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A01638 A golden chaine of divine aphorismes written by John Gerhard Doctor of Divinitie and superintendent of Heldburg. Translated by Ralph Winterton fellow of Kings Colledge in Cambridge; Loci communes theologici. English Gerhard, Johann, 1582-1637.; Winterton, Ralph, 1600-1636.; Cecil, Thomas, fl. 1630, engraver. 1632 (1632) STC 11769; ESTC S103039 111,208 568

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Wife and the Kindred of the Husband as also between the Husband and the Kindred of the Wife there is such Affinitie that they may not marry one another 43 Therefore according to the Constitutions of all Lawes in a right Line Prohibition extends it self Infinitely 44 In a Collaterall Line by the Provinciall Lawes Prohibition is extended to the Third degree 45 And it respects not onely Consanguinitie but also Affinitie 46 And it is good counsell which is given by Ictus That in joyning together in matrimonie we are not onely to consider what is Lawfull but also what is Honest 47 The Principall end of marriage is the propagation of mankind and of the Church consequently 48 The Lesse-Principall ends are That the Man and the Wife may be mutuall and faithfull helps the one to the other and that they may be a Type of Christ and his Church 49 The Accidentall end is The avoiding of fornication 50 For what before the fall was instituted for an Office or Duty after the fall became an Help or Remedie 51 Before Matrimonie not without good reason there must go Betrothing 52 Which is the Promise of future Marriage 53 After Betrothing there may be a Separation for sundrie causes which are to be judged in the Consistories by godly learned and prudent men 54 In generall we say that Refusalls may be made for more causes and reasons then Divorces may 55 For many things may hinder Matrimonie to be contracted which cannot dissolve it when it is contracted 56 Matrimonie is dissolved by Death and by Adulterie 57 By Adulterie the very Knot of Matrimonie is dissolved insomuch that the party innocent may marrie againe 58 Jerom thinks that the Adulteresse may not be retained Augugustine thinks that she may not be dismissed and put away But we go in a middle way 59 If one partie forsake the other and go away out of malice the Magistrate doth well in providing and taking care for the partie innocent 60 But still we must remember Christs Exclusive That there is no other just Cause of Divorce but onely Adulterie 61 A Statute speaking Exceptively is not extended to other causes Bald. Lib. 28. C. de Adult 62 Inhabilitie of body for the use of Matrimonie doth not make a Divorce but it shewes that no true Matrimonie went before 63 It is proved by this Argument Because that Inhabilitie hapning after marriage doth not admit of a Divorce 64 We may judge the like concerning any errour in the Substantialls 65 Violence is counted equall to Desertion 66 That Matrimonie is to be dissolved for Heresie we do not hold neither do we grant it 67 Virginitie is Subordinate to Wedlock for chastitie in both states is pleasing unto God 68 The Apostle preferres Virginitie before Wedlock to wit in idoneous and fit persons which have the Gift of Continencie Not absolutely but in some respect by reason of troubles which follow those that are married and the circumstances of times 69 The yoke of Virginitie is not to be imposed upon any against their wills for all are not able to beare it 70 Therefore it is free for all to marrie But as for those that burne it is necessarie 71 If the Spirit voluntarily make thee a Virgin then art thou a Virgin indeed There is no need of a Vow or any Coaction 72 If thou art a Virgin upon Coaction before God thou art no Virgin neither doth thy Vow profit thee 73 Virginitie of Body without Virginitie of Minde is but Hypocriticall 74 Which is not to be compared with Holy Wedlock but is to be put farre after it 75 It profits nothing to keep the Body Impolluted without and to have the Minde Fuming and Flaming with lusts within 76 What doth it profit to have the Flesh sound and the Minde corrupted 77 And yet what one of a thousand is there of those that Vow Virginitie which keeps his body altogether impolluted 78 But certainly there is not any that hath his Minde free from the burning of lust within 79 Paul himself that great Apostle would here make no Law nor cast a snare upon any man 80 It were to be wished therefore that they which cannot containe themselves would not give up their names to Virginitie and vow to live a single life It is a sumptuous tower and a great word which all cannot receive Bern. Serm. ad Cler. 81 I know no woman and yet I am no Virgin Cassianus cites this saying out of Basil. Lib. 6. de Spir. fornic 82 A good man useth Wedlock well But an evill man useth neither Wedlock nor Virginitie well 83 Christ who is the Bridegroome of the Church be present by his grace with all those that are married that they may leade a godly life and vouchsafe at length to bring us all unto the celestiall Marriage Amen CHAP. XXIII Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning the foure last things DEATH the RESURRECTION the JUDGEMENT and the PLACE either of Eternall JOY or Eternall TORMENT WE have seen the estate of Christs Church Militant here on Earth It remains now that we lift up our mindes and elevate our thoughts to the consideration of the Church Triumphant in the Heavens 2 The Passage of the godly out of the Militant Church into the Church Triumphant is by the gate of Death In which consideration Gregorie Nyssen in his oration concerning Death wittily compareth it to a Midwife which brings us forth into another world unto a life truely so called 3 After Death follows the Judgement whose Forerunner is the Vniversall Resurrection It is appointed unto all men once to die but after this follows the Judgement Hebr. 9.27 4 They that have done good shall come forth unto the resurrection of life and they that have done evill unto the resurrection of damnation John 5.29 5 Foure things there are which are called a mans last the consideration whereof should never depart out of our memorie and these are they Death the Resurrection the Judgement and the Eternall Mansion and habitation of the godly in Heaven and the damned in Hell 6 By the name of Death here we understand not the continuall Miseries of this present life 1 Cor. 15.31 Nor the Death of the Soule in trespasses and sinnes Ephes. 2.5 Nor that Blessed Death by which being dead unto sinne that is freed and delivered from the dominion thereof and so from damnation we live unto God Rom. 6.2 Nor that Eternall Death or second death of the damned Revel 2.11 7 But we understand the Death of the Body which is the separation of Soule from Body the privation of carnall life and the passing away of the little World 8 He that Dies unto Vices before he dies the Death of the Body doth not die an Eternall Death when he dies the Death of the Body Sphinx Phil. Cap. 36. 9 By the gate of Sinne Death entred into the World and so passed upon all men Rom. 5.12 10 Which Death is not the dissolution and reduction of
the Soule into nothing but the departing of the Soule out of the House of the Body The Soule cannot be destroyed Matth. 10.28 11 The Scripture maketh mention but of two receptacles of Soules separated from their bodies The one of the godly the other of the wicked 12 Away then with Purgatorie away with that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or night and sleeping of Soules betweene the Day of Death and the Day of Judgement Away with Pythagoras his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Transmigration of Soules away with Apparitions of Soules 13 For there is no middle place where one can be out of Punishment if he be not in the Kingdome no place where one can be out of the Divells companie if he hath not Fellowship with Christ. August de Pecc Mor. Remiss Cap. 2. 14 Before the Vniversall Resurrection the greater world shall passe away and after that shall follow the Vniversall Judgement 15 Many of the ancients were of opinion that the World should passe away by the Change of Qualitie onely and not by the Abolition of Substance 16 But the Scripture useth words very Emphaticall Heaven and Earth shall passe away Matth. 24.35 Luk. 22.33 17 The Key which is to open our Graves and the Pledge of our Resurrection is the Resurrection of Christ our Head 18 The Resurrection of our bodies is confirmed by manifest Testimonies of the Holy Spirit in the Scripture and they are often repeated 19 The Preludes or forerunners of our Resurrection are the particular examples of those which were raised up againe to life in the Old and New Testament whom Tertullian calls the Candidates of immortalitie 20 Man was at the first both in Body and Soule created for immortalitie The Body is the Soules instrument by which it worketh in actions good or bad The body of the godly is the Temple of the Holy Ghost Yea our bodies are fed with the quickning Body and Bloud of Christ. And how then can they alwayes remaine in the Grave 21 God is the Authour of our Resurrection But Christ is the Finisher thereof in and with his humane nature assumed 22 Not onely all flesh but even the same flesh that was shall be raised up againe 23 Their change in a moment which shall be found alive upon Earth at the last day shall be to them in stead of Death and Resurrection from the dead 24 Neither shall Christ onely raise us up but he shall be also our Judge Joh. 5.27 The Father hath given him authoritie to exequute Judgement 25 Christ when he cometh to Judge the world shall appeare in the same nature which he united unto himself by his Incarnation That Flesh shall sit Judge which stood before the Judge That Flesh shall Judge which was it self formerly Judged 26 This Vniversall Judgement Gods Truth Justice do require 27 The exact Forme Manner and Proceeding in Judgement at the last day Experience it self will then better teach then any humane understanding can now conceive 28 Let us whilst we are here pray unto God with sighes and grones to be delivered from the Sentence of Condemnation in that day Let us now heare the Voice of Invitation that then we may heare the Voice of Consolation 29 After Sentence is once passed immediately followes Execution Then shall they which are set at the right hand of the Judge enter into Life everlasting and they which are on the left shall be cast into Everlasting fire Matth. 25.34.41 30 The Blessednesse of eternall Life comprehendeth in it the Privation and Absence of all Evill and the Presence and Fruition of all Good 31 Wee shall be Freed and delivered from all Sinne and from all Punishment due unto sinne 32 Our vile Body shall be fashioned like unto Christ his glorious Body Philip. 3.21 But there shall be great difference in glorie 33 We shall see God Without end we shall Love him alwayes Without loathing and praise him evermore Without being wearied August 22. de Civit. Dei cap. 30. 34 Vision shall succeed in the place of Faith Fruition in the place of Hope and Charitie here onely Inchoate shall be there Consummate 35 God shall be fulnes of Light to the Vnderstanding superabundance of Peace to the Will and continuance of Eternitie to the Memorie Bern. Serm. 11. Super. Cant. Col. 519. 36 The Saints shall Rejoyce for the Pleasantnesse of Place which they shall possesse for the sweet Companie with whome they shall raigne for the Glorie of their Bodies which they shall put on for the World which they have contemned and for Hell which they have escaped Bonavent in Dioet Cap. 50. 37 Let us then Pant and Breathe for earnest desire after that Life whose King is the Trinitie whose Law is Charitie and whose Measure is Eternitie 38 Neither shall our Being be subject unto Death nor our Knowledge unto Errour nor our Love unto Offence Sphinx Phil. pag. 5. 39 We shall see God face to face we shall heare him speake immediately unto us 40 The Elect shall have Wisdome in the highest degree Righteousnesse in full perfection Joy which is everlasting and shall Sing Prayse and Glorie unto God without end 41 All the Elect Salvation shall see But Glorie in a different degree 42 It hath not at any time entred into the heart of man to conceive what glorie God hath prepared for his Elect. 1 Cor. 2.9 And if his Heart is not able to conceive it much lesse is his Tongue able to expresse it 43 To the Eternall Life of the blessed is opposed the Eternall Death of the damned which in the Revelation is called the Second Death 44 The life of the damned shall be to be alwayes dying and the death of the damned to be alwaies living If it be life why doth it kill and if it be death why doth it endure 45 The damned shall so live that they shall be alwayes dying and so dye that they shall be alwayes living Bern. in Med. Devot Cap. 3. Col. 193. 46 In the Flesh shall they be tormented with Fire and in the Soule with the Worme of Conscience Ibid. 47 It is the Eternitie of the Punishments which beyond all measure increaseth their torments laying upon them a weight unsupportable 48 For to be tormented without end this is that which goes beyond all the bounds of desperation Isidor Clar. Orat. 12. 49 Grievous is the Torment of the damned for the Bitternesse of th● Punishments But it is more grievous for the Diversitie of the Punishments But most grievous for the Eternitie of the Punishments Dionys. in 18. Apocalyps fol. 301. 50 The Gate shall be shut upon them Matth. 25.10 Understand the Gate of Indulgence the Gate of Mercie the Gate of Hope the Gate of Consolation and the Gate of Good Works 51 To be for ever deprived of the beatificall vision of God goes beyond all the Punishments in Hell 52 Being squeezed under the unsupportable weight of Punishments they shall wish they had no being but it shall be all in vaine They shall desire to die but death shall ●lee from them Revel 9.6 53 They shall roare for the very disquietnesse of heart they shall rage for madnesse and gnash their teeth There shall be weeping for griefe and gnashing of teeth for madnesse Bern. Ser. 8. in Psal. 91. 54 Of all which some have a tast even in this Life 55 The Companie of the Divells and the Qualiti● of the Place do exc●edingly increase the Torments of the Damned 56 Neither shall the Torments of the Damned be onely Eternall but they shall also be Without all Intermission at any time The smoake of their Torments ascendeth up for ever and ever Revel 14.11 57 As in Heaven one is more glorious then another So likewise in Hell one shall be more miserable then another August in Enchirid. Cap. 3. 58 We are very curious to know where Hell is But we are not so carefull to learne how we may escape it Our thoughts were better spent in meditating upon it 59 When we sit downe to eat and drink and when we rise from table againe when we lye downe to sleepe and when we rise up againe at all times and in all places it is very good to thinke upon Hell 60 For To thinke upon Hell preserves a man from falling into it Chrysost. Hom. 44. in Matth. 61 Doest thou think to quench the flames of Hell by not speaking of it or Doest thou think thou kindlest the flame thereof by speaking of it Whether thou speakest of it or no the flame is alwayes there alike Idem in Homil 2. in 2. Thess. 62 He deliver us from eternall death who himself died for us He bring us unto eternall Life who himselfe is the Prince of Life blessed for ever To whome with the Father and the Holy Spirit be all honour and glorie World without end Amen FINIS
way of Inherence 31 Immortalitie was a part of that divine Image For God created man to be immortall and made him to be an Image of his own Eternitie Wisd. 2.23 32 That death of the body unto which we are all subject since the fall of Adam is not the naturall condition of man But it is derived upon us as a punishment for the wickednes of his transgression 33 It is not a debt due unto our nature as it was at first created by God but it is our just merit and wages for falling away from God 34 At what time man opened the gate of sinne unto Satan knocking death entred in upon him and so passed upon all men Rom. 5.12 35 That immortalitie unto which man was created as likewise the whole Image of God was a naturall and internall propertie of the humane nature 36 In the body there was a most exact harmonie of all the qualities and it was governed by the soule which was created after the Image of God unto immortalitie 37 As therefore since the fall VVee are by nature the children of wrath Ephes. 2.3 So before his fall the first man was by nature the Son of grace and life 38 But the Degree of Immortalitie which was in our nature at the first institution and the degree that shall be at the perfect restitution are farre different the one from the other 39 The Immortalitie of the first man was That hee had power not to die but the Immortalitie of the Elect shall be hereafter That they cannot die August 6. de Gen. ad lit cap. 25. 40 And further seeing that Immortalitie is a part of the divine Image from hence it is apparant That even in the body of man there is some glimpse of the divine Image 41 The comlinesse of the clay did argue also the beauty of the soul. Bern. Serm. 24. Sup. Cant. Col. 564. 42 If any one ask whether Eve was made after the Image of God or no we answer that the name of Image is taken two wayes 43 Primarily and properly the Image of God was resplendent in the conformitie of the soule and all the powers faculties of man with the Law of God which was common to both sexes saving the diversitie of degrees 44 Secundarily the Image of God was resplendent in that externall priviledge of Dominion and rule the eminencie whereof properly belonged unto the man 45 And that there might be nothing wanting to mans felicity beside the grace of soule and body God added also the grace of place for he gave him his dwelling-place in Paradise 46 Man was created by God partly Spirituall and partly Corporeall Therefore God gave unto him also a twofold Paradise both a Spirituall and a Corporeall 47 The Corporeall or Terrestriall Paradise was a Type and School of the Spirituall and Celestiall Paradise that is great tranquillitie and joy in the minde of man 48 If any man be desirous that we should show unto him in what part of the earth the Corporeall Paradise was situate That we will doe if he will first plainly show unto us the situation of the earth as it was before the floud 49 That the garden of Paradise is yet extant and to be seen then will wee beleeve when any man can bring us a bough or a branch from thence or else demonstrate it unto us upon a good foundation 50 It is certain that Henoch and Elias live in Paradise But in what Paradise Not the Terrestriall but the Celestiall where Christ promised the good thief that hee should be Luk. 23.43 51 There were two trees especially which were a great grace to the garden of Paradise to wit the tree of Life the tree of Knowledge of good and evill Gen. 2.9 52 In the tree of Life there was set before man a Preservative against sicknesse and old age as also a Type of eternall beatitude 53 The tree of Knowledge was mans Temple and Altar and the service which he was to have performed unto God was To abstain from the fruit thereof 54 After mans fall it was so called from the Event For by tasting of the fruit thereof man learnt by wofull experience what a great good he had deprived himself of by reason of his sinne and what a great evil he drew upon himself by his disobedience 55 As concerning the question about the production of souls whether by way of Propagation or by a dayly and immediate Creation we do not dislike the modestie of those which say That it is sufficient for them to beleeve and know whither they shall come by living a godly life although they be ignorant from whence they came August 10. de Gen. ad lit cap. 23. 56 Let me be ignorant of the originall of my soul if so be that I can come to the knowledge of the propagation of originall sinne and the redemption of souls Aug. Epist. 157. ad Optat. 57 If by the Image of God we understand according to the Scripture phrase true righteousnesse and holinesse The Holy Ghost witnesseth that we have lost it and we finde it true by wofull experience 58 For what is Originall sinne but the losse and want of the di●vine Image which succeeded in the place of Originall righteousnesse 59 This doctrine concerning the Image of God leads us as it were by the hand that so we may come to the knowledge of Gods mercy and our own misery and further establisheth our hope 60 All laud and praise be given to God the Father God the Sonne and God the Holy Ghost To the Father which created us in Adam after his own Image to the Sonne which merited for us the renewing of that Image and to the Holy Ghost by whom this Image beginneth again to be renewed in us CHAP. IX Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning ORIGINALL SINNE That is The Fall of our first parents and the corruption of nature which followed thereupon and is propagated unto their posteritie 1 THe first man continued not in the integritie and perfection wherein he was created and therefore it descended not upon his posteritie by any right of inheritance 2 He followed the deceitfull perswasion of the Serpent and so fell into sinne and the transgression of Gods commandment 3 In that naturall Serpent the infernall Serpent lay lurking 4 So then the Serpent which by his subtiltie deceived our first parents was disguised For there was a Divell in the shape of a Serpent 5 He sets upon the woman first being the weaker and not to be compared with man for the gift and endowment of wisdome 6 By a treacherous and deceitfull question about the meaning of Gods commandment he sollicits her to a very dangerous kinde of doubting 7 Outwardly with a faigned voice he propounds a question unto her Inwardly he wounds her soul with venomous darts and inspires into her the poison of doubting 8 Afterwards being grown more audacious and bold by reason of his successe he turns Eve● doubting into
not onely the punishment and cause of sinne but it is also sinne it self 52 For there is in it disobedience and rebellion against the dominion and law of the minde August lib. 5. contra Julian cap. 3. 53 Neither hath the veice of evil concupiscence place in the inferiour faculties of the soul onely but also in the superiour 54 For the will of a man not yet regenerate is prone to evill and to vanities 55 Amongst the works of the flesh these are reckoned Heresies Idolatrie Strife Variance c. Gal. 5.20 56 From whence we may gather evidently That the Flesh is to be taken for the whole man such as he is since the fall without the grace of God and regeneration 57 By Originall sinne the whole nature of man was most intimately and inwardly corrupted But yet we must distinguish between the vice and the very substance of man For the substance of man is the good work of God and Nature 58 Sinne is an evil Adjunct or evil present with me saith S. Paul Rom. 7.21 Therefore it is not any thing consisting or subsisting of it self 59 Men are conceived in sinne Therefore they are not very sinne itself 60 The whole man is the subject of originall sin with all the powers of the soul and members of the body 61 Originall righteousnesse was not onely an equall and just temperament of the body but also a rectitude of all the powers of the soul and an intrinsecall ornament 62 So Originall sinne which succeeded in the place of originall righteousnesse is not any diseased qualitie of body but an infection of all the powers of the soul. 63 For Habit and Privation are to be considered with reference to the same Subject 64 This evil is propagated by carnall generation 65 Therefore Man since the fall is flesh because he is born of flesh John 3.6 He is by nature the childe of wrath Ephes. 2.3 By being born then he contracts sinne for which he becomes the childe of wrath 66 Whosoever therefore are born of parents according to carnall generation are also guilty of originall sinne 67 Therefore even the children of the faithfull and those that are born again bring this originall sinne and pollution with them into this world 68 For it is Regeneration and not Generation that maketh Christians August 3. de peccat merit remiss cap. 9. 69 Men are made and not born Christians Tertull. in Apol. cap. 17. 70 Onely He was born without sinne who without the seed of man was conceived by the Holy Ghost in the wombe of the Virgin 71 He is not infected with the pollution of sinne who was born holy and sanctified from the sanctified wombe of the Virgin 72 To the participation of this priviledge and dignitie that is To be free from Originall sinne we do not admit the blessed Virgin herself 73 We say That the glorious Virgin Mary conceived by the Holy Ghost not That she was conceived by the Holy Ghost We say That a Virgin brought forth not That she was brought forth of a Virgin Bern. Epist. 174. ad Lugdun 74 Some effects of Originall sinne are onely punishments some are both punishments and sinnes 75 Punishments are both Temporall and Eternall as sundry calamities innumerable swarms of diseases temporall death the wrath of God eternall damnation 76 Punishments and sinnes both are evil motions of concupiscence damnable desires of the heart and an heap of actuall sinnes 77 The pravitie of originall sinne draws us headlong into vice Cassiodor in Psalm 118. 78 The number of these actuall sinnes are in respect of us altogether numberlesse For who can understand his errours Psalm 19.12 79 The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth all those that beleeve from all sinne both Originall and Actuall 1. John 1.7 80 With which we are sprinkled in Baptisme which is therefore called the holy and saving laver or the washing of regeneration Tit. 3.5 81 Unto which Regeneration Renovation or renewing is added as an inseparable companion though it be not altogether absolute and perfect in this life 82 For if there were a perfect renewing in Baptisme then would not the Apostle say That the inward man is renewed dayly Aug. 2. de peccat merit remiss cap. 7. 83 Knowing therefore the extreme corruption of our nature let us send up our prayers and sighs unto Christ our Physician to renew us every day more and more till at length we be perfectly renewed in the life to come which is eternall CHAP. X. Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning FREE-VVILL That is The Power which is left in man since the fall 1 THe poyson of Originall sin hath quite overrun and inwardly infected all the powers and faculties of man 2 Whereupon there must needs follow great Detriment and Decrement or losse and decay in them all 3 The Powers and Faculties of man are chiefely to be estimated by the Reasonable Soule which was created after the Image of God 4 The Faculties of the Reasonable Soul are two a Mind to know and understand and a Will to elect and choose 5 From the concurse of these two faculties ariseth that which is commonly called Free-will 6 Which is a Facultie both of the Minde and the Will For the arbitrement or judgement is of the Minde and the Freedome or Libertie is of the Will 7 Libertie or Freedome is attributed unto the Will first having a respect unto the Manner of Working which is Free and Voluntarie 8 For it is not compelled or violently carried away by any Externall motion neither doth it work onely by a Naturall instinct but it hath an Internall and Free principle or cause of its owne motion 9 This Libertie is a naturall and essentiall propertie of the Will 10 And therefore it was not lost by the fall 11 For the Will did not cease to be a VVill by reason of the fall 12 This Libertie from coaction or necessitie is called Interior Libertie or Libertie in the Subject 13 Therefore the VVill of man in this respect is alwayes free though not alwayes good August in Enchirid. cap. 30. 14 But yet the will of man is so free that still it must needs acknowledge the all-ruling power of God 15 And therefore it is not free from Law and Obligation 17 For God hath imprinted in the minde of man certain Naturall Motions the light and leading whereof the VVill must follow 17 If it follows them it is free 18 For the True Libertie and Freedome is to serve God and to obey his Law 19 In which sense Tullies saying is very good in his Oration for Cluentius VVe are servants to the Lawes that so we may be freemen 20 Therefore as in respect of Libertie or freedome from coaction man hath allwaies free-will yea since his fall 21 So in respect of Libertie or Freedome from obligation man hath never free-will neither had he before his fall 22 Againe this Libertie or Freedome of the VVill is estimated in respect of the
with God 74 The Holy Ghost without us worketh in us to will that which is good And when we will and will after such and such a manner it is he that worketh together with us to enable us to work 75 For the children of God are so moved to working that they also have a part in the working August de corrept grat cap. 2. 76 This may be called Libertie or freedome from the service of sin For where there is the Spirit of God regenerating and illuminating a man there is Libertie or freedome 2. Cor. 3.17 77 But yet that Libertie or freedome of the Will being freed standeth still in need of the aid and guidance of the Holy Ghost 78 For seeing that even in the regenerate the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh Gal. 5.17 Therefore they are not fully free from all sinne 79 In the spirit of the regenerate there is a free servitude and in the flesh of the regenerate there is a servile freedome 80 In the other life at length the regenerate shall obtain full and plenarie libertie or freedome of will by which they shall be freed not onely from the service of sinne but also from all manner of sinne from all miserie and from all fear of falling 81 Which may be called a Libertie or freedome from sinne and mu●abilitie 82 By which they shall not onely not sinne nor onely have power not to sinne but also have no power to sinne at all To that Libertie freedome Christ bring us who is the authour of our Libertie and freedome CHAP. XI Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning the LAVV. 1 THe Word and the Sacraments serve for the repairing of man being soveraign Antidotes and preservatives against the poyson of sinne and our spirituall diseases 2 The Word is reduced to two chief heads the Law and the Gospell 3 By the Law we come to the knowledge of our diseases and by the Gospell we are directed to our Physician 4 For the Law was given by Moses but Grace and truth by Jesus Christ. John 1.17 5 The Law which was given by Moses is divided into the Morall the Judiciall and the Ceremoniall 6 The Morall Law was onely repeated by Moses by a solemn promulgation for it was at first ingraven in the heart of man 7 And it is the Glasse of Gods Eternall justice The glasse of Natures perfection such as it was before the fall The glasse of Sinne and the inward corruption of Nature since the fall The glasse of Obedience which the regenerate are to perform and The glasse of Perfection which shall follow in the life to come 8 They which would have this Law to be thrust out of the Church deserve themselves to be thrust out of the Church 9 For they gainsay Christ who began his preaching from the expounding of the Law Matth. 5.6 7. 10 They gainsay the Apostles who preached Repentance and Remission of sinnes in the name of Christ. 11 The Law is indeed a Glasse to behold Sinne but it is not a remedie to cure sinne 12 But yet unlesse we first come to a sight of our sinne we can have no desire or will to seek for a remedie 13 For They that be whole need not a Physician Matth. 9.12 that is They that think themselves to be whole for indeed all men are not onely sick but even dead in their sinnes 14 The Law was given that we should seek for Grace August d● Spir. lit cap. 15. 15 What the Law commands Faith obtains Idem Homil. 29. in Joan. 16 By the Law sinne is made known unto us and by Faith it is abolished Ambros. in 3. cap. Rom. 17 And therefore the ministerie of death was in this regard necessarie that we might desire and seek for life in Christ. 18 God poureth not the oyl of of Mercie but into the vessell of an humble and contrite heart Bern. serm 3. in Annun● Col. 113. 19 God doth not pardon unlesse thou dost first acknowledge thy sinnes neither doth he cover them unlesse thou dost first lay them open neither doth he send comfort unlesse thou beest first grieved for them 20 The Law is the perfect way to Eternall life but it was weak through the flesh Rom. 8.3 And therefore it is not available for us unto Eternall life 21 The Law is spirituall It requires intire obedience of body of soul and spirit inward and outward throughout all the parts of our life It requires that our thoughts words and deeds be spirituall It requires soundnesse and perfection of Nature every way 22 But we are carnall Rom. 7.14 We are born flesh of flesh John 3.6 Neither are we altogether freed from the old flesh in this life 23 Therefore we cannot fulfill the Law in this life 24 There is no man that sinneth not 1. Kings 8.46 Now we know that To sinne and To fulfill the Law these are contrarie the one to the other Therefore there is no man that can fulfill the Law 25 That every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God Rom. 3.22 26 God by the word of the Law hath concluded all under sin Rom. 11.32 Galat. 3.19 27 The Rule of the Affirmative precepts or commandments is tha● First Of the loving and fearing God above all things 28 The Rule of the Negativ● precepts or commandments is that Last Of not coveting August de perfect just 29 Therefore the Affirmative precepts or commandments are not satisfied or fulfilled by the love and fear of God begunne in us in any kinde whatsoever 30 Neither are the Negative precepts or commandments satisfied or fulfilled by our abstaining from outward offences in any kinde whatsoever 31 Though we should begin our outward obedience in never so great a measure and eschew outward offences yet still we should fail in the first and last commandments 32 Therefore in the Decalogue or Ten Commandments there is expresse mention made of the outward and grosser offences that the minde of man may conceive by the judgement of God what to judge of the grievousnesse of inward offences 33 Before God he is an Adulterer not onely that lies with another mans wife but whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her Matth. 5.28 34. Before God he is a Thief not onely that takes another mans goods from him by force but whosoever doth usurp them by coveting them in an unlawfull manner 35 Gods Laws and commandments do not onely binde the hand and the other outward members but the whole man 36 Who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from sinne my heart is free from concupiscence Prov. 20.9 Who then can boast that he is not a transgressour of the Law 37 Therefore the promises of the Law profit us nothing 38 But in Christ All the promises of God are Yea and Amen 2. Cor. 1.20 39 For what the Law could not do God sending his Sonne hath done for us Rom. 8.3
unjust 63 If any thing be commanded which seems hard and grievous to be born yet we must beare it But if that which is commanded be impious and unjust we are bound not to obey it 64 We owe Tribute unto Kings and Magistrates because they labour for us because they rule and govern us and because they defend us 65 But here a due moderation is required For the tribute must be such as the Subjects are well able to pay and such as the necessitie of the commonwealth requires 66 Here the question is moved whether that place 1. Sam. 8. is to be understood of Right or Custome It may be answered by distinguishing between the Necessitie of Government and the Pleasure of the King 67 Prayers also are a due which subjects are to pay unto kings and those that are in authoritie as the Apostle teacheth expressely 1. Tim. 2.2 68 It was well said by B●genhagius That if we were as ready to pray for the Magistrates as we are to d●●ract from them then certainly things would go better with us and it would be the better for us 69 The Hebrew Rabbies have such a saying as this Wo unto tha● people which bury their own Lords Rabb Solomon Jar in Comment Hos. 1. 70 And Antigonus after his death is often digged up again by his Subjects 71 And thus much concerning the Politicall Order or Civill State That which remains concerns the Politicall Doctrine 72 God who establisheth kingdomes grant unto all Christian Kings Princes and Governours peace and tranquillity both in body and minde here in this life and eternall salvation both of body and soul in the life to come Amen CHAP. XXII Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning WEDLOCK OR MARRIAGE WEdlock is a state which was ordained by God even then when man stood in his integritie and before his fall 2 Marriage is honourable in all and the bed undefiled Heb. 13.4 3 But to speak properly and accurately it is no Sacrament according to the definition which is given unto Baptisme and the Lords Supper 4 For it wants the externall and visible element according to Gods institution and likewise it wants the promise which is proper to the Gospell 5 But if we speak generally and in a large sense so it may be called a Sacrament that is a signe of an holy thing Ephes. 5.32 6 The proper place and seat of the doctrine concerning marriage is to be found in Gen. 2.18 c. 7 Unto which Christ calling us back Matth. 19.5 sheweth that the answer and solution of all questions and doubts concerning Marriage is to be fetcht from that place 8 There it is taught that Marriage is the lawfull indissoluble knot and joyning together of two onely to wit the man and the woman 9 There Digamie and Polygamie that is having two wives or more is against the institution of marriage 10 Digamie is not when a man after the death of the first woman marrieth a second but when a man at the same time hath two wives Chrysost. in 1. Tim. 3. 11 For neither are second marriages nor third nor more then these forbidden by the Holy Ghost if so be that those that marry marry in the Lord. 12 Again The woman after the death of her first husband may be married again as before and yet oftener 13 God tolerated in the fathers in the Old Testament Polygamie or having many wives but he no where commanded it 14 God tolerated it I say not for unbridled lusts sake but for propagating of the Church and promoting the promise concerning the blessed ●eed 15 And so God used that which was evill in them to a good end 16 That the Marriage-knot may be lawfull there is required the mutuall consent of both parties 17 Therefore there must be no violence used neither must there be any errour especially such as toucheth the substantialls of marriage 18 The Consent which is required must be lawfull honest just free full and sincere 19 But though we said there must not be any errour yet if the faith be once pledged and the promise of marriage once made it is not to be broken upon every errour 20 Neither is the Contract to be made void and of none effect for want of every condition which is required in the Consent 21 And further the Consent of the parties is without force and efficacie if there be not also the Consent of their parents 22 And therefore we say that the Consent of the parents is as well required as the mutuall Consent of the parties and that not onely for honesties sake but also for necessitie 23 And this we say following the authoritie of the Divine Naturall and Civill law 24 Which also some Canons of the Pontificiall law especially the more ancient do approve 25 If the Parents forget the duty which they owe unto their children or if they will abuse their power the Magistrate is to succeed into the place of the parents 26 Unto the lawfull joyning together in Matrimonie this is also required that the degrees of kindred be not violated 27 Who may lawfully be joyned together in Matrimonie and who are forbidden we are taught in Leviticus chapt 18 and 20. by an expresse limitation of degrees both of Consanguinitie and Affinitie 28 Which Texts we say are to be taken and understood not onely of the Persons but also of the Degrees 29 And we expresly and plainly affirme that these are the Constitutions of the Law of Nature 30 In these therefore there is no place for Dispensation 31 To these Divine Lawes not without good and wholesome counsell and advice for greater reverence there are also added by godly Magistrates Prohibitions even to the third degree of an unequall line 32 Which we also hold fit to be observed but yet so that upon a good and probable cause they may be relaxed 33 But still there must be a Proviso or care had that Dispensation be not turned into Dissipation 34 In the Computation or reckoning of the Degrees we follow the Disposition and order of the Canon● 35 Not that we acknowledge our selves to be bound unto the Canons of the Pontificiall Law but because herein it is sound and good 36 In a right line there is given this Rule As many as the Persons are so many are the Degrees excepting one 37 In a Collaterall equall Line this Rule is given As many degrees as one Person is distant from the stock so many degrees is it distant from the other 38 In a Collaterall unequall Line In what degree the Person more remote is distant from the stock in that likewise it is distant from the other 39 In respect of Affinitie also some there are which are not to be married together 40 But this Affinitie which hindreth marriage doth not stretch it self farre 41 For betweene the kindred of the husband and the kindred of the wife there is no such Affinitie but that they may marry one another 42 But betweene the