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A16736 The doctrine of the Gospel By a plaine and familiar interpretation of the particular points or articles thereof: with the promises, comforts, and duties, seuerally belonging to the same. VVhereunto is added, a declaration of the danger of not knowing, not beleeuing, or not obeying any one of them. Likewise, a rehearsal of the manifold heresies, wherein many haue erred contrary to them all. Diuided into three bookes. The first whereof, is of beliefe in God the Father ... Allen, Robert, fl. 1596-1612. 1606 (1606) STC 364; ESTC S106811 1,499,180 1,052

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doe enter into couenant with God in all holy care and conscience of walking in all good dutie before him as Abraham and all the faithfull of his posteritie did For as our Sauiour Christ saith The duties the children of Abraham will doe the workes of Abraham c. And verily all the dutie that we yea that all the Church of God can yeeld is too shallowe a fruite of obedience and thankfulnes to God for the reuelation and comfort of this most deepe and high mysterie For insomuch as the Lord God our onely Lord of his infinite mercie wholly consenteth both in vnitie of nature and according to the eternall distinctiō of the persons to the endles perfitting of our redemption saluation what dutie of ours though we were able to yeelde him all the seruice both of vnderstanding and reason of will and affection yea both of spirit soule and body could be answerable to this his infinite goodnes and mercy But to speak something more particularly it is the duty of the whole church of God and of euery true beleeuer to hold maintaine and defend this most holy doctrine against all Anti-trinitarians Atheiests or Profane persons whosoeuer shall shewe themselues to be despisers gainesayers and blasphemers thereof In which respect the holy and diligent labours of Athanasius Nazianzene and many other in former times as also of Caluin Beza Vrsinus Zanchius c. they are in these our daies very excellent The aduersaries of this most high point of doctrine haue beene from time to time many and great in the church of God the lesse to be maruelled at because it is the doctrine of a most secret and high mystery infinitely exceeding all comprehension of corrupt naturall reason The lesse also is it to be maruelled at because the Diuel who in all things enuieth the glory of God and euery way maliceth the saluation of his people taketh all the occasions he can to hinder yea to corrupt and vtterly to peruert the true knowledge faith of this most glorious and healthfull mysterie The former and more ancient of these wicked aduersaries as learned Danaeus hath gathered and sorted them together in his booke of heresies they were first the Apellites Messa●ians Deïtes and Monarchites who denying the distinct Persons held that God is onely as it were a sole and solitarie Monarch of the world Secondly the Simonians Ptolemies Colarbasies Montanistes No●tians Praxcans Sabellians Apolanaristes who affirmed that there is but one person in the Trinitie onely called by these three sundry names Father Sonne and holy Ghost Thirdly the Marcellians who taught that the Trinitie is but an extension or d●lating of ●ne and the same thing as it were waxe Four●hly the Hieracites who said that the Persons in the Trinitie are but as it were two lights of one candle F●f ly the Metangismonites who imagined the Persons to be like to diuerse vessels the one contained within the other and as a scroule of diuers skinnes Sixtly the Tritheïtes and Triformians who contended that the three Persons are three diuerse and sundry Gods Seauenthly the Marcites and Tetratheïtes who make a quaternitie of Persons The which hereticall blasphemie when Anastasius the Emperour attempted to establish by his Edict about the yeare of our Lord 485. he was by the hand of God stricken with lightening and died miserably Danaeus chap. 47. in his booke of Heresies The last of th● more ancient aduersaries which the same writer rehearseth were the Actians who made no more account of the three Persons then of three qualities All these were worthily resisted and refuted by the excellent M●nisters of Gods word in former times Now in these latter daies rose vp one Seruetus and other who went about to reuiue the former heresie of the Simonians and such like heretikes of their rancke Wherefore by how much the Diuel raiseth vp more hostile warre against this sacred ground of our Christian faith to the dishonour of our God The Danger of not beleeuing this Article and to the endangering of our soules to euerlasting perdition as also to the opening of the mouthes of the profane and vngodly to blaspheme that most holy and sacred mysterie which they knowe not neither haue learned to reuerence and adore by so much ought all the seruants of God at this day and from time to time according to the example of those that haue beene bef●re vs to be the more studious and carefull both to settle our owne vnderstanding and faith more firmely and also more wisely soundly and faithfully euery one according to his place and calling to teach and strengthen one another and all of vs with one consent to pray the more feruently to God that it would please his diuine maiestie still to vphold this his blessed truth of doctrine which teacheth the truth of his most blessed nature the māner of his glorious Essence against all aduersaries thereof as euer heretofore he hath done Amen THat which now remaineth concerning this article is the danger of not beleeuing in the blessed Trinitie Question What is that Answere It is vnpossible that any which beleeue not in the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost three Persons one onely true God should either know rightly the fountaine from whence or the meanes by whom or the manner how life and saluation is brought to light much lesse can they feele the comfort of it here and least of all shall they be partakers of the happines and glory of it in the kingdome of heauen Explicatiō proofe It is vnpossible in very deed For all is contained within the reuelation and faith of this most blessed mysterie as wee may clearly perceiue by calling to minde that which wee reade in the places of holy Scripture before alledged Ro 5.1.2.3.4.5 Eph. 2.18 1. Pet. chap. 1. v. 2. 2. Cor. ch 13. v. 13. which is the last of the whole chapter Yea so is all contained and treasured vp in this mystery that whosoeuer doe not rightly beleeue it * Vnderstand it of those that be willingly ignorant or heretically minded against this holy Mysterie they shal most assuredly wofully perish for euer frō the most glorious presence of God haue their portion among the most hellish and diuellish aduersaries of his glorie According as it hath beene long since well acknowledged and determined and so is stil in the true churches of Christ that whosoeuer desire to be saued must necessarily and before all things hold the true Christian and Catholike faith And that whosoeuer doe not keepe it holy and vndefiled shal without doubt perish euerlastingly The which Catholike faith that is to say the common faith of all true beleeu●rs is this that we doe acknowledge and worship one God in Trinitie and the Trinitie in vnitie Neither confounding the Persons nor diuiding the substance c. Whosoeuer doe not beleeue thus it is most certaine that they doe not beleeue in the true God rightly Nay it is
profitteth vs not to saluation but by the humane nor the humane without the diuine as our Sauiour himselfe saith Iohn 6.53 and verses 61 62 63. The conception profiteth not without the birth nor the birth without the life nor the life without the death nor his death without his resurrection nor all that he did vpon earth either before his resurrection nor in the forty daies after without his ascension vp to heauen Neither doth his ascension or sitting at the right hand of the Father perfect our redemption and saluation till he shall haue executed and performed his last iudgement Reade Iohn 16.7 I tell you the truth saith our Sauiour It is expedient for you that I goe away for if I goe not away the Comforter will not come to you but if I depart I will send him to you And verses 12 13 c. Reade also Luke 21.27 28. and Rom. 8.23 Colos 3.1 2 3 4. Philip. 3.20 21. and 1. Cor 15. verses 12 13 14. and so forth to the end of the chapter In this respect also it is said of the Church of our Sauiour Christ that they who were before his comming in the flesh were not perfect without vs that haue followed them after his comming Neither shall wee be perfect till all shall be gathered into one fold Heb. 11.39.40 Iohn 10.16 But touching the Article of faith now in hand For any to beleeue in the obedience and death of our Sauiour or in his resurrection c. without beliefe in his conception it were as if one would build without a foundation For so our Sauiour Christ in regard of the coniunction of the humane and diuine nature by this conception of the holy Ghost is compared to the foundation of the Church yea to the whole and compleat building arising from thence in an allusion to the holy temple of Ierusalem Hag. 2. ve 3 4 c. Zech. 6.9 c. 15. and Isai 60. The foundation of this spirituall Temple may be said to haue beene laid in the incarnation of our Sauiour by the conception of the holy Ghost By his birth and by the obedience of his life and death the walls were as it were raised and set vp and by his resurrection c. the roofe was laid ouer it as it were and fully finished Heb. 9.1 c. and verses 11 c. Now though this house being well set forward in the building by God was attempted to be pulled downe by such as were accounted in their time chiefe Master builders yet in three daies our Sauiour built it vp againe according as he had told thē before that he would Ioh. 2.19 Destroy this Temple in three daies I will build it vp againe The necessi●ie therefore of beliefe concerning the truth of this Article of the conception of our Sauiour is the cause why GOD hath so graciously reuealed and confirmed it together with the other Article of his birth c. by the testimonie both of men and women and also of the Angels of heauen Now therefore that we may growe to an issue in this point wee may iustly affirme that they doe erre in the very foundation of our saluation whosoeuer doe not beleeue in our Sauiour Christ according to the truth of this Article For it is no Christ with an aierie body or with a body from heauen conueied into the wombe of the Virgin as some haue vainely fancied whereby wee must bee saued but by that CHRIST who is the seede of Abraham and Dauid who tooke our true nature of the Virgin Mary c. as hath already beene declared Let vs therefore very carefully euen as we tender our soules auoid all erroneous and hereticall opinions and fancies swaruing from the holy truth in this behalfe The which that wee may the better doe it shall not be amisse for vs to set downe a briefe collection of the manifold heresies of sundrie sorts of heretikes misled by the Diuel from the truth of this Article that by other mens dangers we may learne to beware First therefore the heretikes called Carpocratiani are to bee vtterly condemned who affirmed that our Sauiour Christ was conceiued after the carnall manner of the conception of other men Likewise the Ebionites Cerinthians and Theodosians who held that hee was conceiued by the comming together of Ioseph and Mary These are directly contrary to the holy Scriptures touching the conception of our Sauiour by the holy Ghost There haue beene diuers other heretikes who haue partly denied the truth of the humane nature and partly haue peruerted and ouerthrown the truth of the personall vnion of both the natures Against the truth of the humane nature First the Valentinians Secundians and Apollinaristes doe deny that Christ tooke a body of Mary The Tatians and Manichaans deny Christ to be of the seede of Dauid The Ophites Cerdonians Marcionites Apollites Manichaans and A●●artodochites deny CHRIST that was borne of the Virgin Mary to be true man c. The Apellites say that the body of Christ was compounded of the foure Elements and of the Starres The Armenij say that the body which was taken of Mary was from the conception such as could not suffer any paine The Valentinians and other heretiks would make Christ to haue a heauenly and spirituall body and not an earthly body or like to the bodies of other men The Arians and Eunomian● deny Christ to haue taken a humane soule but onely a body The Apollinaristes grant that Christ tooke indeed a soule with the body but yet a vegetatiue soule onely and not a reasonable soule Such are the wicked heresies imbraced of many contrary to the veritie of our Sauiour Christs humane nature both in body and soule Now against the truth of the personal vnion of the humane nature with the diuine there are many like wicked and fantasticall heresies First the Entychians Iacobites and Armenij affirme that the humane nature of Christ was absorpt or swallowed vp of the diuine The Nestorians Seruetans and Vbiquitarians contend that the humane nature is deified that is as they say changed into the diuine The groūd of the article and made equall vnto it The Timothians say that there is a third thing made of a certaine mixture of two natures in Christ This third thing the Theodosians say that it is mortall but the Caians say it is immortall The Manichaeans affirme that the Sonne of God descended into the Sonne of Mary at his Baptisme The Apollinaristes say that the word of God it selfe was changed into the fleshe The Theopaschites teach that the diuine nature did suffer in Christ The Acephali and Seuerites grant indeed that both the diuine nature and also the humane doe remaine in Christ but they say with all that their proprieties are confounded and not distinct The Apollinariste● againe they say that Christ in that he is man hath no will of his owne because the humane nature is by their false doctrine confounded and changed into the
Article let vs come to the Promise The Promise Question What promise hath God made of the remaining or forgiuing of our sinnes Answer We haue many very gratious and often renewed promises hereof both old and new euery where dispersed in the holy Scriptures of God Question Name you some of them Answer Beside that which you rehearsed Isai 48. verses 8.9.10.11 You haue pointed vs to another notable testimonie in the 31. chap of Ieremie from the 30. verse to the 35. of the same And chap 33 the .8 verse And in the newe Testament the same promise is alledged to belong through our Sauiour Christ to the beleeuing Gentiles as well as to the beleeuing Iewes Explicatiō It is true as we may reade Act 2 38 39. And ch 10.43 Rehearse the words of some of the places which you haue named Question How do you reade Answer In the 31. cha of Ieremie verses 31. thus it is written Behold the dayes come saith the Lord that I will make a new couenant c. For I will forgiue their iniquitie and remember their sinnes no more And chap 33.8 I will cleanse them from all their iniquitie whereby they haue sinned against me yea I will pardon all their iniquities whereby they haue sinned against me And it shall be to me a name and an honour before all the nations of the earth which shall heare all the good that I doe vnto them c. Explicatiō Let this suffice out of the Prophet Ieremie for this time Wee may read the like testimonies in other of the Prophets beside those which haue beene hitherto alledged As Isai 33.24 The people that dwell therein shall haue their iniquitie forgiuen Read also Ezek chap 18. verse 21. c. 32. All these promises of forgiuenes of sinnes doe belong vnto vs Gentiles The Comforts now through our Sauiour Christ as well as they did before to the Iewes THe Promise being thus confirmed the vse of this Article is next And first for Comfort Question What is that Answer The comfort is euery way very great insomuch as the glory and happines both of our bodies and soules in this life and also in the life to come consisteth herein It is very true as we reade Psalm 32. in the beginning of the Psalme And Rom 4.6.7.8 Explicatiō proofe Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are couered Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not sinne So that forgiuenes of sinnes is as one may say an epitome or short summe of all the mercies of God Whence it is that the Lord is saide Psal 103. as was before alledged to crown vs with his mercies and compassion Verily there is no goodnes or dignitie in our selues whereof we may reioyce or for the which we may looke to be accepted with God The mercie of our God is our onely crowne the glory of Gods free grace is our onely glory c. No doubt the comfort of this Article is singular to all those that knowe what Sinne meaneth And it will the rather warme and cheare vp our hearts if we shal consider that beside our former sinnes infinite and hainous in the sight of Gods iustice we remaine still very apt and prone to offend God euen after that we are by his grace regenerated and borne againe Yea if we shal consider that we daily offend his diuine Maiestie not onely by forgetfulnes and neglect of many good duties but also by rash and vnwarie committing of much euill according to that saying of Saint Iames In maine thinges wee sinne all Furthermore the Comfort hereof will be the more manifest to our consciences if we consider earnestly of the nature of sinne not onely how odious it is in itselfe but also how vile and abominable it maketh our persons both bodies and soules in the sight of God how it keepeth all good things from vs and pulleth downe vpon vs all euill Ier 5.25 Isai 59 1 2 3. till it be couered and forgiuen in our Sauiour Christ But most clearely of all wil the comfort of this Article shine into our hearts if we shall duly looke into the cause and fountaine of the forgiuenes of all our sinnes which would haue pressed vs downe to the very bottome of the gulfe of Hell to wit the most free and amiable grace and fauour of God our heauenly Father through his most blessed Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ which is better then our life though naturally that is most pretious vnto vs. According to the 3 verse of the 63 Ps Thy louing kindnes is better then life And Ps 30 5. This maketh our Baptisme exceedingly comfortable vnto vs insomuch as the whole blessed Trinitie cōsenteth to make it a testimonie of the forgiuenes of our sins through the same most free grace and rich fauour of our one onely true God Mark 1 4. Act. 2 38. and chap 22.16 It maketh the Supper of the Lord in like māner exceeding comfortable vnto vs in that it is a further pledge and assurance that our sinnes are forgiuen through the blood of our Sauiour Christ Mat chap 26. verses 26 27 28. The largenes of this free grace of God to the forgiuenes of sinnes through our Lord Iesus Christ reaching vp as it were to the heauens Ps 36. verses 5. and 7 and Ps 103 11 it enlargeth the comfort of this most excellent blessing seeing God sheweth vs plainly that he hath aboundance of mercie in store not onely for the forgiuenes of some fewe persons here and there but euen for the forgiuenes of his whole Church that is of so many thousands yea myriads of thousands of all sorts of people as shall seeke for mercy at his hands as was touched before Yea not onely for sinners of smaller degrees in offences but also for the greatest sort of sinners aboue other whosoeuer among them shall earnestly repent them and truly beleeue the Gospell of our Sauiour Christ according to that most liberall The Duties and sweete consolatorie incouragement of the Lord by his holy Prophet Isaiah chap 1.18 Come now and let vs reason together saith the Lord though your sinnes were as crimsin they shall be made white as snowe though they be red as skarlet they shall be as woole If ye consent and obey ye shal eate the good things of the land And chap 40.1.2 Comfort yee comfort yee my people will your God say Speake comfortably to Ierusalem and cry vnto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquitie is pardoned for shee hath receiued of the Lords hand double for all her sinnes Finally the bowell-like tendernes of Gods mercy is not the least cause of the great comfort of this Article as we may consider from these and such like testimonies of holy Scripture Psal 25 6.7 and 79.8 Ier 31.20 Lament 3.22.23 Hos 11.8.9 Ioel 2.13 Luke 1.7.8 and ch 15 20. O how sweet therefore ought this mercy of God to be vnto vs in all these
and all things that we doe according to his word well pleasing and acceptable before him Answere 1. It is by reason of that infinite loue of God wherewith hee hath made vs accepted to himselfe in his owne beloued Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ whose righteousnesse and whole obedience and worthinesse faith apprehendeth yea and maketh vs one with Christ himselfe by spirituall coniunction and that according to the most gracious and fatherly good will and pleasure of GOD toward vs in the same his Sonne 2. It is also because God esteemeth it the greatest honour which we can possibly doe vnto him yea and the very ground and originall of yeelding him any true henour at all when we doe beleeue in him as being most true and faithfull of his word aboue all that the naturall sense and reason of man can possibly conceiue and vnderstand 3. Furthermore because faith onely teacheth vs the true deniall of our selues and of all trust in any thing but in God alone 4. Finally because faith is instrumentally as it were the seede yea the very life of all true obedience vnto him Faith most pleasing to God and why There might more reasons bee alleadged from whence the excellencie of faith may be discerned as will further appeare by that which followeth but we will content our selues with these for the present Explicatiō and proofe Now for the proofe of them first let it be well considered that euen as God is in speciall manner pleased to shewe mercy for mercy pleaseth him Micah 7.18 so likewise doth faith singularly please him in so much as it maketh most precious account of his mercy and doth most dutifully attend vpon the same as we read Ps 147.11 The Lord delighteth in them that feare him and attend vpon his mercy Now if we shall inquire yet further why it is that the Lord delighteth so greatly to shewe mercie to miserable and sinfull men it is doubtles for no other cause but for that infinite loues sake which hee beareth first to his owne naturall and onely begotten son our Lord Iesus Christ and then to them for his sake in whom he hath adopted them according to that which we read Ephes chap. 1.5 6. c. Secondly we may see by that which is saide of Abraham how greatly God doth account himselfe glorified of those that do truly and constantly beleeue in him For so we read of Abraham that he gaue great glory to God in that he did not doubt of the promise of God through vnbeleefe but was strengthened in faith aboue hope beleeued vnder hope c. He being fully assured that he who had promised was able also to doe it Ro. 4 18 19 20 21. And for this grace of faith all the seruants of God themselues are specially honoured graced as we may say according to that wee reade touching many particulars mentioned in the 11. ch of the ep to the Heb. from the beginning of the ch c. and as it is generally affirmed of them v. 39. All through faith obtained good report Whereas on the contrary they that beleeue not in God are charged to make God a lyar Then the which what greater dishonour can any doe to him who alone is the God of all truth 1. Iohn 5 10 And how also can they that be such more dishonour and reproch themselues For the third branch read Philip. 3 3 4 c. And here it may be wel worth the noting that as mans calling of the truth of Gods word into questiō was the beginning of mans fall from God so it pleaseth God that faith in the truth of his word promise should be the recouery revniting of man vnto God againe Finally call here againe to minde the words of the former answere Read also 2. Cor. 13 14. Gal. chap. 5 verse 6. VVhat Faith is BVt of the nature of faith wee are now in the next place to enquire further as after a iewell of speciall price and as after that which is the very staffe and stay of our soules as we haue partly beene giuē to vnderstand already Now therefore seeing faith is so excellent a grace shewe you yet more fully what the nature of it is Question How haue you learned to answere this so speciall a point Answere The faith whereby euery true beleeuer is iustified and saued is that most holy and excellent gift or grace of our spirituall regeneration and new birth wherein resteth the principall comfort of our soules here in this life The which arising from the knowledge of the glorious grace of God in the face of Iesus Christ and sweetly and comfortably reposing and resting it selfe onely and wholly vpon the vndoubted certaintie of the diuine truth and faithfulnes of Gods most gracious and free promise concerning the same our iustification and saluation by Christ yea laying sure hold vpon Christ himselfe in whom onely and al-sufficiently life righteousnes and saluation is to be found It hath furthermore many right worthy and admirable effects in the heart of euery true beleeuer Which are those so notable effects Question Answere 1. It reioyceth the heart of the true beleeuer with ioy vnspeakable and glorious 2. It imboldeneth him to make open profession and confession of his faith in the name of Iesus Christ euen in the middest of the most cruell despitefull aduersaries thereof 3. It causeth his soule What Faith is to haue good trust and affiance vnder the holy wings of the fatherly prouidēce protection of God in the most bitter tēptations trials of this life 4. It inciteth also and incourageth the beleeuer to earnest and constant prayer 5. It continually soliciteth to repentance and care of a godly life here in this world 6. Finally it is accompanied with hope and that also in a patient waiting for eternal happines and glory after this life in the kingdome of heauen That the true iustifying faith is of such an excellent nature as you haue described Explicatiō and proofe and that it worketh these so notable effects as you haue rehearsed it is euery where euident in the holy Scriptures as hath beene declared in the last Sermon vpon this point Let vs now briefly here call them againe to mind But first of all in so much as the word faith is vsed in the holy Scriptures in diuers and sundry significations it shall not be amisse for vs to set downe a note thereof And let vs beginne with this that faith is vsed sometimes to signifie the doctrine of faith as Act. chap 6 7. A great company and of the Priests some were obedient to the faith And againe chap. 13 8. Rom. 1 5 and chap. 3.31 and chap. 16 26. Gal. 1 22 and chap. 3 verses 2 5 23 and 1. Tim. verse 2 chap. 1. Paul writeth to Timotheus calling him his naturall sonne in the faith meaning to giue him this testimonie that hee was a true beleeuer according to the true doctrine of faith Read
life Yea and for the better declaration of this excellent doctrine I desire that you shew which they are as each succeede other in either of the same respects Question FIrst therefore which are the former sort of those graces that belong to mortification so farre as for some orders sake we may for the present discerne of them Answere They are these which follow First a true knowledge and earnest meditation of sinne yea of that originall fountaine of sinne which is in our wicked nature How infinite also in number and how haynous in offence our sinnes are and alwaies haue beene in the sight of God How grieuous to the children of God who haue alreadie begun to repent so farre as they haue broken forth to Gods dishonour Ad how dangerous and deadly they are euen against our owne soules Secondly shame and confusion of face and conscience both before God and the holy Angels and also if neede so require before all good and godly men Thirdly remorse and pricking of conscience in the sence of the guiltines of our sinnes and in the feare of Gods iust wrath and vengeance due to them Fourthly godly sorrow and mourning euen with salt teares of repentance from the bitternes of a mans soule in contrition as it were and brokennes of heart before the Lord. Fiftly a willing suffering and induring of all rebukes and chastisements which God sendeth at any time to the taming and subduing of our vnruly and rebellious nature But aboue all and in all a most neare application of the death of our Sauiour Christ to our wounded soules and consciences the which onely is a most soueraine plaister to mortifie and kill as it were the proud flesh of sinne and also to heale and quiet euerie soule that is troubled and distressed for the same Explication and proofe These indeede doe most immediatly goe before in the worke of Gods grace to the mortification of sinne Concerning the first whereof that is the knowledge of sinne c. it commeth as we haue alreadie learned from the doctrine of the law which God hath for the benefit of his children made as it were a seruant to the Gospell though to the obstinate it is armed as a Iudge to their condemnation And further for the meditation of the greatnes of sinne and the infinite number of them euen from our youth yea from our originall corruption of nature consider the example of Dauid Psal 25.7 and 38.4 and 40.12 and 51.4.5 and Psal 19.12 And of Iob. Cha. 9.2.3 and Chap. 13.26 And of Ezra Chap. 9 6. And for the griefe which we put the godlie vnto by our sinne consider it from the example of Lot 2. Pet. 2.8 of Dauid Psal 119. verses 136.158 of Ier Chap. 9.1 and Paul 2. Cor. 12.21 and Phil 3.18 Secondly for shame and confusion read in the same Ch of Ezra and in the beginning of the same verse where note that when the seruants of God are ashamed and confounded for the sinnes wherein other haue chiefely trespassed how much more then ought euery one to bee ashamed of his owne For the which reade further Ieremy 3.25 Wee lye downe in our confusion and our shame couereth vs for wee haue sinned against the Lord our God wee and our Fathers from our youth euen vnto this day and haue not obeyed the voice of the Lord our God Reade also Ezek. Chap. 16.68 Thou shalt remember thy waies and bee ashamed c. And I will establish my couenant with thee and thou shalt knowe that I am the Lord. That thou maiest remember and bee ashamed and neuer open thy mouth any more because of thy shame when I am pacified toward thee for all that thou hast done saith the Lord God And Rom. 6.21 What fruite had yee then in those thinges whereof yee are now ashamed For the ende of those things is death Marke heere the iust cause why we should be ashamed of sinne namely that we should euer be so foolish as to addict our mindes to follow so greedily and to delight so excessiuely as we haue done in that which without repentance would be our vtter destruction For want of this shame for sinne read a vehement rebuke Ier. 3 3. Thou haddest a whores forehead and wouldest not be ashamed And chap. 6.15 Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination Nay they were not ashamed no neither could they haue any shame therefore shall they fall among the slaine c. The Prophet speaketh of a godly shame for otherwise by the conuiction of their consciences that they doe ill in the committing of sinne the very wicked haue a certaine shame though it profiteth them not as chap. 2.26 As the thiefe is ashamed when he is found so is the house of Israel ashamed they their Kings and their Princes and their Prophets Saying to a tree thou art my father and to a stone thou hast begotten me c. There is none in the world who if they haue not by custome of sinne and hardnesse of heart as it were feared their consciences with a hoat yron as the Apostle writeth but they haue akinde of shame and blushing in their face when their sinne is found out according to the prouerbiall saying The good blood lyeth not But the shame of those that are in the way of repentance is an other manner of shamefastnesse for they doe willingly shame themselues and that euen as in the sight of God and from their very hearts in a dislike of their sinne c. Thirdly for remorse and pricking of conscience read Gen. 42.21.22 We haue verily sinned against our brother say the brethren of Ioseph c. Read also 2. Sam. chap. 24.10 Dauids heart smote him after hee had numbred the people and Dauid said to the Lord I haue sinned exceedingly in that I haue done Therefore now Lord I beseech thee take away the trespasse of thy seruant for I haue done very foolishly And Acts. 2.37 Now when they heard it to wit how grieuous a sinne they ●ad cōmitted in crucifying the sonne of God they were pricked in their hearts c. Fourthly concerning godly sorrowe and mourning the holy Apostle Paul writeth that godly sorrow causeth repentance to saluation neuer to be repented of 2. Cor. 7.10 The Apostle meaneth that this is one helping cause among the rest through the worke of Gods grace though not the onely cause It causeth repentance because it doth by the grace of God prouoke it not onely to beginne but also more and more to worke forth the owne worke For when a man is truly sorie for sinne hee indeuoureth to leaue it and to take a better course In which respect King Salomon Eccles 7.4 affirmeth that it is better to goe to the house of mourning then to goe to the house of feasting because this is the end of all men and the liuing will lay it to his heart Likewise he saith that anger is better then laughter he speaketh of that anger which a man
iustly conceiueth against himselfe for sinne because by a sad looke the heart is made better And againe in the same respect verse 7. It is better saith he to heare the rebuke of a wise man then that a man should heare the songe of fooles This sorrowe is very fitly to bee put before the death of sinne and as a meanes tending to the mortification of it For there is no sorrowe at all to bee taken for the death and dying of sinne but ioy and comfort yea a triumph of spirit We are onely to sorrowe that sinne hath liued and borne the sway so long in vs and that we haue takē so great pleasure in it already c. This kind of godly sorrow breedeth the death of sinne for sinne cannot prosper where it is not delighted in Sinne must be made a wanton or else it will haue no ioy to stay It will take no liking of colde and grimme entertainment This godly sorrowe whereby the soule mourneth for nothing so much as because God our most kind Father is thereby displeased with vs Gualan super hoc Trem Inn in gen neut paulo post in cadem sententia gualan de co it is a gracious gift of the holy Ghost according to that we reade Zech. 12.10 c. In that day that is in the time of the Gospell saith the Lord I will power vpon the house of Dauid and vppon the inhabitants of Ierusalem that is vpon all true Christians both Iewes and Gentiles the spirit of grace and supplication and they shall looke vppon mee whom they haue pierced and they shall lament * for this as one mourneth for an onely sonne and bee sorie * for it as one shoulde mourne for his first borne Teares are oftentimes ioyned with this mourning as Iudges 2.4.5 as we haue seene before Ezra chap 10.1 Luke 7 38. Psal 56 8. Ioel. 2.17 Mat. 26 75. and in many other places of holy Scripture Not that godly sorrowe cannot be in some measure without teares or not in great measure but there must of necessitie bee aboundance of teares For some are lesse apt to weepe then other euen by constitution of nature but not the lesse apt to sorrowe by that but subiect rather to more deepe and pensiue sorrow euen because they cannot so easily feele their hearts to melt For the easiest melting of the heart and the breaking forth of teares is a dissoluing and loosening of sorrow the which without teares is both to body and soule of a constringent and binding nature The heart being contrite and broken with this godly sorrowe insomuch as hereby as it were with a hammer all vaine confidence is battered downe and the soule made fit to bee suppliant to God for his tender mercy and grace it is more accounted of before God then all outward and legall sacrifices were euer vnto him For as we reade Psal 51 17. The sacrifices of God are a contrite spirit a contrite and broken heart ô God thou wilt not despise And as we read Ps 34 18. The Lord is neare vnto them that are of a contrite hart and he will saue such as be afflicted in spirit Reade also Isay Chap. 57.15 Thus saith hee that is high and excellent hee that inhabiteth the eternitie whose name is the holy one I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to reuiue the spirit of the humble and to giue light to them that are of a contrite heart For I will not contend for euer neither will I bee alwaies wroth for the spirit should faile before mee and the soules which I haue made And againe Chap. 66.2 To him will I looke euen to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my wordes Come vnto me all yee that are wearie and laden and I will ease you saith our Sauiour Christ Mat. 11.28 The same in sence though in other wordes Where note with singular thankfulnes to God our Sauiour this his sweet promise whereby he releeueth the poore oppressed soule assuring all such that hee will ease them And Isay 61.1 and Luke 4.18 he will binde vp and heale the broken hearted And the rather consider of it with exceeding thankfulnesse to God because all that will not mourne and breake their hearts in a blessed practise of repentance now shall one day howle when it will be too late and wishe that the high mountaines might fall vppon them to crush them to peeces that they might not appeare before the iudgemēt seate of the Son of God whom now they despise Neither is the holy prouerbe vnfit to be considered of vs to the same purpose chap. 29.1 in that it is said He that hardeneth his necke hauing beene often rebuked shall suddenly be destroied so that he cannot be cured And for the same cause also let vs willingly practise that which was answered in the fift place concerning the induring of all Gods fatherly chastisemēts to the breaking of our stout and sturdy hearts and to the weakening of that sin which is so strongly setled in our nature That is let vs harken to the admonitorie precept of the Apostle Iames. chap. 4.9.10 Cleanse your hands ye sinners and purge your hearts ye wauering minded Suffer ye affliction and sorrowe and weepe Let your laughter be turned into mourning and your ioy into heauinesse Cast downe your selues before the Lord and he will lift yee vp For this is one blessed vse and benefit of afflictions that they doe humble and meeken the heart as we may remember from the example of Manasses And as we read Iob 33.17 18 c. That God may cause man to turne away from his enterprise and that hee might hide the pride of man c. For to this end as it followeth hee is stricken with sorrowe vpon his bed and the griefe of his bones is sore c. And Leuit. 26 41. Their vncircumcised hearts shall be humbled and then they shall willingly beare the punishment of their iniquitie Let vs therefore in all times of our afflictions lay our hand vpon our mouth and beare them patiently according to that of the 39. Psal verse 9. I should haue beene dumbe and not haue opened my mouth because thou didest it Let vs say as wee read Psal 119 15. I knowe Lord that thy iudgements are right and that thou hast afflicted me iustly Read also 1. Sam. 3 18 and 2 Sam. 15 26 c. chap. 16 10 11 12. And Eccles 7.16 Yea we ought to intreat the Lord to correct vs that wee might not continue in our sinnes as the holy Prophet praieth Correct vs ô Lord but yet in mercy Yea and to desire that the righteous may smite vs with their wholesome rebukes the propertie whereof is to supple and heale like precious oyle and not violently to crush and breake Psal 141.5 But aboue all as it is answered in the last branch the application of the death of our Sauiour
succour mighty and effectuall for the defence of his people For the proofe whereof consider that which wee reade Psalme ●0 and Psalme 21. Heere call to minde againe Psalme 89.15 c. and Psalme 144.15 Blessed are the people whose GOD the Lord is Wherevpon also iustly is the exhortation made vnto all the people that they would reioyce in him Psalme 66.1 c. and 67 4. and 68 32. yea many Psalmes together following after the 95 Psalme The experience of this comfortable fruite of faith is testified in the holie Scriptures both generally and particularly Our Fathers trusted in thee saith the Prophet Dauid they trusted in thee and thou didst deliuer them They called vpon thee and were deliuered they trusted in thee and were not confounded Psalme 22 4. 5. And more particularly concerning himselfe In the Lord doe I put my trust how say ye then to my soule flee away from your mountaine as a little bird to wit as one chased away as easily as a silly bird is scared from place to place Psal 11 1. And Psalm 18.16 17. Likewise Iehoshaphat and Hezekiah godly Kings of Iudah they trusted in the Lord and prayed vnto him and they were deliuered from their mightie aduersaries 2 Chron 20 20. and chap ●● The Lions also did not hurt Daniel because hee beleeued in his God Dan chap. 6.23 According to the comfort of the same experiments iustly may we hearken to the generall incouragement of the same the holy Scriptures of God such as we may read Psal 31.24 All ye that trust in the Lord be strong and hee shall establish your heart And Psal 37 3 4 c. and 55.22 Read also Heb. 13.5.6 And consider that God hath bound his holy promise with an oath that hee might thereby helpe the weakenes of our faith chap. 6.17.18.19 Yea this comfort may wee haue in our greatest afflictions that the Lord will not leaue vs. Prou. 24.16 and Rom. 8.28 There are many comfortable testimo●ies euery where in the holy Scriptures to this end Great therefore is the generall comfort and benefit of faith in one onely true GOD euen one onely in his diuine nature and essence as hath beene prooued before And yet one thing more let vs obserue heere the which may be of good vse for afterward and that is this Whereas wee doe generally ascribe all comforts to beleefe in GOD as hee is one onely in nature wee doe not exclude the Trinitie of Persons For faith in the vnitie of the Godhead and f●ith in the Trinitie of Persons it is all one and the same faith and the comfort of both is one and the same comfort So that as a learned Father saith well * Grego Nazaa●z Ou phihano to en noesat ca●tois tri●i per●●●mpomat Ou phthano ta tria dic●em carets to en anapheromai I cannot thinke of the vnitie but the brightnes of the Trinitie shineth about me neither can I distinguish the Trinitie but my thoughts doe send me to the vnitie Onely for orders sake and to make the doctrine of faith and the manifold instructions thereof more plaine wee take the occasion heere to gather the comforts of faith as they are in the holy Scriptures rehearsed vnder the name of God indefinitely and without distinction of person as afterward wee shall likewise by the grace of GOD obserue the comforts which b● ascribed to faith as it beleeueth distinctly in euery person yet so as it continually looketh to the vnitie of the Godhead without all distraction or diuision of the minde The like is to bee considered concerning the duties But before wee come to them let vs more particularly examine the comforts of this principle of our faith in one onely true God in that hee is the eternall and almightie the most wise and gratious Creator Gouernour and Preseruer of all things the most righteous Iudge of all men c. according to the seuerall titles belonging vnto him Question ANd first what is the comfort of this that the Lord our God is Iehouah the onely eternall and euerliuing God in whom wee liue and moue and haue our beeing as the Apostle Paul teacheth Act. 17.28 Yea that he is in his diuine nature a most holy GOD What I say is the comfort of this The comfort arising from hence is this that the same our God who hath giuen vs a beeing and life Answer and mouing who also is the father of our soules and spirits will no doubt preserue and maintaine vs in this life according to his owne good will and pleasure against all aduersarie power whatsoeuer Yea more then this that hee will sanctifie vs to himselfe and effectually accomplish all the holy promises which he hath made to his whole Church and to euery true member thereof concerning a most happy and g●orious estate after this life euen for euer and euer So indeed the Lord himselfe assureth his people f●om this his name Iehoua as we read Explicatiō and proofe Exod. chap. 6 2 3 4 c. Wherevpon also the Church of God praieth against the enemies thereof that they may be so confounded in their wicked enterprises that they may know by experience that God who is called Iehoua is God alone euen the most high ouer all the earth Psal 83 16 17 18. Read likewise Psal 31 14 15. I trusted in thee ô Iehouah I saide thou art my God My times are in thy hand deliuer mee from the handes of mine enemies c. And Psal 68 verse 4. Exalt God in his name Iah and reioyce before him For according as hee is in himselfe eternall so it pleaseth him to bee our God for euer and euer Psal 48 14. And Psal 102 verse 24 c. euen to the ende of the Psalme The eternitie of the Church is lincked with the eternitie of God by vertue of the most gracious and faithfull promise of his couenant And Psal 111 ● He hath cōmanded his couenant for euer holy and fearefull is his name Finally as our Sauiour Christ hath testified Matth. 22 33. God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing hee therein assuring the faithfull of their imm●rtalitie with faithfull Abraham and that euen from the faithfulnesse of the immortall God And that God being in himselfe most holy wil sanctifie his people it is euidēt by his ordaining sanctifying of his Sabbath euen from the beginning Gen. 2 verses 2 3. And Exod. 31 12 13 14. And Ezek. 20 12. God calleth it a signe betwixt him and his people that hee doth sanct●fie them Yea and it is a speciall meanes of sanctification to all such as doe religiously sanctifie it by the exercise and practise of the holy duties of Gods worship Reade also Hab 1 12. Psal 22 3 4 5. And the praier of our Sauiour Christ Iohn 17 verses 17 18 19. Sanctifie them with thy truth thy word is truth c. All is very comfortable The comfort of faith in Gods almightie power and in this
Answere Adam had yet no sinne and therefore the Lord would laie no paine or griefe vpon him For that is indeed a part of the stipend and wages of sinne Explicatiō proofe It is true For not only death is the wages of sinne specially eternall death which is as the last pa Rom ● 23 but also all whatsoeuer is a forerunner and causer of the n●turall death And therfore this is reckoned to the man a part of that curse which he brought into the world by his sinne that hee should eate his bread in the sweate of his face and to the woman that shee should trauell and bring forth children in sorrow and paine You answered a while since that God in making man created the bodie first without all life or sense and after that inspired a liuing soule into it but that as touching all other liuing creatures hee made them liuing from the first instant of their creation Can you yeeld any reason why the Lord should do thus Question There is no doubt but God would hereby declare Answere that the nature of the soules of mankinde are greatly differing from the nature of their bodies yea and also euen from the natur in ●ife of all other earthly creatures Question How is that Answere The soule of mankinde is a spirituall and immortall substance not hauing the originall from the earth as the bodie had but more immediatly from the author of life euen from the Lord God himselfe whose glorious Image it beareth This is very euident from the Text it selfe and it agreeth as well to woman a● to man for the one as well as the other is said to be created in the Im●ge of God And herein especially consisteth the excellency of this speciall worke of Gods creation according to that which was said in the Answere and for the same cause to be a thing worthie of our speciall obseruation LEt vs therefore in the third place consider as diligently as we can concerning this p●●● Question What was thi● Image or likenes of God in the which man and woman were created W●● 〈◊〉 respect of their outward comelines or bodily shape Answere Nothing lesse for as we haue alreadie learned God is an infinite and incomprehensible Spirit and hath no bodily shape at all Question Wherein doth it c●nsist then Answere It standeth in the spirituall nature and immortalitie of the soule in the soundnes of the wisedome and vnderstanding of the minde in the p●●●●e of the will and affection of the heart and in true righte u nes and holines of life conformable to the minde and will and after the example of God himselfe in the imitation of his diuine vertues Yea it standeth in that honourable estate wherein God created and set the whole humane nature euen so farre aboue all other earthly creatures that they are but a little inferiour to the holy Angels Explication and proofe Reade for the proofe of this Psal 8.5 Hebr. ● 9 And Ephes 4.24 And Colloss 3.10 For God renueth vs being corrupted to that integritie wherein hee had at the first created vs. Wherefore concerning the Image of God which man beareth let it be obserued that a God is a Spirit so is the soule though finite As God is immortall so is the soule but not as hauing the fountaine of life in it selfe as God hath The soule is wise c. but not infinite in wisedome c. a God is This l kenes therfore though it be a true likenes to God in many things as touching the nature or kinde of them yet it admitteth an infinite dissimilitude in the degree and measure of all things And touching t●● soule let it be further noted that it is of so excellent a creation that it ●●bsis●ing in it selfe by the gift of God so giueth life mouing an● sense to the bodie that though the bodie die yet cannot the soule die but in it selfe howsoeuer by the naturall death seperated from the bodie yet ●●●th vnderstandeth and reteineth affection either of ioy and desire in the godl● or of griefe and feare in the wicked though wi hout the bodie euen vntill the revniting of soule and bodie againe thenceforth so to continue for euer and euer although we cannot now conceiue the manner how So wonderfull is the creation of God in this his creature Now verily touching this first creation of mankinde if God had made vs onely a little superiour in dignitie to the other creatures of the earth wee cou d not but haue acknowledged it for a great mercie but in that hee hath made vs by creation onely a little inferiour to the heauenly Angels the bountie of his goodnes is euen herein infinitely aboue all that we can conceiue Here therefore without any further discourse we may see according to the third thing worthie to be obserued in the creation of mankind that God did aduance them to a verie high and excellent estate of honour and dignitie And it is particularly euident in this that the Lord placed them in the most fruitfull and pleasant place of the whole earth as it were in a most fine and delicate Orchyard and Garden and gaue them also therewithall the soueraigntie ouer all the foules of the heauen ouer the fishes of the Sea and ouer the beasts of the Earth as we reade how God from the beginning both purposed and also performed to authorise them therevnto not onely in the Text of the 1. chap of Genesis alreadie rehearsed but also in the 2. cha verse 8. c. A portion of the which authoritie hee hath continued to mankinde for Christes sake euen after the fall and reuiued it againe after Noahs flood as we reade Gen 8.20 c. and chap 9.1.2 c. And as we haue experience euen to this day Yet note that all that is said of the excellencie of mans creation is to be referred onely to the glorifying of God and in no wise to puffe vp man in any proud conceit of himselfe For alas he did through his pride loose all his dignitie by and by To conclude this third obseruation concerning the excellent estate dignitie wherevnto God aduanced mankinde Question Why did he at the first create only one man out of the earth and one woman out of his side Answere He did it to the end he might institute and giue a liuely example of that matrimoniall estate whereby onely the Lord required a holy propagation of mankinde in a more honourable manner then any other creatures are multiplied and increased So indeed it is declared to ●ro● bene the minde of God by the Prophet Malachie chap 2.15 and by our Sauiour Christ Matth 19.4.5.6 NOw let vs come to the fourth obseruation touching the creation of the first man and woman in that they were created the last of the creatures of God Question What may be the reason of that Answere Heerein God doth really vtter and declare his most bountifull fauour and good will toward mankinde in that
or foot speciallie to the taking away of life without speciall commission and commandement from God himselfe Certainlie they shall beare thei punishment whosoeuer they be Gen ch 9.6 NOwe therfore for the conclusion of our inquirie concerning this Article of the creation of all things What is the danger of not beleeuing in God the Father Question as in the Creator and maker of heauen earth of the Sea and all that is in them and that also euen according to the holie historie thereof as it is recorded and written in the first and second chapters of Genesis by the Prophet Moses and not otherwise What I say is the danger of this Answere They that beleeue not in God the Father as in the Creator and that also euen according to the holie historie of the Creation wherein God himselfe hath by his faithfull Prophet reuealed the same vnto vs to his whole Church it is vnpossible that they should truely beleeue in him as in the Allmightie most wise righteous and gratious Lorde God but that with one heretike or other they should falsifie this holie Article of our Christian beliefe Explicatiō proofe It must needes be so indeed For from whence shall any truely vnderstand the Almightie power of God his diuine goodnes c. if they do not learne it from the introduction as it were of his owne works yea euen from these his most mightie most wise and gratious workes of his Creation And who could haue bene able so faithfully to report them as we should finde our selues sufficiently warranted to giue our vndoubted credit therevnto but euen God himselfe by the holie ministerie of his owne approoued and faithfull Secretaries and seruants And touching the discouery of that danger of error which euery one is readie to fall into whosoeuer turneth his eyes and his heart from the holy worde and faithfull Scriptures of God it shall not be amisse for vs to take our admonition from the manifolde examples of such as turning aside from the word haue heretofore fallen into many fowle and absurde heresies For some I speake not of heathen and prophane Aristotle or of anie of his philosophicall Sectaries but euen of such as haue taken vppon them the profession of the true Christian religion in the Church of Go they haue denied the worlde as touching the first matter of it to haue bene euer created but to haue beene without beginning coeternall with God himselfe Of the which sorte were the heretikes called Seleuciani Hermians and such like Others also of the like sorte haue helde that these three beginnings the water fire and darkenesse are vncreated Such were the heretikes called Audiani Some haue more particularlie insisted in the element of the water affirming that to be coeternall with God and therevpon as it seemeth are called Aquei But leauing these and to come vnto those that haue in some sorte yeelded that the world hath bene created They haue neuertheles accounted it a work vnworthie the good God such as were the wicked and blasphemous Marcionites and also the Cerdonians and the Apellites The heretikes called Caiani denied that the God of Abraham was the creator of the worlde The Simoniani Nicolaitae and others taught that the worlde was created by the Angels and not by God himselfe The Saturninians and the Basilidian heretikes are saide to haue attributed the creation to seauen Angels The Corinthians and diuers others of like leaden and drossie stampe feared not to say that the worlde was made by an inferiour sorte of Angels and the Diuell Thus and manie waies beside manie haue hereticallie erred about the creation of the world So haue manie done also concerning the creation of the Angels and mankinde Some haue bene missled to imagine and holde that the good Angels were propagated of the essentiall wisedome of God Such are the Basilidians recorded to haue beene and likewise the Gnostici and Archontici Other haue taught that the Deuill is a bodilie substance as did the Messa●ians And as touching mankinde the Manichai helde that Adam and Eue were not created by God The Patricians that the flesh of man was not the creature of God The Paternians Ennomians and some other that the lower partes of the bodies of mankinde were the worke of the Deuill The Melitonij and the Anthropomorphites that the image of God is in the bodie of man and not in the soule The Seleuciani and others that the soule of man was not created by God but by the Angels The Gnostici Manichaei and Priscilianists that the soule is of the same essence that God is The Nazaraei on the other side that the soules of men are of the same nature with the soules of the brute beastes The Arabici that the soule of man is mortall and that it perisheth with the bodie Thus and sondrie other wayes most fowllie and contrarie to the doctrine of the true Christian faith haue very manie sortes of men erred for want of sincere and humble attendance vpon the holie word of God and namely for neglecting this parte of the word concerning the holie historie of the Creation All which examples ought mightilie to schoole and admonishe vs to looke religiously thervnto to the end we may be sounde in this Article of our Christian faith and so auoide all the rocks boggs and quake-mires of mans wicked corrupt imaginations euery erroneous suggestion of the Diuell Thus much concerning the doctrine of faith in the Almightie power of God our heauenly Father manifested by the manifold works of his Creation Beliefe in Gods Fatherly prouidence Beliefe in the Fatherly Prouidence of God The groūd and meaning of it LEt vs now henceforth proceede to inquire into the doctrine of the diuine prouidence of the same our God and heauenly Father the which he doth continually exercise ouer all his workes which hee hath once made For as was trulie answered hee doth at no hand leaue any one of them so to themselues that they should be as one would say at vncertaine to him Question First therefore what doe you vnderstand by the Prouidence of God Answere The Prouidence of God is his most mighty vpholding and continuing as also his most wise and watchfull most righteous and mercifull most constant and soueraigne ruling and gouerning of all his creatures once made in that hee effectually worketh all good thinges in them and by them but restraineth correcteth and turneth all euill things both counsels wordes enterprises and actions as may best serue to those most holy vses and endes which he himselfe hath most holily propounded to himselfe in his owne eternall counsell and decree according to the pleasure of his most free and blessed good will Explicatiō and proofe It is so in deede as you say For to speake in fewe wordes that which for plainenes sake you haue vttered in more The prouidence of God is the execution of the decree of God concerning the disposing and ordering of all his creatures
duties of faith in the comfort of this that the Sonne of God our Lord and Sauiour is the Christ or anointed of God Question And first concerning his anointing to be a Prophet vnto vs. What may these duties be Answere The comfort of faith herein requireth this dutie first and principally that we doe most reuerendly obey him in his word and Gospell and ministerie thereof with care of continuall profiting in knowledge and faith and in euery other grace Secondly that we doe labour according to the encrease of our owne knowledge and the comfort of our faith c. euery one to further and profite those that belong vnto vs. Thirdly it is our dutie to beleeue as vndoubtedly those things which our Sauiour hath prophecied and fore-told that they shall hereafter come to passe as those things which hee hath taught set downe for the perpetuall instruction of his Church It is verie meet and necessarie that it should be so For to what other ends should we thinke that God hath anointed him to be a Prophet vnto vs but that wee should receiue all such instruction from him as hee was to giue and hath giuen vs to make vs wise yea more and more wise vnto saluation The children of the former Prophets Explicatiō and proofe stood bound to profit by those that were sent vnto them Act. 3.25 much more then wee that are the children of this most high Prophet the Prince of all the rest Heb 2.13 But let vs more distinctlie consider the particulars of the answer And first that we must in respect of this Prophesie of our Sauiour heare obey his doctrine wee haue the commandement of God as we may remember Matth 17.5 And 2. Pet 1.17 Hee receiued of God the Father honour and glorie saith the Apostle when this voice came to him from the excellent glorie c. Here also call to minde againe Matth 23.8.10 It may iustlie be accounted a most absurd thing for anie to professe themselues Christians and to haue bene schollers of Christ and yet to be ignorant of the knowledge of Christ and of that mysterie of redemption and saluation which hee hath both taught plainely and wrought effectuallie for all that doe truelie beleeue in him Verilie none of that sorte euer entred the right way into the profession of Christianitie Doubtles they came not in by the dore for then they should haue bene let in by the keye of knowledge The which seeing they want it is apparant that they rather crept in at the windowe like theeues and church-robbers then otherwise And therefore they haue neede to looke better to themselues For if they haue no knowledge it is certaine that they haue no faith and so consequentlie that they cannot be saued Wee thinke it a iust cause of reproofe to yong children and a discredit to their Schoolemaisters if they do not in some good proportion profit in learning according to the time of their going to schoole And Cicero a heathen wise man reasoneth with his sonne that hee ought to haue made no small profiting vnder a choice teacher and in so learned an vniuersitie as hee had sent him vnto though hee had as yet bene there but one whole yeere What then shall wee say of our selues if after many yeares teaching vnder the ministerie of the Gospell wee be found olde truantes and non proficientes in the schoole of Christ the chiefe Teacher whose doctrine is the most excellent doctrine and his teaching the most powerfull teaching that can be The reproofe of the Apostle is iust against all such Hebr 5.12 in that wheras they ought to haue so farre profited that they might haue ben teachers of others they are yet ignorant of the first principles of the word The punishment also belonging vnto this sinne is verie fearefull as wee shall haue occasion to obserue further anone Thus then according to the first branch of the answere we may easilie see that it is a dutie where-vnto we are streightlie bound to heare and obey the most holie prophesie and doctrine of our Sauiour Christ and that vnder the great perill of our soules to the contrarie Nowe secondlie that it is furthermore in the same respect the dutie of euerie Christian to further another according to his owne profitting in his seuerall place and calling the Minister of the worde his people parentes and Maisters of families their children and seruantes and euerie one his companion friend and neighbour Wee may plainely perceiue by the parable of the Talents Matth 25. verses 14.15 c. 30. Read also 2. Corinth 3.1 And Hebr. 6.1 Moreouer read Ephes 6.4 And in the fourth commandement of the morall lawe of God And yet further read Isai ch 2. verses 2.3 againe Micah 4.1 Mal 3.16 By these testimonies the second branch may be plentifullie confirmed The third dutie is likewise euident by those manifold testimonies which are euery where giuen concerning the most perfect truth and faithfulnes of our Sauiour Christ in euery point of his doctrine as hath beene declared at large before And seeing euery prediction of his seruants the Prophets haue beene fulfilled in their times and seasons alwaies hetherto how may we doubt of the fulfilling of any the predictions of our Sauiour himselfe And the rather also because some of them are fulfilled since he fore-told them as namely his owne sufferings and the destruction of Ierusalem These are the duties of faith in due regard of the propheticall office of our Sauiour The duties belonging to the comfort of his most royall and holy Priesthoode remaine yet to be considered of vs. Which therefore are the duties of faith Question in respect of this combined comfort of his Kingdome and Priesthood Answere In so much as faith assureth vs to our comfort that by our Sauiour Christ and through that redemption which he hath wrought for vs we are aduanced in a spirituall manner answerable to the nature of his Kingdome to be here on the earth Kings and Priest vnto God it doth from the same comfort teach vs that it is our dutie to offer vp our selues our soules and our bodies a liuely sacrifice holie and acceptable to God in the crucifying of our wicked flesh with the lusts thereof and in rising vp to care and conscience of yeelding vnto him the holy fruites of a new life Secondly as a further fruit of the comfort hereof and of the same our care it is our dutie to offer vp euery spirituall sacrifice of true christian obedience and namely contrition of heart praier praise and almes-giuing Thirdly it is our dutie from the vertue of the princely power of our Lord Iesus Christ deriued vnto vs continually to subdue keepe vnder not only sin and the lusts thereof but also the suggestions of the diuel this world that they neuer reigne or rule ouer vs. Finally it is our dutie in the same respect if neede so require that we doe offer vp our liues themselues as
the vnderstand●ng of this great mysterie The proofes and explication wherof wee will nowe adioyne vnto them Touching the first we read thus Iohn 1.14 The word was made flesh And Galat 4.4 The Sonne of God was made of a Woman And Rom 1.3 and 2. Tim 2.8 He was made of the seede of Dauid according to the flesh For the virgine Marie was of the posteritie of King Dauid as hereby plainely appeareth And in this respect hee is furthermore called the Sonne of Dauid and therewithall the Sonne of Man as Matth 20. verses 28.30.31 and chapter 22 verses 41.42 The Genealogie also of our Sauiour Christ from Abraham and so forward to Ioseph the reputed Father of our Sauiour in his descent generation after generation by the Euangelist Matth cha 1. verses 1.2 c. And againe from the same Ioseph backward euen to the first man Adam set down by the Euangelist Luke in his 3. chap verses 23 c in the ascent or parentage of Marie confirmeth this most plainely and plentifullie to all that are teachable and willing to vnderstand the same Moreouer allbeeit the tribes did often marrie one within the other Iudges 14.3 as Dauid of Iuda married King Sauls daughter of Beniamin And Elizabeths mother though of Iuda in all likelyhood was married to one of Leui and so was cosen to the Virgine Marie Luke chapt 1. verses 5.36 Yet because they did most vsuallie marrie within their owne tribe as the examples are frequent and the matter cleare euen of it selfe and in one case euen by speciall cōmandement that it should be so Num ch 36.5.6.7.8.9.10 We may iustly conceiue that Ioseph tooke Marie to wife out of his owne tribe after the vsuall manner Yea and more then this all testimonies of the holie Euangelists confirming that the holie prophesies touching the descent of our Sauiour are fulfilled they are so many vndoubted proofes that Marie as well as Ioseph was of the very familie stock of king Dauid For otherwise the prophesies could not haue ben fulfilled so the truth of the whole Gospel shuld be called into question of wicked Atheists c. Read also He 2.16 ch 4.15 Well therfore may we resolue of this truth that our Sauiour Christ hath the verie true nature of man of the bodilie substance of the Virgin Marie like to vs in all things euen from the conception sinne onely excepted indued likewise with a reasonable soule inspired of God at the time appointed after the same manner as God vseth to animate if we may so speake other children in the wombs of their mothers hauing an aptnes from the beginning to vnderstand and affect things and growing afterward in knowledge wisedome of minde as well as in stature of bodilie substance as it followeth to be considered of vs in the time thereof The summe of our present instruction is this that our Sauiour did euen from the conception take the true nature of man And what a wonderfull mysterie is this that for the saluation of mankinde the Sonne of God being verie God should so farre abase himselfe to be made man by assuming of mans nature the immortall to become after a sort mortall the infinite finite the Creator creature This is admirable mercie this is a mysterie most worthie to be loued and reuerenced aboue all other But on the contrary side very erroneous heretical is the opinion of all such as doe obstinatelie hold that our Sauiour did not take his humane nature from the substance of the blessed Virgin but came from heauen and passed through her wombe as if wine should be put into a vessell afterwards to be emptied againe out of the same whervnto they doe vainely and wickedlie abuse these holy scriptures 1. Cor 15.47 He is the Lord from heauen And Philip 2.7 He took on him the forme of a seruant c. And Rom ch 8.3 He was in the similitude of sinnefull flesh For our Sauiour Christ is the Lord from heauen not in regard of of his humanity but rather of his Deitie Neither do the words form of a seruāt or shape of man take away either truth of māhood or truth of seruice inferiority in respect therof no more thē do the words forme of God vsed in the same place denie the truth of his Godhead And it is to be noted also that the Apo speaketh by cōparison in respect of that glorie which either our Sauior had with God before his incarnation or now since his ascension which was greatly obscured as it were hiddē vnder the vail of the flesh while he was here on the earth euen frō his conception c till he rose againe ascēded vp to heauē Onelie those words similitude of sinfull flesh are simplie to be vnderstood insomuch as our Sauiour was neuer sinfull indeed saue onely by imputation of our sinnes which he tooke vpon himselfe on our behalfe to satisfie for them Like heretical is the fancie of such as contend that our Sauiour Christ had no soule giuen vnto him in the wombe of the Virgin vnder this imaginarie pretence that the Deitie it selfe was in stead of a soule vnto the bodie Wherfore let vs in the feare of God abandon all such erroneous conceits as being directly contrary to the truth of the conception of his humane Nature must needes be contrarie to the truth of beliefe concerning the same Thus much of the first point of the Answer Nowe touching the second point that the humane nature of our Sauiour Christ was perfectlie sanctified in the Conception the wordes of the holie Angel to the virgin Marie doe plainely shewe●● Luke 1.35 The Promise The holie Ghost shall come on thee c therfore also that holie thing that shall be borne of thee shal be called the Sonne of God And so it must needes haue bene to the ende that he might be the fulfilling of that which was prefigured by the sacrifices of the lawe which must be all of them in their kinde pure and without blemish that is to say that he might be that true vnspotted lambe of God that should take away the sinnes of the world And how should that cleanse away the filth of another thing that is not cleane it selfe If a soule clothe should be washed in soule water it would remaine foule still Likewise if our Sauiour Christ had not bene perfitlie holie how could he haue bene our sanctification in the sight of God For these causes therefore was it necessarie that our Sauiour should be conceiued by the holie Ghost of a virgine and not be begotten by ordinarie generation of man For all that are so begotten are sinnefull and vncleane Euerie man must confesse with King Dauid that hee was conceiued in sinne Onelie our Sauiour Christ is of all men to be excepted in that his conception followed not the ordinary race Read Heb 2.11 4.15 and ch 7.26 Thus then was our Sauiour Christ in his humane nature most holie by
so farre tormented for feare of common death that he should melt with bloodie sweate not be able to be comfort●d but by the sight of Angells wha● doth no● that praier thrise repeated Father if it be possib●e let this cup depart from mee proceeding from an incredible bitternes of heart shewe that Christ had a sh●rper a ha●der battel then with ordinarie death And hence it appeareth that those ●r●flers against whom I now dispute doe boldlie babble of things which they know not what they meane for th●t they neuer considered what it is or of ho● great importance that we are redeemed from the iudgement seate of God But this is our wisedome w●ll to vnderstand how dearely our salua ion did cost the Sonne of God Now if any man do aske me whether Christ went then downe to hell when he prayed to escape death I answere that then was the beginning of it whe●by may be gathered how grieuous terrible torments he suffered when he knew that he stood araigned for our cause before the iudgment seat of God But although for a moment of time the diuine power of the Spirit did hide it selfe that it might leaue the fleshe to haue experience of the owne weakenes Yet it is meete that w●e knowe that such was the tentation through the feeling of sorrowe and feare that it was not against faith And thus was that fulfilled which is in the Sermon of Saint Peter Actes 2.24 that hee could not bee helde of the sorrowes of death because when hee felt himselfe as it were forsaken of God yet hee did nothing at all departe from trust in his goodnes And this doth that his notable calling vpon God declare wherein euen for extremitie of paine hee cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me For although his anguish was aboue measure yet he ceaseth not to call ●im his GOD of whom he crieth out that he was forsaken Moreouer hereby is confuted as well the error of Apollinaris as theirs that were called Monothelites Apollinaris fained that the eternall spirit was in stead of a soule to Christ as if he had beene but a halfe a man And as who should say that he could cleanse our sinnes some other way then by obeying his Father For where is the affection or desire wil to be obedient but in the soule And euen therefore as wee knowe was his soule troubled that ours might obtaine peace and quietnes all feare being driuen away And further we see contrarie to the opinion of the Monothelites how at this time he willed not that thing as he was man the which he willed in respect of his diuine nature I omit to speake how he did subdue the aforesaid feare with a contrary affection Neither is the shew of contrarietie hard to discerne in this Father deliuer me from this houre but therefore came I into this houre Father glorifie thy name In which perplexitie notwithstanding there was no such distemper in him such as is seene in vs euen then when we most of al indeuour to subdue our selues Here also because the iudgement of our good and faithfull brother Maister Perkins now in heauen is very circumspect and exquisite I suppose it will be well liked of all of sound iudgement that I borrow his words from his exposition of the Creed for a third witnes first when he writeth of the death of our Sauiour and after of his descension Of his death thus As Christs death was voluntarie so was it also an accursed death and therefore it is called the death of the crosse And it containeth the first and the second death the first is the seperation of the body from the soule the second is the seperation of body soule from God both were in Christ for beside the bodily death he did in soule apprehend the wrath of God due to man for sinne and that made him crie My God my God why hast thou forsaken me And here saith he further we must not omit a necessarie point namely how farre forth Christ suffered death Answer Some thinke that he suffered onely a bodily death and such paines as followe the dissolution of nature but they no doubt come too short for why should Christ haue feared death so greatly if it had beene nothing but the dissolution of nature Some againe thinke that he died not onely the first but also the second death but it may be they go too farre for if to dye the first death be to suffer a totall seperation of body and soule then also to dye the second death is wholly and euery way to be seuered from all fauour of God and at the least for a time to be oppressed of the same death as the damned are Now this neuer befell Christ no not in the middest of his sufferings considering that euen then hee was able to cal God his God Therfore the safest course is to follow the meane namely that Christ died the first death in that his body and soule were really and wholly seuered yet without suffering any corruption in his body which is the effect and fruit of the same and that withal he further suffered the extreme horrour pangs of the second death not dying the same death nor being forsaken of God more then in his owne apprehension and feeling For in the very middest of his sufferings the Father was well pleased with him And this which I say doth not any whit lessen the sufficiencie of the merit of Christ for whereas he suffered very truly the wrath of God and the very torments of the damned in his soule it is as much as if all the men in the world had died the second death and beene wholly cut off from God for euer and euer And no doubt Christ died the first death onely suffering the pangs of the second that the first death might be an enterance not to the second death which is eternal damnatiō but a passage to life eternal Thus much writeth this good seruant of God concerning the extremitie of Christs sufferings in dying the death with such limitation onely as was necessarie considering the most high and diuine excellencie of him that suffered in whom was no sin who could not possibly abide long vnder the curse and torment though eternally due to vs for our sinnes And againe vpon the descension thus he disputing that question with like good iudgement and faithfulnes Others there be saith he which expound it thus He descended into Hell that is Christ Iesus when he was dying vpon the crosse felt and suffered the panges of Hell and the full wrath of God seazing vpon his sonne This exposition hath his warrant in Gods word where Hell often signifieth the sorrowes and paines of Hell as Hanna in her song vnto the Lord saith The Lord killeth and maketh aliue he bringeth downe to Hell and raiseth vp that is hee maketh men feele woe and miserie in their soules euen the panges of hell and
So Psalm 130. verse 1. Out of the deepe places haue I called vpon thee O Lord. The same sense though in other words And as the Prophet prayeth in the deepe distresse of his soule so after that he is most gratiously heard of God hee doth accordingly giue most heartie thanks as Psal 30.3 O Lord saith Dauid thou hast brought vp my soule out of Sheol thou hast reuiued me from them that goe downe into the pit And Psalm 71.26 though in another phrase of speech O God thou hast shewed me great troubles and aduersities but thou wilt returne and reuiue mee yea thou wilt returne and cause me to ascend vp from the depth of the earth mittomoth aharets ex abyssit terrae And yet more fully Psal 86.13 Great is thy mercy toward me and thou hast deliuered my soule from the lowest graue Misheol tachtijah Some translate it by an increase of the Hyperbole from the nethermost Hell But most fully of all doeth the Prophet Heman describe this kinde of the extreame trouble and aduersity and distresse of the children of God here sometime in this life both from the word Sheol and also from others of like signification and nature Psal 88.1 c. O Lord God of my saluation I cry day and night before thee Let my prayer enter into thy presence Incline thine eare vnto my cry For my soule is filled with euills and my life draweth neare to Sheol I am counted among them that goe downe to the pit the word is Bhor and I am as a man without strength Free among the dead like the slaine lying in the graue Keber whom thou remembrest no more they are cut off frō thy hand Thou hast laid me in the lowest pit Bebhor tachtijoth in darknes and in the deepe Thus by Sheol and many other borrowed speeches of like nature as was said this Prophet expresseth the extremity of the sorrowes and affl●ctions of the children of God which somet●mes fall vpon them either for their triall or for their correction from the fatherly displeasure of God according as it followeth in the same Psalme Thine indignation lieth vpon me and thou hast vexed me withall thy waues And thus according to this last signification of Sheol which noteth such aduersitie and sorrow as bringeth downe euen to the very brinke of death so that they may be said after a sort to haue beene brought downe to the graue yea euen to Hell though they neuer came neither by the grace of God shall euercome into the place of the damned Neither is it vnwonted with our selues in our owne English speech to vse the word Hell in this signification as when we say of this o● that man he hath a hell in his conscience Infernus animae re● cōscientia A guilty cōscience is the Hell of the soule euen heere in this world though God of his infinite mercie doth not seldome deliuer such from the place and damnation of Hell In which respect the Prophet Ionah a figure of our Sauiour Christ saith that he called vpon God as it were out of the belly or womb of Hell for so is Sheol not vnfitly translated when he was in the belly of the Whale chap. 2.2 the which hee calleth in the same verse the place of distresse I cried in my affliction or distresse saith the Prophet vnto the Lord and he heard me The like is to be considered concerning Haides comparing Act. 2. ver ●4 with ver 27.31 so it be discreetly done that is if we consider the loosening of the sorrowes of death in Haides not to be any sorrowes which our Sauiour indured being in Haides but those which hee felt before and at his death the which death being in it selfe a dolefull thing and Haides the graue a place and state in it selfe likewise of discomfort by reason of the separation of the life and soule from the body might well hetherto and thus farre forth retaine continue to vs so much the more full and through a memoriall the●eof and the rather also expresse that singular ioy which is to be taken of vs in the resurrection of our Sauiour the which perfectly remoueth all remainder of sorrow whatsoeuer might seeme to be continued and abetted by death or any other aduersary that we or our Sauiour had NOw therefore that as a fruite of this our inquirie hetherto wee haue found out the diuerse significations of this word to Descend and also of these other words Sheol and Haides whereon the sense of this article of our Sauiours descension dependeth it shall be the more easie for vs to vnderstand the true meaning of them Question May we not thinke so Or is there any thing else furthermore to be considered to the attaining therevnto Answer I haue heard you say that to the right vnderstanding of these words spoken of our Sauiour He descended into hell it is necessarie that we consider the time when he descended whether before in the garden when he did sweat blood and on the Crosse when he made his complaint as one forsaken and left for a season or after his death and taking downe from the Crosse It is indeed to speciall purpose For this difference of time doth necessarily inferre Explication and proofe a diuerse distinct sense and meaning of these words For if we vnderstand them to haue beene principally accomplished in the garden and vpon the Crosse then must the meaning be that our Sauiour Christ did for our sinnes suffer most grieuous paines and therewitha●l also most deepe reproach and ignominie to satisfie the iustice of God and to appease his wrath euen such paines and such reproach as may iustly be compared to the paines and ignominie of hell And this no doubt our Sauiour did for the time sustaine as hath beene already declared Bu if we vnderstand the descension to follow after his death then can nothing in any true sense soundnes of faith be affirmed saue onely that he being laid downe into the graue continued so as a man truly descended to the dead and abiding in their state and condition as touching the true nature of death the soule seperated from the body vntill by his diuine power hee rose vp againe as truly f●om the state and condition of the dead as by his buriall he had descended into it and for a certaine time abode in the same according to those speeches of descending to the graue and according to that signification of Sheol and Haides which hath beene alledged before as tending to this ●nd And according to the spee●h of the Angell Luke 4.5 who interpreteth the abiding of our Sauiour in the graue to be his abid●ng among the dead and his resurrection to be his remouing from the dead Math. 2● 7 Luke in the Gospel 24 4● Read also Act. 3.15 and ch 1● 30.31 and chap. 26.23 and 1. Cor. 1● 12 and verse 20. and Iohn 21.14 But that we may grow at the la●t to t e full point and issue
grieuous sufferings which went before and partly also to that last degree of his humiliation which followed after in that he lay in his graue as it were vnder the captiuity and dominion of death vntill his resurrection as was said before For we are not precisely to binde our selues to these words as if because they are set down in this summe of our beliefe therefore we must beleeue them as being of them selues the canonicall text or ground of our faith But wee haue free liberty granted nay rather wee stand bound to take counsell from the holy Scriptures and to beleeue them onely in such sense as they doe apply these words to our Sauiour Christ without any regard of the priuate interpretation of any which hath not certaine ground from the same Question But are there any such interpretations of these words giuen forth by any which cannot be warranted from the holy Scriptures Answere I haue heard it so affirmed for our admonition sondry times that wee might be stirred vp thereby to seeke to ground our selues in the right vnderstanding of them so as no erroneous or groundlesse interpretation might cause vs to decline from the truth therof Explication and proofe There is doubtlesse iust cause why you should be thus taught and admonished For sondry expositors haue their sondry expositions of these words He descended into hell which cannot be concluded from the word of God The which though they are in this respect all of like nature yet they are not to be accounted in like degree of error Question Which may these sondry and groundlesse expositions be Answer They are of three sorts First of those that haue taught the meaning of them to be this that the soule of our Sauiour Christ descended to hell the place appointed of God for the euerlasting torment of the wicked to manifest his diuine power to preach and declare the victorie of his crosse or rather as some think both to begin his victory and triumph and also vtter●y to subdue the power of the diuell and hell it selfe there Secondly of those that haue expounded the meaning of them to be this that the soule of Christ went downe to Limbus Patrum as it were to a region within the earth next aboue hell to fetch out the soules of them that were there till his comming and to carrie them with him into heauen after his resurrection Yea some haue taught from these words that the soule of our Sauiour Christ descended to hell to suffer the torments thereof for the redemption of our soules that they might neuer come there Thirdly the Marcionites and other heretikes called Liberatores affirmed that Christ by his Descension deliuered the soules of the reprobate out of hell All which opinions specially the two latter sorts if there be any other like to these they are carefully to be auoided of vs as hauing either no warrant in the word or else are plainly contrary to it Explication and proofe They are so indeede insomuch as a little leauen as wee are admonished sowereth the whole lumpe For to begin with the last of the second sort how can this agree with the words of our Sauiour on the Crosse who most solemnly affirmed that all his sufferings foretold by the Prophets were finished and perfited euen vnto the point of death which he also immediatly performed to the sealing vp of all the rest At which very instant also he did most faithfully commend his spirit into the hands that is into the gratious custody and preseruation of God his Father Who therefore shall dare presume to disable that which our Sauiour hath valued at a full and sufficient valure Seeing all was fulfilled vpon the crosse which God foretold by his holy Prophets who may be of sufficient credit to warrant vs any reuelation to the contrarie to be giuen vnto him And if there be reason that the soule of our Sauiour should descend to Hell to suffer torments in stead of our soules there why should not his body descend likewise to suffer for our bodies that they might neuer come thether Thus that exposition which would lay the most heauie burthen vpon our Sauiour Christ may from these and such like absurdities which followe vpon it be discerned to be the lightest in it selfe and to recoile most dangerously against those that haue so vnreasonably ouercharged it The other exposition of this second sort containeth likewise a meere fiction as may euidently bee perceiued because they can no where shewe vs any ground for such a place as they describe and altogether without booke determine vnto vs. But much rather because that which they say is contrarie to the holy Scriptures which determine another place for the soules of the faithfull which haue died in the LORD euen before the appearance of our LORD IESVS CHRIST For so doth our SAVIOVR himselfe giue plainely to vnderstand in that he placeth the soule of Lazarus in the bosome of Abraham which was in such a place as the LORD vsed the ministerie of the holy Angels to carrie it vnto The which also is expressely saide to be so situated that there is a great gulfe betwixt the one place and the other Luke 16 26. And as the Preacher saith Eccles chap. 12 7. Though the body which is dust returne to the earth as it was yet the spirit returneth to God that gaue it No doubt it doth not returne downeward but vpward I speake now of the soules of the righteous who as they liued so dye the seruants of God Yea like enough also the other may returne euen vpward to God if for no other cause yet to receiue their sentence and so to be cast downe from the glorious presence of God As for that which we read Heb 9.8 The way into the ho●iest of all was not yet opened while as yet the first Tabernacle was standing it can by no meanes be haled to determine any such Limbus or region and place within the earth either nearer or further off from Hell which the superficiall and darke braine of man hath fancied from the same The last opinion of deliuering the soules of the reprobate out of Hell it is most hereticall and dire●tly contarie to the eternall iustice and truth of GOD concerning that eternall punishment which hee hath threatened and decreed against them And touching the former sort of expositions they are partly against the expresse doctrine of the Apostle Coloss 2 14 15. Where he teacheth that our Sauiour Christ by his sufferings and humiliation vpon the crosse did so sufficiently subdue yea and triumph openly ouer the Diuel yea as wee may say ouer all the Diuells of Hell that he needed not goe downe into any hidden and darke places of the earth to doe it And they are also against those famous testimonies and declarations which shewe that the victorie was then atchieued as appeare●h by the earthquake at the death of our Sauiour and by the rending of the vaile of the
Rom. v. 8 9. c. to the end of the ch Where he sheweth at large that the obedience of our Sau● by reason of the excellencie of his person perfection of his sufferings was of more excellent vertue to saue all that doe truly beleeue in him then the transgression of Adam was of force to condemne and destroy them And thus the historie of the manifold and most grieuous sufferings of our Sauiour Christ is in it selfe a reall confutation of all mans merit or satisfaction for himselfe For why then should our Sauiour haue suffered so as he did That which the aduersaries of the most free grace of God say that our Sauiour hath merited this for vs that we should be worthy in him to merit for our selues it is an vtter peruerting of the most holy vse and ende of his sufferings which is the glorie of the grace of God toward vs. And it is also a most subtile and mischieuous inchantment of the Diuel to puffe men vp in the greatest pride vnder a colour of the greatest and most holy humilitie that may be But here seeing we are according to the course and order of our inquirie to consider of the meaning of the Articles of our faith concerning the sufferings of our Sauiour though in the opening of the historie thereof this hath alreadie in some measure beene performed Yet to the end all things may be made something more plaine and familiar concerning this so great and weightie a part of our faith let vs purposely call to mind and set downe such obseruations as being laide together may be a further helpe hereunto Question Which may these obseruations be Answer First of all we are most earnestly and with all holy reuerence to consider that which was euen now mentioned to wit the most high and incomparable excellencie of the Person of him that suffered in that he is the most glorious and onely begotten Sonne of God full of grace and truth Secondly that no one part or parcell of the sufferings of this most worthy and excellent Person fell vpon him but by the foreknowledge and determinate counsell and appointment of GOD and that euen in most perfect wisedome iustice and mercie And therefore also we are in the third place to consider that the same most excellent person hath in euery part of his sufferings to dea●e not so much with the extreame iniustice and malice of men as with the most iust displeasure and wrath of almightie God fiercely bent against our sinnes Fourthly we are to consider that all his sufferings in the times of his speciall passions were in their owne nature and kinde extreamly grieuous and dolorous chiefely those which did more immediately befall his most holy and righteous soule Fiftly that he had a true sense and feeling of them alwaies and that at his death he indured the vttermost smart and dolour of them drinking as it were the full cuppe of Gods bitter anger euen dregges and all Sixtly that he of his vnspeakable loue willingly indured them all for our sakes and the rest of Gods elect though we were all of vs vtterly vnworthy to be any thing at all respected of him Seuenthly that the fruite and benefite of his sufferings is infinite and vnspeakable on our behalfe Finally the manifold vertues of our Sauiour Christ are diligently to be considered of vs throughout all his most grieuous sufferings as of a most perfect paterne of all wisedome holines righteousnes faith loue patience meekenes magnanimitie and of all other vertues of most gracious behauiour from the beginning to the end of them all Explication and proofe All these things are most worthy to be reuerendly considered of vs. And first of al touching the most high peerelesse excellencie of our Sauiour euen in our humane nature we may call it to minde from that which hath beene declared before concerning the vnion of the humane nature with the diuine in one Person of a mediator In which respect he must needs be euen in the nature of man higher then all creatures both men and Angels whatsoeuer He was euen here vpon earth in the time of his humiliation greater then the Prophet Moses Heb 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 Greater then the Prophet Ionas or any other of the Prophets Mat 12.41 Greater then Aaron the high Priest yea no doubt infinitly greater then Melchisedek that princely high Priest Heb. chap. 7. Greater then king Dauid for he was Dauids Lord Psal 110.1 Mat. 22 41 c. Greater then king Salomon Mat. 12 42. He is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords Reuel 19 16. N●ither is any or all the Angels of heauen to be compared with him Heb. 1 4. He alone aboue all comparison is the annointed of God in the same chap. verse 9. The light of the Gentiles and glorie of all Israel Luke 2 52. Whence it is also considering the extremitie of the sufferings and debasing of so high and holy a Person that his sufferings are before the diuine maiestie of God of infinite merit and of a propitiatorie and satisfactorie value for vs and that by suffering a finite space of time he being eternall and infinite hath deliuered vs from that eternall destruction which our sinnes haue deserued Yea and that the sufferings of him though one alone hath preuailed to the iustifying of infinite thousands from the beginning of the world to the end of the same Secondly that no part of the sufferings of our Sauiour fell vpon him at aduenture or by hap-hazard as we doe vse to speake but by the foreknowledge and determinate counsell of God a sufficient proofe was alledged euen now And we may read the same confirmed againe Act 4 27 28. For doubtles say the Apostles against thy holy Sonne Iesus whom thou haddest annointed both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and people of Israel gathered themselues together To doe whatsoeuer thy hand and counsell had determined before to be done And I Pet. 1.19 20. Christ a lambe vndefiled and without spot which was ordained before the foundatiō of the world but was declared in the last times for your sakes And Reu. 13 8. The ●ambe slaine from the beginning of the world To wit in the purpose of God and as touching the vertue and effect of it to all that beleeued the promise of his appearing The Euangelists also and our Sauiour himselfe in the historie of the holy Gospell doe make it plaine from point to point that the prophesies which God vttered by his holy Prophets concerning the sufferings of the Messiah were fulfilled in him Read ye neuer in the Scriptures saith our Sauiour Mat 21.42 The stone which the builders refused the same is made the head of the corner This was the Lords doing and it is maruelous in our eyes And chap 26 31. He saide to his disciples All of yee shall be offended by me this night for it is written I will smite the shepheard and the sheepe of the
our ransome and satisfaction to the iustice of God but the holy Euangelist synecdochically putting one part for the whole insisteth thus earnestly vpon this last portion and remainder of blood because in this last emptying of the body now freshly dead and yet warme euen from the heart roote as wee may say the whole effusion was fully perfitted Yea and further also to the end wee may enioy the comfort of our Sauiours sufferings and of the piercing both of his hands and also of his feete and side we must in no wise forget so to looke vnto him that was so pierced wounded for vs as we may therewithall ioyne mourning hearts in remembrance of our sinnes which caused the wrath of God to breake forth so sharply against him as well as ioyfull hearts for the appealing of Gods wrath and for the remouing of the guiltines and punishment of our sinnes thereby For this mourning heart is that chiefe sacrifice of thanks which wee for our parts can offer vp vnto the Lord Psal 51. to the which also the promise of this speciall comfort doth specially belong Matth. 5. And Ezek. chap. 9. Let vs not therefore in any wise faile in this duty neither yet be negligent in prayer to God that ●e may vouchsafe vs this singular grace of godly mourning which hath so singular comfort annexed vnto it Finally let vs not here neglect to gather vp as it were by the way some comfort euen from that crueltie which it pleased God to permit the souldiers to execute vpon the repenting thiefe though hee had through the vertue of our Sauiours mediation and death receiued him into his diuine fauour For heereby wee may plainely perceiue that howsoeuer the external and temporall afflictions and grieuances of this life The Comforts belonging to his buriall with ciuill punishmēts may haue their course in this world yea euen to the destroying or cutting of it off from hence though we haue truly repented vs of our sinne and turned to him yet will he not cease to loue vs nor faile to saue vs with his euerlasting saluation as he did this poore hanged and crucified thiefe if wee shall truly beleeue in his Sonne as he did Question ANd now in the next place What may be the comfort of our faith concerning the buriall of our Sauiour or rather concerning our Sauiour himselfe in respect of this that he was buried Answer The principall and chiefe comfort thereof lieth in this that the very true natuturall and propitiatory death of our Sauiour is hereby so much the more certainely confirmed vnto vs and the rather will it be so if wee shall duly weigh the time of his continuance in the graue Explication It is true For the continuance in the graue was so long that it must needes put the truth of his death out of all question Now then this we know further that by how much the death of our Sauiour is more assuredly warranted vnto vs by so much also all the fruites and benefites of his death are made more sure and certaine vnto vs. The buriall therefore of our Sauiour may well be verie comfortable vnto vs in this respect But is there no other comfort Question Answer Yes For as our Sauiour Christ died not as a priuate person and for his owne cause or desert but for vs and our sinnes to our benefit yea to the benefit of the whole Church so also are we to esteeme of his buriall Wherefore iustly may it be comfortable vnto vs all in that like as by his death the nature and quality of death or rather death it selfe which is a priuation of life is so changed that of a curse it is made a blessing insomuch as the end of the naturall life yeeldeth the soule a passage from the body to the fruition of a more excellent estate and condition of life then before it enioyed or could attaine vnto while it abode in the body so by the buriall of our Sauiour Christ the nature of the graues of all such as die in the faith of CHRIST is altered That is to say of prison houses such as they are to the wicked against the day of the great and fearefull assises and iudgement they are vnto all beleeuers peaceable resting places for their bodies to take a certaine quiet sleepe in them as in their beddes vntill their resurrection at the last day which shall bee to their immortall happinesse and glorie Explication and proofe It is verie true As we may perceiue by that which wee reade in diuers places of the holy Scripture For as touching the wicked and the vncomfortablenes of the death and state at them yea though they be buried as the faithfull are reade Psal 49.14 and Iob 18.12 13 14. and chap. 20.4 5 6 7. And for the comfortable estate of the godly euen in respect of their bodies which doe rest and as it were sleepe peaceably in their graues reade Isai 57.2 and Iohn chap. 11. verse 11. Matth. 27.52 Act. 7.60 and chap. 13.36 and 1. Thes 4.15 But this we must know that the ground of this comfort to our soules from the comfortable estate of our bodies lying and resting in the graue it resteth in this that our Sauiour by his buriall and continuance in the graue for a while hath infinitely more sweetely perfumed our graues then his owne was with all that mirrhe and aloes wherewith Ioseph and Nicodemus embalmed his body So then though it be an vncomfortable thing to the nature of euery man to die and thereby to haue the body seperated from the soule and turned to dust yet in our Sauiour Christ we haue a sweete comfort against it seeing he hath as it were brokē the yee or rather paued the way before vs. It is true that there is a great difference betwixt the buriall of our Sauiour and our buriall and betwixt his continuance in the graue and our continuance For he continued but a short time and his body saw no corruption but ours lie a long while and doe corrupt Neuerthelesse seeing in the death and buriall of our Sauiour wee haue the ground of our comfort that as he rose out of the graue and vanquished death so shall we by him it neede not neither ought it to discourage vs but rather put vs in good comfort seeing as we know a thousand yeares with the Lord are but as yesterday when it is past and as a watch in the night Ps 90 4. and 2. Pet. 3.8 And accordingly hee knoweth when and how to awaken euerie one and to raise vp all in due time euen as if they who haue beene longest dead had beene dead but a day or two since Thus then wee see that the buriall of our Sauiour ministreth vnto vs this second comfortable consideration to our faith in Christ buried and laide in the graue after the manner of other men though there be some speciall difference to be considered as hath beene herein obserued Question But
is there yet no other comfort behinde Answer Yes For by the buriall of our Sauiour and by his continuing dead in the graue till the thirde day his resurrection is so much the more euidently confirmed vnto vs. Explication This also is very true and it containeth another singular comfort in it And the rather also by reason of the malice of the chiefe Priestes and Pharisies in their sealing of the stone which couered the sepulchre and by their setting of a watch to keepe the same lest as they pretended to feare the body of our Sauiour should by some fraudulent meanes be stolen away Yea and some comfort resteth in this also that God for the honouring of the buriall of our Sauiour stirred vp the heart of the honourable Counseller Ioseph of Arimathea to vndertake the care of the reuerend performance of it And in that he moued Pilate to yeelde to the sute of Ioseph in that behalfe And yet further in that he gaue Nicodemus a heart to ioyne with Ioseph in the solemnizing of the buriall c. For thus it is manifest vnto vs that our Sauiour died not as a vile and contemptible person but as one honourable in the sight of God and before good men far aboue that honour which King Dauid gaue to Abner who died by the wicked hand of Ioab in Israel howsoeuer the outward solemnitie was not so pompous and princely 2. Sam. 3.31 c. Question This therefore may be a third comfort Is there yet any more remaining Answer As our Sauiour Christ did not onely suffer death for our sinnes but also lay in the graue for the more certaine confirmation of his death and euen thereby also to endure for a while the reproch and tyrannie of death to the end hee might afterwarde make a more glorious conquest thereof by his rising againe in that it is thereby euident that he hath vanquished our last enemie euen within his owne castle or within his owne trenches and as it were the olde cruel lion in his owne denne so he hath thereby assured vs of this singular fruite and benefite that hee will not for a time onely somewhat weaken and suppresse in our wicked nature that bodie of sinne and wicked corruption which is in vs but euen throughlie and for euer at the last so to destroy it euen in the secret of our soules and spirites that it shall neyther bee able to hinder vs from the first resurrection of our soules from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse nor yet from the second resurrection which shall bee of our bodies from mortalitie to immortalitie at that day when they shall be vnited againe to our soules Explicatiō proofe This indeed is that comfort which the Apostle Paul intimateth and assureth vnto vs from the buriall of our Sauiour Christ annexed to his death for a further manifestation and amplification of the same comfort whereof also as he teacheth our baptisme is a representation and pledge in that we are in the administration of it for a while put vnder the water much rather as they haue beene who were baptized being of yeares of discretion and at mans age as many thousands were at the beginning of the conuersion both of Iewes and Gentiles to the faith of the Gospel For the which comfort of the buriall and destruction of sinne thus assured from the buriall of our Sauiour and from the vse of our christian baptisme reade Rom. chap. 6. verses 1 2 c. euen to the 12. verse Know ye not saith the Apostle that all we which haue beene baptized into Iesus Christ haue beene baptized into his death Wee are buried then with him by baptisme into his death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead to the glorie of the Fat●er so wee also should walke in newnes of life c. Knowing this that our olde man is crucified with him that the body of sinne might be destroyed that thenceforth we should not serue sinne c. Thus we see that the buriall of our Sauiour hath a ioynt vse with the death of our Sauiour for the comfort of our faith yea for a certaine progresse or increase of our comfort touching the weakening and wasting yea the vtter destruction of sinne at the last And againe Colos 2.11 12. In whom also saith the same Apostle ye are circumcised with circumcision made without hands by putting off the sinfull body of the flesh through the circumcision of Christ In that ye are buried with him through baptisme in whom ye are also raised vp together through the faith of the operation of God who raised him from the dead Thus much for the manifold comfort of our faith concerning the buriall yea the honourable buriall of our Sauiour together with his continuance in the graue vntill the time of his resurrection For euen therefore no doubt would God in his diuine prouidence in no wise haue the body of our Sauiour throwne out or tumbled aside as a thing despised and abominable as the Iewes in their malice still raging against him coulde haue beene content yea rather would earnestly haue desired but to be in a very seemely and honourable manner taken downe from the Crosse embalmed and entombed that thereby it might the more clearely appeare to our comfort that the Lord our God hath immediately from by his death receiued a full reconciliation for our sinnes c. Question Now therefore from the collection and gathering together as wee haue done of all the comforts of the sufferings of our Sauiour may not the history therof be worthily esteemed of vs the most comfortable history of al other in respect of the most sweete vses and ends of the sufferings though they were in themselues to our Sauiour most bitter and dolefull for the time of his induring of them Answere Yes no doubt in this respect it is to vs the most comfortable history of all other insomuch as it containeth the onely ground and foundation of all true ioy and gladnes according to that saying of the holy Apostle St. Paul God forbid that I should reioyce in any thing but in the Crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ. Explication It is so indeede For as hath beene already declared the crosse and sufferings of our Lord Iesus Christ are both satisfactory for sinne to the remoouing away of all euill due to it and also reconciliatory and meritorious to procure vnto vs the fauour of God and all good fruites and blessings with the same Question But doth not this make much against this generall comfort of the sufferings of our Sauiour that sicknesses other afflictions which came into the world by sinne are not yet ceased nor taken away Answer No nothing at all For as it was said before of death it selfe that by the death of our Sauiour the nature or office of it is cleane altered and changed so also are all sicknesses and afflictions which are but the messengers and fore-runners
teacheth vs that it is our dutie not onely to abstaine from desire of reuenge against our aduersaries but also to pray earnestly to God for the forgiuenes of their cruell dealing against vs and that it may please God to turne the hearts of so many as doe belong to his most holy and blessed election To this purpose indeede the most blessed example of our Sauiour is very notable And though it be a hard lesson for vs to learne yet the grace of God is sufficient to teach it to euery one that will indeuour to learne it of him And therefore it is that the Apostle Peter doubteth not to holde forth the example of our Sauiour to inuite and incourage all Christians therevnto 1. Ep 2 18 c. 23. Moreouer in that our Sauiour Christ praying for sinners saith that they doe they knowe not what and so giueth to vnderstand as hath beene obserued before that ignorance is the cause why many doe that which otherwise they would not doe if they knewe how great and grieuous the euill is which they doe commit We ought therefore from hence to learne that it is our dutie to seeke after knowledge that so comming to the knowledge of sinne wee may bee sorie for that which is past striue against present tentations and bee more prudent and circumspect to preuent much sinne for the time to come Yea therefore ought we to stirre vp our selues to a careful seeking after knowledge to the end we may know how to keepe a good conscience in the doing and minding of those things onely whereof we may haue good warrant from the word of God that they are agreeable to his most holy and blessed will And then may we be sure that through the blessing of God we shall not onely abstaine from euill which we are wont to commit aboue knowledge but wee shall doe more good then we can throughly know that we doe As for those that doe otherwise that is to say which haue no care to seeke after knowledge they easily working more mischiefe then they would think doe thereby procure greater wrath against themselues then they are aware of For he that rashly thrusteth himselfe into sinfull actions hee dealeth as if one should bring fire among barrels of gun-powder not considering that the nature of it is to blowe vp and ouerthrowe all so soone as it taketh any sparkle of fire As for example who knoweth how many soules perish or at the least are hindered from their more speedie conuersion by an ignorant and wicked or vnconscionable Minister of the word of God Who knoweth likewise how much good he hindereth that is a wicked instrument of the Diuel to disgrace or displace any godly and faithfull Preacher of the Gospell of our Sauiour Christ Finally what loue of ours can answere the wonderfull loue of our Sauiour in praying and suffering for vs miserable sinners all of vs being naturally enemies vnto him as well as these his persecutors mentioned in this Story were Rom 5 verses 6 7 8. c. Such are the duties belonging to that comfort which faith apprehendeth from the lifting vp and fastening of our Sauiour naked vpon the crosse LEt vs now come to those things which doe concerne the time of his continuance vpon the crosse Question And first what dutie may we learne generally from this his cōtinuance by the space of many houres in extreme dolour and paines Answer This we learne that it is our dutie patiently to beare our affliction and crosse whatsoeuer and how grieuous soeuer it may be euen so long as it shall please God to continue the same vpon vs. Explicatiō proo●e You say well Neither ought we to doubt of a good issue according to that in the Ep to the Heb chap 12.1.2.3.4 Question Nowe more particularly what are wee to learne from this that our Sauiour endured patiently to see his garments diuided among the Souldiers Here againe we are to learne to be content to loose all for Christs sake and to thinke our selues to haue sufficiency of all things when we haue Christ euen naked Christ or Christ alone to be ours by faith But in no case must we be riflers of Christ to take away any thing that is due vnto him as these souldiers did and as many robbers and thieues doe which liue in the bosome of the Church Explicatiō proofe God forbid we should doe so But if we shall account our Sauiour Christ to be our portion doubtlesse we shall haue sufficiencie of all things in the midst of all wants and our greatest losses in this world shall bring our greatest aduantage in the world to come Philip. 1.21 and chap. 3.7 8 c. Question NOw after this what dutie are wee to learne from hence that our Sauiour Christ being in this grieuous passion vpon the crosse had neuerthelesse vpon the sight of his mother a most louing and tender care to prouide for her comfortable maintenance seeing hee was nowe to leaue this world Answere All children haue a most worthie paterne of that great honour and dutie which they owe vnto their Parents in tendering the peace and comfort of their life of whom they haue receiued their naturall life as from those speciall instruments which it pleased God to vse therevnto Explicatiō proofe The example of our Sauiour is an euident paterne hereof in very deede And herewithall our Sauiour had no doubt a tender regard to mitigate the present sorrow of his mother in her heauy beholding of his calamitie which could not but pierce her tender and motherly soule As touching our selues it is true that wee shall neuer be able to performe so perfect loue and dutie to our naturall Parents as our Sauiour did to his Mother and namely at this time neither shall wee haue nor could we endure at any time the like occasion that is out of so great an agony to shewe so tender and strong an affection But contrariwise we finde rather that euery little head ache or other trouble is able to make vs forgetfull of all good dutie and loue toward any We may be compared to the snaile whose propertie it is as wee know if it be touched neuer so little to draw it selfe altogether into the owne shell The like is our practise we care onely for our selues All as we thinke is little enough to procure our owne ease selfe-loue so wholly possesseth vs. Neuerthelesse the example of our Sauiour sheweth vs what we are to striue vnto To the which purpose also serueth the example of Dauid that notable figure of our Sauiour Christ who had care of his Parents in the time of his afflictions as we reade in the holy story 1. Sam. ch 22.1 3 4. Neither is the example of Iohn the D●sciple of our Sauiour to be neglected of vs who in obedience to the word of Christ did willingly entertaine Marie the mother of our Sauiour and did the dutie of a sonne vnto her And note we
exaltation and glory which followed the same his humiliation and sufferings For this is the orderly course of the reuealing of our Sauiour Christ to his Church And herein consisteth the whole doctrine of our beleefe in him the second person of the most holy and blessed Trinitie the Son of God that he hath taken our nature to the end he might be a meet mediator for vs vnto God to the purchasing and performing of our eternall redemption iustification and saluation According to that which our Sauiour himselfe said to two of his Disciples the same day wherein he rose againe from the dead O yee fooles saith he and slowe of heart to beleeue all that the Prophets haue spoken Ought not the Christ to haue suffered these things and to enter into his glory Luke 24. ver 28. According also to that of the Apost Peter 1. ep 1.10.11 Where he affirmeth that the prophets inquired diligently after the time and season wherein the sufferings of our Sauiour should be reuealed and the glory which should follow the same Vnto whom as the Apostle saith further it was reuealed that not vnto themselues but that vnto vs they should minister the things which are shewed vnto vs. c. And according to that of the Apost●e Paul Act. 26.22.23 I witnes no other things but those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come to passe to wit that Christ should suffer and that he should be the first that should rise from the dead c. Wherefore seeing by the ministerie of the Euangelists Apostles the glory of our Sauiour Christ which followed his sufferings is reuealed vnto vs in the holy Scriptures of the new Testament as wel as the sufferings themselues let vs according to the example of the holy Prophets inquire af●er the same First of all therefore Question what was the glory or exaltation which followed after the humiliation and sufferings of our Sauiour Answere The glory of our Sauiour Christ which followed his sufferings comprehendeth First the deposition or laying down and leauing of al his humane infirmities and naturall weaknesses in the graue Secondly the recouering assuming and taking to himself that whole perfection of our humane nature wherein God at the first had created Adam yea and that in a more excellent and perfect degree at might best beseeme the naturall Sonne of God the eternall King and Sauiour of his people Thirdly the glory of our Sauiour Christ comprehendeth that more cleare sensible and full manifesting of his diuine nature and the infinite power and grace thereof both by the raising vp of the body from the dead an● also b● the ascending of the whole humane nature both body and soule vp into heauen to the right hand of the Maiestie of God Fourthly it comprehendeth that possession of all souereigne and diuine power which he hath in heauen euen in that he is in the nature of man The grūd and meaning of his glorification in generall the Comfort arising frō the same seated at the same right hand of God the Father to rule and gouerne all things Finally the glory of our Sauiour Christ comprehendeth that authoritie which he hath euen in that he is the Sonne of man to iudge the whole world at the last day Thus large indeed is the glorie and exaltation of our Sauiour Christ euen in his humane nature Explication proofe answerable to the degrees of his humiliation considered before at large The which humiliation of our Sauiour we will here briefly cal to mind for the more cleare illustration of that glory which we doe presently inquire of For like as though he were the Son of God in most high glory one with the Father yet humbled himselfe first to take our humane nature to the diuine ●n personall vnion secondly in that same personal vnion to take all the infirmities of the same our humane nature euen all infirmities which sin hath brought vpon vs such as are hunger thirst wearines faintnes sorrow yea so as in this respect he hath yeelded himselfe in all things like vnto vs sin onely excepted as the holy Apostle teacheth vs thirdly in the same our nature to be subiect to the whole law of God both ceremonial therfore was ccircūcised morall therfore was subiect to his naturall parents judicial therefore was subiect to death by ciuil iudgemēt yea fourthly more then this to bear the whole curse of the law spiritual punishmēts in his soule whatsoeuer were to be indured of him for vs to a kind of death therof in feeling the horrour of Gods forsaking of his creature for a time so far as it might be a punishment of our sinne vpon him without any sinful forsaking of God on his part as we had done finally as our Sauiour being the Son of God humbled himselfe not onely to death but euen to descend into the graue and to lye for a time in the most low and base estate condition of the dead as touching his body so after the humiliation euen of the diuine nature after a sort by reason of the personall vnion with the humane for the work of our Redemption and saluation the humane nature the same work of our redemption accomplished hath bin glorified and exalted with a certaine diuine glory in such sort as hath bin also expressed Both which points of our faith as wel humiliation as exaltation glory of our Sauiour the Apostle Paul doth notably comprise in that one place of his holy ep or letter sent to the Philippi as we read ch 2. v. 5. Let the same mind be in you saith the Apostle that was euen in Christ Iesus c. euen to the 11. v. I pray read the text in your Bible And Act. 3.13 The God of Abraham Isaak Iaakob the God of our Fa hers saith the Apostle Peter hath glorified his Son Iesus whom ye betraied c. The comfort of this most high glorie exaltation of our Lord and Sau Chr in our humane nature after that he had perfectly humbled himselfe and suffered for our sins in the same though personally vnited to the diuine nature the comfort is exceeding great in this most exceeding great work mysterie of our redemption according to the thanks-giuing of the Virgine Mary Luk 1.46 c. according to the thanks-giuing of Zacharias as it followeth in the same ch frō the 68. v. And euen herein is the comfort exceeding great that we may reioice with ioy vnspeakable glorious seeing the fruite of this humiliation exaltation of our Saui is our saluatiō glory also according to that Heb 2.9.10 We see Iesus crowned with glory honour who was made a litle inferiour to the Angels through the sufferings of death that by Gods grace he might tast death for all men c. Wherby as it followeth he brought many children vnto glory c. And 1. Pet 1 9 In whom you beleeue reioyce with ioy
God hath set ouer them as if it were of no power and authoritie or of a superstitious and slauish feare to attribute more then is meete as if they had an absolute power ouer their soules and consciences to rule and reigne ouer them at their owne will and pleasure That these extreamities are carefully to be auoided both of Ministers of the word and also of all sorts of people both experience reason may plainely confirme vnto vs. And first for experience yea euen wofull experience both of ambitious and proud arrogating of too much and also of seruile and superstitious yeelding too much the Romish both prelacie and laitie are most palpable and grosse examples The one in obtruding their infinite lawes and ceremonies and censures vpon the consciences of the people with confessions penances satisfactions and superstitions aboue all number and measure without anie regard of the pure lawes and liberties of the Gospell of our Lord Iesus Christ The other in yeelding their neckes and soules vnto the same in most blinde and superstitious deuotion as if they must otherwise goe into their fained fire of Purgatorie and as if they could not otherwise possibly be saued And on the contrary for experience of prophane contempt of the ministerie and ministers of the Gospell at the hands of their people and likewise of too timorous and abiect a course of ministerie yea and of too base and contemp●ible Ministers to the emboldening of wicked contemners to harden themselues in their contempt would to GOD that wee our selues and our people professing the Gospel were not in eyther respect two vnworthy examples Albeit wee cannot excuse all Ministers neither for presuming aboue that they haue good warrant from their Lord and Master to doe For the which they shall no doubt giue an heauy reckoning at the day of account whosoeuer they be Thus verily common experience sheweth euery way exceeding great extreamities both on the one hand and on the other as well among the Ministers of the word as among the people committed vnto them The world is commonly euermore in extreamities But oh how happy are they both Ministers and people whether Magistrates and Princes or any other who haue learned from the Gospel to walke in the true faith and o-obedience of the Gospel when neither Minister of the word requireth neither more nor lesse of the people then his Lord and Master Christ Iesus the Lord of life and glory hath commanded him that is no more then may serue best to the glory of God and furtherance of their saluation neither people nor Princes and Nobles refuse to yeeld that to their faithfull Ministers of the word and to their ministery in the Gospel which their Lord and Sauiour doth in his Gospel command them for his sake and for the honour they beare to them that is dutifully to be taught and guided by them according to the word of God For then surely shall the faithfull Minister be incouraged to doe his dutie with singular ioy to himselfe and to the vnspeakable comfort of his people He should teach them the truth purely he should reproue sinne without bitternesse hee should incourage and comfort them without flattery he should boldly admonish and warne them to take heede of dangers hee should alwaies be in good hope of victory against sinne and Satan that they should not preuaile among his people Then surely would the God of peace and our Sauiour Christ the Prince of peace the hope and glory of his people and the holy Ghost the Spirit of all truth true consolation be among them yea they should dwell among them euen in the hearts and mindes both of Minister and people The word should be profitable the Sacraments should be helpefull prayer should be effectuall euery part of the ordinance of our Sauiour should further the saluation of euery one that should christianly that is sincearely and without hypocrisie submit themselues vnto the same But contrariwise when the people despise their Minister thinking too well of themselues and hating to be rebuked for their sinnes and likewise when the Minister doth bitterly and prowdly lift himselfe vp against the people or debaseth himselfe too farre for feare or flattery and so giueth place to wicked ones that rebell against the Gospel then all things tend to the eternall destruction of all and not to the saluation either of Minister or of people Then all preaching prayer Sacraments and all things else are made deuoid of all sauing health And these are the reasons beside common experience which may iustly moue all both Ministers and people either of them in their places to approue themselues faithfull and dutifull to the Lord Iesus Christ euen as they tender his glory and their owne saluation Otherwise if we perish our destruction shall lie vpon our owne heads For the Gospel in the owne nature is giuen for edification and not for destruction And therefore in the name of God let vs calling vpon God for his grace labour vnfeinedly and in all subiection of our soules vnto God and our Lord Iesus Christ to make our best vse and profit of all his ordinances to our saluation Let vs hold our selues to the excellent moderation of the holy Apostle 1. Cor. 4.1 2. Let a man so thinke of vs as of the Ministers of Christ c. And 2.1.24 Not that we haue dominion ouer your faith but are helpers of your ioy Reade also 1. Thes 5.12.13 and Heb. 13.17 and 1. Pet. 5.1 2 3 4 5 c. The which great and manifold grace God of his infinite mercy euen for our Lord Iesus Christs sake and by the effectuall working of the holy Ghost grant vnto vs euen for his owne glories sake Amen These things of singular weight and importance are very deepely to be weighed and pondered of vs in this eight particular The last particular is yet behinde to wit the promise which our Sauiour made to his Disciples that he would furnish them with all meete and suff●cient graces to the performance of their Apostolike office before he would employ them in the same Qu. In what words is this promise expressed Let vs heare them againe An. The Euangelist Luke recordeth the words of our Sauiour to be these 49 And behold * The word is apostello I will send the promise of my Father vpon you but tarrie ye in the Citie of Ierusalem vntill ye be endewed with power from on high Thus indeede we reade in the 49. verse of this last chapter Explicatiō In the which last particular belonging to this fift appearance of our Sauiour after his resurrection we haue first to call againe to minde the Deitie of our Sauiour Christ in that he promiseth to send the holy Ghost For the holy Ghost cannot be sent by or from any but by and from God to wit from the Father by the Sonne And though as hath beene obserued before that by the holy Ghost is meant the gifts of the holy
the name of the Father we must shew our selues obedient children yea so as we must rather then disobey him make account of none else to be our Father as our Sauiour hath taught vs. Matth. 23. Neither must we by any meanes grieue the holy Ghost by giuing place to wicked lusts and affections c. because wee are baptized into his name as was by you well acknowledged in the answer Question But it may be obiected that we doe not vsually read the outward forme of administring this sacrament expressed in this phrase of baptizing into the name of Father but in the name of the Father c. What may we say for answer to this Answer The di●ference of these two speeches is onely in words and not in the vnderstanding and sence as I haue beene taught Explicatiō and proofe So it is indeede For they are vsed in the holy Scriptures indifferently sometimes in the name en to onomati as Act. 2.38 and chap. 10.48 though most often indeede into the name eis to onoma as in these wordes in the Euangelist Matth. and Acts 8.16 and chap. 19.3 4 5. and in diuers other places alreadie alledged and sometimes epi to onomati So that though we say in the name tha● is by the power and authority as this word name doeth often signifie 1. Cor. 1.10 and as it is interpreted Act. 4.7 By what power or in what name haue ye done this yet this power and authoritie must be vnderstood of baptizing into the name that is to the faith and profession of the same name and to all holy obedience to him that beareth the same name as hath alreadie bin declared And herevnto euery one that is baptized standeth bound vnlesse he will be a couenant breaker in the highest degree not only with men that is with the Church of God in whose sight he hath giuen his faith but also euen with the Maiesty of God himselfe whose couenant it is Quemadmodum gratiam suam Deus hoc sigillo nobis confirmat ita quicunque se ad Baptismum offerunt vicissim quasi data syngrapha obstringunt suam fidem Calu. Matth. 28.19 Harmon That is like as God doth by this seale assure vs of his grace and fauour so doe all that offer themselues to be baptized binde themselues as it were by a bill of their hand to be faithfull vnto him And another To be baptized into the name of any saith hee is to be consecrated to be a worshipper of him to professe him to be his Lord and to addict himselfe wholy to his seruice It is Piscators obseruation vpon these words of Saint Matthew chap. 28.19 That which hath beene said concerning the administration of the sacrament of Baptisme that it is one principall part of the Apostolike commission is in like manner to be affirmed concerning the other sacrament of the Lords Supper the commandement whereof our Sauiour had giuen his Disciples before at the first institution of it And so as was alledged not long since the Apostle Paul saith concerning it 1. Cor. 11.23 That he had receiued of the Lord that which he did in that behalfe deliuer vnto them But the more full declaration of the doctrine of the holy sacraments of our Lord Iesus Christ doth belong to another part of Catechisme in a Treatise set apart for that purpose to the which we are to referre our selues Onely that which remaineth to be obserued in this place is this that our Sauiour as we see lincketh the administration of the word and sacraments together in one ministerie and commendeth and commandeth both of them to one the same Ministers of his Neither are they faithfull Preachers which teach any thing which our Sauiour hath not commanded Of whom also he requireth very straitly that they be faithfull and obedient to him in them both as the same commission plainly sheweth Hetherto of the second branch of the speech of our Sauiour Christ as it is recorded by St. Matthew wherein as was answered before and now hath beene further declared hee hath giuen his Apostles their charge and commission shortly to be put in execution by them The third branch followeth in the same Euangelist which containeth that gratious promise which our Sauiour made to his Apostles touching his diuine presence assistance while they should faithfully discharge their duties But because this was the conclusion of the whole speech of our Sauiour and doth cōcerne all other faithful Ministers of the Gospel to the end of the world and for that the Euangelist Marke reporteth some other words which our Sauiour vttered at this time we wil therefore here take thē in before we come to speak of those words which may wel be our cōclusiō of the whole And yet so as that which followeth in St. Marke may well shew further the maner of our Sauiours presence in the ministery of his Apostles by the effects which should follow the same as was answered before Let vs therefore consider of those effects The which seeing as it was answered in the beginning of this eight appearance they were either generall concerning all or more speciall concerning some Let vs in the first place consider of those that are more generall Question Which are they And in what words doth our Sauiour speake of them Answere He that shall beleeue and be baptized saith our Sauiour shall be saued but he that wil not beleeue shall be damned Explicatiō The effects as we may see are as generall as may be For they shew vs what shall be the estate condition of all to whom the Gospel is at any time preached cōprehending all vnder two branches to wit that they either beleeuing the Gospel preached vnto them shall be saued or not beleeuing shall be damned There is no third estate or codition as our Sauiour expresly determineth so that all shall come to a verie short and round reckoning And that most certainely and as verily as our Sauiour who is truth it selfe is most true in euerie word that euer he spake yea so true that though heauen earth perish yet no word that euer he spake shall faile but shall haue their full and perfect effect Then the which effects saluation or damnation what may be more graue and weighty And this we cannot but acknowledge if we will consider earnestly with our selues but a little while what the nature is both of that saluation and also of that damnation which our Sauiour speaketh of insomuch as both of them being eternall and that as well of soule as of body The one that is saluation noteth a most happy blessed and glorious estate replenished with all heauenly ioy and comfort The other that is damnation noteth a cleane contrary estate in the most extreame woe and reproachfull misery that may be infinitely exceeding all disgrace and torment that may possibly befall a man in this world as our Sauiour in the Gospel doth describe the same Wherefore insomuch as life
and remained in the graue as one truly descended downe among the dead yea that he being verily in the state and condition of the dead saue onely that his flesh saw no corruption the soule being neuerthelesse perfitly seperated and remooued from the body as farre as heauen is distant from the earth neither yet perfitly glorified but onely resting in the paradise of God among the soules of the faithfull already departed this life and abiding in like estate and condition with them all the time that his body lay dead in the graue the wordes of this Article I say doe teach me to beleeue that the third day after his sufferings hee did quicken and raise vp the same his body that was dead and buried from the former condition of the dead and from the power and dominion of the graue his soule returning againe to his body thenceforth neuer to die or to be sundred any more but to liue for euer in perfect happinesse and fulnesse of glorie with his diuine nature as the Articles following will further declare They doe teach vs indeed thus much For seeing the humane nature of our Sauiour Christ Explication being free from sinne in it selfe and hauing on our parts made a full satisfaction to God for our sinnes and moreouer insomuch as the same humane nature was vnited to the diuine nature in one Person it was vnpossible that death should preuaile against him And therefore at the time appointed that is on the third day after he was crucified dead buried he brake the bonds of death hath openly declared that he hath made a full conquest both of sin death and of him that had the power of death that is the diuell But insomuch as this your answer is somewhat long The meaning of the Article and consisteth of many parts it shall be good for vs in regard of the weightinesse of the matter accordingly to consider of the seuerall proofes thereof First therefore as touching this that our Sauiour Christ did by his owne diuine power together with the Father raise vp his bodie from the dead wee haue the testimony of our Sauiour himselfe who said before his death that he would doe so Iohn 10.17 18. Therefore saith he doth my Father loue me because I lay downe my life that I might take it againe this commandement haue I receiued of my Father And 1 Pet. 3 1● Christ was put to death concerning the flesh but he was quickened by the spirit that is to say by his diuine power And further cōcerning the ioynt working of the Father thus we reade Act. 2.24 God saith the Apostle Peter hath raised vp Iesus and loosened the sorrowes of death because it was vnpossible that he should be holden of it And verse 32. This Iesus hath God raised vp whereof we all are witnesses And againe more fully chap. 3. verses 13 14 1● The God of Abraham Isaak and Inakob the God of our Fathers hath glorified his Sonne Iesus c. and hath raised vp the Lord of life from the dead whereof wee are witnesses And verse ●6 First vnto you hath God raised vp his Sonne Iesus And chap. 4. verse 10. Be it knowne to yee all c that God hath raised againe Iesus Christ from the dead Likewise chap. 5. verse 30. The God of our Fathers hath raised vp Iesus whom yee slew and hanged on a tree Him hath God listed vp by his right hand to be a Prince and a Sauiour c And wee are witnesses of these things which we say yea and the holy Ghost whom God hath giuen to those that obey him And chap. 10. verse 40. Him God raised vp the third day and caused that be was shewed openly And chap 13 in the Sermon that Paul preached at Antioch of Pisidia from the 30. verse c. And Heb. chap. 13. verse 20. God is called the God of peace who brought againe from the dead the Lord Iesus the great Sheepeheard of the sheepe Thus Therefore wee see it plentifully confirmed that the bodie of our Sauiour Christ which was crucisied dead buried and which lay in the graue to the third day is one free among the dead as the Psalmist speaketh Psal 8.5 was raised vp againe by his owne diuine power together with the Father And that this was done the body neuerthelesse remaining free from corruption it is expresly testified by the Apostles Peter and the rest Act. 2.27.31 and chapter 13. verses 36 37. according to the prophesie of Dauid in the 16. Psalme Moreouer that his soule which before hee had alreadie commended into the hands of his Father with the which also the soule of the repenting thiefe was the same day in Paradise as we haue seene Luke 23.45 46. that I say this his soule returned againe it is necessary that according to the truth we doe beleeue it to be so because otherwise insomuch as the soule of man is the chiefe part of man Christ risen could not be the same whole and true Christ who was crucified dead and buried before Neither shall it be amisle for vs in this behalfe to conceiue that the ministerie of the holy Angells who descended from heauen to beare witnesse of the resurrection of our Sauiour was employed to the bringing of the soule to the bodie according as the Ange●ls are saide to haue carried the soule of Lazarus from the bodie of Lazarus into the bosome of Abraham But howsoeuer the conueiance of the soule of our Sauiour was from heauen to the bodie this wee may bee sure of that it was by the diuine hand and power of God reunited to the bodie from the which it had beene separated by so farre a distance before That the same his soule was not yet fully glorified though for the time of his seperation from the bodie it rested in the Paradise of God with the soules of the righteous departed this life it is very euident because the full glorification of the whole humane nature depended vpon the ascension of our Sauiour to the right hand of the diuine Maiesty of God The Promise as we may perceiue Iohn 7.39 and chap. 17.5 and 20.17 And that there is no death or seperation for euer now after the reuniting of the soule to the body the Apostle Paul doth plainely testifie Act. 13.34 in that he saith Explication proofe God raised vp Iesus from the dead no more to returne to the graue To the which very purpose also he alledgeth the testimony of the Prophet Isaias chap. 55.3 I will giue ye the holy things of Dauid which are faithfull For the Apostle giueth vs to vnderstand as the truth is that if our Sauiour should not liue for euer hee could not performe the mercies promised to the Church of God in him and by him alone for euer Likewise Rom 6.9.10 If saith the same Apostle Saint Paul we be dead with Christ we beleeue that we shalt liue also with him Knowing that Christ being raised
is so manifold and great it is our duty Answer first of all to esteeme most highly and pretiously of the grace and vertue of it Secondly to labour earnestly that we may be partakers of the same grace or vertue and power Thirdly from the same power to indeuour to walke in all holy obedience to God in euery Christian duty Explicatiō That wee are thus both most highly and pretiously to esteeme of the vertue and power of the resurrection of our Sauiour and likewise most earnestly to seeke to apprehend it by faith the example of the Apostle Paul Phil 3. may be a sufficient proofe and inducement vnto vs both so to thinke and also to be earnest imitators and followers of him And in deede vnlesse wee doe with him carrie the same iudgement how can we drawe with him in the like yoake of affection Now touching a particular indeuour to walke in euery good dutie of obedience to God as a fruite of this power of the resurrection of our Sauiour Christ apprehended by faith it is good for vs to consider that the holy Apostles doe euery where hold forth the same as a reason of singular force to stirre vp the hearts of all Christians to minde repentance from all dead workes and to prouoke to the contrarie duties of godlines And namely for one instance 1. Corinth 15. the last verse of the chapter where so soone as the Apostle had professed thanks to God for this vnspeakeable comfort which the resurrection of our Sauiour affordeth he annexeth this exhortation forthwith Therefore my beloued bretheren be ye stedfast vnmoueable and aboundant alwayes in the worke of the Lord for as much as ye know that your labour is not in vaine in the Lord. And Acts 2.38 after that the Apostle Peter hath layed open and confirmed the article of the resurrection he doth immediatly exhort and incourage vnto repentance And chap. 3.15.19 And the Apostle Paul againe chap. 13.30 c. 40.41 And Rom. 6 9.10.11.12 c. And 2. Cor. 5 15. And Coloss 3.1 c. 5. For sanctification as was noted before is very neerely linked vnto iustification Heereunto therefore we ought as the Scriptures doe speake to rise early in the morning with all cheerefulnes of heart and spirit euen as our Sauiour Christ did preuenting as it were the morning watch that he might manifest and make knowne that good hand which hee had in his so speedy a victorie ouer the dominion of the graue and of death and hell And this also ought to giue vs singular incouragement not onely to fight manfully against sinne and all the confederates thereof the flesh the world and the diuell but also with good hope of prosperous successe to seeke after mighty increases in godlines Neither let it be a small comfort and incouragement vnto vs to bethinke our selues that according to the ordinance of our Sauiour himselfe we doe together with the exercises of our Christian religion euery Lords day celebrate as it is meete the memoriall of the blessed resurrection of our Sauiour and of the restauration of the world by him partly alreadie begun and to be fully perfitted in time to come And in trust of this mercy of our God also let vs not cease to pray continually in this barren and dead time of godlines wherein wee liue for a new spring and resurrection in mens mindes to the zeale of the Gospell as a fruite of this resurrection of our Sauiour Christ Finally let all our life long in the premeditation of our resurrection at the last day by the vertue of his resurrection to euerlasting life and of that perpetuall feast of the Lambe which wee are inuited vnto be nothing else The danger of not beleeuing this article but a carefull addressing and preparing of our selues both soules and bodies against that great day that then wee may be partakers of a ioyfull resurrection and so liue for euer with him Amen These thinges in deede are to be further enforced vpon our consciences from the Articles following which doe set forth the further exaltation of our Sauiour but because as was said in the comforts the resurrection is the first and most familiar inducement heereunto therefore the exhortation vnto these duties might not be pretermitted here ANd now that we may fully finish the doctrine of this article What danger is there in not beleeuing the very naturall and bodily resurrection of our Sauiour Christ and not in yeelding that fruit of obedience Question which it most worthily challenged at our hands Answer If any doe not beleeue this Article of the resurrection of our Lord Iesus Christs true and naturall body his death shall profit them nothing but they shall die in their sinnes And further also as touching those that be not through the vertue of our Sauiours resurrection partakers of the first resurrection of their soules from the death of sinne they shall neuer be partakers of the resurrection of their bodies to euerlasting life by him at his second comming Explication For the proofe of this reade first of all 1. Cor. 15.12.13.14.15.16.17.18 Where the holy Apostle maketh the resurrection of our Sauiour Christ the ground and foundation of ours yea so the ground that they are as one would say coincident and of the nature of relatiues in a certaine sort For insomuch as our Sauiour Christ who is the head of his Church is bodily raysed vp it cannot be but the members of this mysticall body must be made conformable that is they must be likewise raised vp and vnited vnto him or else he should be as a head without a body And likewise insomuch as our Sauiour Christ is raysed vp to be a King and a Prince ouer his Church for euer his subiects also must be raised vp or else hee could not haue subiects of the same nature and kind with himselfe to rule add gouerne A King who is a man must be a King of men and not of beasts yea of men and not of spirits or ghosts c. It is so in this world it shall be so in the world to come as touching the Kingdome of our Sauiour Christ For as hee shall retaine the whole nature of man for euer and euer so hee shall rule ouer men consisting of soules and bodies euen as ouer his naturall brethren Answerable after a sort to that which the people saide to Dauid 2. Sam. 15.1 Beholde wee are thy bones and thy flesh And as our Sauiour himselfe sheweth plainely concerning himselfe in his message sent by Marie Magdalen Iohn 20.17 though hee be in another state and condition then wee are in nowe and is so to continue euen world without any end And therefore the holy Apostle after that he hath noted diuers grosse and hereticall absurdities accompanying the deniall of the resurrection of Christ 1. Cor. 15. hee addeth verse 17.18 If Christ be not raysed your faith is in vaine ye are yet in your sinnes And so they who are
to carrie him vp Answer Though our Sauiour could by his diuine power haue caused his body to haue ascended without any meanes For he being in stead of a ladder to the Angels of heauen to ascend and descend he could haue beene a ladder to himselfe Gen. 28.12.13 Iohn 1.51 Yet it seemeth that for the declaration of the truth of his humane nature still so to remaine in heauen after his ascension and for euer as he was at his resurrection here vpon the earth he would haue it lifted vp and carried vp by a clowde Explication So it seemeth indeede For notwithstanding the body of our Sauiour being glorified and freed from all naturall grossenes was more apt to moue with greater agilitie and quicknes by many degrees then before yet wee may not thinke that it had lost all waightines of substance and therefore had yet naturally neede of some helpe to lift it vp like as it is said of our bodies that though at the resurrection they shall be glorified bodies yet they shall stand in need of the clowdes of God to carrie them into heauen 1. Thes 4.17 And euen for this cause also would our Sauiour in the translating of his body from earth to heauen giue vs a president how our bodies shall be conucied thether at the end of the world Thus then we see good reason why our Sauiour would haue his body taken vp carried into heauen by a clowd Neither is it to be neglected which learned interpreters obserue that the Lord by putting a clowd betwixt our Sauiour and them would teach them sobrietie least they should seeke to know more of the secrets of God then were meet but should content themselues and rest satisfied with those things which he thought good to reueale vnto them Like as the Lord at the giuing of the lawe did as it seemeth to the same end appeare in a darke clowde Exod 19.9 And afterward in the Tabernacle chap 46.34 c. Num 9.15 and chap 16.42 and likewise in the Temple 1. King 8.10.11.12 Reade also Psalm 18.9.10.11 and Hab The meaning of the Article 3 verse 4. Hereunto tend the speech of the two men that stoode in white apparell Act. 1.10.11 that is to say the two Angels such as the Euangelist Iohn saith to be Angels in white garments chap 20 12. whom Marke and Luke doe neuerthelesse call by the names of men clothed in white shining vestures Marke 16 5. and Luke 24.4 For these Angels of whom we speake in this our text of the Acts call the Disciples from looking any longer vp to heauen after that our Sauiour was receiued out of their sight and informeth them of his second comming to iudgement and that he should remaine in the heauens vntill that time retaining still the same nature of man wherewith hee visibly ascended vp from them And thus the Angells besides the Apostles who were eye-witnesses doe testifie vnto vs this article of the ascension of our Sauiour into heauen yea the Angels doe further testifie of his cont nuance there in the same nature as was said euen now vntill his comming againe A point right worthy and comfortable to be no●ed of vs. And further touching the speech of the Angels in that they speaking to the Apostles doe call them men of Galile they doe it not in any way of reproofe but that by hearing their countrie mentioned by such as were strangers and vnknowne of them they might bee so much the rather stirred vp to attend their speech Nleither are we so to vnderstand these Angells as though they did simply reproue the Disciples for looking vp to heauen but euen as our Sauiour in former times shewing his Disciples the glory of his miracles did therewithall make mention of his death and speaking of his death did vpon that occasion likewise often foretell them of his resurrection and being risen againe interrupteth Mary Magdalen and telleth her of his ascension and by her his Disciples so here the holy Angells call their mindes from that which was of little vse further then they had alreadie seene to that which was now more necessarily to bee knowne and thought vpon of them to the ende they might prepare themselues and teach others also so to doe that they might be found such as they ought to be in all faithfulnesse of good seruice at his glorious appearance according to that of the Apostle Paul 2. Cor 5.10 11. we must all appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ c. knowing therefore the terror of the Lord we perswade men c. Thus much therefore concerning the manner of the ascension of our Sauiour and of the faithfull witnesses of it yea euen of the whole historie and ground of it ANd now in the next place wee are according to our course to consider of the meaning of the wordes of the Article Question What is that How doe they teach you to beleeue Answer This Article teacheth mee stedfastly to beleeue that albeit our Lord Iesus Christ in respect of his diuine nature was all wayes both in heauen and earth filling all places at once with his diuine presence so that to speake properly and without figuratiue speech hee cannot bee saide his Godhead simply considered in it selfe to haue at any time either ascended or descended yet that in his humane nature both body and soule being here vpon the earth and not in heauen yea that euen with the same body which was conceiued by the holy Ghost borne of the Virgine Marie was crucified dead and buried and the third day rose againe from the dead hee did at the ende of fourtie dayes after his resurrection ascend vp from the earth heere belowe into the highest heauens there to remaine till the ende of the world and is not now neither will be till that time bodily present any other where Explicatiō All is very true that you say For first that the God-head to speake properly and without trope or figure of speech cannot bee saide to ascend or descend it is euident insomuch as it is not possibly subiect to change of place but it is present euery where filling at once all places Ier chap 23. verse 23 2● And Psal 139 7 8 9 10 11 12. So that where God is said to descend or ascend and to goe from one place to another as Gen 11.5 7 and chap 18.21 Exod 3 2 c. 8. and cha 19 18. Psal 89. Habak chap 3 verse 3 c. this is to be vnderstood of some speciall declaration of his diuine and glorious presence by the ministerie of his holy Angels with some strange adioynts and effects of the same his presence And this may ioyntly or distinctly be ascribed to all three persons of the Deitie as Mat chap. 3 16. Iohn 14 23 26 cha 15 26 and 16 7 8 Acts 2.1 2 3 4. And yet more specially concerning the Sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ in the person of a mediatour both God
we reade 1. Pet. 3.19 20. The people at that time regarded not to preuent the day of their visitation though a time was set them if they would not repent Therefore that is because of their great sinnes and securitie in sinning the Lord said My Spirit shall not alwaies striue with man because he is but flesh Gen. 6.3 and his daies shall be a hundreth and twenty yeares to wit before his destruction if he will not repent Wee regard not to repent though we are altogether vncertaine how soone we may be called to our generall reckoning and account So then as touching the world it is all one whether they haue a time of repentance or no time limitted vnto them In St. Luke there is also though likely vttered by our Sauiour at another time the example of the daies of Lot added to this of Noah to the very same purpose and therefore may we well make mention of it here Likewise saith our Sauiour Luke chapter 17. verses 28 29 30. as it was in the daies of Lot they did eate they dranke they bought they sold they planted they built But in the day that Lot went out of Sodome it rained fire and brimstone from heauen and destroied them all After these ensamples shall it be in the day when the Sonne of man shall be reuealed This vncertaintie of the time to our knowledge though most certaine and exactly determined in the counsell of God Beliefe in God the Sonne who shall come from heauen to iudge both the quicke and the dead it is in the last place of the description of the t●me amd manner declared from the sodaine and contrarie effects instanced by two combined examples as one may say the first of two men in the field working together the one receiued to wit into the kingdome of heauen as Luke 17.17 the other refused that is as one adiudged to euerlasting torment The second example is of two woman grinding at the mill the one receiued the other refused And in the Euangelist Luke the chapter before alledged verse 34. there is a third instance expressed I tell you saith our Sauiour in the night there shall be two in one bed the one shall be receiued and the other shall be left And beside this there is also this vse prescribed from the former examples of the daies of Noah and Lot that euery one ought to be so willingly prepared to meete the Lord that they should haue their mindes sequestred from all desire after earthly things or else that all contrary desires and indeauours in seeking after the enioying of them should be in vaine yea perillous and damnable vnto them At that day therefore saith our Sauiour he that is vpon the house and his stusse in the house let him not come downe to take it out and he that is in the field likewise let him not turne backe to that which he left behinde Remember Lots wife Whosoeuer will seeke to saue his soule to wit by any vnlawfull practises against the Lord Zoogonesei A metaphore in like sense as it is said The blood of the Martyrs is the seede of the Gospel For it is as the seed of their owne saluation as in seeking to elude or escape his iudgement they shall loose it and whosoeuer will loose it that is to say willingly in the waies of God he shall get it life Thus much out of St. Luke in another place though belonging to the same doctrine But as touching the use it followeth to be more fully considered of vs from the words of our Sauiour recorded by Saint Matthew when we shall proceed to a new portion of our text But before we come to that let vs obserue two things more First concerning the former three couple of instances in the which the one of euery couple were receiued the other refused yea though they were about lawfull businesse of this life or at their naturall rest what then shall we thinke of those both couples and companies that shall be found vnlawfully busied either in bed or at board as we vse to speak such as giue themselues to wantonnesse and vncleannesse or to any other lewd practise or that spend their time wholly or principally at dicing and carding or in any other exercise of vaine pleasure and delight without regard of the honest and godly duties of some good and profitable calling The nature also of the refusing which our Sauiour speaketh of would diligently be considered of vs. For it is a most terrible thing to be left so as a man shall remaine for euer seperated from the Lord world with out end to remaine in extreame anguish of soule and bodie in a conuiction of all former contempt and sinne and rebellion against the holy word and Gospel of God Neuerthelesse we must not so take the words of our Sauiour concerning the receiuing of one and the refusing of the other as though no two or more in a company shall not be receiued together For out of question though thousands of the elect faithfull and dutifull children of God should be gathered together in one place at a sermon or vpon any other iust occasion no one of them should be refused And yet for all that let none being without faith and care of godlinesse in himselfe thinke that because he is with the godly in neare society in outward and ciuill respects that therefore he shall be saued Nay rather the wife liuing with a godly husband and is not godly herselfe or the husband liuing with a christian wife and is not himselfe carefull to serue and obey Christ and so of parents and children c they shall the rather be condemned because they profit not by such excellent examples which God hath set before them in a continuall view to put them in minde of their dutie This ought therefore not onely to cause euery one to be carefull for himselfe but also as much as lieth in him for his neare companion the husband for the wife the wife for the husband the parents for the childe and euery friend for his friend that they also may be saued with them Thus much concerning the first of the two obseruations mentioned before Now secondly let vs obserue that whereas our Sauiour in describing the security of the old world in the daies of Noah and of Lot maketh men●ion of their marrying and giuing in marriage of their eating and drinking of their buying and selling of their building planting it is not because these things or any of them are vnlawfull in themselues For we know that marriage is the ordinance of God yea an honourable ordinance And God that hath giuen vs appetite and made his good prouision with a bountifull hand for the feeding of vs it is his good will no doubt that we should eate our meate yea not onely for necessitie but also sometimes for daintie It is lawfull also to buy and sell yea necessary for a Commonwealth and benefite to all
with him and the holy Angels here hee telleth the wicked that they shall haue their fellowship with the Diuel and his wicked Angels The comparison thus touched let vs now consider of the latter part of the sentence more simply in the owne nature according to the seuerall parts or members of it We may consider of them in this order First who the persons be that shall be condemned Secondly what the punishment is wherevnto they are to bee adiudged The persons are saide to be such as are Cursed and they are no doubt accursed of God Neuertheles our Sauiour doth not call them the Cursed of the Father or the cursed of God as he had saide of the godly that they are the blessed of the Father The reason may be for that no man is simply cursed of God but by reason of his corruption and sinne whereby he maketh himselfe iustly subiect to the curse of God For sinne is the proper and immediate cause of that curse which falleth vpon any And the curse is the next forerunner of condemnation For this cause therefore it may by good reason be conceiued that our Sauiour Christ spareth the name of God or of the Father though hee had vsed it before that euery man might finde the cause of the curse in himselfe and the cause of blessing to be in the free grace and mercy of God who is the onely true and proper fountaine thereof Furthermore touching the persons of whom this sentence shall be principally pronounced by the course and tenure of it it is euident that they are and shall be such as be professours of the Gospell both Iewe and Gentile yet hypocriticall Christians because of their hypocrisie are more accursed then they that neuer heard of the Gospell according to the saying of our Sauiour that it shall be easier for them of Sodom and Gomorrha at the day of iudgement then for such Thus much for the Persons The punishment is to be considered first in two seuerall parts and degrees and then in some further amplifications of it setting forth both the certaintie of it and also the most hideous and wofull vncomfortablenesse of it The first part of the punishment is a seperation from Christ and from the ioyes and glory of his heauenly kingdome for euer Departye from me saith our Sauiour As though hee should say Howsoeuer yee haue presumed to boast of my name and to promise to your selues the kingdome of heauen as wee knowe that the wicked are readie both to thinke and to speake that they looke to be saued as well as the best yet saith our Sauiour Depart from me ye haue no part in me or in my comming or with my redeemed And as he saide before to the foolish virgins I knowe yee not so doth he speake to the same effect here in this place This therefore shall be the first degree of the punishment that it shall be a frustrating of all hope of happines for euer It may be called the punishment of depriuation or losse of the greatest good that might possibly be obtained The second part or degree of the punishment may be called the punishment of feeling or smart yea of the enduring of the greatest euill or woe that can befall any creature This latter part of the punishment is called fire for the sharpnes of it yea it shall be fire of such a kind as God shall make a fit executioner of his most seuere wrath For let vs not deceiue our selues God is able as easily to doe both the one and the other as hee hath alreadie giuen to euerie creature that nature and disposition which they doe presently enioy The same punishment is said to be euerlasting because it shal be such a firie vengeance as shall alwaies torment and burne and yet neuer either consume and wast it selfe or the matter which it shall burne This euerlasting fire shall not onely torment the body but also the soule Yea the soule not onely by the body but properly and in the owne nature For it shall be such a fire as shall torment the spirituall nature of the very diuels themselues Herein therefore doth their iudgement exceed all humane iudgements that euer were or can be For the most grieuous of them are but bodily they cannot touch the soule they are but temporall they cannot be prolonged for euer nay they cannot extend further then the terme of the naturall life O therefore whatsoeuer the iudgement of man shall be of vs or vpon vs let vs be careful I beseech you that we may escape this most heauie and euerlasting punishment which shall proceed from the most terrible iudgment of the diuine Maiestie of the eternall God We doe not without cause pitie those that run on in their sinnes as it were hasting a pace to this destruction Let vs learne to pitie our selues And when we shall doe so let vs magnifie the goodnes of the Lord our God and heauenly Father in this behalfe acknowledging that he hath herein shewed on vs his inestimable pitie and compassion For otherwise wee should be as careles as any other are But let vs proceed to such further amplifications of this punishment as the words of our Sauiour doe point vs vnto to wit the certaintie of it the most wofull and hideous vncomfortablenes of it The certaintie of it is argued from the cause in that our Sauiour saith that it is prepared for the wicked yea no doubt euen as certainly as God hath prepared heauen for his elect children according to the saying of our Sauiour in the 3 of Iohn He that beleeueth not is condemned alreadie to wit if he harden his heart in his vnbeliefe against the doctrine of the Gospel In the last verse of the 30 chap of the Prophet Isaiah the Lord threatening the destruction of the enemies of his Church he alluding to a doolefull place neare vnto Ierusalem where through outragious superstition parents did most vnnaturally burne and torment their children vnder pretence of sacrificing them to God as wee read 2. Chron 28 3 ch 33.6 And Ier 7.31 the Lord I say in that place of the Prophet Isaiah alluding to that doolful place of cruel superstitiō he describeth the most doolfull destructiō of the enemies of his church for euer in these words Tophteh or as the name of the same place is called Topheth Ier 7 31. alledged euen now and likewise 2. King 23.10 it is saith the Lord prepared of olde it is euen prepared for the King hee hath made it deepe and large the burning thereof is fire and much wood the breath of the Lord like a riuer of brimstone doth kindle it Whence it grewe that Hell the place of the eternall torment of the wicked was of the godly the haters of this horrible idolatrie from the name of the possessor of that place who was the sonne of Hinnom called the vallie of Hinnom according to that saying of our Sauiour Mat 5.22 Whosoeuer shall say Foole
the continuall and as we may say essentiall exercises of a true and liuely faith And all that you haue answered standeth with uery good reason to the ende we may alwaies keepe our soules in true humilitie vnder the holy hand of God and in greater watchfulnes against sinne and in greater thankfulnes to God in the continuall remembrance of his most gratious mercy toward vs herein And let vs marke this specially well that we doe not say that wee must continually pray for forgiuenes of sins past as well as of sinnes present as though we were to be in continuall doubt of the forgiuenes of them but to this ende that by the renuing of our praiers we may grow more and more assured that they are forgiuen Like as wee doe pray continually that the kingdome of God may come that is that it may more and more come though we know that God doth alreadie in some measure rule and raigne in vs by his word and holy Spirit and so in the first and third Petitions of the Lords Praier But that we may make all things as cleare as wee can touching this point yet one thing more and that is this Insomuch as God of his most aboundant grace forgiueth the sinnes of his children most freely perfitly for his Sonne our Lord Iesus Christes sake and so are we vndoubtedly to beleeue how cōmeth it then to passe that the faithfull doe suffer afflictions all their life long and that they die at the last Question as well as other men Can it be thought therefore that God doth perfitly forgiue sinne for our Sauiours sake seeing it seemeth that he retaineth the punishment still Answer God neither sendeth death nor any affliction at all vpon his children as punishments for any satisfaction touching the guiltines of sinne for the which our Sauiour Christ hath by his sufferings and death perfitly satisfied the iustice and wrath of God but onely of his fatherly goodnes he chastiseth them to very gratious ends and namely to send them to Christ and to further them in the way of their saluation So it is in deed 1. Booke page 234. c. to page 248. ● 2. Booke p●ges 295. 2●● And page 304. as it hath beene more fully laid open in the doctrine of Gods Fatherly Prouidence Explicatiō proofe For all the afflictions or punishments for sinne call them what ye will which God laieth vpon his children to whom he forgiueth sinnes they are appointed and sanctified of God to further their repentance to exercise their faith and patience to nourish the reuerend feare of God in their hearts to make them more watchfull against sinne to bring them out of loue with this sinfull world to stirre them vp to a greater longing after the kingdome of heauen and to other such like gratious ends and purposes all which cannot proceede from any other cause then from the fatherly loue of God toward them And therefore they must needes be of another nature then those plagues and punishments are which God casteth vpon the wicked Yea the very nature of death is changed to the godly in that it onely setteth the soule free from a sinfull and corruptible body that it may mount vp to the kingdome of heauen and there be perfited among the soules of the faithfull departed before And touching their bodies also though they descend to the earth yet their very putrifying is but a preparation and as one would say a sowing of them against the day of the glorious resurrection which shall be as the day of a most ioyfull haruest to all the faithfull children of God These thinges thus inserted by the way let vs nowe returne to the second branch of the duties touching thankfulnes due to God for this so inestimable a benefit of the forgiuenes of sinnes For the proofe whereof see the example and practise of Dauid Psal 103.1.2.3 c. See also the example practise of Paul 1. Tim. 1.12.13 And Rom. 7.24.25 who in either place giueth great glory praise to God in this behalfe And that also by good reason For seeing it belongeth to God onely to forgiue sinnes therefore also doth the glory of forgiuenes belong to his diuine Maiestie For the third branch read Psal 116.1 c. I loue the Lord because he hath heard my voice and my praiers c. And Luk 7.47 c. She loued much saith our Sauiour concerning the sinfull woman there mentioned because many sinnes are forgiuen her For the fourth branch read Psal 13● 4 Mercy is with the Lord that hee may be feared And Iohn 5.14 Behold thou art made whole saith our Sauiour to the sick man whom he had healed sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee Read also 1. Cor. 6.15 And Iohn 1. Ep. ch 2.1 My babes these things I write vnto you that ye sinne not c. What things Euen this that the blood of Christ cleanseth vs from sinne c. as wee read in the former chapter And Ezek. 16.63 the vse of Gods mercy to Israel is noted to be this that the people might remember their sinnes and be ashamed c. The contrary neglect of Gods mercy is vehemently reproued Ier. 2.19.20 in these words The danger of not beleeuing this article Thine owne wickednes saith the Lord by his holy Prophet shall correct thee c. For of olde time I haue broken thy yoake and burst thy bonds and thou saiedst I will no more transgresse but like an harlot thou runnest about vpō all high hilles vnder all greene trees c. Read also Ezek. ch 33.13 It is a most vnworthy absurd thing that any should so abuse the mercy of God in forgiuing them many great sinnes that they should thereby be the more licentious and bold to cōmit sinne This doubtlesse is such a wickednes as God cannot but seuerely punish as the Apostle Iude doth vehemently denounce against such as turne the grace of our God into wantonnes For the fift branch read Luk. 6.36 Be ye mercifull saith our Sauiour as your Father is mercifull Ephes 4.32 Be ye curteous one to another saith the Apostle of our Sauiour and tender hearted forgiuing one the other euen as God for Christes sake forgaue you And Colos 3.13 Forbearing one another and forgiuing one another if any man haue a quarrel to another euen as Christ forgaue you euen so doe yee To speak generally Repentance is vsually in the holy Scripture ioined with Faith when forgiuenes of sinnes is promised or offered to poore sinners Neither doth our Sauiour Christ giue the one without the other Whereof also our Baptisme is iointly a signe and seale Act. 2.38 and cha 3.19 and cha 5.31 And Rom. 6.1 c. God forbid saith S. Paul that we should sinne that grace may abound Nay rather by how much God is more loth to punish vs yea rather more ready to forgiue vs as hee is by so much doe wee stand the more straitly bound
the soules of all godly and true beleeuers For as touching their naturall creation in respect of their substance and also in regard of their faculties of vnderstanding memory reasoning will election or choise and likewise in ministring life sense and motion to the body they are naturally of the same kinde The one cannot die or be extinguished more then the other For though it be saide in the holy Scriptures that the wicked and all vnbeleeuers shall perish and die the second death c yet this perishing or death is not to be vnderstoode as simply opposed to beeing and life but to that good and blessed estate of life and well beeing which is onely proper to the children of God after this naturall life is ended For this is very plaine in the holy Scriptures that the misery and torment of the soules of the wicked shall be perpetuall euen from the time of their naturall death and so to continue for euer The worme of their guilty conscience shall neuer die neither shall the fire of their torment euer be quenched as our Sauiour sheweth plainely in the parable of the rich man Luke 16.22 c. So then the wicked are said to die a second death moreouer and beside the naturall death in respect of their punishment and torment or destruction after this life in such sense as they are saide as touching all grace and godlinesse to be dead euen while they liue here For like as they while they liue the naturall life are dead because they want the ioy of godlinesse and thereby of a good conscience which is as wee may say the life of our life so yea much rather because after the end of the naturall and sinfull life of the wicked their torment beginneth neuer to end they may iustly be saide to passe to a second death that is from a death in extremity of sinne to a death in extremity of an eternall punishment Thus the immortality of the soule belongeth to the wicked as well as to the godly so farre forth that their soules can no more die that is bee extinguished or loosed their nature and Beeing then the soules of the godly can But as touching the good beeing or blessing of immortality that is to say touching the blessed estate of the soule in the continuance of it for euer in the fauour of GOD this belongeth peculiarly to the children of God who through faith and by the Spirit of God doe mortifie sinne in some measure here in this life and liue vnto God through that life which they liue by the Sonne of God by whose grace th●ir soules are daily renewed and sanctified vnto him as it is euident by the testimonies and examples alledged before for the ground and warrant of this Article vnto vs. And that the estate of the soules of the faithfull are vnspeakeably blessed with God after this life we may be assured from that which wee reade 1. Cor. 2.9 For the glory of it is such as the eye hath not seene nor eare heard nor came into the heart of man which God hath prepared for them that loue him The Promise And 2. Epist chap. 12.4 And that the same blessed estate of the faithfull shall be a fruit of that care which they had here in their naturall life time to attaine to true christian knowledge faith c it may be euident from that which is written 1. Cor. 13.12 that then shall be the perfection of that which we haue now but in part Reade also Reuel ch 7.14 15 16 17. And ch 14.3 4 5. and verses 12.13 Whence also it finally appeareth that this vnspeakeable blessing shall be as was answered in the cōmunion of all the thousands of the triumphant Saints and with the Angells to all those that haue had their part in the communion of the militant Saints here on earth According to that which we reade Heb. chap. 12.22 23. Ye are come vnto the mount Sion and to the Citie of the liuing God the celestiall Ierusalem and the company of innumerable Angells And to the congregation of the first borne which are written in heauen and to God the Iudge of all and to the spirits of iust and perfect men Thus much briefly concerning the meaning of this Article Question Now what Promise haue we in the holy Scriptures for the further warrant of the same Answer We haue the promise of it Psal 22. verse 26. The poore or meeke saith the holy Prophet shall eate and be satisfied they that seeke after the Lord shall praise him your heart shall liue for euer Explication This indeede may well be one testimonie of Gods promise in this behalfe For by the heart the soule of man is vsually signified in the Psalmes and in other places of holy Scriptures There are many other testimonies to the same purpose For all the promises of euerlasting life after the natural life ended they haue the beginning of their accomplishment in this blessed immortality which we speake of according to that of Iames chap. 1. verse 12. Blessed is the man that endureth tentation for when he is tried he shall receiue the crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that loue him Likewise Reuel 2.7.17 And chap. 3.5.12.21 though these promises shall not haue their perfect effect till the resurrection of the body as we shall see further when we come to that Article IN the meane season our order requireth that wee come to the vse of the present Article And first concerning the Comfort of it Question What may that be Answer I heard a voyce from heauen saith St. Iohn Reuel chap. 14. verse 13. saying vnto me write ●lessed are the dead from the time that they die in the Lord. Euen so saith the Spirit for they rest from their labours and their workes doe follow them Explication In these words of Saint Iohn we haue a double comfort expressed as belonging to the faithfull euen from the time that they die in the Lord that is for the Lords cause or in faith and repentance as it becommeth the seruants of God First that thenceforth they rest from their labours that is from all the troubles and disquietments of this life such as we read of Eccles 1.8 All things are full of labour And Psal 90.10 According to that promise Reuel 6. verse 11. They shall rest for a little season c. And chap. 7.16 They shall hunger no more nor thirst any more c. And God shall wipe all teares from their eyes The second comfort of the faithfull immediately after their naturall death is that their works doe follow them that is to say the fruit and reward of all good things which they haue done in their life time For God will performe all his promises which he of his bounteous goodnesse hath made to the obedience of his seruants in and for Christs sake according to that Ephes 6.24 The grace of God shall be to the immortality of all that
corne doth vsually die that is to say rotteth in the ground before it taketh roote that then it may spring out of the earth according to the rule of Philosophie that the corruption of one thing must make way to the bringing forth of another and seeing also that we finde yeere after yeere that God giueth the corne that was sowen a seuerall body according to his kinde yea many graines as it were so many seuerall bodies for one yea and beside the multiplied graines of the corne it selfe the stalke also and the eare why then should it seeme vnpossible to any that God should from the same resolued substance raise vp one and the same body againe Thus much therefore more briefly for answer to the first question thus waiwardly repeated by the aduersaries againe The more large answer of the Apostle to the second question which is of the manner of the resurrection followeth in the verses before mentioned 39. c. 51. The summe whereof is this that our bodies shall be in a farre differing manner at the resurrection and for euer after to that which they are nowe And the possibilitie of this also the blessed Apostle Paul sheweth from the vsuall course of Gods dealing in that he magnifieth his diuine wisedome and power in the varietie of all his workes and in the seuerall kindes thereof And first in his earthly creatures which haue life compared among themselues And then also in his heauenly creatures compared both with earthly and also one of them with another Let vs heare the Apostles words Question Which are they Answer They are these as we read them verses 39.40.41 39. All flesh is not the same flesh saith the Apostle but there is one flesh of men and another flesh of beasts and another of birdes 40. There are also heauenly bodies and earthly bodies but the glory of the heauenly is one and the glory of the earthly is another 41. There is another glory of the Sunne and another glory of the Moone and another glory of the starres for one starre differeth from another starre in glory Explicatiō Here as we may see the varietie of Gods most excellent wisedome and the infinitenes of his almighty power do shine forth very clearly both in the earthly and also in the heauenly creatures the which he hath created made at the first and the which also he hitherto preserueth maintaineth still in their seuerall kindes The earthly as we see in the 39. verse and both the earthly and heauenly in an vnequall condition and degree verses 40.41 Now after the possibility of the resurrection of the body and that also in a manner very farre differing from their present estate declared by the differing instances of the former similitudes or examples the Apostle doth henceforth applie the same instances or examples to expresse the matter in hand and saith Euen so is the resurrection that is to say greatly differing from that estate wherein the bodies were before they fell downe to the graue And hee proceedeth to shew further wherein that difference consisteth First in three particular properties and then more generally in their estate more entirely and totally considered But let vs heare the Apostle himselfe speake And first concerning the three differing or rather contrary properties or qualities in the differing estate of the body Question What is that which he saith to this purpose Answer He maketh the application of the former instances or similitudes and examples of the other creatures in these words verses 42.43 42. So also saith the Apostle is the resurrection of the dead The body is sowen in corruption and is raised in incorruption 43. It is sowen in dishonour and is raised in glory it is sowen in weakenes and is raised in power Explicatiō These contrary qualities of one and the same body doe expresse the difference to be as great as possibly may be in the one estate from the other though the substance of the body is to be one and the same in either state and condition How our bodies are for their present estate corrupt vile and fraile we haue euery one of vs sensible experience but what the incorruption glory and firme and able constitution of them shall be free from all diseases c at the resurrection and thenceforth for euer wee shall not throughly discerne till God vouchsafe to make vs partakers of them Neuerthelesse this we know and it may well satisfie vs that our bodies shall in some measure be made like to the glorious body of our Sauiour Christ as we read Philip. 3.21 And whereas the Apostle expresseth the death of our corruptible ignominious and fraile bodies vnder the metaphore or borrowed speech of sowing he doth it to note that our bodies shall not be vtterly extinguished by death like as our Sauiour speaketh of his death vnder the similitude of the wheat corne falling into the earth dying and so bringing forth much fruit as we read Ioh. 12.24 Like as also to the same end death it selfe which falleth vpō the bodies of the faithfull is compared to a sleepe as it followeth in our text afterward Such therefore is the differing estate which shall be of the body at the resurrection from that which it is now expressed by three particular qualities in each estate the one of the which estates is in respect of the same qualities cleane contrarie to the other The entier and totall difference in each estate is further expressed by one more generall contrarietie as was said Question Which is that difference Answer It is contained in the former part of the 44. verse in these words of the Apostle 44. It is sowen a naturall body and it is raised a spirituall body Explication By the naturall body the Apostle vnderstandeth the estate and condition of our bodies such as it is by the common course of nature mortall and subiect to death as wee sawe euen now insomuch as the soule which ministreth life vnto it Soma psychicon doth in death leaue it Wherevpon the Apostle calleth it animale of anima the soule wherewith the body is animated as one may say so long as the body liueth Soma pneumaticon By the spirituall body he doth not meane a body without a bodily or naturall substance and beeing but a bodily substance indued with such excellent qualities as were likewise mentioned before Not so much proceeding from the soule it selfe to the body when it shall be revnited vnto it as from the holy Spirit of God the onely immediate fountaine of this spirituall estate of the body which he speaketh of So that by the Apostles description the faithfull shall at the resurrection of their bodies be in comparison rather like Angels at that time then such men as they were before that is very corrupt and vile weake and fraile c. According to that saying of our Sauiour Christ Luke 20.35.36 They that shall be counted worthie to enioy that world