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A13952 A briefe institution of the common places of sacred divinitie Wherein, the truth of every place is proved, and the sophismes of Bellarmine are reprooved. Written in Latine, by Lucas Trelcatius, and Englished by Iohn Gawen, minister of Gods word.; Scholastica, et methodica, locorum communium s. theologiæ institutio. English Trelcatius, Lucas.; Gawen, John, minister of Gods word. 1610 (1610) STC 24261; ESTC S103024 183,328 620

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same pertaineth to a Divine and to the Principall end of Divinity which is Salvation is generally limitted as it were within 2. boundes of places and times for wee must necessatily know and discerne a double estate of man the one in this life while hee is in the way the other after this life when hee shall attayne to the last Gaole eyther of felicity or eternall death In this life wee are wont ought to consider a double estate of man according to the distinction of the works which indeede passe from God to the creatures by an outward and temporall action the one of nature the other of grace that belonging to man as he is naturall as touching himselfe this as hee is to bee advanced by the grace of God aboue his nature and naturall condition The Former State of man in this life which is according to nature ought to bee discerned and distinguished according to the divers condition and consideration of Nature Now the Nature of man is two wayes considered one way according to his Beginning and first Originall condition and creation the other way according to the Change and Corruption which followed after as man fell from his Naturall goodnesse by his owne mutability and fault into the evill of Nature and guilte or sinne wherevpon there ariseth a double Estate of Man in Nature the one of Integrity the other of Corruption OF THE STATE OF Integrity or first Creation of MAN according to the Image of GOD. The Part Confirming CHAP. II. THe State of Integrity or the first creation of man before his Fall is a singular worke of God in Nature whereby hee made man a Reasonable creature being of a compound or double nature according to his Image for his owne glory and the good of Man himselfe The Efficient Cause is Iehovah Elohim The Lord God or God in the Plurality of Persons and Vnity of Essence for there is but one finishing or perfecting of the worke of one Essence though according to the distinction of the persons the order of working is distinct For the Father created by the Sonne through meanes of the power of the Spirite himselfe Now God effected it both by a cōmon consultation will and consent going before a Gen. 1.27 and by a manner of of effecting or creating partly immediate if you respect the soule which God of nothing created by infusing and infused by creating b Gen. 1.7 partly mediate if you respect the body which was brought forth from a matter pre-existent The Matter or Subject of this first estate is humane nature endued with all perfections which in thēselues might befitte for a thing created according to the condition thereof Now whereas wee call it a matter wee vnderstand not onely that which is incorporeall or the corporeal onely but that which is composed and as it were tempered of both for there are two essentiall partes of this Subject or humane nature whereof wee treate the Body and the Soule the truth whereof ought to be discerned and distinguished by their first Beginning Substance and Qualities By their first beginning because the bodies of our first Parents were created of a matter preexistent or having a fore-being eyther neere as the body of Eue of Adams ribbe and the body of Adam of the dust c Gen. 2.7 22. 1. Cor. 15.45 or remote of the 4. Elements which Synecdochically are vnderstoode by the name of earth as being an Element for substance and quantity predominant but the soules were created of nothing by the vertue of Gods infinite power as after the same manner God createth new soules in every body for they are not brought forth from the body d Per traducem by derivation but are brought into the body by creation e Psal 33.14 Zach. 12.1 Heb. 12.9 nor are they forced out by the power of the matter as other living creatures as well perfect as imperfect for they are simple spirites which are neyther divided nor changed nor corrupted By Substance because the bodies are compound substances furnished with diverse Organes or Instruments by which the soules exercise their powers and faculties but the soules are substances both simple and immateriall for being compared to other materiall thinges they consist of no matter and that they haue not any materiall matter their beginning and originall hath taught as also immortall not absolutely by themselues by the Law of nature or composition for God alone being life it selfe is by himselfe immortall but by the grace of God the creator and his divine will which created the same to be such that though it had a beginning yet it should not haue an end f 1. Tim 6.16 Luc. 16.22 23.43 By Qualities because even their bodies had also an incorruptibility not in their owne nature absolutely for everything composed of contraries is corruptible but by Gods grace whereby man was able as touching his body not to die vnlesse through his g Gen. 3.19 Rom. 5.12 Iac. 1.15 owne fault hee had voluntarily brought on himselfe the first and second death also a Bewty so that there was not any Infirmity or deformity but a convenient proportion and a most godly well ordered constitution but the Soules which are humane and as they are so had two principall faculties the vnderstanding and the will according as the obiect of them is two-fold to witte Being and Goodnesse to which faculties as beeing Subalternall all the other are referred For the vnderstanding apprehendeth Being and Truth the vniversall indeede by it selfe but the particular by sense The Will inclineth forward to good which because it is in the things them selues it doth not properly draw and take vnto it the very things but is drawne of them The Forme of this first Estate of man is limitted in the condition and consideration of the Image of God according to which man was created Now we call the Image of God that likenesse whereby man resembleth the nature of his Creator after a convenient manner of his nature partly in the soule properly partly in the body because of the Soule Last of all partly in the whole and entire person by reason of the vnion of both In the Soule whether you respect the Nature thereof and the faculty of substance or the Faculties or lastly the qualities of the habites wherby they are perfected The Substance of the Soule resembleth the Nature of God according to her condition and the measure of the condition for three causes first because as that so this also is one though it cōsist of many faculties as her essentiall partes For of one singular thing there is but one substantiall forme Secondly because as that is so also is this simple spirituall immateriall Simple in respect of the materiall i Act. 17.26 Spirituall in respect of the bodies k Gen. 2 9 Immateriall in respect of Originall l Gen. 2.7 Thirdly as that is so is this also incorporeal
of administring or the mediation it selfe which of the Schoole-men is vsually considered eyther in a more large or in a more strict manner in that it is the mediation which is of Christ as the head of all Angels and men generally but in this it is that which is of Christ as the Redeemer of men particularly after which manner hee is of vs here taken But in this Mediation of Christ the Redeemer two proportionable things are considered the person and the working whence it is that there is one mediation tearmed Substantiall another by working The Substantiall Mediation is the conjunct●on of the two natures in one person for the worke of mediation But that which is by operation is performed by certaine degrees the first is of an Arbitrator the second of a Messenger the third of an Intercessor the fourth of satisfaction the last of governing and all these parts of mediation the Person of Christ hath yet doth execute the properties of both natures wholy kept For hee is an arbitrator betweene God and Men a messenger from the Father with vs an Intercessor from vs with the father who for vs prayeth and maketh supplication a Priest who for vs offered himselfe Lastly a Governour who ruleth vs by the vertue and efficacy of his spirite And of these degrees the first second is of the Propheticall office the third and fourth of the Priest-hoode but the last of the kingdome of Christ by his Mediatorship The end of Christs office Supreme is the glory of God Subordinate Redemption Iustification and our Salvation And this is the common way and manner of Christs office The particular maner they distinguish and define to bee the speciall kinds and partes thereof The speciall kindes of Christs office are three according as both the necessity of mans condition without Christ of the deliverance of him from out of the same by Christ as also the verity of that annointing whereof hee is named Christ most clearely convinceth i Psal 45.7 Heb. 2.9 Of mans condition without Christ there are three as it were degrees the first of Ignorance the second of Inordination or disorder the third of guilt from both Mans deliverance from the same is performed according to three contrary degrees which the office of Christ sealeth vnto vs for Prophet●● is set against Ignorance the kingdome of Christ and the building of his kingdome in vs against Inordination the priesthood against guilt The same doth the verity of Christs annointing convince for looke what was the manner of the three-folde calling propheticall priestly and kingly which were wont to be confirmed with the outward oyle k Exod. 30 23.24 28.41 .. 1. Sam. 16.14 1. Kin 19.19 the same is also the manner of Christs office annointed of the Father both as touching those callings and as touching the conferring of gifts in them There is therefore a threefold office of Christ the Mediator of prophesie whereby hee teacheth vs our owne ill the good of divine grace l Mat. 3.17 of Priest whereby hee redeemeth vs from our evils and prepareth for vs divine grace m Psal 110 4. Heb. 7.21 of King whereby hee defendeth vs from all evill and conserveth vs in that conferring of n Psal 2.6 Luc. 1.32 grace And these three offices Christ hath in order performed and doth as yet this day performe in Heaven executing the partes of a Mediator in their order towardes vs and towardes God the Father towardes vs teaching sanctifying and ruling by the power of his Spirite towardes the Father exhibiting his message and the offering vp of himselfe yea and moreover most powerfully exercising his kingly authority given him of the Father The Propheticall Office of Christ is a function of the person whereby he teacheth and instructeth his church The verity of this office is to be discerned by the partes and maners thereof the partes are two the outward publishing and the inward illumination or efficacy of doctrine The outward publishing of doctrine is both the preaching of the Gospell concerning the Grace of God and Redemption of mankind as also the Interpretation of the Law according to the mind of the Law-giver himself and lastly the fore-telling and prophesie of things to come o Ioh. 1.13 Mat 5.17 Mat. 4 17. Esa ●1 ● Ioh. 3.18 The efficacy of doctrine is that speciall accomplishment of the Propheticall office whereby the faithfull are moved by the Spirite of God that both in mind they might conceiue and in heart desire those thinges which are taught by publishing p Ioh. 5.25 6.83 Mat. 16.16 The manner of this office is twofold the one immediate the other mediate The Immediate is whereby Christ according to his divine Nature of himselfe instructed the Patriarkes and Prophets in the olde Testament by visions oracles and dreames but according to both natures hee witting and willing taught mankind in the New Testament by outward voyce q Heb. 11 2. Pet. 1.21 Hence it is that every where hee is called in the Scriptures the Worde of the Eternall Father the Messenger of the Lord the Angell of the covenant r Mal. 3.2 counceller ſ Esa 9.6 and the Apostle of our profession t Heb 3.1 The Mediate is whereby Christ by the Patriarkes and Prophets in the old Testament by his Apostles their Successors in the New doth instruct the church by the Ministery of the Worde and Sacraments u Luc. 24.45 Act. 16.14 Luc. 21.15 The Priestly office of Christ is a Personal worke of Christ God-man wherby hee was ordayned to satisfie God for men Of this office there is vsually delivered in the Scriptures a twofold manner the one according to type the other according to truth The Type was both of calling or person and of execution or actions according to calling The Typicall person in the olde Testamēt was the Priest eyther having an ordinary calling generally according to the order of Levi or extraordinary particularly as Melchisedecke according to whose order Christ both for the dignity of person as also for the manner of calling is called a Priest x Psal 110 ● Heb. 7.21 Actions according to calling are three fold to keepe the Law to offer Sacrifices and to make Intercession The keeping of Gods Law among other things was severally commended to the high Priest the Tables wherof hee was to keepe being given of God and layde vp in the Arke of the covenant Of Sacrifices y H●lasti●orum pacifying which were offered by the Priest and of the types of the sacrifice truely propitiatory there was a twofold sort the one reconciling and z Holocaustum whole burnt the other absolving or redeeming The whole burnt was a sacrifice in which the beast whether greater or lesse being orderly slaine according to the ability of every offerer was wholy burnt and consumed to ashes a Leu. 1.23 and was both Ordinary and Extraordinary The Ordinary one was
they are taken with the Fathers in generall in the former when they treate of the bookes truely canonicall in the latter when of the Apocryphal III. IT belongs vnto him only to prescribe giue and maintaine a Canon in the church who is the Author Lord and Preserver of his Church IIII. NEyther doth the Apocryphal confirme the authority of the Apocryphal nor the Councels of Florence and Trent nor the Ecclesiastical reading nor lastly the Fathers eyther by citing of places out of the Apocryphall or intitling the Apocryphal with the name of holy Scriptures for the Canon of ecclesiasticall reading is one and the Canon of saith is another Distinctions for the perfection of the Scripture VVHereas our Adversaries are wont to bring two kinde of Arguments against the perfection of the Scripture the one against the necessity the other against the sufficiency thereof wee will treate of both together Against Bellarmine 1. Tom. Lib. 4. Cap. 4. I. THere is a two-fold necessity the one absolute the other by an d Or supposition Hypothesis or something is sayed to bee necessary two wayes eyther as the Cause or the e Concausa Fellow-cause the word of God revealed is simply necessary to all men as the cause but the Scripture as the Fellow cause Now it followeth not thus to conclude the Fathers vntill Moses vsed the necessary cause without this the Fellow-cause therefore we may for a conclusion drawne from the change of time is deceitfull II. A Tradition onely is sayed to haue beene eyther b After a sort or in part Simply or Absolutely secundum quid that 〈◊〉 without the Scripture and so wee confesse a tradition to haue beene vntill Moses or simpliciter and that we denie for they had in stead of Scripture other innumerable Principles and Ru●diments III THe whole is sayde to be two waies eyther according to quantity or according to the perfection of the Essence thereof All the Bookes severally are sufficient in their owne Essentiall ●erfection though according to their ●ntirenesse and quantity they haue not the sufficiency of the whole but their owne IIII. THese Bookes which perished eyther were not Canonicall or their substance is found in those which are Canonicall V SOme precepts of God are expressed and manifest some other inwarde and hidden God commaunded his Word to be written downe both by the inward inspiration of the spirit generally and therefore is sayde to bee inspired i Divinitus of God as also expresly to certaine persons in particular k Reu. 1.11 Apoc. 1.11 VI. ALL thinges are contayned in the Scripture eyther expresly or Analogically so what wee are to think● of Women not circumcized of Infants dead before the eight day of the Gentiles saved we may know out of the Scripture Analogically VII A Principle of a Principle cannot be had nor ought to bee sought Now the Scripture is knowne to be divine not from Tradition but first from the inward testimony of the spirite of Christ secondly from the testimony of the Apostles as the publicke Notaries in the Church Thirdly from the testimony of the Scripture as a divine Instrument and lastly from the ●●stimony of the Church of God open● and as it were in a pillar setting ●rth the testimony of the Apostles and ●f the Scripture VIII THe Scripture is not doubtfull in it selfe but vnto vs by accident and ●ther seemeth so to be through the cor●uption of our vnderstanding but God 〈◊〉 an infallible Interpreter of the same ●y his Spirit and word written and ●f this divine tradition wee haue need ●r the vnderstanding of the Scripture or those things which it behooveth vs ●o know concerning the equality of ●●e persons the proceeding of the Spi●ite originall sinne the descension of Christ into Hell are sufficiently decla●ed in the Scripture for our Salvation IX THose thinges which are spoken concerning the Virginity of Marie af●er the birth of Christ the Passeover to be celebrated on the Lords day the l Paedabaptismo Baptisme of Infantes and Purgatory eyther are not necessary as the first and the second or are found Analogically in the Scriptures as the third or are false as the fourth The Places which are cited by Bellarmine against the perfection of the Scripture 1. Tom. Lib. 4. Cap. 5. are these Ioh. 16.12 Ans The Place treate● of speciall thinges the knowledge o● which is infinite which therefore als● are expressed in the Scriptures not i● particular and one by one but b● Word and in generall or else o● those thinges the Revelation whereof according to the dispensation o● time Christ would defer vntill th● time of that extraordinary and visibl● communicating of the holy Ghost 1. Cor. 11.2 Ans In the holy Supper of the Lord two things concurre● the very substantiall thinges of the Supper to wit the matter and forme se●●ndly the meere Ceremoniall thinges the Rites Those are of themselues ●●cessary and were most faithfully de●ered by the Apostles but these 〈◊〉 after a sort m Secundū qu id for that which is morall 〈◊〉 them is necessary and therefore ●ly written downe of the Apostles ●t that which is Ceremoniall onely is 〈◊〉 Indifferent n Adiapho●um and left free to the ●hurches 2. Thes 2.15 Ans The Word of ●●adition is Equivocall for eyther in ●enerall it signifieth every doctrine ●owsoever delivered by Word or Wri●g or it signifieth in Particular or ●ppositely that doctrine which is not ●itten in the first signification the ●postle taketh it and not in the se●nd 1. Tim. 6.2 2. Tim. 1.13 Ans ●hat the pledge and patterne of whole●me wordes cannot be otherwise ex●ounded then of the Scripture it selfe ●nd the substance of christian doctrine ●ll the circumstances of the place doe teach 2 Ioh. 1.2 Ans That kinde of reasoning hath no consequence which is drawne from particulars eyther deedes or rytes which it was not needefull to expresse in writing but the case is altered concerning the very substance of the doctrine of Faith Distinctions for the playnenesse of the Scripture against Bellarmine 1. Tom. Lib. 3. Cap. 1. I. THe clearenesse or obscurity of the Scripture is two-fold the one to vs partly through the Nature of the thinges partly through our owne infirmity the other in manner and meane of the Scriptures every obscurity whereof mention is made among the Fathers is not of the Scriptures but eyther of the thinges in the Scripture for the maiesty therof or else ours who without the inward light of the spirite cannot know them those thinges which wee know wee know onely in part and after an vnperfect manner II. THe matters of the Scripture though for their maiesty they are vnto vs obscure yet as they are proposed vnto vs in the Scripture they are not obscure for the manner of speaking is every way perspicuous neyther is there in the Scriptures eyther any contrariety or ambiguity or falshood nor doe the speeches which go e
Perpetual or continuall which was dayly performed by two Lambes b Exod. 29 39. the other set because vpon set or appointed dayes it was offered eyther Sabathicall which was every Sabath offered or monethly which was every new Moone or anual which was every year offered c Leu 23.2 3. c. Numb 28.23 The Extraordinary was that which was performed for an Incident necessity eyther publicke of all the people or private of every man d 1. Sam. 7 8. 2. Sam. 24.25 The Redeeming was that whereby some certaine sinnes were purged and there was one for sinne by error or ignorance committed e Leu 4.2.3 c. another for an offence or sinne committed by one witting and willing f Leu. 7.24 both were ordinary eyther in the new Moones as at the Feast of Passeover and Pentecost g Leu. 23 19. Numb 28.15 or extraordinary at any other time Now commeth the thirde action of Priesthoode to witte Intercession whereof there were as it were three partes Presentation whereby the Priest presented himselfe as a Mediator to God for the people Covenant whereby for himselfe and the people hee solemnely promised thankefulnesse and obedience Prayer whereby hee prayed for the remission both of his their sinnes And this is the manner of the type to which the verity of Christes Priestly office every way answereth most agreeably and perfectly whether you respect the calling of the person or the execution of his office The calling of Christes person to this priestly office three arguments doe proue First divine testification wherof the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrewes citeth a two-folde testimony h Heb. 5.5 6. Secondly the voluntary debasement of Christs person and the dispensation of his office whereof there was one onely end even the execution of this office Thirdly the Analogy and comparison of Christs person and Melchisedech which the author to the Hebrewes doth at large prosecute The execution of Christs priestly office is as it were by three partes finished by the fulfilling of the Law by the full payment of punishment and by intercession or by the gracious and effectual application of both The fulfilling of the Law is that wherby hee hath freely and perfectly performed the whole righteousnesse vnto which wee were bound both by a perfect conformity of vnderstanding wil with that Law and by workes agreeing with this Law as being perfect both inward and outward i Rom. 8.4 Ioh. 17.19 Mat 3.15 For two thinges were required that the Law might bee fulfilled the righteousnesse of the person or that which is habituall and the righteousnesse of operation or that which is actuall that from which is the power this from which is the Act of fulfilling Christ had both not for himselfe onely but for vs yet for himselfe because man but for vs because hee was man for vs for as he was made God-man for our sake so those things which he beeing man had and did he had and did them for vs. Hence it is also that many are called just by his obedience and that hee is sayde to bee the end of the Law vnto righteousnesse to every one that beleeveth k Rom. 5.19 The full payment of punishment is the voluntary oblation of Christ whereby hee offered himselfe to God and the Father in the eternall Spirite the price of Redemption for our sinnes being himselfe both the Sacrifice and the Sacrifice There were of that oblation as it were two partes the appointing of the Sacrifice and as it were the preparing of the same for the sacrificing then the very consummation of the Oblation on the Altar of the crosse The appointing and preparing of the Sacrifice all those sufferings doe limite wherewith Christ disposed himselfe voluntarily vnto the oblation of the sacrifice of his body especially about the end of his life and the next day before his death l Mat. 26.38 Ioh. 12 27 Mar. 4.35 Of these sufferings some were Inward in respect of the soule and affection m Heb. 5.7 Apoc. 9.15 Esa 53.5 some outward in respect of the body n Heb. 10.5 Mat. 20.28 for the whole Substance of his Man-hood must needes haue beene possessed in suffering of punishments that hee might saue whole man The consummation of the oblation was made on the crosse by death but because the Scripture maketh mention of a two-fold death to wit naturall which is of this world and supernaturall which is of the other both which were layde vpon Adam the offender and his posterity when the Lord sayde By dying thou shalt die both these Christ for vs suffered and subdued that when the soule was separated from his body o Ioh. 19.30 this when having felt by dispensation the dashing and violent force thereof hee sayde My God my God why hast thou forsaken me p Mat. 29.46 Now vnto both deathes was conjoyned a curse corporall and spirituall by the signe of the crosse that Christ by the curse of his punishment might purge the curse of our guilt q Gal. 3.13 1 Pet. 2.24 for albeit neyther of both were Infinite as touching the time yet both are considered as Infinite touching the absolute quantity and therefore Christ suffered death infinite in deed and not in time because the Infinitenesse of his Merite Satisfaction Sacrifice and Redemption by all meanes went beyond that Infinitenesse of time which the damned feele There remayneth the last part of the Execution of Christs Priest hood which is Intercession whereby Christ applyeth effectually that vnto vs which hee hath deserved by the fulfilling of the Law and the full payment of punishments First by presenting himselfe vnto to God the Father as the onely Mediator and Satisfier that hee might procure vnto vs the presentation of his merite and of his performed satisfaction Heb. 9.24 Rom. 8.34 the remission of sinnes and the restoring of righteousnesse Secondly by promising and vndertaking to God the Father for vs obedience and thankefulnesse the seale and earnest of which vndertaking hee giveth vs even his Spirite by whome hee might stirre vp in vs a desire both to avoyde sinne performe righteousnesse r 1. Pet. 2.5 Rom. 8.26 Mat. 20.38 Lastly by making intercession and praying for vs. ſ Rom. 8.34 And this intercession of Christ as it leaneth vpon his satisfaction and sacrifice so it obtayneth that dignity value which it hath from his whole person whose worke it is The kingly office of Christ is that whereby Christ doth order and desend his kingdome purchased by Redemption But whereas the kingdome of Christ is two-fold the one Essentiall according to nature which he hath cōmon with the Father and the holy Ghost the other Personall according to dispensation of will which hee executeth as being Mediator t Ioh. 18 36. Rom. 14.17 Psal 2.6 Eph. 1.22 in respect of this properly this Kingly office of Christ must needes bee considered Now it is considered by the manner of
onely concerning the condigne but not so much as concerning the congruent The outward impulsiue cause is Christ God-man both in respect of his merit as also of his efficacy and operation Of his merite because both by obeying and suffering in his life and death he purchased for vs the benefite of Iustification t Esa 83.3 1. Tim. 2.6 1. Ioh 1.7 Rom. 8.30 31. Of this Efficacy because he effectually applyeth this purchased benefit both by offering the same by the preaching of the word conferring it by the inward and effectuall operation of his spirite u Rom. 1.16 2. Cor. 5.19 On mans behalfe that which is is called reductiuely the Efficient cause of the Passiue Iustification is wholy Instrumentall and it is saith by which not for which we are sayde to bee iustified both in respect of her Correlatiue as also in respect of her cōtrary the law and good works Of her Correlatiue because the whole forme of saith as it is justifying consisteth in relation neyther is it sayde to justifie vs as it is a quality but as it is occupied relatiuely in the applying of her Correlatiue u Gal. 3.8 Heb. 2.4 Rom. 1.17 Of her contrary because the good workes which are required in the person of him that is justified are excluded from the merit of Iustification as in the place concerning Earth and Workes shall be spoken more at large x Rom. 5.15 11.6 Ephes 2.8.9 The matter of Iustification which on Gods behalfe is considered actiuely is two fold according as there are two parts of Iustificatjon the Remission of sinnes and the obedjence of Christ For because we y Asiequuti sumus procured vnto our selues both the bond of death and the deprjuation of righteousnesse and life both were needful for our Iustificatjon that both our sinne might bee abolished by Remission that wee might be freed from death which is the wages of sinne and that righteousnesse might bee communicated vnto vs to the end we might attaine vnto life z Dan. 9.24 Gal. 3.13 By the name of Remission of sinnes we vnderstand that gratious act of God whereby hee perfectly forgiueth and remitteth the fault and the punishment for the merit and satisfaction of Christ a 2. Cor. 5.19 Rom. 8.1 4.7 The foundatiō hereof is the righteousnesse of Christ not his Essentiall and Diuine b Esa 42.8 nor yet his habituall which was his originall righteousnesse opposite vnto our originall righteousnesse or spot of nature but his actuall righteousnesse which is the effect of both namely a most perfect obedience performed to the Father both by satisfaction for sin and by fulfilling of the Law For the obedience of Christ is two fold opposite to the double bond of man after his fall actiue for the fault passiue for the punishment or both for both The Actiue obedience is a perfect performance of Gods law which Christ fully and perfectly executed even to the vtmost title c 1. Cor. 1.30 Rom 5.19 2. Cor. 5.21 of the law the necessitie hereof in the worke of our Redemption and Iustification three things doe prooue the Iustice of God the office of a Mediatour and our Salvation The iustice of God for if you eyther respect his nature wherby he is infinitly iust he ought not to saue man but by the same manner of iustice d Prou 17 Exod. 20.5 eyther proper to vs or freely imputed or if we respect his will revealed in the law which is an vnmoueable 〈◊〉 of Iustice he hath prescribed none other way vnto life than obedience The office of Christ the Mediatour for wheras he as our surety was bound by a voluntary dispensation to vndergoe and performe those things which we our selues were necessarily bound to vndergoe and performe it was needfull that he should not onely suffer death for vs but also performe the law because we were bound vnto both e Rom. 8.3 Gal. 4 45. Our Saluation for whereas two things are necessary for the same a freeing from death and a giuing of life it was needfull we should obtaine the one by the purging of sinne and the other by the gift of righteousnesse f Rom. 10 4 Rom. 5 19 20. Hence it is that Christ is said to be the end and presection of the law vnto Saluation to every one that beleeveth and the actuall obedience of Christ whereby we are made just is in the Scripture opposed to the actual disobedience of Adam whereby wee are made sinners g Heb. 10.14 Rom. 4.25 1. Pet. 1.19 1. Ioh. 1.7 Gal. 3.13 Adde further that in the very passiue obedience the actiue neverthelesse doth of right challenge vnto it selfe the chiefty for the suffering doth not simply justifie but as it is the suffering of Christ voluntarily presenting himselfe to God the Father by his Eternall Spirit whervpon the same Christ by offering himselfe as a sacrifice suffered as a Sacrificer performed it The Passiue obedience of Christ is the sacrificing or suffering of Christ very necessary in respect of God of Christ the Mediator and of vs. Of God because his justice must haue beene satisfied by punishment Of Christ because he being our surety ought to haue payde our debt Of vs because it was needefull that we should be freed from death by death h Num. 8.33 The Subiect of this righteousnesse is Christ alone in whom subiectiuely that habituall Iustice is inherent and from whom that both actiue passiue obedience proceeded which wee called actuall righteousnesse The matter of Iustification which is considered Passiuely are men elect i Rom. 5.8 10. Tit. 3.3 Eph. 2.12.13 Of this matter there is commonly had a double notion the one according to Nature the other according to Grace supernaturall according to nature they are sinners and therefore subiect to the accusation and malediction of the law k Rom. 8.30 Eph. 5.30 Ioh. 17 20. according to grace supernatural they are beleevers or ingraffed by faith into Christ The forme of Iustificatiō taken actiuely is a feee imputation of Christs actuall righteousnesse whereby the merits and obedience of Christ are applied vnto vs by vertue of that most strait communion whereby hee is in vs and we in him The forme therfore consisteth in Relation in which the vnity that ariseth thereout hath between both boundes the manner of a forme and consisteth rather in the issuing forth and the habite then in the inherence Hence it is also that Relation is sayde m Non esse eius sed esse ad aliad not to bee his but to be in respect of another Now it is receyved by right of the giving and acceptance of the merites of Christes obedience for this imputed righteousnesse is grace and not nature the communicating of a benefite not a Real or habitual possession of the righteousnesse or substance of Christ Lastly an Imputation not a passible quality inherent in vs. In this Imputation we consider two things the truth
a society of men called forth by an outward calling or communicating of the preaching of the word and Sacraments to the worshippe of Gods Glory i Mat. 18.17 And the Invisible Church the Society of men predestinated which are called forth by an effectuall and saving calling out of the state of corruption vnto the dignity of being adopted the children of God and are vnited vnto Christ as to their head not onely to the service and worshippe but also to the fruition of the glory of God k Luc. 1.33 Rom. 11.4 The Efficient Cause of both Churches is the one Primary the other Instrumentall or Serviceable The Primary and Principall ought 2. wayes to bee expounded according to the constitution of the church and according to the administration and ordering thereof The Cause Efficient of the Constitution of the church is God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost as the beginning of all good in nature and aboue nature l Rom 2.29 Of this Efficient cause or beginning in respect of the vnity of the Essence there is one and a common Operation but in respect of the distinction of the Persons there is a distinct Manner of working A Common Operation because in divine matters the cause of working is common the worke it selfe the same The Cause of Working in the constituting of the Church is the good pleasure of Gods will whereby from everlasting thee hath appointed to call forth some of Mankind to the communion of his Grace m Eph. 1.5 Tit. 2.14 But the Worke it selfe is the n Eph. 1.13 fulfilling or complement of the church which is to bee consummated with those degrees of meanes and periods of times wherewith it pleased God Of which decree and worke God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost is the common beginning but the maner of Working is distinct For the Father is the Efficient cause of the Church of the Invisible by election but of the Visible by Creation The Sonne is the Efficient cause of the Invisible by effectuall Redemption but of the visible by the common offering of the same Redemption by the preaching of the Gospell the Holy Ghost is the Efficient cause of the Invisible by saving sanctification and new creation in Christ but of the visible by outward calling whereby hee worketh more or lesse And this is the manner of the Efficient cause in the constituting of the Church Now the cause efficient neerest of the Administration and ordinance thereof is Christ God and man by a voluntary disposition and dispensation of Grace whereby God the Father made and appointed Christ the head over all to his Church which is his Body o Rom 12 5. 1. Cor. 3.11.12 Col. 1.18 And it is so not by order of nature but by the divine ordinance of saving Grace for the Church is not sayde to be a Physicall and Mathematicall but a mysticall body of Christ Wherefore also by the same benefite of divine Ordination Christ ought to bee helde and esteemed the head of his body not many heades but one for the church is neyther without head nor yet having many heades But as the condition of the head over the body doth chiefly consist in three thinges in Order Perfection and Power in Order towards the members in Perfection in it selfe in Power towardes the whole Body so Christ also in order perfection and power performeth all duties after a most excellent manner which can or ought to be performed of the best head In Order because he being true man and true God holdeth the chiefty in all things having the supreminence not onely of dignity but also of Regiment and power whence it is that the Scripture doth very often affirme him to haue Beeing before all things and to be placed aboue all things In Perfection because Christ alone is the King Prophet and High Priest having all things in himselfe from the Father which any way may be required for the perfection of the head In Power and Efficacy because hee alone inspireth vigour sense motion and spirituall life into his members and is alone knit fast vnto the body by the bond of the Spirit yeelding that whole ioyning and fastening together of the members among themselues and with God to the whole Church The Cause of the Church Instrumentall and serviceable is Generally the word of God what way soever revealed and communicated whether inwardly or outwardly or ioyntly both wayes p Heb. 4.12 Act. 2 4● 2. Pet. 2.23 1. Tim. 3.15 Whence it is also that the Word is in Scripture called the seede of the Church and the rule measure foundation of the truth which the Church hath as it were hanged vpon a pillar and as a sure prop vpholdeth the same But Specially the Instrumentall cause of the church Invisible is faith it selfe which sith it is inward is not indeede knowne by the judgement of men but yet it marketh or noteth out the true and essentiall manner and forme of a member of the church as being the onely Instrument of that inward and effectuall calling of God But of the Church visible chiefly and Primary are the Ministers of the Gospell who for that cause are called in the Scripture Builders and Master-builders q 1. Co. 3 10. Eph. 4.12 1. Pet. 3.5 to witte instruments vsed of God and the Lord Iesus Christ for the knitting together of the Saints for the worke of his Ministery and for the common edification of the Body of Christ r Eph. 4.7 2. Cor. 4.1 Now both the calling of these Instruments and their Office according to the Calling must be expounded Their Calling I meane whereby they are holily and lawfully called to a holy publicke function in the communion of Christ and of his Church Now they are called eyther of God inwardly by the Spirite or outwardly of the Church next after God in a holy and lawfull order The first manner if it be alone maketh the calling immediate and extraordinary which God alone causeth for the singular begetting and raysing of his church such as was that of the Prophets and Apostles whome the Lord extraordinarily called and informed by a singular revelation that their authority in teaching and writing might bee plainely divine ſ Luc. 21.14 Act. 13.1 Act. 21 4. The latter with the former maketh a calling mediat ordinate which God together with the church causeth by Order Ecclesiasticall t 1. Tim. 5 17. Of this Order there are two Essentiall partes The Choice and Confirmation the First is whereby a holy and lawfull examination is made both of life and doctrine u Tit. 2.7 2 Tim. 2.24 1 Tim. 3.10 The other is whereby a consecration and ordination to the Ministery is first made with Imposition of hands by the Cleargie the body of the Church therevnto consenting by Signe speech or free si●ence x Act. 6.6 ● Tim. 4.14 2. Tim. 1.6 And this calling for that it is Ordinary is also Successiue