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A47625 A systeme or body of divinity consisting of ten books : wherein the fundamentals and main grounds of religion are opened, the contrary errours refuted, most of the controversies between us, the papists, Arminians, and Socinians discussed and handled, several Scriptures explained and vindicated from corrupt glosses : a work seasonable for these times, wherein so many articles of our faith are questioned, and so many gross errours daily published / by Edward Leigh. Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1654 (1654) Wing L1008; ESTC R25452 1,648,569 942

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cannot be conceived that these glorious Spirits should not signifie to one another their meaning but how this should be it is hard to determine they say that the Angels make known their mindes to one another by their meer will 5. Their multitude and order That there are many Angels appears Dan. 7. 10. and Heb. 12. 22. an innumerable company of Angels Rev. 5. 11. Matth. 26. 23. that is seventy two thousand as Ierom computes it The Fathers generally thought that the number of the Angels which fell should be made up by the Elect Saints Some think that Heb. 12. 27. seems to speak little lesse Some say the good Angels exceed the number of the wicked Angels by how much evil men exceed the good the greatest number of evil Angels that we reade of is but Legion the good very many as those places in Daniel Mattthew Hebrews and Revel 5. 11. will shew As for their order the Apostle indeed Colos. 1. sheweth that there is an order among them so that one may be above another in dignity but not in power and command Hence they are called an host which word signifieth chiefly what hath a compleat order Dionysius Areopagita makes nine orders of Angels and distinguisheth them into threes The first containing Cherubims Seraphims Thrones The second Dominions Armies and Powers The third Principalities Arch-angels and Angels Much more modest is Augustin Qui fatetur se rationem hujus distinctioni● ignorare cont Priscil c. 11 c. 57. Enchirid ad Lau. See Doctor Prideaux on Mat. 18. 10. for their Nature Properties Order and Ministry The Papists say there are different degrees of Angels and that this is founded in their nature The Protestants say that this difference lies not in natura Angelica but in Officio as they are drawn forth to more eminent imployment The Scripture makes mention only of two orders of Angels Angels and Archangels Heb. 1. 4. 1 Thes. 4. 16. Seraphim is a common name unto all Angels they are all described to be flames of fire Psal. 104. 4. and all the Angels are Cherubims as is evident by the Curtains of the Tabernacle which were set forth and garnished with Cherubims only Exod. 26. 31. signifying the presence of the Angels in the Assembly of the Church as the Apostle expounds it 1 Cor. 11. 10. It is evident saith Mr Cartwright that the Apostle Col. 1. 16. heapeth up divers words of one and the same signification thereby the more effectually to set forth d the supereminent power of our Saviour Christ above all 6. The names of the Angels The first and most common name is that of Angel which name is common to the good and evil Angels yet in a farre different sense The evil spirits are seldome called so simply though they be sometimes to note the excellency of their original because they fell from their blessed condition 1 Cor. 6. 3. Iude 6. The evil spirits are called Angels the name which was first given them Otherwise they are not absolutely called Angels that name being peculiar to the Angels which stood but angels of the devil and angels of Satan viz. because they are sent by the devil their Prince Some as proper names are given to certain Angels Michael Dan. 10. 13. which is compounded of three Hebrew particles Mi-ca-el who is like or equal to the strong God It signifieth the power of God because by him God exercised his power And Gabriel Dan. 8. 16. 9. 21. Luke 17. 19. that is the glory of God who executed the greatest Embassages in Gods name to men Vide Sculteti exercitat Evangel l. 1. c. 9. 7. The Angels Ministry and service Their service may be considered either in respect of God the Church or the enemies of the Church Respecting God and the Church and the people of God they have divers services The office of good Angels in respect of God 1. They enjoy God and glory Matthew 18. 10. 22. 30. This implieth their great purity and happinesse and withall their Ministry What God bids them do they are ready to do They shall attend Christ when he comes to judgement 2. They praise God and celebrate his Name cleave inseparably unto him and obey his Commandments Isa. 6. Psalm 103. 20 21. 104. 4. Dan. 7. 10. Iob 1. 6. they see the worth and excellency of God that he deserves more praise then they can give 3. They praise and worship Christ as the Head of the Church Apoc. 5. 11 12. Heb. 1. 6. Phil. 2. 10. also as his Ministers Matth. 4. 11. Luke 22. 43. Matth. 28. 2. they stand alwaies ready to do him service so in his agony an Angel comforted him 2. Their service in respect of the Church and people of God 1. They are glad for the good which befals the Elect So when Christ came into the world how glad were they Luke 2. they cried Glory be to God on high They rejoyce at their conversion Luke 15. 10. 2. They reveal unto them the will of God Dan. 8. 9. Rev. 1. 11. 3. They keep the Elect from dangers both of soul and body so farre as is expedient Gen. 19. 16. 28. 12. 25. 7. 32. 1. 2. Psal. 34. 7. 91. 11. Numb 22. 1 King 19. 7. 2 King 6. 16. 8 9 10. Both in the curtains of the Tabernacle Exod. 26. 1. and the wall of the Temple Cherubims were painted up and down to signifie as judicious Divines think what protection the people of God have in serving him 4. They comfort them in distress heaviness and distraction Gen. 20. 17 18. 3● 1 2. Isa. 6. 6. Luke 1. 30. 2. 10. Matth. 28. 5. Acts 10. 4. 27. 23 24. Iudges 6. 12. 13. 10. Dan. 10. 12. Matth. 1. 20. 2. 12 13. 5. They suggest holy thoughts into their hearts as the devil doth evil and unclean thoughts Resist Satan as in Iude. 6. They carry the souls of the Elect into heaven at the end of this life Luk. 16. 22. And at the day of judgement they shall gather the Elect from the four windes and separate between the Elect and reprobate Matth. 24. 31. 13. 27. 3. Their services against the wicked and all the enemies of the Church They are ready to execute vengeance upon the enemies of Gods people Isa. 37. 36. An Angel smote bloudy persecuting H●rod Acts 12. At the last day the Angels shall hurry the wicked to Christs Tribunal and cast the reprobate into hell Matth. 13 40 41 42 49 50. 8. The speech of Angels Angels and devils communicate with God and one with another not by speeches for language requires bodily instruments which these Spirits want but as they apprehend every object without senses so they express it without language in a secret way We come now to some profitable questions about the Angels The first is this If the Angels be so beneficiall to us
could ever have found out such an admirable temper and mixture of Mercy and Justice together as the Gospel revealeth in the reconciliation of God with man God hath declared himself to be most just yet most merciful Rom. 3. 24 25 26 Justice requires that there should be no freeing of a guilty person without satisfaction sinne deserved an infinite punishment that satisfaction could not be made by man himself mercy therefore provides a Saviour which God bestows on him vers 25. God in giving and establishing his Law useth no other Preface but I am the Lord Exod. 20. nor Conclusion but I the Lord have spoken it upon his absolute authority without other reasons to perswade commanding what is to be done though it be contrary to our natures forbidding what is to be left undone though pleasing to us he promiseth things incomprehensible requiring Faith he relateth and teacheth things strange above likelihood above mans capacity and yet will have them to be believed to be understood There is nothing in the Law against reason or common equity A Jesuite reports in his History that when his fellows came first to preach in the East-Indies the Gentiles and Indies there hearing the ten Commandments did much commend the equity of them See Sr Walter Rawleighs History 2. It teacheth the Nature and Excellency of God and the Works of God more clearly and distinctly than any other writings nay then any without God could have contrived viz. That there are three Persons and one God that God is Infinite Omniscient Omnipotent most Holy that he created all things that he doth by a particular Providence rule all things that he observes all mens actions and will call them to account and give every man according to his works that he alone is to be worshipped and that he must be obeyed in his Word above all creatures 3. It requireth the most exact and perfect goodnesse that can be such as no man could ever have conceited in his brain and yet such as being taught and revealed the conformity of it to right reason will enforce any well-considering man to acknowledge it to be most true and needful for example that a man must love God above all and his neighbour as himself that he must keep his thoughts free from all the least taint of sinne that he must lay up his treasures in Heaven not care for this life and the things thereof but all his study and labour must be to provide well for himself against the future life that he must not at all trust in himself nor in any man but only in God and that he must do all he doth in Gods strength that he can deserve nothing at Gods hand but must look for all of free favour through the merits and intercession of another 4. The end of the Scripture is Divine viz. The glory of God shining in every syllable thereof and the salvation of man not temporal but eternal These writings leade a man wholly out of himself and out of the whole world and from and above all the creatures to the Creator alone to give him the glory of all victories therefore they are from him and not from any creature for he that is the Author of any writing will surely have most respect of himself in that writing The Scriptures manifest Gods glory alone Ier. 9. 23 24. 1 Cor. 1. 31. ascribe infinitenesse of being and all perfections to him Nehem. 9. 6. The Doctrines Precepts Prohibitions and Narrations tend to the setting forth of his glory and bring solid and eternal comfort and salvation to their souls which follow their direction They make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15 23. Shew the path of life Psal. 16. 11. Guide our feet into the way of peace Luk. 1. 79. Christ Iohn 7. 18. proves that he came from God because he sought not his own glory but the glory of him that sent him 5. Another reason is taken from the difference of these writings from all other whatsoever in regard of their phrase and manner of writing There is a certain authoritative or God-like speaking unto the creature from place to place See the first Chapter of Isaiah and 53. and the eighth Chapter to the Romans The Prophets and Apostles propound divine truths nakedly and without affectation 1 Cor. 2. 1. Habent sacrae Scripturae sed non ostendunt eloquentiam August They expresse the things they handle with a comely gravity the form of speech is fitted both to the dignity of the speaker the nature of the thing revealed and mans capacity for whose sake it was written All other Writings use perswasive and flourishing speeches these command and condemn all other Gods all other Religions all other Writings and command these only to be had in request and esteem and acknowledged as the will of God without adding or diminishing requiring every conscience to be subject to them and to prepare himself to obedience without any further objecting or gain-saying and to seek no further then to them for direction Both the Simplicity and Majesty of stile shew it to be from God the wonderfull plainnesse and yet glorious Majesty the Simplicity because it is plain in no wise deceitful and because it describes great matters in words familiar and obvious to the capacity of the Reader the Majesty since it teacheth so perspicuousl● the chiefest mysteries of Faith and divine Revelation which are above humane capacity Whether we read David Isaiah or others whose stile is more sweet pleasant and ●hetorical or Amos Zachary and Ieremiah whose stile is more rude every where the Majesty of the Spirit is apparent There is an Authority and Majesty in them above all other Writings of other Authors the Scriptures command all both King and People Ier. 13. 18. 1 Sam. 12. ult and binde the heart to its good abearing Ierom could say As oft as I read Paul it seems to me that they are not words but thunders which I hear Iunius reading the first Chapter of Iohn was stricken with amazement by a kinde of Divine and stupendious Authority and so he was converted from Atheism as himself saith in his life Divinitatem argumenti authoritatem sentio Iohannes Isaac a Jew was converted by reading the 53. of Isaiah Our Saviour spak● As one having Authority not as the Scribes So this book speaks not as men it simply affirms all things without proof other Autho●s use many Arguments to confirm the truth of what they say Therefore Raimundus de Sabunda hence proves That he who speaketh in the Bible is of that Authority that his bare word ought to be believed without any proof whereas Galen Atheistically urged it the other way The Socinians reject all things in Religion which they cannot comprehend by reason Nihil credendum quod ratione capi nequeat They hold That a man is not bound to believe any Article of Faith nor any Interpretation of
determine all controversies 2. It is true and certain verity is affirmed of the Scriptures primarily interternally and by reason of it self which is called the truth of the object which is an absolute and most perfect agreement of all things delivered in the Scripture with the first truth or divine will of which the Scripture is a symbole and lively image so that all things are delivered in it as the Holy Ghost hath dictated whence those honorable Titles are given to it the Scripture is called A sure word 2 Pet. 1. 19. Psal. 19. 7. The Scripture of truth Dan. 10. ult words of truth Eccles. 1● 10 Yea truth it self Iohn 17. 17. having the God of truth for the Author Christ Jesus the truth for the witness the Spirit of truth for the Composer of it and it worketh truth in the hearts of those which hear it 2 Pet. 2. 2. The Apostle prefers the Scripture before the revelation made by Angels Gal. 1. 8. Christ commend● the certainty of it above all other sorts of revelation 1 Pet. 1. 19. above information from the dead Luke 16. 31. The word of God is not onely true but eminently true truth it self Prim● veritas and pura veritas The Scripture hath a twofold truth 1. Of assection it containeth no error 2. Of promise there is no unfaithfulness in it The first truth refer to the matter which is signified properly called Truth o● Verity The second refers to the in●ention of the Speaker which is properly called veracity or fidelity the latter is implyed Psal. 19. Thy Testimonies are sure and so th● sure mercies of David the former is implyed in that the word is purer then gold seven times refined There are two signs of truth in the Scripture 1. The particularity of it it names particulars in geneolagies dolosus versat●r in generalibus 2. Impartiality toward friends and their adversaries the most holy men have their faults described they give due commendation to their adversaries The truth of Scripture is 1. More then any humane truth of sense or reason 2. Above all natural reason as the Doctrine of the Trinity the ●ncarnation of Christ Justification by faith in Christ. 3. A truth which evidenceth it self 4. The standard of all truth nothing is true in Doctrine or Worship which is not agreeable to this 3. The Scripture is the rule of faith and manners It is termed Canonical generally by the Fathers of the word Canon which signi●ieth a rule because it contains a worthy rule of Religion faith and godliness according whereunto the building of the house of God must be fitted These properties saith Suarez are required in a rule 1. That it be known and easie the Scripture is a light 2. That it be first in its kinde and ●o the measure of all the rest 3. It must be inflexible 4. Universal 1. It is a perfect rule of faith and obedience able to instruct us sufficiently in all points of faith or doctrinals which we are bound to believe and all good duties or practicals which we are bound to practise Whatsoever is needful to believe or to do to please God and save our souls is to be found here whatsoever is not here found is not needful to beleive and practise for felicity Christ proveth the resurrection of the dead being an Article of our faith against the Sadduces Mat. 22. 32. and the use of the Sabbath being a rule of life against the Pharisees by an inference made from the Scripture Mat. 12. 7. The heads of the Creed and Decalogue are plainly laid down in Scripture therefore there we have a perfect rule of faith and manners It is a rule 1. For Faith Ierome in his controversie with Helvidius saith Credimus quia legimus non credimus quia non legimus We believe because we read we do not believe because we do not read Christ often saith Have ye not read is it not written what is written in the Law Luke 10. 26. Faith and the word of God must run parallel This we first believe when we do believe saith Tertullian that we ought to believe nothing beyond Scripture When we say all matters of Doctrine and Faith are contained in the Scripture we understand as the Ancient Fathers did not that all things are literally and verbally contained in the Sripture but that all are either expressed therein or by necessary consequence may be drawn from thence All controversies about Religion are to be decided by the Scripture Deut. 12. 32. and 4. 2. Iosh. 1. 7. Franciscus de Salis a Popish Bishop saith The Gospel was honored so much that it was brought into the Councel and set in the midst of them and to determine matters of faith as if Christ had been there Erasmus in his Epistles tells us of a Dominican that when in the Schools any man refuted his conclusion by shewing it contrary to the words of Scripture he would cry out Ista est argumentatio Lutherana protestor me non responsurum This is a Lutheran way of arguing I protest I will not answer to it 2. It is a perfect rule for our lives and practice Psal. 19. 11. and Psal. 119. 9. In Scriptures there are delivered remedies against all vices and means are there laid down for the attaining of all vertues We must follow the Scriptures exactly and not swerve to the right hand or left a metaphor taken from a way or rule saith Chamier When Linacer a learned English man heard the beginning of the 5 of Matthew read Blessed are the poor in spirit c. he broke forth into these words Either these sayings are not Christs or we are not Christians 1. It is a perfect not a partial and insufficient rule as the Papists make it As God is a perfect God so his word is a perfect word if it be but a partial rule then it doth not perfectly direct and he that should perfectly do the will of God revealed in Scripture should not yet be perfect Secondly if the Scripture be a partial rule then men are bound to be wise above that which is written that is above the Law and Gospel Regula fidei debet esse adaequata fidei aut regula non erit Whitakerus 1. All addition and detraction are forbidden to be made by any man to the word Deut. 4. 2. and 12. 32. Deut. 5. 32. Gal. 1. 8. 2. The Scripture is said to be perfect to beget heavenly and saving wisdom Psal. 19. 8. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16 17. 3. Men in the matter of Faith and Religion are sent to the Scripture onely 2. The Scripture is an infallible rule Luke 1. 4. of which thou hast had a full assent Regula rectè definitur mensura infallibilis quae nullam vel additionem vel detractionem patitur 3. It is a just rule Lastly It is an universal and perpetual rule both in regard of time and person ever since the Scripture hath been it hath been the onely
Scripture of the New Testament and therefore the whole body of Scriptures which the Christians now have shall be Light Secondly That place Psal. 119. 130. doth not speak of the Precepts alone Of thy words by which is signified the whole Scripture in Psal. 19. David speaketh of the word of God in general which he adorneth with many Titles The Law or Doctrine of the Lord The Testimony of the Lord The Statutes of the Lord The Precepts of the Lord The Fear of the Lord It is so called Metonymically because it teacheth us the Fear and Reverence of the Lord he saith this Doctrine is perfect converts the soul and makes wise the simple therefore he understands the whole Scripture the teacher of true and perfect wisdom 2. It is called a light because it hath light in it self and because it illightneth others unless they be quite blinde or willingly turn away their eyes from this light Thirdly If the Commandments be easie the rest of the Scriptures is likewise as the Prophets and historical Books being but Commentaries and Expositions of the Decalogue That evasion of the Papists will not serve their turns That the Scripture is a Light in it self but not Quoad nos as if the Scripture were a light under a Bushell for that the Scipture is Light effectivè as well as formaliter appears by the addition Giving understanding to the simple It was a smart answer which a witty and learned Minister of the Reformed Church of Paris gave to a Lady of suspected Chastity and now revolted when she pretended the hardnesse of the Scripture why said he Madam what can be more plain then Thou shalt not commit Adultery The Scriptures and Reasons answered which the Papists bring for the obscurity of the Scripture Object 2 Pet 3. 16. Peter saith there That in the Epistles of Paul there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some things hard to be understood which they that are unlearned aend unstable wrest as they doe also the other Scriptures unto their own destruction Answ. First Peter restraineth the difficulty of Pauls writings to that point himself then wrote of touching the end of the world therefore it is unreasonable that for one hard point in the Epistles the people should be debarred the reading of all the rest Secondly Even in that point he affirmeth That some things only are hard and not all Thirdly The understanding of the Scriptures dependeth not principally on the sharpnesse of mens wits for their learning but on the Spirit of God which is given to the simple that humbly seek it by Prayer therefore though the whole Scripture were hard to be understood yet that is no good cause to bereave the people of God from reading of his Word Fourthly Peter assigning the true cause of errour and abuse of the Scripture to be the unstability and unleardnesse of such as deal with them cannot thereby be understood to speak that of the body of the Church and of the people Laurentius in his Book intituled S. Apostolus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hoc est explicatio locorum difficilium in Epistolis Paulinis reckons up fourty hard places in Pauls Epistles Rom. 1. 19 20 28. and 2. 12 13 14 15. and 4 5. and 5 6 12 13 14 15 20. and 7. 9 14 and 8. 3 4 19 20 21 22. and 9. 3 11 12 13 18. and 11. 25 26. 1 Cor. 2. 15. 1 Cor. 3. 11 12 13 14 15. 1 Cor. 4. 9. and 5. 11. and 6. 2 3. 1 Cor. 7. 1 7 10 11 12 13 14 15. 1 Cor. 11. 7 10. and 15. 29 51. 2 Cor. 2. 15 16. and 3. 6 15 16. Galat. 1. 8. and 2. 14. and 3. 10. 1 Thess. 4. 15 16 17. 1 Tim. 1. 9. Heb. 6. 4 5 6. and 10. 26. They say the Scriptures are difficult also in the manner of writing as well as in the matter for which they alledge Psal. 119. 18. the Eunuch and Luk. 24. 45. also the divers expositions of old and new Writers The first place is directly against them for teaching that it is the gift of Gods holy Spirit obtained by Prayer to understand the Scripture the Spirit through Prayer being as well obtained by the simple as learned sort yea rather by them then the others it followeth that the reading of them belongeth to the simple as well as unto the learned The like answer serveth for the place of Luk. 24 45. for by that abuse of the place they may wring the reading of the Scriptures from all men even Ministers of the Word commanded to attend the reading of them since they of whom they say that they understood not the Scriptures were Ministers of the Word and that in the highest and most excellent degree of Ministery in the world which was the Apostleship The cause of want of understanding then was this the Spirit of God was not given because Christ was not glorified which can have now no place Besides that in saying they understood not the Scriptures concerning the suffering and glory of Christ it must needs be understood comparatively that they did not clearly particularly and sufficiently know them For that place Act 8. it is to be understood comparatively viz. That a man faithfull and already gained to the truth as this Eunuch was cannot understand the Scriptures by the bare reading of them so well and throughly as when he hath one to expound them The Lord which helped the endeavour of the Eunuch searching the Scriptures by sending of Philip will n●ver suffer those which seek him in careful reading of his Word to go away ashamed without finding that which they seek for in directing unto him some lawful and sufficient Ministery to instruct him by The Mystery of the Gospel then indeed fulfilled remained notwithstanding unpublished to the world by the Apostles which is now by their preaching and writings laid open and made more manifest The Eunuch which professed that he could not understand the Scripture without an Interpreter did notwithstanding busie himself in reading of it The multitude of Commentaries was not so necessary because the Scripture might have been understood without them although they deserve singular respect amongst all those that are desirous to understand the Scripture who write learned and elaborate Expositions on the Scripture That was a witty speech of Maldonates on Luk. 2. 34. Nescio an facilior hi● locus fu●sset si nemo eum exposuisset sed fecit multitudo varietas interpretationis ut difficilis videretur Secondly These Commentaries are publisht that the Scriptures may better and more easily be understood Thirdly The Papists confesse that the Articles of the Apostles Creed being necessary for all are easie Yet there are many Commentaries of the Ancients upon the Creed as Russinus Augustine Cyril Chrysostome Chrysologus and of Papists also Some Scriptures are hard for the matter which they handle as are the Books of Daniel Ezekiel Zachary or throng of much matter
7. The object of it are some sinful men or the greatest part of sinful men which are called vessels of wrath fitted for destruction Rom. 9. 22. that there are more damned then saved is proved Matth. 20. 16. Matth. 7. 14. The end of reprobation is the declaration of Gods justice in punishing of sin There is no cause of reprobation in the Reprobate that they rather then others are passed by of God that is wholly from the unsearchable depth of Gods good pleasure but that damnation whereto they are adjudged is for their own sins There are five dreadful consequences of reprobation or preterition 1. Such whom God passeth by he never calls or not effectually calling is according to purpose 2. He deserts leaves them to follow their own corrupt lusts 3. Hardens them Rom. 9. 4. They shall prove Apostates 1 Tim. 2. 18. 5. They are liable to that dreadful sentence Matth. 25. 41. Obj. 1 Tim. 2. 4. Who will have all men to be saved Ans. That is God would have some of all sorts of men to be saved so all men is taken verse 1. Let prayers be made for all men that is all manner of men he instanceth in one kinde viz. Kings All is likewise here to be taken not pro singulis generum but pro gen●ribus singulorum So Austin expounded this place above a thousand yeers since All manner of men of all Nations and qualities All in this place doth not signifie universally every man in every age and condition but All opposed to the Jews onely all indefinitely and that in the times of the new Testament of which the Apostle speaketh Obj. 2 Pet. 3. 9 Not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repen tance therefore there is not an election of some and reprobation of others Ans. He speaks there onely of the Elect and he would have none of them to perish He speaks that for the comfort of the godly and includes himself amongst them long-suffering to us-ward therefore he means those in the same condition with himself He shews why God staies the execution of his wrath because all his Elect are not gathered See 1 Pet. 2. 8. There is nothing doth more set out the glory excellency and sufficiency of God then his Decree O the infinite depth of the wisdome of God which hath fore-seen decreed and determined with himself the innumerable things that ever did or shall come to passe We should not search into the depths of his counsels Deut. 29. 29. but in all things professe our dependance on him and refer all to his decree Psal. 37. 5. They are justly blamed that ascribe any thing to chance fate fortune or good luck as also such as are impatient under any crosse Admiring the methods of Gods eternal Counsel and the execution of it for the salvation of our souls will be a great part of our work in heaven That is a desperate inference If I be predestinated I shall be saved * though I neglect and scoff at sanctity God hath predestinated the means as well as the end he hath decreed us to be holy as well as happy 2 Pet. 1. 3. Ephes. 1. 4. Christ laid down his life not onely to save us from the guilt of our sins but to sanctifie us Tit. 2. 14. The Spirit of God is a Spirit of sanctification 2 Thess. 2. 13. In good things the Devil strives to sever the means from the end in evil the end from the means We must not reason whether we be predestinated but use the means prove our Election by our calling we should judge of our predestination not so much descendendo by prying into Gods secret Counsel as ascendendo by searching our own hearts It was good counsel that Cardinal Poole gave to one who asked him how he might most profitably reade the Epistle to the Romans He advised him first to reade the twelfth chapter to the end and then the beginning of the Epistle to the twelfth chapter Because in the twelfth chapter the Apostle falls on matter of duty and sanctification which is the onely way to attain to the knowledge of those great mysteries handled in the beginning of Predestination Take heed of abusing this Doctrine 1. Quarrel not with Gods justice because he hath determined not to give grace to some Rom. 9. 14. That any are saved it is from Gods mercy there can be no injustice in refusing when it is the meer mercy of God to take any as if of many Traitors the King spare some and hang up the rest neither have the Elect a just cause to glory nor the reprobate to complain since undeserved grace is shewed to the one due punishment inflicted on the other It bewraies no more want of mercy in God that he takes but such then it did want of power because he made not many worlds since the exercising of one and the other is determined by his wisdome It were unjust say the Polonian Churches in their Catechisme to punish any one because he hath not done that which by no means he could do But when God punisheth the wicked and those that are refractory to his word what doth he do else but punish those which do not do that which they cannot do See more there cap. 10. of the same branne 2. This may comfort the people of God who may be certain of their election and salvation Rom. 8. 38. 39. Paul had not this by immediate revelation because he concludeth upon such arguments as are general to all the godly see 1 Ioh. 3. 14. Certainty of mans election and salvation is not such as we have of arts and sciences yet the truths of God are more to be adhered unto then any humane principle 3. Nor is it such as we have of doctrinal truths we are not so perswaded of Gods favour in particular to us as that there is a God and that there is Jesus Christ because the dogmatical truth is contained in the Scripture the other is but a practical conclusion drawn from the General 3. It is not such an assurance as expelleth all doubting and wavering Mar. 9. 24. yet doubting is a sin and we are to bewaile it but the Papists teach doubting and praise it under the name of humility and say it keeps us from presumption They say we can have but a conjectural and wavering knowledge of our salvation justly therefore did Luther terme the Romish Doctrine concerning uncertainty of salvation Non Doctrinam fidei sed diffidentiae no Doctrine of faith but distrust 4. It is not such as presumption and carnal security excluding all use of the means work out your salvation with fear those which have been most perswaded of Gods love to them have been most active for him the love of Christ constraineth us 5. It is more then probable conjectural or moral 6. It is not of our own conscience and Spirit onely but inabled by the Spirit of God
thus to conclude and determine Rom. 8. The Spirit witnesseth with our Spirit Those that finde this in themselves should feed upon this eternal comfort it is absolute eternal immutable nothing shall oppose it who shall lay any thing to the Elect It is full of love and grace We may make our election sure by our calling Rom. 8. 29 30. and our effectual calling by two things 1. By a new light 2. A new life 2 Cor. 4. 5. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Iohn 12. 36. Ephes. 5. 8. We have a new knowledge wrought in us of our selves we see our misery by sin and our inability to help our selves Rom. 2. 23. 2. Of God God in Jesus Christ is discovered to us 2 Pet. 1. 3. We see our need of Christ and know him to be a mediatour who must reconcile God and us 3. A new life is wrought in us Ephes. 2. 1. We now die to sin and live to God 1. By faith Rev. 17. 4. These three are put together faithful chosen and called 2. By new obedience 1. It is every mans duty to give diligence to make his election sure both for the glory of God and the comfort of his soul but in Gods way and according to his Ordinance first Calling then Election 2. When he hath used his utmost diligence if he cannot make it sure it is his misery not his sin 3. When the Spirit of God reveals to a man either the truth of his own graces or else Gods eternall love to him then a man is bound to beleeve it It is 1. A certain assurance 2. Secret Rev. 2. 17. 3. Exceeding sweet rejoyce in that your names are written in the Book of life 4. It is an imperfect assurance the assurance of faith not of sight it may be eclipsed CHAP. II. 2. The Execution of Gods Deeree GOD executes his Decree by Actions Creation and Providence Gods works are in time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Government and preservation Creation is taken 1. Strictly when God makes any Creature of nothing meerly of nothing not as if nothing were the matter but the terme so the souls of men and Angels are created of nothing 2. Largely when of some prejacent matter but very unfit and indisposed a creature is made as Adam of the earth Creation is the action of God whereby out of nothing he brought forth nature it self and all things in nature both substances and accidents in and with the substances and finished them in the space of six daies both to his own glory and the salvation of the Elect. Or It is an action whereby God the Father by his word and holy Spirit made all things exceeding good for the glory of his Name Or thus Creation is a transient or external action of God whereby in the beginning He made the world by a meer command out of his own free will in six dayes space to the glory of his Name 1. An action not a motion or change motion argueth some succession but in the things created the fieri factum esse is all one nor is it a change because that supposeth some alteration in the Agent 2. Transient it passeth from the Agent to the thing created whereas in immanent actions as Gods will decrees and personal actions they abide in himself 3. Of God The efficient cause of all things is God the Father Son and Holy Ghost Creation is the proper work of God alone so that he is God which created the world and he created the world who is God Ier. 10. 11. It is without controversie that the work of creation agrees to God the Father the same is expresly given to the Son Iohn 1. 3. Col. 1. 16. and to the Holy Ghost also Psal. 33. 6. He brooded on the waters Gen. 1. 1 2. Aquinas parte prima Qu. 44. Artic. 1. hath this question Utrum sit necessarium omne ens esse creatum a Deo The Schoolmen much dispute whether God may not give a creating power to a creature and answer no creature can be so elevated as to concur to the execution of an almighty act In Scripture it is alwaies made the work of God Gen. 1. 1. Prov. 16. 4. Psal. 33. 6. 8 9. Creation is an act of omnipotency The Apostles when they dealt with the Heathens urged the works of creation Acts 14. 10. 7. 26. Rom. 1. 19 20. 4. In the beginning by the Scripture it is a matter of faith to hold that the world was not from all eternity in the beginning notes not that there was time first and then God created the world for time is a creature and concreated but it denotes order that is at first 5. The world that is the Heaven and Earth and all things contained in them Act. 4. 4. and 17. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that well ordered decent beautiful and comely frame of heaven and earth 6. By his meer command as appears Gen. 1. Let there be light let there be heavens which argues his omnipotency 7. Out of his own free will for God did not need the world and therefore he created it no sooner He was happy enough in himself without men or Angels Psal. 115. 5. Prov. 8. 30. 8. The final cause to the glory of his Name Rom. 2. 30. Three Attributes especially manifest themselves in this work of Creation Gods power wisdome goodnesse his power in that he made all things by a word and of nothing Isa. 40. 16. his wisdome is seen in the order and variety of his works Psal. 136. 5. and their exceeding wonderful and particular uses his goodnesse in that he would communicate being to the creatures Plutarch writeth that the old Philosophers the ancientest Divines amongst the Pagans were wont to describe pourtrayed out in stone wood and other matters the Images of their Gods with musical Instruments in their hands not that they would teach others or did beleeve it themselves that the Gods were Fidlers or Pipers or used to solace themselves with Lute or Viol but because they held nothing more fit or answering to the nature of God then to do all things in sweet harmony and proportion which the Wiseman calleth in number in measure and in weight Mountague against Seld. c. 1. The work of Creation say some is set out generally in a general proposition In the beginning God created the Heavens and the Earth Which proposition He after explains by its parts That the world was not from eternity but was made by God these arguments may perswade First and principally Faith Heb. 11. 3. which is grounded upon divers places of Scripture as the first and second chapters of Genesis 38 39 chapters of Iob and some Psalms almost whole as 104 136. this also is the first Article of our Creed that the world was created in time by God The Apostle Paul Acts 14. 15. 17. 24. 28 doth point out God to the Heathen by this work
indeed it was in some respect a false notion for they conceived them to be a certain kinde of petty Gods and did perform worship unto them the evil angels beguiling them and if there be evil angels there must needs be likewise good The Angels are diversly called in Scripture Spirits Psal. 104. 4. to express their nature and Angels to express their Office as Messengers sent from God They are called Sons of God Job 1. 6. 38 7. Yea Elohim Gods Psal. 8. Cherubims Gen. 3. 24. Ezek. 10. 1. from the form they appeared in viz. like youths Caph is a particle of similitude and Rabiah signifies a young man in Chaldee witness R. David But Ludov. de Dien in his Animadversions upon Mr. Medes Clavis Apocalyptica saith Hoc est puerile frivolum Seraphim Isa. 6. 2. Burning quasi accensi ardore justitiae divinae they execute those things which God commands when he sits in the Throne of his justice and according to it judgeth mankinde Not from their burning love toward God as some imagine Watchmen or the watchfull ones Dan. 4. 10. 13. being in heaven as a watch-tower and keeping the world Starres of the morning Job 38. 7. from their brightness of nature A flaming fire Psal. 104. 4. because God useth their help to destroy the wicked In the New Testament they are called Principalities for their excellency of nature and estate and Powers for their wonderfull force Reasons why God made Angels The will and power of God therefore they are because God saw it fit to make them yet two reasons may be rendred of this work 1. God saw it ●it to raise up our thoughts from meaner to more excellent creatures till we came to him First things say some were made which had no life then living things without fense as plants and trees then sensible then reasonable 2. It was convenient that every part and place of the world should be fill'd with inhabitants fit for the same as the air with birds the earth with beasts and men the sea with fishes and the heavens which we behold with stars and the highest Heavens with Angels God is the maker of Angels These glorious Creatures which shall have no end had a beginning as well as the silliest beast bird or fish and they are equally beholding nay more because they have received more excellent endowments unto God for their Being with the silliest worm And though Moses mentions not in particular either the act of creating them or the time yet St Paul saith that By him were all things made visible and invisible and it is evident by discourse of reason that the Angels were made by God That is too bold an assertion of Mr. Hobbes his in his Leviathan part 3. c. 34 Concerning the creation of Angels there is nothing delivered in the Scriptures See more there What can be meant but the Angels by Thrones and the words following Col. 1. 16. Vide Grotium in loc For either they must be made by God or some other maker or else they must be eternal for whatsoever is not made by some maker cannot be made at all and whatsoever is not at all made is eternal Now if the Angels were eternal then were they equal with God in self-being they might be called self-subsisting essences and so should be equal with God standing in no more need of him then he of them owing no more service homage and praise to him then he oweth to them and so they were Gods as well as he and then we should have multitude of Gods not only one God and so should not God be the first and best Essence there being so many others beside him as Good and Omniscient as he wherefore they must be made by some Maker because they cannot be Eternal and if made then either by themselves or some other thing besides themselves not by themselves because that implies an absolute contradiction and if by some other thing then by a better or worse thing not by a more mean for the lesse perfect cannot give being to a more perfect thing for then it should communicate more to the effect then it hath in it self any way which is impossible that any efficient cause should do not by any better thing then themselves for excepting the Divine Majesty which is the first and best there is no better thing then the Angels save the humanity of our Lord Jesus Christ which could not be the Maker of them because they were created some thousands of years before the humanity was formed in the Virgins womb or united to the second person in Trinity We are not able to conceive of their Essence they are simple incorporeal Spiritual substances therefore incorruptible An Angel is a Spiritual created compleat substance indued with an understanding and will and excellent power of working An Angel is a substance 1. Spiritual that is void of all corporeal and sensible matter whence in Scripture Angels are called Spirits Psal. 104. 4. Heb. 1. 14. Therefore the bodies in which either good or evil Angels appeared were not natural to them but only assumed for a time and laid by when they pleased as a man doth his garments not substantial but aerial bodies they were not Essentially or personally but only locally united to them so that the body was moved but not quickned by them The Hebrew Greek and Latine words for Spirit signifie breath there is no more subtill being that we are acquainted with then breath being condensed by the cold indeed it may be seen The Angels good and bad are Spirits because 1. They are immaterial and incorporeal 2. Invisible 1 Tim. 1. 16. That was a foolish fancy of the disciples Luke 24. 37. If Christ had been a Spirit he could not have been seen 3. Impalpable Luke 24. 37. compared with vers 39. 4. Incorruptible and immortal they end not of themselves and no creature can destroy them God alone hath immortality 1 Tim. 6. 16. Origine in himself so as to communicate it to others 5. They are intellectual beings all understanding 6. Their spirituality appears in the subtilty of their moving It is a question whether they do transire ab extremo ad extremum without going through the middle parts yet they ●ove like lightening 7. In respect of their strength and power there is a great deal o●●orce in a natural spirit extracted Isa. 31. 3. 2. Created By which name he is distinguished from the Creator who is an infinite Spirit Iohn 4. 24. Nihil de Deo creaturis univocè dicitur 3. Compleat By which an Angel is distinguished from the reasonable soul of man which also is a spiritual substance but incompleat because it is the essential part of man 4. Indued with 1. An understanding by which an Angel knoweth God and his works 2. A will by which he desireth or refuseth the things understood 3. An excellent power of working by which he effects what the
cleaving f●rmly unto God The ninth and last question concerning Angels is How can they be happy in enjoying Gods face and yet be on the earth Matth. 18. 10. By heaven there is not meant the place but their heavenly estate and condition Now though they go up and down doing service yet this hinders not their happinesse for they do not this with distraction and these things are appointed as means for the end viz. enjoying of God and as the soul is not hindred in its happiness by desiring the body again so it is here 1. We should imitate the Angels 2. It shews us how much we are beholding to Christ no Angels could love us if it were not for him How much are we to love God who hath provided helps for man especially Christ who took our nature upon him not that of Angels Gods Angels are our Angels to defend and keep us God hath committed the care of us to these ministring Spirits 3. It shews the wofull condition of the impenitent when Christ shall come with all these Angels when those great shouts shall be Come thou swearer drunkard how terrible will this be The more potent God is in Himself and in his Ministers the more wretched are they and the surer is their destruction 4. This confutes the Papists in three errours 1. In that they hold nine orders of Angels They are distinguished ratione objectorum officiorum in respect of the object and message they go about 2. They would have them worshipped but the Angel forbad Iohn 3. They say every one hath his good Angel to keep him so Bucan thinks in his Common places 2. The Saducees who said there was neither Angel nor Spirit Acts 24. 8. but held good Angels only to be good thoughts and evil angels to be evil lusts and affections Their names offices actions apparitions shew plainly that they are not bare qualities but true substances It serves for instruction 1. To see the blindness and erroneousness of mankinde in that a great number of men of learning and wit and parts good enough and that such as lived in the Church and acknowledged the five books of Moses to be divine should yet make a shift to wink so hard as to maintain that there were no Angels What falsehood may not the devil make a man entertain and defend and yet seem not to deny the Authority of Scripture if a man confessing Moses writings to be true will yet deny that there be either Spirits or Angels which are things so plainly revealed by Moses that a man would account it impossible to receive his writings and not confess them But if God leave man to the devil and his own wit he will make him the verier fool because of his wit and he will erre so much the more palpably by how much he seems better armed against errour even as a mans own weapon beaten to his head by a farre stronger arm will make a deep wound in him See we our aptness to run into and maintain false opinions and let us not trust in our own wits but suspect our selves and seek to God for direction Secondly Let us learn humility from this and by comparing our selves with these excellent Spirits learn to know how mean we be that we may be also mean in our own esteem So long as a man compares himself with those things and persons which are baser then himself he is prone to lift up himself in his own conceit and to think highly of himself but when he doth weigh himself in the balance with his betters he begins to know his own lightness The Lord hath set us men in the midst as it were betwixt the bruit beasts and the celestial Spirirs we do so far exceed them as the Angels exceed us as for bodily gifts the beasts in many things go beyond us some are more strong swift have more excellent sight and smell then we but in few things do we equal the Angels They are swifter and stronger then we and their excellent reason goes beyond ours in a manner as the understanding which is in us excelleth the fancy of the beasts they know a thousand things more then we do or can know One Angel can do more then all men can speak more languages repeat more histories in a word can perform all acts of invention and judgement and memory farre beyond us Thirdly Since God hath made Angels to serve and attend him should not we that are far inferiour to them be content also to serve him yea exceeding glad and thankful that he will vouchsafe to admit us into his service Doth he need our service that is served with such Ministers and Messengers Let us frame our selves to obedience and do Gods will on earth with all readiness and cheerfulness seeing there is so great store of more worthy persons in heaven that do it An Angel will not esteem any work too difficult or base why should we Fourthly The Angels which wait about the throne of God are glorious and therefore the Lord himself must needs excell in glory Isa. 6. 1 2. Ezek. 1. 28. Of the Devils or evil Angels The Angels which persisted in the truth are called good Angels Luke 9. 26. but those which revolted and kept not the law were called evil Angels or evil spirits angels of darknesse Luke 8. 20. 19. 42. and Angels absolutely 1 Cor. 6. because they were so created of the Lord. In respect of their nature they are called spirits 1 King 22. 21. Matth. 18. 16. Luke 10. 20. In respect of their fall they are called evil spirits 1 Sam. 18. 10. Luke 8. 2. unclean spirits Matth. 10. 1. Zach. 13. 2. not so much because of their instigation to lust as because their natures are defiled with sin Lying spirits 1 King 22. 22. Iohn 8. 44. Devils Levit. 17. 7. 1 Cor. 10. 20. The Hebrew names for the devil are 1. Satan an adversary 2 Sam. 19. 32. of Satan to oppose and resist 2 Pet. 2. 14. Belial 2 Cor. 6. though some reade it Beliar unprofitable He is likewise called Beelzebub or Beelzebul which word comes of Bagnal Dominus a Lord or Master and Zebub a fly the Idol of the Achronites because they thought these best of those pestiferous creatures or else because the devils were apprehended as flying up and down in the air but if it be read Z●bul then it signifieth by way of contempt a Dunghill god Levit. 17. 7. The devils are called Shegnirim the hairy ones because they appeared to their worshippers like hairy goats and in the mountains The devil is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to accuse because he accuseth men to God and God to men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 scio because they know much by creation and by experience The devil is called an enemy or the envious man Matth. 13. 139. The tempter Matth. 4.
3. 1 Thes. 3. 5. A destroyer Apoc. 9. 11. The old serpent Apoc. 12. 7 9. A roaring lion 1 Pet. 5. 8. The strong man armed Matth. 12. 24. The prince of the world three times Iohn 12. 31. 14. 30. 16. 11. Nay The God of this world 2 Cor. 4. 4. 2. Their nature The evil angels are spirits created at first entire and good Genesis 1. ult Vide Aquin. part 1. Q. 11. Art 4 5. But by a willing and free apostacy from their Creator are become enemies to God and man and for this eternally tormented Iohn 8. 44. It was a totall wilfull malicious apostacy from God with spite and revenge 1. Totall because God never intended to offer to the Angels a second Covenant Heb. 2. 16. 2. With despight and revenge therein lies the formality of the devils sin and of the sin against the holy Ghost 1 Iohn 5. 19. That they are spirits appears by the opposition Ephes. 6. We wrestle not with flesh and bloud and this is to be opposed to those that deny that there are any spirits or that the devils are incorporeal For their sin what when and how it was it is hard to determine That they did sin is plain but the sin is not specified Some say it was lust with women misunderstanding that place The sons of God saw the daughters of men for it is plain the devils were fallen before Chrysostome and our Divines generally conclude it was pride from that place in Timothy 1 Tim. 3. 6. though there be different opinions about what this pride shewed it self whether in affecting a higher degree then God created them in or refusing the work and office God set them about which some conceive was the ministration or the guardianship of man which trust they deserted or scorned Zanchius thinketh their sin was That they were not contented with the truth of the Gospel concerning Christ propounded to them at the beginning and that they chose rather to leave their heavenly mansion then subscribe to the truth An inordinate desire of power to be like God in omnipotency say the Schoolmen Pride seems to be the devils sin by his first temptation of man to be like God Concerning the time when the devil first sinned it is uncertain Tempus lapsus non definit Scriptura It seemeth they continued in their integrity till the sixth day was past Gen. 1. 31. It is likely that neither man nor Angel did fall before the eighth day Gen. 2. 1 2. The devils stood not long Iohn 8. He was a manslayer from the beginning They fell before man that is plain 3. How the devil sinned seeing his understanding and will were perfect It was initiatively in his understanding and consummatively in his will Many of them fell as appeareth Luke 8. 30. there was a legion in one man one of the chiefest as some conceive fell first and drew the rest with him by his perswasion and example That one great Angel now Beelzebub did first fall and then drew after him the rest is likely enough Capel of Tentat part 1. c. 1. It was in all likelihood some prime Angel of heaven that first started aside from his station and led the ring of this highest and first revolt Millions sided with him and had their part both in his sin and punishment B. Hals Invis world l. 3. Sect. 2. Vide Aquin. part 1. Q. 63. Art 8. Yet Voetius seems to doubt of this They fell irrecoverably being obstinate in wickedness The Schoolmen and Fathers give reasons why they fell so and not man Aquinas gives this reason from the condition of an Angels will whose nature is such they say that what it hath chosen with full deliberation it cannot refuse it again but this is no good reason because the choice made cannot alter the nature of the will The Fathers give these reasons 1. The devil sinned of himself but man was tempted 2. In mans fall all mankinde would have been damned but in the Angels fall not all Angels The best answer is this When they had sinned God out of his justice refused to give them any help of grace by which they might rise from sin and without which it was impossible for them to recover and this is the Apostles argument If God were so severe that he would not give these so great and noble Creatures time of repentance neither would he others The Angels were intellectual Spirits dwelling in heavenly places in the presence of God and the light of his countenance and therefore could not sin by error or misperswasion but of purposed malice which is the sin against the Holy Ghost and irremissible But man fell by misperswasion and being deceived by the lying suggestion of the spirit of errour The devils malice against mankinde appears Gen. 3. where there is an imbred enmity in the devil as likewise 1 Pet. where he is said to be a roaring lion a lion roars when he hath got his prey by way of triumph or when he is hungry and almost starved and so most cruel This malice of his appears in his going up and down the whole world to damn men and that though he get no good by it nay though his condemnation be so much the greater and therefore if God should let him do what he would against us he would first bring all outward misery as upon Iob and then eternal damnation And though he knows God will defend the godly yet he never leaveth to vex them to tempt them to sin to overwhelm them with grief and dispair so that he is opposite to God The devils malice is beyond his wisdom else he would never oppose the people of God as he doth since he doth hereby advance their glory and his own ruine The devils are subtill creatures 1. In nature 2. They have perfect intelligence of all things done in the world 3. They have gotten subtilty by long experience Iob 32. 7. 4. They have strong delusions and great stratagems 2 Cor. 11. 14. 5. Their subtilty appears by their prevailing over the wises● men in all ages and by making choice of the sittest instruments to accomplish their designs When he would deceive Eve he made choice of the serpent when he would deceive Adam he made choice of the woman The devils design was to draw Iob to curse God therefore he spared him two things his tongue that he might be at liberty to curse God and his wife to be a counsellour to him thereto Their craft is seen likewise in their divers and sutable temptations 2 Cor. 2. 12. We reade of his methods Eph. 6. and depths Rev. 3. His first stratagem and device is to observe the naturall constitution of every mans minde and body and to sit his temptations thereunto 2. To observe our natural abilities and endowments and accommodate his temptations thereunto 3. To apply his temptations to mens outward estate condition and place 4. To
Saviour had spiritually so he would corporally or externally manifest his power over Devils This possessing was nothing but the dwelling and working of the Devil in the body one was demoniack and lunatick too because the Devil took these advantages against his body and this hath been manifested by their speaking of strange tongues on a sudden The causes of this are partly from the Devils malice and desire to hurt us and partly from our selves who are made the slaves of Satan and partly from God who doth it sometime out of anger as he bid the Devil go into Saul or out of grace that they may see how bitter sin is Vide Voet. Thes. de Energ Quest. 5. The meaning of Christs temptation by Satan and how we shall know Satans temptations Matth. 4. The Devil carried Christs body upon the pinacle of the Temple It is hard to say whether this were done in deed or vision only although it seem to be real because he bid him to throw himself down headlong but now this was much for our comfort that we see Christ himself was tempted and that to most hideous things Satan was overcome by him Damascene of old and some of our Divines say That Satan in his temptations of Adam and Christ could not have accesse to their inward man to tempt them therefore he tempted Adam by a Serpent and audible voice and Christ by a visible Landskip of the world Satans temptations say some may be known by the suddennesse violence and unnaturalnesse of them All these are to be found in the motions of sinne which arise from ones own heart original sinne will vent sinne suddenly Isa. 57. 20. Violently Ier. 8. 6. and it will break forth into unnatural lusts blasphemies against God and murders against men Mark 7. 21 22. Mr Liford saith if they seize upon us with terrour and affrightment because our own conceptions are free it is very difficult to distinguish them When thoughts often come into the minde of doing a thing contrary to the Law of God it is an argument Satan is at hand The Devil tempts som●●o sinne under the shew of vertue Iob. 16. 2. Phil. 3. 6. Omnis tentatio est assimila●●●●o●i say the Schoolmen Some under the hope of pardon by stretching t 〈…〉 ds of Gods mercy lessening of sinne propounding the example of the multitud 〈…〉 e●ting before men what they have done and promising them repentance hereafter before they die The difference between Gods temptations and Satans they differ First In the matter the matter of Gods temptations is ever good as either by prosperity adversity or commandments by chastisements which from him are ever good but the matter of Satans temptations is evil he solicits us to sinne Secondly In the end the end of Gods temptation is to humble us and do us good but of Satans to make us dishonour God Thirdly In the effect God never misseth his end Satan is often disappointed A question is made by some Whether Satan may come to the same man with the same tentation after he is conquered Mr Capel resolves it that he may part 1. of Tentation cha 7. pag. 132 133. It is also a question An omnia peccata committantur tentante Diabolo John 8. 41 44. Every work of sin is a work of falshood and all falshood is from the Devil And likewise it is questioned Whether man might not have sinned if there had not been a Tempter To that it is answered he might for Satan fell without a tempter the angelical nature was more perfect then the humane 2. Nature is now so depraved that we cannot but sin Iam. 1. 14. Non eget daemone tentatore qui sibi factus est daemon saith Parisiensis Fourthly What is meant by delivering up to Satan 1 Cor. 5. 5 Some with Chrysostome think it was a corporeal delivering of him so that he was vexed of him by a disease or otherwise and that they say is meant by destruction of the flesh and so expound that Mark 6. They had power over the unclean spirits that is not onely to expel them but to put them in whom they pleased but this is not approved therefore others make it to be a casting out of the company of the faithful and so from all the good things that are appropriated unto that condition and therefore to the destruction of the flesh they expound to be meant of his corruption for so flesh is taken in Scripture Sixthly Whether the Devils may appear 1 Sam. 28. He which appeared was 1. Subject to the Witches power therefore it was not the true Samuel 2. If Samuel had been sent of God he would not have complained of trouble no more then Moses did Matth. 17. 3. The true Samuel would not have given countenance to so wicked a practice to the Magick Art 4. True Samuel would not have suffered himself to be worshipped as this did 5. Saul never came to be with the soul of Samuel in blisse yet he saith 'to morrow shalt thou be with me 6. God refused to answer Saul by Prophet Vision Urim or Thummim therefore he would not answer him by Samuel raised from the dead 7. True Samuel after his death could not lie nor sinne Heb. 12. 23. He said Saul caused him to ascend * and troubled him if he had been the true Samuel Saul could not have caused him to ascend if not he lyed in saying he was Samuel and that he troubled him If God had sent up Samuel the dead to instruct the living Why is this reason given of the denial of the Rich mans request to have one sent from the dead because if they would not believe Moses and the Prophets They would not believe though one rose from the dead In so doing the Lord should seem to go against his own order The souls of Saints which are at rest with the Lord are not subject to the power or inchantment of a Witch But Samuel was an holy Prophet now at rest with the Lord. Bellarmine answereth That Samuel came not by the command of the Witch but by the command of God and that rather impeached then approved Art Magick which he proveth because the Witch was troubled But the Scripture expresly teacheth that her trouble was because it was the King who having lately suppressed Witches had now in disguised apparel set her on work and so deceived her Bellarmine objecteth The Scripture still calleth him that appeared Samuel as if it were not an ordinary thing in Scripture to call things by the names of that which they represent or whose person they bear the representations of the Cherubims are called the Cherubims And things are often called in Scripture not according to the truth of the thing or Scriptures judgement thereof but according to the conceit and opinion of others The Angels which appeared to the Patriarchs are called men Gen. 18. the Idols of the Heathen are called gods Gen. 25. because
because he is not proud it was Mr. Fox his speech As I get good by my sins so I get hurt by my graces the more universal any sin the more dangerous Pride hath three degrees 1. Close and secret pride when though it be retired as a King into his closet yet it rules Ier. 48. 26. it bears rule in all unsanctified men for they dare oppose Gods Commandments crosse his directions for their lusts sake murmur against him this is to prefer themselves above him 2. More open when being fed fat with wealth learning it makes a man plainly to count himself some worthy person this is high-mindednesse 1 Tim. 6. 17. and being puffed up 1 Cor. 8. 1. 3. Most open when it dares even contest with God and sets light by him in plain terms as Pharaoh Exod. 5. 2. Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3. 15. the King of Tyre Ezek. 28. 26. Antichrist 2 Thes. 2. and some Heathen Emperors would be worshipped as God Amongst all vices there is none that discovers it self sooner then pride for the speech we reade of a proud mouth Iude v. 16. for the gate we reade of a foot of pride Psal. 36. 11. for apparel of a crown of pride Isa. 28. 1. of a chain of pride Psa. 73. 6. Many that know not the man yet point at him as he walks in the streets and say There goes a proud fellow which men usually pronounce of no vice beside but the drunkard and therefore doth the Prophet Habakkuk 2. 5. joyn them both together It bears rule when it is not constantly observed and resisted with sorrowful confessions and self-judging and earnest prayers to God against it The effects of it in all estates 1. A proud man cannot brook a wrong without chafing and distemper 2. It breeds contentiousnesse aptnesse to strive to fall out to be and continue to be at variance with other men Only by pride cometh contention Prov. 13. 10. 3. Such a one worketh in proud wrath when he is angry he carries himself haughtily and cares not what he sayes with whom he is angry to deal in proud wrath argues a proud man 4. Headinesse and high-mindednesse and self-willednesse Paul joyns headiness and high-mindednesse together the better a man thinks of himself the more apt he is to be ruled by himself and not regard the counsel of others it is said of the proud builders of Babel This they did and would not be stopped Secondly In prosperity he brags and boasts and sets up himself never fears any alteration but is secure and saith He shall not be moved Thirdly In adversity he whines and mutters and is full of complaints and is ready to use ill shifts and cannot frame himself to a usefull and patient bearing of it Lastly Consider the hurt it doth in the world First It hinders men from receiving good either from God or man 1. It hinders the good of illumination God teacheth the humble See Ier. 13. 15. Prov. 26. 12. Psal. 25. 9. 2. The good of Sanctification Except you become as little children you cannot be my Disciples 3. The good of comfort To him will I look who is of a contrite spirit 4. It is the main impediment of conversion See Exod. 18. 11. Iob 26. 12. Mal. 4. 1. Luke 1. 5. Secondly It depriveth us of all the good we have received and unfits us for doing service Thirdly It is the mother of all sins covetousnesse grows on it Hab. 2. 5. it whets revenge Esth. 3. 16. Helps against it 1. Pray to God to shew it and make it hateful 2. Meditate of your own meannesse and basenesse bodily and spiritual in this life and another 3. Be diligent in some vertuous calling 4. Observe Gods judgements on pride either upon your selves or those that are near you Dan. 5. 22. 2 Cor. 12. 7. it is the sure fore-runner of ruine 5. Draw out the Spirit of Christs humiliation Phil. 2. 5 7. 6. Let every act of pride be accompanied with a subsequent act of humility 2 Chron. 32. 25. 1 Chron. 21. 8. 7. Treasure up some holy principles and keep them alwayes present and ready in your thoughts Psal. 119 9. 1. The only way to exaltation is not to affect it He that humbleth himself shall be exalted Jam. 4. 10. 2. The ornament of an high estate is not outward splendor but a lowly mind Iam. 1. 10. when one can be minimus in summo 3. Those that are most worthy of praise doe most despise it Prov. 11. 12. 8. Take heed of those things which nourish pride idlenesse voluptuousnesse delighting in earthly vanity looking much abroad to others faults promising our selves much prosperity long-life in the abundance of outward things CHAP. XXII Of Railing Rebellion Revenge Scandall Schisme RAILING RAiling is a great sin Our Saviour having condemned rash anger proceedeth to blame this evil effect of it saying He that saith Raka or he that calleth his brother fool plainly enough intimating that commonly distempered and inordinate anger doth bring forth such language See what companions the holy Ghost hath yoked with railers 1 Cor. 6. 9. 5. 11. Psal. 50. David saith He heard the reproach of many Saul railed on Ionathan and called him the Son of the perverse rebellious woman as much as if in plain english he had called him whoreson varlet Nabal railed on David and his servants which were sent unto him and Rabshekeh railed on the living God the Jews railed on Christ saying Thou hast a Devil Shimei on David 2 Sam. 16. 5 6 7 8. Railing is the uttering of such words and terms against any man as do aim at his disgrace to make him appear contemptible hateful and vile Not only those rail which call others vile names as rogue fool asse this is the highest degree of railing but all vilifying terms Thou what art thou a pinne for thee thou art this and that casting in a mans teeth his faults and imperfections yea or any words tending to reproach is railing Reason why it is so great a sin 1. It is contrary to equity which requires that a man should deal no otherwise with his neighbour then he would have his neighbour to deal with him no man can brook railing terms but abhors them 2. It is against charity 1. It is a fruit of bitternesse and wrath in him that doth it and shews that he is provoked and inflamed now charity is not provoked 2. It tends to the disgrace of another to blemish his name and make him appear vile and contemptible to others which is against the rules of charity for charity covers faults and this layes them open 3. In some cases it is contrary to truth and verity Men are prone to this sin because they are full of pride passion bitternesle uncharitablesse which ingender it A man should be able to hear himself railed at 1. Because we deserve greater evil at Gods hand 2. We are never the worse for it 3. Because it argueth folly
return their wrongs upon them 3. Pride possesseth all men naturally this stirreth men up to revenge 4. Every mans heart aboundeth with self-love and love cannot endure to see evil done to the person loved 5. We are all void of charity and love to our brethren hence there is an aptnesse to be provoked and do them hurt if we seem to have any cause 6. It gives a kinde of pleasure and satisfaction to hatred or envy of which it is a kinde of exercise as scratching doth to him that hath the itch Revenge is a requiting of evil for evil a doing hurt again to them from whom one hath received hurt and measuring ill measure for ill measure A dog in the Law was an unclean beast because he was revengefull 1. Revenge transgresseth the plain light of nature which bids us do as we would be done to and every man would be forgiven and not have revenge taken upon him 2. It is a manifest enemy to peace and concord which we should seek and follow after 3. Injurious to God a preventing of him as if he were not carefull enough to execute justice The best and wisest Heathen writer of morall vertues hath delivered it as a generall principle that a man must not hurt any other but with this caution and limitation unlesse he be first provoked by some injury Phocion when he had done great service for Athens yet they ungratefully putting him to death he charged his son at his death that he should never remember the Athenian injuries The King of France after would not revenge the wrongs done to him before when Duke of Orleance Signs of Revenge 1. A pittilesse disposition by which one is rather glad then sorry for anothers evill 2. Excesse in punishing Some directions or means for the crucifying of this unruly affection 1. You must subdue pride and labour to make your selves base and vile in your own eyes being worthy of all the wrongs and indignities that can be offered to us in regard of our own sinfulnesse 2. You must observe God in wrongs as David The Lord hath sent him to curse 3. You must often consider of the goodnesse of God in forgiving your sins many and hainous Eph. 4. 12. and 5. 2. 4. You must often ponder of the necessity of this duty which appears by three things 1. The clear and expresse commandements given about it Matt. 5. 39. resisting evil that is by doing the like evil to him which he doth to thee but prepare thy self to bear that and another rather then by doing the like to repell the former whereby he meeteth with the cavils which flesh doth enforce to justifie revenge or else I shall be perpetually obnoxious to wrongs be it so saith our Saviour thou must rather bear it then resist Rom. 12. 17. and 19. 1 Thes. 5. 15. no man may render to any evil for evil that is evil word for evil word evil deed for evil deed taunt for taunt blow for blow 2. The great danger if it be not mortified our sins shall never be pardoned we pray in the Lords Prayer Forgive as we forgive he therefore which forgiveth not can never have any true assurance of being forgiven Mat. 6. 14 15. ●o as manifest a promise and threat as any the Scripture containeth or can be made Now to forgive a wrong and requite it with some evil done to the wrong-doer are as quite contrary as any thing in the world so that he which will do the one doth not the other as he which sues and imprisons a man for debt doth not forgive his debt so he that recompenseth a man evil for his evil doth not forgive his evil 3. The worthy examples which we have of good men that have gone before us in mortifying it as Christ and other Saints To these meditations adde fervent praiers to God that he would vouchsafe to season our hearts with humility meeknesse forbearance that he would strengthen us to passe by wrongs injuries indignities that he would give us his Spirit to crucifie this as well as the other lusts of the flesh Scandall A Scandall or offence is that which is or may be in it self an occasion of falling to another Any thing whereby we so offend another as that he is hindred from good drawn into or confirmed in evil is a scandall One saith it is an indiscreet or uncharitable abuse of my Christian liberty There is Scandalum 1 datum 2 acceptum a scandal given when a man doth that which is in it self unlawfull or else if it be lawfull he doth it in an undue manner Rom. 14. 20 21. First Scandals given 1. When men by corrupt doctrine endeavour to justifie wicked practises Rom. 16. 17. 2. By sinfull practises Prov 29. 6. and 22. 15. 3. By giving just ground of offence in appearance of evill 1 Thessal 5. 22. 2 C●● 8. 19 20. 4. In the abuse of lawfull liberty go to the utmost bounds of it Rom. 14. per tot Secondly A Scandall or offence taken when men take offence at that which is good where there is neither evil nor any appearance of it Ioh. 6. 61. 1 Pet. 2. 7. men take offence at true doctrine and good actions the Disciples at Christs doctrine of the resurrection 2. When their sins are reproved Lev. 19. 16 17. Schisme Schism in the Church is much like sedition in the State As the name of Heresie though it be common to any opinion whereof one makes choice whether it be true or false in which sense Constantine the great called the true faith Catholicam sanctissimam haeresin yet in the ordinary use it is now applied only to the choice of such opinions as are repugnant to the faith so the name of Schism though it import any scissure or renting of one from another yet now by the vulgar use of Divines it is appropriated only to such a rent or division as is made for an unjust cause and from those to whom he or they who are separated ought to unite themselves and hold communion with them Tota ratio Schismatis the very essence of a Schisme consists in the separating from the Church I say from the true and orthodoxall Church It is a renting or dissolving of that unity which ought to be amongst Christians See M Marshall's Sermon on Rom. 12. 4 5. It was a memorable speech of Calvin who said he would willingly travell all over the Seas and Countries in the world to put an end to the differences that were in the Reformed Churches Cameron well distinguisheth of a double Schisme 1. Negative which is a bare secession or subduction and is unlawfull Non separatio sed causa facit Schismaticum Cassand 2. Positive when there is a certain consociation which useth Ecclesiasticall Laws the Word of God and administration of the Sacraments separatim which he calleth setting up an Altar against an Altar this is called Schism Antonomastic 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 s and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
〈◊〉 saith he de Eccles. Different forms of Churches and Church-government in one State must needs lay a foundation of strife and division therein It is no wisedom saith M. Durie in a Letter in a State to reject an approved way of government which all the best Reformed Churches have received all this while and acknowledged to be Gods way and by experience found to be safe sound and instead of it to take up another which it is not yet known what it is nor was ever tried but in two or at the most three Churches and that for the space of a few years The slighter the cause of Separation the greater the fault of Schisme when men hold the same Faith and Orthodox truths yet separate for lesser matters The true Saints in the 7. Churches of the Revelation were never bid go out of them though they were very corrupt as they were out of Babylon M. Vines The first Separatist in the Scripture saith one was Cain Gen. 4. 16. Enforcements to love are clear 1 Cor. 13. 1. That question of Separation in Scripture is dark See M. Gillespy miscel c. 10. and 15. and M. Manton on Jam. 3. 17. Schisma est secessio in religionis negotio vel temeraria vel injusta Cameron de Eocles Schisme is a causelesse separation from externall communion with any true Church of Christ M. Ball against Separation c. 8. Schism is a breach of the unity of the Church D. Field l. 3. of the Church c. 5. We do not leave communion of true Churches for corruptions and sins but only abstain from the practice of evil in our own persons and witnesse against it in others still holding communion with the Churches of Christ. You send me unto such a Book of M. Robinson as himself doth begin to revoke pubpubliquely as being unsound in divers things whereas I refer you unto a later book of his made with riper deliberation and in no part that I hear of publikely revoked His Book which you send me unto being his Iustification of Separation is sick of King Iehorams incurable disease the guts of it fall out day by day yea he openly plucks out some of the bowels thereof with his own hands This is to be observed by them especially who much follow M. Robinson CHAP. XXIII Of Sedition Self-love Self-seeking Slander SEDITION SEdition is a sin whereto people are much inclined It is to leave our present Governours which rule us according to law and follow other Governours who rise up of their own accord to leave a David and follow a Sheba The Israelites raised sedition against David by means of Absalom and Achitophel and proceeded so farre in their rebellion that they brought it to a pitcht field and would not give over till their Captain with twenty thousand more were slain in the battell 2 Sam. 19. Corah Dathan and Abiram stir up a great multitude against Moses and Aaron At another time of themselves they rose against Moses and were ready to stone him because they wanted water At another time they cry to have a Captain and return back to Egypt M. Hobbs in his Rules of government c. 12. reckons up these two among other wilde ones as seditious opinions that the knowledge of good and evil belongs to each single man and saith Legitimate Kings make the things they command just by commanding them and those which they forbid unjust by forbidding them This is to make Subjects beasts and the Magistrate God 2. That faith and holinesse are not acquired by study and naturall reason but are supernaturally infused and inspired unto man which if it were true saith he I understand not why we should be commanded to give an account of our faith or why any man who is truly a Christian should not be a Prophet This opinion is so contrary to Scripture and the judgement of all sound Divines that I need not spend time to confute it See Phil. 1. 29. Eph. 1. 8. Heb. 12. 2. One indeed saith the habits of Faith Hope and Charity are infused after the manner of acquisite God having ordained not to infuse them but upon the means of hearing praying caring studying and endeavouring Some say there are no graces wrought in us but severall actings of the Spirit as the Spirit acteth with us where grace is wrought we need the Spirit to excite and draw it forth but the Scripture is plain for infused habits grace is called a good work in us Phil. 1. 6. the Law written in our hearts God is said to shine into our hearts 2 Cor. 4. 6. we are said to be partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. See Eph. 2. 10. 1. It is a sin it is plain by Scripture how severely did God punish it in Korah and his accomplices making the earth to gape wide and swallow them up Solomon condemns it saying meddle not with such as be given to change Gal. 5. 20. yea it is a great sin as is evident 1. It is contrary to the light of Scripture in the Law he that cursed that is railed upon or used ill wishes against the Ruler of his people was to be put to death how much more then he that shall rise up against him The Scriptures of the New Testament are full of precepts for duty and subjection Rom. 13. 1. 1 Pet. 2. 13. 14. Give unto Caesar that which is Caesars saith our blessed Saviour Give to every one his due fear to whom fear honour to whom honour belongeth You must needs be subject for conscience sake And the Apostle willeth Titus to put them in minde to obey principalities and powers and be subject to Magistrates and ready to every good work as if a man were unfit for any good work if he be not duly subject to authority The Jesuites are still tampering about Kingdomes Monarchies Common-wealths and temporall States how to bring them into mutinies contentions seditions rebellions and uproars Watsons Quodlibets of Religion and State Quodl 5. Answer to the fourth Article They are like unto Aesops Trumpetter who being taken in war made his lamentation saying that he never drew his sword against any nor shot at any but the enemy answered Thou hast animated others thou hast put courage rage and fury into all the rest Saint Peter and Iude do blame them which despise government and speak evil of them in authority Secondly It is contrary to the light of nature for even among those Nations which never had any divine revelation yet the necessity of duty to Magistrates was alwaies maintained as a thing which they perceived absolutely requisite for the welfare of humane societies seeing without government the societies of men could never continue in a good estate No man could possesse his own goods enjoy his own lands and house live comfortably with his own wife and children or give himself to any profitable calling and endeavour Thirdly It is contrary to those principal vertues by which all men
ought to govern themselves in the course of their lives unlesse they will be bruitish appetite ruleth beasts reason ought to guide man and a setled habit agreeable to right reason Now the main and fundamental vertues are religion justice charity and prudence against all which sedition doth evidently oppose it self Religion tieth our souls to God and commandeth us to give him his due God is not duly feared and honoured if his Ordinance of Magistracy be despised 2. Justice bindeth us to men and requireth to give every man his due which we do not if we deny subjection to the Magistrate by whose power all men else should be helped to the attaining of their right 3. Charity bids us do good to our neighbours as to our selves and how will he do good to other neighbours who will not perform his duty to his Governours who are appointed for the common good 4. Discretion and prudence advise to take that course which is most requisite for our own and the common happinesse seeing no member can be long safe if the whole be not kept in safety It is quite contrary to the common welfare and consequently to a mans own at length that the body be rent asunder with sedition Fourthly It is a great sinne since it proceedeth from bad causes and produceth ill eff●cts Ambition envy and discontent at the present estate and foolish hopes to have all remedied by a change are the mothers of sedition 2. The effects of sedition are lamentable where envying and strife i● there is sedition and every evil work James Envying and strife likely bring sedition and sedition cometh accompanied with every evil work viz. with civill war which puts the sword into the hand of the multitude and makes them bold to kill spoil bu●n all which lies in their way without difference or respect of persons religion and justice are exiled and fury and passion do what they please The reason why men are so prone to this sin is because they are naturally full of those vices which are apt to breed it viz. ambition envy discontent fond hopes Self-love It is a vehement and inordinate inclination to ones own content in things carnall earthly and sensuall 2 Tim 3 2. See 2 Cor. 12 7. There is 1. a naturall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or self love by which every one from the instinct of nature loves himself his own body soul life Eph. 5. 29. the Scripture doth not condemn this 2. A divine self-love by which every one that is born again by the holy Ghost from the instinct of the Spirit loves himself as is fit●ing to the glory of God and good of the Church these two kindes of self-love were in Christ. 3. A devilish self-love whereby one by the instinct of corrupt nature and inflamed by Satan so loves himself that he loves no other truly and seeks only his own things Effects of it 1. To praise our selves Prov 27. 2. and boast of our selves as the Pharisee 2. To be imbittered against reproofs 3. To attempt things above our power and place Remedies against Self-love We should love our best selves Mat. 6 33. Luke 10. 42. and consider what reason we have to love God above all The right knowledge of God and our selves will cure this corrupt self-love Consider the basenesse of our originall and our evils as well as excellencies and the purity of God Iob 40. 4 5. It is lawfull 1. To will our temporal good with moderation 2. To prefer our necessities before the necessities of others to defend our own lives rather then the lives of others unlesse he be a Magistrate Thou art better then ten thousand of us 3. To maintain our reputation and just priviledges Self seeking It is an evill at all times to seek great things to a mans self Reasons 1. God hath written a Treatise of purpose to take men off from the creature 2. There are divers commands to the contrary Phil. 4. 5. prohibitions Mat. 6. 21. sharp reproofs Eph. 5. ●am 4. 4. 3. God is much delighted with such a disposition of the soul as it is taken off from creature-comforts Psa. 131. The greatnesse of this evil 1. It is the root of all other sins the first sin that came into the world 2. It is an errour circa finem nay an errour concerning the utmost end therefore the more dangerous 3. Self as standing in opposition to God is that against which all the curses of the Law are denounced Isa. 22. 16 17. and 23. 8. 4. For these self-seekers only the torments of hell are prepared Cesset propria voluntas non erit infernus Bern. God hath ever set himself against self-seekers to destroy them and their house Prov. 19. 21. Isa. 44. 25. Psa. 33. 10. Isa. 59. 5 6. Ier. 22. 13. Hab. 2. 9. This is especially evil in the calamities of the Church Numb 14. 11 12. what is this self compared with the Churches good this is condemned in Baruch it is unseasonable We reade not of any Saint in the Scriptures given to covetousnesse 2. Hypocrites were given to it Saul Demas Iudas Gods prerogative is 1. To have high esteem from the creature as the chiefest good to this self-love is opposite 2. To give Laws to the creature as an Absolute Soveraign to this self-dependance is opposite 3. To have the trust of the creature as an Independent essence to this self-will is opposite 4. To be the utmost end as the Supream cause to this self-seeking is opposite Signs of it 1. When one puts himself on the profession of Religion for some worldly advantage Gen. 34. 22 23. Iohn 6. 26. 2. When men are enemies to Christs Crosse Phil. 3. 18 19. 3. Envy to others Gal. 5. 26. Remedies against it Consider 1. The greatnesse of the sin God should be the chief end to set up self in his room no man lesse enjoys himself then he that seeks himself 2. You will have the greater judgement Mat. 23. 14. 3. Frequently pray against it and cast back the praises given to thee unto God Phil. 2. 21. May not our things and the things of Christ consist together 1. All men are not Christs nor led by his Spirit 2. Many that professe themselves to be Christs are none of his Rev. 3. 4. 3. Those that are spiritually quickned keep not close to Christ See Mat. 12. 30. Slander Slander is a great sin Psa. 52. 3. Rom. 1. 29. It was the sin of Ziba Haman against Mordecai Detractio est alienae famae per verba denigratio Aquinas 2● 2ae Quaest. 68. Art 1. the smiting of a mans good name the Latines call it detractio because it is a kinde of theft in that it stealeth from a mans good name See Ames de Consc. l. 5. c. 15. The cause of it is flattery envy and twatling uncharitablenesse or malice or both is the prime cause of it uncharitablenesse is the bare absence of charity malice is a disposition quite
manner of Tyrants to seek the destruction of the right Inheritor dissembled with the Wisemen pretending that his purpose was to come and worship him and learning by them what he could for that purpose intended in very deed to have made him away by which means he was compelled for the saving of his life to take a long and tedious journey down into Aegypt no Question with great labour and wearinesse to himself as well as to his Parents Thus you have the sufferings of our Saviours Infancy next consider his whole life and what was it but a suffering of all misery both in the whole course of it and in the conclusion of all at his death For the course of his life it was private and publick For his private life untill his thirty years he lived a Carpenter He that was sufficient to have governed all the Monarchies under the Sunne to have ruled the whole world to have led mighty Armies and to have read a Lecture of Wisdom to Angels and Archangels he was servant to his Father a Carpenter and spent his time obscurely in a manual occupation handling the Mallet and Chezil and doing the work of a mean labourer burying as it were all his Divine Excellencies under the thick and dark cloud of a poor Trade and not shewing forth so much as a glympse of his heavenly glory but that at one time at the age of twelve years he peeped a little out of the Cloud when at a feast in Ierusalem he disputed with Doctors to the astonishment of all the hearers and beholders He was cast down from all honour and made to inherit contempt and basenesse But come we to his publick life where he was to take upon him a glorious function fit for himself even to be the Minister of the Circumcision a Prophet to the people Israel First He entred into this function with a great toil and labour for by and by after his Baptism and Calling to publick view he was thrust forth into the wildernesse there to be tempted of the Devil not for a few hours or dayes but for full fourty dayes together There he did challenge all the powers of darknesse and hand to hand did enter the lists to fight a combate with all the Devils of hell There was he singled forth and they let loose to try the utmost of their mighty and subtil temptations three principal ones are mentioned but no question he stood not against so little as three thousand for what would not Satan assay to do him mischief What evils did he not by word or suggestion labour to draw him to when he had him for so long a space of time at so great a disadvantage all alone in the wildernesse and fasting he would strain himself to the utmost of his wicked wit to have poysoned him with some taint of wickednesse that he might have killed the whole body of his Church in him the Head thereof as he destroyed all mankinde in the first Adam the common root of it It is certain that our Lord was armed with power and wisdom to discover and resist his temptations and knew he should could and would be victorious but no doubt the combate was troublesome and tedious and filled his righteous soul with unspeakable dolour and anguish Let a vertuous and honourable Matron be shut up so many dayes together in one room with a base and loathsome adulterer there to suffer all his impure solicitations will not her misery be so much the greater in sense by how much her self is more shamefac'd and honest and more abhorrent from all such impurity so it was with the soul of our blessed Saviour That great and foul polluter of himself and mankinde the Devil had liberty given him to try what ever he could do with all his crafty and abominable temptations to draw our Lord Jesus from his God and to make him as all other men were a sinner The most valiant person in the world armed with the best weapons for defence and furnished with so much prowesse and skill that he knew he should be conquerour and unwounded would yet finde it unspeakably troublesome to ward oft the multitude of blows of ten thousand at once assailing him with such fiery darts and poisoned weapons that each of them had they but fastened to draw bloud would have been mortal unto him Had any of Satans temptations fastened on the soul of Christ he had been made a sinner and so separated from the Union with the second Person and so himself with all his members that depended upon him had perished eternally Doubtlesse though he knew he should overcome yet the bearing off putting by and resisting so many mighty blows and subtil thrusts must needs be extreamly tedious and bitter unto him by how much he was more perfectly holy and did more detest all such manner of temptations Thus his sufferings from Satan were horrible though in the issue harmlesse yea and glorious but now thinke what he bare in his whole life after Five things are most intollerable to the nature of man in passing of his life Poverty Reproach Labour Danger and Sorrows he was laden with all these in all extremity First for Poverty Though he were very rich saith St Paul yet he became poor for our sakes he had been no slothful nor prodigal Person in his private life but he was a Servant to his father in law and the calling was poor so that he could get nothing but from hand to mouth and therefore being to leave his Trade and become a Minister and Preacher of the Gospel he had no house nor home of his own to dwell in no stock nor revenues to live upon but was fain to live of pure alms and though he was no beggar yet as if he had been a beggar to maintain himself altogether by the kindenesse of others The Foxes have holes the Fowls nests but the Sonne of man hath not whereon to rest his head We reade of a bag he had but it was not filled with the fruits of his own hand or stock but with the gifts and alms of others He had it but he had it of alms it was enough but at other mens voluntary cost What ingenuous spirit doth not feel it an abasement to be so maintained You see his Poverty he was of so low estate that indeed he had nothing at all but what good people would bestow upon him Again for Reproach How insufferable a thing is that to worthy natures to be standered reviled ill-spoken of and laden with false accusations and calumniations Doth it not seem unto us a heavier thing then death Who is not so tender of his good name that the least blemish and aspersion cast upon him seemeth more smarting then the cutting of a sword But our Saviour had all manner of disgraces cast upon him not by mean base beggarly and despised companions but by the Scribes Pharisees Elders High-Priests and Rulers of the City
Yea let us long for his appearance and thirst after the great Day when he shall come to judge the quick and dead What good wife would not often long for the coming of her absent husband and for her going to partake with him in his state of glory This world is a dunghil and all the things in it are baser compared to that estate of Christ then dirt and dung compared to gold O let us shew that we know and beleeve these things by filling our souls with holy and heavenly desires and affections Contemplate our Lord Jesus Christ rising out of the grave contemplate his ascending up to his Father contemplate him sitting at the right hand of his Father contemplate him coming to Judgement till these things have banished all love of sinne in thee all earthlinesse of Spirit and made thee in some measure like unto him in these things If the Spirit of grace and glory rest upon us it will thus glorifie us and raise us up A Christian man is not glorious because he hath obtained more outward preferment or wealth but because he hath obtained a more effectual and working knowledge of Christ his Head and is made more and more suitable to the spiritual glory of such a Mediatour Hitherto should our chief desires and indeavours runne What do we musing tiring and tormenting our selves in studying earthly things nay evil and sinful things Do these studies and cogitations accord with the heavenly nature which our blessed Saviour maketh them partakers of that are ingraffed into him by Faith and enlivened by the mighty work of his Spirit In vain do we call our selves Christians and look to be brought to that glorious estate wherto he hath already assigned all true Christians if we do not shew our selves thus in our measure for the present glorified with Christ. But secondly let this thought make us to loath our sins and heartily to lament them when we consider of them because they offend so great and wonderful a person that is so highly advanced over all and withal so good and glorious and one that hath done so much for us and doth so particularly know and observe us and all our actions That Lord of Lords and King of Kings that only blessed Potentate who inhabiteth eternity who dwelleth in that light which is inaccessible whom no creature saw nor can see this eminent person he seeth us at all times in all places and companies he is a witnnesse of all our actions that shall be the Judge he taketh particular and precise notice of our whole carriage O shall we dare to offend his pure and glorious eyes with things so abominable to him as those must needs be for which himself was put to suffer such things as he did suffer before he entred into his glory Do we not think that Christ hateth sinne with a most perfect hatred and shall not we strive to conform our selves to him and to please him that is so incomparably much greater then all other creatures Do but think what an one our Lord is and how displeasing sinne is in his sight and then it is not possible for us to love it if we either love our selves or him And it is a sure truth that God will sanctifie these Meditations to such as will exercise themselves therein to beat down sinne in them and to work an hatred of it in their souls Oh rhat each of us could retire our selves often from the world and put himself in minde of Christs glory and say to himself if I follow voluptuousnesse and give my self to wantonnesse drunkennesse gaming idlenesse riot or unthriftinesse these are the things that glorious Saviour of mankinde abh orreth and shall I dare to provoke him against me We are careful to shunne those things which we know will offend great men in the world not alone Kings and Princes but men of inferiour rank that are of place in the Countreys where we dwell and shall we not avoid that which will displease him whose greatnesse is so great that all height set in balance with his is meer meannesse basenesse and contemptiblenesse Admonish thy self often of this point beseech him that knows how loathsom sinne is to himself to make it abominable to thee for his sake and this will cause thee to loath it The true knowledge of Christ to conceive him to be so exceeding excellent as he is will force any reasonable creature to study to please him and to cast away farre from him all that will provoke him and that is all sinne and wickednesse for that his soul hateth and then is our leaving of sinne and casting away evil deeds truly acceptable to him when it hath its original in this knowledge of him and love to him Thirdly This glory of Christ following his sufferings must become a pillar to our Faith and a sure Argument to make us trust perfectly upon him and him alone For is he not able to the utmost to save those which come unto God by him hath he not made it more then manifest that he hath fully satisfied his Fathers justice and answered for our sins He bare the sins of mankinde even of the world as the Scripture speaketh indefinitely that no man should through unbelief exclude himself I say he bare all the sins of men upon his body on the Tree there he undertook to offer up a perpetual Sacrifice and to make an atonement to his Father for us Now you see him no more in an Agony no more Crucified no longer lying in the Grave but entred into his Glory O rest upon him rest upon him rest upon him perfectly How many how great soever those sins be that you have committed for his entring into Glory maketh it manifest that he hath satisfied for them all to the full and if you renounce your selves and all other merits he can and will cause them all to be pardoned and blotted out of the Debt-book of his heavenly Father If we can go to Christ for pardon of sinne he is so glorified that his intercession applying his Redemption to us shall surely make us safe To him therefore runne on him cast thy self on him rely for the plenary and certain remission of all thy sins all aggravations of them notwithstanding yea go to him and rest upon him for power against them all and for strength to overcome them and to vanquish all Satans temptations and to make thee a perfect conquerour for this glory hath he received as the Head of the Church for the use and benefit of his Church and of all and each of those in his Church that shall seek to him and beleeve in him He will justifie he will sanctifie he will save He can do it perfecty he will do it certainly onely so that we rest upon him for it and seek to and call upon him for it All that call upon the Name of the Lord shall be saved all that long and desire to be saved and do trust
in him and cry to him to be saved from the guilt power punishment of their sins shall be saved for therefore hath he ascended and is glorified that he might become a perfect Saviour to his Church If he had not entred into Glory by sufferings we should have had no benefit by his Glorification but because he did in this manner conveigh himself to Glory therefore is he become a Captain of our Salvation as the Author to the Hebrews speaketh Let us runne to him in all our fears doubts temptations weaknesses for doth not the Scripture tell that he hath received gifts for men even gifts to bestow upon men not to keep to himself alone but with a liberal hand to distribute unto men yea even to the rebellious that God might dwell among them Cleave to Christ rest on him stay upon him he should lose the glory of his glory the subordinate use of his glory if he did not save them from whom he did both so suffer and so enter into his glory Again Let all the Saints learn to adore admire honour love serve obey this glorious person this surpassing excellent person the Mediator God and Man even the man whom God hath so exalted let us see him by Faith as they by sight see him in Heaven that we may honour praise magnifie and exalt him as they do and obey him submit our selves to him in our measure as they Faith Faith must be our guide we see not Christ with this mortal eye we must see him by the eye of Faith I mean by a lively and full apprehension and perswasion of this his glorious being which the Scripture doth set forth before our eyes and if we unfeignedly and undoubtedly beleeve that he is such a one the great glory whereunto he is entred will make us to glorifie him highly to esteem of him devoutly to worship to bow the knees of our soul alwayes and of our body on fit seasons to him and to count it out happinesse to be subject unto a person so highly advanced by God This is the whole work of those immortal and blessed Spirits which are nigh unto him because their knowledge is more full and perfect too but the more we inform our selves of the excellency of Christ the more shall our souls stoop to him and the more shall we esteem it not our duty alone but our felicity to be at his command God is ascended our Lord Jesus is ascended with the joyful voice of all Saints and Angels which with a divine and heavenly musick entertain him there they sing All honour be unto the Lamb let our souls sing for ever let us cast our selves down before him let us exalt his great and glorious Name let our hearts tongues and lives confesse to him that he is the Lord of glory to whom all glory is to be given that by glorifying him we may glorifie the Father that sent him for He that honours not the Son doth not neither honour the Father Christ glorified hath not laid down any of his Offices First Because certain acts of Office are to be performed in Heaven Iohn 14. 2. Secondly Christ hath not yet given up his Kingdome to his Father 1 Cor. 15. 24. Thirdly It appears by enumeration of the several acts that Christ performs as Mediator in Heaven in reference to each of his Offices I. To his Prophetical so 1. He gives gifts to men furnisheth them with abilities for the Churches service Ephes. 4. 11 12. 2. He sends them forth and will uphold them Rev. 1. 16. the Witnesses shall prophesie till they have finisht their Testimony 3. He takes the measure of the truths taught Ezek 40. 3. his businesse is to resine doctrines 4. He concurs with his Messengers in their Ministery 2 Cor. 5. 12. 31. 2. Isa. 57. 18. Heb. 12. 24 25. 5. When ungodly men prevail against any the Lord raiseth up others in their spirit and power II. To his Priestly Office so 1. As a publick person he represents your persons Heb. 9. 24. See Exod. 28. 12 29. by this means you are made accepted Ephes. 1. 6. 2. You have a memorial Psal. 112. 6. God is alwayes mindful of you 2. The High-Priest was to sprinkle the bloud before the Mercy-seat Levit. 16. 15. Christ offers there the price of his own bloud whereby you obtain Mercy and have it continued for the bloud was carried into the holy place to abide alwayes before the Lord. 3. He hath taken possession for you as your Priest this gives actual right as the price paid a meritorious right 4. He is careful to receive your services Levit. 1. 1 2. to sanctifie them Exod. 28. 3. Revel 8. 3 4. and to offer them to his Father the smoke of the incense comes up out of the Angels hand III. To his Kingly Office Mat. 28. 18. Eph. 1. 21 22. 1. In his present dispensations 1. In protecting his people from danger Isa. 4. 5. Mic. 5. 5. 2. In preserving his Truths and Ordinances Rev. 14. 1 2. 3. By confounding his enemies 2. In his preparations for the time to come 1. He prepares Grace for his people Col. 3. 3. 1 Ioh. 5. 11. 2. Prepares Prayers for them Luk. 21. 31 32. 3. Prepares Glory for them 1 Cor. 2. 9. Ioh. 14. 2. Gods people should exercise Faith on Christ as glorified and in Office in Heaven 1. An act of perswasion that he takes care of them still 2. Of reliance for thy self and the Church 1 Ioh. 2. 1. Psal. 55. 22. 3. Look upon none but Christ Prov. 3. 5. 4. Quiet thy soul in trouble Psal. 127. 2. 5. Triumph over dangers The End of the fifth Book THE SIXTH BOOK OF THE CHVRCH The SPOUSE of CHRIST And Antichrist The great Enemy of CHRIST HAving handled the Work of Redemption in the Nature and Person of it I should now speak of the Application of it by the holy Ghost But because many Divines do treat of the Church after Christ I shall follow that Method and likewise speak somewhat of that great Adversary of Christ before I come to the Doctrine of the Application of Christ. CHAP. I. Of the Church of CHRIST THe principal matter required of our parts in the Apostles Creed is to believe things concerning God and the Church God is the first object of our Faith we must know and believe in him so farre as he is revealed in his Nature Properties and Works Malè vivitur si de Deo non benè creditur August de civit Dei lib. 5. cap. 10. After Articles concerning the several Persons in the Trinity followeth this I believe the holy Catholike Church This was added to the former saith August Enchirid. cap. 56. upon special consideration For the right order of a confession did require that after the Trinity the Church should be mentioned as the house after the owner the Temple after God and the City after the builder And he cannot have God for his Father which
Arch-bishops four thousand Bishops and five thousand Saints approved by the Church yet if they be compared to the Jesuites or to the weak and unperfect types of them the Franciscans it is no great matter that they have done Dr. Donnes Ignatius his Conclave A rich Merchant in Paris in meriment told the Friers of Saint Francis that they wore a Rope about their bodies but Saint Francis should once have been hanged but was redeemed by the Pope on this condition that all his life after he should wear a Rope but they in earnest got judgement against him that he should be hanged for it Doctor Taylors Romish Fornace The Monks and Friers are no where mentioned in Scripture unlesse Apoc. 9. 3. Locusts issued out of the bottomlesse pit they by their smoaky Tradiditions obscure the light of the Gospel To prove their Cardinals a Divine Ordinance they urge that place 1 Kings 2. Domini erunt Cardines terrae See Polyd. Virg. de Invent. rerum lib. 4. cap. 9. pag. 270. They consist for most part of personages nobly descended they are admitted to kisse the Popes mouth they onely elect the Pope and from them onely the Pope elected must be selected Saint Peter had no Cardinals about him A certain Friar wittily preached to the people at Lions in France when he said That the Hogonots so the Protestants are called in France did agree with the Church of Rome in all the Articles of Faith but that there was one wicked word Solùm Onely at the noise of which the warre was kindled for they Onely beleeved what the Rule of Faith hath from the holy Scriptures but the Romane Church required something more to be beleeved then what is contained in the Rule of Faith or holy Scriptures because the Authority of of the Church will have it so Junius de Eccles. cap. 17. de Eccles. Roman Corollaries from the Church and Antichrist First From the Church Christs great interest here below is the Church it is his Hephzibah his delight is in her it is as Shew-bread continually before him the people of God are his Segullah his peculiar treasure his jewels Mal. 3. 17. all the rest of the world being but as lumber in comparison for them the world stands The Church is the fulnesse of Christ Ephes. 1. 22. The great blessings are out of Sion The interest of Christ extends to all Churches where a people love the Lord Jesus in sincerity The Donatists would include the Church in their parts of Africk the Papists say they only are the Church Christs interest is not limited to any forms 2 Cor. 11. 28. None are true members of the invisible Church of Christ but only those which have the Spirit of Jesus Christ in them really holy and united to Christ the Head There is a great controversie about qualification of Church-members therefore Apollonius and Spanhemius have begun their Dispute with this Question Some say The members of every particular Church are obliged at their first admission to shew to the whole Congregation convincing signs of their Regeneration and true Grace Some urge that the Scripture in the description of a godly man rests not in the negative Rom. 8. 1. and that a bare profession is not enough or to say I know no evil by him or that he is not scandalous they urge 1 Thes. 1. 1. and 2 Thes. 1. 1. they say the Church is not only termed holy from the better part but the particular members are commended for holinesse 2 Thes. 1. 3. Phil. 1. 7. We are strict say they in taking a wife or servant enquire after them and are not satisfied that we hear no ill so a judgement of severity is to be used in admitting Church-members and because we may be deceived therein the more care is to be used Others say If they be willing to give up their names to Christ it is enough because the Church is a School there they are admitted Non quia docti but ut sint docti not because they are learned but because they are willing to learn Would you have Church-members real Saints crosse to the Texts the Floor and Drag-net or such as by the exactest scrutiny that can be made we may judge to be Saints really I desire your Texts for this D. Ames saith Falsum est internas virtutes à nobis requiri ut aliquis sit in Ecclesia quoad visibilem ejus statum Bellarm. Enerv. Tom. 2. l. 2. c. 1. Sect. 5. The Apostles at the first gathering of the Church of the New Testament never required any more then the profession of the faith of Christ in fundamentals and that they were willing for the time to come to walk in Gospel-rules Iohn Baptist received Publicans and sinners souldiers Scribes Pharisees when they confessed their sins and desired to be admitted into the faith of him whom Iohn preached See Act. 2. 41 47. Vide Calvin ad Mat. 3. Many a one that may have real grace yet out of bashfulnesse and because he hath but weak parts may not be able to evidence it to others and others who have greater gifts may carry it away when they are not inwardly wrought upon I suppose therefore those are to be received into Church communion which prosesse the faith of Christ and subject to the rules of the Gospel if they be freed from damnable errors and scandalous conversation Some conceive the gathering of Churches out of Churches to be unwarrantable and think it is confusion 1 Cor. 14. 33. Where is there say they any warrant from Moses and the Prophets or from Christ and his Apostles for any such thing though yet in their times many Church-members were as ignorant and prophane as now To be a member of the Church of Christ is a great priviledge the Communion of Saints is the only good fellowship The Communion of the Saints consists in three things First In the Communion of their Graces what Graces they have they have not only for their Salvation but in trust for the good of the body the members of the body should be helpful to one another Secondly In the use of Gods Ordinances this was the beauty of the primitive times Act. 2. 42. there was no such separation then Thirdly In the performance of all mutual Offices of love Serve one another in love Our Union with Christ is the ground of this Communion As all men are one in the first Adam so all the Saints are one in the second Adam This Union is wrought on Gods part outwardly by the Word and inwardly by the Spirit on mans part Outwardly by our profession Inwardly by faith Rom. 11. 20. By Communion of Saints is meant their common partaking in Christ their Head and all his Benefits and their mutuall interest one into another There is no such good fellowship in the world as in the Church of Christ. Secondly From Antichrist That the Popish Doctrine tends to the extream dishonour of Gods Word
Some say it was an eternal transaction before all time onely manifested to us by the Spirit There are four set periods of Justification First In Gods purpose which reacheth as far as the eternal transactions between God and Christ such as were set down in the Lambs book Secondly When Christ did in the name and stead of sinners perform that which was the matter of their justification but in neither of these periods was the soul translated out of the state of nature into the state of grace Thirdly Actually at that moment when we come to own Christ as a Saviour by beleeving Fourthly When the Spirit which translates the soul out of the state of nature into the state of grace makes it known to the soul. Others say there are five as it were periods or degrees of Justification 1. When the Lord passeth a sentence of Absolution on men at their first Conversion immediately upon their Union with Christ Act. 13. 38 39. 2. He that is justified fals into daily transgressions therefore there must be a daily imputation and application of the death of Christ Iohn 13. 10. 3. There is a high act of justification after great and eminent fals though there be not an intercision yet there is a sequestration such cannot then plead their right Davids sinne of adultery and murder made a great breach upon his justification therefore he prayes God Psal. 51. To purge him with hysop to apply anew the bloud of Christ. 4. There follows a certification a sentence passed in the soul concerning mans estate 1 Iohn 5. 9. Rom. 8. 33 34. 5. Justification is never perfected till the day of judgement Act. 3. 19. then sentence is passed in open Court before men and Angels Of preparatory Works to Justification The 13th Article of the Church of England saith Works done before the grace of Christ or Justification because they are not done as God hath commanded them we doubt not but they are sins Matth. 7. A corrupt tree brings forth corrupt fruit Heb. 11. Without faith it is impossible to please God Tit. 2. 9. To the defiled all things are defiled Whether these Works without faith merit ex congruo Potest homo nondum reconciliatus per opera poenitentiae impetrare mereri ex congruo gratiam justificationis Bellarm. l. 5. de grat lib. arbit c. 22. The Papists say one must dispose and sit himself by Alms and Repentance to partake of Christ this they call Meritum ex congruo and then say they one receives primam gratiam See 2 Cor. 3. 5. Rom. 9. 15 16. We confesse that God is not wont to infuse saving grace but into hearts fitted and prepared but he works these preparations by his own Spirit See B. Dav. Determ of Quaest. 34. Whether Works with faith deserve grace ex condigno We say not as Bellarmine chargeth us that the Works of the regenerate are simply sins but in a certain respect The Papists say after one is made a new-creature he can perform such Works as have an intrinsecal merit in them and then by their good Works they can satisfie for their smaller offences Secondly They have such a worth that God is tied say some of them by the debt of justice Others say by the debt of gratitude to bestow upon them everlasting glory Some say they deserve this ex natura operis Others say Tincta sanguine Christi being died with the bloud of Christ This is a damnable doctrine throws us off from the Head to hold justification by works Our good Works as they flow from the grace of Gods Spirit in us do not yet merit Heaven 1. From the condition of the Worker though we be never so much enabled yet we are in such a state and condition that we are bound to do more then we do or can do Luk. 17. 7. We cannot enter into Heaven unlesse we be made sons Come ye blessed of my Father and the more we have the Spirit enabling us to good the more we are bound to be thankful rather then to glory in our selves Againe we are sinners the worker being a servant sonne sinner cannot merit 2. From the condition of the work those works that merit Heaven must have an equality and commensuration as a just price to the thing bought but our works are not so Rom. 8. 18. those sufferings were the most glorious of all when Paul was whipt imprisoned ventured his life he doth not account these things considerable in respect of Heaven See Rom. 8. 18. Iam. 3. 2. 1 Ioh. 1. 8. Rom. 7. 24. 11. 35 36. Ephes. 2. 8. and D. S●lat on Rom. 2. p. 118. to 185. They say The Protestants so cry up Justification by grace that they cry down all good works at least the reward of them we say there is a reward of mercy Psa. 62. lat end Bona opera non praecedunt justificandum sed sequuntur justificatum Aug. Bona opera suxt occultae praedestinationis indicia futurae foelicitatis praesagia Bernard de gratia libero arbitrio Extra statum justificationis nemo potest verè bona opena satis magnificè commendare Luther More hath been given in this Land within these threescore yeares to the building and increase of Hospitals of Colledges and other Schools of good learning and to such like workes as are truly charitable then were in any one hundred years during all the time and reign of Popery Dr. Willet confutes the calumny of the Romanists charging our Doctrine of justification by faith only as a great adversary to good Works For he proves that in the space of sixty years since the times of the Gospel 1000000lb lb hath been bestowed in the acts of piety and charity Whether we be justified by inherent or imputed righteousnesse We do not deny as the Papists falsly slander us all inherent righteousnesse 2 Cor. 5. 17. nor all justification before God by inherent righteousnesse 1 Kings 8. 32. But this we teach That this inherent righteousnesse is not that righteousnesse whereby any poor sinner in this life can be justified before Gods Tribunal for which he is pronounced to be innocent absolved from death and condemnation and adjudged unto eternal life The Church of Rome holdeth not this foundation viz. the Doctrine of Justification by Christ 1 Cor. 3. 11. 1. They deny justification by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse yea they scorn it and call it a putative righteousnesse 2. They hold justification by inherent righteousnesse that is by the works of the Law Gal. 5. 4. The Papists place the formal cause of justification in the insusion of inherent righteousnesse The opinion is built upon another opinion as rotten as it viz. perfection of inherent righteousnesse for if this be found to be imperfect as it will be alwayes in this life the credit of the other opinion is lost and that by consent of their own principles who teach that in justification men are made
all things to do Gods will The motive to that is only love of himself or some outward thing 2. From the perfect goodnesse which was required in Adam in the Covenant of works for that was not only a will and endeavour to Know and Do but an actual Knowing and Doing They differ as much as shooting at the Mark and hitting it Purity consists in freedom from mixture with that which is of a baser nature as when silver is mixed with lead or drosse it is impure All godly men must be pure Titus 1. 15. The Apostle Paul describes godly men by this Epithete Our Saviour telleth his Apostles Now are you clean or pure all is one by the word which I have spoken unto you Joh. 15. 3. Mat. 5. 8. Ps. 24. 4. 2 Cor. 7. 1. He that hath this hope purisieth himself as he is pure Reasons 1. Because he hath to do with a God of pure eyes which can abide no iniquity nor unclean thing and therefore one must be pure else he cannot possibly be accepted with him nor have any of his services favourably entertained 2. The Lord Jesus by his Spirit and Word and by faith doth dwell in the heart of his people now Faith the Word and Spirit will purisie all these are clean and pure things of a cleansing and purging nature therefore he in whom they be must be pure Purity or being purged is opposed to foulnesse and uncleannesse Uncleannesse is a deformity cast upon a thing through the cleaving to it of some thing worse and baser then it self Sinne is the uncleannesse of the soul which defiles it and makes it deformed and unpleasing to God so that he can take no delight in it not admit it into any society and familiarity with himself Purity is a freedome from sin because that is the only thing which can pollute the soul. There is a double freedom from sinne one when it is not at all in the soul nor no spots or stain of it and so no man is pure another when no uncleannesse is suffered to remain but is washed off and purged away by the application of the bloud of Christ and the water of true repentance so that no stain of sinne is there allowed or suffered to rest upon the soul and this is the purity meant 2 Sam. 22. 27. when a man is careful to observe lament confesse resist crave pardon of and strive against all the sinful and corrupt fruits of his evil and naughty nature which cannot be altogether repressed How far this purity must extend 1. To the heart which Salomon wisheth a man to keep with all diligence and of which the Apostle saith That faith purifieth the heart because God searcheth the heart and his pure eyes do principally look unto the inside 2. To the Tongue likewise Salomon saith of the pure His words are pure 3. To the Actions Psal. 24. 4. He then is a pure man which doth with such due care oppose and resist the sinfulnesse of his nature that either it doth not break forth into sinful thoughts words and deeds or if it do he labours presently to purge himself by confessing and bewailing the same before God by humble begging of pardon by renewing his purposes and resolutions of amendment and by labouring to rest upon the bloud and merits of Christ for pardon He that doth this is altogether as free from sinne in Gods account as if he had not sinned God esteeming him as he is in Christ. The Excellency of the work of Sanctification Christians look on the grace of Adoption Justification and spiritual Wisdom as high Priviledges but through the Devils policy they look on this as a drudgery whereas there is not a greater priviledge or higher favour all the subjects of Christs Kingdom are holy Isa. 4. 3. Chap. 35. They have Gods Image repaired in them which consists in righteousnesse and true holinesse Holinesse is a conformity of the frame of the heart to the will of God Christs life is communicated to them whereby they die to their corruptions and labour to live according to the rules of the Gospel This is a great priviledge to be a Saint Reasons 1. Because holinesse is the Lords own excellency it is his great Attribute He is glorious in holinesse The Cherubims Isa. 6. sing holy and the Church sings so in the Revelation 2. It is the Image of God wherein he created man when he intended to make him a beautiful creature See Ephes. 4. 24. 3. It is a great part of the happinesse which the people of God shall enjoy in heaven to all eternity Ephes. 5. 27. 4. A soul that is empty of it is abominable in Gods sight Psal. 5. 5. Hab. 1. 13. there are but two sorts of creatures capable of holinesse Angels and Men the Angels as soon as they were sin'd for ever thrust out of heaven as soon as man sinn'd God cast him out of Paradise and God left the greatest number of men to perish 5. God every where pronounceth such blessed and makes great Promises to them This Priviledge is communicated to every one under the Dominion of Christs grace Isa. 11. from vers 1. to 12. 1 Pet. 2. 8 9. and to none else the world is Satans Kingdom This serves to comfort and cheer the soul what ever God doth for any he never gives a greater pledge of his love then to sanctifie them God gives holinesse for the onely great standing Evidence of his Favour Holinesse is the Evidence of thy Election Calling Justification Adoption Justification and Adoption have Comforts which Sanctification hath not yet this cleares them to me The work of Sanctification is imperfect in all the servants of God while they are in this world Rom. 6. per totum the seventh and eighth Chapters 2 Cor. 5. 11. Ephes. 4. 18. to the end First Those gracious Qualities which the Spirit of God hath wrought in the soul are but feeble and initial 1 Cor. 13. We know love and beleeve but in part Secondly There remains still a body of corruption a depravation of all the faculties of the soul which consists in aversnesse from that which is good and pronenesse to all evil therefore Sanctification consists in mortifying those reliques of corruption Col. 3. 5. Rom. 7. lat end 1 Iohn 1. lat end Thirdly While Gods people are in this world no good things they do are perfect yea they are all tainted with corruption Isa 64. 10. The Lord could as easily make Sanctification perfect as Justification He hates the stain of sinne as well as the guilt and the Law requires a pure nature as well as pure life but God suffers the work of Sanctification to be imperfect and these reliquiae vetustatis as Augustine cals them remain 1. Because he would have his people fetch their life from the intercourse they have with Christ the exercise of faith and delights that his people should stand in need of Christ if Sanctification were perfect
this life thus 1. In the letter of it though delivered by never so faithful Ministers it is able to do nothing therefore these things are often preacht and men not bettered when the Spirit accompanies it it is efficacious See Rom. 1. 16. Phil. 2. 15. The preaching of the Gospel is 1. The only means of the revelation of this life 2 Tim. 1. 10. 2. It is the divine seed whereby the Lord conveys this life and begets it in the soul 1 Pet. 1. 23 25. This work of the Gospel consists in five things 1. The preaching of the Gospel opens the understanding makes us see the misery of sinne and the excellency of Christ and the things of God Ephes. 1. 2 Cor. 5. 2. It makes the will and affections to relish Christs sweetnesse perswades the heart to chuse him and consent that God and they may be united in a league of friendship this is the work of faith 3. Turns the heart from all evil wayes it walkt in men are said to be pull'd out of the power of Satan 4. Creates in the soul and stampes in it all the Graces wherein Gods Image stands 5. By administration of the promise and instruction fortifieth the soul and makes one do all things belonging to this life Arminians give too much to man and too little to Christ. Antinomians and Familists give too much to Christ and too little to man They give so much to Christ that they abolish the nature and act of the creature they say Christ must do all and we can do nothing They dream of an insensible motion without us place Grace in a naked apprehension there must be not onely a work for us but in and by us The work of the Father is in heaven of Christ on the Crosse of the Spirit within us Col. 1. 29. They deny not onely mans work but the Spirits work in us Rom. 16. 20. Secondly They say Christ must do all and we after we have received Grace nothing there is not a coordination but subordination of our wils to his grace though at our first conversion we were meerly passive yet when Grace is received we may act motion follows life Col. 2. 4. The Familists deny all inherent graces in the Saints because it is said we do not live but Christ he they say beleeves repents as if we lived not at all and he is formally all habits and graces but the Scripture grants habits and graces to be in a man Iohn 19. 28. Matth. 12. 33. 1 Iohn 3. 9. 2. The sins of our actions then could not be charged on our selves but on the faint operations of his grace Marks and Evidences of spiritual life First Every creature which lives values life A living dog is better then a dead Lion If one values his life he will prize 1. Pabulum vitae Attend on the Ordinances the Word Sacrament Prayer Communion of Saints 1 Peter 2. As new born Babes Cantic 4. latter end 2. He will avoid what is destructive to life Beware of grieving and quenching the Spirit Ephes. 4. 30. 1 Thess. 5. 19. by neglecting the motions of it or noysome lusts 3. He will endure any evil and part with any good rather then part with life Secondly This new life brings alwayes a great change along with it when a childe quickens in the mothers womb she findes a great change so when Paul and Manass●h and the blinde man Ioh. 9. were converted unlesse they were religiously trained up as Timothy from their youth Thirdly Sense a spiritual sense in the soul senses exercised savour the things of God Rom. 8. Fourthly Every life hath some kinde of motions and actions that are sutable to it as in this spiritual life 1. That inward work of adhering to Christ as their chief portion the fountain of all their good a true faith 2. Repentance labouring to cast out corruption and to turn to God 3. The Spirit of Prayer You have received the Spirit of Adoption whereby you cry Abba Father Our Law judgeth a childe alive that was heard to cry 4. The minding of heavenly things Col. 3. 1 2. 5. Life hath a sympathy a fellowship with those that are members of the body the same quickning Spirit lives in all Christians weep with them that weep and rejoyce with them that rejoyce 6. If we be regenerated we do that to God which children do to their Father 1. Honour him and stand in awe of him 2. Rely on him as the fountain of all our good as children do on their parent● for a supply of all their wants 3. Are obedient to him Motives to live to God 1. It is a dishonour to God when the creature seeks to exalt self that which I make my utmost end I make my God Phil. 3. 10. 2. Consider the self-denial of Christ he came from heaven to do the will of him that sent him Rom. 15. 3. Means of spiritual life 1. Labour to get thy miserable condition by nature set close upon thy spirit how thou art dead in sin 2. Study to get into Christ 1 Iohn 5. 12. onely he can quicken he is never got but by Faith Luke 15. the Prodigal is the pattern of a converted soul. See vers 31. CHAP. XIV The Sanctification of the whole Man Soul and Body VVE should live more to the soul then body Psal. 119. 175. 141. 8. 142. 7. 143. 11. 1. The soul is distinct from the body as the operations of it shew 2. It lives when the body dies Eccles. 12. 7. Mat. 10. 28. 3. It is far better then the body 4. The concernments of the soul are higher then those of the body 1 Pet. 3. beginning 5. The sicknesse and death of the soul is worse then that of the body 1 King 8. 38. Ioh. 8. 21 23. 6. We never live to any purpose but when the soul lives 1. Of the faculties of the soul. Grace spreads it self through all the faculties A faculty is an ability of producing some effect or operation agreeable to our nature and for our good implanted in man by nature There are three reasonable faculties proper to men alone 1. The Understanding by which we know truth 2. The Will by which we desire good 3. Conscience a power of ordering our selves to and with God I. Of the Understanding It is that power which God hath given a man to acquaint himself with the Being Properties and Differences of all things by discourse Or it is that faculty by which we are able to inform our selves of the general natures of things Sense alone perceives particulars the understanding abstracts things and forms in it self the general natures of things I see this or that man but understand the nature of man The Object of it is omne intelligibile Truth in general in the utmost latitude and universality of it is the object of the Understanding good in the general in the universality of its nature is the object of the Will therefore till
Pet. 1. 12. Iam. 2. 19. 3. Sensible 1. Because they have their operation chiefly on the sensitive part of man manifest themselves there and forcible because they move with force 1 Chron. 29. 3. 4. According to the object propounded Affections are but the shaping or forming of the will in several motions according to the object presented Their use is to shunne evil and pursue good The manner of doing is by certain stirrings motions workings of the bloud and spirit about the heart They are commonly called passions Iam. 5. 17. because they imprint some passion on the body by working In the infancy they are affections in the youth and age passions when they over-rule reason perturbations Passions abstractively considered are neither good nor bad morally but as they are determined to this or that object as they are in man the subject who is wholly flesh and dead in sinne his affections and passions are defiled with sinne as well as the understanding and the will The Papists though they say the superiour faculties of the soul like the upper region are altogether clear and undefiled yet the inferiour faculty viz. the sensitive appetite in which are lodged the affections they say is vitiated with sin Their sinfulnesse appears 1. In that they are not carried to the right object the object of love was God and his Law of hatred sin now these passions are clean contrary 2. If to the right object then inordinately they cannot joy but overjoy love but overlove Ephes. 4. 26. 3. There is a contrariety in them this is implied in that Phil. 4. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be careful for nothing the word implies a tearing and torturing of the heart 4. In their distraction this differeth from contrariety that is when one passion sets against another this when one passion is too inordinately set upon his object then the other cannot do his proper office because the heart is finite the Apostle would have us hear and pray without wrath since the heart hereby is so distracted that it cannot attend 5. The importunity of passion Ahab fell sick because of Naboths vineyard Quicquid volunt valde volunt 6. Their tyranny over the will and understanding Iam. 1. 14. 7. Their incertainty and inconstancy as Ammon loathed Tamar after he had his desire more then he liked her before To be above passions will be our happinesse in heaven rightly to order them should be our great care here First The Scripture bids us not cast off but rectifie our affections Colos. 3. 1. 1 Iohn 2. 15. Secondly They are natural faculties planted in the soul by God himself and so in themselves good Christ which was free from all sinne was not without affections He was angry did grieve rejoyce Now we must not dare to abuse any power which he did sanctifie Thirdly Affections rightly ordered much further and help our course in godlinesse If we joy not in prayer delight not in obedience the work is tedious but good affections make the work delightsom they are spurs in our sides which whosoever wanteth goes on but in a dull and slow pace Fourthly Manifold are the evils which come from disordered passions 1. They blinde the judgment Perit omne judicium cum res transit ad affectum Impedit ira animum ne possit cernere verum If the Spectacles be of green or red glasse all things through them seem to be of the same colour 2. They seduce the will for the will sometimes is guided by reason it is often also carried away by passion 3. They fill the heart with inward unquietnesse they interrupt prayers 1 Pet. 5. 7. and hinder the working of the Word 1 Pet. 2. 1. They disturb reason and hinder a man in Meditation whereby his heart is quieted When fear anger jealousie begin to stirre then is judgement disturbed and hindered Again these passions fight one with another fear with anger and anger with fear joy with sadnesse and sadnesse with joy one passion carries a man one way and another another way Passion can never be satisfied 4. They often when they are excessive hurt the body some by immoderate joy have ended their dayes because the spirits slie out too suddenly to the object and so leave the heart destitute of them more by grief and fear because the bloud and spirits so hastily slie to the heart that they choak it anger hath stopt many a mans breath envy is the rottennesse of the bones The regenerate man is renewed in all his passions as we may see in Davids love Psal. 119. 9. in his hatred Psal. 130. 22. in his desire Psal. 35. 9. in his fear Psal. 119. 120. in his delight Psal. 119. 6. Psal. 16. 2. in his sorrow Psal. 119. 138. Some make zeal to be sanctified anger There are in repentance melting affections sorrow for sinne Zech. 12. 10 11 12. shame before God Ezra 9. 6. Lam. 3. 29. 3. sear of offending him Prov. 28. 14. Marks of sanctified affections 1. They must be universal carried to all good and against all evil Some love to hear the Word some to reade some to pray but they are not as carefull to subdue passion they will be angry pettish discontented they will give way to doubting The affections are regular when they are set on their right objects inlarged when they take in the whole object He that loves God loves whole God loves him not only as gracious merciful but as just holy faithful he that hates sin hates all the evil of it Ephes. 3. 18. 2. They are subjected to grace in the rise measure and continuance of them they must rise and fall ebbe and slow at the command of faith according to the nature of the thing presented Faith will make us affect things according as the Lord doth in cases which concern his glory affections must be raised up to the highest pitch Adams passions were subject to reason 1. In their rise they were commanded by him 2. In their measure 3. In their continuance 3. Sanctified affections do constantly and most immediately discover themselves in Meditations projects inward desires and indeavours of the soul if thy thoughts of sin be pleasant thou hatest it not 4. The true metal of Sanctification is sincerity and the edge of it zeal in every faculty Motives to get the affections sanctified 1. All Christians are really as their affections are and God judgeth of them by their affections A man that is carnal in his affections is judged a carnal man and one who hath his affection set on heavenly things is judged a spiritual man I am my Beloveds and my Beloved is mine he doth not say I am Christs and Christ is mine 2. Without sanctified affections one is no Christian at all Deut. 5. 29. 3. Most of the Gospel promises are made to the affections Mat. 4. 6. and so to love fear delight and confidence in God 4. Holy and enlarged affections from God are one
The activity of grace appears chiefly in our love and desire for the good things of Christians are not yet enjoyed and therefore is this affection so much exercised 1. In general the work of grace is to renew that which our original corruption spoiled in the affections or to repair the image of God once stamped there It takes off the desire from the creature and turns it to the proper object of it in a due order method and measure 2. Particularly 1. The true object of a sanctified desire primary and ultimate is God Christ and all the graces of his Spirit and the means of Grace the Ordinances and in a due place moderately the creature and what ever is helpful to me We ought to desire 1. For our selves only good things Prov. 11. 23. God chiefly Psal. 42. 2. Revel 3. 2. Christs righteousnesse and the vertues of the Spirit the means and helps to grace as the sincere milk of the Word and the company of the Saints and the like helps as Paul desired to see Timothy places and occasions of doing good if we finde our selves furnished for them 1 Tim. 3. 1. Natural benefits and good things health liberty We ought to desire for others their conversion Rom. 10. 1. and growth in grace and salvation the welfare of the Church Secondly The act or measure of it carried to its proper object God and Christ with greatest intensnesse called hungring and thirsting As the Hart pants after the water brook and moderately carried to the things of this world grace is a spur to our desires for spiritual things and a bridle to them for earthly We must 1. Desire spiritual things more then temporal Mat. 5. 6. 2. Among spiritual things those most which may do us most good as Paul bids us covet spiritual gifts chiefly that we may prophesie 3. The publick good more then our own There is no evidence of grace so constantly to be found in a gracious heart as the holinesse of their desires Nehem. 1. 11. The desire of our hearts is toward thee Rom. 7. Cant. 1. Draw me and we will run after thee Reasons 1. Because their good is absent from them the heart which cannot say I pray and believe can say I desire to pray and believe The true desire of grace is grace it self in a degree 2. The Saints of God have ever pleaded their desires as an evidence of their interest in God when they could plead nothing else My soul longeth for thy salvation Marks to try whether our desires after these things be sanctified First Then thou desirest all that is good Christ Grace the Ordinances the Gospel holds out Christ to be good to me therefore one may somewhat desire this and not be sanctified I must desire him to be my King and Lord as well as my Saviour Secondly It hath five Properties 1. It is the greatest and strongest the soul hath of rational not sensitive desires therefore set out by hunger and thirst panting after God Whom have I in heaven but thee and in the whole earth in comparison of thee Desires put out on Election and counsel are put out most on these things 2. It is accompanied with sadnesse and languishing if it attain not the thing desired Hope deferred makes the heart sick 3. They would enjoy the object presently Balaam could desire it at later end If I desire a thing as an end I cannot but desire it presently 4. These desires are constant till the thing be fully enjoyed Ioh. 4. 14. 5. Such desires are operative otherwise if they put us not on the use of means they are not right Such an one will be at any cost for exalting adorning that thing What is a mans happinesse end glory he desires to make as excellent as may be Who ever truly desires spiritual things desires them as their glory they will give all for the glory of Christ and the beauty of the Gospel How to know whether our desires after the things of this life be sanctified try that by two things 1. In the point of subordination as they may stand with subordination to the great things he desires As farre as these outward things may be usefull and helpfull to the things of Gods Kingdome One thing have I desired saith David as an end Ze●h 7. 5 6. Whether you eat or drinke or what ever you doe and so desire do all to the glory of God 2. You shall try it by the moderation of your spirit If you desire these things as inferiour goods 1 Cor. 7. 27. Means or Directions to keep your desires strong and vigorous after spiritual things and to moderate your desires after earthly things Of the first 1. Labour for a thorow knowledge and acquaintance with these spiritual things knowledge of a thing stirs up the appetite Two men did vehemently desire a spiritual communion with God Moses and Paul and none knew more of Christ then these Study the things of God of Christ and Gods Kingdom not only a speculative knowledge but a practical taste of God rest not till thou hast some experience of this supernatural object Other truths quickly ●loy when one understands an Art or Tongue the knowledge of spiritual things quickens the appetite and enlargeth the soul. 2. Labour to be acquainted with thine own emptinesse how empty of all grace and full of corruptions thou art Tecum habita labour to get a sense of these things what a great evil an hard heart is and what it is to be deprived of God so the Lord counsels the Angel of Laodicea 3. Hope of attaining is the whetstone of desiring study those promises He will satisfie the hungry soul and those that thirst after the Well of life and open thy mouth and he will fill it Directions how our desires after the things of this life may be sanctified In general The sanctification of these desires stands in their moderation we must have a care that they be not inordinate First Labour in general for a contented minde Heb. 13. Be without covetousnesse Get a contented spirit which may stand in an indifferency to these things 3. Rules 1. Let thy desires be fully let out after the things of heaven this will moderate them to all other things because they will satisfie them 2. Labour to be rightly informed what all these worldly things are and thy soul will be moderate toward them know six things of them 1. None of all the things of this life have any good in them to us further then they are useful There is a necessity of food and raiment to uphold our natural being but otherwise all these things are but useful in a subordinate way not good further then of good use 2. They are of no use at all to the saving of thy soul I am going to a place said the Martyr where money is nothing worth the thing I am to look after is the saving of my soul. 3. They are all by Gods own appointment most
inconstant and fading things Riches take themselves to their wings they are but flowers these three considerations limit the good in them 4. They are all vain empty not simply but entitatis debitae a Well is empty though it be full of Air if it have no water in it Salomon challenged all the world to finde more in learning pleasures then he did What can the man do after the King 5. They are vexation of spirit either in getting keeping fear of losing or real parting 6. They beguile bewitch and make us worse 1. Blinde the judgement with erroneous principles that they are prone to think amisse of God and his wayes 2. Draw the heart from God he who is the great disposer of all earthly blessings out of his fatherly love will measure out of all these mercies the best portion unto thee therefore be careful for nothing but let your request be made known to God The affection opposite to Desire is Flight This was Moses his fault Exod. 4. 13. It is a stirring of the soul to get away from the evil before it come too near and have surprized a man We have an example of it in him that owing a man money knowing or thinking that he will come to such a place findes a kinde of lothnesse to meet with him and is moved to go out of the way or absent himself that he may not meet with him It must be exercised on such things as are fit to be loathed and shunned 1. Such things as may be hurtful to us 1. All manner of sinful actions Luk. 12. 1 15. 2 Tim. 2. 22 23. 1 Pet. 3. 11. 1 Cor. 10. 14. 6. 18. 2. All manner of occasions and sollicitations to sin 1 Ioh. 5. Babes keep your selves from Idols Prov. 5. 8. Ioseph ●●ed from his mistresse 3. The familiarity and friendly society of sinners chiefly such as would and do sollicite us to sin Prov. 1. 15. 4. 14. Away from me you wicked saith David 2 Tim. 3. 5. 2 Thess. 3. 6. Rom. 16. 17. 4. Natural evils when we are not put upon them by necessity of our calling as poverty disgrace danger of limb or life liberty and the like and such things as may be hurtful to others 5. Things unprofitable vain and uselesse Tit. 3. 9. For measure of working We ought 1. To loathe and shun spiritual evils more then temporal sin then danger 2. To loathe publick evils and shun them more then private the hurt of the Commonwealth or Church more then our own losse or danger as David did when he went against Goliah 3. To shun those natural evils most which most hinder goodnesse vertue and the discharge of the duties of our place as the losse of life more then of goods of good name more then of liberty CHAP. XXIII III. Ioy and Sorrow THe next pair of affections are Joy and Sorrow The Philosophers make these two the ground of all our vertues and endeavours Of Joy Four things are to be considered in Joy 1. The nature of the affection 2. What the Image of God was in this in our primitive condition 3. The corruption of it in our Apostate condition 4. What the Spirit of God doth to the repairing of this in our conversion 1. What the nature of Joy is Joy is acquiescentia cordis in bono sibi congruenti the acquiescence of the will in the presence of a sutable good It is either 1. Bodily then the content the soul takes in it is called voluptas pleasure 2. Spiritual then the content the soul takes in it is called gaudium joy These things are required to make up this affection 1. It must be a sutable good which gives satisfaction 2. Proper one must have an interest in and a title to it 3. Present the desire accomplished is the joy of the soul. Secondly Mans joy in his primitive condition Then it was our happinesse because in that pure estate man was not only freed from all evils which might molest him but was compast about with all good sutable to him He enjoyed God himself and all things which might conduce to his happinesse 2. The holinesse of this Joy The Image of God in this affection stood in the sutablenesse and proportionablenesse which was betwixt all the good which man enjoyed and this affection The rectitude of any faculty is when the faculty and the object meet God is the only absolute adequate and supream good therefore the greatest joy of the soul of man was placed in the enjoying of God he found a sutable joy in all other good things yet so that he did above them all prize God and by them all did rise up more and more to the service of God 3. Mans joy in his fallen condition The Object of it 1. Privatively is not in God 2. Positively It is much placed 1. In the deeds of darknesse Rom. 1. 32. They take pleasure in unrighteousnesse 2. In all things wherein bruit beasts and man do agree 3. In meer fictions Chymaeraes fancies and imaginations 4. The comforts that the rest of the creatures may give the soul it is irregular in all The properties of sinful joy 1. It is unlimited we place all our happinesse in these things Psal. 49. 18. The rich glutton Soul take thy ease 2. Vain an immortall soul cannot finde reall satisfaction in an imaginary object 3. Various the soul rests not in any one of these comforts but slits from one thing to another Thirdly The woful effects of these depraved joyes 1. They wholly keep the soul from seeking or accepting the only good which may give rest to it all Ordinances the motions of the Spirit the thoughts of God and goodnesse are in vain proposed to the soul Eccles. 11. 9. Like the Ivy that seems to adorn the tree but eats away all the sap of it 2. They leave a sting and venome of sorrow after Prov. 14. 43. Iob 20. 5. the end of that joy is sorrow Fourthly What is the work of Grace in sanctifying this affection Although Gods people actually enjoy not the benefits of this affection as of some others because of the weaknesse of Grace yet a great part of our happinesse lies in this The Spirit of God turns it from the corrupt to the right object and helps the affection to act in the measure and order upon that object as it deserves He turns the stream from rejoycing in those sensual and imaginary things 1 Cor. 1. 13. it rejoyceth not in iniquity 2. Is turned to God in Christ hath interest and communion with Christ. We are the circumcision who rejoyce in Christ Iesus I will go to God saith David who is my exceeding joy See Psal. 104. lat end He is the full object of a regenerate soul. God in Christ is not here to be enjoyed immediately but in and by the Ordinances the more of God is in them the more joy doth the soul take There are divers Commandments to rejoyce in
looks on the good it waits for as not to be obtained by its own strength Secondly The act of what the soul doth in reference to this object an expectation this the Scripture expresseth by waiting patient abiding All hope is either Humane the expectation which the rational creature hath from some second cause this the Scripture cals A vain hope A Spiders-web A lie Divine the expectation of the will to receive good from the hand of God The ground of such a hope must be the Word of God by which alone his power and truth stand ingaged to us and to hope for any thing but from them is vain So we must either have a general or particular promise of the thing hoped for or else it is idle to expect it Therefore David repeateth it more then once that he hoped in Gods Word Psal. 130. 5. Psal. 119. 49 81. So Abraham had Gods promise for a son in his old-age before he expected one The measure of Hope It must be strong and firm without wavering so as to hold out even against hope all likelihood The continuance of it It must hold out against all delaying and procrastination 1 Pet. 1. 13. this is waiting on God which is commanded 2. The Image of God in this affection There will be no use of hope at all in glory there was little use of it in the primitive condition of man The object of his happinesse was present and enjoyed God his favour and communion and all things in him but this did not continue 3. The corruption of this affection 1. The corrupt object of our hope when we are depraved 2. The woful effects and cursed fruits it brings forth First The object that which is the only excellent object of it a wicked man hath wholly lost God his Image favour grace Ephes. 2. 14. 1. 11. That object though sutable is not lookt on by him under that notion 2. There is no declaration of the will of God to reach out this unto him Although there be no real hope yet there is a bastardly hope which the Scripture cals presumption the hope and vain expectation of the wicked will be cut off it is an ungrounded confidence whereby a sinner without warrant will promise himself all good Secondly The woefull effects which this false hope produceth in the soul of man 1. It is a great means to draw them violently into the wayes of sinne Young men are therefore easily beguiled because they are full of hope 2. This corrupt hope wraps up the soul in a cursed carnall security Iob 18. 13 14. 3. When this is cut down it usually ends in bitter despair because the confidence it had to uphold it self was a meer sigment 4. The Sanctification of this affection Because the greatest part of a Christians good is unseen and unenjoyed in this world therefore hope must have a great influence on a believers life to comfort stay and refresh him Rom. 8. 24 25. The work of Gods Spirit in sanctifying this affection 1. In turning it to its right object and upon a right ground 2. In producing the right proper and natural effects of it hope thus rectified is the establishing of the soul in all storms It looks at two things the good to be enjoyed and the means whereby it is to be enjoyed God in Christ and the Spirit is the principal object that hope closeth with Ier. 14. 8. Rom. 15. 13. Col. 1. 27. 1 Pet. 1. 21. 2. The lesse principal are the promises concerning this and a better life Heb. 11. or rather the things promised Secondly The means the good will of God the Intercession of Christ the Ordinances The ground of hope is faith in the Word the act of hope is expectation the putting out of the rational appetite in the expectation of a future good which is difficult not a vain uncertain expectation but a sure expectation of it the object is sure if I believe it this makes the soul possesse it self in patience Rom. 8. 24 25. Heb. 11. 1. Faith looks at the truth as present Hope closeth with it as future There is a Certainty 1. Of the object when the thing I believe or hope for is infallible 2. Of the subject when the thing is made sure to my soul. Two things are contrary to Hope Despair and Presumption Despair is a falling of the heart from the future good conceived as inattainable at least to the parties self It is a soul racking it self with what is and what will be See Iob 13. 14. We must despair of attaining any good thing by our own industry without Gods special help We must not despair of attaining any good thing by Gods gracious blessing favour and mercy viz. power against sinne pardon of it deliverance out of crosses and life eternal It is not a bare absence or privation of hope but a passion contrary to hope as love to hatred Francis Spira in the despair of his soul cried out Verily desperation is hell it self he said My sin is greater then Gods mercy Presumption which is the excesse of hope the Papists expect heaven as a reward of their obedience It is a taking of things asore-hand or a looking for that God hath not promised What the proper use of this holy affection is to Gods people whilst they live in this world 1. To be a stay and safeguard to their souls in all times of difficulty Heb. 6. The Anchor of the soul. 2. It is while we are in this world all the possession we have of the other world Rom. 6. We are saved by hope Marks of a sanctified Hope 1. The holy Scripture breeds it Rom. 15. 4. Col. 1. 23. it discovers thy desperate condition in thy self Lam. 3. 24 25. 2. It is grounded upon true faith in Christ Rom. 15. 13. Col. 1. 27. 3. Such a one minds heavenly things more then earthly Heb. 11. 15 16. 4. He that hath true hope to go to heaven will be careful to prepare and fit himself for it 2 Cor. 5. 9. 1 Ioh. 3. 3. Psal. 37. 3. because the soul expects good from God it labours to walk acceptably with him 5. It carries the soul chearfully on in the use of all those means which the Lord hath appointed for attaining that end Heb. 10. 23. 6. The use of it principally appears when storms and difficulties arise the real use of it is to stay the soul when troubles come it quiets the soul and makes it patient and content under pressures 1 Tim. 4. 10. Motives to Hope First There is a necessity of it we cannot live without it it is an expectation of an absent good we shall be dasht on the rocks continually if we have not this Anchor of our lives Prov. 10. 28. 1 Pet. 1. 13. Secondly When this grace is wrought in the soul it will keep it in a quiet calm condition Thirdly It will be a great help to Holinesse He that hath this
Lord and his glory It is nothing but heat or warmth whence zealous men in Scripture are said to burn in the Spirit but it is a spiritual heat wrought in the heart of man by the holy Ghost improving the good affections of Love Joy Hope for the best furtherance of Gods glory using the contrary affections of hatred anger grief against Gods enemies Dr Holland when he went any journey was used to say to the Fellows Commendo vos dilectioni Dei odio Papatus All the servants of God should be zealous for the Lord Revel 3. 19. This is required in the Minister Act. 18. 25. the hearer Luke 24. 32. of them that would pray with comfort Iam. 5. 16. in every part of the service that we do unto God Rom. 12. 11. it is in general required of us in our whole profession and practice of Religion Tit. 2. 14. Iehosaphat is praised for it 2 Chron. 17. 6. See Chap. 31. 25. 2 King 23. 25. Reasons God is a Spirit a pure act with whom we have to do therefore we must be spiritual he would not accept the first-born of an Asse because it is a dull sloathful creature Secondly It is conversant in matters of Religion which are of highest concernment in the world all the heart soul and strength are to be laid out about them Thirdly This is an excellent grace 1. Because it is the best evidence of a Christian the Spirit of God works like fire 2. The greatest means to draw out the soul to service for Christ Isa. 6. when he was toucht with a coal from the Altar then he cries Send me 3. It will save a sinking Church Numb 25. 10. Ier. 5. 1. 4. It is the glory and beauty of all our services as varnish adds a lustre to all other colours makes them amiable Two Cautions 1. It must be guided by knowledge Rom. 10. 2. Zeal without knowledge is like mettle in a blinde horse Knowledge without zeal is like a precious stone in an old Toads head 2. Mannaged by wisdom we must not go beyond our calling Signs of holy Zeal 1. One is impatient for injuries done against God so Moses Exod. 32. 2. It is ready to be imployed in any service which may advance God as Isa. 6. 3. It makes a man do it couragiously a zealous man is bold for God Shall such a man as I flee said Nehemiah 4. He will spare no cost in the cause of God Cant. 8. 7. 5. What ever it hath done for God it never thinks it hath done enough Phil. 3. 12 13. 6. This heavenly fire shines abroad but burns most within 7. Makes one take pleasure in the zeal and forwardnesse of others I would all the Lords people were Prophets CHAP. XXVII Of the Sensitive Appetite THus I have done with sanctifying the intellectual Nature the Understanding Will Conscience Memory and the Affections Now I come to Appet●tus Sensitivus The Sensitive Appetite It is an inclination of the soul to imbrace those things which are good or evil according to the judgement of the sense There are five external Senses Seeing Hearing Smelling Touching and Tasting and three internal the Memory Fancy Common Sense In these men and bruit beasts are alike In man this sensitive appetite differs from that in a bruit beast in three things 1. That in a bruit beast is all the soul which he hath but in man it is not a distinct soul but an inferiour faculty of the reasonable soul. 2. The motions of a bruit beast according to sense are not guided by reason 3. In a bruit beast his sense is all the guide he hath by which he is to make his judgment mans rule is reason guided by God All the motions of the will which the soul takes upon the representation of the senses is the bruit part 1. The rectitude of it before the fall or the image of God in it It was wholly at the command of reason is was to be a servant to the soul only to bring intelligence and represent all the things which were done abroad A man in his pure condition had not a desire to a thing till reason had judged of it Since mans fall much of our depravation lies in this low brutish faculty the Scripture saith Every man is a beast The Apostle ten times in the sixth seventh and eigth of the Romans cals concupiscence sin Some think it is but the depravation of this he there means Man falling off from God and making him his portion turns to the creature and makes it his portion 1. The power which this brutish part hath over reason 2. Over the will and affections 3. The abominable fruits which slow from both these Of the first Whereas reason should impartially take all things without prejudice and weigh them in the right balance it puts out the eye or deludes it 2. It takes up the will before any thing be propounded to reason it often ravisheth the will which the Scripture expresseth by madnesse 3. The woful fruits of this Hereupon man who was made after Gods Image and most like him becomes a carnal earthly brutish man the spiritual part is drowned Iude v. 10. His joy is in his musick wine horse garden cloaths Though he have an intellectual nature yet his reason invents wayes and means to follow some sensual good and to avoid some sensual ev●l and in this case are all natural men Corruption first came into the soul by the sensual appetite Eve by seeing the fruit hearing the Serpent touching and tasting the fruit and by imagining what good might come to her by it was deceived Scholars and wise men when corrupt are often taken up more with the things which work upon the senses then with what works upon reason Many among the Arabians are learned in the Tongues and Mathematicks yet their happinesse and all their Religion from Mahomet is what pleaseth the sense Popery is a meer pompo●s sensual Religion Men often do vertuous things that they may have the reward of vertue and hate punishments because they are sensual The work of Gods grace in sanctifying this part The proper office of it was to present the intellectual nature with what of God may be found in the creature The Sanctification of it stands in two things 1. God by his grace spoils the relish of that good which is presented to us by the senses it discovers to the soul better good to feed upon the taste of spiritual things the consolations of Christ. 2. The soul is not much troubled at the evil which the senses present sicknesse reproach Though grace do not so far subdue the appetite that it shall not be medling yet it stayes the will In a gracious man the dictates of reason and conscience conclude the businesse as in Samsons love of an uncircumcised Philistim if grace had prevailed that had soon ceased There is a great deal of wickednesse in the sensual appetite it is impetuous since the fall 2.
liberality prodigality in the excesse or covetousnesse in the defect be worse Covetousnesse is the worse because 1. It is the root of all evil Iudas sold Christ for it 2. The covetous doth good to none nor to himself neither the prodigal doth good to many 3. Age is some remedy as against other vices so against prodigality covetousnesse then grows young II. Humility It is that grace whereby a man doth make little or no account of himself Iob 42. 6. Ezek. 20. 43. Or It is a grace of the Spirit of God whereby a man out of true knowledge of himself his state and condition accounts himself vile and walks accordingly before God and man Every good man is humble Prov. 30. 2. Luke 18. 13. Poverty of spirit is the first step to heaven Matth. 5. 3. High in worth and humble in heart saith Nazianzen of Athanasius All the Stars the higher they are the lesser they appear so must all the Saints Humilitas virtus Christianorum prima secunda tertia Aug. Augustin being asked What vertue was most to be desired he answered Humility being asked What was the second he answered Humility Which was the next he said still Humility Primislaus the first King of Bohemia kept his shoes by him to put him in minde from whence he rose We reade of Agathocles that King which was at first but a Potters son and after advanced to the Kingdom of Sicily that he would together with his plate of gold and silver have earthen vessels on his cup-board to put him in minde of that condition he was in before Iacob saith I am lesse then the least of all thy mercies Abraham cals himself dust and ashes David terms himself a dead dogg 1 Sam. 2. 4. a flea that is a poor mean base worthlesse person Paul terms himself The least of all Sainis and the chiefest of sinners 1 Tim. 1. 15. Though I be nothing saith he and I am the least of all the Apostles not worthy to be called an Apostle God often cals for this grace Ephes. 4. 2. Col. 3. 12. Phil. 2. 3. God teacheth the humble exalts the humble He hath two thrones one in the highest heavens and the other in the lowest heart Humility hath the promise both of temporal benefits Prov. 22. 4. and Spiritual Prov. 3. 34. Grace Prov. 11. 4. Wisdome Prov. 22. 4. the fear of God and finally Blessednesse Matth. 5. 3. Reasons 1. Because a godly man knows Gods excellency the foulnesse of sin and his own littlenesse and sinfulnesse therefore must needs be mean in his own eyes Iob 42. 6. Isa. 6. 6. Secondly There is no way to exalt mercy but by abasing self it will not be prized unlesse self be abased Deut. 26. 5. The whole have no need of the Physician but the sick Marks of this excellent grace 1. We may judge of it by the efficient cause the Spirit of God must be the worker of it God when he converts a man shews him his own misery and the excellency of Christ. 2. The effects of humility It discovers it self in its carriage to God upon his dispensations toward us if his waies be waies of mercy and enlargement it admires free-grace in them all 1 Chron. 29. lat end that I should enjoy such blessings if God send afflictions he acquits his severity and saith The Lord is righteous and submits to him 3. Such a one rejects himself as vile and abominable in the sight of God Paul after his conversion saith I know that in me dwels no good 4. Such a one willingly imbraceth every service belonging to his relation Christ washed his Disciples feet Queen Bathsheba taught Salomon her son 5. He is far from censuring and undervaluing of others Be not many masters Iam. 3. 1. The whole design of the Gospel lies in two things 1. To make the creature nothing 2. To make the grace of God in Christ all things Quickning Motives to provoke us to get Humility Meditate on three things 1. The absolute necessity of it 2. The difficulty of it 3. The excellency of it 1. The necessity of it God takes no pleasure in men till he hath brought them into such a frame Humility is necessary also for every condition of life if God send crosses thou wilt never bear them till he have humbled thy spirit 2. The difficulty of it It is hard to get the heart into such a temper all that is in thee is against thee The Grecians and Philosophers thought humilitie was not a vertue but a despondency of Spirit all thy corruptions are against it thy excellencies wit authority thy graces against it grace will be against grace thou wilt be proud because thou art humble 3. The excellency of it Thy heart shall be Gods Temple a broken Spirit is in stead of all Sacrifices it will nourish all graces in thee a humble man seems to creep but he flies to heaven saith Parisiensis not one administration of God will passe without doing thee good if thou hast an humble spirit Means to get it First See thy pride all sin is resolved into pride Ier. 13. 17. Secondly Meditate 1. Of the basenesse of thy beginning and original thou comest immediately from the slime of thy parents loins and mediately from the dust of the earth and just nothing 2. Consider thy extream sinfulnesse How little do we know in comparison of what we should know how little do we love serve and obey God in comparison of that our duty bindeth us What a deal of atheism blindenesse vanity is in our mindes How forgetful are we of God and our later end how foolish and sensual 3. We must put our selves in minde of our death and later end we must shortly rot putrifie stink and crawl with worms we must return to the dust lie down in the grave must be without wealth honour beauty strength wit learning knowledge celebrate thy own funerals 4. Consider of the torments and wofull condition which we have deserved to which we must go if we be not humbled in the sense of our having deserved it we cannot escape Thirdly Adde to these meditations hearty prayers to God to humble you to convinte you of sinne to open your eyes to know your selves and him The knowledge of Gods holinesse excellency majesty glory will also abase us Isa. 6. 5. Iob 42. 5 6. The worst pride is an overweening of our selves because of our graces Consider 1. That this holinesse is received from God 1 Cor. 4. 17. 2. It is imperfect 3. It is in its own nature defective being a creature Grace is depositum as well as donum a talent or pledge that the Lord hath left with you as well as a gift Iustice. Iustinian defines it thus Est constans perpetua voluntas suum cuique tribuendi he begins his Institutions so D. Ames de consc lib. 5. cap. 2. saith it is a vertue by which we are inclined to perform all due offices
wisdome he doth nothing rashly but knows how to order all things for the best his will is a wise and holy will the rule it self Good is the word of the Lord said Hezekiah when ill tidings came 3. His will is good to thee All the wayes of God are mercy and truth he aims at the good of his even when he corrects them 4. Consider that this God which hath laid this upon thee affords thee all the good things thou enjoyest thou hast one crosse and perhaps ten thousand mercies all these come from the same hand Iob 2. 10. 5. This God beares with thee every day else what will become of thee II. From our selves We have reason to stoop to Gods will even when he pleaseth to correct us because 1. We have provoked him by our sins to strike us and have deserved farre more evil then we suffer 2. We cannot ease or any way deliver our selves from miserie by murmuring This is 1. A worthy service a childe that quietly bears the stripes which his Father sometimes laies upon him pleaseth his Father as much as he that readily goes about the things he is bidden Christ himself learnt obedience by sufferings The principall part of his merit stood in that he submitted himself to be made of no reputation and became obedient even to the death of the Crosse. 2. It is a most profitable dutie turning evil into good and making evils easie to bear and procuring a safe and speedy issue out of evil 3. From the grace of patience it self 1. The necessity of it thou canst not live without it we cannot perform a duty mortifie a lust bring forth fruit without patience the good ground brings forth fruit with patience 2. The excellency of this grace it makes thee most like to God it is a great part of his Image to Christ he was patient to death 1 Pet. 3. 3 4. it will make one enjoy himself in the worst times Luk. 21. 19. it will be helpful to all graces and duties make thee an amiable Christian it will strengthen thy faith subdue thy flesh in thee bridle thy tongue Magna praecipua virtus est patientia quam pariter vulgi voces publicae Philosophi oratores summis laudibus celebrant Lactant. l. 5. de Iustitia 4. From the things we suffer the right consideration of the nature of Afflictions 1. Afflictions whether upon the Soul State Friends Name are no evidences at all of Gods displeasure for they are the lot of all Gods people his dearest servants Prov. 3. 12. Iob 7. 17 18. Heb. 8. 6 7. 8. 2. God really intends his peoples good and doth them a great deal of good by afflictions Heb. 12. 6 7. 1. Hereby Christ makes all his people conformable to himself Rom. 8. 28. 2. He purgeth out the reliques of corruption takes down our pride self-love love of the world 3. He exerciseth abundance of grace in his people 1 Pet. 1. 7. 4. Makes them grow in grace more heavenly-minded 3. God will uphold thee in afflictions 1 Cor. 10. 13. 4. We shall have a most seasonable and merciful deliverance out of afflictions Psal. 34. 19. and God will do his people good according to their afflictions leave in them an excellent frame of spirit Iob and David were rare men after afflictions God makes the hearts of his people more holy and chearful after most of all do they finde the fruit of their afflictions when they come to heaven for though that be given of free-grace yet God rewards them proportionably to their good services and afflictions 2 Cor. 4. 17. If we suffer with Christ we shall reign with him Means to get patience First The frequent Meditation of the former Motives studie those Arguments Secondly Get faith study to know thy interest in Christ 1. Know the nature of the Covenant how fully and freely Christ offers grace to thee 2. Give thy consent that Christ should be a Saviour to thee that he should sanctifie thee as well as pardon thy sinne Faith is an assent to the truth and consent to the goodnesse of it that Christ should be my Saviour Psal. 112. 7. Peace Peace in the general notion and nature of it is the correspondency or harmony of one thing to another working in its proper place to the common end the good of the whole It is a kinde of sweet divine and heavenly concent harmony or beauty of things subordinate one to another D. Gauden If the world be a Ring peace is the Diamond of it The Hebrews use it often for all prosperity of soul and body they use Shalom in their letters and say ordinarily Peace be to this house that is All happinesse attend you It was Henry the 7th usual Preface in his Treaties That when Christ came into the world Peace was sung and when he went out of the world Peace was bequeathed Sir Francis Bacon The Apostolical Benediction is Grace and Peace More properly it signifies Concord Unity and Reconciliation Firm and stable peace is and must be the fruit of righteousnesse Heb. 7. 1 2. first King of Righteousnesse then of Peace Isa. 48. 18. Jam. 3. 18. Righteousnesse is the qualification of the person to whom God will grant peace it takes away all the matter which provokes God to wrath No peace is to be had without Christ Isa. 48. ult all peace by him 1. With God Rom. 5. 1. 2. In our own consciences 3. With all the cereatures Ezek. 34. 25. Hos. 2. Perseverance All agree that perseverance is necessary to the end that one may be saved Mat. 10. 22. The negative may be gathered from the affirmative That no man therefore shall be saved which shall not continue to the end Heb. 3. 14. But all do not agree what is the ground of perseverance and to whom it belongs Reasons and Grounds of the Perseverance of Gods people 1. The eternal love of God Psal. 103. 17. Iohn 13. 1. he loves his people with an everlasting love Rom. 8. 38 39. See Iohn 10. 28 29 30. 11. 29. 2. The Covenant that is betwixt God and them is a stable and everlasting Covenant Ier. 31. 31. 32. 40. Hosea 2. 19. 2 Samuel 23. 5. the Covenant made at first with the Angels and Adam might be broken but this cannot Christ is the Surety of it 3. The Union between Christ and the faithfull is indissoluble Iohn 14. 19. 1 Iohn 5. 11. 4. The Intercession of Christ for them Heb. 7. 25. Luke 22. 31. Iohn 17. 11 20. God the Father hears him alwaies Iohn 11. 42. Object Though Christ have purchased the Spirit and bestowed it upon us yet we may cast off the Spirit Answ. We have the witnesse of the Father Isa. 59. 21. and of Christ Ioh. 14. 16. that the holy Ghost shall never depart from us St Augustine hath observed out of the Exposition of the Lords Prayer made by Cyprian that almost in every
pulled down the Images of Baal and broke his Altar so did Iehu too but alone for his own sake to establish his Kingdome by pulling down the Religion which Ahab had set up but Iosiah was upright because he did it to please God and for Gods sake This grace is much commended Psal. 51. 6. 45. 18. Iohn 1. 47. Isa. 38. 3. 1 Cor. 5. 8. Ephes. 6. 14. David being an upright man is entituled A man after Gods own heart 1 Sam. 13. 14. such a one as God would have him to be all the promises are made to such Blessed are the upright in heart Lord do good to those which are upright in heart it becometh upright men to rejoyce No good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly It is a defence 1. At time of death so to Hezekiah Remember O Lord how I have walkt before thee in truth and with a perfect heart See Iob 33. 6. The devil will tell thee all thy holy duties were done in hypocrisie the devil laboured to perswade Iob all was false 2. In calumnies and reproaches of men so Paul was slandered by false Apostles but saith he We have the testimony of a good conscience that we did it in sincerity Signs of it 1. He is fearful of himself fulfilling his salvation with fear and trembling 2. Such a one will presse Gods Commandments and Threatnings upon himself in secret and laments before God and confesseth and resists the secret evils of his heart and life 3. Extends his desire and endeavour of doing good and shunning evil to all kinds and degrees of evil and good to all times and places Psal. 18. 22. desiring in all things to live honestly 4. Is still humbled for his imperfections and failings 5. Gives the praise of goodnesse he hath attained to God alone 6. It makes him easie to see and confesse a fault in himself 7. Rejoyceth to see others exceeding him in good and pities those that are bad 8. Loves him that plainly admonisheth him and is thankful for the admonition 9. Is at peace with those that differ from him in judgement 10. Suffers wrongs patiently There are three main signs of it 1. Such a one is set against every known sin especially his darling sin Psal. 18. 23. 2. Hath universal respect to all the Commandments Psal. 119. 6. 3. He is much in examination of himself and jealous of his own heart Ps. 26. 2. The right Causes of it The Spirit the Word Faith Love The right ends the pleasing and glorifying of God and obtaining his favour The right Subject both the inward and outward man too the will is chiefly the seat of it We are perswaded saith the Apostle that we have a good conscience which is never separated from this uprightnesse willing in all things to live honestly It is a firm purpose of the will not a slight weak and sudden qualm or motion as was sometimes in Saul to leave persecuting David and in Pharaoh to let Israel go but a well-grounded stable setled lasting durable purpose which holds out constantly and is rooted in the heart such as David noteth in himself saying I have sworn and will perform it to keep thy righteous judgements Motives to it 1. The Lord hath pleasure in uprightnesse 1 Chron. 26. 2. Iob 14. 15. Isa. 26. 3 4 Psal. 147. 10. 2. God will be upright with thee if thou wilt be upright with him Psal. 18. 25. if you be upright in the waies of obedience he will be upright in his rewards Psal. 11. 7. Means to get Truth or Sincerity 1. See ones want of it 2. To see the great danger of wanting it 3. To desire it and to pray to God for it 4. To muse and meditate much of the goodnesse of God in his great worthiness in himself and to accustom our selves to direct our thoughts and intentions actually to him in the particular deeds we do The End of the seventh Book THE EIGHTH BOOK OF Ordinances OR Religious Duties CHAP. I. Something general of the Ordinances HOw a Christian stands affected to the Ordinances of divine worship the exercises of Religion in general 1. He makes great account of them and finds more good benefit and comfort by them then by any other thing as David saith He loves the place where Gods honour dwelleth and when he could not enjoy his Ordinances his life was no life he envied the Swallows One thing have I desired that I may live in the house of God all the dayes of my life and enquire in his Temple he loves them as the Babe the brest 2. He findes God and the power of God in them else he is not satisfied he rests not in a bare outward performance of them but looks for the efficacie of them to unite him to God and to strengthen and confirm his soul and to make him grow by them in godlinesse David saith That he may enquire in his Temple and Peter That he may grow thereby His life is sweet and joyful when he feels the Ordinances of God in power that they work on his heart to humble reform him beat down his flesh edifie him in grace then he is like a healthy man with a good stomack at a good meal 3. This respect to Gods Ordinances is joined with a care of Righteousnesse Mercy and Charity to men also and the more forward he is in Religion the more he abounds in all other parts of good conversation Iam. 1. ult Christ is present in his Ordinances 1. In Majesty Revel 4. 2 3. 2. In Beauty Revel 4. 6. David cals it the beauty of Gods house 3. In Communion Exod. 20. 24. 4. In waies of Bounty and Communication Gods people are transformed into his Image that place in Exodus proves this also Ordinances shall continue in the most flourishing times and most glorious estate of the Church Matth. 20. 18 19. I am with you not your persons but successours with you preaching and baptizing Ephes. 4. 9 10 11. The Ministry is to continue till all the Saints be perfected therefore till Christs second coming 1 Cor. 11. 27. You shew the Lords death till he come viz. to judgement therefore the Ordinance of the Lords Supper must continue till Christs coming to judgement Some in these dayes cry down all Ordinances as things carnal and unbecoming a spiritual and raised estate they call them low administrations and our walking by them to be a walking by Moon light They say these had their time and may be of some use to some low sort of people but it is but an abasement for seraphical and spiritual men to use them The Papists deny the prohibition of the second Commandment they set up Image and Angel-worship these the precept of it it enjoyns instituted worship Christ and the Apostles made use of the Ordinances and pressed them upon the Churches See Mat. 5. 19. Acts 2. and 3. ch They urge Isa. 60. 19. which speaks not of the
God with Flute and Harp they think is moral and binds in respect of the thing it self and warrants in respect of the manner Musick say they is a natural help to devotion which doth not further it by any mystical signification but by a proper and natural operation and therefore is not a typical Ceremony Nature it self and God have fitted it to accompany a holy Song Paul bids us edifie our selves in Psalms and a Psalme is a Song upon an instrument Not only Dr Ames opposeth it but Aquinas Rivet Zanchius Zepperus Altingius and others dislike of Organs and such like Musick in Churches and they do generally rather hinder edification CHAP. IV. Of Prayer IT is a calling upon God in the name of Christ with the heart and sometimes with the voice according to his will for our selves and others Or It is a calling upon God in the name of Christ with Petitions and Thanksgivings joyned with confessions of sinne and deprecations of punishment Or thus Prayer is a lifting up of the heart to God our Father in the name and mediation of Christ through the Spirit whereby we desire the good things he hath promised in his Word and according to his will First It is a lifting up of the heart to God by way of desire and this is represented by those natural gestures of lifting up the hands and eyes to heaven See Lam. 3. 41. Psal. 25. 1. To thee O Lord do I lift up my soul. Which phrase implieth 1. That the soul is sluggish and pressing downward for sensible helps 2. It denotes confidence a heavenly temper It is not your eyes voice or bodies lifted up but your hearts and spirits thy heart in prayer must be with God in heaven thy heart must beleeve lay hold on the promise To pray then is a difficult duty how hard is it to call off the heart from other things to get it united in prayer to seek the Lord with our whole hearts if there be distraction lazinesse or deadnesse we cannot say With my whole heart have I sought thee Secondly The object of prayer is only God Rom. 10. 14. faith and calling upon God are linked together as none but God is the object of faith so neither of prayer as it is the property of God to hear our prayers Psal. 65. 1 2. so invocation is a worship proper to him alone therefore the Papists prayers to Saints Angels and the Virgin Mary are sinful since prayer is a divine religious worship and so may be given to none but God himself All worship is prerogative and a flower Of his rich Crown from whom lies no appeal At the last hour Therefore we dare not from his Garland steal To make a Posie for inferiour power Herberts Poems the Church To pray to one supposeth in him two things 1. Omniscience knowledge of all hearts of all our wants desires and groanings 2. Omnipotence power in his own hand to help and these are peculiar to God alone Psal. 65. 2. 1 Kings 8. 39. M. Lyf Princip of faith and a good consc c. 42. Therefore our Saviour when he informs us how we should pray he bids us say Our Father Luk. 11. 2. Rom. 8. We cry Abba Father it is a familiar intercourse between God and the soul. Thirdly All our prayers must be made in the name of Christ Iohn 14. 13. 16. 23 24. Themistocles when the King was displeased brought his Sonne in his arms there is no immediate fellowship with God As God and man are at variance Christ is Medium reconciliationis as reconciled he is Medium communionis Ephes. 3. 12. The Father is the ultimate object of our faith and hope Christ the intermediate by whom we come to God Iohn 15. 16. The Priest only in the Law burnt incense to God Exod. 30. Revel 5. 3. See chap. 8. 3. by the incense our prayers are shadowed out and figured Psal. 141. 2. the Sacrifice was to be brought to the Priest and to be offered by his hands Levit. 17. 3 4. We must pray to the Father through the Son by the holy Ghost Deus oratur à nobis Deus orat in nobis Deus orat pro nobis Some say the prayers of Gods people are not only to be directed unto God but Christ as Mediator Luke 11. 5. Mat. 15. Iesus thou Sonne of David not Son of God afterwards she cries Lord help me all the Petitions in the Canticles they say are directed to Christ as the Churches husband They give these reasons for their opinion 1. We ought to beleeve in Christ as Mediator Ioh. 14. 1. See Rom. 3. 25. therefore we ought to pray unto him as Mediator The worship of all the reasonable creatures is appointed to him Heb. 1. 6. 8. The Saints have directed their prayers to him 1. Before his Incarnation Abraham Gen. 18. Iacob Gen. 32. 24. 2. In the dayes of his flesh the woman of Canaan Matth. 15. 22. the thief on the Crosse. 3. Since his Ascension into heaven Acts 7. 51. There is a double Object of worship 1. Materiale whole Christ God man in one Person Heb. 1. 6. 2. Formale the God head of Christ when we pray to him we pray to his Person but the ultimate and proper object of our prayers is the Divine Nature 1. In all our duties we are to take in the whole object of faith Iohn 14. 1. 2. This is the right way of honouring the Father according to the plot of the Gospel Iohn 14. 13. 5. 23. 3. This is the onely way to come to the Father to obtain any mercy of him Iohn 14. 6. 6. 57. 4. This answers the grand design of the Gospel that each Person of the Trinity may be glorified with a distinct glory In him onely we are accepted 1 Pet. 2. 5. We need no other Mediators nor Intercessours They who pray to God without a Mediator as Pagans or in the name of any other Mediator but Christ as Papists pray not aright We bear a natural reverence to God we must honour Christ also Iohn 5. 23. put up our requests into Christs hand that he may commend them to his Father and look for all supplies of grace to be dispensed in and through him Ephes. 2. 18. and 3. 12. Rom. 5. 2. In which three places the word rendred Accesse is one and the same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It properly signifies a manuduction or leading by the hand The Israelites under the Law were tied to pray either in the Tabernacle and Temple Deut. 12. 5 14. Psal. 99. 6. or else towards the same 2 Chron. 7. 38. 1 Kings 8. 44 48. Psal. 138. 2. Dan. 6. 10. yet now all such distinction and difference of place being but ceremonial is abolished For that one place of prayer and Sacrifice was a type of Christ Jesus the alone Altar and the praying in or towards the same did figure out thus much that only in the mediation of Jesus Christ
we are to call upon the Lord. B. Down of Prayer ch 28. There is a two-fold form of prayer 1. Accidental a form of words this may be various 2. Essential in the name of Christ Iohn 16. 23. Col. 3. 17. Fourthly By the Spirit of God Rom. 8. 15. 26. he helps us to call Abba Father Ephes 6. 18. Iude v. 20. See Zech. 12. 10. 1 Cor. 14. 15. 1. In regard of our natural estate we have no ability to pray 2 Cor. 3. 5. 2. In our regenerate estate we are no longer able to do any good thing then the Spirit helpeth and assisteth us Phil. 1. 6. 3. Our prayer will not be acceptable to God except it come from his Spirit Rom. 8. 27. Fifthly Whereby we desire those good things he hath promised in his Word Some things we are specially to pray for for things of our souls Matth. 6. 33. that we may be more holy and heavenly and enjoy more communion with God For the Church Pray for the peace of Ierusalem Psal. 51. 18. For the propagation of the Gospel this is one main thing in that Petition Thy Kingdome come Col. 4. 3. Sixthly According to his will 1 Iohn 5. 14. The Incense was made exactly according to Gods will Exod. 30. 34 35. The matter of our prayers or things asked must be according to Gods will for the glory of God Mat. 6. 9 10. for the good of our selves and others One must ask things Temporal alone conditionally as our Saviour If it be possible yet not my will and things Spiritual simply but in both one must refer himself to the wisdome of God for the time means and measure of granting his desires Secondly For the manner and end of ones asking one must ask 1. Faithfully striving to bring his soul to a certain and firm perswasion that he shall be heard in due time Iam. 1 6. Let him ask in faith and whensoever you pray believe think on that place Psal. 65. 2 3. hence an Infidel cannot pray because he hath no faith as this is strong or weak so prayer is more or lesse successfull We must acknowledge 1. That God is and that he is a rewarder of those which seek him 2. That he will grant our requests notwithstanding our sins and this is the faith chiefly meant as appears in that St Iames saies He upbraids not and so in the woman of Canaan 2. Fervently Iam. 5. 16. The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man prevaileth much It is called a pouring out of the heart as if the whole soul were breathed out in desire to God and a crying Exod. 8. 12. 1 Sam. 7. 9. Job 30. 28. Matth. 15. 22. Psal. 22. 2. 18. 6. 28. 1. 55. 17. 8 8 13. 130. 1. Jon. 2. 2. Wrestling with God Gen. 32. 24. Striving Rom. 15. 30. Renting the heart Joel 2. 13. A groaning in Spirit Rom. 2. 6. 3. Constantly and continually Ephes. 6. Pray alwayes 1 Thess. 5. 17. Pray continually when occasion and duty requires as that was called a continual Sacrifice which was twice a day 4. Purely 1 Pet. 1. 22. The prayer of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord. He hears not sinners Heb. 10. 22. Revel 5. 8. Pure heart and hand Iob 22. 26. 1 Tim. 2. 8. 5. Sincerely with respect more of Gods glory then a mans own satisfaction Psal. 145. 18. 17. 1. 6. With an united heart 1 Cor. 7. We must attend upon the Lord without distraction and we must be sober and watch unto prayer intimating that there are many enemies against it 7. With a quiet submissive spirit as our Saviour Not my will but thy will you must not prescribe God what and when he shall do but pray and then resign up your selves to be guided and governed by him 8. Reverently and humbly Psal. 2. 11. 5. 7. 9. 12. 10. 17. 34. 18. 51. 17. 2 Chron. 7. 14. so did David 2 Sam. 7. 18. Dan. 9. 8. Abraham Gen. 18. 27. Iacob Gen. 32. 10. Paul 1 Tim. 1. 15. the Publican Luke 15. We may from hence observe the imperfections and defects that are to be found in our prayers all which may be brought to two heads 1. Omission of the Duty 2. Failing in performance Of the first Not only a total omission when one doth not pray at all for a long time together is a fault but the not being so frequent in it as we ought to be and as leisure and occasion doth require Iob 15. 4. Isa. 43. 22. We should pray continually we should be ever ready for this work upon every opportunity but we many times neglect it when we have time enough and cause enough and helps enough yet out of a meer indisposition to so gracious a work we let it passe and slip it over even because we want will Secondly The faults in performing this duty are of two kinds 1. Some such as do so totally blemish and corrupt our prayers as to make them loathsome to God and these are in respect 1. Of the persons which have an interest in prayer 2. Of the prayer it self There are three persons interessed in this duty 1. He to whom prayer is made 2. He in whose name it is made 3. He by whom it is made Failing in these marre the prayers quite First If one pray to any other but the true God his prayer is sinne he gives Gods glory to another thing and is a grievous Idolater because as Paul saith Gal. 4. 8. He doth service to that thing which by nature is not God prayer is a service which God cals for to himself if we leave him the fountain of living water and go to cis●erns that can hold no water we displease him exceedingly Thou art a God that hearest prayers to thee shall all flesh come so that if we go to any other we do manifestly break his Commandment and dishonour him It is to no purpose how we mince the matter with distinctions and say We pray to other things not as the chief authors of the good we ask but as intercessors for it to him For if we go to them so in way of praying we doubt of his goodnesse and mercy give them his honour to be a hearer of prayers Indeed we may request one anothers prayers God allowes us that but we may not pray to them the Church of Rome therefore offends against the object of worship in praying to Saints and Angels Secondly If we pray in any other name but Christs our prayer is loathsome There must be but one Mediator as there is but one God If men make distinctions of Mediators saying some be of Expiation some of Intercession yet the Scripture makes no such distinction one Mediator as one God Expiation and Intercession are not distinct offices making two kinds of Intercessors but distinct parts of one Mediatorship A Mediator must make Expiation and Intercession after
and salvation How can our praiers satisfie for others faults seeing themselves are defective and faultie many waies and how can that deserve heaven which when God heareth he must forgive or else it will be hard with him that makes it What a madnesse is this that when we have the satisfaction and merits of Christ we should not be satisfied therewithall but should thrust our own most imperfect services into that room Let us pray let us fast let us give alms let us do good works in obedience to God in assured faith of obtaining his promises and being more then abundantly requited for our service But what should this proud fancie of merit and satisfaction be added to our praiers Why will we not suffer our selves to be made to see the weaknesse and frailties of our best services why should we stand upon such terms with God as to think rather to satisfie him and earn of him then to receive things that be good of his free favour in Christ and to attain pardon of things that be sinful for his meer mercie sake in the mediation of his Sonne and for his satisfaction sake which he hath made Woe unto them that seek to draw Gods people from resting wholly upon Christs merits and satisfaction to rest in part upon their own poor weak and many waies defective services which further then they be washed with the bloud of Christ must needs be unacceptable much more then when they are offered to such an intent as would utterly marre them were they otherwise never so perfect What is if this be not to bring strange incense strange fire strange beasts and strange Sacrifices unto the Altar of God But thanks be to God that hath freed us from this amongst other errours of that Church by which they do cut off all possibility of salvation from those that continue to beleeve their lies For if any trust to the goodnesse of his own praiers or other services by them to satisfie Gods justice and to deserve heaven Lucifer himself shall as soon sinde favour as he continuing thus because he doth not seek to be found in Christ but in himself and because as yet he is not poor in spirit nor broken nor contrite nor heavy laden and so not capable of Christ. But secondly let Gods people learn to apply themselves to the work of praying with very great diligence and careful observing of themselves to prevent as much ●s may be those many defects whereto they are subject and those many faults which they are apt to commit If we set our selves with the best diligence we can to call on the name of God we shall not escape some nay many faults but if we fall to make roving praiers as it were looking to nothing but the bare deed done and thinking all is well if a few words be said over and if so much time be spent in uttering some good speeches O how much sinne will this ill carriage bring upon us Let us therefore in praying pray that is pray with all earnest and heedfull observation of our selves yea let us not think our selves sufficient to make our own praiers but let us humbly beseech the Lord to assist us with his Spirit of praier without which we cannot pray as we ought in any sort To pray as one ought to pray is a difficult a hard a painful work It requireth the whole man and the greatest labour and even more then a man No wit no learning no good parts will suffice to make a good praier unlesse we have the Spirit of praier poured upon us from above If praier were only a framing and composing of words handsomly together and pronouncing them distinctly and fully it were an easie matter to pray but the affections of the soul must be set in a good frame as well as the words The eye must see God the heart must stoop to him the whole man must be made sensible of his presence a man must conferre with his maker lift up his soul to God pour forth his heart before him and he knows not himself that knows not this to be more then he can do of himself Wherefore we must not only take great heed to our selves when we come to pray but we must even trust upon God and call upon him for the assistance of his Spirit to help our infirmities or else our praiers will not be such as may give us comfort Thirdly This should teach poor Saints not to be discouraged at the manifold failings of their praiers but alone to be humbled It is one of the faults accompanying praiers to be made heartlesse thereby 1 King 8. 30. Salomon requests of God not alone to hear but when he heareth to pardon God will pardon and passe by all those weaknesses of our praiers which we labour to see and are carefull to resist and bewail and cast our selves upon Christ for acceptation of If we should finde our selves never so much assisted in praying so that we could scarce say what it were that we ought to blame yet if we do trust to our praiers and their worth God cannot be well-pleased with them for he is not well-pleased but in Christ. On the other side if we can renounce our selves though our praiers have many weaknesses those praiers shall be heard because those faults in Christ shall be forgiven Christ is our Mediator and Intercessor and he sits at his Fathers right-hand by the sweet Incense of his merits as a thing most acceptable to God to do away the rank smell of our carnalnesse which shews it self in praying We are therefore to trust on him stay in him rest in his supplications and intercessions This thing which Salomon praied for he the true Salomon hath praied for and will procure Wherefore be not heartlesse and make not any such perverse conclusion Surely these Petitions cannot be heard cannot be regarded Consider them in themselves they cannot consider them as they are perfumed with the incense of Christs intercession they cannot but prevail Christs intercession doth not make our services meritorious that were to put them into the room of his own righteousnesse which he never intended to do but he makes them as effectual and available even as if they were meritorious because in him all their faults are pardoned Therefore do not suffer thy soul to give it self a denial and to pronounce against it self a rejection of thy sutes but flee to Christs intercession then thou shalt be heard and forgiven But especially take heed your discouragement go not to such an extremity as to make you resolve not to pray because you cannot pray well There be some things sinful for matter these we must not do for fea● of sinning against God there be some things sinful in regard of manner and other circumstances those we must do as well as we can and not omit altogether for fear of doing them amisse Better a great deal offend through failing in good things then by
be in Heaven there must our hearts be Praier being an humble discourse of the soul with God Which art in Heaven The natural gesture of lifting up our eyes and hands to Heaven implieth this this is opposed to worldly cares and earthlinesse these are clogs this made David say It is better to be one day in thy house then a thousand elsewhere Call in the help of the Spirit Rom. 8. 27. 2. Consideration of Gods benefits it is good to have a Catalogue of them 3. Study much the fulnesse and all sufficiencie of God and his making over himself to you in his all-sufficiencie Gen. 17. 1. 4. Acquaint your selves with your own necessities Let the word of God dwell richly in you Col. 3. 16. The ground of praier is Gods will acquaint your selves with the precepts promises 5. Give your selves to praier Psal. 109. 4. but I praier so the Hebrew Oratio ego so Montanus Helps against wandring and vain thoughts in holy duties and especially in praier 1. Set a high price upon it as a great Ordinance of God wherein there is a Communion with him to be enjoyed and the influence of the grace of God to be conveyed thorow it 2. Every time thou goest to praier renew thy resolutions against them till thou comest to a habit of keeping thy heart close to the duty 3. Set the presence of God before you in praier his glorie and consider that he converseth with thy thoughts as man with thy words 4. Be not deceived with this that the thoughts are not very sinful whatsoever thoughts concern not the present duty are sinful 5. Blesse God for that help if thine heart hath been kept close to a duty and ou hast had communion with God The godly must pray by this title the Scripture describes true Christians Acts 2. 41. and Paul saluteth All the faithful that call upon the name of the Lord 1 Cor. 1. 2. a heart full of grace is also full of holy desires and requests Cant. 1. 2 4 7. It is called the Spirit of Supplications Zech. 12. 10. suitable to the Spirit of grace is the Spirit of Supplication They must pray daily Psal. 55. 17. 147. 2. Dan. 6. 10. Luk. 2. 47. 1 Thess. 3. 10. 2 Tim. 1. 3. Reasons 1. It is equal that part of every day be given and consecrated to him who is the Lord of the day and of all our time they had a morning and evening Sacrifice in the time of the Law 2. Praier is a singular means of neer and heavenly Communion with God therein the godly enjoy the face of God talk familiarly with him 3. Praier sanctifieth to us that is obtaineth of God for us a lawful and comfortable use of all the things and affairs of the day 4. Every day we stand in need of many things belonging both to temporal and spiritual life 5. We are every day subject to many dangers A gracious heart is full of holy requests to God Psal. 8. 10. Revel 5. 8. Rom. 5. 5. Ezek. 16. 15. Iohn 16. 24. Iude v. 11. Reasons 1. Praier is an act of religious worship Dan. 4. 17. 2. Because of the great things spoken of praier Isa. 46. 11. Rev. 16. 1. Deut. 4. 7. Isa. 37. 3. 3. The Saints have received the Spirit of Supplication Zech. 12. 10. Every godly man must be constant and assiduous in praier persevere in it Psal. 5. 23. Psal. 55. 16 17. Psal. 118. 12 13. Will the hypocrite alwaies call upon God saith Iob Daniel would not forbear the daily exercise of this service although it were with the hazard of his life Dan. 6. 10. Aquinas 2a 2ae Quaest. 83. Artic. 4. determines this Question Utrum oratio debet esse diuturna Reasons 1. From God who hath signified approbation of this service by commanding it expresly saying Pray continually and Christ spake a Parable That we should be constant in praier and not faint Luk. 18. 1. 2. This hath been the practice of all the Saints of God Iacob wrestled with God and praied all night The Canaanitish woman had several repulses yet persevered in praier Moses held up his hands which implies the continuance of his praier Isa. 62. 1. Christ praied thrice and yet more earnestly Luk. 22. 44. 2. From our selves First We have great need for we absolutely depend upon God and he hath tied himself no further to do us good then we shall seek it in his Ordinance at his hands Secondly We have great helps even such as may enable us to perform the dutie notwithstanding any weaknesse that is in our selves for we have Gods Word and Spirit If a man doubt to whom to direct his praiers the Scripture cals him to God To thee shall all flesh come Psal. 65. 2. If in whose name it leads him to Christ Whatsoever you shall ask in my Name If for what to pray for wisdome for the Spirit for patience for daily bread for remission of sins for deliverance from evil for the honouring of Gods name in a word for all good things If for whom for Kings for Rulers for our selves for others for all men except him whom we see to have sinned a sinne unto death If where every where lifting up pure hands If when at all times continually If how oft why morning noon night If on what occasion in all things by praier and supplications If in what manner why fervently with an inward working of the heart in praier with understanding in truth and in faith and without fainting 2. God will assist us with his Spirit all those which addresse themselves to perform this work according to the direction of his Word and beg the Spirit of praier to help them in praying The Spirit maketh intercession Rom 8. Jude v. 20. Praying in the holy Ghost Thirdly Constant supplicating to God doth honour him and actually confesse him to be the universal Lord the Ruler and disposer of all yea to be liberal in giving to be omnipotent in power to be present in all places to see and hear all persons and actions to search our hearts and to sit at the stern of the whole world so that he observeth also each particular creatures need and wants Fourthly It is exceeding advantagious to our selves seeing it acquaints us with God and breeds a kinde of holy familiaritie and boldnesse in us toward him 2. It exerciseth reneweth and reviveth all graces in us in drawing near to God and calling upon him we grow like to him this sets a work and increaseth knowledge of God humilitie faith obedience and love to him Fifthly Because praier it self is not only a duty but a priviledge the chief purchase of Christs bloud Sixthly Because if we persevere and faint not God will come in at last with mercie in the fourth watch of the night Christ came in the morning watch the night was divided into four watches Iacob wrestled all night with God but in the morning he prevailed
meant whether it arise from Satan our selves or other men The principal thing against which we are here taught to pray is the power of temptation as is evident by this particle Into In that God permitteth and instigateth tempters to tempt men and withdrawing his grace which is sufficient for them leaveth them who are not able to stand of themselves he is said to leade them into temptation God tempts us 1. To prove us Deut. 8. 3. that we may know our selves 2. To humble us 3. To do us good in the end 4. By leaving us to our selves that we may know how weak we are 2 Chron. 32. 31. 5. By extraordinary Commandments Gen. 22. 1. 6. By outward prosperity Prov. 30. 8. God leades us into temptation 1. By withdrawing his grace and holy Spirit 2. By offering occasions 3. By letting Satan and our own corruptions loose The Devil moveth allureth and provoketh man to sinne Exod. 17. 2. Deut. 6. 16. Psal. 78. 18 19. hence he is called the tempter Matth. 4. 3. He tempts 1. By inward suggestions Iohn 13. 2. being a Spirit he hath communion with our souls and can dart thoughts into us so he filled the heart of Iudas 2. By outward objects Matth. 4. 3 4 8. he sits his baits to our constitutions the tree of knowledge was present to the eye pleasant and good for food there was an outward occasion The world tempts by persons in it or things of it The flesh tempteth when we are enticed by our own corruption Iam. 1. 14. Temptation hath five degrees 1. Suggestion 2. Delight 3. Consent 4. Practice 5. Perseverance or constancy in sinning God preserves his people from Satans temptations six wayes 1. By laying a restraint on Satan that he cannot tempt them See Iob 2. 3. and Luk. 22. 31. God will not give Satan a commission to tempt them 2. When he preserves them from occasions of evil without Satan doth not only stir up lust within but lay a bait without Iam. 1. 14. God will not suffer Satan to lay a bait for them Psal. 96. 3. Eccles. 7. 26. 3. When he so strengthens their graces that a temptation shall not take Gal. 5. 27. Col. 2. 15. 4. When he layes affliction upon them as preventing physick Iob 33. 16 17. the Crosse keeps them from sin Hos. 2. 5 6. 5. He shews them the beauty of holinesse by which the glory and sweetnesse of sin vanisheth Psal. 110. 3. 6. By casting into the soul quenching considerations But deliver us from evil or out of evil By evil we are to understand all the enemies of our salvation the flesh world and the devil sinne and hell and all punishments of sinne but especially the devil who in the Scriptures is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the evil one though not only him as Scultetus seems to interpret it Exercit. Evang. l. 2. c. 33. Under evil is comprized 1. Satan the principal author of evil 2. All other kinds of evil Satan in other places is styled the evil one 1 Iohn 2. 13 14. and this word Evil is oft put for every thing that is contrary to good and that with the Article prefixed before it Matth. 5. 39. Rom. 12. 9. 2 Thess. 3. 3. 1 Iohn 5. 19. Now as this title good is of a large extent so on the contrary is evil Gen. 48. 16. The greatest evil of all is sin Mark 7. 23. Judgement also for sinne both temporal Zeph. 3. 15. and eternal Luke 15. 25. are stiled evil In this large extent is the word here to be taken And because it compriseth under it all manner of evils it is fitly set in the last place Evil in Scripture hath three significations 1. Afflictions and crosses so the time of old-age is an evil time Eccles. 12. 1. 2. By evil is meant the devil Matth. 5. 37. 3. By evil is meant sin especially the power of it and so it is taken here not excluding the devil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deliver signifieth two things 1. To keep and preserve to protect and defend from evil that we fall not into it as 1 Thess. 1. 10. 2. To deliver and as it were to pull us out of the hands that is power of our spiritual enemies as the word is used Luke 1. 74. Matth. 27. 43. Romans 7. 24 2 Tim. 4. 17 18. This deliverance which we orave is either inchoate in this life or perfect in the life to come both by Christ Luke 1. 74. But deliver These words are a limitation or explication But couples like things together We desire in this Petition That we may not be exercised with trial in our estate good name or body if God so please or that he would support us if we be tried The deliverance which we crave is either inchoate in this life or perfect in the life to come both by Christ Luke 1. 74. Some from these words Deliver us from evil hold that one may pray for perfection of holinesse to be freed from the very being of sinne the words mean say they to be delivered from all sinne and all degrees of it They alledge also other places to prove this viz. 2 Cor. 13. 7 9. Col 4. 12. Heb. 13. 21. 1 Thess. 5. 23. Though these prayers say they be not fulfilled in this life yet one should say up prayers for absolute perfection 1. Because thereby the manifests his perfect displeasure against sinne and perfect love to the Commandment of God 2. Hereby he manifests the truth and sincerity of his heart he would not onely not have sin reign but he would have it not to be in him 3. Hereby he doth his duty in striving after perfection Phil. 3. 12. herein he makes his heart and the Law even though his life and it be not 4. His prayer shall be answered in degrees though not in perfection as there are severall degrees of accomplishing Prophecies so of answering Prayers 5. Your prayers are of an everlasting efficacie because they are offered to God by the eternal Spirit Heb. 9. 14. upon the same Altar that Christs Sacrifice was offered therefore Christs righteousnesse is everlasting because it was offered to God by the eternal Spirit Others say such perfection may be desired and were to be wished if it might be had yea must be set before us as an exact copy to write after white to aim at with endeavour to come as near it as we can but they see no ground to pray for it since they cannot pray in faith because they have no promise nay it is not a state compatible with this life since the fall and they think it is too great a presumption to pray for that which they have no promise for and ambition to affect such a prerogative as no childe of God ever since the fall here enjoyed or is like to doe Hitherto of the Petitions Now followeth the Conclusion of the Lords Prayer in these words For thine is the Kingdome the Power and
Christ consented to all this he voluntarily came into the world to save sinners he hath paid the ransome hath promised that those which come to him he will in no wise cast away Means to get and improve or strengthen faith 1. To get it 1. Labour to see your selves in a lost condition 2. Know that there is no way in the world to save you but by Christ. 3. Bewail your condition to God tell him that you are a lost creature and say Lord help me to believe 4. Plead the promises there are promises of grace as well as to grace say Lord thou hast said thou wilt be merciful and why not to me 5. Wait upon God in the use of the means hearing and the like Rom. 10. Acts 10. 44. 2. To improve and strengthen it You that have faith labour to improve it 2 Thess. 1. 3 4. I shall premise four Cautions 1. There is a common dead faith an ungrounded presumption gotten by the devil and mens false hearts which is rather to be destroyed then increased When men put all their confidence in Christ and yet can live in all kinde of ungodlinesse whereas true faith is wrought by the Spirit of God and brings forth a holy life 2. Among true believers there are several sizes as it were of faith some are strong and some weak in the faith 3. The weakest faith if true will certainly save the soul the weakest believer is united to Christ adopted reconciled justified hath the Spirit all promises belong to him and shall partake of glory 4. There is none of Gods servants in this world do attain so much faith as they might the Apostles Luke 17. 5. make this their joynt Petition Lord increase our faith 1. It increaseth in the use of it To him that hath shall be given Spiritual things increase by exercise 2. Diligently attend on all the Ordinances and treasure up experiences 3. Study thy self daily see what a wretched worthlesse creature thou art what a dead barren heart thou hast real self-abhorring makes a man to hang on Christ. 4. The more thou knowest Christ the more thou wilt believe in him Psal. 9. 9. study to know Christs person Offices the tenour and indulgence of the Covenant of Grace 5. Labour to get some evidence of the work of faith in thee that thou art in a league of love with Christ if the wayes of Christ be sutable to thy Spirit and the bent of thy heart be against all sins and especially thy bosome sinne it is a good sign 6. Remove all impediments II. Repentance It is taken sometimes largely and so it comprehends all the three parts of Conversion Contrition Faith and new Obedience 2. Strictly for contrition alone Act. 13. 24. In General it is a turning from sinne to God Or thus It is a supernatural work of Gods Spirit whereby the humbled converted sinner doth turn from all sinne with grief and detestation of it because thereby God is offended and to the wayes of God loving and embracing them and resolving to walk in them for the time to come 1. The efficient cause or authour of repentance is Gods Spirit Acts 1. 51. 11. 18. 2 Tim. 2. 18. it is a supernatural work such a work as never is nor can be wrought in any but by the almighty work of Gods Spirit in a way above corrupt nature Ier. 31. 18 19. A man can do something toward legal duties but one hath no principle for evangelical duties but something against them 2. The Subject in whom this grace of repentance is found say some is an humbled and converted sinner 1. Humbled that is legally sensible of the misery it is brought to by sinne 2. Converted that is by God one whose inward man is changed Ezek. 25. 26. Repentance seems rather to precede conversion Act. 3. 19. though full Repentance be Conversion 3. The general nature of it a turning with the terms from which and to which an aversion from sin and a conversion to God Ioel 2. 12. Ezek. 16 lat end 4. The manner of it with detestation of sinne with delight in Gods will and wayes Hos. 14. 8 Surely shall one say in the Lord I shall finde righteousnesse and peace It is a mourn●ng for sinne as sinne as it is offensivum Dei aversivum à Deo as it is an act of disobedience an act of unkindnesse There are several kindes of Repentance 1. Antecedent which goes before Remission and Justification Acts 2. 38. 3. 19. 8. 22. 2. Consequent Repentance melting of the heart toward God after assurance of pardon Luke 7. 47. 1 Tim 1. 12 13 14. Ezek. 16. ult Initial Repentance when one is converted Act. 8. 22. 2. Continual Rom. 7. 24. Iohn 13. 10. 3. Personal or Ecclesiastical Some say the parts o● Repentance are to eschew evil and do good Psal. 34. 15. Isa. 1 15 16. 55. 7. Amos 5. 15. Rom. 12. 9. In sinne there is an aversion from God and a conversion to the creature 2. In repentance there must be an aversion from the pleasures of sinne and a returning to Communion with God The vertue and grace of Christ is not onely to mortifie but vivifie Rom. 6. 11. Sinne must be mortified before the image of God can be superinduced into the soul Col. 1. 13. In renouncing of sinne four affections are to be exercised true humiliation is begun in fear continued in shame carried on in sorrow and ends in indignation 1. Fear ariseth from application of the curse to the provocation we compare the sins we have committed with the threatnings of the Word Iob 22. 23. Heb. 12. 28. Shame ariseth from comparing filthinesse Psal. 73. 22. Ezra 9. 6. Rom. 6. 21. Sorrow ariseth from thoughts of Gods goodnesse and our own unkindenesse Zach. 12. 10. Ezek. 36. 31. Luke 7. 47. Indignation the highest act of hatred ariseth from the unsutablenesse of it to our interest in Christ Isa. 30. 22. Hos. 14. 8. Rom. 6. 2. Fear looks on sinne as damning shame looks on it as defiling sorrow looks on it as offensive to God indignation looks on it as misbecoming our profession In turning to the Lord 1. There is a serious and solemn consideration of our state and danger out of Christ Psal. 22. 27. 119. 59. Hab. 1. 5. 2. A firm resolution Luk. 15. 18. Psal. 32. 5. 119. 106. 3. A mutual exercise of holy affections desire hope and delight Psalm 119. 49. 4. A consecration or resignation of our selves to God Rom. 12. 1. 2 Cor. 5. 16. 5. A constant care of making good our ingagement Prov. 23. 26. Hos. 5. 4. Dr Twisse against Corvinus saith there are three parts of Repentance The Confession of the mouth Contrition of the heart and Amendment of life M. Calamy on Acts 17. 3. p. 37. saith it consists in five things 1. There must be a true and right sense of sinne as to Gospel-faith there must be a true sight of Christ Iohn
of the spiritual Combate and two other fruits of Faith which Method I shall here the rather follow because I have not yet discussed that Subject The first Question then to be resolved is What follows the purifying of the heart by faith Ans. A fighting and combating against sin and corruption Rom. 7. ult Gal. 5. 17. a Law in the Flesh and in the Spirit there is alwaies bellum though not alwaies praelium betwixt the Flesh and the Spirit In the state of Nature men are wholly in the Flesh and not in the Spirit in the state of Glory they are wholly in the Spirit and not in the Flesh in the state of Grace there is both Flesh and Spirit As long as there is a mixture of Principles there will be a mixture of our actions a Christians life is nothing but a checker-work of light and darkness The Flesh resists Divine Admonition before and in and after conversion but though it may resist God exhorting yet it cannot resist God regenerating as dead flesh cannot resist God raising it from the dead In the first moment of conversion the Flesh cannot lust against the Spirit since that is filled up by introducing the Spirit and regenerating the man The nature of this Fight First It is the contrary renitency between the Flesh and the Spirit in the whole course of a mans life 1. There is an habitual enmity of one against the other in the bent of ones spirit he is disposed both waies all the daies of his life the Will doth will and nill sin and Grace loveth God and sin there is a proneness to both sides 2. An actual Opposition when the faculties of the soul are to act on any thing that fals under a Rule they both close with it in all holy actions or sins Both these have their seconds to joyne with them Grace hath its second and Corruption its second the Devil and World side with the one and the Spirit of God and holy Angels side with the other The Devil by suggesting to the Flesh sinful thoughts presenting objects and taking all advantages The world joynes with it 1. All wicked men 2. Things and state of the world prosperity and adversity 1 Iohn 2. 15 16. they feed these Lusts Riches Honours Pleasures The Power of God the Intercession of Christ the in-dwelling vertue of the Holy Ghost joyne with Grace the Holy Ghost by his exciting and assisting grace by chasing the Devil away A natural conscience may fight against sin as well as a renewed when a mans conscience is tempted to sin often and Satan and corruption will take no denial when conscience yet resists this is properly a fight this may be in natural conscience Numb 22. 13. Dav. Psal. 73. 13. The difference between the fighting of the natural conscience and of the renewed conscience with sin 1. The conflict in a natural man is between Conscience and the Will and Affections the Will carries the Soul one way Conscience another 2 Pet. 2. 15. In a regenerate man the fight is in the same faculty between Conscience and Conscience there is Sin and Grace in every faculty a party in the Will for Grace and another for Sin this is properly the fight between the Flesh and Spirit in the regenerate id patiebar invitus quod faciebam volens Ang. The Angels and Saints in Heaven are all for good the Devils and damned all for evil One saith it is an apparent errour to affirm that a godly man cannot sin with a full consent of will Gal. 5. 17. Sanctification is in every faculty 1 Thess. 5. 23. 1 Iohn 5. 4. Two things will make it plain 1. An antecedent and concommitant willingness and unwillingness before the sin one may seem very unwilling while the lust and objects are kept asunder but bring them together the natural conscience presently sins 2. There is a willingness perse and per accidens a wicked man loves sin but for Hell 2. The fight in a natural conscience never puts sin out of dominion Rom. 6. 12 14. There may be in natural man an opposition of flesh against flesh corruption against corruption he may strive against all sin from the dictates of his understanding and his conscience but his will is never troubled at it This opposition is but weak and treacherous he hath no will to any good but a kind of woulding that is but now and then the opposition of the Spirit to the flesh is everlasting and irreconcileable Why doth not the prevailing party keep the other under when it hath gotten the victory A good man hath a twofold strength 1. Habitual a readiness to that which is good and against evil by the work of Regeneration which gives him a Will 2. Actual strength the assisting power of the Holy Ghost which calleth out the graces that are in us strengthens them God is a free Agent when his assistance is withdrawn sin prevaileth Nature opposeth sin with worldly weapons carnal considerations I shall lose my credit the Spirit with heavenly weapons the Word of God I shall offend God grieve the Spirit The Flesh gets the better of nature and at last prevails the Flesh is worsted by the Spirit Sanctification is an imperfect work in this world we are adopted reconciled justified as much at first as ever but sanctified by degrees The imperfection of Sanctification stands in three things 1. All the habits of Grace are weak 2. There remaineth still a whole body of corruption 3. All the acts which they perform here are mixt A wicked man may have fighting about corruption as Pilate had a conslict with his own soul before he gave sentence against Christ. There is a fivefold difference say some between the war in the godly and this in the wicked In the regenerate man there is the flesh against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh in the unregenerate there is only flesh contending with it self on several considerations on the one side flesh lusting after a present content and at the same time flesh fearing an after reckoning 2. In the unregenerate the strife is betwixt Reason and Conscience inlightened and the inordinate affection but in the regenerate man faculty against faculty in the whole man in the will somewhat which closeth with sin and somewhat which abominates it 3. In the Matter in the unregenerate the contest is onely about gross sins the gracious heart is against sin as sin and consequently against every sin 4. In the end they propound the unregenerate man to stop the clamours of his conscience and secure his soul from the danger of Hell the godly man to destroy the body of sin and please God in all things 5. In the effects the unregenerate man is given up to walk in the waies of sin but in Gods servants the longer the warre is continued the more corruption is mortified and Grace grows in him It seems their estate then in the second Adam is not better then it was
time of his Creation the Law that was proclaimed by Gods own mouth upon Mount Sinai which we call the ten Commandments whether it be in force in the Christian Church First Take the true state of the Question betwixt us and the Antinomians that deny the Law to be in force in these distinctions 1. You must distinguish betwixt the Law given to Adam in Paradise as a Covenant of life and death and as it is given in the hand of a Mediatour the Lord Jesus Christ. 2. You must distinguish betwixt the things that are contained in the Law and the binding power of the Law 3. You must distinguish betwixt the principal Law-giver and the ministerial Law-giver 4. You must distinguish betwixt the Law given by God even by the hand of Moses in the true intent and meaning of it and between the interpretation that the Jewish Doctors could make of it 5. You must distinguish betwixt the Law it self and the sanction of it The only Question is about the binding power of the Law that is Whether the things contained in the ten Commandments are by the Lord the great Law-giver commanded now to Christians The Antinomians hold the contrary quid nobis cum Mose the only rule say they they are under is the free Spirit of God enclining them by a holy renewed nature to do that which is good in his sight they are acted by a Law of love and they do the things of the Law but not because commanded in the Law they urge Rom. 6. 14. 1 Tim. 1. 9. But on the other side the Orthodox Divines say That it is true our light is only from Christ and the Spirit of God dwelling in us is the fountain of all the good we doe but yet say they the Lord hath commanded his holy Law to be our Rule which we must look to which if we transgresse we sinne and are to account every transgression of it a sinne and so are to be humbled for it and to walk as those which have offended a gracious God Reasons to prove the moral Law still in force to believers First Some places of Scripture prove it as Mal. 4. 12. Eccles. 13. 4. Matth. 5. 17. Think not saith Christ that I am come to destroy the Law I am not come to destroy but to fulfill it So Matth. 22. 37. Rom. 3. 31. Rom. 7. 22. Rom. 13. 9. Iam. 2. 8 10 11. Ephes. 6. 2. Revel 22. 14. which Scriptures make it clear that believers are under the moral Law Secondly If believers be not under the Law then they do not sin if they do contrary to the Law or neglect the things commanded in the Law For where there is no Law there is no transgression Thirdly Because the Lord when he doth promise in the Old Testament the new Covenant he doth in that Covenant promise to write his Law in their hearts there should be such a sutablenesse between their spirits and the Law of God that they should carry the counterpane of it in their hearts It is a presumptuous speech to say Be in Christ and sinne if thou canst for Davids murder after he was in Christ was a sinne 2 Sam. 12. 13. In many things we offend all Jam. 3. 2. 1 Joh. 1. 8. Some object and say that this is an argument we are freed from it Because their heart is so willing to conform to Gods will that they shall need no other rule to walk by but their own Spirit Answ. If there be that conformity in them yet the readinesse of the childe to obey his Fathers will doth not take off the command of the Father Fourthly The moral Law is in effect nothing but the Law of nature we owe it to God as our Creator Beleevers are freed from the Law 1. As a Covenant of life Do this and live they have no need to look for life that way they have it at a better hand and a cheaper rate for eternal life to them is the gift of God and the purchase of Jesus Christ. 2. From the rigour of the Law 3. The irritation and coaction of it 4. From the condemning power and the curses of it The Law is 1. A glasse to reveal and make known unto us the holinesse of God and the will of God and secondly to make our selves known to our selves by the Law comes the knowledge of sin Rom. 3. 20. 2. It is a Foil to set off Christ it drives them out of their own righteousnesse and makes them highly prize Christ and the benefits by him Rom. 7. 24 25. 3. It is a perfect Rule of all our obedience 4. The meditation of the terrours of the Law and the threatnings and curses which the Lord hath denounced against them that break it are one of the sanctified means of grace for the subduing and beating down of corruption Luk. 12. 5. 1 Cor. 9. 29. The Antinomians cry Away with the Law and what hath the Law to do with a Christian and they say that such a one who preacheth things out of the moral Law is a legal Preacher they say the love of God shed abroad in our hearts and the free Spirit is our rule None ought to be legal Preachers that is to preach salvation by keeping of the Law only the Papists are such See Rom. 6. 14. Col. 2. 24. But the Law must be preached as a rule of obedience and as a means to discover sin and convince men of their misery out of Christ Gal. 3. 23. The Law habet rationem speculi fraeni regulae The moral Law is a glasse to reveal sinne and the danger of it a glasse to discover it and a Judge to condemn it 1. A Glasse to reveal sin 2. A Bridle to restrain it 3. A Rule both within and without First A Glasse to reveal sin It discovers 1. Original sin I had not known lust but by the Law 1. It sets before us the Primitive righteousnesse wherein we were created 2. That there is something in us perfectly contrary to all this Colos. 1. 21. Acts 13. 10. 3. It discovers to us the dominion that this sinne hath over us Rom. 6. 12 14. 7. begin 4. Shews a man the filthinesse of this sinne 2 Corinth 7. 1. Iames 1. 21. Titus 1. 15. 5. Shews that this sin hath seminally all sins in it Iam. 1. 14. 1 Iohn 2. 15. 6. It discovers the deceitfulnesse of this sinne Ier. 17. 19. Iam. 3. 15. Act. 13. 10. Iude v. 11. 7. Shews a man the demerit and miserable effect of this sin Rom. 8. 12. 2. Actual sin it shews 1. Every sin dishonours God his glory is denied debased 2. The perfection of the Rule Rom. 7. 12. 3. The harmony of the rule Iam. 2. 10. 4. It s spirituality it discovers the thoughts and intents of the heart 5. The infection of sin to a mans self if it be inward to others if outward it is called rottennesse plague leprosie 6. That one act of sin
in any such exercise of religion for the end and purpose of pleasing God and getting grace from him with respect of conscience to him as esteeming that he must and will have it so or else the service shall not be well-pleasing and acceptable to him this is a part of worship or of divine Service For example a man brought an Ox or a Ramme a Lamb or such like thing and presented it to the Priest he did offer it unto God and that directly with intention of exercising obedience and faith to God Likewise this Offering was to be made by a certain person in a certain place at a certain time with certain Garments and Rites So all those observations became parts of this worship for in these also the intention of the doer was directly carried to God hoping and purposing by them to please God and exercise faith and obedience and other graces as well and as much as by the very offering it self and accounting the service not to be acceptable to God without them The things commanded here are of two sorts 1. For the performance of divine service 2. For the preservation and continuance thereof For the right performance of divine worship some things are to be looked unto for the substance and circumstances of it For the substance of worship also some things are required for the Matter of it Manner of it For the Matter some things are required for 1. The Object of the service 2. The Subject of it that is the kindes and parts of it For the Object two things are required 1. That it be to the true God alone 2. For the parts that they be such as are prescribe and appointed by the true God For the Object it must be only the true God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which is the maker of Heaven and Earth the Sonne of God our blessed Saviour and Mediatour the blessed Spirit our sanctifier which God hath manifested himself to us in the Scriptures to him and him only must we tender our worship which is so essential to worship that it cannot be true unlesse it be appropriated unto him according to the words of the Law repeated by our Saviour saying Thou shalt bown down to the Lord thy God and him alone that exclusive and confining particle our Saviour addeth by way of interpretation Shalt thou serve or worship for so that word which in the original is Thou shalt serve Christ rendereth Thou shalt worship And great cause that he alone should be worshipped who alone is worthy of worship Seeing this worship is a solemn acknowledgement of his Deity we testifie that we esteem him the onely true God upon whom we depend and to whom we give our selves as servants Secondly This true God must be the object of our worship purely and by a clear work of the understanding conceived of in his Attributes and Properties not represented to the eye or any way pictured forth or imagined under any visible or sensible form or representation because there is no possibility of resembling him to the life by any similitude that any man or creature can invent or frame yea all resemblances fall so farre short of his perfection that it will prove an imbasing of our conceits concerning him to attempt any such resemblance and therefore Deut. 4. 2. is expresse telling Israel that they heard a voice alone in the time that God came amongst them to deliver the Law and saw no manner of Image or likenesse and therefore they ought not to corrupt themselves by making any Image or Representation God is not a body but a Spirit and Essence a Spirit whose being is every way above all that all creatures can attain and reach to proportionably to the excellency thereof by the most deep contemplation of their minde And therefore also the Prophets do cry out against the picturing of God or worshipping him under any such form or picture saying Whereunto will ye liken me What similitude will ye make of me Isa. 48. 18. The way to cure this evil 1. Purge your hearts more and more from carnal affections Psalm 17. 15. Matth. 5. 8. 2. Beg the assistance of the holy Ghost to raise your apprehensions of the Divine Essence 2 Cor. 3. 14 15 16. The Spirit gives us light and makes it powerfull to change the heart 3. Be much in the study of the Scriptures they are the image of Christ and he is the image of God 2 Cor. 3. 18. 4. 4. 4. Be obedient to divine institutions God knows what worship is best for himself Col. 2. 23 Obedience to Gods will keeps up the repute of his Essence See 2 Sam. 6. 6. Nihil adeo offendit hominum mentes ac simplicitas Divinorum operum Tertul. 5. Consider your experiences of grace Exod. 15. 11. Mic. 7. 17. Luk. 1. 46. 6. Often view God in his stupendious works Psal. 104 observe the bounding of the Sea the hanging of the earth upon nothing Iob 26. 7. the beauty and motion of the heavens the order of all the creatures Hosea 2. latter end See Psal. 40. 18. 7. When you make use of sensitive things to increase your knowledge of God you must proceed by way of negation and argument and not by representation See Isa. 45. 15. 8. Labour to get a more perfect and clear notion of God follow on to know the Lord Hos. 6. 3. Heaven consists much in the vision of God For the parts of worship it is required that they be all prescribed unto us by the written word of God that he may not have cause to except against us saying Who required these things at your hands For seeing we do them to him we must from him know whether they will be acceptable unto him yea or no. His own will is the right rule of his own worship what is not conformable to the rule cannot be true worship Wherefore the Lord chargeth Israel that they should not adde any thing to the thing by him prescribed but keep themselves strictly to his appointment doing alone that very thing which he required without swerving to the right hand or to the left Deut. 4. 2. Iosh. 1. 7. Prov. 30. 2. If God had left us without a patern in the wayes of his worship we should have wandered in incertainties the Heathens by the light of nature knew that there was a God and that he was to be worshipped yet they did but grope after him because they wanted a rule of worship Humane inventions in matters of worship have been brought in 1. By Satan he knows 1. That they take away the glory of worship that only is excellent which it plenum sui 2. That they take away the Majesty and Authority of it God shews no such Majesty any where as in his Ordinances but in heaven Revel 4. 2. 3. That they take away the power of Ordinances Matth. 15. 6. all the power of Ordinances consists in Gods presence in them
one in their bosome so the elect are cherished in the bosome of the Father of all the faithful There is perfection perpetuity immutability there is Foelix securitas secura foelicitas Bernard Blessednesse is the fruition of the essential absolutely chief first eternal independent perfect only sufficient good and chiefly to be desired The object of this blessednesse is God himself Psal. 50. 23. 33. 1 Iohn 2. 3. for all these properties agree to him and none other Gen. 15. 1. Psal. 16. 5. and he being the first cause of all things must needs be the chief good and last end Blessednesse is two-fold 1. Incomplete Beatitudo viae as Iam. 1. 12. 2. Perfect Beatitudo Patriae as the Schools call it which consists in the enjoyment of a good commensurate to all our desires Nothing but the Divine Essence can make us happy in the life to come 1. Not the glorious place of heaven Paul was taken up thither yet after had a messenger of Satan to buffet him 2. Not the company of Saints and Angels 3. Not the perfection of grace 1 Cor. 13. 12. perfection of grace is rather a consequent of felicity 2 Cor. 5. 17. 4. Not a perfect injoying of Christ the Mediator because he as Mediator hath his happinesse in another Psal. 16. ult it is spoken of Christ. The highest object of faith must be to the soul the highest ground of joy the essence of God is the ultimate object of faith 1 Pet. 1. 21. This only perfects the graces 1 Iohn 3. 3. Matth. 18. 10. gives rest and satisfaction to the soul Psal. 17. ult In beatitudine complebitur omne desiderium beatorum Aquinas The essence of God cannot be seen by creatures glorified with bodily eyes 1 Tim. 6. 16. though the body then be spiritual it shall not lose its essential properties we shall see Christ then Iob 19. 26. it is an intellectual vision yet this is Cognitio apprehensiva not comprehensiva as the Schoolmen speak Iob 11. 2. There shall be fulnesse of fruition Frui est cum gaudio uti to requiesce with delight in the thing obtained therefore mediis uti fine frui dicimur Psal. 16. ult Vide Aquin. Sum. part 1. 2. Quaest. 11. Art 3 4. But though their solemn and substantial happinesse lies in God Psal. 17. 15. Psal. 73. 25 26. 1 Cor. 15. 28. yet it is an additional comfort to enjoy the company of the Saints all the Patriarchs Prophets Apostles and Martyrs Matth. 8. 11. Heb. 12. 22. We love to be in the Assemblies of the Saints on earth to pray fast and receive with them then we shall more delight in them when we shall converse with none but real Saints here the sheep and goats are mingled together and they perfect we shall all agree in the same work and aim communion with them will be constant The Communion between the blessed spirits will not be mental only but vocal 2 Cor. 12. 3. Paul speaks not so much of what he saw as what he heard whether every man shall be understood by others in his own tongue or whether they shall speak Hebrew as Act. 26. 14. is uncertain The place of this happinesse is the highest heavens farre above all heavens a place that no Philosopher ever wrote of a place which God from all eternity appointed to be his throne where he would shew all his glory and for a receptacle of his Saints The society the Saints shall there have are innumerable multitude of elect Angels and all the glorified Saints which God hath called out of the world All their knowledge shall be by vision sight not by faith discourse the will perfectly conformable to God the affections which have any perturbation shall cease as hope desire care grief love and joy shall continue the whole Church shall then see and enjoy God immediately and this vision and fruition of God is properly heaven First Vision they shall see his face Mat. 5. 8. The happinesse of heaven is often exprest by knowledge they shall see God it is called the beatifical vision 1. All the faculties shall be glorified the minde is the most noble faculty the soul enjoyes pure content in the contemplation of any truth Psal. 19. 10. 2. Our fruition increaseth by light as our light is so is our love Iohn 4. 10. God presents himself immediately to the understanding 1 Cor. 13. 9. 1 Iohn 3. 2. Secondly Fruition they shall enjoy God possesse him he shall be all in all They shall not see him with bodily eyes so the Deity cannot be seen but with the soul so far as the understanding can be enlarged it doth simul semel behold all the glorious perfections of God Christ and the Trinity knows him as he knows us for the kinde 1 Cor. 13. 12. The true Christian is thus disposed toward heaven he prizeth it above all things it is his inheritance portion he conceives of it as a place where God doth give himself to him fully 2. He would willingly be there it is the end of his race and hope 2 Cor. 5. 1. if he might enjoy all the benefits of this world for ever according to his desire he would willingly leave all to be with Christ. 3. He hath his conversation in heaven travels the way that leads to it The way to obtain eternal life 1. We must seek it of God in an earnest and serious way Matth. 11. 12. Luke 16. 16. 2 Pet. 1. 10. it is called striving 1 Cor. 9. 24 25. We strive for an incorruptible crown saith Paul See Phil. 2. 2. We must take great care lest in this we come short 1 Cor. 9. ult 3. We should take heed of our darling sin 1 Cor. 9. 26 27. 4. We must be guided in this life by the counsel of God Psal. 73. 24. 5. We should have our conversation in heaven before hand 6. We should keep our spirits in a continual readinesse Luke 12. 36 37. Col. 1. 12. Because all that handle the Commonplace of the glory of heaven handle that Question Whether the Saints there shall have the like degree of happinesse therefore I shall speak something of it The generality of the Fathers Schoolmen and modern Divines are for diversity of degrees The Papists lay the degrees of glory on the several merits of men and tell us of seven Crowns This preheminence of glory the Schoolmen term Aureola that is an Additament of felicity to that essential glory in the vision of God which they term Aurea This Aureola or Coronet to be added to the Crown of glory they ascribe to three sorts of persons to Virgins to Martyrs and to Doctors or Prophets Vide Aquin. Supplem 3. Part. Quaest. 96. Artic. 1 2 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13. God rewards a man not propter but secundum opera according to the matter of his work so shall be the substance of his reward according to the manner of his work the
1. p. 60 Vertue what in God what in men l. 2. p. 172 Violence l. 4. p. 382 Virgin The Virgin Mary why called Deipara the mother of God l. 5. p. 404 Visiting two-fold l. 9. p. 768 Unbelief l. 4. p. 383 384 Vivification l. 7. p. 537. to 540 Understanding What Gods Understanding is l. 2. p. 160 161 Differs from ours many wayes l. 2. p. 161 What our Understanding is and its sanctification l. 7. p. 540 541 Union Union of two natures in Christ described l. 5. p. 403 〈…〉 04 Our Union with Christ l. 7. p. 486 487 Not only relative nor essential or personal l. 7. p. 487 488 Three mystical Unions l. 7. p. 488 Marks of our Union with Christ and Means to preserve it l. 7. p. 488 489 Unkindeness l. 4. p. 385 Unsetledness ibid. Unthankfulness ibid. Vocation or effectual calling l. 7. p. 489. to 492 Vow What a religious Vow is l. 8. p. 740 How it is distinguished from an Oath ibid. Its ends and uses l. 8. p. 741 Rules to be observed in Vowing and the manner of it l. 8. p. 740 The Popish Vows of perfection continence and poverty condemned l. 8. p. 742. to 745 Uranoscope what l. 3. p. 262 Usury l. 4. p. 386 Vulgar The Vulgar Latine Edition not authentical l. 1. p. 76. to 80 W WAter a necessary element its nature and use l. 3. p. 239 Whales a great work of God l. 3. p. 252. 262 Will. What it is l. 2. p. 164 Its properties and how distinguished l. 2. p. 165 The meaning of that Petition in the Lord Prayer thy Will be done in earth as it is in heaven l. 8. p. 644 645 The Will of man is desperately evil l. 4 p. 309 310 A double Will in Christ l. 5. p. 430 The sanctification of the Will l. 7. p. 542 543 Willet commended l. ● p. 116 Windes a great work of God l. 3. p. 248 Wisdom Wisdom what l. 2. p. 〈…〉 Wherein seen 〈…〉 Godlinesse is true Wisdom l. 2. p. 163 164 The grace of Wisdom l. 7. p. 589 590 Witchcraft a great sin l. 4. p. 387 Witness-bearing False-witnesse against ones self or other evil l. 7. p. 845 846 Whether the use of Witnesses be necessary in Baptism l. 8. p. 672 673 Word Why the Scripture is called the Word and why the Word of God l. 1. p. 5 Why the Word of God was written l. 1. p. 84 Works Works of God distinguished l. 3. p. 216 Whether Works without faith merit grace ex congruo and with faith ex condigno l. 7. p. 516 Good Works flowing from the grace of Gods Spirit in us do not merit heaven l. 7. p. 516 517 Protestants no enemies to good Works ibid. World how divided by Philosophers and how by the Scriptures l. 3. p. 235 Worship Worship what is required to it l. 9. p. 769 What to the matter and manner l. 9. p. 770. to 773 We must not Worship God under any form or picture l. 9. p. 771 How humane inventions in Worship have been brought in l. 9. p. 771 772 The several kinds and parts of Worship l. 6. p. 573 The manner of Worship l. 9. p. 774. to 780 Preparation to Worship wherein it consists l. 9. p. 775 776 To the Word Prayer Sacraments Vows ibid. False Worship what l. 9. p. 781 782 True Worship abused l. 9. p. 785 786 Worship solemn and common l. 9. p. 789 Z ZEchary when he wrote and who best interpret him l. 1. p. 40 Zephany when he wrote and who best interpret him ibid. ERRATA REader I suppose if thou hast published any thing thy self thou art not ignorant that it is almost impossible though one be never so carefull and diligent to free a Book wholly from errours in a large Treatise consisting of many Marginal Quotations it is more difficult to avoid them I might apologize likewise for my self my absence twice while the Book was printing my reading much of it by Candle-light and my having but one Copy the making use of divers Books besides my own for the composing of it must needs render it a harder province also to observe those faults that have passed I do not approve of all those things I alleadge as viz. p. 731. It cannot then be called the Lords Supper since it is rather a Break-fast By this reason it should be necessary to eat before we receive the Sacrament yea to receive it in the evening Nor that p. 757. in the sixth and seventh Commandment are otherwise c. Nor that p. 861. of the Jews being called by Vision I mention not false Interpunctions figures misplacing of things or the omission or change of a letter Some things are twice in the same page p. 124. à Jove principium p. 482. IN Epist. Dedicat. p. 2. l. 23. and our Deborah Epist. to the Read p. 1. l. 13. I treat not l. 25. fewer p. 2. l. 7. dele the last Sanctification p. 4. l. 28. wolves and asses p. 5. l. 7. last labour Prolegom p 3. l. 27. dele first most l. 42. Apostles m. Protectori p. 10 m. controversam p. 12. m. Statut. 10. l. 10. errours and discover the danger of them and that he termed heresie c. l. 21. Tort Tort. p. 13. l. 35. nec nos l. 42. Roffens m. called Masters or Heirs Judg. 18. 7. IN the Book p. 4. m. scavoir p. 9. l. 30. conversatio mel m. alius aliqua p. 11. m. non persuadent sed cogunt p. 27. m. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 63. l. 20. Talitha p. 67. l. 37. osculamini m. splendidius p. 67. l. 27. that which follows after possessed me dele p. 80. l. 2. the Interpretation p. 86. m. ordinatè p. 96. l. 19. necessary p. 1● 12. m. annis Mayerus in Philol. Sac. ut sciunt qui in Commentariis Hebraeis versati sunt sacris c. p. 125 m. determinatur à sagittante p. 142. m. dele non p. 161. l. 47 the object of the last is all things possible of the first only c. p. 164. l. 42. Gods will is taken c. p. 178. l. 45. dele Iob 35. 8. l. 46. make it 1 Sam. 24. 19. p. 179. l. 4. dele Mark 6. 3. p. 183. m. eluceat p. 201. m. fruenda p. 205. m. respiciens p. 217. m. Ames coron p. 222. m. dele Electio completa c. p. 251. l. 14. disserentium p. 257. m. susi ineri p. 260. l. 15. dele Ierech p. 263. m. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 268 l. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 273. m. not more p. 281. m. bono p. 288. l 35. out p. 304. m. Vide plura ibid should be after cap. 2. p. 306. m. eramus p. 313. m. sin● hoc p. 329. l. 18. dele Rom. 1. ult p. 334. m. dele Amos 9. 3. p. 344. l. 4. one hath written a book of 3 c. p. 354. l. 16. all men p. 357. m. log p. 359. l. 10. that he might be able
influence upon the act and function of Christian life Principia Theologia or Fundamentalia dogmata fundamenta salutis are not the same but differ formally though some of them may be materially coincident Mr Mede in a letter to Mr Hartlib As there are in points of saith fundamental Articles so there are in points of practice fundamentall Duties Master Raynolds on Hosoa 14. 2 3. The foundations of religion must 1. Be held with great certainty 1. Speculative foundations John 17. 3. We must hold one God in three Persons Christ the Mediator 2. Practical John 16. 8. We must be convinced of the sinne of nature the righteousnesse of Christ and the necessity of a holy life and suspect those opinions which advance nature depresse Christ decry good works 2. We must be earnest about the particular explication of these truths 1 Cor. 5. 6. Errour in matter of Justification is dangerous Corollaries n Haeresis est pertinax defensio erroris in fide opinionem aliquam pugnantem cum fundamento ejus ponentis Voet. Haereticus non est nisi qui inverbum fidei peccat Luther in Epist. Galat. c. 1. v. 8. Haereticum tota Ecclesia Christiana inde ab initio in hunc usque diem vocavit cum qui haeresiarcham aliquem sequ●tus negat doctrinam aliquam fundamentalem ad salutem necessariam inter Christianos controversiam Vedel de Arcan Armin. lib. 1. cap. 1. Vide plura ibid. There are damnable heresies 2 Pet. 2. 1. and errours that are capital Not holding the head Col. 2. 19. and such as destroy the faith 2 Tim. 2. 18. o Vide Altingii loc com part 2. p. 262. et Z●nc misc de Magist. Non omnis error est baeresis sed illa tantum quae est contra fundamentum a●t in fundamento fidei pertinaciter defenditur Voet. Some errours do not touch the foundation others do concutere and others do evertere We hold the Lutherans to be true Churches agreeing with us in fundamental points of faith and likewise in being free from Idolatry for albeit they have Images in their Churches which we conceive to be a very dangerous thing yet they do not worship them and although they hold reall presence in the Sacrament yet they do not adore it Dr Twiss his doubting conscience resolved My Lord Faulkland in his Reply to him that answered him about the Romane Infallibilitd pag. 220. to 231. seems to hold the negative Bellar. Tom. 2. l. 3. c. 21. T. Aquin. part 2. Quaest. undecima Articulo tertio Vide Gerhardi loc commun de Magistratu p Part. 3. Philos. Sob Sect. 2. q. 6. Zanch. tom 2. Misc. in cap. de Magistratu Aretius hath written the history of Valentinus Gentilis put to death at Bern. There was a Statute against Lollardi in England and Hugonots in France Haereticus ego tibi tu miht See Statut. of Qu. Eliz. c. 1. Propriè Heretici vocantur qui ea pertinaciter rejictunt quae in sacris Scripturis docentur Daven de judice controv Haeresis est error pugnans cum ●undamento religionis Christianae isque pertinax Altingius Tom. 2. Problem Theol. part 2. Prob. 14. Heresie is an errour in the foundation of Christian Religion taught and defended with obstinacy Perk. on Gal. 5. 20. See more there q Lib. 3 of the Church ch 3. See D. Prideaux his Sermon on 1 Cor. 11. 19. Vide Grotium in Tit. 3. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicuntur ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eligere praeferre est enim haeresis priv●●a aliqua opinio quam quis prae dogmate Christiano fide Catholica sibi amplectendam eligit eamque pertinaciter defendit Gerh. loc commun de ministerio Ecclesiastico c. 8 Ut quis sit propriò dictus haereticus requiritur 1. Ut sit person● in Ecclesiam visibilem per Baptismi Sacramentum recepta 1 Cor. 11. 9. Act. 20. 13. 2. Ut erret in fide sive errorem illum noviter introducat sive ab alio acceptum amplectatur quamvis illud haeresiarchae hoc vero haeretici proprium videri possit 3. ut error directè in ipsi fidei fundamentum impingat 4. Ut errori conjuncta sit malitia ac pertinacia per quam etiam aliquoties admonitus nihilominus obstinatè errorem suum defendat 5. Ut dissensiones scandala in Ecclesia excitet ejusque unitatem scindat Id. ibid. Haeresis consideratur vel in doctrina vel in persona haeresis doctrinae est quando id ipsum quod proponitur est contra sidem Catholicam Orthodoxam Haeresis autem personae quum quis haeresin doctrinae ita proponit ut asserat etiam convictus Cham. de Occ. Pontif. l. 6. Errours are practical or doctrinal onely fundamental or circa-fundamental or neither of the two r See Master Clarks Sermons on Matth. 8. 13. and Master Cranfords Haereseomachia on 2 Tim. 2. 17. s Arius in Alexandria una scintilla fuit Sed quoniam non statim oppressus est totum orbem ejus flamma populata est Aquin. t Ubi supra Cum agitaretur de ista quaestione An morte mulctandi cogendi haeretici in Synodo quadam Londini perrogarentur singulorum sententi● surrexit quidam senex Theologus atque hoc planum esse asserit ex ipso Apostolo Haereticum hominem post unam aut alteram admonitionem d● vita De vita inquit ergo manifestum est haereticos istos homines post unam aut alteram admonitionem ● vita tollendos Erasm. Annotat. in Tit. 3. Vel sola modestia potuisset vitam redimere said Galvin of Servetu●●n opusc Here the Spirit of God sets forth 1. The office of a Magistrate to bear the sword 2. The end which is double 1. The Minister of God for thy good in general 2. To execute wrath on him that doth evil God never committed to any that charge of the body onely and not proportionably the charge of the soul as to Masters Parents Heirs Judg 7. 10. u Magistrates in the Scripture in the Hebrew are called Masters of restraint Qui non vetat peccare cum potest jubet Sene. x M. Hildersam on Psal. 51. 7. Lect. 146. As all blasphemous hereticks Levit. 24. 16. so seducing hereticks are to be put to death The whole 13 Chapter of Deut. is spent about the seducing of false prophets Are not Moses moral Laws of perpetual equity and therefore to be observed in all ages Is blasphemy more tolerable in the New Testament Mr. Cotton on Rev. 16. third Vial. We are not obliged saith Beza to the judicial Laws as they were given by Moses to one people yet so farre we are bound to observe them as they comprehend that general equity which ought to prevail every where By the judicial Laws of the Jews the false prophets and Idolaters were to be put to death Deut. 13. 8 9. 17. 5 6. where there is a moral equity in the precept it is perpetual 1. That
Father 2. Civilly so men Act. 16. 30. 3. Possessively so a Master over his servant the husband over his wife When this Lord of lords Lord Paramount came into the world Augustas Caesar by a strict Edict commanded that no man should give or receive the title of Lord. Ps. 110. ult Lu. 24. 26 He is called Enosh calamitous man Ps. 8. 5. the Apostle expounds it of him Heb. 2. 5. See Psal. 22. 6. 69. 1. 2. Christ speaks that there of himself say some He did this as our Surety as our Sacrifice so he bare our sins Psal. 40. 12. 69. 5. compared with v. 9. was liable to our debt Gal. 4. 4. 3. 13 Dan. 9. 26. there was a commutation of the person not the debt Isa. 53. 6. He had a negative ignorance though not a privative in his understanding Isa. 7. 15. on this ground he is said to grow in knowledge Luke 2. 52. was troubled in Spirit John 11. 33. His Spirit was spent after labour his strength weakned Psal. 22. 14. all the creatures were against him the good Augels withdrew themselves from him in the three hours of darknesse and approv'd of the judgement the evil Angels set on him John ●4 30. He was whipt and buffeted as a slave The chief Magistrates in Church and State condemned him the souldiers mocked and pierced him God himself had a great hand in Christs sufferings Isa. 53. 16. The same Greek word translated Deliver and Betray is used of God Rom. 8. 32. Jude ver 26. Matth. 16. 21 23. The Priests Mat. 27. 2. and Pilate Matth. 27. 26. and of the people John 19. 11. Acts 3. 13. God ordained Christs death Acts 2. 23. 4. 27 28. 1 Pet. 2. 20. Some say God foreknows but doth not by a certain and immutable Decree predetermine The Apostle Acts 2. mentions his determinate counsel in the first place and in Acts 4. his hand to note his concurring power and his counsel to note his pre-ordaining will 2. A great part of Christs sufferings was immediately inflicted by God Mat. 27. 46. Gal. 3. 13. 3. Christ ascribes the cup to God John 18. 11. Gal. 4. 4 5. Rom. 5. 19. He was obedient in the humane Nature alone not in the divine Dr Hampton * Amari●●i●a● mortem dulcem nitidam candidam acceptabilem reddit dum audis Iesum Christum Filium Dei suo sanctissimo contactu omnes passiones ipsam adeò mortem consecrasse ac sanctificasse maledi●●ionem benidixisse ig●ominiam gl●rificasse paupertatem ditasse ita ut mors vitae janua maledictio benedictionis origo ignominia gloriae parens esse coga●tur Luther loc com primae Class c. 6. We should look unto Christ whom we have pierced and on all his sufferings as brought upon him by us nothing will make sin so hateful nor Christ so dear Vulnera Christi rutilantia sunt Biblia practica these lead us to all duties of holinesse The proper object of faith in justification is Christ crucified The Angels love Christ because of the excellency and glory of his person but not as made sinne for them Dignites Person● primò conducit ad acceptationem Unde enim fit quod Persona Iesu Christi in nostram omnium vicem admittitur nisi quod Persona jam multò dignior paenam luit atque si omnes in mundo homines plecterentur Secundò ad meritum Tertiò ad compensationem Sanford de Descensu Christi ad inferos l. 3. p. 108. Et in ●ascendi s●rte in vivendi instituto in mortis genere nihil nisi humile abjectum sordidum infimumque spectavit cogitavit Quid Deo immortali minus conveniens aut decorum quam è Caelo in terram descendere Hoc paru● Immò in ventrem Virginis mortalis se insinuare ibique naturam humanam mortalem omnibus hominis infirmitatibus obnoxiam assumere Hoc ille fecit Quid vero honesto homini magis probr●sum contumeliosum indignum quam servili supplicio que latrones tum puniri solebant animam quafi criminosam per vim exbalares Hanc ille etiam sustinere infim● abjectionis ignomini● extrema notam voluit Salmas Epist. 2. ad Bartholinum de cruce Sugit ubera qui regit fidera August Vagit infans sed in coelo est puer crescit sed plenitudinis Deus permanet Hilar. ● 10. de Trinit Mark 6. 3. * Baronius thinks he made yokes alluding thereto in that he professeth my yoke is easie Mat. 11. 30 Dr Prid. Introduct for reading all sorts of Histories c. 7. p. 51. 2 Cor. 8. 9. a Pope Nicolas the third and others maintain'd that our Saviour Christ was a very beggar and lived here in the lowest degree of beggary that can be which Pope Iohn the 22. condemneth for an heresie Mr Gatakers answer to Mr Walkers vindic p. 40 41. b Mat. 8. 20. Luke 4. 29. Mark 3. 6 7. John 8. 59. The Psalmist expresseth Christs trouble by roaring Psal. 22. 1. The Apostle Heb. 5. 7. by strong crying and tears Those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 26. 37. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mark 14. 33. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are emphaticall see them opened in my Greek Critica Tanta sudoris copia ut non corpus humectaret solum sed etiam in terram caderet Non sudor aqueus sed sanguineus nec guttae sed grumi cui exemplo quod unquam auditum simile nedum aequale Chamierus Tom. 2. l. 5 c. 13 Vide Sandfordum de Descensu Christi ad Inferos l. 3. p. 203. ad finem a An agony is the perplexed fear of one who is entring into a great and grievous conflict Timor quo corripitur is qui in certamen descendit Arist. Irenaeus saith the year of his age wherein he suffered was about the Fiftieth which he voucheth to be an Apostolical tradition The ground of his opinion was Iohn 8. 57. The common received opinion is That he suffered being thirty three compleat and in the beginning of his thirty four Scaliger addeth one year more and placeth his Passion in the beginning of his thirty five Non timeretur ille qui potest nocere nisi haberet quandam eminentiam potestatis cui de facili resisti non possit ea enim quae in promptu habemus repellere non timemus In Christo fuit timor Dei non quidem secundum quod respicit malum separationis à Deo per culpam neque etiam secundum quod respicit malum punitionis pro culpa sed secundum quod respicit ipsam Divinam eminentiam prout scilicet anima Christi quodam affectu reverentiae movebatur in Deum à Spiritu sancto acta Aquin. part 3. Q. 16. Art 6. b That is not ●ound that one drop of Christs bloud was enough to redeem the world Pope Clement the sixth first used that speech That one drop of Christs bloud was enough to save men and the rest was laid up in the
man will believe he hates God Hatred is an opposition to love love of God makes us endeavour an union with him thou carest not for a knowledge of God or being nigh him 2. A desire that another may not be so excellent as he is wicked men would not have God have a being or so excellent a being would not have him be so holy pure just 3. A great sign of hatred is contrariety or opposition of wils Gods will is revealed in his Word when there is an opposition to it we sinne against him Exod. 20. 2d Commandment Those that love me and keep my Commandments those hate God that do not keep his Commandments God chooseth holinesse you filthiness if thy will be contrary to the choice he makes thou hatest him 4. That which is feared unlesse it be with a reverential fear is hated To stand in awe of God a● the Indians of the Devil who dare not but offer Sacrifices lest the Devil should hurt them Secondly For the evil of punishment how far sanctified hatred may be carried against crosses We may use all lawful means to have the crosses removed but with a quiet resignation to the will of God if he will have it so If our hatred be sanctified then it is carried against sinne primarily and properly because it is Gods great enemy and ours and the great evil in it self How to know whether our heart be rightly carried against sin This is a great part of Repentance Repentance is the turning of the affections especially those two great affections of love and hatred in our lost condition Our hatred was against God and our love set on sin now contrarily 1. Where ever this affection of hatred is carried aright against sinne the minde judgeth of sinne as Gods Wotd doth counteth it the greatest abomination and dislikes it not onely because it brings damnation but because of the nature of it The Scripture cals it our deformity uncleannesse nakednesse a running issue 2. Here sinne is grieved for as the greatest evil if one have an antipathy against a creature yet if that be farre enough there is no great trouble Rom. 7. Wretched man that I am It is the greatest spiritual though not sensitive grief we are most troubled at those evils which most affect the body have the greatest sense of grief for them as the ●amp gont stone but here the intellectual nature is most offended with sin chuseth more to be rid of it then trouble and judgeth himself more abominable for it 3. A constant hatred of sin 4. It endeavours to ●uine and destroy it the Scripture often expresseth it by killing of sin Mor●isi ●our members 5. It hates it upon those grounds that God hates it because it is a rebellion against God crucifieth Christ grieves the Spirit is at enmity to the grace of God in me I hate it upon such spiritual grounds 6. Where ever sin is truly hated there we hate it most in those that are nearest to our selves Hatred of sin is one half of repentance sin is a hatred of God and a loving of sinne in Repentance our love is turned to God and hatred set on sinne Means to get our hatred of sin sanctified First Study to get a right information of sin what ever can be the object of hatred meets in sin in the highest degree in crosses there is something evil but in sin there is nothing good it is not only evil but hath in it all kinde of evil 1. A defiling evil 2. Deprives us of all other good robs us of God peace comfort Secondly Principally get thy heart filled with the love of God and his wayes you that love God hate that which is evil Psal. 119. I love all thy Commandments therefore I hate every evil way love the holy Spirit and thou wilt hate filthinesse CHAP. XXII II. Desire and Flight THe next affection is that of Desire It differs no more from love then the Act from the Habit it being the exercise of love The surest Character you can make of a man is by his desires as much as the Physician can judge of his patients condition by his appetite In this affection four things are considerable 1. The Nature of it 2. The Image of God in it before the fall 3. How extreamly depraved our desires are in their natural condition 4. The work of grace in sanctifying of it Desire is the going out of the will endeavouring after that we love a good thing not yet enjoyed or not perfectly the making out of the soul for the fruition of that good There are three affections conversant about good say some Love about good in general present or absent Desire about good absent Joy about good present Des Cartes saith not only the presence of good absent but also the conservation of a good present is desired God gave to the soul of man when he created it a two-fold appetite 1. Sensitive or natural whereby the desires are carried violently after their own preservation 2. Rational or the will these rational desires are exercised about spiritural things in the fruition of which one placeth his happinesse Of the Image of God in our desires in our innocent condition The understanding then lookt on God as his only absolute Good and the will of man did adhere to him and acquiesce in him He desired 1. A more perfect fruition of God and that he might lay out himself more for him Natural desires were few moderate subordinate to this to be helps and furtherances of the perfect enjoying of God 2. The depravation of this affection A great deal of our original corruption is vented out this way the corruption of the understanding will love hatred thoughts fall in here 1. The object of the desire whereas God should be only desired in our sinful condition we have no desire after him only vellieties faint wishings and wouldings Though the soul be full of desires they are taken off from God and wholly carried to some poor empty creature 2. The Qualities or Properties of these sinful desires 3. The woful fruits of them The qualities of our corrupt and carnal desires 1. The vanity of them which appears in three particulars 1. There is no reason to be given of our corrupt desires as Samson Give me her she likes me 2. The things that we desire appear to be toyes 3. The innumerablenesse of them 2. They are intense and violent the soul pursues such things 3. They are insatiable 3. The woful effects and fruits of them 1. These corrupt desires have got the regiment of the soul they enslave reason the most noble faculty of it 2. Destroy all hope of profiting they take up our time and study the soul is ever imployed about some of these unworthy desires 3. They make the soul extreamly unthankful for the mercies already received they make the Soul and Spirit of a man base 4. The work of Gods grace in renewing or sanctifying our desires