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A03392 The office and vse of the morall law of God in the dayes of the gospell iustified, and explained at large by Scriptures, Fathers, and other orthodoxe diuines, so farre as occasion was giuen by a scandalous pamphlet sent abroad of late into the hands of diuers good Christians, pretending great reason and reading for the vtter abrogating and abolishing of the whole Law of Moses since the death of Christ. By William Hinde, sometimes fellow of Queenes Colledge in Oxford, and now preacher of Gods Word at Bunbury in Cheshire. Hinde, William, 1569?-1629. 1622 (1622) STC 13513; ESTC S116213 121,247 151

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THE OFFICE AND VSE OF the Morall Law of God in the dayes of the GOSPELL Iustified and explained at large by Scriptures Fathers and other Orthodoxe Diuines SO FARRE AS OCCASION was giuen by a scandalous Pamphlet sent abroad of late into the hands of diuers good Christians pretending great reason and reading for the vtter abrogating and abolishing of the whole Law of MOSES since the death of CHRIST By WILLIAM HINDE sometimes Fellow of Queenes Colledge in Oxford and now Preacher of Gods Word at BVNBVRY in CHESHIRE HOS 8.12 I haue written vnto him the great things of my Law but they were counted as a strange thing MATTH 5.19 Whosoeuer shall breake one of these least Commandements and shall teach men so he shall be called the least in the kingdome of heauen LONDON Printed by Iohn Haviland for Thomas Pavier and are to be sold at his shop in Ivy Lane 1622. Antinomus Anonymus OR A SCANDALOVS Pamphlet of a namelesse Aduersary of the Morall Law of God intending thereby to proue if he could that In the Church of Christ since his death the whole Law of Moses is wholly abolished SIR This pamphlet was directed and sent unto a religious and gracious Gentleman Mr. Iohn Foxe late Steward to the right Honorable the Earle of Darby of his L. of Berry and Pilkinton in Lancashire you may well thinke mee slacke in performance of my promise and not vnlike but you in respect thereof thinke that I faint in the cause but it is farre otherwise with me for the more that I consider of it the more I am confirmed in the truth of it and the more I discerne the many errors that rise out of the ignorance of the true difference betweene the Law and the Gospell Luther on Gal. 3.21 saith The knowledge of this difference keepeth all Christian doctrine in its true and proper vse Also it maketh a faithfull man iudge ouer all kinde of life ouer the Lawes and decrees of all men and ouer all doctrine whatsoeuer and it giueth them power to trie all manner of Spirits And on Gal. 4.27 he also saith As it is the most principall and speciall article of Christian doctrine To know that we are iustified and saued by Christ so is it also very necessary to know and vnderstand well the doctrine concerning the abolishment of the Law for it helpeth very much to confirme our doctrine as touching faith and to attaine to sound and certaine consolation of conscience when we are assured that the Law is abolished and especially in great terrors and serious conflicts Thus far Luther who as you see agreeth with mee that the point is of great consequence and very necessary to be knowne of all that truly seeke Christ Iesus I will set you downe as briefly as I can what I conceiue and some testimonies for the same that are briefe and point you to some others that are more large The point is this In the Church of Christ since his death the whole Law of Moses is wholly abolished or abrogated For as saith Tossanus in 2 Cor. 3. Licet unus sit Deus una semper fuerit Ecclesia idemque substantia foedus varia tamen hujus dispensatio fuit ut aliter agitur cum homine in infantia aliter in adolescentia aliter maturajam aetate Quo nomine Paulus ad Galatas 4o. Iudaeorum populum puero inter tutores educato comparat Lex fuit quidem à Deo data per virum Dei Mosen promulgata nec sine peculiari gloria sed Euangelium suam habet propriam gloriam quod non est literale solum ministerium aliquod jubens sed habet conjunctam efficaciam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spiritus sancti 1 Cor. 2. Gal. 3. And Gualther on Gal. 3.19 20. Quia homines non semper stant conditionibus quas Deus ipsis praescribit aliter atque aliter cum ipsis agendum est Ideo tunc queque propter causas legem addi oportuit quae ad tempus duravit quam diu ejus usus fuit At nunc novi Testamenti tempus est quando lex Prophetae Euangelio cedunt ut tam Gentibus quàm Iudaeorum reliquijs in Regnum Dei vim facientibus locum dent 1. The whole Epistle to the Galatians importeth so much for it is the generall argument of that Epistle And that there is meant the Morall law as well as any other in Gal. 3.19.23 See also Calu. Iust 3.19.4 Beza in Gal 3.22 Perkins on Gal. 3.11.23 Pareus in argumento in Gal. 3. and in Columna 153. D. 229. A. 232. C. 246. C.D. 274. D. who though they speake but only vpon one or two places yet it will appeare that the like must be vnderstood in the whole Epistle One word in chap. 3.19 mis-translated in most vulgar translations drawes many men awry Serueth Neither the Greeke nor any Latine translation hath it But grant the word must needs come in to make vp the sense I cannot see how it can be sensibly in the present tense but rather in the preterimperfect tense seeing it is a question and the answer to it is in the preterimperfect tense plainly as both Bezaes note and others expound it Not vnlike to this is in Rom. 3.20 commeth or is which being read came or was of the time past maketh the sense good otherwise I cannot vnderstand the words for the time it is aduerse to Now that followeth immediatly after and therefore cannot be the same Another thing in this Epistle is worth noting that the Apostle cap. 4.1 by the Heire in minoritie meaneth the Synagogue or Church of the Iewes afore Christ or the Iewes themselues and by full age he meaneth the Church of Christ since his death or Christians themselues See Socrates lib. 5. ca 21. Tho. Aquin. 1. 2. q. 91. a. 5. 2. 2. q. 1. 7. 2. Calv. in Gal. 3.24 4.1 Gualther in eundem Beza in eundem Piscator in eundem Pareus in Gal. 4.3 col 265. B. 274. A. 276. A. 290. D. Perkins in Gal. 4.3 setteth it out very fully and withall sheweth most plainly that the words We or Vs are to be vnderstood of Paul himselfe and others that were Iewes And so doth Pareus expound them on Gal. 3.24 Luther not well vnderstanding this exposition but generally taking the nonage of the heire to be the state of the vnregenerate and the full age to be the comming of Christ in spirit to any man concludes the end of the Law to be at the comming of Christ into any mans heart though on the same Gal. 4.1 he acknowledgeth an end of the Law at the comming of Christ but doth not fully handle it so Whereas it is plaine that the Apostles meaning was so For he writ to the Churches of Galatia which were in a sort fallen from Christ Calv. in Gal. 1.2 and not particularly to them alone that were true beleeuers as he did to the Romans Ephesians Philippians and Colossians
is of good and great vse for preseruing of true Christian doctrine for iudging of all kinde of life and lawes of men and for triall of spirits And all this we willingly grant assent vnto And how I pray you doth this point agree with yours That the whole Law of Moses is wholly abolished Nay doth it not rather pull yours in peeces and wholly deuoure your whole Law and your wholly too As p Exod. 7.12 Aarons rod deuoured the rods of the Inchanters of Aegypt Luthers rod hath this truth written vpon it The Law of Moses is of great and good vse therfore it deuoures yours which beares engrauen vpon it this error The whole Law of Moses is wholly abolished But take you good leaue to make your owne Argument your selfe and let vs see of what strength and consequence it will be Luther say you * Antinom affirmeth that the Law of Moses is of good and great vse for preseruing of true Christian doctrine for iudging of all kinde of life and lawes of men and for triall of spirits Therefore you conclude that he agreeth with you in this point That the whole Law of Moses is wholly abolished * Answere As much agreement there may be betwixt fire and water light and darknesse truth and error as betwixt his Antecedent and your consequent Will you see what life and light sinewes and ioynts it hath by another like vnto it The Ancient Canons of the 4. first generall q 1. Concil Nicen. 2. Constantinop 3. Ephesin 4. Chalcedon Vide Euseb de vita Constant lib. 3. cap. 7. Theodoret. Eccles Hist lib. 5. cap. 6. 9. Euagr. Histor Eccles lib. 2. cap. 4. Counsells are of great and good vse for preseruing of true doctrine for iudging all kinde of life lawes and opinions of men and for triall of spirits Ergo All the Canons of the first 4. generall Counsels are wholly abolished and abrogated What connexion is here betwixt the Antecedent and the consequent Would not the cleane contrarie be more necessarily concluded Ergo All the Canons of the 4. first generall Councels are yet in force and neither wholly nor in part abolished nor abrogated Non r Cicero lib 4. Acad quast ovum ovo similius quàm Servilius Servilio One egge is not more like another then this Argument is like to yours And what thinke you of this Luther himselfe on Gal. 3. the same chapter which you alledge for you doth most euidently fight against you ſ Luth. on Gal. 3. fol. 131 152. There is saith he a double vse of the Law the first vse is to bridle the wicked and to restraine sinne as men vse to restraine Lions and Beares with bonds and chaines that they teare and diuoure not euery thing they meet And this he calleth a ciuill vse of the Law Another vse of the Law is diuine and spirituall which is as Paul saith to increase transgression i. o reueale vnto man his sinne his blindnes his miserie his impietie his ignorance hatred and contempt of God death hell iudgement and the deserued wrath of God Of this vse the Apostle intreateth notably in the 7. to the Romans Luther you see doth otherwise iudge of colours then you doe certainly either your eyes were not matches or your spectacles not of the same nor so true a sight as his were You say the whole Law is wholly abolished he saith and not onely faith it but proueth it by Scripture too That it is not wholly abolished but hath yet his double vse both ciuill and spirituall t Quint. Orat. Instit lib. 5. cap. 12. Asc●nius Paedi in Cic. Orat. pro M. Scauro Valerius Max lib. 3. cap. 7. Q. Varus Hispanus Marcum Scaurum Principem Senatus socios in arma ait concitasse Marcus Scaurus princeps Senatus negat vtri vos Quirites convenit credere You I know not who say that Luther a Captaine of the Lords hoast hath both stirred vp others and taken armes himselfe for the abolishing of the whole Morall Law Luther a leader of the Lords armies doth vtterly denie it whether of you two should now be better credited let the Christian reader iudge But it may be you take hold of this that Luther mentioneth the u Luth. on Gal. 4.27 fol. 222. abolishing of the Law saying it is necessary to know and vnderstand well the doctrine of the abolishment of the Law c. Gal. 4.27 Men that are in danger of falling or drowning will catch at any thing which may seeme to helpe them although it be vtterly vnable to doe them any good So said x Hieron advers Ruffin Apol. lib. 2. Ierome of Ruffinus Tantum me diligit ut raptus turbine in profundum dimersus meum potissimum invadat pedem ut mecum aut liberetur aut pereat You catch at this word Abolishment of the Law and yet it will neither stay you nor stand you in any stead for Luther speakes only of the abolishing of certaine vses of the Law as for righteousnesse iustification life and saluation for terrifying accusing condemning those that are iustified by faith in Christ Iesus so farre he acknowledgeth and we with him that the * Calu. de usu legis Harmon in 4. Libros Mosis p. 442 August de Spiritu litera cap. 4. 5. 10. Morall Law for these offices and vses is abolished The very light and euidence of the opposition which in the same sentence he maketh betwixt Moses and Christ workes and faith seruitude by the Law and libertie by the Gospell iustification and condemnation terrors and conflicts of conscience and sound and certaine consolation of the same might haue manifested and made knowne thus much vnto you had you been as carefull to seeke the truth of his doctrine and to taste his true meaning in it as you were willing to feed your owne fancie only with the bare letters and leaues of it y Tertul. Scorpi●…c advers Gnostic cap. 7. Tertullian saith Verba non sono solo sapiunt sed sensu nec auribus tantùm audienda sunt sed mentibus As z Hieron in Gal. 1. Non in verbis sed in sensu non in superficie sed in medulla non in sermonum folijs sed in radice rationis pag. 162. Ierome said of the sense of the Scripture it is not in cortice orationis sed in radice rationis so may we say of mens writings we must seeke for the meaning by the matter as well as by the letter and lend our eares to listen and obserue what they desire to speake and not make them speake only what we desire to heare vnlesse we will be like little children who hauing some fancie running in their heads imagine the bells to ring and sing as they thinke and speake Let me in loue aduise you when you alledge an Author to giue euidence for any point bring not in testem sine testimonio a man that hath nothing to
spirituall vses confirmed by Christ and continued by his Apostles for the good of Christs Church euen vnto the worlds end Now if you thinke that all that hath beene said and done be not nor cannot be of any such force with you as to conuince you of error or to confirme this truth it may be herein the fault will proue rather yours than mine For as Non est Oratoris persuadere sed dicere quae ad persuadendum sunt idonea It is not required of an Orator to perswade but to deliuer such things as in themselues may be fit and auailable for perswading So neither can it be required of an Answerer to satisfie a wrangling Disputer but to giue what may serue for a sufficient satisfaction to his insufficient objection Ezeckiel is commanded to speake Ezek. 3.4.7 euen though Israel will not heare And Paul doth charge Titus Tit. 1.9.10 to endeuour by some doctrine and exhortation to be able to conuince the gainsayers and to stop the mouthes of such as are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnruly vaine-talkers and deceiuers subuerting whole houses and teaching things they ought not for filthy lucre sake Vpon like occasion and in a matter not much vnlike I held my selfe charged after the same manner to endeuour according to my ability to conuince you of this your error and to stop your mouth if it may be which you haue opened so wide against the truth with the witnesses and with the word of Truth And this was I after a sort enforced to attempt because I knew you had laboured by speaking and writing if not for filthy lucre yet for foolish humour sake things which you ought not not only to corrupt the mindes of the simple by words of deceit but to subuert the hearts and houses of some of my neerest and dearest friends with a great and pompous shew of reading and learning which had they not formerly beene better instructed and established in the true knowledge of Gods Word both Law and Gospell might easily haue bred some distraction in their mindes and trouble in their hearts Pudet haec opprobria nobis dici potuisse non potuisse refell●… I may truly say I held it both sinne and shame that so opprobrious things should be objected against the holy Law of God and put into the bosomes of good and gracious people as a parcell of Gods truth and a pledge of your loue and not to be resisted by some encounter August Bonis Epist 23. and refuted by some answer to the same Respondi sicut existimo quaestionibus tuis saith S. Augustine to Bonifacius quantum attinet ad minus capaces ad contentiosos non satis quantum autem ad pacatos intelligentes plus fortè quàm sat est Let me speake vnto you in almost the same words I haue answered as I thinke your positions and oppositions against the Morall Law of God for such as are lesse capable and such as are contentious not sufficiently enough neither for length nor strength but for such as are tractable and teachable peraduenture more than enough for both And here if the length of my answer procure me any blame either with you or other of my friends seeing your Pamphlet was but short which drew the same from me I must plead my just defence as Augustine did his to the same Bonifacius requiring a briefe answer to some hard questions proposed vnto him His literis saith he lectis relectis recordatus sum Nebridium amicum meum qui valdè oderat de quaestione magna responsionem brevem In like manner hauing read ouer and ouer againe your short Pamphlet and seeing the question was great and quotations many and large though your paper was not much nor long I could not abide to frame a short answer nay I must needs frame a long August Epist 23. ad Bonif. to so large and great a question and that for the same reason which moued Nebridius so to desire an answer at length in such a case Because in matters obscure ad pietatis doctrinam maximè pertinentibus especially appertaining to the Doctrine of piety as this of the Morall Law especially doth he that would diligently search and see into them had need to enlarge himselfe and hold that course Concerning your last Will and Testament and the light that it bringeth to your second section Zanch. in Hos I referre you to Zanchius in Hoseam where you shall finde the like Simile and withall a paire of snuffers to top your light that it may burne more clearly And if that will not serue you may haue Torchlight from Caluine which I will now put into your hands before I leaue you you may see how loth I am to leaue you in the darke whereby you may once more be admonished of your error and the danger of it and haue light enough to lead you vnto the truth and prouoke you also to the entertaining and embracing of it Speaking of the sweetnesse and lightsomnesse of the Morall Law vnto all that can doe as Dauid did i. finde and apprehend Christ the Mediator in the same He addeth these words Quod discernere dum imperiti quidam nesciunt Caluin Instit lib. 2. cap. 7. sect 12.13 totum Mosen animosè explodunt duasque legis tabulas valere jubent quia scilicet Christianis alienum esse arbitrantur adhaerere doctrinae quae mortis administrationem continet Which different office and vse of the Law saith Caluine whiles some ignorant persons know not how to discerne they doe boldly and couragiously hisse out all Moses Law and bid farewell to the two Tables of the Morall Law because forsooth they thinke it strange for Christians to cleaue vnto that Doctrine which containeth the administration of death or damnation in it Mutato nomine de te fabula narratur You may view your face in this glasse and take euery word home with you to your owne house and withall take I pray along with you what he addeth in detestation of this your opinion Caluin Instit lib. 2. cap. 7. sect 13. Facessat longe ex animis nostris profana istac opinio Let this profane opinion be farre remoued from our mindes And consider seriously I beseech you of that which he speaketh so resolutely for the establishing of the Morall Law as well as in the commendation of the vse of it Quod si absolutum saith he in ea justitiae exemplar eminere nemo inficietur aut nullam esse nobis rectè justeque vivendi regulam oportet aut ab ea nefas est discedere But if saith Caluine no man can deny but that in the Morall Law there is manifestly to be seene a most absolute patterne of righteousnesse either we must haue no rule at all of right and just liuing or it is great wickednesse to depart from the Morall Law Certainly me thinks to a reasonable and ingenuous man this might be sufficient satisfaction for embracing the truth and relinquishing of so vnsound and vnsauoury an opinion I could compasse you about with a cloud of witnesses to this purpose But it must be euen this Law of God written in your heart by the finger of Gods Spirit which through the power and grace of Christ shall helpe to illighten your eies to see the beauty and conuert your soule to feele the vertue euen of this Morall Law of God which you now so oppose and oppugne which I doubt not but in due time the Lord will doe if as I hope you doe you belong vnto him Meanewhile we will pray for you and wait in patience to see if peraduenture the Lord may giue you repentance to the acknowledging of the truth 2 Tim. 2.25 26. that when you shall haue recouered your selfe out of this snare of Satan and we shall heare or see that he which persecuted the Law in times past doth now publish and professe obedience thereunto we with other of Gods children that wish you well in Christ may be prouoked by your light which may shine in the workes of loue the summe of the Law Gal. 1.23.24 to reioice in your recouery and to glorifie God in youre behalfe FINIS
Gospell as the Heire come to age If this be your meaning we acknowledge he handleth this point of difference betwixt them very fully and as many other Diuines also doe very soundly too But what of all this Mr. e Perk. on Gal. 4.3 Perkins saith The Fathers of the Old Testament were children in respect of vs two waies First in regard of the Mosaicall gouernment because they were kept in subjection to more Lawes than we Secondly in regard of reuelation because God hath reuealed more to vs than to them And this he saith truly and well Is there any thing here to be found for the vtter abolishing of the Morall Law If there be why doe you not shew it If there be not why make you such a vaine flourish for it Haue you yet any more to say out of the Epistle to the Galatians * Antinomus Yes it seemes you yet looke for some helpe from Luther vpon Galat. 4.1 where you say He acknowledgeth an end of the Law at the comming of Christ Answer but doth not fully handle it so Me thinkes you haue no great confidence in this allegation Luther I doubt hath not so fully handled the matter as to fulfill your minde in it You know right well that f Luth on Gal. 4.1 See Muscul in Mat. 5.17 Luther speaking of the ending of the Law two waies First at the comming of Christ in the flesh at the time appointed of his Father Galat. 4.4 Secondly at the comming of Christ vnto vs daily by his Spirit doth only meane such an end of the Law As that when Christ is come into our hearts by faith the Law hath not that dominion ouer vs to accuse to terrifie to kill to condemne vs spiritually and before God as formerly it had And all this we acknowledge may well be and yet the Morall Law be of good and great vse still * Antinomus But though Luther did not fully handle it so yet it is plaine you say that the Apostles meaning was so Answer And I say that if the Apostles meaning were so plaine as you will haue it to wit that the Morall Law is vtterly at an end then might this our labour be plainly at an end also But because some others it may be cannot see this so plainly as you can we desire it may be made a little more plaine vnto vs For the reasons which * Antinomus you render That the Apostle writeth not particularly to true beleeuers alone amongst the Galatians as you say he did to the Romans Ephesians Philippians and Colossians but without distinction of true beleeuers from others to them that professed Christ calling them brethren and that as you affirme he sheweth them all that they are now no more vnder the Law Cap. 4.1 by the Simile of an Heire and after by an Allegory of the free woman and the bond and that Cap. 5. he exhorteth them to stand fast in that liberty These reasons I say Answer doe not make it plaine that the Apostles meaning was in or by the Epistle to the Galatians to put an absolute end to the Morall Law for the vtter abolishing of the same as you would haue it but that the g Gal. 2.16 Cap. 3.11 12 13. workes of the Law whether Morall or Ceremoniall in the matter of our justification before God and saluation by faith in Christ are vtterly to be excluded and abandoned and that by h Gal. 3.26 Cap. 5.1 faith in Christ alone the Galatians and all other true Christians are freed and set at i Iren. aduers Haer. lib. 4. cap. 5. liberty as from the burden and bondage of the Ceremoniall Law so from the rigour and terror dominion and malediction of the Morall also k Gal. 5.1 And this is the liberty wherewith Christ hath made them free and wherein the Apostle exhorteth them to stand fast and not to be againe intangled in the yoke of bondage That this is the true sense and meaning of the Apostle it is most manifest and plaine by that his earnest and zealous protestation which immediately he annexeth Behold I l Gal. 5.2 3 4 5. See Tertullian advers Marcion lib. 4. cap. 33. lib. 5. cap. 2.3.4 that the Law is fulfilled in Christ not abolished by Christ Paul say vnto you that if you be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing For I testifie againe to euery man that is circumcised that he is a debter to the whole Law Christ is become of no effect vnto you whosoeuer of you are justified by the Law yee are fallen from grace For we through the spirit wait for the hope of righteousnesse by faith c. Thus farre we haue followed your steps in the Epistle to the Galatians where we haue not left you so much as the breadth of a foot to ground or settle your opinion vpon Now you flie to the Epistle to the Hebrewes where you looke for succour and shelter as in a City of refuge for you say The whole m See Zanch. judgement of the Argument of the Hebr. Zanch. in Hos cap. 2. p. 45. Epistle is for your purpose But we will pursue you with the sword of the Lord and of n Iudg. 7.18 Gideon i. The word of God and the writings of the Lord his o In Epist ad Heb. principalis propositio est Ceremonias veteris legis esse abrogatas Chemloc de lege Caluin Instit lib. 2. cap. 11. sect 7. Worthies and doubt not but we shall either draw or driue you thence also Is the whole Epistle to the Hebrewes to the same purpose viz. For the vtter abolishing of the whole Morall Law for hauing any being or well being any office or vse in the Church of Christ It seemes indeed you haue taken possession of the gates the middle and the vtmost parts thereof as if all the forts and fences the turrets and towers were your owne already But shall we make an assault and try what right or reason you haue so to doe * Antinomus Your first reason of so bold a speech is this In the very first verse he opposeth the speaking of Christ to all that were afore him he being Heire of all things whom the Angels must worship and the heauens and earth must vanish Answer but he must remaine And what makes this for your purpose Is the Morall Law therefore abolished because Christ is opposed to all that went or were before him Or is this an opposition of contrariety or of disparity Doth the speaking of God by Christ argue an abolishing and not rather an accomplishing of all that was spoken before him Or can any man with any shew or shadow of reason inferre that because in former times God spake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the Prophets in visions and dreames by ceremonies and sacrifices by reuelations and prophesies by thunderings and lightnings and the like and by all these more darkly and obscurely
faith or rule of life And how then doe you imagine can the Geneua Note make for your purpose to proue by this place the abrogation and vtter abolition of the Morall Law To giue some weight vnto your light opinion and sleight exposition of this place you haue burdened your margent with a multitude of witnesses as if they had now iointly setled and established you in the same Not much vnlike me thinkes herein vnto Philotus Cous mentioned by b Athen. Dipnosophist lib. 9. cap. 23. lib. 12. cap. 29. Athenaus who was of so light and slender a body that he had weights of lead tied to his heeles left by some blast or puft of winde he should haue beene whirled and blowen away But wherefore doe you beare vs in hand that so great a cloud of witnesses as you haue painted your margent withall doe all stand for you and with you in the vtter abolishing of the Morall Law And yet you haue not drawen one drop from them all to giue vs some taste of their vniforme consent with you in your opinion Are they clouds without water witnesses without testimonies Titles without euidences Like Apothecaries boxes that beare goodly and faire names without but haue not a drugge nor a dram of any thing that is good within The Authors which you name I acknowledge to be good men and full of good things as c 2 Cor. 4.7 Vessels of the Sanctuary trusted with the Lords treasure and imployed for their d 2 Tim. 2.27 Masters vse And I haue sought and searcht e Caluin Vatah. Tremel Musc Zanch. Hipp. c. their f Caluin Vatah. Tremel Musc Zanch. Hipp. c. storehouses with what diligence for the time I could yet can I finde none of your leauen in their lumpe nor any of their Gold to gild your drosse Shall I deale plainly and fairely with you I will make you a free and franke offer Set me downe the Testimonies of the Authors which you alledge for the vtter abolishing of the Morall Law set them downe I say totidem verbis and if of the two and twenty which you name in your margent I doe not proue that one and twenty are vtterly against you I will acknowledge you victor and yeeld you the whole cause without more adoe g Cicero de Orat. Tully saith That an Orator as well as a Warrior must doe something ad specimen non ad vulnus something for a flourish not all for fight and so it seemes you doe though not as a glozing Orator yet as a h Teren. in Eun. Act. 4. sc 7. bragging Souldier you braue vs as with a troupe of horse and foot and then they be but shadowes in stead of souldiers much like those images of men which as i Jul. Frontin lib. 3. stratag cap. 8. Iulius Frontius recordeth Cyrus the King of Persia besieging the City of Sardis did put vpon long Poles and armed them like Persian souldiers and set them vpon one side of the City as an Army of men to delude and terrifie Craesus and the Citizens therewithall Now surely if any should be so credulous as to beleeue or so timorous as to feare that all these Authors are armed souldiers which you haue set vp in the margent as vpon one side of your City to defend your cause I would haue him answered only with the words of k Iudg. 9.36 Zebul to Gaal Iudg. 9. Thou seest the shadowes of the Mountaines as if they were men But now to leaue your shadowes and to deale with the substance of that which you thinke yet remaineth in the Epistle to the Hebrews for the vtter abolishing of the Morall Law * Antinomus You vrge That because the Tables of Stone wherein the Morall Law was written were remoued with the Tabernacle and other like Adjuncts therfore the Morall Law is vtterly abolished Answer And who taught you this Logicke to reason à remotione Accidentis ad remotionem subjecti Must it needs follow that because the Tables of Stone wherein the Law was written be abolished that therefore the Law it selfe is vtterly abolished together with them Were the Tables of Stone so essentiall to the Morall Law that it had neither birth before them nor being after them Nay was it not written in the Tables of the heart first in the state of l Primordialis lex data est Adae Euae in paradiso quasi matrix omnium praeceptorum Dei Tertul. advers Iudaeos cap. 2. ibi lege plura de lege Innocencie as in faire and golden Characters and continued after the fall as the Law of Nature but as it were in dimme and darke letters and yet more plainly m August quaest Vet. No. Test quaest 4. renewed to * Gen. 17.1 18.19 Abraham and the Patriarkes before it was euer written in Tables of Stone for the more manifest direction and conuiction of the n August quaest Vet. No. Test quaest 4. Iewes And hath not the Lord according to the Couenant of Grace changed the Tables of Stone into the fleshie o August de vera Innocentia ca. 258. Tables of our hearts the killing letter into the quickning spirit not putting out but putting in his p August de spir litera cap. 14. 21. lawes into our minde and writing them by his Spirit vpon our hearts and so causing vs to walke in his Statutes And hath he not done all this that as q Luc. 1.74 75. Zachary speaketh We might serue him according to his Law without feare in righteousnesse and holinesse the summe and substance of both r Matt. 22.37.39 Tables all the daies of our life How then doth the remouing of the Tables of Stone proue vnto vs the remouall of the Law written in them Nay if the remouing of the Tables of Stone would proue the abolishing of the Law written in them then the Morall Law was abolished not only as you say after Christs death but many hundred yeeres before Christs birth For in the Second Temple there was not the Arke of the Testimonie wherein the Tables were kept nor the Tables themselues neither As not onely ſ Joseph lib. 5. de Bello Iudai cap. 14. Iosephus and the t Petrus Galat. de Arcanis Catholicae verit lib. 4. cap. 9. Iewish Rabbins with others u Morn de veritate Chr. Relig. cap. 29. Phil. Morn De veritate Rel. x Ludov. Vives de veritate Chr. fidei lib. 3. cap. 11. Lud. Viv. de verit Christ fid lib. 3. doe record but the sacred y 2 King 24.13 Story also beareth witnesse seeing all the Vessels of the Temple and all the precious Instruments thereof that were of gold as the * Ex. 15.11 Arke it selfe was wherein the Tables of Stone were kept were all carried away to Babel either in the former Captiuities of Iehojachim and Ieconiah or the last which was the worst of z 2
Chron. 36.7.10.18.19 Zedekiah when the City was sackt the Temple spoiled and both by the Chaldaeans burnt with fire Besides all this it is most certaine that as the Arke of the Couenant and the parts of it the Cherubins and the Propitiatorie Couering or Mercy Seat were all Ceremonies and Types of CHRIST and shadowes of good things to come in the daies of the Gospell so was both the writing of the Law in Tables of Stone and the putting of those Tables being the 1 Deut. 9.9 11. Tables of the Legall Couenant in the 2 Deut. 10.5 Arke which was therefore called the 3 Deut. 10.8 Arke of the Couenant these also I say were Typicall and Ceremoniall but the Law it selfe both before and then and now and for euer was and is and shall be Morall still To make this a little more plaine The Arke was a figure of Christ and a pledge of Gods gracious a Numb 7.89 presence where he promised to speake with his people and whereunto he called them to speake with him This did signifie that there could be no intercourse of mercies and duties betwixt God and vs but in and by b Matt. 3.17 Christ alone The c Exod. 25.21 Deut. 10.8 Tables of the Couenant were put in this Arke and kept in it to signifie not only that all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge were hid in d Col. 2.3 Christ but that the Law of God is fulfilled and the justice of God satisfied and the wrath of God appeased in and by e 2 Cor. 5.18 21. Act. 4.12 Christ alone These Tables were of Stone f Exod. 34.1 4. hauing the Law of God written by the g Deut. 9.10 finger of God in them to signifie that in the New Couenant he would change our hearts of stone into h Ezek. 36.26 27. hearts of flesh and write his lawes by the i 2 Cor. 3. ●… finger of his spirit in the fleshy Tables of our hearts and both cause vs to walke in his Statutes and also accept of our obedience in Christ Iesus The Arke when the Tables of the Law were put in it had a k Exo. 25.17 21. Propitiatory Couering put vpon it Exodus 25. This did signifie another part of the Couenant That in Christ alone the Lord will couer l Heb. 8.10 12. Rom. 3.25 and be mercifull to our sinnes and remember our iniquities no more Hebr. 8.10 11. Rom. 3.1 Ioh. 2. Vpon the Propitiatory or Mercy Seat were the two m Exod. 25.20 Cherubins looking downe into the Arke this did signifie That as the holy n Heb. 1.14 Angels were appointed to be ministring Spirits for the good of them that are Heires of saluation so doe they desire and delight to o 1 Pet. 1.12 looke into Christ and his Church and the mysterie of the Gospell reuealed in the same Now these things considered this I say That so farre as these Tables of the Couenant had any thing Ceremoniall in them or any thing concerning other circumstances of persons time place terror rigour and the like being peculiar to the Church of the Iewes in that estate of the Mosaicall Pedagogie so farre I say they are p Temporalli horum administratio fuit Iren. advers Haeres lib. 4. cap. 8. remoued together with the Arke and Altar Tabernacle and Temple and other Leuiticall Sacrifices and Ceremonies Iudaicall types and rites whatsoeuer But the Morall Law contained in the Ten Commandements could not be Ceremoniall no more than a substance can be a shadow for then should Morall and Ceremoniall haue beene confounded whereas euen by their writing in Tables of Stone and that by the finger of God they were distinguished neither was there then any thing for the substance of it nor is now as now it stands vpon record in the Booke of God but it doth concerne vs as well as them according to that of the Apostle We know that the Law is good if a man vse it lawfully and therefore though the Tables of Stone be remoued the q Age Marcion omnésque jam commiserones coodibiles ejus Haeretici quid audebitis dicere Resciditnè Christus priora praecepta Non occidendi non adulterandi non furandi c. An illa servavit quod deerat adjecit vide Tertull. adver Marcion li. 4. ca. 36. Morall Law is yet continued and hath exceptis excipiendis his proper vse and force still That which you draw from Mount Sinai hath not strength enough to withdraw all vse of the Morall Law from Mount Sion The r Heb. 12.12 13. Apostle enforceth his exhortation vnto Christian obedience and patience vnder the Metaphors of lifting vp their hands that hang downe and their feeble knees the better to enable them to resist and hold out in running the race that is set before them by Arguments drawen from the comfortable and admirable priuiledge of the Gospell and kingdome of Grace farre aboue those which the Hebrewes themselues had vnder the regiment of Moses in the estate of the Law This you say truly and we doe acknowledge That greater mercies require greater duties But when you say He doth not presse his exhortation by the Law giuen in Mount Sinai you are conuinced of a grosse vntruth by the two last ſ Heb. 12.28 29. verses of the same Chapter where the Apostle presseth this exhortation Let vs haue grace to serue God acceptably with reuerence and godly feare by an Argument drawen from the Law Deut. 4.24 viz. Antinomus For our God is a consuming fire That which the t Heb. 12.26 27. Apostle allegeth out of u Agg. 2.6 Aggai and you vrge out of both concerning things that are shaken may indeed shake in peeces all the Iewish Ceremonies and Sacrifices as most Diuines doe agree But the Gospell is so farre from shaking the Morall Law in that manner that it doth rather ioine and shake x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vide Iustin Mart. Quaest Resp ad Orthod p. 354. hands with it as if that which is spoken in another place were also verified in them Mercy and truth are met together righteousnesse and peace doe kisse each other So farre therefore as the Lord hath ioined them together let no man be so bold as to seeke or sue out a Bill of * Bez. Theol. Ep. Ep. 20. p. 103. diuorce to put them asunder Thus haue you seene and felt too if you be not darkned in your minde by prejudice and selfe-conceit and so strangely hardened which God forbid against all touch of truth what sorry successe you haue had in discharging your many Arguments out of the whole Epistle to the Galatians and out of the whole Epistle to the Hebrewes notwithstanding all the powder and shot which you haue borrowed from so many men or rather by fraud and force haue taken from them We come now vnto your third great Argument namely the practise of the
words as seuerely and seriously charge Timothy to keepe the Commandement which he had giuen him for the duties of his person and calling as euer did Moses the people of Israel for obseruing of the Commandement of the Law when d Deut. 30.11 15 18 19. he said This Commandement which I command thee this day is not hidden from thee c. Behold I call heauen and earth to record this day against you that I haue set before you life and death blessing and cursing For whereas Moses calleth heauen and earth only to record against Israel Paul conuents Timothy as it were before the Lord of heauen and earth and doth not only command him with all authority but charge him with all seuerity That as euer he would haue any benefit by Christ as his e 1 Tim. 6.13 14. Redeemer witnessing a good confession before Pontius Pilate or would euer render vp his account vnto him as a f 2 Tim. 4.1 2. Iudge with joy at his appearing he should be carefull and faithfull in keeping his Commandements Looke also vpon 1 Cor. 7.10 g 1 Cor. 7.10 And vnto the maried I command yet not I but the Lord Let not the wife depart from her husband And vpon Ephes 4.17 This I say therefore and testifie in the Lord that yee henceforth walke not as other Gentiles walke in the vanity of their minde And 2 Thessalon 3.6.10.12 h 2 Thess 3.6 10 12. Now we command you brethren in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that you withdraw your selues from euery Brother that walketh disorderly And that also 1 Tim. 6. i 1 Tim. 6.25 I charge thee before God and before the Lord Iesus Christ and before the elect Angels that thou obserue these things Consider I pray you these places aduisedly and tell me whether you haue not erred too too grossely in saying so confidently That although in the Epistles of the Apostles there were some words of commanding yet was there not so much as a forme of Commandement in them seeing you haue here many and worthy Commandements both for matter and forme in full measure But you say Antinomus They are without penalty Answer For answer vnto that Tell me I beseech you whether you doe not reckon the threatnings of k Rom. 6.21 23. Death l Rom. 14.23 Damnation the m Ephes 5.6 Wrath of God the n 2 Thess 1.8 Vengeance of God o 1 Cor. 3.17 Destruction p 1 Cor. 11.32 34. Condemnation q 1 Tim. 6.9 Perdition flaming fire r Iud. v. 7 8. Eternall fire and such like against ignorant disobedient vngodly and vnbeleeuing persons such as know not God and obey not the Gospell of our Lord Iesus Christ to be penalties and not only penalties but dreadfull judgements yea the very terrors of God that fight against such sinnes and sinners If you say they be as you must needs if you will say the truth then were you deluded with a lying vanity and which is worse would delude others also therewithall when you said and set it downe That the Commandements of the Apostles in their Epistles were without penalty ſ Aug. contra Adamant Manich. ca. 3. Sacrae Scripturae non temerarios superbos accusatores sed pios diligentes lectores desiderant August I maruell whether euer you read that terrible sentence 1 Cor. 16. If any man t 1 Cor. 16.22 loue not the Lord Iesus Christ let him be Anathema maranatha If you did doe but tell me by what Argument the Apostle doth here vrge and enforce the loue of Christ Iesus whether by promise of mercy or threatning of penalty Or whether here be not as dreadfull a curse threatned against those that doe not loue the Lord Iesus Christ as there is Ephes 6.24 a gratious promise made to all that doe viz. u Ephes 6.24 Grace be with all them that loue the Lord Iesus Christ in sincerity It were absurd and impious to deny that here is a promise of a blessing to them that loue him and as impious and absurd it is to say that the other denounceth no terrible penalty to them that loue him not For the very words themselues Anathema maranatha doe import an execrable curse such as the Lord when he commeth in x Ecce autem quòd in clausula tribunal Christi comminatur utique Iudicis vltoris in Rom. 14.10 Tertull. advers Ma●…i lib. 5. ca. 14. judgement shall inflict vpon all wicked reprobates being separated from Christs presence and cast into vtter darknesse So Paul vseth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 9.3 Gal. 1.8 as Accursed and 1 Cor. 12.3 for Execrable And the other y Cornel. Pertram praefat in Gram. Heb. Syriac Maranatha consists of two Syriack words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which properly signifieth Dominus noster and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 venit The Lord commeth Which words being the beginning of Enochs Prophecy cited by Iude as containing the dreadfull judgement of God at the last day against all the wicked and vngodly were vsually taken vp by the Iewes as they are here by Paul to expresse the z Bez. in 1 Cor. 16.22 Aug. Ep. 78. great Curse which is hopelesse helplesse and endlesse as their portion and just recompence which doe not loue the Lord Iesus In the next place you proceed from euill to worse when you say There is not so much as any allusion vnto Moses Law or the Ten Commandements in all the Epistles When Peter liking well of the ease and peace beauty and glory of Mount Tabor made a a Luc. 9.31 32 33. motion for building of Tabernacles that they that were there might dwell there saying Master it is good for vs to be here The Holy Ghost hath obserued That he was heauy with sleepe and wist not what he said Surely me thinkes in such a like minde and mood were you when falling into a dreame of Mount Sion and liking well of the fancies that ranne in your head of grace and peace mercy and mildnesse promises and gentle exhortations all tending to life and glory you haue laboured to build this your Tabernacle for a place of rest and said in your heart It is good to be here vnwilling altogether to heare any mention of Mount Sinai or of any allusion to the Morall Law But we will beare with your weaknesse and plead your excuse The spirit of sleepe or slumber was vpon you and you wist not what you either did or said For had you beene well awakened and your eies well opened you might haue seene in the most if not in all the Epistles not only some allusions but many allegations out of the Ten * See Iam. 2.8 9 10 11 12. 4.10 11. Commandements or * See Iam. 2.8 9 10 11 12. 4.10 11. Morall Law Doth not the Apostle in the Epistle to the Romans make often mention of the Morall Law
b Rom. 3.20 By the Law commeth the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3. c Rom. 4.31 Doe we then abrogate the Law by faith God forbid nay rather we establish the Law Rom. 4.31 d Rom. 7.7 12 22 23. See Tertull. vpon these and other places of the Epistle to the Rom. 7. Quia lex peccatum Absit Erubesce Marcion Absit Abhominatur Apostolus criminationem legis ô summum praeconium legis Tertull. aduers Marcion lib. 5. cap. 13. I had not knowne sinne but by the Law for I had not knowne lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not couet wherefore the Law is holy and the Commandement i. the tenth Commandement is holy just and good I delight in the Law of God after the inner man So then in my minde I serue the Law of God but with the flesh the law of sinne Rom. 7.7 12 22 25. Are not these plaine allegations of the Law more than bare allusions And doe not these pregnant Testimonies graciously establish the nature and vse of the Morall Law which you most wickedly goe about to abolish Will you yet see more euident for better satisfaction and assurance Owe nothing to any man saith the Apostle but to loue one another Loue is a Christian duty you will not deny 1 Cor. 13. By what argument or reason doth he presse them hereunto Euen by a sound Argument drawen from Gods Law For he that loueth another hath fulfilled the Law he meaneth partibus non gradibus and what Law he sheweth by reckning vp the seuerall Commandements of the second Table For this saith e Rom. 13.8 9. See Paraeus in Rom. 13.8 9. Aug. de spirit lit cap. 14.21 he Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit adultery Thou shalt not steale Thou shalt not beare false witnesse Thou shalt not couet and if there be any other Commandement it is brieflie comprehended in this saying namely Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Loue worketh no ill to his neighbour therefore loue is the fulfilling of the Law May you not now f Erubesce Marc. Abhominatur Apostolus criminationem legis blush at your bold ignorance to say and that with such confidence That in all the Epistles there is not so much as any allusion to the Morall Law or Ten Commandements seeing there is here so expresse mention of the same And what will you say to that exhortation of the Apostle to the Ephesians Children g Ephes 6.1 2. obey your Parents in the Lord for this is right And how doth he enforce this duty and proue the equity of the same Doth he not plainly alledge the first Commandement of the second Table and the promise annexed thereto for this end and purpose saying Honor thy father and mother which is the first Commandement with promise that it may be well with thee and thou maist liue long on the earth The euidence of this one place is such and so sufficient to conuince you of grosse blindnesse in this particular that I will not seeke any further for more lights but only leaue this in your hand and pray that the scales may fall from your eies that you may see the truth by it I come now to the reason which you render of all this Antinomus For it is the goodnesse of God say you that leadeth to repentance Rom. 2.4 c. 2 Pet. 3.9 and not the thundering of the Law To this I answer Answer That the goodnesse of God indeed doth lead vs to repentance according to that which you alledge out of Rom. 2.4 But where you absolutely exclude the thundering of the Law as of no vse nor force in this businesse tell me I pray you what you thinke of the very next verse h Rom. 2.4 5. But thou after thy hardnesse and impenitent heart treasurest vp vnto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath and reuelation of the righteous judgement of God who will render to euery man according to his deeds Whether are these any thunderings of the Law or no Euery word hath his weight Wrath of God day of wrath righteous judgement of God just recompence according to the worke so shall the wages be If the goodnesse of God leade vnto repentance doe not these threatnings driue vnto it If the mercies of God moue vs to obedience doe not the terrors of God remoue vs and withdraw vs from impenitency and profanenesse Nay doth not the Apostle in the same place for this very end ioine them both together i Rom. 2.7 8 9 10. Indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish vpon euery soule of man that doth euill of the Iew first and also of the Gentile but glory honour and peace to euery man that worketh good to the Iew first and also to the Gentile As for that which * Antinomus you alledge also out of 2 Pet. 3.9 The long suffering of the Lord to vs ward 2 Pet. 3.9 not willing that any should perish but that all shall come to repentance I acknowledge it as a point of the mercy and truth of God Answer But whereas you would haue this long suffering to be the only meanes without all threatnings or terrors to bring vs to this repentance looke backe I pray you to the k 2 Pet. 3.5 6 7. 5 6 7. verses of the same Chapter and be not willingly ignorant of the judgements of God there mentioned by the ouerflowing of waters whereby the Old world perished and by the burning and flaming fire whereunto this world is reserued against the day of judgement and perdition of vngodly men And looke forwards also to the very next words following viz. l 2 Pet. 3.10 But the day of the Lord will come as a theefe in the night in which the heauens shall passe away with a great noise and the elements shall melt with feruent heat the earth also and the workes that are therein shall be burnt vp And tell me whether these threatnings of the Day of the Lord be not as terrible as the lightnings and thunderings at the giuing of the Law the seeing and hearing whereof made m Exod. 19. Heb. 12.18 19 21. Moses to say I exceedingly feare and tremble And if you thinke these be not vrged to leade vs or draw vs to repentance then consider I beseech you what vse and application the Apostle makes hereof euen vnto all the faithfull in the words following n 2 Pet. 3.11 Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolued what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conuersation and godlinesse Now for conclusion of this point Let vs heare how the Author to the Hebrewes doth vrge vs To prouoke one another to loue and to good workes This he doth not only by the boldnesse or liberty which we haue to enter into the Holiest by the o Heb. 10.19 bloud of Iesus but also by the p Heb. 10.27 looking for of judgement and fiery indignation
which shall deuoure the aduersaries And this he enforceth further not only by an allusion but by a manifest allegation of Moses Law q Heb. 10.28 29. He that despised Moses Law died without mercy vnder two or three witnesses Of how much sorer punishment shall he be thought worthy who hath trodden vnder foot the Sonne of God c. For we know him that hath said r Heb. 10.30.31 Vengeance belongeth vnto me I will recompence saith the Lord and againe The Lord shall judge his people It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God And this shall suffice for answer to your third generall Argument drawen from the practise of the Apostles in all their Epistles Your fourth Argument is this Argument 4 Antinomus Wheresoeuer the Holy Ghost handleth the abrogation of the Law there is neuer any exception of the Morall This is vtterly vntrue Answer for where the Holy Ghost handleth the abrogation of the Law it is either first The abrogation of the Law handled diuers waies First in the matter of Saluation Secondly in the matter of justification in the matter of Saluation as Acts 15.1 10. and there in the same Chapter the Morall Law is excepted because abstaining from Idolatries and Fornication being breaches of the first and second Table of the Morall Law is there inioined as from things of necessity to be refrained Acts 15.28 Or secondly in the matter of justification as Rom. 3.28 We conclude saith the Apostle that a man is justified by faith without the workes of the Law and yet there also vnto that obiection Doe we then make void the Law through faith he answereth as it were with detestation God forbid yea we establish the Law Rom. 3.31 So in the like Argument in the Epistle to the Galathians where he doth vtterly abolish the Law for righteousnesse in the Å¿ Gal. 2.16 Rom. 3.28 31. act of justification he doth yet establish the vse of the Morall Law for leading a godly and Christian life when he telleth vs that Faith t Gal. 5.6 worketh by loue and by loue we are bound to u Gal. 5.13 serue one another and the rule of loue is the Morall Law which he there vrgeth as a bond euen now in full force and vertue binding all Christians to obedience when he addeth this reason For all the x Gal. 3.14 Law is fulfilled in one word euen in this Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Leuit. 19.18 Matt. 22.39 And is not this an euident exception of the Morall Law made by the Holy Ghost and that euen in the same Epistle nay in the same Chapter where he handleth the abrogation of the Law also Thirdly the abrogation of the Law is handled as it was a wall of partition Or thirdly the Holy Ghost handleth the abrogation of the Law as it was a wall of a Ephes 2.13 14 15. partition betwixt Iewes and Gentiles as Ephes 2.13 14 15. and yet in the same Epistle he requireth and vrgeth the duties of the Morall Law as b Ephes 4.24 25 26 28. Cast off lying and speake the truth Be angry and sinne not Labour with your hands and steale not c Ephes 5.2 3 4 5 6. Walke in loue and hate not flie fornication and all vncleannesse and name it not And all this to be done vpon promise and penalty as euer they will haue any inheritance in the kingdome of God or auoid the danger of the wrath of God Nay further to cut off all occasion of cauill as if one should obiect That these duties are not vrged for obedience to the Morall Law but to the Gospell the Apostle by a special direction of the Holy Ghost doth in expresse words exhorting children to obey their Parents make mention of the d Ephes 6.1 2. first Commandement with promise and setteth downe both precept and promise out of the Morall Law as yet of speciall force to draw them thereunto And yet we doe not say that these duties are either so vrged vpon vs or performed by vs as duties of the Law for righteousnesse to liue by them Rom. 10.5 but as fruits of the righteousnesse of faith in the Gospell discerned and measured by the Law yet not by the rigour but by the e Rom. 12.2 13.8 9. tenor of it offered also and accepted only in the obedience of Christ Iesus who according to his Couenant hath put his f Heb. 8.10 10.16 Lawes in our mindes and written them by the finger of his Spirit not in Tables of stone but in the g 2 Cor. 3.3 fleshy Tables of our hearts That as the Apostle speaketh the righteousnesse of the Law might be h Rom. 8.1 4. fulfilled in vs who walke not after the flesh but after the spirit Or fourthly Fourthly the abrogation of the Law is handled touching Iewish obseruation the abrogation of the Law is handled as touching i Col. 2.16 17. Iewish and superstitious obseruations Col. 2.16 17. and typicall signification shadowing k Heb. 10.1 forth good things to come as Hebr. 10.1 And yet in both these Epistles where the law of carnall Commandements i. the Ceremoniall Law is cancelled and abolished the Commandements of the Law which is spirituall namely the Morall Law are confirmed and established as euidently appeareth by the plentifull and powerfull exhortations and injunctions for the performance of both generall and speciall duties of the Morall Law As for example Col. 3.14 l Col. 3.12 14. Aboue all things put on loue which is the bond of perfectnesse Heb. 10.24 m Heb. 10.24 Let vs consider one another to prouoke vnto lsue and good workes And n Rom. 13.8 9. loue you haue already heard is the fulfilling of the Law and when o Gal. 5.6 faith worketh by loue faith worketh by the rule of the Law and he that walketh in loue p Gal. 6.16 walketh by the line of the Law Which may yet be further seene by those speciall duties of Superiours and inferiours appertaining to the fift Commandement as of husbands and wiues parents and children gouernours and seruants Col. 3. 4. and Heb. 13. mentioned and vrged out of the Morall Law in both places By this time you may perceiue that euen in the same places where the Holy Ghost handleth the abrogation of the Law there is contrary to your assertion some exception of the Morall Law Nay I say more that wheresoeuer the Holy Ghost handleth the full and finall abrogation of the Law for all exercise in Gods worship or vse in the Church of Christ there he euer giueth instance in the Ceremoniall Law and neuer either mentioneth or meaneth the Morall Law And againe where he handleth the abrogation of the Law only in some circumstances or for some particular ends or vses he sometimes ioineth the Morall and the Ceremoniall * Aug. in Epist ad Galat. cap. 3. Calu. in Rom.
Psal 147.19 20. Psal 103.7 Psa 81.4 5 8. All which places I haue searcht and seene and will now tell you what I haue found by fishing in them That of Exod. 19.2 3 Exod. 19.1 2 3 4 5. c. you seeme to vrge on this manner Moses had charge from God to speake to the house of Iacob and to the children of Israel If yee will obey my voice and keepe my Couenant then yee shall be a peculiar treasure vnto me aboue all people and yee shall be vnto me a kingdome of priests and an holy nation and hereupon you would inferre that the Morall Law was giuen vnto the Iewes only Answer That the Morall Law for the manner of deliuery promulgation and diuers circumstances of persons times places and forme of Legall Couenant was peculiar to the Iewish Nation we doe now againe as often before most willingly acknowledge Moses was to the Iewes a p Deut. 18.18 Prophet to teach them a q Ioh. 1.17 Lawgiuer to gouerne them a messenger and r Gal. 3.10 19. Mediator to deale betwixt God and them r Gal. 3.10 19. a rigorous exactor of absolute obedience a Å¿ Heb. 2.2 10. seuere auenger of all disobedience 28 29. yea he was a minister of u 2 Cor. 3.7 9 14. condemnation to all them that could not see through the veile that was vpon his face into the end of the Law Christ Iesus and thus the Iewes euen vntill this day the veile remaining yet vpon their hearts in the reading of the Old Testament will needs be x Ioh. 9.28 Moses disciples still But as thus the Law was giuen vnto them by Moses so was y Iob. 1.17 grace and truth with the true end and vse of the Law brought vnto vs by Christ Iesus who being our z Act. 3 22 23. Prophet a Iam. 4.12 Lawgiuer b Act. 5.31 Prince and c Heb. 8.1 Priest d Malac. 3.1 Messenger and e Heb. 8.6 Mediator of a better Couenant our f Heb. 7.22 surety and g Matt. 1.21 Sauiour from all our sinnes hath redeemed vs from this Iewish Paedagogie and bondage h Gal. 4.4 of the Law and yet hath according to his Couenant i Heb. 8.10 put his lawes into our mindes and written them in our hearts by the finger k 2 Cor. 3.3 of his spirit and reckoneth and accounteth vs as much as euer he did the Iewes to be now his l 1 Pet. 2.9 10. peculiar people a chosen generation a royall priesthood or a kingdome of priests a holy nation his m 2 Cor. 6.18 sonnes and daughters children of Abraham according to the n Rom. 9.7 8. faith though not according to the flesh o Heb. 8.8 the house of Iacob the house of Iudah and p Gal. 6.16 the Israel of God By which titles dignities and priuiledges the Apostles Peter and Paul and others doe call vs of the Gentiles to obey the Commandements of the Morall Law euen now in the daies of the Gospell as Moses did the Iewes in the place which you alledge Exod. 19.2 3 4 5. by the same meanes at the giuing of the Law For example because we are a q 1 Pet. 2.9 12. compare with Exod. 19.2 3 4 5. and Tit. 2.14 with Deut. 7.7 and Ezek. 36.26 27. with Iam. 2.8 10 12. chosen generation a royall priesthood c. therefore we must be of honest conuersation 1 Pet. 2.9 12. because we are his peculiar people therefore we must be zealous of good workes Tit. 2.14 because we are the Israel of God we must therefore walke according to this rule because he hath put his lawes and his spirit in our hearts therefore we must so speake and so doe as they that shall be judged by the Law of liberty Of all these we may say as S. Iohn r 1 Ioh. 2.7 saith of the Commandement of loue which is the summe of the Law Brethren we write no new Commandement vnto you but the old Commandements which yee had from the beginning These are no new Commandements of the Gospell but the old Commandements of the Morall Law renewed in the Gospell In which respect we may say againe with S. Iohn Å¿ 1 Ioh. 2.8 A new Commandement or these are new Commandements which we write vnto you And as Christ t Ioh. 13.34 himselfe said in the same sense A new Commandement giue I vnto you that yee loue one another which yet was an old Commandement enioined by u Leuit. 19.18 Moses in the Morall Law and now only renewed and reenforced by Christ in the Gospell who came not as you imagine x Matt. 5.17 to destroy the Morall Law but to fulfill it to repaire the breaches and renew the beauty of it These things thus considered we say plainly That whatsoeuer appertained vnto Moses his literall carnall legall personall and terrible ministration or promulgation of the Morall Law that together with all the circumstances thereof was peculiar to the Iewes only and we now make no claime to any part or parcell of it But whatsoeuer was then in the Decalogue or y Deut. 1.13 Ten words of God substantiall morall spirituall just and good teaching and prescribing all duties of z Matt. 22.37 38 39 40. loue to God and man that we say for ought yet we see is a Matt. 5.18 perpetuall and remaineth still b Rom. 13.8 9 10. in force and vse for c Iam. 2.12 vs as the Morall Law of God recorded by Moses as a d Ioh. 5.46 47. pen-man of the Holy Ghost expounded by the e Matt. 22.40 Prophets f Matt. 3.15 5.17 fulfilled g Matt. 5.19 22 28 34 39 44. renewed and h Ioh. 13.34 established by i Matt. 5.19 Christ himselfe k Act. 28.23 preached and l Rom. 7. 13. Iam. 2.10 pressed by the holy Apostles vpon m 11 12. all that beare the name of Christ and professe the Gospell and so further to be published and vrged by the n Matt. 28.20 See Bez. Epist Theol. Ep. 20.104 Ministers of the Gospell as occasion shall require euen vnto the n Matt. 28.20 See Bez. Epist Theol. Ep. 20.104 end of the world Neither doe we now receiue the Morall Law as Moses disciples to the same end and vpon the same tearmes as did the Iewes but as the disciples of Christ who is our o Iam. 4.12 Law-giuer who hath taken away the p 2 Cor. 3.14 veile from Moses his face and hath so reuealed by his spirit both the image of God and the good and acceptable q Rom. 12.2 will of God in the Morall Law through the r Eph. 5.8 9 10. light of the Gospell that now we all as with open Å¿ 2 Cor. 3.17 18. face beholding as in a glasse the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory
hath appeared and teacheth vs that denying vngodlinesse and worldly lusts we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world which is the summe * Armin. disput de peccato actua thes 8. sect 4. and substance of the whole Morall Law As for that promise of long life and prosperity Exod. 20.12 annexed to the fifth Commandement Exod. 20.12 which * Antinomus you vrge as if it were appropriated only to the Land of Canaan that you might binde fast the Morall Law vnto the Iewes onely The Apostle Paul Answer Ephes 6.2 shall giue you vpon the same ground of generall equity an effectuall and full answer thereunto For pressing and perswading there diuers duties of the Morall Law he requireth and allureth children to honour and obey their Parents both by precept and by promise of the first Commandement of the second Table Children saith he Ephes 6.1 2. obey your Parents in the Lord for this is right Honor thy father and mother which is the first Commandement with promise that it may be well with thee and thou maiest liue long on the earth The precept he setteth downe in the same words as it is written in the Law Exod. 20.12 The promise he a little changeth not in the substance and quality of it but in the circumstance of persons and place and that according to the rule of generall equity and conueniency for the better vnderstanding and enioying of the same The substance and quality of the promise to such children as honour and obey their Parents is one and the same be they Iewes or Gentiles viz. long life and a prosperous estate in this world and this is perpetuall as the precept it selfe is The circumstances of persons and place are different in both places For in the giuing of the Law Exod. 20.12 Exod. 20.12 the promise was at that time directed to the people of the Iewes to be made good in the Land of Canaan running in this tenor That thy daies may be long in the Land which the Lord thy God giueth thee But in the renewing and applying of the Law in and since the dayes of Christ the promise is directed to all beleeuers both Iewes and Gentiles as the Apostle doth here deliuer it to the Ephesians in these tearmes That it may be well with thee and that thou maist liue long not only in Canaan or in Ephesus but on the earth i. whatsoeuer thy estate or wheresoeuer thy abiding be How opposite and contrary to the Apostles judgement and dealing is your position and opinion You will needs wholly abolish the whole Morall Law the Apostle doth establish it you will needs haue it to be giuen to the Iewes only the Apostle saith it belongeth to the Gentiles also you will needs abolish the precept because of some circumstance wanting now in the promise the Apostle passing by or letting fall the circumstance as temporall preserueth and maintaineth the substance and equity of them both as perpetuall you will needs restraine and confine the blessing of long and happy daies vnto Canaan the Apostle doth extend and enlarge it to euery City and Countrey to euery corner and quarter of the earth euen ouer the vniuersall world Let this suffice for answer to the scriptures which you haue brought out of the 19. and 20. Chapters of Exodus Antinomus as for the rest which you heape vp out of Deuteronomy and the Psalmes to the number of a dozen more being all one in substance with the former and diuers of them the very same in the same words Me thinks you deale as wisely herein Answer as if hauing offered to pay a shilling in two sixpences you should to shew your store of siluer draw out twelue single pence also to discharge the summe as reckoning the payment to be better in many peeces than in few because the shew and flourish is not so great in few as in many But seeing it is so ordinary with you to deliuer in your Scriptures and Testimonies by number rather than by measure and so to carry out or couer an error with some colour and shew of truth I will follow you no further in this maze but either put you ouer for answer vnto that which I haue answered to the former of like nature or else giue you ouer to runne round in your owne circle vntill you waxe giddy with your owne conceit and course as many others of like temper haue done before you Those which you alledge out of the New Testament some of them are flat against you and not one of them will proue your point That the Morall Law was giuen to the Iewes only That of Matthew 10.6 I send and 15.24 Matt. 10.6 Matt. 15.24 See Calu Instit li. 2. cap. 11. sect 12. I am not sent but vnto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel would serue with greater shew of probability to proue that the Gospell was not sent vnto the Gentiles than that the Law was giuen only to the Iewes Howbeit the meaning of Christ is not to binde himselfe or the Gospell only to the Iewes and to exclude the Gentiles but that for his personall ministration he was first and so they a Act. 13.46 principally to offer the bread of life to the Iewes being Gods children and so to seeke the lost sheepe of the house of Israel And albeit he commanded his Apostles for a season that they should not go into the way of the Gentiles but vnto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel yet after his resurrection when he renewed their commission he gaue them in charge to goe and teach b Matt. 28.19 20. all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost The Apostles were first indeed to offer the food of the Gospell vnto the Iewes but when they as wanton or wicked children turned away their food from them they waxed bold and said Loe c Act. 13.46 we turne vnto the Gentiles that the Prophecy of Isaiah might so be fulfilled in all this Out of d Isa 2.3 Sion shall goe forth a Law and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem Isaiah 2.3 As for that of Acts 14.16 How doth this follow Antinomus The Lord in times past suffered all Nations to walke in their owne waies Ergo the Morall Law was giuen to the Iewes only for the time past and not vnto vs of the Gentiles for the time present Answer For although the Gentiles had not the Law e Rom. 2.15 written in Tables of stone to teach them to walke in the waies of God so euidently as the Iewes had yet had they the effect of the Law written in their hearts in times past but now since the daies of the Gospell the beleeuers of the Gentiles haue the same Morall Law written in the fleshy f 2 Cor. 3.3 Tables of their heart by the finger of Gods Spirit with much clearer light g
Act. 2.17 18. of knowledge in their mindes and much greater power of grace in their hearts h Heb. 8.10 11. and liues than euer the Iewes that first had it written in Tables of stone had For proofe whereof if other Scriptures were silent yet those which you produce for your selfe will speake enough to serue my turne Rom. 7.14 and 3.19 and 9.4 5 6 7 8. Hebr. 1.2 2. For if the Morall Law be i Rom. 7.14 spirituall if it k Rom. 3.19 conuince the whole world as guilty before God if it belong vnto the true l Rom. 9.4 5 6 7 8. Israel the children of Abraham Rom. 9.6 7. compared with Hebr. 8.10 and if God hath in these last daies spoken m Heb. 1.1 2. more plainly and opened his will more effectually by his Sonne as the Scriptures you alledge beare witnesse with me then haue we that are beleeuers of the Gentiles the Morall Law of God both in a clearer light of n 1 Ioh. 2.27 knowledge in our mindes and in a greater o Phil. 1.9 10 11. power of grace in our hearts and liues than euer the body of the people of the p See Muscul loc com de leg cap. de lege spiritus Vrsin de lege diuina p. 278 279. Iewes had which if it be true then haue you spunne a faire threed who drawing out a line and twisting a cord to binde the Morall Law vpon the Iewes only haue before you were aware made them both of that length and strength that they reach vnto and binde it vpon the Gentiles also I come now vnto the Testimonies of learned men whose names and writings you pretend for your cause and peruert to your owne purpose as being of the same minde and wrapt in the same error with you That the Morall Law was giuen to the Iewes only But take heed whilst you beare men in hand that you haue witnesse from them lest vpon due search you your selfe be found to beare false witnesse against them Let vs make triall of your dealing with some of the most judicious and religious of them And first for Caluine I haue read the Epistle q Calu. Epist 58. That Christ is the end of the Law but as you cite no sentence so can I finde no syllable to proue that the Morall Law was giuen to the Iewes only he that must finde out what you set him to seeke especially in so large a field had need to plow with your heifer and to haue some more particular markes of your meaning to lead him thereunto But although I found not what I sought yet in seeking I found what I there sought not viz. That Caluine speaking of the Ceremonies and Sacrifices of the Law hath these words Lex nihil adduxit ad pèrfectionem tantum instar r Gal. 3.24 paedagogi dirigebat deducebat ad Christum qui legis ipsius finis ſ Rom. 10.4 est complementum vt tradit Apostolus Now it may be that you finding these words in Caluine that Christ is the end of the Law did imagine that Christ had made an vtter end of the Morall as well as of the Ceremoniall Law either not knowing or not obseruing that there is an * Christus finis perficiens non interficiens Aug. in Ioh. Tract 55. end of accomplishment as well as an end of abolishment Christ hath both accomplished and abolished the Ceremoniall Law the Morall Law he hath accomplished but not abolished That which t See Calu. Ep. 58. was imperfect in both touching the Legall Couenant for righteousnesse by the workes of both is abolished in both and only perfected in him who for righteousnesse is the end of both CHRIST IESVS to all that beleeue in his name Rom. 10.4 Vpon which place u Paraeus in Rom. 10.14 Paraeus hath these words Consens●… legis Christi hinc apparet errant qui putant legem repugnare Christo Christum abol●… legem Hence appeareth saith he the consent of the Law and Christ and they are deceiued that thinke the Law is contrary vnto Christ or that Christ doth abolish the Law Antinomus Your next quotation of Caluine Rom. 3.19 telleth vs That whereas the Iewes would needs put off all those rebukes and threats of the Law from themselues vnto the Gentiles the Apostle doth there apply the Law to them particularly x Calu. in Rom. 3.19 Ne ad solas Gentes restringant quae in ipsos promiscuè competunt Lest they should restraine vnto the Gentiles only those things which did belong vnto them both together Answer Now as there the Iewes were blamed for restraining the Law vnto the Gentiles so are you here to be rebuked for restraining the Law vnto the Iewes only especially out of this place where the Law is said to y Rom. 3.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stop euery mouth i. to conuince both Iewes and Gentiles of sinne in such a manner as that they can haue nothing to plead for their clearing or just defence and not only so but to hold fast the whole world as liable to Gods curse for the breach of it If you haue aduisedly read the other z Calu. Instit lib. 2. cap. 1. sect 1. li. 2. cap. 11. sect 11. places and Chapters of Caluine Instit lib. 2. cap. 1. lib. 2. nay if you haue but read the very contents of the Chapters and 13.14.16 and 17. sections you cannot but sinne against knowledge and conscience too in citing these places as making for you which stand in open force and fight against you For albeit Caluine doth acknowledge that both the Morall and Ceremoniall Law were giuen vnto the Iewes which no man doth deny yet doth he not say that the Morall Law was giuen vnto the Iewes only which is that which you affirme And although he grant as we doe that the Ceremoniall Law is now by Christ abolished yet doth he manifestly proue that the Morall Law doth yet continue and retaine some speciall force a See Bez. Theol. Ep. Ep. 20. p. 103.104 and vse still which is that which you deny I referre you to the same Booke of his b Calu. Instit lib. 2. cap. 7. sect 6 7 8 9 10 11 12. Institutions which you alledge and section 6 7 8 9 10 11 12. of the seuenth Chapter c Ad Sacramenta pertinent Circumcisio carnis Sabbatum temporale neomenia Ad mores autem non occides non machaberis Augustine in Galat. 3. hath nothing that I can finde to proue that the Morall Law was giuen to the Iewes only something he hath to the cleane contrary For distinguishing the workes of the Law into Ceremoniall and Morall d Nunquid ergo potest Apostolus non curare c. Aug. in Gal. 3. he demandeth whether the Apostle could as little care whether a Christian were a murtherer an adulterer whether he were chaste and innocent as he careth
not whether he be circumcised or vncircumcised in the flesh By which his demand it may euidently appeare that howsoeuer he thought the workes of the Ceremoniall Law were now ceased yet he thought also that the workes of the Morall Law were now to be practised and so the Morall Law it selfe not to be giuen to the Iewes only but still to be continued amongst Christians also See Aug. contr Advers leg proph lib. 2. cap. 7. Erasmus in his Paraph. in Gal. 3.14 speaketh of the Ceremoniall Law which he faith was giuen vnto the Iewes as a Schoolemaster to a rude people Vt paulatim proficientes ad Christum perducerentur à quo solo veram expectarent justitiam pristinis diffisi ceremonijs And how will this proue that the Morall Law was giuen vnto the Iewes only But doth he e Erasm on Rom. 2.14 15. not say in his Paraphrase on Romans 2. that the Gentiles were à lege Mosaica alienae Yes he doth and he tels you what he meaneth when he addeth Nullo Mosaicae legis praescripto monebantur but only had rem legis non tabulis sed mentibus inscriptam Antinomus They were not admonished what to doe and what to leaue vndone by any prescript of Moses but only had the substance or effect of the Law engrauen not in Tables but in their hearts And what of all this Answer Is this a good Argument The Gentiles that were strangers from the life of God were strangers from the written Law of God Ergo The Morall Law was giuen vnto the Iewes only and not vnto vs Christians of the Gentiles no more than vnto those that were without God and without Christ before vs f Ad Graecas Calendas When you proue this Argument to be good I will acknowledge your skill to be greater and your cause to be better than it doth yet proue to be The like answer and offer I make to the quotations out of Erasmus in Rom. 5.13 and 7.1 Antinomus That which you bring out of g Zanch. de fide cap. 13. sect 7. Zanch. de fide cap. 13. sect 7. is spoken of Moses Law opposed to the Gospell as may appeare by the differences which there he setteth downe betwixt them and so he saith it was giuen to the Iewes only Answer But you doe him wrong to cite him for a witnesse to your bill put vp against the Morall Law as belonging to the Iewes only whereas in the very h Zanch. de fide cap. 13. sect 8. next section which it seemes you tooke not paines to reade he testifieth to all the world That in as much as the Doctrine of the Gospell requireth repentance and holinesse of life and that we should liue soberly Vide Caluin Har. in 4. lib. Mosis p. 443. righteously and godly in this present world Eatenus etiam non tollit legem de moribus so farre forth it doth not take away the Morall Law and he giueth a good reason hereof Tota enim consentanea est cum doctrina Euangelij de vitijs vitandis virtutibus persequendis For the Morall Law is wholly agreeable to the Doctrine of the Gospell concerning the eschewing of vices and ensuing of vertues Antinomus i Bucan loc 22. quaest 18. Bucanus 22. loc 18. q. saith That the old Couenant did properly belong vnto Abraham and his posterity the Israelites but the New vnto all Nations And what will you inferre hereupon That the Morall Law was giuen only to the Iewes and doth not now at all belong vnto vs If this be your Argument I say Answer as you haue not changed your Bowe so you haue chosen an arrow of the same flight and feather with those which you haue shot before as much able to hurt the sides of the Morall Law as a rush is able to pierce a rocke A strange man you are and as strange a course you hold there are few Diuines that doe so fully and distinctly set downe the differences betwixt the Law and the Gospell and the seuerall vses of the Morall Law euen now amongst Christians as k Bucan loc 22. loc 19. 20. 21. Bucanus doth and yet dare you be so bold as to piddle and picke out something out of his writings and those the very same which testifie against you as though he had giuen you his hand or lent you his sword to strike one stroake at least in your behalfe Reade ouer Bucan loc 22. againe and loc 19. and 20. and 21. and tell me at your leasure whether then you thinke him to be a man of your minde for the vtter abolishing of the whole Morall Law In the meane time take I pray you one note out of the same l Bucan loc 19. quaest 28. Bucan loc 19. for your admonition It is the error of the * Let Antinomus view his face in this glasse Antinomians and Libertines saith he to thinke that Christians haue now no vse of the Morall Law of God nor that the Decalogue is to be preached in the Christian Church because the faithfull are regenerate by the spirit I know not whether you be of this number but I feare me you are much of their temper * Hiero. August Tom. 2. pag. 341. Manichaeus Marcion destruebant Legem quam sanctam spiritualem juxta Apostolum novimus saith Hierome Paraeus in Rom. 3.19 you haue mistaken there is nothing in that place to serue your turne and Perkins in Gal. 3.23 hath beene cleared before I only adde that if you will be pleased to reade and receiue that which Mr. Perkins hath written vpon that Chapter nay vpon that verse touching the nature and vse of the Morall Law I am of opinion you will neuer looke hereafter that Mr. Perkins will euer be brought to open his mouth in this businesse any more But Moses Law you say in your sixt Argument was giuen to continue till Christs death at the most Antinomus Argument 6 Luk. 16.16 Rom. 7.1 Ergo the whole Morall Law is now wholly abrogated and abolished Answer And I say for answer That if by Moses Law you meane the Morall Law as in the former Argument I haue shewen that you must and ought then is your Antecedent false if by Moses Law August contr duas Epist Pelag. ad Bonif. lib. 3. cap. 4. you vnderstand the whole body of the Ceremoniall Iudiciall and Morall Law as it was giuen to the Iewes in that their estate of minority and legall seruility then I grant your Antecedent and deny your Consequent The Scripture which you alledge out of Luk. 16.16 The m Luc. 16.16 Law and the Prophets were vntill Iohn may as well proue that the Prophets are now of no force ☞ as that the Morall Law is now of no vse The meaning thereof is this That whereas the n Ioh. 5.16 Law and the o Act. 3.24 Prophets did testifie promise signifie and prophecie
vtterly abolished Is there any sinewes or joints nay is there any life or soule in this Argument What if the Law were giuen as a b Gal. 3.24 Schoolemaster to the Iewes is therefore the Morall Law of no force nor vse to vs Christians of the Gentiles But I demand what Law is it which you say was instituted as a Schoolemaster vnto the Iewes If you say the Ceremoniall we grant that it was a Schoolemaster not only teaching obscurely by signes and sacrifices types and figures that c Tota Legis Occonomia rudis quaedam erat disciplina rudibus conaeniens Beza in rude people of the Iewes in their non-age to looke vnto Christ to come but also conuincing and condemning them seuerely of all manner of sinne and keeping them continually vnder the rod and whip in d Gal. 4.3 the bondage of seruants as an heire in his minority is vnder sharpe e Gal. 4.1 Caluin Jnstit li. 2. ca. 11. sect 2.5 tutors and gouernors though he be lord of all that so they might be driuen to looke and long for the time of release and liberty in Christ appointed by the Father If you meane the Morall Law we doe not deny but for the manner of deliuery measure of obedience forme of Legall Couenant rigour in exacting terror in threatning and seuerity in accusing and condemning as it was in Moses hand the f 2 Cor. 3.7 9. ministery of condemnation and a killing letter it was then to the Iewes a sharpe and seuere g Gal. 3.24 Schoolemaster to driue them vnto Christ Iesus not directly as teaching pointing out or promising Christ vnto them but indirectly and as it were occasionally forcing them by h Ioh. 3.14 sorrow and feare and despaire of their owne righteousnesse for obtaining life by the Law to cast about and seeke for some remedy and releefe elsewhere as sicke men enquire for a i Matt. 9.12 Physitian and such as are wounded seeke for a Chirurgion which because it could no where be found vnder heauen but k Act. 4.10 11 12. See Calu. de usu Legis in Harmo in 4. lib. Mos p. 442.443 only in Christ Iesus they were occasioned by the Law to flie vnto the Gospell and enforced as it were to appeale from Moses vnto CHRIST resting and relying vpon him alone who hath l Mal. 4.3 healing vnder his wings for m Luk. 4.18 binding vp all their n Ad justitiam Christi lex moralis homines revocabat ut ad medicum Bez. in Rom. 3.21 wounds and curing all spirituall maladies and miseries whatsoeuer And thus also for the substance though not for euery circumstance according to the Iewish Paedagogie the Morall Law as we haue often said before hath yet in the Church of Christ some speciall vse and office still and that not only for the wicked to humble them but euen for the godly to conuince them to rebuke them to stirre them and spurre them vp to all holy duties and to teach and instruct them what to doe and what to leaue vndone euen after they are called to beleeue and liue in Christ Iesus To this purpose o Luth. on Gal. 3.24 See Calu. summa legis in Harmo in 4. lib. Mos p. 440.441 Luther speaketh most excellently vpon Gal. 3.24 The Law was our Schoolemaster vnto Christ The Law doth not only terrifie and torment as the foolish Schoolemaster beateth his schollers and teacheth them nothing but with his rods he driueth vs vnto Christ like as a good Schoolemaster instructeth and exerciseth his schollers in reading and writing to the end they may come to the knowledge of good letters and other profitable things that afterwards they may haue delight in doing of that which before being constrained vnto they did against their wils and a little after he addeth The true vse of the Law is to teach me that I a●…●…rought to the knowledge of my sinne and humbled that so I may come vnto Christ and be justified by faith c. That which you alledge out of p August de Doctr. Christi cap. 6. August de Doct. Christ cap. 6. helpeth you nothing in this businesse for he speaketh only of the Iewish Paedagogie in their Sacrifices and Ceremonies which their estate he calleth servitutem custodiam tanquam sub paedagogo puerorum and tearmeth their Ceremonies signa saying they were signa quae temporaliter erant imposita servientibus And what is this to the abrogation of the Morall Law q Beza in Gal. 3.23 4.1 3. againe abused Puerilis est jactantiae accusando illustres homines nomini suo famam quarere Hieron Ep. 13. Beza you doe abuse againe he mentioneth the Ceremoniall Law only in both places Gal. 3.23 and Gal. 4.1.3 Nunc eandem Ceremonialem Legem confiderans ut Euangelicarum promissionum umbram figuram docet illam quoque hoc respectu cessasse quam comparat cum paedagogo postea cum tutore Gal. 4.1 And will you inferre vpon this Beza saith The Ceremeniall Law which to the Iewes was a Schoolemaster and Tutor vnto Christ is now ceased Ergo The Morall Law is vtterly abolished since the death of Christ The place of Mr. Perkins Galath 3.23 hath beene cleared before let me now stop your mouth once for all for euer mentioning Mr. Perkins name as being of your opinion for the vtter abolishing of the Morall Law and I will not goe far to fetch a stoppell but euen to the other side of the leafe which you haue quoted r Perk. on Gal. 3.23 Seeing faith is now come saith he it may be demanded what is the guard whereby we are kept now Answ The precepts of the Morall Law The sayings of the wise are as nailes and stakes fastened to range men in the compasse of their duties Eccles 12.11 If this stoppell will not serue your mouth is huge wide till you send me the measure of it I shall not fit it right to serue your turne Antinomus Vnto your eighth ninth and tenth short Arguments I will make no long answer Argument 8 9 10. they being all of one nature may receiue one manner of satisfaction and resolution The * Aug. ad Bonif. cont duas Epist Pelag. lib. 3. cap. 4. Law of Moses as it was giuen vnto the Iewes in the letter for the outward forme of Legall Couenant in Mount Sinai Answer is resembled to Hagar that bringeth forth children vnto bondage as she did Ismael and being giuen in such horror and terror bestoweth nothing but the spirit of feare vpon her children And in this regard we say It is the old and no part of the new Couenant See Muscul loc Com. de Discrim Veteris Nov. Iestam that is of the Gospell which on the contrary bringeth forth children vnto spirituall liberty as Sarah did Izaacke and bestoweth vpon them the spirit of Adoption making them heires of promise and fellow-heires annexed with Christ Iesus But what is
all this to the vtter abolishing of the Morall Law Such things as were but accidentall or * Zanch. in Hos cap. 2. p. 45. col 1. accessory to the Couenant made with Abraham or to the promulgation or administration of the Legall Couenant amongst the Iewes are all abolished But the Morall Law which for substance was euer the same rule of righteousnesse before the fall before the t Muscul loc de foedere Dei p. 144. Law giuen by Moses and before the publishing of the Gospell by Christ Iesus was then and is yet still of good and great u Vrsin de lege divina p. 278. vse in the Church of God For as the x Aug. Ep. 49. ad Deog●at Couenant of Grace made betwixt God and man in Christ Iesus was euer since the fall one and the same in the daies of Adam Abraham Moses and of Christ and his Apostles though the administration thereof was diuers according to the different ages and estates of God Church and children so the Morall Law of God was euer the rule of obedience in all those times for all duties of loue to God and man and shall so continue together with the Gospell euen vnto the end of the world although it was not alwaies either deliuered vnto or vrged after the same manner vpon Gods people Abraham y Vide Zanch. in Hos c. 2. p. 44. col 2. Paraeus in Rom. 2. v. 25. Gen. 17.1 before the Law written hauing a portion of this Couenant was charged to walke before God and to be vpright I demand by what rule must Abraham thus walke Doubtlesse by the rule of the Morall Law written in his heart and by the word and will of God reuealed by his Spirit Moses Dauid Samuel Daniel and all other holy Prophets and holy men in the daies of the Law were in the same z Hyper. in Heb. cap. 3.1 Cor. 10.1 2 3. Aug. cont duas Ep. pelag lib. 3. ad Bonis cap. 4. Couenant of Grace by faith in Christ Iesus and yet as during the time of the Iewish Paedagogy they conformed themselues in the outward worship of God to the Ceremoniall Law looking by faith vnto Christ the a Col. 2.17 substance of those b Heb. 10.1 shadowes so did they frame their affections and actions for a sober righteous and holy life according to the Morall Law which yet they did not follow for righteousnesse to be justified and saued by the workes of it as the greatest number of the c Rom. 10.3 4 5. Iewes did but because they knew that the Law of God was a d Psal 119.105 light vnto their feet and a lampe vnto their paths and God did call them to the Law and to the e Isai 8.16 20. Testimony and charged the Prophet to binde vp the Testimony and to seale vp the Law amongst his disciples Isa 8.16.20 So likewise hath our Sauiour Christ and his Apostles the f 2 Pet. 1.19 night of darke Ceremonies being dispelled by the bright day of the Gospell continued and g Matt. 5. cap. 22. cap. v. 36 37 38 39 40. Gal. 5.14 Iam. 2.8 9. established the Morall Law of God being now a part of his written word and reuealed will to be for euer vnto all Christians the rule of life and the line of loue by which we must measure out all our duties and seruices of piety towards God and charity towards men before him and his for euer In which regard loue which is the summe of the Law is said by the Apostle h 1 Ioh. 2.7 8. Iohn and by i Ioh. 13.34 Ioh. 14.15 Ioh. 15.10 11 13. Christ himselfe to be both an Old Commandement and a New an Old Commandement because the duties of loue were euer enioyned and required from the beginning and a New because the same Law of loue was vpon new grounds of loue both renewed and reenforced by Christ himselfe the Lawgiuer Argument 10 Now whereas in your tenth Argument you seeme to conclude That because the Morall Law was giuen with manifest tokens of Gods wrath Antinomus in great terror and is called a fiery Law Deut. 33.2 therefore it was giuen to the Iewes only and so consequently is now vtterly abolished Answer and belongs not now vnto vs Might you not as well and wisely i. indeed as absurdly conclude also that because the Day of the Promulgation of the Gospell is called by the Prophet Ioel and by k Ioel 2.28 Peter The great and terrible day of the Lord a day wherein the Lord will shew l Act. 2.16 17. wonders in heauen aboue and signes in the earth beneath bloud and fire and vapor of smoke when the Sunne shall be turned into darknesse and the Moone into bloud therefore the Gospell sure being giuen and the Holy Ghost being sent with such manifest tokens of Gods wrath as also by a m Act. 2.2 3 c. rushing and mighty winde and fiery tongues which did make many amazed and as it were at their wits end doe both belong vnto them that were then present whether Iewes or Proselytes but neither of them vnto vs Christians to whom no such fiery feares and bloudy terrors doe belong at all For shall not the like causes in the like case produce and bring forth the like effects Or shall fires and feares proue the abolishing of the Law when the like meanes are vsed by the wisdome of God for the publishing and establishing of the Gospell Argument 11 But let vs now heare your eleuenth Argument if it can speake any thing more directly to the point and purpose Antinomus than his fellowes haue done I cannot finde say you that saluation was euer promised to him that should keepe the Law Answer And what then I pray you will you needs inferre hereupon that the Morall Law is vtterly now abolished What true Christian doth now seeke for saluation by the keeping of the Law Or who is he that maintaineth the vse of the Morall Law for this purpose How often haue we told you That we looke for saluation and justification by the n Rom. 3.24 25 28. righteousnesse of faith in Christ Iesus and not by the keeping or fulfilling of the o Phil. 3.9 Morall Law If the Morall Law indeed had no other vse but this you speake of then had your Argument spoken something to the purpose but seeing it is vrged and vsed by vs as a chrystall glasse of Gods will to discouer vnto vs the spirituall blemishes and beauties of our hearts and liues and as a guide to teach vs to walke in his waies telling vs what to doe and what to leaue vndone and seeing it hath many other speciall p Vide Calu. de usu Legis in Harmo in 4. lib. Mos p. 442 443. offices as formerly you haue heard both for Gods glory and our good we can neuer yeeld this vnto you for a sound Argument That therefore the
Morall Law is now wholly abolished because you cannot finde that saluation was euer promised to the keeping of it But tell me in good earnest could you neuer finde that euer saluation was promised to the keeping of the Law Haue you not read q Leuit. 18.5 what is written in the Law You shall keepe my Statutes and my judgements which if a man doe he shall liue in them Or doe you thinke as some r Basilidiani Pepusiani Adamit Danaeus in Augu. Haeres Heretikes haue done that this and the like promises made vnto the Iewes concerne only the comforts of this temporall and not the blessing of eternall life Thinke you what you list it greatly skils not so long as we know that the most judicious and religious ſ Calu. Harmo in 4. lib. Mos pag. 445. 450. August contr Faust lib. 4. cap. 2. Diuines euen such as are pillars in the house of God doe thinke otherwise the Scripture bearing witnesse to their opinion herein when it tels vs That in the keeping of the Law there is a t Psal 19.11 Eccles 1.2 2.11 Psal 119.1 2. great reward a reward of greater weight and worth than any or all earthly things being but vanity and vexation of spirit can afford this being the best end of all and the whole man both for his duty and felicity to feare God and to keepe his Commandements For Blessed are they that are vndefiled in the way who walke in the Law of the Lord and blessed are they that keepe his Testimonies and seeke him with their whole heart Came this blessednesse then may you say vpon any or could euer any attaine vnto it by the workes of the Law I answer Neuer any either did or could attaine vnto this blessednesse of eternall life by their keeping u August lib. 4. cont duas Epist Pelagian ad Bonif. cap. 5. of the Law by reason of their wants and weaknesses defectiue and imperfect obedience vnto the same but all that euer were are or shall be so blessed must attaine thereunto only by the righteousnesse of x Phil. 3.9 faith in the absolute and perfect obedience of Christ Iesus And yet notwithstanding that which you say you could neuer finde we haue now not only found out for you but brought it to your hand viz. that saluation hath beene promised to him which should keepe the Law whosoeuer he were that could fulfill it in all things accordingly A further proofe whereof you may yet take if you please from the answere of our y Luk. 10.28 Matt. 19.16 c. Sauiour to the Scribe or Lawyer demanding of him what he should doe to inherit eternall life What is written in the z Leuit. 18.5 Ezek. 10.11 Law saith he how readest thou And when the Lawyer had answered out of the Law Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy strength and with all thy minde and thy neighbour as thy selfe Christ replied vnto him Thou hast answered right this doe and thou shalt liue In which words our Sauiour Christ doth both expound the promise made in the Law to the keeping of the Law viz. doe this and liue not of this temporall but of a Luk. 10.25 28. Rom. 10.5 Gal. 3.12 eternall life and also maketh himselfe a promise of Saluation to him that would keepe the Law if so be he could doe it accordingly Certainly it is strange to me that you could neuer finde out thus much before seeing both Moses and the Prophets Christ and his Apostles haue laid it downe so plainly before your face that had your eies beene in your head as a wise mans are nay had they beene but in your heeles you might haue runne and read seene and found the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rajn Censu●… Praelect 183. col 862. promise of saluation made vnto him that should keepe the Law both in the old and new Testament The b Mark 8.24 blinde man in the Gospell that had but a little glimmering light and sight saw men walking as trees and you that would be loth to be reckoned amongst the blinde or * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1.9 Gen. 21.15 19. purblinde cannot see wood for trees but like Agar cry out you can finde no water and yet the well lieth open before your eies But it may be though the well were open yet your eies were shut as hers also were that she could not see till the Lord had opened them which I pray the Lord may doe for you also and then shall you see more plainly both this and other points of Gods truth which though you haue sought yet haue you not seene and though you haue groped after them yet haue you not found them because the Lord hath hid them from your eies I come now vnto your last Argument Of such Arguments as these your dozen are Quintilian speaketh thus Si non possunt valere quia magna non sunt valebunt forsan quia multa sunt Orat. Instit lib. 5. cap. 12. which makes vp the full dozen Repentance you say is a part of the Gospell Rom. 2.4 2 Pet. 3.9 It is And what doe you collect or conclude hence Ergo the Morall Law is vtterly abolished Of what force this your Argument is you may see by the like The Prodigals returning to his Father was a part of his reconciliation with him Ergo his humiliation vpon the sense and sight of his sinne was of no vse at all for that purpose Remission of sinne from God is a part of justification Ergo confession of sinne to God is now of no vse at all The promises of grace are a part of the Gospell Ergo the precepts of the Law of God are no rules of obedience in the daies of the Gospell If these Arguments be firme and sound then such is this of yours also but if they be so feeble and weake that they haue no strength either to beare or bring forth a good conclusion then must I take yours in this cause for the like vntill you can shew me some difference or dislike betwixt them for what though repentance a See Lactan. li. 6. de vero cultu cap. 24. de vocab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 377. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being taken for our 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 12.2 effectuall renouation 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 3.5 regeneration 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 15.13 conuersion 4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 6.4 newnesse of life turning from our sinnes to embrace and obey the Gospell be indeed a part of the Gospell because none can come vnto this but they that haue the b Act. 2.18 spirit of grace powred vpon them and the word of grace c Iam. 1.18 21. ingraffed in them and the d Ephes 2.8 Phil. 1.29 gift of grace to beleeue
and obey the Gospell bestowed vpon them yet neuerthelesse this maketh nothing against the speciall offices and vses of the Morall Law either for the e Act. 2.37 conuiction of sinners or direction of Saints to prepare them for repentance by e Act. 2.37 pricking of their f Psal 19.7 8 9 10. 2 King 22.19 hearts or to bring forth fruits worthy of g Mat. 3.2 8 10 12. repentance for the well ordering of their liues The Law hath his vse to worke h Mat. 27.3 Vide Bez. in Mat. 3.2 in Act. 5.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 poenitentiam The Gospell his force to worke i 2 Tim. 2.25 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 resipiscentiam and both are needfull for Christians euen at this present as formerly they haue euer beene k Calu. in Act. 2.36 Caluine speaking of the last clause of Peters Sermon wherein he chargeth the Iewes that they had crucified Christ Iesus saith he did this Vt majori conscientiae dolore tacti ad remedium aspirarent and so layeth open the hainousnesse of that sinne in these words Cujus caedes non crudelitatis modo sceleris plena erat sed etiam immanis adversus Deum perfidiae sacrilegij îngratitudinis denique apostasiae testimonium and then he giues in the next words this reason of this course Verum ita vulnerari oportuit ne ad quaerendam medicinam tardi essent Here I doe demand whence had the Iewes this sight and sense of so many sinnes in that one of crucifying the Lord Iesus as of cruelty wickednesse perfidiousnesse sacrilege ingratitude against God and apostasie from God Whence had they that l Act. 2.37 pricke in their hearts and wound in their conscience for these sinnes Had they no light by the Law to conuince them no stroke by the Law to wound them If sinne be a m 1 Ioh. 3.4 transgression of the Law and by the Law comes the n Rom. 3.20 knowledge of sinne and if sinne be not o 5.13 7.7 imputed nor pressed but by the Law how can it be but the Law had some hand in wounding and afflicting their hearts for these sinnes and in opening their eies to see and discerne the same I deny not for I doubt not but the p Ioh. 16.8 Spirit as the finger of God had his especiall and principall worke in their humiliation and conuersion that is not the question The Spirit may worke by the q 2 King 12.19 Law to make vs sensible of sinne and to cast vs downe vnder the weight of Gods wrath for it as well as it may worke by the r Isai 61.1 Act. 10.43 44. Gospell to make vs looke vp vnto Christ and to raise vs vp to some hope and assurance of the mercy of God for pardon and forgiuenesse of the same It is sufficient for me both against your position and allegation if in the worke of their repentance containing both their ſ Act. 26.18 Act. 3.19 1 Thess 1.9 Auersion from sinne and their Conuersion vnto God the Morall Law had any either u Lex facit ut non modò intelligam sed cum morsu conscientia sentiam experiar in me esse peccatum Muscul loc com de legib p. 135. force or vse which I am well assured any judicious and indifferent Reader by this which hath beene said will judge that it had When Dionysius as x Apollod de Orig. deorum lib. 3. p. 57. Apollodorus reporteth had cast Lycurgus into a fury or frensie he in that distemper taking a hatchet in his hand whiles he thought he had smitten downe the branch of a Vine with the same hand and hatchet slew his owne sonne What Dionysius he was that cast you first into this fit or frensie error or heresie I know not but it seemes whiles you haue lift vp your hand and your hatchet your skill and pen to cut downe the Morall Law a branch of Gods Vine the dint and danger of the stroke hath light vnawares vpon your owne soule as his did vpon his owne sonne though not absolutely to kill it yet to wound it vnto death vnlesse the Lord recouer it by giuing you repentance and effectually cure it by powring in the balme of his mercy and truth which I pray he may doe in the offerings and sufferings of Christ Iesus y 2 Tim. 2.24 25 26. Antinomus Answer Your many other Arguments which for breuity sake as you say or rather for leuity sake as I conceiue you omit for vanity sake I see you must needs call vpon and that by name as if you had in readinesse a fresh supply of armed men in case of danger to renew the fight and win the field Terent. Eun. Act. 4. Scen. 16. Simalio Dorax Syrisce sequimini C●…do alios ubi centurio est Sanga manipulus furum Eccum adest Vbi alij Thus doe you well resemble bragging Thraso behauing himselfe proudly and brauing his aduersary vainly both with that he hath and also with that he hath not For hauing brought out your best appointed forces into the field you call on still Vbi alij as though there were yet so many and so many and many more behinde whereas poore man you haue not a man more neither tag nor rag to follow you seeing solus Sanio seruat domum Take so much of this to your selfe and your former Arguments as may best fit you and reserue the rest for the other which yet sit at home with Sanio to keepe the house Your reference to Musculus Common-places giues no better satisfaction now we haue taken the paines to view all the quarters and corners of those speciall places which you haue beene pleased to send vs vnto for that purpose For if either you will stand vnto Musculus or Musculus will not stand against himselfe you may and shall euen there and thence receiue resolution to satisfie you that there we finde no such satisfaction as you haue dreamed may be found in those places He that seriously readeth and aduisedly considereth what Musculus hath written in the place De abrogatione Legis Mosaicae may easily perceiue both by the title and the text that he principally aimeth at the abrogation of the Ceremoniall and Iudiciall and the Morall Law only so farre as it was Lex litera Muscul loc com de abrogatione Legis Magisterium Mosis Ministerium Mosis virtus peccati litera occîdens iram maledictionem mortem operans And all this neither hurteth vs nor helpeth you for the vtter abrogating of the whole Morall Law For albeit for these offices it may be said to be abolished to them that are true beleeuers in Christ Iesus in which respect they are said not to be vnder the Law but vnder grace yet for other vses and offices the Morall Law is in force still as to be a rule of obedience to discouer corruptions and transgressions to be a bridle
of restraint vnto sinne and sinners Muscul loc de vi effica Legis Loc. de abrog Legis Dei enim similis quisque factus ipse Legem facilè implet nec erit sub illa sed cum illa August lib. Exposit quarundam propos ex Epist ad Rom. Cal. instit lib. 2. cap. 7. sect 13 14. as Musculus in the same place and elsewhere doth acknowledge alleging that out of the Romans Shall we sinne because we are not vnder the Law but vnder Grace God forbid and giuing vs thereby to vnderstand that such as are in the state of grace euen the sonnes of God are seruants vnto the Law for obedience vnto righteousnesse though they be freed from the law of sinne and death They are not indeed vnder the Law as a rigorous exactor and terrible auenger but they are vnder it as a righteous commander and holy conducter to leade them in the waies of righteousnesse and holinesse Agreeable hereunto is that which Musculus inferreth hereupon Qui Christianus est saith he etiamsi non sit sub Magisterio Mosis propterea tamen non est liber ad faciendum ea quae sunt impia injusta adeoque factu illicita Now I would gladly know seeing nothing can be impious and vnjust but that which is illicitum vnlawfull and nothing is sinne or vnlawfull but that which is knowne and acknowledged to be so by the light and line of the Morall Law how shall a Christian once imagine that the Morall Law is to him wholly abolished seeing he continually stands in need of it as of a lanthorne vnto his feet Psal 119.105 Psal 19.7 8-11 and a light vnto his paths and must haue daily recourse vnto it Iam. 1.25 to see what is right and what is wrong what he ought to doe and what he ought to leaue vndone And if here you reply Tit. 2.12 that the Gospell teacheth vs to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue godly righteously and soberly in this present world I answer It is most true that such as haue their eies enlightned with the light of the Gospell and their hearts seasoned with the grace of it Iam. 1.25 Rom. 7. Act. 26.9.20 Gal. 5.6 Gal. 5.22 looking into the glasse of the Morall Law doe see more clearely into the beauty and glory of it judge more wisely of things that differ in it worke more effectually by loue in all the duties of it renounce and resist more powerfully all the affections and actions of sinne that rise against it and make all the Commandements thereof more easie Matt. 11.28 c. Ephes 6.1 2 c. Iam. 2.8 9 10 11 12. 2 Cor. 3.17 1 Ioh. 5.3 and the burden more light than otherwise it could be vnto them All this the Gospell teacheth and worketh in vs and for vs but it teacheth all this by the lines and lessons precepts and prohibitions of the Morall Law and worketh all this vpon the Morall grounds of loue in the Law and walketh in obedience by the spirit of adoption and liberty not in the spirit of feare and slauery And therefore by all this it may easily appeare that so long as the Gospell is established the Morall Law can neuer be wholly abolished This conclusion receiueth further strength from another made by Musculus himselfe in the same place Muscul loc com de abrogatione Legis to the same end Quare Christianus faciens contra ea quae praecepta sunt in Decalogo enormius peccat quàm si sub lege constitutus faceret tam abest ut liber sit ab ijs quae illic praecipiuntur etenim tamet si liber est à Mose hand tamen liber est ab obedientia Christi ac vera justitiae In which sentence we may obserue these seuerall propositions all seruing to maintaine the vse of the Morall Law amongst Christians First that the Decalogue i. the Morall Law or Ten Commandements being a part of the written word and reuealed will of God doth yet for the substance of it continue and concerne all Christians Secondly that the precepts and prohibitions of the Decalogue doe binde all Christians to allegeance and obedience Thirdly that a Christian doing any thing against the Decalogue or Morall Law sinneth more grieuously vnder the Gospell than any Iew committing the same sinnes vnder the Law Fourthly that Christians doe not entertaine nor maintaine the Morall Law as Moses disciples receiuing it and obeying it vpon the same conditions and to the same ends as Moses did deliuer it and impose it vpon the Iewes but as the disciples of Christ Iesus who is the Lord of his house and the only Lawgiuer for the well ordering of it Now forasmuch as Christ testifieth of himselfe that he came not to destroy but to fulfill the Law Matt 5.17 18. clearing the beauty and renewing the spirituall vigor and vertue of it Rom. 6.14 15. Rom. 7.12 Matt. 5.19 Heb. 8.10 Iam. 2.8 taking away the terror and abating the burden and rigor but not changing the nature nor abolishing one iot of the substance of it yea further not only commending and commanding it to all his disciples and in them to all true Christians Accedente gratia idipsum quod lex onerosè jusserat jam sine ouere libertissimè implemus August 83. quaest quaest 66. but putting it into our mindes and writing it by the finger of his spirit in our hearts and making it vnto vs a royall Law of liberty not a yoke of bondage and feare therefore doe we now willingly receiue and obey the Commandements thereof and doe not now account them grieuous but in Christ gracious holy just and good the duties whereof we desire and endeuour to performe with delight knowing that our infirmities are couered our wants supplied our sinnes pardoned and our seruices accepted in the absolute and perfect obedience of him that did absolutely fulfill the Law for vs that is of Christ Iesus Rom. 7.22 According vnto these grounds we may say with Musculus That although a Christian be free from Moses yet is he not free from the obedience of Christ nor of true righteousnesse and if he be not free from the obedience of Christ that is such as both by precept and patterne he taught and required according to the precepts of the Morall Law then is a Christian bound in the daies of the Gospell to the obedience of the Morall Law And if a Christian be not freed from the obedience of true righteousnesse and the rule of true righteousnesse be the Morall Law as all Diuines doe agree and as Christ and his Apostles haue taught the Churches then is a Christian bound in the daies of the Gospell to yeeld obedience vnto the Morall Law Now if you be pleased to lay all these together the reckoning will arise to another and a greater summe than you imagined or expected at this time and place and that not to feed your fancy
and serue your humour for the vtter abrogation of the whole Morall Law but to confirme the contrary truth for ratifying and establishing thereof amongst Christians in the daies of the Gospell Shall I trouble you yet with one other conclusion out of Musculus for your further satisfaction that he is not for certaine of your minde for the vtter abrogation of the Morall Law Muscul loc com de abrogatione Legis Quare tam abest saith he ut damnemus usum Decalogi ut admodum etiam laudemus eorum studium diligentiam qui primi illum ad catechizandum neophytos vsurpandum esse judicarunt We are so farre from condemning the vse of the Decalogue or Morall Law that we doe much commend their care and diligence which first did judge it fit to be vsed for catechizing nouices or the ruder sort in religion By this you may see how farre Musculus is gone from you though you labour neuer so much to draw him to stand by your side and to speake in your behalfe He is farre from condemning the vse of the Morall Law you are eager and hot in pursuing of it euen vnto death and vtter destruction He will allow and commend the vse of it and them that vse it too for catechizing children or nouices in religion there is neither man woman nor childe younger nor elder that can intreat you to giue them leaue or liberty to haue any thing at all to doe with it And here by the way I pray you be aduertised that howsoeuer this allegation be sufficient to confute your opinion yet doe not I so alledge it as altogether to approue it nor can I so either thinke or speake of the Decalogue or Morall Law as here your Musculus doth write of it for whereas he will not allow it any other place in the Church but in the Catechisme nor the explication thereof to be needfull for any but for nouices and children I am of opinion that the ministry and industry of the most judicious religious and best experienced Diuines may well and worthily profitably and comfortably be employed in seeking and searching out the infinite and admirable wisdome together with other the deepe things of God which are hid in the Morall Law and that not only for their owne priuate instruction but for the edification of the ripest and chiefest of Gods children And whosoeuer he be that thinks so little and so light knowledge of the Morall Law will serue the turne that it is to be held only as milke for babes and not as strong meat for men of riper age I am afraid that as he doth depresse and abase the Law of God more than is meet so doth he aduance himselfe too high aboue his pitch being rashly puft vp in his fleshly minde and knowing little or nothing in this particular as he ought to know For howsoeuer it be true that in the Morall Law there be some generall things so easie and shallow that euen a little lambe may wade in them Psal 19.7 Psal 119.18 yet considering the infinite variety of matter contained in the specials and particulars of the same there are many things to be found of greater depth and difficulty wherein a huge Elephant may swimme also Otherwise I can hardly thinke that euer the holy Prophets being all interpreters of the Morall Law and Christ himselfe the Lawgiuer Matt. 5. Iam. 4.12 best worthy and best able to expound and explaine the true meaning of it and Christs Apostles who were taught by his spirit the true sense thereof would euer either all or any of them haue taken all or halfe that paines in opening and applying extending and enlarging Execrandi igitur s●…t Libertini Antino●…i cateri Legem Moralem repudiantes Thes Geneu thes 28. clearing and explaining vrging and enforcing of the Morall Law and that both by word and writing preaching and exhorting as we know by their publike records they haue all done and that amongst the Priests and Prophets Doctors and Expounders of the Law Scribes and Pharisies and Rabbines such as professed the greatest skill and vnderstanding of the Law if either all or any of them had beene of his minde That it is sufficient for such as are more ripe in faith to know this summe of the Law Loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and thy neighbour as thy selfe but for the ruder sort and nouices it is meet that they be instructed in the Decalogue being a more plaine forme of liuing and fit for such persons only Antinomus The other places of Musculus which you point your finger at Answer namely of the Couenant of the difference of the Old and New Testament of the abrogation of the Legall Sabbath I haue read and perused and finde nothing in all or any of them being rightly vnderstood which I doe not willingly assent vnto If you vpon a more setled and serious reuiew of those places shall yet imagine there is any thing in them which may seeme to sauour of your opinion and beare any either colour or countenance for the vtter abolishing of the whole Morall Law when you shall be pleased to note out and send vnto me the expresse words which you conceiue doe make for your purpose you shall God willing haue a returne of a more particular and expresse answer vnto the same Meane-while I pray you now for your further satisfaction to admit of this my reference also to Musculus his Common-places for establishing of the Morall Law and the right vse thereof seeing your reference for the vtter abolishing thereof doth neither serue your turne nor satisfie me at all In that place de Legibus Muscul loc com de Legib. and those sections de usu Legis Mosaicae de vi efficacia Legis he hath sufficiently expressed himselfe that howsoeuer his writing in other places might be taken or mistaken by others yet he is of opinion Muscul de usu effica Legis That the Morall Law is now in the daies of the Gospell of speciall vse and efficacy euen for himselfe and others for the godly and for the wicked as men stand in the estate of nature or in the state of grace Now if it so fall out Muscul loc com in divisione Decalogi that Musculus may seeme vnto you in those places which you haue mentioned and the like to crosse himselfe and to be of another minde concerning the continuance office and vse of the Morall Law amongst Christians in the daies of the Gospell what answer can be fitter both for him and you in this case than the very same which he himselfe giues vnto Augustine when he found him inconstant and differing from himselfe in the diuision of the Decalogue Quaso quomodo aequum esse poterit ut unius idque sibi ipsi non constantis authoritas omnibus alijs praeferetur Deinde si placuit authoritas Augustini quare non placuit in
the written Word or reuealed will of God without any ordinary meanes of illumination or instruction and so beholding the matter of the Morall Law but very darkly and confusedly and feeling the worke in their hearts by their conscience witnessing and their thoughts accusing or excusing one another and their wils grudging and rebelling against the tenor of it So doe they vnderstand the Morall Law Theologically which besides the naturall light and sight of the Law written by nature in their hearts doe consider it and receiue it as the written Word of God as an expresse forme of a principall part of the reuealed will of God a right rule of direction for religion and religious conuersation a portion of the Couenant of Grace as it is written in our hearts by the finger of Gods Spirit a part of Gods image which in the new man is created after God in righteousnesse and true holinesse the knowledge whereof they attaine vnto by the word of Grace and the sense and feeling of the worke thereof by the spirit of Grace so beholding the beauty thereof more cleerely and distinctly and feeling the power thereof more effectually and obeying the precepts thereof more willingly and looking for the acceptance of their imperfect obedience in and by the only perfect and absolute obedience of Christ Iesus only They that thus I say doe vnderstand the Morall Law to be in force in the daies of the Gospell as for ought I know the best Diuines and best Christians doe doe vnderstand it Theologically which as yet you say you cannot see that you can doe Iunius de Theolog. vera cap. 2. thes 5. cap. 3.6 ca. 4. thes 7. cap. 7. cap. 8. Iunius that great Scholler and worthy Diuine in his Booke de Theologia will helpe you to light your candle if that will doe you any good in this your darknesse He giues this definition of Theology Theologia est rerum divinarum sapientia and this diuision Theologia est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nimirum Dei ipsius sapientia aut est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à Deo informata And leauing the former rather to be adored than curiously inquired into he afterwards subdiuides the latter to be Theologia visionis or Revelationis and then he tels vs that this Theologia revelationis is either naturalis or supernaturalis and in handling these two he worthily setteth forth the weake sight and light of humane vnderstanding and reason according to the principles and conclusions of the Law of Nature and noteth the error obscurity and insufficiency of this naturall wisdome therewithall And then a little after he defines the absolute supernaturall Theology which doth especially concerne the present businesse after this manner Iunius de Theolog. vera ca. 12. thes 23. Theologia absolutè dicta est sapientia rerum divinarum secundum veritatem divinam à Deo inspirata per enuntiativum sermonem in Christo commissa servis ejus atque in Testamento Vetere Novo per Prophetas Apostolos Euangelistas consignata quantum ejus hic nobis expedit revelari ad gloriam ipsius Electorum bonum According to the tenor of this definition of Theology I will now proue vnto you if I can that the Morall Law of God is now in force being vnderstood Theologically Whatsoeuer in it selfe is now diuine the knowledge whereof is diuine wisdome inspired of God according to diuine truth and by word in Christ committed to his seruants and in the Old and New Testament ratified by the Prophets Apostles and Euangelists as much of it as here is meet to be reuealed vnto vs to Gods glory and our good That same is and may be according to the definition of Theology Theologically vnderstood and is now in force so vnderstood But the Morall Law of God is diuine and the knowledge thereof is diuine wisdome inspired of God according to diuine truth and by the Enunciatiue word in Christ committed to his seruants and in the Old and New Testament ratified by the Prophets Apostles and Euangelists as much of it as here is meet to be reuealed vnto vs to Gods glory and our good Ergo The Morall Law is and may be according to the definition of Theology Theologically vnderstood and is now in force so vnderstood The Major of this Syllogisme is euident by the definition of Theology The Minor is made good by the Scriptures and by the practise of Christ and his Apostles and the judgement of the most judicious and Orthodox Diuines as in euery branch thereof may be proued by the Scriptures alledged and by the testimonies before and after mentioned and produced The Morall Law is diuine because it is holy Rom. 7.22 24. spirituall just and good Rom. 7.22 24. The knowledge thereof is diuine wisdome because it maketh the simple wise Psal 19. illighteneth the eies Psal 119. and maketh Dauid wiser than his teachers because it teaches the feare of God which is the beginning of wisdome yea the end of all and whole man feare God and keepe his Commandements Psalm 111.10 Psal 112.1 Eccles 12.13 It is inspired of God according to diuine truth because God hath put it in our mindes and written it in our hearts by the finger of his spirit Heb. 8.10 2 Cor. 3.3 17 18. Nehe. 9.13 14. And the things of God knoweth no man but the spirit of God which searcheth and reuealeth the deepe things of God 1 Cor. 2.10 11. And by the Enunciatiue word in Christ committed to his seruants because it was giuen by audible voice by word and writing vnto Moses and by him to the Israelites and so by and in Christ a Prophet like vnto him giuen also by word and writing vnto vs Act. 7.38 Hebr. 11. Matth. 5.17 18 c. And in the Old and New Testament ratified by the Prophets Apostles and Euangelists by Dauid Psalm 19.7 8 9. Psalm 119. throughout by Esay Isa 8.16.20 Seale vp the Law among my disciples to the Law and to the Testimonie by Matthew Marke Luke Paul Peter Iames and Iohn Matt. 22.37 38 39 40. Mark 12.29 30 31. Luk. 10.26 27. Act. 28.23 Rom. Chapters 2.3.4.7.13 2 Pet. 2.15.21 Iam. 2.10 11. 1 Ioh. 2.7 8. 3.23 and infinite other texts of Scripture which might be heaped vp to this purpose And is not the end of the Law for Gods glory and our good justified out of the Scripture also seeing by the light of the Law shining in the works of the Law God is glorified here Matth. 5. Phil. 1.11 Luk. 1.75 and we when our faith worketh by loue gather and get assurance that we shall be glorified hereafter Gal. 5.6 2 Pet. 1 10 11. Psal 119.1 Iam. 1.25 And thus may you see if you can see any thing at all that the Major of this Syllogisme being granted and euery branch of the Minor now proued the conclusion against you must needs follow as necessarily inferred That the Morall Law according to the definition of Theology is
and may be Theologically vnderstood and is now in force so vnderstood If yet you desire to heare what our Diuines speake also for this point albeit I thinke you can finde none to speake a word against it yet to doe you a pleasure I will call in one or two sufficient witnesses to giue testimony thereunto Caluine hauing rebuked them that judge Philosophicè of the Morall Law Calu. in Deut. in Append. de usu Legis pa. 441 443. addeth these words to shew there is now a Theologicall vse of it Ille verò legis usus Theologicus est quia nihil aliud potest quàm detegendo nostram injustitiam mortem duntaxat afferre And as he sheweth this is one Theologicall vse of the Law by discouering vnrighteousnesse to bring vs in danger of death so doth he afterwards in the same place finde out another Theologicall vse of it Vbi autem intus cordibus legem suam insculpsit simul prodest exterior doctrina legis sic enim filios suos gubernat spiritu regenerationis ut simul tamen velit ad vocem quoque suam esse attentos dociles That so soone as the Lord hath written his Law in our hearts then doth the doctrine of the Law doe vs good making his children by his spirit more teachable and tractable to heare and obey his will Iunius also in his learned Booke de vera Theologia brings in the Morall Law jus Morale as opposite to the Law of Nature which he calleth jus Naturae and there very plainly auerreth that the Morall Law is a principall or speciall part of the subject of true and sacred Theology Fran. Iun. lib. de vera Theolog. cap. 13. thes 24. His words be these Hoc vero jus morum quo homines ad Deum oportet accedere sacrae voluntati ejus quàm maximè fieri potest conformari sacra Theologia exponit perfectissimè Now if sacred Theology doe most perfectly expound the Morall Law then is the Morall Law Theologically vnderstood yet in force which you haue not yet the eies to see and not in force only as it is the Law of Nature as you haue had the face and forehead to affirme Now because you say There is no warrant in the Scripture for this that the Morall Law Theologically vnderstood is yet in force I pray you answer me directly to this one question which I hope will cleare the point in question Did Saint Paul when he said I had not knowne concupiscence to be sinne Rom. 7.7 except the Law had said Thou shalt not couet Did he vnderstand the Morall Law Philosophicè or Theologicè You cannot say Philosophicè for then he might haue knowne so much by the Law of Nature before his conuersion hauing as he had a double helpe the light of naturall reason and the benefit of Gamaliels Doctrine and yet he acknowledgeth that without the Law sinne was dead i. vntill he had a spirituall insight into the tenth Commandement he had no manner of sense and feeling of concupiscence to be sinne against it Besides neither Plato nor Aristotle nor the wisest Moralists that euer wrote could euer search into this depth and finde out this truth of God hid from the eie of Nature in the tenth Commandement that inclinations to sinne or motions and imaginations of sinne without consent or delight were to be accounted a breach of the Law and worthy of death If he then did not vnderstand the Law when he so said Philosophicè I conclude he must needs vnderstand it Theologicè and so without question he did speaking of it so diuinely graciously and religiously and disputing of the nature and vse fruits and effects thereof both in the estate of nature and in the estate of grace so spiritually so feelingly and effectually For the other place Rom. 3.31 which you except against as not plainly expounded by Zanchius Antinomus Because you say it may be vnderstood of the whole Law as well Ceremoniall as any other Answer and that for the time past Doe you not offer Zanchius some hard measure in charging him to expound it of the Morall Law only which he doth not and the Apostle also saying he speaketh of the time past whereas the words which the Apostle vseth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are both of the time present And doe you not see how in yeelding this place to be meant of the Morall Law though not of it only you doe conuince your selfe of an error in going about to abolish the Morall Law which by confessing the truth with the Apostle you doe now establish As for Erasmus Antinomus we haue seene enough of his minde already and returned you more by way of recompence and satisfaction from his writings than you will be willing to receiue either from his or our hands Answer And here you fall into a great commendation of Erasmus an impertinent and needlesse peece of seruice and worthy no other answer than was once giuen in a like case Plut. apoth Lacon in Antalcida Quis quaso vituperat But you say with some indignation His Paraphrase though commanded to be had in Churches is too much neglected That is a fault And books you say of farre meaner quality are much esteemed That I feare me is a scornfull flout If you aime at the Defence of the Apology of the Church of England Iewels Defence of the Apology and his Reply now commanded to be had in the Churches consider I pray you there is roome enough for both and though the Apology be admitted yet the Paraphrase is not excluded Can you not thinke well and speake well of Erasmus his gold but you must cast out some words of disgrace against our Iewel Let the Ring and the Diamond haue either of them their due place and praise If herein I misse of your meaning beare with my mistaking and hereafter either speake more plainly or not so dangerously Antinomus As for that which followeth you bring me such confused stuffe such shreds and peeces gathered here and there out of Luther on Galath Bez. 2 Cor. 3.11 August de spirit lit as is wonderfull One Simile runnes after your fift section gone many a mile before another looks hard after the generall point and then you conclude with an exhortation and then hauing made an end before you had done you come in with a word or two to illustrate your second section I cannot but conceiue that now your head grew mazy Answer or else hauing cut your garment too short or put forth your arme further than your sleeue would reach you runne and seeke about for peeces and patches shreds and snips to see if you can make vp that which you haue marred neuer regarding how they sute with your stuffe for matter or colour so they may patch vp your coat and serue your turne in your owne imagination Luther on the Galathians hath not so much by much as you say
that as Iunius saith non humana traditione sed Christi ipsius observatione atque instituto and so commended to the Churches and receiued by them as Augustine himselfe confesseth and declareth more at large elsewhere Antinomus Now whereas you say That the Holy Ghost in the New Testament doth not exact naturall precepts such as the Decalogue is for that is fulfilled in one word Loue Answer Gal. 5.14 I answer hereunto That if you haue as great felicity as I see you haue facility to contradict your selfe and to marre with one hand what you haue made with the other you are worthy more pitty than blame and haue more need at this present of a Physitian to purge you than of a Diuine to answer you Notwithstanding we will yet make triall whether you can be sensible of your error and see what you haue said or done amisse herein by asking a question or two and crauing your direct answer to the same I demand then Is not the Epistle to the Galathians a part of the New Testament Gal. 1.1 Yes it is And did not the Apostle Paul pen that Epistle by the instinct of the Holy Ghost Gal. 5.13 No doubt he did And did not the Holy Ghost by Paul require and exact of the Galathians Gal. 5.6 the duty of loue Yes he did for he commands them verse 13. Rom. 13.8 9 10. To serue one another by loue And is not this loue both a fruit of faith and a duty of the Morall Law Yes indeed it is both for in this very Chapter Gal. 5.6.14 the Holy Ghost testifieth that a true faith worketh by loue verse 6. and in the 14. verse erewhile alledged telleth vs also that this worke or duty of loue must be measured by the Morall Law For saith he the whole Law is fulfilled in this Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Why now you haue dealt honestly you haue answered directly and truly Gather vp your seuerall answers now and binde them vp in one proposition and you will finde that as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sed sero sapiunt Phryges your second thoughts are often wiser than the first so your latter position is better and truer than your former opposition Your former opposition was That the Holy Ghost in the New Testament doth not exact naturall precepts such as the Decalogue or Morall Law is for that is fulfilled in one word Loue Gal. 5.14 and now your latter and truer position is this That the Holy Ghost in the New Testament euen in the Epistle to the Galathians doth require loue not as a naturall but as a spirituall and morall duty being both a fruit of faith and the summe and substance of the whole Morall Law Gal. 5.6 and 13.14 Gal. 5.6 13.14 Certainly if your left hand be not better able to defend your selfe than your right hand hath beene to offend your aduersary you will feele the smart of your owne weapon thus beaten downe vpon your owne head more sensibly hereafter in a better mood than yet you can doe for the present in your hot bloud As for that peece which you patch and adde to the same sentence Antinomus That none of the works of the spirit are properly commanded in the Decalogue What Answer None of the works of the spirit commanded in the Decalogue properly This is a proper lie with a witnesse Tell me I pray you are not the works of the spirit there commanded where the works of the flesh are forbidden Are not adultery fornication idolatry witchcraft Gal. 5.19 20 21. hatred heresies murther drunkennesse and the rest mentioned Gal. 5.19 20 21. Are not all these forbidden in the Law and the contrary vertues or duties as chastity purity piety charity c. commanded in the same also Take the Law as Paul takes it not as it stands in opposition to the Gospell but as it stands in communion and conjunction with it and the same spirit of truth speaketh in both and requires spirituall duties in both Phil. 1.11 as the fruits of righteousnesse and holinesse to the praise and glory of God by Christ Iesus Rom. 7.12 14. Besides such as the Law it selfe is namely spirituall Iam. 2.8 9 10 11 12. holy just and good such must also the works of the Law needs be Lastly S. Iames beares witnesse hereunto very plainly and effectually saying If you fulfill the royall Law according to the Scripture Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe yee doe well This the spirit speaketh vnto the Churches by Iames vpon the same ground of the Morall Law and that not only in that generall summe of the second Table Loue thy neighbour as thy selfe but in mentioning some of the speciall Commandements as Doe not commit adultery Doe not kill prouing also that the Christians to whom he writes among the twelue Tribes now dispersed stand now bound to obey the whole Morall Law First because if they faile in one point they are guilty of all as if they commit no adultery yet if they kill they are become transgressors of the Law Secondly because they are charged not only to shunne that which is euill but to follow that which is good and that according to this rule of the Morall Law Iam. 2.12 as in the very next verse the spirit speaketh and commandeth So speake yee and so doe as they that shall be judged by the Law of liberty I would you would take the paines to reade Augustines Epistle vnto Hierome August Epist 29. ad Hiero. touching the exposition of this place of Saint Iames you shall there I doubt not finde him of an other minde than your selfe for the continuing of the office and vse of the Morall Law in binding all Christians to all duties of loue euen in the daies of the Gospell required in the same The like you may also see in his first Booke de doctrina Christiana August de Doct. Christ lib. 1. cap. 30. in his Bookes de litera spiritu contra adversarium Legis Prophetarum And now hauing deliuered your selfe of your maine businesse Antinomus and rid your hands of that confused stuffe which stucke in your fingers you are at leasure to bring vs in a Simile to illustrate as you say the conclusion of your fift section and another to illustrate the generall point If your section and your point haue no greater light than your Similies bring them Answer they may both stumble and fall in the darke for all the helpe that they shall haue by their meanes I haue heard that nullum Simile currit quatuor pedibus no Simile runs vpon foure feet but how shall that run or goe or stand which being maimed and starke lame hath neuer a sound neither legge nor foot at all If Venice and England in your supposition were vnder one and the same King and Gouernour vnder the same Law and Lawgiuer yet
with some difference of circumstance considering the diuersity of place people and condition for a season vntill the Kings sonne and heire take the gouernment more eminently and conspicuously vpon him at which time he shall renew the former Lawes remouing all difference of circumstance and establishing the same Lawes in substance by writing them in fairer Tables and confirming them by better both seales and witnesses vnto them both as to one people I would then know of you out of the depth of your English or Venetian policy whether now the Venetian Lawes being brought and read either to condemne or acquit a man accused or to giue direction for order and gouernment here with vs we in England might not hold our selues bound by vertue of those Lawes to yeeld obedience thereunto accordingly and yet not as vnto the Venetian Lawes as formerly they were in diuers circumstances imposed and exacted but now as vnto the royall Law of one and the same King who by one and the same Law will rule and gouerne both Venice and England as one and the same people If you be pleased to take the light of this comparison in your hand it will shew you if your sight be any thing like both the vanity and weaknesse of your conclusion in your fift section and the darknesse and obscurity of your sorry Simile which you haue brought to set a fairer glosse vpon the same Your other Simile which you bring to illustrate the generall point hath I acknowledge much more light in it if by the generall point you meane the Law giuen by Moses as it stands in opposition against the Gospell according to that of Iohn Ioh. 1.17 The Law was giuen by Moses but grace and truth by Christ Iesus For whether you vnderstand the Ceremoniall or Morall Law or the Prophets either as interpreters of the same or foretellers of the good things to come imported by any of them 2 Pet. 1.19 it is most true as you alledge out of 2 Pet. 1.19 That the Doctrine of the Gospell doth as farre exceed for beauty brightnesse and glory the Doctrine of Moses and the Prophets as the Sunne-light doth Starre-light Mal. 4. Col. 2.17 2 Cor. 3. Ioh. 12.46 and as the body doth the shadow and the face of Christ the veile of Moses In which respect Christ himselfe said of himselfe That he was the true light that was come into the world and that his disciples were happy and blessed that saw those things which they saw Luk. 10.23 24. and heard the things which they did heare whereas many Kings and Prophets had not seene them though they had desired to see them And in regard hereof he is termed by the Prophet Malachy The Sunne of righteousnesse Mal. 4.2 Isa 9.1 2. Ioh. 1.17 So then we say They that sate in darknesse haue seene a great light and vnto them that sate in the shadow of death hath the light shined Whatsoeuer was darknesse in Ceremony it is dispelled Act. 3.24 whatsoeuer was a farre off in Prophecy it is fulfilled Luk. 24.44 and whatsoeuer was a handwriting against vs in the Law of Moses it is cancelled Col. 2.14 15. But what light doth this your Simile giue to the vtter abolishing of the whole Morall Law which by the comming of Christ is not obscured but more beautified Rom. 3.31 and not abolished but more established and confirmed In the next but not in the last place as me thinks in good manners according to due order it should haue done comes in your conclusion by way of exhortation and Doctor-like direction to all Christians Antinomus especially Diuines to take paines rightly to vnderstand the Doctrine of Christian liberty c. Answer As if none but your selfe alone were either so industrious or judicious so studious or religious as to haue taken any paines or to haue gotten any knowledge like your selfe in all or any of these things Knowledge puffeth vp 1 Cor. 8.1 but loue edifieth and if any man thinketh he knoweth any thing he knowes nothing as he ought to know and againe Gal. 6.3 If any man thinke himselfe to be something when he is nothing he deceiueth himselfe It had in my opinion sauoured of more humility and modesty if you had after you had set downe your judgement and reasons for the vtter abolishing of the Morall Law in meeknesse of wisdome submitted your selfe and your writings to the judgement of the religious and judicious both Ministers and people in our Churches 1 Cor. 14.32 for euen the spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophets and not to haue cast such odious aspersions of ignorance and negligence as you doe vpon them For suppose some amongst many deserue so sharpe a censure and rebuke yet I doubt not but euen they seeing your grosse ignorance great negligence and I feare me some things euen against knowledge and conscience too in these your owne writings will quit you with this or the like answer Et si nos quidem digni sumus hac contumelia Maenius absertem Neuium cum carpe●…t heus tu Quidam ait ignoras te Horat. Ser. lib. 1. sat 3. tu omnium indignus qui faceres tamen Although we haue deserued such a contumely or reproofe as this yet you of all others might worst doe it For Quis tulerit Graccos de seditione loquentes Who can endure the turbulent and seditious Gracchi to speake against sedition Or traiterous Athalia to cry out treason treason Or a man that for want of light or diligent looking to his waies doth himselfe stumble and tumble and fall dangerously oftentimes to reproch others and some it may be more vigilant and diligent than himselfe with such ignorance and negligence Antinomus that they runne into strange questions as men in darknesse stumbling at one thing and catching hold of another thing that auailes them nothing If these be not swelling words of vanity Answer I mistake both your spirit and speech if they be I desire you may see what is amisse and amend it and learne to conceiue more humbly of your selfe and more charitably of your brethren As for the speciall points which you commend vnto our study and industry viz. The Doctrine of Christian liberty the difference of the Law and the Gospell and of the Old and New Testament and of the Couenants of both and so the right abrogation of Moses Law I suppose there is not one of all those but hath in handling of this businesse beene already touched and so hath giuen some light both to discouer your error or heresie if you hold it wilfully in going about to abolish the whole Law of Moses and that wholly too and to cleare this truth also that the Morall Law of God giuen by Moses to the Iewes is not since the death of Christ in the Churches of Christ wholly abolished and abrogated but is yet in force still for many holy offices and
the old Law and giuen a New or that he is a Iudge that must be pacified by workes as the Papists haue taught but he is the end of the Law to all those that beleeue that is to say euery one that beleeueth in him is righteous and the Law shall neuer accuse him The Law then is good holy and iust so that a man vse it as he should doe By which euidence we may iustly giue sentence both against your opinion for the whole abolishing of the whole Morall Law and against your allegation also out of Luther vpon whom you would father the base and bastard fruit of your owne braine to make it either more plausible or more probable by this meanes Seuen Obseruations out of Luthers allegation for may we not hence most euidently conclude that Luthers iudgement concerning the Morall Law is this first that it is not abolished secondly that it is of good vse thirdly that it serueth to bring vs to the knowledge and sense of sinne fourthly that it driueth vs out of our selues and our owne righteousnesse which is of the Law to seeke for righteousnesse by faith in Christ only fiftly Jrenaeus is of the same iudgement for establishing the Morall Law In lege in Euangelio primum maximum praeceptum est Diligere Dominum Deum ex toto corde Irenaeus advers Hares lib. 3. cap. 25 26 that Christ hath not abolished the old Law sixtly that the Law may be said to be at an end in Christ because as it cannot iustifie so can it not iustly accuse or terrifie any that are righteous by faith in him lastly that the Gospell doth not abolish the nature and right vse of the Law for according to the Apostle the Law is holy iust and good but only taketh out of the hearts of true beleeuers the accusing and accursing power of it Which points being so apparantly contrarie to your position I haue the more fully and distinctly set downe for your better satisfaction that you may either let fall your opinion seeing you haue Luthers both heart and hand against it or else neuer run againe vnder his wing to seeke for any succour or shelter for the same I now come vnto your reason which you seeme to alledge for your so great confidence in this cause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 namely Because the ignorance of the true difference betweene the Law and the Gospell doth breed many errors which you say you haue already discerned and the true knowledge of this difference keepeth all Christian doctrine in its proper vse Answer In which words what doe you else but establish that which you goe about to abolish For whiles you say you discerne many errors to arise out of the ignorance and much good to come in by the knowledge of the difference betweene the Law and the Gospell doe you not see your owne error and ignorance herein also that laying it downe in your position for sound and true doctrine that the whole law of Moses is wholly abolished you notwithstanding doe acknowledge not only that the m Ergo Lex Creatoris etiam ab Adversario probata est nec dispeadium sed compendium ab eo consecuta est Tertul. advers Marcion lib. 5. cap. 4. Law is but also that it is of good and great vse pulling downe with the one hand that which you haue built or would build with the other for if the whole Law of Moses be abolished then the ignorance of it will breed no error nor the knowledge of it can build no truth for young Logicians can tell vs that Non entis non est actio nee scientia Againe if the whole Law be wholly abolished it is not possible it should be distinguished by any difference from the Gospell for as Non entis non est scientia so Non entis non est differentia What difference can be designed betwixt that which is not and that which is that which is wholly abolished and that which is established If you say as before that the difference of the Law from the Gospell may be knowne and acknowledged and be of good and great vse then I say you are too bold in your assertion to maintaine that the whole Law is wholly abolished for if this were true you leaue the Law neither breath nor being neither nature nor vse neither substance nor circumstance neither difference nor n 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diog. Laert. lib. 9. p. 694. Accidence neither place in the booke of God nor so much as a nights lodging vnder the roofe of the Church of God Which to affirme because it were both absurd and impious I hope vpon better aduice you will see and acknowledge that your point was cut out too long and too large when you thus set it downe The point is this That the whole Law of Moses is wholly abolished the rather because you haue now cut it shorter narrower with your owne hands telling vs that it is not abolished for it is nor wholly abolished for it is of good vse it hath essence and difference and may be knowne and not onely knowne in it selfe but distinguished from the Gospell and the distinct knowledge hereof so profitable and needfull that the ignorance hereof is a mother of many errors dangerous and hurtful If I acknowledge this with you for a truth then must you acknowledge with me your position for an error and if you will haue your position That the whole Law is wholly abolished to be true then is all this that you haue spoken of the profitable and necessary knowledge of the difference of the Law and the Gospell false You seeme to boast that you faint not in the cause and that you are confirmed in the truth of it but consider I pray you whether you faile not in your o Hieron adversus Ruffin p. 218. course seeing you doe not onely trip and interfere but stumble and fall at your first setting forth * Statim de portu egrediens navem impegit So said Ierome to Ruffin I vnto you Cic. Tuscul lib. 1. Is the truth diuided or doth the truth differ from it selfe * Statim de portu egrediens navem impegit So said Ierome to Ruffin I vnto you Cic. Tuscul lib. 1. I see a man may take a fall though he doe not faint and thinke himselfe confirmed in the truth when he is vnsetled in vncertainties and diuided from it Pugnantia te loqui non vides ubi est acumen tuum But to recouer your selfe againe you say Luther agreeth with you in this point How should Luther agree with him that cannot agree with himselfe But how or wherein doth he agree with you Antinom That the point is of great consequence and very necessary to be knowne of all that truly seeke Christ Iesus Answer What point his or yours His point is That the knowledge of the difference of the offices of the Law and Gospell