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A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

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of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Now as our Mediatour in respect of the Adoption of Sons which he hath procured for us is not ashamed to call us Brethren so in respect of this nevv birth whereby hee begetteth us to a spirituall and everlasting life he disdaineth not to own us as his Children When thou shalt make his seed an offering for sin he shall see his seed saith the Prophet Esaias A seed shall serve him it shall be accounted to the Lord for a generation saith his Father David likewise of him And he himself of himselfe Behold I and the children which God hath given mee Whence the Apostle deduceth this conclusion Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and bloud he also himselfe likewise took part of the same He himself that is he who was God equall to the Father for who else was able to make this new creature but the same God that is the Creator of all things no lesse power being requisite to the effecting of this then was at the first to the producing of all things out of nothing and these new babes being to be born of the Spirit who could have power to send the Spirit thus to beget them but the Father and the Son from whom he proceeded the same blessed Spirit who framed the naturall body of our Lord in the womb of the Virgin being to new mould and fashion every member of his mysticall body unto his similitude and likenesse For the further opening of which mystery which went beyond the apprehension of Nicodemus though a master of Israel wee are to consider that in every perfect generation the creature produced receiveth two things from him that doth beget it Life and Likenesse A curious limmer draweth his own sons pourtraicture to the life as we say yet because there is no true life in it but a likenesse onely he can not be said to be the begetter of his picture as he is of his Son And some creatures there be that are bred out of mud or other putrid matter which although they have life yet because they have no correspondence in likenesse unto the principle from whence they were derived are therefore accounted to have but an improper and equivocall generation Whereas in the right and proper course of generation others being esteemed but monstrous births that swarve from that rule every creature begetteth his like nec imbellem feroces Progenerant aquilae columbam Now touching our spirituall death and life these sayings of the Apostle would be thought upon We thus judge that if one died for all then were all dead and that he died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which died for them and rose again God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us even when we were dead in sins hath quickned us together with Christ. And you being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh hath he quickned together with him having forgiven you all trespasses I am crucified with Christ. Neverthelesse I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me From all which we may easily gather that if by the obedience and sufferings of a bare man though never so perfect the most soveraign medicine that could be thought upon should have been prepared for the curing of our wounds yet all would be to no purpose we being found dead when the medicine did come to be applyed Our Physitian therefore must not onely be able to restore us unto health but unto life it selfe which none can doe but the Father Son and holy Ghost one God blessed for ever To which purpose these passages of our Saviour also are to be considered As the Father hath life in himself so hath he given to the Son to have life in himself As the living Father hath sent me and I live by the Father so he that eateth me even he shall live by me I am the living bread which came down from heaven if any man eat of this bread he shall live for ever and the bread that I will give is my flesh which I will give for the life of the world The substance whereof is briefly comprehended in this saying of the Apostle The last Adam was made a quickening spirit An Adam therefore and perfect Man must he have been that his flesh given for us upon the Crosse might bee made the conduict to convey life unto the world and a quickening spirit he could not have been unlesse hee were God able to make that flesh an effectuall instrument of life by the operation of his blessed Spirit For as himself hath declared It is the Spirit that quickneth without it the flesh would profit nothing As for the point of similitude and likenesse we read of Adam after his fall that he begat a son in his own likenesse after his image and generally as well touching the carnall as the spirituall generation our Saviour hath taught us this lesson That which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit Whereupon the Apostle maketh this comparison betwixt those who are born of that first man who is of the earth earthy and of the second man who is the Lord from heaven As is the earthy such are they that are earthy and as is the heavenly such are they also that are heavenly and as wee have borne the image of the earthy we shall also bear the image of the heavenly We shall indeed hereafter bear it in full perfection when the Lord Jesus Christ shall change our base body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself Yet in the mean time also such a conformity is required in us unto that heavenly man that our conversation must be in heaven whence we look for this Saviour and that we must put off concerning the former conversation that old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts and be renued in the spirit of our mind and put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse For as in one particular point of domesticall authority the Man is said to be the image and glory of God and the Woman the glory of the Man so in a more universall manner is Christ said to bee the image of God even the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse image of his person and we to be conformed to his image that he might be the first-born among those many brethren who in that respect are accounted
as most men think it to be What breaches of the first Commandement may be observed in this transgression First infidelity whereby they doubted of Gods love towards them and of the truth of his word Secondly contempt of God in disregarding his threatnings and crediting the word of Satan Gods enemy and theirs Thirdly hainous ingratitude and unthankfulnesse against God for all his benefits in that they would not be beholding unto him for that excellent condition of their creation in respect whereof they ought unto him all fealty but would needs be his equall Fourthly curiosity in affecting greater wisdome then God had endued them withall by vertue of their creation and a greater measure of knowledge then hee thought fit to reveale unto them Fiftly intolerable pride and ambition not onely desiring to be better then God made them but also to be equall in knowledge to God himselfe and aspiring to the highest estate due to their Creatour How did our first parents break the second Commandement Eve by embracing the word of the Devill and preferring it before the word of God Adam by hearkning to the voyce of his wife rather then to the voyce of the Almighty Gen. 3. 17. What were the breach of the third First presumption in venturing to dispute of Gods truth and to enter in communication with Gods enemy or a beast who appeared unto them touching the word of God with whom no such conference ought to have been entertained Secondly reproachfull blasphemy by subscribing to the sayings of the Devill in which he charged God with lying and envying their good estate Thirdly superstitious conceit of the fruit of the tree imagining it to have that vertue which God never put into it as if by the eating thereof such knowledge might be gotten as Satan perswaded Fourthly want of that zeale in Adam for the glory of God which he ought to have shewed against his wife when hee understood shee had transgressed Gods Commandements How was the fourth Commandement broken In that the Sabbath was made a time to conferre with Satan in matters tending to the high dishonour of God If it be true that on that day man fell into this transgression as some not improbably have conjectured for at the conclusion of the sixth day all things remained yet very good Gen. 1. 31. and God blessed the seventh day Gen. 2. 3. Now it is very likely Satan would take the first advantage that possibly he could to entrap them before they were strengthened by longer experience and by partaking of the Sacrament of the tree of life whereof it appeareth by Gen. 3. 22. that they had not yet eaten and so from the very beginning of man became a manslayer John 8. 44. Shew briefly the grounds of the breach of the Commandements of the second table in the transgression of our first parents The fifth was broken Eve giving too little to her husband in attempting a matter of so great weight without his privity and Adam giving too much to his wife in obeying her voyce rather then the Commandement of God and for pleasing of her not caring to displease God Gen. 3. 17. The sixth by this act they threw themselves and all their posterity into condemnation and death both of body and soule The seventh though nothing direct against this Commandement yet herein appeared the root of those evill affections which are here condemned as not bridling the lust and wandring desire of the eyes as also the inordinate appetite of the tast Gen. 3. 6. in lusting for and eating that onely fruit which God forbad not being satisfied with all the other fruits in the garden The eighth first laying hands upon that which was none of their own but by a speciall reservation kept from them Secondly discontent with their present estate and covetous desire of that which they had not The ninth judging otherwise then the truth was of the vertue of the tree Gen. 3. 6. and receiving a false accusation against God himselfe The tenth by entertaining in their minds Satans suggestions and evill concupiscence appearing in the first motions leading to the forenamed sinnes Thus much of our first parents sinne and the causes thereof Now let us come to the effects of the same shew therefore what followed in them immediately upon this transgression Three fruits were most manifest namely guiltinesse of conscience shame of face and feare of Gods presence Did any punishment follow upon this sinne Sinne guiltinesse and punishment doe naturally follow one upon another otherwise the threatning that at what time soever they did transgresse Gods Commandement they should certainly dye should not have taken effect Declare how that threatning took effect They were dead in sinne which is more fearfull then the death of the body as that which is a separation from the favour of God for there came upon them the decay of Gods glorious image in all the faculties of their soule and also a corruption of the powers of their body from being so fit instruments to serve the soule as God made them and this in them is signified by nakednes Gen. 3. 7. And in their children called originall sin Then there issued from thence a streame of actuall sinnes in the whole course of their life which appeared in Adam even upon his fall by his flying from Gods presence and affirming that it was his nakednesse that made him flye his excusing of his sin and laying it on the woman c. By sin an entrie being made for death Rom. 5. 12. they became subject to the separating of the soul from the body which is bodily death and of both from God which is spirituall death signified by expelling them out of Paradise and debarring them of the sacramentall tree of life Gen. 3. 22. c. And thus by the just sentence of God being for their sin delivered into the power both of corporall and of eternall death they were already entred upon death and hell to which they should have proceeded untill it had been accomplished both in body and soule in hell with the Devill and his Angels for ever if the Lord had not looked upon them in the blessed Seed For the fuller understanding of the things that immediatly followed the transgression of our first parents let us consider more particularly what is recorded in the 3d. ch of Gen. And first shew what is meant by that in v. 7. that their eyes were opened they saw themselves naked were they not naked before and having the eye sharper then after the fall must they not needs see they were naked It is true howbeit their nakednesse before the fall was comely yea more comely then the comeliest apparell we can put on being clad with the robe of innocency from the top of the head unto the sole of the foot wherefore by nakednesse he meaneth a shamefull nakednesse both of soule and body as the Scripture speaketh elsewhere Rev. 3. 17 18. Exod. 32. 25. What
the name of Adam was comprehended the man and the woman for by mariage two are made one and Moses calleth both the man and the woman Adam Gen. 5. 2. and last of all the Apostle used the word here signifying both man and woman What reason is there that all their posterity should take part with them both in their fall and in the wofull effect thereof It seemeth not to stand with the Justice of God to punish us for the sin that we never did Our first parents by Gods appointment were to stand or fall in that triall not as singular persons only but also as the head and root of all mankind representing the persons of all that should descend from them by naturall generation and therefore for the understanding of the ground of our participation with Adams fall two things must be considered First that Adam was not a private man in this businesse but sustained the person of all mankind as he who had received grace and strength for himself and all his posterity and so lost the same for all For Adam received the promise of life for himself and us with this condition if he had stood but seeing he stood not he lost the promise of life both from himself and from us and as his felicity should have been ours if he had stood in it so was his transgression and misery ours So that as in the second Covenant the righteousnesse of the second Adam Christ Jesus the Mediatour is reckoned to those that are begotten of him by spirituall regeneration even those that beleeve in his name although they never did it so in the first Covenant the sinne of the first Adam who herein sustained a common person is reckoned to all the posterity that descend from him by carnall generation because they were in him and of him and one with him Rom. 5. 15 16 17 18 19. Secondly that we all who are descended from Adam by naturall generation were in his loyns and a part of him when he fell and so by the law of propagation and generation sinned in him and in him deserved eternall condemnation therefore as two Nations are said to be in the womb of Rebekah Gen. 25. 23. and Levi to have paid tithes to Melchisedec in the loins of Abraham Heb. 7. 9 10. who was not born some hundred years after so is it here Thus we see that as by the act of generation in leprous parents the parents Leprosie made the childrens and the slavish and villanous estate of the parents is communicated unto all the off-spring for a man being a slave his progeny unto the hundred generation unlesse they be manumitted shall be slaves even so the naturall man howsoever he thinketh himself free yet in truth he is sold under sin and is the very servant of corruption and in that state shall for ever remain unlesse the Son doe make him free Joh. 8. 33 34. 36. Rom. 6. 17. 19 20. 7. 14. 2 Pet. 2. 19. We see also that great Parsonages rebelling against the King do not only thereby hurt and disgrace themselves but also stain their whole bloud and lose their honour and Inheritance from themselves and from their children for by our Law a man being attainted of High treason the attaint of bloud reacheth to his posterity and his children as well as he lose the benefit of his Lands and Living for ever unlesse the King in favour restore them againe as God in his mercy hath done unto us Then it appeareth that by propagation from our last parents we are become partakers of the sin of our first parents Even so and for the same transgression of our first parents by the most righteous Judgement of God we are conceived in sin and born in iniquity and unto misery Ps. 51. 5. for men are not now born as Adam was created but death doth reign over them also that sinned not after the like manner of the transgression of Adam Rom. 5. 14. that is over infants who are born in sin not by imitation but by an inherent corruption of sin even as we see the young Serpents and Wolves that never stung men or devoured sheep are notwithstanding worthy to die because there are principles of hurtfulnesse and poysonsomnesse in them How is it shewn that babes new born into the world have sin In that they are afflicted sundrily which they bewray by their bitter cries and in that they comming out of the mothers womb goe straight into the grave What is then the naturall estate of man Every man is by nature dead in sin as a loathsome carrion or as a dead corps and lieth rotting and stinking in the grave having in him the seed of all sins Eph. 2. 1. 1 Tim. 5. 6. For the fuller understanding of the state of sin and the consequents thereof declare first what sin is It is defined in one word 1 Joh. 3. 4. to be the transgression of the law namely a swerving from the law of God making the sinner guilty before God and liable to the curse of the law Gen. 4. 7. Seeing by the law sinne is and the law was not before Moses Rom. 5. 13. it seemeth there is no sin untill Moses When it is said the law was not before Moses it is to be understood of the law written in the Tables of stone by the finger of God and other laws Ceremoniall and Politicall written by Moses at the commandement of God for otherwise the law the Ceremoniall law excepted was written in the heart of man and for the decay therof through sin taught by those to whom that belonged from the fall unto Moses Is every breach of the Law of God sin Yea if it be no more but the least want of that God requireth Rom. 7. 7. Gal. 3. 10. And doth every sin the very least deserve the curse of God and everlasting death Yes verily because God is of infinite Majesty and dignity and therefore what so toucheth him deserveth endlesse wrath wherefore Purgatory and our owne satisfaction for small sinnes is vain How many sorts of sins are there Sin is either imputed or inherent the one without us and the other within us What is the sin Imputed Our sin in Adam in whom as we lived so also we sinned for in our first parents as hath been shewed every one of us did commit that first sinne which was the cause of all other and so we all are become subject to the imputation of Adams fall both for the trasgression and guiltinesse Rom. 5. 12. 18. 19. 1 Cor. 15. 22. What sins are Inherent in us They doe either defile our nature or our actions the one called Originall sin the other Actuall Col. 3. 9. For every one naturally descending from Adam beside the guilt of that first sin committed in Paradise first is conceived and born in original corruption Ps. 51. 5. Secondly living in this world sinneth also actually Gen. 6. 5. Esay 48. 8. yea of
himself he can doe nothing but sin Jer. 13. 23. neither is there any thing pure unto him Tit. 1. 15. What is Originall sin It is a sin wherewith all that naturally descend from Adam are defiled even from their first conception infecting all the powers of their souls and bodies and thereby making them drudges and slaves of sin for it is the immediate effect of Adams first sin and the principall cause of all other sins How is this sin noted out unto us In that other sinnes have their speciall names whereas this is properly called sinne because it is the puddle and sinke of other sinnes and for that also the more it is pressed the more it bursteth forth as mighty streams are that cannot be stopped till God by his holy Spirit restrain it Wherein doth it specially consist Not only in the deprivation of justice and absence of good but also in a continuall presence of an evill principle and wicked property whereby we are naturally inclined to unrighteousnesse and made prone unto all evill Jam. 1. 14. Rom. 7. 21. 23. For it is the defacing of Gods Image consisting chiefly in wisdome and holiness whereof we are now deprived and the impression of the contrary image of Satan John 8. 41 c. called Concupiscence Rom. 7. 7. Jam. 1. 14. consisting first in an utter disability and enmity unto that which is good Rom. 7. 18. 8. 7. Secondly in pronenesse to all manner of evill Rom. 7. 14. which also every man hath at the first minute and moment of his conception contrary to the opinion of the Pelagians who teach that sinne commeth by imitation Is the Image of God wholly defaced in man No if we take it in a large acception For man remaineth still a reasonable creature and capable of grace having the same parts and faculties he had before and in them some reliques of Gods Image Gen. 9. 6. Jam. 3. 9. As in the understanding some light John 1. 9. in the conscience sometimes right judgement Rom. 2. 15. in the will some liberty to good and evill in naturall and civill actions Rom. 2. 14. and freedome in all things from compulsion c. Is there not a power left in man whereby he may recover his former happinesse Man hath still power to perform all outward actions but not to change himselfe untill he be changed by the grace of God Is man then able to perform the Law of God perfectly They that are not born again of God cannot keep it all nor in any one point as pleasing to God thereby in respect of themselves For except a man bee borne of God hee cannot see the Kingdome of heaven nor enter therein neither can he keep the Commandements of God Moreover all men by nature being conceived and born in sinne are not onely insufficient to every good thing but also disposed to all vice and wickednesse Can man in this estate doe no good thing to please God to deserve at least something of his favour We have lost by this sinne all the righteousnesse we had in our creation so as now if God should say to us Think but a good thought of thy selfe and thou shalt be saved we cannot but our nature is as a stinking puddle which within it selfe is loathsome and being moved is worse But doth not God wrong to man to require of him that he is not able to performe No for God made man so that he might have performed it but he by his sins spoiled himselfe and his posterity of those good gifts Is this corruption of nature in all the children of Adam Yea in all and every one that are meer men none excepted Rom. 3. 10. 5. 15. All children since Adams fall being begotten in it Ps. 51. 5. How then doth the Apostle say that holy parents beget holy children Parents beget children as they are by nature not as they are by grace How is originall sin propagated and derived from the Father to the Sonne Wee are not to bee so curious in seeking the manner how as to marke the matter to bee in us even as when a house is on fire men should not be so busie to enquire how it came as seeing it there to quench it But this we may safely say that what effect the committing of the first sinne wrought in the soule of Adam the same it doth by the imputation of it work in the soules of his posterity as therefore the committall of that sin left a staine behind it in his nature being like a drop of poyson that being once taken in presently infecteth the soundest parts or like the dead flye that marreth the most precious ointment of the Apothecary so in the creation and infusion of our soules into our bodies God justly imputed the same transgression unto us the same corruption of nature as the just punishment of that sin must ensue in the like manner Hath this inbred sin wherein every one is conceived equally polluted all men Yes though not altogether alike for disposition and motion to evill for experience teacheth us that some are by nature more milde courteous and gentle then others which difference notwithstanding is not so much in the natures of men as in the Lord who represseth these sins in some which he suffereth to rise up in others In what part of our nature doth this our corruption abide In the whole man from the top to the toe and every part both of body and soule Gen. 6. 5. 1 Thess. 5. 23. Like unto a leprosie that runneth from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foot but chiefly it is the corruption of the five faculties of the soule which are thereby deprived of that holinesse wherein God created them in Adam Is not the substance of the soule corrupted by this sinne No but the faculties onely depraved and deprived of originall holinesse For first the soule should otherwise be mortall and corruptible Secondly our Saviour took our nature upon him without this corruption To come then to the speciall corruptions of the five faculties of the soul. Then first how this sin is discerned in the Vnderstanding The mind of man is become subject to blindnesse in heavenly matters First Darknesse and ignorance of God of his will and of his creatures 1 Cor. 2. 14. Eph. 4. 17 18 19. Rom. 8. 5. Secondly uncapablenesse unablenesse and unwillingnesse to learn though a man be taught Rom. 8. 7. Luk. 24. 45. Thirdly unbeleefe and doubting of the truth of God taught and conceived by us Fourthly vanity falshood and error to the embracing whereof mans nature hath great pronenesse Esa. 44. 20. Jer. 4. 22. Prov. 14. 12. 16. 25. What use make you of this corruption of the understanding That the originall and seeds of all heresies and errors are in mans heart naturally without a teacher and therefore we should distrust our own knowledge to lead us in the matters of God and Religion and
jurisdiction and authority Mat. 20. 19. Joh. 18. 31 32. as likewise to teach us that he appeared willingly and of his own accord before a mortall Judge of whom he was pronounced innocent and yet by the same he was condemned What comfort have you hereof That my Saviour thus suffering not any whit for his own sins but wholly for mine and for other mens sins before an earthly Judge I shall be discharged before the heavenly Judgement seat What did he chiefly suffer under Pontius Pilate He was apprehended accused arraigned mocked scourged condemned and crucified Mat. 26. 27. and 28. chapters What learn you here That he that knew no sin was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. 1 Pet. 2. 24. Did Christ suffer these things willingly as he suffered them innocently Yes he laid down his life meekly as the sheep doth his fleece before the shearer being obedient even unto the death Luc. 23. 41. 1 Pet. 2. 22. Esa. 53. 7. Phil. 2. 8. Heb. 5. 8. Vnto what death was he so obedient Even unto the most reproachfull painfull and dreadfull death the death of the Crosse Mat. 27. 30. 38. Phil. 2. 8. Why was Christ put unto this death of the Crosse Because it was not a common death but such a death as was accursed both of God and man that so he being made a curse for us he might redeem us from a curse due unto us Deut. 21. 23. Gal. 3. 13. What comfort have you by this I am comforted in this because I am delivered from the curse which I have deserved by the breach of the law and shall obtain the blessing due unto him for keeping of the same Why was it requisite that our Saviours soul should be separated from his body Because we were all dead that so he might be the death of death for us 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. Heb. 2. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 54 55. for by sin death came into the world and therefore the Justice of God could not have been satisfied for our sins unlesse death had been joyned with his sufferings How could the death and sufferings of Christ which were but for a short time be a full satisfaction for us which have deserved eternall death Although they were not everlasting yet in regard of the worthinesse of the person who suffered them they were equivalent to everlasting torments forasmuch as not a bare man nor an Angel did suffer them but the eternall Son of God though not in his Godhead but in our nature which he assumed his person Majesty Deity Goodnesse Justice Righteousnesse being every way infinite and eternall made that which he suffered of no lesse force and value then eternall torments upon others yea even upon all the world besides For even as the death of a Prince being but a man and a sinfull man is of more reckoning then the death of an Army of other men because he is the Prince much more shall the death and sufferings of the Son of God the Prince of all Princes not finite but every way infinite and without sin much more I say shall that be of more reckoning with his Father then the sufferings of all the world and the time of his sufferings of more value for the worthinesse of his person then if all the men in the world had suffered for ever and ever What use are we to make of Christs death and passion 1. The consideration hereof may bring us to a sound perswasion and feeling of our sins because they have deserved so grievous a punishment as either the death of the Son of God or hell fire 2. Hereby we reap unspeakable comfort forasmuch as by his stripes we are healed by his bloud washed by his sacrifice God is satisfied and by his death we are saved and redeemed 1 Pet. 2. 24. Rev. 1. 5. Heb. 10. 10. 12. Rom. 5. 8 9 10. 3. We learn from hence to die to our sins and to live henceforth unto him that hath dyed for us Rom. 6. 2. 6. 2 Cor. 5. 15. What befell our Saviour after his soule was separated from his body He was buried Act. 13. 29 30. and went to Hades or as we commonly speak descended into hell Act. 2. 31. Why was it needfull that Christ should be buried 1. To assure us more fully that he was truly dead Mat. 27. 59 60. 94 65 66. Act. 2. 29. 2. That even in the grave the very fortresse of death he might loose the sorrows and bands of death Act. 2. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 55. What is meant by his descending into Hell Not that he went to the place of the damned but that he went absolutely unto the estate of the dead Rom. 10. 7. Eph. 4. 9. What doe you call the estate of the dead That departing this life he went in his soul into heaven Luc. 23. 43. and was in his body under the very power and dominion of death for a season Acts 2. 24. Heb. 2. 14. Rom. 6. 9. What comfort have you by Christs death buriall and lying under the power of death 1. I am comforted because my sinnes are fully discharged in his death and so buried that they shall never come into remembrance 2. My comfort is the more because by the vertue of his death and buriall sin shall be killed in me and buried so that henceforth it shall have no power to reign over me 3. I need not to fear death seeing that sin which is the sting of death is taken away by the death of Christ and that now death is made unto me an entrance into his life Hitherto of his sufferings what is the other part of his satisfaction His perfect righteousnesse whereby he did that which we were not able to doe and absolutely fulfilled the whole law of God for us Ps. 40. 7 8. Rom. 3. 19. 5. 19. Why was it necessary that Christ should as well fulfill the Law as suffer for us Because as by his sufferings he took away our unrighteousnesse and freed us from the punishment due to us for our sins so by performing for us absolute obedience to the whole law of God he hath merited our righteousnesse making us just and holy in the sight of God and purchased eternall happinesse for us in the life to come 2 Cor. 5. 21. Gal. 4. 4 5. 1 Cor. 1. 30. Rom. 8. 3 4. For as we are made unrighteous by Adams sinne so are we made fully and wholly righteous being justified by a man that is God How manifold is the righteousnesse of our Saviour Two-fold Originall Actuall VVhat is his originall righteousnesse The perfect integrity and purenesse of his humane nature which in himselfe was without all guile and the least staine of corruption Heb. 7. 26. Being very man how could he be without sin The course of naturall corruption was prevented because he was not begotten after the ordinary course by man but was conceived in the
the confirmation thereof or a reason of the perswasion that they are forgiven What is the summe of this Petition That we may be justified and be at peace with God that God giving us a true knowledge and feeling of our sins would forgive us freely for his Sons sake and make us daily assured of the forgivenesse of our sins as we are privy to our selves of the forgivenesse of those trespasses which men have offended us by Job 33. 24. Psal. 35. 3. Jer. 14. 7. Col. 3. 13. What is meant here by debts The comparison is drawne from debters which are not able to pay their creditors to whom all we are compared for that we have all sinned Therefore by debts we must understand sins as Saint Luke expoundeth the metaphor and that not in themselves as breaches of the Law of God for who would say that we owe and are to pay sin unto God but with respect to the punishment and satisfaction due to Gods justice for the offence of sin For our debt being properly obedience whereto we are bound under penalty of all the curses of the Law especially eternall death Rom. 8 12. 13. 18. Gal. 5. 3. we all in Adam forfeited that bond wherby the penalty became our debt and is daily increased in us all by sinning Luke 13. 4. Mat. 18. 24 c. Rom. 6. 23. What learne you from hence Here hence two things are implyed One a franke and humble confession that we have sinned both originally and actually Another that there is no power in us to make satisfaction for our sins What use is there of Confession Great for that we have naturally a senselesnesse of sin or else being convinced thereof we are ready to lessen it and make it light the contrary whereof appeareth in the children of God 1 John 1. 8 9. Psal. 32. 3 4. Prov. 28 13. Job 31. 33. 1 Sam. 15. 19 20. Psal. 51. 3 4 5 6. Acts 22. 3 4 5. 1 Tim. 1. 13 15. How can a man confesse his sins being not knowne and without number Those that are knowne we must expresly confesse and the other that are unknowne and cannot be reckoned generally Psal. 19. 12. How appeareth it that we are not able to pay this debt Because by the Law as an obligation every one being bound to keep it wholly and continually Deut. 27. 26. Gal. 3. 10. so that the breach thereof even once and in the least point maketh us debtors presently as having forfeited our obligation there is no man that can either avoid the breach of it or when he hath broken it make amends unto God for it considering that whatsoever he doth after the breach is both imperfectly done and if it were perfect yet it is due by the obligation of the Law and therefore cannot goe for paiment no more then a man can pay one debt with another What doth it draw with it that causeth it to be so impossible to be satisfied The reward of it which is everlasting death both of body and soule Rom. 6. 23. the greatnesse and also number whereof is declared by the parable of ten thousand talents which no man is able to pay being not able to satisfie so much as one farthing But are we not able to satisfie some part of it as a man in great debt is sometime able to make some satisfaction especially if hee have day given him No and therefore we are compared to a child new borne red with bloud and not able to wash himselfe nor to help himself Ezek. 16. 4 5. And to captives close shut up in prison and fetters kept by a strong one Luke 4. 18. Matth. 12. 29. so that there is as small likelihood of our deliverance out of the power of Satan as that a poore Lamb should deliver it selfe from the gripes and pawes of a Lion What is the meanes to free us from this debt By this petition Christ teacheth us that being pressed with the burden of our sin we should flee unto the mercy of God and to entreat him for the forgivenesse of our debt Matth. 11. 28. Esa. 55. 1. even the cancelling of our obligation that in Law it be not available against us In which respect the preaching of the Gospel is compared to the yeare of Iubile when no man might demand his debt of his Brother Luke 4. 19. How shall we obtaine this at Gods hands By the onely blood and suffering of Christ as the onely ransome for sin contrary to the Papists who confessing that originall sinne is taken away by Christ in Baptisme doe teach that we must make part of our satisfaction for our actuall sin and therefore some of them whip themselves as if their bloud might satisfie for sinne which is abominable to think What doe you then understand here by forgivenesse Such remission as may agree with Gods justice which will not endure him to be a loser wherefore it is forgivenesse of us by taking paiment of another Job 33. 24. even of our surety Iesus Christ in our behalfe 1 John 2. 2. What meane you by saying Vs and Ours We include with our selves in this petition as many as are in Christ enabled by a true faith to lay hold on him and to plead his paiment and satisfaction Psal. 130. 7 8. 51. 18. Doe we here pray for the sinnes of this day as before for the bread of this day Not onely for them but also for all that ever we have done at all times before to the end that we might be the further confirmed in the assurance of the remission of all our sins What is further to be considered in this Petition That as in the former by Bread more was understood so here under one part of our Iustification to wit the remission or not imputation of sins unto death by meanes of the satisfaction of Christs sufferings we doe also conceive the other part which is the imputation of his holinesse unto life eternall as implyed under the former and inseparably annexed thereto For as Christ hath taken away our sins by suffering so he hath also cloathed us with his righteousnesse by fulfilling of the Law for us Dan. 9. 24. 2 Cor. 5. 21. What doe we then aske of God in this Petition Six things viz. 1. Grace feelingly to know and frankly and tremblingly to confesse without excuse or extenuation the great debt of our sins Psal. 51. 3. and our utter inability to satisfie for the same or for the least part thereof Psal. 103. 3. 142. 2. 2. That God would bestow upon us Christ Iesus and for his sake remove out of his sight all our sins and the guilt and punishment due unto us for the same 3. The power of saving faith Luke 17. 5. to lay hold on the meritorious sufferings and obedience of our Lord Iesus Christ unto our full Iustification Esa. 53. 5. 4. The Spirit of prayer that with griefe and sorrow for our sins wee may crave pardon for our
discharge in the least measure His surety therefore being to satisfie in his stead none will bee found fit to undertake such a payment but he who is both God and Man Man it is fit he should bee because Man was the party that by the articles of the first Covenant was tyed to this obedience and it was requisite that as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one man likewise many should be made righteous Again if our Mediatour were onely God he could have performed no obedience the Godhead being free from all manner of subjection and if he were a bare man although he had been as perfect as Adam in his integrity or the Angels themselves yet being left unto himselfe amidst all the temptations of Satan and this wicked world he should be subject to fall as they were or if he should hold out as the elect Angels did that must have been ascribed to the grace and favour of an other whereas the giving of strict satisfaction to Gods justice was the thing required in this behalf But now being God as well as Man he by his own eternall Spirit preserved himself without spot presenting a far more satisfactory obedience unto God then could have possibly been performed by Adam in his integrity For beside the infinite difference that was betwixt both their Persons which maketh the actions of the one beyond all comparison to exceed the worth and value of the other we know that Adam was not able to make himselfe holy but what holinesse he had he received from him who created him according to his owne image so that whatsoever obedience Adam had performed God should have eaten but of the fruit of the vineyard which himselfe had planted and of his own would all that have been which could be given unto him But Christ did himself sanctifie that humane nature which he assumed according to his own saying Joh. 17. 19. For their sakes I sanctifie my self and so out of his own peculiar store did he bring forth those precious treasures of holy obedience which for the satisfaction of our debt he was pleased to tender unto his Father Againe if Adam had done all things which were commanded him hee must for all that have said I am an unprofitable servant I have done that which was my duty to doe whereas in the voluntary obedience which Christ subjected himself unto the case stood far otherwise True it is that if we respect him in his humane nature his Father is greater then he and he is his Fathers servant yet in that he said and most truly said that God was his Father the Jews did rightly infer from thence that he thereby made himself equall with God and the Lord of Hosts himselfe hath proclaimed him to bee the man that is his fellow Being such a man therefore and so highly born by the priviledge of his birth-right hee might have claimed an exemption from the ordinary service whereunto all other men are tyed and by being the Kings Son have freed himself from the payment of that tribute which was to be exacted at the hands of Strangers When the Father brought this his first-begotten into the world he said Let all the Angels of God worship him and at the very instant wherein the Son advanced our nature into the highest pitch of dignitie by admitting it into the unity of his sacred Person that nature so assumed was worthy to be crowned with all glory and honour and he in that nature might then have set himself down at the right hand of the throne of God tyed to no other subjection then now he is or hereafter shall be when after the end of this world he shall have delivered up the kingdome to God the Father For then also in regard of his assumed nature he shall be subject unto him that put all other things under him Thus the Son of God if he had minded onely his own things might at the very first have attained unto the joy that was set before him but looking on the things of others he chose rather to come by a tedious way and wearisome journey unto it not challenging the priviledge of a Son but taking upon him the form of a mean servant Whereupon in the dayes of his flesh hee did not serve as an honourable Commander in the Lords host but as an ordinary soldier he made himself of no reputation for the time as it were emptying himself of his high state and dignity hee humbled himself and became obedient untill his death being content all his life long to be made under the Law yea so farre that as he was sent in the likenesse of sinfull flesh so he disdained not to subject himself unto that Law which properly did concern sinfull flesh And therefore howsoever Circumcision was by right appliable onely unto such as were dead in their sins and the uncircumcision of their flesh yet he in whom there was no body of the sins of the flesh to be put off submitted himself notwithstanding thereunto not onely to testifie his communion with the Fathers of the old Testament but also by this means to tender unto his Father a bond signed with his own bloud whereby he made himself in our behalf a debtor unto the whole Law For I testifie saith the Apostle to every man that is circumcised that he is a debtor to the whole Law In like manner Baptisme appertained properly unto such as were defiled and had need to have their sins washed away and therefore when all the land of Judea and they of Jerusalem went out unto John they were all baptized of him in the river Jordan confessing their sinnes Among the rest came our Saviour also but the Baptist considering that he had need to be baptized by Christ and Christ no need at all to be baptized by him refused to give way unto that action as altogether unbefitting the state of that immaculate Lambe of God who was to take away the sinne of the World Yet did our Mediatour submit himself to that ordinance of God also not onely to testifie his communion with the Christians of the new Testaments but especially which is the reason yeelded by himselfe because it became him thus to fulfill all righteousnesse And so having fulfilled all righteousnesse whereunto the meanest man was tyed in the days of his pilgrimage which was more then he needed to have undergone if he had respected only himself the works which he performed were truly workes of supererogation which might be put upon the account of them whose debt hee undertook to discharge and being performed by the Person of the Son of God must in that respect not onely be equivalent but infinitely over-value the obedience of Adam and all his posterity although they had remained in their integrity and continued untill this houre instantly serving God day