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A09026 The grounds of diuinitie plainely discouering the mysteries of Christian religion, propounded familiarly in diuers questions and answeres: substantially proued by scriptures; expounded faithfully, according to the writings of the best diuines, and euidently applyed by profitable vses, for the helpe and benefite of the vnlearned which desire knowledge. To the which is prefixed a very profitable treatise, containing an exhortation to the study of the word, with singular directions for the hearing and reading of the same. By Elnathan Parr minister of the word, at Palgraue in Suffolke.; Grounds of divinitie. Parr, Elnathan, d. 1622. 1614 (1614) STC 19314; ESTC S103147 128,560 328

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as other beasts nor clad in apparrell as now but of a soft smooth skinne and naked yet they were not subiect to the iniuries of the wether as raine wind heat cold c. They were not ashamed Not as though any vndecent thing were spoken of them as now he is accounted a beast that is not ashamed of his nakednesse but first to shew that inwardly in their mindes did shine the Image of God that is Innocencie sanctity and Integritie c. in which if they had continued they should not haue néeded their figge-leaues nor any apparell Secōdly that outwardly in their bodies there was excéeding beautie and perfection of all parts so that there was no vncomelinesse no not in those members which after sinne natural shame for their deformity and vnséemlinesse teacheth vs to couer Thirdly that in the inferiour parts of the minde and body there was no inordinat motion or appetite all members of the body and inferiour desires being ruled and gouerned by the Inward grace of the minde So that if wée meditate of these things we can not but conceiue that the happinesse of our first parents was very great Now we are to consider of the conditions on which this happinesse did stand for they were created thus but mutable and changeable this state to continue and in the end to be translated to a celestiall life Ge. 2.16.17 if they kept the Commaundement of God otherwise not The Commandement was about one of the Trées which were in the middest of the Garden namely the Tree of Knowledge of good and euill which was so called not of the effect as though it had a quality to sharpen the wit but of the euent being a Sacrament of triall and admonition to them that if they did eate of it then they should haue wofull experience of the good they had lost and of the euil they had gotten they hauing before a speculatiue knowlege but not a practical experience hereof The other trée was called the trée of Life both because it had a power or vertue to preserue life and health and also more principally because it was to our first parents a Sacrament of the continuance of their life in Paradise and after of their translating vnto a heauenly life if they continued in obedience The Commaundement concerning the Trée of Knowledge contained a Prohibition which was this Verse 17. Of the Tree of knowledge of good and euil thou shalt not eate This Commaundement God inforceth by two reasons The first from the liberty God gaue them to all the rest of the Trées of the Garden Therefore he might wel abstaine from this one Verse 16. The other reason from the danger ensuing if he did eate Thou shalt die the death Verse 17. that is Thou shalt certainely die temporally here in the seperation of the soule from the body and spiritually in loosing the graces before spoken of and eternally in the seperation of Body and Soule from God This was mans happinesse and it stoode on this condition if he obserued the Positiue Lawe giuen him of God Vse 1. Death to speake properly is not naturall namely according to the nature of man in his Creation Rom. 5.12 but against nature comming in by sinne Adam being created to immortality that is in such an estate that if he had neuer sinned he should neuer haue died For although Adams body was mortall in it selfe could die yet it had a power not to die through the gift of the Creator namely if he continued in his integrity So Adam in his state of innocencie was both mortal and immortal in diuers respects Immortall hauing not an impossibilitie of dying but a possibilitiy of not dying which possibility he lost by his sinne and instead thereof receiued a necessitie of dying Thou shalt die the death Hée was mortall not because he should haue actually died if he had not sinned but because if he sinned it was possible hée should or hée might die Death then commeth not from Nature but from Sinne. Vse 2. The remembrance of this happinesse of our first parents which they lost to themselues and to vs by their fall should moue vs euen with teares of bloud if it were possible to bewaile our present misery in which we are which is 〈◊〉 farre from that happinesse as the Earth nay as Hell is from Heauen Then Man was the Cedar of Paradise the Picture of Heauen the Glory of the Earth the Ruler of the World and Gods owne delight But now he is the Fire-brand of Hell the Picture of the Diuell more base then the basest creatures on the earth clothed with no lesse dishonour and shame then he was before crowned with honour and glory Not onely as Nebuchadnezzar trans-formed into a beast but being made of the Temple of God a Cage of vncleane Spirits yea the very habitation of the Diuell Wherefore let vs all take vp a grieuous lamentation when we looke backe to our first glory and to Paradise our antient right And if there be any sparke of Heauenly courage wisedme in our breasts let vs endeuour to recouer that by Christ which we haue lost in Adam Nay God offers in his beloued Sonne more glory better happinesse let vs not be so besotted as to suffer Sathan to deceiue and depriue vs of the Recouery of Gods fauour by our continuance in sinne which first he made vs loose by committing sinne c. Vse 3. Man in Paradise in the time of his Innocency might not be idle nor without a positiue law for obedience so that neither lobour in dressing the Garden nor to be tyed to speciall duty by the law was any impeachment of his happinesse Those therefore which place any pleasure or happines in idlenes or in desiring to liue as they list and to be lawlesse do excéedingly manifest the vile corruption of their hearts for idlenesse and lawlesse liberty was not permitted to Adam in Paradise Q. I something conceiue the happinesse of man in his creation and the conditions of the same Now I pray you shew me what was the manner of his fall Ans The fall of our first parents was their voluntary transgression of the commandement of God in eating of the fruit of the forbidden tree caused by the subtill malice of the Diuell and their owne infidelitie Gen. 3. through the whole chapter Expli Out of the third chapter of Genesis which is called of some The Patriarkes Catechisme we are taught of the fall and sin of man of the anger of God of the punishment of sinne and of the beginning of mans misery vnto the which he was not created but into the which he fell by the iustice of God through his sinne points hidden from the wise and reuealed by the word by which we come to know the cause of all the miseries which follow our nature which miseries the Philosophers saw and confessed but the wisest of them could neuer conceiue the cause thereof
deserue it by our good workes no not by our faith but by reward is meant a frée gift or a gift due by couenant or promise For there is a double reward Due or vndue and frée the first properly the second improperly so called That which is due by order of iustice for the dignity of the worke is properly a debt or due Reward That also is so called which is due by fauour and by promise To our good workes is eternall life as a reward due not the first but the second way For God hath made himselfe our debter not by receiuing from vs but by promising to vs. So that if you take debt or reward properly we affirme that nothing is due to our best works for there are foure things necessary to make a worke meritorious in the first acception of debt First that the grace whereby we do it be our owne for if we receiue it from another it is against reason that he that giues should thereby be indebted to giue more 1. Cor. 4.7 But wee haue no grace but we haue receiued it Secondly it must not be due or duty to performe it for that is contrary to merit but all that we are able to doe if it were more is due in regard of Creation and Redemption Luk. 17.10 Thirdly it must be profitable to him to whom it is done But God is not benefited by vs. Psal 16.2 50.11.12 13. Rom. 8.18 Fourthly it must be proportionable to the reward but so are not our best workes Therefore it is well called of the Apostle A free gift of God Rom. 6.23 This further remember that we teach good workes to be necessary to saluation but not as causes thereof but as the way thereto as Bernard said Q. What is eternall life Ans Eternall life is that glorious and most happy estate Mat. 25.46 Ioh. 17.22.23.24 Rom. 2.10 1. Cor. 2.9 Ioh. 10.28 Heb. 13.14 1. Ioh. 2.25 in which the soules of the elect are in heauen after this life and in which their bodies and soules shall bee at the day of iudgement the contrary whereof is eternall death Q What is eternall death Ans Eternall death is the most horrible condition in which the Reprobate shall be for euer in Hell Luk. 16.22.23 Mat. 25.41 2. Tess 1.4 with the Diuell and his Angels in their soules presently after their bodily death and in body and soule together in the day of Iudgement Expli There are thrée kindes of life First Naturall of the body in the vnion of body and soule Secondly Spirituall of the soule in the vnion of it with God and Christ Gal. 2.20 Eph. 2.17 whereby Christ is said to liue in vs. Thirdly Eternall of body soule whereby the elect liue and reigne for euermore in the kingdome of Heauen The first is common to the Reprobates with the Elect the other two are proper to the Elect. Eternall death is also thrée-fold First naturall of the body in the separation of body and soule called naturall not that it doth properly procéed from nature for it is the effect of sinne but because it is according to corrupt nature by the iustice of God Secondly spirituall in the separation of the soule from God whereby sinne liues and reignes in the wicked being said also to be dead in sinne Thirdly Eternall whereby body and soule shall be for euer separated from God and Christ and liue with the Diuell in eternall torments which kinde of life is called death because it were ten thousand times better not to liue at all in respect of themselues then in such endlesse easlesse and remedilesse misery For eternall life may be considered either in respect of the creature as it is and continueth by the power of the Creator so the wicked shal liue eternally in hell or in respect of the adiuncts of life or the affection which the creature shal haue toward the Creator and the fauour of God in Christ and so the Elect shall only liue for euer In a word the happinesse of the one estate and the misery of the other is such as no tongue is able to expresse no heart able to conceiue Al the glory and splendor of this life being scarce a shadow of the glory to be reuealed the first fruits whereof are in this life in the peace and ioy of a good conscience Rom. 14.17 which though it be vnspeakeable and as a Heauen vpon Earth yet is no more nor so much to that which shall be then a handfull of corne is to a field of a thousand acres 1. Ioh. 3.1.2 So also the torments which we can any wayes deuise to bee inflicted vpon man in this world being but a flea-biting to Hell and a sparke of that flame which the damned there shall endure and yet when wicked men féele the flashings of it in their consciences in the middest of all their worldly pleasures they are horribly confounded as in the example of Caine Saul Balthasar Iudas Pro. 18.14 and as Salomon signifies As there are but two Estates so but two places Heauen and Hell As for a third place called Purgatory neither doth the Scripture mention it neither can the Deuisers and first Founders of it the Papists tell what to make of it and therefore wee acknowledge it not Vse 1. Séeing such torments remaine for them in Hell which repent not of their sins vse all possible care that thou come not there Helpe thy selfe against sin and all damnable security in it by thinking of the torment following In regard of thy selfe it had béene better thou hadst neuer béene borne then to haue thy abiding with those vgly Fiends in that same euerlasting Fire and Brimstone Let not therefore the bitter pleasures of sinne deceiue thée Knowest thou not it will be bitternesse in the end The end of thy Drunkennesse Whooredome Lying Pride Sabaoth-breaking Negligence in the seruice of God Contempt of the Gospell c. will be more bitter then Worme-wood or Gall when the very Dregges of the Wine of the fierce wrath of God shall be powred out against thée for those thy sinnes Is sinne swéete But death is bitter remember it Thy sinne and the pleasure of it is short but the shame and torment following is without end and that in Hell where one minute of torment shall swallow vp the very memory of all fore-past pleasures Labour to thinke often of Hell it will bée some meanes to kéepe thée from thence c. Vse 2. Is life Eternall such a happinesse then liue godly 1. Tim. 4.8 Rom. 2.7 for that is the way to it It is our duty to liue godly though no reward were propounded but when our endeuours which yet are weake shall bee so beyond all proportion rewarded with such an eternall weight of glory how should it whet on our care and spurre vs forward to please such a God who is so rich to them which feare him How should it prouoke
not onely giuing the outward shape and beautifull colour of the skinne and outwardly distinguishing compacting in singular order and comelinesse the parts and lineaments of the body but framing giuing within Bowels Veines Arteries Nerues Muskles and Bones c. most wonderfully Now whether Iesus Christ by whom we beléeue all things were made did in the shape of man as he often so appeared to the Fathers with his hands frame and fashion the body of man as some affirme I leaue it as vncertaine Vse Did not God make mans body of nothing nor of gold or some heauenly and pretious matter but of dust Remember then thy beginning and be humble in as much as thou nay Kings Quéenes are framed of no better stuffe then the dust and dirt of the earth which themselues nay euen bruite beasts tread vnder their féete yea wée are below the beasts in this that they were but brought out of the earth as out of their originall place Man made of the earth as of a base and brittle matter Why art the proud of a péece of dirt so prankest vp thy painted sheath Let thine owne bosome teach thée humility for thou art dust and let it also teach thée thy frailty that thou must die Gen. 3.19 for to dust thou shalt returne Quest What is the Soule of man which you spake of Ans The Soule of man is a Spirituall substance Ecc. 12.7 Heb. 12.7 Mat. 10.28 Psa 103.2 Zach. 12.1 Gen. 2.7 1. Cor. 15.45 Immortall endued with Vnderstanding Memory Conscience and Will Created in the Humane Body to make the Person of Man and to enable Man to know and worshippe his Creator Expl. Euery man hath a Soule the originall whereof is of nothing and it is the better part of man without the which the body is a dead lump of the earth the Immortality whereof is to be beléeued against all Epicures or else all Religion Piety vanisheth Though therefore the body die yet the Soule existeth being dissolued from the body being so farre from death that it neuer falleth a sléepe Mat. 10.28 Mat. 22.32.33 Luk. 16.29 Phil. 1.23 c. which is the image of death The immortality of the Soule might be made manifest by reason but Scriptures to proue it for I write to Christians are When Moses speaketh of the creation of the Soule and the infusing of it into the body hee saith God breathed into his face the breath of life Which must not bée vnderstood as though God had any mouth to breath but that God by his omnipotent power made the man to breath and yet héereby wée may perceiue that that which was thus created is a Spirit not drawne out of the matter but immediatly procéeding as out of the mouth of God Psa 33.15 Zach. 12.1 Iob. 33.4 Ezech. 12.7 Heb. 12.9 And if any shall aske how our soules are now created and whether wée receiue them as our bodies from our parents or no The answere is that we receiue onely our bodies from our parents our soules still immediately from God God is called the Father of the Spirits of men because though hee bée the Authour of their bodies also yet of these by meanes of them immediately And whereas some might thinke that héereby God might bée in danger to be made guilty of the sinne of man when hée putteth a soule into the body begotten by vnlawfull copulation It is answered that God is no more héereby guilty then hée is pertaker of the fault of the Théefe when hée causeth stollen corne to grow as well as that which is truely bought These things being to bée considered not Morally but Naturally in regard of their Being And because the guiltinesse wée receiued from Adam may séeme to approue that our Soules come from Adam also else how should they bée guilty Wée are to vnderstand that the sinne and guiltinesse is not in the Soule alone or in the Body alone but in the whole Man consisting of Body and Soule so the Soule is infused of God voide of sinne Though euen then when it is put into the Body it bée guilty of owing though not of doing euen as the debt of the Father is to bée paid by the Heire and hée lyable thereunto Thus is the Soule subiect to guilt so also is it faulty not as it is created of God for so it is pure nor as it is reasonable but as it is ioyned to the Body making the person of a Man who hath not the Image of GOD which hee should haue but the corrupt image of Adam which hée should not haue This Soule is the forme of Man by the which wee Vnderstand Remember Will Discourse by the which wée differ from the beasts being wonderfully ioyned to the body A Spirituall Essence to a Bodily without any thing to hold the same but the onely commandement of God Being not in one part of the body in regard of the Essence and in another in regard of the Faculties but being after a wonderfull manner wholy in euery part yea all the Faculties of the Soule being wholly in euery part in regard of their originall though not in regard of their proper subiect Vse 1. Thou hast a Soule which is endued with Vnderstanding and Will the proper obiect of thy Vnderstanding is Truth of thy Will Goodnesse If thou béest a man then all thy labour should bée to increase in the knowledge of the Truth and in the approbation election and practise of that which is Good Vse 2. Remember thou hast an immortall part which is thy Soule bée carefull then so to adorne it with grace and vertue that thou maist liue immortally in ioy and happinesse and not in misery and paine Many will say they haue Soules to saue so haue they Soules giuen them to know God and to worship him according to his Word But as the most part haue no care to glorifie God in and with their Soules so whatsoeuer they say they shew by their liues they haue Soules to bée damned rather then saued For as saluation is promised to them which beléeue and obey God so to them which do not is damnation denounced by the word of God Quest You said that Conscience is a Faculty of the Soule declare further what Conscience is Ans Conscience is a Faculty of the Soule taking notice of all that is in Man Eccl. 7.24 1. Cor. 2.11 Rom. 2.15 or that passeth through his whole life and so determining thereof accusing or excusing before God Ex. All men haue Conscience which is proper to euery reasonable creatures yea euery seuerall man or woman hath his or her owne seuerall Conscience within them which is a Naturall Faculty or Created Quality in the Minde borne with vs And whereas wée vse to say that some are men of no Conscience or haue no Conscience the meaning is not that they haue no conscience at all but no good Conscience Conscience is diuersly distinguished In regard of the
thou bé et sensible of those terrors and the hellish torments following make good vse of it Quest But if the Soules of the Elect goe presently after their death to heauen and the Soules of the Reprobate to hell what neede a generall Iudgement Ans There must be a general Iudgement notwithstanding both that the iustnesse of such particular Iudgement may bee made more manifest to the glorie of God and that the whole man consisting of body and soule may receiue the du reward 2. Cor. 5.10 Quest Doe you then thinke that the bodies of man shall be restored at the day of iudgement Ans Yes verely I beleeue the resurrection of the body according to the Scriptures Act. 24.15 1. Cori. 15.12 c. Expli We are firmely to hold the generall resurrection both of good and bad for the good shall not onely rise though they shall rise onely to eternall life in which regard they are saide to be the children of the Resurrection Luk. 20.36 The wicked shall also rise but because they shall rise to receiue their full torments they are not so called Both shall rise but in a double difference first of the efficient cause for the good shall rise by the power of Christ their head The wicked by the power of Christ as Iudge of quicke and dead and by the vertue of that Sentence Gene. 2.17 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death secondly of the end for the righteous shall rise to glory the wicked to shame and perpetuall contempt And note this carefully that those very bodies in which both iust and vniust liued here Dan. 12.2 Ioh. 10.27 Iohn 5.28 Mar. 10.28 2. Cor. 5.10 1. Corin. 15 53. shall be raised and restored as appeareth by the Scripture This corruptible shall put on incorruption This that is This same in number as if he had clapt himselfe on the breast Now though this séeme vnpossible to reason yet it is not so to our Faith whereby considering the power of God we know that he is able to restore the body though burnt to ashes deuoured by wild beasts or turned to dust as he was able to create them and all the world of nothing in the beginning And this the Iustice of GOD requires namely that that body which sinned should be punished and not another and that that body which hath béen tortured héere for the profession of his Name should be crowned with glorie at the last day The bodies shall rise the same in substance but the bodies of the Iust shall bée Immortall Incorruptible Spirituall not in substance but in quality or condition not néeding meanes of bodily nouriture not subiect to infirmities but powerfull firme strong and impassible nimble to moue as well vp-wards as downe-wards voide of all deformity and vncomelinesse glorious of perfect stature without the vse though not without the difference of Sexe Mat. 13.43 Mat. 22.30 1. Cor. 15. The bodies of the vniust shall rise Immortall also and Incorruptible but passible to endure the due punishment inflicted vpon them The manner of the Resurrection conceiue to be thus On the last day Christ shall suddenly come in the clouds in that visible forme in which He Ascended and shall send his Angell with a Trumpet Mat. 24.31 1. Cor. 15.31 1. Thess 4.15.16 at the sound whereof first they which are dead shall be raised and then those which are liuing shall bée in the twinkling of an eye changed Vse 1. If in this life onely wee had hope we were of all men the most miserable but we looke for a day when our vile bodies shall gloriously rise and bee made like the Glorious Body of our Lord Iesus Christ 1. Cor. 15.19 Phil. 3.21 Iob 19.25.26.27 comfort thy selfe against thy calamities with this This vpheld Iob in the day of his sore trouble So in the troubles of the Iewes vnder Antiochus Epiphanes Many were racked and would not be deliuered because they looked for a better Resurrection Act. 11.35 Let this also comfort against the loathsomnesse of the graue in as much as though our bodies be laid downe for a time in the dust they shall yet after bee restored to Life and Glory Vse 2. Remember that euen that body which thou hast vsed as a Weapon and Instrument to Lying Murder Vncleannesse Theft Pride and all manner of vnrighteousnesse shall rise againe and as thou hast done in the same that which thou shouldst not so shalt thou receiue in the very same that which thou wouldst not And if thou béest a Beléeuer remember that that very body of thine which hath bene vnto thy soule an instrument of Righteousnesse which for righteousnesse sake hath endured Griefe Smart or Contempt c. as it hath taken part with the soule in Mortification and in the affliction so shall it also pertake in the blessed Consolation to bee reuealed in the last day Quest You said that God was the Redeemer and Sanctifier of his Church Do you not beleeue that the Redemption Iustification and Sanctification which you haue spoken of are vniuersall and belonging to all Ans No Eph. 5.25 c. I verely beleeue that those Graces belong onely to the Church Quest What is the Church Ans By Church I meane the Holy Catholique Church 1. Cor. 12.12.13 Eph. 3.15.16.17.18.19 Eph. 4.15.16 Reu. 21.27 Heb. 12.21 22. Cant. 6.8 which is the whole Company of them which are from euerlasting Predestinated to Eternall Life and which in time are called by the Word and sanctified by the Bloud and Spirit of IESVS and this is but one part whereof is Triumphant in heauen and part Militant on earth Expl. As in our vsuall Créed wée are taught to beleeue the Holy Catholique Church to bee the company of Saints which haue Communion or Fellowship in the grace of Remission of sinnes and Resurrection to Eternall life So it is manifest that such onely are the Catholique Church and that such graces are proper and peculiar vnto them As the Scriptures do euery where restraine these benefites to Beleeuers onely and to the Church To Beléeuers Ioh. 3.16 and 5.24 and 6.40.47 Act. 10.43 Ioh. 12.46 Rom. 3.22 Gal. 3.22 To the Church Mat. 1.21 Ioh. 10.15 and 15.13 and 17.9.19 Now whereas in diuers places the Scripture speaketh with a generall note That Christ dyed for all and that God loued the world and such like Such places must bee vnderstood some of the sufficiency of Christs death for all not of the Efficacy which is onely to Beléeuers Some of a Precept vniuersall whereby all are commanded to beléeue Some of the publique Ministery of the Word whereby grace is offered to all Some collectiuely to signifie that the benefite of Redemption extends it selfe to Gentiles as well as to Iewes or distributiuely signifying that some of all Nations Conditions Ages Sexes haue that benefite not that euery singular of all kinds but the kinds of all singulars are made partakers
to vs in vaine Euen as the euidences of another mans land are nothing auaileable to me but to the Land-holder they are of singular vse So the Sacraments are part of the euidences of a beléeuers hope and seale to him Gods fauour but to vnbeléeuers they seale nothing but their greater condemnation if they repent not Euen as if an vnlearned man open a booke he séeth the letters but is neuer the better and cannot attaine the meaning but a man that is learned readeth and is instructed So an vnbeléener séeth the Bread and Wine and eateth the signe but the beléeuer onely hath the benefite of the thing signified through his faith For the spirituall grace is present not to the signe but to the person beléeuing Euen as Pharoh had a dreame but not the interpretation and as the noble man of Samaria saw the plenty but tasted not of it Euen se vnbeléeuers ignorants vnthankefull for the death of Christ haue the shell but not the kyrnell haue that which goeth into the body not that which blesseth the soule First therefore get faith Secondly repent of thy sins hauing an vnfained and stedfast purpose alwaies hereafted to liue godlily If thou comest with a hungring desire of the righteousnesse of Christ with a broken heart for that which is past and with a holy purpose for the time to come then thou art welcome to thy Sauiour and shalt without faile taste of his swéetnesse but if thou hast béene and yet art a Drunkard a Blasphemer Vncleane Proud Couetous Contentious c and hast not vnfeignedly repented or at least doest not begin to repent For this cause thou art guilty of the body and bloud of Christ being more fit to be at the méetings of Turkes and Infidels then of such as professe Iesus Christ Get therefore Repentance also And testifie this thy repentance not onely by a shew of sorrow and sobriety the day thou comest to the Lords Table but all the dayes of thy life after Many haue I séene which on that day haue gone softly spoken patiently looked sorrowfully behaued themselues grauely which within a day or two haue with the swine returned to the wallowing in the mire and with the dogge to the vomit of their former euill courses But vnderstand thou that euen as when a man hath escaped the danger of some great distemper of surfeit it is not enough for him to kéepe a good dyet a day or two So it is not a dayes obedience or two nor such fits of deuotion which vanish as a flash of lightning that will approue our faith repentance and profession but it is perseuerance in these holy duties when the sauour of the Sacrament remaines with vs all the daies of our life Therfore euen as Daniel was the fairer and better fauoured by his dyet of Pulse so it is required and the Lord erpects that if thou eate drinke at his table thou shouldest be the fairer by it and the better reformed in thy conuersation And if thou béest notwithstanding ill-fauoured that is without Knowledge Faith Repentance Obedience Patience Temperance Charity c. it is a manifest argument that thou hast a foule and corrupted conscience that thou hast receiued vnworthily and so art in danger of the wrath of God Qu. You said that some thinke Discipline to be a note of the true Church What is that Discipline Ans It is that power in the Church by the consent and approbation of the Christian Magistrate whereby by persons fit and lawfully called Constitutions are made 1. Cor. 5.3.4 14.40 both for comelinesse and order in the worship of God and for the censuring of prophane liuers Expl. Though a true Church may bée without this power of Discipline yet bée well without it it cannot both that the ministery of the holy things may with the greatest reuerence and profite be performed and also that the Church may be holy and a maintainer thereof First then because without order things cannot well procéede or continue and God is the God of order the hold that the Church hath power to make Canons and Constitutions but with a thrée-fold restraint First that they be onely about matters Ecclesiasticall Euery man is to kéepe within the compasse of his calling Secondly that as concerning the worship of God they be determinations of circumstances necessary profitable as concerning time place order méetings maner of reading Scriptures c. In all which comelinesse order edification of the Church auoiding of offence are to be respected and such determinations in their owne nature to remaine mutable to be altered as the Magistrate shall sée it make for the good of the Church Thirdly that if there be a Christian Magistrate they be with his consent and authority because the authority of making confirming lawes concerning both the ciuill Ecclesiasticall good of the subiects is principally in the chiefe ciuil Magistrate This order being obserued the Ecclesiasticall things as dispensation of the Word Sacraments and execution of Discipline be handled not by lay persons but by Ecclesiasticall persons onely by the authority of God and the Prince For the other part which concerneth Ecclesiasticall censures this is to be remembred that properly they are not executed by mulcts fines hodily smart imprisonment death such like which are proper to the power of a ciuill Magistrate but by admonition Mat. 20.25 26. 1. Pet. 5.3 reproofe suspension excommunication The highest degrée of Ecclesiasticall censures is excommunication when notorious stubborne offenders are cast out of the Church the parties deseruing this censure being notorioufly prophane and there being extreme danger of offence and of the infection of others by their society In the execution whereof procéeding must be as in the body in the cutting of a member which is when no meanes will recouer it and least it should procure decay to the whole body then to cut it off though it be with griefe Also excommunication is not absolutely to be executed but on the contumacy of the delinquent for the party as a lost shéepe is both carefully to be sought vp if he repent to be with all reioycing loue receiued againe into the fellowship of the Church for the end of excommunication must be first that holy things be not giuen to dogges Secondly Math. 7.7 that the Church may frée herselfe from an euill fame of suffring them which dishonor God Thirdly 1. Cor. 5. 1. Cor. 5.6 lest others be infected Fourthly that such as offend may be ashamed and come to repentance 2. Thess 3.14 1. Cor. 5.5 that their Spirits may be saued in the day of the Lord. And this order of censuring offenders excommunication ought to be perpetuall in the Church because the causes thereof are vniuersal perpetuall which are those foure before mentioned together with the commandement of Christ 1. Cor. 5.4 and Paul testifieth that the incestious person ought to be excommunicated in the
the world began The Holy Ghost beareth this witnesse vnto the consciences of the elect And this testimony is that inward force and efficacy of the holy spirit by the which wee feele our hearts moued bowed and perswaded to beleeue the word 1. Cor. 2.10.11.12 Ioh. 2.20.27 1. Ioh. 5.10 Hee that beleeueth hath the witnesse in himselfe This testimony next to the voyce of God speaking in the Scriptures who indeed is onely a sufficient witnesse to himselfe is to be preferred before all other testimonies and arguments whatsoeuer But this must be remembred that this witnesse of the Spirit in the heart serueth not to confirme doctrines and to confute aduersaries but onely that euery one for himselfe by this witnesse might be certaine in his very conscience that the holy Scriptures are of God In this the conscience resteth and is satisfied and it ariseth and is wrought in our hearts by the word read heard meditated vpon and translated to the vse of faith and life as Ioh. 7.17 If any man will do his will saith Christ he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speake of my selfe The humane testimonies are either of the Church or of The enemies of the Church The perpetuall consent of the Church of all the people of God in receiuing embracing and conseruing the word of God so many ages notwithstanding their diuersity and disparity of mindes and iudgements argueth no lesse then a diuine authority in the word The enemies are either Iewes or Heathen The Iewes acknowledge the bookes of Moses and the Prophets to be giuen by diuine inspiration And among the Heathen when Ptolomy the King of Aegypt demanded why Heathen Authors in their writings make no mention of the bookes of Scripture one made answere Because they were diuine and that God the author of them was reuenged of all those that presumed to touch them as Iosephus and Eusebius report The other reasons may be drawne first from the antiquity of them being of all writings the most ancient Moses the first Pen-man of holy Writ being farre elder then all other writings now extant in the world a thing well knowne to the learned Secondly from the certaine euent accomplishing of the diuers prophesies which neither by naturall causes nor by the wit of man could euer haue been foretold Thirdly from the miracles which Sathan neuer could bring to passe Fourthly from the matter of them containing the whole pure and perfect law of God and describing such a meanes of saluation which both agreeth to the glory and perfect Iustice of God and satisfieth the conscience Fifthly from the maiesty of them which shineth euen through the humility and simplicity of the phrase Sixthly from the inuincible firmity and continuance of them notwithstanding the rage of so many persecutors labouring to abolish their very memory Seuenthly from the beautifull harmony and admirable consent of all the parts of the doctrine contained therein Eighthly from the force of them in the mindes of men effecting mouing conuerting and transforming vs into new men and kindling a liuely consolation in our mindes in the day of tryall as appeared in the Martyrs Ninthly from the irreconcileable hatred of Sathan and his complicies tyrants persecutors and all prophane men against the Scriptures more then any other Bookes Tenthly from the vengeance of God vpon the contemners blasphemers and enemies of the word It were almost infinite to reckon all that might be said herein all which are good iointly and seuerally considered to confirme vnto vs the authority of the Scriptures and to conuince the consciences of all them which in the vanity and wickednesse of their hearts shall any way call them into question Wherefore it appeareth and nothing can be said to the contrary that all are bound with all diligence to study in the word of God Two principall parts of our study in the word are the Reading and the Hearing of it All then must giue all diligence to heare and read the Scriptures And because things good in themselues through bad and negligent vsage become oft-times vnprofitable and hurtfull vnto vs therefore the Apostle Paul prayeth and exhorteth Colos 1.10 Colos 3.16 that the Word dwell in vs in all wisedome That wee ought wisely to heare the word preached appeareth by our Sauiour himselfe in his monitions to his Apostles and Disciples Mat. 15.10 Mark 4.24 Luke 8.18 Heare and vnderstand Take heed what you heare Take heed how you heare Vnto this wise hearing three things are necessary First something is to bee done before we heare Secondly something in the hearing Thirdly something when we haue heard That which is to be done before wee heare is called Preparation which consisteth in the auoiding of some things and in the doing of other some Those things which are to be auoided may be reduced to these fiue heads The first is Intemperance in riotous eating and drinking pampering the body whereby we are made vnfit for the exercises of the word the body being then more apt to sleepe then to heare Full bellies for the most part haue empty soules and therefore our Sauiour Christ monished his Apostles to beware of surfeiting and drunkennesse Luk. 21.34 which oppresse the heart The second is Distracting cares of the world these must be banished out of our minds when we come to heare the word As Abraham when he went to sacrifice his sonne vpon the mount Gen. 22.5 left his Asse and Seruants at the foote of the hill Euen so when we come to the holy hill of God with the Congregation we must put off and abandon all our owne thoughts words and seruile labours For as thornes choke the Corne so will these the word as our Sauiour teacheth Luk. 8.14 The third is Preiudice against the person of the Teacher for when the person is once distasted we relish not his doctrine though neuer so good So Ahab could not abide Micaiah and therefore would not endure his teaching and admonitions The fourth is Pride for some measure of knowledge receiued As many will say they know as much as the Preacher can tell them It may be they doe But doe they practise it Such must know first that preaching is not onely to teach men that which they know not but also to stirre them vp to practise that which they know not so much ordained to informe the iudgement as to reforme the affection Secondly they must remember that part of the song of the Virgin He filleth the hungry with good things but the rich he sendeth empty away The fifth is Carnall security when we come to the hearing of the word with a resolution that speake the Lord what he will and cry the seruants of God against our sinnes as long and as loud as they will yet we will do as we list For many by this meanes come into the congregation as the vncleane beasts into the Arke they come in vncleane and
goe out vncleane Well Rom. 1.28 2. Thes 2.10.11 this of all other is most fearefull and the high way to a reprobate minde These especially and so all other sinnes must be carefully auoided and vnfeignedly repented of Wisd 1.4 For wisedome entreth not into a defiled soule And as the eye if it be euill affected cannot discerne the obiect so the minde infected and the conscience polluted with these and the like sinnes cannot possibly vnderstand the things of God Sathan by these meanes stealing out of our hearts the pretious seed of the good word of God Those things which are to be performed before the hearing of the word are especially two The first is prayer If wee must pray before the receiuing of our bodily meate much more before this heauenly food of our soules And in our prayers wee must commend our Teachers and our selues vnto the Lord. For our Teachers we are to pray for three things First that their lippes may preserue knowledge Secondly that they may be faithfull in deliuering the whole counsell of God vnto vs. And thirdly that they may powerfully and wisely speake to our consciences For our selues also we are to pray for three things First for the pardon of our sinnes Secondly that our mindes may be opened to vnderstand Thirdly that our hearts and affections may be sanctified to obey the holy word For oftentimes we do not that we know to be best but that vnto which our affections carry vs. An honest and a good heart is a notable signe of Gods Spirit The second thing to be done is timely and seasonable resorting with the rest of Gods people to the house of God Negligent comming that is when we come one stragling after another howsoeuer it be ordinary almost in all places yet it argueth a grosse carelesnesse and neglect if not contempt of the worship of God If our loue vnto the word should be measured hereby it would soone appeare to bee a great deale lesse then our loue to Faires Markets Feasts and merry-meetings as they call them vnto the which we will be sure to come with the first O that wee had but halfe the care to come to the market and feast of our soules which is the mistery of the word Why should we not bee like to Peter and Iohn in striuing to out-run one another to the house of God Iohn 20.4 as they to the Sepulchre of Christ In the time of Nehemias the people gathered all together Nehem. 8.1 and called for the reading of the Law Act. 10.33 And Cornelius and his houshold were all ready waiting for Peter to heare the word Luk. 5.1 And the people pressed vpon Christ to heare him The forwardnesse of these is for our imitation In hearing three things are requisite first Attention second Intention third Retention The 1. ordereth the body the 2. the vnderstanding the third the memory Attention is when the whole body but specially the eare and the eie are reuerently composed to heare the word Eccle. 4.17 Of the eare we reade Be more neere to heare Luke 4.28 Of the eye The eies of all that were in the Synagogue were fastned on him that is on Christ when he began to teach them Of the reuerent carriage of the whole body Constantine the Great may be an example who as Eusebius reports though he were the most noble Emperour that yet the world hath seene for the most part would stād at the preaching of the word and not sit downe though admonished of his Nobles Luk. 10.39 Marie also is an example hereof Wherefore to sleepe to talke to reade to gaze vp and down in euery corner which is the marke of a foole as Salomon teacheth are specially to be auoyded So also departing out of the Congregation without iust and reasonable cause as the people stayed for Zacharie though in regard of the vision hee held them very long Euen so should we stay with reuerence till the Congregation be dismissed with the blessing of God Luke 1.21 More reuerence then must bee of a great many practised in hearing If Paul will haue women reuerently to behaue themselues in the congregation because of the Angels much more ought all both men and women behaue themselues reuerently because of the presence of God who is the Lord both of men and Angells of the which his presence we haue his promise and therefore Dauid called the meeting the saints in his time the presence of God Mat. 18.20 As therfore Iacob was stricken with great reuerence for the vision which hee had at Bethel Psal 42.2 said How feareful is this place Gen. 28.17 this is none other but the house of God this is the gate of heauen so should wee esteeme of the assemblies of the children of GOD worshipping in feare as Dauid Psal 1.7 remembring we are present before God himself as Cornelius The second is Intention and this is of the mind when wee diligently marke those things which are taught For if our thoughts wander Acts 10.33 and bee not bent on the things spoken we heare without profite Euen as wee see by experience that in a deep meditation though our eies be fixed vpon some certaine obiect yet we smally regard it so if the minde bee not present aswel as the body all is to no purpose For this is to be like the Iewes who honoured God with their lippes but their hearts were farre from him Wherefore heere is required that wee suffer not our hearts to wander but that we call home all the powers of body and soule to this holy businesse not onely marking some words and sentences but the Booke the Text the Parts the Doctrines the Proofs and the Vses This is Intention and this is commaunded to the Church Psal 45.10 Heare O daughter and consider incline c. And Cause thine care to hearken Prou. 2.2 and incline thine heart to wisedome and vnderstanding The third is Retention and this is of the memory when we lay vp the word of God in the heart as the virgin Marie the sayings concerning Christ Luke 2.51 Not so to lay it vp as the euill seruant the talent neuer to vse it but as Ioseph in the yeares of plenty laied vp corne for reliefe against the yeares of famine so should wee store vp the word that wee may haue it ready for our vse vpon all occasions offered And this is noted to bee the property of good ground Luke 8.15 Ioh. 14.23 To keepe the word But many are like to siues or broken vessels into which whatsoeuer is poured is lost That bodie thriueth not where the stomacke wanteth a retentiue faculty to keepe the meat till it be digested Euen so all the hearing in the world profiteth not if wee be not carefull to remember it Wherefore as a man hauing receiued a pretious iewel casteth it not at his heeles but layeth it vp charily vnder locke and
of his kingdome read ouer the Bible foureteene times in order with certaine Commentaries vpon the same As his diligence is here very commendable and for our imitation so also this He read in order If therefore I were worthy to giue directions this way I would thus aduise First what booke soeuer we take to read to begin at the beginning and so to continue reading till we come to the end of it And thus shall wee carry the summe and the drift of the History and argument before vs of which in a great part they which read now a Chapter in one booke now a lease in another must needs be ignorant Such simple readers I may liken to those simple women which are alwayes reading but are neuer able to come to any sound knowledge of the truth 2. Tim 3.7 For as he that goeth but an easie pace in the right way speedeth his iourney faster then he that maketh more haste in a wrong way Euen so a little read in good order aduantageth the knowledge more then greater paines if it bee confused Secondly I would aduise that in our reading we beginne first with the easiest and playnest Bookes as the history of Christ set down by the Euangelists and the Booke of Genesis Then to reade the Epistles first the shortest as the Epistles to the Philippians Colossians the first and second to the Thessalonians then the Epistles to the Galathians and to the Romans which last Epistle is called of some the Key of the Bible And when wee haue tryed our selues in these then to beginne the Bible and to reade it through For euen as in Trades there are some things more easie to the which the apprentice is applied and afterwards as hee groweth in capacitie hee is taught the harder and more secret things of his mystery so in the scriptures there are some things easie and familiar for learners and beginners as milk for babes and there are other things hard and obscure which it is not safe to meddle withall till wee haue our senses well exercised in the word The third thing required in wise reading is Iudgement and Discretion by the which first wee make choice of a fit time to reade secondly discerne the right sense and meaning of that wee reade and thirdly apply and make the right vse of our reading Iudgement is requisite Psal 112.5 for a wise man ministreth all his affaires with iudgement and euery thing is beautifull in his time Eccle. 3.10 Therefore the time is specially to be regarded All time is not to bee spent this way For our callings must carefully be followed neither is all the time to be taken vp in our callings but some time is to be spared for reading prayer and meditation One of these may not hinder an other which must needs come to passe without Iudgement Dauid and Daniel obserued prayer thrice a day and they that feare God will so diuide their times that at the least once a day they will reade a chapter or two in the Bible and because of the stuggishnesse of our nature soone weary of good things it were good to taske our selues and when it so fals out that we are constrayned vpon extraordinary occasion to leaue our taske vnperformed one day then to double our paines and diligence the next time rising the earlier and working the harder in our callings that we may redeeme that time without any losse Theodosius the second Emperour of that name is reported to haue written out the Bookes of the New Testament with his owne hand accounting it a speciall Iewell and out of it hee read euery day praying with his wife and sisters and singing of Psalmes And it was that famous Eunuches practise as we may gather out of the eight chapter of the Acts. I reade of another Emperor of Rome who was wont to account that day lost in the which he had not bestowed a benefit vpon some of his subiects So we may well reckon that day among our losses in the which wee reade not or meditate not of something in the word But foolish men thus obiect I haue no leisure by reason of vrgency and multitude of busines To such a one I answer Is any businesse more vrgent then this Martha is troubled indeede about many things but this one thing is necessary namely the knowledge of God by his word Againe Thou wilt spare a time to eate and sleepe why not then to read Iob esteemed the words of God more then his appointed food If our loue were such to the word Iob. 23.12 wee would rather spare the times of our eating then of our reading as Iacob spared the meate out of his belly to buy the blessing Hath the body neede of nourishment and hath not the soule much more Gen. 25.30 c. Now the bread of the soule is the word of God O Lord giue vs euermore of this bread Amen Iudgement also is requisite in reading that wee may vnderstand the meaning of the Holy Ghost For the word of God is not in the letters and leaues but in the meaning and sence as some of the Antients haue spoken yea one of them saith that the word of God foolishly vnderstood is not the word of God Our Sauiour Christ hauing oftentimes to deale with the learned Scribes and Pharisies Mat. 12.3 19.14 21.16.42 22.31 Mark 12 24. and with the Sadduces asketh thus Haue you not read and Did you neuer read and You erre not knowing the Scriptures And yet these Scribes did so diligently reade the Scriptures that they numbred the letters and words but they read without iudgement not discerning nor searching into the heart of the sence but staying in the barke of the letter Thus to read is vnprofitable And here as we must be carefull to finde the meaning that we may not read as children so also we must take heed that we feigne not a meaning of our owne and thrust it vpon the word lest we proue Heretickes Therfore the right true and fit sence is to bee sought out which of one place can be but one And that must be not according as we thinke for no Scripture is of priuate interpretation 2. Pet. 1.20 but according to the Scriptures which are the onely best expounders of themselues The meanes and ready way to finde out the genuine and true meaning of any Scripture are especially these First a due and learned considering of the originall Tongue in the which the Scripture is written Secondly a diligent marking of that which goeth before and that which followeth Thirdly a wise comparing together the place in hand with other places both like and vnlike Fourthly a heedfull examining of the sence arising with the Analogy of faith that is with the doctrine contained in the Apostles Creed so called the Lords Prayer and the ten Commandements which are a short summe of the whole Bible Fifthly conference with the learned Interpreters Sixthly feruent
actions proceeding from these beginnings Therefore that part of Astrology concerning the calculations of mens Natiuities and the Iudgement and Diuination of things to come which are contingent as the Nature Qualities Fortune as they call it Successe Marriage Children with their Inclinations kind and time of death of men women we condemne as blasphemous The Lord hauing not ordained the Stars to this vse Deut. 18.10.14 Esay 8.18 Esay 19.3.12 44.25 Ier. 10.2 27.9 29.8 Esa 47.13 as may appeare by diuers Scriptures where such practise is reproued The deuils themselues who passe all men in such knowledge cannot certainely thus foretel muchlesse Astrologers cunning-mē as they are called And so vnderstood the Fathers professed the Imperiall Lawes Astronomy is not nor Mathematicks cōdēned but this curious damnable Astrology The Stars were also ordained for times daies and yéeres that is that by their motion they should bee the measure of time according to whose motions time running should bée reckoned and distinguished into certaine parts That one should bée Time Past another Time Present another time to come one Time a Yeare another a Month another a Wéeke another a Day another an Houre c. Which wee could neither vnderstand nor distinguish without the motion of these Celestiall Bodies whereby as also by the two former vses appeares most singularly the necessity of such Motions but chiefly the wisedome and goodnesse of God who hath not onely giuen to man the knowledge and faculty of numbring but also hath set such markes in the heauens whereby man should measure Time and the continuance of his life and of other things without the which we should be like vnto children which know not their age or like to them which sléep which know not how Time passeth because they number not Lastly they were ordained to giue light to the earth and to the creatures therein without the which they could not diuide the day and the night nor bee for signes and seasons c. Vse 1. Hereby are condemned not only al such which practise Astrology concerning diuining of things to come and telling of things lost as before spoken of but also all such which resort to such for counsell or help as by the Scriptures in the exposition appeareth Vse 2. God appointed the Starres for the diuiding of the day and night and this appointment ceaseth not Hence comfort thy selfe thus If God bee constant and true in this why not then in all his other promises though Reason séeme to sée Sence to féele and the whole world say the contrary as the Lord himselfe testifieth Ier. 31.35.36 Quest What did God create on the fifth day Ans On the fifth day God created all manner of Fishes and all manner of Birds euen all creatures that liue and moue in the Aire and in the Waters and appointed the Fishes to fill the waters and the Birds to multiply themselues on the Earth Gen. 1.20.21.22.23 Expl. God on the fifth day whereas before there was not so much as a Fly created not of water but of nothing the Fishes and Birds of all sorts and kind and also appointed this Order and gaue them this Faculty that they should bring forth their Like for the continuance of their seuerall kinds as wée sée by daily experience but the Fishes in greater aboundance thē the Fowles as the word to the Fishes Fill the water and to the Birds onely Multiply yee doth shew Vse That wée prouoke our selues to obedience by the nature of Birds Ier. 8.7 and by remembring that the Water a bruite creature obeyed the voyce of God how much more should man heare and obey which is endued with Sence and Reason Quest What did God Create on the sixth day Ans On the sixth day God created of Nothing all Cattell and creeping things and the beasts of the earth according to their Kings also hee made man of the dust of the earth Gen. 1.24 to the end Expl. First of the Creation of the beasts of the Earth They are here distinguished into 3. ranks or sorts First Cattell whereby we vnderstand all tame Beasts and Domesticall which are familiar and conuersant with man as Horse Kine Shéep Dogs Cats c. Secondly créeping things whereby are vnderstood those that haue no féete as Serpents or those which haue but very short as Wormes Ants c. Thirdly Beasts whereby are vnderstood all wilde Beasts As Lyons Beares Tigers Wolues Foxes Hares and all such which are of wilde Nature The least of which creatures either Fishes Fowles or Beasts of the earth is so great a worke that all the world is not able to make the like no not a Fly not a Louse Ex. 8.18 Vse 1. If God abase himselfe to make and preserue the smallest liuing creatures much more wil he prouide for them which feare him Mat. 6.26 Vse 2. The Lord made all things good and so approued of them but through the sinne of man many creatures are become hurtfull as Toads Snakes c. As one saith They were created Good Eucherius but to them that are euill they are become a scourge Learne then by the rebellion of the creatures to thee and the danger and feare thou art in by them to bee humbled for thy finne the cause thereof Quest You said that on the sixth day God also created Man What thinke you of Mans Creation Ans I beleeue that on the sixth day God made Man Male and Female according to his Image and Likenesse The Body of the Man of the dust of the earth and his Soule of nothing the Body of the woman of the rib of the Man Gen. 1.26.27 2.7.21.22 and her Soule also of Nothing Expl. It is a great folly and ouersight for a man to take vpon him to know other things and to bee ignorant of himselfe in whose Body and Soule there are such euident marks of Gods wisedome power and goodnesse that euen Heathen Philosophers haue called Man A little World or a Map of the whole world Man consists of a body and a Soule wée will speake first of his Body noting briefly only that which thereof is said in the Text. When God had finished all his other workes then he made Man In whose Creation he saith not as before Let there be Man or Let the earth bring forth Man but as with Counsell Let vs make Man Hereby noting more cléerely the doctrine of the Holy Trinity in mans Creation then in the creation of other things Concerning Mans body wée may consider either the matter or the Figure of it The matter was the dust of the earth other things were made of nothing onely Man and Womans body of matter praeexistent thoough of it selfe hauing no disposition to such an effect as what likenesse hath dust or red earth to the flesh bloud and bones of mans body Now for the Figure of it it is wonderful as Dauid obserueth Ps 139.14.15 God
the conscience may be called a brideling or a restraining Conscience as if question be whether the Sabaoth may bee broken thus The commandement of God may not be broken but to breake the Sabaoth is to breake the commandement of God therefore breake it not saith conscience Thus by experience we féele within vs before we do a thing a certaine power pushing vs backe or egging vs forward or we séeme to heare a voyce in our breasts bidding or forbidding vs. And when we do contrary to the motion and monishing of conscience we are said to wound and to sin against our consciences which is grieuous Now remember how the Conscience determineth of Actions So also of Thoughts and Words Vse 1. Looke well to thy conscience and examine it for a good conscience is not of Nature but of Grace by Faith Rom. 5.1 through the bloud of Christ For it is the bloud of Iesus applied by Faith Heb. 9.14 which purgeth the conscience both from the guiltinesse and filthinesse thereof Content not thy selfe then though thy conscience be quyet and trouble thée not for it may so be and yet be starke nought Bee sure that the quietnesse thereof bee grounded on the righteousnesse of Christ and the assurance of the pardon of thy sinnes Else when it stirreth and awakeeth it will be like a Lyon ready euen to rend out thy throat Call therefore thy conscience to her office here which if shée discharge and being rightly informed excuse thée thou mayest truly haue boldnesse before God Otherwise euen as a man that hath the gout is not healed because for a little time he féeleth it not beat and fret so neither doth the quietnesse of conscience argue the health and goodnesse thereof vnlesse it be quieted by the blood of Iesus Better thy conscience accuse here then in the day of Iudgement when though it sléepe now it will vnlesse it be preuented most certainely accuse and confound For the nature of it is alwaies to take Gods part though it be against it selfe Make then thy concience thy friend against that day when a good conscience will be more woorth then a whole world The remembrance of which time made Paul endeuoure to haue a cleare conscience before God and men Acts 24.16 Vse 2. If thou once gettest a good conscience kéepe it with all diligence For as a good conscience is a continuall feast Prou. 4.23 Pro. 15.15 2. Cor. 1.12 Yea a very heauen vpon earth so an euil and guilty conscience is an vnspeakeable torment yea a very hell for a wounded spirit who can beare If a man haue a good conscience Pro. 14. he cannot want comfort in the middest of the fire But if a man were in Paradise as Adam with an euill conscience hee must néedes want comfort for as the shadow followes the body so doth an euill conscience follow the vnrepentant sinner alwaies dogging him and crying fearefully against him Thou hast sinned thou shalt be damned driuing into most fearefull agonies and passions euen vnto finall desperation as in Iudas if the mouth be not stopped by the merites of Christ The Heathen thought that those who liued ill were haunted with furies and fiends Surely this is the fiend euen thy euill conscience gnawing vpon thy heart and stinging as a Scorpion neither canst thou auoyde it but onely by faith in Christ Kéepe therefore thy good conscience if thou hast it as the chiefest Iewell which thou shalt doe if thou obserue these Rules First cherish Faith for it is the root of a good conscience Secondly auoyd all sinne for as a moat in the eye so sinne troubleth the peace of conscience and as water queucheth fire so sinne putteth out the goodnesse thereof And therefore when Abigaile would perswade Dauid from bloody reuenge she vseth an argument from preseruing the peace of conscience and perswadeth him Thirdly walke in the continuall practise of righteousnesse which that wée may be able to do namely both to auoyde sin Heb. 13.18 to liue honestly A fourth thing must bee done which is the right enforming of the conscience that it be able to discerne good from euil and mistake not one for an other for as an vnskilfull Pilote that knoweth not the coast easily maketh shippewracke and as a bad guide soone bringeth into danger so a conscience not instructed in the truth For if thou doubtest and doest doubtingly thou sinnest though the action be lawfull in it selfe yet not to thée for whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14.23 If thy conscience erre taking that to be good which is euill thou canst not but sinne for if thou dost according to thy erring conscience thou sinnest in doing contrary to the commandement of God If thou doest it not thou sinnest also because thou dost against conscience and there is no way to helpe out of these briers but to enforme the conscience in the truth which is by the word of God the rule of conscience by which it appeareth that all such which neglect the word of God 1. Corin. 14 24 25. must néedes haue corrupt and dangerous consciences Vse 3. Neuer sinne in hope of secrecie for thou canst not lie hidde though thou couldst conceale thy faults from al men yea from the diuell yet there is a bird in thy breast which will tell tales and bewray all the conscience is a thousand witnesses happy is he which hath it to witnesse for him before God Quest What meane you when you say that man was created in the Image and likenesse of God Ans I meane that neere likenes wheby Adam resembled God which consisted partly in the immortality of his soule partly in his dominiō ouer the creatures but principally in the gifts of his minde Colos 3.10 Ephe. 4.24 knowledge holines and righteousnes Expli Herein consists the chiefe happinesse of man to be like his Creator for God made not man like other things made but like himselfe like I say hauing some sparkes of excellency as representations of the Diuine Nature though this likenesse be such that there remaines an vnspeakeable distance betwéene God and man euen in his greatest perfection Though the feature of the body bee most beautifull yet herein we place no part of the Image of God though wee confesse that euen as the lanthorne is illustrated by the candle within it euen so the body is made in some sort resplendent by the brightnesse of the Soule within in which the Image of GOD chiefly resideth And yet to speake properly we say not that the Soule but that the whole man was made according to Gods Image This Image not to say any thing of the spirituall Essence and Immortalitie of the Soule was partly in the dominion granted ouer the Creatures which dominion was not direct for God is onely the soueraigne Lord but profitable consisting in his dwelling and the vse and benefit of the Creatures yet the extent of this onely to the inferiour creatures as
the earth sea ayre and the creatures liuing in the same Partly also was the Image in the excellent Graces of Knowledge Holines righteousnes and Trueth wherewith man was endowed so that as the former resembled Gods imperious maiesty so this his infinite purity and Holinesse And this also wée are to remember that the woman was made aswell as the man accorcording to the Image of God though in regard of the subiection of the woman to the man it more excellently in that 1. Cor. 11.8 appeares in the man Vse Labor for knowledge and grace to liue godlily whereby thou resemblest God himselfe and this is commanded Be ye holy for I am holy saith the Lord 1 Pet. 1.16 For though thou hast a body beautifull and a soule endued with much vnderstanding and wit yet without wisedome and righteousnes without knowledge of heauenly and spirituall things and the practise of piety and dolines thou arte not like vnto God Iohn 8.44 1. Iohn 3.8 but like vnto the diuell himselfe Thus much of the first generall worke the Creation now of the other which is the preseruation of the Creature called Prouidence Quest What is the Prouidence of God Ans The Prouidence of God is that way or manner Hebr. 4.13 Psal 36.6 104. Hebr. 1.3 Iere. 10.23 Iohn 5.17 Acts 17.28 whereby I verely beleeue that God knoweth preserueth gouerneth and to their certaine ends directeth all and singular the things with their actions which he hath created Explic. As nothing could haue béene vnlesse it had receiued a being of God so nothing can continue vnlesse it be still preserued by him Which preseruation of the Creature is eyther generall or speciall The generall is that wherby he continueth the order which he gaue the creature at the first as the seasons and tunes of the years that the Sunne should giue light the fire burne the earth yeeld fruit bread nourish c. for this could not continue without the prouidence of God as appeares in bread Deut. 8.3 The speciall is wherby he ouerruleth all second causes and the course of things so oft as he pleaseth as making the Sunne to stand still and diuiding the Sea c. and also preserueth and careth for not onely the kindes of things but also the particulars of euerie kinde not onely of the more noble creatures as of Man of whom more hereafter in the doctrine of Predestination but of the least and most contemptible with all their actions and euents Psal 147.8 9 16 17 18 Mat. 10.29 30. not any wind riseth not a cloud stirreth not any raine snow c. falleth not a sparrow or little bird dieth or commeth into the tallons of the Kite or into the net of the Fowler but by him who worketh all things according to the cunsell of his will yea our very haires are numbred So that we beléeue the prouidence of God to extend it selfe euen to the basest worme and least flie as well as to the Angels in heauen and that it is as large as his knowledge equally containing all things though not giuing equall things to all vniuersalls singulars things necessary things contingent naturall voluntary good euill little great and that it ordereth and gouerneth all things and actions as he himselfe hath decréed Neither is this to flatter God to say that he careth for euery particular worme flie c. as if so be God cared onely for multitudes and not for euery each one when our Sauiour saieth one Sparrow Hee is as well able to know them and to prouide for them as to make them and giue them life and the paine is all alike to him to care for euery one as for a multitude neither doth it derogate from his greatnesse or goodnesse but rather amplifie the same when hee neglecteth nothing which he hath made Surely if it did not impeach his Maiestie to make them neither to preserue them Quest But do you beleeue that Gods prouidence extendeth it selfe to all actions of men euen to decree order and gouerne euill actions Ans Yes indeede Ibeleeue that euen the euill actions of men are not only ly foreknowne Gene. 45.5 2. Sa. 16.10 Acts 4.28 but also decreed by God Expli We néed not feare to attribute euill actions to the decrée of God because the Scripture so speaketh onely we must soberly and wisely vnderstand it namely that Pharaohs cruelty Sheme is cursing Absolons vncleannes Iudas his betraying of Christ are not by his reuealed wil approued but forbidden and yet that by his good pleasure hee will permit the same Which permission we may not vnderstand to be the cessation of his care and prouidence or an ydle wincking at the matter but ioyned with an actiue power not of infusing euill into men but first of taking away or denying his grace and of deliuering of them most iustly to Satan and to the lusts of their owne hearts And also of bounding their wils purposes and actions and directing them to a good end For God is so good that he would neuer suffer euill to be if hee could not bring good out of euill Euen as the skilfull Apothecary knoweth how to vse poyson well and to the good of the patient And surely this is amost pregnant proofe of the powerfull prouidence of God herein when those actions which are done by wicked men contrary to his will yet are brought to serue and fulfill his holy will and purpose For euen as in an Armie one fighteth for praise an other for lucre of the spoyle an other is egged forward by desire of reuenge yet all for the victorie and for their Prince and as in a shippe some weigh vp Ankers others stand at the pumpe others at the sterne and all by seuerall workes labour for the safety of the ship so whatsoeuer the wicked propound to themselues yet the Lord ordreth all to his good pleasure will they nill they so that as an arrow flieth to the marke which the shooter aymeth at without any sence whither it goeth So the Lord serueth himself by the wicked thogh they thinke not so much Esay 10.5 6 7. Hence is it that though the decrée of Gods prouidence as hath béene said is concerning those euill actions yet neither is God guilty nor man guiltlesse God is not guilty because he putteth no euill into men but vseth them as he findeth them and so maketh them to serue his glory who may vse what creatures he will and cannot vse them though they be euill but well because he is infinitely good Neither is man guiltlesse notwithstanding the Decree for sinners are not excusable because there is no force vsed towards them but they follow their sinnes with great pleasure and a very willing minde and casting away the care of vertue do of their owne accord yeeld themselues to their owne lusts respecting in their euill déeds onely the satisfying of their owne wils and not the fulfilling of the will of God The Iewes did
deliuered foin the power of darknesse where the word signifieth by fine force to deliuer or plucke away Euen as Dauid pulled the Lambe out of the Beares mouth so hath Christ by his Almighty power reskued vs out of the mouth of the Roaring Lyon So also hée hath destroyed the deuill Heb. 2.14 not by abolishing his substance but by weakening his power as the word there importeth Christ then payeth his Bloud as a price to his Father and so forcibly deliuereth vs from the deuill Who hath the power of death as the Hang-man hath the power of the Gallowes not absolute but by commission from God for the tormenting of the wicked This Redemption wée speake of is so the worke of God that wée exclude all creatures from any power or possibility of redéeming vs. Psal 49.7 And wée acknowledge it to bée the worke of the whole Trinity deliuering vs in the person of the Sonne who redéemeth vs by his Merite and by his Efficacy by his Merite deseruing Redemption for vs by his Efficacy effectually applying it vnto vs by his Spirit through Faith Vse First héere wée may sée the wonderfull misery in the which wée are all till wée haue our part in the Eternall Redemption purchased for vs by Iesus Christ For first we are vnder the power of sinne and the tiranny of the deuill very Bond-slaues more miserable then euer were the poore Iraelites in Egypt or now are the poore Christians vnder the Turke for the bondage of these is onely bodily ours more bodily and spirituall also our bodies and very Spirits being subiect to obey his filthy will in all things Ephe. 2.2 Secondly we are all our life time in feare of death euen as is the case of one condemned to the Gallowes hee alwaies trembles and quakes at the approach and remembrance of the houre of his execution So wee if God make vs sensible of our estate in regard of sinne are alwaies haunted with the terrours of an euill conscience as with Furies and Fiends of hel as Caine Saul Iudas Thurdly wee are fire-brands of hell subiect to eternall condemnation for our sinnes c. This is our misery which who so vnderstandeth not nor considereth he neuer esteemeth this wonderfull mercy of God in redeeming of vs as he ought For as hee that supposeth himselfe to bee mortally sicke highly reckoneth of the Phisition which cureth him and he which is troubled but with some light infirmity not so Euen so to him to him onely is the tydings of the Gospell welcome the Promise sweete the Bloud of Christ vnualuable the Loue of God vnspeakeable yea without measure and passing all knowledge which seeth his misery and seeleth his heart wrung with the fetters and bolts of sinne and which considereth of those eternall torments due to the same Vse 2. Here we ought also to consider of the Price whereby wee are ransomed and of the exceeding Loue of God For the Price it was neither gold nor siluer nor any corruptible thing but the pretious Bloud of the Lambe vnspotted Iesus Christ Marke thou which readest 1. Pet. 1.18 19. It cost the very Heart Bloud of Iesus the Sonne of God who was without sinne to saue thee a vile wretch from eternall damnation which thou deseruest by thy sinnes The Loue of God herein appeared to be most wonderfull in that he spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him to death euen for vs and in our stead who were not his friends but his very enemies See what loue the Father hath shewed Rom. 6.7.8 that thou an Imp of the deuill by sinne shouldst haue the Bloud of Gods owne Sonne shed to make thee his son or daughter Let me speake vnto thee in the words of Ezra Ez. 9.13.14 which words he spake from the occasion of a meaner deliuerance Seeing God hath kept thee from being beneath for thine iniquities and hath granted thee such deliuerance shouldst thou continue in sinne shouldst thou rebell and returne to breake the Commandement of such so mercifull a God by drunkennesse blasphemy lying pride whoredome or any profanenesse Shouldest thou despise the Saboaths Word Sacraments Bloud of such a Sauiour Shouldest thou refuse to sacrifice thy Body and Soule to his glory that refused not to sacrifice his precious life for thy Saluation Shouldest thou be a Niggard of thy duty to him yea of thy best bloud who was prodigall to expend and shed his Bloud to redeeme thee Now God forbid Luk. 1.74.75 Tit. 2.14.15 c. Nay this inexcusably bindeth vs all to all thankefulnesse and true obedience Quest But you said that Man was created according to the Image of God in a most holy and happy estate how then comes bee to stand in need of a Redeemer Ans I beleeue that Adam and Eue being created by God according to his Image in singular happinesse and placed in Paradise did notwithstanding willingly and by the enticement of the diuell fall away transgressing Gods commandement giuen vnto them and so made themselues and their posteritie Gen. chap. 2. and 3. subiect both to sinne and death the wages of the same Expli Though it be farre better to indeuoure to come out of the misery we are in then curiously to inquire how wée came into the same yet because many necessary points depend on this and wee neuer séeke the heauenly Physition till we vnderstand and féele our disease and the danger Therefore it is necessary that wee should haue some good measure of knowledge hereof Which we shall attaine if we consider these two things First what Adams state was in his Innocency and vpon what conditions it did stand Secondly the manner of his fall We will héere intreate of his happinesse Genes 3. and the conditions thereof The happines of our first parents may bee referred to these heads First that they were created in the Image of God together with the manner of their creation but of this before Secondly that they were placed in the Garden of Eden translated by the Septuagint Paradise and commonly so called because it was a place of singular delight and pleasure Gene. 2.9 to 15. a most pleasant place in regarde both of the variety of all pleasant fruits the Trées also of knowledge and life in the middest thereof and also in regard of the pretious riuers watering the same Vnto this our Sauiour alludeth when he saith to the Thiefe This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise not that Paradise wherein Adam was put which was defaced in the flood but Heauen so called for the happinesse ioy and riuers of pleasure which are there for euermore Thirdly the happines of our first parents is set downe from their fréedome from all things which might hurt their bodies or disturbe their mindes They were both naked and were not ashamed Gen. 2.25 They were naked Hereby is signified that their bodies had a kinde of Impassibilitie so that though they were neither hairy nor woolly
if we would be preserued in the time of temptation then one singular meanes is to hold fast the word of God and to beléeue it which was the weapon wherewith Christ repelled and foyled the deuill in the Wildernesse Mat. 4.10 when he brought Eue to doubt of this shée was easily ouercome so if he can bring vs to neglect contemne or speake euill of the Word or but to doubt of the truth of it hee makes reckoning we are his owne This is as if wee should yéeld our weapons into our enemies hands to cut our owne throats for then we must needs bee ouercome c. Vse 3. From the guiltinesse of conscience corruption shame and other miseries issuing from the disobedience of our first Parents we learne what it is to sin namely to bring our selues vnder the danger of all the curses and plagues of God The deuill promiseth pleasure and profite if we sinne fulfilling our owne lusts beléeue him if thou wilt he that tempts thée now will if thou beest ruled by him torment thée for it afterwards Remember how hee promised a kind of Diuinity to our first Parents and tremble Labour what thou canst to resist him and repent Vse 4. When we see our nakednesse bodily or spirituall or feele any cold or heat hurtfull sickenesse want paine c. we should call to minde the originall of all these our sinnes and be humbled c. Quest What if Adam and Eue thus offended what 's that to vs Ans Yes very much for though Adam actually transgressed yet because he was not as a priuate but as a publique person representing and the very roote of all Man-kind receiuing and loosing not onely for himselfe but for all his Posterity the Grace which hee had Therefore his fall made both Himselfe Rom. 5.12 Rom. 5.18 Rom. 5.19 Gen. 5.3 Psal 51.5 and all Mankind also Culpable Guilty and Corrupt c. Expl. In Adams sinne three things concurred First the Actuall Transgression Secondly the Legall Guilt Thirdly the Naturall Prauity or Corruption These three are conueyed to all Posterity the Virgin Mary not excepted which are by Naturall Generation descended of Adam and that three waies The fault by participation For as Leui was in Abrahams Loines so were we in Adams Therefore the Apostle saith Rom. 5.12 That in Adam all sinned The guilt by imputation as the sonne of a Traytor looseth the honour his father lost by his Treason Therefore Paul saith Rom. 5.18 By the offence of one the guilt came on all men to condemnation and this is meant when wee say the sinne of Adam is imputed to vs. The Corruption by Generation therefore it is said By one Mans disobedience Rom. 5.19 wee are made sinners So Adam begat Seth not according to the image in which he was first created but in his Image as he then was corrupt that is a corrupt father begat a corrupt sonne Gen. 5.3 Ioh. 3.6 As that which is borne of the Flesh is Flesh As a serpent engenders a serpent so sinnefull men begets sinnefull men according to the Rule That which is begotten followeth the nature of that which doth beget Neither doth this hinder because some are regenerated and their sinnes pardoned for men beget not children as they are regenerate but as they are men euen as a circumcised father begetteth an vncircumcised sonne and as cleane séed-Corne commeth vp with straw and chaffe and other wrecke so men though they haue obtained grace beget children which are borne and conceiued in sinne Vse 1. Hence we learne that children are corrupt not onely by imitation but also by nature not as it was at first created but as it is now corrupted none partaking thereof Christ onely excepted but being culpable guilty and corrupt thereby Vse 2. This also admonisheth parents with all care to endeuour to bring vp their children in the instruction and information of the Lord that as they are Instruments of their generation also of their corruption and guiltinesse conceiued by the same so they become instruments by their good Education and Discipline of their regeneration by the Spirit of God Surely these parents which beget and bring forth children and care not to teach them the feare of God and to instruct them in holinesse both by doctrine and example bring forth Children as much as in them lieth fort the Diuell and not for God c. Q. Tell me more plainly what is that corruption that you say is conueyed vnto vs from Adam Ans It is that which is called Originall sinne which is the disorder of the whole man and the guiltinesse of Adams transgression Gen. 6.5 Rom. 7.18 Psal 51.7 Rom. 8.7 1. Cor. 2.14 Iam. 1.14.15 Mat. 15.19 brought vpon all mankinde by the fall of Adam whereby they want the righteousnes which ought to be in them and haue that vnrighteousnesse which ought not to bee in them which makes them inclinable to actuall sinne being the fountaine thereof Expl. This corruption of Nature is called Originall sinne or of beginning because it was from the beginning as soone as euer the fall of Adam was and also because it is one of the first things which is with the childe in the conception And further because it is the beginning of all actuall sinne Generally and more largely taken it signifies the sinne of Adam the guilt following and the corruption but more strictly it is vsually taken onely for the corruption of nature which implieth the losse of the Image of God and in the stead thereof in the minde blindnesse and vanity in that will stubbornnesse and rebellion and in the affections sences and the whole body grieuous disorder contrary to that that should be and inclinable to all euill Yea we may not thinke that the substance of body and soule or any faculties are impaired but as in a poysoned Fountaine there is the water and the running onely the wholesomnesse is taken away so onely the soundnesse of these is lost and in the roome therof all vnsoundnesse hath taken place This corruption which wée thus speake of hath truely the nature of sinne and maketh subiect to the wrath of God as is manifest in Infants which die though they haue committed no actuall transgression Rom. 5.14 as Paul reasoneth And this is further to be remembred that it is not so deriued vnto vs that one hath one part of originall sinne and another another part but it is wholly in euery one and is the Séed and Spawne of all sinne euen of the Sinne against the Holy Ghost Vse 1. Hence we sée that we are corrupt and guilty of Hell euen in our mothers wombe being conceiued in sinne Psal 51.5 so that a childe of a day old is not innocent though we call them so in regard of any actuall rebellion in their owne persons performed for there is in them Sin or concupiscence in the first act as they say euen as rauenousnesse in the Lyons or Wolues Whelpe
also and sauour of our corruption as pure water is soyled by passing through a filthy channell and good Wine as it were tainted by the fustinesse of the Caske And further our actions are to be reputed such as are the next naturall beginnings in vs from whence they procéed which are an vnderstanding but in part inlightened and will and affections but in part sanctified by the Spirit Vse 1. Trust not in thine own works for though they may be in some respect good yet in other respect they haue euill mingled withall so that thou hast much cause or more when thou hast done thy best to aske pardon for that is wanting then to boast of that thou hast performed c. Vse 2. Perswade thy heart to endeuour to please him with thy best seruice who so graciously is content through Christ to accept of thy weake obedience c. Q. None then can keepe the law what doe they deserue which breake it Ans They which in the least manner breake that holy Law deserue the wrath and curse of God Deu. 27.26 Gal. 3.10 Rom. 2.9 6.23 that is all plagues and iudgements of body and soule in this world and in the world to come Vse 1. If one sinne deserue Hell then what hast thou iust cause to feare who art guilty of innumerable sinnes How shalt thou escape vnder many sinnes when the least sinne is so heauy and heynous that it cannot bee pardoned without the heart bloud of Iesus Christ c. Vse 2. Hate sin which bringeth with it the curse yea all curses and if thy vile nature taketh pleasure in any sinne lay the momentany pleasure thereof with the eternall paine that followeth it and consider wisely Is sinne swéet But Death and the Curse are bitter Couetousnesse Vsury Vncleannesse Drunkennesse Reuenge may please the flesh but knowest thou not that they will bee bitter in the end Wilt thou rather separate thy selfe foreuer from God and be accursed then leaue thy sinnes and walke in the commandements of God Who can dwell with continuall burnings and endure that fire c. Q. Wee are all sinners and deserue the curse what meanes is there to be freed from it Ans Whosoeuer are iustified in the sight of God by the obedience of Christ Rom. 5.1.2.3.4.5 Rom. 8.1 Gal. 3.13 through Faith are sure to escape the curse of the Law Q. What is iustification in the sight of God Ans Iustification is the sentence of God whereby as a Iudge for the righteousnesse of another that is of Christ he freely forgiueth the sins of the belieuing sinner Rom. 3.21.22.23.24.25.26 and imputeth the righteousnesse of Christ vnto him for his owne glory and the sinners eternall saluation Expl. For the vnderstanding of this wonderful point it must be very well obserued that Iustification or to Iustifie signifies not to make Iust by expelling the euill quality in vs and infusing that which is good but alwayes in this matter it is taken iudicially being a tearme or word taken from the bench of the Iudge and signifies by way of sentence to pronounce a person arraigned to be cleare quit and guiltlesse as appeares He that iustifies the wicked Pro. 17.15 and condemneth the iust both these are an abhominatiō to the Lord. Here by the opposition of Iustifying and Condemning Psal 14 3.2 Rom. 8.33 c. it is manifest that Iustification is iudicially taken for it is no abhomination to make an euill man good so also is the word taken For the vnderstanding then of the answeres to the two last questions conceiue thus Thou hast broken the Law and art a grieuous sinner Thou must answere it before the iudgement seate of God the sentence of the Law is Thou must bee damned for thy sinnes Thy Conscience askes how thou shalt escape The answer is There is no way vnlesse the Iudges fauour may bee obtained to iustifie thee that is to absolue thée by his sentence Which Iudge who is God from whose sentence there is no appeale if he shall iustifie thée that is pronounce thée to be guiltlesse and Iust and so acquite thée then thy Conscience hath Peace Vse 1 Diligently study this point which is the chiefe Tower as it were of Christian Religion against all Gentilisme and Superstitions Which if it be not rightly vnderstood it is not possible to preserue the purity of doctrine in other points Yea some Papists haue confessed and it is most true that this doctrine Pighius razeth the very foundation of all Popery their Idolatrous Sacrifice of the Masse their groundlesse Purgatory their superstitious praying to Saints and for the dead c. Being no more able to stand before this doctrine sincerely taught vnderstood then the Dagon of the Philistins was able to stand before the holy Arke of Israel This is the summe of the Bible the ground of our peace and assurance It were therefore a very grosse thing that any Christians of the yeares of discretion should be ignorant hereof Vse 2. It is the greatest and hardest matter in the world for a sinner to be iustified in the sight of God Many thinke it to be a slight and easie thing and therfore they neither feare him nor seriously séeke forgiuenesse But consider thou that thou must be arraigned and tried before the iudgement seat of that God who is a consuming fire in whose sight the Heauens are vncleane who will not fauour iniquity who cannot be deluded or deceiued who cannot retract and reuerse the sentence of condemnation manifest in the law without satisfaction for the law accusing sheweth that sentence already written with the finger of God thy conscience confesseth all Consider this and then tell me what it is to be Iustified How shalt thou escape Euen Dauid a man beloued of God and after his owne heart when hee considereth this crieth out Enter not into iudgement with thy seruant O Lord for in thy fight shall no flesh be iustified And againe If thou shalt marke iniquities who shall stand namely in iudgement What then canst thou say why thou shouldst not be damnned What shall thy conscience plead Guilty thou art and God must deale iustly To whom wilt thou go We will go euen to Iesus Christ our Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world Iehouah our righteousnesse our surety who hath perfectly fulfilled the Law for vs and fully paid and patiently suffered all things which can be exacted of vs or were to be suffered by vs. Whose righteousnesse is ours if we beléeue euen as effectually as if it had béene done in our owne persons and for this onely is a sinner iustified that is pronounced to be iust before God This if thou know it happy arte thou if thou féele it c. Quest You said that wee are instified by the righteousnesse of another How can that be Can I liue by another mans Soule or be learned by the learning that is in an other Ans I verely beleeue that
and of his Office Of his Person these thrée things must necessarily be beleeued according to the Scriptures First that he is that onely true God Secondly that he is very man partaking of our flesh and bloud with all generall not personall infirmities of our Nature being in all things like vnto vs yet without sinne Heb 2.14 and 4.15 1. Pet. 1.19 and 2.22 And therefore wee reade that he was hungry thirsty weary c. And if you aske how he could partake of our nature and yet haue no sinne you must remember that he was conceiued by the Holy-Ghost and borne of the virgin Mary The Holy-Ghost sanctifying a part of the substance of the Virgins Luk. 1. 2 Body to be the Body of Christ so that we beleeue he was not begotten by man by whom corruption and sinne is propagated and deriued vnto vs. Thirdly that he is God and Man in one Person figured by the Arke which was of Gold and precious Wood that would not rot noting by the Gold the Deity of Christ and by the precious Wood his Humanity without sinne This Personall vnion of these two Natures in Christ was thus The Sonne of God being from euerlasting a Person subsisting in the Holy and vndiuided Trinity did assume or take into the Vnty of his Person a Humane Nature consisting of Body and Soule so soone as euer it beganne to be hauing no Subsistence out of his Person but being destitute of all Personality in it selfe so that it becomes the very Body and Soule of the Sonne of God and whatsoeuer is proper to either Nature which are not by this meanes either in Essence or Operations confounded is indifferently and truely spoken of the Person As to make it plaine to the simple In our selues vnderstanding and knowledge are effects and workes of the Soule eating sleeping c. are workes proper to the Body Neither doth the Soule eate or sleepe or the Body vnderstand or know Yet wée say well and truely that Peter or Paul consisting of this body and soule vnderstand know eate stéepe c. because these two Natures the body and soule are vnited in their person And for this cause looke what is well or ill done by the body or any part of it or by the soule or any part of it is accounted to the whole Person making the Person guilty or not guilty good or bad As if the Tongue blasphemeth it is said the Person blasphemeth or if there be euill motions in the minde yet the whole Person is guilty So in some sort is it in this Personall Vnion of these two Natures of Christ As To know all things to be present euery where are Proprieties of his Diuine Nature To kéep the Law to die and to bléed are Proprieties of the Humane Nature of Christ Now wée may not say that the Humane Nature of Christ knoweth all things is omnipotent c. Nor that the Diuine Nature is obedient bléedeth dyeth c. And yet in regard of the Personall Vnion of these two Natures in Christ we say that the Person which hath these two Natures which is Christ the Sonne of God knoweth all things is present euery where bléedeth dyeth c. and looke what is done or suffered by either of the Natures is truely done and so accomited by the whole Person So that if you 〈◊〉 who fulfilled the Law who dyed for vs we may say the second Person in the Trinity euen God though not according to his Diuine but Humane Nature as speaketh the Holy Ghost notably Act. 20.28 God by his Owne Bloud purchased the Flocke of his Elect. Whereby I beleeue and that most infallibly and truly that whatsoeuer Christ did for my saluation is Gods own deed euen the immediate worke of the second Person in the Trinity Yet heere one thing must be remembred that though the body and soule of Peter make the person of Peter yet the Humane and Diuine Nature of Christ make not his Person for he was a Person from euerlasting and cannot bee a Humane Person but is still a Diuine Person though he could not be a Mediator or execute that Office without the Humane Nature so assumed This is that wonderfull Mystery of our Sauiour IESVS CHRISTS Incarnation Wherein concurred propounded to our Faith not to our Reason three the greatest Miracles that euer were First that a Virgine conceiued and brought forth a Child remainings Virgine Secondly that Adams flesh and Adams sin were parted Thirdly and principally this vnsearchable Mystery of the Personall Vnion of the God-head and Man-hood of Christ Quest But was it necessary that our Mediator should be God and Man and that in one Person as you haue declared Ans Yes verely for by this meanes he could die for vs and ouercome death and deserue for vs by his obedience the pardon of our sinnes and eternall life Expli Two things necessarily required that our Mediatour should be God First the greatnesse of the euill to the which we were subiect Secondly the greatnes of the good that we stood in néed of Our euill was foure-folde First the heinousnesse of sinne Secondly the anger of God Thirdly the power of death Fourthly the tyranny of the Diuell Our good which we wanted Foure folde also First the restoring of the Image of God Secondly the pardon of sinne Thirdly deliuerance from Death and Satan Fourthly eternall life But to take away the Euill Marke 2.7 Hos 13.14 Reuel 1.18 Zach 3.2 Ro. 16.20 Psal 51.10 Rom. 6.23 c. Ro. 5.17 18 Hebr. 2.14 and bestow the Good none is able to do but God Therfore it was necessary that our Mediatour should be God Two Reasons also there are why he must necessarily be man first the Iustice of God required that in that nature which offended satisfaction should be made secondly that he might haue somthing to offer which could not be his Godhead therefore he must be Man Euery high Priest must offer somewhat therefore a Body was ordained him Hebr. 8.3 Heb. 10.5 Hebr. 9.26 that he might offer himselfe Two reasons also may be alleaged why he must be God and Man in one person First that he might be a fit Mediator betwéene God and Man as it were indifferent and equally affected to either side for an Vmpiere or Wards-man may not be partiall If he had béene onely God wée might haue thought that he would not enough haue respected our misery If he had béene onely Man not enough the iustice of God Therefore he is to be God and Man deare vnto both and accounting both deare vnto him carefull that Gods iustice be not impeached and that our misery be relieued Secondly that the workes performed in the flesh of the Sonne of God might be of an infinite price to satisfie for our sinnes by which an infinite Maiesty was offended which could not be if the Person vndertaking our Redemption had not béene God and Man in one Person He was Man that he might haue
glorifieth them and whereby he will condemne the Deuils and Reprobates Vse 1. Is Christ our Prophet Mat. 17.5 then Here him Rest in the doctrine hée hath deliuered respect not Reuelations or Traditions or any thing that agréeth not therewith Yea Gal. 1.8 if an Angell from heauen teach otherwise let him be accursed Is Christ our Priest who hath taken vpon to satisfie for thee and to make intercession for thée in heauen Then trust neither to Saint Angell or thy selfe but trust perfectly on his Grace 1. Pet. 1.13 and bee of good comfort for he is a High-priest which is full of compassion and it is his Office and he is able perfectly to saue thee seeing he liues for euer to make intercession for thée Heb. 7.25 Is Christ the King of his Church Yes of heauen and earth then let the 〈◊〉 of the earth be confounded For Christ is King who shall stay all 〈◊〉 before 〈◊〉 face Luk. 19.27 that refuse to bee 〈…〉 his Word and Spirit 〈…〉 in her King for euermore 〈◊〉 Vse 2 Learne héere why thou art called a Christian Thou art called so of Christ because all the Elert tereme of his Annoynting that is of his Spirit Heb. 1.9 Hee was annoynted with the Oyle of Gladnesse aboue his Fellowes Ioh. 3.34 For he receiued the Spirit not by measures and to this end Ioh. 1.16 that wee of his Fulnesse might receiue Grace for Grace So that as the oyntment powred vpon the head of Aaron ran downe to the skirts of his cloathing so wee 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 of Christ and of him are called Christians by the which is meant that we are made Priests and Kings to God therefore called a Royall Priest hood Reu. 1.6 1. Pet. 2.9 If this were well vnderstood and men would examine their Christianity by this it would soone appeare that many are not true Christians which glory in the Name If thou béest a Christian then where is thy knowledge whereby thou art as a Prophet to thy selfe and to others Grosse Ignorance cannot stand with this Title If thou béest a Christian then thou art a Priest and a King If a Priest then thou must offer Sacrifice Prayers Alines yea thy Body and Soule to the seruice of God If a King then thou must rule and governe thy passions affections thy selfe according to the rule of the Word If thou dost not thus if thou neuer or seldomo prayest if thou art without compassion toward the néedy if thou béest profane in thy life not sanctifying thy body and soule by Faith and Obedience to God but by drunkennesse swearing filthinesse cruelty pride lying c. to the devill If thou mournest not for thy corruptions and resists them but yéeldest cowardly to the wicked motions of thine owne vile minde being a very slaue to sin and the deuill then thou must needs conclude against thy selfe that thou art no Priest and King to God and so no good Christian in very deed whatsoeuer thou esteemest of thy selfe Quest Is there nothing else necessary to bee knowne concerning Christ Ans Yes as namely his Resurrection Ascension Sitting at the right hand of his Father and his comming to Iudgement which things may well bee referred to the Kingly Office of Christ Expl. Christ teacheth vs as a Prophet saueth vs by his Merite as a Priest and maketh his heauenly Doctrine and Obedience Effectuall as he is a King and to this his Efficacy are those seuerals in the answere to bee referred of the which there are plentifull expositions extant and therefore I spare the particular opening of them Thus much of the first speciall worke of God toward his Church which is Redemption Now followes the second called Sanctification Quest What is Sanctification Ans It is the worke of God by his Holy Spirit Deut. 30.8 Ier. 31.18 32.39 Iob. 6.44 Act. 5.31 11.18 whereby the Image of God is renewed in the Elect called also Conuersion Regeneration Repentance c. Expl. There are two principall benefits which wee obtaine in this life by Christ Iustification by Faith and Sanctification by the Spirit Who is called the Holy Spirit both Essentially and Effectually because as he is God holy in himselfe so he maketh holy whom he pleaseth 2. Thess 2.13 1. Pet. 1.2 which worke is therefore called the sanctification of the Spirit This worke is wrought in the minde will and affections yea in the whole man not by altering the substance of body or mind or abolishing any naturall Faculty or Affection as Vnderstanding Loue Hate Ioy c. but by putting away and purging out the euill quality in these and the like and by creating a new holy quality in them acceptable to God and agréeable to his word that now the vnderstanding should be capable of good things and the streame of our affections turned to the right obiect as to hate euill to loue goodnesse and to reioyce in it Wée are to vnderstand also that this in nature is after Iustification as Paul reciteth them Whom he iustifieth Rom. 8.31 hee glorifieth that is he gloriously reneweth which is begun here perfected in the life to come yet I cōfesse the repentance is sometimes put before remission of sinnes not that in Nature but because in our sense and feeling it is first For first we feele the burden of our sinnes Marke 1.13 Actes 5.31 and then we are eased and refreshed by the mercy of God And also repētance is named in the first place because it is first to bee taught that wee may desire the mercy of God Yet in nature Faith which purifieth the heart is first though in time there bee no difference For our Vnion with Christ and our partaking of his merit to Iustification and of his Spirit to Sanctification are wrought at the same time euen as the Sunne and his beames Vse 1. As the Sunne is declared by his light the trée by his fruits so by thy sanctification demonstrate thy iustification c. Vse 2. Boast not of thy heart while thy life is profane neither content thy self with an outward shew of holines hauing an euill conscience Rom. 12.2 2. Cor. 7.1 c. for Sanctification is the renewing of the minde yea of the whole man and therefore labour to grow vp into a full holinesse of the flesh and of the spirit Quest Is Sanctification Conuersion or Repentance so the worke of God that we can not of our selues by the power of our free will 〈◊〉 or repent Ans Iverely beleeue that since the fall of Adam 1. Cor. 2.14 2. Cor. 3.5 Rom. 8.7 Iohn 15.5 there is no free will in man vnto things Spirituall and pleasing to God Expl. For the vnderstanding of this we are to consider of Man as he was before his fall or as he is now since the fall Free will you may call a facultie or power of the Soule whereby it doth fréely without compulsion force chuse or refuse
thereof So then not the world that is not euery man and woman in the world haue interest in the blessing of Christ Rom. 11.7 but onely the Elect of God This Church is called Holy partly because it is cloathed with the righteousnes of Christ imputed and partly because it is gouerned by the Spirit of Christ by the which euery member thereof is quicknes and made able in some measure in truth to hate sinne and to loue and follow that which is good It is called Catholike that is Vniuersall because all the Saints and Elect of all times and places 〈…〉 vnto it as to one Body And this we professe to be One because there is the Head which is Christ one Body one Spirit one Faith one Hope Ephe. 4.4 one Loue c. Part whereof is now in heauen Triumphing which are the Soules of the Saints departed and part fighting and Militant here on earth in the Spirituall wee face against the world the flesh and the deuill Vse 1. All happy making promises are made onely to the Church All shall not be saued labour to be of that number whose are the promises if thou wouldst bee saued Vse 2. It 's a great comfort that of all sorts of men some are of this Church which is washed with the Blocd of Iesus the Geatile as well as the Iew the Seruant as well as the Maister the Poore as well as the Rich For there is no respect of persons with God but in all Nations such as feare him are accepted be they one or other Act. 10.34.35 As God respects none for their riches or great place so he reiects none because they are poore and base Indéed in this world the poore haue the least part but in Christ benefites the Beggar beléeuing hath as large and good right as the King For we are Cittizens of a Kingdome which is not of this world God is not onely the God of the Mountaines Ioh. 18.36 but of the Vallies also And the Spirit bloweth where it listeth Yea many times God breatheth Life and Grace on a pooer contemptible wretch as the world accounts as on Lazarus and passeth by such as go in veluet coates as Diues Memember Christ is not thine because thou art rich or great or beautifull but because thou Beléeuest It is faith makes the poore Beggar as rich in Christ as thy selfe For God hath chosen the poore also to make them rich in faith and pertakers of his Kingdome Art thou rich Iames 2.5 despise not the Beggar or poorest Beléeuer who if thou beleeuest not is better then thy selfe and though in the things of this life according to Gods ordinance thou hast the start of him yet in Christ he is thy equall for in Christ there is neither Circumsion nor Vncircumcision Bond nor Frée Col. 3.11 c. Art thou rich Labour to bée rich in faith rather then in gold for thou and thy money may perish but by faith thou shalt bée saued Art thou poore Comfort thy selfe Thou hast a right in a heauenly inheritance where thou shalt equally share with the greatest King and let it prouoke thee to so much the more care to please him in all things who hath chosen thée so base and called thée so vnworthy Vse 3. The Church of Christ is a Holy Church Marke then If thou béest not holy in heart and affections in life and conuersation but a profane wretch thou art also a damned wretch if thou so continuest thou art no part of this Church for Christ hath chosen vs that we should bée holy Ephe. 1.4 2. Tim. 1.9 and hee hath called vs with a holy making calling Examine therefore thy selfe Cant. 4.12.13 The Church by Salomon is called a Garden enclosed full of the sweetest Flowers and Plants Now if thou beest a Blasphemer a Lyer a Backe-biter c. If these bee the Flowers which grow in thy Garden thou art the Deuils Dunghill thou art none of the Church The Church is called a Doue vndefiled If thou beest filthy Cant. 5.2 vncleane a Fornicator a Strumpet an Vsurer an Oppressour Couetous Cruell Vnmercifull c. Thou maist be a member of the Kite Vulture or rauenous Cormorant but not of Christs spotlesse Doue which is his Church The Church is the Body of Christ If thou beest a Drunkard Ryotous a breaker of the Saboath a contemner of Religion and such as doe professe it c. thou art a limbe of the deuill not a Member of Christ vnlesse thou wouldst make the Body of Christ a monstrous body like the Image of Nebuchadonoser which was part of Gold and Siluer part of Iron and Clay Remember then Christ is the Head of his Church if thou receiuest not not Grace from him to Sanctification thou art none of his Christ is the King of his Church out of the Church the deuill raignes If thou obeyest not Christ but the deuill how art thou Christs Nay how art thou not the deuils Quest You say that the Church is a company of such which are Predestinated to Eternall Life What meane you by Predestination Ans By Predestination of men I meane the Eternall purpose of God concerning Man-kind fallen and corrupted whereby for the setting forth of his glory he appointed some to Saluation with the meanes whereby they should obtaine the same which is called Election and some to damnation 1. Thess 5.9 which is called Reprobation Rom. 9. throughout the chapter Quest What is Election Ans Election is the most free and Eternall Counsell of God Luk. 10.20 Rom. 8.30 9.11 11.5.2 Pet. 1.10 Eph. 1.2.3.4 whereby hee chooseth some which were falne in Adam and Predestinateth them to Grace and Glory by Iesus Christ Quest What is Reprobation Ans It is the most free Counsell of God whereby hee determined not to chuse Rom. 9.21.22.2 Pet. 2.8 Iude 4. but to passe by some fallen in Adam and to leaue them in their guiltinesse and corruption and in the end to condemne them for their sinnes Q Do you then thinke that men were ordained to life or death before they were borne Ans Yes verily that I do Quest Doth not this bring in a neglect of all godlinesse Rom. 9.11 and make for them which say If I be predestinated to life I shall be saued whatsoeuer I do if to death I shall bee damned in like manner therefore I will liue as I list Ans God forbid For wee teach that men are not onely predestinated to the end but also to the meanes They which are ordained to Life being also ordained to Grace whereby they obtaine it and they that are ordained to death being also ordained to be left in their corruption that they may be damned Ephe. 1.4 Expl. That there is Predestination which is an ordaining of a thing to this or that before it be extant appeares in the doctrine of the Prouidence of God And that it is to be referred to men in the