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A34599 A conference Mr. John Cotton held at Boston with the elders of New-England 1. concerning gracious conditions in the soule before faith, 2. evidencing justification by sanctification, 3. touching the active power of faith : twelve reasons against stinted forms of prayer and praise : together with the difference between the Christian and antichristian church / written by Francis Cornwell ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; Cornwell, Francis. 1646 (1646) Wing C6335; ESTC R17280 52,817 177

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special● mercies and particular experience● that the Lord hath done for a beleever when his soule was brough● into great adversity and when the Lord delivered him the Spirit o● God in the dayes of his mirth bringeth into his mind and causeth him with heart and lips to blesse th● Lord in the Congregation for his mercies received Thus Hannah that was barren ●he Lord made to keep house and ●o be the joyfull mother of a sonne ●ingeth her song of praise 1 Sam. 2. ● My heart rejoyceth in the Lord my ●orne is exalted in the Lord my mouth is enlarged over mine enemies because ● rejoyce in thy salvation Mary the mother of Jesus singeth her Magnificat My soule doth magnifie the Lord and my spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour Luk. 1. 46 47. So when the Lord had made good unto old Zacharias what hee had foretold him concerning his sonne John Luk. 1. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20. being filled with the Spirit breaketh forth into his Eucharistia of praise Luk. 1. 68. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel for hee hath visited and redeemed his people Yea and old aged Simeon singeth his Nunc dimittis Lord let thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seene thy salvation Nay King David upon his har● warbles out the speciall mercies and favours and deliverances Go● had done for his soule Psal 103 Blesse the Lord O my soule and 〈◊〉 within mee blesse his holy Name Bles● the Lord O my soule and forget 〈◊〉 all his benefits Who forgiveth all thi●●● iniquities who healeth all thy diseases Who redeemeth thy life from destruction who crowneth thee with lovin● kindnesses and tender mercies ● Nay the Psalmist exhorteth th● Traveller the sicke man and th● Mariner to praise God for thei● speciall mercies received Psal 107. Hence holy Paul saith I will pra● with the spirit and I will pray wit● understanding also I will sing wit● the spirit and I will sing with under●standing also Else when thou shal● blesse with the spirit how shall he whic● occupieth the roome of the unlearned say Amen at thy giving of thanks ● Cor. 14. 15 16. So that to sing blesse and give thanks in the language of holy Scripture is all one Hence as spirituall Prayer is a Sacrifice Psal 141. 2. offered up unto God our Father in the name of Christ to comfort solace and cure a sad and grieved spirit so spirituall praise is a Sacrifice tendered to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ through Christ Heb. 13. 16. by a merry and rejoycing Spirit for the speciall mercies and blessings spirituall and temporall that the Lord hath bountifully bestowed on him According to that of the Apostle Iames Is any afflicted amongst yo● let him pray Is any merry amongst you let him sing James 5. 13. 3. Thirdly Sacrifice is a bro●en and a contrite heart for his sins and his dayly failings he hath committed against a crucified Jesus when God powreth upon his people the Spirit of grace and supplication Zech. 12. 10. The more the Spirit of Christ openeth the eyes of their spirituall understanding to looke up by faith upon a Jesus who for their sinnes was peirced the more will their hearts bee pierced with godly sorrow for their sinnes which bringeth repentance to salvation never to be repented of 2 Cor. 7. 10 11. and to loath themselves in their owne eyes for all their spirituall and corporall abominations Ezek. 36. Hence beleeving David the King that sorrowed after a godly manner for all his iniquities said The sacrifices of God are a troubled spirit A broken and contrite heart for sinne o● God thou wilt not despise Psalm 51. 17. 4. Sacrifice is a free ready and cheerefull contribution to the poor● and needy members of Christ Hebr. 13. 16. To doe good and distribute forget not for with such a sacrifice God is well pleased Phil. 4. 18. 5. Sacrifice is an holy life which the Spirit of Christ formeth in us Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you brethren upon the mercifulnesse of God that yee present your bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable to God which is your reasonable service 1 Cor. 6. 20. Yee are bought with a price glorifie God therefore in body and spirits which are Gods Thirdly The Altar that sanctifieth the person and the Sacrifice and maketh them both acceptable unto God Is Jesus the Christ 1 Pet. 2. 5. Yee also as lively stones that have received life from Jesus the living stone are built up a spirituall house and holy Priest-hood to offer up spirituall sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ To this Spirituall House or Church of the New Testament gathered according to the royall Commission of King Jesus Matth. 28. 18 19 20. as the Churches in Judea in Rome Corinth Galatia Ephesus c. were constituted The Promises were made First that God would bee a Father to all those that did obey his voice and come out from among the Jewes Heathens and Gentiles and separate from their false waies and superstitious worship and touch not the uncleane thing and he will receive you And yee shall be his Sonnes and Daughters saith the Lord the Almighty 2 Corinth 6. 17 18. Secondly for all the defects that these commit against his Spirituall worship they have this promise The bloud of Iesus Christ his Sonne clenseth them from all their sinnes 1 Iohn 1. 7. 1 Iohn 2. 1 2. Thirdly So many as have been b●ptized into the name of the Lord Jesus that is into the profession of Faith that the Apostles taught to wit that men should beleeve in a Crucified dead and risen Jesus whom God hath exalted to be Lord and Christ had the promise of receiving the gifts of the holy Spirit How prove you that to this Faith and Baptisme the gift of the holy Spirit was granted Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus for the remission of sinnes and yee shall receive the g●fts of the holy Spirit For the promise of giving the holy Spirit is to you and to your children as Joel the Prophet foretold I will powre out my spirit upon all flesh and your Sonnes and Daughters shall prophesie and your old men shall dreame Dreames and your young men shall see V●sions and also upon the servants and upon the handmaides in those daies I will powre out my spirit Joel 2. ●8 ●9 And all that are a farre off even so many as the Lord our God shall call verse 29. and to the twelve in Asia ●he promise was made good Acts 19. 5 6 7. And when this Spirit is come he will guid thee into all truth for he shall not speake of himselfe but whatsoever he shall heare that shall ●ee speake and he will shew them things to come John 16. 13. Yea to be to the whole Church as a River that shall make glad the City of God Psal 46. 4. compared with John 7. 37. If any man thirst let him come
8. 56 The same Apostle saith that ●here bee six Witnesses that give ●ight and evidence unto our spiri●uall life in Christ of which three ●e in heaven and three on the earth ●nd the Spirit in both yet he did ●ot thinke it a vaine thing to give ●he water of Baptisme as out of ●he death and resurrection of Christ we receive the power to walk in new●esse of life Rom. 6. 3. 4. as a witnesse ●fter foure of the greater lights If you take Sanctification for a ●reated gift it is indeed but a Candle to the Sunne But when John ●aketh it but to confirme faith ●he meaneth then the Spirit of God beareth witnesse in it or else the testimony of sanctification though it be a divine gift or work yet it would not give a divine testimony nor increase divine faith for the heavens and earth are divine and supernaturall works yet they doe not give divine testimony of the Godhead unlesse the Spirit of God himself doe beare witnesse in them Therefore John giving sanctification for an evidence of a good estate to such as already knew it by the witnesse of the Spirit is not a lighting of a candle to the Sunne but as the setting up of another window though a lesser to convay the same Sun light into the house another way In 2 Pet. chap. 1. from verse 5. to 10. the Apostle exhorteth us by adding one gift of sanctification to another to make our calling and election sure Let Calvin answer for me This assurance saith hee whereof Peter speaketh by adding grace to grace is not in my judgement to be referred unto conscience as if the faithfull did thereby before God know themselves called and chosen but if any man will understand it of making of it sure before men there will be no absu●dity in this sense Neverthelesse it might be extended further that every one may be confirmed in their calling by their godly and holy life But that is a proofe not from ●he cause but from a signe and effect There be many conditionall promises in the Gospel which are made to the gifts and duties of sanctification which are all in vaine if poore drooping soules finding such gifts and duties of sanctification in themselves may not take comfort from them according to the promise The conditionall promises are made to poore drooping soules no● in respect of such conditions or as they are qualified with such gifts and duties of sanctification but in respect of their union with Christ to whom the promises belong Gal. 3. 26 28 29. The fruits of such an union with Christ such duties and gifts of sanctification be when they be sincere otherwise if the promises were made to such soules in respect of such conditions then the reward promised would belong unto them not of grace but of debt Rom. 4. 4. A promise made to any condition after it be made it becometh due debt to him in whomsoever such condition is to be found But therefore that such promises might be of grace they are made to us not as wee are indued with such and such conditions but as wee who have such and such conditions are united unto Christ Whence it is that such blessings offered in such promises as they are tendered to us in Christ so are they fulfilled to us in Christ Whereupon we look for the blessing not in our gifts and duties but in going still unto Christ for a clearer and fuller manifestation of him to us and of comfort in him As for example A thirsty soule to whom promise is made that hee shall be satisfied hee looketh not presently to be satisfied from his thirsting nor from any right his thirsting might give him in the promise but hee looketh to be satisfied by going unto Christ in drinking more abundantly of him by his Spirit as Christ himself directeth such drooping soules to doe and so we are to make use of such kind of promises Joh. 7. 37 38 39. No man can see his gifts and duties of sanctification in himselfe but hee must first have seen Christ by faith the Spirit of Christ enlightening his understanding in the knowledge of him As in case of mourning to which many promises are made No man can with Evangelicall repentance mourne over Christ and for himselfe untill the Spirit work faith and by faith beholding Christ hee hath seen him crucified and by him Zech. 12. 10. So then these conditions and the promises made to them doe not give us our first sight of Christ nor the first glymyse of light and comfort from him but rather our sight of Christ and some glympses of light and comfort from him doth beget such conditions in us Such conditionall promises are not in vain though poore drooping soules have found no comfort by them and though they cannot suck present comfort from them and from their good conditions accordingly to them Because these promises being discerned in a Covenant of free-grace made in Christ by them doe work if they were not wrought before or at least confirme such conditions in the soule As when God promised them to send a Redeemer out of Sion unto them which turne from transgression in Jacob Isai 59. 20. the Apostle expoundeth it That Christ shall come out of Sion and shall turne away transgression from Jacob which is as much as if hee should say He shall work that condition which the promise was made unto And this the Apostle maketh to be the meaning and the blessing of the promise according to the Covenant of grace Rom. 11. 26 27. The promises are not in vain to such soules in whom such good conditions are wrought because they direct them where they may find comfort and satisfying to their hearts desire to wit not by clearing their good conditions in themselves but by coming unto Christ and drinking a more full draught of his Spirit as Christ directeth thirsty soules to doe Joh. 7. 37. If any man thirst let him come to me and drink V. 38. Hee that beleeveth on me as the Scripture saith out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water V. 39. But this hee spake of the Spirit that they which beleeve on him shall receive But why may not the holy Spirit breathe his first comforts into our soules even on such conditions Is not this to limit the Spirit who is free and bloweth where hee listeth Joh. 3. 8. He doth not breathe his first comforts in such conditions because he listeth not it is not his good pleasure to give us our first comfort which is the comfort of our Justification from our owne righteousnesse before hee give us comfort in the righteousnesse of Christ The holy Spirit in all his dispensations to us ward delighteth to receive all from Christ rather then from us that so hee might glorifie Christ in us The Comforter whom I shall send to you hee shall glorifie me for hee shall receive of mine
good Spirit The third Question is concerning the activenesse of Faith The Controversie is WHether Faith concurre as an active instrumentall cause to ●ur Justification In the explicating of it I must ●●rst speake what it is that justifieth ●●ee First we doe beleeve that in our ●ffectuall calling God draweth us to ●nion with Christ Ioh. 6. 44. Sheding abroad his Spirit in our hearts Rom. 5. 5. And working Faith in us 〈◊〉 receive Christ Ioh. 1. 12. 13. And 〈◊〉 live by Faith upon him Gal. 2. 20. Secondly we are no sooner alive in Christ but we are accounted of God ●s his adopted children in Christ Gal. ● 26. Ephes 1. 5. and so are made heires of righteousnesse Galat. 3. 29. God imputing the righteousnesse of his Sonne Jesus to us for our justification Rom. 4. 23. 24. 25. As we were no sooner alive in the first Adam but we became his children and heires of his transgression God imputing the guilt of it to our condemnation Now in this we all consent that in receiving the gift of Faith we are meerely passive But yet a double Question heere ariseth Whether in receiving of Chris● or the Spirit who commeth into our hearts in his name we be meerly passive Whether our Faith bee active to lay hold upon the righteousnesse o● Christ before the Lord doe firs● impute the righteousnesse of Christ unto us Our Reasons are If it be the spirit of Grace she● abroad in our hearts that doth be● get Faith in us then if wee were Passive in receiving Faith wee are much more passive in receiving Christ or the Spirit of Christ that begetteth Faith for if we have no life to be Active untill Faith come we have much lesse life to be Active before the Cause and root of Faith come But it is the spirit of Grace shed abroad in our hearts that begetteth Faith in us Zech. 12. 10. Therefore if we be Passive in receiving Faith we are much more Passive in receiving the spirit that begetteth Faith If we bee active in laying hold on Christ before he hath given us his Spirit then we apprehend him before he apprehend us then wee should doe a good act and so bring forth good fruites before wee become good trees yea and bee good trees before we be in Christ But these are all contrary to the Gospell Philip. 3. 12. 13. Matth. 7. 18. Iohn 15. 4. 5. Therefore wee bee not active in laying hold on Christ before hee he hath given us his Spirit Whether our Faith bee active to lay hold upon Christ for his righteousnesse before the Lord do first impute the righteousnesse of Christ to us we conceive no. For these Reasons If the sinne of Adam were imputed unto us for our condemnation assoone as we were alive by naturall life before we had done any act of life good or evill then the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ is imputed unto us to our Justification as soon as we be alive unto God by Faith before wee have done any act of Faith But the former is plaine Rom. 5. 18. 19. Therefore the latter also If our Faith be first active to lay hold upon Christ for his righteousnesse before God imputeth it unto us Then wee take Christs righteousnesse to our selves before it bee given unto us But that wee cannot doe for in the order of nature giving is the cause of taking unlesse wee take a thing by stealth If our Faith be first active in laying hold on Christ for his rightenesse before God impute it unto us then we doe justifie God before he doth justifie us For hee receiveth the testimony which God hath given of his Son that God hath given us life in his Sonne he hath set to his seale that God is true Iohn 3. 33. And so he which justifieth God as others that doe not receive the testimony condemne God of lying 1 Ioh. 5. 10. But we cannot Justifie God before he justi●e us no more then we can love him before hee first loved us 1 Ioh. 4. 19. If our Faith be first active to lay hold on Christ for his righteousnes before God impute his righteousnes unto us Then wee are righteous men to act and worke out our own righteousnesse before we be righteous by the imputed righteousnes of Christ But we be to our best acts and workes of righteousnesse unrighteous till our sinnes bee pardoned which is not untill the righteousnesse of Christ be imputed to us In the order of nature the object is before the act that is conversant about it Therefore it is in the order of nature before the act of our Faith To beleeve on the name of Christ is an act of Faith To beleeve on the name of Christ is to receive Christ Iohn 1. 12. Therefore the receiving of Christ is by an act of Faith The place in Iohn upon which the weight of this Argument lieth saith no more but that they which received Christ in the second Aorist in the time past doe beleeve on his name in the time present Which we willingly grant that they who receive Christ their faith becommeth active through him to beleeve in his name that so they might receive him and his righteousnesse We are justified by Faith Rom. 3. 28. When we are said to bee justified by Faith It is by the righteousnesse of Christ imputed unto us Abrahams To credere his act of beleeving was imputed unto him for righteousnesse Rom 4. 3. It is taken generally amongst the Learned for a singular opinion of Master Wotton that To credere the act of beleeving should be imputed for rigteousnesse For indeed the act of beleeving is neither a righteousnesse according unto the Law For the Law is perfect Psal 19. 7. Nor a righteousnesse according unto the Gospell For the act of beleeving is an act of our owne though given of grace But the righteousnesse of the Gospell is not an act of our own And therefore Paul desireth that he may be found in Christ not having his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ the righteousnesse which is of God by faith Phil. 3. 9. to wit the righteousnesse of Christ imputed But this Doctrine is opposite unto the streame of all the Learned a passive Faith is not heard of amongst men and they doe genenerally make Faith an instrumentall cause of their Justification A passive Faith is rarely hard of out of my mouth but yet the thing meant by it is never rare in the writings of the learned nor sometimes the word passive Faith Two things are meant by the word of Faith and may be said to be passive in our Justification in a double respect Because a habite of Faith may be called passive before it putteth forth any act and we are justified assoone as by an habit of faith we are alive in Christ in the first moment of our conversion before
learned saying Read this I pray thee An● hee saith I am not learned Esay 29. 11 12 So that it is not in him that is learned no● in him that is unlearned to discover the mystery of iniquity by which Antichris● hath filled the Temple so full of smoak that no man can see how to enter into it unti● God enlighten him which caused the Lord Jesus in the dayes of his flesh to break out into an Eucharistia of praise looking on his Disciples I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth that thou hast hid these things from the wise and learned and hast revealed them unto babes Even so O Father because it seemed good in thy sight Mat. 11. 25 26. That the whole glory in discovering of truth to any might be given unto God Thirdly Know gentle Reader who art a searcher after truth in these inquiring times that the Publisher wrote this Treatise to discover that the difference lieth not so much amongst us in point of Baptisme as it is about the Doctrine of the Faith of Jesus the Christ the Sonne of God which whosoever beleeveth and confesseth that Jesus the Christ is the Son of God it is lawfull to baptize him Act. 8. 36 37 38. And to which Faith of Jesus the Christ and Baptisme the promise of receiving the gifts of the holy Spirit is given Act. 2. 38 39. And though for publishing this mystery of Faith which hath been hidden for some Ages and Generations that are past hee suffer reproach and contempt from the hands and tongues of some yet if the will of God be so it is better hee suffer for well-doing then for evill Yet the love that hee beareth to the loyall Covenanters in the Nation constraineth him to doe it rather then his Country-men should ever remaine in blindnesse under the power of Antichrist Thine who is the unworthiest of all the servants of Christ who is content it should be said of his good name that is as a precious oyntment as Luther said of Moses his body Let it die and rot so God may be glorified and Jesus the Christ exalted in all his royall Offices FRAN. CORNWELL A DESCRIPTION Of the Spirituall TEMPLE THe Spirituall Temple of the New Testament the New Jerusalem which came downe from heaven the Bride prepared for the Lambe the Lord Jesus the Christ Revel 21. 2. may not be unfitly compared to the materiall Temple of Jerusalem in the letter whose foundation stone was of earth whose materials were hewen stones compacted into one edifice or Tem●le the furniture thereof was an Altar a Sacrifice and a Priesthood who were made after the law of a carnall Commandement Heb. 7. 16. which was typicall and was not to continue for ever but onely to the time of Reformation and then the glory of it should vanish away In which materiall Temple none must come thither to worship but the circumcised Jewes and Proselytes for the uncircumcised and unclean were an abomination and must not enter in at the gates thereof Ezek. 44. 6 7. And for the defects the people of Israel and Judah committed in their worship so long as they continued in their integrity the high Priest went once every yeare into the Holy of Holiest and that not without bloud to offer up for himselfe and for the errours of the people Heb. 9. 7. Yea and great were the priviledges that belonged to the Jewish Church To them saith Paul pertained the adoption and the glory and the Covenants and the giving of the Law and the service of God and the promises Who are the fathers and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came who is over all God blessed for ever Amen Rom. 9 4 5. But Christ being come an high Priest of good things to come by a greater and a more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands that is to say not made of this building Heb. 9. 11. reareth up a spirituall structure or house 1. Whose Foundation was the living stone who hath life in himselfe Jesus the Christ 1 Cor. 3. 11. Seeing other foundation no man can lay save that is laid Jesus the Christ 1 Pet. 2. 4. For there is salvation in none other Acts 4. 12. 2. The spirituall Materialls are such as are borne of water and of the Spirit Joh. 3. 5. Who are they which are born of the Spirit Such men and women as through a Gospel Ministry are brought to beleeve and manifest by their confession that Jesus who was crucified dead and risen is the Christ is borne of God 1 Joh. 5. 1. For no man can say that is confesse that Jesus is the Lord but by the holy Spirit and being born of water they are manifested to be lively stones that have received life from Jesus the Christ the living stone 1 Pet. 2. 4. and fit spirituall materialls to be set into the spirituall house 1 Pet. 2. 5. 3. What is the Forme of this spirituall house Union They which gladly received the word were baptized and were added unto the Church and so were compacted into one spirituall house whereof Jesus the Christ is Lord Heb. 3. 6. But Christ as a Sonne over his owne house whose house are we if wee hold fast the confidence and the rejoycing of the hope firme unto the end And these continued stedfastly in the Apostles doctrine and fellowship in breaking of bread and prayers c. Act 2. 41 42. The Furniture of this spirituall ●ouse of the new Testament where●f Jesus the Christ is the King Priest ●nd Prophet is a Priesthood Sa●rifice and an Altar but all spiri●●all First The Priests whether they ●e Male or Female they are all ●ne in Christ Gal. 3. 28. Yea every ●ember of this spirituall house are ●ade Kings and Priests to God the Fa●her Revel 1. 6. Yea and the whole Church united into a body is a cho●●n Generation a royall Priesthood an ●oly Nation a peculiar People that they ●●ould shew forth the vertues of him that hath called them out of darknesse into ●is marvellous light Which in times ●ast were not a ●eople but are now the people of God 1 Pet. 2. 9 10. Secondly The Sacrifices that ●●ese Priests offer are all spiri●uall 1. The first is Prayer which the ●pirit of Christ formeth in the heart ●f a beleever whereby hee layeth ●pen all his spirituall and temporall wants unto God his Father in the name and mediation of Jesus Christ through whom hee hath received a promise to bee heard and to have his request granted Joh. 16. 23 24. 2. Secondly Praise is a spirituall sacrifice offered up unto God continually that is the fruit of our lips giving thanks to his name Heb. 13. 15. Which is done by praising God in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs which the Spirit o● Christ formeth in us to sing and make melody in our hearts to th● Lord Ephes 5. 19. Col. 3. 16. What is a Psalme It is a rehearsall of those
pure Reformation agreeable to the word of our good God and have preserved our estates and liberties from an Arbitrary Government shall they dye which have wrought such a deliverance in the Land they shall not dye we will bleed our selves before an haire shall fall from their heads if either wee with our persons prayers counsells states or swords can prevent it And hath the Lord given such a blessing to our endeavours that God hath made the righteous of the Land next to the Lord a wall of defence to the Parliament shall it ever therefore enter into the heart of loyall and tender-hearted Covenantors to have such hard thoughts that the Parliament will ever consent to burden us any longer with unjust Penall Statutes who have thought nothing too deare for them but have jeopardized lives and livelyhods for their preservations Especially they being sensible what a burden such penall Lawes have been to tender Consciences and what an hinderance they are for propagating truth Sixtly All the faithfull in the Parliament know but in part and the more they tast of the honey of Gods eternall truth the more their eyes are enlightened to see they have not as yet attained to a full Reformation And if now they should build but upon the least hay and stubble they should not onely suffer losse but lay a foundation of a new rent in the Ages and generations to come yea and looke what unjust Penall Statutes they impose now may perhaps fall as heavy upon their Posterity as sometime did upon that famous Lord Cobham that gave his consent to the Statute of Lolordi and afterward was put to death for a Lolord Seventhly The Lord hath added such a blessing to the pious endeavours of the Parliament that they have discovered many things to be ●ruth that the Learned Prelates in former times adjudged to be Heresies As the parity of the Ministery Superstitious formes of devised Worship called Divine Superstitious Festivals formerly esteemed holy Feasts now taken away that men may follow their honest labour six daies and Sanctifi● a Seventh as a day of holy re●● to the Lord being now the first day of every weeke as the holy Scripture hath left us a rule of practise to observe and doe Act 20. 7. And hee which hath begu● this great and happy Worke of Reformation by this Parliament we are confident will never leave them untill hee hath made them instruments either to perfect it or a● least to give to all his faithfull Daniels libertie of Conscience to worship the Lord in Spirit and truth according to his will revealed against whom they can object nothing unlesse it bee in the matte● that concerne the spirituall worship of their God Seeing the● have learned to give Caesar his due Tribute Custome Feare Honour Yea and lay downe their lives rathe● then just and lawfull Magistrate should not be maintained among us and obeyed in all their just Legall and Civill commandements Knownig they carry not the Sword for nought but for the punishment of them that doe evill and for the praise and defence of them that doe well Lastly the wrondrous power of the Spirit of grace in enlightning darke mindes with the knowledge of his Truth and scattering the knowledge of it all the Kingdome over in Cities Countreyes and Campe and causing men of singular parts of learning to bring their gifts toward the building up of Zion and powring out of his Spirit as Ioel the Prophet foretold Ioel 2. 28. upon all sorts of people both young and old rich and poore which is to mee a plaine demonstration that the Lord will never leave us untill he hath made his new Jerusalem the praise of the whole earth and prepared the Spouse the Lambes wife Yea and advanced Jesus the Christ once againe upon the Throne to be the Head King Priest and Prophet of his Church according to the ancient Prophesie of David Psal 2. 6. Yet have I set my King upon my holy hill of Zion Gloria soli Deo FINIS 1 Cor. 14 27 Ephes 4. 24 1 Cor. 1. 30 Psal 16. 3. Psal 15. Cant 4 16. Joh. 3. 5. Tit. 3. 3. Col. 1. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Heb 15. 1. Rom 9 11. Act. 13. 39. Heb. ● 14. Act 26. 1● Eccl. 36. 25. 26. Gal. ● 15 1● 〈…〉 Mat 22. 21 Rome 13. 7. ● Pet. 2. 14 Quest 1. Reas 1. Reas 2. Object Answ 1. Quest 2. 〈◊〉 Answ Object 1. Answ 1. Answ 2. Object Answ 1. Answ 2. Answ 3. Object 2. Answ Object 3. Answ 1. Answ 2. Answ 3. Reas 1. Reas 2. Object Answ Object 4. Answ Object 5. Answ Answ 2. Quest 3. Quest 1. Quest 2. Reas 1. Reas 2. Quest 2. Reason 1. Reas 2. Reas 3. Reas 4. Reason 5. Object 1. Answ Object 2. Answ Object 3. Answ Object 4. Answ Reas 1. Object Answ Object Answ Psal 1. 2. Quest Answ Quest Answ Psal 141. 3. Quest Answ Quest Answ A Quest Answ Quest Answ 1 Tim. 3. 15. Mat. 6. 25. Reas 1. Object Answ Quest Answ Quest Answ Quest Answ Quest Answ Object Answ 1. Quest Answ Reas 1. Reas 3. Object Answ Object Answ Answ 2. Reas 1. Reas 2. Reas 3. Reas 4 〈◊〉 〈…〉 Object 2. Answ Object 3. Answ Object 4. Answ Reas 7. Reas 8. Reas 9. Reas 10. Quest Answ Reas 2. Reas 5. Reas 6. Reas 7.