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A20766 The summe of sacred diuinitie briefly & methodically propounded : more largly & cleerely handled and explaned / published by John Downame ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1625 (1625) STC 7148.3; ESTC S5154 448,527 580

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knoweth all the secrets of his Father as perfectly as if they were numbred before him must not hee needes be wise himselfe and of an vnderstanding substance And how can he else be tempted as Paul t 1. Cor. 10. 9. saith that some of the Fathers in the Wildernesse tempted him To conclude what can bee more plaine then that in the u Pro● 8. ●0 Prouerbs where he is said before the World was made to haue beene the daily delight of God sporting before him continually and in Iohn 17. 5. to haue beene glorious with his Father before the World was Whereunto adde the effects attributed vnto him he x Gen. 32. 4. 〈◊〉 with Moses 〈◊〉 wrestled with Iacob spake and blessed him came out from the Father when he y Iohn 16. 18. came into the World c. Touching the Spirit although wee grant this word to bee often vsed by a Metonymie of the cause sometimes for the motions and working of the Spirit in the faithfull as when z 1 Thess 5. 19. Paul saith Quench not the Spirit sometimes for the grace and gifts themselues wrought by the Spirit in which sense a Acts 2. 4. the diuersity of Tongues is called the holy Spirit yet there want not infinite testimonies to prooue the Spirit properly taken not onely distinct from the graces which it worketh which the Apostle doth most b 1. Cor. 12. 18. euidently saying There bee diuersity of graces but the selfe-same Spirit but to bee withall a liuing and vnderstanding substance Therefore to him is attributed will and that a most free and voluntary will c 1. Cor. 12. 11. He distributeth to euery one according as hee will Knowledge d 1. Cor. 2. 11. None knoweth the things of God but the Spirit of God Iudgement e Acts 15. 22. It seemeth good to the Holy Ghost and to vs hearing and declaring the same to others f Ioh. 16. 14 15. Of mine shall he take saith Christ and declare to you Againe g Iohn 16. 13. Whatsoeuer he heareth he shall speake And if hee were no liuing and vnderstanding substance how could hee be grieued as the Prophet speaketh h Esay 63. 10. They grieued his Spirit His actions likewise prooue the same i Esay 61. 1. Hee anoynted Christ sent him to preach vnto the poore k Esay 63. 14. led the people of Israel thorow the Wildernesse l Luke 1. 35. The Holy Ghost saith the Angell to MARY shall come vpon thee and ouer-shaddow thee framing and creating out of thy substance the flesh or humane nature of Christ Our Sauiour in Iohn calleth him m Iohn 14. 16. and 15. 26. and 16. 13. a Comforter he saith not comfort it selfe but a Comforter that is a liuing and vnderstanding person comforting Gods Elect. The point of their personall subsistence being thus cleered let vs goe on to that which followeth There be in all foure things to be considered touching these persons First That they are each distinct from other Sabellius who as the former robbeth vs of these persons but in a more subtill manner So infinite are the sleights of Satan who to deceiue and abuse the world changeth him self into a thousand formes For granting the Sonne and holy Spirit to be persons truly subsisting diuine eternall and vncreated yet he taketh away all distinction between the Father and them maketh but one Person in the God-head As if God were termed the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost no otherwise then as wee terme one and the same man to be wise learned rich c. seuerall and distinct persons When IOHN n Iohn 1. 1. saith that the Word was with God that is with the Father as in another o 1. Iohn 2. 2. place he doth expound it if he did not meane that it had some thing proper to it selfe beside the essence common with them both he had which is to be detested mistaken his kind of speech and hereunto it serueth that Christ expresly calleth the Father another then himselfe Iohn 5. 33. There is another that beareth witnesse of me So of the Spirit Iohn 14. 16. I will pray the Father and hee shall giue you another Comforter the Spirit of Truth as in the p Iohn 15. 26. next Chapter hee doth expound himselfe And how else could the comparison stand That the q Phil. 2. 6. Sonne is equall with God his Father vnlesse there be a distinction betweene them But among all other that place is very r Iohn 8. 13 14 15 16 17. 18. notable where to the cauill of the Iewes excepting that the testimony of our Sauiour Christ was not true because he bare record of himselfe he answereth If I iudge any thing my witnesse is true for I am not alone but there is I and the Father that sent mee Now in your owne Law it is written that the witnesse of two is true there is I beare witnesse of my selfe and the Father that sent mee beareth witnesse of me c. manifestly making himselfe and his Father two As also of the Spirit it doth appeare in the Prophet ESAY ſ Esay 48. 16. IEHOVAH hath sent me and his Spirit The second point is the Trinity of Persons euident and cleere by that which hath beene said yet for further illustration it shall not be amisse to note from the beginning such places as serue vndoubtedly to prooue it that it may appeare by what degrees the wisedome of God hath from time to time made knowne so great a Mystery to his Church which no reason can demonstrate nor since the fall could once haue entred into the thought or imagination of man if God had not reuealed it In the first Chapter of t 〈◊〉 1. 1 2. Genesis MOSES though more obscurely layeth downe this same God his Word and Spirit The Spirit of God mooued vpon the Waters And GOD said Let there bee Light c. whom anon hee bringeth in taking counsell together in the making of man diuision of Tongues c. as before wee haue declared Long after that as it were in a middle Age Esay u Esay 63 ● 11 doth reuiue it and speaketh somewhat playner I will declare the kindnesse of IEHOVAH towards the house of Israel The Angell of his face Christ the Mediator betweene God and man saued them but they rebelled and grieued his holy Spirit which he had put in the middest of them Last of all in the conclusion and winding vp at it were of the times of the Law hee manifesteth it more fully by the hands of the x Hag. 2. 5 6. Prophet HAGGAI Now therefore ZERVBBABEL and IEHOSHVA and all the people of the Land be strong and doe the worke for I am with you saith IEHOVAH of Hostes with my Word in whom I made a Couenant with you when you came out of Egypt and my Spirit that abideth among you And thus farre out of the Old
proofe of the God-head of the Spirit This is the summe of our most precious Faith concerning the God-head of the Sonne and Holy Ghost against Arrius Seruetus and all that hellish crue which either bring in a multiplicitie of gods and so in truth make no God at all or imagine a secondary kind of God-ship making them inferior to the Father or of the like but not of the selfe-some essence against whatsoeuer Heresies else that Hell hath forged and Satan set abroch to the dishonour of these three Persons the one onely true and euer-liuing GOD Coequall Coeternall and Consubstantiall whom we onely honour and serue CHAP. II. Of the Eternall Decrees of God THE glory of God which from all Eternitie God being thus in his nature and Persons most glorious hath further embroidered himselfe in glory by two notes of excellency which he taketh to him Kingdom and Hanour Kingdome is that whereby he doth excite an absolute soueraigntie toward other The order whereof answerable to the relation betweene the persons themselues is from the Father in the Sonne by the Holy Ghost to whom is attributed the immediate doing of them did shine in and to himselfe it hath further pleased him both to manifest in the exercising of a Kingdome and to inlarge by taking honour vnto him Therefore our Sauiour in the Lords Prayer after the Name of God comprehending his nature and persons which hitherto haue beene handled addeth these other two Thy Kingdome come thy will bee done c. By the one he ruleth by the other his rule is obeyed This to speake properly is not any other Kingdome then that which he had before but the actuall exercise and putting into practice of that Kingdome or Soueraigntie which is of his very nature as our Sauiour doth distinguish them Matth. 6. when saying Thy Kingdome come c. he addeth by and by For thine is the Kingdome c. The order or the administration of it is in this manner The Father is first in Order not in Power nor in Time is the supreme working cause who doth whatsoeuer hee doth in the Sonne and they both by the holy Spirit To whom is attributed the immediate doing of them nor as if eyther the Sonne or Spirit were instruments to worke by but both of them be principall efficient causes and they all that one and the same God that worketh all in all The place for this diuersitie of working is manifest ●n the Epistle to the Romanes a Rom. 8. 11. But if the Spirit of him that raysed Iesus from the dead dwell in you hee that raysed Christ from the dead will quicken also your mortall bodies by his Spirit dwelling in you Here as you see all is comprehended The Father quickening in Christ by his Spirit that dwelleth in vs for to this end hee maketh mention of Christs raysing from the dead More cleere betweene the Father and the Sonne is that to the b 1. Cor. 8. 6. Corinthians But vnto vs there is one God The Father from whom are all things and one Lord Iesus Christ through whom are all things From he giueth to the Father as the Fountaine of the Action Through to the Sonne in regard of the personall Distinction So in the Epistle to the c Heb. 1. 2. Hebrewes Through his Sonne hee made the World Of the Holy Ghost also it is said By his d Iob 26. 13. ●pirit he beautified the Heauens And our Sauiour Iohn 16. 14. He shall glorifie me for he shall receiue of mine and shew it vnto you whose proper kind of working as the next and immediate cause of all things is most liuely set forth e 1. Cor. 12. 4 5 ● 7 ● 10 11. 1. Cor. 12. Now there are differences of gifts but the same spirits there are differēces of Ministeries but the same Lord. And there are differences of working but there is the same God who worketh all in all But to euery one is giuen the manifestation of the Spirit to profit for vnto one by the Spirit is giuen the Word of Wisedome and to another the Word of Knowledge by the same Spirit and to another Faith by the same Spirit and to another the gifts of healing by the same Spirit and to another the working of Powers and to another Prophecie and to another discerning of Spirits and to another kinds of Tongues and to another interpretation of Tongues But all these things worketh one and the same Spirit distributing them seuerally to euery one as he pleaseth This Kingdome standeth in three things whereof the first are his Purposes or Decrees Then his Creation and The Kingdom of God hath two parts purpose workes Purpose is his Decree before all times of euery thing thirdly the Gouernment of the World the Apostle reduceth them vnto two purpose and workes Ephes 1. 21. Who worketh all things after the counsell of his will In the Counsels and Workes of God putting them both together fiue things may be noted one proper to the purpose of God the other in common appertayning both to his Workes and Purpose The first is as touching the Eternitie of this Decree that it is before all times that is to say from euerlasting The second is the generalitie of his Dispensation that it stretcheth it selfe to all things to wit to all kinds and each particular of euery kind Thirdly the relation betweene his Purpose and Workes that he effecteth nothing which before he hath not decreed decreeth nothing which in time hee doth not effect whereupon followeth the ineuitable necessitie of the execution of his counsels The fourth is touching the Lords most free and absolute stroke in this whole dispensation Lastly That all this is proper vnto God within the compasse of one of which will fall whatsoeuer wee are to speake concerning the Gouernment and Kingdome of God The Apostle in that one sentence elegantly comprehendeth all for in saying Him that worketh c. meaning God he sheweth the supreme cause before assigned and maketh it proper to God by calling him as it were by that name and saying all things hee leaueth nothing free Now where he addeth recording to the purpose after the counsell he giueth to vnderstand that nothing is wrought but that which is decreed nothing decreed but in time it is effected In which words of purpose counsell the Eternity of this Decree is also included as fore-running all his Works yea the first worke of Creation it selfe Lastly the free-will of God is expressed in adding after the counsell of his will But for a better view to be taken of them all let vs handle these three apart Therefore to begin with his Purposes or Decrees obserue in them three things First The Eternitie of those Decrees for as God himselfe is eternall so are his deep and vnsearchable counsels all of them written and decreed or euer the World was And as f Psal 93. ● He is from euerlasting so is
to the Church of Professors it standeth in an outward calling and gifts An outward calling when by his Word that is to say his publishing of the Couenant of Grace and people in bestowing vpon them his Word and the fruit it bringeth forth by the working of his Spirit for these three Prophet Word and Church haue a perpetuall relation one vnto another Wherefore in handling the Propheticall Office the Word of Christ is first to be spoken of and then his Church The Word of Christ is all the holy Doctrine that hee hath taught from the beginning concerning our saluation through him Wherein obserue First Christ is the matter and onely subiect and substance of the Word In that regard himselfe is called The g Iohn 1. 1. Word or h Reuel 19. 13. The Word of God Because of him and of him alone it is that there are in the Word so many glorious and excellent speeches and the Doctrine of the Gospell hath the name of the Word of Christ Col. 3. 16. So as it is not any naturall knowledge that this Doctrine teacheth but heauenly and supernaturall which was not in Adam before his fall though he were perfectly holy and endued with all manner of naturall vnderstanding Secondly He himselfe as he is the matter so he is the Authour of the Word In which respect the Scripture giueth these names vnto him First He is called Hamedabber or the Speaker and Interpreter of his Fathers Will Dan. 8. 13. To which place it may be the Apostle i Heb. 12. 25. hath some eye when hee saith Take heed yee reiect not him that speaketh or the Speaker meaning Christ Secondly A Doctor k Mat. 3. 10. or a Teacher Thirdly A l Deut. 18. 15. Acts 3. 22. Prophet the head and Lord of the Prophets Fourthly an m Heb. 3. 1. Apostle Fiftly The n Mal. 3. 1. Angell of the Couenant And that wee may know with what Graces our Sauiour Christ is furnished for o Col. 2. 3. so great a worke all the treasures of Knowledge and Vnderstanding are hidden in him yea he is Wisdome p 1. Cor. 1. 24. it selfe or q Luke 11. 49. the Wisdome of God and called as by a proper name r Dan. 8. 13. Palmonie that is one that hath all hidden things numbred before him or ready told and as we say at his fingers ends which as occasion doth serue he vttereth to his Church Wherefore here is the Touch-stone of all Truth and there is no truth concerning God and our Saluation in Christ but in the Word our Sauiour himselfe bearing record Iohn 17. 17. Thy word is Truth Touching the outward instruments which it hath pleased him to vse in the deliuerie of this Word sometimes he spake by his owne voyce from Heauen sometimes by the Ministerie of his holy Angels But specially this outward Ministerie is either his owne which hee executed personally himselfe when hee was vpon the Earth described Esay 42. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7. in regard whereof he is called a Minister ſ Rom. 15. 8. The Minister of Circumcision and a t Esay 42. 1. Seruant or it is of his Seruants from the beginning of the World of whom hee saith He u Luke 10 16. that heareth you heareth mee and hee that reiecteth you reiecteth me Of whose Ministeries and Functions we shall haue cause to speake hereafter Therefore Christs Office of a Teacher did not first begin when hee tooke our flesh vpon him for his Spirit it was that spake in the Prophets long before hee came into the World as the Apostle beareth record 1. Pet. 1. 11. The forewitnessing Spirit of Christ that was in the Prophets declared the sufferings that should befall Christ and the glorie that was to follow And that which is in the Psalmes x Psal 95. 7. To day if ye will heare his voyce the Apostle y Heb. 3. 7. to the Hebrewes referreth to the voyce of Christ Thirdly I note the perfection of this Doctrine that Christ hath opened the whole will of his Father fully and perfectly in euery Age and neuer left his Church without a full and perfect direction of all things necessarie for their saluation for Moses saith z Deut. 30. 15. Behold I set before you this day life and death which hee could not haue said vnlesse there had beene a certaine direction to lead them vnto life And when hee chargeth a Deut. 4. 2. Not to adde to the words that he gaue them in Commandement nor to take from them doth it not prooue that the same was perfect Fourthly The subiect of the Word being Christ it is more particularly the Couenant made in him which by the Word is promulged and offered vnto all and his Spirit maketh effectuall to as many as receiuing the same by faith make themselues worthy of it The which Couenant being distinguished by the Old which being of the Old Testament was called The promise of the New The Gospell Testament and the New as before hath beene declared the publication of the Old Testament in and through Christ to come was called b Acts 13. 32. Gal. 3. 17. The Promise when hee was exhibited and come indeed that worthy and welcome Message was termed c Acts 13. 32. Marke 1. 1. The Gospell or good newes and glad tydings But it is the glory of Christs administration whether in his owne person when hee was among vs or by his and by the power of his Spirit Seruants that the outward dispensing of the Word is accompanied with an inward working of the Spirit of both which parts his Propheticall Office standeth herein differing from all other Ministers who onely preach the Word set d Mat. 3. 11. on the outward Element e 1. Cor. 3. 6. plant and water but the whole blessing doth come from him for he teaching openeth mens mindes e Luke 24. 45. that they may vnderstand the Scriptures and bestoweth other graces which the Word bringeth forth euen in the wicked by a generall working of his Spirit as we are taught by the f Mat. 13. 24. Parable of the Sower and haue g Marke 6. 20. Herod and the h Iohn 5. 35. Iewes for an example It followeth to speake of the Church That which we he draweth men to that Profession call Church signifieth in i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greeke a select companie gathered called culled picked out from other men In English it hath the name deriued from that which in Greeke signifieth k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord because they belong to Christ the Lord and are separate to his Seruice be it by an inward whereof commeth the word Church or as the Northerne pronounce Kirk or an outward separation But the outward Church is it which wee are to beginne withall which is in generall the whole number of men professing Christ Concerning which take these few
things First Grace is not vniuersall nor all doe not receiue it no not so much as the offer of Grace nor an outward calling Many l Mat. 20. 16. saith our Sauiour Christ are called he saith not all but many And so the m Mat. 22. 3 4 King which made a Marriage Dinner for his Sonne sent his Seruants to call not all but those that hee had called that is those whose names he had set downe in a Calender or Roll to bee his Ghests although of those also some n Ver. 11 12 13 were none of his Neither doth it hinder this which is said after o Ver. 9. Go into the high-wayes and bring in as many as ye shal find For the scope of the Parable sheweth that by those that were first bid are meant the Iewes into whose place came the Gentiles that before were alieus and strangers so that by calling of the Iewes onely at the first it is prooued that all men are not made partakers of the outward calling And this if wee had no word at all for it experience it selfe might teach vs for how many hath death ouer-taken in thier Cradles before they could bee called how many of riper yeeres doth darknesse couer that they neuer can see the Light Paul verily p Acts 14. 15. saying that in the ages passed God suffered all Nations to walke in their owne wayes sheweth how many Millions of soules haue perished that neuer heard of Christ But it is the glorie of Christs administration whether in his owne person when he was among vs or by his seruants that the outward dispensing of the Word is accompanied with an inward working of the Spirit of both which parts his Propheticall Office standeth herein differing from all other Ministers who onely preach the Word q Mat. 3. 11. set on the outward Element r 1. Cor. 3. 6. plant and water but the whole blessing doth come from him for he teaching ſ Luke 24. 45. openeth mens minds that they may vnderstand the Scriptures and bestoweth other graces which the Word bringeth forth not onely in his Children but euen in the wicked Secondly It is the instinct and motion of Gods Spirit that draweth a man to this Profession Gen. 9. 27. God perswade IAPHETH that hee may dwell in the Tents of SHEM for all the naturall Wisdome of the World is not able to leade vs by the hand to Christ nor to teach vs the knowledge of heauenly things I say not the sauing knowledge of Gods Elect but not so much as that outward knowledge and profession and those common graces which many of the Reprobates doe attayne vnto No man saith IESVS is the Lord but by the Spirit of God 1. Cor. 12. 3. that is the grace euen but outwardly to professe him is a worke of the Holy Ghost And so doth the Apostle there goe thorow the rest of the parts Gifts of knowledge Faculties and Ministeries All which he saith one and the same Spirit worketh And what need we much to labour herein when the very hiding of this sacred Doctrine so many yeeres from all the deepe and wise men of the Earth whilest the Iewes had it alone and at this day from so many famous Common-wealths and Kingdomes to whom wee are not superiour in Learning Wisdome or other Gifts shew that all the wit of the World cannot make vs so much as thinke one thought of Christ till God by his Spirit giue vs light And this which is the first and meanest of Gods fauours is yet a fauour not to bee contemned it being an excellent and a glorious thing to bee though but outwardly Professors of Christ for First Hereby they are seuered from Turkes Pagans and Heathen men and in name are become Christians for that title the t Acts 11. 26. Holy Ghost giueth to all Professors Secondly They are now receiued into the LORDS House and are said to bee within u 1. Cor. 5. 12 13 whereas all others What haue I to doe to iudge them that are without But those that are within doe you iudge But those that are without God will iudge that are not of the Church are said to bee without Thirdly Being members of the visible Church dwelling with and among them they are made partakers of many goodly graces and benefits which God powreth vpon his Church euen vpon the Reprobate and wicked for the Elects sake that are among them as the Psalmist saith that x Psal 29. 9. in his Temple hee vttereth all his Glorie The third thing is it sufficeth for the making of a Church if they bee Professors onely this being but a bare outward calling common to the Reprobate Fourthly They must bee Professors of Christ professing that in words the hauing whereof indeed maketh men truly Christians So the Apostle defineth it Ephes 1. 1. where in stead of naming the Church of Ephesus for to the outward Church he writeth hee vseth this Periphrasis to the Saints that are in Ephesus and to the faithfull in Christ Iesus and 1. Cor. 1. 2. To the Church of God which is in Corinth sanctified in Christ Iesus Saints by calling In regard whereof the same Apostle calleth Christ The foundation euen of the visible Church 1. Co. 3. 11. And this is the right Touchstone to examine al Churches by for what The Papists make three notes of the visible Church Antiquitie Vnitie Vniuersalitie most fondly and ridiculously when as all these are to bee found in the malignant Church in the most wicked assemblies societies Errors haue bin ancient as long as since the Apostles time for euen then the mystery of iniquitie began to worke 2. Thes 2. 7. 1. Iohn 5. 3. and then were there many Antichrists 1. Ioh. 2. 13 Theeues are as vnitie among themselues and so are the Deuils one with another else their Kingdome could not stand Mat 12 25. 26. And Reuel 17. 17. it is said that God put into their hearts with one consent to giue their Kingdome to the Beast As for Vniuersalitie that is so farre from being a certaine badge of the true Church that contrariwise Paul telleth vs when Antichrist shall be reuealed there must be a generall Apostasie and defection from the Truth 2. Thes 2. 3. And in the Reuel we reade that all the World went wōdring after the Beast worshipped the Beast and the Dragon that gaue him power Reu. 13. ● 4. Howbeit we say the Church of God is Catholike or Vniuersall but in a farre other sence then they meane by their vniuersalitie which they intend of a general spreading of itselfe without any great opposition to the contrarie in beautie and much brauerie and multitudes of men glittering and shining in the World whereas we say The true Church of Christ is Catholike or Vniuersall because it is not tyed to any one particular place or Countrie as sometimes among the Iewes it was but in euery Nation God hath those that
as some n Luke 18. 30. Marke 10. 30. other where the Scripture taketh it the life that shall bee hereafter but the world here restored in and through Christ euen from the first promise made in Paradise and fully to be perfected when God shall bee all in all for the world corrupted by the sin of ADAM that whereof all men naturally are members goeth vnder the name of the old world o 2. Pet. 3. 15. this wherein righteousnesse dwelleth of the new To note more expresly the quality of this new world a heauenly World I call it heauenly as the Scripture doth in diuers places opposing it to that which is terrene and earthly This is not saith p Iam. 3. 15. IAMES the wisdome that commeth from aboue but earthly naturall deuilish And the Apostle to the Colossians q Coloss 3. 1 2 5. Seeke the things which are aboue where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God minde the things which are aboue not which are vpon the earth Mortifie therefore your members which are on the earth Fornication Vncleannesse c So to the Philip. r Phil. 3. 19 20. Whose end is destruction which mind earthly things But our conuersation or if you will Free-burgesship is in Heauen Wherefore the Citie whereof we are thus Free Burgesses is called ſ Reu. 3. 12. The Citie of God t Reu. 21. ● 22. 19. The holy Citie u Reu. 3. 12. 21. 2. New Ierusalem which commeth downe from God out of Heauen x Gal. 4. 26. Ierusalem aboue which as it is there said is the mother of vs all The World therefore thus formed and fashioned anew by the power of Christs Spirit is An euerlasting World the Citizens and Free Burgesses y Esay 44. 7. An euerlasting people Christ the Prince z Esay 9. 6. Father of eternitie and the Kingdome it selfe an euerlasting Kingdome that shall not haue any end So saith DANIEL a Dan. 2. 44. It shall destroy and consume all other Kingdomes but it selfe shall stand for euer b Dan. 7. 14. His dominion is a perpetuall Dominion that cannot passe and his Kingdome a Kingdome that cannot bee destroyed And the Prophet MICA c Micab 4. 7. to the same purpose IEHOVAH shall raigne ouer them in Mount Sion from this time forth for euermore This is it which the d Luke 1. 33. Angel telleth MARIE Hee shall raigne ouer the house of IACOB for euer and of his Kingdome there shall bee no end For where it e 1. Cor. 15. 24. is said that this Kingdome must haue an end and that he shall deliuer it vp to God his Father Wee must vnderstand that the Kingdome of Christ is two wayes to be considered one as he ruleth and raigneth in the hearts of the faithfull and is the head of his Church which cannot haue any end for he must continue the Head of his Church for euer Wherefore the word which is commonly translated End may perhaps in that place rather signifie Perfection this Kingdome of his being so farre from hauing an end with the end and dissolution of the world that contrariwise it shineth and sheweth it selfe most when all his enemies shall be subdued vnder his feet that he may raigne glorious in his Saints who being then wholly led and gouerned by his Spirit shall not so much bee subiect to him as knit and vnited with him But the Kingdome of Christ is also taken for that gouernement which for the Churches sake and to bring men to faith and obedience of the Truth hee hath ouer all the world beside brideling and subduing Satan Sinne and all the enemies of our saluation which then shall cease when hauing finished the whole worke of our full and perfect Redemption he shall crowne with immortalitie those that are his Our Sauiour Christ comparing the Kingdome of weakely here by Faith and therefore by meanes of the Word ordinarily which is called the Kingdome of Grace Heauen to f Math. 13. 31. a graine of Mustard-seed which beeing at the first the least of all seedes becommeth verie great and to g Math. 11. 33. Leauen which at the first is in some part of the dough but in time spreadeth it selfe ouer the whole lumpe teacheth vs the order and manner of Gods proceedings in the things that haue beene handled The beginnings weake and tender all perfection reserued till wee come to heauen Whereupon this part of Christs Kingdome is distinguished into the Kingdome of Grace h Esay 59. 21. and the Kingdome of Glorie The Kingdome of Grace which is and standeth by faith and therefore by the Word the subiect of faith ordinarily that in the Church of beleeuers the Word and the Spirit doe alwaies goe together the Church neuer destitute of the Spirit the Spirit neuer separated from the Word As the Prophet ioyneth them by an euerlasting Couenant Esay 59. i Esay 59 21. This is my Couenant with them saith IEHOVAH My Spirit which is in thee and my Word which I haue put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed nor out of the mouth of thy seedes seed from this time forth for euermore So vaine a thing it is whilst we liue Anabaptists and such like fanaticall spirits in this World to dreame of a Spirit without the Word The Spirit of Christ therefore working by Faith the worke it selfe must needs bee of the nature of Faith weake and imperfect as that is But in the Kingdome of Glorie comming to see perfectly hereafter by Sight and therfore immediately by Christs Spirit that is called the Kingdome of Glorie Christ all things shall bee wrought by the present beholding of him the vision of his face and the immediate working of his Spirit There shall then be i Reu. 21. 22 23. no Temple but the Lord God Almightie and the Lambe are the Temple for when the Faith whereby now we walke must cease then the preaching of the Word and the administring of the Sacraments shall also cease The k 1. Cor. 13. 9 10 Apostle telling vs that whether prophecying and interpretation of the Scriptures or speaking of strange Tongues which God in those beginnings of the Gospell graced his Church withall for the winning of men to the obedience of the Faith or knowledge and instruction of other being the ordinarie way whereby we attayne here to knowledge they shall cease and be abolished for when in God himselfe we shall behold all things then to no purpose shall these helpes serue which now we vse either to teach or to be taught Wherefore here is all and all manner of perfection l 1. Iohn 3. 2. When he shall be manifested saith IOHN wee shall bee like him for we shall see him as he is This so great a worke to make the World anew the by the power of his Resurrection Scripture commonly
THE SUMME of Sacred Diuinitie Briefly Methodically Propounded More Largly cleerely handled and explaned PUBLISHED by John Downhame Batchelor in Diuinitie LONDON Printed by William Stansby TO THE CHRISTIAN READER AS in materiall buildings the skil of those Workemen is commendable who can cunningly frame the singular parts and so beautifie set them forth as that they may bee pleasant to the eye and conuenient for vse as they that can make faire Walls and Windowes a gracefull Frontispice and comely Roofe but they are most praise-worthy who can well contriue the whole plot lay a good and sure Foundation and in due proportion can frame out and set vp the principalls and chiefe parts which sustayne and beare all the rest so in the spirituall Edifice they are worthily to be commended who skilfully handle particular points of Diuinitie in their Learned and Religious Tractates whereby the iudgement of the Reader is thorowly informed in those diuine Mysteries and the heart and will inclined to draw them into holy vse but yet none deserue better of the Church of God nor ought rather to haue their names registred with red Letters in the Kalender of the worthiest Saints then they who in their Writings or Sermons doe skilfully contriue the whole building or body of Diuinitie in a wel-framed plot lay a sound and sure foundation and thereupon erect the chiefe Principles and most substantial parts which are the strength and stay of all the rest For if the iudgement bee once thorowly informed in these mayne points then is it able to deduce from them innumerable particular Conclusions for speciall information and direction in the well-ordering of our liues in all singular actions then may wee with profit and without perill of falling into pernicious errours reade the holy Scriptures when we are able to interpret them according to these infallible Canons and Rules then may we heare the Word preached with vnderstanding and trie the spirits of those who preach vnto vs whether they bee of God or no when wee haue skill to examine their Doctrines according to this Analogie of Faith and can trie them by this neuer-deceiuing Touchstone whether they bee pure metall or but reprobate siluer and counterfait coyne Then shall we be more strongly armed against all assaults of enemies and aduersaries to the Truth false Seducers and subtill Heretikes and be better able to defend that Veritie which we professe and conuince them of their errours and lyes then wanting this helpe if we should spend our whole time in reading of Controuersies and euen dimme our eyes and tyre our braynes in the perusing and studying of Polemicall discourses For these many grounds of Truth doe yeeld from them such a cleere light that they do not only appeare in their owne brightnesse but also discouer the blacknesse of errour and from one Principle well vnderstood wee inferre the falshood of innumerable contrarie Conclusions whereof it is that we shall very rarely obserue any well-grounded in the fundamentall points of Religion to fall into the snares of subtill Seducers whereas contrariwise wee may commonly see that those who are ignorant of them though neuer so sharpe-sighted in curious speculations doe become an easie prey and are quickly catched in the nets of their Sophistrie In which respects it were much to bee wished that both Ministers would bee more frequent and diligent in laying these grounds in their Teaching and Writing and also that the people would receyue this more solid and substantiall foode with a better appetite The which of both is too much neglected because how soeuer these grounds are most necessarie yet they doe not make so glorious a shew as other points lesse substantiall because like a sure foundation they are plaine and vnpolished whereas the other being beautifully garnished with wit and eloquence doe delight the sense and more pleasingly worke vpon the heart and affections And yet we must acknowledge to Gods glorie who hath giuen these gifts to men and grace to vse them that there haue not beene wanting in these latter times many famous Worthies who haue happily laboured in this kind and with great soundnesse and perspicuitie haue deliuered and cleered these mayne points by their speaking and writing Among which Christian Reader I commend vnto thee the Author of this Booke as deseruing iustly to be ranked among the best both for Method and Matter sound handling of the chiefe points of Christian Religion and for cleering by the way diuers hard places of holy Scripture All which hee performeth in this worke with such learning iudgement and pietie that had he herein respected the prayses of men hee might well haue graced his Name with his Worke euen as his Worke would haue beene graced by his Name and not as one ashamed of so beautifull an off-spring haue suffered it to come abroad into the World as an Orphan the Father still liuing onely vnder the name of an vnworthy God-father The which I write not to commend the Author who as he is farre aboue my prayses in the high pitch of his owne worth so doth he not desire but rather shunneth them and as to the willing an iniurie is no iniurie so an officious dutie is no benefit but a kind of wrong where the partie nilling it is forced and obtruded Nor yet doe I prayse the worke for the Workers sake which though it commeth abroad without the Fathers name yet will I doubt not in short time bee famous in it owne name and excellencie but that I may with the weake thread of my censure draw thee to peruse it and so will it sufficiently commend it selfe and giue there iust cause of praysing God for stirring vp such Instruments of his Glorie and thy good The Lord make this and all other the godly labours of his faithfull Seruants effectuall for magnifying of his great Name and the further Eph. 4. 12 13. building vp of the body of his Sonne till we all come in the Vnitie of the Faith and the knowledge of the Sonne of God vnto a perfect Man and vnto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ that wee henceforth bee no more children tossed to and fro and carryed about with euery wind of doctrine by the sleight of men and cunning craftinesse whereby they lye in wait to deceiue but speaking the truth in loue may grow vp into him in all things which is the Head euen Christ. AMEN Thine in the Lord Iesus IOHN DOWNAME An Aduertisement to the READER THis Booke tending to explane another intituled The sacred Doctrine of Diuinitie wherein the whole body of Religion is set forth according to rules of Arte it was thought necessarie to place the Arte in the Margent on the one hand and some principall Heresies and Errors contrarie to the Doctrines here handled as they arise on the other Also for thy better helpe we haue herewithall printed the Arte by it selfe before the beginning of the Booke If it differ in any
in the end Death which is the separation of Soule and Body Yet in all this some Reliques of former D●gnitie doe remaine namely in the Minde common Principles of Good and Euill sparkes of that light of Nature and some Seedes of Conscience which notwithstanding are wholly sinfull and doe but serue partly to keepe Men from breaking forth without all shame or regard of honestie partly to make them vnexcusable In the Body a kind of Maiestie in the whole Man a certaine Soueraigntie that keepeth in awe the brute Creatures The Creature here through the Fall of Man receineth an impaire of his first perfection So much of that which is in part The fulnesse of the Curse after Death is Damnation with the Deuill and his Angels In Soule presently till the Latter Day at what time God for that purpose raysing vp their Bodies the whole Man shall receiue the like Doome and Execution accordingly A miserable Change to such Men as then are liuing shall be instead of a Death and rising from it The Creature is then also subiect to an vtter abolition THE SECOND BOOKE OF DIVINITIE Of EMANVEL God and Man our Redeemer CHAP. 1. Of CHRIST THis is the summe of that Doctrine which we haue concerning GOD. The other followeth concerning Emanuel GOD with vs. Emanuel GOD with vs is in one Person the Sonne of GOD and very Man conceiued of a Virgin by the Holy GHOST Who is also CHRIST or Anointed called of his Father euer since the Fall of Adam to be a Mediatour betweene GOD and Man of a Couenant to saue through Faith in him that is by apprehending of the Couenant certaine few Men whom GOD his Father hath chosen from Eternitie and giuen vnto him to set forth in them the prayse of his Mercie This Couenant is called the Couenant of Grace And ratified by the Death of Him that made it hath also the Name of a Testament Being alwayes one and the same in substance it is neuerthelesse distinguished or distinctly to be considered in the Old and the New Testament The Old Testament was the Couenant through CHRIST to come The New Testament is the Couenant through CHRIST alreadie come IESVS the Sonne of Marie CHAP. II. Of the Priesthood of Christ OF the Office of Mediation there be two parts Priesthood and Kingdome Priesthood is in the things which he doth to God for those Elect. The parts are Oblation and Intercession Oblation is the offring vp of Himselfe for them It standeth in two things First the sanctifying of his Humane Nature in all Holinesse from the very first moment of his Conception for the worke of the Mediation Then in the performing of the most excellent measure of Obedience to the Law of God that can possibly fall vnto any Creature One principall part whereof are his Sufferings in taking vpon him our Sinnes and the whole Curse both that of this Life and the fulnesse of it due vnto them after Death All which he fully satisfied The Curse vpon vs here in the whole course of his Life the fulnesse of the Curse vpon the Crosse and Death by dying vnder the power whereof he lay three dayes in the Graue This Righteousnesse or Obedience being the Righteousnesse of Him who is both God and Man doth consequently merit a like supreme measure of Blessednesse euidently seene in the G 〈…〉 s that did follow his Sufferings and were in Soule or Bodie apart or ioyntly in them both In Soule hee went to Heauen presently after Death His Body hee rayled from the Dead glorious the third day at the da●●ning of the Day In his whole Person Soule and Body ioyned together he ascended into Heauen the fortieth day after his Resurrection and there sitteth at the right hand of God that is to say imoyeth all Soueraigntie Power and Glory Hitherto of Oblation Intercession is the continuall presenting of his Merites to God his Father on the behalfe of those Elect. CHAP. III. Of Christs Gouernment of the World in generall SVch is the Priesthood of Christ his Kingdome followeth Kingdome is in the things which hee doth from God for those Elect. The Kingdome of Christ hath two parts One whereby hee gouerneth all the World according to their owne Nature since the Fall In the Angels perfect in Deuils and Men corrupted in the rest of the World peruerted CHAP. IIII. Of the Propheticall Office of Christ And of his Word THe other which is vnto his Church a Companie of Men culled out of the World This latter part contayneth his Propheticall Office and that which the Scripture by excellencie termeth the Kingdome Propheticall Office whereby hee hath a Church vnto himselfe by his Word and the Power of his Spirit The Word of Christ is his publishing of the Couenant of Grace Which of the Old Testament was called the Promise of the New is called the Gospel CHAP. V. Of the outward Church HIs Church is the outward Church or the Church of Gods Elect. Outward is of those that professe to beleeue in Him Seuerall Companies that assemble for the Exercises of the Word are so many Churches and Members of the Whole And in euery of these God hath alwayes some that are His indeed Their Children also are of the Church Vpon the outward Church Christ bestoweth Gifts both for the Churches common good and for a Man 's owne priuate For the common good are first things committed to the Churches keeping then Ministeries and Graces The things committed are his Word whereof wee haue spoken to be preached Sacraments to be administred and other holy Things Preaching is an Instruction of the Church by liuely Voice in the Word of Christ and that by Doctrine or Exhortation Doctrine in laying forth the Truth and confuting of contrarie Errors Exhortation to apply it also to all good vses of comforting denouncing sti●●ing vp reprouing A Sacrament is a signe and seale of the Couenant either for our entrance or continuance in the Couenant The administration is to deliuer them with declaring Christs Institution and Prayer vnto God to make the same effectuall to the end for the which they were ordayned Which the Scripture calleth Blessing or Consecration It followeth to speake of Ministeries and Graces Ministeries are publike Functions in the Church specially for Preaching which includeth the dutie of offering the Churches Prayers and Administration of the Sacraments Among the Ministers of the Word some haue beene extraordinarily inspired of Christ to deliuer both by liuely Voyce and Writing so as they could not erre the whole Truth of Christ and had power to worke Miracles for the confirming of their Doctrine All other Ministeries are to fetch their Light from the Doctrine of those that were so inspired Graces are Gifts for the discharge of those publike Functions Gifts for a Man 's owne priuate are Knowledge of the Word of Christ and a Taste of the sweetnesse of it Which being the highest Step that it is possible for any Reprobate to ascend changeth after a
sort Mans corrupt Nature yet so as it may be lost againe But whoso once of Malice falleth from it can neuer be repayred CHAP. VI. Of the Church vnder the Law THe Church is One and cannot be diuided but hauing regard to the diuersitie of Gods Dispensation it may be distinguished into the Church vnder the Old Testament and the Church in the New That vnder the Old Testament had diuers Rites Ceremonies and Sacrifices Figures of Christ and of the good things we haue in him especially among the Iewes his then peculiar People Whereby the Dispensation of those Times was more obscure and lesse accompanied with Knowledge and other Graces But of all these things as also of their Sacraments which in regard of the outward Signes were a part of the Legall Paedagogie and likewise of the Ministeries that were among them both that of Prophets inspired by whom were written the Bookes of the Old Testament and of other I haue written at large in a Treatise entituled The Old Testament or the Promise CHAP. VII Of the Church in the time of the Gospell TO the Church of the New Testament the Dispensation is in all cleerenesse and perfection Touching the Sacraments and Ministeries of the New Testament there be two Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper Baptisme is a washing with Water to assure our entrance into the Couenant the forme whereof is thus or to this effect I baptize thee in the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost The Lords Supper is a feeding with Bread and Wine to assure our continuance in the Couenant the forme whereof is thus or to this effect For the Bread Take ye eate ye This is my Body which is giuen for you Doe this in remembrance of me For the Cup Drinke ye all of this for this is my Bloud of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sinnes Doe this as oft as ye shall drinke it in remembrance of me The Ministers of the New Testament were Apostles inspired by whose Ministerie were written the Bookes of the New Testament Prophets Euangelists Pastors Teachers c. CHAP. VIII Of the Church of Gods Elect. THus farre of the outward Church The other is the Church of Gods Elect drawne to beleeue in Christ ordinarily by Preaching Wherefore with these God maketh indeed his Couenant By vertue whereof our Faith albeit apprehending Christ absent it apprehend Him weakely yet confirmed by the Word and Sacraments Prayer and other holy meanes it neuer letteth goe the Hold but continually groweth till we come to see Christ in his glory So as Faith hath alwayes Hope that is an assured waiting for of that blessed Sight going with it CHAP. IX Of Regeneration HItherto of Christs Propheticall Office The Kingdome by excellencie so termed is that whereby destroying the Old Man by the Power of his Death and Sufferings all that are of the Church of Gods Elect He doth regenerate by the Power of his Resurrection The Day of his Rising which was the first Day of the Creation is for an euerlasting Remembrance of that Benefit come in place of the Sabbath and called the Lords Day beginning when he arose and began to renew the World Regeneration is our spirituall incorporating into Christ euery Member in his due proportion whereby being one with him through him with God and his Spirit ours we become Gods children by adoption Of a regenerate estate there be two Degrees as it were two Ages Infancie and Mans estate Infancie which is during this Life by Faith and therefore by meanes of the Word and imperfectly sealed vp in our owne inward assurance of the Spirit not in the Worlds discerning of it and growing according as our Faith doth grow And this is called the State or Kingdome of Grace Mans estate which is after this Life by Sight and therefore immediately by Christs Spirit and in all Perfection And that is called the State or Kingdome of Glorie CHAP. X. Of Wisedome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption THe Spirit of Christ being ours consequently doth saue vs from our sinfull and cursed estate to inioy all the Good that is in him It standeth in Illumination and Iustification and from thence comming Sanctification and Redemption Illumination Whereby expelling Darkenesse he doth inlighten our Minds with the Knowledge of the Will of God in Christ which the Apostle calleth Wisdome Iustification Whereby forgiuing our sinnes by his taking them vpon him he doth account the Holinesse of his Nature and Righteousnesse to be ours From whence as I said come Sanctification and Redemption Sanctification Whereby slaying Sinne he putteth a new Life of Holinesse into vs to bring forth fruits of Righteousnesse Wherein there is no more now required but that Sinne beare not the rule in vs and our Workes of Righteousnesse though all mingled with sinne are not onely pleasing vnto God through his forgiuenesse of the sinne but haue beside of Gods free Goodnesse looking vpon them in the perfection of his Sonne speciall Promises of Reward made vnto them both in this Life and in the Life to come Redemption Whereby freeing vs from the Curse himselfe becomming a Curse for vs he maketh vs blessed by the participation of his Blessednesse Our Blessednesse in this estate standeth First in the Loue of God anew Whereby all things not the Calamities and Troubles of this Life and also Death it selfe but euen our very sinnes turne vnto our good and in the assurance whereof wee haue Peace of Conscience and Ioy in the Holy Ghost Secondly in that wee are made neere vnto him and haue continuall accesse with boldnesse into his Presence Thirdly in our former Soueraigntie and Power ouer the Creatures whereof commeth free liberty of vsing them all and deliuerance from the Bondage of Satan This also as a noble accesse added thereunto that the holy Angels themselues are made ministers for our good Fourthly in a Spirituall Glorie and Wisedome and other Graces After this Life commeth the fulnesse of Blessednesse more or lesse according to the diuers measure of our Faith here To the Soule in Heauen presently after Death till the Latter Day At what time our Bodies being raysed vp glorious the whole Man shall meete CHRIST comming to Iudgement in the Ayre and there receiue Sentence of all fulnesse of Blessednesse for euer Which we shall inioy taken vp into Heauen by the vertue of his Ascension Certaine Men vpon our Sauiour CHRISTS Resurrection rose againe and are alreadie with him in Heauen So are Enoch and Elias both aliue assumed thither Those that are liuing at the Latter Day shall suddenly be changed after the dead are once risen The Creatures also for our sake shall then be renewed into a Glorious estate not subiect to Corruption A TABLE OF ALL THE principall Points handled in this BOOKE The first Booke CHAP. I. THe scope and drift of the Doctrine of Diuinitie Fol. 1. The Parts 6. Of God his Being Life Vnderstanding and
grosely of him to thinke that eyther he is mixed with the Creatures for that is contrary to his most perfect single nature or that by the filth and contagion of the creature himselfe can be polluted for that is contrary to his most perfect holy nature but in such a sort hee is present as is heauenly and spirituall and incomprehensible And albeit by nature we seeke God in the Heauens and our Sauiour Christ hath taught vs to say Our Father which art in Heauen that is not in respect of his essence and as I may say of his very presence that hee is rather in Heauen then in Earth or dwelleth rather in his Church then in prophane Synagogues in the hearts of his Saints then in the wicked but in respect of his working and more speciall grace or of the cleerer manifestation of his glory as he saith a Esay 66. 1. In Heauen is my Throne And the Prophet b Psal 29. 9. DAVID In his Temple hee vttereth all his glorie And that this euery-where-presence doth onely belong to God appeareth in that by this note hee differenceth himselfe from all other Creatures For when hee saith c Ier. 23. 23. Doe not I fill Heauen and Earth he meaneth that none other doth so It is to bee obserued that hee saith there Am I a God neere at hand saith IEHOVAH and am I not a God farre off Doe I not fill Heauen and Earth As if hee had said that which none but God can challenge God therefore is onely Infinite Hee onely is that Circle whose Center is euery where and Circumference no where who alone d Esay 40. 12. measureth the Waters in his fist and counteth the Heauens with a spanne As the Prophet would haue vs to vnderstand when he setteth the same as a spell to any whatsoeuer that foolish men shall dare to make like vnto him From this infinitenesse of God three The Anthropomorphites because the scripture speaketh of the eies of God his hands feet other parts likewise of his Loue Anger Hatred such like imagined God to haue truly and properly Limbes and parts of a Body and the passions affections of a man whereas these things are spoken out to our capacitie who cannot conceiue how the actions which God is said to doe can be performed without such helpes not that truely and properly there are any members or passions in God And therefore of a most single nature that whatsoeuer is in God is God himselfe things may bee learned First The singlenesse of his nature admitting no quality or other accident for in that which is infinite how can there any thing haue place that is not of the essence GOD therefore hath neither composition nor diuision parts or members passions or affections or other accidents but whatsoeuer is in God is God himselfe which is the meaning of our Sauiour Christ when he calleth e Iohn 4. 24. him a Spirit not as if he were a Spirit of like nature as the Angels are or the soules of men for that were most erroneous and blasphemous for to thinke but because Spirits haue a most single and vnmixed nature vnder the same word hee representeth vnto vs that most single and spirituall essence of GOD which of all things in the World the Spirits come neerest to Now that both this holinesse and all other the good things whereof wee haue heard are of the very nature of God the Scripture giueth vs to vnderstand when it calleth him Light Charity Eternity c. and when he himselfe speaking of his very nature and essence saith to MOSES f Exod. 33. 19. I will make all my goodnesse to passe before thy face for this cause it is that in that most glorious description of himselfe Exodus 33. before hee come to the particular vertues of Power Goodnesse Iustice hee setteth in the fore-front this name Iehouah saying IEHOVAH IEHOVAH the mighty God mercifull c. And why doth he so Both to stirre vp Moses vnto due reuerence and humiliation before the presence of his Maiestie and withall to shew that as hee is Iehouah that is of himselfe and in his most single essence he is Omnipotent Mercifull Iust c. yea that his very nature is nothing else but Power Mercy Iustice c. Notable is that place of the Prophet ESAY g Esay 43. 25. I euen I am he that blotteth out thy rebellio●s for my else He saith not For my Mercy but For my selfe to teach vs that his Mercy and his Goodnesse is himselfe and consequently all essentiall in him and nothing accidentall Therefore he can neyther be tempted of euill nor be the author of it So saith h Iames 1. 13. IAMES Let no man when he is tempted say I am tempted of God for God cannot bee tempted of euill neither tempteth he any man And PAVL i 2. Tim. 2. 3. Though we beleeue not yet he remayneth faithfull hee cannot deny himselfe And to TITVS k Titus 1. 2. God that cannot lye Againe it followeth from hence that his will is the rule of all goodnesse a thing being therefore good and holy because he willeth it not willed of him because it is good and holy The Apostle teacheth vs that Lesson Rom. 9. 22. What if God willing to shew forth his wrath and to make knowne his power hath suffered c. As if he should say What hast thou ô man to say against it if it be his will and pleasure This also doth our Sauiour shaddow in the Parable Matth. 20. 15. Is it not lawfull for me to doe what I will with mine owne The other two things to bee inferred from the infinitenesse of God are First That he is inuisible by the eyes eyther of the Body And therefore also inuisible or the minde as the m 1. Tim. 1. 17. To the King euerlasting immortall inuisible Col. 1. 15. who is the image of the inuisible God Heb. 11. 1● for he continued constant seeing as it were him that is inuisible And incomprehensible Scripture in many places termeth him whereupon it is said n 1. Tim. 6. 16. That hee dwelleth in light which none can haue accesse vnto Secondly that he is altogether incomprehensible of his creatures So true it is which o Iob 26. 14. Eternity whereby he is without beginning or ending And therefore of himselfe and vnchangeable Iob once spake How small a little piece doe we heare of him Wee come to the Eternitie of God whereby hee is without beginning and ending and therefore of himselfe and vnchangeable for eternall wee call that that hath neyther beginning of dayes nor end of life but remayneth for euer one and the same not subiect to any change As Melchisedek and his Priest-hood are typically set forth Heb. 7. 3. Such a one in truth doth the Scripture declare God to bee That hee is without beginning appeareth Psal 93. 2. Thy Throne is established
worshipped But this honour Christ also hath For both Stephen giueth it vnto him when he saith Lord y Acts 7. 59. Iesus receiue my spirit And it is the Epithete of all the Church that they z Acts 9. 14. 1. Cor. 1 2. call vpon the Name of Christ IOHN likewise in the a Reuel 21. 22. Reuelation maketh the Lord God Almighty and the Lambe alike the Temple of that holy City the heauenly Ierusalem meaning that hee is equally to bee worshipped and with the same honour Faith doth onely rest vpon God but wee are commanded to beleeue in Christ Yea b Iohn 16. 1. beleeue in God beleeue also in me Further it is the pleasure c Ier. 9. 24. of GOD that whosoeuer glorieth should glory onely in this That he knoweth him to be IEHOVAH But Paul doubteth not to professe that he d Gal. 6. 14. gloried onely in the Crosse of Christ and neyther preached nor chose to know any other thing saue e 1. Cor. ●2 onely him alone Christ f Iohn 17. 3. also himselfe coupleth these two together This is euerlasting life to know thee the onely true God and him whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ But what stay I hereupon when testimonies are so cleere vpon the marke and notes when the things themselues are so euident and expresse his God-head being euerywhere to bee found in most plaine and manifest termes Which that it may the better appeare I will sort all the testimonies of this kind into three Orders or Rankes The first is of such as attribute the spirit vnto him Not as the spirit or soule of a man but so as it appeareth plainly by the Epithetes adioyned to be the Diuine Spirit or GOD himselfe 1. Cor. 15. 45. The first man ADAM was made a liuing Soule the latter ADAM a quickering Spirit As bee noteth out in Adam the whole man by the more excellent part the Soule so doth he in Christ the whole Person by that most excellent Nature of the God head bodily dwelling in him calling him another Adam for that as Adam imparted fleshly life vnto all that come from him so doth Christ the Spirituall Life to all that are his And that this may bee the better conceiued to be meant of his Eternall Deity in the seuen and fortieth Verse hee doth more cleerely frame the comparison The first man out of the earth earthly the second man the Lord himselfe from Heauen Therefore is his Spirit or Diuine nature sometime called The g Heb. 9. 14. euerlasting Spirit a thing proper to the God-head sometime The h Rom. 1. 4. Spirit of Sanctification whereby hee sanctifieth all Gods Elect and sanctified his humane Nature otherwise infirme and weake and not able to rayse vp it selfe As in i Iohn 6. 63. Iohn he saith It is the Spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing And k 1. Pet. 3. 18. Peter that he was put to death as touching the flesh but quickened as touching the Spirit Finally the Apostle l 2. Cor. 13. 4. Paul expounding as it were this place For though saith he he were crucified of infirmity yet he liueth by the power of God In the name of infirmity or weaknesse manifestly alluding to the Hebrew En●ch which signifieth a fraile or weake and mortall man and in the name Power vnto El the mighty God of the second sort are those where he is said to haue the m Col 29. For in him dwelleth all the fulnes of the God-head bodily that is personally and substantially fulnesse of the God-head in him to bee n Phil. 2. 6 7. Who being in the forme of God emptied himself taking the forme of a Seruant becomming in the likenesse of men and in habit found a very man Where the forme of a Seruant noting a verie seruant and abiect person indeed sheweth that to bee in the forme of God signifieth as much as to be really and essentially God himselfe in the forme of God to be o Iohn 8. 15. For this cause the Iewes sought to kill him because hee called God his owne Father making himselfe equall with God Phil. 2. 6. He thought it no robbery to be equall with God equall with God And to conclude to bee p Dan. 10. 13 21. Michael of equall Power with the Almighty God And this to be an honour belonging vnto Christ alone and not to any created Angell the Apostle Iude q Iude verse 9. teacheth expresly when he so termeth Iehouah himselfe that in Zachary stroue with Satan about the Body of Moses or the truth and perfection of the Law of Moses namely the whole Doctrine of the Gospell Remission of sinnes Imputation of Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption as in that Chapter the Angell reasoneth of them all But most manifestly this appeareth Reuelat. 12. 7. where MICHAEL and his Angels fought with the Dragon and his angels Against the Dragon that is the Deuill head of the malignant Church opposing Michael that is Christ Head of Saints and Angels and therefore calling them his Angels which agreeth to God alone Finally the holy Ghost so expoundeth it Verse 10. Now is the Saluation and Might and Kingdome of our God and the Power of his Christ In the third and last ranke come those that call him expresly r Iohn 1. 1. The Word was God 2. Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World Luke 1. 16. 17. Many shall he that is Iohn Baptist turne vnto the Lord their God and himselfe shall goe before him in the spirit and power of Elias Where before him being referred to Christ as it must sheweth him to bee the true and vndoubted Lord God And hither tendeth the confession of Thomas sirnamed Didymus my Lord my God Iohn 20. 28. Of this sort also is that 2. Peter 1. 1. Through the righteousnesse of our God and Sauiour Iesus Christ The coupling and context of the sentence without any Article before Sauiour which otherwise by the vse of that tongue ought to haue beene shewing plainly that the word God can haue no reference but to Christ our Sauiour M 〈…〉 plaine is that Co● ● 2 Vnto the knowledge of God both the Father and Christ Where God as a common antecedent is attributed to them both God The ſ 1. Iohn 5. 20. We are 〈…〉 true one in his Sonne Iesus Christ Th●● is that true God and life euerlasting true God The t Titus ● 13. Wayting for the blessed hope and glorious bright appearance of the great God and Sauiour of vs Iesus Christ Where not onely the knitting of the sentence as in the place of Peter before but the phrase of bright appearance neuer spoken but of the Sonne enforceth that whole sentence to be meant of him great God The mighty u Esay 9. 6. To vs a Child is borne wh●le name is called Wonderfull The might● God Most strong c. God The onely x Iude
Nature and being Consubstantiall and Coessentiall things not in the least degree appertayning to the Angels Further let the Text be marked It is p Reuel 5. 5 6. apparant that these seuen Spirits the Hornes and Eyes of the Lambe are noted to be that strength and most absolute and perfect Wisedome whereby this Lyon of the Tribe of Iudah ouercame to open the Booke and the seuen Seales thereof which q Reuel 5. 34. none in Heauen or Earth or vnder the Earth that is no Creature could doe And when all other r Reuel 7. 11. Angels and Å¿ Reuel 4. 10. and 5. 14. Elders are said to fall downe and adore God onely these seuen Spirits doe it not To this I adde Prophecie of ZACHARY t Zach. 3. 9. and 4. 10. That God will put seuen Eyes vpon one Stone vpon CHRIST the Rocke and Foundation of his Church Being I doubt not the selfe-same seuen Eyes that Iohn u Reuel 5. 6. speaketh of which neyther the Phrase will suffer to be spoken of Angels nor they can bee said The ingrauings of that Stone It must needes bee then that the Prophet there meaneth nothing else but that which x Esay 12. 2. Esay saith Vpon him shall rest the Spirit of IEHOVAH the Spirit of Wisedome and Vnderstanding the Spirit of Counsell and Power the Spirit of Knowledge and feare of IEHOVAH that is an infinite store of all gifts and ornaments of the Spirit And that no man may doubt hereof these Spirits that here are called seuen Eyes are before y Reuel 3. 5. called seuen Lampes whereby yet more manifestly it is prooued to bee that one onely Spirit for so doth the Prophet z Zach. 4. 2. Zacharie from whom this place is fetched or rather the Angell to the Prophet precisely expound that Vision After he had shewed vnto him a Candlesticke all of Gold with a Bowle vpon the top of it and his seuen Lampes therein and seuen Pipes to the seuen Lampes which were on the tops thereof and two Oliue Trees ouer it one vpon the right side of the Bowle and the other vpon the left side thereof And being demanded of the Prophet the interpretation of all this First he deliuereth it in grosse This a Zach. 4. 6. is the word of IEHOVAH to ZERVBBABEL not with Power nor with Strength but with my Spirit saith IEHOVAH of Hosts Afterwards b Zach. 4. 14. expounding it piece by piece hee saith in the end The two Oliues are those that continue with the Lord of all the Earth that is which are in Christ and by Christ largely powred vpon his Church as here c Reuel 5. 6. also Christ is said to haue them nay that they be as Hornes and Eyes in his head And this is that which seemeth to haue beene shaddowed in those seuen Candlestickes d Exod. 23. 31. commanded in the Law to be made of one entyre matter to note out the varietie and multiplicitie of Graces proceeding all from one Spirit as the e 1. Cor. 12. 4. Apostle saith There be differences of Graces but the same Spirit neyther let it offend any man as vnworthy of the Maiestie of the Holy Ghost that these seuen Spirits f Reuel 5. 6. are said to be sent forth into all the Earth as if they were Ministers and Attendants vpon the Lambe for both the word sending is g Iohn 15. 26. and 16. 17. many times spoken of the holy Spirit and h Zach. 4. 10. Zacharie hath the phrase of rolling to and fro vpon all the Earth Sixthly he calleth and appointeth to the worke of the Ministery and that by an equall power and as it were a ioynt commission with God Esay 48. 16. IEHOVAH hath sent me and his Spirit Acts 13. 2. In the solemne Assembly at Antioch whilest they were ministring and fasting the Holy Ghost said Separate mee now SAVL and BARNABAS to the worke whereunto I haue called them So saith PAVL Acts 20. 28. Take heed to your selues and to all the Flocke whereof the Holy Ghost hath made you Bishops And this was the warrant that Peter had of his calling to preach vnto the Gentiles Acts 10. 19 20. Whilest hee doubted of the Vision which he saw and made question of it the Spirit said vnto him Behold three men seeke thee arise and get thee downe and goe with them making no question at all for I haue sent them Finally that of the same Apostle is generall i 1. Pet. 1. 22. Not by the will of man was Prophecie heretofore brought but as they were led of the Holy Ghost did the holy men of God speake Seuenthly Regeneration as also Iustification and Sanctification all the sole k Iohn 1. 13. Who are borne not of bloud c. but of God Ro. 8. 33. It is God that iustifieth and proper marke of God come from him Iohn 3. 5. Vnlesse one be borne of Water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdome of God Titus 3. 5. He hath saued vs by the Lauer of Regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost 1. Cor. 6. 11. And such were some of you but you are washed from them but yee are sanctified but yee are iustified in the Name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirits of our God Eightly the markes also and steps of his God-head are not obscure First Wee are l Mat. 28. 19. baptized into his Name Secondly Iohn m Reuel 1. 4. 3. prayeth for Grace and Peace from him Thirdly when the Apostles n Acts 15. 28. doe warrant the decree which they made by this Argument it seemed good to the Holy Ghost and vs is it not plaine that they giue him a Diuine authoritie and the supreme Soueraigntie of God himselfe Fourthly How much maketh it for his Godhead that the sinne committed o Mat. 12. 13. against him that is his speciall grace and working can neuer be forgiuen Ninthly playne testimonies of Scripture calling him God The mightie God c. ESAY p Esay 40. 13 18 hauing discoursed of the excellent and incomparable both Power and Wisedome of the Spirit addeth To whom then will you liken the mightie God manifestly calling him the mighty God As Peter q Acts 5. 3. also doth when asking ANANIAS Why Satan had filled his heart to lye against the Spirit of God forth-with hee addeth Thou hast not lyed to men but to God Hither belongeth that vnto the r 1. Cor. 2. 11. Corinthians For who among men knoweth the things of man saue the spirit of man that is in him So also none knoweth the things of God but the Spirit of God Where to make the comparison hold as it ought you must needes say that as the Apostle expresly noteth none to know the things of man but a very man So he meaneth that none know the things of God but hee that is GOD indeed So that this also is a most cleere
his Throne and Kingdome in the dispensation of his great and glorious purposes established before any time In which regard the Psalmist g Psal 78. 69. saith of the Land of Canaan That he founded it for his people the Iewes from euerlasting meaning in his eternall counsell and h Esay 45. 7. ESAY Since I disposed an euerlasting people the Church in the purpose and appointment of God eternally elected And when the Psalmist i Psal 103. 17. cryeth out The kindnesses of IEHOVAH are from euerlasting to euerlasting doth he not euidently point hereat But more cleerely to this purpose serueth that of Paul k Ephes 3. 11 commending the excellency of the Doctrine of the Gospell in the gathering together of the Churches of the Gentiles aswell as Iewes in that it was according to his euerlasting purpose As also l 1. Cor. 2. 7. in another place hee saith of the Wisedome of God lying hid in the Mystery of the Gospell that God had fore-ordayned it before the World And of Christ Peter m 1. Pet. 1. 20. saith that he was fore-appointed before the foundation of the World was layd The truth hereof not onely shineth forth in these and other great and high points of our Faith and namely of Election and Reprobation which come hereafter to be considered but reacheth farther and hath a place in all So n Psal 193. 15. 16. Dauid speaketh of his conception an ordinary course of nature When I was secretly framed and as it were curiously wrought and wouen together thine eyes did see my very lumpe what time they were fashioned yea euen then when none of them was extant that is from euerlasting And the saying of Iames o Acts 15. 18. hath no exception All the workes of God are knowne to him from Eternitie In this Argument I finde that the Prophet Esay from whom the Apostles p 2. Pet. 2. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Peter and Iude seeme q Iude verse 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to haue taken it delighteth himselfe much to set out the Eternitie of Gods Decrees by the Phrase of Long r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 agoe In the two and twentieth ſ Esay 22. 5 8 11. Chapter Thou diddest looke in that day when the enemie did besiege you to the Armour of the Forrest House c. But ye looke ●●ot to the Authour of it nor had respect to him that framed it long agoe Chap. 25. The t Esay 25. 1. counsels long agoe eternally decreed and in their time prophesied and made knowne to the Church are Faith and Truth And so himselfe doth in another u Esay 37. 26. place expound it to import as much as from all Eternitie Secondly The cause why all things are so decreed is not the knowledge or fore-knowledge of God but his absolute will and pleasure for causes resting onely in himselfe although vnknowne to vs yet most iust and holy Ephes 1. 11. Hee worketh all things after the counsell of his will Thirdly The generalitie in that hee hath decreed all things and all the meanes and circumstances of euery thing Acts 15. 18. All the workes of God are knowne to him that is purposed and decreed of him from Eternitie So that whatsoeuer experience sheweth or the Word of God confirmeth to come to passe in Heauen or in Earth or in the lowest Hell both the confounding of the wicked the Saluation of the Elect and the things that pertayne to the businesse and affaires of this life the same are all eternally decreed of God and that for his owne good pleasure onely the x Ephes 11. 1. Apostle bearing witnesse That hee worketh all things after the counsell of his will CHAP. III. Of Creation IN the Creation which is the second thing The workes of God are the execution of his purpose And are Creation and Prouidence Creation is his making all things wherein his Kingdome standeth I obserue fiue things which the Story of the Creation penned by Moses in the first and second Chapters of Genesis doth offer vnto vs. First The things which God made All things without exception and in saying all things it is manifest that we leaue nothing vncreated excepting onely him that did create them no not the Angels themselues the most glorious and super-excellent Creatures of God of whō albeit Moses maketh no mention in expresse termes no more then of their fall specifying onely the visible workes of God in respect of the people to whom he wrote yet the Holy Ghost else-where concealeth not their Creation for when the Psalmist had exhorted the Angels and Host of Heauen the Sunne the Moone the Starres the Heauen of Heauens to prayse the Lord hee addeth a reason common to them all Let a Psal 148. 2 3 4 5. them prayse the Name of IEHOVAH for he commanded and they were created But most manifest is that of PAVL Col. 1. 16. By him were all things created which are in Heauen and vpon the Earth things visible and inuisible whether Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers By which words it is most certaine he vnderstands the Angels This all things you may not vnfitly deuide into b 1. Cor. 4. 9. reasonable Creatures Angels and Men and the World of them both whereto aptly serueth the place of the Colossians before and Moses in the very first words of his Story hath so deuided it In c Gen. 1. 12. the beginning God made Heauen and Earth that is both the vtmost compasse of this vniuersal World together with the Spirits and Angels that inhabit it and that Chaos or first lumpe and matter whereout the Earth and Heauen as we call Heauen and all heauenly and earthly bodies were made Moses therefore as Paul in that place maketh a most perfect diuision of all the whole frame of Gods Creation sundring it into two Heauen and Earth The Ayre it selfe the Sunne the Moone the Planets and whatsoeuer in that whole Chapter is spoken of seemeth to be comprehended vnder the name of Earth For so hee doth proceed resuming the latter member And touching the Earth it was vnshapen c. By Heauen is meant the place of blessed Spirits and the Angels inhabiters and dwellers in it All which appeareth further in the next Chapter Thus d Gen. 2. 1. were the Heauen and the Earth perfited and all the Host of them that is whatsoeuer is within the compasse of the highest Heauens vnto the very bottome and Center of the lowest Earth things visible and inuisible Angels or whatsoeuer else wherewith the Heauen and Earth are beautifully adorned The World of these two Creatures is either the vnseene World Heauen and Hell or the World visible and subiect to our eyes which Moses in one word termeth Earth But a better and more apt diuision to this purpose may bee made to say it is eyther the naturall place and World for these two Creatures Heauen for the one
Apostle bearing witnesse that by faith onely wee vnderstand it for howsoeuer many of the Heathen who knew not God especially the wiser sort haue in a kinde acknowledged a Creation Neyther in truth can any bee so blockish as not to see it if he looke but vp to Heauen and the frame of this World which haue the name of their Workeman and Creatour written in their fore-head yet neuer was there any not so much as the wisest of them that could attaine to this How the World should bee made of nothing Heere therefore all reason of man must stoope and bee content to learne of him in whose Schoole it is better to bee Schollers then Teachers and Professors any where besides who not onely maketh men wiser then the beasts of the field as it is in the p Iob 35. 11. Booke of Iob but teacheth his wisedome aboue the wisedome of the wise and guideth them by pathes that no foote of vaine Philosophie is able for to walke Thirdly I note the order and manner how all this was effected First The Angels and their World the highest Heauens were without more adoe immediately made of nothing But for men and the World which here we see it was somewhat in another sort For touching the World it selfe First God minding to erect such a large and goodly Theater wherein hee would make full demonstration of his incomparable both Power Wisedome and Goodnesse q Gen. 1. 1 2. framed first an empty an vnshapen lumpe without fashion without forme called Waters for the vast hugenesse of it Darknesse for the confusion and lacke of forme and the Deepe for the emptinesse without bottome to rest vpon which lest it should vanish and come to nothing hauing no steaddinesse to vphold it the Spirit of God lay vpon it and ouer-spred it to keepe it from decay Secondly Out of this lumpe and vnformed confusion did God afterwards distinctly forme this World and all the parts of it First those foure Elements called the simple bodies by fetching one contrary out of another as Light out of Darknesse the Firmament out of emptinesse dry Earth out of Waters then the compound bodies out of the same Elements and for the most part of all foure vnequally mingled together euery one principally out of the same Element which they garnish or inhabit As Grasse and Trees out of the Earth The Sunne the Moone the Stars wholly or specially out of the r For it is plaine by Moses that the Heauens thēselues and those celestiall bodies were made not of any fift essence as Aristotle and some other dreame but of elementary matter namely of the fire Whereupon the very substance and the whole frame and compasse of them all which wee call the Skye is termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aether from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is to burne for that al things there are fiery as Ana●ag●r an old Philosopher did well deriue it Albeit Aristotle in his first Booke de C●lo reiect this Etymologie and preferres another rather from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it is in perpetuall motion But that seemeth neither so naturall for the Word nor so apt for the matter fire as may not vnprobably be gathered Fishes out of the Waters Birds out of the Ayre Beasts out of the Earth But men and women as a piece of singular worke hee framed in a more artificiall sort The body of man by ſ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 2. 7. whereunto Paul alludeth 1. Tim. 2 1● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 forming and figuring it as a Potter doth his Vessels out of the Clay of the Earth And therefore heauy and lumpish dead of it selfe and without any sence or feeling Whereinto he breathed a soule not as a part of the Diuine Nature or of Gods owne essence which to thinke were impious and absurd but because it was made neyther of the Ayre nor of any other elementary matter but onely by his Word and the power of his Spirit and this hee knit vnto one person with the body to quicken and giue life vnto it and to make it a perfect man The woman hee framed and formed out of the Rib of man And all this Moses plainly expresseth Gen. 2. 4 5 6 7 * Finished in six dayes The fourth thing I obserue in the Creation is the time which it pleased GOD to take for the finishing of this worke in that he created not all at once and in a moment as he could haue done but tooke the space of sixe t Gen. 1. 31. 2. 1. 2. 3. dayes for it within which compasse Heauen the place of the blessed Angels together with the Angels themselues were made as Moses plainly teacheth Gen. 2. 1 2. Therefore the first day God made First Heauen and Hell For Hell it is probable to bee supposed hee did then make when Heauen the other part of the vnseene World was made And that Heauen was the first worke of all is easie to be gathered by the very order wich Moses u Gen. 1. 1. 2. 1. vseth Secondly The Angels those Creatures of x 2. Cor. 11. 4. Light the Tenants and Inhabitants of the highest Heauens who in Iob y Job 38. 7. are said to shoute and sing forth the prayses of God when those heauenly Bodies the Sunne the Moone the Starres were made as astonished at the excellency of their beautie And therefore themselues were before that time created Thirdly That vnfashioned lumpe Fourthly Fire The second Day he made the Ayre The third Day First Water Secondly Earth Thirdly Grasse and Trees The fourth Day the Sunne the Moone the Starres The fifth First Fishes Secondly Birds The last Day hee made First Beasts Secondly Man and Woman A fift and last thing to be obserued in the Creation is And was of euery Creature in excellency of perfection that all the Creatures were made exceeding good whether you consider them singly and apart or all of them together As from God that is goodnesse it selfe nothing can come but absolutely good For the further sealing vp of which Doctrine wee haue the testimony of God himselfe both in euery speciall God z Gen. 1. 4. saw the Light that it was good and so in the rest and in the generall conclusion of all God a Gen. 1. 31. looked vpon all that hee had made and behold it was exceeding good This goodnesse in the Creatures generally is the excellencie of perfection according to that their nature is capable of for goodnesse in that place is not to bee taken as opposite vnto vice and to that foule deformitie which is a breach of the righteous Law of God but it noteth that perfection and excellency of estate that euery Creature was framed in according as his nature was fit and able to receiue No weaknesse or infirmitie was then any where to be seene No corruption or decay nothing out of frame or ioynt so as now wee see the whole
Dauid to Murder and Adulterie Lot to Incest Noah to Drunkennesse c. And the best of all their actions are stayned with some corruption that is his and commeth from him But is not God hereby made the Authour of sinne God forbid The Manichees indeed when they knew not how otherwise to excuse him plunged themselues into a foule and monstrous absurditie for they made two beginnings of things God from whom all goodnesse commeth and the Deuill from whom all euill or which is all one two gods a good and an euill god This is a horrible and a fearefull Blasphemie and striketh at the verie roote of all Religion But for auoyding all danger that may grow hereby it is necessarie first to know how and in what sence wee say that God hath a stroke in vnrighteous and sinfull actions not because he instilleth or powreth into his Creatures a poyson which before they had not or inclineth them vnto wickednesse for that were indeed to make God the authour of sinne but partly in that hee forsaketh and leaueth them to their owne naturall corruption either by taking away the grace they had or not bestowing new grace which they want whereby they runne head-long vnto euill partly that he letteth Satan loose vpon them to bee by him blinded and misse-led because they haue refused to be ruled and gouerned by Gods Word and Spirit To the former those places are to be referred where he is said to tempt or try them as the Holy Ghost recordeth y 2. Chron. 32. 21 of EZECHIAS that when hee dealt with the King of Babylons Ambassador God forsooke him trying him what was in his heart And Moses z Deut. 8. 2. in Deuteronomie Remember all this way wherein IEHOVAH thy God hath led thee now fortie yeeres in the Desart that he might afflict thee in trying what was in thine heart whether thou wouldest obey his Precepts or not So afterwards a Deut. 29. 3. 4. he vpbraydeth the people that notwithstanding these great tryals signes and wonders which Iehouah had done for them Yet he had not giuen them a mind to know eyes to see and eares to heare wherin we may not think God vniust who is indebted to none For who b Rom. 11. 35. gaue vnto him first and he shall be recōpenced And who according to his owne free pleasure bestoweth the measure of his graces how and where he will I c Rom. 9. 15. will haue mercie vpon whom I will haue mercie And is d Mat. 20. 15. it not lawfull for me to doe what I will with mine own Of the latter we haue an Example 1. Kin. 22 23. IEHOVAH hath sent a lying spirit into the mouth of all thy Prophets And the 1. Sam. 16. 15 16. An euill spirit from IEHOVAH vexed SAVL And that nothing herein falleth from the holinesse and Iustice of the Lord as all men not forsaken of common sence doe easily discerne for else as the e Rom. 3. 6. Apostle reasoneth how should God iudge the World So the Holy Ghost in many places teacheth very plainly for when the f Hosh 13 9 Prophet cryeth out Thy destruction is from thy selfe O Israel doth it not follow of necessitie that the cause also of destruction which is sinne is wholly from our selues and that GOD hath no part in it Which g Iames 1. 13. Iames more plainly vttereth Let no man when he is tempted say I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted of euill neither tempteth he any man And 1. Iohn 2. h 1. Iohn 2. 15. Whatsoeuer is in the World as the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not from the Father but is from the World For this cause sinne is called The i 1. Iohn 3. 8. he that committeth sinne is of the Deuill for the Deuill sinneth from the beginning For this cause was the Sonne of God manifested that he might destroy the worke of the Deuill worke of the Deuill And our Sauiour Christ saith When k Iohn 8. 44. he speaketh a lye hee speaketh of his owne The sinne therefore of the Action is wholly to bee ascribed to the depraued nature and corruption of men wherein God is no way to be blamed l Eccles 7. 29. Who made all righteous but they haue sought many inuentions to themselues To illustrate this by one or two Similitudes Hee that spurreth a lame Horse is the cause of his stirring but not of his halting The Sunne that shineth vpon a filthie carcasse maketh the sauor yet it is no cause of any stench for out of sweete Flowres it bringeth a pleasant odour Such is the worke of God in the actions of wicked men And the better to apprehend how God in all this remayneth without any touch of sinne wee must consider that sinne hath alwayes three things going with it whereof it is impossible that any one should fall vpon God First To bee subiect to a Law For m Rom. 5. 13. where no law is there is no transgression And the n 1. Iohn 3. 4. Apostle defineth sinne to bee a breach of the Law Now God who made his Lawes for others is not himselfe to bee tyed to them Secondly Impuritie and corruption a thing most contrarie to the nature of God who is not onely holy and pure but holinesse and puritie it selfe and so farre off from being euill that he o Iames 1. 13. cannot be tempted of it Thirdly An euill and a wicked end Whereas GOD euermore seeketh his owne glorie which is absolutely good and the chiefe Good of all Therefore beside that the will of God is the Rule of all goodnesse the difference in these sinfull actions betweene that hee worketh and the worke of wicked men lyeth plaine aswell in the cause that mooueth him as in the end hee setteth before him and in the manner of doing all which though they bee in respect of wicked men vniust and sinfull yet as they proceede from God they are most iust and holy for first by reason of this diuersitie of the causes moouing and of the diuers ends which these two Agents God and wicked men set before them it falleth out that the selfe-same Action which in respect of the corruption of wicked men becommeth vnto them sinfull and damnable is as in regard of God most holy and righteous being led thereto for most gracious and iust respects either to set forth the riches of his Iustice or Mercie or for the chastizement and tryall of his Children or for some other cause as he seeth good which ends the wicked neuer set before them but all the contrarie what more blessed or glorious worke and of greater loue to vs was there euer or can possibly be then the reconciling of the World by the death of his Sonne And what more iust in respect of God then to inflict all these punishments vpon him who was our suretie and tooke
which he requireth of vs Know ſ Psal 110. 3. that IEHOVAH he is God Thou t 1. Chron. 28. 9 SALOMON my sonne know the God of thy fathers and serue him Behold u Ro. 2. 17 18. thou art named a Iew and restest in the Law and boastest of God and knowest his will Be x Ephes 5. 17. not foolish but vnderstand what is the will of the Lord. The contrary whereof is ignorance of God and of his reuealed will whither referre all Errors and Heresies concerning either God his Persons and Properties or any other point of Christian Doctrine But then y Gal. 4. 18. verily not knowing God ye serued those that by nature are no gods z Ephes 4. 18. which are strangers from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them Fashion a 1. Pet. 1. 14. not your selues to the former lusts which you had in your ignorance Next is iudgement or wisdome which is as it were the life of our knowledge and added by the Apostle as one degree higher Thou b Rom. 2. 18. knowest his will and tryest the things that differ So he prayeth for the Philippians that they may discerne c Phil. 1. 10. things that differ And to the Hebrewes d Heb. ● 14. he saith Strong meate belongeth to them which are of age who through long custome haue their wits exercised to discerne both good and euill A principall branch of this is the trying of Spirits Dearely e 1. Iohn 4 1. beloued beleeue not euery spirit but try the Spirits whether they be of God Try f 1 Thess 5. 21. all things and keepe that which is good Hereby g Act. 17. 11. are those noble men of Berea commended that they searched the Scriptures whether the things that Paul said were so or no. The contrarie whereof is that which the Apostle h Rom. 1. 28. calleth a minde void of iudgement and the i Ephes 4. 17. vanitie of mindes wherein we all naturally doe walke esteeming Truth Falshood and Falshood Truth whence it commeth that we k Ephes 4. 19. are carryed away with euery winde and puffe of Doctrine With knowledge and iudgement a good conscience must be ioyned whose propertie it is iustly and rightly to beare witnesse of our Actions in l Rom. 2. 15. Their Consciences accusing or excusing accusing or excusing them as it ought The contrary whereof is an euill conscience either benummed or through hypocrisie seared as it were with a hot Iron that both it accuseth not where it should and excuseth where it ought not To the m Tit. 1. 15. vnfaithfull there is nothng pure but both their minde and conscience is polluted For remembrance of holy things a Commandement is giuen Numb 15. 39. that the children of Israel should weare frindges vpon the edge of their garments that seeing the same they might remember all the Commandements of IEHOVAH and doe them Ps 119. 11. DAVID professeth of himselfe I hid thy Word in my heart that I might not sinne against thee And Mary hath her worthy prayse Luke 2. 51. for that shee retayned all the things there spoken of in her heart The contrary whereof is forgetfulnesse My n Prou. 3. 1. sonne forget not my Law but let thy heart keepe my Commandements I forget o Psal 119. 16. not thy Word In the soule first is the desire comprehending all inward thoughts and motions that but once rise vp within vs and come not so farre as to haue consent vnto them And this desire is by nature a holy thing The p Gal. 5. 17. spirit desireth or lusteth against the flesh Hereof principally the Lawes of God are q Rom. 7. 24. called spirituall because they bind not onely all the Creature his intents and purposes but his whole force and power and all the thoughts and inclinations of his heart The contrary is concupiscence or lust The Papist which teach that the first motions are no sin Put off r Ephes 4. 22. saith the Apostle the old man which is corrupted through deceiueable lusts which he there opposeth to renewing in the spirit of our minde Walke ſ Gal. 5. 16. 17 in the Spirit and yee shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh for the flesh lusteth against the Spirit Let t Rom. 6. 12. not sinne raigne in your mortall bodie to obey it through the lusts thereof that is of the body flying u 1. Pet. 1 4 the corruption which is in the World through concupiscence Euery x Iam. 1. 14. man is tempted of his owne lust Sinne y Rom. 7. 8. taking occasion by the commandement wrought in me all lust Of concupiscence or lust the Apostle Iames z Iam. 1. 1 4 noteth two degrees First The a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moouing of the powers of nature out of their right and proper place by raysing vp wandring and wicked thoughts which yet we neuer like of Secondly The nibbling b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were with some delight at this bayte laid before vs though presently we repell it of which nature are vaine sudden wishes and euill dreames though it bee of things which a man misliketh when he is awake And that all concupiscence is vnlawfull euen that whereunto no consent of the will doth come may appeare by these reasons following First Because the Root from whence the least thought doth spring is naught our owne inborne corruption else it could neuer enter into vs farther then by Satans offering it to the sences and outward obiects as it was to our Sauiour Christ and to our first parents in their innocencie The sinne whereof appeareth in this that wee thinke not vpon it with a detestation at the first but when it hath once passed our thoughts then we beginne to detest it which in the vncorrupt estate of man should haue beene quite contrary Secondly Iames doth tell vs that lust conceiuing bringeth forth sinne Can lust conceiue and bee with childe of sinne and be any other thing then sinne Are fishes bred of Serpents or is it possible that the fruit and the Tree should bee not of one nature Euen so concupiscence which is the spawne of sinne the bed and bosome wherein it is conceiued and hatched must needes it selfe bee sinne euen after Baptisme after wee bee regenerate and after that the guilt and the sting thereof is pulled out by Christ Thirdly Philosophers and other heathen men that neuer heard of the Law of God haue condemned settled purposes to doe euill Therefore this must needs bee more close and secret which Paul himselfe so great a Doctor of the Law brought vp at the feet of Gamaliel was altogether ignorant of till he was taught a better Lesson in the Schoole of Christ I c Rom. 7. 7. knew not sinne but by the Law for I had not knowne lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not lust
them know that the place hath no such meaning as they would fasten vpon it but quite the cōtrarie which according to the Originall may truly be thus rendred For thy seruant will no more offer burnt Offerings and Sacrifice to other Gods but to Iehouah in this matter Iehouau be mercifull to thy seruant at my Lords going into the house of Rimmon to bow downe there and hee leaning vpon my hand that I also haue bowed downe in the house of Rimmon for my bowing downe in the hou●e of Rimmon Iehouah now be mercifull to thy seruant in this matter So crauing pardon for his Idolatrie past with promise from thenceforth to serue God alone This Interpretation the faith and pietie of Naaman truly conuerted Luke 4. 27. the rule of Charitie the nature and proprietie of the Word being in the time past and not but where necessitie inforceth to be taken futurely the promise which hee himselfe maketh and the Prophets answere Goe in Peace doe strongly confirme also belong all markes and badges of Superstition or other sinne But what z Rom. 11. 4. saith the Scripture I haue rescrued to my selfe seuen thousand men that haue not bowed the knee to BAAL The a Exod. 32. 6. People s●te downe to eate and drinke before the Calfe which Aaron had made and rose vp to play So PAVL 1. Cor. 8. 10. reprehendeth the sitting at the Table in the Idols temple euen of them that knew an Idoll was nothing in the World And God by his b Hosh 13. 2. Prophet threatneth ruine to those that kisse the Calues which Ieroboam had set vp Reu. 14. 9. 10. it is the Proclamation of an holy Angell sounded with a loud voyce If any man worship the Beast or his image and take a marke vpon his forehead or vpon his hand euen he shall drinke of the Wine of the wrath of God and be tormented with fire and brimstone The c Esay 30. 22. Prophet also setteth it forth as a fruit of true Repentance to pollute the Images of Siluer and the rich Ornaments of the Images of Gold and to cast them away as a menstruous cloth Hence shalt thou say vnto it Thirdly outward Actions come heere also to be reckoned which the Scripture commonly attributeth to the hands Clense d Iames 4. 8. your hands you Sinners c. It is many times called the doing e Ephes 6. 6. Heb. 13. 24. of the will of God sometimes the liuing f 1. Pet. 4. 2. according to his will The contrary whereof is the committing of grosse sinnes which the Apostle calleth To worke g 1. Pet. 4. 3. the will of the Gentiles to doe h Ephes 2. 3. the will of our flesh and of our thoughts IAMES i Iam. 1. 15. termeth it Sinne perfited and that though we doe it in ignorance not knowing or at the least not making it to bee a sinne which lesseneth the hainousnesse of the offence Therfore k 1. Tim. 1. 23. Paul professeth he did obtayne mercie notwithstanding he were a Blasphemer a Persecutor and an Oppressor because he did it ignorantly And Dauid l Psal 19. 13. prayeth Clense me from my secret sinnes But this kind of sinne is greater when our will is carryed contrarie to our vnderstanding to doe those things which wee know and are perswaded to be euill wherein notwithstanding a difference is to be held for if it bee through the ouer-ruling of the flesh and inordinate desires either for feare of present danger or by the bayte of some false appearing pleasure then is the sinne the lesse Hereof is that complaint the Apostle taketh vp Rom. 7. 19. I doe not the good I would but the euill which I would not that I doe But if it be in a presumption of Gods Mercie bearing our selues bold vpon the riches of his patience and forbearance that doth much increase the sinne whereupon in the Law m Num. 15. 30. it is commanded that the person that doth presumptuously should be cut off from amongst his people because hee hath despised the Word of IEHOVAH And that this wrong construction of the patience and long sufferance of God is the roote of all presumption the Wiseman teacheth Eccles 8. 11. Because sentence against an euill worke is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the Children of men is fully set in them to doe euill And the Apostle Rom. 2. 4. Despisest thou the riches of his bountie c. not knowing that the bountie of God leadeth thee to Repentance But farre greater it is and commeth neere the top of all iniquitie when men doe willingly follow after sinne onely for their pleasure and because they will doe it which our Sauiour noteth in the Iewes Iohn 8. 43. The lusts of your father the Deuill you will or you loue to doe And of Ephraim the n Hos 5. 2. Prophet saith that willingly they went after the commandement of IEROBOAM A further thing that the Law of God requireth in the performance of holy Duties is that in them all whether the Actions bee inward or outward wee put forth our selues and the strength both of our soule and bodie to performe it with our whole force and might That Commandement wee haue Deut. 6. 5. Thou shalt loue IEHOVAH thy God with thy whole heart or minde and with thy whole soule and with thy whole strength Where vnder the word strength he noteth the whole power both of soule and bodie ioyned together as our Sauiour o Luke 10. 27. Mark 12. 30 doth interpret it vsing two words to expresse that one of strength namely might which more properly is referred to the bodie and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the strength and power and spirit as it were of the whole soule both of the mind and will and therefore may not vnfitly bee translated the power of reason or of discourse PAVL is woont to call it The spirit of our p Ephes 4. 23. Be renewed in the spirit of your minde minde This the Apostle touching the soule exhorteth vs vnto when he saith Doing q Ephes 6. 6. the will of God from the soule r Col. 3. 23. Whatsoeuer you doe worke from the soule And of the body we haue our Sauiour Christs owne exhortation Luke 6. 23. Skippe and bee glad An Example Luke 10. 21. where he himselfe is said to reioyce in the spirit that is for very spirituall ioy and gladnesse expressed by some bodily gesture to breake forth into that Thankesgiuing that followeth in that place So ſ Exod. 39. 19. Moses in a holy zeale flang the Tables of Stone away The contrarie whereof in the former the Prophet Ezechiel toucheth once or twice in the Enemies of Gods Church that with the ioy of their whole heart and from their verie soule reioyced to doe them mischiefe t Ezech. 25. 15. Because the Philistims wrought vengeance spoiling from their soule u Ezech. 36.
Secondly When wee vow things too base to offer vnto God as if a Rich man to obtayne some great mercie at Gods hands would vow to giue somewhat not worth the speaking of vnto the poore This Salomon wisheth vs to take heed of when in the matter of Vowes hee maketh the feare and reuerence of God in not doing any thing vnworthy of his Maiestie one great and speciall point Eccles 5. 6 3. Thirdly when we vow such things as are not indifferēt to do or to leaue vndone for as to bring the hire of a Whore or the price of a Dogge into the House of God for a Vow were to prophane his Seruice Deut. 23. 18. So to vow that in token of a rare and extraordinarie zeale which without vow wee are bound to doe is rather to dally with God then to offer any speciall seruice to him This is plainly taught Deut. 23. 24. when it is said If thou vow not at all it shall not be sinne vnto thee but the sinne is in not performing our Vow when wee haue vowed it And if wee take a view of all the Vowes of Gods Children wee shall find them all for the most part according vnto this rule of things which otherwise without offence they might haue left vndone Such was that of d Ps 132. 3 4 5 DAVID I will not goe vnto the Tent of mine House nor climbe vp my Bed-stead nor suffer sleepe in mine eyes nor slumber in my eye-lids till I find out a place for IEHOVAH c. an habitation for the mightie God of IACOB And that of ANNA e 1. Sam. 1. 11. If indeed looking to the affliction of thine Hand-mayde thou wilt remember mee and not forget thine Hand-mayde but giue vnto thine Hand-mayde a man-childe then will I giue him to IEHOVAH all the dayes of his life and no Razor shall come vpon his head Such also was f Gen. 28. 20 21 22. Iacobs Vow If IEHOVAH God will be with me and keepe mee in this iourney which I goe and will giue mee bread to eate and clothes to put on so that I come againe to my fathers house in safetie and finally if IEHOVAH will be my God Then there beginneth the Vow shall this Stone which I haue set vp as a Piller be the House of God Fourthly When we are slacke to performe them When g Deut. 23. 21. thou vowest a Vow to IEHOVAH thy God thou shalt not delay to performe it for IEHOVAH thy God will certainly require it of thee and it shall be sinne vnto thee When h Ecclesi 5. 3. as thou vowest a Vow to God delay not to performe it for God hath no pleasure in Fooles Yet for the performance of some greater dutie our Vow may bee put off for a time as the example of the Rechabites i Ier. 35. 7. 14. doth confirme of whom the Lord himselfe beareth witnesse that they obserued the vow of IONADAB their father charging them not to dwell in houses but in Tents continually though for safetie of their liues they came to dwell in Ierusalem For the performance of the duties of this Commandement Whereunto are requisite Preparation are required in all but especially in the publike seruice of God First Preparation of our selues before wee come by considering both the cause that should mooue vs to it and how to performe it with greatest dutie and respect as the Preacher doth exhort vs Take k Eccles 47. 5. 1. heed vnto thy feet when thou goest into the House of God and bee neerer to hearken then to giue the gift of Fooles and sacrifice for they know not that they doe ill Doe not confusedly speake with thy mouth nor let thy heart make haste to vtter a word before God for God is in Heauen thou art vpon the Earth Therefore let thy words be few To which purpose it is necessary that we vse priuate Prayer before-hand and take speciall view and examination of our sinnes that hinder our approch to God Secondly Diligent attention Being come and trembling and Humiliation at the presence of God before whom wee stand like vnto that good woman l Acts 16. 14. LYDIA whose heart God opened that shee attended to the things spoken by PAVL And as Cornelius did Acts 10. 33. Now therefore all wee are heere present before God to heare all things that are inioyned vnto thee of God Whereupon euerie where in the Scripture it is made a proper marke of Gods Children to tremble at his Word To m Esay 66. 2. this man doe I looke to him that is humble and of a broken spirit and which trembleth at my words Thirdly Meditation and chewing as it were the cud when we are departed as the men of n Acts 17. 11. Berhea did who after they had heard PAVL searched the Scriptures whether those things were so For the fitting of vs to some more speciall parts of his And when need is both fasting to quicken vs to petition in the acknowledgement of our vnworthinesse and wants and feasting to expresse our thankfulnesse for his benefits worship are required both Fasting and a holy Feast Fasting to quicken vs to petition in the acknowledgement of our wants holy Feasting to expresse our thankfulnesse for his benefits This vse of Fasting the King of Nineueh was not ignorant of when hee gaue o Ionah 3. 9 10 commandement by the Decree of the King and his Nobles saying Let neither Men nor Beasts nor Heards nor Flockes taste any thing nor feede nor drinke water but let Men and Beasts couer themselues with Sack-cloth and cry vnto God strongly c. Esay toucheth the same in the 58. p Esay 58. 4. Chapter of his Prophecy Yee fast not as these times are to make your voyce to be heard on high But of Fasting what it is and of the true nature and properties thereof we shall haue further cause to speake in the Doctrine of Repentance The contrary hereof is that which the same Prophet reprehendeth in the people q Esay 22. 12. In that day the Lord IEHOVAH of Hoasts called to weeping and to mourning to baldnesse and to girting with sackcloth and behold gladnesse and ioy killing of Oxen and slaying of Sheepe eating flesh and drinking Wine Let vs eate and drinke for tomorrow we shall die that is to say in stead of humiliation they gaue themselues to all kind of iollitie and bathing of themselues in pleasures The exercise of Feasting was taken vp amongst Gods people when they had receiued some singular benefit or deliuerance from some notable euill which by Fasting and Prayer they had begged at his hands In which Feasts a more liberall vse of the creature is permitted both for plenty and variety and all kind of honest iollity and pleasure Goe your wayes it is said Nehem. 8. 11 13. eat fat things and drinke sweet things and send portions to him for whome nothing is prouided for this
Brethren if yee haue any word of exhortation for the People say on Acts 15. 21. MOSES of old time hath in euerie Citie those that preach him being read in the Synagogues euery Sabbath Day Secondly Publike Prayer Acts 16. 13. Vpon the Sabbath Day we went out of the City vnto a Riuer where Prayer was wont to be Thirdly To receiue the Sacraments at the times appointed Acts 20. 7. The first Day of the Weeke when the Disciples were gathered together to breake bread PAVL preached vnto them c. Fourthly Collections and gathering for the Saints 1. Cor. 16. 2. The first Day of the Weeke let euery one lay aside by him treasuring vp what hee hath beene prospered Fifthly Priuate meditation which was the exercise of Iohn the Apostle at what time hee was banished into the I le Pathmos for the Word of God Vpon the Lords Day hee was rauished in Spirit in sweete and heauenly Meditations Reuel 1. 10. wherein it is fit that by our selues and in our Family we conferre together and call to minde the things that in the publike Ministerie wee haue heard z Acts 17. 11. as the men of Berea did And in this respect lest by the trauailing of our beasts men who are necessarily to be imployed about them should be drawn from Gods Seruice we are commanded that they should also rest for whose ease otherwise the Sabbath was not any way ordayned Secondly The duties of brotherly loue as distributing In which number the duties of brotherly loue as distributing to the poore according to Gods blessing vpon vs visiting the sicke helping our Neighbor or any thing that is his in their distresse come also to bee reckoned when they are done as works of Mercie to the poore according to the good hand and blessing of God vpon vs visiting the sicke helping our Neighbour his Oxe Asse or any thing in distresse when they are done not for our owne lucre but as workes of mercy and compassion Thus did a Acts 20 9. Paul vpon that day restore him that being ouercome with sleepe while Paul was preaching the night of the Sabbath Day fell downe from the third Loft and was taken vp dead Acts 20. 9. And hither tendeth the saying of our Sauiour Christ Marke 2. 27. The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath The contrarie hereof is the outward obseruation without respect of inward godlinesse The Seuenth Day thus to bee kept holy was in the b Gen. 2. 3. Exod. 20. 10 11. This day in the first institution was the Seuenth Day from the Creation and called the Sabbath Day first institution the Seuenth Day from the Creation when God resting from his owne worke of creating the World which in six dayes he had finished sanctified that Day for a Day of rest and named it the Sabbath Day beginning on the Euening of the day before when c Gen. 1. 31. Beginning on the euening of the Day before when the Creation of the World was finished the Creation of the World was finished as d Leuit. 23. 32. all other Feasts vnder the Law did To vs Christians it is the first Day of the Creation as in his place shall bee declared And this Seuenth Day is all to be kept holy from the beginning to the end rising vp early in the morning for the sanctifying of it after the example of our Sauiour Christ Marke 1. 35. continuing it till the night and in the night as the e Psal 92. 3. Psalme made for the Day speaketh that so our verie sleepe may bee the sweter to vs. The obseruation of the Sabbath Day which hath a speciall Item giuen to it Remember the Sabbath Day that thou keepe it holy is a morall and a perpetuall Law not onely Ceremoniall and for a time for First It is the same which was f Gen. 2 2 3. instituted in Paradise before any promise of Christ whom all Ceremonies doe respect Secondly It is written by the finger of God in the Tables of the Couenant where there was nothing Ceremoniall but all Morall and of perpetuall indurance Thirdly Our Sauiour Mat. 24. 40. willing them that long time after his death should bee aliue to pray that their flight might not be on the Sabbath sheweth that it was not to haue an end by that Sacrifice of his whereby g Dan 9 24. all Ceremonies were abolished Howbeit some way it was ceremoniall representing a spirituall rest but that was not of the Substance nor in the first Institution but afterwards annexed to it as a thing accidentall which had his end in Christ CHAP. IX Of the second Table of the Law and of the fift Commandement WE haue done with the first Table Come we Iustice followeth which is of the the duties among our selues now to the second The summe whereof we deliuered before To loue our Neighbour as our selues by the Name of Neighbour vnderstanding euery other man as our Sauiour teacheth Luke 10. 30. To the Commandements of the second Table 2. Rules do generally belong First That they stretch euery one as well to our selues as to another so in being commanded to honour our Parents we are also willed to haue a care of our own credit and estimation In being forbidden to couet other mens goods we are commanded to bee content with our owne Secondly They h Mat. 5. 43. 44 Ye haue heard that it hath bin said Thou shalt loue thy Neighbour and hate thine Enemie But I say vnto you Loue your enemies Blesse those which curse you Doe good to those which hate you and pray for those which molest and persecute you extend aswell to our enemies and them that hate vs as to our friends them that loue vs. These Commandements are thus deuided They command And is Honor or the general duties of loue Honor is a performance of duties in respect of a degree honour or the generall duties of loue By honour we meane the performance of all duties which the respect of any degree may require at our hands commanded in the fift Commandement which vp-holding the common order and comelinesse of life principally Magistracie Gouernmēt without which the whole world would come to nothing giueth the precedence to this Commandement before all the rest of the second Table To come to the fift Commandement It contayneth First among vnequals from Inferiours to their Superiours and contrariwise first the duties of Inferiours to their Superiours and contrariwise Secondly The duties of equals one vnto another Thirdly The due respect that we are to haue vnto our selues The dutie that Inferiours owe to all Superiours whether As to all Superiors in yeres knowledge or howsoeuer else in yeeres knowledge or howsoeuer else is Reuerence both in acknowledging the good things wherein they are preferred and making our vse of them and in all outward notes and markes of honour towards Reuerence in acknowledging the good things
keepeth thē from sinning and after sinnes committed draweth them home againe So he saith in x Hosh ● 5. Hoshea of his Spouse which purposed to follow after Idolatry Hee would hedge her way with Thornes that she should not bring her desire to passe and by that meanes would bring her to Repentance that voluntarily she should say I will goe and returne vnto my former Husband And then hee saith Hee will receiue her home vnto himselfe Lo the certainty of the Saluation of Gods Elect through those certaine meanes and remedies wherby they are led forward into Saluation not violently compelled but by the sweet instinct of Gods Spirit returning willingly to the Lord whereas contrariwise vnto the Reprobate all things serue for the hardening of their hearts To conclude particularly of Election it is said The y 2. Tim. 2. 19. foundation of God remayneth firme hauing this seale The Lord knoweth who are his Why doth he set a Seale and a Badge vpon it but to close it vp firme and immutable vnto the Day of Iudgement Againe The z Rom. 11. 29. graces of God are without Repentance So as a Ier. 31. 3. Iohn 13. 1. those whom he loueth hee loueth to the end And our Sauiour b Iohn 17. 21. saith Of those whom thou hast giuen vnto mee none perish but I will raise him vp So Rom. 11. 29. the Apostle taketh this same as a most sure principle whereupon to build the whole truth of the rest of the Doctrine for to prooue that the Lord had not generally reiected his own people the whole Nations of the Iewes he relyeth vpon this as a most strong reason among the rest That it is not possible that God should change his minde to reiect those whom he once hath chosen c Rom. 11. 2. God hath not saith hee cast off his people whom he knew before predestinating and appointing them to life And afterwards d Ro. 11. 28 29 concludeth that God hath mercie in store for them which once were the people of God because the calling and graces of God are without Repentance Wherein although the Apostle speake of the Iewes in generall not of the singular persons yet the ground which he taketh is vniuersall and properly belongeth to this we haue in hand And therefore in this confident assurance doth e Rom. 8. 36. Paul cry out Who shall separate vs from the loue of Christ And our f Luke 12. 31. Sauiour biddeth his little Flock the whole Church and euery member of it not to feare because saith hee it hath pleased your Father to giue vnto you a Kingdome And g Mat. 24. 24. againe that notwithstanding all the false christs and false prophets that shall arise all the signes and wonders that they shall shew yet it is not possible the Elect should be deceiued This is to vs the foundation of all our comfort that our Election being grounded vpon this brazen Hill of Gods eternall loue can neuer be shaken but remayneth fast for euer If it stood in our selues to bee the cause of our owne either Saluation or Damnation we should all vndoubtedly perish Now that it wholly and alone resteth in God who is most mightie to bring his counsels to passe notwithstanding all resistances wee haue a matter of firme comfort that in vaine doth Satan labour in vaine doth the World rage and our owne corruptions rise vp against vs for he to whom wee are giuen to keepe is stronger then all who will keep vs to that Day For this cause Christ is not content to say h Iohn 15. 16. I haue chosen you but addeth also You haue not chosen me shewing that herein indeed our comfort standeth that GOD whose Counsels are vnchangeable hath first elected vs. Against this Doctrine in vaine doe men obiect that which is said concerning the Booke of Life out of which i Exod. 32. 32. Moses desireth to be blotted out and k Rom. 9. 30. Paul to be an accursed and Christ promiseth l Reuel 3. 5. I will not blot out his Name out of the Booke of Life for the speech of our Sauiour Christ tendeth not to shew that any whose name is once genealoged in this Booke may bee blotted out but it is a phrase taken from the manner of men as where Repentance Anger and such like are attributed vnto God As for the example of Paul and Moses wee are not to esteeme that holy affection peculiar vnto them though they had it in a more abundant measure but a common dutie of all Christians to bee followed to whom the Glorie of God ought to bee dearer then the Saluation of their soules They therefore in a matter so nighly concerning the Glorie of God and the Saluation of many soules as it were forgetting and rapt beyond themselues wished to bee accursed and blotted out of the Booke of Life or which is all one to bee Cast-awayes and damned Creatures to saue as they thought the glorie of God Not but that they knew the same was impossible but carryed with zeale they did as it were forget it So Christ prayed that the Cup might passe from him yet he knew full well it was impossible And this vehemencie of spirit oftentimes appeareth not onely in speeches which are sudden but in writing which is more deliberate Although conditionally as I said this ought to bee the stayed affection of vs all that if it were possible Gods Glorie could bee put in ballance with the losse of our soules their sauing must bee thought but light that he may haue prayse Now if any man shall thinke this to bee a Doctrine to Gods Children of Securitie because howsoeuer they liue it is impossible they should perish and to the wicked of despayre because whatsoeuer they doe they can neuer come to bee saued whereby all good indeuours should be in vaine hee mistaketh the matter the case is farre another For no Doctrine more then this awakeneth mans securitie none more amazeth the dissolute and carelesse liuer since Faith and Sanctification bee ordayned for those that are themselues ordayned vnto Glorie and none can bee assured hee is elect but hee that is assured hee walkes in faith and newnesse of life Contrariwise this Doctrine serueth not to throw any man into despayre for none is so wicked nor sinneth so grieuously to whom God offereth not Grace if with an vnfayned heart he seeke it And if thou say it is impossible to seeke where the Lord hath once reiected yet thou must remember that Gods counsels are knowne vnto himselfe and he hath not communicated the secrecies of Reprobation so plentifully as hee hath of his Election considering that there is no certaine note of Reprobation either to a mans selfe or others saue onely That one sinne against the Holy Ghost which layeth hold but vpon a few And the reason is plaine and manifest for he that to day is obstinate and froward an enemie to God and to
for the World but for those whom thou hast giuen me Fiftly For what things this Intercession is made Not for some one or few benefits but that we may be partakers of all the good things that he hath wrought Faith or Vocation Vnion with himselfe that is to say Regeration Righteousnesse and Sanctification through him Constancie and Perseuerance in the estate of Grace and finally Eternall Happinesse for all these parts are particularly set downe Iohn 17. as namely Verse 20. 21. I pray for all that are to beleeue in me by their Ministerie that all may be one as th●● Father in me and I●n thee So that they also may be one with vs that the World may beleeue that thou hast sent mee Verse 17. Sanctifie them by thy Truth Verse 11 Holy 〈…〉 er keepe them in thy Name Verse 15. I pray not that thou 〈…〉 them out of the World but that thou keepe them from th 〈…〉 one Verse 13. That they may haue my ioy fulfilled to them Verse 24. Righteous Father whom thou hast giuen vnto me I desire that where I am there they also may be that they may behold my Glorie which thou hast giuen me And Verse 26. That the loue wherewith thou hast loued me may be vpon them So hee doth expresse the Intercession hee made for Peter to bee That his faith should not faile Luke 22. 32. Intercession therefore of our Sauiour Christ is as it were a continuall plaister for the curing of the manifold slips frailties and sins whereunto the faithfull through infirmitie doe continually fall that so by a speciall and continuall application of his Merit our persons may remayne iust and our workes acceptable to God 1. Iohn 2. 1. If any man sinne we haue an Aduocate c. Sixtly That as in his humanitie hee desireth all these things for our Saluation and the applying of his Merits and death vnto vs so by the power of his De●●e he doth indeed apply them whereunto his being in t Heb. ● ●4 Heauen and in the sight of God his u Rom. ● 34. sitting at the right hand of his Father and his x Heb. 7. 25. euerliuing doe much 〈…〉 le making that Intercession of his as in it selfe more glorious so for vs more gracious and acceptable and able perfectly to saue them that come to God by him Seuenthly That y Rom. 8. 26. making Intercession for vs hee teacheth vs also by his Spirit to make Intercession to God with Prayers sighes and grones that cannot bee expressed CHAP. III. Of Christs Gouernment of the World in generall AFter the Priesthood of Christ next followeth Such is the Priest-hood of Christ his Kingdome followeth his Kingdome which is euerywhere spoken of in the Scriptures and most honourable and glorious promises made vnto it Esay 9. 7. A Child shall bee borne vnto vs and a Sonne giuen to vs vpon whose shoulder the Dominion shall lye Esay 32. 1. Behold a King shall raigne in Righteousnesse And Ierem. 23. 5. A King shall raigne and prosper Generally in his Kingdome I obserue three things Kingdome First A calling of Christ by God his Father to it for as hee intruded not himselfe into the Office of a Priest but expected the calling of his Father so he tooke not vpon him to raigne before hee had a Kingdome giuen him Therefore Psalme 2. 6. God is brought in saying I haue appointed my King ouer Sion my holy Hill And Dan. 2. 44. it is said In those dayes shall the God of Heauen rayse vp a Kingdome So Luke 1. 32. the Angell telleth MARIE The Lord shall giue vnto him the Throne of his Father DAVID And PETER z Acts 2. 36. Him hath God made both Lord and Christ Secondly The inuesting of him into the Princely Honour and Administration of his Kingdome whereof he had full seizin and was put into the actuall and reall possession of it when he ascended into Heauen which a man may call his going vp vnto his Coronation Daniel a Dan. 7. 13 14 in his seuenth Chapter hath a notable description of it seeing in a Vision Christ God and Man comming out of Heauen into the lower parts of the Earth to worke the mysterie of our Redemption and that done ascending into Heauen to the Ancient of dayes God his Father to present himselfe before him And to him saith hee was giuen Dominion Glorie and a Kingdome Thirdly The fruit and end of all this the same wherevnto is in the things which he doth from God for those Elect the whole worke of his Mediation tendeth which is our b Ephes ● 16. Peace and Reconciliation with God in and through him Therefore hee is called The c Esay 9. 6. Prince of Peace d Heb. 7. 2. The King of Righteousnesse and The King of Peace figured by MELCHISEDECH King of Shalem And heereupon the e Rom. 14. 17. Apostle saith that the Kingdome of God is Righteousnesse Peace and loy in the Holy Ghost More specially to treat of this his Kingdome It parteth The kingdome of Christ hath two parts it selfe into three mayne Armes or Branches rising by so many steps or stayres one is his Gouernment of the World in generall taking things in such sort as the Fall did leaue them without vouchsafing any further fauour And this may bee called the footstoole of his Kingdome Another standeth in the bestowing of his Word and the fruits thereof matters of speciall grace though such as fall vpon the Reprobate and this may be called the Scepter of his Kingdome The third Is the giuing of his Spirit whereby of carnall he maketh vs spirituall and heauenly Creatures and this may be called the Seate and Throne or rather the Life and Power of his Kingdome as these three parts are so distinguished and in the same order Psal 93. The first words of which Psalme in a holy triumph and reioycing-wise expresse the generall argument that Iehouah which is Christ our Lord raigneth and not raigneth onely but hath his Raigne accompanied with two Noble Adiuncts Glorie and Power Then hee commeth to distinguish the parts First his Gouernment of the World considered in two degrees One the stay and sustentation of all things the same which the f Heb. 1. 3 Apostle so highly magnifieth to the Hebrewes for whereas Adams sinne had turned vpside downe the whole frame of Nature and according to the curse What day thou eatest of the forbidden fruit thou shalt certainly dye had brought man and all the Creatures for mans sake to vtter ruine and desolation Christ the Mediator steppeth forth and there beginneth his Kingdome in holding vp the World which otherwise had instantly come to nothing This you haue in the latter end of the first Verse The inhabited World is settled it shall not be remoued And that so wonderfull a thing as this a worke of such admiration might haue a reason sutable to make it not seeme strange the Prophet
telleth vs that Hee which vpon Adams fall began his Mediation had a Being long before and together with his Father and Holy Spirit weilded a greater Scepter being the Lord and Creatour of Adams selfe and of the whole World besides and the great King out of whose Throne proceed those euerlasting counsels that rule and moderate whatsoeuer is or shall be Thy Throne is established before any time thou art from euerlasting The other degree is in the tayming and bringing downe of the proud enemies of his Kingdome whose rage and furie hee compareth with the loud noyse of mightie waters when the Waues and Surges of the Sea arise Christs Dominion that sitteth aloft as Lord Paramount with the stilling and ouer-ruling of them Then followeth the second mayne Arme and Branch of his Kingdome in the Scepter of his Word Thy testimonies are exceeding true And lastly the euerlasting Righteousnesse which by the Spirit of Sanctification hee bestoweth vpon his Church In thy House is comely holinesse O IEHOVAH for euermore The first of these is properly called his Iudicature or Office of a Iudge the second is his Propheticall Office the third is wont by excellencie to be called The Kingdome All most glorious and noble effects of his Ascension into Heauen and sitting at the right hand of God as the Apostle telleth vs Ephes 4. 8. Ascending on high he led captiuitie captiue whereby he meaneth the absolute power giuen vnto him for the gouernment of the World seene specially in the subduing of the proud enemies of the Church And gaue gifts vnto men which g Verse 10. by and by hee interpreteth to bee as much as to fill all things that is the whole bodie of his Church and all the parts of it with the varietie of his Graces Not that Christ had not this excellencie or did not raigne at all before his Ascension into Heauen for h Iohn 1. 49. Nathaniel telleth him Thou art the King of Israel And i Iohn 18. 37. hee himselfe when Pilate asked Art thou a King answereth Thou sayest true for I am a King But the full and reall manifestation of this Kingdome in his flesh or humane nature did then first beginne To prosecute now these parts in such order as wee One whereby he gouerneth all the World according to their owne nature since the fall did propound them The first is that which extendeth generally to all the World and to the whole gouernment and administration of it which hee himselfe is wont to call his Iudgeship or Office of iudging Iohn 5. 27. He hath giuen vnto him dignitie to execute iudgement as he is the Sonne of man And Iohn 5. 22. The Father iudgeth no man but hath giuen all iudgement to the Sonne where that it may appeare how large his Power in this behalfe extendeth hee calleth it all iudgement Agreeable whereunto is that of the Apostle Heb. 1. 3. where hee is said to sustayne all things by the power of his Word Therefore Iohn 5. 17. he makes this generall proclamation My Father worketh hitherto and I worke without restraint of time or place or of the subiect or persons towards whom it is wrought God therefore who before gouerned immediately and by himselfe hath euer since the fall of Adam appointed Christ his Vicegerent and Lieutenant generall in whose person he would afterwards rule the World Not that himself sitteth idle in heauen as Iosephs Master did when he had committed vnto Ioseph the Administration of his house but being in him and with him and working all things by and through Christ who againe vseth to that end beside his Spirit and the power of his Word the seruice also the ministery of his holy Angels all which is figured by many excellent and goodly Similitudes in the Vision of k Ezech. 1. Ezechiel where the foure liuing Creatures representing the innumerable company of Angels whose Ministerie extendeth vnto all the foure parts of the Earth haue vnder their feet foure wheeles noting the whole vncertaine course of this changeable and vnconstant world which moue when they moue and rest when they stand still And when the liuing creatures lift vp themselues from earth into heauen to receiue from God new Commandements the wheeles also as it were doe follow them and cease from wheeling to wait their direction Aboue which Angels is a Curtaine or Extent betweene God and them all of Christal cleare and transparent thorow the which as he beholdeth these inferior creatures so they both Angels and men according to their mediocritie are able to see him and the brightnesse of his glorie Ouer that Extent higher than the highest heauens is a most glorious Throne erect whereupon doth sit the likenesse of the Sonne of man Christ the blessed Lord of glorie God and man whom all obey and stoope at his command All this for the good of his Church and people for whose sake it was necessarie he should be armed with so great a Command and Power In this part of his Kingdome I note First The largenesse thereof in that it reacheth euery where and no place exempted from it I will giue the Nations l Ps 2. 8. for thine inheritance and the ends of the earth for thy possession m Zach. 9. 10. His dominion shall be from Sea to Sea and from the Riuer vnto the ends of the earth n Dan. 7. 14. And to him was giuen Dominion and a Glorie and a Kingdome that all people nations and tongues should serue him o Ps 72. 8. 11. He shal beare rule from one Sea vnto another and from the floud as farre as the ends of the earth All Kings shall bow downe vnto him and all Nations shall serue him p Math. 28. 18 All power is giuen me in heauen and vpon the earth Secondly In this Kingdome Christ alone perfecteth all things not like to other Kings and Potentates who rule by deputies but here hee himselfe doth all for though there he vsed instruments yet all commeth from his strength and vertue and hee himselfe is euery-where present by his Spirit Whereupon his Kingdome is called q Esay 9. 6. Wonderfull because the effects and working of Gods Spirit are strange and marueilous Thirdly the vertues and properties of this our King arming and inabling him for the effecting of those great things are two Counsell to aduise of things wisely and Strength to put them in execution beeing both the stayes and props of a Kingdome as it were the two pillers Iacin and Bohas whereupon r 1. King 7. 21. Salomons Porch was built Therefore Rabshake to discourage Hezekias vanteth of these two as of the things whereon the hope if battaile standeth as if Hezekias were not in them to be compared to the King his Master Å¿ Esay 6. 5. Say yet they are but lip words that thou haue counsell and strength for the warre yet in whom doest thou trust And Salomon though hee preferre the one maketh
Chro. 15. 3. Israel by which is meant not the ten Tribes onely but Iudah and Beniamin as the sequel of the Chapter sheweth is said to haue beene a long time without the true God without Priest to teach without the Law And Paul 2. Thess 2. 3. telleth of a generall defection and falling from the Truth that no face of a visible Church should be discerned Antichrist should so vniuersally set vp his throne which in the height and fulnesse of Poperie we see to haue bin accomplished Although that God hath and alwaies had some that are his as appeareth by that which the Lord d Rom. 11. 2 3. answered to Elias But I call it a visible Church because it may be seene and knowne who are such Professors though the Church of the Elect cannot be seene This outward Church vniuersall is further Seuerall companies that assemble for the exercises of the Word are so many Churches members of the whole to be considered in the beautie it receiueth by companies and assemblies drawne by the power of Christs Spirit to associate and ioyne themselues together in the profession of his Name which is a singular ornament and a marueilous gracing of the whole thus to be distinguished into particular meetings as it were the field of the Lord into seuerall closures or a garden into seuerall beds or alleyes Whereby Gods glory is much the more conspicuous Such a Church or Congregation for so in ordinary sense the Scripture vseth the word Church neither standeth of one or two nor a few in a corner but of many enough to performe all seruices of the Church and those publiquely assembling So the Apostle speaketh of the e 1. Cor. 11. 18. Corinths Comming together to the Church and to the Hebrewes f Heb. 10. 25. Leaue not your assembling together as the manner is of s●me But not euery assembly of Professors doth forth with make a Church but their assembling in the name of Christ for Prayer Administration of the Sacraments or other spirituall matters whereby the Church is distinguished from the Common-wealth and ciuill meetings And this badge or marke our Sauiour setteth vpon it Matth. 18. 20. Where two or three are gathered together in my name And Paul 1. Cor. 1. 5. 4. 5. I haue decreed when you and my Spirit are gathered together in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ with the power of our Lord Iesus Christ to deliuer such a one to Satan So wee read in the Acts that the first day of the Weeke the Disciples gathered together to breake bread Act. 20. 7. And not in vaine doe the Churches so assemble God And in euery of these hath alwaies some that are his indeed hath made vnto them this large and ample promise that he will be alwayes effectuall to renue some of them by the power of his Spirit vnto euerlasting life for the ministery of the Word with the vse of the Sacraments and the exercise of true discipline sounding in euery Church g Math. 13. 3 ● 5 6 7. neuer returneth emptie but howsoeuer much of it fall by the way or vpon stonie places or among the thornes yet some alwayes lighteth vpon good ground and bringeth forth fruit in that measure that God hath appointed A promise anciently made to the Church as appeareth Esay 9. 251. This shall be my Couenant with them saith IEHOVAH My Spirit that is in thee and the words I haue put into thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed nor out of the mouth of thy seedes seede saith IEHOVAH from this time forth for euermore Which promise our Sauiour hath also renued Matth. 28. 19 20. Goe therefore and gather Disciples of all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to keepe all things whatsoeuer I haue commanded you And behold I am with you alwayes vnto the end of the world Hereof it is that so many things are generally attributed to the Churches professing Christ because the same is alwaies true in some that are among them As where they are called h Eph. 1. 1. Faithfull ones i Eph. 1. 1. Holy k 1. Cor. 1. 2. Sanctified and the Iewes in generall l Exod. 19. 5 6. A holie Nation A peculiar people c. So Deut. 32. 15. They are called leshurum that is The righteous people for that all being called to that honour many of them were such indeed although of a number it were also true that they m Vers 5. were none of his sonnes Another noble Prerogatiue belongeth to the outward Their children also are of the Church Church that they purchase not onely this dignity for themselues by the profession of their faith but their children also are borne free Burgesses of this Citie as the promise is made to n Gen. 17. 7. ABRAHAM I will be the God of thee and of thy seed for as the Apostle saith The gifts which Christ bestoweth vpon the outward Church are for the Churches cōmon good or for a mans owne priuate for the common good are first things committed to the Churches keeping then Ministeries and Graces The things committed are his Word whereof we haue spoken to be preached Sacraments to be administred and other holy things Rom. 11. 16. If the Root be holy so are the branches also Else-where doth the same Apostle Gal. 2. 15. oppose Iewes by nature to sinners of the Gentiles but to shew that from the very birth the children of beleeuing parents are within the outward Couenant of the forgiuenesse of sinnes And this is not to be restrayned to such children onely as are borne of both parents beleeuers but if any one of them be of the Church so is the child likewise for the vnbeleeuing man is sanctified by the beleeuing wife and the vnbeleeuing woman is sanctified by the beleeuing husband so farre as to make our children that otherwise were vncleane to be holy 1. Cor. 7. 14. Christ not onely gathereth a Church vnto himselfe a precious possession out of the world and the delight and ioy of the earth but he garnisheth it also and setteth it forth with many goodly ornaments and rich endowments which the Apostle calleth Gifts Ephe. 4. 7 8. Some for the publique some for a mans owne priuate Of these the first are certaine rich Iewels of inestimable price and valew his Word Sacraments and other holy things which Christ hath layed vp in the Arke of his Church and committed to their care as a treasure which he will trust none but his Church withall As vnder the Law in the Holy of holies wherein was the Arke were kept the o Heb. 9. 3. Tables of the Testament the Word the golden pot that had Manna a Sacrament and Aarons Rod that had budded for p 〈◊〉 ●7 10 1. Cor. 4. 21. a signe against the rebellious His word
the Apostle by this Argument condemneth those that in the Congregation pray in a strange Language there being none for to interpret it For then saith he how shall hee that supplyeth the place of an vnlearned man say Amen at thy giuing of thankes forasmuch as he knoweth not what thou sayest To the Ministers also belongeth the Administration of and Administration of the Sacraments the Sacraments for in that they haue power to deale with the Word it selfe the dispensation of those holy things which are but Seales and Pledges of the Word of the promises made in Christ cannot be denied them the Sacraments being as it were a visible Word in which respect they are said to haue a t Exod. 4. 8. voyce wherefore our Sauiour Mat. 28. 19. coupleth them together Teach all Nations baptizing them c. The Ministers of the Word being some of them extraordinarily Among the Ministers of the Word some haue bin extraordinarily inspired of Christ raysed vp of God other comming in by the ordinary calling of the Church in those of the former sort wee are specially to consider the Ministerie of certaine select persons inspired of GOD to deliuer the truth of Christian Doctrine both by word and writing which were the Prophets of the Old Testament and the Apostles of the New Whereupon wee are said to bee u Ephes 2. 21. built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Iesus Christ himselfe being the head corner stone And Peter x 2. Pet. 3. 1. stirreth vp those to whom hee writes to remember the words spoken before of the holy Prophets and the Commandement of vs saith hee the Apostles of the Lord and Sauiour So it is said Reuel 21. 14. The wall of the Citie new Ierusalem had twelue foundations and vpon them the twelue names of the twelue Apostles of the Lambe And in that sence Peter and the rest may well bee taken to bee that y Mat. 16. 18. Rocke vpon which Christ doth build his Church In this point of the Propheticall and Apostolicall Ministerie I obserue foure things First That they spake and wrote by Diuine Inspiration for Prophesie in times past saith the Apostle 2. Pet. 1. 21. came not by the will of man but as they were mooued by the holy Spirit did the holy men of God speake And Paul z 2. Tim. 3. 16. to TIMOTHIE All Scripture is inspired of God and is profitable to teach c. Secondly The manner how they deliuered this Doctrine to deliuer both by liuely voyce which was in two sorts by liuely voyce or writing The liuely voyce was euer in the Church from the beginning to the death of the Apostles All which time there was almost no Age wherein at the least some holy man of God was not extraordinarily stirred vp to deliuer the Doctrine of Truth from the immediate mouth of God although there were many times intermissions as the Historie doth shew And the Church complayneth in the a Psal 74. Psalmes yea this Doctrine was oftentimes corrupted and adulterated but by new Reuelations restored againe and kept in the first Integritie In limiting the liuely voyce to the time of the Apostles it must not so bee taken as if the liuely voyce of the Ministers of GOD did not continue still in the Church but that is of Pastors and Teachers who are and alwayes were to fetch their light from the direction of the Prophets and Apostles it is not of extraordinarie men inspired of the Holy Ghost as the Prophets and Apostles were The reason why a liuely voyce continuing so long as from the beginning of the World vntill the Apostles time should cease with their death doth appeare Heb. 1. 1 2. where it is said that God in many pieces and after diuers fashions of old spake to the Fathers by the Prophets but in these latter dayes he hath spoken vnto vs by the Sonne For so long as the Word was deliuered but by parcels and that there remayned something still behind more cleerely and manifestly to be reuealed which was till he spake fully and lastly by his Sonne so long a liuely voice was necessarie wherewith euery new Reuelation doth beginne but longer there can be no vse of it for that should plainly argue that the Reuelation of the Mysterie of Christ by Christ himselfe were not yet perfect By writing they did deliuer it in the Canonicall and writing Bookes of the Old and New Testament which by way of excellencie wee call the Scriptures or the written Word begunne by Moses and continued during all the time before-mentioned euen to the death of the Apostles Those Bookes are in the Old Testament Genesis c. In the New Matthew c. As for the Bookes commonly called Apocrypha wee acknowledge therin many profitable things contayned and good for morall instruction especially in Ecclesiasticus and in the Booke of Wisdome and some things also necessarie for the vnderstanding of the Storie of the Church yet because they carrie not the print of Gods Spirit which the spirituall man discerneth they are not equalled or matched with the Scriptures And because in many of them flat vntruths and contrarieties may be found and in one and the same Storie contradictions with the true Storie penned by the Holy Ghost and in most of them diuers things either friuolous and absurd or manifestly false and forged or Doctrines taught and commended which the Word of God condemneth we cannot without impiety lift them vp into the Chaire of Truth Beside They were neither written in the Hebrew nor receiued of the Iewes b Rom. 3. 2. 9. 4. to whom were committed all the Oracles of God vnder the Old Testament But that those which we call Canonicall Scriptures were inspired of God is to be proued by arguments and reasons taken from the Bookes themselues As first the Maiestie of the Word in so great simplicitie and so familiar and plaine a stile so piercing and effecting the conscience which all the eloquence of the world and lay it all together is not possibly able to doe although there lacke not also eloquence in the Word but heauenly and diuine Secondly The harmony and consent of so many persons writing at seuerall times in seuerall places and ages of seuerall arguments and matters all iumping and concurring in one as led by one and the same Spirit Thirdly The holinesse of the matter it selfe not sauouring of the world but leading vs by the hand out and from aboue the world Fourthly The prediction of future things many hundred yea thousand yeeres before they came to passe which all fell out accordingly Fiftly The secret and hidden things there discouered which no wisdome of the earth no wit of man was able to reach vnto Some few sparkes whereof stollen from hence haue cast such a light in the writings of Heathen men as hath made them to seeme diuine Sixtly The faithfull and sincere dealing of the Pen-men whom
God hath vsed that haue not spared to lay open their owne nakednesse and shame the nakednesse and shame of their Wiues Children Families Tribes of whom they came Seuenthly The end and drift of all which is to giue glorie vnto God and to beat downe and abase the pride of man A second sort of argument is from the authoritie of the Church which may moue and well perswade vs of them The third and last without which all the rest whether humane testimonies or other arguments are nothing is the testimony of the Spirit it selfe bearing witnesse of them Esay 59. 21. My Spirit that is in thee and my Word that I haue put in thy mouth Therefore Esay 54. 13. the faithfull are said to be such as are taught of God And PAVL saith The spirituall man discerneth all things 1. Cor. 2. 15. Therefore it is not the iudgement of the Church which maketh vs beleeue the Scriptures but the Church is the same to the testimony of the Spirit that the c Ioh. 4. 39 40 41 42. woman of Samaria was to the preaching of our Sauiour Christ because of whose words many of the Samaritans were brought to beleeue in Christ but when hee himselfe came and preached amongst them they tell her plainely Now wee beleeue no more because of thy speech for wee our selues haue heard and know that this is of a truth That Sauiour of the World That Christ So the iudgement of the Church may well bee a motiue at the first and also bring great stay and confirmation to a mind that is once inlightned but the maine strength of all dependeth vpon the testimonie of the Spirit Thirdly In the ministery of the Prophets Apostles so as they could not erre I obserue the qualitie of their doctrine thus deliuered by diuine inspiration First It was not subiect to error for howsoeuer they were men subiect to sinfull infirmitie and in part onely regenerate whose seruice it pleased God to vse for this purpose yet in the deliuery of the Doctrine they were so extraordinarily gouerned and inspired with his Spirit that they d Ioh. 16. 13. could by no meanes erre Secondly It is holy both the whole and euery part whereupon grow these speeches e 2. Pet. 1. 21. The holy men of God f 2. Pet. 3. 2. The holy Prophets g Eph. 3. 5. Reu. 18. 20. The holy Apostles h 2. Pet. 2. 22. The holy Commandements i Rom. 1. 2. The holy Scriptures whereas all other bookes and speeches of men are prophane further then they fetch some holinesse from hence Thirdly That both their Sermons and these Bookes written by the Spirit of Christ are of soueraigne authoritie in the Church of God and haue the sole pre-eminence for the deciding of all controuersies the iudging and discerning of all sayings and writings of men for vnto them the holy Ghost doth alwaies call vs k Esay 8. 20. To the Law and to the testimonie if they speake not according to this Word it is because there is no light in them And this is it which Christ vsed as the weapon to foile Satan Math. 4. So the Apostle Paul 1. Corin. 15. 3 4. maketh the Scriptures to giue credit to his doctrine I haue deliuered vnto you that which I haue receyued that Christ dyed for our sins according to the Scriptures and that he was buried and that he was raysed the third day according to the Scriptures c. The men likewise of Berhea Acts 17. 11. are commended for examining by the Scriptures the things which Paul taught Therefore our Sauiour l Iohn 5. 39. Christ referreth vs to the Scriptures as to the Touchstone of all truth Search the Scriptures and in m Matth. 22. 25 another place Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures For the authority of these Bookes is greater than the authoritie of the Church as the authoritie of God who cannot erre must needes be greater than the authority The Popish Doctrine which hangeth the authoritie of the Scriptures vpon the Church of men that may and doe erre Againe the Church hath her life and being from the Word inasmuch as faith which maketh a Church cannot bee without the Word So hath not the Word from the Church Thirdly It is aboue the authoritie of the Angels of heauen n Gal. 1. 8 9. who if they preach any other doctrine are to be held accursed How much more aboue the authoritie of the Church Fourthly Our Sauiour Christ attributeth this excellencie to his Word which men or Angels cannot challenge that in the latter Day it is That which shall iudge him that doth not receiue it Iohn 12. 48. But why then is the Church called the Pillar of Truth 1. Tim. 3. 15 Surely because the Truth of God dwelleth no where else and there is alwaies Truth sufficient to saluation Not that the Church eyther beareth and bringeth forth the Truth of God or is the chiefe and fundamentall ground to hold it vp for she her selfe hath another foundation to sticke vnto from whence shee fetcheth all her Truth which is the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles o Eph. 2. 20. 1. Cor. 3. 11. Esay 28. 16. Christ himselfe beeing the head Corner-stone and is not the Mother but the Nurse of the Truth of God that cherisheth and preserueth the same and giueth testimonie thereof vnto the World To the true meaning of the Scriptures we are to reach by the Scriptures themselues the same Spirit that indited them suggesting and opening the sence vnto vs. So did the Leuites that taught the people Nehem. 8. 9. render the sense and giue the vnderstanding of it by the Scripture it selfe Our Sauiour also Matth. 4. beeing set vpon by Satan that clipped and wrested the Scriptures to serue his owne turne confuted his false glosses and expositions of it by the conference of other Scriptures The meanes we must vse for this purpose are these First we must come with a mind to profit and to bee made the better by them not to read them for knowledge onely or vaine ostentation much lesse to cauill at them Secondly Prayer is to bee vsed to God to open and enlighten our hearts that wee may see the wonderfull things that lye hid therein Thirdly We are to frequent the House of God and to giue diligent attendance vpon the Ministery and Preaching of the Word whereby the Doctrines deliuered in the Scriptures are beaten out and made familiar and plaine vnto vs the same being also the ordinarie meanes by which the holy Ghost doth vse to worke in our hearts all true and spirituall wisdome Fourthly the true sense and nature of the words euery one apart and the construction of them all together must be waighed Fiftly We must alwaies take the proper and naturall sense if the matter it selfe will beare it Sixtly The summe of the matter the scope and drift of the place the Arguments and their coherence the method
for they dranke of the Spirituall Rocke following them and the Rocke was Christ The difference onely is First In the outward Signes Secondly In that the Sacraments of the Old Testament were signes of c Heb. 10. 1. future good things which Christ should performe ours are signes and remembrances of good things alreadie done and performed by him The Ministers of the New Testament were first Apostles The Ministers of the New Testament were Apostles inspired by whose Ministery were written the Bookes of the New Testament Prophets Euangelists Pastors Teachers c. inspired of Christ as is afore-said by whose Ministerie were written the Bookes of the New Testament then Prophets Euangelists Pastors Teachers c. These fiue you haue so reckoned vp Ephes 4. CHAP. VII Of that which the Scripture by excellencie termeth The Kingdome and of the Church of Gods Elect. OF the three great Armes or Branches of Hitherto of Christs Propheticall Office That which the Scripture by excellencie termeth The Kingdome is to the Church of Beleeuers It standeth in an effectuall Calling and the ruit that commeth from it An effectuall Calling whereby hee draweth as many as are elect to beleeue in him Christs Kingdome two haue beene alreadie opened His generall Gouernment of the World whereby hee swayeth all things and the fauours which in the Largesse and Royaltie of his Propheticall Office he bestoweth vpon the Church in generall the bad among them aswell as the good all sworne vnto him and called by his name and all for the Elects sake being so many steps and stayres to leade those whom God hath chosen to farre more eminent and surpassing Graces now to bee spoken of in this third part which the Scripture is wont to call by way of excellencie d Mat. 13. 38. Luke 4. 43. Acts 20. 25. The Kingdome e Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdome of God or f Col. 1. 13. The Kingdome of his Sonne and g Mat. 13. 44 45. The Kingdome of Heauen For though the same as wee haue shewed bee specially spoken of the Raigne of the Messiah when hee came into the World yet for the truth and substance it holdeth in all times from the beginning that being Citizens of that Kingdome we haue as it were a Heauen here on Earth and Heauen indeed hereafter for in it are all the glorious things which God communicateth with his people Wee beginne with that excellent and precious gift of Faith the sauing Knowledge of GODS Elect Which standeth in the imbracing and laying hold on Christ the highest step of Grace that in this life is possible to bee attayned whither the Reprobate neuer can ascend Also it is the life soule of the true Church on Earth as Profession is outward for the proofe whereof I refer you further to that which is spoken there wherefore the number or h Ephes 3. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Family as Paul speaketh of Gods Elect effectually called to the knowledge and participation of Christ makes the whole companie of those that belong vnto him and are indeed and truly his which therefore by excellencie is wont to be called i Ephes 1. 22. 5. 23 32. Col. 1. 18 34. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 16. 18. The Church or as we vse to speake and as the Symbole of the Apostles hath it The holy Catholike Church wherein these qualities come to be obserued First The Church is but one whether they bee on Earth drawne by the Word of Christ and the Grace of his holy Spirit to beleeue in him or in Heauen there enioying his blessed presence so the Apostle doth k Col. 1. 20. Ephes 3. 15. many times deuide it they make all but l Ephes 1. 10 23 Col. 1. 18. one bodie whereof Christ is the Head Secondly Catholike or Vniuersall The Papists ridiculous to call the Romane Church which if it were admitted a true Church is but a particular Church by the name of the Catholke Church it may be called hauing regard both to persons places and times Persons as comprehending all GODS Elect who in their time are all gathered into the bosome of this Church Wherefore Gal. 4. 26. the Catholike Church Ierusalem which is aboue is said to be the mother of all In regard of place because it is not tyed to any Region or Countrey in particular but scattered throughout the World For the times In all Ages of the World God hath euer some that are his indeed members of the true Church through faith in him Thirdly The true Church is called holy because they are indeed and truly the sanctified members of Christ regenerate and borne againe in whom he dwelleth and raigneth by his Spirit being washed iustified sanctified through him and hereafter for euer glorified So as out of this Church there is no Saluation for there is no Faith no Christ but there and hereof the m 1. Pet. 3. 20 21. Arke was a Figure wherein all that were not perished Fourthly The true Church whilest it remayneth here on Earth is inuisible because their Faith which onely maketh them members of the Church cannot be known or seene of any but of those that do receiue it And if the true Catholike Church might bee seene then were it no Article of our Faith to beleeue it Howbeit at the last Day they shall be all seene To speake of Faith which maketh men members of the true Church Properly it is a vertue and holy qualitie of the Minde and Will powred into vs by the Holy Ghost for the knowing and apprehending of Christ But as the Scriptures take it and Diuines commonly define it by the worke of Faith it is a knowledge and apprehension of Christ now absent with all his benefits offered in the Word to bee ones owne Howbeit in so great a matter to vse somwhat a more large description and in one view to lay forth whatsoeuer is necessarie to bee knowne of Faith Faith proper to Gods Elect for I meddle not here with Historicall Faith which n 1. Iames 2. 19 Iames calleth the faith of Deuils nor with o Mat. 13. 21. temporarie Faith or the Faith of p 1. Cor. 13. 2. working Miracles these are but in name onely and abuse of speech or if properly Faith yet not sauing Faith but true and sauing Faith is a speciall gift and grace of God wrought in our hearts by the Holy Ghost and that ordinarily by the preaching of the Gospell nourished by the Word and Sacraments Ioyned it is with Knowledge not a generall or confused knowledge but the sauing knowledge of Gods Children that apprendeth Christ and applyeth him to euery true Beleeuer But apprehending Christ absent in his Word it is mixed with much weaknesse and vnbeliefe yet still holdeth fast and letteth not goe the hold but continually groweth till wee come to see Christ in his Glorie and therefore is perpetually waited vpon by Hope the sure Anchor of our soules Now
that the preaching of Christ is the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth And IAMES u Iames 1. 18. Because he would hee begat vs by the Word of Truth for this cause hee calleth x Iames 1. 21. it The ingraffed Word because by the Ministerie thereof God changeth vs anew and the Scripture y Mat. 13. 4. elsewhere compareth it to seed that as no Haruest can be without sowing of the Ground nor no Generation without the seed of our fleshly Parents no more z Mat. 13. 23. can any Faith without hearing of the Word nor any Regeneration without the Seed of the Word of God 1. Pet. 1. 23 24. Being borne againe not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible That is the Word of God who liueth and abideth for euer which maketh much to commend the excellencie and necessitie of GODS holy Ordinance of Preaching Not that preaching hath this fruit and effect by any naturall vertue or power that is in it but by the a Rom. 10. 17. Ordinance and Blessing of God who vseth to hide and conceale his owne supernaturall worke in our conuersion as it is the Glorie of God to hide his counsell Prouerbs 25. 2. Neither in saying so do we tye God vnto the meanes as though without Preaching it could not bee wrought at all for as in the things of nature he is not tyed vnto the meanes being himselfe the Lord of nature no more must we iudge him in this worke aboue nature wherein hee taketh glorie to himselfe to deale how and which way he will in an extraordinarie sort Sometimes in respect of the times sometimes in respect of the persons In the ruinous estate of the CHVRCH when there wanteth a set and stablished forme of gouernment it pleaseth him many times to blesse the very sound of the Word though it bee but read or talked of and sometimes other meanes so farre as to make it effectuall for the planting of faith in the heart as Iohn 4. 39. many of the Samaritanes were brought to beleeue in Christ onely vpon the womans wordes which bare record of him And the b Rom. 10. 18. Apostle to the Romanes sheweth that all the World was without excuse to pretend that they had not heard seeing the sound of the Apostles Doctrine was gone abroad into all the Earth The Wise-men also Mat. 2. were led by a Starre as it were by the hand vnto the true knowledge of Christ And Reuel 12. 6. it is said that the woman which fled into the Wildernesse had a place prepared of God that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes Of the extraordinarie worke in respect of the persons we haue an example in the course which it pleaseth him to take with Infants that are not come to yeeres of discretion and vnderstanding as also with men of age which haue not capacitie bee it naturall fooles madde men or deafe-borne in whom the Spirit of God worketh immediately without this outward Ministerie To the faithfull this prerogatiue doth belong that wherefore with these God maketh indeed his Couenant God not onely offereth but maketh with them his Couenant In the Scripture it is called A striking smiting or as the word doth signifie c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Cutting off a Couenant The phrase seemeth to bee taken from the custome of old-time in making of solemne Couenants which was to cut a beast in twaine and to passe betweene the parts of it Gen. 15. 17 18. Ier. 34. 18 19. The qualities or adioynts of Faith are three First Apprehending Christ now absent onely in his By vertue whereof our Faith albeit apprehending Christ absent it apprehend him weakly Word and Sacraments the knowledge and apprehension must needs be feeble and weake Wherein notwithstanding there are distinct degrees neither are the faithfull that lay hold on Christ endued all with the like measure of Faith for there is a weake and a slender hold as it were by the fingers end there is a strong and a fast hold as it were with the whole hand The first of these is called d Mat. 8. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A little Faith and e Mat. 17. 20. Faith as much as a graine of Mustard Seed But how weake soeuer the Lord accepteth it and promiseth not to quench so much as the f Esay 42. 3. smoking Flax yea hee accepteth the verie desire to beleeue which is the beginning and least step of Faith for faith it selfe And this kinde of Faith is to be seene in the father g Mat. 9. 24. of the childe that cryed with teares I beleeue Lord helpe my vnbeliefe The other by a Metaphore taken from a Ship that commeth into the Hauen with ful Sayles is called Plerophoria or a full assurance whereof we haue h R● 4. 20 21. Abraham for an Example Who was not weake through vnbeliefe but was strengthened in the Faith and gaue glory to God being fully assured that what he had promised he was able also to do Our faith being weake is through the gracious operation yet confirmed by the Word Sacraments Prayer and other holy meanes of the same Spirit that first wrought it strengthened and supported by the Word and Sacraments which are the nourishing and preseruing causes that so long as heere we liue wee haue a continuall need of the Ministerie and all other holy meanes Whereupon Paul bidding the Thessalonians i 1 Thess 5. 19 20. not to quench the Spirit immediately addeth Despise not Prophecies Another thing proper vnto Faith is this that where it neuer letteth goe the hold all other Gifts and Graces of the Spirit if they haue not Faith which is the Roote may wither and come to nothing this neuer can bee lost but groweth to the end Wherefore out of this one Roote two branches as it were doe spring And because they are both worthie of speciall consideration it shall not be amisse distinctly to speake of them One which is the second qualitie of Faith that he which once hath this Faith is sure to haue it still So saith our Sauiour Christ Luke 22. 31. in the person of Peter giuing a perpetuall comfort to all that are his I haue prayed for thee that thy Faith should not faile In another place hee saith k Iohn 6. 35. He that commeth vnto me shall neuer hunger and he that beleeueth in me shall neuer thirst Agreeable whereunto is that of IOHN l 1. Iohn 2. 19. They went out from among vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they would haue abidden with vs. For this is that sweete and euerlasting promise that God hath made vnto his Church m Ier. 32. 39 40 I will not put my feare into their hearts that they shall neuer depart away from mee all the dayes of their life And excellent to this purpose is the speech of
17. 21. That all may be one as thou Father in me and I in thee that they also may be one in vs. And by reason of this vnion which the members haue with the head and euery member one with another it is that the whole bodie that is to say Christ himselfe the Head and all the Church which are his members are called n 1. Cor. 11. 12. Christ as we heard before And so taking Christ together with his Elect the Catholike Church is called The Mother of the Spouse himselfe Cant. 8. 2. and the Church that is all the Elect his Sister Cant. 4 9. and 8. 8. The third thing is Adoption or the making of vs the we become children by Adoption sonnes of God by grace being regenerate and borne againe in Christ who is the Sonne of God by nature as it is said o Iohn 1. 12. 13 To them that receyued him hee gaue this dignitie to bee the sonnes of God p Gal. 3. 17. for all of you are the sonnes of God by faith in Christ Iesus q Gal. 4. 4. When the fulnesse of time came God sent forth his Sonne c. that wee might receiue the Adoption Fourthly Beeing one with Christ wee also haue his and haue his Spirit to be ours Spirit to bee ours for if any man haue not the Spirit of Christ the same is not his Rom. 8. 9. Because yee are sons saith the Apostle Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father And hereupon the Spirit of Christ whom we receiue is called The Spirit of Adoption Rom. 8. 15. Now let vs in a few words recapitulate the summe of all we are to know concerning Regeneration for so we shall make a better passage to that which followeth First It is a meere r Psal 102. 18. Esay 65. 18. B●t ●e glad c. yee whom I create Eph. 2. 10. Gal. 6. 15. Creation God findeth no more matter to worke vpon for the making of a man anew then when he made that lumpe whereof heauen earth were framed Secondly the manner of this Creation is by a new birth when a hollow person one as emptie and voyd of heart as the hollow of a tree is of substance is made to haue a heart and a wild Asse-Colt borne a man by spirituall Regeneration as Tsophar speaketh Iob 11. 12. A maruailous a strange birth wherin there is no more matter to beget him of then there is in the hollow of a tree to fetch out heart of Oke Thirdly Therefore this Birth is not naturall as parents beget their children but legall as Iechonias begat Salathiel whether hee adopted him or rather that as next of DAVIDS line without adoption he succeeded in the gouernement But howsoeuer it were in the case of Salathiel we speake of that which is adoptiue Fourthly There is a difference of this Adoption from all other for men adopt children when themselues are childlesse God hauing a Son of his own adopteth vs vnto him therfore all Adoption ſ Eph. 1. 15. is in through Christ Fiftly Because GOD was purposed to bring many children this way vnto glorie it pleased him to found a most noble Incorporation whereof all other bodies politique are but counterfait Of this Incorporation Christ God and man is the Head all beeing adopted by him and incorporated into him the members are euerie one Kings and Priests two of the most sacred and venerable things that euer were in the world euen among the Heathen the bone and ligament that tyeth all together is the holy Spirit the soule as it were of this Incorporation That where other Corporations are said to consist of a bodie without a soule this hath the Spirit of God himselfe to bee the soule of it So the Apostle teacheth 1. Cor. 12. 13. By one Spirit wee are all baptized into one Bodie and all made to drinke into one Spirit Againe t Eph. 4. 4. There is one Bodie and one Spirit that knitteth all the parts together Sixtly Therefore also we liue u Gal. 5. 25. all by one Spirit the same Spirit that quickned our Head quickning also vs that are his members in that whosoeuer is Christs hath his Spirit Rom. 8. 11. The verie words of the promise imply as much x Ezech. 36. 27 I will put my Spirit in the midst of them And thereupon is the Gospel called y 2. Cor. 3. 8. The ministerie of the Spirit And z Gal. 3. 2. PAVL saith Receyued ye the Spirit by the workes of the Law or by the hearing of faith And as certainely and verily as the naturall man liueth by his reasonable soule so certainely and verily doth the Regenerate man liue by the Spirit dwelling in him beeing now no more a naturall man so farre as he is Regenerate but hauing all his life from and in that Bodie politique a Gal. 1. 20. I liue no more I but Christ liueth in me b Coloss 3. 4. When Christ which is our life shall be manifested c. Therefore is the whole Bodie comprehending both the Head and members called c 1. Cor. 12. 12. Christ and euerie particular d Iohn 3. 6. 1. Iohn 5. 8. Spirit because as he is begotten of the Spirit so he liueth in and by the Spirit This is the summe of all whereunto let me adde First Where the Spirit is it e Acts 15. 9. purifieth and clenseth the heart maketh all whole and cleane as a griffe set into a Stock doth alter and change the nature of it wherefore Sanctification of the whole man is an vnseparable companion of the Regenerate estate f Iohn 3. 6. That which is borne of the Spirit is Spirit heauenly and spirituall Secondly That liuing in the Spirit it is as naturall for vs so farre as wee doe liue in the Spirit that is to say are Regenerate and consequently sanctified to bring forth the fruits of the Spirit Loue Ioy Peace c. as they are reckoned Gola 5. 22. as it is for fire to burne for the wind to blow c. which is it the Apostle saith there g Gal. 5. 25. If wee liue in the Spirit let vs also walke by the Spirit And so are the graces of the Spirit distinguished from the Spirit dwelling in vs as the effects from the cause in the verie same manner as the worke of reasoning and disputing is from our reasonable soule it selfe But of these two things the worthie fruits and effects of Regeneration wee are to speake in that which followeth Of a Regenerate estate there be two degrees as it Sealed vp during the infancie of Regeneration were two ages Infancie and Mans estate of both which the Apostle speaketh Eph. 4. 14. Till we meet all together in the vnitie of Faith and of the knowledge of the Sonne of God vnto a perfect man vnto the measure of the age of the
iustifying but because our Iustification begunne in his death was perfectly made an end of when he rose from the dead From Iustification two things doe follow Sanctification from whence commeth Sanctification and Redemption and Redemption or Holinesse and Blessednesse Holinesse as the fruit Blessednesse the reward Rom. 6. 22. Being freed from sinne and made seruants vnto God which hee said before Verse 18. to bee seruants vnto Righteousnesse You haue your fruit vnto Sanctification and the end euerlasting life And as death before comprehended our sinfull and cursed estate whereunto these are contrarie so the Scripture is wont to note them both in one word of Life euerlasting begunne on Earth and perfected in Heauen for that the Righteousnesse of Christ made ours by Faith is effectuall in vs vnto eternall Life by the Spirit of CHRIST who sanctifieth and quickeneth vs. By Sanctification I meane the renewing of vs to Sanctification whereby Holinesse and Righteousnesse by his Spirit dwelling in vs when e Rom. 6. 18. being freed from sinne we are made seruants vnto Righteousnesse and not onely f Esay 1. 17 18. Cease to doe euill but Learne to doe good nor be onely g R●● 6. 11. Dead vnto sinne but liuing vnto God through Iesus Christ which the Apostle Peter calleth To h 1. ●et 2. 24. foregoe sinne that we may liue vnto Righteousnesse and againe to be i 1. Pe● 4 6. condemned as touching men in the flesh and to liue as touching God in the Spirit The former of these two is commonly called Mortification slaying sinne or the slaying and beating downe of the lusts of sinne when through the power of the Spirit of Christ they are not repressed onely and kept from breaking out but subdued and conquered within vs as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 6. 6 7 12 13 14. Therefore it is called A crucifying of the flesh A doing away of the bodie of sinne And to the end wee may know it must bee thorowly done the Scripture not onely speaketh of our dying vnto sinne but that the old man must bee buried also Rom. 6. 4. This abolishing of our sinfulnesse or mortification of sinne within vs doth Paul ascribe to the power of the death of Christ when hee saith that k Rom. 6. 3 4 5 6 7. we are baptized into the death of Christ buried together with him and engraffed into the likenesse of his death that our old man might be crucified together with him and the bodie of sinne done away that we might no more serue sinne for he that is dead is free from sinne And to the Hebrewes l Heb. 9 14. that it is the bloud of Christ shed and and powred forth for vs which purgeth our conscience from dead workes to serue the liuing God To the m Gal. 6. 14. Galatians hee saith that by the Crosse of Christ the World is crucified vnto them and hee vnto the World And Colos 3. 3 5. Because wee are dead with Christ hee gathereth that wee are to mortifie our members that are vpon the Earth The latter is called Viuification or Quickening And here are two most precious linkes of the Golden Chaine of our Saluation the imputed Righteousnesse we haue in Christ and as in some sort it may be called n 1. Iohn 3. 7 renewed Righteousnesse in our selues But these two are distinguished the o 1. Cor 6. 1 1. Cor. 1. 30. one is wont to bee called Righteousnesse or in respect of the worke of Christs Spirit Iustification the other Holinesse or Sanctification which noble complement holds vp the whole frame of Christian building and are as it were the two posts of the house that Samson shooke whereupon all the building stood And as the Elme and Vine flourish and fall together so fareth it with these twaine that where the one is the other must needs be for this is one part of the Couenant which God hath made with vs not only to be our God but that wee should bee his people and not alone to be mercifull to our sinnes and to remember our iniquities no more but withall to write his Lawes in our hearts to doe them whereupon it is that the Apostle saith Follow p Heb. 12. 14. after Holinesse or Sanctification without which no man shall see God In the Doctrine of Sanctification these things I consider First We haue hereby he putteth a new life of Holinesse into vs. Pelagians that make grace naturall Semipelagians that make the first grace to concurre with nature and onely to be a helpe to weake and infirme nature The Papists in like sort call this worke of the Holy Ghost not the Creation of any new Creature which was not before but the stirring vp of some Goodnesse and Sanctitie lost in nature as they dreame after the Fall which they call also Freewill and say it was not lost in the Fall but weakened And therefore define Sanctification to bee Gods preuenting grace quickening the Freewill or an externall motion standing as it were without and beating at the doore of the heart a new life of Holinesse put into vs. A totall change from that which is naturall to that which is not onely supernaturall but euen opposite contrarie to our corrupt nature q Rom. 12. 2. Ephes 4. 23. Titus 3. 5. renewing vs vnto the state of our first Creation or vnto that former integritie which wee lost in Adam Whereupon wee are said to be r Ephes 4. 24. Created againe according to God vnto true Iustice and Holinesse and to be ſ Col. 3. 10. renewed vnto knowledge according to the Image of him that created vs. Hence it is that the worke of Sanctification is termed A t Psal 55. 20. change An after-mind or a change of the minde and that to the best which wee commonly translate Repentance A u Ier. 4. 1. and in diuers other places turning c. And in this respect also considering the qualities whereunto we are renewed as the worke it selfe of our renewing wee are said to bee new creatures 2. Cor. 5. 17. and Gal. 6. 15. Secondly From hence proceed the fruites of Righteousnesse to bring forth fruites of Righteousnes that very Righteousnesse prescribed in the Law Therefore x Ier. 31. 33. Ieremie calleth it The putting of his Law in the middest of vs. And Paul exhorting hereunto layeth downe both the parts of this Righteousnesse Holinesse and true Iustice Ephes 4. 24. so that whatsoeuer was said before of Righteousnesse in generall and all the notes and qualities thereof are to be referred hither being all of them such as ought to be in euery man that is sanctified Thirdly This Righteousnesse is inherent and in our selues wrought within vs by the Spirit of Christ for this y Ier. 31. 33. Ieremie reciteth to bee one part of Gods Couenant with his people I will put my Law in the middest of them and in their heart will
ISACK where indeed hee did but shew himselfe willing and readie to offer him and u Mat. 5. 6. Christ promiseth that they that hunger and thirst after Righteousnesse shall be satisfied To come to some other notes of Sanctification in the second place many parts of Holinesse are vndoubted signes of it First our intercourse with God by priuate and feruent Prayer of Faith is the most infallible signe of all the rest A singular fruit and testimonie to a mans conscience that hee is regenerate for this is the very marke which the Holy Ghost setteth vpon prophane men They x Psal 53. 5. call not vpon God and the reason is plaine and euident for either Prayer will make men to leaue sinne or sinne will make men to leaue to pray The wicked though they seeme to pray in secret doe it seldome or neuer with companie to fill vp the number and for their credit sake or for some worldly respect they can be content to make one But howsoeuer it bee their Prayers differ farre from the properties of true Prayer that are onely to bee found in Gods Children Which properties and wherein the wicked differ from them may all be gathered out of that most absolute Prayer both for matter and forme which our Sauiour himselfe hath taught vs and are these that follow First The faithfull man is furnished with the y Zach. 1● ● Spirit of Prayer or Supplication that is an excellent Grace facultie or abilitie wrought in a man by the holy Spirit whereby he is made able willing and readie to pray vnto God for euery want as the present occasion doth require for as the z Rom. 8. 26. Apostle saith Of our selues we know not what to pray Therefore our Sauiour deliuers vnto vs in few wordes all the maine Graces wee can desire and maine wants we any way can stand in need of to aske at the hands of God which may serue for a Store-house continually to put words in our mouth But the carnall man though he can speake and tell a perswasiue Tale for worldly things he is vtterly ignorant how to aske heauenly Secondly That we may pray as we ought the a Rom. 8. 26 27 Spirit helpeth our infirmitie and teacheth vs to pray according vnto God with grones and sighes that cannot bee expressed But this the Worldling is farre from to whom such sighes and gronings of the Spirit are as strange and vnheard of as is the b Iohn 14. 17. Spirit it selfe the Authour of it Thirdly Gods Children in all their necessities addresse themselues to him and seeke for good things at the hands of their heauenly Father through Christ the wicked howsoeuer with c Numb 23. 14 Balaam they may breake forth into wishes and woulds Let my soule dye the death of the Righteous and my latter end be like to him haue neither the face nor the heart to goe to God by humble Prayer as Dauid in the like case did Psal 26. 9. Take not away my soule with sinners nor my life with bloudie men This diuersitie you may finde Psal 4. 7. Many say Who will shew vs good IEHOVAH lift vp vpon vs the light of thy countenance Fourthly The godly prepare themselues to Prayer by d Eccles 4. 13. meditating before-hand of the dutie they are to performe and of the arguments and reasons that may stirre them vp vnto it And so our Sauiour in that Prayer teacheth vs to doe by the vsing of a Preface The wicked neuer make conscience of their Prayers Fiftly True Prayer cannot be without Faith whereby wee apply particularly to our selues the loue of GOD in Christ to call him Our Father for how shall they call on him in whom they doe not beleeue Rom. 10. 14. but this the carnall man hath not Sixtly Gods Children come with boldnesse and confidence vnto him as a Child vnto his Father whereas the carnall man flyeth from him and is afraid of him as of a Iust and Righteous Iudge This difference in the point of Prayer the Apostle teacheth Rom. 8. 15. Wee haue not receiued the Spirit of bondage to feare any more but the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Seuenthly Reuerence is in the true and faithfull Caller vpon of Gods Name e Eccles 5. 1. knowing that God is in Heauen and himselfe vpon Earth the carnall man rusheth without all reuerence into his presence Eightly Our Sauiour requireth of his Zeale and earnestnesse in Prayer that all our affections bee taken vp and wholly bent vpon it which the shortnesse of the Prayer teacheth and the concluding of it with this word Amen and the rather to kindle in vs a feruencie in Prayer he beateth vpon it with many words f Mat. 7. ● Aske Seeke Knocke c. For cold Suiters prooue cold Speeders But such as euen rent the Heauens with their Prayers and pull as it were by violence Gods Graces from him are those that hee delighteth in but this the carnall man is farre from whose minde is alwayes stragling and thinketh vpon his penny his businesse and worldly delights Ninthly In Gods Children there is a greater feruencie of Spirit in praying for the things that concerne Gods glorie then for those that concerne our owne good yea though it be the saluation of our soules and in those that concerne our owne good greater zeale and feruencie for heauenly things then for earthly that are sought but as additaments and appendances to the other all which the very order of petitioning in the Lords Prayer sheweth Contrariwise of these worldly things are altogether or at the least most sought after Tenthly The godly pray to set forth Gods glory as may be seene there The g Iames 4. 3. wicked aske to imploy it vpon their lusts Eleuenthly Gods Children in their prayers remember not themselues onely but the Church their brethren and fellow-members in a fellow-feeling and loue one of another Our Father Our bread Our trespasses Lead vs not Deliuer vs c. The wicked are euery one for himselfe Twelfthly The Elect pray with assurance of obtayning the things wee pray for earthly things with condition so farre as God hath appointed them for our good All other absolutely without condition which assurance is noted in the word Amen signifying that not only so we desire it may be but that so vndoubtedly it is and shall be whereunto wee are induced both by the consideration of the loue of God who is our Father and therefore willing and of his power which is in heauen and therefore able to doe vs good Which two his Goodnesse and his Greatnesse are the two maine pillars and props of our Faith And to this vertue in prayer our Sauiour doth exhort vs Mark 11. 24. All things whatsoeuer yee aske when yee pray beleeue yee shall receiue them and they shall be yours The wicked are as h Iames 1. 6. waues of the Sea tossed about with euery wind doubting and distrusting
vnto vs whereof if there were no more that one example of Dauid may bee a sufficient witnesse and serue in stead of many c 2. Sam. 12. 10 11. The Sword shall neuer depart from thy house for euer I will rayse vp against thee euill out of thine owne house And I will take thy Wiues before thine eyes and giue them to thy fellow who shall lye with them before this Sunne To conclude it must cost many bitter cryes and pittifull lamentations many a salt teare deepe sighes sobs and grones great deiection of minde and abasing of ones selfe long exercise in the Schoole of Affliction much strife and struggling and many a plucke and wrestle like true Israelites with God himselfe our owne conscience and the feares and terrours of Hell before we can come to obtayne a blessing at his hand to be assured we are reconciled to him And yet for all that wee are not free from falling any more after we be once risen for euery day we fall yea oftentimes a day and therefore haue need of a continuall and euery day Repentance The greater question is whether wee may fall againe into the same sinne whereof truely we haue repented especially if it be a grosse and hainous sinne I answere The best man in the World hath no priuiledge this way but that as hee may lye long in his sinne so hee may fall againe into it and as hee may fall once so may hee fall twice and so may hee fall oftener and how oft the word for ought I know setteth not any stint neither are the Mercies of God nor Merits of Christ to bee restrayned to so narrow bounds but that where sinne aboundeth there grace doth more abound Howbeit he that shall so doe spoyleth himselfe of much comfort and greatly shaketh the assurance of Faith which euery Christian ought to labour for seeing a continuall relapse into one and the same offence is a fearefull argument of a man forsaken and giuen vp of God yet all comfort is not wholy to be denyed to such a one for First d 2. Cor. 8. 12. If there be a willing mind euery one is accepted for that grace he hath not for that which he hath not Secondly e 2. Cor. 12. 9 10 The power of GOD is perfected in our weaknesse The sixt and last thing touching Repentance is the meanes to spurre vs forwards to this duty which is twofold One on the behalfe of God the other of our selues On the behalfe of GOD by the power of his Spirit by the Ministerie of his Word by chastizements and afflictions by blessings and outward benefits as he promiseth in f Hosh 2. 14 15 16. HOSHEA Therefore behold I will perswade her by my Spirit after I haue brought her into the Wildernesse and tamed her by afflictions and will speake vnto her heart there is the word mouing And will giue vnto her Vineyards c. that she may sing as in the dayes of her youth and what time shee came out of the Land of Egypt And in that Day saith hee thou shalt call me My good man c. that is then shalt thou take mee for thy Husband and serue and worship me On our behalfe for the better quickening of vs vnto this dutie we are not onely carefully and with a good conscience to vse all the holy meanes ordayned of God for the conuerting of our soules Prayer Meditation of the Word and other godly and profitable exercises but especially sometimes wee are to take vp the exercise of a true fast commanded in the Word of God for our h Mat. 17. 21. Sauiour telleth vs that there are some kinde of Deuils whom Prayer only will not cast out vnlesse it haue Fasting ioyned with it Fasting is an vtter abstinence for a time not from flesh onely but from all the delights and commodities of this life so farre as necessitie and comelinesse will permit Whereupon it is called A i Ioel 2. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 day of restraint That we may know to fast as we ought it shall bee fit to reduce to some heads what is necessarie to a true fast All may be comprehended in these foure The first head is of the things wee are commanded to abstayne from As first all kinde of Popish Fast which permitteth al kind of meate at Dinner flesh onely excepted and at Supper to fill ones selfe with bread and drinke and both at Dinner and Supper with Wine and all kinde of Dainties Spicebread Fruit Marmal●t and Sucker c. Meates and Drinkes which the very word of k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iohn 3. 8. fasting doth import And therefore in the Fast of Niniue they are forbidden as much as to l Ionas 3. 7. taste any thing Secondly The benefit of ordinary sleepe Ioel 1. 13. Goe lodge in Sackcloth extending this exercise at the least to some part of the night whereupon m Marke 13. 32 watching is also added as a Companion to this exercise Thirdly All brauerie and costlinesse of attyre contenting our selues with a common kind of apparell or rather vnder that which is common and ordinarie Exodus 33. 5. IEHOVAH said vnto MOSES Say vnto the Children of Israel Thou art a stiffe-necked people c. Put therefore thine Ornaments and Iewels from vpon thee that I may know what to doe with thee Thus did the holy Fathers in times past clothe themselues with Sackcloth and Ashes which Fashion Kings themselues in their Fasts scorned not to take vp as wee reade of the King of Niniue Ionas 3. 7. Who rose out of his Throne put away his Robe from him and couered himselfe with Sackcloth and sate in Ashes And the like did wicked Ahab 1. Kings 21. 27. Fourthly Cheerfulnesse and outward ioy and pleasure In which respect the exercise which the n Mar. 2. 20. Luke 5. 35. other Euangelists ca●l Fasting o Mat. 9. 15. Matthew calleth Mourning Can the children of the Bride-chamber mourne as long as the Bride-groome is with them And Ioel calleth it weeping Let the Priests weepe betweene the Porch and the Altar So it is said Iudges 20. 26. that all the Israelites came to Bethel and there wept and fasted And 1. Sam. 7. 6. in the Fast at Mispa that they drew out of the fountaine of their heart teares as it were buckets of waters which they powred forth before IEHOVAH Fiftly All gate and gesture that may carrie any shew of loftinesse with it So did AHAB p 1. King 21. 27 clothe himselfe in Sackcloth and went softly Sixtly The lawfull vse of Marriage 1. Cor. 7. 5. Depriue not one another but by consent for a time that yee may haue leisure for Fasting and Prayer yea though it be betweene the Bride-groome and the Bride which of all other are least to be restrayned Ioel 2. 16. Let the Bride-groome goe out of his chamber and the Bride out of her Bed-chamber The second head is