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A02785 A discourse concerning the soule and spirit of man Wherein is described the essence and dignity thereof, the gifts and graces wherewith God hath endued it, and the estate thereof, aswell present as future. And thereunto is annexed in the end a bipartite instruction, or exhortation, concerning the duties of our thankfulnesse towards God. Written by Simon Harvvard. Harward, Simon, fl. 1572-1614. 1604 (1604) STC 12917; ESTC S116608 106,518 282

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of one length is incomprehensible and vnspeakable such as no eie can see 1. Cor 2. ● no eare can heare neither can it enter into the hart of mā But it is many waies apparant that howsoeuer in the day of iudgement the body shal be ioined to the soul as in society of either blisse or torment yet is that immortal inuisible creature of it selfe inorganical sufficiently able for all her actiōs motions and operations without the bodily instruments humors qualities powers agitations temperaments or any corporall faculties whatsoeuer CHAP. IIII. Whether anima the soule bee a medium a meane or middle thing betwixt the spirit and the bodie DIuers late writers set it downe for a firme position Dorn in claue pag 138 142 anima est medium inter spiritum et corpus The bodie and spirit are so contrarie one to another that they cannot be ioyned together but by a middle or meane now the meane to ioyne them is the soule and one expoundeth what that soule is anima est corporis motrix Ibid pag. 136 Fol 141 it is the mouer of the bodie and after he saith anima duobus constat motu scilicet et sensu the soule doth consist of two things to wit mouing and sense And afteward he addeth a third thing to wit appetites Fol 145 odit animam in corpore qui fraenat appetitus he hateth his soule in his body which doth bridle his appetites And in another place defineth it to bee the life Fol 137 anima est vita corporis et substantia media inter animam et corpus participans de animo et corpore the word anima signifieth the life of the bodie and is a middle substance betwixt the mind and the bodie and taketh part of both By which places his meaning seemeth to be that the worde anima should comprehend whatsoeuer is betwixt the principall part of mans soule and the grossenesse of the bodily substance and that the immortall inuisible substance is by it as by a second middle substance vnited to the bodie In these his assertions hee is first iniurious to the worde anima which as I haue shewed alreadie hath as large a signification as hath the word spirit for the immortall soule of man and hath beene alwayes so vsed in all ages amongst Philosophers and approued Latine Authors and especially amongst the most religious Fathers of the Church in all their sermons and discourses and further in as many as haue translated the holy Scriptures vnto vs. As it is taken sometimes for the inferiour faculties so is also the worde spirit and therefore there is no reason why the one should bee restrained strictly to an inferiour baser substance more then the other Marsil Ficin de vita caeli●us comparada lib 3 cap 3 The excellent interpreter of Plato Marsilius Ficinus maketh spiritus to be the medium betwixt corpus and anima His words are inter animam et corpus in nobis spiritus necessariò requiritur tanquam medium quo anima diuina et adsit corpori crassiori et vitam eidem penitùs largiatur Betwixt the soule and the bodie a spirit is of necessitie required in vs as it were a middle or meane whereby the soule being diuine may be present to the body being more grosse and thorowly bestow life vpon it And a little after Scimus viuentia omnia tàm plantas quàm animalia per quendam spiritum viuere et generare sui simile lapides sui similes non generant quia spiritus iniis crassiori materia cohibetur Wee knowe that all liuing things as well plants as sensible creatures do liue by a certaine spirit and thereby get their like But stones doo not bring forth their like because the spirit in them is holden backe by the grossenesse of their matter The meaning of Ficinus doth not much differ from Dorne but that which the one calleth anima the other calleth spirite because indeede the wordes are aequivalent and both of them equiuocall And therefore to take away ambiguitie the best had beene for either of them to haue added to the worde the difference as to haue said that the vegetatiue and sensitiue soule is the middle betwixt the rationall soule and the bodie or that the spirit of life is the middle betwixt the vnderstanding spirit of man and the bodie But Dorne in calling that vegetatiue and sensitiue facultie a third substance doth seeme to haue drawne his position out of Origen Origen super Leuit. Hom 2. who doth directly set it downe that anima is in such sort a medium betwixt the spirit the bodie that the soule may be damned and yet the spirit saued and one of his proofes is Origen in Mathaeum hom 30 Fol 96. because it is said in the Gospell that God can cast both bodie and soule into hell fire ex eo quod nihil de spiritu dixit euidenter oftenditur quòd spiritus cum anima peccatrice non simul punitur quí enim peccauit diuiditur et pars quidem eius cum infidelibus punitur quod autem non cius reuertitur ad Deum qui dedit eum Seeing hee speaketh nothing of casting the spirit into hell it is euidently shewed that the spirit is not punished together with the sinfull soule The person that sinned is diuided and part is punished with the Infidels and that which is not his but Gods that gaue it must returne to God that gaue it A very grosse errour is this as are likewise many other opinions which the said Origen doth hold as concerning the soule as the omnes animae erant in initio simul creatae all soules were created in the beginning all together which heresie of his is at large confuted by Aquinas Tho Aquinas 1. parte sūmae theologiae and animam saluatoris fuisse antequam nasceretur à Virgine et in restitutione omnium animas Christianorum Iudaeorum et Gentilium vnius conditionis fore et ex Angelis fieri animas et rursus ex animis Angelos That the soule of our Sauiour Christ was before hee was conceiued of the Virgine and that in the restoring of all things the soules of Christians Iewes and Gentiles shall bee all of one estate and condition and that of Angels are made soules and againe of soules Angels All which absurde opinions of Origen are condemned by Saint Hierom. Whatsoeuer therefore may be gathered as is by some out of Origen Hierom. in Apologi● aduersus Ruffinum to proue anima to be a third substance in man wee see by these his assertions what little account may iustly bee made thereof But say they there are many places in the holy Scriptures wherein the worde soule and spirit are both ioyned together in such sort that they seeme apparantly not to signifie one thing Indeede when they are ioyned both together all the Fathers of the Church generally doe make a difference betwixt them but not such a difference
truly mans flesh so tooke hee also a humane soule and was perfect man Hebr. 4 15 like vnto vs in all thinges sinne onely excepted Saint Peter saith ye were all as sheepe going astray 1 Pet. 2 25 but ye are returned to the sheapheard and Bishop of your soules Ver 11. And in the same Chapter againe abstaine from fleshly lustes which fight against the soule Hee calleth by the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 anima Iam 1.21 the spirit and principall part of man So doth Saint Iames when he willeth vs to receiue with meeknes the word of God which is able to saue your soules so doth our Sauiour Christ when hee biddeth vs not to feare them which kill the body Mat 10.28 and haue no power to kill the soule but to feare him that hath power to kill both body and soule and to cast both into hell fire Mat. 11.28 Heb. 13.17 1. Pet. 1.9 1. Pet. 4.39 And in the Chapter following learne of me that I am meeke and lowlie in heart and you shall find rest vnto your soules Hieron aduer Iouinian lib. 2 of this speaketh S. Hierom Anima in aurigae modum retinet fraena sensuum currentium The soule as a Wagoner doth holde and gouern the bridle of the running senses Aug. quaest super Numer lib. 4. cap. 18. And Augustine Humana natura constat corpore spiritu quem etiam animam dicunt The nature of man doth consist of a body and a spirit which spirit is called also the soule And Bernard Bernard super cant se m 59. gemit anima deuota Christi absentiam A deuoute soule doth grone and sigh when it feeleth Christ absent or longeth for the comming of Christ The other significations of the wordes soule and spirit as whē soule is taken Gen. 14.21 Rom. 13.1 either for the whole person of man yet liuing Numb 21 1 Numb 6.6 or for the body of man being dead and the spirit taken for a Phantasma or Ghost appearing in some visible shape as Theophilact doth expound that place in S. Luke Luk 24.37 where it is said that the Apostles when our Sauiour appeared to them did think that they had seene a spirit and were afraid but our Sauiour did cheare thē vp why are ye troubled touch mee and behold for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye see mee haue These and sundry other acceptations of the wordes soule and spirit I omit as impertinent to the question now in hand and doe thinke it more fit the aequiualency of the words being thus briefly laid open to passe vnto that which in order ought next to follow to wit the definition of anima what it is first generally in al liuing creatures and then more particularly what is the soule of man CHAP. II. What is the soule or anima and how the soule in man doth differ from anima in other creatures WHat that anima is that is the life of all animalia of all liuing creatures it is a question much disputed amongst auncient Philosophers Some doe make it a bodily thing some a nature incorporeal and some onely the temperature of the body The Stoickes taught See these opinions more at large in the beginning of the 7. chapter ammam esse vitales spiritus in sanguine that the soule was onely the vitall spirites in bloud If it be a corporall thing then must it needes be like either the aeriall or the fiery element The signification of the worde doth import rather an aerial nature but Democritus called it Igneam naturam of a fiery nature some called it a harmony or as Empedocles a friendship of the elementes and humors Heraclitus accounted in a certaine force flowing from the celestiall bodies into the terrestrial vnto which opinion the Poet seemeth to allude Virg. Igneus est illis vigor caelestis origo Aristotle defineth it to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tully Tusc 1 the continued motion as Tully doth interprete it of a naturall organicall body hauing life in power some doe reprehend that interpretatiō of Tully do think that it should be expounded rather perfectiō because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth perfect Plato de leg Arist 3 Physic in lib. de gener anim at l. 2 de ani ait inima est principium quo vluimus sentimus mouemur But Plato vseth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for iugiter continuè certaine it is that Aristotle doth vse often promiscuè the wordes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for an efficiency and working motion many hold it to be all one with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a continuall agitation as in the Prouerbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a drippe alwaies dropping doth harden the hard rocke and the Wiseman sayeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eccl. 30.1 He that loueth his sonne doth continually adde correction to him When anima is called a continued agitation wee must not vnderstand an accidentall motion but a substantiall and habituall agitation stirring vp actions Hippocrates nameth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the naturall heat or the spirite in bloud and hee addeth Cum haec anima inflammatur pereunt corpus anima because when the heat and spirits doe not keepe a iust proportion thē all liuing creatures are thereby extinguished In the holy scriptures the word anima is giuen to the bloud Carnem cum sanguine ipsius qui anima ipsius est ne comedite Gen. 9.4 Eate not the flesh with the bloud of it which is his life tantummodò non comedas vllum sanguinem Deut. 12. ●3 quia sanguis cuiusque est eius anima ideo non com ede vllius animam cum ipsius carne Eate no bloude for the bloude of euery thing is the life therefore eate not the life together with the flesh Herevpon is the word anima also giuen to euery liuing creature Quaecunque anima viuebat in mari mortua est Apoc. 16.3 Euerie soule that liued in the sea that is euery liuing creature Adam called by name omnem animam viuentem Gen. 2 20. euery liuing soule that is euery liuing creature omnis anima viuens quae repit euery creeping soule Ezech. 47.9 that is creeping creature In most authors the worde bloud is taken for life because of the spirits of life proceeding of the bloud when the Poet describeth a man slain he vseth this phrase Purpuream vomit ille animam He cast out his purple-red soule Virg. Aenead that is his life together with his bloud Gal. de vsu partium lib. 6 cap. 17. Galen defineth animalem spiritum esse exhalationem quandam sanguinis benigni the animall spirit to be a certain exhalation of the best part of bloud Ibid lib. 9. c. 4 And afterward sheweth how this animal spirit is engendered of the vitall the thinnest and purest portion of the vitall spirits engendered
when the poorest should liue of the spoile of the richest and the best sword should most preuaile Amongst all these dispaires of men ill minded it pleased God when wee were bereaued of our most Gratious Queene whose memory bee blessed for euer to send vs according to the expectation and hearty desire of the faithfull a most noble religious wise and vertuous King and with him such an assured hope of an established succession that wee are neuer able sufficiently to magnifie his inestimable goodnes and mercies And the more to testifie that it was his own handy work it was the good pleasure of God that when at the first our Soueraigne King being far absent from the chiefe seate of his Realmes authority could not of a sodaine bee presently established In that time as it were of magistracie sleeping all partes were founde so quiet and obedient that the most simple in the world might see such a gouernour now to be placed ouer vs as whō God doth vntertake to protect with his owne right hand Whē in the Arke ōf Noah the rauening birdes Gen. 7.2 the Hauke Gripe and Vultur liued quietly with the Doue and tamer fowles when the Wolfe Lion and Leopard remained in peace with the simple sheepe and heyfer then it appeared euidently that this agreemēt was not ordinarie but a very wonderfull worke of the finger of Gods own hand And euen so wonderfull of late was the prouidēce of God in repressing the cruell affections of them which had before ill will against Sion The Lord make vs so truely thankefull for these his vnspeakable benefits that his graces and fauours may still be multiplied towards vs. And the Lord so still extend his miraculous preseruations that by our noble king and by his most royall issue the holy Gospell may be continued to vs and our posterity for euer The second thing that is to bee obserued in this text is the maner how wee must shewe our thankfulnsse to wit first both priuately and openly both before the Lord and before the sonnes of men and secondly with offering the sacrifice of praise telling Gods workes with gladnes To celebrate Gods goodnes before the Lord is to do it religiously zealously as in Gods presence Ioh. 4.24 God is a spirit they which worship him must do it in spirit and truth Dauid in his thanksgiuing doth principally encourage his soule to praise God Psal 103.1 Prayse the Lord O my soule and all that is within me prayse his holy name In the time of Gods seruice our mind must still cary in selfe as now talking with God When the word is preached vnto vs Aug. Serm. 112. I de temp God speaketh to vs whē we pray or giue thanks we speake vnto God Cypr. lib 2. ●p 2. if then in those holy exercises our hearts be caried away with wordly or vaine cogitatiōs it is an euident token that Satan doth then endeuor to steale our hart from God that our outward profession is nothing but meer hypocrisie Of such seruing of God the Lord himself doth pronounce by the Prophet Esay This people doth draw neer vnto me with their mouth Esay 29 13● and honor me with their lips but their heart is far frō me That we may giue thanks in soule spirit it is altogether requisite that the hart of euery particular man do vnderstand the sense and meaning of the wordes which are vttered 1. Cor. 14.8 for that I may vse the cōparisō of the Apostle vnlesse the trūpet do giue a certain soūd that the army may plainly vnderstand when is soūded the alarum whē the retreat how shal the souldier order himselfe aright in the battell Euen so in the seruice of God vnlesse the people do vnderstād whē they pray whē they giue thanks for what they pray for what they giue thanks how can they in hart ioyne with the Pastor how can they serue the Lord in zeale spirit Psal 103.1 euery thing within thē praise Gods holy name 1. Cor. 14 1● I had rather saith S. Paul speake fiue words with vnderstanding to instruct others then ten thousand words in a strange language Obiection The Romanists haue a slender shift and euasion that the Apostle should speake of the preaching of the word because in that Chapter he nameth sometimes the instructing of others and the edifying of others The confesse that preaching must needes bee in a knowne language but as for prayer and thanksgiuing such Psalmes hymnes as are song vnto God they say that all these may be in Latine although it be either in them or before them which vnderstand not the Latin tongue Resp But it is more cleare then the Sun that the Apostle doth speake not only of preaching 1. Cor 14.15 but also of all maner of prayer and thankesgiuing in the Church of God Hee saith in the fifteenth verse I will pray with the spirit that is with the strange language which was then the extraordinary gift of the spirit but I will pray also with vnderstanding I will sing with the spirit but I will sing also with vnderstanding Hee willeth therefore not onely preaching of the word but also all prayers hymnes songs and anthems whatsoeuer to bee in that tongue which may be vnderstood by them by whome they are presented to God I thinke that euery good Christian ought to be perswaded that when the minister doth publikely vtter either prayer or thanksgiuing the whole Church either doth or ought to ioyne with him in the offering of that spirituall sacirfice vnto God But in the verse following V. 16. the Apostle doth put the matter out of all controuersie he saith if thou shalt blesse with the spirit hee which occupieth the place of the vnlearned how shall hee say Amen to thy giuing of thanks seeing he vnderstandeth not what thou hast said Thou truely doest giue thāks well but the other is not edified It is therfore a thing necessarie to thanksgiuing as well as to prayer or preaching that the heart doe vnderstand what is vttered before the Lord. If an vnknowne tongue had no place in the Apostles time where was the miraculous gift of Gods spirit much lesse may it chalenge any place now when it is gotten more vnperfectly and by more ordinary meanes If in that primitiue church not onely the latine or greeke Acts. 2.9 or hebrew but also all languages vnder heauen were vouchsafed to be powred downe by the holy ghost then why should not euery tongue be equally sanctified to giue thanks vnto God Phil. 2.11 to confesse that Iesus is Christ to the glorie of God the Father Thanksgiuing must bee done with ioyfulnesse as here Dauid sheweth now the olde saying is true ignotinulla cupido Psal 107.22 There is neither hearty desire nor true ioy in that whereof the mind is vnskilfull and ignorant All thinges in the Church of God ought
of the Church of God as may appeare by the often naming of the Church in the verses last going before Now there is the place of the Church where the word of God is taught and the Sacraments administred according to the institution of Christ and publicke prayer and thankesgiuings offered vnto God Teach all nations sayth Christ and Baptize them in the name of the Father Math 28 19. and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost then followeth the promise I will be with you to the end of the world The Apostle when he hath made mention of the Church 1. Cor 11 1● 20.23 and publicke place of the assembly when ye come together in the Church V. 23 when ye come together into one place c he addeth that which I receiued of the Lord that haue I deliuered vnto you how the Lord Iesus in the same night that he was betrayed tooke bread V. 33 c. and after when ye come together one tary for another He requireth of the Romaines Rom. 13.6 that they all with one heart and one mouth glorifie God and to the Ephesians that prayses be giuen in the Church through Christ Iesus Eph. 8.21 vnto all generations for euer Math 28.20 where is the word and Sacraments there is especially the ero vobiscū vsque ad cōsummationem seculi Fourthly the alotting of the place amongst Christians must needs be in the power of the supreme magistrate and of such lawes as are confirmed by him Ios 6.6 Ios 11. If Iosua being Duke did take order for matters in the Church 1. Chro. 23.6 2. Chro. 3.14 1. Reg. 2.35 If Dauid and Salomon did set the courses of the Priests and Leuites remoue the bad and place better in their roome 2. Chro. 17.8 2. Chro. 19 8 If Iehosaphat did send Elithama and Iehoram Priests to instruct the people and set the Priests and Leuites for the iudgement of the Lords cause 2. Chro. 31 4 If Ezechias did not onely appoint the courses but also prescribe to euery one their portions and stipends If Asa 2 Chro 29 1 2 Reg 23 4 Iosias and other godly Kings of Iuda did account it their chiefest charge to purge the Church from Idolatry then why might not Constantinus Theodosius and other Christian Emperours imitate their godly ensample And when now our Christian most noble King doth inioyne or establish orders for the publicke seruice of God Why should not all good subiects obey not for feare but euen for conscience sake Where Princes do command Idolatry Rom 13 5 or any thing directly against the word of God there the subiects may say with S. Peter and the Apostles Act. 5 29 we must rather obey God then man Yet in no wise may they rebell Eccl 10 17 Rom. 13.1 nor in heart wish the subuersion of God his annointed But God his holy name be praysed we haue no need to feare any such edicts we may of all people vnder hearte most willingly submit our selues to that obedience where goalinesse and loyalty may both meete together Psal 85.10 and righteousnesse and peace may kisse each other Fiftly in respect of the prayers themselues great cause we haue had and no doubt shall haue still most carefully to frequent them the prayers being all euen in the conscience of the aduersary most godly and needfull for all good gifts and graces requisite both for Prince and people and all made through our onely mediator Christ Iesus 1. Tim. 2 5. There is one God sayth Paule and one mediator betwixt God and man euen the man Christ Iesus 1. Ioh. 2.2 If any man sinne saith Saint Iohn we haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes Aug. in Psal 108. Oratio quae non fit per Christum non solum non potest delere peccatum sed ipsa fit peccatum The prayer which is not made through Christ doth not onely not put away sinne but euen it selfe is made sinne And further it must needs be a great comfort to the vnlearned and a ioy generally to all when the prayers are made in that vsuall knowne language wherein the whole Church may ioyne together with one heart and one voyce to praise God The Apostle sayth I will pray with the Spirit 1. Cor 14.15 V. 16. I will pray with vnderstanding also He which occupieth the place of the vnlearned how can he say Amen to the giuing of thankes when he vnderstandeth not what thou sayst I had rather in the Church speake fiue words to the instructing of others then ten thousand in a strange language V. 19. If there were in our Churches blasphemous prayers maintained or Idolatrie erected then we should with Sidrach Misach and Abednego chuse rather to die then to yeeld so much as the body to prostrate it selfe before them But otherwise for euery small abuse or corruption which is crept into the Church we are not to take occasion thereby to refuse the place of God his seruice There were corruptions when there was buying and selling in the Temple of the Iewes Luc 19.45 Luc. 2.22 Luc. 19.47 Act. 3.1 yet Ioseph and Mary did present themselues to the oblations in that Temple Christ refused not to teach daily in it the Apostles refused not to pray in it Luc. 2 37 and Anna the ancient widow is commended for that in her fasting and prayer she serued God day and night in that Temple Sixtly our intent in comming to the Church is not to iudge the faith of other men but euery one to examine his owne faith Paule sayth Let a man proue and examine himselfe 1 Cor 11.28 31 and so let him eate of that bread and drinke of that cup If we would iudge our selues 2 Cor. 13.5 we should not be condemned Trie and examine your selues whether ye be in the faith or no. If any do come vnworthily in a wrong faith or without repentance the Apostle denounceth of him 1. Cor. 11.29 that he eateth and drinketh his owne damnation He cannot condemne others he damneth but himselfe It was sayd to him that had no wedding garment Friend how camest thou hither not hauing a wedding garment Math. 22 12 he was himselfe cast into vtter darknesse he did not condemne the rest of the guests which were clothed with faith working through charity Gal. 5.6 The Apostles knew that Iudas was a traytor our Sauiour had before certified them of it Math 26.21.22 yet they refused not to receiue the Sacrament with him Iudas receiued his owne damnation he could not condemne the rest of the Disciples If the time imployed in the Church be not for the Sacraments or prayers but for the preaching of the word our assured preseruation against all error is to cleane to the holy Scripture the old and new Testament Aug in Psal 57. Saint Augustine
A DISCOVRSE CONCERNING THE Soule and Spirit of Man Wherein is described the essence and dignity thereof the gifts and graces wherewith God hath endued it and the estate thereof aswell present as future And thereunto is annexed in the end a bipartite instruction or exhortation concerning the duties of our thankefulnesse towards God Written by SIMON HARVVARD LONDON Imprinted by IOHN WINDET 1604. ILLVSTRISSIMO omnique virtute ornatissimo Domino Georgio Moore Equiti aurato bonarum literarum Mecanati benignissimo prospera omnia foelicia precatur QVemadmodum apud priscos Philosophos vir amplissime quamplurimae de anima humana disputationes sunt literis mandatae à nonnullis quidem in dialogis vt a Platone ab aliis in tractatu continuato vtab Aristotele A quibusdam sermone soluto ab aliis oratione numeris constricta ab his fusiùs ab illis magis succinctè ab his ornatiùs ab illis stilo magis humili magisque crassa quòd aiunt Minerua Sic hodierno tempore non vti spero videbitur à ratione alienum si pro ingeniorum varietate eodem pergatur cursu vt quàm multiplices sunt animae dotes tam variae etiam sint illorum librorum formae quibus natura vi●es animae describantur Sicut enim non omnes pisces vna capiuntur esca nec vno vultu omnes prori ita nec omnium hominum corda eodem scribendi genere alliciuntur necomnium aures eadem loquendi phrasi delectantur Si qui sint qui politiora scripta expetant ea velim perlegant quae de cognitione dei in libro non ita pridem praelo commisso acutè admodum et copiosè Ampl. tua demonstrauerit Est enim Dei agnitio tàm essentiae quàm virium animae planè certissimum argumen tum Quòd si qui peomata magis euoluere percupiāt Dauyesum Orphea Anglum audiant de noticia animae suauiter modulantem Hoc sum ego tantummodo in codicillo meo conatus vt quae ab antiquis optimis tā theologis quàm Philo sophis in aliis linguis pertractata viderim ea vt possem in exiguum reducerem compendium vt bonū esset quo communius eo melìus in idioma nostrum vernaculum illa traducerem Visum autem est mihi vir clarissime hoc meum qualecunque scriptum tuae potissimùm Ampl. consecrare quia apud omnes satis constat eiusmodi esse tuum in his arduis quaestiunculis iudicium vt si tractatus hic meus licèt im politus sub nominis tui patrocinio in lucem prodeat non est quòd verear alicuius Momilinguam virulētam nec est quòd de bonorum omnium approbatione quicquam omninò dubitem Conciones duas à menuper Camerwellae praedicatas in operis exitu adieci partim quia à disputatione de diuinis animae dotibus non multum viderentur dissentire Nullo enim modo se satis nouit anima nisi se suo creatori summè deuinctam gratissimè agnoscat partim quia erant coram illo habitae quem omnibus palàm innotescit te non vulgari amplecti amore cui non possum non acceptum referre quòd mihi tui fauoris spes certissima affulgeat quódque patronum adeò praestantem hoc exiguum sit nactum opusculum Deus Opt. Max. te multis verbi diuini ministris solatium atheis obstaculum Suriaeque non mediocre decus sanum laetum honoratum quàm diutissimè viuum conseruet vitáque defuncto caelestes tibi sedes largiatur iustorū animis in aeternum repositas Tanridgiae vltimo Decembris Anno 1603. Ampl. tuae deuotissimus SIMON HARWARD The Contents of the BOOKE The Arguments or briefe Summe of the twelue Chapters following 1 THe first Chapter sheweth that the words soule and spirit are so generally synonima that in all principall vses concerning man the one is promiscuè taken for the other 2 The second what the soule of man is and how the soule of man doth differ from that anima which is in other liuing creatures 3 The third whether anima vegetatiua sensitiua rationalis the vegetatiue sensitiue and rationall soules be three seueral formes or substances of soules or but diuers faculties of one soule 4 The fourth whether anima the soule be a medium a meane or middle substance betwixt the spirit and the bodie 5 The fift in what part of the bodie the soule doth possesse her seate 6 The sixt whether the soule doe come ex traduce by propagation from the parents or us 7 The seuenth that the soule is an immortall essence and that according to the opinion of heathenish Philosophers 8 The eight how in the soule the image of God may and ought to be renewed 9 The ninth what wee may conceiue of the soule of man by the conscience of man and how the conscience is either a heauen or hell to the soule in this life 10 The tenth of the estate and condition of the soule after this life against the heresie of the Catabaptists 11 The eleuenth of the future estate of the soul being seperated from the bodie against the Romanists 12 The twelfth the conclusion concerning the twofolde estate of soules once loosed from their bodies Errata Folio 8. b for feat sent twise fol. 20. a who by wholy fol. 21. a one our fol. 21. a geneally generally fol. 30. b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fol. 32 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fol. 58. a often giuen fol. 74 a and did not possesse fol. 99 b if we cast of if we taste of Fol. 48. Decius A DISCOVRSE concerning the Soule and Spirit of MAN CHAP. I. How many wayes the words Soule and Spirit are synonima and the one promiscuè taken for the other THe words anima and animus in their originall etymologie are thought of many to bee deriued of the Greeke worde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●ignifying a blast or Spirit Arist de mundo according to that of Aristotle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anemos is nothing but much aire flowing hard together which is also called a Spirit The hebrew word nephesh for the soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ruach for the spirit are accounted in their originall sense to signifie also one thing to wit a breath or blast The Greeke word for the soule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is deriued of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 refrigero because breath is let in to coole things naturally hote and is therefore the same in meaning with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spiritus of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spiro The like is in the Latine tongue wherein as the word spiritus is taken often for winde and breath Virg. Aenead as in the Poet Boreae cum spiritus alto insonat Aegeo And of the Queen of the South when she came to Salomon and sodainly sawe his exceeding glorie and Maiestie it is said of her being amazed 1. Reg. 10.5 non erat ampliùs in
ea spiritus there was no more breach in her So vsually in the best approued Latine Authors the word anima is also taken for winde Cicero de V. muersit and breath Tully saith inter ignē et terram Deus aquam animamque posuit Betwixt the element of fire and the earth God hath placed the water and the ayre Geta in Terence telleth Antopho how by hearkening and listening Terent. in Phorm he had found out the parents of Phanium accessi astiti animam compressi aurem admoui I came neere stood close held in my breath and listened And in Plautus the fault of the breath is called faetor animae Plautus in Asinaria Philenium said to Demaenetus dic amabò anfaetet anima vxoris tuae As in the three chiefest languages the etymologie of the wordes vsed for soule and spirit do import one force and nature so in the three principall significations and purposes whereunto they are most commonly applied in the description of the parts and faculties of man they haue as large a priuiledge the one as the other For first they are taken generally for the spirit of life in euery liuing creature As in Genesis it is said Gen. 7.15 Venerunt ad Noachum bina ex omni carne in qua erat spiritus vitae There came 2. 2. of al to Noah Tulli. de senec tute in whō was the spirit of life Tul. extolleth those olde men quorum ad extremum spiritum prouecta est prudentia whose wisdome encreaseth euen vnto the ende of their life Aenaeas promiseth to bee mindful of Dido Vir. Aeneid 4 dum spiritus hos regit artus while life doth last This bodily life is called often in the Scripture by the worde of anima Reuben said to his brethren concerning Ioseph Gen. 37.21 Non percutiamus eum in anima Let vs not strike him in soule that is Exod. 21.23 let vs not kill him The law of retribution is eye for eye tooth for tooth hand for hand animam pro anima life for life Psal 59.4 Dauid praieth to be deliuered from those bloud-thirstie men which laid waite for his soule Our Sauiour commaundeth vs not to be solliciti pro anima Math. 6.25 carefull for the life what we shal eate or drinke nor for the body what raiment we shall put on The Angell bad Ioseph to take the babe and his mother and to returne out of Aegypt into Iury because they were dead qui petebant animam pueruli Math. 2.20 which sought the childes life Qui vult animam suam seruare saith our Sauiour hee which will saue his life Luk. 9 2● shall loose it and hee which will loose his life for my sake shall finde it Ioh. 10.11 A good sheapherd layeth downe his soule for his sheepe that is his life Ioh. 3.16 as hee laid downe his soule for vs so should wee lay downe our soules for our brethrē that is our liues The Poet Iuuenal reprouing the greedy couetousnes of marchāts saith I nunc et ventis animam committe dolate Confisus lígno digitis à morte remotus Quatuor aut Septem Secondly the word spirit and soule are in an equall degree taken vsually for the affections of man either good or euill Gal. 6.1 1. Cor. 4. v. vlt. The Apostle doth exhort vs to instruct one another with the spirite of mildnesse Psal 51.10 The Psalmist prayeth God to renew a right spirit within him that is holy motions of the mind Esay 29.10 The Prophet Esay telleth the stiffe-necked people that God had cast vpon them a spirit of slumber Greg. in mor. spiritus carnalis mollia spiritus mundi vana spiritus malitiae sēper amara loquitur Psal 27.12 So may proud couetous affections be called the spirit of pride and the spirit of couetousnesse So is the word soule often vsed for the affections of the heart The Prophet Dauid sath ne tradas me animae hostium meorum deliuer me not to the soule that is the wicked desire of my enemies for false witnesses are risen vp against me Anima Sichem ad haesit Dinae filie Iacobi Gen. 34.8 the soule of Sichem that is the affection of his hart did cleaue vnto Dina the daughter of Iacob The Lord saith by Ezekiel that he had giuen vp the Israelites animae odio habentium eos Ezech. 16.27 to the soule that is the will and affections of them that hated them So of good and louing affections it is said in the Actes of those first conuerts in the primitiue Church Act. 4.32 there was amongst them cor vnum et anima vna one heart and one soule that is their counsels did all agree and their willes and affections were faithfully ioyned Eph. 4.3 The like doth the Apostle Paul exhort vs to when he biddeth vs hold the vnitie of the spirit in the bond of peace When the affections of our Sauiour Christ are expressed they are set out sometimes by the word spirit and sometimes by the word soule Ioh. 13.21 Saint Iohn saith turbatus est spiritus his spirit was troubled when he said one of you shall betray me Luk. 10 21. and as it is in Saint Luke exhitauit Iesus spiritu Iesus reioyced in spirit when hee said I thanke thee O Father Lord of heauen and earth that thou hast hid these thinges from the wise and prudent and reuealed them to babes euen so was thy good pleasure In Saint Marke he said Mark 14.34 tristis est anima vsque ad mortem my soule is sorrowful vnto death tary here watch And in Saint Iohn anima mea turbata est Ioh. 12.27 my soule is troubled and what shall I say Father saue me from this houre Aug. in Ioh S. Augustine doth expound these places to signifie his infinite loue towardes mankind and saith caput nostrum suscepit membrorum suorum affectum Our head vouchsafed to take vpon himselfe the affections of his mystical bodie Thirdly the word soule and spirit do in as full maner the one as the other point out vnto vs the principall part of man that rationall soule and vnderstanding spirit which beeing part of mans substance here doth remaine still immortall when the bodie is extinguished Of that is meant that speech of the wise man Eccles 12.7 when earth goeth to earth the spirit goeth to God which gaue it That did the first Martyr Saint Stephen yeeld vp into the hands of Christ Act. 7.59 when he said Lord Iesu receiue my spirit Of that speaketh the Apostle to the Hebrewes Hebr. 12 9 if wee haue reuerenced the Fathers of our flesh when they haue corrected vs much more shall wee bee subiect to the Father of our spirites and liue Of that doth our Sauiour speake in the yeelding vp of his soule Luk. 23.46 Father into thy hands I commend my spirit For as he tooke
doth take hold of many matters and exhibite them to the vnderstanding And as many times captaines being drawn on by the errour of their spies do attempt some exploits which redound to their great harme so reason being beguiled with the errour of imagination doth fall into folly and rashnes The Greeke Philosophers doe erre about the imagination of mā some of them doe make it to bee all one with the common sense some make the imaginatiō in man in brute beastes to be both alike but both the assertions are erronious for the common sense or inwarde sense dooth in the same moment of time together with the outward senses perceiue those things which do fall vnder sense and when the obiect is remoued the actiō of the cōmon sense doth vterly cease but the imaginatiō although the bodies be taken away yet it doth retain the formes and of diuerse things can make one as of a mountain and gold can make a golden mountaine Again the common or inwarde sense doth only perceiue those things which are brought vnto it by the benefite of the outward senses but imagination goeth further and doth put forth her power in high and lofty matters At the first sight of a wolfe the sheepe doth flie away and yet cannot that sagacity be attributed to the outward senses neither can we say that the imagination in brute beastes is the same that it is in man for in beastes it is occupied wholy in appetites in seeking those thinges wherewith it is delighted in flying frō those things which they imagine will bring harm But mans imagination doth beholde many thinges very farre remoued frō affections and appetites and when imagination hath conceiued many things and by the exhibiting of thē as it were rowsed reason out of sleepe then doth reason ponder discourse of the matters proceeding to fro from the effectes to the cause doth thereupon inferre conclusions and determine vpon resolutions Caluin Instit l. ● cap. 15. The commō sense is as it were a receptacle into the which by the outward senses as by instrumentes all maner of obiectes are infused Phantasie dooth iudge of those thinges which bee apprehended by common sense Reason hath an vniuersall iudgement farre beyond those thinges which doe fall vnder sense And aboue them all that which is called Mens the minde doth with a quiet and fixed contemplation behold those thinges whereof reason hath discoursed The three faculties called cognitiuae the cognitiue or knowing faculties of the soule Caluin ibid. haue other three appetitiue faculties answering vnto them Voluntas the wil doth properly desire that which the mind and reason do propound Vis irascendi the courage doth catch at those thinges which are reached out by reason and fantasie And vis concupiscendi the concupiscence doth desire and apprehend such things as are obiected by fantasie and sense How all these should be rightly vsed it is thus defined by an ancient Father Gregor Mag in Prologo in 7. Psalm poenitent Caro quatuor constat elementis anima tribus vegetatur naturis est enim rationalis ad disceraendum concupiscibilis ad virtutes appetendum irascibilis ad vitia aduersandum The flesh consisteth of fower elemēts and the soule is quickned in three natures for it is either rationall to discerne or concupiscible to desire vertue or irascible to abhorre sinne Some doe make in the soule three beginnings of actions Calu. Instit l. 2 cap. 15. sense vnderstanding appetite Some do more briefly bring it into a Dichotomy making onely two parts of the soule to witte vnderstanding and will vnder vnderstanding they do comprehend sense and in will they include appetite vnderstanding doth discerne decree and the will doth make choise of that which reasō hath prescribed refuse what she hath disalowed The appetite if it do obey reasō natural instinct it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an earnest desire but if it do shake off the yoke of reason it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sodain and rash perturbatiō which is rather a corruption infirmity thē a natural faculty of the soule The Orator or tather in that booke the Philosopher doth thē accoūt the apetite to be a right force of the soule when it obeyeth reason Duplex est vis animorum Tul. lib. 1. off vna pars in appetitu posita altera in ratione quae docet explanat quid faciendum fugiendumque sit ita vt ra●io praesit But our Christian faith geeth further and dooth teach vs that all our reason our thoughts Rom. 8.7 2 Cor 3 5. 1 Cor 2 14. Gen 8 21. Phil 2.13 Eph 4 23. Ioh. 1 9 2 Peter 1 19 2 Cor 4.4 1 Tim 5 6. Greg. in Ezech hom 17 our knowledge our appetites our wil our wisedome and the very spirites of our mind are blinde darke and euen dead vnlesse they be lightened by the beames of Gods word and quickened by his sanctifying Spirit It was well said of Gregorie Anima in corpore vita est carnis Deus autem qui viuificat omnia vita est animarum The soule in the bodie is the life of the flesh but God which quickeneth all things is the life of our soules And of Augustine Aug. de verbis dom in Math Cap. 8 sicut expirat corpus cum animam emittit ita expirat anima cum Deum amittit Deus amissus mors animae anima emissa mors corporis As the body dieth when it sendeth out the soule so doth the soule dye when it loseth God the seperation from God is the death of the soule euen as the parting of the soule is the death of the body This is opus animae regere inferiorem et regia superiore August lib 6 mu●i cap 5 the proper office of the soule is to gouerne man and to be gouerned it selfe of God CHAP. III. Whether anima vegetatiua sensitiua et rationalis the vegetatiue sensitiue and rationall soules bee three seuerall formes of soules or but diuers faculties of one soule WHen the vegetatiue force the sensitiue life and the rational soule are considered in themselues and in their owne nature they must needs be accounted three distinct kindes because the first is in plants all things growing on the earth The second is common both to bruit beast and man And the third is proper to man onely But when they are all ioyned together in man then the question is whether they are to bee reckoned three sortes of animae or but only three distinct powers of one soule Galen doth in diuers of his bookes followe still the positions of Plato and as there are three principall parts of man the heart the brayne and the liuer so hee teacheth expressely that their seueral sortes of anima tres animae sunt species Gal. lib. de animi et corporis temperament mutua consequutione G●l de placit Hipp. et Plat. lib. 9. saith he there
as they doe imagine as when the Apostle saith 1 Thes ● 23 the God of peace sanctifie you who by that your spirit being perfect your soule and bodie may bee kept vnblamably vntill the cōming of our Lord Iesus Christ the meaning is not that there shuld be a perfect coniunctiō of the Spirit to the bodie by the soule as a meane or middle that so the spirit the bodie might the better continue long together but the praier of the Apostle is that the spirit of the Thessalonians that is their reason vnderstanding their soul that is their wil and affections and thirdly their body should be kept vnblamably vntill the cōming of Christ These significations of the words I haue proued at large in my first Cha. And althogh they being named here together haue seueral significations Pe●a piscater I●wellus alii in hunc locum yet can we not thereupon conclude that they are seueral substāces But as the body and flesh are but one body so the spirit soule are but one soule Aqui. saith vpō tht place ad peccatū tria concurrūt ratio sēsualitas et exi equutio corporis Aquinas in 1 Thess 5 23 optat vt in nullo horū sit peccatū Three things in man may offend reasō sensuality the body he praieth that none of these maybe defiled with sinne The ancient Fathers Augustine and Hierom doe expounde this place in an other sense Folio 21. and yet nothing fauouring the opinion of Dorne v. 19. for by the spirit they vnderstand the graces of Gods spirit and so to bee all one with that which goeth a little before Spiritum ne extinguite Quench not the spirite they make the meaning to be that both one soule and the giftes graces of Gods spirit bestowed vpon it Hieron epist 150. ad 12. quest Hedibiae might be kept perfect vntill the cōming of Christ Alii ex hoc loco triplicē affirmare volunt substantiam spiritus quo sentimus animae qua vinimus corporis quo incedimus Some saith S. Hierom would out of this place to the Thessalonians proue a threefolde substance in man c. Nos autem accipimus gratias donationesque spiritus sancti But we by the first by the word spirite do vnderstād the graces and giftes of the holy spirite The like affirmeth S. Augustine Aug. de ecclesiast dogmat cap. 20. tom ● Non est tertius in substantia hominis spirities sicut Didimus contendit sed spiritus ipsi est anima quae prospirituali natura vel pro eo quod spiret in corpore spiritus appellatur anima veró ex eo vocatur quod ad viuendū viuificandum aenimet corpus Tertinm autem cum anima corpore coniunctum spiritum gratiam spiritus sancti esse intelliga mus quam orat Apostolus vt integra perseueret in nobis The spirit is not a third substance in man as Didimus woulde haue it but mans spirite is his soule which for the spiritual nature or because it breatheth in the body is called a spirit and it is called Anima because it quickneth the body and giueth vnto it a quickning force but the spirit which is in this place ioined by the Apostle with the soule and body wee must vnderstand it to bee the grace of the holy Ghost which the Apostle doth pray that it may perseuere and continue in vs. The late Writers Beza Piscator and others do in the sense of this place differ from the Fathers but all doe geneally conspire against a third substance to be framed out of it Aquinas holdeth two Axioms very strongly first Aquinas in 1. parte suae summ Theol. quest 76 3 lib. sen●●●● distinct 1. that Forma substantialis vnitur immediaté materiae the substantiall forme of a thing is immediately or without any medium vnited with the matter Aquinas in 1. parte suae summ Theol. quest 70. sentent lib. 2 dist 12. and the second that non est possibile plures formas substantiales simul esse in eodem corpore It is not possible that two substantiall forms should be at one time in the selfe same body Writing also vpon that place of S. Paule 1 Cor. 15.44 Est corpus animale est corpus spirituale there is a naturall body and there is a spirituall body where the Apostle seemeth to giue the word body both to anima and spiritus Aquinas in 1. Cor. 15. he expoundeth the naturall body corpus animale to be that which in this world is troubled with naturall functions for feeding increase generation and such like and the spirituall body to bee that which absque aliquo impedimento fatigatione incessanter seruiet animae ad spirituales operationes eius hoc per Christum spiritum id est non solùm animam viuentem vt Adam sed viuentem viuificantem without all impediment and wearines continually serue the soule for her spirituall operations and that by the power of Christ being a spirite not onely a liuing spirit as Adam but a liuing and also a quickning spirite And that this is the very sense of the place it is most euident by the wordes last going before and by that which immediately followeth for in the verse before hee compareth our body in this life with our body that shall be in the resurrection It is sowen in weaknes it doth rise againe in power it is sown Copus animale it shall rise againe corpus spirituale And when he hath said there is an animall body and there is a spirituall hee addeth as it is written the first man Adam was made a liuing soule and the second Adam that is Christ Iesus was made a quickning spirit The Animal body is that which the posterity of Adam haue in this life Rom. 8. v. 11 and the spiritual body is that which shall be raysed with the quickning spirit of Christ in the resurrectiō Aug. de Ciuitate Dei lib. 13. cap. 20. Augustine sayeth that that is called a spirituall body which Spiritui summa mirabile facilitate subdetur omni molestia sensu omni corruptibilitate tarditate detracta shall obey the spirite with admirable facility all sense of trouble being taken away and all corruption and slownesse remoued And in an other place Aug. de fide symbolo cap. 6. tom ● Spirituale corpus intelligitur omnifragilitate labe terrena in coelestem puritatem stabilitatem mutata conuersa That is vnderstood to bee a spirituall body wherein all frailty and earthly pollution is conuerted and changed into heauenly purity and stedfastnes Anselmus Anselm in 1. Cor. 15 Titleman in 1. Cor. 15 and after him Titleman and other schoolemen doe interprete that to be an animal body which hath need of meats drinkes and other cherishing that to bee a spirituall body which shall not neede any of these but liue for euer by the
quickning spirit of Christ To call a body spirituall and to say that the spirit is a body are speeches very much different Col. 2. v. ● S. Paule sayeth that the fulnes of the Godhead doth dwell in Christ bodily but wee can not thereupon inferre that the Godheade is a body Rom. 7.14 The law is called spirituall the law sayth the Apostle is spirituall and I am solde vnder sin who will thereupon inferre that the law is a spirit Rom. 8.7 It is sayd the wisedom of the flesh is enmity against God is the flesh therefore a thing rationall Paule will haue the body of sinne destroyed Rom. 6. v. 6 is therefore sin a thing corporeall 2 Cor. 4.16 He sayeth though the outward man doe perish the inward man is renewed daily is therfore the soule of it selfe a person Aquinas writing vpon that place Aquinas in 2. Cor. 4. condēneth an heresie of Tertullian Hic Tertulliani error dānatur etiam ab Augustino Epist 157 who taught that because S. Paule doth call the Soule an inward man therefore the Soule no doubte had a bodily shape but hee frameth him this answere Vnumquodque dicitur illud esse quod est in eo principalius Any thing may beare the name of that which is most principall in him secundum veritatem iudicium principalius in homine est mens sed secundum apparentiam principalius est corpus exterius cum sensibus suis According to true iudgement the principall part of man is the minde but according to the outward appearāce the principal part is the body the sēses thereof therfore it is that the one is called the outward mā the other the inward S. Hierom sheweth that some in his time to proue that the spirite and soule are seuerall substāces Hierom. epist 150. ad 12. quaest Hedibiae In adiectione ad Dan. v. 86. did alledge that in the song of the three children O yee Spirites Soules of iust men praise the Lord. But hee putteth it downe as an vsual answere that that chapter is of the Apocrypha and he addeth Non vtique sunt tot substantiae quot nomina We must still imagine so many substances as we finde names The Apostle to the Hebrewes Heb. 4. v. 12. calleth the worde of God such a two edged sworde as doth enter to the deuiding of the soule and spirite we may not conclude thereby two seuerall substances but by the soule is meant as most do expounde it the affections and by the spirit the reason an vnderstanding Aquinas in Heb. 4. Aquinas saith spiritus est illud per quod communicamus cum essentiis spiritualibus anima est illud per quod communicamus cum brutis anima operatur cum corpore sciritus sine corpore That part of the soule which doth communicate with spirituall substances is called a spirit but that faculty which is common to brute beastes is called anima the one worketh with the body and the other without the body Others make that to the soule do appertaine those thinges which are agreeable to nature and to the spirit those thinges that are aboue nature but still meaning the faculties of one soule and not seuerall substances It is no abasing of the soule of man to haue some thinges common with brute beastes as it is no disgrace to the mightiest prince in the world to haue some things common with the vilest and basest subiect of his kingdome to witte eating drinking sleeping such other naturall functions All Creatures haue their seuerall degrees of this anima some haue onely the natural degree as haue trees and herbs some haue further a vitall degree as haue wormes some besides the vital haue also a sensuall degree with some feeling of feare and ioy as haue brute heastes and some besides the naturall vitall and sensuall haue also an intellectuall as hath man to discourse ponder and iudge and stil the higher includeth his inferior and the highest and most soueraign comprehēdeth all in one Some to derogate from the word anima doe alledge that speech of Athan. Athanasius tom 4. in tractatu de definitionibus ecclesiasticis Nemo existimet quod ille spiritus quē in hominē inflauit factus sit anima absit Let no mā think that the spirit which God did breath into man was made a soule God forbid wee should think so wherupō they conclude that in Athan. his iudgemēt the spirit the soule are two distinct substāces most certaine it is that Athanasius in that place doth not speake of spirite as of any essentiall part of man but of that Spirite wherewith God created all thinges of which it is sayde in Genesis Spiritus Dei incubabat superficiei aqua rum The spirite of God did hatch vpon the waters and in the Psalms by the word of the Lord the heauēs were made all the army of them Gen 1 2 Psal 33.6 Spiritu oris eius by the breath of his mouth This working creating spirite did God breath into mā ●en 2.7 by it man was made a liuing soule without any elementary matter now that efficient al-creating spirite which God did breath into mā let no mā think saith Athana that it self was made a soule God forbid for then anima esset nimirū de Dei essentia Our soule should be of the very essence of God Sed spiritus ille perficit animā But that spirite which is of Gods essence doth make the soule of man and all the powers therof by which wordes following Athanasius doth so plainely expounde his owne meaning that no doubt can be left thereof I conclude therfore that the soundest course is when we take vpon vs to determine what anima is to giue it the same properties and the same signification as hath been euer giuen to it by the holy Scriptures by the auncient Fathers by the wisest of the Philosophers and by all the best approued authors that euer haue written and if in any place either in the booke of God or in the writinges of learned Diuines if be ioined together with the word spirit thē to giue it no other sence thē is the scope and drift of the places In all the places which are alledged the purpose of the originall text is not to shew how the soule should bee vnited to the body but how al the powers of the soule should be ioyned vnto God CHAP. V. In what place of the body the Soule doth possesse his seat THe vulgar and common axiome that anima rationalis est tota in toto tota in qualibet parte The rationall soule of man is whole in whole and whole in euerie part which some do attribute to Augustine and some to other late schoolemen but in Melancthon his iudgement it is no speech of Plato Melancth de anima pag 34 Aristotle or of any ancient Philosopher may best bee expounded of the power and efficacy of the
iudgement sometimes manifest sometimes secret but alwayes iust A weake house must needes incline and also fall when the vnderproppers are remoued darkenesse must needes ensue when the Sunne is departed away Those bright beames of all light which were giuen to our first parentes are remoued and other gifts and excellent graces of God are in his iust iudgement so long withholden from our soules vntill by his holy spirit Act. 26.18 Eph. 1.18 Act. 5 10 Heb. 13.21 as the worker and by his holy worde as the instrument God in his good time doe lighten the eyes of our heartes purifie them by faith and confirme and strengthen vs to euery good worke CHAP. VII Of the immortality of the Soule Marsil Ficinu●m Theol. Platonis pag. 361. MArsilius Ficinus sheweth fiue sundry opinions of the Philosophers concerning the soule of man but of Christians which truely hope for immortality he wisheth the fower first assertions to be vtterly reiected and the first onely fit to be receiued and embraced The first sort of Philosophers were they which made the soule to be a certaine thinne body infused into a thicker a more subtle bodily substance infused into a grosser And of these some made it to bee fiery as Democritus Leucippus and Hipparchus Some to bee an ayre or an aeriall body as Anaximenes Diogenes and Critias some to bee a watery substance as Hippias some earthly as Hesiodus some of fire and ayre as Epicurus and some of water and earth as Xenophantes The second sort of Philosophers was of them which thought the soule to bee no bodily substance but some quality thereof dispersed through the body to wit either a heate or a complexion as was defended by Zeno Cleanthes Antipater and Possidonius A third sort iudged the soule to be no whole quality but some bright point of qualitie remaining in some beter part of the body and qualities to wit in the braine or heart and from thence gouerning the body their authors especially were Chrysippus Archelaus Heraclides The fourth sect were they which taught the soule to be a certaine point or pricke or indiuisible thing not fastened to any part but secluded from all set place wholy present to euery part of the body but yet such as it dependeth of the body either because the complection of the body did beget it or because it came of seede or of some proportion of matter and addicted to the matter as to her natural birth-place the chiefe broachers of this opinion were Xenophanes Colophonius Asclepiades Aristoxenus Critolaus To some of them the soule was nothing but a nimble force of mouing to others a harmony of corporall partes Others thought it a perfection of the senses others a conspiring of the Elements others a swarm of atomes The first and best sort of Philosophers Ficinus maketh to be those which defēd the soule to be a certain diuine indeuisible essence wholy ruling euery part of the body produced of an incorporeal author depending wholy on the vertue power of the worker not vpon the beginning or capacity or vertue of any material thing Thus thought Zoroaster Mercurius Pythagoras Plato and amongst these also he numbreth Aristotle It was a thing that mightily perswaded Plato that the soules both came frō God and were also immortal whē he cōsidered that her functions did not depend so vpon bodily instruments but she could performe all her chiefest actions without thē as he saith in Phaedo Ratiocinatur optimé quādo nihil eāperturbat Plato in Phaedone neque auditus neque visus neque dolor neque voluptas she doth reason and discourse best when neither hearing nor sight nor griefe nor pleasure do hinder her In age when the body groweth weake yet is oftē her iudgement ripest though many sicknesses do bereaue the body of strēgth yet the vigor of the soule is not thereby diminished she flieth beyond all the powers of the sēses more swift then the lightning from the east to the west shee can passe the seas as Plato saith in Axiochus in a moment Sort. in Axiocho Platouis she can calculate the course of Sunne moone stars shee can discourse of things past foresee things to come in ambiguous matters she can first doubt and then chuse and all these without the help of any bodily instrumēnts in knowledge she doth not only passe through humaine arts by defining deuiding dissoluing cōpounding but she doth euē pierce the skies shee cōprehendeth the knowledge of God she conceiueth God his Angels to be essences immortal if brute beasts shold cōceiue reasō they shold be then accounted reasonable Calu. Instit lib. 1. cap. 15. sect 2. This conceiuing of immortality hauing recourse to the fount aine of life is an euident argumēt that the soule is not a vanishing vapour but a diuine essēce How chearefully went Socrates to his death Platonis Apolog when in his conscience he was perswaded that death was nothing els but as he said a flitting vnto another place where he should enioy the cōpany of the Gods where vndoubtedly the dead were in better estate then the liuing Plato in Axiocho Hee made this to bee the definition of the death of thē that liued wel Discessus é vita est mali cuiusdā in bonū cōmutatio the departure out of this life is nothing els but the chāging of ill into good To the wicked hee confessed it to bee an entrance into some kindes of torments but to the wise and vertuous he thought it to be nothing but a chāging of sorrows into all ioy happines what they were he could not define but of this he made no question Plato in Phaedone Socrates to Simmias 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To good soules it was surely better and to ill soules worse Philo. Iudacus It em Bruson lib. 4. cap. 10. When Crito one of Socrates his friendes asked him at the time of his death in what maner he would be buried he cryed out O my frendes I haue spent a great deale of labour in vaine I haue not yet perswaded Crito that I shall flie away leane no parte behind but Crito said he if thou canst ouertake me bury me how thou wilt his meaning was that the minde or soule is the man that the body was but an instrumēt or cotage or prison Anaxurchus the Philosopher whē being taken by Nicocreon tyrant of Cypres Idem lib. 2. cap. 1. ex Plutarcho he was knocked with iron hammers hee said Tunde tunde probé Anaxarchi carnes ossa tunde Anaxarchi follē Anaxarchū nequaquàm laedes knocke knocke hardly the flesh and bones of Anaxarchus knocke his bellowes the instrument of his winde but Anaxarchus himselfe thou canst not hurt Ibid. Theodorus the Macedonian philosopher when Lysimachus threatned to hang him answered haec aulicis tuis minitare mea enim non refert humine an in cruce putrescam threaten
reason Tul. Tusc 5. that corpus est quasi vas anim quoddam receptaculum the bodie is but as it were a vessell for the soule and a receptacle for a time Againe if the soule were not a substāce of it selfe why should the Apostle saint Peter call the end of our faith the saluation of our soules 1. Pet. 1.9 1. Pet. 2.11 or bid vs abstaine from lustes which fight against our soules Or the Apostle to the Hebrewes Heb. 1● 17 call the labour of Ministers a watching euer soules as they which must giue an account of them with sundrie other such exhortations as are set downe here in my first chapter Heb. 10.17 Or how could there be a terrour and trembling of conscience in the wicked when by the guiltinesse of their sinne they finde in themselues a fearefull looking for of iudgement and violent fire to consume the aduersarie It is not a motion but an essence which doth pierce vp to the tribunall seate of God and from thence strike terrour into it selfe This sting of conscience as it is a spirituall punishment and not corporall so it falleth not vpon the body but vpon the soule For the immortalitie of this spirituall essence what is reuealed by the holy scriptures I shall haue occasion to declare more at large in my four last chapters only my chief drift hath beene here to shew what the wise Philosophers of the world haue cōceiued thereof by the light of naturall reasō and to let vs see what a shame it is for vs not to make so much vse of deepe meditations as they did When Socrates did but consider that the minde doth thē discourse best when nothing doth trouble it neither hearing nor seeing nor griefe nor pleasure as wee see when the senses are stopped the vnderstanding doth most deepely meditate he could gather thereby an argument of immortalitie Seneca epist 111. When Seneca sawe that the greater and more heroicall mind was in man the more it did despise these base worldly things and the lesse it feared to depart out of the bodie he would say straight maximum est argumentum animi ab alitiori venientis sede It is the greatest argument that can be of a mind comming from heauen and therefore of a heauenly and eternall nature To conclude euen the Poets when they considered the diuine gifts bestowed on the soul of man Phoeylides could not but confesse that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Th' immortall soule stil yong lasteth for aye And Pythagoras a Poet but much more a Philosopher 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythag. in aureis carmini 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If soule and mind as wagoners rule all Then when thou leauing body comest to skies With God thou shalt be euer immortall And taste no more of death nor miseries CHAP. VIII How in the soule the image of God shal be renewed OF those words in Genesis Gen. 1.27 that God made man after his owne image likenes there haue beene amongst many sundry applicatiōs and sundrie opinions some plainely heretical and others more tolerable The heresie of the Anthopomorphitae is dānable which maketh God to be a bodily substance like vnto man for the scriptures doe shew vs abundantly Ioh. 4.24 2. Cor. 3.17 that God is a spirit inuisible and incomprehensible he appeared sometime visibly to the Patriarkes Exod. 33.20 Ioh. 6.46 Gen. 16.10 Exod. 2.2 Esay 6.1 and his holy seruants but that was not according to his essence which is infinite but according to certaine representments or as Athanasius speaketh maiesties farre inferior to that which he is of himself applied to the capacity of man And certaine it is that in Genesis that image of God which is said to bee in man was not in respect of the bodie which was made of the slime of the earth but in respect of the spirit which was giuen vnto man Gen. 2.7 whē God did breath into him and hee was made a liuing soule Osiander made the image of God to signifie Christ which in the preordināce of God was for to come and to take mans nature vpon him hee taught that then doth the soule beare the image of God when it hath the very righteousnesse of Christ Iesus as an inherent quality He had it from the Manichees groūded his opiniō especially vpon that place of the Apostle 2. Cor. 3.18 we all with open face beholding the glory of God as in a glasse are trāsformed into the same image frō glory to glorie as by the spirit of God Those wordes are spoken especially of the Apostles and Ministers of whome Saint Paul doth in that place intreat and doe import thus much that they in the glasse of Gods worde beholding the glorie of God are transformed into the same image to bee lights vnto others as our Sauior said Math. 5.14 ye are the lights of the world and to light them not onely in doctrine but in going before them in sanctification of life The righteousnesse of Iesus Christ is imputed to vs as the Apostle doth often declare when wee put on Christ by faith Rom. 4.9.10 Rom. 4.22 Gal. 3.27 1. Cor. 1.30 Phil. 3.9 and are clothed with the righteousnesse of Christ But that perfect righteousnesse it self such as is able to stand before the iudgement of God neither is nor euer was an inherent quality residēt in any but only in the manhood of Christ Iesus It may and ought to suffice vs to receiue of the fruit and to let the tree roote remaine where it should 2. Cor 5.21 The Apostle sheweth that in the same manner as Christ was made sinne for vs so we are made the righteousnes of God in him Now he was made sinne by imputation when all our sinnes were laid vpō him Pet 2 24 and as Saint Peter saith hee bare our sinnes in his bodie on the tree so likewise his righteousnesse as of one that hath vouchsafed to become our head is imputed to all the true members of his mysticall body for as Adā was as no priuate mā but the fountain and welspring of mankind therfore most iustly Rom 5 12 as in him we all sinned so in him we all died So the second Adā our Lord Iesus is not to be considered as a priuate mā but as the head of the church what was wrought by him is wholy benificial to al the faithful If by the husband as being the head a debt be answered how iustly thē is the wife discharged The church is called the spouse of Christ Eph. 5 27. although it be said to be without spot or wrinckle yet must it not be vnderstood that it is void of all sin for why should it then be taught by our Sauiour to pray continually for forgiuenes of trespasses but we are said to bee without spot or wrinckle as we are clothed with the iustice of
liue vnto the Lord or whether wee dye wee we dye vnto the Lord whether wee liue therfore or dye we are the Lords for Christ therefore dyed and rose againe and reuiued that he might bee the Lord both of the dead and of the quicke How can our sauiour bee said to be the Lord and gouernour of the dead vnlesse some part of them doe remaine aliue to be subiect to his dominion Gouernement rule do of necessity import that there be also some to yeeld obedience and submission The Apostle sheweth Heb. 12.22.23 who bee the subiectes of that heauenly king to wit the angels and the spirites of iust and perfect men and hee sheweth there the great dignity of a Christian who is ioyned as it were to the Angels and spirites of iust men when he embraceth that religion which they doe continually reuerence But say they if the soule doe already enioy eternall blisse in heauē what needeth then a day of iudgement If it be iudged already to what purpose should there bee any further sentence The day of iudgement is ordained of God for the vniting together both of body soule that as the elect haue serued God both in body and soule so they may receiue euerlasting ioy blisse both in body and soule and as the wicked haue serued the Diuell both in body soule so they receiue eternall tormentes both in body and soule And for this cause we are taught to belieue as an article of our faith the resurrection of the body wee do not say the resurrection of the soule for the soule doth not dye but the resurrection of the flesh or the resurrection of the body The soules of thē which haue dyed in the Lord August in Iohn tract 49. doe already enioy perfect and happy rest Nothing is wanting to the perfection of their ioyes but only the company of their bodies and the company of their brethren for this cause as some expounde it the soules of the Martyrs attired with white robes Apoc. 6.10 Anselmus in Apoc. Calu. in psychopanychia doe cry out in the Reuelatiō How long Lord holy and true as thirsting and longing for the comming of Christ to their full accomplishment If in this world a glorious sight doe delight vs neuer so much yet is our ioy increased when our friend doth behold the same together with vs. And no doubt this is as it were an accomplishing of the ioyes of the soules already receiued into the presence of Christ in the celestiall paradise when they shall receiue the company of their bodies the societie of their fellow-brethren An other argument doe the Anabaptists make Gen. 2.17 Rom. 6.23 Ezec. 18 4 20. drawn from the reward of sinne The stipend of sinne is death therefore say they seeing the soule hath sinned the soule must needes dye but death is in the scripture taken sundry wayes sometimes for the separation of the soule from the body sometimes for the separation of God from the soule 1. Tim 5.6 as when the Apostle calleth the widow liuing in wanton delightes dead though shee liue that is aliue in the body but dead in the soule sometime for the horror of condemnation as the Diuell did receiue the reward of sinne and yet was not so extinguished but that hee doth watch and goe about continually 1. Pet. 5. ● seeking whome to deuoure In respect of the Saintes of God death is saide to haue lost her sting and to become as a drone bee as the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 15 56 O death where is thy sting It was prophesied of our Sauiour Christ by the Prophetes Praecipitabit mortem in aeternum Esay 25.8 Hee shall throw death headlong for euer O Death I will be thy death O hell I will bee thy destruction They obiect further that the death of the saintes is called a sleepe Act. 7 60 Ioh. 11.11 2. Thes 4.13 Stephen when he dyed fell a sleepe Lazarus being dead was said to sleep the Apostle biddeth not to mourne for them that sleepe that is be dead If death bee a sleepe thē can there not be in the soule any conceiuing of ioyes vntill that sleepe bee awakened by the resurrection It is very apparant that in that Phrase by a Synechdoche that is giuen to the whole which agreeth but to one part when Iob saith Ecce nunc in puluere dormio Iob 7.21 Behold I shall sleepe now in the dust and if you seeke mee in the morning I shall haue no being did Iob thinke that when hee dyed his soule should lye in the dust that were too grosse to bee once imagined It is very apparant then that hee meaneth onely that his body shall sleepe in the dust and that figuratiuely hee doth attribute that to the whole which agreeth but to a part That which they alledge out of Salomon that man and beast haue both one end Eccl. 3.21 who knoweth whether the spirite of man shall ascend vpward or the spirite of beast descend downe into the earth is answered by those wordes which Salomon doth so often repeat in that book Eccl. 1.2 Eccl. 2.11 Vanity of vanities and all is but vanity hee sheweth often in that Booke what are the speeches of vaine men Eccl. 9.4 as after when hee sayeth Better is a liuing dog then a dead Lion for the liuing know that they shall dye but the dead know nothing at all wee must not think that Salomon speaketh this as of himselfe but to shew the affections of worldlinges who are led by vanity of vanities and by nothing but vanity Tertul. lib de resurr carnis Irenaeus lib. 9 aduersus haeresi Chrysost hom 28. in ●1 ad Hebr. August lib 12 de Ciuit. Dei cap. 9 When the Fathers doe sometimes affirme that the soules are not crowned vntill the day of resurrection they mean of the perfect triumph they deny not but that the soules of the Saints are in peace and happy rest but the perfect triumph crown of glory they made to be then when the bodies being againe vnited to the soules death should be vtterly swallowed vp in victory The argument which some doe alledge out of the Apostle that because he saith If the dead rise not againe 1. Cor. 15.19 we are of all men most miserable v. 32 therefore before the resurrection there is no ioy nor felicity is of no force at all for hee saith after what will it profite mee to fight with the beastes at Ephesus if the deade bee not raysed vppe the bodies of the Saintes in this life suffer many iniuries reproches and often martyrdomes Now vnlesse these bodies bee hereafter to be aduanced to glory we are of all mē most miserable and againe although the soule do enioy blessed rest yet a great part of the happinesse doth consist in the assurance of the expected resurrection Caluin in Phychopanychia haec tractat 1 vberrime It is further obiected
bee found call vpon him while he is night that is saith he Dum estis in corpore Hierom. in Esay 55. V. 6. dum datur locus paenitētiae et quaerite non loco sed fide while ye be in the bodie while place is granted for repentance and seeke him not in place but in faith The ransome of Christ is so sufficient to all those which with true faith take hold of it that as the Scriptures doe shewe vs plainely Psal 32.2 Rom. 8.33 Rom. 8 ● Esay 4● 25. Micha there is no imputation of sinne no accusation no condemnation no remembrance and therefore as vpon these foure benefits doth necessarily followe they haue a perfect deliuerance both from fault and punishment The faith of Dauid was Psal 51.7 that when he is washed of the Lord hee is become whiter then snowe And Saint Iohn appointeth this onely purgrtorie for the Church of God 1 Ioh 1 1 the bloud of Iesus Christ to purge vs from all sinne If their purgatorie fire should appertaine to the Church it must needes be either to the Church militant or to the Church triumphant for there are but these two parts of the Church as the Apostle saith Col 1 20 that Christ hath reconciled and set at peace by the bloud of his Crosse both the things in earth and the things in heauen but it appertaineth not to the Church militant for then it should be on earth nor to the Church triumphant for then it should be in heauen therefore indeed it appertaineth to no part of the Church of God There are but two kindes of ioyes and torments the one temporall the other eternall the temperall are al of this life the eternall are those which followe after this life 2. Cor 4 18 as the Apostle saith the things which are seene are temporall the thinges which are not seene are eternall The ordaining of a temperall ioy or a temporall punishment after this life is a thing that the Scriptures doe no where acknowledge Our Sauiour Christ and likewise Iohn the Baptist Luke 24 47 Mark 1 4 did preach repentance for forgiuenesse of sinnes whereby they plainely shewed that where there is no place for repentance there is rhere no place for forgiuenesse of sinnes Math 25 10 1 Cor 9 14 but after this life there is no place of repentance for then the gate is shut and the race of this life is already run Cyp. saith quādo istinc excessus fuerit nullus paenitentiae totus Cyprian cōtra Demetri c. When man is departed out of this life there is then no place of repentance therefore to them which dye without repentance there is after this life no hope of forgiuenesse of sinnes Bee faithfull saith Christ vnto death Apoc. 2.10 and I will giue to thee the crowne of life Rom. 10 14 Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word preached where there is no place of hearing there can there not be any place of increase of faith Aug. in Psal 3 It was well aduised by Saint Augustine tuus certè vltimus dies longè abesse non potest ad hunc te praepara qualis enim exieris ex hac vita talis redderis illi vitae thy last day cannot be farre off prepare thy selfe vnto it for in what maner thou shalt depart out of this life in the same estate thou shalt bee restored to the life to come Aug ad Hesy 1 p●t 80. Qualis in die isto moritur talis in die illo indicabitur as man dieth in this world so shall he be iudged in the world to come They obiect that which is saide of Saint Peter that Christ going did preach vnto the Spirits which were in prison once disobedient when the mercy of God did waite in the dayes of Noah 1 Pet. 3 12 The purpose of the Apostle is there to shew that Christ did alwayes in all ages shew his diuine power as namely when by Noah he preached to those disobedient spirites which are now in prison that is in hel as likewise in Saint Iohn Apoc. 2 ● 7 the word prison is taken for hell and if they take it for purgatorie they are two wayes condemned by their owne doctrine for first they confesse that not purgatorie but hell is the place for such as are infidels and rebellious and no members of the true Church Nowe Saint Peter sheweth that not the family of Noah which did represent the Church of God but the other disobedient and vnfaithfull people were cast into this prison and therefore by the prison must needes be meant that place which appertaineth not to the Church of God Secondly some of them seeme to teach that the Fathers in the olde Testament were in a Limbo patrum but in no purgatorie and that purgatory only tooke place after the comming of Christ If that be their meaning little reason then haue they to drawe vnto purgatorie those thinges which are spoken of the people in the olde Testament and much lesse to make such contrarie maners of the remitting of sinne The Apostle sheweth euidently 1. Thes 4.17 that in the end of the world at the second comming of Christ they which shall be then found aliue shall bee sodainly catched vp to meete the Lord and remaine euer with the Lord. The tenour of Gods iustice is alwaies one and the same against sinne and therefore it is no wayes likely that in so many seuerall ages of the world there should be such farre differing estates of soules departed They alledge the fact of Iuda 2. Mach. 12.14 who when some of his mē being slaine in the battell were found to haue vnder their garmēts little reliques of Idolatrie did send two thousand groates to Ierusalem to offer for them and this acte is called a holy and godly cogitatiō because he made an expiation for the dead that they might bee loosed from their sinnes This may be answered with the same answere which Saint Augustine maketh against the Donatists who vrged out of the Machabees that it is lawfull for a man to kill himselfe because when Rhasis killed himselfe Mach. 14.2 42 43. he is there twise commended to dot it generosè or viriliter nobly and manfully Saint Augustine telleth them that that is a Scripture recepta ab ccclesia non inutiliter si sobriè legatur Aug. contra 2. Gaudentii epist cap 23 ● receiued of the Church not vnprofitably if it be soberly read It is then soberly read when no newe doctrine is collected out of it against the lawe and the Prophets The law appointed no such vse of offerings to offer for them which perished in Idolatrie how damnable the sinne was it may well appeare by the grieuous punishment of Achan Iosua 7.24 But wee may answeare rather with the iudgement of that ancient expositio symbols attributed to Cyprian that those bookes of the Machabees are no Canonicall scripture
The words of the Author of those bookes doe plainely declare it 2. Mach. 15.39 If I haue done well saith he it is as I would but if I haue done slenderly barely it is as I could What more apparant proofe can wee desire to shewe that those books were not penned by the spirit of God They seeke some defence by the wordes of of our Sauiour that he which sinneth against the holy Ghost Math. 12.32 Luk. 11.10 shall neither be forgiuen in this worlde nor in the worlde to come therefore say they there is some place of forgiuenes to some sins after this life But our Sauiour speaketh there of the fault or blame and not of the punishment and his meaning is that it shal neuer be remitted neither in this life which is graunted to sinners for repentance nor in the world to come when God shall by his Angelles seperate the sheepe from the goates They rest further vpon that precept Math. 5.25 Agree with thy aduersarie quickly whilest thou art in the way with him least the aduersary giue thee to the Iudge and the Iudge to the Sergeant and the Sergeant cast thee into prison verily I say vnto thee thou shalt not come our vntill thou haue paid the vttermost farthing Sic exponit Chrysost de vsitato circere magistratu The meaning of the place is that wee must in time cut off all occasions of suites and contentions But they wresting it to an allegory make the prison to bee purgatorie the Iudge to be God the Sergeant to be his angels and the aduersarie to be the diuell This cannot possible be the true interpretation of the place for then must the wordes agree with the aduersarie be expounded agree with the Diuel and the paying the vttermost farthing in the prison must erect such a Purgatorie as leaueth nothing at al to be performed by our Sauiour Christ Besides it can make nothing for them for they teach satisfaction to be made vnto God but in that text satisfaction is not required to the Iudge again who seeth not that lying in prison is not a satisfying of the debt So likewise they wrest that place of Saint Paul The fire shall trie euery mans worke of what sorte it is 1 Cor 3 13. some as he hath said before do build vpon the foundation gold siluer precious stones timber hay or stubble but euery mans worke shall bee manifest for the day shall declare it because it shall be reuealed by the fire and the fire shall trie euery mans worke The meaning of the Apostle is that God in his due time by the examination of his word and spirit shall trie the doctrines of all that doe build any thing vpon the foundation some build sound doctrine signified by the gold siluer and precious stones others build curious and friuolous matters signified by the word hay stubble God will by his worde and spirite make manifest and cōfirme the good and sound but the more vaine he will consume and burne and yet so that the vnskilfull builder shall bee saued but as by fire This maketh nothing for the confirmation of their purgatorie For first the Apostle speaketh of matter to be tried in the fire and not the persons hee saith that which the builders haue builded shall bee tried Secondly hee saith that euery mans worke shall be tried in that fire euen the gold and precious stones the doctrines of the Apostles themselues and therefore cannot bee meant of their purgatory which they themselues do make not to be a place for the perfecter sort Thirdly the Apostle speaketh of a trying fire and not of a purging fire We reade of a trying fire as the Wise man saith the fining pot is for siluer and the furnace for golde Prou. 17.3 but the Lord trieth the hearts We reade also of a fire to consume vices in man as the Lord saith by the Prophet what is chaffe to wheate Ierem. 23.29 Is not my worde as fire and like the hammer that breaketh the stone And so afflictions are an instrument whereby God doth mortifie sinne in vs and as with fire consume it Dauid saith Psal 66.12 hee passed thorowe fire and water meaning the afflictions of this life But of a purging fire and that after this life there is none such mentioned in the holy Scriptures Fourthly it is most certaine that whether the fire be of triall or purging it is meant in that place of a fire in this life because the Apostle saith is shall reueale and make manifest euery mans worke Hee speaketh no● of a purgatorie in some farre remoued center but of such a place where euery mans work shall be made manifest Fiftly when at the last hee commeth to the persons he saith that the builders which builded hay and stubble yet because they held the foūdation they shall be saued but as by fire he saith not by fire but tanquam per ignem as it were by fire because they shall not onely bee examined by the examination of the holy spirit often compared to fire but shall suffer the losse and consuming of their vaine doctrines and therefore bee saued as by fire Ambr. in Psal 118. serm 20 Aug. de ciuit dei lib. 10. cap 25. I deny not but some of the ancient Fathers haue expounded this fire to be meant of a purging fire in the life to come but they haue named it to be onely that fire which shall bee at the end of the world They taught that by it God wold make a consummation of all thinges to burne the drosse and to make the pure more perfect they thought it to bee such a fire Ambr. in Psal 118. as oportet omnes transire siue sit ille Iohannes Euangelista siue Petrus all men must passe thorowe it whether it bee that Iohn the Euangelist or Peter This opinion of the Fathers doth nothing fauour the Romish Catholikes The like may be said of that prophesie of Malachie who may endure when he shall appeare Malach. 3 v 2 for he shali bee like a purging fire and like fullers sope he shall trie the siluer and fine the sonnes of Leui and purifie them as golde that they may bring offerings to the Lord in righteousnesse The prophesiyng in the next verse before of the comming of Christ and of his messenger Iohn the Baptist and the naming of the end of this purging fire to be that the people should bring acceptable offerings vnto God as their faithfull predecessors had done doe plainely shewe that the Prophet doth in that place speake of the power of Christ at his first comming when hee shal baptize with his spirit Math. 3.11 hauing his fanne in his hand and purging his floore gathering the wheate into his barne but burning the chaffe with vnquenchable fire Augustine doth expound it of the generall fire Aug. de ciuita te dei lib. 20. cap. 25 at the second comming of Christ but
for thou hast created al things by thy will they are haue bin created worthy is the Lambe that was killed Apoc. 5.12 to receiue power and riches wisedome and strength and honour and glory and praise Of which celestial thanksgiuing hee make vs al partakers that dyed for vs all euen that Lambe Christ Iesus to whome with the Father and the holy Ghost bee all glory Maiestie honour and praise now for euer Amen The End of the First Sermon THE SECOND SERmon of Thanksgiuing PSALME 107. V. 21. And sacrificing the sacrifice of prayse let them tell forth his doings with gladnesse COncening that which hath already beene spoken in the forenoone as well of the generall argument of the Psalme as also of the particular handling of the former part of my text I purpose not now right Worshipfull and beloued to make any repetition thereof partly because it was so lately vttered and partly because as some of you know I must of necessitie hasten to another place It remaineth onely now that I proceede somewhat further with the fruites and effects of thankfulnesse which then I began to speake of and to enterpret the verse following of our offering the sacrifice of praise and telling forth his workes with gladnesse The sacrifices which here the Psalmist speaketh of are not propitiatory but eucharisticall not for ransome of sinne but for rendering of thankes The propitiatorie sacrifices of the olde Testament Heb. 10.1.8 were types and shadowes of the passion of Christ The truth being come those shadowes are vanished away The last altar was the Crosse the last sacrifice was the bodie and bloud of Christ Heb. 7 17 and the last sacrificing priest was Christ Iesus himselfe a priest for euer after the order of Melchizedeck The order of Aaron had successours which did often offer sacrifices because they were vnperfect But the order of Melchizedeck is to haue no successour Christ offered a perfect sacrifice and therefore without any neede of repeating it he offered himselfe once for all Heb. 10.14 No mortall man nor yet any angel of God was fit to offer this sacrifice but onely Christ Iesus himselfe who was holy pure Heb 7.26 blamelesse and higher then the heauens he offered himselfe once for all Heb. 9.26 He ordained the sacrament of his bodie and bloud not to bee an altar 1 Cor 10.21 but a table not to offer but to receiue not to be a sacrifice 1 Cor 10 16 but a heauenly supper wherein our soules doe feede vpon the bodie and bloud of Christ and doe enioy a communion or common partaking thereof not to bee a propitiatory act but eucharisticall as that sacrament was called in the primitiue Church eucharistia a solemne and publike thankesgiuing vnto God for all the benefits which wee receiue in and through his Son Christ Iesus The sacrifice was offered by Christ himselfe It is sufficient for vs by faith to feede vpon it and thankfully to acknowledge that all is ours 1. Cor 3 ●2 as wee are Christs and Christ is Gods Phil 1 17 Without this faith all our thankesgiuings are but dead sacrifices as were the offerings of Kaine Gen. 4.3 who did offer to God as well as Abel but not with the faith of Abel Luk 1● 11 And as were the speaches of the Pharisie Lord I thanke thee that I am not as other men when he sought more to exalt himselfe then to giue glorie and prayse vnto God Be there neuer so good a proportion of a body in the outward lineaments yet if the life be absent it is not a bodie but a carkase euen so be there neuer so good words in prayer and thanksgiuing yet if the soule bee absent for the life and soule of God his seruice is faith in the bloud of Christ then is our honouring of God but only a mere shadow ad carkase howsoeuer it do carry an outward shew of holines The good Christians of the primitiue Churches did not thinke it sufficient in God his great deliuerances to testifie their ioy with bonefires ringing of belles reuelings and belly-cheare but they shewed their thankfulnes by a general and solemne receiuing of that sacrament which they called Eucharistia the sacrament of thanksgiuing to wit Cyprian in serm de orat Dom. the Supper of the Lord by the often and zealous receiuing whereof they did both testifie their thankefulnesse vnto God and acknowledge also by whom they hoped that their prayers and prayses should be graciously receaued Apoc. 8.3.4 Christ onely it is that hath the golden censer to offer vp the prayers of the Saintes before the throne of God and with the smoake of the odours that is with the sweete sauour of his oblation the prayers of the Saintes go vp to the presence of God Dauid when hee hath called to mind the manifolde blessings of God Psal 116 13 can finde no other way to bee thankefull but onely by receiuing the cup of saluation and calling vpon the name of the Lorde V. 17 by paying his vowes vnto God and offering vnto God the sacrifice of thankesgiuing True thankefulnes requireth that our heart should loue God our lippes prayse God our bodie and soule obey God and our goods with all that we haue serue for the glorie and honour of God And each of those duties is accounted in the holy Scriptures to as it were a sacrifice offered to God For the hart the Lord saith by the wisedome of Salomon Prou. 23.26 My Sonne giue me thy hart and let thine eyes marke deligently my wayes The sacrifice of the Lord saith Dauid is a contrite spirit a contrite spirit and a broken heart Psal 51.19 ● O Lorde thou wilt not despise In the sacrifices of the olde Testament the Israelites did first behold the wrath of God against sinne that the rewarde of sinne was death for the Ramme Rom 6.23 Heyfer and such like being sacrificed did plainely shewe vnto them what they had deserued and thereby they conceiued a griefe for sinne and a loathing of sinne Secondly it was vnto them a liuely figure of the passion of Christ Ioh. 8.56 whereby they were stirred vp to loue the Lorde for his goodnesse and to reioyce in the beholding of the dayes of Christ And thirdly the sacrifice was as it were a vowe of amendment of life They vowed that as that beast was slaine vpon the altar so they would from thence foorth slay mortifie the wicked corruptions of their sinfull nature In which respect God doth call it a couenant Psal 50.5 when hee saith they make a couenant with mee by their sacrifice If these thinges to wit the griefe for sinne the loue of God and the full purpose to amend were wanting then was the sacrifice before God abhominable To him will I looke saith God euen to him that is poore and of a contrite spirite Isay 66.2 and that trembleth at my wordes