have an eye unto it as it is a Sacrament and means sanctified by the vvord of God vvith vvhich and by vvhich all the most sacred and Holy Trinitie doth work in those that are Baptized unto their salvation 33 The Form of Baptisme is to Baptize a man with water That is to sprinkle the water upon him or to dip him in the water In the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost 34 And forasmuch as it is the Form which gives being unto a thing Therefore if this Form of Baptisme be changed it shall be no longer a Sacrament 35 Whether the party Baptized be sprinkled or dipped Thrice or but Once it matters not to the integritie and perfection of Baptisme The usuall rites and custome of the Church in these indifferent things is to be observed 36 By the Three sprinklings or clippings the Trinitie of Persons is signified and by One onely the Unitie of the Divinitie or Godhead 37 Those words In the name or On the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost have a great Emphasis which is accurately and frequently to be expounded to the godly and devout auditorie or congregation 38 For the Minister professeth that what he doth in this part he doth not in his own name but in the name of God and at his command 39 For he declareth that the true God which is One in Essence and Three in Persons is called upon over him that is Baptized 40 Moreover those words do evidently witnesse that every Person of the most sacred and Holy Trinitie is present at Baptisme by the presence and efficacie of grace to wit The Father for the merit of his Sonne doth receive him that is Baptized into grace and doth seal him by his Holy Spirit unto salvation 41 Whereupon those that are Baptized are called the Sonnes of God Christians and Spirituall men in respect of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost 42 Whereunto belongeth the Collation or comparing of Creation and Re-creation Formation and Reformation For As the Father by the Sonne through the Holy Ghost created the first man So is it at the Sacrament of Regeneration where all the most Holy and blessed Trinitie doth work in like manner 43 Last of all By those words he that is Baptized in the name of God is bound to acknowledge him and to call upon him as the true God and serve him all the dayes of his life 44 For you must be baptized as vve have received and beleeve as we are Baptized and glorifie the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost as vve have beleeved Basil Epist 78. 45 From this Fountain flow forth all the praises which are extant in the vvritings of the Apostles concerning the saving fruit of this mysterie 46 As for example That it is The washing of Regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost Tit. 3.4 By vvhich the Church may be cleansed Ephes 5.26 Sinnes may be washed avvay Act. 22.16 Christ may be put on Gal. 3.27 And in a vvord salvation may be obtained 1. Pet. 3.21 47 By way of Comparison it will not be amisse to consider the Baptisme of Christ by which Our Baptisme is consecrated For vvhat was done there in visible signes vve must not doubt but that the same is done at our Baptisme after an invisible manner 48 The Father for Christ his sake receiveth us to be his Sonnes The Sonne by his bloud washeth us The Holy Ghost regenerateth and renevveth us and prepareth himself a dvvelling-place in us and openeth the gate of Paradise unto us 49 We sticking close to the literall sense of the words as we must alvvaies do in articles of faith do firmly beleeve that Baptisme is an effectuall means by which man is regenerated and renewed unto eternall life 50 VVhich end comprehends in it Adoption Remission of sinne Ingraffing into Christ Sanctification and the Inheritance of eternall life 51 But we deny that Baptisme doth either imprint an indelible character or conferre grace ex opere operato upon the vvork done or outward act of administration or that it doth take away and altogether blot out both sin and the punishment thereof For concerning this matter the Scripture is silent 52 Furthermore seeing that in Baptisme God doth make a Covenant of grace with man certainly the efficacie thereof endureth throughout a mans whole life 53 For the Covenant of God is not made of no effect by reason of our unbelief Rom. 3.3 54 Therefore though we should for our parts go never so farre astray from this covenant yet by true and serious conversion vve may return and be received again into it 55 Unto vvhom this Sacrament appertaineth and belongeth vve learn even from Gods ovvn institution by vvhich it is commanded that all nations should be baptized 56 Yet the order and manner vvhich Christ there hath prescribed is to be observed that is That they which are of age to heare the Gospel should first be taught and then baptized 57 Seeing then all are either infants or of yeares vve must ansvver distinctly concerning both 58 Those Infants are to be baptized vvho are either born of Christian Parents it matters not vvhether one or both the parents be Christians or else are to be brought up under them 59 Therefore Bastards and children that are found vvhose parents are not knovvn are not excluded from the benefit of Baptisme although it be doubted of by some nor yet those vvho at their birth have some externall defect c. 60 But those which are not yet born are excluded For a man cannot be born again unlesse he be first born And so are also the children of Infidels and unbeleevers to be excluded as long as they are under their tuition 61 Those of yeares are to be baptized who being instructed concerning Christ do professe the Christian religion 62 Neither here are vvomen excluded as it is confirmed by the practice of the Apostles beside other arguments Acts 8.12 and 16.15 63 For the confirming of this our opinion concerning the baptizing of infants out of Scripture serve many things and it vvill be usefull for us to consider these following Hypotheses or suppositions 64 First Infants are conceived and born in sinne And therefore they are by nature the children of wrath 65 Secondly God would have little children to be brought unto him For it is not the will of him that one of the little ones should perish 66 Thirdly There is no dealing with them by the preaching of the Word Therefore there remains onely to them that means to vvit Baptisme vvhich succeeded in the place of Circumcision 67 Beware of saying That Baptisme is not profitable unto infants forasmuch as yet they neither do not can beleeve 68 Because in Baptisme and by Baptisme the Holy Spirit doth so work in Infants that it is no lesse then Circumcision A seal unto them of the righteousnesse of Faith Rom. 4.11 69 For although we cannot
of Christ is consiâered either in this life or in the other 89 In this life is the Kingdome of Power and Grace That is his generall âule over all things but This comârehendeth the speciall works of his ârace in the Church 90 In the other life shall be the Kingdome of glory into which all the âlect being raised out of the dust shall âe received Of which Kingdome Christ make us partakers who is our King âlessed for ever CHAP. V. Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning the Creation and Angels 1 GOD who by Naturâ is invisible that hâ might be made knowâ by things Visible wrought a work which by the visibilitie thereof mighâ manifest him whose work it is Ambrâ in cap. 1. Rom. 2 This work of God wrought iâ time is and is also called Creation 3 Which is nothing else but thâ production of the whole Universe out of nothing in six distinct dayes being wrought by God through the Sonne iâ the Holy Ghost for the glory of God and salvation of men 4 The Authour then of Creation iâ God One in Essence Three in Persons 5 Moreover that Creation of all things is the immediate work of God alone 6 The Father created all things by the Word which as the Evangelist teacheth us is to be understood of the Hypostaticall and consubstantiall Word of God Joh. 1.1 7 The Spirit of God moved upon the âace of the waters Gen. 1.2 That as âhe Psalmist sheweth is to be underâtood of the breath of his mouth Psal â3 6 that is the Hypostaticall and conâubstantiall Spirit of God 8 Therefore where Moses calleth âhe Creatour Elohim it is rightly referâed to the Trinity of Persons 9 Whereas it is said That the Father ây the Sonne in the Holy Ghost creaâed all things we must beware that we ânderstand it not of inequalitie of Essence or Power in the work of Creation 10 For what things soever the Faâher doeth the same doeth the Son likewise Iohn 5.19 11 But all this ought to be referred to âhe reall distinction of Persons and the order of working in works ad extrà or externall which results from thence 12 The Father therefore created by the Sonne not as by one that workeâ not or an instrument separate but as bâ his coeternall and consubstantiall Image 13 And he created all things out oâ nothing 14 Some things indeed immediately but other things mediately Damasc 2. Orth. fid cap. 5. 15 And all in six distinct dayes whence it is that the Ancients calâ Creation The six dayes works 16 That all things were created iâ in a moment it seems indeed agreeablâ unto reason but it is against the Mâsaicall Scripture 17 On the First day were createâ the Heaven and the Earth that is thâ matter of all things to be made rudâ and without form 18 Light also was created to dispeâ the darknesse of the deep to inchoatâ or beginne the vicissitude or intercoursâ of day and night 19 That Light without doubt waâ something obscure And therefore the question concerning the Nature thereoâ is also obscure 20 On the Second day was the Firmament made that is the whole Systemâ âr comprehension of the celestiall boâies 21 Above which that there are waâers the Holy Spirit speaketh expresseây To what use that onely knowes he which made them 22 Let us herein beleeve the Scriâture whose authority is greater then âhe capacity of mans understanding August 2. de Gen. ad Lit. cap. 4. 23 On the Third day at the command of Almighty God were the waâers under the heavens gathered togeâher unto one place and the dry land âppeared Gen. 1.9 24 And what are the Bases or founâations of the Earth what are the âanks of the Sea They are The Almighty word of God 25 Neither would God have the âarth to be unfruitfull but caused it to âring forth every kind of herb Genes â 12 26 And yet not all for the food of man but yet all for the use of man 27 On the Fourth day God set the greater and the lesser Lights in the firmament of heaven Gen. 1.17 28 Which are nothing else but as it were the Chariots of the Light which was first made 29 The starres as well those thââ are fixed as those which are called Plânets or erraticall do work upon the lower bodies by their motion light aââ influences 30 What these influences are it very obscure and past our finding out 31 We must beware therefore thââ we do not ascribe unto the starres thâ causes of humane wickednesse seeiââ that he which made the starres is frââ from all wickednesse 32 He that is wise shall have domânion over the starres Understand thâ of true and divine wisdome which coâsisteth in the fear and sincere worship oâ God 33 It is not therefore to be calleâ Mathesis but Mataeologie not skill iâ Astrologie but Vaniloquie to go abouâ by the starres to foretell humane action and events Scal. Exerc. 251. 34 On the Fifth day was the Wateâ replenished with Fishes and the Aiââ with Fowls Gen. 1.22 35 Out of water God produced the things which cannot live within thâ water and the things which cannot live but in the water which is an Argument of his Almighty Power and Wisâome 36 The Sixt day was the Birthâay to all terrestriall living creatures ând to Man himself likewise Gen. 1. â4 25 26 27. 37 All which were created for Man and Man for God 38 No Creature had ever been hurtâull unto Man yea rather all the Creaâures had been at Mans service had âot Man sinned August lib. 3. de Gen. âd Lit. cap. 15. 39 Man by not doing his bounden âuty and service to his Creatour lost âhe dominion which was given him oâer the Creatures 40 God being about to create man âalled as it were a Councel before hand âecause he was to create a living creaâure capable of reason and counsel 41 After that all other things vvere âreated God in the last place created Man because he was to be the Epitome âentre Abridgement Complement and Perfection of the whole Universe 32 Man was made in the Earth ând of the earth but not to the earth ând for the earth but he was made to Heaven and for Heaven 43 God which is the Creatour ãâã Heaven and Earth would end his woââ in Man Therefore he rested when ãâã had made Man 44 He made all things I say fââ Man in so much that the very Angââ themselves farre superiour both for Nâture and Dignitie do at Gods appoinâment minister as servants unto Man 45 And what wonder is it thâ God made all things for Man when ãâã for Man even God himself was maâ Man 46 Moses describeth not the creâtion of the Angels but yet notwitâstanding he doth not exempt theâ from the number of the creatures 47 There is more subtiltie in âquiring then fruit in finding on whââ day they were created 48. In respect of their Nature whiââ is incorporeall they are called Spiritâ and
trie and examine themselves and vvhat also of children and others vvhich cannot try and examine themselves 70 This true examination consists in the earnest acknowledgement of sinnes and detestation of the same in true faith in Christ and a stedfast purpose and resolution of amendment of life 71 He that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself not discerning the Lords body 1. Cor. 11.29 72 For whosoever shall eat this bread which is the communion of the body of Christ 1 Cor. 10.16 and drink this cup of the Lord which is the communion of the bloud of Christ 1. Cor. 10.16 Unworthily shall be guilty of the body and bloud of the Lord. 1. Cor. 11.27 73 Therefore as concerning the integritie and perfection of the Sacrament it matters not vvith what faith a man comes to receive it but as concerning the fruit and benefit of it surely it matters very much Aug. 3. contra Donat. cap. 14. 74 Concerning the time place and other circumstances of the Holy Supper if vve be asked the question our ansvver is according to the counsel of the Apostle Let all things be done decently and in order 1. Cor. 14.40 75 God grant that our bodies which are fed vvith the body and bloud of Christ may at the last day be raised up unto everlasting life Iren. lib. 4. adv baer c. 34. Amen CHAP. XIX Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning the CHURCH 1_BY the Word and the Sacraments the Holy Ghost also working together effectually God gathereth himself a Church here on earth 2 Which Church is in Greek called ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã because it is called out of the vvhole race of mankind and gathered together into an holy Assembly 3 For the Church is an Assembly or company of men gathered together unto the kingdome of God by the ministery of the Word and the Sacraments amongst whom there are alvvayes some true godly which persevere in the true faith even unto the end with vvhom also are mixed many not holy but yet agreeing in the profession of doctrine 4 This Assembly or company because it must alwayes fight under Christs banner against the Flesh the World and the Devil is therefore called the Church Militant 5 And because the ministerie of preaching the Word and administring the Sacraments is obvious to our senses it is also called the Visible Church 6 But yet again Forasmuchas it is not conspicuous to the eyes of men who be true beleevers and godly in respect of them it is called an Invisible Church 7 Therefore that distinction of the Church into Visible and Invisible doth not introduce tvvo as it were distinct Churches or divers companies 8 But it considereth the Church or the company of those which are called after a diverse respect and in a different manner that is Inward and Outward 9 The Inward beauty and glory of the Church doth consist in Faith and Renovation or renewing vvith vvhich is immediately joyned the Inheritance of eternall life 10 This spirituall Regeneration and Renovation is hidden under the infirmities of the flesh and this communion or Inheritance of eternall life is by the scandal of the crosse and death covered as it were with a vail here in this life And in this respect the Church is said to be Invisible 11 The Outward beauty and glory of the Church doth consist in the sincere preaching of the Word and the profession thereof and the lawfull administration of the Sacraments In vvhich respect the Church is said to be Visible 12 To make a man therefore a true and living member of the mysticall body of Christ the externall profession of the same doctrine and the participation of the same Sacraments is not sufficient but there is required also and that necessarily invvard regeneration and the inward dwelling of the Holy Ghost 13 But yet vve are not to seek for the Invisible Church vvithout the Visible seeing that it is included vvithin it For the elect are not to be sought for vvithout the company of those vvhich are called 14 Neither are we in any nation under heaven to seek for that Invisible Church of the elect pure unspotted undefiled outwardly separate from all hypocrites 15 For here in this life the Jebusites and they of Jerusalem dvvell together in the same garden the Nettle and the Myrtle in the same wood the lovv Shrub and the lofty Cedar grow together in Jacobs flock the white and the speckled the Lambs and the Rids feed together in Peters net fishes Good and Bad are caught together in the Lords field the Lilies and the Thorns spring up together in the Lords floore the Corn and the Chaff are mingled together in Christs cellar the Wine and the Oyd have both their Lees and Dregs in Noahs ark there were beasts Vnclean as well as Clean. 16 This company of the elect this Church is by the Holy Ghost in Scripture adorned vvith most honourable Titles 17 For it is called The body of Christ The spouse of Christ The kingdome of God Gods peculiar Gods beloved people c. 18 But all these Titles and appellations are to be understood by a Synecdoche as not belonging to all in the Church For they are attributed unto the Church for the truly regenerate and elects sake vvhich are in and of the Church 19 For there is a manifest and evident difference betvveen the truly regenerate and the hypocrites vvhich are onely joyned unto the Church in an outvvard profession 20 The Truly regenerate are True and Living members of the Church because from Christ their Head they draw both Spirit and Life The Hypocrites are but rotten and dead members Those belong unto the Church Internally These onely Externally Those in Heart These onely in Outward shew Those In deed These In thought onely Those in the Judgement of God These onely in the Judgement of Men Those as True and sound parts of the Body These as Scabs and Ill humours Those to speak properly are of the Church These are onely in the Church August in Brev. Collat. Collat. 3. in Joan. Tract 6. De Bapt. lib. 3. cap. 18 c. 21 The Church in the Creed is called One Holy Catholick and Apostolick 22 It is called One for the Unitie of the Spirit vvhich the Apostle expounds Ephes 4.3 c. There is one Body and one Spirit even as ye are called in one hope of your calling One Lord one Faith one Baptisme One God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in you all 23 It is called Holy because it is sanctified of Christ by the Spirit and the Word Which Sanctitie or Holinesse consists in this life in the imputation of Christs Sanctitie and the Study of true Sanctitie but at length it shall be made perfect and absolute in the life to come 24 It is called Catholick in respect of the Catholick Faith which is to be estimated by the common consent of all the Godly and their agreement in
see His Spots and Stains and his Obliquitie He gave his Law a Rule for man to be That he thereby might learn Conformitie He gave his Law a Light for man to see The Way to Life and blest Eternitie Do this and live Do this and Life is due But no man âiving ever could this do No man but one And that he this might do As he was Man so was he God most true God sent his Sonne as he had promised According to the Time determined He was Conceiv'd and Born and Liv'd and Died All without sinne And we are justified He did fulfill the Law which none could do And freed us from the Curse to us most due He by his Life for us hath merited Eternall Life to be inherited And by his Death which he once suffered From Death for ever us delivered But that we may these benefits partake We must Repent and all our Sinne forsaâe We must by Faith in Christ âe Justifiâd And by the Holy Spirit Sanctified Now to this end Christ left his Testament The Gospel and a Twofold Sacrament And sent his Spirit for to Sanctifie Those whom hereafter he will Glorifie Heare and obey Christs will and Testament Wash and be clean Receive his Sacrament Obey the inward Calling of the Spirit Be Constant And Eternall Life inherit Reader I have presented to thine eye The Summe of Gerhards whole Divinitie The Contents of each chapter in this Book The First Chapter containeth the Summe of all the rest Chapter Concerning Page 2 The Holy Scripture 1 3 God and his Attributes 14 4 The Person and Office of Christ 26 5 The Creation and the Angels 40 6 The Providence of God 51 7 Election and Reprobation 62 8 The Image of God in Man before his fall 70 9 Originall sinne 81 10 Free-will 94 11 The Law 105 12 The Gospel 116 13 Repentance 135 14 Faith 152 15 Good Works 168 16 The Sacraments 185 17 Baptisme 201 18 The Lords Supper 219 19 The Church 237 20 The Ecclesiasticall Ministerie 251 21 The Civil Magistracie 268 22 Wedlock 280 23 Our latter end or The foure last things 292 CHAP. I. A Description or Representation of the Theologicall places or Heads of Divinitie contained in this book together with their order connexion 1THe onely and proper Principle of Divinitie is the word of God 2 For God came forth from the secret throne of his Majestie and manifested himself unto men in the word 3 At sundrie times and in diverse manners God spake in time past unto âhe fathers by the Prophets In these âast dayes he hath spoken unto us by his Sonne and his Apostles Hebr. 1.1 2. 4 That word of God was first preached by the Prophets and Apostles anâ afterwards the chief and necessariâ heads of divine revelation were penneâ by them according to the will of Goâ Iren. lib. 3. cap. 1. 5 Therefore the undoubted word ãâã God cannot at this day any where ãâã found but in the writings of the Prâphets and Apostles 6 From this word of God floweâ Theologie and is busied about it prâpounding unto us the oracles of Goâ Rom. 3.2 7 Now Theologie is as the name ãâã self importeth A doctrine concerniââ God 8 And by this doctrine men are iâstructed concerning the essence and wââ of God unto their salvation 9 And this is life eternall To knoâ the onely true God and Jesus Chrisâ which came in the flesh John 17.3 10 The doctrine concerning the Eâsence of God is absolved in this quâstion What God is to wit Jehoââ Elohim One in Essence three in Peâsons 11 For God hath so manifested hiâ self that in the divine Essence beiââ but one and that undivided there aâ âhree Persons neither more nor lesse to wit the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost 12 The Father is the first Person âeither made nor created nor begotten âor proceeding 13 The Sonne is the second Person âot made nor created but begotten of âhe Father from all eternitie 24 Who in the fulnesse of time took âpon him our humane nature in which ând through which he payed the price âf our redemption 15 The Holy Ghost is the third perâon not made nor created nor begotâen but proceeding from the Father ând the Sonne from all eternitie 16 We must judge of the Will of God by his decrees made from all eterâitie 17 Whereof there are two more prinâipall The decree of Creation and the decree of Reparation or as the Greek words signifie Creation and Recreaâion Formation and Reformation 18 What those decrees were the fulfilling of them in time doth declare 19 For what God doeth and in what manner he doeth in time the same thing and in the same manner he decreed tâ do from all eternitie 20 The reason of which assertion dâpends upon the immutabilitie of Goâ will 21 Creation made in time is the mânifestation of the decree concerning tââ creation of all things made from aâ eternitie 22 And it is the production of tââ Angels Men and all other creatures iâ the six first dayes of the world wrougââ by God the Father through the Sonnâ in the Holy Ghost to his own glorieâ 23 A great part of the Angels fââ away from God The rest being coâfirmed in goodnesse do laud and praiââ God and are ministring Spirits for tââ good of men 24 Our first parents Adam anâ Eve in like manner at the instigatioâ of Satan transgressed the law of Goâ which was written in their hearts aââ proclaimed by the mouth of God 25 So then by this fall of theirs tâ image of God was quite defaced in theâ and their nature was corrupted witâ sinne 26 Whereupon their posteritie alsâ were and are to this day born starâ naked of originall righteousnesse and in miserable manner corrupted with sinne 27 Through the contagion whereof ââl the powers and faculties in the soul âf man are so infected that there is ââttle or no light of Reason left and ââarce any power at all in the will even âbout externall things 28 God who is omniscient could not âut know that our first parents would âall and therefore of his infinite merâie he made a decree concerning the Reparation or Redemption of man ârom all eternitie 29 What that decree was the fulâilling of the same in like manner doth âeclare He sent in time his Sonne to be âur Redeemer and Mediatour Thereâore he decreed to send him from all âternitie 30 God by his word offereth the benefits of a Mediatour unto all and applieth them unto those that beleeve Therefore from all eternitie he decreed to offer them unto all by the word and to apply them unto those that beleeve 31 This decree in Scripture is called Predestination of which we must not judge but à posteriori that is by the manifestation thereof 32 For the fulfilling of the decree concerning the Reparation of man God hath appointed the Word and the Sacraments 33 The Word is reduced to two chief heads the Law and the Gospel
in respect of their Office they aââ called Angels 49 They are indeed Spirits bâ yet they are not Simple as God is 50 For their Esse and Essentiâ Actus and Potentia Nature and Actâons are in them distinguished 51 Sometimes they appear in bâdily shapes and yet they are not corpoâeall For they are but the Forms Assiâtent and not Forms Informant of the âodies which they assume 52 The Angels understand by Speâies as well Connate as Superadded 53 Which Knowledge of the Angels is called Vespertine unto which is âdded that which is called Matutine ây which in the light of the Word they âre said Intuitively to know all things 54 But what can the Intellect of âoore man that crawleth upon earth know or conceive concerning the Inâellect or understanding of the Anâels 55 Alas we know not the manner of our own knowledge And why do we âegin to babble like children about the knowledge of the Angels 56 Neither are the Angels endued onely with understanding but also with âower And therefore they are called Vertues and Powers 57 But yet this Power of theirs is finite as is also their Essence 58 They are Finite not by circumscription of any bodily place but by designation of a certain Ubi 59 Some say that the Eternity of God is the Measure of the Angels Scaâ Exerc. 359. Sect. 7. 60 This is to be understood of thâ Measure of Perfection and not the Measure of Duration 61 That there are certain Hierarchies or Orders amongst the Angels wâ deny not But that we are able to know what they are That we deny 62 The Order of the Angels is onelâ known unto him that did ordain them 63 Whom we shall hereafter bâ hold face to face when we shall be âquall unto the Angels Luke 20.36 64 All the Angels were created bâ God good and perfect For from hiâ which is good and perfect nothing caâ proceed but that which is good and perfect 65 But some yea a great part oâ them by a voluntary fall fell away from that goodnesse in which they werâ created 66 Which fall of the Angels whaâ it was seeing that the Scripture sayeâ nothing of it who shall declare it The Ancients dispute that it was either Pride or Envie 67 The evil Angels fell without all hope of recovery But the good Angels are confirmed in goodnesse and freed from all fear of falling 68 Which confirmation of theirs was not the Adequate and duâ reward of any merit but the free gift of God rewarding beyond all condignitie 69 From the Confirmation of some of the Angels in goodnesse and the obstinatenesse of others in malice there arise contrary works on both parts 70 The good Angels are praising and lauding God and sent as ministring Spirits for the good of men 71 The Angels are present with us for good to protect us and to fight for us Bern. Serm. 10. in Psalm 92. 72 The number of the Angels is innumerable as concerning us 73 How the Angels conferre and discourse one with another let them discusse and determine who are present at their conferences and discourses 74 The Devils by the subtiltie of their nature and their experience for time and also by superiour revelation may foreknow some things but yet not all 75 They may do many things to be admired but they cannot work Miracles properly so called 76 They do what they can bâ Gods permission They do not whaâ otherwise they can at Gods prohibition 77 And this is such as it is The description of the first work of God which was wrought in time that is thâ Creation whereof there can be no otheâ moving cause given but onely the superabundant riches of his goodnesse Damasc 2. Orthod fid cap. 2. 78 For God wrought his works noâ out of any indigencie but of his merâ beneficencie Nothing is added untâ him by our praises but he is manifesteâ unto us by his works Euch. lib. 1. iâ Gen. 79 He is the Finall Cause of thâ Universe in respect of his Goodnesse the Exemplarie Cause in respect of hiâ Wisdome and the Efficient Cause in respect of his Power Thom. 1. qu. 46. art 1. 80 Therefore the glory of God iâ the Vltimate and chief end of Creationâ and the good of Men is the Mediate and secundary end 81 God which is Good yea Goodnesse it self did all things well and made all things good whatsoever he made To him be praise honour and glory for ever and ever Amen CHAP. VI. Wherin are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning the Providence of GOD. GOD which is Almighty is not onely the Creatour of the Uniuerse but also the Upholder Conserver and Governour of the same 2 He did all things well and doth guide and govern all things well whatsoever he at first made 3 As nothing was made but by Gods creating Essence So nothing is able to stand or endure but by his conserving Power Ansel in Monol 4 Gods upholding supporting and governing all creatures is usually called Gods Providence 5 Concerning which Nature it selâ giveth an evident testimony But thâ Holy Scripture giveth a testimony âouââ more evident 6 The Laws therefore of true Religion do proclaim it that All things have their being and existence and are governed by the Providence of God Euseb 6. de praepar Evang. cap. 5. 7 Now the Providence of God consisteth in these three things His Foreknowledge his Purpose and his Administring and Governing all things 8 Which is expressed by Hugo de Sencto Victore after this manner In the Providence of God we must consider his Knowledge directing his Will commanding and his Power executing 9 His Foreknowledge is a most present and clear sight of all things past present and to come 10 God in a moment fixed and not sliding stable and immoveable and not successive beholdeth all things clearly altogether all at once 11 God by the propertie of his Eternitie excludeth all space and distinction of time 12 As God is not said properly to Remember that which is past so neither is he said properly to Behold afarre off the things which are to come For to him all things are present 13 The things which are known are mutable transitorie and successive but the vision of him that knoweth knoweth no change alteration or succession Polycrat lib. 2. cap. 21. 14 By this knowledge all things are known unto God better then they are unto themselves 15 God beholdeth himself in himself and all other things likewise in himself For from him and in him are all things 16 This knowledge of God is immutable But yet notwithstanding some things unto which Gods knowledge extends it self are in themselves mutable 17 All things are Necessary by a necessitie of Consequence but not by a necessitie of the Consequent 18 For it cannot be unknown unto God who is Omniscient which way the force of action in causes or Agents working contingently and freely will incline 19 Yet God by this his Vision doth not inferre
Holy Ghost 73 After Conversion the Will of man being freed is not idle but through power given from above is made operative and a fellow-worker with God 74 The Holy Ghost without us worketh in us to will that which is good And when we will and will after such and such a manner it is he that worketh together with us to enable us to work 75 For the children of God are so moved to working that they also have a part in the working August de corrept grat cap. 2. 76 This may be called Libertie or freedome from the service of sin For where there is the Spirit of God regenerating and illuminating a man there is Libertie or freedome 2 Cor. 3.17 77 But yet that Libertie or freedome of the Will being freed standeth still in need of the aid and guidance of the Holy Ghost 78 For seeing that even in the regenerate the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh Gal. 5.17 therefore they are not fully free from all sin 79 In the spirit of the regenerate there is a free servitude and in the flesh of the regenerate there is a servile freedome 80 In the other life at length the regenerate shall obtain full and plenarie libertie or freedome of will by which they shall be freed not only from the service of sinne bur also from all manner of sinne from all miserie and from all fear of falling 81 Which may be called a Libertie or freedome from sinne and mutabilitie 82 By which they shall not onely not sinne but also have no power to sinne at all To that Libertie and freedome Christ bring us who is the authour of our Libertie and freedome CHAP. XI Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning the Law 1 THE Word and the Sacraments serve for the repairing of man being soveraign Antidotes and preservatives against the poyson of sinne and our spirituall diseases 2 The Word is reduced to two chief heads the Law and the Gospel 3 By the Law we come to the knowledge of our diseases and by the Gospel we are directed to our Physician 4 For the Law was given by Moses but Grace and truth by Jesus Christ. John 1.17 5 The Law which was given by Moses is divided into the Morall the Judiciall and the Ceremoniall 6 The Morall Law was onely repeated by Moses by a solemn promulgation for it was at first ingraven in the heart of man 7 And it is the Glasse of Gods Eternall justice The glasse of Natures perfection such as it was before the fall The glasse of Sinne and the inward corruption of Nature since the fall The glasse of Obedience which the regenerate are to perform and the glasse of Perfection which shall follow in the life to come 8 They which would have this Law to be thrust out of the Church deserve themselves to be thrust out of the Church 9 For they gainsay Christ who began his preaching from the expounding of the Law Matth. 5.6 7. 10 They gainsay the Apostles who preached Repentance and Remission of sinnes in the name of Christ 11 The Law is indeed a Glasse to behold Sinne but it is not a remedie to cure sin 12 But yet unlesse we first come to a sight of our sinne we can have no desire or will to seek for a remedie 13 For They that be whole need not a Physician Matth. 9.12 that is They that think themselves to be whole for indeed all men are not onely sick but even dead in their sins 14 The Law was given that we should seek for Grace August de Spir. Lit. cap. 15. 15 What the Law commands Faith obtains Idem Homil. 29. in Joan 16 By the Law sin is made known unto us and by Faith it is abolished Ambros in 3. cap. Rom. 17 And therefore the ministerie of death was in this regard necessarie that we might desire and seek for life in Christ 18 God poureth not the oyl of Mercie but into the vessel of an humble and contrite heart Bern. serm 3. in Annunc Col. 113. 19 God doth not pardon unlesse thou dost first acknowledge thy sinnes neither doth he cover them unlesse thou dost first lay them open neither doth he send comfort unlesse thou beest first grieved for them 20 The Law is the perfect way to Eternall life but it was weak through the flesh Rom. 8.3 And therefore it is not available for us unto Eternall life 21 The Law is spirituall It requires intire obedience of body of soul and spirit inward outward throughout all the parts of our life It requires that our thoughts words and deeds be spirituall It requires soundnesse and Perfection of Nature every way 22 But we are carnall Rom. 7.14 We are born flesh of flesh John 3.6 Neither are we altogether freed from the old flesh in this life 23 Therefore we cannot fulfill the Law in this life 24 There is no man that sinneth not 1. Kings 8.46 Now we know that To sinne and To fulfill the Law these are contrarie the one to the other Therefore there is no man that can fulfill the Law 25 That every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God Rom. 3.22 26 God by the word of the Law hath concluded all under sin Rom. 11.32 Galat. 3.19 27 The Rule of the Affirmative precepts or commandments is that First Of the loving and fearing God above all things 28 The Rule of the Negative precepts or commandments is that Last Of not coveting August de perfect just 29 Therefore the Affirmative precepts or commandments are not satisfied or fulfilled by the love and fear of God begunne in us in any kind vvhatsoever 30 Neither are the Negative precepts or commandments satisfied or fulfilled by our abstaining from outward offenses in any kind whatsoever 31 Though we should begin our outward obedience in never so great a measure and eschew outward offenses yet still we should fail in the first and last commandments 32 Therefore in the Decalogue or Ten Commandments there is expresse mention made of the outward grosser offenses that the mind of man may conceive by the judgement of God what to judge of the grievousnesse of inward offenses 33 Before God he is an Adulterer not onely that lies with another mans wife but whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her Matth. 5 28. 34 Before God he is a Thief not only that takes another mans goods from him by force but whosoever doth usurp them by coveting them in an unlawfull manner 35 Gods Laws and Commandments do not onely bind the hand and the other outward members but the whole man 36 Who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from sinne my heart is free from concupiscence Prov. 20.9 Who then can boast that he iâ not a transgressour of the Law 37 Therefore the promises of the Law profit us nothing 38 But in Christ All the promise of God are Yea and Amen 2.
he forbiddeth To do alms before men to be seen of them And in the 16 verse he saith that some fast and are of a sad countenance that they may appear unto men to fast 22 The other is but Lame Repenâance and by the halves deploring sinne but without grace and faith 23 But true and saving Repentance consists in serious Contrition and Faith 24 Some call it Evangelicall But here we must adde this explication That in respect of the better part that is Faith which is from the Gospel it is so called 25 True Repentance is a motion of the heart kindled by the Holy Ghost by which a man coming to the knowledge of his sinnes and the wrath of God doth earnestly grieve and by faith in Christ who made satisfaction for his sinnes is again raised up being certainly perswaded that for Christ his sake his sinnes are forgiven 26 For Repentance is a kind of Conversion from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan unto God Acts 26.18 27 Therefore the Term from whence is our sinnes from the consideration whereof there ariseth Contrition and the Term unto which is God unto whose Mercie we have accesse by the merit of Christ 28 As many Kinds of Celestiall Doctrine as there are by the ministeriâ whereof God preacheth unto men Râpentance and Remission of sinnes and worketh the same in men so many aââ the Essentiall parts thereof But thââ are two kinds of Celestiall Doctrine to wit the Law and the Gospel Therefore also there are two parts of Repentance 29 Each of these Doctrines hath ãâã proper and peculiar effect in the conversion of man The Law striketh feââ and terrour whilest it manifestââ sinnes and the wrath of God againââ them The Gospel giveth coââiââ whilest it sets before the man that iâ contrite Christ the Mediatour thaâ Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world 30 These Effects of the Law and the Gospel although they be distinct yeâ they both concurre in this to make up the complement and perfection of Repentance 31 We do not call good works or new obedience a part but the Fruits worthy of Repentance as the Scripture witnesseth Luke 3 8. Acts 26.20 23 Some dispute That there are two parts of Repentance to wit Mortification of the flesh and Vivification of the Spirit 33 For my part I am not against them if by Mortification they understand Contrition or grief conceived upon the acknowledgement of sinnes and the sense of Gods wrath and by Vivification likewise Consolation which is from Faith 34 But if they understand that perpetuall studie of the converted and regenerate in mortifying the old man and following the fruits of the Spirit Then I say it belongs to new obedience 35 Which forasmuch as it is not perfect in this life therefore The whole life of a Christian man is called a continued act of Repentance Luther âân prim suis propos de Indulg th 1. 36 Those three parts of Repentance according to which it is divided into Contrition of heart Confession of mouth and Satisfaction of work have no place in that saving and inward Conversion unto God by which we return unto God but they have place onely in that publick and Ecclesiasticall Penance used by the Ancients 37 For in time past those which by their publick offenses had given scandal unto others and were therefoââ excluded out of the communion of the Church were required to give publick testimonie and signes of their repentance beside inward contrition of heart to wit by their sorrow confession and begging pardon and forgivenesse c. To give the Church satisfaction B. Rhenanus in Schol. ad Tertull. de Poenit. 38 Therefore they abuse that division whosoever say that those are the parts of that saving Repentance by which we return unto God 39 For from that can Faith by no means be excluded for without Faith Repentance cannot be Repentance unto life Acts 11.18 40 Tears are good if thou dost acknowledge Christ Ambros in cap 24. Luc. 17. 41 But that which is annexed is farre worse If those actions of the Penitent or Repentant are made to have the force of an Element or the Materiall not onely signifying but also causing and effecting remission of sinnes in the Sacrament of Penance and the voice of the Confessour absolving be added hereunto as the Formall Concerning which there is wonderfull great difference amongst writers 42 For thus we should attribute unto our own endeavours and merits that remission of sinnes which the Scripture appropriateth unto Christ and his merit apprehended by Faith 43 Contrition is required in our Conversion not as the cause and merit of our reconciliation with God but in respect of order 44 Christ preacheth the Gospel but it is to the poore he healeth but it is the humble in heart he preacheth libertie but it is to the captives he preacheth sight but it is to the blind he preacheth binding-up but it is to the broken in heart Isai 61.1 Matth. 11.5 To the broken in heart that is to those that know and acknowledge their own spirituall povertie captivitie and blindnesse and therefore are contrite and broken in heart 45 To this Contrition belong Acknowledgement of sinne sense of Gods wrath grief and anguish of a terrified conscience detestation and flight of sinne as also outward signes of Contrition Tears fasting beating of the breast sackcloth c. 46 But there is a great difference between the Contrition of the Good and Godly and the Contrition of the Hypocrites and Ungodly 47 The Contrition of the Godly ariseth from the speciall operation of the Holy Ghost but the Contrition of the Ungodly and Hypocrites ariseth for the most part from the old man and from the naturall povvers of free-will 48 The Godly in the terrours of Conscience have an eye unto the principall Object of sinne that is God himself and are onely grieved that they have offended him But the Hypocrites contrarily are more afraid of the judgement of their own minds and the judgements of other men and they are vexed more with the consideration of the punishment then of the sinne 49 The Godly have an eye not onely to their Actuall sinnes but also to Originall the fountain of all Actuall not onely to outward offenses but also to their inward corruptions not onely to the punishments of this present life but also of the life to come But the Hypocrites make confession onely of their outward offenses and that in a negligent manner and for the most part they think onely upon the punishments of this present life but if aâ any time their thoughts be bent upon the consideration of eternall punishments they are carried headlong into the gulf of despair 50 The Godly confesse and acknowledge God to be just that his judgements are just But it is the propertie of Hypocrites to extenuate their sinnes and to challenge Gods justice 51 But yet we must beware that we make not one Contrition Legall
word 48 From whence it may be easily gathered what we are to determine concerning the question Whether the Church can erre or no. 49 For vve are to distinguish between the Catholick Church and Particular Churches 50 Again vve are to distinguish betvveen errours overthrowing the Foundation and stubble built upon the Foundation 51 And again vve are to distinguish between the Visible Church and the Invisible 52 The Romanists after long and tedious disputation about the infallible judgement of the Church bring us at length to the Pope alone The Infallibilitie saith Bellarmine 4. de Pontif. cap. 2. is not in the assembly of the Counsellers or in the Councel of the Bishops but in the Pope alone 53 The faithfull people erre not as long as they follow their Pastours The Paestours erre not as long as they follow their Bishops The Bishops erre nor as long as they follovv the Pope Therefore according to them the immunitie of the Church from errour descendeth from the Pope alone 54 What they attribute unto the Pope that do we attribute unto Christ vvho teacheth his Church by the Scriptures and in the Scriptures The Church doth not erre as farre forth and as long as it follovvs the voice of Christ and is ruled by the Holy Ghost 55 To conclude To this end doth God gather himself a Church that be may have an assembly or company to acknowledge to praise and to glorifie him aright both in this life and in the life to come 56 The Militant Church here on Earth is the Seminary of the Church Triumphant in Heaven Unto vvhich Christ bring us vvho is the Head thereof To vvhom be glory for ever and ever Amen CHAP. XX. ¶ Wherein are contained Theologicall Aphorismes concerning the Ecclesiasticall Ministerie 1_THere are in the Church three states or orders instituted all by God The Ecclesiasticall Politicall and Oeconomicall The First of the Church the Second of the Common-vvealth the Third of the Private familie 2 They are commonly called three Hierarchies 3 The Ecclesiasticall order is called in Scripture ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã The Ministerie and Service 4 Therefore it is not any Despoticall or Lordly dominion 5 In this Ecclesiasticall Ministerie vve are to consider the lavvfull Vocation thereunto and the faithfull Discharge thereof 6 Vocation is certainly necessarie for Ministers of the Church and that such as is lavvfull 7 For How shall they preach except they be sent Rom. 10.15 8 The power and right of calling Ministers is Gods ovvn It is he vvho as the Lord of the harvest sendeth forth labourers into his harvest Matth. 9.38 9 Now God calls the Ministers of his Church both Immediately and Mediately 10 Immediately he called the Prophets in the Old Testament and the Apostles in the Nevv 11 Which manner of calling the Apostle Gal. 1.1 describeth thus That it vvas neither of man nor by man but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised him from the dead 12 With vvhich description this is nothing repugnant That sometimes by some Prophet or Apostle or else by lot this immediate vocation or calling of God is outvvardly declared 13 The Immediate vocation or calling is alwayes accompanied vvith some extraordinarie Testimonies and Gifts of God 14 But yet by Testimonies and Gifts we would not have miracles to be understood 15 For John the Baptist did no miracle John 10.41 and yet it is certain that he vvas Immediately called 16 But by these Testimonies of Immediate Vocation vve understand the peculiar declaration and manifestation of the Spirit and the singular povver and efficacie of their ministerie 17 The doctrines of those which are Immediately called by God forasmuch as they speak as they are moved by the Holy Ghost are simply and absolutely to be beleeved 2. Pet. 1.21 18 Whereupon we are said to be built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Ephes 2.20 19 They vvhich are called after this manner have this priviledge That they are not tied and bound to any certain and particular Church but they are furnished vvith povver and authority to preach every vvhere 20 From whence it appears that this Immediate vocation hath especially place either in the constituting of a Church or in the purging of it from errours 21 The Mediate Vocation is also the calling of God but it is by fit men according to the Canon and rule expressed in the vvord of God 22 Where vve must very accurately observe that the Mediate Vocation also as well as the Immediate belongeth into God 23 For it is God that hath set in the Church not onely Prophets Apostles and Evangelists but also Pastours and Teachers 1. Cor. 12.28 Ephes 4.11 24 The Ministers of the Church of Ephesus are said to be made by the Holy Ghost although Paul by the imposition or laying on of hands commended the ministerie unto them Acts 20.28 25 The Holy Ghost even at this day reproveth the world of sinne by those which are called by a Mediate Vocation John 16.8 26 God vvhen he calleth by a Mediate Vocation useth the ministerie of the Church 27 For unto the Church hath he committed the pledge of his vvord Rom. 3.2 He hath delivered unto her the Sacraments and unto her as to his spouse he hath given the keyes of the kingdome of heaven Matth. 18.18 28 So then the Church hath povver and right to call Ministers but it is from God and it must be in such manner and order as it expressed in the Scriptures 29 What manner and order of calling vve here understand it is declared by the precepts and practice of the Apostles 30 Whomsoever you shall approve by your letters saith the Apostle 1. Cor. 16.3 them will I send A Bishop must have a good report 1. Tim. 3.7 Lay hands suddenly on no man 1. Tim. 5.22 suddenly that is before thou hast the testimony and consent of the Church 31 Adde hither also the Practice of the Apostles At the ordination and election of Deacons the Apostles speak after this manner Brethren look ye âut among you seven men of honest report full of the Holy Ghost and wisdome whom we may appoint over this businesâ Acts 6.3 and again Elders were ordained in every Church by suffrages or voices Acts. 14.23 32 Whereupon vvere made those old Canons No reason it is that any should be suffered to be reckoned and accounted amongst Bishops unlesse they be elected by the Clergie desired by the People and consecrated by the Bishops of the same Province vvith the judgement of the Metropolitane c. null dist 62. ex Leon. Episc Rom. 33 Item Let them be desired by the People elected by the Clergie and ordained by the judgement of the Bishops 34 Item Whosoever are to be made Priests for such let a postulation be made unto the Bishops let them have the hands of Clergiemen of good credit and let them also have the testimonie and consent of the People 35 That place of Cyprian Liâi â Epist 4. is especially to