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A04767 Heavenly knowledg directing a Christian to ye assurance of his salvation in this life / written in Latin by Barthol. Keckerm. ; done into English by T.V. Keckermann, Bartholomäus, ca. 1571-1608 or 9.; Vicars, Thomas. Treatise written to the glory of gods grace, against free-will. 1625 (1625) STC 14897; ESTC S1099 106,438 362

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Lerinens M●●● D●●● tam non habit hoe illud quam non haec illa Bern. or these diuerse manners of Gods being doe not multiply the Diuine Essence no more then the diuers degrees of heate or light doe multiply the light or heat● so that I speake right when I say there are moe persons in the diuine Essence but it cannot be vttered without blasphe●y to say there are in God more Natures or more Gods then one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazianzē Qui nescis Trinitatē ito ad Iordanem Mat. 3. Aug. Syst Th p 46 vide etiā p. 35. seqq Dicamus tres sed non ad praiudiciā vnitat● dicamus vn●● sed non ad confussionem Trinitatis Ber. v. Syst Theol p. 49. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Na. Quomodò pluralitas in vnitate sit aut ipsa vnitas in pluralitate scrutari hoc temeritas est credere pietas est nosse vita vita aeterna est Bern. How many persons are there Three the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost which is proued by manifest Testimonies of holy Writ Matth. 28 19. Goe teach all nations baptizing them in the nam● sc by the Authority and appointment of the Father th● Sonne and the Holy Ghost Iob. 15.26 When that Comforte shall come whom I will send t● you from the Father euen t● Spirit of Truth who proceedeth from the Father he well testifie of me where they are all three plainely named the Father from whom the holy Spirit is sent the Sonne who sendeth and the Holy Ghost who is sent 1. Ioh. 5 7. There bee three which beare record in Heauen the Father the Word and the Spirit and these three are one in Essence or Nature How proue you that these three persons bee that one God First I must haue it granted that these three persons are distinct because hee that sendeth is distinguished from him that is sent and hee from whom is distinguished from him that is sent Now I●●c 15. plainely saith that Christ is hee that sendeth the Holy Ghost him that is sent and the Father from whom the Sonne sendeth the holy Ghost Whence I doe necessarily inferre that these three manners of being in God are distinct which being graunted I shall easily prooue this three-fold manner of being or these three Persons in the diuine Essence to be that true God For first as touching the Father the very aduersaries themselues yeeld Christus est Deus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cōtra Ariū 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contra Apolinar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contra Nestor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contra Eutych Syst Theol. pag. 52. seqq that he is truely God And touching the Sonne wee haue manifest testimonies of the Scripture Rom. 9.5 Of whom namely the Israelites are the fathers of whom Christ came as concerning the flesh who is God aboue all blessed for euer If aboue all therefore about those who by reason of their excellent gifts are called Gods That the holy spirit is God these Sentences of Scripture plainely proue Acts 5.3 Peter saith to Ananias Why hath Satan filled thy heart that thou shouldest lye against the holy Ghost And presently he addeth vers 4. Thou hast not lyed vnto men but vnto God Therefore the holy Ghost is God Another place is 1 Cor. 2.10 The Spirit searcheth all things euen the profound things of God And the verse following For who knoweth the things c. Whence wee may thus re●son whosoeuer knoweth the secrets the profound secrets of God or which is all one whosoeuer is omniscient is God but the Holy Ghost is Omniscient Ergo The Maior is euident the Minor is expr●sly in the Text. Secondly whatsoeuer is in God is God but the Holy Ghost is in God Ergo. The Proposition is of certaine truth for that God who is a most simple Essence void of all difference and composition cannot consist of any thing which is not God The assumption is in the Text v. 11. where it is said As the reasonable soul is in man that is of the essence of man so the holy Spirit is in God Hitherto may tha testimony 1 Cor. 3.16 be referred ● August Enchirid. cap. ●6 Know yee not that yee are the Temple of God and that the holy spirit dwelleth in you where the latter words doe expound the former for it is all one as if the Apostle had said Know yee not that yee are the Temple of God seeing that the Holy Ghost dwelleth in you who is God But if the Aduersaries say that the spirit is nothing else saue the effects and gifts of God they are most manifestly confuted and confounded by the words of the Scripture 1 Cor. 12.4.5.6 There are diuersities of gifts but the same spirit there are diuersities of ministrations but the same Lord c. And verse 11. All these gifts worketh that one and selfe same spirit distributing c. Whence ariseth this argument He that distributeth a gift is not himselfe that gift that is distributed but the Holy Ghost is the distributer of all those gifts Ergo. The Proposition is cleare enough The Assumption is plaine in the Text where it is said that the spirit worketh and distributeth al those gifts Another argument out of the same text may bee this Hee that is endued with a will hee cannot be a bare vertue or accident but is a substance subsisting by it selfe but the Holy Ghost c. Ergo. The Maior is cleare for whosoeuer willeth he vnderstandeth and whosoeuer willeth and vnderstandeth hee must bee a substance by it selfe subsisting The Minor is clearely set downe in the text where it is said The Spirit distributeth to euery one as he will Fuit principium essendi DEVS sequiter cognoscendi principium VERBVM DEI non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verbum Christi Syst Th p. 167. Qui Scripturā ignorat Christū ignorat Hieronym de Scriptura Zanch. Confess pag. 482. item in illud Pauli 2 Tim. 3.14 tom 8. p. 319 seqq I haue heard the doctrine concerning God tell mee now besides what the holy Scripture is It is that testimony and witnesse which God hath giuen to Mankind as touching his owne nature and will and as touching those thinges which appertaine to the saluation of man How is the holy Scripture diuided Three manner of waies first by reason of the Time wherein it was reuealed secondly by reason of that Authority it hath in proouing thirdly by reason of the Matter which it handleth How is the Scripture diuided in respect of the time wherin it was reuealed Into the Old and New Testament The Old Testament therefore is that part of the Scripture which God reuealed to the first of Man-kind people of the Iewes which liued vntill the Ministery of Christ which hee reuealed I say by the Prophets as by his Scribes and Notaries But the New Testament is called that part of the Scripture which God hath reuealed to Man-kind after the birth
sinne What is the third propriety of Christs Passion That it was most sufficient Per Christum hominem iustitiae Deiplenissime satisfactum pregenere humano Bellar. lib. de asccusment in De um grad 13. cap. 3. neither neede wee any more expiation which is proued by that Heb. 9. v. 26. New was he in the end of the world made manifest by that offering vp of himselfe once to take away sinne And verse 28. Christ was once offerd vp that hee might take away the sinnes of many And yet more euidently Heb. 10.12 This man after the offering of his sacrifice sitteth for euer at the right hand of the Father And vers 14 By his one oblation that is by that his oblation which only is most perfect and sufficient Now that with is said Col. 1.24 Objection I fulfill the remainders of Christs suffering or passion in the flesh Soluti It must not be so vnderstood as if the Passion of Christ were not of it selfe sufficient 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christi sunt duplicia quaedam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in carne sua quadā 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in membris quae sunt Christi quia mēbrorū Za●ch but needed some addittament to fill it vp but there by a Synecdoche the Passions of Christ hee calleth all such as the members of Christ were to suffer as if he said I must also indure those afflictions which Christ shall feele in his members as he expressely annexeth I fulfill the remnant of Christs Passion in the flesh for the body of Christ which is his Church that hee might plainly shew that hee spake not of that passion which Christ suffered for our sinnes Omnes sanctorum afflictiones vel sunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q●●bus puniuntur peccata vel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quibus probatur fides vel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quibus confirmatur doctrina de his loquitur Melanct. but of the crosses and afflictions which the Church must sustaine in this world which Church by a Metaphoricall kind of speaking is the body of Christ And this which we haue spoken about the sufficiency of the passion of Christ we must note againe against the Papists who reach and say that expiation and purging of sinne is partly by good workes which shall bee confuted in the doctrine of Iustification partly by the Masse which shall likewise bee confuted in the point of and concerning the Lords Supper and partly by Purgatory which say they is a fire in which the soules of men after this life are tormented with temporall paines and are purged from sinnes and from which the soules of such as are aliue by fauour and by prayers may be deliuered as the Councell of Trent saith in the fifth Session Against which obserue these reasons First Calu ●nsti l. 3. c. 5. §. ● seqq in the sacred Volume there is no one testimony of Purgatory nor not so much as one example of any one that was in that Purgatory fires Ergo it is a meere inuention of their owne braine They vrge a place Obiecti 1 Cor. 3. verse 13. where it is said that by the fire shall be made manifest and proued euery mans worke of what sort it is But they apply this to Purgatory very foolishly Solus for the Apostle speaketh as touching the edif●cation of the Church and saith that the time shall come when it shal be tryed and examined how much euery one hath profited in edifying the the Church by the word of God and the holy Spirit which two he calleth fire by a Metaphor Hee addeth further Verse 15. He shall be saued but euen as it were by the fire where abiding still in the Metaphor and similitude he saith that not all those who haue not edified aright shall straight way bee damned for euer but that they shall suffer a tryall in their owne conscience because they haue not so faithfully discharged their Office as they should Secondly obserue two manifest sayings of the holy Writ wherein you shall finde but two places only that must bee in the next world pointed out vnto you the one for the blessed the other for those who are eternally damned Mark the last 16. Iohn 5.24 Verily verily I say vnto you who so heareth my word and beleeueth in him that sent me shall not come into iudgment and by consequence not into Purgatory which is a part of Iudgement but shall passe from death to life Reuel 14. vers 13. Blessed are they henceforth which dye in the Lord. Henceforth that is from the very moment wherein they dye There is also a plaine place Luke 23.43 where Christ saith to the thiefe To day shalt thou bee with mee in Paradice whereas he if any needed this Purgatory fire I haue heard sufficiently as concerning the first part of Christs Priestly office namely the purging away of our sinnes tell me what is the second part of the Priestly Office of Christ Syst Theol. pag. 357. It is that effectuall application whereby Christ doth alsufficiently and powerfully apply that his purging performed by him vnto the faithfull so that by it they may obtaine remission of sinnes reconciliation and peace What is the third part of this Office of Christ It is his intercession for vs VVhat doe you meane by intercession I doe not meane any Prayer or suite whereby Christ would get vnto vs againe the the fauour of God as one man is said to interceed for another that he may procure him somewhat but I vnderstand first that perpetuall value and vertue of the Sacrifice of Christ namely in that Christ presenteth his passion which he suffered for vs vnto the eternall Father Secondly the Fathers consent resting in this Passion of Christ contented and agreeing that this Passion of Christ shall be of force for vs for euer VVhich is the third Office of Christ His Regall Office Syst Theol pag. 359. for Christ is not only a prophet a priest vnto vs but he is also a King In what points consisteth the Regall Office of Christ In foure First in that hee gouerneth the Church by his Spirit and by his Word and doth not only shew vnto vs by his Word what we ought to doe but by the worke of the Spirit in vs enableth vs to doe them Secondly in that he defendeth vs against our enemies Satan Sinne and Death that they haue no power to hinder our saluation Thirdly in that he beautifieth his Church with excellent gifts and appointeth the Ministerie of his Word making men obedient vnto his owne ordinance Fourthly in that at the end of the World he shall appeare to bee Iudge of all men Syst Theol. pag. 368. and shall condemne the wicked to eternall punishments but shal make the godly to shine with eternall glory I doe already conceiue the office of Christ what it is and of how diuers sorts it is now I would haue you tell mee what the obiect is about
and enfold h● glorious Creature Man t●● Creature of his good-wil● with the mists of Ignoran● and Errour Farre be it fro● the thought of euery go●● Christian once to thinke th● from such a good tree shou●● Woe vnto you saith Christ that take away t●● Key of knowledge Luke 11.52 ●●me such bad fruit that from ●●ch a blessed cause should ●●oceed such a dissastrous ef●●ct that frō the light should ●●ow darknesse Dei ordinatio non potest esse peccatorum obstetri● Cyprian from the re●erend reading of the Scrip●●res errours The Papists doings workes of darknesse Iohn 8.44 As for their ●oings that they also are of ●●rkenesse it would if I ●ould particularize them re●uire a large Volume But 〈◊〉 single out and to instance 〈◊〉 one wherein they much re●●mble their prince of darke●esse the Deuill who hath ●eene a murtherer from the ●eginning Let their cruell ●nd barbarous butchering of 〈◊〉 many Saints of God meere●● in the matter of Religion ●t the bloodie stabbing and ●iolent murdering of so good ●nd gracious Kings which ●hewed themselues like good ●Zechias forward and bent to reformation Though wee bee in DD. Carriers bookes no lesse thē Schismatiks for obiecting the hainousnes of this horrible Treason yet we will not leaue to obiect it but cry and thunder against it being as his sacred Maiesty hath rightly obserued not only a crying sinne of blood but a roaring and thundering sinne ● fire and brimstone DD. Hakw Answere to DD Carrier Ca. 2. Sect. 13 See likewise the worthy S● F. Bacon now Lord Saint Albon his Essayes Pa● 2. Ess 1. Of Religion Let the Deuill in the Vault who was the contriuer of that matchlesse Treason and the Powder Pioners that should haue bee● the Actors of the intende● Tragedie let all these speak● if they belong not to darkenesse if they be not the sonne of the night Iohn 13.2 They th● digge through houses in the darke c. Iob 2● 16 17. Qui malè agit odit lucem Aske the Powder plotters if they hated no● and shunn'd the shining ligh● least their deedes should hau● beene reprooued censured condemned as they were an● as it fell out happily to thi● State and Countrey by th● watchfull eye of his Prouidence who is the Psalm 121.4 Keeper ● our Jsrael and neuer slumbers nor sleepes but is alwayes ready at hand to shend and defend his people whom hee hath set his loue vpon euen for his owne mercie goodnesse sake howbeit wee haue by our sinnes deserued to bee cassier'd out of his fauour to be ouertaken with imminent dangers and to be ouerturned with the power and powder the fire and fury of our enemies But euer loued and blessed be his mercifull goodnesse and patience Psal 124.6 that hee hath not giuen vs ouer as a pr●y vnto their teeth Their snare was broken and our soule was deliuered O let this mightie and wonderfull deliuerance bee written on the postes of our gates let vs bee euer talking of it to our neighbours and friendes to our children and strangers that all with ioynt mouth and consent of heart may praise the Lord God of Israel for euer Now I doe from my soule desire that the blind-folded Papists and ignorant Catholiques as they will bee tearmed would but a little consider of these Doings of this Doctrine Hispan reformat C. 10. and then tell mee if they bee not nuzled in most pernitious heresie and most tyrannically helde vnder the very power of darkenesse it selfe Quod si illi haec omnia tranquillo animo et ad audiendum discendumque comparate spectare velint non tantum probabunt institutum nostrum qui relictis erroribus Christum eiusque Apostalos secuti sumus sed ipsi etiam â se deficient se que vltro aggregabūt ad partes nostras Iuel Apolog. pag. 148. See the occasion● of Mr. Copleys conuersion and among the rest you shall find the Powder-plor Copl Doct. Mor. obseruat cap. 2. sect 6. They that haue but the least spinke of ingenuitie will bewray betime and will timely bewayle their woefull estate These to vse the words Ezech. 20.43 of the Prophet shall remember one day their wayes and ●ll their doings wherein they ●aue beene defiled and they ●hall loath themselues in their ●wne fight for all their e●ils that they haue commit●ed And they shall know that ●he Lord is GOD when hee ●ath wrought in them this cō●ersion for his owne Names ●ake not according to their wicked wayes nor according ●o their corrupt doings Such desperate ones as Ieremy describes Iere. 18.12 Noluerun● veritati consentire nec victi et Quod volumus sanctū est August vincent Epist 48. But for the ignorant obstinate ●bdurate Papist who wil not ●eare and vnderstand and bee ●onuerted who spurnes at the ●ery motion of Reformation Quaerimus vos qui a perist● vt de inuentis gaudeamꝰ de quibus perditis dolebamus August Vincent Epist 48. ●nd being settled on his lees groweth bold and impudent ●n the cause for who so bold ●s blind Bayard Let him be ●gnorant let him bee misted ●et him bee misse lead still These men shall one day know that there hath beene many Prophets among them who are cleare from the bloo● of all men Si saepitis benè et rectè si autem non sapitis non vestri curam gessisse non pa●it●bit August lib. 3. contra Epist ●e●● an c. 59. ad finem Pr●l●ps and they shall fin● that their blood must rest vp on their owne hard hearts an● stiffe neckes What Sir may some o● them say doe you so hastil● include vs all in the pitt o● confusion because wee pr●fesse another Religion I te● you truely wee haue as goo● hope to come to Heauen a● your selfe Doe wee wal● in any other saue in the step of our with them still Custome hath borne must way and euer will And good or bad what their Forefathers did They 'l put in practice too else God forbid G. W. forefathers a●● progentors D● we professe an● other R●ligion Tantum se isti debent inscitia ac tenebris superiorum temporum luel Apol. pag. 138. then that which the bequeath'd vnto vs whic● we will liue and dye in too The Moales speech in Mast Scots Vnio pag. 37. of his Philomythology Wee our forefathers customes still obey Doe as they did and follow their blinde way Not striuing busily our wits t' approue By searching doubts but rather shew our loue By louing euen their errours that are gone Or reuerently beleeuing they had none True it is like enough you will doe so whatsoeuer bee said to the contrary For as the wise King saith of a foole Prou. 27.22 Bray a foole in a morter and he will neuer bee the wiser The holy Spirit hath branded those people with blacke who practized that long since which you plead for now 2 King 17 41. v. Mr. Scots Vnio in the Epimythium p. 48. So those nations feared the Lord and serued their Images
But as for those obstinate wretches furious spirits branded with the marke of the Beast and therefore firebrands of hell too too headstrong in their erroneous opinations as the Lord gaue them vp to a reprobate sense that they should not receiue the loue of the truth and so be saued and they now fry for it So assure your selues if yee insist in their steps and resist all good admonitions you can neuer flye their Mat. 23.33 punishment For it is iust with God that those which haue beene Quos similis culpa coinquinat par quoque paen● constringer Gregor pares culpa shall be also pares pana Bee partakers of their sinnes you shall certainely be sharers in their punishment O then yee Mat. 3.7 generation of Vipers bee forewarned of the heauy vengeance to come Doe not with the deafe Adder alwaies stop your eares to all godly and Christian admonitions but take them at length to heart and say not with your selues Wee haue had ranke Papists to our Fathers we haue had such as haue derided and mocked your Orthodoxe Religion for our patternes and presidents for I dare boldly affirme in the words of our Sauiour that vnlesse yee repent and be conuerted you shall likewise perish Be not like them in Saint Austine Verum est quod dicitis to professe all true that wee say Non est quod respondeatur and that you haue nothing to say against it Aug. Vincent epist 48. Sed durum est nobis traditionem Paretum relinquere but it seemeth a hard thing vnto vs to forsake the faith and tradition of our Fathers For consider it well in your hearts why should your Fathers examples mislead you into errour O what a senselesse part is this in you Mast Scots Phylomythologie p. 41. Your Fathers faults and errours to allow And not much rather to reforme your owne By shunning the defect which they haue showne Shall the vaine conceit of your Fathers worth Ezech 20.18.19.20 Quos Christus vocat secum in aternum mansuros pater forsā reuocat secum in aeternū arsuros vid Bern Epist 2. weigh downe Gods holy Word Will you conferre nay preferre man to God If the Fathers of your bodies leade you one way and Father of Spirits bid you goe another haue you not learn'd to obey God rather then men will you not grant that which reason hath alwaies held for certaine and grounded truth Demosth contra Aristocrat Viuendum est legibus non exemplis Goe to then thinke not to shrowd your doings with your Fathers exemplarie dealings For as it is well vttered by the Heathen Oratour Jmpudens est Oratio dicere sic factum est But let the bright and cleere Law of God shine in your hearts let it dwell in you plentifully in all wisedome here the Word of God from others Si non dedignentur legere malè mihi sit ita enim in tanta causa iurare ausim nisi tandem capiantur Petr. Mart. Loc. com c. 6. clasi 1. sect 14. reade it by your selues Ab eo speranda est intelligentia qui pulsantibus aperiet querentibus demonstrabit petentib non denegabit Hilar. in Ps 125. Multum domini de tua bonitate praesumo quoniam tu ipse docet petere quarere pulsare tu domine qui iubes petere fac accipere consulis quarere da inuenire doces pulsare aperi pulsanti confirma nie infirmum restaura nie perditum suscita mè mortuum c. August Meditat. cap. 39. sect 9. pray to God for a right vnderstanding of it marke it well ponder it in your heart and examine all your tenents and courses by it and then the Lord opening your eyes to see your owne mis-doings and your Fathers mis-leadings you will confesse your Fathers follies wherein you haue liued and professe to leaue them with all speedie reformation in new obedience vnto Gods holy will and Commandements And this I pray God that of his infinite goodnesse he will grant vnto you that so by the conuersion of your soules his holy Name may be glorified his Angels gladded his faithfull confirmed ● our hearts comforted and the borders of Christs Church enlarged and that for the merits of Chrst Iesus his onely true naturall Sonne our alone all-sufficient Sauiour and Redeemer Amen An Apologetique to t● Christian Reader for the worke in and about the Translation Gregor Nazian Monostich Horat. Carm. l. 3. od 6. Reu. 1.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hinc omne principium liue re● exitum Of all thy studies and intentions se● That God the Alpha Omega be DA veniam Scriptis remembring that of the ●postle 1 Cor. 12.7 The ma●festation of the Spirit is gi● to euery man to profit with● The Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 th●● is the g● and graces of the ●pirit of 〈◊〉 are bestowed vpon vs no● bee wrapt vp in a Napkin 〈◊〉 hid in the earth but for ma●festation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whereupon the a●ent Greekes well expressed 〈◊〉 and light by one common na● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Plutarch shews in the ●●futation of that common M● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and what our Sauiour spake with a primary direction to his Apostles Vos estis lux mundi Yee are the lights of the world may in a secondary application be affirmed of euery Christian or else Saint Paul would not say Among whom yee shine as lights in the world Now least any one should exempt himselfe therefore euery one is put in the ●ext 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For as there are none furnished with all gifts so there are none but they haue some gift and the doner will looke for his owne with aduantage As euery man therefore hath receiued the gift so let him minister thereof to others for the good of others Looke not euery one on your owne things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but euery one on the things of other A good lesson for this incroaching and Monopolizing world wherein euery man is for himsefe as the prouerbe saith and as the Apostle The Attestation of a friend touching this Booke inserted in a Letter to the Translatour In your Translation you haue laboured that they that will read may haue delight and that they that are desirous to commit to memory might haue ease and that all into whose hands it commeth might haue profit 2 Ma● 2.25 Adam Airay S.S. Theol. Bat. M.D. Esquire To his good Friend T.V. WHat Thou do'st teach by others heretofore Hath likewise bin But yet by no man 〈◊〉 To the true life That by thy godly care Thou and thine Authour equally doe share Thou praisest him Translating but if he Vnderstood English he would more praise th●●e Thou to our Nation ha'st his Doctrine showne Which to our vulgar else had not ●eene knowne As much by this thou get'st as ere he wan●● England praise Vicars D●nt●k her Ke●ke●man Mich. Drayton 〈◊〉 ●postle complaineth Euery man seeketh his owne things none ●he things of
man hath such a naturall power and strength by which hee doth prepare himselfe for his conuersion and saluation and by which hee doth affect and effect too that which is truly and vniuocally good Wee teach and affirme that there is in the vnregenerate no such power of nature no such strength of free-will nor any faculty to doe ought that good is but onely he is led by the corruption of nature to that which is euill till Gods grace hath wrought a change in the whole man by an effectuall and vnresistable call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Adam indeed our common Father had such a quality and naturall faculty of the soule bestowed vpon him by God in his first creation whereby potuit non peceare if hee had would he should not haue sinned This he had for himselfe and for his posterity hee being the root of Mankind but by his disobedience and auersion from God hee depriued himselfe and consequently his Posterity of that excellent quality as Saint Austin very appositely Homo malè vtens libero arbitrio ipsum perdidit seipsum Man not vsing his Free-will aright lost both it and himselfe too Now what we lost in Adam we do not regaine but by Christ Iesus It is Christ alone that makes vp those breeches and therefore till a man bee regenerate by the grace of Christ till hee be implanted into the body of Christ till Christ dwell in his heart by faith he can neuer looke to be freed from that misery whereinto hee was plunged by Adams first transgression This is the true state of the Controuersie whereby you see what wee hold and what they oppose The proofes which are brought on their side to giue your Author his due are very orderly and distinctly proposed but some of them are impertinent some friuolous all as weake as water for a generall answer to them all doe but obserue a double distinction I. Man is considered in a fourefold Estate 1. In statu instituto in the state of integrity before the fall wherein his will was inclinable to good or euill So inclined to good that it might decline to euill which he did and wee feele it and smart for it 2. In statu destituto in the state of corruption after the fall wherein his will is inclinable onely to euill being made the slaue and seruant of sinne yea dead in sinne 3. In statu restituto in the state of Regeneration by Christ wherein his will is inclinable to good and euill the Spirit calling to good the flesh calling to euill 4. In statu praestituto in the state of glory whereunto hee was predestinate in Christ wherein his will is inclinable onely to good and that immutably II. The things whereabout the will of man is conuersant are of three sorts Naturall as to eate and drinke heare and see talke and walke and the like in these hee hath free-will after the fall Ciuill Affaires as to argue and dispute to follow a trade to resort to the Church to listen outwardly to that is taught in these he hath freewill though it bee very weake and maimed as S. Austin saith Spirituall which are either appertaining to the Kingdom of Darknesse as all sins and to these a man is freely carried by the corruption of nature God as the duties of holinesse and in these actions an vnregenerate man hath no freedome of will at all Now the reasons that are brought against the Orthodoxe truth doe either speake of man in his integrity and the state of regeneration and so conclude not that which is in question about the corrupt estate of man abiding vnder the Dominion of Sinne or they speak of freedome in naturall and ciuill affaires which wee doe not altogether deny but that hee hath no will to desire nor power to effect Spirituall actions appertaining to the Kingdome of God these reasons following shall most euidently euict 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I. Who can bring a cleane Reas 1 thing out of that which is vncleane saith holy Iob and he answers himselfe with his own words No body can doe it Iob 14. An euill Tree saith our Sauiour cannot bring forth good fruit Math. 7.17 but the vnregenerate a man in his corrupt estate is an euill Tree Math 12.13 therfore he can bring forth no good fruit he can doe nothing that is good Reas 2 II. All the imaginations of an vnregenerate mans heart are euill only euill continually euil Gen. 6.5 if all be euill and only euil continually too there is no imagination nor inclination to good at all Reas 3 III. They that are dead cannot possibly performe any worke of a liuing man Sin is the death of the soule grace is the life o● it But an vnregenerate man is dead in trespasses and sinnes Eph. 2.1 and therefore hee hath no more power to raise himselfe out of the graue of sinne or to walke in the wayes of godlinesse then a dead man hath to raise vp his body out of the Sepulchre or to walke and worke as a liuing man IV. If by the Power of Reas 4 Free-will a man might attaine to grace then by the power of the flesh a man might attaine to the spirit the reason is because as Free-will is of the flesh so grace is of the spirit now Christ saith That which is borne of the flesh is flesh and that which is borne of the spirit is spirit Joh. 3. The force of this Argument I thinke none will deny that hath read the Combate betweene the flesh and the spirit in the Apostle Galat. 5. whereby it manifestly appears that in euery faithfull Christian there are two contrariant Principles of action The one is flesh that is the part vnregenerate the other is spirit and that is the regenerate part The spirit calleth vs to good the flesh haleth and draweth vs along vnto euill Now then Free-will being of the flesh and belonging to the part vnregenerate for whatsoeuer is not spirit is flesh cannot produce any spirituall action Those actions are deriued from another Principle The workes of the flesh proceed not from the spirit therefore the works of the spirit doe not issue from the flesh The causes will alwaies be distinct and the effects different That which is born of the flesh will be flesh and that which is borne of the spirit will bee spirit Ioh. 3.6 Reas 5 V. If wee are not able of our selues so much as to think a good thought then we cannot will any thing that is good before the grace of God hath brought vs out of our corruption Ignoti nulla cupido wee cannot desire that wee know not wee know not that that wee cannot thinke vpon But wee are not able of our selues so much as to thinke a good thought as of our selues but all our sufficiencie the word in the originall is Emphaticall all our idoniety and aptitude to good is from God And therfore saith Austin Omne bonum opus gratia Dei praecedit Epist
your whole demeanes Say you couenant for foure or fiue hundred pounds per annum Your Farmer at the making of the bargaine is an able substantiall sober man well able to pay you your annuall rent But so it fals out that soone after he is with-drawne to lewd and riotous courses and spends both time and estate vpon luxurie and vanity So that now hee is Bankerupt not worth fiue pence in all the world and consequently altogether vnable to pay you fiue hundred pound What then may not you in equity and iust law require of him your annuall rent although it be impossible for him to pay it I know you may Iust so it is betwixt God and man At the first man was created in perfect righteousnes and so was a person fitted to the obseruance of all good duties but soone after hee turned bankrupt hee fell vpon riotous and disobedient courses being tempted by the woman and shee by the Serpent to eat the forbidden fruit Before he was the seruant of God now he is become the slaue of sin So that he hath no strength to runne in those good wayes wherein at first God set him What then Because hee is not able to do any good may not God in equity exact of him the keeping of his commandements I trow hee may yea I am sure he doth and that rightly because the thing is become impossible to man meerly through his owne default 3 The exhortations and dehortations the promises and threatnings which haue annexed conditions are not in vaine neither is there any mockery in them although we be not able of our selues to fulfill the exhortation or performe the condition For it must be obserued that there are in the visible state of the Church both elect and reprobate and these two will grow together in the field vntill the haruest when they shall bee separate by the Angels the wheat that is the elect gathered into Gods barne the tares that is the reprobate gathered into sheaues to be burnt So then the precepts of God in the Word and the exhortations of the Ministers according to the Word are directed either to the reprobate or to the elect and not one iot of the Word of God shall fall to the ground For to the one it becomes the sauour of death vnto death to the other the sauour of life vnto life I open my selfe thus The exhortations threatnings promises warnings c. set downe in the Word of God and published by the mouth of his Ministers being directed to the reprobate make them the more inexcusable that their mouths may be stopped and that they may not say another day that if they had beene exhorted to such a good duty they would haue imbraced it if they had beene admonished of such a fault they would haue forsaken it For here there consciences shall conuict them and they shal know then that there hath beene a Prophet among them If they be directed to the elect they bee eyther such as are not yet effectually called and then the holy Spirit enwrapping himselfe in his Word worketh an admirable change in their hearts and begets those good things in them whereunto they are exhorted for the Word of the Lord is mightie in operation as the Apostle saith and the Law of the Lord is perfect conuerting the soule as the Psalmist speaketh or else they bee actually called and then by those denunciations of iudgement they become more wary in their carriage by those exhortations to godlinesse they become more liuely and forward in all good courses tending and striuing after perfection So that in all this here is no mockage at all neither can God without blasphemy be said to doe any thing in vaine This because it is the most substantiall doubt and most stood vpon by your Author therefore I haue endeauoured to cleere it thus at large as you see and to afford it a full answere Ob. For the other they are either impertinent as that out of Ecclus 15.14 which speakes of man in his first estate of creation before the fall Sol. wherein we deny not man freewil besides I say not that the Booke is Apocryphall although that might serue for a sufficient answere or they be friuolous Ob. as that of Cain Gen. 4 7 wherin it is not said that he shall haue dominion ouer sin Sol. but there God vrgeth an argument to coole the heat of his anger taken from the subiection of his brother Abel Ob. Of this Bran is that testimony taken out of Iosuah 24. Sol. wherein hee giues them their choice whether they will serue the true God or not not as if it had been in their power to haue chosen but only that hee might draw from them a confession of the true worship of God by which protestation they might the more be tied to Gods seruice after Iosuahs death and held the more inexcusable if they fell to Idols after this solemne profession to feare God and to abiure all idolatrous worship And that instance of Ananias Ob. Act. 5. is like because it speaketh onely of an humane and ciuill matter Sol. the sale of a piece of land which was in his owne power Ob. The first demonstratiue reason which is argumentum cornutum carries some better shew with it but concludes nothing against the truth Haec Pelagii quoque arma erant ad impetēdum Augustinum Calv. Instit l. 2. c. 5. §. 1 Sol. It is this Sin is either necessary or voluntary if necessary thē it is not sin if voluntary then it may be auoyded The hornes of this argumentation are too short and weake to push down the truth If sinne be necessary then it is no sinne How proue you that argument You must remember which you also learned in morall Philosophy that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 voluntarium inuitum are opposed not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 voluntarium necessarium God and his Angels are good necessarily and yet they are voluntarily good The Deuill and his Angells are euill necessarily and yet they are euil most willingly too 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 oportet there must be heresies sayes the Apostle Necesse est It is necessary that offences come sayes our Sauiour and of Iudas his bloudy sinne and the Iewes malicious conspiracy against Christ it is expresly said That they did nothing but what the mighty hand of God had decreed long afore to be done Briefly then sinne is both voluntary and necessary Voluntary in respect of mans will for we say that a man may bee carried freely and with a full swing to the workes of darknesse euen to commit wickednesse with greedinesse neither is it necessity but compulsion which takes away the liberty of the will And it is also Necessary in respect of Gods decree which is immutable For this is a most certaine and vndoubted truth that nothing can bee done in the