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A15824 A modell of divinitie, catechistically composed Wherein is delivered the matter and method of religion, according to the creed, ten Commandements, Lords Prayer, and the Sacraments. By Iohn Yates, Bachelour in Diuinitie, and minister of Gods word in St Andrewes in Norvvich. Yates, John, d. ca. 1660.; Yates, John, d. ca. 1660. Short and briefe summe of saving knowledge. aut; Richardson, Alexander, of Queen's College, Cambridge. 1622 (1622) STC 26085; ESTC S103644 253,897 373

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Father had none to speake vnto but his Sonne let there be is that the word spoken might be done by the Spirit who finisheth what is spoken by both And here we see by what kind of motion the world was made by the least stirring for what is lesse then to effect all by a word And yet what greater then to effect by such a word and spirit Iob 26.13 The Spirit is said to garnish the worke of creation Ioh. 14.26 and 15.26 All that the word hath said or Father promised shall bee taught testified and remembred vnto vs by Gods spirit Rom. 8.10.11 13.14.15.16.26 c. A Spirit of life quickens those mortall bodies that are redeemed by Christ by whom they liue againe and are led in prayer as children of adoption c. 1. Cor. 12.11 All gifts and graces wee haue from the Spirit Rom. 8.9 1. Cor. 3.16 the Spirit is said to dwell for as the Father makes choice of his house and the sonne purchaseth it so the holy Ghost takes possession in casting out Satan and sinne and in keeping and holding the same in spite of all Satans assaults Act. 5.3 A lie against the truth is a speciall sinne against the holy Ghost whose proper worke is to testifie of the veritie he hath receiued from the Father and the Sonne And hence it comes to passe that sinning after the knowledge of the truth is most dangerous because it is opposite to the last act of God further then which he will not goe in the addition of any new supply of grace and goodnesse Q. What may wee learne for conclusion of all this A. That to him the worke is especially giuen in whom the manner of working doth most appeare as Creation to the Father Redemption to the Sonne and Sanctification to the holy Ghost This may a little be manifested vnto vs out of man who is said to doe all things by his wit will and power The first mouer of man to action is will then by wit and wisedome he proceeds and by his power concludes The will workes by wit and power wit workes from the will by power and the power workes from them both Will begins wit dispenseth and power doth finish the action Onely here is the difference that they are not alwayes able to worke inseparably for sometimes a man hath more wit then will Agrippa Act. 26.28 had more wit to be perswaded to be a Christian then will to imbrace so dangerous a profession Sometimes he hath more will then wit as Peter Mat. 16.22 Master spare thy selfe loue made him blind in seeing what was fit for Christ to doe Sometimes againe more will and wit then power as the Devill Mat. 4. in the temptation of our Sauiour he shewed all his wit and will to trap our Sauiour but he had not power thereunto somtimes also there appeares more power then eyther wit or will as in the Legion of vncleane Spirits Math. 8. who carried the whole Herd of Swine head long into the Sea By this wee may see the inseparable co-operation of the three persons as through a crevis or lettice a little glimmering light of their distinct manner of working The Father wills the thing to be done hence in Scripture will is oftner giuen to the Father then any other person Mat. 11.26 Ephes 1.11 Secondly the Sonne being the wisedome of the Father dispenseth what the Father hath willed And here wee vsually call the Sonne the wisedome of the Father and so indeed we finde him to be in our redemption 1. Cor. 1.30 Thirdly the holy Ghost as the power of both doth finish and consummate their works and so the Scripture stiles him the power of the Highest Luk. 1.35 For as the Father did will that his Sonne should take vpon him our flesh and as it was proper to the second person to assume so the finishing of this worke in the last act of it was due to the Spirit for as there is a naturall spirit to vnite the body and soule together so is there a divine spirit equall to the worke to vnite the divinitie and the humanitie of Christ together God wills that his sonne assume and his sonne will not assume but by the worke of the Spirit To conclude nothing is done no not in their most distinct manner of working but they will all haue an hand in it what more proper to the sonne of God then to take our flesh and become our wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption And yet he can doe none of this but from the will of his Father and by the power of his Spirit CHAPTER XII Of the Creation of things immediately made perfect Question HItherto of Gods efficiencie in generall what are the kinds Answere A. Two Creation and providence In the one we see the orderly production of the creatures in the other Gods carefull administration and preservation of them See for this Psalme 104. Of creation to the tenth verse of government to the 27. verse of preservation to the end Nehe. 9.6 Thou hast made the heauen with all their host c. Thou presoruest them all and they worship thee in regard of their Government Q. What is Creation A. It is the first part of Gods externall efficiencie whereby he made the world of nothing originally good Gen. 1.1 In the beginning God made Heb. 11.3 of things which did not appeare Gen. 1.3 and they were very good Psal 33.6.7.8.9 and 146.6 Ier. 10.11.12 Act. 17.24 All which places testifie of a Creator and his power wisedome and discretion in framing them so excellently and that minimo motu by his word and breath Q. What is here generally to be obserued A. That because things here originally had their beginning therefore the Fathers manner of working doth here pruicipally appeare to whom the originall of all things is giuen 1. Cor. 8.6 All are said to be of the Father so are they of the Sonne as God but as a person he is not the originall for in the same place it is said by the sonne And so in the Creed we giue all personally to the Father vntill wee come to the worke of redemption and here we are to learne that the Apostasie of Adam was especially against the Father and therefore could not he by way of satisfaction be our Redeemer for the person properly offended cannot satisfie himselfe by himselfe but by some other that must come betwixt the Father and vs and thus agrees it with the iustice of God that we should be reconciled by a second person Q. Did God make the world all at one instant A. No but in the space of sixe times 24. houres that wee might more distinctly consider all his workes And Aquinas giues a good rule Successiverum non simul est esse perfectio God could haue created all at once but in his wisedome he tooke daies for it Some glimps of reason hereof we may aime at thus as some creatures were to begin with the first instant
his his righteousnesse and sufferings are ours for vnion is ever the ground of communion 1 Cor. 1.30 2 Cor. 5.21 Q. What are the degrees of our Iustification A. Two Imputation and Reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.18.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world vnto himselfe not imputing their trespasses vnto them Q. What is this imputation A. It is the charging of Christ with all our debts and the discharging of vs by his righteousnesse As God imputes our debt to his Sonne so doth he impute his Sonnes justice to euery child he calleth Isa 53.4.5 He is broken and bruised by our sinnes and wee are healed and helped by his stripes Q. What is the imputation of our debt A. The laying of our blame and default together with the punishment vpon our Suretie First God imputes all our sinnes to his Sonne as that first sinne of Adam then the consequents of it to wit both originall and actuall sinne and hereupon followes a reall obligation of the Sonne of God to payment and punishment Rom. 3.24 Gal. 2.16 Rom. 8.3 Gal. 3.13 Math. 27.46 Q. What is the imputation of Christs Iustice vnto vs A. First in regard of Adams transgression his conflict with the Devill and in spite of all his malice his perseverance in obedience as likewise the ascribing to vs of his iustice both originall and actuall and the merit of his death both first and second And hereupon a reall remission both of punishment and sinne and the fruition of salvation and happinesse The debt and the discharge answere in a parallell and equall distance of proportion Adams transgression in his conflict with Satan is fully satisfied by Christs combate and conquest his and our Apostasie and continuance in it by Christs obedience and perseverance therein His and our originall and actuall sinne is crossed and cancelled by the perfect lines of Christs originall and actuall iustice drawne over those crooked lines His vnder-going of our punishment in the first and second death takes away our curse in both and by so reall an obligation of himselfe and full discharge of it for vs he brings vs an acquittance sealed in his owne bloud that all our sinnes are pardoned and giues vs a new stocke of grace for the fruition of a better life so that now the poore sinner may say with comfort to Satans accusations thou art now put out of office thou hast nothing to doe with mee here is my discharge from God thou maist goe on and slander but thou hast no power to arrest me or carry me to thy prison He that is in good termes with his Prince feares not the approch of Heraulds or Pursevants he that is out of debt feares not Baylifes or Sergeants but imagines they come vpon some good message so the childe of God needs not feare death but that it comes from God as a messenger of his blisse and happinesse He therefore that would die cheerfully must thus know death to be his friend what is it but the faithful officer of our maker who ever smiles or frownes with his master It cannot nourish or shew enmitie where God favours when he comes fiercely and pulls a man by the throat and summons him to hell who can but tremble then the messenger is terrible but the message worse Oh you that prosper and flourish in your sinnes thinke of this death deales with you as Creditors doe with their debters sayes nothing whiles you trade lustily for hell but when once you begin to goe downe the winde in sicknesses crosses and povertie then arest vpon arest action vpon action then come the fowles of the aire I meane the Devils and seaze vpon the sicke soule as the Ravens vpon a sicke sheepe then doth conscience begin to write bitter things against the sinner and makes him possesse the forgotten sinnes of his youth Hence arise miserable despaires furious ravings of raging consciences that finde no peace within lesse without Oh blessed Soule that makes a timely exchange with Christ getting his righteousnesse for the sinnes thereof Rom. 3.24 and 8.33 Gal. 2.21 Tit. 3.5.7 1 Ioh. 1.8.9.10 Q. What is our reconciliation with God A. It is that whereby the controversie betwixt God and man is fully taken vp and they are at one againe All being fully discharged there is nothing betwixt God and man but peace and loue Rom. 1.7 Grace and peace The grace of imputation brings vs to this peace of Reconciliation Rom. 5.10.11 2 Cor. 5.18.19 Col. 1.20.21 Q. What followes from hence A. Both peace with God and all the creatures Psal 85.8 Rom. 5.1 Iob 5.23 Rom. 8.31 Here is the peace of conscience with God of charitie among our selues of amitie or an holy kind of league with all creatures and of outward prosperitie and good successe in all our wayes c. Q. What will follow in the second place A. Our adoption the branches being vnited once to the stocke may fitly be called the Sonnes thereof And being by nature of the wild Oliue but now translated into the true Oliue and springing forth of it may aptly be called the sonnes thereof By nature wee spring from the first Adam and are taken from thence and put into the second and so vnited with him are made the sons of God by adoption Isa 9.6 Christ is called the everlasting Father and so wee are his children but because he begets vs to his Father and is to deliuer vs vnto him Heb. 2.13 Our adoption is in regard of the first person Christ onely the meanes thereof and therefore the Scripture to avoid confusion of names vseth to call vs brethren in respect of Christ and sonnes in respect of the Father Rom. 8.15.23 Gal. 4.5 Eph. 1.5 Rom. 8.29 Q. What are the benefits of our adoption A. Hence wee receiue the spirit of adoption whereby wee are made the sonnes of the Father and hereupon such is the care of our heauenly father that he makes all things worke together for our good Rom. 8.28 both in prosperitie and adversitie 1 Cor. 11.32 2 Cor. 12.7 Psal 32.4 Heb. 12.10 A gaine by this Christ is our brother and wee are co-heires with him of eternall life and haue restored againe vnto vs the sanctified vse of all the creatures yea and the very Angels are become our attendants to keepe vs in all our wayes Psal 91.11 Furthermore Christ hath made vs to his heavenly Father both Prophets Priests and Kinges Rev. 1.6 Q. How be wee heires of that which is purchased A. The purchase was made by the Father who gaue his onely begotten sonne a price for our redemption So that wee haue title by our father who giues vs our right Secondly by sonne-ship for euery sonne of God is an heire and we haue giuen vs in this world the earnest of our inheritance Eph. 1.14 Oh then may not all the sonnes of God indure an hard wardship here on earth seeing they know alreadie what they are borne to Shall men part with good things in possession for
proportioned in the outward Elements and inward Graces Q. How doe the outward Elements teach the outward man A. Either in themselues or their vses Q. How in themselues A. Both for substance and qualitie Q. How for substance A. As the bread is the staffe of life and as the wine glads the heart of man Q. How in their qualities A. As they are common and sensible sensible to the eye and cares feeling smelling tasting Q. How in their vse A. Either as they are handled by the minister or by the receiuers Q. How by the Minister A. First in setting them apart Secondly in blessing of them Thirdly in breaking of the bread powring forth of the wine Fourthly in deliuering them to the Communicants Q. How by the receiuers A. First by taking the bread and drinking the wine Secondly by digesting of them first in the stomacke then in the liuer lastly in euery part whereby they are made powerfull to humane duties Q. How doth all this teach the inward man in respect of grace A. In proportioning them to Christ both in himselfe and in his vse Q. How in himselfe A. Both in his nature and qualitie Q. How in his nature A. As his body is the bread of life whereof whosoeuer tasteth shall neuer hunger and his bloud is drinke indeede that for euer makes glad the heart and soule Q. How in the qualitie A. As his bodie and bloud were common with ours in all things sinne onely excepted and that he is made sensible both to the eare bored by the Spirit the eye anointed with eye-salue and to the feeling of the sanctified affection also to the smelling of ioy and tasting of the hungry soule Q. How in the vse A. Either as he is appointed of the Father or receiued of vs. Q. How of God A. First as he is called to this worke Secondly indued with grace Thirdly as his body is crucified for vs and his bloud powred out for the washing of our wounds Fourthly as he is deliuered and giuen to euery beleeuer Q. How receiued of vs A. First he is taken by the hand of faith and his bodie is fed on by meditation and his bloud spiritually drunken to wash our soules then he is digested first in the vnderstanding and then in the will and affections and lastly distributed to euery facultie both of body and soule by which wee are made able to euery good word and worke which is the happy life of euery Christian * ⁎ * ERRATA Some faults escaped in Printing which I intreat thee courteous Reader to correct the materiall ones are these following PAge 2. line 33. weakened for wakened p. 6. l. 1. our for the pa. 7. l. 3. at for as p. 22. l. 8. our conuersion for our conuersation p. 43. l. 7. to it selfe for in themselues p. 64.7 most excellent for the most excellent p. 73. l. 36 deadly for dead p. 149. l. 32. as diaptron for as a diaptron p. 153. l. 34. flie for shie p. 189. l. 16. found for sound p. 200 l. 33. art for act p 223. l 3 take out othor p. 232. l. 3. require for acquire p. 256. l. 32. fit for vnfit p. 263. l. 2.9 embatement for embasement l. 34 rigorous for vigorous p. 262 13. receiued for reviewed p. 266. l. 12. authenticall Ierome for authenticall Ierome p. 268. l. 5. babes for bagges p. 292. l. 24. ouercome for ouercome it A MODELL OF DIVINITIE CATECHISTIcally Composed CHAPTER 1. Of Religion Question IS there any thing that is called Religion Answere Rom. 2.14 The Gentiles which haue not the Law doe by nature the things contained in the Law they hauing not the Law are a law vnto themselues which shew the effect of it written in their hearts their Conscience also bearing witnesse and their thoughts accusing one another or excusing Let Pilate heare of a God and he will feare Ioh. 19.18 Felix of judgement and hee will tremble Act. 24.26 So powerfull is conscience to put backe the swellings of the proudest Iorden Iosh 3.19 And dare boldly tell euery man as that stout and resolute Tragedian told proud Pompey the time shall come wherein thou shalt fetch many a deepe and deadly sigh and sorrow desperately because thou sorrowedst no sooner It is the demand of Nature it selfe What shall we doe to haue eternall life and because Natures meanes are not able to resist the force and feare of death no people so sauage which hath not thought vpon some supernaturall helpe though ignorance haue cast them vpon superstition c. Oh that the miserable estate of others which wander in darkenesse and wote not whither they goe could giue vs vnderstanding hearts worthily to esteeme the riches of the mercy of God toward vs before whose eyes the doores of the kingdome of heauen are set wide open Should we offer violence vnto it it offereth violence vnto vs and we gather strength to withstand it It is the fault of corrupt nature and not the least that as she hath dimme eyes so they are for the most part euen in the best things exceedingly misplaced She lookes still either forward to the obiect she desireth or downeward to the meanes she vseth neuer turning her eyes either backward to see what she is or hath beene or vpward to view the true cause of her good Alas What a little sparke and poore peece of Adams old ingenuitie is left aliue in vs like one of Iobs messengers to beare witnes of our great losse and what diuine light is extinguished in vs It can bring vs to the obiect of our confusion vnable to shew vs the least glimpse of the obiect of our consolation O foolish reason how sharpe art thou to see thy mischiefe and yet how blunt how blind art thou to foresee it O poore remnant of pictie onely so much goodnesse left as to make vs languish in our owne euill How are we weakened how are we weakened by these relicks of right reason not to see our misery that wee may implore Gods mercy but despairing in both as if wee were banished from our right wits cast our selues more violently into the iawes of the Prince of hell O curst accursed wits that for ease teach the poore sinner either to drinke downe his damnation with a greedie swallow or else through horror to chocke himselfe with his owne morsels Conscience is not alwaies lowd and clamorous neither are the deadliest enemies euer vp in armes against vs yet with still murmurings and secret twitches it bewryes his mis-likes and for want of true peace euermore workes priuie and hidden vnquietnes in the heart There is a lamentable and odious disease called Ileos or misercre mei Deus Nature in expelling superfluities contracts and gathers it selfe from aboue downeward but being often and againe hindred by inflamation opilation and exulceration the fibres doe from below gather themselues vpwardes against nature and by a peristaltick motion sends backe with violence the excrements by the mouth So
the spirit Ioh. 15.26 I will send from the father the Comforter even the spirit of truth The same is said to proceed Gal. 4.6 God hath sent forth the spirit of his sonne into your hearts Ioh. 16.8 As the sonne comes from the father to take our nature vpon him so the spirit comes from them both to apply Christ effectually vnto vs and vs vnto Christ But this comming sending proceeding is a worke of counsell not of nature for the Spirit by an imminent act as he comes from father son so he hath his residence in them both and no creature is capable of him but as by a transient act hee passeth the worke of Redemption to vs by application hee is sayd to come to vs and we receiue him in graces and operations By nature he comes from the same persons and rests in them by counsell not by command he comes to vs and is said to dwell with vs and that in spite of Satan all his temptations As fierce Mastiues tyed in a chaine which although they both barke and haue perhaps a good will to bite yet they can make no neerer approach then the chaine doth permit so that Cerberus of hell is chained vp of God and though his malice be great to labour to enter where he is expulsed yet the spirit keepes him out by his presence and safegards our hearts in peace against all his molestations Q. What is the Father A. The first person who by nature begets his sonne who must needs be an onely sonne because the Father cannot haue many images of himselfe Christ is the first begotten Heb. 1.6 and the onely begotten Ioh. 3.16.18 1 Ioh. 4.9 Ioh. 1.14.18 And therefore the relation betwixt the Father and Christ is a speciall and peculiar respect Heb. 1.5 I will be to him a father and he shall be to me a sonne Man was made in the image and likenesse of God and of the three persons by a divine consultation but Christ is the image of his Father or first person by an eternall and everlasting generation Luk. 3.38 Adam is called the sonne of God which is a most free and voluntary act of the Creator in producing man in his owne image This I insist vpon the more that wee may be wary in our conceits in apprehending Gods act vpon vs and the fathers act vpon his sonne It is happinesse enough for vs to come so neare God that his onely sonne may stand betwixt vs him and that wee may be called his brethren by the Fathers choice of vs in him Q. What is the Fathers relatiue propertie A. To beget and not to be begotten and therefore he is the first person in order Psal 2.7 Thou art my sonne this day haue I begotten thee Heb. 1.5 The same words are repeated to proue Christ aboue the Angels who Iob. 2.1 are called the sonnes of God and therefore in another sense that is in regard of Creation and grace both which they obtained by the will and counsell of their Creator who made them and ordained them to stand in that favour from which the reprobate Angels fell but Christ is a naturall and an eternall sonne Prov. 8.25 And therefore to day is as some Fathers expound it put for eternitie seeing all times are present to God to whom a thousand yeares are as one present day Or rather this day being the day of Christs resurrection and exaltation in which he was mightily declared to be the sonne of God Rom. 1.4 is the manifestation of that eternall generation by which hee is preferred before all creatures His conception and natiuitie as he was man belong to his humiliation which as S. Augustine speakes of his passion was the sleepe of his divinitie as his death was the sleepe of his humanitie Yet as the fathers of Chalcedon say truly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indivisibly inseparably is the God-head of the second person with the whole humane nature and euery part of it still and for ever one and the same person The soule in the agony and vpon the Crosse feeles not the presence of the God-head the body in the graue feeles not the presence of the soule yet vpon the third day both bodie and soule did feele the power of his divine nature death being too weake to dissolue the eternall bonds of this heauenly coniunction And therefore vpon the day of Christs resurrection was there a manifest declaration of the eternall generation of the second person Q. What is the Sonne A. The second person begotten of his father Ioh. 1.14 We beheld his glory the glory of the onely begotten of the Father Vers 18. No man hath seene God at any time the onely begotten sonne which is in the bosome of the father he hath declared him Q. What is the relatiue propertie A. To be begotten and not to beget and because he is from the father alone therefore the second person in order 1. Ioh. 4.9 God sent his onely begotten sonne into the world Heb. 1.5 I will be to him a father and he shall be to me a sonne therefore by the force of relation he must be begotten no begetter otherwise contrary things should bee the same Q. What is the holy Ghost A. The third person proceeding from the Father and the Sonne Ioh. 14.26 The comforter which is the holy Ghost whom the father will send in my name Ioh. 15.26 When the comforter is come whom I will send vnto you from the father c. Ioh. 20.22 Christ breathed on them and saith vnto them receiue yee the holy Ghost he that hath power to breath on his members the gifts of the holy Ghost according to his owne will and counsell hath by nature together with his father an ineffable manner of breathing the spirit for as the three persons worke by counsell so they subsist in the divine essence by nature Q. What is the spirits relatiue propertie A. To proceed and because he is both from the Father and the Sonne therefore the third person in order of subsistence Ioh. 15.26 even the spirit of truth which proceedeth from the father c. Ioh. 16.7 It is expedient for you that I goe away for if I goe not away the comforter will not come vnto you but if I depart I will send him vnto you till the second person haue fully dispensed the worke of Redemption the third person cannot so fully apply it no marvaile then if the times before the death of Christ had more weake meanes of application then now we haue the spirit being more fully giuen Ioh. 12.32 And I if I be lifted vp from the earth will draw all men vnto mee Peter Act. 2.41 conuerted more at one Sermon then Christ did all his life not because he was the better or more powerfull Preacher but because the spirit was then more fully sent both from the father and the sonne to accomplish that which they had begun for the redemption both of Iew and Gentile Q. What is
propertie of the Sonne A. To be begotten Heb. 1.5 Q. What is his manner of subsisting A. To be the second person in order not in nature for the begotten in relation is naturally as soone as the begetter Q. What is his worke A. Redemption Ephes 1.7 Q. What is Redemption A. It is a satisfaction made to the Iustice of God the Father for Man by a Redeemer Q. Who is the Redeemer A. Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord. Q. Why call you him Iesus A. Because he is a Sauiour of his people from their sinnes Math. 1.21 Q. Why Christ A. In regard of his offices as he is anointed our King Priest and Prophet Psal 45.7 Luk. 4.18 Act. 4.27 and 10.38 Q. VVhy his onely Sonne A. Because the Father can haue no more sonnes by nature but one Q. Why our Lord A. By the right of Redemption Rom. 14.9 Q. How is our Redemption wrought A. By the humiliation and exaltation of the Sonne of God Luke 24.26 Q. VVhat be the seuerall degrees of his humiliation A. Seuen There be some others left out of the Creed but these expressed are the principall Q. What are they A. 1. His conception 2. his natiuitie 3. his passion vnder Pilate 4. his crucifying 5. his dying 6. his buriall 7. his descent into hell Q. VVhat are meant by all these A. That Christ must not onely satisfie in generall but that he must passe through the degrees of our sorrowes and beare our afflictions Isa 53.4.5 Q. VVhat be the seuerall degrees of his exaltation A. Foure which are his Resurrection Ascension Sitting at Gods right hand and returne to Iudgement As in his humiliation he tooke our receits and tasted the bitter potion for vs so all Physicke being ended of that kinde he giues vs his receits of Redemption Ephes 1.7 Iustification Rom. 3.24 Reconciliation Colos 1.20 Sanctification 1 Pet. 1.2 Entrance into glory Heb. 10.19 These are Cordials for vs and for him after all his penall receits Q. What is the third person A. The holy Spirit who by nature proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne and by counsell applyeth Christ to the Church and euery member thereof the Father being the first person elects the Sonne redeemes and the Spirit sanctifies Ioh. 14.26 and 15.26 Rom. 8.16 1 Cor. 2.12 Ioh. 3.5 2 Cor. 1.21 Rom. 8.23 Q. VVhat is his Relatiue propertie A. To proceede Vnderstanding begets an Image of it selfe and loues it and so from the best vnderstanding to the best obiect of it proceedes a mutuall loue The begetter loues the begotten and the begotten loues the begetter and their loue is equall to themselues and proceedes from them both and to vs. The will of the Father by the wisedome of his Sonne and power of his good Spirit is sayd to doe all Q What is his manner of subsisting A. To be the third person in order for proceeding from two he must needs be the third and yet in nature as soone as either of them for the louers and the loued are Relalatiues and therefore together in nature Q. VVhat is his worke A. Application or Sanctification Ephes 5.26.27 The Sonne hauing prepared the remedie leaues it to be applyed by the Spirit Ioh. 16.7 CHAPTER II. Of the Faith of the Church Hitherto of Faith in God Question WHat is the Faith of the Church Answere Whereby beleeuing in God we also beleeue that wee are of the Church and made partakers of all good things promised vnto it Q. VVhat is the Church A. That number of all those that are applyed to Christ by the spirit Now as this vnion is made by faith it is called the militant Church as by vision the triumphant Q. Why is it called holy A. Because it is an holy Societie of Saints in regard of the Spirits worke 1 Pet. 2.9 Reu. 11.2 and 21.19 Q. Why Catholicke A. Because it is vniuersall in respect of all times persons and places a familie both in heauen and earth Math. 26.13 Ephes 3.15 1 Ioh. 2.1 Reu. 7.9 Q. What are the benefits God bestoweth vpon it A. Two in this life as the communion of Saints and remission of sinnes and two in the life to come as the resurrection of the body and life enerlasting Lamen 3.23 Psal 68.19 Col. 1.5 and 3.3.4 1 Ioh. 3.2 Q. VVhat is the communion of Saints A. It is our communicating with God and the godly both in grace and glory or that fellowship that wee haue with Christ our head and all his members Psal 16.5 73.26 Isa 55.1 Act. 4.32 Gal. 6.10 Ephes 4.3.4.5.6 Heb. 10.24 Phil. 2.1.2 1 Cor. 10.16 Reue. 3.18 and 6.20 Q. What is the remission of Sinne A. It is a worke of mercy whereby the Father being offended and reconciled by his Sonne doth witnesse to our consciences by his holy Spirit that all our sinnes are discharged and that we are graciously receiued againe into his fauour Iob 33.27.28 1 King 8.47 Hos 14.2 Isa 33.24 and 62.11 God in forgiuing our sinnes doth both couer and cure them 1 Ioh. 1.9 Q. What is the resurrection of the body A. It is a standing vp from the dead by the power of Christs resurrection whereby our corruptible bodies are made incorruptible and filled with all glory and excellencie Iob 19.25.26 Ioh. 5.28 Act. 3.19 1 Cor. 15.42.43 2 Cor. 5.1 Heb. 11.35 Q. What meane you by life Euerlasting A. That most blessed and happie estate in which all the Elect of God shall raigne with Christ their head in the third heauen after this life and after the day of iudgement and that both in body and soule for euer and euer Psal 16.11 Isa 64.4 Ioh. 17.20.21 1 Cor. 2.9 and 13.12 and 15.28 2 Cor. 12.4 Phil. 3.21 Reue. 21.22 and 22.2 CHAPTER III. Of good Workes Hitherto of Faith Question WHat are the workes of Faith Answere That ready act of faith to doe as we are bidden Rom. 6.16 1 Sam. 12.25 Iam. 2.14.17 Ioh. 14.15 1 Thes 1.3 Tit. 3.1.8 Q. How are these workes deuided A. They are either our walking with God or conferring with him or receiuing from him 2 Cor. 7.1 Phil. 1.6 2 Thes 1.11 Heb. 6.17.18 Faith bids the cleansed goe away and sinne no more but walke after the Spirit it prouokes to prayer and giues vs full confirmation of Gods loue Q. What is our walking with God A. It is our due obseruation of his lawes in all our wayes Psal 119.6 Q. What is the law of God A. The rule that God hath prescribed vs for the holy performance of all our actions Isa 8.20 Rom. 2.15 7.7 Q. How is the Law distributed A. It is either concerning the worship of God or loue of our neighbour Mark 12.29.30.31 Q. What is the first Commandement concerning the worship of God A. Thou shalt haue no other Gods before myface Gen. 39.9 Iob 31.23.24 Psal 112.1 Pro. 3.5 Isa 8.13 and 51.12 Hab. 1.16 Luke 12.45 Phil. 3.19 Colos 3.5 Q. What is the summe of this precept A. The hauing of
to keepe the minde in an equall poyse but as Balances ill matched in their vnsteddy motions come to an equalitie but stay not at it so the scoales of an vnregenerate minde if at any time they seme to be even are easily swayed by contrary passions sometimes vp to the beame through lightnesse and overweening opinion of prosperitie and suddenly downe againe to the lowest pitch being depressed with any load of sorrow There is no heart makes so rough weather as never to admit of a calme When the winde stirreth not the waters and waues of the Sea seeme to be silent so the man that is most disordered may haue some respits of quietnesse It is not enough to avoyde the imputation of madnesse to be sober many Moones for hee that rageth in one is no better than franticke so how quiet so euer these masters haue made themselues yet their rules haue never countervailed all their troubles The wisest and most resolute Moralist that ever was lookt pale when he was to taste his poysonfull Hemlock Courage and constancie against all crosses and curses and then to bee least shaken when mostassayled comes from the rules of an higher art then naturall wisedome was ever able to teach Hastie hounds amd swift on foote often spend their mouths and courses in vaine for want of sent so how easie is it for nature to over runne Religion that so seldome is lead by right reason Wandering Empiricks may say much in tables and pictures to perswade credulous Patients but their ostentation is farre from approbation of skill when they come to effect their cures How many ships haue suffered miserable ship-wracke for all the glorious titles of the Triumph the safe-gard the geod-speed c. So how many soules haue beene swallowed vp with the faire hopes of their fained religions This taske of faving soules is left whole for grace to busie her selfe about it Alas nothing is left in vs but the ruines and relicks of our sinnes and the iudgements of our God Nay the soule diepred with her owne bloud shrinkes not at the face of death following it That goes best downe with the sinner that is freest from grace And as hunger maketh riffe raffe odious viands toothsome or as the vicious stomacke can feed hungerly on coales and ashes so the greedie sinner can with delight devour the murthering morsels of his owne misery In darknesse Starres of the greatest magnitude are not to be seene nor the millions of moats that lie in blindnes so who knowes the magnitude or multitude of his sins O Lord if thou shine not vpon vs wee sleepe in darknes If thou saue vs not in thy sonne we perish in our selues O that we could be netled with the newes of our miserie Can we see our Sauiour mourne for it whiles we haue no grace to mourne for it our selues Should not this strike vs in the very striking and fetch teares from our eyes If he that was without sinne would not be without stripes for vs shall we thinke to be cockered like Adoniah of our heauenly Father Lord strike our hearts with the rod of thy word as Moses smote the hard rocke that our stonie hearts may gush forth plentifull rivers of teares because we haue not kept thy Law Let vs no longer like fooles laugh when we are lashed of our sinnes Transplant vs into thy Sonne for as we are both the stocke and the griffe are euill It was onely for our Sauiour as a sweet Impe to grow out of a Crabstocke But if thy mercy feoffe vs not in the blessings and vertues of thy Sonne as our sinnes doe feoffe vs in the curses of our parents we perish They are grosse faltterers of nature that tell her shee is cleane yea aliue O the vnspeakeable mercy of our God that whiles wee provided him the sinne he provides vs the remedie Behold an expiation as early as our sinnes the pure and innocent Lambe of God slaine from the beginning of the world Thus thus whiles the clamour and feare of our fall to our affrighted consciences runnes on like fire in a traine to the very vtmost rankes of our bodies and soules euery part and power fearing their fellowes no lesse then themselues are affraid even then to the true beleeuer behold the bloud of him who purgeth our consciences from dead workes Heb. 9.14 Nay so admirable a lenatiue that it leaues no more conscience of sinne Heb. 10.12 But from the name and notation let vs come to the definition and fist that which is generall a doctrine Our once lost law of life is left to the teaching of the word and Spirit Sinfull man being dull and deafe of hearing had need to haue his heart prepared made ready by all meanes to receiue the truth The Scriptures are not penned like an Art in order and methode and the reason is because the truth could not be offered to man directly who lookes asquint but on all sides that he may be hit with them on some side The first thunder-bolt that did strike through the soule of man was Adam thou hast sinned and art the childe of death By creation in wonderfull silence was the law written in the fleshy Tables of our hearts and as things which are written in barkes of trees did daily grow out by corruption therefore he thought it high time to write in in tables of stone as more faithfull monuments then our hearts And when he comes to driue it into the iron hearts of men hee takes state vpon him as one that will be trembled at in his word and judgements There was nothing in the deliuery of the Law that might not worke astonishment The eyes dazled and dimmed with lightnings the eares torne with thunders roaring in them The voyce of the Almightie wrapped in smoake and fire and out-speaking both the clamor of the trumpet and clappes of thunder and that in such a manner as he did rather seeme to threaten then teach forbid then command deterre then define what he would haue done More negatiues in opposition to what men would doe then affirmatiues in direction to what men should doe By which wee are to vnderstand that he that was so terrible a Law-giuer would one day appeare as severe a judge If he were so dreadfull in the proclamation he would be as fearefull in the execution Oh! how will this fiery Law flash terrour in the face of euery hard and impenitent sinner when at the day of iudgment his conscience like another Sinai shall tremble and quake before the Iudge then shall he see the Law that was giuen in fire in fire to bee required By this promulgation I plainely see how difficult a thing it is to teach a sinner If God should not change our hearts Ezech. 11.19.20 his Messengers might as well with our venerable Country-man Mr Beda preach to heapes of stones as to the stony hearts of carnall men There is none but God that is able to giue the first charge
Life consisting in the moysture of ayre is to be nourished not in the spirit of fire Animall spirits if they were not generated of the vitall and daily restored by them they might liue by their fiery nature as well as starres Let this then be granted that all elementarie soules are either the formall spirits of the ayre or fire and then starres hauing the one and not the other may liue without nourishment The influences of the Starres are as vitall as the animall spirits in man and both comfort and beget life c. Againe their motion shewes they liue for nothing is moued from place to place without it If God and Moses may be heard Phylosophers shall easily haue their mouthes stopped Scripture euery where testifieth of the motion of the Starres Which must either be by counsell or nature or violence or fortune Not by counsell for their motion is regular and alwayes the same and this were sufficient to proue the cause next vnder God to be naturall But the opinion is they are moued by the externall force of Angels as a wheele by a dog or a Crane by walking men I reade indeed that the Angels are ministring spirits for the good of the elect but no where in Gods booke that they turne the wheeles of heaven And againe the light being common to good and bad the good Angels should minister daily as well for reprobates as Gods elect But to still all cackling in this cause let the Text cleare it selfe Gen. 1.14.15.16.17.18 That which God saw to be good answers Gods intention in his motion to his end Therefore the Starres had so much by their creation that they were able to devide giue light rule dayes and nights the which they were vnable to doe without motion God therefore gaue them a power to moue that they might obtaine these ends which if they should assume from any other then God would argue the imperfection of his owne worke It may well be thought they receiue this life in their centers as other things doe in the circumference For being round heat and spirit will most vnite themselues within as in a silver spoone turne the hollow side to the fire and it will be very hot But in plaine bodies heat is receiued in a cleane contrary fashion as in Andyrons where they be round are very cold but where they be plaine they be very hot and will burne soone Starres therefore are round like globes that heat may the better center in them and make them the more actiue and liuely in their motion Why they should neither ascend nor descend is their equall temper with the place where they stay Why they moue round is the actiue spirit and soule that will not suffer them to rest It is said of the Sunne Psal 19.4.5.6 that God hath set him a tabernacle or proper place out of which he cannot goe and yet he comes out of the chambers thereof and in the strength of his motiue spirit reioyceth to runne his race not tumble it as some dreame for running a brest in the fire hee pusheth and shoueth it from him that nothing can be hid from his heat light His circuit is from one end of heaven to another and by his quicke dispatch euery day either drawes a little nearer or goes a little farther off not that at any time he comes nearer the earth but by fleeting a little his chambers he comes sometime in the yeere to dwell more directly over our heads then other He devids night and day euery 24. houres with vs and by running from one point to another the whole yeere And it is as naturall to the Sunne to runne a circuit euery day as another in a whole yeere not that he is pulled contrary wayes by two diverse orbes but that which he doth euery day in part that hee doth wholly and completely in a yeare Now the part and the whole may agree in the same motion and euery dayes race is but a part of the whole yeeres course which the Sunne may as truely keepe in the whole as in the parts and that without all contrary motions But seeing euery man will fancie his owne fiction I leaue this without all further prosecution Q. How many sort of Starres haue we A. Two The greater and the lesser not for quantitie of bodie but qualitie of light for the originall word Meoroth is Makers of light Luminaries shiners And so the Sunne and Moone are greatest as giuing to the earth the greatest quantitie of light How great the Starres are is a coniecture and guesse at the iust proportion of any one yet they are very bigge and it is evident that the Sunne is bigger then the earth by the Eclipses and because it enlightneth more then halfe the earth at once Gen. 1.16 Q. What are the greater A. The Sunne and the Moone These two cast downe the greatest light vpon the face of the earth Genesis 1.16 Psal 104.19 Q. What is the Creation of the Sunne A. Whereby he made it to rule the day c. And it is called the greater light because it darkens all Starres by his shining yea and casts light in the face of them all hence the Moone which hath such a changeable light receiues her splendor from the Sunne according to that face which is opposite to the body of the Sunne for the one halfe of it is ever illuminated and illustrated by the same and in receiuing and casting downe that light seemes to haue spots in her face Gen. 1.16 Psal 19.5.6 Q What is the creation of the Moone A. Whereby it was made to rule the night Gen. 1.16 Yet shee hath the assistence of the Starres for her selfe is often absent in the night Q. What are the lesser lights A. The Starres Gen. 1.16 These carry downe a lesser quantitie of light yet if it were not for them our nights would be palpable darkenesse which is the greatest enemy to the eye for it is a comfortable thing to see the light Eccl. 11.7 Q. When were all these made A. In the fourth day euening and morning succeeding as before in the compasse of 24. houres Gen. 1.19 Q. What is the creation of things with a compound life A. Whereby they were made not onely with a growing and mouing life but also with sense externall and internall the one serving as glasse windowes for the other The first sense which is most necessary is our feeling and is dispersed through the whole body excepting the bones and sinewes Bones are the sustentacles of our bodies and therefore would be painfull to vs if they were tender of feeling The sinewes they are the organs and instruments and carry in them the sensitiue spirits and man is most ticklish where his skin is thinnest With the tips of the fingers Physitians feele their patients as being most sensible of the pulses motion The tangible obiects are heat cold drought and moysture principally secondarily the qualities that hence arise Tast is next
beene the greatest Malefactor that ever was Math. 26.55 Q. What is the second degree A. His arraignment before the Ecclesiasticall and politicke Magistrate as if he had broken all lawes and deserued punishment at euery judgement seat And all this was done to shew vs what wretches wee were in Gods sight and how he should haue proceeded against vs who by meanes of his Sonne are pardoned that wee might never see our iust condemnation otherwise then wee see it acted in our Suretie he was posted from Caiaphas to Pilate from Pilate to Herod and backe againe from Herod to Pilate by whom he was both iustified and condemned God running along with the whole Tragedie and shewing plainely by Iudge Pilate that Christ was not to die for himselfe but for vs the iust suffering for the vniust Mat. 26.57 and 27. 2. Luk. 23.7.8 Math. 27.4.19.24 Q. What was the third degree A. The most miserable derision and whipping of him that ever was heard tell off he was to encounter both paine and scorne for vs. An ingenuous and noble nature can worse brooke this then the other any thing rather then disdainfulnesse imperious in sultation especially from so base enemies The Iewes the Souldiers yea the very theeues flouted and taunted him and triumph over his misery his blood cannot satisfie them without his reproch Math. 26.67.68 and 27.28.29.30.31 Oh that wee could imitate the Iewes in their custome concerning evill doers they had ever some malefactor brought forth to them in their great Feast which they dismissed with disgrace so it should bee the happiest peece of our triumph and solemnitie if wee could bring forth that wicked prophanenesse wherewith wee haue dishonoured God and blemisht his Gospell to be scourged and sent away with all holy indignitie See thy Sauiour scourged and beaten for thee and see if thou canst finde in thy heart to fauour or cheerish the least sinne Q. What is his crucifying A. After all these abuses he is put to the most accursed death of the Crosse a kind of punishment ioyntly with the other inflicted vpon none but such as were offenders in the highest degree and euery one was held most accursed that so died to shew that he suffered for offenders of the greatest staine and straine and so to beare our curse vpon him Phil. 2.8 Gal. 3.12.13 Deut. 21.23 Q. Did he suffer onely these outward afflictions A. He suffered these as iudgements for sinne therefore were they so much the more bitter and whiles he was on the crosse those three houres of darkenesse he was assayled with all the powers of darkenesse so that he felt in his soule and body vnvtterable anguishes even the effects or apprehension of the most feareful wrath of God so that it made him cry out My God my God c. and when that was over as hauing felt therein the most bitter paines of all his sufferings he said it was finished Math. 27.45.46 Ioh. 19.30 Q. What might this meane A. That he was for the time reputed as one separated from God which is the second death for as the first death is the reparation of the soule from the body the beginning of our naturall life so the second death is the separation of both body and soule from God the beginning of that spirituall life Isa 53.4.5.6.10 Christ was never a stranger to the life of God Eph. 4.18 and yet his Father did for a space seeme to estrange himselfe to his Sonne Oh beloued Saints of God let vs with that Disciple follow him a far off and passing over all his contemptuous vsage in the way see him thus brought to his Crosse and still the further wee looke the more wonders shall wee behold Euery thing addes to his ignominy of suffering and triumph of over-comming It was not done in a corner as Paul saith to Festus but in Ierusalem the eye the heart of the world and that without the gates in Calvary among the stinking bones of execrable Malefactors Before the glory of the place bred shame now the vilenesse of it Not a circumstance but argues the wonderfull humiliation of our Sauiour and still his paine and scorne increased till all was finished Q. Hitherto of his life what is his death A. The expiration and deliuering vp of his soule into the hands of his Father Math. 27.50 Luk. 23.46 Ioh. 19.30 When he had finished all and indured most exquisite torments he himselfe without all violence gaue vp the Ghost For he both cryed with a lowd voyce and bowed the head immediately before he yeelded his last breath whereas in mans death the spirits first faint and tyre and the head fals downe when they are expired but Christ being full of spirit able to hold vp his head bends the same downe-ward of his owne accord and then dies Oh yee sinners behold Christs head thus humbly bowed downe in a gracious respect to you his armes are stretched out louingly to embrace you yea his precious side is open to receiue you there is no more accusation iudgement death hell for you all these are no more to you then if they were not if yee can beleeue who shall condemne It is Christ which is dead Rom. 8.34 I know euery man is ready to reach forth his hand to this dole of grace and would be angry to be beaten from this doore of mercy surely there is no want in this Mossias looke that the want be not in thy selfe hee hath finished but thou beleeuest not thou repentest not all is in vaine to thee for all these thou maist be condemned What ever Christ is what art thou Here is the doubt Christ is a good shepherd and giues his life for his sheepe But what is this to thee that art secure prophane impenitent thou art a wolfe or a goat Christs sheepe heare his voyce but thou art a rebell to his law and therefore canst not hearken to his Gospell for mercie c. Q. What is his death to vs A. Christ was willingly content to indure the separation of his body and soule for a time which is the first death that hee might take away whatsoeuer is iudgement therein and sanctifie the same vnto vs. 1. Cor. 15.55.56.57 Wee were the authors of this death and our Saviour did alter it our disobedience made it bitter his mercy hath made it not to be evill vnto vs. Oh my Saviour how halt thou perfumed and softened this bed of my graue by dying How can it grieue mee to tread in thy steps to glory The worst peece of the horror of this death is the graue and that part which is corrupted feeles it not the other which is free from corruption feeles an abundant recompence and forefees a ioyfull reparation Wee carry heauen and earth wrapt vp in one compound it is but restitution when each part returnes homeward Q. What followed his death A. His buriall and abiding in the graue to the end that hee might sweeten the same for vs and whereas it was
there is but a reversion of the divine nature so this is an exaltation of the humane to possesse that glory and excellency which before it had not Psal 2.6 and 110.1 Dan. 7.13.14 Act. 5.30.31 Heb. 2.9 and 8.1.2 and 9.24 Thus might Steuen see Christ in a most glorious manner aboue all other in heaven Act. 7.55.56 Q. What benefit redoundeth thereby to vs A. Vnspeakeable for while our head is so highly magnified and made Lord of all wee know that he will rule all for the best and that no good thing shall be wanting to them that are his yea that our sinnes which wee cannot but commit whiles the old man dwelleth in vs shall not preiudice our happinesse seeing he sitteth at the right hand of our Father to be our intercessour and governour Q. What is the fourth and last degree A. His glorious returne from heaven to iudgement both of the quicke and dead which is his second comming into the world with great glory and maiestie to the confusion of them that would not haue him rule over them and the vnspeakeable good of his owne for it is he that iudgeth and who shall condemne them and hereupon is the full worke of Redemption giuen to the Sonne Math. 24.30 Ioh. 14.3 Act. 1.11 1 Thess 4.16 and 2. Epist chap. 1. ver 7.8 Iud. ver 14.15 Phil. 3.20 CHAPTER XXV Of the Spirits application to the Church Question HItherto of Redemption what is the application thereof Answere The making of that ours which the Lord of life hath done for vs. The purchase of our peace was paid at once yet must it be severally reckoned to euery soule whom it shall benefit If we haue not an hand to take what Christs hand doth either hold or offer what is sufficient in him cannot bee effectuall to vs. Wee haue no peace without reconciliation no reconciliation without remission no remission without satisfaction no satisfaction without infinite merite no infinite merit without Christ no Christ without faith By this wee are interessed in all that either God the Father hath promised or Christ his sonne hath performed Conscience must play the honest servant and take his masters part not daring to be so kinde to the sinner as to be vnfaithfull to his maker It must not looke straight vpon him till he by the eye of faith be able to looke straight vpon God Hence it will suffer no man to bee friends with himselfe till hee be a friend with God now by faith in Christ Iesus of enemies wee become friends yea sonnes and as sonnes may expect and challenge not onely in this life carefull provision and safe protection but in the life to come salvation and fruition of an everlasting patrimony Mark 16.16 Luk. 24.45.46 Ioh. 3.3.14.15.16.18.19 Ephes 3.17 Q. To which of the three persons is this worke most properly ascribed A. To the holy Ghost the Father most properly carries the worke to Redemption and then the Sonne goes on with it so begun to Application and then the Spirit finisheth the worke so dispenced by the second person Ioh. 14.17.18.26 and 15.26.27 and 16.7.8.9.10.11 Christ left not his Church comfortlesse but even increased her ioyes by the presence of his Spirit When he let fall the showers of spirituall operation after his departure vpon the Iewes Act. 2.41 there were at one Sermon three thousand soules added to the Church a great increase none such in Christs time Why Was Peter the better Preacher Nay never man spake as he spake for God gaue him the Spirit not by measure Ioh. 3.34 and 7.46 But now the spirit was giuen plentifully to the hearers which before was either restrained or sparingly imparted Eph. 1.13 The word faith and the Spirit worke all together for the applying of Christ vnto salvation Q. To whom is Christ applied A. To the Church which is the proper subiect of Redemption They that make Christ an vniversall Mediator and the Spirit a generall agent in applying to all and yet the Father but a speciall elector of some shew themselues ignorant of the manner of the co-operation of the sacred Trinitie For as the Father beginnes by election so the Sonne goes on by Redemption and the Spirit finisheth the worke by application so that application is as speciall as election Ioh. 17.9.10.11 As the Father redeemes his owne by Christ so he keepes them by the Spirit Eph. 5.25 He gaue himselfe onely for his Church vers 26.27 and the same he doth present holy to his Father by the worke of his Spirit Q. What is the Church ❧ A briefe Map of Gods Election Election From the Father The inchoation and beginning whereof is Who for the first manner of working hath by the counsell of his will decreed by his omnipote●●ie and efficie●●ie originally to effect all In the saluation of all the Elect. The dispensation or progresse In the Sonne Who for the second manner of working ha●● by the price of redemption obtained and still by ●is intercession doth obtaine to repaire all The consummation or ending By the holy Ghost Who for the third manner of working hath doth apply by testimony seale and gouernment the ●●●athers electiō ●●s redemptiō to finish all And for conclusion all 3 apply the same to faith Which receiues all as most freely graced of God And by which we are both ingrafted into Christ and made to grow vp with him vntill we haue our perfect fruition Q. What are the kinds as they concerne man A. Election which is Gods gracious decree in Christ Ephes 1.4 to set free some men from the misery of the generall lapse and to bring them infallibly to salvation for the setting forth of his abundant mercy Rom. 9.11.16.23 And Reprobation which is his preterition or passing by some men and leauing them in the generall corruption of the fall without effectuall meanes of recovery and salvation for the manifestation of his vncontroulable justice Rom. 9.18.21.22 Question VVHat meane you by this delineation and description of Election Answere That wee should not fixe our eyes vpon the odious and offensiue name of Reprobation but delight our selues the more with the sweet and comfortable inspection of our Election wherein were shall finde the sacred Trinitie to haue beene more deepely then in the other and not to be so much pleased in plaguing men for finne as to saue them out of it Reprobation being an internall effect and ever sleeping in the bosome of him that never sleepeth I meane an imminent no transient effect must needs be from God and in God yet the execution of it is no wayes so large in God as that decree of life and salvation Shewing plainely that God is farre more affected with the life and happinesse of his creatures then their death and misery Election is from the Father in the Sonne by the Spirit to faith which workes not any life in vs or for vs but onely receiues it at the bountifull hands of Almightie God Oh let vs not so
And this God hath done many wayes generally either externally or internally Externally by voyce without vision Act. 9.4 or by both together Christ for a time assuming the shape of men and Angels Gen. 18.9.13.17.33 and 19.2 Internally either awaking by inspiration or sleeping by inward dreames and visions Gen. 15.12.13 c. Math. 2.12.13 Act. 2.4.17 Sleepe reacheth not to the reasonable Soule and God may conferre with man when both his internall and externall senses are locked vp He is able to informe the Soule immediately without all vse of the body and by a divine vision let man see his will though his reason was never informed thereof by his eare or any outward word So God can informe the inward senses without the outward and by a dreame let a man see that which was never within the supposition of any sense So God can shew vnto the outward senses obiects without naturall light or colour Rev. 1.10.12 He saw and heard in an extasie His eye and his eare were spiritually taken vp with revelations not as the Prophets of the wicked Spirit when they are said to be Deo pleni full of God behauing themselues like mad-men but quiet and calme vnderstanding well what they did God first certifying their vnderstandings after their wills and so inclining them to speake and liue accordingly the other knew not what they said as being possessed by the Spirit of darkenesse And this extraordinary revelation shews the immortalitie of the soule being able to conferre with God even without the body 2 Cor. 12.2 Wee receiue all our knowledge by our outward senses Rom. 10.17 which conuey things to the inward and they informe our reason but God can invert the order and beginne first with our reason and by that informe our inward senses in dreames and then by them our outward c. Q. What are the ordinary Governours A. Such as are called by the Church where there is try all of their gifts election of their persons and consecration of them in office The two first were supplied by the third in all those whom the Apostles ordained for they by imposition of hands gaue gifts and therefore such were not tryed by the learned seeing they had no gifts for such callings before hands were imposed by the Apostles Hence it followes that the new Testament speaking of no other consecration of Ministers but by the Apostles speakes nothing of examinations or elections Men then had not ordinary gifts for they receiued them together with other ornaments by the hands of the Apostles that place Act. 14.22 is abused even against Grammaticall construction by those that would draw it to election before ordination and that by the suffragies of the people for the Nominatiue case to the Verbe must needs be Paul and Barnabas they therefore and not the people were agents in that businesse and made Ministers of such as they found fit for gifts whom God with an ordinary calling extraordinarily gifted Wee reade Act. 19.6.7 of 12. made Ministers which before had not heard whether there was an holy Ghost yea or no whose power immediately they felt after Paul had imposed his hands So that wee may safely conclude that ordination is more essentiall to ministry then popular election and yet in after-times the people were not reiected for the liking or disliking of their Pastours vntill they became factious and patrons of schismes or at least-wise abetters of the worse and so made themselues vnworthy of their voyces I would faine know of any strict defender of the peoples choice whether it were better in point of schisme or heresie to leaue them to their owne libertie or to haue them restrained If they be left in such eases to themselues then shall the Church of God be destroyed As for example in the times of Arianisme whiles the people had libertie they would choose no Pastours but Arians It shall ever be observed that in siding and factious divisions the worst are for the most part strongest c. So that election is to be moderated by the discretion of the civill Magistrate or faithfull Pastours But ordination and consecration hath still gone in his course and Ministers are to make Ministers and not the people Gal. 1.1 Some are called immediately of God and by God as Apostles some of God by man as Timothie Titus c. Some of men and by men as the Prophets of Brownists and therefore none of Gods This is the Tenent of truth that the first course of Ministry hath ever bin extraordinary the second hath ever gone on in an order as from one government to another and never hath Ministry begun at the people We deny not that we are Ministers by Rome but we affirme wee are not the Ministers of Rome Wee are of God by them and they may as truely be instruments of our Ministery as of our Baptisme For as Ezek. 16.20 the Iewes did beget children vnto God but consecrate them to Molech so Papists may beget both a people and Pastor for God but till they separate they are both consecrated vnto Antichrist And here let all take notice how Separatists gnaw vpon this bone and sucke in nothing but the bloud of their owne iawes Q. What were the Governed A. All those in the Congregations which were subiected to their lawfull Pasters Act. 20.28 1 Thess 5.12 Heb. 13.7.17 It is for Korah and his confederates to rise vp against Moses and Aaron because they are lift vp aboue the Congregation Num. 16.3 Q. Of how many ought a Congregation to consist A. Of so many as may conveniently meete together in one place for the publicke exercises of Religion The severall portions are left to the discretion of our Governors and so far forth a Parish is humane yet the Congregation it selfe is Gods ordinance who would haue it gouerned according to his owne lawes 1 Cor. 5.4 The flocke is Christs the fold is lesser or greater as the Governours judge it fit and convenient Q. What if some members of more Congregations meete together to consult of some matters A. Then it is called a Councell for single Congregations are the weakest parts of the Church and therefore haue need of neighbour helpe Act. 15. The Separation teach that euery Congregation is absolute in it selfe and that assembling of Councels is voluntary c. which if it be true then the guiltie or infected Congregation cannot be cited to appeare Iudicium redditur in invitum for pars rea is in law pars fugiens the party presumed to come thither against his will c. If then councels be lawfull there must needs be a subordination of Churches In the time of Constantine Pastours were called a great way from their charge many dyed in their travell and many in their absence found much hurt done at their returne to their flocke whereupon order was taken for a more convenient calling of councels They had foure Patriarkes then vnder euery Patriarke diverse Provinces which had an Archbishop
liue in ignorance and blindnesse If such weake Governours had charge of instruction Masters must not thinke that they are exempted by the translation of the Ministery to others We indeed haue the charge of the Soules of diverse families but euery Master hath still the charge of his owne Gen. 18.19 2 Tim. 3.15 There is nationall domesticall and personall mourning enioyned Zach. 2.10.13.14 So teaching c. Q. How was the Church in a People A. As it did consist of many families and had the bounds thereof exceedingly inlarged from the dayes of Moses Vntill his time God had but a familie or two to worship him At the great Deluge but eight persons saued in the Arke Gen. 7. The world was growne so foule with sinne that God saw it was time to wash it with an vniversall flood and saw it meete to let it soke long vnder the waters so close did wickednesse cleaue to the authors of evill Q. What is here to be considered A. The writing of the rule of Religion which was done by such extraordinary Governours as God had fitted and inspired by his holy Spirit thereunto for the edification of his Church For even then God had both extraordinary and ordinary teachers now wee haue the rule completely delivered in writing and therefore need not any extraordinary Governours in the Church 2 Tim. 3.16 2 Pet. 1.20.21 And this is that that makes vs receiue a more sure word of Prophecie c. 2 Pet. 1.19 Q. How was it written A. According to the necessitie of the Church diversely and at sundry times Heb. 1.1 God increased the dyet of his Church as he saw it was fit to beare it Q. What are the Bookes called A. For the matter contained The word of God for the manner of Record The Scriptures by an excellencie of phrase as the most worthy writings that ever saw the light and being compiled into one volume are called Bibles or many little Bookes vnited in one body so that both worke and writing carry away the names of all other Scriptures and Bookes as most admirable for vse Ioh. 1.8 2 Tim. 3.15.16.17 Oh the shame of Christians that these workes should be counted as a strange thing vnto them Hos 8.12 whiles other bookes as baites for fooles shall be followed and applauded Q. How are these to be considered A. As they are either in the originall tongues or in the Translations in the purest fountaines or the derived streames and conduits In the Originalls not onely the matter which is the Divinitie Dogmaticall Historicall c. but also the meanes of inferring which is the Logicke the manner of expressing and enforcing which is the Grammar and Rhetorique are all immediately inspired 2 Tim. 3.16 All scripture is inspired from God 2. Pet. 1.21 The holy mon of God spake as they were moued by the holy Ghost In the translations the subiect matter or substance of Theologie is equally inspired though mediately The Logicall coherence also and consequence of argument retaineth the same necessitie of illation because it dependeth not vpon diversitie of Languages but communitie of notions But as for the proprietie of Grammar and vigor of Rhetorique there must needs be some abatement and embatement First and principally because the skill and diligence herein vsed by Translators is not divine or inspired but meerely humane at the best and in tryall prooueth to be lyable to much latitude sometime more sometime lesse Secondly for that many emphaticall words and rigorous figures both of Grammar and Rhetorique proper to the originall Tongues such as are especially deriuatiues agnominations proverbes c. cannot to the life be expressed in other Languages Thirdly and lastly because in vulgar Languages there is such mutabilitie and change of fashions almost as much as in apparell that after a few yeares we scarce vnderstand what our fore-fathers meant in some passages of the Scripture in our mother-tongue much lesse in the Latine which in the Vulgar is so pestered with Barbarismes in stile beside defects in notion that not onely S. Hierome would write invectiues if he should see such a brat layd at his dore but Priscian himselfe would call for the ferula It was therefore a very pious and laudable intention in our learned and judicious Soueraigne to appoint all our English Translations of the Scripture to be receiued and the best of them corrected by neerest reduction to the originals and to the proprieties of our Language Q. How in the originall Tongues A. As they are in the tongue wherein the Spirit did indite them and they are of themselues to be receiued without all exception as being Canonicall and hauing their authority primarily from the spirit and by themselues secundarily from the Church 1 Tim. 3.15 and 2 Ephist 3. chap. ver 16. The Church is the pillar on which the truth must hang to be shewed to others or the ground on which it resteth it selfe finding little stay else-where Next to the testimony of the Spirit and word it selfe wee are to admit the Churches testimony Q. Doth the Scripture containe the whole body of Religion A. It doth most fully and plainely and therefore there is no need of vnwritten verities or Popish Traditions It is the rule of all faith and controversies of faith It is the standard or the Kings beame by which wee are to try all doctrine that is tendred to vs. Wee are not to goe by the common beame of custome and opinion but by these ballances of Gods sanctuary not suffering a drams waight to be iniected that may incline these golden scoales as we please Isa 8.20 When the law was written Moses recalls both himselfe and the people to it for tryall when he had written his fiue bookes the Prophets that followed were content to haue their sayings brought to Moses law for tryall Christ himselfe never refused any tryall by the law and Prophets yea ever and anone is hee appealing vnto them for proofe of his owne doctrine and so all the A postles did tread in their masters steps onely the man of sinne will not indure any such tribunall he will iudge all and be iudged by none Q. But they seeme not to be so plaine and perspicuous A. Yes in themselues they are evident enough concerning things necessary to salvation and if at any time they seeme hard it is by reason of the weakenesse of our vnderstandings Pro. 14.6 Psal 25.14 2 Pet. 3.16 We must therefore in the obscure passages pray to God and conferre one place with another and consider duely the cirumstances of the places and wee shall find the true meaning if not God will pardon our ignorance and require no more of vs then himselfe giueth wee vsing his meanes aright Iam. 1.5 Q. What sense is to be giuen of Scriptures and whence must it be taken A. The Scriptures haue euer one literall sense and meaning and that which must be fetched from themselues 2 Pet. 1.20 It is of no private interpretation or as man
with the twelue lesser and Daniel The Apocrypha is shut out of the distribution both by the Iewes and our Saviour and therefore is not of equall authoritie with the bookes we haue mentioned God made the Iewes faithfull registers of the old Testament and they were so curious least a letter should be lost that they kept them by count and therefore would never haue beene so negligent in the Apocrypha writing if ever they had beene committed of God vnto them by their extraordinary governours As in notorious Burglaries a hat gloue or fword is often left behind for discovery so in these though more honest some errors haue escaped to discover the Authors Q. Who were their ordinary Governours A. The supreame was the high Priest the inferior were the Priests Levites and Rulers of their Synogogues Lev. 8. Num. 3. Act. 13.15 Order hath ever beene for the custodie of divine things and confusion for their ruine Q. What is the Church among all people A. The Catholicke Church gathered out of all people where we haue the Messias exhibited in the flesh in whom the law and the Prophets are yea and Amen Moses branded some creatures with vncleannesse he that hath redeemed his children from morall impuritie redeemes his creatures from legall what should S. Peters great sheet let downe by foure corners teach vs but that all creatures through the foure corners of the world are cleane and holy And that God is no respecter of persons but in euery nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted with him Act. 10.34.35 Gal. 4.27 Q. How are the Congregations thereof called A. They are called Churches the name of the whole being put for the part and Christ doth it to distinguish his Churches of the Gospell from the prophane and wicked Synagogues of the Iewes Math. 18.17 He sayes not tell it the Synagogue but the Church c. They therefore levell amisse that lay the line of their government by this deceitfull square Q. Who were the extraordinary Governours of this Church A. Iohn Baptist the forerunner of Christ Christ himselfe his Apostles seventie Disciples Evangelists and Prophets whereof some did write the bookes of the new Testament in the Greeke tongue which are either Historicall as the Gospells of Mathew Marke Luke and Iohn or diverse excellent Epistles as of Paul to the Romanes Corinthians 2. Galathians Ephesians Philippians Colossians Thessalonians 2. Timothy 2. Titus Philomon Hebrewes Epistle of Iames of Peter 2. Iohn 3. Iude or lastly the Propheticall booke of the Revelation Q. Who were the ordinary Governours A. The Doctors and Pastours Eph. 4.11 which may be distributed into Bishops Elders and Deacons As for the first if time and place be accidents of a calling and the very essence lie in relation betwixt the caller and the called Timothy and Titus were ordinary teachers for to an extraordinary Governour an extraordinary caller is required It cannot be denied but that both Timothy and Titus did a long time wait vpon the Apostles and were sent from place to place though setled at the last If going from place to place make an Euangelist then they were both of them Evangelists but I beleeue all the Pastours and Doctours of the Church were at the Apostles command and sent too and fro as there was need 2 Tim. 3.10.12.20 c. wee heare of Crescens Titus Tychicus Trophimus c. sent diverse wayes by the Apostle Paul c. And therefore it is not enough from the place to say such a one was an Evangelist except it be further prooued that he had an extraordinary calling That Timothy is bidden to doe the worke of an Euangelist it is a dubious terme for an Evangelist is either put for a writer of the Gospels and so some Apostles are Evangelists or for an officer and so such as were extraordinarily called to plant Churches Act. 8. but had no power to ordaine them Pastours are called Evangelists Act. 21.8 And of this sort might be many of the seventie Disciples or lastly for Preachers for the Gospell with which the name is coniugated is the obiect of all three The first write it for the edification of the Church the second preach it and worke miracles to confirme it for the plantation of the Church and the third preach it too for the further watering of that seed which others haue sowne before them and in this sense is Timothy bidden to doe the worke of an Evangelist as the next words expound it make thy ministery fully knowne And it is out of doubt that Timothy was called of God by man which to me is an ordinary calling And that Timothy and Titus as Bishops properly so called had a superintendencie and coerciue power of jurisdiction over Elders Ministers or Preachers it is evident to me out of these places 1 Tim. 1.3.5.19 2 Tim. 2.14 Tit. 1.5.11.13 The Elders are from the originall called Presbyteri which turned into English is called Priests the most current and passable title had not Masse-mongers made it infamous in the eares of such people as are not acute enough to devide betweene a fit title and a corrupting abuse Thus much for the name As for the office of Elders taken for Ecclesiasticall Governours I find none described but by seeding of the flocke which makes mee conclude they were all Pastours As for that place 1 Tim. 5.17 all the question is about the comparison whether gifts or offices be compared together The originall hath it thus Elders ruling well are worthy of double honour especially labouring in the word and doctrine now it is a rule in the Greeke tongue that participles are to be turned into reasons of the things they explaine as ruling because they rule and labouring because they labour c. The sense then may be thus rendred without all rending of the comparison Elders are to be reompenced with honour and maintenance first because they rule secondly because they preach First they goe before their flocke in holy practise of discipline vpon themselues and others secondly they continually presse them by precepts in painfull preaching Now that the people may especially see wherein they are to be honoured it is in this that they are labourious dispensers and disposers of heauenly doctrine Therefore with the Scriptures I say that the ordinary teachers and Governours of the Christian Churches were Pastours and Doctors and that copulatiuely and not segregatiuely as in Apostles Prophets and Evangelists Q. What is the Church triumphant A. The number of all those that are applied vnto Christ by sight After faith and sight followes freedome and fruition This Church consists of holy Spirits both Angels and men the soules of the Saints departed are receiued vp into glory and after the resurrection the militant Church both in body and soule shall be of the Triumphant in the full fruition of all blisse and happinesse Gal. 4.26 Heb. 12.22.23.24 Iob. 14.2.3 Heb. 11.10.16.26 c. As those therefore that haue tasted of some
delicate dish finde other plaine dishes but vnpleasant so it fareth with all those which haue once tasted of heauenly things they cannot but contemne the best worldly pleasures As therefore some daintie guest knowing there is some pleasant fare to come will reserue his appetite for it so must not we suffer our selues to be cloyed with the course dyet of the world but keepe our desires for the ioyes to come And if worldlings find so much pleasure on earth as to thinke it worth the account of their heauen because they see such a Sunne to enlighten it such an heauen to wall it about such sweet fruits and flowers to adorne it such varietie of creatures for the commodious vse of it and yet onely provided for mortalitie and chiefely possessed by the makers enemies what then must heaven needs be that is provided for God himselfe and his best friends If the out side be so glorious what shall be within How can it be lesse in worth seeing God is aboue his creatures and Gods friends better then his enemies I will therefore not onely be content but desirous to be dissolved CHAPTER XXVI Of the Spirits application by Faith Question HItherto of the subiect of Application what are the parts Answere Preparation and the infusion of faith Such is the nature of man that before he can receiue a true iustifying faith hee must as it were be broken in peeces by the law Ier. 23.9 The word of God is both the hammer to breake our hard hearts and a fire to heat melt mollifie and dissolue them into the teares of godly sorrow A rocke may tremble and an iron vessell by violent stroakes may be broken in peeces and yet still retaine their hardnesse onely the sweet and pleasant fire of grace must soften them againe It is the bloud of the Lambe that must melt the Adamant and the Sunne-shine of Gods loue in Christ that must thaw the ice of our hearts Rom. 8.15 we are to be led from the feare of slaues through the feare of penitents to the feare of sonnes and indeed one of these makes way for another and though perfect loue thrust out feare yet must feare bring in that perfect loue as a Needle or Bristle drawes in the thred after it or as the potion brings health The compunction of feare saith Gregory fits the minde for the compunction of loue Psal 2.11 We are bidden to reioyce in God with trembling If Samuel had not made the people to quake at Gods thunder and raine hee should never haue brought them so to haue ioyed in the following Sunne-shine 1 Sam. 12.18.19 c. Hostile feare through the power of God may be initiall to the filiall And whereas that casts both the eyes vpon the punishment God can make it cast the one eye off the iudgement and fixe the other on the partie offended so Samuel teacheth Israel 1 Sam. 20.20 with 24. Feare not the thunder but feare him that sent it If ever wee will stoope the iudgements of God will bring vs on our knees Q. What is the preparation A. A fitting vs for our being in Christ for wee being branches of the wild Oliue must be made ready for our being in the true Oliue before wee can be grafted into it Rom. 11.17.24 Ioh. 15.5.6.7 The convexe or out-bowed side of a vessell will hold nothing it must be the hollow and depressed part that is capable of any liquor The broken contrite spirit makes way for Gods grace Psal 51.17 Sweetly Bernard God poures not the oyle of his mercy saue into a broken vessell for indeed whole vessels are full vessels and so this precious oyle would runne over and be spilt on the ground Oh if wee were so humbled with the varieties of Gods iudgements as wee ought how savory would his counsels be How precious and welcome would his feare be to our trembling hearts Whereas now our stubborne senselesnesse frustrates all the threatnings and executions of God Q. When is this done A. In the acceptable time and day of saluation in the which the Lord pleaseth to bring into act his purpose of salvation in gathering his owne out of the world and that sooner or later as it pleaseth him Wee may not mend the pace of God or spurre on his decree yet must we be diligent in the meanes vntill God blesse them for this end Every man hath power to goe to Church heare the word and be present at all outward seruices and the neglect of this hinders many in respect of better successe though not of Gods decree Wee therefore are guiltie of our owne time ill husbanded though God will not worke before his owne day Luk. 19.42 Rom. 13.11 2 Cor. 6.2 Q. What are the parts of this preparation A. First the cutting of vs as it were from the wild Oliue tree Secondly a paring and fitting of vs to be put into the true Oliue tree Rom. 11.24 The Gentiles were cut out of the Oliue tree which is wild by nature and contrary to nature grafted into a good Oliue tree c. Wee that grow wild in wickednesse want grace to seeke Christ and being contrary to his vertues are vnapt to ioyne with him without a great preparation Tell the prophane person in the midst of all his iollitie and revels of devotion pietie or iudgements and he will turne you off with the Athenian question What doth this babler say Tell the woman of Samaria Ioh. 4. of the water of life and shee will mocke at it till Christ sit as iudge in her conscience and pinch her with that close imputation of adultery there is no sowing Ier. 4. till the hard and clottie fallow ground be subdued by the Plough the vnhumbled sinner is as vnfit for Gods instruction as an vnbroken Colt for the saddle Our Gallants cannot be stayed from their Gallop till God touch their Soules with some terrour cast their bodies on their beds of sicknes turne their fooles feathers into kerchiefes then when they see their faces grow pale their eyes sunke in their heads their hands shaking their breath short their flesh consumed you shall haue them easie to be talkt withall now or else never will they learne with old Eli to say speake Lord for thy servants heare Thus wee see it is good striking when the iron is hot there is no fishing so good as in these troubled waters Now it is good striking whom God hath stricken for conscience is a nice and sullen thing and if it be not taken at fit times and moodes there will be no medling with it Q. What meane you by this cutting of vs from the wild Oliue A. Two things first a violent pulling of vs out of the corruption of nature or a cutting as it were by the knife of the law of an vnregenerate man from his security wherin he sleepeth he not so much as dreaming of any such thing Psal 119.70 Their heart is as fat as grease but I delight in thy law Shewing
3.16 The Prophet sheweth how his peace was wrought out of trouble Psal 126.5 Wee must sow in teares before wee can reape in ioy And wee care not if wee may haue a dry harvest after a wet seed time And thus farre haue wee shewed the preparation now let vs see the composition of grace Q. What is the infusion of faith A. It is a worke of the Spirit who infuseth faith into Infants immediately by his sole operation into men of riper yeares also by the externall ministery of the Word by which it receiueth further increase and augmentation for the word 1 Pet. 1.23 and 2.2 is both seed and food that as it serues to beget faith so it nourisheth the same Luk. 1.44 The babe leaped in the wombe of Elizabeth for ioy This motion was not naturall but spirituall and therefore Iohn was sanctified in his mothers wombe and did really reioyce at the presence of Christ in the Virgin Now sanctification presupposeth iustification and iustification faith yea this ioy was a true effect of faith in the Messias And therefore Infants are capable of faith and may be saued though they die in their mothers wombe As for the others faith it is out of doubt Rom. 10.17 Eph. 2.18.19 And here we are to take notice where that faith which is the first part of Divinitie is wrought in vs to wit in the application of the Spirit after preparation Faith in the rule is generall particular to euery one in the application Furthermore faith wrought by the Word hath two degrees the first is as a graine of mustard seed the second a Plerophorie or full perswasion Wee are at our first but as reeds feeble plants tossed and bowed with euery wind and with much agitation bruised loe yet we are in tender hands that never brake any whom their sinnes bruised never bruised any whom temptations haue bowed Wee are but flax and our best is not a flame but an obscure smoake of grace loe yet here is the Spirit as a soft winde not as cold water he will kindle never quench our little faith others are better growne and stand like strong Oakes vnshaken vnremoued Luk. 13.19 and 17.6 Rom. 4.18.19.20.21 Q. What followes from hence A. Either the insition grafting and sciencing of the prepared into Christ or else his vnion and coalition with Christ First the Spirit infuseth faith by that faith we are put into Christ being put into Christ we haue vnion and communion with him and by receiuing vertue from his fulnesse wee grow vp with him Ioh. 15.2.5 The branch abiding in Christ bringeth forth fruit Not such as are tyed to Christ by an outward threed of profession but such as haue this vitall ligament of faith to couple them with Christ Q. What is this insition A. When being cut off from the wild Oliue the Spirit of God by faith graffeth and scienceth vs into the true Oliue which is the Lord Christ If wee were left as we are cut off by the law wee should wither away and perish and therefore we are set in Christ that in him wee may grow Rom. 6.5 Wee are said to be planted into his life and death Q. How are wee put into Christ A. By our effectuall vocation when the voyce of God soundeth in our eares and in our hearts come and we answere againe as by a liuely Echo Lord we come Hence it is that all such as are prepared by the law are called by the Gospell to come vnto Christ Psal 40.7 Isa 55.1 Math. 11.28 Rom. 8.28 2 Tim. 2.9 Q. What are the degrees of our effectuall vocation A. First a meditation of the mercies of God in Christ and from hence that our sinnes are pardonable and that we haue need of the same mercy then of the meanes how wee may obtaine the same as deepe sighs to God for mercy 2 Sam. 12.13 Psal 52.5 Rom. 8.26 Heb. 4.16 Often praying by our selues and others Hos 14.2.3 Luk. 15.21 Act. 8.22 As also diligent hearing of the word of God read and preached and often frequenting of the Ministers and others for comfort All these further the meditations of the mercies of God to sinners The second degree is Gods gracious perforation or boaring of our eares that the comfortable invitation of comming to Christ the onely Physitian of our Soules may sound and ring in our eares and hearts Zech. 13.9 and wee resound againe we come Lord at thy call and so comming it pleaseth the Father to bestow his Sonne on vs and vs againe vpon his Sonne Psal 27.8 Isa 9.6 Ioh. 10.29 and 17.2.7 Rom. 8.37 And thus sanctified trouble at the last establisheth our peace and the shaking of the former windes makes the trees of Gods Eden take the deeper rooting Surely after the most toylesome labour is the sweetest sleepe and after the greatest tempestes the stillest calmes It is the blessed Lambe of God that carries all our sinnes into a wildernes of oblivion quite out of the remembrance of his Father And if Devils rend and rage in our Soules he presently by a word of his mouth can cast them out Never did Ionas so whist the waues of the Sea being cast into it as Christ cures the wounds of conscience being thereunto applied Here all our throbbing sores receiue their ease by breaking and even Sinai it selfe covered with clouds of Gods displeasure presently by his Gospell of peace is enlightened and the trembling Soule that stands at the foote of it comforted Thus it pleaseth the Father from Ebal the mount of curses to bring vs to Gerizzim the mount of blessings Deut. 27.12.13 And this wee shall finde most true that as in the Sea the lower the ebbe the higher the tide so the deeper we descend in humiliation the higher shall wee ascend in consolation c. Q. What is our vnion with Christ A. It is that whereby wee being graffed into Christ are made one with Christ our head and the Church his body There is no science put into a stocke but if it shall thriue it must first be vnited and become one with the stocke and then grow with it so it is with vs branches of the wilde Oliue wee must become one with Christ if wee desire to thriue in him Ioh. 17.21 with Ioh. 15.1.2 Eph. 2.20.22 and 5.30 Colos 2.7 Isa 61.3 Loe here is a growing temple in which whosoever is planted shall flourish in the Courts of God Psal 92.13 Gods house and the furniture thereof is built of greene growing timber Our bed is greene of liuing stones Cant. 1.16 1 Pet. 2.5 A spirituall house not onely inhabited but animated that shee may be the house of the liuing God 1 Tim. 3.15 Q. What followes from hence A. Our iustification Papists count it absurd for one man to be iust by another mans iustice or wise by another mans wisedome wherein they shew their grosse ignorance in this point of Divinitie for Christ and man being one haue all things in common our sinnes and punishments are
setle our soules in the cogitation of these last things Remember that the best suite of apparell is laid vp in the wardrobe or heauen here we must be either in blacke mourning or in red persecuted It matters not what ragges or colours we weare with men so wee may hereafter walke with our Sauiour in white and raigne with him in glory In the meane time let vs often exercise to acquaint our nature draw it into some familiariue with the ioyes of heauen And as one that maketh a fire of greene wood not be tyred with blowing vntill our devotion be set on flame for the habite of vertues doth grow and increase with the exercise of their acts Doe wee not see that our glorification is nothing else but our multiplied sanctification And those that endevour God will helpe and by our persistance and his assistance wee shall haue continuance and pleasure in happy courses for as one that is either weary or weake recovereth strength by taking his food although he eateth many times without either appetite or taste so holy exercises which giue both fewell and flame vnto devotion doe increase in vs some spirituall strength even when to vs they yeeld little spirituall solace Let vs grow in sanctification and wee shall be graced with glory and glorified with grace and comforted in both * ⁎ * ¶ The second Booke CHAPTER I. Of the Law Question HItherto of faith in God What is our obedience towards God Answere The dutie to be performed to God by vs the power of the holy spirit working in vs by our faith Luk. 1.74 Rom. 6.8 12.1 1 Cor. 6.20 Tit. 2.11.12.14 1 Pet. 1.17.18.19 Psal 56.13 Eph. 2.10 1 Thess 1.8 Faith and the inward dispositions of the soule are as the kernell outward acts are as the shell he therefore is but a deafe nut that hath outward seruice without inward faith And yet this divine Phylosophy teacheth vs not onely to referre our speculations but our affections and all the dispositions of our soules to action Tit. 3.8 So that as our seruice must be grounded vpon our faith so must our faith be reduced to seruice There is no faith but it workes It is neither idle nor vnable to set the whole man a doing well In Rethoricke wee say there may be Elocution without pronunciation but in Diuinitie wee cannot haue the first part of the Art without the second This Solifidian like Aesops Henne too fat to lay may sit at Rome as iustified but is pittied by Dauid Psal 119. Rome saith there may betrue faith without workes as if a man should haue faith and not liue by it or liue and not performe the act of life Papists erre grossely in both parts of divinitie for they teach faith in the Church and creatures and so make not God the end of it If the Church or Saints may terminate faith it will rest there and goe no further for the goale Againe as in faith they shoot not at God no more doe they in workes for they looke to gaine and merite heauen by them Also hypocrites and civill men know neither the ingenuitie of faith nor liberalitie of workes for they walke before men and not before God but they are here soundly lessoned that would so dissemble with God as if seruice consisted onely in wearing of liueries in taking of wages in making of curtesies and kissing of hands I meane they put on the cognizance of Christianity in Baptisme know how to liue vpon the trencher of Gods providence in their maintenance and to giue him the complements of a fashionable profession c. I know there is nothing more easie or more common then this such servants are as vsefull for God as drunken seruing men for honest masters which are not to be found when there is most vse for them Ransacke then thy heart O sinner and finde sound affection to God firme resolution to goodnesse true hatred of sinne ransacke thy life and finde the truth of workes the life of obedience or els Scribes and Pharisees shall goe before thee into heauen Doe not thinke that because thou hast gotten Gods liuery on thy backe and his name in thy mouth that thou shalt be able to out-face all reproofes God will smite thee God will smite O thou whited wall But if the civilly righteous shall not be saued where shall the notorious sinner appeare A Christian and yet a forme below a Iew For shame what are wee and where is our emulation Heauen is our goale wee all say wee runne loe the very Seribes and Pharisees are gotten before many of vs and what safetie can it be for vs to come short of those that by the verdict of our Sauiour come short of heauen Math. 3.20 Be zealous and never be at rest till thou get a step further then the most honest civill man and that is both in faith and workes to gaine sinceritie which is the girdle of truth Eph. 6.14 Thinke thy selfe but a loose man as long as thou wantest it thy graces never so excellent will be shaken off with a storme as loose garments with the wind And here the Proverbe is most true vngirt vnblest c. Obedience if wee respect Gods iustice ought to be perfect yet it is so farre perfect in vs as it is wrought in vs by the spirit and faith wherein properly there is no imperfection for it is the opposition of corruption that makes faith little A small fire warmes but a little and the reason is not in the heat but the coldnesse of the weather therefore as farre as wee beleeue wee obey God perfectly and our faith is sayd to be in part because the greater part is corrupt onely this is the comfort that the new man shall gaine ground of the old for though the old man by his long experience often deceiue the yong man yet the flourishing age of the one shall grow riper in yeeres and experience when the old man in the end shall fall to plaine dotage The spirit faith and man are all agents in well doing and man deserues the least prayse for he is beholding to the Spirit and faith if he receiue any reward of his workes I wonder at Papists that they should make those workes most meritorious which are most remote from the fountaine of well-doing The hand in Almes or feete in Pilgrimages or both in Christian warre deserue least if the reward be according to the doer for then the spirit and faith will carry all away and teach the whole man to be thankfull for mercies and not to stand pleading for merites Q. Wherein stands our obedience A. Either in observation of the law invocation of God or celebration of Sacraments Faith makes vs euery way dutifull to our Maker It moues vs to seeke him in all his ordinances and most willingly submit vnto his lawes devoutly to sue vnto him in our prayers and holily to receiue the pledge of his loue Math. 28.19.20 They that for want