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

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Covenant of grace is sealed and personally applied the body and bloud of Christ may be held forth in a Sermon God renews unto them all that he hath promised Matth. 26. 22 This Cup is the New Testament in my bloud as the New Testament is founded in the bloud of Christ so it is exhibited and sealed therein 2. It serves for the nourishing and building up of his people in all graces it is called eating and drinking He that eats my flesh and drinks my bloud Two things are comprehended under nourishment 1. The maintenance and preservation of the stock of spiritual life which we have got already as by our meat and drink we are preserved and continued in our life 2. In children it serves to augment their parts make them larger stronger the Lords Supper was appointed by Christ to be one of the great means of our spiritual augmentation The Sacraments are not properly Seals unto our faith but of the Covenant They may be said to be seals of our faith consecutivè by a consequence of speech because as seals confirm a thing so faith is confirmed and strengthened by receiving but they are not formaliter in a true proper sense seals unto any thing but the Covenant All graces are nourished and increased by the Lords Supper because the new Covenant is sealed but three cardinal Graces especially as in the body nourish the stomack liver brain heart lungs nourish them and you nourish all the rest 1. The in-dwelling vertue of the Spirit of God they receive an increase of the Spirit 2. Faith nourish that and you nourish all it is called the life of faith Faith is the condition of the Covenant and we seal to our condition 3. Love to God and his people it doth enflame thy love to God and his people it is a communion we are all made one Spirit This Sacrament doth not beget but increase and strengthen Grace where it is already wrought Christ is conveyed in this Sacrament by way of food The Word was appointed to work conversion Faith cometh by hearing This ordinance is not appointed for conversion but it supposeth conversion it seals mens conversion therefore in the Primitive times they let all come to the hearing of the Word and then when the Sermon was done there was an Officer stept up and cried Sancta Sanctis Holy things for holy men and then all others were to go out and therefore it was called missa though the Papists did corrupt it and so called it the Masse afterwards by mixing their own inventions in stead of the Supper of the Lord but it had that name at first because all others were sent away and only such as were of the Church and accounted godly stayed Reasons 1. The nature of it being the seal of the Covenant of Grace requires it it must be supposed that all which come hither must be in Covenant with God The condition of the Covenant of Grace is Believe and be saved therefore it is appointed for believers Secondly It is the Ordinance of spiritual nourishment there must be first life before there can be any nourishment received in If it be appointed to nourish and increase grace then surely there must be grace before Thirdly We are required to examine our selves 1 Cor. 11. and of our godliness examine what work of God hath been upon the soul. Fourthly It is a Sacrament of Communion with God and with the Saints and What Communion hath light with darknesse Or What fellowship hath Christ with Belial All ignorant prophane scandalous persons and such as are meerly civil are hence excluded Conversion is sometimes and that improperly in Scripture as Matth. 18. 3. taken for the renewed exercise of faith and repentance in one that is already converted but the Question is Whether the first work of Regeneration the infusing of the first habits principles and seed of grace be effected by the Lords Supper received It is one thing to be converted at a Sacrament another to be converted by the Sacrament There is some expounding praying It is one thing intentionally to convert as an Institution and another accidentally to convert as an occasion Philip Goodwins Evangelical Communicant The Assembly upon these grounds thought it fit that scandalous sinners though not yet cast out of the Church should be suspended from the Sacrament 1. Because the Ordinance it self must not be prophaned 2. Because we are charged to withdraw from those who walk disorderly 3. Because of the great sinne and danger both to him that comes unworthily and also to the whole Church The Scriptures from which they did prove all this were Matth. 7. 6. 2 Thess. 3. 6 14 15. 1 Cor. 11. 27. to the end of the Chapter compared with Iude v. 23. 1 Tim. 5. 22. Another proof added by the Assembly was this There was power and authority under the Old Testament to keep unclean persons from holy things Levit. 13. 5. Numb 9. 7. 2 Chron. 23. 19. And the like power and authority by way of Analogy continues under the New Testament for the authoritative Suspension from the Lords Table of a person not yet cast out of the Church Wicked men saith Master Hildersam should not be admitted to the Table of the Lord Ezra 6. 21. holy things are prophaned thereby Ezek. 22. 26. 1 Cor. 5. 6. There should be a publick confession for scandalous sins David was more honoured for this Psal. 51. then dishonoured for his sinne Salomon left his Ecclesiastes as a monument of his Repentance Paul frequently mentions his faults Tertul. de poenit and others speak of it Ebrius infantes erroneus atque furentes Cum pueris Domini non debent sumere corpus It was their great sinne in the Church of Corinth that they did not cast out the incestuous person and it was a commendation to that Church Revel 2. that they could not endure the Nicolaitans A prophane person in Augustines Chrysostoms time Tertullians and Cyprians time in Pauls in Iohns time could not come to the Sacrament They are called Tremenda mysteria mysteries which the soul is to tremble at the Fathers call it the most terrible day and hour as if it were a day of Judgement This Suspension is called by the Schoolmen Excommunicatio minor The power of suspending one from the Sacrament is given not uni but unitati to the Eldership not to any one either Minister or Elder M. Gillesp. Aarons Rod bloss l. 3. c. 1. Church-officers should not admit all promiscuously but be careful whom they admit to the Supper That they be not cruel to the souls of them they admit and to the Nation and their own souls by being guilty of other mens sinnes Pareus said to those of Heidelberg When I see your Sacrament prophanation I wonder not at the warre Of receiving with the wicked It is lawful to joyn with a known unsanctified man in the service of God 1 Sam. 15. 30 31 Christ knew Iudas
Christ consented to all this he voluntarily came into the world to save sinners he hath paid the ransome hath promised that those which come to him he will in no wise cast away Means to get and improve or strengthen faith 1. To get it 1. Labour to see your selves in a lost condition 2. Know that there is no way in the world to save you but by Christ. 3. Bewail your condition to God tell him that you are a lost creature and say Lord help me to believe 4. Plead the promises there are promises of grace as well as to grace say Lord thou hast said thou wilt be merciful and why not to me 5. Wait upon God in the use of the means hearing and the like Rom. 10. Acts 10. 44. 2. To improve and strengthen it You that have faith labour to improve it 2 Thess. 1. 3 4. I shall premise four Cautions 1. There is a common dead faith an ungrounded presumption gotten by the devil and mens false hearts which is rather to be destroyed then increased When men put all their confidence in Christ and yet can live in all kinde of ungodlinesse whereas true faith is wrought by the Spirit of God and brings forth a holy life 2. Among true believers there are several sizes as it were of faith some are strong and some weak in the faith 3. The weakest faith if true will certainly save the soul the weakest believer is united to Christ adopted reconciled justified hath the Spirit all promises belong to him and shall partake of glory 4. There is none of Gods servants in this world do attain so much faith as they might the Apostles Luke 17. 5. make this their joynt Petition Lord increase our faith 1. It increaseth in the use of it To him that hath shall be given Spiritual things increase by exercise 2. Diligently attend on all the Ordinances and treasure up experiences 3. Study thy self daily see what a wretched worthlesse creature thou art what a dead barren heart thou hast real self-abhorring makes a man to hang on Christ. 4. The more thou knowest Christ the more thou wilt believe in him Psal. 9. 9. study to know Christs person Offices the tenour and indulgence of the Covenant of Grace 5. Labour to get some evidence of the work of faith in thee that thou art in a league of love with Christ if the wayes of Christ be sutable to thy Spirit and the bent of thy heart be against all sins and especially thy bosome sinne it is a good sign 6. Remove all impediments II. Repentance It is taken sometimes largely and so it comprehends all the three parts of Conversion Contrition Faith and new Obedience 2. Strictly for contrition alone Act. 13. 24. In General it is a turning from sinne to God Or thus It is a supernatural work of Gods Spirit whereby the humbled converted sinner doth turn from all sinne with grief and detestation of it because thereby God is offended and to the wayes of God loving and embracing them and resolving to walk in them for the time to come 1. The efficient cause or authour of repentance is Gods Spirit Acts 1. 51. 11. 18. 2 Tim. 2. 18. it is a supernatural work such a work as never is nor can be wrought in any but by the almighty work of Gods Spirit in a way above corrupt nature Ier. 31. 18 19. A man can do something toward legal duties but one hath no principle for evangelical duties but something against them 2. The Subject in whom this grace of repentance is found say some is an humbled and converted sinner 1. Humbled that is legally sensible of the misery it is brought to by sinne 2. Converted that is by God one whose inward man is changed Ezek. 25. 26. Repentance seems rather to precede conversion Act. 3. 19. though full Repentance be Conversion 3. The general nature of it a turning with the terms from which and to which an aversion from sin and a conversion to God Ioel 2. 12. Ezek. 16 lat end 4. The manner of it with detestation of sinne with delight in Gods will and wayes Hos. 14. 8 Surely shall one say in the Lord I shall finde righteousnesse and peace It is a mourn●ng for sinne as sinne as it is offensivum Dei aversivum à Deo as it is an act of disobedience an act of unkindnesse There are several kindes of Repentance 1. Antecedent which goes before Remission and Justification Acts 2. 38. 3. 19. 8. 22. 2. Consequent Repentance melting of the heart toward God after assurance of pardon Luke 7. 47. 1 Tim 1. 12 13 14. Ezek. 16. ult Initial Repentance when one is converted Act. 8. 22. 2. Continual Rom. 7. 24. Iohn 13. 10. 3. Personal or Ecclesiastical Some say the parts o● Repentance are to eschew evil and do good Psal. 34. 15. Isa. 1 15 16. 55. 7. Amos 5. 15. Rom. 12. 9. In sinne there is an aversion from God and a conversion to the creature 2. In repentance there must be an aversion from the pleasures of sinne and a returning to Communion with God The vertue and grace of Christ is not onely to mortifie but vivifie Rom. 6. 11. Sinne must be mortified before the image of God can be superinduced into the soul Col. 1. 13. In renouncing of sinne four affections are to be exercised true humiliation is begun in fear continued in shame carried on in sorrow and ends in indignation 1. Fear ariseth from application of the curse to the provocation we compare the sins we have committed with the threatnings of the Word Iob 22. 23. Heb. 12. 28. Shame ariseth from comparing filthinesse Psal. 73. 22. Ezra 9. 6. Rom. 6. 21. Sorrow ariseth from thoughts of Gods goodnesse and our own unkindenesse Zach. 12. 10. Ezek. 36. 31. Luke 7. 47. Indignation the highest act of hatred ariseth from the unsutablenesse of it to our interest in Christ Isa. 30. 22. Hos. 14. 8. Rom. 6. 2. Fear looks on sinne as damning shame looks on it as defiling sorrow looks on it as offensive to God indignation looks on it as misbecoming our profession In turning to the Lord 1. There is a serious and solemn consideration of our state and danger out of Christ Psal. 22. 27. 119. 59. Hab. 1. 5. 2. A firm resolution Luk. 15. 18. Psal. 32. 5. 119. 106. 3. A mutual exercise of holy affections desire hope and delight Psalm 119. 49. 4. A consecration or resignation of our selves to God Rom. 12. 1. 2 Cor. 5. 16. 5. A constant care of making good our ingagement Prov. 23. 26. Hos. 5. 4. Dr Twisse against Corvinus saith there are three parts of Repentance The Confession of the mouth Contrition of the heart and Amendment of life M. Calamy on Acts 17. 3. p. 37. saith it consists in five things 1. There must be a true and right sense of sinne as to Gospel-faith there must be a true sight of Christ Iohn
time of his Creation the Law that was proclaimed by Gods own mouth upon Mount Sinai which we call the ten Commandments whether it be in force in the Christian Church First Take the true state of the Question betwixt us and the Antinomians that deny the Law to be in force in these distinctions 1. You must distinguish betwixt the Law given to Adam in Paradise as a Covenant of life and death and as it is given in the hand of a Mediatour the Lord Jesus Christ. 2. You must distinguish betwixt the things that are contained in the Law and the binding power of the Law 3. You must distinguish betwixt the principal Law-giver and the ministerial Law-giver 4. You must distinguish betwixt the Law given by God even by the hand of Moses in the true intent and meaning of it and between the interpretation that the Jewish Doctors could make of it 5. You must distinguish betwixt the Law it self and the sanction of it The only Question is about the binding power of the Law that is Whether the things contained in the ten Commandments are by the Lord the great Law-giver commanded now to Christians The Antinomians hold the contrary quid nobis cum Mose the only rule say they they are under is the free Spirit of God enclining them by a holy renewed nature to do that which is good in his sight they are acted by a Law of love and they do the things of the Law but not because commanded in the Law they urge Rom. 6. 14. 1 Tim. 1. 9. But on the other side the Orthodox Divines say That it is true our light is only from Christ and the Spirit of God dwelling in us is the fountain of all the good we doe but yet say they the Lord hath commanded his holy Law to be our Rule which we must look to which if we transgresse we sinne and are to account every transgression of it a sinne and so are to be humbled for it and to walk as those which have offended a gracious God Reasons to prove the moral Law still in force to believers First Some places of Scripture prove it as Mal. 4. 12. Eccles. 13. 4. Matth. 5. 17. Think not saith Christ that I am come to destroy the Law I am not come to destroy but to fulfill it So Matth. 22. 37. Rom. 3. 31. Rom. 7. 22. Rom. 13. 9. Iam. 2. 8 10 11. Ephes. 6. 2. Revel 22. 14. which Scriptures make it clear that believers are under the moral Law Secondly If believers be not under the Law then they do not sin if they do contrary to the Law or neglect the things commanded in the Law For where there is no Law there is no transgression Thirdly Because the Lord when he doth promise in the Old Testament the new Covenant he doth in that Covenant promise to write his Law in their hearts there should be such a sutablenesse between their spirits and the Law of God that they should carry the counterpane of it in their hearts It is a presumptuous speech to say Be in Christ and sinne if thou canst for Davids murder after he was in Christ was a sinne 2 Sam. 12. 13. In many things we offend all Jam. 3. 2. 1 Joh. 1. 8. Some object and say that this is an argument we are freed from it Because their heart is so willing to conform to Gods will that they shall need no other rule to walk by but their own Spirit Answ. If there be that conformity in them yet the readinesse of the childe to obey his Fathers will doth not take off the command of the Father Fourthly The moral Law is in effect nothing but the Law of nature we owe it to God as our Creator Beleevers are freed from the Law 1. As a Covenant of life Do this and live they have no need to look for life that way they have it at a better hand and a cheaper rate for eternal life to them is the gift of God and the purchase of Jesus Christ. 2. From the rigour of the Law 3. The irritation and coaction of it 4. From the condemning power and the curses of it The Law is 1. A glasse to reveal and make known unto us the holinesse of God and the will of God and secondly to make our selves known to our selves by the Law comes the knowledge of sin Rom. 3. 20. 2. It is a Foil to set off Christ it drives them out of their own righteousnesse and makes them highly prize Christ and the benefits by him Rom. 7. 24 25. 3. It is a perfect Rule of all our obedience 4. The meditation of the terrours of the Law and the threatnings and curses which the Lord hath denounced against them that break it are one of the sanctified means of grace for the subduing and beating down of corruption Luk. 12. 5. 1 Cor. 9. 29. The Antinomians cry Away with the Law and what hath the Law to do with a Christian and they say that such a one who preacheth things out of the moral Law is a legal Preacher they say the love of God shed abroad in our hearts and the free Spirit is our rule None ought to be legal Preachers that is to preach salvation by keeping of the Law only the Papists are such See Rom. 6. 14. Col. 2. 24. But the Law must be preached as a rule of obedience and as a means to discover sin and convince men of their misery out of Christ Gal. 3. 23. The Law habet rationem speculi fraeni regulae The moral Law is a glasse to reveal sinne and the danger of it a glasse to discover it and a Judge to condemn it 1. A Glasse to reveal sin 2. A Bridle to restrain it 3. A Rule both within and without First A Glasse to reveal sin It discovers 1. Original sin I had not known lust but by the Law 1. It sets before us the Primitive righteousnesse wherein we were created 2. That there is something in us perfectly contrary to all this Colos. 1. 21. Acts 13. 10. 3. It discovers to us the dominion that this sinne hath over us Rom. 6. 12 14. 7. begin 4. Shews a man the filthinesse of this sinne 2 Corinth 7. 1. Iames 1. 21. Titus 1. 15. 5. Shews that this sin hath seminally all sins in it Iam. 1. 14. 1 Iohn 2. 15. 6. It discovers the deceitfulnesse of this sinne Ier. 17. 19. Iam. 3. 15. Act. 13. 10. Iude v. 11. 7. Shews a man the demerit and miserable effect of this sin Rom. 8. 12. 2. Actual sin it shews 1. Every sin dishonours God his glory is denied debased 2. The perfection of the Rule Rom. 7. 12. 3. The harmony of the rule Iam. 2. 10. 4. It s spirituality it discovers the thoughts and intents of the heart 5. The infection of sin to a mans self if it be inward to others if outward it is called rottennesse plague leprosie 6. That one act of sin
also 2. This tradition concerning the age of men did drive away as well the Ecclesiastick as the Lay persons Notwithstanding all this that hath been objected by the Papists we hold that the Scriptures ought to be translated into the Vulgar and mother Tongues of each Nation and that all men ought to read them and meditate diligently in them and that for these reasons 1. From the Commandment and will of God revealed in Scripture He hath commanded all that live in the Church to study the Scriptures and read them Deut. 11. 18 19. Ioh. 5. 39. He speaks not to the Scribes and Pharisees but to the people in general They must try all things 2. From Gods intention which commanded it to be written for that end that it might be obvious to all Ioh. 20. 31. Rom. 15. 4. 3. Those are commended which did reade the Scripture as the Eunuch Acts 8. 22. the Bereans Acts 17. and dispraised which neglected it as the Israelites Hosea 8. 12. they are pronounced Blessed who diligently meditate in the Scriptures Psal. 1. 2. How unlike to Peter ●2 Pet. 1. 19. are those whith pretend to be his Successours 4. From the fact of the Apostles who as they publickly preached the mysteries of salvation to the people so also in their Epistles they commended the whole doctrine of salvation to be read by them The Epistles of the Romans Corinthians Galatians Ephesians were written to the people therefore to be read by them One Epistle of Iohn was written to Gaius a Lay-man another to the elect Lady 5. From the Profit and Necessity of this study men are illightned and converted by reading of the Scriptures Psal. 19. 8 9. they are directed by them as most faithfull counsellors in all their waies Psal. 119. 24. they are armed by them against the fiery darts of Satan Eph. 6. 16. One seeing a youth read the Scriptures said It was never well since such were permitted to turn over the Bible but he answered him in the Psalmists words Psal. 119. 9. 6. From the unanimous Conse●t of all the Fathers Chrysostom and Ierom especially who exhort the people to the private reading of the Scriptures and testifie that the Scriptures were publickly read in their Ecclesiastical Assemblies not in an unknown tongue but in a tongue understood by the people It was decreed by the Councel of Nice That no Christian should be without a Bible in his house And the Jews at this day suffer no house amongst them to be without the Bible Christ and his Apostles teaching and disputing before the people appeal to the Law and the Prophets without the name of the Author Book or Chapter because they knew the Bible Text to be familiar to the Israelites In an unknown tongue they cannot profit the people Ergo They ought to be translated into a Tongue known to the people 1 Cor. 14. The Apostle in divers verses treateth of this subject vers 6 7 19. He saith All things ought to be done in the Church for the edifying of the people that no man should speak in an unknown tongue without an interpreter and saith That he had rather speak five words and be understood then ten thousand words in an unknown tongue Those Arguments before urged for the peoples reading of the Scripture prove this also for they cannot reade them in every Nation unlesse they be translated into a Tongue they understand Christ and his Apostles taught the people the Scripture in their mother Tongue In the next age after the Apostles saith Grotius lib. 3. de veritate Religionis Christ. the New Testament was translated into divers Vulgar Tongues the Syriack Arabick Aethiopick and Latine which Versions are yet extant and differ not mainly from the Greek In the elder and purer times the Scriptures were translated into innumerable yea into all Tongues usual amongst men See Gregories Preface to the Notes on passages of Scripture The plain and usual words the phrase and manner of speech most frequented the comparisons and similitudes in Scripture most familiar taken out of the shops and fields from Husbandry and Houswifery from the Flock and the Herd shew that the Scriptures were written for the capacity and understanding of the unlearned Iohn 5. 39. a speciall place if it be indicative it shewes the custome of the Jewes if imperative it shewes what they ought to doe Many amongst us are to be blamed for not having the Scripture in their houses and for not reading it constantly in the same as they ought to do or else they read it as other Books not with such respect to it as the greatnesse of its Authour deserveth I mean with a desire and purpose to believe and obey all that they finde there which must needs be the Duty of those that confesse these writings come from God We should receive it with reverence believe it with confidence exercise our selves in it with diligence and delight practise it with obedience Reading the Scripture is a rehearsing out of the Book such things as are there written ●arely without any interpretation It is to be done publickly as it was in the Synagogues of the Jews who had the reading of the Law and Prophets amongst them The Prophets were read in their ears every day saith Paul and after the lecture of the Law and the Prophets in another place From hence hath been continued the custom of Lessons of the Old and New Testament to the same purpose saith Mr Thorndike We honour God more by a publick then a private reading of it 2. P●ivately The godly Jews of B●rea did search the Scriptures and both King and people are commanded to read the Law Deut. 17. 19. and 6. 7. 8. 9. What is written in the Law How readest thou Luke 10. 26. Matth. 12. 5. and 21. 16 42. Christ Peter and Paul in their preaching quote not the Chapter and verse only say Isaiah saith Isaiah is bold It is written in the Psalms because people should be so acquainted with the Scripture as to know where it is See Grotius on Heb. 4. 4. Some good Divines hold that the Scriptures barely read though preaching be not joined with it may be the instrument of Regeneration since the Doctrine of the Gospel is called The ministration of the Spirit Psal. 19. The Law of the Lord converteth the soul it is so when not preached The word is a means of conversion whether written preacht or lived 2 Cor. 3. 2 3. 1 Pet. 3. 1 2. Psal. 51. 13. But the Word of God is made effectual by the Spirit more often more ordinarily to beget a new life in the preaching that is the interpreting and applying of it then in the b●re reading 1 Tim. 4. 13. Matth. 28. 29. Christs custome was as we may collect out of Luke 4. where one instance is recorded to make us conceive his ordinary practice when he had read to interpret
Infinite in him He alone is good Matth. 19. 17. and onely wise Rom. 16. 27. and King of Kings 1 Tim. 6. 15. They are affirmed of him both in the concrete and abstract He is not only wise and good but wisdom and goodness it self Life and Justice it self Fifthly They are all actually and operatively in God He doth know live and will his holiness makes us holy Every Attribute in God as it is an excellency in him so it is a principle to conveigh this to us Gods wisdome is the fountain of wisdome to us We are to seek Eternal Life from his Eternity Rom. 6. 23. 6. All these are in God objectively and finally our holiness looks upon his holiness as the face in the Looking glasse on the man whose representation it is and our holiness ends in his The Attributes of God are Everlasting Constant and Unchangeable for ever in him at one time as well as another The Qualification of every service we perform ought to be taken from the Attribute of God which we would honour He is a great King Mal. 1. 14. therefore great service is due to him The Attributes of God are the objects of our Faith the grounds of our Prayer and the matter of our Thankfulness If one cannot pitch upon a particular promise in prayer yet he may bottome his Faith upon an Attribute 2 Chron. 20. 6. Iohn 17. 17. This may minister comfort to Gods people Gods Attributes are not mutable accidents but his very Essence his Love and Mercy are like himself Infinite Immutable and Eternal In the midst of all Creature comforts let thy heart rise up to this But these are not my portion 2. If God at any time take away the comforts from thee say Satis solatii in uno Deo his aim is when he takes away creature-comforts that you should enjoy all more immediately in himself Matth. 6. 21 22. This shews that the Saints self-sufficiency lies in Gods All-sufficiency Gen. 17. 1. Prov. 14. 14. exercise Faith therefore upon every Attribute that thereby thou maist have the use and improvement of it Ephes. 6. 10. and give unto God the praise of every Attribute Psal. 21. 13. 2. We should imitate God and strive to be immutably good and holy as he is Levit. 11. 44. Mat. 5. 48. These Attributes are diversly divided They are affirmative and Negative as Good Just Invisible Immortal Incorporeal Proper and Figurative as God is Good Wise Members and humane affections are also attributed to him Absolute and Relative without any Relation to the creatures as when God is said to be Immense Eternal he is likewise said to be a Creator King Judge Some describe God as he is in himself he is an Essence Spiritual Invisible most Simple Infinite Immutable and Immortal Some as he is to us he is Omnipotent most Good Just Wise and True Some declare Gods own Sufficiency so he is said to be Almighty Infinite Perfect Unchangeable Eternal others his Efficiency as the working of his Power Justice and Goodness over the Creatures so he is said to be Patient Just Mercifull Some are Incommunicable and agree to God alone as when he is said to be Eternal Infinite Others are Communicable in a so●t with the creatures as when he is said to be Wise Good The communicable Attributes of which there are some resemblances to be found in the creature are not so in us as in God because in him they are Essential The incommunicable Attributes are communicable to us in their use and benefit though not in their Nature they are ours per modum operationis the others per modum imaginis his Omnipotency acts for us 1 Pet. 2. 9. These Properties in God differ from those Properties which are given to men and Angels In God they are Infinite Unchangeable and Perfect even the Divine Essence it self and therefore indeed all one and the same but in men and Angels they are finite changeable and imperfect meer qualities divers they receiving them by participation only not being such of themselves by nature God doth some great work when he would manifest an Attribute when he would manifest his Power he created the World when he would manifest his Holinesse he gave the Law when he would declare his Love he sent his Sonne when he would shew his Goodness and Mercy he made Heaven when he would discover his Justice and hatred of sinne he made hell Psal. 63. 2. and 106. 8. Arminians and Socinians indeavour to corrupt the Doctrine of God in his Essence Subsistence and Decrees Under the first Covenant three Attributes were not discovered 1. Gods pardoning Mercy that was not manifested till the fall 2. His Philanthropy or love to man Hebr. 2. 16. 3. The Patience and Long-suffering of God he cast the Angels into hell immediately after their sinne All the Attributes are discovered in the second Covenant in a higher way his Wisdom was manifested in making the world and in giving a Law but a greater Wisdom in the Gospel Ephes. 3. 10. the Truth and Power of God were more discovered under the second Covenant It is hard to observe an accurate method in the enumeration of the Attributes Zanchy D. Preston and M. Stock have handled some few of them none that I know hath written fully of them all CHAP. III. That GOD is a Spirit Simple Living Immortall GOd in respect of his Nature is a Spirit that is a Substance or ●ssence altogether Incorporeal This the Scripture expresly witnesseth Iohn 4 24. 2 Cor. 3. 17. An understanding Spirit is either created or uncreated Created Spirit as the soul of man or an Angel Psal. 104. 4. 1 Cor. 6. ult uncreated God Whatsoever is affirmed of God which is also communicable to the creatures the same must be understood by a kinde of Excellency and Singularity above the rest Angels are Spirits and the souls of men are spirits but God is a Spirit by a kinde of Excellency or Singularity above all spirits the God of Spirits Numb 16. 22. the Father of Spirits Heb. 12. 9. the Author of Spirits and indeed the Spirit of spirits The word Spirit in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Hebrew Ruach is used chiefly of God and secondarily of the creatures when it is used of God it is used either properly or metonymically properly and so first essentially then it signifieth the God-head absolutely as Iohn 4. 24. or more restrictively the Divine Nature of Christ Heb. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 3. 18. Secondly Personally for the third Person in the Trinity commonly called the holy Spirit or Ghost 1 Cor. 2. 11. If the word be taken metonymically it signifieth sometimes the effects of grace either the common graces of Gods Spirit prophetical 1 Sam. 10. 6 10. miraculous or the sanctifying graces Ephes. 5. 18. Angels and mens souls are created spirits but God is an infinite Spirit the word is not applied to God in the same sense Nihil de Deo creaturis
ha●endi eandem Essentiam Subsistentia in Schools signifies a being with an individual property whereby one is not another Person say some is a Law term it is any thing having reason with an individual property A Person is such a subsistence in the Divine Nature as is distinguished from every other thing by some special or personal property or else it is the God-head restrained with his personal property Or it is a different manner of subsisting in the God-head as the nature of man doth diversly subsist in Peter Iames Iohn but these are not all one It differs from the Essence as the manner of the thing from the thing it self and not as one thing from another one Person is distinguisht from another by its personal property and by its manner of working We have no reason to be offended with the use of the word Person if we adde a fit Epithete and say The Father is a Divine or Uncreated Person and say the same of the Sonne and holy Ghost The word Person signifies an understanding Subsistent 2 Cor. 1. 11 Persona quasi per se una This word doth expresse more excellency then the word subsistence as one doth import for it is proper to say that a beast doth subsist but it is absurd to say a beast is a person because a Person is an understanding subsistent Dr Cheynels Divine Trin-unity The personal property of the Father is to beget that is not to multiply his substance by production but to communicate his substance to the Sonne The Sonne is said to be begotten that is to have the whole substance from the Father by communication The holy Ghost is said to proceed or to be breathed forth to receive his substance by proceeding from the Father and the Sonne joyntly in regard of which he is called The Spirit of the Father and the Spirit of the Sonne both Gal. 4. 6. The Father only begetteth the Sonne only is begotten and the holy Ghost onely proceedeth both procession and generation are ineffable When Gregory Nazianzen was pressed by one to assign a difference between those words Begotten and Proceeding Dic tu mihi said he quid sit generatio ego dicamquid sit processio ut ambo insaniamus Distinguere inter Processionem Generationem nescio non vel●o non sufficio Aug. In the manner of working they differ for the Father worketh of himself by the Sonne and through the holy Ghost the Sonne worketh from the Father by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost worketh from the Father and the Sonne by himself There is so one God as that there are three Persons or divers manners of being in that one God-head the Father Son and the holy Ghost 1. Whatsoever absolutely agrees to the Divine Nature that doth agree likewise to every Person of the Trinity 2. Every Person hath not a part but the whole Deity in it self A Person is one entire distinct subsistence having life understanding will and power by which he is in continual operation These things are required to a Person 1. That it be a substance for accidents are not Persons they inhere in another thing a person must subsist 2. A lively and intelligent substance endued with reason and will an house is not a Person nor a stone or beast 3. Determinate and singular for man-kinde is not a Person but Iohn and Peter 4. Incommunicable it cannot be given to another hence the nature of man is not a person because it is communicable to every particular man but every particular man is a person because that nature which he hath in particular cannot be communicated to another 5. Not sustained by another therefore the humane nature of Christ is not a person because it is sustained by his Deity 6. It must not be the part of another therefore the reasonable soul which is a part of man is not a person That there are three Persons in the Deity viz. Father Sonne and holy Ghost is manifest by expresse Testimonies of Scripture Gen. 1. 26. Let us make man in our image after our likenesse Deus qui loquitur ad Deum loquitur Ad Patris Filii imaginem homo conditur nomen non discrepat natura non differt Hilary lib. 5. de Trin. Vide plura ibid. Gen. 19. 24. Then the Lord rained upon Sodom and Gom●rrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of Heaven The Lord rained from the Lord the Son from the Father Mercer on the place saith Sed efficaciora in Iudaeos aut alios qui Trinitatem negant argumenta sunt proferenda Num quid saith Hilary de Trin. non verus Dominus à vero Domino aut quid aliud quàm Dominus à Domino vel quid praeter significationem Personae in Domino ac Domino coaptabis memento quod quem solum verum Deum nosti hunc eundem solum justum judicem sis professus Adime filio quod iudex est ut auferas quod Deus verus est Vide plura ibid. Psal. 110. 1. The Lord said unto my Lord sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy foot stool Rabbi Saadia Gaon on Daniel interprets this of the Messias Vide Grotium in Matth. 22. 42. It is of Christ that he speaks so Peter Paul and Christ himself shew Mat. 22. 43. and the Pharisees acknowledge it since he cals him His Lord although he ought to descend of his race and should be called the son of David Psal. 33. 7. there three are named the Word the Lord and the Spirit Isa. 6. 3. Holy Holy Holy But this truth is most clearly taught in the New Testament Matth. 3. 16. Luke 3. 22. The first Person in the Trinity utters his voice from Heaven This is my beloved Sonne The Sonne is baptized in Iordan the holy Ghost descends in the shape of a Dove upon Christ. Pater auditur in voce Filius manifestatur in homine Spiritus Sanctus dignoscitur in Co●umba Aug. Tract 6. in Joh. Adde to this the History of Christs Transfiguration described Mat. 17. 5. Mark 9. 7. Luke 9. 35. In which likewise the voice of the Father was heard from Heaven This is my beloved Son the Son is transfigured the holy Ghost manifests himself in a bright cloud Matth. 28. 19. The Apostles are commanded to baptize in the Name of Father Son and holy Ghost Cameron thinks that is the most evident place to prove the Trinity But that it is as apposite a place as any for this purpose 1 Iohn 5. 7. For there are three that bear record in Heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost The Arrians wiped this place out of many Books 2 Cor. 13. 14. The grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all The Arrians Samosate●ians Sabellians Photinians and others deny the Trinity of Persons in one Essence of God Servetus a Spaniard was burnt
as that they had made an inequality between the Persons But since their forme of speech is That the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father by the Sonne and is the Spirit of the Sonne without making any difference in the Consubstantiality of the Persons it is a true though an erroneous Church in this particular Divers learned men thinke that a Filio per Filium in the sense of the Greek Church was but a Question in modo loquendi in manner of speech and not fundamental 3. The personal propriety of the holy Ghost is called procession or emanation Iohn 15. 26. Bellarmine proves the Procession of the holy Ghost from the Sonne by Ioh 16. 14. and from Iohn 20. 22. by that ceremony Augustine and Cyril say Christ would signifie that the holy Ghost proceeds from him and Bellarmine produceth fifteen Latine and as many Greek witnesses who most evidently taught before the Grecians denied the Procession of the holy Ghost that the holy Ghost proceeded from the Father and the Son Bellarm. de Christo l. 2. c. 22. Neither hath the Word defined nor the Church known a formal difference between this Procession and generation The third internal difference among the Persons is in the number for they are three subsisting truly distinctly and per se distinguished by their relations and properties for they are internal works and different and incommunicably proper to every person There follows an external distinction in respect of effects and operations which the Persons exercise about external objects namely the creatures for though the outward works are undivided in respect of the Essence yet in respect of the manner and determination all the persons in their manner and order concurre to such works As the manner is of existing so of working in the Persons The Father is the original and principle of action works from himself by the Son as by his image and wisdom and by the holy Ghost But he is said to work by his Son not as an instrumental but as a principal cause distinguished in a certain manner from himself as the Artificer works by an Image of his work framed in his minde which Image or Idea is not in the instrumental cause of the work but his hand To the Son is given the dispensation and administration of the action from the Father by the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 8. 6. Iohn 1. 3. 5. 19. To the holy Ghost is given the consummation of the action which he effects from the Father and the Son Iob. 26. 13. 1 Cor. 12. 11. The effects or works which are distinctly given to the Persons are Creation ascribed to the Father Redemption to the Sonne Sanctification to the holy Ghost all which things are done by the Persons equally and inseparably in respect of the effect it selfe but distinctly in respect of the manner of working The equality of the Persons may be proved 1. By the work of Creation joyntly Psal. 33. 6. severally for the Father those places prove it 1 Cor. 8. 6. Heb. 1. 2. the Sonne Iohn 1. 3 10. Col. 1. 16. the holy Ghost Iob 33. 4. 2. By the work of Redemption the Father sends and gives the Sonne the Sonne is sent and given by him the holy Ghost perfects the work of Conception and Incarnation Luke 1. 35. 3. By the work of Sanctification the Father sanctifieth Iohn 17. 17. Iude v. 1. the Son Ephes. 526. the holy Ghost 2 Thess. 2. 13. 1 Pet. 1. 2. 4. By the worship of religious adoration The Father is religiously adored often in the Scripture Ephes. 1. 17. the Sonne Acts 7. 59. Heb. 1. 6. the holy Ghost Act. 28. 25 26. Rom. 9. 1. This is a wonderful mystery rather to be adored and admired then enquired into yet every one is bound to know it with an apprehensive knowledge though not with a comprehensive No man can be saved without the knowledge of the Father he hath not the Father who denieth the Son and he receives not the holy Ghost who knows him not Ioh. 14. 17. 2. We must worship the Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity as it is in Athanasius his Creed We must worship God as one in substance and three in Persons as if Thomas Iohn and Matthew had one singular soul and body common to them all and entirely possessed of every one we were baptized in the Name of Father Son and holy Ghost We worship another God then the Idolaters could imagine their God to be they conceived him to be the Creator and Governour of all things Omnipotent Eternal but they worshipped not one God in three Persons the Father who accepts the Spirit who works and the Sonne who presents our services One main intendment in the New Covenant was not onely to honour the Attributes of the nature but the glory of the Persons Ephes. 1. 3 7 13 14. 2. All the Persons have a special hand in the salvation of a sinner and every believer hath a special interest in the promises of the Persons Ioh. 5. 19. 3. The order of working in the Persons is sutable to the order of their subsisting the Father is first in order therefore in working therefore Adoption is reckoned by some Divines as the first of spiritual benefits then Redemption and Sanctification 4. We should walk in the love of them all 1 Ioh. 4. 16. See Iohn 5. 9. 14. 23 16. 27. and fear to offend them all not only the Father but the Son Ezek. 21. 10. and the Spirit Ephes. 4. 30. 3. We should praise God for revealing this mystery to us in his Word and be assured that what he promiseth or threatens shall be accomplished being confirmed by three witnesses Prudentius hath exercised his Poetry well in defending and illustrating the whole Christian religion against the Jews Heathens and Hereticks and in celebrating the holy Trinity The End of the second Book THE THIRD BOOK OF Gods Works CHAP. I. Of Gods Decree and especially of Predestination and the Parts thereof Election and Reprobation HAving spoken of the Scripture and God the works of God in the next place are to be handled which some make two the Decree and the Execution of the Decree others three Decree Creation Providence The works of God whereby he moves himself to his Creatures are three Decree Creation Providence not three individually for so they are innumerable but in the species and kinds of things The works of God are 1. Before time or eternall his Decree 2. In time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Gubernation and Sustentation Government and Preservation Or thus Gods Works are 1. Internall which are in the very will of God from eternity and they are called the Decrees of God by which God determined from eternity what he would do in time We follow the received Phrase of Divines when we call the Decrees the works of God and speak of God after our capacity Therefore we call Decrees of God his Works because
brains Alexander the Great had a very strange and rare horse called Bucephalus eithr for the greatnesse of his head or else from the mark or brand of a Bulls head which was imprinted upon his shoulder He would suffer no man to sit him nor come upon his back but Alexander when he had the Kings saddle on and was also trapped with royall furniture for otherwise he would suffer any whomsoever When he was dead the King solemnized his funerals most sumptuously erected a Tomb for him and about it built a City that bare his name Bucephalia That is a lofty description of a horse Iob 39. 19. to 26. By which words it is signified that that terrible strength of the horse is from God that neighing almost like to thunder that mettle when not being able to stand still he hollows the earth with his hoofs goes on undaunted into the battell neither is terrified with so many darts falling near him and his rider and runs with that swiftnesse that he seems to swallow up the earth and rejoyceth at the sound of the Trumpet stirring up the souldier to battell If Banks had lived in elder times he would have shamed all the Inchanters of the world for whosoever was most famous among them could never master or instruct any beast as he did his Horse He would restore a glove to the due owner after his Master had whispered that mans name in his ear he would tell the just number of pence in any peece of silver coin barely shewed him by his Master and obey presently his command in discharging himself of his excrements whensoever he bad him That story of Androdus and the Lion is commonly known Vide Auli Gellij noctes Atticas l. 5. c. 14. and Vossius de orig prog Idol l. 3. c. 52. relates a strange story out of Aelian of the sagacity of the Lion a Bear in the mountain of Thracia entring into his Den and killing the young Lions the old He and Shee-Lion returned at last home from hunting and seeing this Spectacle they pursued the Bear and the Bear getting up into the next Tree the Lionesse stayed at the tree and the Lion wandered about all the mountains till he met with a Carpenter who at the first sight of him out of fear let the hatchet fall from his hand but the Lion fawned upon the man and with his foot shewed him the hatchet that he might take it up and at length with his tail embracing the man he brought him to his den and the Lionesse came thither both shew the destruction of their whelps and also looked up to the tree where the Bear was then the Carpenter conjecturing that the Bear did this injury cut down the Tree that falling with the Bear the Lion and the Lionesse presently tear the Bear in peeces and the Lion brought back the man safe to the place where before he did cut wood See more of the Lion in that Chapter and 53. of Vossius his Book before-cited It is a great token of Gods goodnesse to us that from the vety Serpents which are poysonfull for mans sin a threefold profit redounds to man 1. In respect of nourishment in Africa as Pliny relates lib. 6. cap. 29. men feed on them 2. They serve for Medicament See Vossius de Origine Progress Idol lib. 4. cap 62. 3 They are a Preservative against poyson amoletum ab amoliendo or as they commonly write it amuletum Treacle is made of the flesh of a viper the oyl of Scorpions is good against the sting of Scorpions Being bitten by a Serpent if you anoint the wound with spittle it will hinder the poyson from spreading any farther CHAP. VII Of the Angels good and bad AMong the works of Creation the principal are the reasonable Creatures Angels and Men. The Name Angell comes of the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a Messenger sent forth from some superiour person or State to deliver a message and to declare the minde of him or them that sent him The Hebrew name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the name of an Angell in the Old Testament signifies also a Messenger but yet in a more full and large sense for it signifies such a Messenger as doth not only deliver and declare a Message by word of mouth but also doth act and execute indeed the will of him that sent him and doth perform his work enjoyned as a faithfull Minister and servant First of all It signifieth that chief and principall Messenger and Embassadour of God his Sonne Jesus Christ who is called Malachy 3. 1. The Angell of the Covenant Secondly Pastors are called Angels Rev. 2. and 3. Ch. being Gods Messenger sent to the Church Thirdly This word is most frequently used to signifie the heavenly Spirits who are so called because they are both ready to be sent on Gods message and often are sent out to do the will of God Gen. 19. 1. Psa. 103. 20. 21. Mat. 18. 10. That there are Angels is proved out of Scripture where they are often mentioned Psa. 68. 17. Dan. 7. 10. Col. 1. 16. and 2 10. Heb. 12. 12. and by the manifold apparitions of them Gen. 3. 24. Cherubims that is Angels appearing in the form of flying men to keep the entrance into the Garden Abraham entertained Angels unawares They were sent to destroy the filthy Sodomites and the Cities about them that ra● into the like exorbitancies An Angel stopped Abrahams hand which he lifted up according to Gods Commandment to slay his only son Isaac Abraham told Eleazar that God would send his Angel with him to prosper him in the businesse of taking a wi●e for his son Isaac An Angel of the Lord met Hagar and sent her back to her Mistresse when through discontent she had plaid the Fugitive An Angal appeared to Zachary and foretold the conception and birth of Iohn the Baptist. An Angel acquainted the blessed Virgin that she should conceive our Saviour in her womb by the over shadowing of the Holy Ghost A multitude of Angels celebrated the Nativity of our Blessed Saviour with an hymn of joy Angels ministred to Christ after his temptation in the wildernesse and in his bloudy agony in the Garden An Angel also set Peter at liberty when he was imprisoned between two souldiers An Angell shook the foundation of the Prison wherein St Paul and Si●as were laid fast in the stocks An Angell shewed unto Iohn the vision of the Revelation at the appointment of our Lord Jesus Christ. Now besides these and many more apparitions of the heavenly Spirits we reade that the Angels of God are many thousands yea millions and of the company of innumerable Angels and of Angels pitching their tents about the righteous and holding them up in their hands and chasing the wicked and destroying them And besides the testimony of Scriptures the Heathens also had some notions of them as appears in their writings but
3. 1 Thes. 3. 5. A destroyer Apoc. 9. 11. The old serpent Apoc. 12. 7 9. A roaring lion 1 Pet. 5. 8. The strong man armed Matth. 12. 24. The prince of the world three times Iohn 12. 31. 14. 30. 16. 11. Nay The God of this world 2 Cor. 4. 4. 2. Their nature The evil angels are spirits created at first entire and good Genesis 1. ult Vide Aquin. part 1. Q. 11. Art 4 5. But by a willing and free apostacy from their Creator are become enemies to God and man and for this eternally tormented Iohn 8. 44. It was a totall wilfull malicious apostacy from God with spite and revenge 1. Totall because God never intended to offer to the Angels a second Covenant Heb. 2. 16. 2. With despight and revenge therein lies the formality of the devils sin and of the sin against the holy Ghost 1 Iohn 5. 19. That they are spirits appears by the opposition Ephes. 6. We wrestle not with flesh and bloud and this is to be opposed to those that deny that there are any spirits or that the devils are incorporeal For their sin what when and how it was it is hard to determine That they did sin is plain but the sin is not specified Some say it was lust with women misunderstanding that place The sons of God saw the daughters of men for it is plain the devils were fallen before Chrysostome and our Divines generally conclude it was pride from that place in Timothy 1 Tim. 3. 6. though there be different opinions about what this pride shewed it self whether in affecting a higher degree then God created them in or refusing the work and office God set them about which some conceive was the ministration or the guardianship of man which trust they deserted or scorned Zanchius thinketh their sin was That they were not contented with the truth of the Gospel concerning Christ propounded to them at the beginning and that they chose rather to leave their heavenly mansion then subscribe to the truth An inordinate desire of power to be like God in omnipotency say the Schoolmen Pride seems to be the devils sin by his first temptation of man to be like God Concerning the time when the devil first sinned it is uncertain Tempus lapsus non definit Scriptura It seemeth they continued in their integrity till the sixth day was past Gen. 1. 31. It is likely that neither man nor Angel did fall before the eighth day Gen. 2. 1 2. The devils stood not long Iohn 8. He was a manslayer from the beginning They fell before man that is plain 3. How the devil sinned seeing his understanding and will were perfect It was initiatively in his understanding and consummatively in his will Many of them fell as appeareth Luke 8. 30. there was a legion in one man one of the chiefest as some conceive fell first and drew the rest with him by his perswasion and example That one great Angel now Beelzebub did first fall and then drew after him the rest is likely enough Capel of Tentat part 1. c. 1. It was in all likelihood some prime Angel of heaven that first started aside from his station and led the ring of this highest and first revolt Millions sided with him and had their part both in his sin and punishment B. Hals Invis world l. 3. Sect. 2. Vide Aquin. part 1. Q. 63. Art 8. Yet Voetius seems to doubt of this They fell irrecoverably being obstinate in wickedness The Schoolmen and Fathers give reasons why they fell so and not man Aquinas gives this reason from the condition of an Angels will whose nature is such they say that what it hath chosen with full deliberation it cannot refuse it again but this is no good reason because the choice made cannot alter the nature of the will The Fathers give these reasons 1. The devil sinned of himself but man was tempted 2. In mans fall all mankinde would have been damned but in the Angels fall not all Angels The best answer is this When they had sinned God out of his justice refused to give them any help of grace by which they might rise from sin and without which it was impossible for them to recover and this is the Apostles argument If God were so severe that he would not give these so great and noble Creatures time of repentance neither would he others The Angels were intellectual Spirits dwelling in heavenly places in the presence of God and the light of his countenance and therefore could not sin by error or misperswasion but of purposed malice which is the sin against the Holy Ghost and irremissible But man fell by misperswasion and being deceived by the lying suggestion of the spirit of errour The devils malice against mankinde appears Gen. 3. where there is an imbred enmity in the devil as likewise 1 Pet. where he is said to be a roaring lion a lion roars when he hath got his prey by way of triumph or when he is hungry and almost starved and so most cruel This malice of his appears in his going up and down the whole world to damn men and that though he get no good by it nay though his condemnation be so much the greater and therefore if God should let him do what he would against us he would first bring all outward misery as upon Iob and then eternal damnation And though he knows God will defend the godly yet he never leaveth to vex them to tempt them to sin to overwhelm them with grief and dispair so that he is opposite to God The devils malice is beyond his wisdom else he would never oppose the people of God as he doth since he doth hereby advance their glory and his own ruine The devils are subtill creatures 1. In nature 2. They have perfect intelligence of all things done in the world 3. They have gotten subtilty by long experience Iob 32. 7. 4. They have strong delusions and great stratagems 2 Cor. 11. 14. 5. Their subtilty appears by their prevailing over the wises● men in all ages and by making choice of the sittest instruments to accomplish their designs When he would deceive Eve he made choice of the serpent when he would deceive Adam he made choice of the woman The devils design was to draw Iob to curse God therefore he spared him two things his tongue that he might be at liberty to curse God and his wife to be a counsellour to him thereto Their craft is seen likewise in their divers and sutable temptations 2 Cor. 2. 12. We reade of his methods Eph. 6. and depths Rev. 3. His first stratagem and device is to observe the naturall constitution of every mans minde and body and to sit his temptations thereunto 2. To observe our natural abilities and endowments and accommodate his temptations thereunto 3. To apply his temptations to mens outward estate condition and place 4. To
they were created The space of eight daies was sufficient somewhat to try the felicity of their state Adams sin was a great sin 1. In the nature of it 2. In the severall aggravations of it 1. In the nature of it It was 1. a transgression of a positive Law wherein God gave to Adam a clear discovery of his will it heightens sinne when it is against great light Heb. 6. Psa. 51. 1 King 11. 9. 2. A command wherein the minde of God was much mens legis est lex we must measure sin by the intention of the Law-giver 3. Of so easie a Law the Fathers aggravate it from this praeceptum tam breve ad retinendum tam leve ad observandum God gave Adam liberty to eat of all the trees in the garden save one there was no cause why Adam should break it 4. A Commandement much for his advantage life here and eternall was promised as eternall death was threatned 5. A Symbolicall Precept God gave him this whereby he should testifie his obedience unto all the rest of the Commandements 2. In the severall aggravations of it 1. It was a sin against the clearest light there was no darknesse at all in Adams understanding he knew the law the danger of the sin that he stood for himself and all his posterity God had adorned him with sufficient grace and holinesse 2. It was a sinne against the greatest goodnesse being in Paradise where God set him 3. Against the greatest trust the Covenant was made with Adam and all his posterity he forfeits this trust Rom. 3. 2. Hos. 6. 7. But they like Adam have transgressed the Covenant so Grotius 4. Against a threatning In dying thou shalt die Certitudinem denotat durationem 5. It was voluntary the more there is of the will in sinne the worse it is Satan could not force them to sin but only allure and perswade them First Adam admitted and received the temptation of Satan whence followed blindenesse of understanding forgetfulnesse of Gods benefits doubting of his truth affectation of excellency giving credit to Satan corrupt beholding of the fruit and an inclination of the will and affect●ons to eat thereof Theee were these sins in this offence Infidelity Idolatry Contempt of God Discontent Ingratitude Curiosity Blasphemy Murdet and Apostasie There were many sins in that one sin 1. Desperate unbelief Eve beleeved the devil before God 2. Pride they desired to be like God not only in knowledge but in state and condition to be Independent 3. Unthankfullnesse though God had given them such glorious excellencies 4. Vain curiosity to know more then they did know 5. Disobedience in respect of that particular command 6. Spirituall murder this sin would have damned all mankinde though there had been no actuall sin Primordialis lex est data in Paradiso quasi matrix omnium praec●ptorum That first Law saith Tertullian given in Paradise was the summe and comprehension of the whole divine law that was published afterwards Therefore in the breach thereof all manner of offences are contained That first sin of his excepting only the sin against the holy Ghost was in sundry respects the most hainous sin that ever mortall man did commit Hildersam on Psal. 51. 5. Lect. 57. Vide Aquin 2. Q. 163. art 3. There are that call this sinne omnium gravissimum and that except none but that against the holy Ghost Robroughs Doct of Iustific cleared par 2 1. 2. Ch. Next unto the sin against the holy Ghost and contempt of the Gospel this is the greatest sin Shep sincere Convert c. 3. The dangerous and wofull consequents of Adams sin were five 1. A perfect obliteration of the Image of God Rom. 3. 23. of original righteousnesse and casting out of Paradise 2. A totall depravation of mans nature the devils image is introduced Iohn 6. 7. 1 Cor. 15. 4. Every man is de suo Satanas de Deo beatus Aug. 3. It sets up the devils kingdom and dominion in the world his dominion lies in sin Eph. 6. 12. and death Heb. 2. 15. 4. It hath destroied all the Creatures they groan under bondage Rom. 8. 20 21. 5. It had brought damnation on all mankinde had not Christ died and rescued them The wicked Angels were intrusted but with their own portions but Adam had the estates of all his posterity put into his hand and he knew if he sinned he should draw a thousand souls after him In Adams act there were three things An actuall fault a legall guilt and a naturall pravity According to these three came the participation of the fault the imputation of the guilt the propagation of the naturall filthinesse In Adamo tanquam in radice totum genus humanum computruit Greg. Sin came upon all by Adam 1. By imputation the Lord in justice imputing the guilt of that first sin to all his posterity Rom. 5. 13 14 19. 1 Cor. 15. 22. See 45. 47. There were two men by whom all fall and rise Adam was the head of the Covenant of nature if he had stood none of us had fallen and so Christ is the head of the Covenant of grace if he be not risen we cannot rise ver 16 17. 2. By propagation the lump and root of mankinde being corrupted so are the branches Rom. 11. 16. Gen. 5. 3. Iob 14. 14. M. Lyf Princ. of Faith and good Conscience c. 2. All mankinde sin'd in Adam because we were all in his loyns Rom. 5. 12. 1 Cor. 15. 22. Heb. 7. 9 10. and as Adam received integrity for himself and us so he lost it for himself and us saith M. Ball in his larger Catechism The Arminians and Socinians deny the imputation of Adams sin therefore they say corruption of nature is a punishment but not a sin for man can have no nature but what God gives him that was a corrupt nature We are all guilty of this sin for these reasons 1. The Covenant or promise Do this and live belonged not to Adams person only but to all his posterity and doth still stand in force the Covenant was not only made with Adam but with us in him therefore the breach of it is not only by him but by us in him Rom. 8. 3. 2. The Spirit of God clears this that the nature of man is defiled by one man and by one offence of that one man Rom. 5. 12. compared with the 17. ver because he was a publique person before he broke this Covenant 3. The curse of the sin came upon all therefore the guilt of the breach of the Covenant Patet culpa ubi non latet poena Prosper 4. All men by nature are under the Law as a Covenant Gal. 4. 21 22. It was Gods mercy to enter into Covenant with us he might have dealt with Adam in an impe●iall way therefore he might order the Covenant as he pleased 2. Adam entred into Covenant on these conditions that his righteousnesse should be
this man to rule over us therefore it is often called rebellion 4. Defaceth the Image of God it doth this not only meritoriè but physi●● not only provokes God to take away his Image but in the nature of it blots it out Gal. 5. 17. as one contrary expels another 5. It severs us from communion and fellowship with God Ier. 2. 13. Psa. 10. 4. Iob 21. 4 it makes much for the eternall separation 6. It severs us from the conformity and likenesse we had with God in our first Creation it 's a disconformity of our judgements to the judgement of God and a disagreement of our wils from the will of God 7. It alienates the soul from God and turns it against him as an enemy Col. 1. 21. men are stiled therefore haters of God Rom. 1. 30. Evil only should be the object of thy hatred there is no evil in God fighters against God Act. 5. 39. There is an infinitenesse in sin objectivè though not subjectivè it is committed against an infinite God though it be in a finite creature Secondly In respect of all Creatures all the antipathics betwixt the creatures came in by mans sin Gen. 2. 29. man had an admirable dominion over them before the fall they took delight to obey him now they will not be subject to him They are all fading deceiving and desiling Eccl. 1. 14. Tit. 1. 15. Thirdly The Reasonable Creatures it hath defiled the Angels Iob 4. 17 18. the devil is called the evill One It poisoned all mankinde at one draught Rom. 8. 19 20. who can reckon up the particular evils that befall him by reason of sin The evil of sin goes through the whole man It is expoliatio gratuitorum say the Schools a stripping of the soul of all those supernatural excellencies that God gave unto man in his Creation 2. Vulneratio naturalium the wounding of the soul in things morall and natural naturae vires non sunt ablatae sed diminutae A mans soul is carried after truth and good accompanied with difficulty or delight As the soul is carried after truth it is called the minde as after good the will as after good that is difficult there is facultas irascibilis heat in the affections as the good is accompanied with delight there is facultas concupiscibilis The minde is now carried after errour and there is an unrighteous frame of Spirit one can resist no temptation there are inordinate affections It brings many calamities on the outward man many diseases some are born blinde others dumb some reckon up three hundred diseases of the eye every age discovers as new corruptions in the souls of men so new diseases in their bodies these are not from the condition of our nature as the Pelagians say but the demerit of our sins naturall evils hunger thirst nakednesse shortnesse of life there is a certainty of dying yet an unwillingnesse to die Austin saith after his friend was taken away he was continually afflicted taedio vivendi metu moriendi Adde to this the losse of heaven glory and the torments of hell that God who is love it self should judge his creature to eternall torments sin meritoriously caused hell and maintains it Fourthly It appears from the names of it it is called Evil in the abstract Psa. 5. 4. and Psa. 97. 10. it is evil the worst evil all evil either formaliter efficienter or meritoriè There is more evil in our sin then good in all the creatures in heaven and earth Matth. 16. 26. one sin will undo the s●ul which all creatures cannot ransome because they cannot make God satisfaction in point of good or honour sin is both damnum and injuria a soul is lost and a wrong offered to God Fifthly From the nature of it That which is only and perfectly contrary to the greatest good God must be the greatest evil and that which is contrary to all good hath all evil in it 1. It is contrary to God the greatest good Col. 1. we are said to be enemies to God and Rom. 1. 30. haters of God It is contrary 1. To his glory both essential that which is in himself and shines forth in Christ Heb. 1. and manifestative that glory which he hath manifested in all the works of creation and redemption Prov. 16. 3. 1. It denies the glory due to God Rom. 1. 21. Tit. 1. 16. 2. Despiseth his glory Psa. 10. 13. Ezek. 13. 19. 3. Reproacheth God and all his excellencies his justice Rom. 3. 2. turns his mercy and grace into wantonnesse abuseth his patience all his dispensations 4. Misemploy●th his glory gives it to ones self to men the very devil he casts out devils by Beelzebub 2. It wrongs God in his nature and being Psal. 14 1. Every sinner wisheth there were no God he hates God for himself so the devil and damned 2. It is contrary to the Rule of goodnesse the Law it is a transgression of it it looks upon it as a vain thing Prov. 1. 7. as a needlesse thing Heb. 2. 3. 1 Thes. 5. 20. as a burden or yoke Psa. 2. 3. Isa. 5. 21 24. as a hatefull thing Lev. 26. 15. as an unreasonable thing Psa. 107. 11. Sixthly It hath been alwaies counted the greatest evil by those that are able to judge 1. By God he hates nothing but sin he loves himself his Son his people all his creatures but his hatred is set on sinne only therefore he counts nothing evil but sinne 2. Christ was content to undergoe all other evils 3. The Saints counted nothing evil in comparison of sin Heb. 11. 25. the Martyrs chose rather to lay down their lives then to admit of any thing against their consciences Mallem ego mundus à peccato gehennam intrare quam peccatorum sordibus pollutus regnum coelorum tenere saith Anselme One should rather venture the salvation of all mankinde then commit one sin to save them Seventhly There is more evil in sinne then in all sufferings whatsoever they are but the issues of sin Moses chose rather affliction then to enioy the pleasures of sin for a season For suffering 1. We have Gods warrant are called to it 1 Pet. 2. 13. 2. His command to take up our Crosse. 3. Christs example he hath left us a copy to write after 4. The end of sufferings is glory of sin shame 5. By suffering we lose some outward good by sin the soul. 6. God hath promised to be with us in suffering never in sinning Sin made hell Rom. 2. 5 ●1 and is worse then Hell 1. God is the authour of all punishment and of hell it self Tophet is prepared but he is not the authour of sin Iam. 1. 14. 2. Some say Christ underwent the torments of hell in the essentiall parts of them the wrath of God immediatly upon his soul but would not admit of the least sinne Psa. 110. ult 3. In hell there is some good the vindicative justice of
and practice 2. A prosecuting such intent and practice with might of any kinde as in one instance the Prophet noteth They covet fields and take them by force A man of violence is he who will bear out a bad matter with mony favour wit strength or any outward helps he can use for that purpose That this is evil appears by that place where David affirms of God that the man which loveth violence his soul hateth that is he hates him in all extremity with an utter hatred the reason is because he hath sold over himself to sin he sins of wilfulnesse is an obstinate sinner a despiser of God he hath buried all justice and equity love and charity and shamefully abuseth those gifts to mischief which God hath furnished him with for better purposes it begins in very children the stronger bigger and craftier will wrong the weaker and sillier Violence bursting forth into any extremities of dealing was in the old law punished with the like of that that was done Lev. 24. 17. Unbelief Infidelity was the first sin Gen. 3. 4 and is the mother of all sins Heb. 3. 12. The evil heart is called the heart of unbelief as faith is the fountain of all graces Act. 15. 9. Our Saviour often checks his disciples for this Matth. 6. 30. It is against those most lovely and soul-ravishing Attributes of God his mercy goodnesse free-grace longanimity patience bowels of compassion It is called a provocation Psal. 78. 4. Heb. 3 8. which notes the highest act of displeasure the unbeliever is abominable to God and good men Psal. 15. 4. It is a departing from God Heb. 3. 12. see Iohn 3. 33. Christ marvelled at it Mark 6. 6. It is hard to finde out unbelief to be a sin not that unbelief whereby we assent not to the doctrine of the Scripture but that whereby we do not apply Christ for our only Saviour for seeing the Law of God is partly ingra●ted in our nature we easily beleeve that what opposeth that is a sin but the Gospel being wholly supernaturall and meerly by divine revelation therefore what opposeth that is not presently acknowledged to be a sin the Scripture discovers this unbelief The Spirit convinceth us of unbelief and the sinfulnesse of that state Iohn 16. 9. 1. It discovers the nature of it and therein our ignorance 2 Cor. 4. 4. 1. In respect of the reality of the Gospel that there is such a thing as pardon a reconciled justified state faith hope 2. In respect of the glory of the Gospel 2 Cor. 4. 4. 2 Cor. 3. ult Christ is precious to them that beleeve 2. Shews the distance that unbelief makes between God and us in our approaches to him Heb. 3. 12. 3. Discovers our rebellion and opposition to God and the righteousness of Christ Rom. 10. 3. by cavilling objecting and hard thoughts of Christ. Secondly The Spirit convinceth us of our unbelief in respect of the objects and effects of it 1. Its objects 1. Christ as he hath all merit and satisfaction in our approaches to God we cannot set that which is in Christ by way of satisfaction against our own guilt 2. We are not able to see pardoning promises speak pardon to us through the bloud of Christ as that promise Isa. 1. 18. 2. We improve not the Covenant we look not upon Christ as the Head of it As he is the party that makes good the Covenant with God for us though I have many miscarriages yet he hath fully satisfied and made reconciliation with God for me as he is the Head of the Covenant also to us what need I doubt but I shall have strength pardon is given into the hands of my Mediator 2. In reference to the effects of unbelief 1. The Spirit shews a man what weaknesse and corruption he lies under still by reason of unbelief 2. Le ts him see how much terrour and guilt he still lies under he cannot call God father Heb. 10. 22. 3. Discovers the comforts and joyes of beleevers both from Scripture and the experiences of others of Gods people 1 Iohn 1. 4. 15. 11. and yet much wrath and guilt still lies upon his conscience 4. The Spirit convinceth of unbelief by a Saints often being at a losse in the things of the Gospel 1. He goes a long time together and cannot meet with one promise to suit his condition 2. When he hath a promise he can make no use of it cannot plead it with faith and expectation 3. He cannot walk in the strength of a promise Lastly Gods Spirit convinceth us also of the sinfulnesse of unbelief 1. By clearing up to the soul that he lies under the breach of the great Gospel-command 2. By shewing what it is to neglect the love and grace of the Gospel Heb. 2. 3. Matth. 24. 51. 3. By presenting to the soul how ill God takes it when we will not beleeve him There are divers aggravations of this sin 1. Other sins deserve damnation but this formally opposeth the way of salvation Some say only unbelief damns a man which is not true in a rigid sense for every sin damns a man unrepented of but only unbelief is more opposite to the way of curing then other sins 2. It is opposite to the chiefest grace faith Illud est optimum cujus privatio est pessima The Scripture honours faith giving remission of sins the righteousnesse of Christ and salvation it self to it 3. It dishonours God and Christ and the holy Ghost it is the glory of Gods love that he becomes thy God though he so great and thou so vile this is the honour of Christ to thee A Son is born a Childe is given God shews the riches of his free-grace here thou grudgest him the honour to be the pardoner of thy sins 4. It is most rooted in us hence the Lord so often checks his disciples for their unbelief and faith is called The work of God in a speciall manner because of the difficulty of it and the contrariety of our natures Hence Comfort you comfort you again and again because the heart of man terrified for sin doth utterly refuse all true comfort in a right way 5. It hath more fair pretences for it more arguments then any other sin that is a dangerous sin which comes upon us as a duty I am unworthy 6. It puts the lie upon God Iohn 1. 5. God saith he will be thy God Christ saith he will put away thy sins thou saiest he will not 7. The devil most tempts a godly man to this sin as the incestuous person the devil had almost tempted him to finall despair as he would hold the prophane man in security so the penitent sinner in irksome unbelief 8. It hath the most terrible and sad effects it breeds daily unsetlednesse and tossings of heart therefore doubting and uncertainty is opposed to faith at last it will breed secret impatience and grudging against God and in the end open hatred
Saviour even such and such a one they were Types of Christ the great Saviour That saveth us out of the hands of our enemies as that holy man telleth in this Song This is the first Title Jesus and the reason of it and it was his Name by which he was commonly known and called and now known and called a name of infinite sweetnesse to us of infinite honour and praise to him For how much comfort did oppressed Nations receive at the hearing of such a Deliverer How much honour did they shew unto him And therefore when the Apostle telleth us of our subjection unto Christs Authority he ascribeth it unto this Name as shewing us that this is the foundation of his requiring and our yeelding all honour and obedience to him He takes not upon him to be honoured onely because he will be honoured or because he is in himself worthy of it in regard of Excellency but because he hath deserved it at our hands and is perfectly worthy of it in regard of the things he hath done for us Baptism saves representatively Ioshua temporally Ministers instrumentally Jesus principally Christ delivers his people from their spiritual slavery the bondage of sin Satan the Law Death Hell The slavery of sin and Satan is all one the Devil hath dominion over the soul only by sinne our lusts are his strong holds Satan is cast out when sinne is broken 2 Tim. 2. 26. See 1 Ioh. 3. 8. Where he comes to be a Saviour First He breaks all the yokes of sinne Rom. 7. 14 17. 8. 2. He delivers his servants 1. From the guilt of sin whereby the sinner is bound over to punishment Christ hath discharged the debt for us Rom. 8. 1. Gal. 3. 13. 2. From the stain and defilement of sinne 1 Cor. 6. 11. and that partly by repairing the image of God in the soul which sinne had defaced and by imputing all his righteousnesse to them so that the soul stands covered over before God with the beauty of Christ Jesus Revel 1. 5. 3. From the reigning power of sin by his Spirit Rom. 6. Acts 3. 26. Titus 2. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 18. Secondly Christ delivers his people from the yoke of the Law both Ceremonial and Moral 1. He hath totally delivered his people from the ceremonial Law those ceremonies that concerned the publick external Worship of God and their private conversation multitude of observations and some costly 2. He hath freed them from the burden of the Moral Law 1. From it as a Covenant of life they have life by Christ. 2. From the curses of it Gal. 3. 13. 3. The rigor of it 4. As it brings wrath and the Spirit of bondage 2 Tim. 1. 7. 5. From the irritation of it for by accident it provokes a mans corruption Rom. 7. 8. 6. As it increaseth the guilt of sin Christ hath taken all the guilt upon his own shoulders Thirdly Christ sets all his servants free from the yoke of Death and Hell the first and second death this is proved out of 1 Cor. 15. 25 26 54. Ioh. 11. 26. Revel 2. 10. 20. 6. 1 Thes. 1. ult Christ delivers his people from the curse of Death 1. Meritoriously by undergoing death Heb. 2. 14 15. In morte Christi obiit mors he endured the wrath of God due to all Gods people 2. He effectually applies this to his people in the administration of the Covenant of Grace The Papists abuse the name of Jesus four wayes 1. In making it a name of wonder using it idly and foolishly in their talk O Iesus 2. In a superstitious worshipping of the letters and syllables bowing at the sound of the word Vox Iesus vel audita vel visa is worshipped by them They say this is the name which God gave his Son after he had submitted to death for us This name Jesus was given to Christ long before his exaltation It is common to others Iesus the sonne of Syrach and Ioshua Heb. 4. 8. They doe not bow at the Name of Christ or Immanuel or at the mention of any other Person in the Trinity 3. In making it a name of a Sect the Jesuites are so termed from it Vide Bezam in 1 Cor. 2. 21. They should rather be called Ignatians of Ignatius the first author of their Society and Order 4. In abusing it for a charm to cast out Devils The Scripture indeed saith By thy Name but the meaning is by thy power have we cast out Devils They abuse that place Acts 3. 16. His Name hath made this man strong that is say they the Apostles pronounced the Name Jesus and the pronunciation of this name hath a force of driving away Devils or doing other miracles the Name of Christ there is Christ himself or his power The Jews out of the word Iesu make the number of ●16 by the Letters and there they have curses and blasphemies scarce to be named Calverts Annot. on the blessed Jew of Morocco The Arminians say Salvation may be had without knowledge of or faith in Christ Jesus Vide Musaeum contra Vedel c. 9. Act. 4. 12. Some of the ancient Fathers before the rising of the Pelagian Heresie who had so put on Christ as Lipsius speaks that they had not fully put off Plato have unadvisedly dropt some speeches seeming to grant that divers men before the Incarnation living according to the dictates of right reason might be saved without faith in Christ. The Quession is not Whether a Gentile believing in Christ may be saved But Whether a man by the conduct of Nature without the knowledge of Christ may come to heaven The assertion whereof we condemn as wicked Pelagian Socinian Heresie and think that it was well said of Bernard That many labouring to make Plato a Christian do prove themselves to be Heathens The Patriarchs and Jews believed in Christum exhibendum moriturum as we in him Exhibitum mortuum Gen. 12. 3. 49. 10. Psal. 27. 8. 110. Bowing at the name of Jesus is defended by Mountague Orig. Eccles. part 1. pag. 123. And Parre on the Romans seems from Zanchy and Paraeus to justifie it but it is generally disliked by the soundest Divines The second Title by which he is termed is a Redeemer by which is expressed in part the manner how he saved us even by buying us out of the hands of our enemies For to save signifieth to deliver without intimating the means of delivering but to redeem noteth also the way how the deliverance was accomplished even by paying a price a valuable consideration in regard of which the party captived and forfeited to death or bonds should be restored to his liberty and good estate again And this kind of deliverance is the fairest deliverance the only way of procuring deliverance when a person is made miserable by his own default and fallen into the hands of Justice joyned with perfect strength so that there is neither reason
Militant or Triumphant 2. The Church Political particular Churches gathered with their Officers as the seven Churches in Asia Christ is the head of both The original and fountain of all Government is God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost he hath a primitive and absolute Soveraignty over all men 1. As he gives them what being he will 2. As he appoints them what end he will 3. As he gives them what Law he will this is Regnum essentiale Thine is the Kingdom Secondly All the Persons of the Trinity have committed or delegated this power into the hands of Christ as he is Mediator both God and Man Mat. 12. 18 19. Dan. 7. 13 14. Four things qualified Christ for this He hath 1. A Spirit of wisdom and counsel Isa. 11. 2. 2. Of courage there to and Isa. 31. 4. 3. Of meeknesse and moderation 4. Is faithful Isa. 9. 6. Thirdly Christ delegates this power as he hath the government of the Church three wayes 1. To the Angels they are principalities and powers 2. To the Magistrates By him Kings reign 3. To Church-officers Ephes. 4. 11 12. These are to continue so long as his Mediatory Kingdom shall last It is fit that Christ and he alone should govern the Church First Because the Church is his own his own body and house Rom. 12. 5. 1 Cor. 12. 12. Ephes. 4. 16. Heb. 3. 6. It is his 1. By purchase He hath purchased to himself a peculiar people 2. By Covenant I entred into Covenant with thee and thou becamest mine 3. By Regeneration They are one Spirit Secondly The Church is his great Depositum and Praemium 1. The great pledge God hath committed to his trust Iohn 17. 2. 2. The great reward of all his services Eph. 1. 21 22. 3. There is none qualified for the Churches government but he This Soveraignty of Christ as Mediator is two-fold First In the spiritual Kingdom by which he rules in the hearts of all especially his Saints Luk. 17. 21. Rom. 14. 17. This consists in six things 1. He sets up a throne in the souls of his people that they look on him as a King Rev. 4. 3. 2. As a spiritual King he gives Laws to the soul Rom. 13. 5. 3. He will punish their enemies 1 Ioh. 3. 18. 4. He bestows both gifts and graces Rev. 4. 5. 5. He rules in their hearts and wayes Ioh. 16. 14. 6. He hath the key of heaven and hell Rev. 11. 17. Secondly He hath a Soveraignty committed to him as Mediator God-man i● the providential Kingdom Psal. 8. 4 5. compared with Heb. 2. 5. Ephes. 1. 21. Pro. 8. 15. 21 22. 2. All the great things in providence are ascribed to Christ Mediatour he brought the floud Gen. 6. 3. compared with 1 Pet. 3. 18 19. he destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah he gave the Law Heb. 26 27. 3. He shall accomplish all the Prophecies Rev. 19. 13. He shall judge the world Act. 17. 30 31. therefore he rules it else he could not proportion to men rewards and punishments if he did not imploy them 4. He shall give up his Kingdom to his Father 1 Cor. 15. 34. the Lord Jesus hath all this Soveraignty for the Saints sake that they might have interest in it Ioh. 17. 2. 3. 35. We should take heed of doating on an earthly Christ Kingdom Inheritance or Preferment by Christ the Apostles expected earthly preferment the Millenaries say Christ shall destroy all Monarchies and be Monarch alone and his Saints shall be great persons here The Jews deny Christs Kingly Office they say he shall be an earthly King and shall conquer all Nations and bring them into the Land of Canaan and there shall blesse them with abundance of all things The Papists speak of a carnal presence of Christ in the Sacrament The Pope hath invaded Christs Kingly Office by making laws which shall immediately binde the consciences of men He saith he is Christs Vicar and the Head of the Church They say there is a two-fold head of the Church 1. Imperial Principal Invisible so Christ. 2. Ministerial Secondary Visible so the Pope This is a meer contradiction To be head argueth preheminence to be ministerial argueth subjection and inferiority Most in the world oppose the Kingly Office of Christ his Laws Psal. 2. 4. See Phil. 2. 10. There are three Kingdoms contrary to the Kingdom of Christ that of sin Satan and Antichrist Christ is our Lord This name is often given to Christ Psal. 110. 1. Mat. 22. 44. Iohn 13. 13. Act. 2. 36. 1 Cor. 2. 8. 8 5 6. The Apostle takes delight still to mention this title The Lord Col. 1. 19. 1 Cor. 10 21. 11. 20. Iude v. 3. It is called The table of the Lord and the body and bread of the Lord because we are so ready to forget Christs authority therefore he is very often called Lord in the New Testament Rev. 1. 5. Phil. 2. 10. Christ is Lord 1. As God Ioh. 20. 28. 2. As man both in respect of the hypostatical Union and by the merit of his passion by which he hath gained a dominion to himself over men redeemed by him Luk. 2. 18. 3. From Gods Ordination Act. 2. 36. Phil. 2. 9 10 11. He is Lord by right 1. Of Creation Ioh. 1. 3. 2. Of Redemption 1 Cor. 6. 20. 1 Pet. 1. 18. 3. Preservation and Government Ephes. 5. 23. He is Lord two wayes 1. In general as over all creatures King of Nations Ier. 10. 7. 2. In special as head of his Church King of Saints Rev. 15. 3. The King is Lord over all the Subjects but in special manner over the Queen by a double right as King and Husband Ephes. 1. penult There are three priviledges of his Lordship 1. He is Lord alone he hath no co-partner Ephes. 4 5. 2. Is Lord over all creatures inwardly and outwardly the good to defend them the wicked to offend them 3. Is Lord for ever This Attribute when given to God the Father or Christ usually signifieth his Soveraignty and Dominion Thus saith the Lord God that is he that hath Soveraign power over you When this Title is given to Christ in the New Testament as a distinctin between God and the Lord 1 Cor. 8. 6. Ephes. 4. 5 6. Phil. 2. 11. it signifieth that Christ is he through whom all good from God is derived to us and through whom all our services are offered to God that he is our Mediator We should pray Let thy Kingdom come labour for a true personal reign of Christ that Christ and he only may be Lord of our souls we should be glad to have him raign in our Families publick Assemblies his Truths Ordinances and Government If we receive Christ into our hearts we must receive him onely and absolutely upon his own terms and in all his Offices and into every room of our hearts and that for ever We become the servants of God four wayes 1.
I have shewed in my first Book of the Scriptures Secondly It tends to the extream dishonour of Christ 1. In making other Intercessours 2. In making each man his own Saviour by his own works 3. In feigning a Purgatory Thirdly It tends to the damnation of mens souls 1. In drawing them to put confidence in their own works 2. In making them content with lip-labour in stead of prayer 3. In mocking them with counterfeit confession 4. In teaching them to commit Idolatry 5. In teaching them the doctrine of venial sins and that these may be pardoned without either confession or contrition There is a double way of advancing Antichrist First In way of Worship and Superstition Some conceive that course was taken here formerly when there was so much cringing and bowing toward the Altar Secondly By publishing and maintaining the Doctrines of Popery the most refined Doctrines conditional Decrees Free-will Auxilium sufficiens omnibus ad salutem media scientia in God and Universal Redemption in Christs intention final Apostasie These are the Jesuites Doctrines Arminius had it from them Christians that have cast off Popery should be so farre from returning again to Babylon that they should pray for the destruction and utter ruine of that man of sinne and with confidence expect the accomplishment of the Prophecies in that kinde The End of the sixth Book THE SEVENTH BOOK OF OUR VNION And Communion WITH CHRIST And our Spiritual Benefits by him and some special Graces CHAP. I. Of our Union with Christ. HAving handled the work of Redemption in the Nature and Person of it Now I shall speak of the Application of it by the holy Ghost That is a special part of Gods Providence whereby those things which Jesus Christ hath purchased are by the operation of the holy Ghost made effectual to all those for whom they were appointed Four things are considerable in it 1. The foundation of it 2. The efficient cause or worker of it 3. The persons who shall be made partakers of it 4. The parts of this work 1. Union and conjunction with Christ. 2. Communion with him The ground work of it lies in three things 1. The donation of God the Father Iohn 6. 39. All that my Father hath given me shall come to me 2. The intendment of Christ in all the work he wrought Iohn 17. 19. For their sakes do I sanctifie my self that is separate my self to the work I undertook 3. The Fathers accepting it done for them as heartily as if they had done it in their own persons 2 Cor. 5. 19. 2. The efficient cause of it the holy Ghost that is the third Person in the Trinity who is equal to the Father and the Son The making of man was in some respect appropriated to the Father redeeming him to the Son the making it effectual and applying it was the work of the holy Ghost 14 15 and 16. Chapters of Iohn I will send the holy Ghost The Comforter he shall lead you into all truth Convince you of sinne righteousnesse and judgement There is no one branch of our partaking of Christ but what is totally ascribed to the holy Ghost The sending of the Gospel is by the holy Ghost they are the gifts and graces of the holy Ghost Faith Union with Christ and Communion with him in all his Offices are from the holy Ghost the Spirit teacheth governeth comforteth Reason Because no inferiour person could effect it Ephes. 1. 19 20. Thirdly The Persons to whom this work of application belongs or who shall be made partakers of Christ but the Decree of Election and Reprobation have been handled already There are a certain number whom God hath appointed to come to life by Christ the Spirit of God will make the means effectuall to all his Fourthly The parts of this work 1. Union and conjunction with Christ. 2. Communion with him 1 Ioh. 5. 12. I shall first speak of our Union with Christ. Christ is said to dwell and abide in us and we are said to be Christs to be partakers of Christ to be cloathed with Christ and abide in him The Spirit of God sets it out in five similitudes 1. Of food made one with the body Ioh. 6. 5 6. 2. Of Head and Members Ephes. 1. 22 23. 3. Of the foundation and building Ephes. 2. 20 21 22. 1 Pet. 2. 4 5 6. 4. Of the stock and branches Ioh. 15. 4 5 6 7. 5. Of the Husband and Wife Ephes. 5. 31 32. We must be one with Christ as we were one with the first Adam say some two wayes 1. Naturally as we bore his image 2. Voluntarily as we consented to his Covenant so with the second Adam 1. Naturally by receiving of his Spirit 2. Voluntarily consenting to his Covenant Though it is not easie to conceive how we can be said to have consented to his Covenant but as being in him and so his consent did include ours The Union begins on Christs part he layes hold on me by his Spirit Rom. 8. 9. Phil. 3. 12. Gal. 4. 5 6. 1 Iohn 4. 13. This Spirit works a principle of faith in us that layes hold on Christ and accepts him for our Head and Husband for ever Iohn 1. 12. Ephes. 3. 17. He will take Christ 1. With all his Offices for a Lord as well as a Saviour 2. With all his graces 3. With all his inconveniences Christ with poverty with disgrace with the stake There is a three-fold Union between Christ and a Believer 1. Mystical with Christ as a Head the fruit of that is intimacy 2. Moral with Christ as a patern or example 3. Judicial with Christ as a Surety whereby we are concerned in every act of Christs mediation the fruit of this is interest This Union between Christ and us is wrought by the Spirit Ephes. 4. 4. He unites God and us and us one with another He works it by the Ministery of the Word 1 Cor. 1. 9. Iohn 6. 44 45. and a religious use of the Seals 1 Cor. 12. 13. Rom. 6. 3 5. 1 Cor. 10. 16. Some make our Union with Christ to be only a relative Union others an essentiall personall Union as if we were Godded with God and Christed with Christ. I would not be too bold with those expressions of Nazianzen because I see they are abused 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 First There is more then a relative Union as that place 1 Cor. 6. 17. forcibly proves 2. These Reasons 1. This Union is set forth by similitudes which shew a real Union Iohn 15. 1. 1 Cor. 12. Head and Body 2. Because our Union with Christ is compared to the Mystery of the Trinity and is like to the Union of the Persons in the Divine Nature Ioh. 6. 57. 14. 20. 17. 21 22 23. We are one not in the same kinde or degree of Union nor in so high and glorious a manner 3. Because it is not a Union founded only in terms of Scripture but
Conversion and Free-will I. Of Conversion COnversion is a coming back again to God from whom one departed by sin Hos. 14. 1. Turning is a word borrowed from Travellers who being out of the way get into it again by turning that is by leaving the way in which they did walk and taking another different way from it contrary to it if one have gone the quite contrary way There is first Habitual Conversion the first infusion of life and habits of grace conversion from a state of sin Act. 3. 19. Secondly Actual the souls beginning to act from that life and those habits a conversion from some particular grosse acts of sinne Luke 22. 32. It is so called because of the great breach grosse sins make on ones Justification 1. Puts a damp on all his graces Psal. 51. 10. 2. There is a suspension of all the comforts of grace vers 12. so that one may be said Quodammodo excidere in respect of the use and comfort Isa. 63. 10 17. Mans aversion from God by sinne and conversion to God by grace is the summe of all Divinity A sinner departs from God two wayes 1. As the chief good 2. As the utmost end therefore conversion is a change of these two when one makes God his chiefest good and his glory his utmost end A man in turning to God First Makes God the chief good 1. If he make him the chief object of his contemplation Psal. 139. 17. Where our treasure is there will our hearts be also 2. If he choose him as his portion Iosh. 24. 22. Psal. 119 57. 3. If he desire all things else in subordination to him Prov. 30. 8. sine summo bono nil bonum 4. Judgeth of all times or persons according as they have this good or are serviceable for it 5. Fears sin above all things which will separate between God and him Secondly He makes Gods glory his chiefest end this is Gods end Prov. 16. He makes God the utmost end of his being Rom. 14. 8. and acting 1 Cor. 10. 31. Rom. 11. 30. From him as the first cause To him as the last end God is our chiefest good therefore must be our utmost end See Psal. 73. 25 26. It is the first Question in the Assemblies Catechism What ought to be the chiefest and highest end of every man in this life The Properties and Qualities which ought to be found in true Conversion It must be 1. Present and seasonable While it is called to day call upon the Lord while he is near and seek him while he may be found The present time is the only time of converting not the future now at this instant time God offers mercy exhorts cals To day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts the future time is uncertain we cannot assure our selves of another hour We have many examples daily of the falshood of late repentance The longer we defer it the more difficult it will be as a sore without a plaister the more hardly it is healed 2. Universal or General we must turn from all sinne without exception or reservation of any and chiefly from our own sins Grace is called Light Leaven The Law of God forbiddeth all sinne God hateth all sin Christ died for all sin the conscience condemneth all sin and in our Covenant with God we renounced all sinne Cast away all your transgressions hate every false way 3. It must be hearty sincere unfeigned God complains of some that turned unto him feignedly 4. Constant persevering to the end a continuing still more and more to convert a daily renewing these acts and reforming our faults we must cleave to the Lord with full purpose of heart The order and manner of this work how and in what measure it is wrought in the Saints First The Doctrine of the Gospel is propounded and made known in both the parts of it viz. that which concerns mans misery in himself and the perfect and only remedy in Christ to all penitent sinners Secondly The soul is enlightened and enabled to assent unto this Doctrine Thirdly It is yet further stirred up to consider of this Doctrine so beleeved and to give heed to it as Lydias minde was wrought upon when Paul preacht Fourthly It begins to apply that Doctrine to it self so farre as to be affected with the sense of its misery but so as there is wrought also a hope of getting out of this misery and a perswasion that he shall be accepted and hereupon follows conversion For he that sees himself in an ill state and sees also a certain way out of it being perswaded that he may by such and such means escape and avoid will undoubtedly apply himself to seek his own good and the Spirit of God by working this perswasion converts the soul We may plainly see this order in Davids renewing of his conversion after his sinne and in the hearers of Peters Sermon Act. 2. where first they heard and marked Peter then were pricked in heart then asked What they must do to be saved and being instructed by Peter to convert did so and were saved Marks or Signs of Conversion 1. Such a one hath had experience of the discovery of sinne as the greatest evil and of misery to himself by sin Sin revived and I died 2. The Lord hath wrought in him a glorious discovery of Christ and an instinct after union with him which is faith Phil 3. 10. 3. He is brought under the guidance and power of the Spirit Ioh. 3. 6. 1 Cor. 6. 11. Mat. 11. 5. Gospellized brought under the power of it hath a spiritual bent in his soul a new principle new ends 2 Cor. 5. 17. He sees things with another eye He hath a new law planted within him which will make all duties easie and sweet to him Ier. 31. 33. 4. He is made like to God every Saint is a living Image of God He will love persons the more he seeth of God in them and Ordinances the more pure they are 5. Where there is life there will be growth 1 Pet. 2. 3. they will grow up as willows as calves of the stall Mal. 4. True Conversion differs from false 1. In the efficient cause for first the true spring comes from the Spirit of God by means of faith in the Gospel stirring up a desire of Gods favour and freedome from sinne for attaining that favour the false from a natural desire of ones welfare that he may escape the punishment of sin 2. In the formal or manner of doing true Conversion is a willing and deliberate act out of choice false a forcible act done out of compulsion 3. Final the true seeks to please God the false to ease it self Motives to and Means of Conversion By Motives I mean certain considerations and arguments that in all reason should prevail to make men resolve upon the work By Means some things tending to enable men the better to do it when they have
Paul sheweth what is that which justifieth and Iames sheweth what kinde of faith justifieth viz. a lively effectual faith Iames sheweth that faith justifieth Quae viva Paul sheweth that it doth not justifie Qua viva which is a great difference though the Remonstrants scoffe at such a nicety Who would give a Lemmon-paring for the difference Whether Sanctification precede Justification Bishop Downame in his Appendix to the Covenant of Grace doth oppose my worthy Tutor M. Pemble for holding this opinion but perhaps a distinction may solve all As Sanctification is taken for the act of the holy Ghost working holinesse into us so it goes before Faith and Justification so the Apostle puts it before justifying saying 1 Cor. 16. 21. But ye are sanctified justified but as it is taken for the exercise of holinesse in regard of amendment of heart and life so it follows Justification in nature but it is joyned with it in time The Apostle Rom. 8. 30. placeth Vocation before Justification which Vocation is the same thing with the first Sanctification or Regeneration See Act. 26. 18. CHAP. XI Of Sanctification HAving spoken of the relative Change or of our State in Adoption Justification I shall now speak of the moral Change of our Persons and Qualities in Sanctification Although we distinguish between Justification and Sanctification yet we acknowledge that they are inseparable and that one doth necessarily follow the other To sanctifie sometimes signifies First To acknowledge the holinesse of a thing so God is said to sanctifie himself and his own name or to use it according to its holinesse so we are said to sanctifie the Lord and the Sabbath-day that is use it holily Secondly To make holy so a person or thing may be said to be made holy three wayes 1. When it is separated from a common use 2. When it is devoted to God made peculiar to him so one might sanctifie a house or beast 3. When it is cleansed and purged from all filthinesse and naughtinesse In the two first senses it is opposed to common and prophane in the last to unclean in Scripture such are goods houses the Temple What Sanctification is Some describe it thus It is the Grace of God dwelling in us by which we are inabled to live a holy life It is a supernatural work of Gods Spirit whereby the soul and body of a beleever are turned to God devoted to him and the image of God repaired in all the powers and faculties of the soul. It is a resolution of will and endeavour of life to please God in all things springing from the consideration of Gods love in Christ to mankinde revealed in the Gospel Sanctification is a continued work of the Spirit flowing from Christ as the Head purging a man from the image of Adam and by degrees conforming us to the image of Christ. 1. It is an act of the Spirit The special work of the Father is Creation of the Sonne Redemption of the holy Ghost Sanctification The Father proposed and plotted the work of Reconciliation Christ undertook the service but the Spirit is the Unction that takes away all enmity that is within us The Spirit dwels in the Saints virtually and operatively by his Gifts Graces Comforts and by exciting them Some dislike that passage of Luther Habitat ergo verus Spiritus in credentibus non tantum per dona sed quoad substantiam though others of our Divines follow him The Spirit of God is the efficient cause of Sanctification The sanctified are called such as are in the Spirit and walk in the Spirit If we mortifie the deeds of the flesh by the Spirit we shall live If any be led by the Spirit he is the Son of God and if any have not the spirit he is none of his Eze. 36. 27. The holy Ghost useth the Word of God the doctrin of the Gospel as its immediate instrument to work this holiness of heart and life Christ sends his Spirit that by the Word works faith and all Graces An act of the Spirit flowing from Christ as the Head common works of the Spirit flow not from Christ as the Head Iohn 1. 16. Col. 1. 19. Christ is the common treasury of all that Grace God ever intended to bestow 1 Iohn 2. 20. the intendment of union is communication 2. A continued work of the Spirit to distinguish it from Vocation Conversion Regeneration it is stiled Vocation because it is wrought by a heavenly Call Conversion because it is the change of a mans utmost end Regeneration because one receives a new Nature and new Principles of action The carrying on of this work in blotting out the image of old Adam and by degrees introducing the image of Christ is Sanctification 2 Cor. 7. 1. therefore we must have supplies of the Spirit Psal. 92. 10. Sanctification is answerable to original corruption and intended by the Lord to be a Plaister as broad as the sore That was not one sinne but a sinne that had all sinne so this is not one distinct Grace but a Grace that comprehends all Grace It is called the new man in opposition to the old man because it makes us new changing from the natural filthinesse of sinne to the righteousnesse and holinesse whereof we were deprived by the fall of Adam and to note the author of it which is the Spirit of God working it in us called the holy Spirit because he is so in himself and works holinesse in us the Divine Nature because it is a resemblance of that perfection which is in God and the image of God for the same cause because it maketh us in some degree like unto him The moving cause is the consideration of the love of Christ to mankinde revealed in the Gospel the matter of it a resolution and constant endeavour to know and do the whole will of God revealed in his Word Psal. 119. 30. 73. 10. the forme a conformity to Gods Law or whole will so revealed Psal. 119. the end principal to glorifie and please God secondary to attain his favour and eternal happinesse The extent must be in all things the subject of it is the whole man the whole soul and body Sanctification reacheth to the frame of his heart David hid the Law of God in his heart the inward man therefore called a New-Creature and outward Conversation therefore called a living to God 1 Thess. 5. 23. The Parts of it are two Mortifying and Crucifying the old man with its lusts and affections quickning the new man bringing forth the fruit of the Spirit The Properties of it 1. It is sincere 2. Constant therefore it is called a walking in the way of the Lord. 3. Imperfect here 4. Grows and proceeds toward perfection A godly life is distinguished 1. From the false goodnesse of the Hypocrite for that is willing sometimes to do Gods will not with such a setled will as to indeavour it and willing in some things not in
the world others natural moderate in things indifferent and shunning the occasions of sinne the meditating on the death of Christ is the purest and most effectual way of mortifying sinne 1 Pet. 4. 1. Look upon Christs death not only as a pattern but cause of Mortification Iohn 3. 14. Heb. 12. 2. 1. Look upon sin as the causes of Christs sufferings Zech. 12. 10. Act. 2. 37. 2. Consider the greatnesse and dreadfulnesse of his sufferings Rom. 8. 32. 3. The fruit of his sufferings Col. 2. 15. 4. Reason must argue from the end of Christs sufferings which was Mortification as well as comfort and pardon 1 Iohn 3. 6. Ephes. 5. 27. Improve the death of Christ 1. By faith Rom. 6. 6. 7. 25. 2. By Prayer Heb. 10. 19. 5. A preparation to this duty Labour daily to finde out thy sins we are naturally very prone to entertain a good opinion of our selves and discern not many evils in us 1. Study the Law Rom. 7. I was alive without the Law but when I saw the inward motions of sinne were abominable to God I died compare thy own soul with it 2. Study thy own wayes When thou art crost how art thou troubed say Is not this anger when others reproach thee how art thou troubled say Is not this pride and self-love 3. Have an ear open to the admonition of faithful friends leave not thy heart till it plead guilty 4. Make use of Ordinances the Word read and heard Prayer the Sacrament after he had commanded them to put off the old man Colos. 3. he saith Let the Word dwell plentifully in you David begs of God to strengthen him 5. Take heed and shun all the occasions that foment and cherish thy corruptions 1. Inward thy own thoughts we cure the itch by cleansing the bloud Iob 31. 1. Why should I think on a maid 2. Outward there are two of all sins 1. Idlenesse the devils cushion 2. Evil company 6. Upon special seasons there must be the solemn exercise of fasting and humiliation because we must mortifie the inclinations of sin Iam. 4. 9. CHAP. XIII II. Of Vivification THere are two parts of a Christians duty Dying to sinne and Living to God It is called living to God Rom. 14. 8. Gal. 2. 19. to holinesse the life of righteousnesse rising to Christ. It is first Habitual when the Spirit of God infuseth such principles where by we are able to live unto God Secondly Practical Vivification is the constant endeavour of a beleever to exercise all those Graces which the Spirit of God hath planted in him The life of a thing is the acting according to the principle of it so something daily draws out the exercise of those holy Graces the Spirit of God hath wrought in him Prov. 4. 23. Practical Vivification reacheth to all things which concern Christianity but consists in two things 1. The active bent and propensenesse of the inward man to the things of Gods Kingdom 2. Strength and ability to act according to the rule The School-Divines make this spiritual bent to stand in five things 1. In oppugnatione vitiorum the same with practical Mortification 2. In contemptu terrenorum 3. In repulsione tentationum 4. In tolerantia afflictionum 5. In aggressione bonorum operum quamvis arduorum This strength comes 1. From the principle within the life of the habits 2. The Spirit of God dwels in them and stirs them up to act This new life is Christs rather then our own He is the root and author of the life of Grace Iohn 8. 12. The Gospel is the ministration of life Col. 3. 4. 1 Iohn 5. 11 12. 2 Tim. 1. 10. There is a threefold life 1. Natural or personal 2. Politick 3. Divine or Spiritual 1. The natural life flows from the Union of soul and body 2. The politick life comprehends all those things which people perform one to another by vertue of their Relations and Associations of people together by Lawes Thirdly Spiritual life which ariseth from the intercourse between God and the soul. There is a great similitude and dissimilitude between also the natural and spiritual life They agree in these things 1. Natural life supposeth some generation so doth spiritual life therefore it is called Regeneration 1 Iohn 2. 27. 2. What the soul is to the body in the natural life that is God to the soul in a spiritual life As the soul is the principle of all the actions and operations in the body so in the spiritual life Christ works all but by the man 3. So long as the soul is in the body one is an amiable creature when that is gone he is but a carkasse so so long as God is with the soul it is in good plight 4. Where there is life there is sense and feeling spiritual life is seen by the tendernesse of the heart Ephes. 4. 18 19. it is sensible of injuries done to it by sin Rom. 7. 24. or the decayes of it by Gods absence 5. Where there is life there is a nutritive appetite an instinct to preserve life 1 Pet. 2. 2. This life is nourished by the Ordinances and constant influences of the Spirit 6. Where there is life there will be growth Gods people grow more wise solid They differ thus 1. The Union between the soul and body is natural between God and the soul from free grace 2. In the natural life there is an indigence till the soul and body be joyned but there is no want on Gods part though he be not united to the soul. 3. The soul and man united make one person so do not God and the soul. 4. The natural life comes wholly from corrupt principles and it is a fading life Iam. 4. 14. but he that lives this one life once lives it for ever Ioh. 6. 5. This divine spiritual life stands in two things First We by our Apostasie are fallen off from God when God restores us to life he restores us to his favour Ephes. 2. from v. 11. to the end and so sin and the curse is removed Secondly There is wrought in the soul a sutable frame of Spirit to do the thing● agreeable to the will of God an inward principle of holinesse the repairing of Gods Image in us Ephes. 1. 2 ch quickned by him Christ is our life and the fountain of this spiritual life three wayes 1. He is the meritorious cause of it he hath purchased all this for us by his bloud he bare the wrath of God for us by his active and passive obedience He hath merited that all this life should be communicated to us 2. He is the efficient cause of it works all this in and to us he sends his holy Spirit into the souls of all those whom he means to save applies to them their peace and pardon and quickens them 3. As he is the exemplar rule and copy how our life should be led The preaching of the Gospel is the ministration of
this life thus 1. In the letter of it though delivered by never so faithful Ministers it is able to do nothing therefore these things are often preacht and men not bettered when the Spirit accompanies it it is efficacious See Rom. 1. 16. Phil. 2. 15. The preaching of the Gospel is 1. The only means of the revelation of this life 2 Tim. 1. 10. 2. It is the divine seed whereby the Lord conveys this life and begets it in the soul 1 Pet. 1. 23 25. This work of the Gospel consists in five things 1. The preaching of the Gospel opens the understanding makes us see the misery of sinne and the excellency of Christ and the things of God Ephes. 1. 2 Cor. 5. 2. It makes the will and affections to relish Christs sweetnesse perswades the heart to chuse him and consent that God and they may be united in a league of friendship this is the work of faith 3. Turns the heart from all evil wayes it walkt in men are said to be pull'd out of the power of Satan 4. Creates in the soul and stampes in it all the Graces wherein Gods Image stands 5. By administration of the promise and instruction fortifieth the soul and makes one do all things belonging to this life Arminians give too much to man and too little to Christ. Antinomians and Familists give too much to Christ and too little to man They give so much to Christ that they abolish the nature and act of the creature they say Christ must do all and we can do nothing They dream of an insensible motion without us place Grace in a naked apprehension there must be not onely a work for us but in and by us The work of the Father is in heaven of Christ on the Crosse of the Spirit within us Col. 1. 29. They deny not onely mans work but the Spirits work in us Rom. 16. 20. Secondly They say Christ must do all and we after we have received Grace nothing there is not a coordination but subordination of our wils to his grace though at our first conversion we were meerly passive yet when Grace is received we may act motion follows life Col. 2. 4. The Familists deny all inherent graces in the Saints because it is said we do not live but Christ he they say beleeves repents as if we lived not at all and he is formally all habits and graces but the Scripture grants habits and graces to be in a man Iohn 19. 28. Matth. 12. 33. 1 Iohn 3. 9. 2. The sins of our actions then could not be charged on our selves but on the faint operations of his grace Marks and Evidences of spiritual life First Every creature which lives values life A living dog is better then a dead Lion If one values his life he will prize 1. Pabulum vitae Attend on the Ordinances the Word Sacrament Prayer Communion of Saints 1 Peter 2. As new born Babes Cantic 4. latter end 2. He will avoid what is destructive to life Beware of grieving and quenching the Spirit Ephes. 4. 30. 1 Thess. 5. 19. by neglecting the motions of it or noysome lusts 3. He will endure any evil and part with any good rather then part with life Secondly This new life brings alwayes a great change along with it when a childe quickens in the mothers womb she findes a great change so when Paul and Manass●h and the blinde man Ioh. 9. were converted unlesse they were religiously trained up as Timothy from their youth Thirdly Sense a spiritual sense in the soul senses exercised savour the things of God Rom. 8. Fourthly Every life hath some kinde of motions and actions that are sutable to it as in this spiritual life 1. That inward work of adhering to Christ as their chief portion the fountain of all their good a true faith 2. Repentance labouring to cast out corruption and to turn to God 3. The Spirit of Prayer You have received the Spirit of Adoption whereby you cry Abba Father Our Law judgeth a childe alive that was heard to cry 4. The minding of heavenly things Col. 3. 1 2. 5. Life hath a sympathy a fellowship with those that are members of the body the same quickning Spirit lives in all Christians weep with them that weep and rejoyce with them that rejoyce 6. If we be regenerated we do that to God which children do to their Father 1. Honour him and stand in awe of him 2. Rely on him as the fountain of all our good as children do on their parent● for a supply of all their wants 3. Are obedient to him Motives to live to God 1. It is a dishonour to God when the creature seeks to exalt self that which I make my utmost end I make my God Phil. 3. 10. 2. Consider the self-denial of Christ he came from heaven to do the will of him that sent him Rom. 15. 3. Means of spiritual life 1. Labour to get thy miserable condition by nature set close upon thy spirit how thou art dead in sin 2. Study to get into Christ 1 Iohn 5. 12. onely he can quicken he is never got but by Faith Luke 15. the Prodigal is the pattern of a converted soul. See vers 31. CHAP. XIV The Sanctification of the whole Man Soul and Body VVE should live more to the soul then body Psal. 119. 175. 141. 8. 142. 7. 143. 11. 1. The soul is distinct from the body as the operations of it shew 2. It lives when the body dies Eccles. 12. 7. Mat. 10. 28. 3. It is far better then the body 4. The concernments of the soul are higher then those of the body 1 Pet. 3. beginning 5. The sicknesse and death of the soul is worse then that of the body 1 King 8. 38. Ioh. 8. 21 23. 6. We never live to any purpose but when the soul lives 1. Of the faculties of the soul. Grace spreads it self through all the faculties A faculty is an ability of producing some effect or operation agreeable to our nature and for our good implanted in man by nature There are three reasonable faculties proper to men alone 1. The Understanding by which we know truth 2. The Will by which we desire good 3. Conscience a power of ordering our selves to and with God I. Of the Understanding It is that power which God hath given a man to acquaint himself with the Being Properties and Differences of all things by discourse Or it is that faculty by which we are able to inform our selves of the general natures of things Sense alone perceives particulars the understanding abstracts things and forms in it self the general natures of things I see this or that man but understand the nature of man The Object of it is omne intelligibile Truth in general in the utmost latitude and universality of it is the object of the Understanding good in the general in the universality of its nature is the object of the Will therefore till
another I. The rectitude of it In the state of Innocency there was little use of it while man did not offend God nothing offended him Christ was perfectly holy and yet angry at the hardnesse of mens hearts and the pollution of the Temple so man might have been angry at the sin of the devils when he knew it Then it would have been no perturbation to his spirit nor blinding of his minde II. The corruption of it Wherein observe 1. The Object this corrupt anger is conversant about and the measure of it 2. The Causes which produce it 3. The many cursed Effects it produceth in mens lives Of the first There are many Objects of anger The right object is dishonour done to Gods name sin that only displeaseth God The object of it is mistaken 1. When I am angry with God he is exempted in regard of his excellency and spotlesse holinesse Ionah was faulty this way and Salomon notes it of men who have perverted their wayes that they fret against God 2. When I am angry with my Superiours it being the passion of correcting punishing the faults of such should grieve us not anger us therefore Ionathan was not altogether blamelesse for being angry against his father Saul in the behalf of David 3. When I am angry with an innocent party where there is no fault there should be no displeasure Lastly In most cases to be angry with unreasonable or senslesse creatures which are too mean to be the objects of anger as Balaam was wroth with his Asse so to be angry with a horse for stumbling or starting unlesse when they be exorbitant from their natural goodnesse as when the Lion and Bear would worry a sheep Secondly One offends in the measure or quantity of anger when he is angry more then enough The proper end of anger is to awaken courage and set it a work to chastise evil or to resist and beat it down that the minde may not be surprized with it such a moderate stirring of this passion as doth serve thus to set the minde a work to resist and oppose a fault or evil thing is allowable but if it come to a greater heat or flame then so then it exceeds and is naught If it be more vehement where the offence is less then it is excessive There may be a fault in the defect when we are not moved a just occasion of anger being offered as in admonishing reproving or correcting Secondly The Causes which produce it Since the fall the natural humours of the body The immediate cause of it is pride and arrogancy the fruit of self-love Proud and haughty scorner is his name that deals in fierce wrath Should such a one as I be thus dealt with 2. Our low esteem of others in comparison of our selves 3. Those things which should cause us to be meek and quiet as learning wisdom any affront done to that excellency which God hath given us whereas these should cause us to be meek our weaknesse which should also make us meek puts us into passion simple and sick folks are most passionate Thirdly The cursed Effects and fruits of this passion of anger 1. It produceth a great deal of sorrow and woe in this world The angry man never wants woe who hath reproaches enemies 2. It disarms the soul of its own force and layes it open to be invaded by an enemy In patience possesse your souls Prov. 25. ult 3. Puts out the eye of our reason Ira furor brevis Eccles. 7. 9. Impedit ira animum ne possit cernere verum Ionah said to God I do well to be angry to death 4. It hurries all the other passions of the soul it s own way 5. It is destructive to one of the principal ends of mans being to humane society Prov. 22. 24. 6. It sets the tongue on fire whence comes reviling raging Moses when he was angry spake unadvisedly with his lips 7. It produceth abundance of wicked actions swearing cursing quarrelling hurting and rude carriage crying stamping staring 8. It hinders a man from any communion with God 1. From hearing Receive the ingrasfed word with meeknesse 2. Prayer 1 Tim. 2. 8. Unbelief and anger hinder our prayers 3. The Sacrament that is a feast of love 9. It quencheth all the motions of Gods Spirit and closeth with the devil he by it possesseth the very soul Ephes. 4. 26 27. Mans nature is enclined to causlesse ungrounded and excessive anger 1 Sam. 20. 30 31. Eliab was angry with David when he spake valiantly Nebuchadnezzar raged against the three children for not worshipping his golden Image and against the Wise-men of Babel for not being able to declare his dream Herod also was wroth against the Wisemen because they returned another way and brought him not word back again concerning the childe Jesus whom they came to enquire of and worship A godly man may fall into passionate fits be over-cholerick as David and Ionah Reasons why man is so prone to this unreasonable distemper 1. The abundance of those vices in every one which concur to the working of unjust anger 1. Self-love which makes one prone to anger because it is so wakeful jealous observative 2. Folly Anger rests in the bosom of fools A fool in the day of his wrath is known An angry man exalteth folly gives it a high room in his heart makes it a great ruler and commander within him now all men are in the corruption of nature fools and have that title given them by the holy Ghost 3. Pride By pride alone cometh contention saith Salomon 2. Anger is a common fault therefore Salomon saith Make no friendship with an angry man lest thou learn his wayes 3. Men make small account of it a little passion choler they say 4. The bodily temper in the farre greater number furthers it the fiery choler which is in a mans body is the instrument of this hot vice So having a soul defiled with those vices which beget anger a body consisting of such humours as will set anger on work finding many examples of it and making little account of it no wonder if a man do prove a wrathfull creature This anger is greatly disgraced in Scripture Prov. 12. 16. 14. 17 29. 21. 24. 19. 19. 22. 24. 29. 22. it is a fruit of the flesh Lastly The work of grace in sanctifying anger 1. The efficient cause of holy anger The principal cause is the Spirit of God in planting a new nature in the soul and so in this affection Morall Philosophy may go a great way in moderating anger but the Spirit of God only makes it holy 2. Sanctified reason is the immediate caller of it out and orderer of it if it be holy anger it is a grace and therefore must be called out by reason Secondly The motive or occasion of it we are angry for what we should 1. Grosse and presumptuous sins done wilfully openly as Christ was angry
a total omission of them There may be upright obedience shewed in doing them as well as we can there is nothing but disobedience shewed in omitting them It is a carnal sense of weaknesse and comes from the devil and the flesh that drives from the duty that alone is a spiritual sight and sense of weaknesse that drives to more care in the duty and more humility after and more earnest longing after Christ and high prizing of him Oh but I shall get nothing by these praiers First Say thou shouldst get nothing yet thou shalt do a thing that God bids thee and so obey him and we must obey God though we get nothing by it But Secondly If thou dost not pray surely thou canst get as little by not praying as by praying weakly and distractedly And Lastly If thou praiest thou shalt be heard and pardoned and that is to get something Wherefore ascribe so much to the infinite and fatherly goodnesse of God and to the perfect and constant intercession of Christ as to come with confidence to the throne of grace even with those praiers which are full of faults The Father loves to see his childrens letters though they cannot yet write a fair hand Motives to praier First The Lord will take it kindly Christ is the Churches Advocate the Saints are the Churches Sollicitors Isa. 62. 1. 7. Psal. 122 6. Secondly Praier is the most principal part of Gods worship Let us worship and fall down it is sometime in Scripture put for the whole worship of God being a principal part of it Ier. 10 25. There is a visible advantage due to praier above preaching in the publick Assemblies because it is a means nearer the end of both It cannot be denied that all preaching is to the purpose of informing the minde or moving the heart to desire that which is good indeed but praier being the actual desire of it is the exercise of the means which God ordaineth to procure it M. Thorndikes Service of God at Religious Assemblies c. 6. The word of God is the great instrument in the hand of the Spirit by which all things are managed in the world praier is the great instrument in the hand of faith by which all things are managed in the new man When the Spirit comes in it is a Spirit of Sanctification and makes way for the Spirit of Supplication and that for the Spirit of Illumination Psalm 43. 3. Psal. 139. ult Ier. 31. 9. Thirdly It is honourable 1. To God acknowledgeth the Souls dependance on him his Omniscience Bountie Goodnesse Omnipresence Faithfulnesse in performing his Promises 2. To us to have the Princes ear still open to our petitions Fourthly Necessary The necessity of it appears 1. In that hereby we are trained up in the conviction of our unworthinesse praier is a discoverie of our beggerie thou hast not grace nor strength if it come not from heaven God would have this seen not only in those great precious priviledges but likewise in our daily bread thy praiers ought to make thee humble if thou hast grace of thy own why dost thou pray for it it is daily pardon and favour and these must be sought for 2. All the best grace and strength we have is imperfect 2 Cor. 9. Perfecting holinesse our faith and righteousnesse hath much corruption mingled with it we had need to pray that God would defend us against temptations the Christian praying and alwaies seeking to God is seldome overcome 3. Every thing becomes sanctified by praier 1 Tim. 4. 5. all Sermons Sacraments Mercies Afflictions become hereby sanctified it makes the Word lively the Sacraments efficacious 4. It keeps off many blows Phil. 4. 22. therefore Paul a stout Christian was much in praier and desired Philemons and others praiers 5. It is gainful a key that opens all the treasures of God 1 King 8. 33 35. Iam. 5. 17 18. Matth. 7. 7. Iam. 4. 7. Ioh. 16. 23. Revel 11 6. The light as well as life of a Christian is laid up in another Omnia in Christo sunt capitalia say the Schoolmen Whatever is in Christ is in him as a Head with reference to the bodie Cant. 4. 15. Ephes. 6. 10. 6. It is very powerful it prevaileth over all creatures yea with the Creator himself God never left granting till Abraham left asking Gen. 18. Ps. 145. 19. 18. 6. Psal. 50. 15. Ioh. 14. 14. 15. 7. 1 Ioh. 3. 22. 5. 14. Vinculum invincibilis Bern. Vis Diograta Tertul. Apol. Praier not only obtains the thing but brings a sanctified use of it it turns it to the good of those that receive it it gives efficacie to other means or if they fail it doth it it self it hath not this efficacie from any intrinsecal vertue or merit to be found in it the efficacie is wholly from God Praier is available three waies 1. As it is a petition put up to God and so it avails Via impetrationis 2. As it is an exercise of the soul and of the graces in it and so it avails Via causationis 3. As it is a commanded dutie and a principal part of Gods service wherein we give him the glorie of his Omniscience Mercie Power and Wisdome and so it avails Via retributionis M. Carter on Exod. 32. 9 10. The efficacie of praier comes 1. From God the Father he is infinite in goodnesse and of his own Nature much more prone to give good things then we to beg them as appeareth by his daily lading us with such comforts as we never so much as craved at his hands yea by casting of innumerable benefits upon his enemies 2. Christ he hath deserved all good things by the infinite and invaluable merit of his most precious life and death yea he hath commended us to his Fathers love and care by many fervent praiers made for us in the daies of his flesh and now he ceaseth not to make perpetual intercession for us at his Fathers right-hand by presenting his own merits to the eies of his Father that they may actually speak in our behalf and do away all the defects of our praiers 3. The holy Ghost stirreth up in us earnest desires and groans and doth as it were dictate our praiers for us 4. From our selves the people of God by praying are fitted to receive those benefits which they pray for in the exercise of praier increasing in themselves faith humblenesse of minde an aptnesse to be thankful for them and an abilitie to use them well to Gods glorie and their own good Helps and Means One must prepare his heart that being naturally unfit for communion with God which lieth First In removing impediments hardnesse of heart want of sense and feeling of the wofull estate we are in the command to pray alwayes implies that the soul should be alwaies in a praying frame 2. Impatience fretting Pray without wrath Secondly In bringing the positive furtherances 1. Heavenly-mindednesse If God
of our entrance into the Covenant and admission into the Church Rom. 6. 3. our insition and incorporation into Christ is signified and sealed up by Baptism and hence it is once administred and never again to be repeated because of the stability of the Covenant of Grace Baptism is a Sacrament of Regeneration wherein by outward washing of the body with water In the Name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost the inward cleansing of our souls by the bloud of Christ is represented and sealed up unto us Tit. 3. 5. Mat. 28. 19. Ephes. 5. 2. D. Gouges Catechism It may be thus briefly described It is the first Sacrament of the New Testament wherein every one that is admitted into the Covenant of Grace being by Christs Minister washed in water In the Name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost is thereby publickly declared to belong to Christs Family and to partake of all the benefits that belong to a Christian. First Sacrament because first instituted and by the Lords order first to be administred being a Sacrament of our new birth 2. Of the New Testament because the old Sacraments ended with the old administration of the Covenant wherein the way to the Kingdom of heaven is more clearly revealed 3. Instituted by Christ himself the authour of it 4. The subject it belongs to all persons who can lay claim to the Covenant 5. To be administred by one of Christs Ministers Matth. 28. 19. He never gave commission to any to administer this Sacrament to whom he gave not authority to preach 6. The form to wash with water In the Name of the Father Son and holy Ghost See Aquin. partem tertiam Quaest. 66. Artic. 6. Utrum in nomine Christi possit dari Baptismus See also the 〈…〉 e there 7. The use and end of it is to be a publick declaration from God that one belongs to Christs family and partakes of all the benefits that concern a Christian. See of the uses of Baptism Perk. Cas. of Cons. l. 2. p. 130. to 135. A converted Pagan which makes profession of his faith and a childe not baptized may have right but this is a solemn declaration of it This washing with water In the Name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost properly and by the Lords appointment notes the washing with the holy Ghost Iohn 3. 5. Tit. 3. 5. Mat. 3. 16. The Spirit descended like a Dove not only to confirm the Godhead of Christ but to shew the fruit of Baptism Heaven is opened and the Spirit poured out abundantly The Lutherans and Papists say we make it Signum mutile it is not a naked and bare sign The great Gospel promise was the pouring out of the holy Ghost and the sign water Isa. 44. 3. Zech. 13. 1. The Analogy lies in this the first office done to a new-born childe is the washing of it from the pollution of the flesh which it brings from the mothers womb so the first office Gods Spirit doth is to purge us from our filthinesse In the Eastern Countreys when they would shew no pity to their childe they threw it out unwasht Ezek. 16. 15. Baptism is a publick tessera or seal of the Covenant First The Priviledges of the children of God by Baptism are many 1. I am united to Christ and ingraffed into that stock his Spirit poured out on the soul is the bond of union between Christ and the soul therefore we are often said to be baptized into Christ Rom. 6. 3. Gal. 3. 27. 2. Hereby we are declared to be the sons of God we are said to be regenerate by him that is sacramentally Baptism is a publick standing pledge of our Adoption 3. It is a constant visible pledge that all our sins are done away in the bloud of Jesus Christ therefore these are joyned together in Scripture Mark 1. Act. 2. 38. See Act. 22. 16. Rom. 6. 18. Ephes. 5. 26. 4. It seals to us a partaking of the life of Christ our Regeneration and Sanctification See Acts 19. beginning It is called the Laver of our Regeneration Titus 5. It seals to us the mortifying of all the reliques of corruption and that we shall rise out of our graves to enjoy that eternal life purchased by Christs bloud 6. It gives us a right to all Gods Ordinances Secondly The Duties Baptism doth ingage us unto All that Christ requires of his people either in faithfulnesse to him or love and unity to his Saints Rom. 6. We are buried with Christ in Baptism therefore are obliged to walk holily Ephes. 4. When the Apostle presseth the people of God to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace he saith There is one Baptisme Baptism serveth for two uses 1. To teach us our filthinesse that have need of washing and to binde us to seek to God for the spiritual washing 2. To assure us by pawning the truth and fidelity of God unto us for that end that upon our so doing we shall be washed with the bloud and Spirit of christ We should make use of our Baptism 1. To resist actual temptations I have given up all to Christ 1 Cor. 6. 15. 2. As a cordial in all dejections of spirit Shall I doubt of the love of God and pardon of my siu sealed to me in Baptism 3. In our prayers to God he hath given us his hand and seal 2 Sam. 7. 27. In Baptism we devote our selves to God it s an Oath of fealty to Christs Laws As therefore Baptism is a pledge to us of what we may look for from God so it is likewise a pledge of what he may expect from us it will be a witnesse against us if we make not right use of it Psal. 87. 6. See Ier. 9. 26. and Act. 7. 51. The Turks say what a Mussel man one that is a professed servant of Mahomet as we say baptized to do this See Rom. 6. 2. Luther tels a story of a pious Gentlewoman that when the devil tempted her to sin she answered Satan still Baptizata sum I am baptized Ex veteri Ecclesiae consuetudine in Baptismo renunciatur Satanae pompis ejus Vossius de orig progres Idol We cannot serve both God and the Devil such contrary Lords Mat. 6. 24. See 1 Cor. 10. 21. Baptism is administred but once the use of it continueth as long as we live We should make use of it 1. To quicken our repentance Have I so long ago promised to renounce all sin and yet am I hard hearted and impenitent The Scripture cals it the Baptism of Repentance for remission of sins because it serveth not alone as a bond to tie us to seek to God for repentance and to set upon that work but also to tie the Lord God unto us to give us the grace of repentance when we seek it at his hands and endeavour to practise it and whereby we are said to put on Christ and to be baptized into Christ and
nor warrant from the Scripture and against the second Commandment M. Ball. The Heathens did object to the Christians in time past in reproach That the God which they beleeved in was hanged upon a Crosse. They thought good to testifie therefore that they were not ashamed of the Sonne of God by the often using of the sign of the Crosse. But we now live not among Turks that contemn the Crosse of Christ but Papists which esteem more of a wooden Crosse then of the true Crosse of Christ that is his suffering We ought therefore to take away the use of it to take away the superstitious estimation of it Cartwrights Reply to D. Whitgift in Defence of the Admonit pag. 136. See Parker of the Crosse per totum and part 1. cap. 3. pag. 106. against symbolical sacramental signifying signs in the worship of God he urgeth that of the Civil Law Nemo est signandus in fronte quia non debet facies hominis ad similitudinem Dei formata foedari CHAP. IX The Lords Supper THere are divers names and appellations of it of which Casaubone speaks Ex. 16. ad Annal. Eccles. Baron This Sacrament is called The Supper from the time of its institution because it was instituted by Christ after a common Supper and the eating of the Paschal Lamb in the night in which he was betrayed 1 Cor. 11. 23. This word Coena is not liked of the Roman Church because it signifies a common Supper and by consequent cannot be applied to private Masses nay nor to publick Masses neither in which oftentimes the Priest eats all alone Scena est planè non Coena Dominici corporis sanguinis id quod agitur Sacerdos ad altare assistit theatrali veste magnificè indutus Post multas gesticulationes manuum multas corporis gyrationes tandem crustulum manibus supra caput elatis elatum à populo aversus ostendunt Audiunt qui ad sunt quod non intelligunt vident quae non percip●unt adorant quod nesciunt Simplicii Varini Epist. de libro postumo Grot. p. 263. The Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11. 20. because instituted by Christ our Lord. The Fathers often call it so Cyprian hath written a Tractate De Coena Domini The breaking of Bread Acts 2. 42. 20. 7. The breaking of the Eucharist so the Syriack in both places Vide De Dieu because it representeth the crucifying of Christ. The Eucharist so it was called not long after the Apostles because the Evangelist Luke and the Apostle rehearsing the institution of this Sacrament do write that Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did give thanks Luke 22. 19. 1 Cor. 11. 24. and it is also still celebrated in the Church with thanksgiving This title is used by the Fathers and Reformed Churches The Table of the Lord 1 Cor. 10. 21. because our Lord Christ instituted this Sacrament and celebrated it at a Table and the Apostles received it there See Mat. 26. 20. Mark 14. 18. Luke 22. 14. Iohn 13. 12. A Communion 1 Cor. 10. 16. because it is a bond of that mutual charity and symbole of the brotherly unity which is among all the faithful 1 Cor. 10. 17. The Papists acknowledge no Communion in participating of this Sacrament no marvel therefore if they dislike the name It is called by the Ancients Syn●xis which is a Greek word and signifies the same with Congregation or a meeting together 1 Cor. 11. 20. it is a collection gathering together or assembling of the faithful The Papists call it A Masse The Sacrament of the Altar and The Sacrifice Some things are necessary in their nature as love and fear of God Some only by a Law are necessary to our life so all institutions of Christ. Paul cals it the Lords Supper which imports Christ the Author as indeed he was as the Evangelists do witnesse See 1 Cor. 11. 23. It is a standing Ordinance he enjoyns the use of it Till the Lord come ver 26. which cannot be meant of coming in the Spirit for so he was already come according to his promise made before he departed from the world The Lords Supper is thus described by one It is an Institution of Christ or second Sacrament of the New Testament consisting of bread and wine wherein by performance of divers acts about it the Covenant of Grace is confirmed to every worthy receiver This is too obscure and confused Others thus It is the second Sacrament of the New Testament instituted by Christ himself wherein by taking and eating of bread and by taking and drinking of wine the Covenant of Grace is confirmed to every worthy receiver It is the eating and drinking of consecrated bread and wine given to seal up our feeding and nourishment in Christ Jesus Doctor Featley in his Grand Sacriledge of the Church of Rome c. 15. thus defines it It is a Sacrament of the New Testament sealing unto us the perfect nourishment of our souls by the participation of the sacred elements of bread and wine Doctor Go●ge in his Catechism thus defines it It is a Sacrament of our spiritual nourishment wherein by receiving of bread and wine according to Christs institution our Communion with Christ is represented and sealed up unto us It is a Sacrament of our nourishment and our growing up in the Lord Jesus and therefore it is appointed by him to be frequently used as being one of the standing dishes which the Lord Christ hath provided for the daily diet and the houshold provision of his faithful ones who are of his family 1 Cor. 11. 26 34. Bread sustains the hungry Wine refreshes the thirsty both satisfie to the full Christ saves perfectly all that come unto him Hookers Survey of the Summe of Church-Discipline part 3. c. 2. Here we have more immediately to do with the person of Christ we draw high to God in prayer but we become one with him in the Supper 1 Cor. 10. 16. here are the sweetest refreshings that ever we receive other duties seem rather to be our work this is our meal all other duties are to fit us for the Supper Examination the Word Prayer This is a duty of the highest and most mysterious signification Epitome Evangelii here are the benefits of the Covenant in one rite 1 Cor. 11. 25. the whole contrivance of salvation is represented in a bit of bread and drop of wine it is a duty wherein God seals up to his people the assurance o● his love and special favour Iohn 6. 33. The Lords Supper is 1. A spiritual medicine to cure the remainder of corruption 2. Spiritual food to strengthen our weak graces 3. A spiritual cordial to comfort our distressed consciences 4. A strong obligation to all acts of thankfulnesse and obedience unto Jesus Christ. What are the special and spiritual ends for which the body and bloud of Christ is exhibited and applied in the Lords Supper 1. In the transacting of the services there done the whole
we come to see that the Sacraments are the Lords Ordinances and that those things which he promiseth in the Covenant of Grace and sealeth in the Sacrament are farre better then all profits and pleasures in this world By it we come to be stirred up to desire and long after these benefits and so to covet them that nothing in this world will satisfie us without them We should exercise faith at the Lords Table view the arguments the Ordinance it self affords 1. Here is Christ crucified before thine eyes and he clearly offers it to thy soul in particular he applies it to thee This is my body which was broken for thee and my bloud which was shed for thee Run over the sad story of Christs agony and say This was done by my Lord for my poor soul. 2. The Lord cals thee hither on purpose because thou art weak He will cherish weak beginnings Mat. 12. 20. For our affections we must behave our selves with joy comfort and reverence See 2 Chron. 30. 21. Mat. 26. 30. Thy heart should be cheerful in God and thankful praise him Thankfulnesse and joy are the effects of faith the Ordinances are often compared to feasts and banquets because of the spiritual delight and rejoycing which the soul ought to take in them Hence the very Sacrament is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of the giving thanks unto God for his mercies The outward duty is comfortable Circumcision was a bloudy rite yet this is nothing to the inward sweetnesse Iohn 4. 32. In one of the Evangelists it is said Christ blest the bread in another it is said Christ gave thanks Christ when he instituted this Sacrament gave thanks to God the Father that he was pleased to send him into the world to die for poor souls Fear is proper to the duty of the Supper because of those excellent mysteries Chrysostom cals this Table Horribilis mystica mensa Psal. 68. 35. mixt affections do best in a mixt state in the whole worship of God Psal. 2. 11. Hos. 3. 7. For our thoughts We must meditate 1. On the outward signs and what they signifie 2. On the dainties prepared 3. The love of him that prepared them 4. On our communion with Christ his Graces and faithful people The effect of these affections and thoughts will be stirring up the heart to thanksgiving When we taste the wine we should consider its properties Psal. 104. 15. Iudg. 9. 13. so there is satisfaction to God and comfort to the creature in the bloud of Christ wine ingenders new spirits warms and refines them the bloud of Christ infuseth a new vigour into the soul. Our Communion with Christ in the Supper is not only with his gifts and graces but with his Person whole Christ. There are two Elements to signifie this Bread his Body and Wine his Bloud Our Communion is with his whole Person with Christ invested with all kinde of Offices to do us good and furnished with rich graces and comforts 1 Iohn 5. 16. We partake of his wisdom as a Prophet righteousnesse as a Priest grace and glory as a King What must be done after the Sacrament We must endeavour to finde an increase of faith love and all saving graces in us abounding more and more in well-doing We should speak of the sweetnesse of Christ to others Psal. 34. 8. Some Disciples have gone from this Supper triumphing and trampling upon Satan as Lions breathing fire saith Chrysostome terrible to the Devils themselves If we finde not the fruit of this Ordinance presently either it may come from want of preparation or from trusting in our own preparation 2 Chron. 26. 15 16. or want of thankfulnesse for our preparation 1 Chron. 29. 14. or from want of stirring up the graces we have received in that duty Isa. 57. 8. 2 Tim. 1. 6. Or Because we were not humbled for former neglects Psal. 32. 4 5. God may deny us the present sense of our benefit 1. To train us up to live by faith 2 Cor. 5. 7. 2. To try our graces 3. That we may more diligently search into our own souls Psal. 77. 6. How oft ought the Sacrament to be received Amongst the Papists the people communicate only once a year viz. at Easter which superstitious custom many of our ignorant people follow Calvin 4. Institut 43. 46. roundly professeth that it behoveth that the Eucharist be celebrated at least once a week The Christians in some parts of the Primitive Church took the Sacrament every day because they did look to die every day Now in many places it is administred every moneth Object The Passeover unto which the Lords Supper succeedeth was celebrated once a year and therefore once only for this Sacrament is sufficient Answ. God ordained that the Passeover should be celebrated but once only in the year and on a certain moneth and day the Jews had many other visible signs to represent Christ and his benefits they had Sacrifices every day and legal washings but he hath appointed that this Feast of the Lords Supper should be often solemnized and that we should come often unto it 1 Cor. 11. 25 26. That the frequent celebration of the Sacrament is a duty is inferred from this Text by Peter Martyr Calvin Musculus Aretius Hyperius Toss●nus Pareus Piscator Dickson and Mr Pemble See Iohnsons Christian Plea Chap. 14. In the time of the Apostles the purest age of the Church they solemnized it every Lords day Acts 20. 7. yea it was their daily exercise as often almost as they had any publick meeting for the service of God Acts 2. 42. And this custom long continued in the Primitive Church after the Apostles times not only in the dayes of Iustin Martyr and Tertullian but also of Chrysostom and Augastine as appeareth by their writings untill by mans corruption and Satans malice the commonnesse of the action exposed it to contempt We should come often to the Sacrament there is no exception but want of occasion or some just impediment There was in old time a custom there should be a Communion every Lords day every one not receiving without lawful excuse being excommunicated which Charls the Great in some sort renewed and which Bucer advised K. Edward in this Land to restore again Whether if an Ordinance and namely the Sacrament of the Lords Supper though there seems to be the like reason in other Ordinances cannot be so administred but that by some which partake of it it will notoriously be prophaned that be a sufficient reason for the non-administration of it Or Whether for want of order and government to keep off such as are notoriously unworthy the administration of the Sacrament may and ought to be suspended Again Whether a Minister may lawfully and with a good conscience continue there in the exercise of his Ministery having a Pastoral charge where he hath not power to administer the Sacrament of
will destroy the whole world as in the Angels Adam all sin is virtually in every sin It is also a Judge condemning sin Iohn 5. 41. Ezek. 22. 2. it passeth sentence on mens estates and actions 1 Cor. 14. 24 25. Heb. 4. 12 13. 10. 27 mortifies their corruptions Tit. 2 13. 2 Cor. 7. 1. The Spirit mortifies sin not only by infusing a new principle of grace but by restraining the old principle of sinne Rom. 6. 12. Psal. 19. 13. Secondly The Law Habet rationem fraeni hath the nature of a bridle to check and restrain sin 1. By setting before men its perfection Psal. 19. 7 13. Iam. 1. 25. 2. By exalting in a mans heart its authority Iam. 2. 8. 3. By shewing the danger of the curses in it Iob 31. 23. 4. By setting before men its preciousnesse Psal. 119. 103 104. 5. By shewing us that God observes what respect we bear to his Law Isa. 66. 2 3. Thirdly The Law is arule to direct in the way of duty It is 1. A rule within ordering a mans inward disposition The Spirit of God in the work of Regeneration stamps the Law of God in the heart and makes use of it to change the inward disposition Rom. 7. 9. Psal. 19. 7. See Ier. 31. 32. Act. 17. 38. Grace is given by the Gospel but it makes use of the Law Fides impetrat quod lex imperat Aug. 2. It is a rule without to guide a mans way a rule of all Gospel-obedience 1. Because the Gospel sends us to it for a rule Luke 16. 29. Iames 1. 25. and 2. 8. 2. Christ hath left us an example of all obedience Matth. 11. 29. Iohn 13. 15. 3. So far as the best men come short of the Law they sin 1 Ioh. 4. 3. 4. It hath all the properties of a rule it is 1. Recta Psal. 19. 7. 2 Promulgata published Hos. 8. 12. 3. Adaequata Psal. 119. 9. shall be our Judge hereafter Rom. 2. 14 15. God requires not only abstinence from evil but the doing of the contrary good Isa. 1. 16 17. Psal. 34. 14. Rom. 12. 9. Reasons 1. In regard of God 1. He hates evil and delights in good 2. The divine mercies are privative and positive Psal. 84. 11. 2. In regard of the principles of spiritual life we must have communion with Christ both in his death and resurrection Rom. 6. 11. The Law as a Covenant of works is in all these respects a servant to the Gospel and Gospel-ends I. As a Glasse and a Judge 1. By exalting free grace Paul and Luther being cast down with their sins exalted free grace 1 Tim. 1. 13 14. 2. By exalting the bloud of Christ the more one apprehends his sinne the more orient will the bloud of Christ be to the soul Philip. 3. 8 9. Rom. 7. 24 25. 3. By qualifying the soul and preparing it for Christ Luke 3. 5. Matth. 11. 28. 4. By making a man pliable to God ever after the discovery of our sin and misery by the Law and of free grace works a childe-like obedience Isa. 11. 6. 5. By making a man fear sin ever after he hath been under the hammering of the Law Psal. 85. 8. Hos. 3. 5. 6. By making one set a high price on the Spirit of Adoption Res delicata Spiritus Christi Tert. II. As a bridle the Law is the Gospels servant in restraining sinne the Gospel can use the Law above its nature and contrary to the use that sinne makes of it The Law cannot give grace to assist in duty and to restrain in sin Restraining grace serves the ends of the Gospel 1. In respect of wicked men though the Law restraining kils not sin in the ungodly yet the very restraint of the action is a great mercy 1. It makes a man lesse wicked 2. Keeps men from corrupting others 3. Lessens their torments the common graces of the Gospel making use of the restraints of the Law keep some wicked men from those grosse enormities that others run into 2. In respect of the godly 1. Preserves them from sinne before their conversion 2. It restrains their lusts Act. 23. 1. and after their conversion keeps them from sin Psal. 19. 13. by the restraints of the Law and the Gospel I shall in the next place lay down certain general rules which may direct us in the right interpretation of the ten Commandments 1. Because the Law doth comprehend all our duties to be performed both to God and man Luk. 10. 26. therefore the interpretation of it must be sought and fetcht out of the Sermons of the Prophets and Apostles and the Doctrine of our Saviour 2. Whereas some Laws are laid down in the form of a command and most of them viz. eight in the form of a prohibition we must conceive that under every command there is implied a prohibition of whatsoever is contrary to what is commanded and in every prohibition a command of all duties opposite to that which is forbidden For example in the second Commandment which under the name of Images forbids the inventing or using of any form of worship of mans devising there is withall commanded the worship of God according to his own will in the use of the Ordinances prescribed and warranted by his Word as prayer and hearing of the Word receiving the Sacraments And in the third Commandment under the prohibition of taking Gods name in vain is commanded the taking up of it with all holy reverence and fear Thou shalt have no other gods that is thou shalt have me for thy God Keep holy the Sabbath that is do not break it 3. Every Commandment of God is spiritual and doth binde the inward man as well as the outward Humana lex ligat manum linguam divina verò ligat animam Original sinne is condemned in the whole Law but it seemeth to be directly condemned in the first and last Commandment for these two concern properly the heart of man the first respecting it so far as it concerneth God the last so far as it concerns man whether himself or others 4. In respect of the authority that commands all the precepts are equal Iames 2. 11. In respect of the objects of the duties commanded the Commandments of the first Table are of greatest importance Matth. 22. 38. if equal proportion be observed and comparison made because the services therein required are more immediately directed unto God and consequently he is more immediately concerned in them then in the duties of the second Table 1 Sam. 2. 25. Isa. 7. 13. The negative Commandments binde us more strongly then the affirmative for they oblige us alwayes and to all times the affirmative although they binde us alwayes yet they binde us not to all times A man is not bound alwayes to worship God but he is bound never to exhibit divine worship to a creature He is not bound at all times and in all places to professe his faith but he is
Christ who wore a Crown of Thorns for me e In the Primitive times they were wont to call Martyrdom by the name of Corona Martyrii the Crown of Martyrdom and Stephen the Protomartyr had his name in Greek from a Crown Erant torti torquentibus fortiores Cyprian Reformati ligneas sanctorum Papistae vivas Dei comburunt Imagines Qui primi relictis patriis ritibus ac lege qui abjectis repudiatis rebus omnibus quae solent esse hominibus in vita gratissima charissima Christum sunt sequuti qui ilii no●a atque admirabilia dicenti fidem tribuerunt gravia dura praecipienti obedierunt denique cervices suas obtulerunt pro illius Doctrina Gloria aliquid certè in co majus excellentius animadverterunt humana sapientia potentia Lod. Viv de verit Fid. Christ l. 2. c. 14. f Non paena sed causa facit Martyrem g Lib. 2. c. 25. Meminerunt Mosis Diodorus Siculus Strabo Plinius Tacitus quoque post eos Dionysius Longinus de Sermonis sub limitate Iamnis autem Mambris qui in Aegypto Mosi restiterunt praeter Talmundicos Plinius Apulcius Grotius de verit relig Christ. * Bish. Andrews in his large exposition on the ten Commandments h Credite me vobis folium recitare Sybille i Vid. Spanhem Dub. par 2. Dub. 34. Sect. 6 7. k Exercit. 1. ad Annal. Bar. * Isa. 8. 20. Psal. 19. The Authors often testifie that they speak not of themselves or by any humane instinct but from Gods command and the Spirit inspiring l Christ commends Moses the Prophets and Psalms by which names are meant all the Books belonging to the Canon of the Hebrews m The holy Ghost inwardly witnesseth in the hearts of the faithfull that the Scriptures are the Word of God 1 Joh. 2. 20 27. 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12. 12. 3. Joh. 16. 23. 14. 26. Isa. 51. 16. Isa. 59. 21. Rom. 8. 16. The inspiration of the Spirit is considered as an efficient cause which disposeth our faculties to believe the truth and not as an argument of the truth The Pelagians say The faculties of the soul are well enough disposed to understand and believe the things of God without the inward inspiration and illumination of the Spirit Scripturam tanquam mortuam literam intuentur meros spiritus inflatis buccis crepant interim tamen neque verbum neque Spiritum retinentes Hic autem audis Paulum Scripturae testimoniis ut firmissimis potissimum nit● c. Luth. in 1 Cor. 15. 3 4. Quocirca noli esse immodicus jactator Spiritus si non apertum externum verbum habueris neque enim bonus e●● qu●m jact●s Spiritus sed ipsissimus Diabolus Id. ibid. Omnes homines quantumvis illustrati Spiritu sancto tamen manent discip●li ●erb● Luth. Tom. 4. The work of the Spirit now is not to perfect Scripture or to adde any thing to its discovery or to be ●● st●a● of a Scripture where it is wanting much lesse where the Scripture is But to remove the darknesse from our understanding that we may see clearly what the Scripture speaks clearly Before the Scripture was perfected the Spirit did enlighten the Prophets and Pen-men of Scripture both wayes But now I know no teaching of the Spirit save only by its illuminating ●● sanctifying works teaching men no new lesson nor the old without book but to read with understanding what Scripture Nature Creatures and Providences teach Mr Baxters Saints everlasting Rest Part 1. Sect. 51. n 1 John 3. 8. 1 John 2. 20. * Fides Christiana non acquiritur sed infunditur n Leviculum est quod objiciunt qui contra sentiunt Si omnis Scriptura Divinitus sit inspirata sequuturum inde etiam Graecorum Gentilium Scripturas esse divinitus inspiratas nam ut benè respondet Theophylactus oportebat eos novisse quod Paulus ante dixerat Sacras literas nosti Rivet Isag. ad Script Sac. o Aliud sanè Prop●●tas hoc vel illud scripsisse aliud verò scripsisse ut Prophetas Spanhem Vide Lod. Viv. de verit Fid. Christ. l. 5. c. 1. p Nothing crosseth humane wisdom more then the Scripture Authoritas sine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scriptur● Illud authenticum dicitur quod sibi sufficit quod se commendat sustinet probat ex se sidem ac authoritatem habet Whitaker q Every principle is known by it self The Scripture is the primum credendum the first thing to be believed we must believe it for it self and all other things for their conformity with it r Eccius reckons this among heretical Assertions Major est Scripturae quam Ecclesiae Authoritas s Nisi Deus hominibus placuerit non erit Deus said Tertullian in Apol. If God please not man he shall not be God as truly and certainly as God is God so truly is the Scripture the Scripture Spiritus sanctus Spiritus veritatis loquitur semper in Scriptura in Ecclesia verò quandoque Spiritus humanus spiritus erroris Rainoldus Thesi. 3. l. 11. t See Chami●rs sixth Book de Canone divers Chapters and Mr Pembles Vindiciae Gratiae pag. 207. to 222. u Superfluus mihi labor videtur eorum qui adco sollicite illud quoad nos inquisiverunt quia n● cogitari quidem potest ulla corum librorum authoritas nisi quoad nos Cham. x Matth. 28. 20 18. 20. John 15. 26. 16. 13. y Scriptura est vel ipsa scriptio literarum per lineas certas pictura vel ipsa doctrina per eas Scripturas significata in iis literis contenta Scriptione fatemur Ecclesiam esse antiquiorem sed negamus esse antiquiorem ea doctrina quae significatur ea scriptione Chamier Tom. 1. l. 1 c. 22. z Fuit Scriptura ante Moysen materialiter non formaliter Quibus lect is verbis adeo exultant quasi reperissent id quod pu●●i in faba se reperisse clamitant tamque considenter ac ●i ad plenum victoriae fructum sola triumphi gloria deesset Chamierus a So Musculus Calvin Peter Martyr and Whitaker expound those words observe the composition of the word it signifieth to move with other things b Gerson saith he taketh the Church for the Primitive Church and that Assembly which saw and heard Christ. c Ecclesi● non habet magisteri●●m supra Scripturas sed Ministerium circa Scripturas There are two causes why the Apocrypha are cast out of the Canon 1. External the Authority of the Church decreeing and the quality of the Authours 2. Internal the style the fabulous and wicked things Chamier d Ecclesiae id est Romano Pontifici vel soli vel cum Concilio magisterium tribuunt summum adeo ut solennis sit apud eos formula indicet magister sidei Amesius e Dr Chalonero Credo Ecclesiam Catholicam Ecclesia dicitur Fundamentum metaphoricè impropriè fundamentum
hac Epistola fuit una de auctore altera de authoritate ejus Bellarm. l. 1. de verb. Dei c. 17. Vide Drusium ad titulum ad Hebraeos De side est Epistolam ad Hebraeos esse Scripturam Canonicam Cornel. a Lapide Dr Fulk against Martin Multo facilius dicere quis istius Epistolae non sit Author quàm quis sit Author Cameron Tomo tertio praelect in epist. ad Heb. ubi multis rationibus probare conatur Paulum non fuisse illius Authorem Tantum vellemus Epistolam ad Hebraeos non adscribi Paulo quam firmis Argumentis persuasi simus alium esse Auctorem Calvinus in Epist. It hath pleased the Spirit of God in wisdom to conceal from us the names of the Authors of some Books both in the Old and New Testament God would have us believe his Word though we know not the Authors it is written by the Spirit of God though we know not whose hand God guided Dr Holsworth on Luk. 22. 11 12. g Sciebat nomen suum invisum Hebraeis esse quamvis ad fidem jam conversis propterea quod ipse prae caeteris legem veterem esse abrogatam acerrimè disputabat cujus legis illi adhuc aemulatores erant Actorum vigesimo primo Bellarminus ex Hieronymo haec citat l. 1. de verbo Dei cap. 17. Vide Bezam in titulum illum Epistola Pauli Apostoli ad Hebraeos Certè non pauca sunt in hac Epistola quae alibi apud Paulum totidem penè verbis scribuntur Beza Compare 2 Pet. 3. 15. with 1 Pet. 1. 1. Other Books have no name prefixed and yet they are certainly believed to be Canonical as Iob Iudges Ruth Chronicles h Epistola Pauli ad Hebraeos Hebraico id est sermone tunc in Syria usitato scripta fuit ab alio versa quem quidam Clementem fuisse volunt alii alium Salmasius de Helenistica i Waltherus in officina Biblica Bellarminus ubi supra k Jun. Parallel lib. 3. cap. 9. pag. 466. Vide Waltheri officinam Biblicam l Epistolae aliorum Apostolorum Catholicae dicuntur quia generatim ad omnes ●ideles in omnes quasi mundi partes missae sunt ista inscriptione à Paulinis distinguuntur quae vel ad certas Ecclesias vel ad certos homines missae fuerunt Rivetus in Catholico Orthodoxo Hieron Epist. Fam. M ● Pemble on Justification Sect. 6. ● 1. m This may be seen in the Harmony of Confessions n Rivet Iesuit● vapulans c. 9. Waltherus in officina Biblica Sect 281. Waltherus also in officina Biblica holds it Canonical o Rainoldus de lib. Apoc ●om 1. praelect quarta Vide etiam pr●olectionem tertiam p As Eusebius and Ierom witnesse Chap. 1. 11 13. Eusebius l. 2. 24 3. 21. Zanchy hath done well on the first Epistle Calvin on all three * Irenaeus Tertullian Athanasius Vide Euseb. l. 2. c. 23. l. 3. c. 22. Erasm. in Anno. It is reckoned among the Canonical books and cited by Athanafius Tertullian Cyprian Origen Ierom under Iudes name Iohn neither in his Epistles nor Revelation cals himself an Apostle This short yet General Epistle was written the last of all the Epistles and is therefore called by some Fasciculus It was written by Iude the brother of Iames and Kinsman of Christ he lived longer then all the rest of the Apostles save Iohn Besides the Dedication and Preface it contains two things 1. Warnings of the Church against false Doctors 2. Woes against false Teachers q Vocatur ist● liber Apocalypsis seu Revelationis quia in eo continentur ea quae Deus revelavit Ioanni Ioannes Ecclesiae Ludov. de Tena Sextus Senensis idem ferè habet Bibliothecae Sanctae l. 7. Apocalypsis Iohannis tot ●habet Sacrament● quot verba Hieron epist. Fam. lib. 2. epist. 1. Nomen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 teste Hieronymo soli Scripturae est proprium apud Ethnicos non usitatum sonat revelationem earum rerum quae prius non quidem Deo nobis autem occultae minus manifestae fuerunt Peculiare est Iohanni prae reliquis librorum N. T. Scriptoribus Filium Dei vocare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 confer Joh. 1. 1. and 14. Iam verò candem appellationem tribuit Filio Dei ●n hoc libro Apoc. 19. v. 13. Gerardus Waltherus Vide Bezae Pr●legomena in Apocalypsin Non illud receptum est quod ex verbis Apocal. cap. 20. colligerunt Chiliastae qui ab Ecclesia explosi sunt ut Haeretici Sanctos nempe in terris cum Christo regnaturos annis mille Rainold de lib. Apoc. Tom. 2. Praelect 131. r Mr Selden of Tithes cap. 1 ex Bodin Meth. Hist. See Mountag against him c. 1. p. 291. See Broughton on Apoc. p. 244. Apocalypsin Iohannis Commentationibus i●tactam se relinquere fatetur Lutherus quod dubiae sit interpretationis arcani sensus in qua etsi periculum sui multi hactenus fecerint nihil certi tamen in medium protulisse Zepperus Mr Perkins on the first three Chapters Consectaries from the Books of Scripture See Luke 1. 69 70. Acts 3. 18 10. 43. ●otum vetus Testamentum rejiciebant Manichaei tanquam à Deo malo profectum Duos n. illi Deos impiè singebant quorum unus bonus malus alter esset Whitakerus de Scripturis Libri digni qui abscondantur magis quam qui legantur Athanas. in Synops. Sac. Script Stephen Act. 7. 42. cites a book of the twelve lesser Prophets and so confirms the authority of them all being in one volume Luke 16. 29. Vide Whitakeri controv 1. quest 3. c. 3. p. 210. * The History of Susanna Dan. 13. and Bel cap. 14. and the song of the three Children Dan. 3. Ezra is accounted by some as the Apocrypha of the Apocrypha because it was never owned for Canonical either by the Jewes Romish Church in general or Protestant Writers The Apocryphal Books are either purer as Syrach Wisdom B●●●ch the first of Maccabees and the prayer of Manasses or more impure as the rest Toby Iudith the second of Maccabees the supplement of Esther and Daniel Nos quidem non negamus horum librorum plerosque Sapientia● praesertim Ecclesiai●icum esse valde bonos utiles omnibus Tractationibus praeserendos sed propriè per excellentiam Cano●icos esse i●sallibilis veritatis è quibus sirma ducantur argumenta id verò inficiamur Rainold de lib. Apoc. praelect 6. See Mr Lightfoot on Luk. 1. 17. p. 5. 6. Acts 6. 1. 9. 29. 11. 20. Solebant pueri praeparari excoli ad audiendas sacras Scripturas libris Sapientiae Ecclesiastici quemadmodum qui purpuram volunt prius lanam insiciunt ut in quit Cicero Rainol de lib Apoc. tom ● praelect 18. * Chamier de Canonc l. 4. c. 2. Musculus Waltherus a Because they were the Scriptures of the Prophets Rom. 16. 26. A
Cains speech the Translator knows not whether he shall english it Gen. 4. 13. My sinne is greater then can be forgiven or my punishment is greater then can be born Dr Clark See D. Halls Holy Panegyrick p. 484. Horace Before sinne came into the world there was no evil Gen 1. 31. but when sin came which was the first and is the chiefest evil it brought with it all other evils When Adam sinned all other creatures should have been destroyed they were all cursed for mans use There is a curse on mans body 1. Weating and wasting labour 2. Mutilation 3. Deformity want of that beauty which God bestowed on him 4. Sicknesse 5. Old-age Bish. Bilsons Redempt of mankinde by the bloud of Christ in conclus to the Reader for the clearing of certain object Spiritual plagues are the greatest 1. In respect of the subject they light on the soul mercies to the soul are the greatest mercies 2. They are not only judgements from God but for sinne in us Isa. 63. 17. 3. They are the greatest evidences of eternal wrath Iohn 13. ult Gregorius l. 4. Moral It is such a stain as cannot be got out but by a remedy that is infinite Isa. 34. 13. All the tribulation in the world cannot do it Ier. 6. latter end The bloud of bul● and goats could not purge the conscience from dead works nothing could get it off but the heart bloud of Jesus Christ Ier. 28. later end Heb. 9. 13 14. Hell fire will not do it * In peccato duo sunt Quorum unum est aversio ab incommutabili bono quod est iusi●●●um Unde ex ha● parte peccatum est infinitum Aliud quod est in peccato est inordinata conversio ad commutabile bonum ex hac parte peccatum e●i sinitum non enim possunt esse actus creaturae infiniti Exparte igitur aversionis respondet peccato poena damni quae etiam est infinita Est enim amissio infiniti boni scilicei Dei Ex parte autem inordinatae conversionis respondet ei poena sensus qu● etiam est f●●●ta Aquinas 1● 2● Quaest. 87. Art 4. Peccatum non formaliter sed materialiter objectivè est infinitum quia peccato majestas infinita violatur The Pelagians whom the Socinians follow say Mors est conditio naturae non peccati argumentum vel poena Death is rather the condition of nature then the fruit of ●in * De extraneis judicare vetat Apostolus 1 Co. 5. 12. Ideoque hos infantes libero Dei judicio relinquimus non audemus salutem cuiquam permittere manenti extra foedus Christi Molinaeus Arminiani dicunt neminem damnari propter originale peccatum hoc est Turcarum Sarac●norum Ethnicorum liberi in infantia defuncti regnum Coelorum ingrediuntur consequenter meliori conditione sunt quam sun Abrahamus aut Moses Virgo Maria dum in terris agerent Poterant enim illi perire juxta sententiam vestram non possunt Turcarum liberi in infantia defuncti Et tamen omnes singulos irae filios nasci profitetur Apostolus quae ratio sub imaginationem cadit quare non moriantur ●●iam silii irae Twiss cont Corvinum c. 9. sect 3. Three things fill up the measure of the sins of a Nation Universality Impudence Obstinacy * Proinde bonus si serviat liber est malus autem etiam si regnet servus est nec unius hominis sed quod est gravius tet dominorum quot vitiorum August de civit Dei l. 4. c. 3. M. Burgess makes the opposing of sin and abstaining from it one of his Signs of Grace See his Treatise of Grace Sect. 2. Serm. 14. Christians go to God for Justification ne peccatum damnet that the damning power of sin may be taken away For sanctification ne regnet that the raigning power of sinne may be destroyed For Glorification ne sit that the very being of it might be abolished * God hath preserved some of his people from shameful sins and stains Enoch Abraham Caleb Ioshua and many others and we are commanded to be careful to live without just reproach 2 Pet. 1. 5 M. Rogers in his 7 Treat c. 11. See M. Hildersam on Psal. 51. the Title They may lose their peace Psal. 51. 12. wound their own consciences Prov. 6. 33. weaken their graces be a reproach to all the Saints See Jer. 13. 11 12 13. Deu. 32 19. Mi●a 1. 5. * 1. They are nearer unto God then other men Mic. 2. 8. Ier. 12. 8. 2. Their sins provoke him more then the sins of others being committed 1 Against more light Isa. 22. 1. 29. 1. inward light Psal 51. 6. 2 Against greater mercies those of the new Covenant the bloud of a Son the graces of the Spirit Am. 9. 3. 3. Their sins dishonour God more then the sins of others Rom. 2. 24. Prov. 20. 9. Eccles. 7. 20. 1 John 1. 8. It was much disputed whether Carthage should be destroyed in regard it had been such a great enemy to Rome and had sent forces to the very walls But some opposed it because then Rome would degenerate into luxury and there would be divisions among themselves when they had no common enemy to encounter Vide Livium Aug. de civ Dei l. 1. c. 30. * God humbleth his people three waies 1. By love melts them with his goodnesse 2. By suffering 3. By sinning that is the worst way as the other by his love is the best Gods people have principles of love to melt their souls Ezek. 36. 31. Hos. 3. 15. There are two aggravations of their sins 1. That they should sinne against the sweetnesse of Grace Iohn 6. 61. 2. That they should sinne against the power of Grace Psalm 51. 6. A Swine is where he would be when he is in the mud but so is not the Sheep The Empresse Eudoxia sent Chrysostome a threatning message to which he answered Go tell her Nil nisi peccatum timeo Iudaeos à carne suilla abstinere Deus jussit id potissimum voluit intelligi ut se à peccatis at que immunditiis abstinerent Est enim lutulentum hoc animal immundum nec unquam coelum aspicit sed in terra toto corpore ore projectum ventri semper pabulo servit Lact. l. 4. divin Instit. de vera saptentia Vide plura ibid. A Reverend and Religious man had this written before his eyes in his study saith Mr Gataker Noli peccare nam Deus videt Angeli astant diabolus accusabit conscientia testabitur infernus cruciabit There were five men met together that asked one another what means they used to abstain from sin The first answered that he continually thought upon the certainty of death and the uncertainty of the time of it and that made him live every day as it were his last day The second meditated of the severe account he was to give at the day
most unjust means extort money from Gojim that is the Gentiles Paulus Fagius in his Annotat. on Deut. 17. 17. Scripture Arguments are the chiefest to convince an unbeliever Christ by divers Arguments Iohn 5. labours to convince the Jews that he was the Messiah promised 1. Iohn bare witnesse of him vers 33. 2. His works bare witnesse of him verse 36. 3. The Father did bear witnesse of him vers 37. 4. He produceth the Testimony of the Scriptures vers 39. They are they which testifie of me Will you not believe Iohn my miracles my Word from Heaven then believe the written Word If we believe not the Testimomy of Scripture nothing will convince us though one rise from the dead nor Christ himself if he were here in the flesh and should preach unto us Ioh. 5. ult The Lord in executing of his Judgements commmonly observes proportion and retaliation Antichrist is the greatest opposite to Gods Law and Word he is called therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thess. 2. 8. The lawlesse one He is without Law above Law against Law He abuseth Scripture takes upon him to jud●● and interpret Scripture therefore it shall be his ruine 2 Thess. 2. 8. God shall destroy him with the Spirit of his mouth id est Verbo suo Beza God hath consecrated the Word to this purpose the end of it is not only to save but destroy being the savour of death to some and it is a fit instrument for such a work Antichrists strength is in mens consciences only this will pierce thither Heb. 4. 12. God useth the Word for the destruction of Antichrist these wayes 1. It discovers him his doctrine his errors 2. It hardens him 3. It condemneth him and passeth sentence against him CHAP. III. II. The Books of Scripture FRom the Divine ●lows the Canonical Authority of the Scripture The books of Scripture are called Canonical books say some from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which word is used 2 Cor. 10. 13. Phil. 3. 16. Gal. 6. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mark the double Emphasis this notable Canon because they were put into the Canon by the Universal Church and acknowledged to be divinely inspired by it and also are made a perfect Canon or Rule of all Doctrine concerning Religion Credendorum agendorum of Faith and Manners of all things which are to be believed or done toward salvation But Cameron thinks it is not termed Canonical because it is a Rule for that book saith he is called Canonical which is put into the Catalogue which the Ancients called a Canon of those writings which are esteemed Divine Becanus saith They are called Canonical both because they contain a Rule which we ought to follow in faith and manners and because they are put into the Catalogue of Divine books The Conditions of a Canon are these 1. It must contain Truth or be an expresse Form and Image of Truth which is in the Divine minde 2. It must be commanded sanctified and confirmed by Divine Authority that it may be a Canon to us in the Church These books were sanctified either commonly all of both Testaments by the Testimony of the Spirit and Church and Canon it self or the books of the Old Testament were specially and singularly confirmed by Word Signs and Event as the Pentateuch but the Prophetical books and Hagiographa before their carrying into Babylon by extraordinary sign the Cloud and Veil in the Temple 1 King 8. 10. Levit. 16. 2. and Gods answer by Ephod Urim and Thummim Exod. 28. 30. after their carrying away into Babylon by singular testimonies of events The books of the New Testament are confirmed by the Son of God revealed in flesh by his sayings and deeds Heb. 1. 2. and by the powerful Ministry of the Apostles by Signs Vertues and Miracles Mark 16. 20. There is a three-fold Canon in the Church Divine Ecclesiasticall and False The Divine Canon is that which properly and by it self is called the Word of God immediately inspired of God into the Prophets and Apostles This according to the divers times of the Church is distinguished into the Old and New Testament 2 Cor. 3. 6 14. this is a common division of the sacred Bible among Christians as in the version of Tremellius and Iunius Testamenti veteris novi Biblia sacra and the Geneva gives that Title to their Bible La Bible qui est toute la Saincte Escriture du vi●l noveau Testament Augustine thinks they are better called Vetus novum Instrumentum Heinsius Grotius Vetus novum Foedus Vide Grotii Annotat. in libros Evangelii A Covenant is an Agreement between two a Testament is the Declaration of the Will of one It is called in regard of the Form Convention and Agreement between God and man a Covenant in regard of the manner of confirming it a Testament For 1. In a Testament or last Will the Testators minde is declared so is the Will of God in his Word therefore it is called a Testimony often Psal. 19. and 119. 2. Here is a Testator Christ a Legacy eternal life Heirs the Elect a Writing the Scripture Seals the Sacraments 3. Because it is ratified by the death of Christ Heb. 9. 16 17. The Books of the Old Testament are the holy Scriptures given by God to the Church of the Jews shewing them what to believe and how God would be worshipped The New Testament containeth the books which treat of salvation already exhibited and Christ already come in the flesh All the books of the Old Testament were written originally in Hebrew because they were committed unto the Hebrews Rom. 3. 2. except what Daniel and Ezra wrote in the Chaldee The Jewish Church receiving them from God kept them and delivered them to Posterity Many grave Authors hold That the Hebrew was the first Tongue and Mother of all the rest and it may probably be collected from the names of our first Parents It was called Hebrew saith Erpenius not from Heber of the Posterity of Shem as Iosephus Ierom and others think when it is manifest that he rather spake Chaldee then Hebrew because Abraham the Patriarch which drew his original from him was a Chaldean but it was so called saith Erpenius as all the Rabbins Origen and others testifie from the Hebrews which people arose from Canaan It is honoured with the Title of the Holy Tongue saith the same Erpenius because the most holy God spoke it to his Prophets delivered his holy Will written in it to the Church and because it is very probable from the opinion of great men that holy men shall use it with God hereafter in Heaven Vide Buxtorfium de Linguae Hebraeae origine Antiquitate Sanctitate There are many Hebraisms also in the New Testament many words and phrases rather used according to the manner of the Hebrews then the Greeks by which it is manifest that the same Spirit was
the Author of the Old and New Testament The knowledge of the Hebrew much conduceth to the learning of those famous oriental Tongues the Chaldee Syriack Arabick and Aethiopick by reason of the great affinity which they have with their Mother The Books of the Old Testament may be divided several wayes in respect of the Style some were written in Prose some in Verse in respect of Time some were written before their being taken Captives into Babylon as Samuel Isaiah Hosea and many others some in the Captivity and some after as Haggai Zachary Malachi The Hebrews divide the Bible ex instituto Esdrae into three special parts 1. The Law the five books of Moses 2. The Prophets ● The former Ioshua Iudges two books of Samuel and two of the Kings so called because they speak of the first Prophets 2. The later 1. Greater three 2. Lesser twelve 3. The Hagiographa for want of a more special name by which title all the rest are understood and they are eleven Our Saviour himself mentions this most ancient distinction Luk. 24. 44. calling all the rest of the books besides the Law and Prophets Psalms Ubi Psalmi ponuntur pro omnibus libris qui Hagiographorum parte continentur ex quibus etiam in N. T. quaedam citantur tanquam impleta Buxtorf Tiberias cap. 11. In Masora quando vox aliqua ter duntaxat reperitur quidem in tribus his Scripturae partibus tum dicunt Ter occurrit Semel in Lege semel in Prophetis semel in Hagiographis Id. ib. All the Scriptures of the Old Testament in other places are comprized in the Law and Prophets Matth. 5. 17. 7. 12. and 11. 13. 20. 40. Acts 13. 15. 24. 14 26. 22. 28. 23. Rom. 3. 21. or Moses and the Prophets Luk. 24. 27. 16. 29. or in the Scriptures of the Prophets Rom. 16. 26. or the Prophets alone Luke 1. 70. 24. 25 27. Rom. 1. 2. Heb. 1. 1. the name Prophet being taken as it is given to every holy Writer The Jews and the An●ient reckon twenty two Books in the Old Testament according to the number of the Letters of the Alphabet for memory sake Ruth being joyned with the Book of Iudges and the Lamentations being annexed to Ieremiah their Author Hebraeis sunt initiales medianae literae 22 finales quinque Quamobrem V. T. modò in 22. modò in 27. libros partiuntur All the books of both Testaments are sixty six thirty nine of the Old and twenty seven of the New Testament Some would have Hugo Cardinal to be the first Author of that division of the Bible into Chapters which we now follow No man put the Verses in the Latine Bibles before Robert Stephen and for the New Testament he performed that first being holpen by no book Greek or Latine Vide Croii observat in Nov. Test. c. 7. This Arithmetical Distinction of Chapters which we have in our Bibles was not from the first Authors Of which that is an evident token that in all the Quotations which are read in the New Testament out of the Old there is not found any mention of the Chapter which would not have been altogether omitted if all the Bibles had then been distinguished by Chapters as ours distinguishing of the Bible into Chapters and Verses much helps the Reader but it sometimes obscures the sense Dr Raynolds gives this counsel to young Students in the study of Divinity that they first take their greatest travail with the help of some learned Interpreter in understanding St Iohns Gospel and the Epistle to the Romans the summe of the New Testament Isaiah the Prophet and the Psalms of David the summe of the Old and in the rest they shall do well also if in harder places they use the judgement of some godly Writer as Calvin and P. Martyr who have written best on the most part of the Old Testament The Books of the Old Testament are 1. Legal 2. Historical 3 Poetical 4. Prophetical 1. Legal which the Hebrews call from the chief part Torah Deut. 31. 9. 33. 4. the Grecians from the number Pentateuch that is the five-fold volume the five Books of Moses Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomy all written by Moses as it is commonly agreed except the last Chapter in the end of Deuteronomy concerning his death written by Ioshua In which five Books are described the things done in the Church from the beginning of the world to the death of Moses Atque hîc finitur Pentateuchum historiam annorum 2552. cum dimidio ab initio mundi complectens R. Usserius in Annal. V. T. cap. 37. Vide Sims Paras ad Chron. Cathol cap. 1. The Sadduces as some say received no other Scripture but these five Books of Moses therefore Christ Matth. 22. 32. proves the Resurrection of the dead which they denied out of the second Book of Moses but Scultetus saith that they rejected not the Prophets lib. 1. exercit Evang. cap. 22. See my Annotat. on Matth. 22. 23. Anciently it was not the custome of holy Writers to adde Titles to what they had written but either they left their works altogether without Titles or the first words were Titles the Titles now in use as Genesis Exodus were prefixed according to the arbitrement of men and the like is to be thought of those before the Historicall Books of the New Testament as Matthew Mark Luke Iohn With the Hebrews the Titles of Books are taken sometimes from the subject Matter or Argument as in the Books of Iudges Ruth Kings Proverbs and others of that kinde sometimes from the Authors or Amanuenses rather as in the Books of Ioshua and the Prophets sometimes from the initial words with which the Books begin which Ierom follows The Books of Moses are denominated from the initial words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. In Principio i. e. Genesis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Haec nomina h. e. Exodus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. Et vocavit h. e. Leviticus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. In Deserto i. e. Numeri 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5. Verba sive Deuteronomium These are subdivided again into fifty four Sections that the reading of them may be finished in so many Sabbaths which is signified Act. 15. 21. Iunius Ainsworth and Amama with Calvin Cornelius a Lapide and Piscator have done well on the Pentateuch 1. Genesis In Hebrew Bereshith the first word of the Book by the Septuagint it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which appellation the Latine Church retained because it sets forth the first generation of things Chap. 2. 4. and of Adam or mankinde Gen. 5. 1. It consists of fifty Chapters and contains a History of two thousand three hundred and sixty nine yeares from the Creation of the World to the death of Ioseph The best Expositors of this Book are Mercer Rivet Paraeus Calvin Peter Martyr