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A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

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Body as Baptism is sometimes and in some places administred into its Bosom as into a Sepulchre Rom. 6.4 whereby we are said to be buried with Christ but raised from the Water the Grave gives up her dead and we are risen with Christ renewed again to life by the quickning power of the Spirit in the efficacy and operation of his grace Rom. 6.3 So that as we are Baptized into Christs death so are we baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so Theodoret into a participation of the Lords Resurrection Very fitly then is the Font of holy Baptism compared by Leo to the Womb of the Blessed Virgin in which the Holy Ghost is powerfully present for our Spiritual Conception 1 Pet. 1.3 In begetting us again unto God by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ For as of Christ risen Acts 13.33 so of the Infant Baptized does God seem to say This day have I begotten thee And to them who are thus begotten again hear St. Chrysostome reckon up the several Divine Benefits and Blessings Quasi tot Baptismatis largitates honores As so many acts of grace and titles of honor accompanying their Baptism They are become not onely Citizens but also Saints and not onely Saints but also sons and not onely sons but also heirs and not onely heirs of God but also brethren of Christ Rom. 8.17 and not onely brethren of Christ but also coheirs with Christ and not onely coheirs of his Kingdom but also members of his body and not onely members of his body but also temples of his presence and not onely temples of his presence but also organs of his Spirit Et hac de causa etiam Infantes Baptizamus And for this cause also we Baptize Infants that they may be sanctified that they may be justified and that they may be adopted Chrys Tom. 5. Hom. ad Neophyt recited by Aug. l. 1. cont Julian c. 6. Cassand de Bapt. Infant so St. Chrysostome as he is recited by St. Augustine Justification and Adoption being relactive acts the admitting them in Infants is no difficulty but concerning Sanctification as a real work by infusion of inherent holiness whether we shall allow that to Infants in Baptism is a great dispute Cassander from the Antients he makes the Baptismal Regeneration of Infants to consist in the remission of original sin which is Justification and in the acceptation to eternal life which is Adoption But now what the Sacramental Sanctification which accompanies this Justification and Adoption is St. Augustine resolves Difficile est dicere Aug. con● Donat. l. 4. c. 23. Episc Satisb Epist ad D. Ward It is hard to say yea he that shall undertake the cause as to quit it of all difficulties Ego me Auditorem libentissimè profiterer says our English Augustine I would most willingly profess my self an Auditor and yield the chair Even they who deny Grace inherent habits infused do yet acknowledge the presence and habitation of the Holy Ghost now sure we are the Holy Ghost dwells not but in an holy Temple yet how far the baptized Infant is sanctified to be this Temple and wherein expresly that Sanctification doth consist Explicet qui intelligit ego fateor me non intelligere saith that Learned Author Episc Satisb ibid. and Reverend Father much the honor of our Nation and Ornament of our Church Let him unfold it that understands it for my part I confess mine ignorance That Children are capable of real Sanctification we must needs grant believing them liable to original Pollution For that doubtless the grace of the second Adam is as effectual to make holy as the sin of the first Adam is to make corrupt Besides we say original Righteousness should have been inherent in children transmitted from their Parents by natural propagation if Adam had stood and if so sure children must needs be capable of receiving a superinduced principle of spiritual life from Christ now that Adam and we in him are fain To close then of this we may be assured Baptized Infants have their effectual manner and real measure of Sanctification by the Holy Ghost because pro conditione parvulorum according to the condition of their tender age they are stated in a present ordination to eternal life for that Without holiness no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 Having thus explained unto you with the original and use the benefits and effects of Baptism I shall seasonably resolve you these three Quares 1. What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state of those Infants which die baptized 2. As to the state of those children which die before Baptism being children of the Orthodox 3. As to the state of those children which die before Baptism being children of the Anabaptists Quest 1 First What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state of those Infants which die baptized Answ I answer Though there is some dispute among the Ancient Fathers a hot contest in the after Schoolmen and a more moderate debate in Modern Divines as to the nature and manner of Infants Regeneration the nature of its being and the manner of its causation yet all consent in this all Primitive Popish and Protestant Writers Fathers Schoolmen and others all consent in this judgment and determination from Grounds of Scripture and Divine Reason That Infants lawfully baptized are in such an estate of Justification Sanctification and Adoption as that so dying they are undoubtedly saved And herein our own Mother the Church of England In the Rubrick before the Catechism she is most clear and full Onely observe in those children that live what by Divine Ordination was sufficient to state them capable of Salvation whilst Infants does become insufficient when adult and come to the use of Reason for then is required their actual Faith and Repentance actual Conversion unto God and obedience unto the Gospel of Christ without which they cannot then be saved Quest 2 Secondly What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state of those children which die before Baptism being children of the Orthodox Answ I answer Herein the Judgment of the Church is not so generally one St. Augustine and some in his time and since most of the Roman Church resolve That such Infants so dying they are not saved they have paena damni though not paena sensus they have a punishment of loss though not of sense they enjoy not Gods blissful presence and yet are not cast into hellish flames they have a Limbus Infantum for them but it is of their own fancying not of Gods providing The truth is the Scripture hath not clearly revealed whereby this Quaere may be so convincingly determined And therefore when some sudden surprise of death doth nip those Buds snatch away our tender Babes our duty is to submit with humility to Gods dispensation resigning them up to his mercy and comforting our selves with this resolution of the Orthodox That as in the
Redeemer and this in a Prosopographia a personal character of Christ both from his intrinsecal relation to the Father and from his extrinsecal relation to the creature and that to the creature either as made and form'd or as redeemed and repaired 1. v. 15. According to his intrinsecal relation to the Father so Christ is the image of the invisible God the natural and essential image by eternal generation And if we may draw the Sun with a pencil if illustrate this mystery by a similitude take this as our aptest illustration That as a man beholding himself in a Looking-glass doth produce an image in nothing different from himself in lineaments of body or proportion of parts so God the Father beholding himself in the glass of his Divinity with the eye of his understanding doth beget his Son Heb. 1.3 the express image of his person no ways different from himself in the essence of his Deity or excellency of his Attributes but coessential and coequal But indeed as for the manner of Christs eternal generation in which he is the essential image of the invisible God Naz. orat with Nazianzen I say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is hidden in a cloud and therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let it be reverenc'd with silence We may we must make it in humility an article of our Creed not think it in curiosity an object of our knowledge From the Apostles description then of Christ in his intrinsecal relation to the Father pass we to the second part his description of Christ in his extrinsecal relation to the Creator and to the creature 1. As made and form'd in which relation he is call'd the first-born of every creature v 15. At which the Arian readily catcheth to prove Christ Deus factus made God but S Chrysostom and the Antients repell his argument and confute his blasphemy from the propriety and emphasis of the Apostles expression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not the first made or the first created but the first begotten or the first-born and therefore primogenitus non primo-creatus ut genitus pro natura Ambr. de fid ● 1. c. 4. primus pro aeternitate credatur Christ is therefore said to be the fi●st begotten not the first created that his being begotten may make us believe the essence of his nature and first begotten the eternity of his essence If with the Modern Expositors especially of the Protestant Church we interpret the Apostle as speaking of Christs humane nature then by first-born is meant Lord and Soveraign according to the law and right of Primogeniture Thus in the Prophecie of David concerning Solomon as a Type of Christ I will make him my first-born Ps 89.27 higher then the Kings of the earth But if with the Antient Writers especially of the Grecian Church we interpret the Apostle as speaking of Christs divine nature then by the first-born of every creature is meant that Christ was begotten before any thing created so primogenitus the first begotten as that he is also unigenitus the only begotten And needs must he be before the creatures v. 16. by whom all things were created even all things that are in heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers even the whole heavenly hoast and celestial hierarchy all things were created by him and for him by him in his omnipotent power and for him in his incomprehensible glory He the efficient and the final cause of all the Creatures And he by whom are all things must needs be before all things v. 17. before dignitate tempore in order of dignity and of time And the same Efficient which creates conserves The whole world as at first it had none other hand to frame it so nor now hath it any other pillar to support it then the power of Christs word as he is God And therefore says our Apostle that by him all things consist Even as water whilst contained in the vessel it hath a consistencie in it self which when the vessel is broken it presently flows out and wastes away in its own fluidity Thus the creatures whilst encompassed by Christs conserving power they consist in their being but that power withdrawn they faint and perish in their own mortality Or as the Air when the Sun withdraws his enlightening beams then ceaseth to have any light Thus the creatures should Christ withdraw his sustaining power they would cease to have any being This sustaining power of Gods providence the Schools call manutenentia Dei which is thus illustrated As a man holding a Globe in his hand if he withdraw his hand the Globe presently falls to the ground Thus Christ sustaining the whole Fabrick of the Universe with the supporting power of his providence should he withdraw that power and support needs must the creatures though ne'r so perfect in their kind needs must they fall away and dissolve to their first nothing Even those very perfections of Nature ay and of Grace too which were in Lucifer and Adam what were they when abused and they left to themselves what were they but as Gerson's expression is Gerson apud Ep. Sar. in Col. 1.17 pondera plura ad ruinam more weight to press them down to their greater ruine Now our Apostle having given us the description of Christ in his extrinsecal relation to the creatures as made and form'd he proceeds in the words of my Text to give the further description of him in that his extrinsecal relation to the creatures as redeem'd and repair'd Which relation he brings in with this Copulative and And he is the head of the body the Church who is the beginning the first born from the dead c. Division From the dependance we proceed to the division Observe a single description rais'd from a twofold relation and argued from a threefold reason 1. The single description it is of Christ in the dignity and office of Mediator as the Head of the body the Church 2. The twofold relation from whence this description is raised that of Creator and that of Redeemer That of Creator in which he is the Beginning of all things and that of Redeemer in which he is the first-born from the dead 3. The threefold reason from whence this description of Christ is argued One drawn from the final moving cause that in all things he might have the preeminence A second drawn from the efficient ordmaining cause the good will and pleasure of the Father And the third is drawn from the formal constituting cause the perfection of all fulness dwelling in Christ Thus Christ he is the head of the body the Church who is the begining the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the preeminence for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Explicat 1. The description of Christ in the dignity and office
Aerium 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That order which is Generative of Fathers Presbyters may beget Sons by Baptism but not Fathers by Ordination and Consecration This is the Bishops peculiar as Successor to the Apostles in that full Ministry which is perpetuated in the Church That the Seventy Disciples had not this full Ministry nor Presbyters the Successors to those Disciples who have power to Preach to Baptize and Consecrate the Eucharist that they have not this full Ministry is the evidence of sacred Scripture and Church History And we will now make the evidence clear as to that main particular the power of Ordination in which we have the Doctrine of the Scriptures to approve the practise of the Church and the practise of the Church to interpret the Doctrine of the Scriptures Consult we then 1 The Sacred Scriptures And the first Ordination we meet with is that of those Seven Acts 6. commonly called Deacons and here we finde no hands but those of the Apostles The second Ordination is that of Presbyters Acts 14.23 and this we finde to be by the hands of Barnabas and Paul Which two when separated to the work of the Ministry if we may call it an Ordination it is by the hands of Simeon Lucius and Manaen Apostolick-men Acts 13.1 2 3. Prophets ministring to the Lord who as Church History tells us were Bishops of Syria The last Ordination we meet with in Scripture actually executed it is that of Timothy 1 Tim 4 14. which though by the hands of the Presbytery yet is not that Presbytery without an Apostle even the laying on of the hands of St. Paul 1 Tim. 1.6 From Scripture practise pass we on to Scripture precept and for this consult we the Epistles to Timothy and Titus in which we have the exact platform of the Churches Ministry as communicated and perpetuated from the Apostles Behold we then the Church of Ephesus and the Churches of Creet in them we finde many Presbyters and above those Presbyters in dignity and office Timothy and Titus and that Timothy and Titus were in dignity and office above those Presbyters appears plainly by that power they had of enacting Ecclesiastical Laws of passing Church censures and of ordaining by imposition of hands in which is the work and the office proper and peculiar to Timothy and Titus above those Presbyters which were in their Churches And observe those instructions given by St. Paul to Timothy and Titus in their particular persons have been and yet are continued in the Church as sacred Rules to regulate for ever the Function and Office of an Episcopal presidency 1 Tim. 5.22 Tit. 1.5 1 Tim. 5.19 Tit. 3.10 which Function and Office extends it self not onely to the ordaining of Presbyters but also to the exercising a Disciplinary power and an Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction over them as appears by many plain Texts given by the Apostle But 2 from the Scriptures Authority pass we on to take a short view of the Churches History Which History from the most sacred and inviolable Records tells us of many Bishops seated by the Apostles yea many successively continued during the lives of the Apostles And strange it were that St. John who tells us of so many Antichrists 1 Joh. 2.18 should not tell us of Episcopacy being Antichristian if he had had the Spirit of our present times to have believed it such which ●rer l. 3. c 3. sure we are he did not believe for that Irenaeus assures us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his yonger years he saw Polycarpe Bishop of Smyrna whom he knew to be so constituted by the Apostles and amongst those Apostles Tertullian Tert. de P aescript c. 32. is express that St. John himself was one After Tertullian consult we St. Basil and he calls Episcopacy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Apostolical prefecture and presidency August Ep. 44. yea St. Augustine he informs us That Radix Christianae societatis per sedes Apostolorum successiones Episcoporum certa per orbem propagatione diffunditur the Root of Christian communion hath branched and spread it self in a certain propagation throughout the world by the Apostolical Seats and Episcopal Successions which propagation to the spreading Church-fellowship and communion how hath it been transmitted but by Ministerial Ordination Which Ordination was so universally and assuredly owned and acknowledged to be proper to the Episcopal order that Aerius pertinaciously asserting the contrary was by St. Augustine yea by the Catholick Church says Epiphanius condemned of Heresie Further they are known examples which we have of Musaeus and Eutychianus two Grecian Presbyters who having ordained without the Bishop and themselves not being Bishops their Ordination is declared by the Council of Sardis about eleven years after Constantine the Great to be null Concil Sard. can 19. and those they had ordained are reduced to the state and condition of Laicks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as such who had dissembled and forged their Ordination Again we read of Ischyras ordained by Colluthus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one who strongly yet vainly fancied himself a Bishop being indeed a meer Presbyter But as concerning Ischyras the Synod of Alexandria reduceth him to Lay-communion and determines concerning Colluthus that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whatsoever Ordinations he had made they should be all void and invalid To close then we have made good unto you by infallible proofs that imposition of hands in Ordination so plain and evident in the planting is requisit and necessary in the propagating the Church of Christ as being productive of issue and succession in the Ministry which Ministry shall continue in the Church whilest the Church continues in the world And now seeing that onely Apostles and Apostolick-men did ordain and that no meer Presbyters in all the Scriptures are exprest nor in all Church History allowed we see by what Ordination we receive our Saviours Mission here of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them c. But before we pass this point it will be some further confirmation and much more illustration of the truth that we give you some plea of Divine Reason to make good the equity of our present assertion Know then in the Apostles times and Infant-state of the Church Parishes were not divided nor Congregations with their particular Ministers fixt and setled but in one City there were many Presbyters and still as Believers increased their Meetings and Assemblies being in several places they had several persons assigned them for the service of the Ministry which how could it be well ordered without confusion but by the Authority and Presidency of some one above the rest Which Presidency the Apostles during their over-sight over the Churches they retained in themselves but upon their remove they committed to some Apostolick-men as their Successors And indeed it is most agreeable to right reason that that office should not expire whose end did continue
all our Doctrine and Worship And oh if hereby we profess our selves Christians that thus we baptize thus we believe thus we worship thus we bless how great is that Apostacie even from Christianity it self which will deny our Baptism destroy our Creed abolish our Worship and if possible deprive us of our Blessing To close this Beloved Let us as by the profession of a true faith so by the exercise of an holy life O let us so regain and keep firm the love of God the Father that by the grace of Jesus Christ our Lord we may so hold fast the communion of the Holy Ghost Act. 2.3 that our fiery trial shall be but as the Apostles fiery tongues not to consume and destroy but to fortifie and prepare us even to a more firm founding and more glorious building up the Church in the unity of divine Faith and the uniformity of holy Worship Further in the manner and form of Baptisms administration we observe that the Holy Ghost is the third Person in the sacred Trinity and very God upon which it will be very seasonable to enlarge our selves For that which brought Satan like lightening down from Heaven carrying Hell with him it was his rebellious pride of Ero similis Altissimo I will be like to the most High and failing in that proud attempt of advancing the creature to equal the Creator he hath ever since made it his malicious design to depress the honor of the Creator to the condition of a creature witness the horrid Idolatries among the Heathens and the blasphemous Heresies amongst Christians The horrid Idolatries among the Heathens Rom. 1.23 Changing the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like unto corruptible man and to birds and to four-footed beasts and to creeping things The blasphemous Heresies amongst Christians Heresies denying the thrice blessed and glorious Trinity especially the eternal Godhead and the incommunicable subsistence of the Son and of the Holy Ghost And amongst the many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fighters against the Holy Ghost since the Pentecost tongues silenc'd the Heathen Oracles and the preaching of the Gospel banished their idolatrous worship amongst the many fighters I say against the Holy Ghost the militant Church of Christ hath been chiefly assaulted and infested by the Arians Macedonians and Photinians of old time and by the Socinians and Anabaptists of later years Yea even at this day there are too too many amongst our selves who pretend most to the Spirit yet are most blasphemous against the Spirit heretically denying the Divine nature and eternal Godhead of the Holy Ghost Wherefore in a secret zeal to this sacred truth of the Holy Ghosts Divinity a zeal enkindled by that Spirit which descended in fiery tongues upon the Apostles give me leave to explain and confirm to you these two particulars First That the Holy Ghost is the third Person in the sacred Trinity proceeding from the Father and the Son Secondly That this third Person thus proceeding is very God 1. The Holy Ghost is the third Person of the sacred Trinity proceeding from the Father and the Son And what we here speak in so ineffable a mystery let it be salvâ reverentiâ with due reverence to the Divine Majesty The Holy Ghost is the third Person of the Trinity Mat. 10.20 Joh. 15.26 and we prove it thus The Holy Ghost is called in Scripture the Spirit of the Father not as sent by the Father but proceeding from the Father his mission is temporary and his procession is eternal And it is worth our observation that the Holy Ghost here is said to proceed as the Son is said to be begotten even 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 1.14 by an immanent act so proceeding from him as being of the same essence with him And as the Holy Ghost is called the Spirit of the Father Gal. 4.6 Joh. 16.15 so also of the Son And seeing Christ saith All that the Father hath are mine what the Holy Ghost receives by procession from the Father the same he receives also from the Son and that by one immanent act of eternal spiration from them both which act of spiration was signified by our Saviour when he breath'd upon the Apostles Joh. 20.22 thereby giving them the Holy Ghost Now that the Holy Ghost thus proceeding from the Father and the Son is a distinct person from the Son and the Father is most firmly proved from that of S. John where we have expresly the Comforter Joh. 15.26 the Spirit of truth sent by the Son from the Father And lest any should think the Spirit the same in person as he is in essence with the Father our Saviour answers the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Neuter with an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Masculine to denote say the Antients the distinct person of the Holy Ghost An Heterosis like unto this we have in the Text In textu legitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsum in margine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsa verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conteret est masculinun Disciple all nations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Neuter yet is it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Masculine The like very aptly observe in the Septuagint upon Gen. 3.15 A dispute it is whether to read ipse ipsa or ipsum he she or it shall bruise thy head The Septuagint resolves the doubt that it is not meant of mankind in general as the Rabbins would have it and so read ipsum it nor yet of the blessed Virgin in particular as the Romanist contends for it and so read ipsa she but of Christ himself and that is ipse he For so the Septuagint reads it with an Haeterosis I will put enmity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 between thy seed and between her seed where the Antecedent is in the Neuter but the Relative they give us in the Masculine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not she nor it but he pointing unto Christ He shall bruise thy head Many very many the like observations I might give you very frequent in sacred Writ but I instance in these as to second the Father's Note upon that of S. John so to hint unto you how necessary to the interpreting and so to the understanding of sacred Scripture humane literature is however cryed down and declaim'd against by the Illiterate and the Enthusiasts 2. The Holy Ghost the third Person in the sacred Trinity is very God Of this we have several proofs in sacred Scripture giving him the Names the Attributes the Works and the Worship of God To give you a cursory view only of these First The Names of God Whereas it is said the Lord Deut. 32. ●2 Isa 63.14 even Jehovah led Israel in the wilderness the Prophet he tells us this Jehovah was the Spirit of the Lord even the Holy Ghost Again that in the Acts is plain and full Why hath Satan filled thine heart saith S. Peter to
Ananias to lye unto the Holy Ghost Act 5.3 4. and in so doing thou hast not lyed unto men but unto God Again we are said to be Temples of God and how Why in that the Spirit of God even the Holy Ghost who is God dwelleth in us One proof more 1 Cor. 3.16 where it is said The diversities of gifts the differences of administrations and the diversities of operations are all from the Holy Spirit 1 Cor. 12.4 5 6. who is called God and Lord working all in all v. 11. yea even dividing to every man severally as he will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not as a Minister of God according to anothers command but as the Author who is himself God according to his own will As then Christ proves his Divinity in that he communicates life Joh. 5.21 so from hence we prove the Divinity of the Holy Ghost that he distributes his gifts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even as he will Secondly The Attributes of God As that he is eternal Heb 9.14 1 Cor. 2.10 Mar. 12.28 Is 139.7 that he is omniscient that he is omnipotent and that he is omnipresent And much of force there is in this argument of the Holy Ghost's omnipresence an argument not so easily evaded by the sophistical disputes of the Heretick The Holy Ghost in all the Saints of Christs Church is as the soul in all the members of mans body quickning actuating and ordering them so that as there is but one Body Eph. 4.4 so but one Spirit One and the same Holy Ghost then at one and the same time sanctifieth by his gracious presence and operation the Saints of God in heaven and in earth And how is this possible but to a person infinite and omnipresent Thirdly The Works of God As to him is attributed the Creation of the World the giving of Life the distribution of Grace the governing the Church and the Resurrection of the Dead yea by him was Christ conceiv'd in the womb anointed to his Ministry and rais'd from the grave Heb. 7.7 And upon S. Pauls argument which holds to be without all contradiction The less is blessed of the greater upon this argument must the humanity of Christ as Mediator be less in dignity then the Holy Ghost which could not be if the Holy Ghost were not God for that by vertue of the hypostatical union Christ Col. 1.15 as man is the the first-born of every creature Fourthly The Worship of God Adored he is in that Trisagion of the Churches Anthem Rev. 4.8 Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which was Rom. 9.1 and is and is to come Attested he is as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Discerner of the heart and the Searcher of the Conscience Yea invocated he is in the form of Blessing for his spiritual communion and invocated he is in the form of Baptism 2 Cor. 13.14 for his power of regeneration And here review we the form of Baptism We are baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into the name Bez. in loc that is invocato nomine says Beza by invocating the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost But this is too little for so full an Emphasis To be baptiz'd then into the name what is it but by Baptism to be obliged to the faith worship and obedience of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost For that Baptism being the seal of the Covenant of grace the Regius Character the Royal stamp of this seal is the name of the sacred Trinity so S. Augustine Wherefore as God in the Trinity of persons owns us to be his people so again do we as his people vow faith worship and obedience unto that sacred Trinity of persons as our God Here if I should ask those who now have rak'd up the long since buried Heresie of Macedonius what is their fear of affirming the Holy Ghost God Is it to assert many Gods how vain is this fear how false were that assertion For in the mysterie of the Trinity the distinction of the Persons does not multiply the Nature of the Godhead neither does the Unity of the Nature nullifie the Persons For the Father is God begetting the Son the Son is the same God begotten of the Father and the Holy Ghost is the same God proceeding from the Father and the Son So that each Person is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the manner of subsistence whereby the Godhead is distinguished not a part of the Godhead whereby the essence is divided And as to the procession of the Holy Ghost though true it is after the Orthodox Faith was determined and confirm'd by those Orthodox Fathers who in that Oecumenical Council of Constantinople call'd by the Emperor Theodosius did suppress the then spreading Heresie of Macedonius adding to the Nicene Creed what concerns more fully the Faith of the Holy Ghost that he is the Lord and giver of life who proceedeth from the Father c. Though after this there arose a great controversie betwixt the Greek and Latine Church concerning the Holy Ghost's procession the Grecians affirming it from the Father by the Son the Latines from the Father and the Son After a long time the controversie was composed in the Florentine Synod by the prudence piety and learning of good Bessarion the Crecians being satisfied by the Latines that the Filioque and the Son added to the Nicene Creed was taken from that of Athanasius as more fully exprest to declare the procession of the Holy Ghost But to return to the Administration of Baptism which is very aptly called by the Antients Sacramentum Fidei the Sacrament of Faith as admitting into the houshold of the faithful and being the Sacrament of Faith it is administred in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost as being the sum of our Faith To confess the faith of the Trinity the Antient Church did use their trina immersio a threefold immersion And again to confess the Unity they had but one immersion Greg. l. 1 ep 41. And therefore Gregory writes to Leander the Bishop that it was no matter of reproof whether Baptism was administred with once or with thrice dipping or sprinkling quoniam in tribus immersionibus Personarum trinitas in una potest Divinitatis singularitas designari In three immersions the Trinity of Persons and in one immersion the Unity of Essence may be confest and declared Yea when we say I baptize thee in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost in the name not in the names we profess the power majesty and authority of all the three Persons to be coequal and so in essence and unity co-eternal In those places where the Church useth three immersions or aspersions as at this day in many Countries the Church does there the first dipping or sprinkling is with a nominating the Father the second the Son the third
3.15 or addeth thereto No man disannulleth or addeth that is No man ought to disannul or adde under peril of hainous impiety and shameful punishment And let not any think St. John seals up onely the Book of Revelations but that guided by the Spirit of Truth he seals up the whole Books of the New Testament with that dreadful Commination against all Violators of the sacred Scriptures And this whether it be in the Letter or the Sense of Christs holy Word for that of Tertullian is most firmly true Tert. de Praescript c. 17. Tantum veritati obstrepit adulter sensus quantum corruptor stilus To impose an adulterate sense is as much injury to the Word of Truth as to violate the proper phrase And therefore Valentinus and so the Heresies of our times do as much damage to the Scriptures verity in misinterpreting the Sense though they spare the Letter as Marcion did by mangling the sentences and chopping off the words Hear then and tremble O ye seduced Souls who through some carnal prejudice and temporal interest involve your selves in this so horrid sin of Scripture-Sacriledge for that perverting the sense or corrupting the Letter of Christs holy Word of Truth 2 Pet. 3.16 ye do it to your own destruction 2. Observe Beloved these two sure Rules of Instruction and Exhortation 1. Keep close to the Doctrine of the Scriptures 2. Hold fast to the Judgment of the Church Keep close to the doctrine of the Scriptures that will keep you from the seductions of the Romanist Hold fast to the Judgment of the Church that will preserve you from the Errors of the Separatist For so hath God been pleased to make the Militant State of our Mother the Church of England to be betwixt the eager opposition of two enraged Enemies the Church of Rome and the Brethren of the Separation against whom she thus makes good the combate from the Authority of the sacred Scriptures and the Judgment of the Primitive Church Urging the Authority of the Scriptures the Romanist flies at the point of that weapon and would soon be beat out of the field were it not some return he makes by pretending the Church Again Urging the Judgment of the Church the Separatist staggers at that blow and would soon fall to the ground were it not some hold he catcheth by wresting the Scriptures To close then That ye may continue firm and sound in the Faith be careful that in the Epidemical distempers of the times ye change not the dyet of your Souls least what you think to make your food prove your poyson Feed on your Mothers Milk keep to that sum of our Churches Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government which is contained in the Publick Liturgy in the Thirty nine Articles the Books of Homilies and Ordination all consenting with the Word of God and Truth of Christ Withal see that to the confession of a true Faith Aquin. ye joyn the confession of an holy life Confitetur qui nulla parte diffitetur He confesses truly who confesseth thorowly Confess we with the mouth and with the hand in our words and in our works This is the best Harmony of Confessions And thus Matth. 10.32 Confess we Christ before men and he will confess us before his Father which is in Heaven Own we him in this Tru●h and he will own us in his Glory hear we his Word and do we his Will so shall we receive his Reward and this in an eternal Rest unto our Souls Thus have we done with the Explication and the Application of what concerns the Mission and Commission together with the several Instructions given by our Saviour to his Apostles in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Teaching them to observe whatsoever I have commanded you Halleluiah THE FIRST SERMON UPON Coloss 1. v. 18 19. And he is the Head of the Body the Church who is the beginning the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the preheminence for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell OUR Lord Jesus Christ being ascended into the highest Heavens Introduct and there sate down on the right hand of God Rom 8.34 Heb. 7.25 he ever lives to make intercession for us From which exaltation and intercession the Apostle draws his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ being able to save unto the utmost all that come unto God by him Able to save unto the utmost for that in his intercession is applied unto the Church for her salvation the utmost efficacie of the richest price the fullest power and the highest favour that humanity can receive from God or Divinity communicate to man For it is worth our observing That our blessed Lord to make our salvation sure he saves us by all means possible for salvation to be secur'd He saves us by ransom by rescue and by request by way of price by way of power and by way of favour Christs Resurrection that gives testimony to the sufficiencie of price laid down in his Passion his Ascension that gives testimony to the sufficiencie of power which he exercised in his Resurrection his sitting at Gods right hand that gives testimony to the sufficiencie of favour whereby he is exalted in his Ascension and lastly the Intercession of Christ that is applicatory of all these for the full and final redemption of his chosen In his Intercession he pleads the merit of his Passion as the full paiment he pleads the efficacie of his Resurrection as his clear acquittance he pleads the benefit of his Ascension as giving actual possession Eph. 1.6 Mat. 17.5 Heb. 1.2 and pleads the vertue of his Session at the right hand of the Father as thereby declared to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beloved Son of God and lawful Heir of Heaven Yea our holy Jesus and blessed Mediator being sate down at the right hand of God he is not only by a gracious decree appointed by an holy unction consecrated but also by a glorious investiture from the Father he is established in the spiritual oeconomy Act. 2.36 Rom. 14.9 Mat. 28.18 and actual administration of that soveraign authority whereby he is constituted and declared to be Lord and Christ Judge of quick and dead King of heaven and earth and as S. Paul here gives us the description Head of the body the Church the beginning the first-born from the dead c. Connexion Before we give you the Division of the words we must give you their Dependance to which we are directed by the Copulative and And he is the Head of the body the Church which Copulative does join what we must not separate the Context and the Text. If then we do but look three Verses back we find how the Apostle having set forth the benefits of Redemption he presently subjoins a description of the