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A47629 A treatise of divinity consisting of three bookes : The first of which handling the Scripture or Word of God, treateth of its divine authority, the canonicall bookes, the authenticall edition, and severall versions, the end, properties, and interpretation of Scripture : The second handling God sheweth that there is a God, and what he is, in his essence and several attributes, and likewise the distinction of persons in the divine essence : The third handleth the three principall works of God, decree, creation and providence / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1646 (1646) Wing L1011; ESTC R39008 467,641 520

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signe that there is no difference betweene them but that the second is added to insinuate the perfection of the image There is a four-fold image or likenesse 1. Where there is a likenesse with an absolute agreement in the same nature and so the Son of God is called the expresse image of the Father 2. By participation of some universall common nature so a man and beast are like in the common nature of animality 3. By proportion onely as when we say the Governor of a Common-wealth and the Pilot of a ship are like 4. By agreement of order when one thing is a patterne or exemplar and the other thing is made after it now when man is said to be like God it is meant in those two last waies Christ was the essential image of God Mans was imago repraesentantis aliter imago imperatoris in nummo aliter in filio Augustine The Image of God in which man was cteated is the conformity of man unto God 1. In his soule 2. In his body for his soule 3. In the whole person for the union of both The soule of a man is conformable to God in respect of its nature faculties and habits 1. In respect of its nature essence or being as it is a spirituall and immortall substance The Scripture witnesseth 1. that the soule of man is a spirit Matth. 27. 20. Acts 7. 59 2. That it is immortall 1. Because it cannot bee destroyed by any second cause Matth. 10. 28. 2. Being served from the bodie it subsists by it selfe and goes to God Eccles. 12. 7. Luke 16. 22. 3. Because it is a simple and immateriall substance not depending on matter the minde workes the better the more it is abstracted from the body when it is asleep or dying 4. Because it transcends all terrene and mortall things and with a wonderful quicknesse searcheth after heavenly divine and eternall things There is an invincible argument for the thing secretly imprinted in the instinct and conscience of the soule it selfe Because it is every good mans hope that it shall be so and wicked mans feare 5. The foode of the soule is immortall 1 Pet. 1. 23. the evident promises of eternall life prove the soule to be immortall He that beleeveth in me hath eternall life and to day thou shalt bee with mee in Paradise Nothing can satisfie the soule but God 6. Man is capable of vertue and vice of immortall desires and affections 7. The soules of Adam and Eve were not made of any matter but came by immediate creation in whom God gave a specimen what he would perpetually doe with other men That is but a Cavill that Solomon Eccles. 12. 7. speakes only of our first Parents Children are called the fruit of their Parents body to note that that they are only fathers of their flesh they have another namely God which is Father of their Spirits Saint Paul teacheth it Heb. 12. 9. and the use of it And this checks their opinion who will have soules propagated no lesse then bodies Many collect the immortality of the soule and salvation of Jobs children because they were not doubled as the rest of his estate was 2. The soule of man is conformable to God in respect of its faculties in its understanding will and memory is like the Trinity 3. In the qualities graces and admirable endowments of it In the understanding there was 1. An exact knowledg of God and all Divine things Coloss. 3. 10. knowledg is a principall part of Gods image by reason hee was enabled to conceive of things spirituall and universall 2. A perfect knowledge of all inferiour things Adam knew Eve and imposed names on the creatures sutable to their natures He had most exquisite prudence in the practicall part of his understanding in all doubtfull cases Hee knew what was to be done 2. In the will there was holinesse Ephes. 4. 24. 3. His affections were under the power of grace From this image did necessarily follow peace with God fellowship and union He knew God to be his Creator and to love him in all good things he enjoyed God and tasted his sweetness Mans body also after a sort is an image of Divine perfection Observe 1. The Majesticall forme of it of which the Heathens tooke notice but the structure of the bodie a man should be taught to contemn the earth which his feete tread upon and to set his heart upon heaven whether his eyes naturally tend 2. Gods artifice in it Psal. 139. 15. Thou hast curiously wroug●● me and I was wonderfully made Materiam superabat opus Of the basest matter dust God made the noblest creature 3. The serviceablenesse of every part for its end and use 4. There is matter of humiliation because it was made of the dust Gen. 3 19. Job 14. 18 10. and 5 15. The Greek name makes man proud cals him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bids him aspire looke up but the Hebrew and Latine humble him bids him stoop looke downe Adams bodie was mortall conditionally if he had not eaten of the tree there could be noe outward cause of his death for Gods protection kept that off nor noe in ward cause because originall righteousnesse was in his soule and for old age and weaknesse the tree of life would have preserved him from that 3. The whole person consisting both of soule and bodie was conformable to God in respect of his felicitie and dominion over the creatures Gen. 1. 26 28. The image of God doth not principally consist in this but secondarily therefore though the man and woman were created perfectly after Gods image in other respects yet in this respect the woman had not the image of God as the Apostle sheweth The power which Adam had over the creatures was not absolute and direct that God reserved to himselfe but it was for Adams use then the stoutest and fiercest beasts would be ruled by Adam this dominion since the fal is lost for a great part of our rebellion against God the creatures rebellion should mind us of ours we may see somtimes a little child driving before him 100. oxen or kine this or that way as he pleaseth for the infusing of the soul the time when it was infused it is most probable that the body was first made as the organe or instrument and then the soule put into it as God did make heaven and earth before man was made God did not create all the soules of men at once but he creates them daily as they are infused into the bodie There are these two Questions to be resolved 1. Whether immortalitie was naturall to Adam 2. Whether originall righteousnesse was naturall to Adam For the first A thing is immortall foure wayes 1. Absolutly soe that their is no inward or outward cause of mortalitie 1. Tim. 6. soe God onely 2. when it is not soe by nature but immortalitie is a perfection voluntarily put into the
mystery of the Trinity is necessary to be known and believed of all that shal be saved it was not so plainly revealed to the Jewes of old as it is to us in the new Testament a perfect and full knowledge of this mystery is not attainable in this life Although Trinity in its native signification signifie the number of any three things yet by Ecclesiasticall custome it is limited to signifie the three Persons in the Trinity This is not meant as if the Essence did consist of three Persons as so many parts and therefore there is a great difference between Trinity and Triplicity Trinity is when the same Essence hath divers waies of subsisting and Triplicity is when one thing is compounded of three as parts they are three not in respect of Essence or Divine attributes three Eternals but three in respect of personall properties as the Father is of none the Sonne of the Father and the holy Ghost of both three Persons but one God as to be to be true to be good are all one because Transcendents Opera Trinitatis ad extra sunt indivisa the outward workes which concerne the creature belong to one person as wel as the other as to create govern but opera ad intra sunt divisa the personall properties or internall workes are distinguished as the Father begets the Sonne is begotten of the Father and the holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Sonne There is in the Trinity alius alius another and another but not aliud aliud another thing and another thing as there is in Christ the Father is another person from the Sonne but yet there is the same nature and Essence of them all They differ not in their natures as three men or three Angels differ for they differ so as one may be without the other but now the Father is not without the Sonne nor the Sonne without the Father so that there is the same numericall Essence The Father in some sence is said to be the onely God John 17. 3. that is besides the Divine nature which is common to the three persons there is not another God to be found the word alone is opposed to all faigned Gods to every thing which is not of this Divine nature so when it is said None knoweth the Father but the Sonne and the Sonne but the Father that excludes not the Holy Ghost which searcheth the hidden things of God but all which are not of that Essence Though there be no inequality in the persons yet there is an order not of dignity but of beginning The Father in the Sonne by the holy Ghost made the world not as if there were so many partiall causes much lesse as if God the Father were the Principall and these Instrumentall but onely meere order Persona divina est essentiae divinae subsistentia incommunicablis Wendelinus The Essence considered with the manner of subsisting is called a Person A Person is such a subsistence in the Divine nature as is distinguished from every other thing by some speciall or personall property or else it is the God-head restrained with his personall property Or it is a different manner of subsisting in the Godhead as the nature of man doth diversly subsist in Peter JAmes John but these are not all one It differs from the essence as the manner of the thing from the thing it selfe and not as one thing from another one person is distinguisht from another by its personall property and by its manner of working The personall property of the Father is to beget that is not to multiply his substance by production but to communicate his substance to the same The Sonne is said to be begotten that is to have the whole substance from the Father by communication The Holy ghost is said to proceed or to be breathed forth to receive his substance by proceeding from the Father and the Sonne joyntly in regard of which he is called the Spirit of the Father and the Spirit of the Sonne both Gal. 4. 6. The Father onely begetteth the Sonne onely is begotten and the holy Ghost onely proceedeth both procession and generation are ineffable In the manner of working they differ for the Father worketh of himselfe by the Sonne and through the holy Ghost the Sonne worketh from the Father by the Holy Ghost the holy Ghost worketh from the Father and the Sonne by himselfe There is so one God as that there are three persons or divers manners of being in that one Godhead the Father Sonne and the holy Ghost 1 Whatsoever absolutely agrees to the Divine nature that doth agree likewise to every person of the Trinity 2 Every person hath not a part but the whole Deity in it selfe A person is one entire distinct subsistence having life understanding will and power by which he is in continuall operation These things are required to a person 1 That it be a substance for accidents are not persons they inhere in another thing a person must subsist 2 A lively and intelligent substance endued with reason and will an house is not a person nor a stone or beast 3 Determinate and singular for mankind is not a person but John and Peter 4 Incommunicable it can not be given to another hence the nature of man is not a person because it is communicable to every particular man but every particular man is a person because that nature which he hath in particular can not be communirated to another 5 Not sustained by another therefore the humane nature of Christ is not a person because it is sustained by his Deity 6 It must not be the part of another therefore the reasonable soule which is a part of man is not a person That there are three persons in the Deity viz. Father Sonne and holy Ghost is manifest by expresse testimonies of Scripture Genes 1. 1. Gods created and v. 26. Psalm 33. 6. there three are named the Word the Lord and the Spirit Esay 6.3 Holy Holy Holy But this truth is most clearly taught in the new Testament Matth. 3. 16. Luke 3. 22. The first person in the Trinity utters his voice from Heaven This is my beloved Sonne the Sonne is baptized in Jordan the holy Ghost descends in the shape of a Dove upon Christ. Pater auditur in voce Filius manifestatur in homine Spiritus Sanctus dignoscitur in columba Aug. tract 6. in Joh. Adde to this the History of Christs transfiguration described Matth. 17. 5. Marke 9. 7. Luke 9. 35. In which likewise the voice of the Father was heard from Heaven This is my beloved Sonne the Sonne is transfigured the Holy Ghost manifests himselfe in a bright cloud Matth. 28. 19. The Apostles are commanded to baptize in the Name of Father Sonne and holy Ghost Cameron thinks that is the most evident place to prove the Trinity But that is as ●pposite a place as any for this purpose 1 John 5.
these writings come from God We should receive it with reverence believe it with confidence exercise our selves in it with diligence and delight practice it with obedience Reading the Scripture is a rehearsing out of the booke such things as are there written barely without any interpretation It is to be done publikely as it was in the Synagogues of the Jewes who had the reading of the Law and Prophets amongst them the Prophets were read in their eares every day saith Paul and after the lecture of the Law and the Prophets in another place We honour God more by a publique then a private reading of it 2. Privately the godly Jewes of Berea did search the Scriptures and the King is commanded to read in the Law Some good Divines hold that the Scriptures barely read though preaching be not joyned with it may be the instrument of regeneration since the doctrine of the Gospell is called the ministration of the Spirit Psal. 19. the law of the Lord converteth the soule it is so when not preached but the word of God is made effectuall by the Spirit more often more ordinarily to beget a new life in the preaching that is the interpreting and applying of it then in the bare reading 1 Tim. 4. 13. Matth. 28. 29. Christs custome was as we may collect out of Luke 4. where one instance is recorded to make us conceive his ordinary practice when he had read to interpret the Scripture and often to apply it Let us all learn constantly to exercise our selves in the writings of God which if we strive to doe in a right manner we shall attaine true knowledge of the way to Heaven and also grace and help to walke in that way If the Lord should deny to any man the publique helps of preaching and conference yet if that man should constantly reade the word praying to God to teach him and guide him by it and strive to follow it in his life he should finde out the truth and attaine saving grace the word would illighten and convert but if God afford publique preaching and interpretation we must use that too as a principall ordinance Let us all reade the Scripture 1. With hearty prayers to God to direct us and open the sence of it to us Psal. 119. 18. JAmes 1. 5 17. and with a resolution to put in practice that which we learne Jam. 1. 25. Matth. 7. 24. and we shall finde the word read Gods power to our edification and salvation Onely a Spirituall understanding can discerne an excellency in the Scripture Nunquam Pauli mentem intelliges nisi prius Pauli spiritum imbiberis 2. Diligently attend unto reading 1 Tim. 4. 13 15. John 5. 39. Search the Scriptures whether the Greeke word be a metaphor from hunting dogges or from diggers in mines both import diligence It was a solemne speech used in holy actions hoc age The passions of the Martyrs may be read when their anniversarie daies are celebrated Whence the name of Legends Chamier 3. Orderly that we may be better acquained with the whole body of the Scriptures We should reade on in Chronicles and Ezra and other places wherein are nothing but names and Genealogies to shew our obedience to God in reading over all his sacred word and we shall after reape profit by that we understand not for the present though it will be convenient to begin with the new Testament as more plain before we reade the old 4. With faith Heb. 4. 2. The word of God consisteth of foure parts 1. History 2. Commandements 3. Promises 4. Threats All truths taught in the History of the Scripture ought to be believed As that the world was made of nothing onely by the word of God Heb. 11. 3. and that the bodies of men howsoever they died shall rise againe at the last day Job 19. 26. 2 All precepts Genes 22. 6. Abraham went doing that commandement though strange 3 All promises as that God could give Abraham when he was 100 yeeres old a seed and posterity which should be as innumerable as the Stars in the Firmament Genes 15. 5. and that by Sarah an old and barren woman Gen. 17. 16. Abraham and Sarah believed it Rom. 4. 20 21. Heb. 11. 11. 4. Threatnings as that Gen. 6. 13. 17. though unlikely Noab believed it 2 Pet. 2. 5. because God had said it Heb. 11. 7. and that Jonah 3. 4. the people of Nineveh believed v. 5. In narrando gravitas in imperando authoritas in promittendo liberalitas in minando severitas Spanhemius or at de officio Theologi 5. Constantly Cyprian was so much delighted with the reading of Tertullian that he read something in him every day and called him his Master Da Magistrum Let Gods command the examples of the godly and our owne benefit quicken us to a frequent reading of the holy Scriptures Mr Bifield hath a Kalender shewing what number of Chapters are to be read every day that so the whole Bible may be read over in the yeere The number of Chapters while you are reading the old Testament is for the most part three a day and when you come to the new Testament it is but two sometimes where the matter is Historicall or Typicall or the Chapters short he hath set down a greater number The Martyrs would sit up all night in reading and hearing After we have read and understood the Scripture we must 1. give thanks to God for the right understanding of it and pray him to imprint the true knowledge of it in our hearts that it may not fall out 2. We must meditate in the word of God now understood and so fix it in our minds One defines meditation thus It is an action of the soule calling things to mind or remembrance and discoursing of them that they might be the better understood retained affected and possessed It is as it were every mans preaching to himselfe and is a setting ones selfe seriously to consider in his mind and apply to his owne soule some necessary truth of Gods word till the mind be informed and the heart affected as the nature thereof requires and is the wholesomest and usefullest of all exercises of piety This is to ingrast the word into ones soule to give the seed much earth this is to bind it to the Tables of our heart and to hide it in the furrows of our soules this is to digest it and make it our owne 3. We must apply to our owne use whatsoever things we reade and understand the precepts and examples of the Law to instruct our life the promises and comforts of the Gospell to confirme our faith It serves for thankfulnesse 1. that now we have the Scripture the world was a long time without it it was the more wicked because they had no canon of Scripture We are not like to erre by tradition as former ages have done 2. That we have so great a
good Those two kind of properties which are said to be in God differ from those properties which are given to men and Angels In God they are infinite unchangeable and perfect even the Divine essence it selfe and therefore indeed all one and the same but in men and Angels they are finite changeable and imperfect meere qualities divers they receiving them by participation onely not being such of themselves by nature It is hard to observe an accurate methode in the enumeration of the Attributes Zanchie Doctor Preston and Mr. Storke have handled some few of them none that I know hath written fully of them all CHAP. III. GOd in respect of his nature is a Spirit that is a substance or essence altogether incorporeall This the Scripture expressely witnesseth John 4. 24. 2 Cor. 3. 17. An understanding Spirit is either created or uncreated Created Spirit as the soule of man or an Angell Psal. 104. 4. 1 Cor. 6. ult uncreated God Whatsoever is affirmed of God which is also communicable to the creatures the same must be understood by a kinde of excellencie and singularity above the rest Angels are Spirits the soules of men are spirits but God is a spirit by a kind of excellency or singularity above all spirits the God of spirits Num 16 22. the Father of spirits Heb. 12. 9. the Authour of spirits and indeed the spirit of spirits The word spirit in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Hebrew Ruach is used chiefely of God and secondarily of the creatures when it is used of God it is used either properly or metonymically properly and so first essentially then it signifieth the Godhead absolutely as I●hn 4. 24. or more restrictively the divine nature of Christ Heb. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 3. 18. secondly personally for the third person in the Trinity commonly called the Holy spirit or Ghost 1 Cor. 2. 11. I● the word be taken metonymically it signifieth sometimes the effects of grace either the common graces of Gods spirit propheticall 1 Sam. 10. 6. 10. miraculous or the sanctifying graces Ephes. 5. 13. Reasons 1. God is a spirit because a spirit is the best highest and purest nature God being the most excellent and highest nature must needs be a spirit too 2. God is a most simple and noble being therefore must needs be incorporeall Angels and Souls have a composition in them their essence and faculties are distinguished they are compounded of Subject and Accidents their nature and qualities or graces but Gods holinesse is his nature 3 God is insensible therefore a Spirit Spirits are not subject to senses John 1. 18. This confutes 1. Tertullian who held God to be Corporeall then he should consist of matter and forme 2. The Anthropomorphites who ascribed to God the parts and members of a man they alleage that place Gen. 1. 27. But some thinke the soule is the onely subject and seat in which the Image of God is placed grant that it was in the body likewise it being capable of immortality yet a man was not said to be made after the Image of God in respect of his corporall figure but in respect of knowledge righteousnesse and holinesse Ephes. 4. 23. Col. 3. 10. not in respect of his substance but qualities Ob. God is said to have members face hands eyes in some places of Scripture and yet in others he is said not to be a body but a Spirit and consequently to have no hands nor eyes Sol. The word hand and eye is taken figuratively for the power of seeing and working which are actions that men performe with the hand and eye as an instrument and so it is attributed to God because he hath an ability of discerning and doing infinitely more excellent then can be found in man Sometimes againe those words are taken properly for members of the body of some such forme fashion making so they are not to be attributed unto God who because he hath no body cannot have an hand an eye A body is taken three wayes 1. For every thing which is opposite to a fancy and notion and so what ever hath a being may be called a body in this sence Tertullian attributes a body to God 2. For that thing which hath some composition or change so God onely is incorporeall 3. More strictly for that which consists of matter and forme so Angels are incorporeall 3. This shewes the unlawfulnesse then of painting the Godhead Cajetane disliked it Bellarmine argues thus Man is the Image of God but man may be pictured therefore the Image of God may be pictured Man is not the Image of God but in the faculties of his soule which cannot be pictured therefore the Image of God cannot be pictured Although the whole man may be said Synecdochically to be pictured yet is not man called the Image of God in his whole but in a part which is his reasonable and invisible soule which cannot be pictured 1. We must call upon God and worship him with the Spirit our Saviour Christ te●cheth us this practicall use John 4. 24. Blesse the Lord O my soule Psal. 103. whom I serve in the Spirit saith Paul The very Heathen made this inference Si Deus est animus sit pura mente colendus 2. God though invisible in himselfe may be knowne by things visible He that seeth the Sonne hath seene the Father John 14. 9. We should praise God as for other excellencies so for his invisibility 1 Tim. 1. 17. 2. Learn to walk by faith as seeing him who is invisible Heb. 11. 27. 3. Labour for pure hearts that we may see God hereafter 4. Here is comfort against invisible Enemies we have the invisible God and invisible Angels to help us 3. God hath immediate power over thy Spirit to humble and terrifie thee He is the Father of Spirits he cannot onely make thee poor sick but make thy conscience roare for sinne it was God put that horrour into Cain Judas Spira's spirits He is a Spirit and so can deale with the Spirit 2. Take heed of the sinnes of the heart and spirit pride unbeleefe insincerity 2 Cor. 7. 1. 1 Thess. 5. 23. such as not onely arise from but are terminated in the spirit These are first most abhorred by God He is a Spirit and as he loveth spirituall performances so he hates spirituall iniquities 6 Gen. He punisht the old world because all the imaginations of the thoughts of their hearts were evill 2. Most contrary to the Law of God which is chiefely Spirituall 3. Sinne is strongest in the spirit as all evill in the fountaine Matth. 15. 19. 4. Spirituall evill make us most like the Devils who are Spirituall wickednesses All sinne is from Satan per modum servitutis these per modum imaginis God is most Simple Ens Simplicissimum Simplicity is a property of God whereby he is voide of all composition mixtion and division being all
because they are inherent after a sort in the bodies of things accompanying a corporall being which is the meanest being But thirdly there is a more worthy and noble kinde of life called reasonable such as is seen in men and in Angels which is an ability to proceed reasonably and understandingly in all actions for the attaining of good and shunning of evils fit for the welfare of the person indued with reason Now we must not conceive in God any such imperfect thing as growth or sense for he is a spirituall a Simple and Immateriall essence but his life is to be understood by the similitude of the life of reason for he is a perfect understanding To the being then of God adjoyn reasonablenesse in our concerning of him and we conceive his life somewhat aright God life differs from the life of the creature 1. His life is his nature or essence he is life it selfe their 's the operation of their nature he is life they are but living 2. His life is his own he liveth of and by and in himself their life is borrowed from him in him we live and move Act. 17. 25. 28. He is life and the fountaine of life to all things 3 His life is infinite without beginning or ending their life is finite and had a beginning and most of them shall have an end 4. His life is entire altogether and Perfect their 's imperfect growing by addition of dayes to dayes He liveth all at once hath his whole life perfectly in himselfe one infinite moment 5. He liveth necessarily they contingently so as they might not live 6. His life is immutable their 's mutable and subject to many alterations 1. This serves to blame those which carry themselves no otherwise to God then if he were a very dead Idoll not fearing his threats or seeking to obey him 2. To exhort us all often to revive in our selves the memory and consideration of his life by stirring up our selves to feare his threats respect his promises obey his Commandements decline his displeasure and seeke his favour Let us serve feare and trust in him which liveth for evermore Provoke not the Lord by your sinnes for it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God Heb. 10. 31. 3. Here is comfort to all the faithfull servants of this God which desire to please him for they have a King which liveth and hath lived for ever a King eternall immortall invisible and onely wise in his life they shall injoy life though friends dye God ever liveth His life is the preserver upholder and comforter of your life God living of himselfe can blesse you with naturall spirituall and eternall life John 14. 19. Rom. 8. 10. 17. Men will give skinne for skinne and all that they have for life It is reported of one that he offered to redeeme his life thrice his weight in Silver twice in Gold once in Pearle But we doe little for the living God and communion with him in the life of grace and for obtaining eternall life God is immortall and incorruptible he liveth for ever in like perfection The Scripture confirmeth this 1. Negatively when it removes mortality and corruption from God Rom. 1. 23. 1 Tim. 1. 17. and 6. 16. 2. Affirmatively when it giveth life to God Gen. 16. 14. Deut. 5. 26. Jer. 2. 13. The property of Gods life is it is endlesse incorruptible Deut. 32. 40. Life is essentiall to God he is life it selfe but the life of other things is accidentall His life is also effective he gives life to all living creatures 2. God is of himselfe eternall of himselfe and absolutely immortall and incorruptible He onely hath immortality 1 Tim. 6. 16. Angels are not immortall in and of themselves they have not originall or absolute immortality their immortality is dependent and derivative 3. Because he is voyd of all composition therefore he is free from corruption 4. Because he is simply and every way immutable 5 This is proved from the Nobility and perfection of the Divine essence Living bodies are more perfect then such as doe not live but God is the most perfect and noble being John 5. 26. 6. Because he is blessed therefore he is immortall Ezek. 37. 14 1. This comforts all Gods people who have the living God for their friend who liveth for ever and they shall live eternally with him the life of God comforted Job 19. 25. Let them trust in the living God This should comfort us against spirituall weaknesse and deadnesse though we be dull and dead in Prayer God is life and will quicken us 2. We miserable men for sinne are all subject unto death 2 Sam. 14. 14. Psal. 144. 4. Psal. 90. 6. Job 14. 1. Job describes there the brevity frailty instability and manifold miseries of this life therefore let us place all our confidence and hope in God who is immortall and incorruptible our soule is immortall and made for immortality it is not satisfied with any thing nor resteth but in God who is immortall and incorruptible A thing may be said immortall two wayes first Simpliciter absolutè per se suaque natura so that there is no outward nor inward cause of mortality so onely God Secondly which in its owne nature may be deprived of life yet ex voluntate Dei neither dyes nor can dye so the soule and Angels are immortall CHAP. IV. GOd is truly Infinite in his nature and essence actually and simply by himselfe and absolutely he is Infinite It is a vaine conceite that there cannot be an infinite thing in Act. He is not infinite 1. In corporall quantity and extension but in essence and perfection 2. Not privativè but negativè he hath simply no end 3. He is Infinite not according to the Etymon of the word which respects an end only for he is both without beginning and end although the word be negative yet we intend by it a positive attribute and perfection The Scripture demonstrates God to be Infinite 1. Affirmatively Psa. 143. 3. 2. Negatively in the same place 3. Comparatively Job 11. 8. Isay. 40. 12. 15. Dan. 4. 32. 2. reasons prove this 1. From the perfection of God whatsoever thing hath not an end of its perfection and vertue that is truly and absolutely infinite Infinitenesse is to be without bounds to be unmeasurable to exceede reason or capacity it is opposed to Finite which is to bound or limite to define to end or conclude Infinitenesse is such a property in God that he is not limited to any time place or particular nature and being or it is that whereby God is free altogether from all limitation of time place or degrees He hath all good things in him in all fulnesse of perfection above all measure and degrees yea above all conceiveable degrees by us He hath all wisdome and power above all that all creatures can conceive and
affections of love and joy shall have their full content the memory shall represent to you perpe●ually all the good that ever God did for you God is most Blessed 1 Cor. 11. 31. Rom. 9. 4. 1 Tim. 1. 11. 6. 15. 2 Cor. 11. 31. yea blessednesse it selfe he is blessed in himselfe and to be blessed by us Gods Blessednesse is that by which God is in himselfe and of himselfe Al-sufficient Or thus Gods happinesse is that Attribute whereby God hath all fulnesse of delight and contentment in himselfe and needeth nothing out of himselfe to make him happy The Hebrews call blessed Ashrei in the abstract and in the plurall number Blessednesses Psal. 1. 1. 32. 1. Because no man saith Zanchy can be called and be blessed for one or another good unlesse he abound with all goods Blessednesse is a state of life wherein there is a heape of all good things The Greeks called blessed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that is not subject to death miseries By the etymologies and significations of these two words it appeares saith Zanchy that there are two parts of blessednesse one to be free from all miseries another to abound with all goods and so to abound with them that thou desirest nothing more A third particle saith he is to be added per se sua natura and a fourth condition that he wel know his owne blessednesse So that he is truly blessed saith Zanchy which of himselfe and from his owne nature is alwaies free from all evils and abounds with all goods perfectly knowing his own felicity and desiring nothing out of himselfe but being fully content with himselfe which description agreeth onely to God God is blessed essentially primarily originally of himselfe such and not by the helpe of any other thing Reasons 1 He that is the fountaine of all blessednesse to others how can he be but infinitely blessed himselfe He makes all those things happy to whom he vouchsafeth in any sort to communicate himselfe Wherefore as that which maketh hot and light that is more hot and light then that which is made so so must he exceede all other things in blessednesse which makes all those persons blessed which have any part of blisse 2 Either he hath blessednesse or there should be none for if it be not found in the first and best essence and cause of all other essences it can not be found in any other thing All men and things affect it therefore such a naturall and universall inclination can not be wholly in vaine as it should be if there were no blessednesse to satisfie it The happinesse of every thing stands in the perfect enjoying of it selfe when it hath all which it inclineth to have and inclineth to have all and onely that which it hath then it is fully satisfied and contented and full contentment is felicity Goodnesse filleth the reasonable appetite of mans soule therefore must he needs be happy whose will is filled with good for then he enjoyes himselfe then is his being truely comfortable to him and such as he cannot be weary of Nothing is happy in enjoying it selfe and of it selfe but God alone all other things doe enjoy themselves by helpe and benefit of some other things besides themselves And if they enjoy themselves by helpe favour and communication of a perfect lasting constant eternall and full goodnesse then have they a reall solid and substantiall happinesse but if by a vaine short momentany partiall defective goodnesse then have they but a shew and resemblance of happinesse a poore weake feeble imperfect nominall happinesse The happinesse of a man consists in enjoying himselfe by vertue of the possession of the greatest good whereof he is capable or which is all one by enjoying the greatest good for enjoying it he enjoyes himselfe in and by it and enjoying himselfe by it he doth enjoy it these are inseparably conjoyned So when a man is possessed of such a thing as doth remove from him all that may be discontentfull and hurtfull to him and can fill him full of content then is he happy and that is when he hath possession of God as fully as his nature is capable of possessing him Accordingly we must conceive Gods happinesse to be in the enjoyment of himselfe he doth perfectly enjoy his being his life his faculties his Attributes his vertues I say himselfe in himselfe and of himselfe doth perfectly enjoy himselfe and this is his perfect happinesse He liveth a most perfect life abounds with all perfect vertues sets them a worke himselfe in all fulnesse of perfection and in all this enjoyes himselfe with unconceivable satisfaction Blessednesse or felicity is the perfect action or exercise of perfect vertue in a perfect life The Lord hath a most perfect life and perfect faculties and also most perfect vertues and doth constantly exercise those perfect vertues and faculties He is blessed because he is strong and enjoyes his strength wise and enjoyes his wisdome just and enjoyes his justice eternall and enjoyes his eternity Infinite Perfect and that without any dependence reference or beholdingnesse to any other God is Happy 1 Formally in himselfe which implies 1. that there is no evill of sinne or misery in him neither is he lesse happy because men offend him Secondly that he abounds with all positive good he hath infinitely himselfe and after a transcendent manner the good of all creatures this is implied in that name when he is called a God Al-sufficient he made not the Angels or the world because he needed them 3. That he is immutably happy because he is essentially so Happinesse is a stable or setled condition therefore Saints and Angels also are happy but dependently they have it from God Gods happinesse is more then the happinesse of any creature The creatures are happy by the aggregation of many good things together they are happy in their knowledge in their love joy and these are divers things but now God is happy by one act which is the same with his essence A man here on earth is happy but it is not in Act alwaies it is sometimes in habit 2 Those Acts by which Angels are happy are successive they have one act of understanding one of love one of joy after another but Gods happinesse can be no more multiplied then his very nature or being can 3. He is happy effectively he makes his children happy Deut. 28. 3. Happy are the people whose God is the Lord. He can blesse the conscience with peace though Hell and divels rage the soule with grace he is the authour of all blessednesse all the blessednesse in Heaven is from him 4. He is objectively blessed God the onely object and good thing which if a man have he must needs be blessed God is also to be blessed by us which blessing addes nothing to his blessednes but is therefore required of us that we may somewhat enjoy his blessednesse The reasonable creature