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A14721 Theologicall questions, dogmaticall observations, and evangelicall essays, vpon the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to St. Matthew Wherein, about two thousand six hundred and fifty necessary, and profitable questions are discussed; and five hundred and eighty speciall points of doctrine noted; and five hundred and fifty errours confuted, or objections answered: together with divers arguments, whereby divers truths, and true tenents are confirmed. By Richard VVard, sometimes student in the famous vniversities of Cambridge in England: St. Andrews in Scotland: and Master of Arts of both the kingdoms; and now a preacher in the famous city of London. Ward, Richard, 1601 or 2-1684. 1640 (1640) STC 25024; ESTC S118017 1,792,298 907

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apple by his skinne nor God a good man by his face The Wolfe hath as smooth a skinne as the simple sheepe the sower Elder a fairer barke then the the sweet Iuniper Truth is naked falshood covered An empty vessell hath a lowder sound then a full barrell And therefore the Lord will not doe as man doth looke upon the outward appearance but hee lookes upon the heart 1 Samuel 16.7 and requires not the outward worship without the service of the heart as is evident from his owne mouth For I spake not unto your Fathers nor commanded them in the day that I brought them forth of the Land of Egypt concerning burnt offerings and sacrifices But this thing commanded I them saying obey my voice and I will bee your God and you shall be my people c. Ierem. 7.22.23 That is God did not first of all or principally command sacrifices for they were instituted for another end then to please God but he chiefly requires obedience And elsewhere hee doth not require profession Esa 1.11.12 that is without practise Proverb 23.26 Mark 7.6 The Nightingall hath a sweet voice but a ranke flesh the Storkes in India have a pleasant cry but a bloody bill and many have a forme of Godlinesse who deny the power therof from which God will turne away his loving countenance 2. Tim. 3.5 How doth it appear that an outward confession Quest 12 of Christ and profession of Religion is insufficient unto salvation It appeares evidently from these five particulars namely First because it is the manner of the hypocrites to wash the outside of the cup and platter and not the inside Answ to whom belongs onely a double woe Mathew 23.25 And therefore the bare outward Profession and performance of Religion and religious exercises will not serve the turne Secondly because the externall profession of Christ and Religion often springs from an evill roote namely I. Sometimes from the love of promotion and preferment thus many in the flourishing age of the Church counterfeit holinesse for preferments sake And II. Sometimes from a feare of punishment And III. Sometimes from the shame of men And IV. Sometimes from the praise of men and estimation of the world Math. 6.1.5.16 V. Sometimes from gaine and filthy lucre Mathew 23.14 Thirdly because God is a Spirit and therfore they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in truth Ioh. 4.24 that is I. They must worship him with their hearts And II. They must worship him with their whole hearts And III. They must worship him only and no other with their hearts Wherefore the outward worke alone is not sufficient Fourthly because the heart is a great way from the mouth Pacis quidem nomen ubique est res autem nusquam Isidor All men talke of peace but few keep it Ecclesia nomine armamini contra coelesiam dimicatis f Le● epist 83. ad Palestinos Many seeme to arme themselves with the name of the Church who yet indeed fight against the Church Diabolus excogitavit novam fraudem ut sub ipsonominis Christiani titulo fallat in cautos g Cypr. de simplicitate Praelatari●●● The Devill hath bethought him of a new deceit namely under the name of a Christian to delude the ignorant and unwarie And therefore seeing there are so many who draw neare unto God with their mouthes and not with the heart Mathew 15.9 ● bare profession onely will neither serve God nor save us Men naturally would have the outside to be good although the Lineing be but rotten ragges and their cloath to have a fine dye though a course threed The Fowle may have faire feathers and ranke flesh the Fish glistering scales without and yet rotten The Amber-Stone will burne outwardly Freeze inwardly and the barke of the Mirtle Tree which growes in the mountaines in Armenia it as hot as Fire in the taste and as cold as water in the operation Thus the heart lieth a great way distant from the mouth and therefore the mouth is not alwaies the interpreter of the heart but often faints and counterfeits that which the heart thinkes not Wherefore the outward confession of Christ and profession of religion wil not save us Fiftly many relapse and fall finally from their profession as appeares plainly by these places Mathew 13.20 Iohn 6.66 Hebr. 10.25 Now onely they who endure unto the end shall be saved And therefore outward profession will not save us Quest 13 How many sorts of false and outward professours are there Foure to wit Answ First ignorant who are without the knowledge of the grounds and principles of Religion Secondly stupide and blockish who professe ore tenus with their mouth but without sense or life Thirdly unwilling thus Julian the Apostate in spite of his teeth was forced to acknowledge the divine power of Christ Vicisti Galilee and thus also doth Sathan Math. 8.29 Fourthly mixt thus the Samaritanes worshipped God and Idols 2. King 17.27 c. Qu. 14 How may wee know whether we be onely outward professours Answ 1 First negatively wee cannot know it by our outward appearance for that may deceive us Silenus Pictures were without lambs and Doves but within Wolves and Tygres so many inwardly are ravening Wolves who outwardly seem innocent lambes Experience teacheth us that the finest Scabbard hath not ever the bravest blade nor the goodliest Chest the most rich treasure neither is every bird with white Feathers a simple Dove nor every faire Lais a faithfull Lucrece And therfore let us neither measure our selves by our outward appearance nor trust in our externall profession but search our hearts and our i●ward man Answ 2 Secondly the notes and markes of outward professours are these namely I. They thinke profession better then practise and to seeme better then to be good indeed The Macedonians thinke the hearbe Beet which looketh yellow in the ground but blacke in the hand better seen then touched So many thinke it better to looke upon Religion then to undertake it and hold the speculation thereof to be preferred before the practise The Camelion draweth nothing into the body but aire and nourisheth nothing in the body but Lungs so many heare and reade onely for Table talke and outward shew but not for true practise And therefore let us examine our selves whether wee thinke it better to seeme good or to be good and whether we take more paines to approve our hearts unto God or our outward man unto the world II. Outward professours are more given to their pleasure and belly then to the service of their God Philip. 3.19 For many walke and yet are the enemies of the Crosse of Christ whose end is destruction whose God is their belly and whose glory is their shame who mind earthly things These thus described by the Apostle had been professours and it seemes still were and yet these foure things are predicated of them namely First that they are enemies of the Crosse of Christ And
9. And thinke not to say within your selves Vers 9 wee have Abraham to our Father for I say unto you that God is able of these stones to raise up children unto Abraham Obiect Answ The Jewes here object unto Iohn either wee are the children of Abraham or none are To this the Baptist answers Deus potest that God can raise up children unto Abraham even of stones and therfore there is no such necessity that they must needs be the sonnes of Abraham God is able of these stones to raise up children unto Abraham Quest 1 What is the meaning of these words Answ 1 I answer first they may be understood literally thus that God Almighty who created all things by his word can procreate and raise up even of stones righteous men who should bee the spirituall children of Abraham and so more true and more noble sons than they were who were his naturall children but not spirituall Answ 2 Secondly this may be understood Metaphorically thus that the Lord can raise up faithfull children unto Abraham even of the Gentiles who although for the hardnesse of their hearts and stolidity and grosse idolatry they are called stones yet the mercy of God can make them holy and spirituall men and consequently worthy to be called the children of Abraham Quest 2 It may hence yet be asked how many wayes God doth produce and make man Answ I answer five First hee makes man without man or woman and thus he made Adam Secondly he makes man of man without woman thus he made Evah Thirdly he makes man of woman whithout man and thus hee made Christ Fourthly he makes man of man and woman according to the common course of nature and thus hee makes all us the naturall sonnes of Adam Fiftly Deus potest God could make children and sonnes even of stones as in this verse Vers 11 §. VERS 11. I indeed baptise you with water unto repentance but he that commeth after wee is mightier then I whose shooes I am not worthy to beare he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire Sect. 1 § 1. The Papists say the baptisme of Iohn was of another kind then Christs baptisme was a Bellar. li de bapt ca. 20.21 and they prove it from this verse thus Iohn himselfe saith I baptize you with water but he shall Object 1 baptize you with the Holy Ghost Therefore Iohns Baptisme and Christs was not all one Iohns baptisme not giving the Holy Ghost as Christs did We answer Answ Iohn speaketh not of divers baptismes but of divers operations and ministeries in one and the same baptisme for Iohn as all other Ministers doe did but give water and Christ co-operating and working together with them giveth the Holy Ghost But they object againe Iohn doth not say Object 2 Christ doth baptize with the holy Ghost but he shall baptize therefore Christ did not baptize together with Iohn by his Spirit b Bellar. cap. 21. We answer Answ as Iohn here speaketh of Christ in the future tense so the same Iohn speaketh else where of Christ in the present tense c Ioh. 1.33 1. saying this is he which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost therefore Christ did both then baptize with his Spirit afterwards also more manifestly when the gifts of the spirit began to be shed forth more plentifully upon men 2. The same Iohn speaking of Christ saith Behold the Lambe of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world d Ioh. 1.29 hee even then when Iohn baptized did take away sinnes 3. Iohn testifieth of Christ that of his fulnesse wee have all received e Ioh. 2.16 and therfore even then Christ baptized with the Spirit which was signified by receiving of his fulnesse Against these three proofes they object three Object 3 things First that Christ is said to baptize with the Spirit not that then he baptized but to signifie that when he baptized he should not onely baptize with water but with the Spirit To this we answer first if Christ then onely Answ 1 began to baptize with the Spirit when he baptized with water it would follow that hee never baptized with the Spirit for it is certaine that he baptized not with water f Ioh. 4.2 as St Iohn the Evangelist saith that Iesus himselfe baptized not but onely his Disciples Secondly that Christ at that instant baptized Answ 2 with the Spirit is evident from Iohns words g Ioh. 1.33 Hee that sent mee to baptize said unto mee upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit come downe c. that is he which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost Christ then immediatly at the comming down of the Spirit baptized with the Spirit unlesse they will say he received the Spirit in vaine Against the second proofe they object Christ Object 4 did not then take away sinnes but it is signified that afterwards by his death hee should take away the sinnes of the world To this wee answer Answ that it is very grosse and absurde to say that Christ did not take away the sinnes of the world before his death for the Prophet David saith h Psa 32.1.2 Blessed are they whose sins are for given whence it is plaine that even under the law by faith in Christ to come they found remission of sinnes And thus much for the resolution of their objections It may now bee questioned how doth it appeare that Iohns baptisme was the same with Quest 1 Christ I answer by these reasons Answ The first is taken ab absurdo because a threefold absurdity would follow from the deniall of it First this would give occasion to the Anabaptists more to enforce their doctrine of Rebaptization Secondly if Iohns baptisme were onely a preparation unto another baptisme why then was it not received by all men Thirdly if it were onely for the sanctifying and consecrating of the water why was any more baptized then Christ for he was baptized for this end to sanctifie this ordinance as followes verse 16. The second reason is because the Baptist baptizeth unto the remission of sinnes l Mark 1.14 and there is no remission sealed unto us but onely by the Sacraments of Christ and therefore it was the same baptisme The third reason is because Iohns baptisme was the Sacrament of his doctrine and therefore if his doctrine were the Gospel then his baptisme was the Sacrament of the Gospell and so the same with Christ The fourth reason is because otherwise Christ and his Apostles were not rightly baptized for Christ was himselfe baptized of the Baptist ver 16. and the Apostles were not baptised of Christ because he baptised none and therefore it is most probable that the most of them at the least if not all were also by Iohn baptised The fift reason is because Christ was circumcised and baptised that he might be united both to the Church of the Jewes of the Christians by the Sacraments of them both that is to the
which see not God so many carnall eyes see the Scriptures which see not Christ f Gualt s Answ 2 Secondly the heavens were opened Tropologicè to shew 1. that heaven is opened unto us by the Baptisme of the Spirit or 2. that heaven is opened unto all those that are spirituall for for this cause are all graces given unto us that wee may be made partakers of the kingdome of heaven What graces are given unto us by the Spirit Quest 3 for the obtaining of heaven I answer First the grace of light knowledge Answ 1 and illumination by which we are enabled to understand those things that concerne the glory of God and our owne salvation g 1 Cor. 2.14.15 Answ 2 Secondly the grace of faith whereby we confidently beleeve heaven to bee our lot and inheritance Answ 3 Thirdly the grace of piety and holinesse whereby we are reclaimed from sinne called unto heaven and commanded no longer to have commerce or fellowship with the world and therefore let us labour that we may be made spirituall and that wee may bee Baptized with the Holy Ghost that so wee may partake of this light of understanding this hope of heaven and this purity of life Sect. 2 § 2. And the Spirit of God descended like a Dove Obiect The Rhemists h s Act. 17. ●ect 5. and Bellarmine produce this place to prove that it is lawfull to paint the Blessed Trinity viz. God the Father like an old man with the world in his hand Christ as hee walked upon the earth the Holy Ghost in likenesse of a Dove Arguing thus To paint the Trinity or any one of them as they appeared visibly is no more inconvenient then it was undecent for them so to appeare Wee answer First this doth flatly controle Answ 1 and contradict the word of God which simply forbiddeth any similitude to bee made of things in heaven or in earth to worship God by in the second commandement Secondly God expressly declareth that hee would not appeare in any visible shape when he Answ 2 gave the law least the people should abuse that shape to make an Jmage of God after it a Deut. 4.15 Thirdly the argument followeth not for Answ 3 God saw it was convenient sometimes by visible signes to appeare unto men and yet seeth it to be inconvenient for pictures to bee made to resemble him by for else hee would never have forbidden it Fourthly though the argument be admitted Answ 4 yet seeing now that all such visible apparitions of the Trinitie are ceased all such visible pictures likewise should be out of use Fiftly if when such apparitions were seene Answ 5 yet no such images were tolerated how much lesse are they lawfull now all such visions being long agoe determined b Willet Synops f. 457. Why did the Holy Ghost descend I answer First for the dignitie of the person Quest 1 baptized Christ was God and therefore God Answ 1 the Holy Ghost comes to witnesse his baptisme Secondly to shew the nature of Christs Kingdome Answ 2 that it was not earthly and therefore hee was not annointed with oile but heavenly and spirituall therefore he was annointed by the Holy Ghost Thirdly to shew the nature of Christs office Answ 3 or that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and powerfull operation and working of Christ in the hearts of men Teaching us Observ that whosoever are Christs are made partakers of the Spirit of God c Ioh. 3.5 and 7.37.39 and 1 Thess 4.8 Hence the Spirit is called 1 Arrha an earnest d 2 Cor. 5.5 2 a seale Ephes 1.13 and 4.30 3 an holy action 1 Iohn 2.20.27 And therefore whatsoever wee be in other things if we be Christs we are happie and blessed if we be poore yet God will love us if we be simple God will teach us if we be infants God will increase us unto maturity and ripenes and in the meane time ordaine praise unto himselfe out of the mouthes of babes and sucklings if we have beene sinners he will passe by our former sinnes e Act. 17.30 and give his Spirit unto us if wee belong unto Christ Whether did the Holy Ghost here make use Quest 2 of a naturall Dove or onely as the Angels were wont to appeare did shew himselfe in the shape of a Dove I answer First the phrase seemes to imply Answ 1 the latter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like a Dove and so also Mar. 1.10 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a bodily shape like a Dove upon him saith Saint Luke f Luk. 3.22 Secondly Calvin warily and wisely dares conclude Answ 2 nothing and doth advise us not to sift it too narrowly and therefore I leave it Quest 3 Why doth the Holy Ghost descend in the shape of a Dove Answ 1 I answer for three causes First for the fulfilling of the Type Secondly for the expressing of the nature of Christ Thirdly for our imitation First the Holy Ghost descended upon Christ in the shape of a Dove for the fulfilling of the type because the Dove was the messenger of peace in times past unto Noah g Gen 8.11 and Plutarch and Coelius Rhod. affirmes that it was also to Observ 2 Deucalion the Holy Ghost hereby teaching us that Christ came that he might reconcile us unto God according to the testimony of the Apostle wee have peace towards God through Iesus Christ our Lord h Rom. 5.1 and againe when we were enemies we were reconciled unto God by the death of his Sonne i Rom. 5.10 and 2 Cor. 5.19.20 What necessity was there of this Doves comming Quest 4 I answer the necessity appeares thus Answ First the world was now overwhelmed with sinne as formerly with a deluge of water Secondly Christ comes to cure this deluge to dry up this water and to take away our sins whence he is called the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world k Iohn 1. Thirdly and therefore most fitly comes this dove at this time that as Noahs Dove came with an olive branch l Gen 8.11 as a token of peace so the holy Spirit in the likenesse of a Dove is a signe of that peace and reconciliation which is wrought by Christ betweene our God and us All are not reconciled unto God by Christ Quest 5 and therefore what must we doe to be assured of our Particular peace and atonement with our Father whom we have offended I answer meditate seriously and frequently upon these things Answ first remember that we are all sinners lost in Adam m Rom. 5.12 and that in many things we all sin daily and he is a lyer who saith otherwise n 1 Ioh. 1.8 Secondly remember that by sinne wee are guilty of death death having passed upon all for sinne o Rom. 5.12 Thirdly meditate what death wee are liable unto it is not the effusion of our blood not a depriving of us of sense not such a sorrow
as the tenet it selfe instead of many take one they tell us a story of a woman who was possessed with a divell and by the direction or revelation of the Virgin Mary shee was brought to the Idoll of Loretto where the Priests invocating and imploring the aid of God the Father Son and holy Ghost the divell moved not at all but when he sung the Letanie of the Virgin Mary the Divell raged and stormed and a woodden Image of the Ladies being laid upon the Damosels head the divell cryed out in her quid mihi caput conteris oh woman why dost thou breake my head a Chem. exam p. 3. f. 182. b. Hereunto we answer first this and the like Answ 1 are but old Wives Fables and woe bee to that Church and religion which cannot subsist without these vide Melch. Can. Loc. 6. Secondly suppose these Fables were truths Answ 2 yet thou knowest not whether they be in Heaven or no unto whom thou prayest for some may worke miracles on earth who shall never partake eternall blisse b Matth. 7.22 Thirdly how canst thou pray unto him in Answ 3 whom thou neither canst nor oughtest to believe Rom. 10.14 Fourthly what need is there to seeke helpe at Answ 4 their hands though they could helpe us seeing that Christ in this verse can doe all things whatsoever he will of himselfe without any aid of others VERS 25. Vers 25 And there followed him great multitudes of people from Galilee and from Decapolis and from Hierusalem and from Iudea and from beyond Iordan There followed him great multitudes of people Why doth the Holy Ghost expresse this Quest 1 To teach us that many are called Answ Observ and but few chosen many here follow him but few persevere yea scarce any for when the people cry crucifie him none in a manner abide with him but leave and forsake him Why doe so many start aside from their stations Quest 2 or forsake their colours First by reason of persecution thus our Saviour Answ 1 saith that when this fiery tryall comes many will depart from the faith Secondly by reason of the difficulty of obedience Answ 2 Many say durus sermo the way of the Lord is hard to walke in and therefore they prove retrograde c Ioh. 6.60.66 Thirdly by reason of the tediousnesse and Answ 3 wearisomnesse of perseverance Noviter conversi fervidi d August they are fervent when newly converted unto the profession of Religion but by and by grow luke-warme and within a while stone cold Zelus ruit mole sua they beginne in the Spirit but end in the Flesh their zeale declining and falling by his owne weight Nullum violentum est diuturnum No extreames hold long and the buildings upon the sand cannot long endure Thus many beginne well hearing the word of God with joy Mat. 13d but for want of depth of earth quickly wither and die Quest 3 What must we do that we may persevere unto the end Answ 1 First doe not presume that thou shalt stand for ever because thou art called many are called who finally and totally fall away and therefore let him that thinkes he stands take heed lest he fall bee not high minded but feare and perfect thy salvation with trembling e Phil. 2 12. Certè plures occidit gula quam gladius praesumptio quam desperatio Intemperance slayes more then the sword and presumtion then desperation we being naturally too prone hereunto hast thou a mind inlightned thy affections inflamed with the love of God and vertue a sense of thy duety towards God and man a conscience of thy sinnes committed both against the first and second table yet measure not thy selfe by these Are thy neighbours worse then thou art Ne te quaesiveris extra yet measure not thy selfe by them goe not out into the streets to seeke for thy selfe but measure what thou art by these rules First by thy owne sinnes which thou dost commit this will make thee blush and be ashamed of thy selfe Secondly by those bright shining lampes of the primitive Church who lived on earth like Saints indeed truely mortified in their carnall affections truely crucified unto the world truely quickned by the Spirit giving themselves wholly unto the Lord and the Lords worke being frequent in contemplation and fervent in practise this will make thee seeme unto thy selfe more deformed then Thersites Thirdly measure thy selfe by the purity of God and his Law consider how undefiled the Law of the Lord is and how infinitely pure the Lord of this Law is and then thou wilt be like the Dove that could find no place to rest her foot upon thou wilt see nothing in thee which thou canst approve of or like but abhorre thy selfe in dust and ashes Fourthly examine thy selfe by thy debility and weakenesse of perseverance consider thy impotency and insufficiency to persevere and continue in the wayes and worke of the Lord unto the end of thy life and this will shew thee as in a glasse that thou art more brittle and fraile then the finest glasse Thus let us meditate of these things and take heed of presuming Secondly examine and search daily thy heart trying and examining therein these particulars First hast thou any faith at all Secondly Answ 2 is thy faith true not false built upon a sure not a sandy foundation How may we know whether our faith be true Quest 4 or not By these markes First dost thou love God Answ 1 Faith workes by love Gal. 5.6 and where there is no love there is no faith and where no true love no true faith and therefore examine whether thou lovest God or not and that not onely lightly in word but solidly in heart Quest How shall I know this whether my Quest 5 love unto my Lord be cordiall and reall or orall and verball Answ By these two things viz. First by the Answ 1 Obedience of God both affirmative and negative dost thou nothing which he forbids thee neither omit any thing which hee requires of thee certainely where there is true love there is a solide desire and a serious endeavour to obey Secondly this may be known by thy reverence dost thou never thinke of God never name him or mention him in thy speeches but with love and hope conjoyned with a godly feare and awfull reverence hypocrites and wicked men approach unto God too familiarly but the faithfull with the greatest respect they can possibly and therefore try whether we love the Lord unfainedly or not by our willing obeying of him and our reverend respect unto him Secondly wee may know whether our faith be true or not by this doe wee performe the Answ 2 workes of love not onely in word but in deed also that is by a renewed changed and purified life and conversation we now labouring I. To obey God otherwise then wee were accustomed that is in sincerity and singlenesse of heart by an universall and continuall obedience
Aug. S. Dom Thom. 1 a 2 ae q. 69. Anton. p. 4. Titul 7. cap. 7. and Schoole-men much addicted and the latter too much doating upon the number of seven doe observe onely seven beatitudes mentioned in this chapter to wit 1. Povertie of Spirit vers 3. 2. Meeknesse and Humilitie vers 5. 3. Mourning vers 4. 4. Hungring and thirsting after Righteousnesse vers 6. 5. Mercifulnesse vers 7. 6. Puritie of Heart vers 8. 7. Peace-makers vers 9. Quest 1 Admitting of these seven beatitudes how may wee apply it with any benefite unto our selves Answ 1 First these seven-fold blessings may be fitted squared and applied unto the seven ages of man which are these I. Infantia Infancie which is from the birth untill the age of seven yeares old II. Pueritia Childhood from seven to fourteene III. Adolescentia Adolescencie from fourteen to twenty eight IV. Inventus Youth from twentie eight to fourtie V. Virilitas Strength from fourtie to fiftie sixe VI. Veneranda Senectus reverend old age from about fiftie sixe to seventie VII Decrepita Senectus Decrepit and much decayed old age from seventie to death First mans first age is Infancie this must bee regulated by the first beatitude Povertie of Spirit wee must be like Infants who are humble and lowly or we cannot come to heaven The second age is Childhood this must bee ordered by Meeknesse and gentlenesse not obstinacie perversnesse stubbornnesse that is we must be of humble lowly spirits towards men and meeke and gentle towards God willing to bee taught and instructed and directed by him in all things not opposing his will in any thing The third age is Adolescencie and is to be curbed by Mourning and godly sorrow this age is subject to many temptations both of the Flesh Divell and World and therefore humiliation and compunction of heart are good guides for this age to follow to beat the body and bring it into subjection is a necessary worke and needfull although a very hard one for that age and shall be rewarded with Blessednesse The fourth age is Youth which is prone to covetousnesse and the profits and preferments of the world longing for and labouring after them too much And therefore it should rather be directed by a hungry and thirsty desire of righteousnesse the fourth Beatitude The fifth age is Strength or the perfection of a man at which a mans strength beginnes to decline this must bee moderated by the fifth Beatitude Mercie charitie liberalitie hospitalitie and the like The sixt age is Venerable old age this is principally to bee squared by Puritie of heart old men must labour that their hearts may bee free from all fraud or love of sinne and filled with holy thoughts and meditations and longing desires of their journeyes end m Anton. part 4. Titul 7. cap. 5. sect 6. The seventh is Decrepit old Age in which a man must studie Peace and Patience Answ 2 Secondly these seven Beatitudes may be squared and fitly applied to the seven Ages of the World viz. The first age fell by pride and therefore wee must learne to be poore in spirit The second age fell by the height of Nimrods ambition who would have built Babell and therefore we must learne and labour to bee meeke and humble The third age fell because they would not suffer adversitie and want in the wildernesse patiently and contentedly but placed their happinesse in earthly things and therefore wee should esteeme this world a vale of miserie and not grieve for any temporall thing we lack herein but rather mourne that wee our selves are so long herein being separated from the full fruition of our Christ so long as wee are present in the body because blessed are they that thus mourne The fourth age was ruined because righteousnesse was contemned and equitie trampled under feet and therefore wee must hunger and thirst after righteousnesse for so wee shall bee blessed The fift age perished through crueltie murder bloodshed and discord as we may see in the Maccabees and therefore we must learne to be mercifull and so we shall finde mercie and not perish The sixt age brought forth Christ who was a Lambe without spot teaching us to endeavour as the fellow members of Christ to bee pure and cleane in heart soule and spirit The seventh age hitherto hath been and shall bee full of warres broyles and seditious strifes and therefore if in this age wee desire to bee blessed we must be keepers lovers and makers of peace n Anton. part 4. Tibul. 7. cap. 5. sect 7. Which is the first blessednesse pronounced by our Saviour This in this verse to wit Povertie in Spirit Quest 2 What is considerable Answ or observable in this Beatitude Quest 3 Answ Two things to wit The Proposition wherein are three circumstances viz. Quid what is promised Blessednesse Qui Who are blessed The poore Quatenus What poore In Spirit The reason because theirs is the kingdome of heaven to wit both the kingdome of Grace the preaching of the Gospell Glory eternall life Quest 4 Why doth our Saviour begin here that is why doth he begin his Sermon with the Beatitudes and with the beatitude of Povertie of spirit Answ 1 First this Christ did in regard of his Disciples who being shortly to be tried and afflicted and scorned must be corroborated by this consolation Answ 2 Secondly this was done in regard of all the people present all love and desire happinesse and therefore our Saviour herewith beginnes that his doctrine and Sermon might be the better liked and more gratefully accepted of all Answ 3 Thirdly because all men almost erre in this subject some placing felicitie in one thing some in another all misplacing it our Saviour therefore doth here correct all the vulgar errours shewing truely wherein true happinesse doth consist Answ 4 Fourthly Christ beginnes this Sermon with the Beatitudes because the end of his preaching is to bring us to felicitie and true blessednesse Quest 5 Why doth not our Saviour rather command us to be poore in Spirit and to mourne and bee meeke and mercifull and peace-makers c. than thus onely to pronounce such blessed and happy Answ 1 First because it is a certaine exclamation or a more emphaticall phrase our Saviour by pronouncing the poore in spirit to be blessed doth intimate the excellencie of this vertue of poverty of spirit Answ 2 Secondly because the vulgar errour of felicity and infelicitie blessednesse and misery is the chiefest let and impediment unto faith our Saviour therefore that hee may take it out of the way doth in these beatitudes shew these two things First that Blessednes doth not cōsist in the plenty fulnesse and abundant fruition of peace or temporal possessions Secondly that afflictions doe not hinder a man from being truely happy The scope therefore of our Saviour here is to teach us what is true happinesse and wherein it consists What is true happinesse according to Christs Quest 6 doctrine
life they shew light unto others Secondly Christ is called light because he is Answ 2 that true primary light which doth not borrow his light from any other but hath light in himselfe and of himselfe doth enlighten others Read for the proofe hereof Ioh. 1 9. and 8.12 Esa 9.2 and 40.6 and 43 6. and 60.1.12 and 1 Ioh. 1.5 and 2.8 Thirdly Apostles and other Doctors Ministers Answ 3 of the church of Christ are called light not because they have light in themselves of thēselves for they have it from Christ that true primary light as the Moone borrowes her light from the Sunne shee beeing without but a darke substance or body So they being enlightned by Christ they are called lux mundi the light of the world in these regards First because they beare witnesse of the true light m Ioh. 1.7.8 Secondly because they have received the splendor of divine knowledge from Christ Thirdly in respect of the sincerity of life and integrity of manners Fourthly God is the cause of light this may Answ 4 be understood either of God the Father Sonne or Holy Ghost For First God the Father is called the Father of lights James 1.17 yea he commands the light to shine out of darkenes n 2 Cor. 4.6 Secondly God the Sonne enlightens every one who comes into the world o Ioh. ● 9 Thirdly God the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of light The Apostle proves most plainely that the ever blessed Trinity is the cause of light in these words I pray for you that the God of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of wisedome that so the eyes of your understanding may be enlightned p Ephes 1.17.18 Fiftly the light it selfe is the word of God Thus David Thy Word is a light unto my feet Answ 5 Psalm 119.105 And Paul Christ hath brought life and immortality to light through the Gospell 2 Tim. 1.10 And Peter ye doe well to take heed to the word of God as unto a light that shineth in a darke place 2 Pet. 1.19 Answ 6 Sixtly and lastly it is given unto the Ministers from God to enlighten the world through this his word Thus Paul was sent unto the Gentiles that by the preaching of the word unto them he might open their eyes and turne them from darknesse to light q Acts 26.18 Obiect 2 It may against this be objected to enlighten or give light is an internall worke and therefore man cannot doe it but it must bee wrought by the blessed Trinitie as was sayd before answer 4. Answ 1 First it is not onely an internall worke for there are two parts of this illumination viz. first an externall adhibiting of light secondly an internall application thereof to the understanding and spirit As in the sense of seeing First there are the species or severall objects without And secondly these are applied unto common sense within Now the outward light is adhibited by the Ministers of the word of God Answ 2 Secondly the Ministers are sayd by consequence to worke the internall light also For first although it bee the worke of the holy Ghost and a taste of the heavenly gift and of the Spirit of God r Heb. 6.4 yet secondly the application of the outward light by the ministery of the word is the ordinary means wherby the internall light is wrought within us And therefore I conclude this objection thus First the light is the word which comes from God not from the Ministers Secondly the power of enlightning is from Christ not from the Ministers and they only illuminate through his helpe and assistance Thirdly yet it is the office of Ministers to hold forth the light in their Ministerie Sect. 3 § 3. Yee are the light of the world The Apostles Quest 1 being but Toll-gatherers and Fishers and not Scribes why doth our Saviour call them the light of the world and not rather the Scribes Answ 1 First Christ doth it to comfort them left they should be dejected by reason of their poore base and low condition Thus elsewhere hee encourageth them to be constant both in active and passive obedience because there will a time come when they shall sit upon twelve seates and judge the twelve Tribes of Israel ſ Matth. 19.28 Answ 2 Secondly Christ calles his Apostles not the Scribes the light of the world lest the Ministerie should seeme to bee supported by an arme of flesh If the Scribes and Pharisees had beene made the light of the world the world would then have thought that the word had been upheld and maintained by humane power but when the Gospell is preached published divulged and dispersed through the world by the Apostles who were but Fishers Toll-gatherers poore and illiterate men then all the world will say Hic est digitus Dei that this is Gods worke and supported by a divine hand Thirdly our Saviour calles his Apostles not Answ 3 the Pharisees and Scribes the light of the world to teach us that worldly pompe and splendour addes nothing to the efficacie of the Ministerie it neither helpes if present nor hurts if absent Why doth not externall and mundane glory Quest 2 availe and further the preaching of the word First because it is a spirituall work and therefore Answ 1 it is to be wrought by spirituall meanes and not carnall for neither estimation nor honour nor riches nor the wisedome of the flesh can helpe forward this worke of God Hence Saint Paul opposeth them first in his conversation in these words Our rejoycing is the testimony of our conscience that in simplicitie and godly sinceritie not with fleshly wisedome we have had our conversation in the world t 2 Cor. 1 12. Secondly Saint Paul opposeth them in his preaching Christ sayth he sent me to preach the Gospell not with wisedome of words u 1 Cor. 1 17. not with excellencie of speech v 1 Cor. 2.1 not with enticing words of mans wisedome but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power w 1 Cor. 2.4 Secondly God in this worke will not use the power of men lest the praise of the work should bee given unto men Vzza was strucke with death because hee puts his hand to the Arke x 2 Sam. 6 7. And God will not deliver his people by 32000 but by 300 y Iudg. 7.2 lest the people should glory in themselves whereas hee that glories should glory in the Lord yea hence it was that God would not take the temptation from Paul but rather sustaine him in it because thus his glory and strength was made perfect in weaknesse z 2 Cor. 12.9 § 4. A Citie that is set on an Hill cannot bee hid These words as also the former some Sect. 4 Papists urge for the visibilitie of the Church Object thus Our Saviour compares his Church to a Citie on an Hill which cannot be hid Therefore the Church
that divine perfection which God requires in every good work yea how the outward good workes which hee performes are stained and blotted with pride vaine boasting ostentation and selfe-love Thirdly let him diligently observe the stupiditie of his conscience how bold and obstinate and senselesse it is as for example 1. He never doubts of his condition 2. He never feares the wrath and judgements of God 3. He never seekes to be delivered from the wrath to come 4. Hee never trembles w●th the sight of his sinnes his heart not being circumcised he is never touched with a sense of his iniquities The Children of God are ever and anon in heavinesse and teares for the sinnes they commit against so gracious a God and so beloved a Father thinking in this kinde every mole-hill a mountaine but the naturall man although hee be never sure yet he is alwaies secure singing peace unto his owne soule and saying no evill shall come unto him Fourthly let him truely know and acknowledge the end of his obedience and what his aime and scope is in all the good duties which he performes namely alwaies either his gaine or estimation of the world or vaine glory ever obeying for himselfe never for God ever seeking himselfe never seeking the glory of his heavenly Father Fifthly and lastly let him consider his weakenesse of rather want of faith let him examine what spirit he hath well may he have the Spirit of slumber and a deceivable presumption but that internall sweetnesse and spirituall peace which might corroborate him against terrors dangers and death or comfort him in afflictions or make him victorious over the greatest tryals Rom. 8.38 he never had the least tast or rellish of Quest 8 Must we only judge our selves by our works Answ We must not onely judge our selves by our externall actions but also by our internall by our thoughts consciences and least sinnes as for example First if thou be not a thiefe then see whether thou art not unmercifull or coveteous or desirous of something which is thy neighbours Secondly if thou bee no murtherer then see if thou hast not beene angry with thy brother without a cause if thou hast not hated him if thou hast not endeavoured at least desired to bee revenged if thou hast not contended with him for some petty trifles if thou hast not called him Racha or foole in thy anger yea examine whether thou lovest him or not Thirdly if thou bee no adulterer then see if thou hast not either with thy hands or eyes or heart or affection lusted after some or shewed some wanton tokens Fourthly if thou be no perjured person or one who hath horribly prophanned the name of God by blasphemies then see if thou hast not sometimes without an oath spoken rashly or irreverently of God or of the Gospel or of holy things yea hast thou not had unreverend thoughts of God Thus examine thy selfe both by thy outward and inward man Quest 9 If this strictnesse be now required of us under the Gospel then who can be saved Answ 1 First by the workes of the law no man living can be justified or saved Answ 2 Secondly every one is then made the child of God when the spirit of God speakes unto him by faith Answ 3 Thirdly this evidence and testimonie of the Spirit is by and by confirmed unto us by a holy conversation of life which is performed in the sinceritie of the heart all our actions proceeding from sincere affections Answ 4 Fourthly and from hence we are assured by the same blessed Spirit that our infirmities shall not 〈◊〉 imputed unto us but covered by that precious garment of Christs righteousnesse Rom. 8.2 and 4.5 6. from Psal 32. And therefore our failings shall not make us fall short of eternall life if we doe but in sinceritie of heart strive and endeavour to serve the Lord in whatsoever he requires for he graciously doth accept of the will for the deede § 2. Sweare not at all Sect. 2 Why is this generall negation added Quest 1 First Answ something is here to bee understood in the answer of the Pharisees They say Thou shalt not for sweare thy selfe but shalt performe unto the Lord thine oathes as if they would say thou shalt pay unto God what thou sweatest By God to give unto him but if thou swearest by any thing else namely either by heaven or earth or Ierusalem or thy hand or eye c. then thou needest not to performe thine oath except thou wilt This was the Pharisees glosse upon that saying which is mentioned before verse 33. and so our Saviour gives us a touch of it Mat. 23.16 Hereunto our Saviour in this verse and the two following answers that by those things to wit heaven earth c. it is neither lawfull to forsweare nor to sweare this ●e layes downe and collects that Wherein were the Scribes and Pharisees Quest. 2 faultie concerning this third Commandement First in generall Gualter upon these words Answ 1 observes that both they might be and many amongst us are guiltie here of abusing the name of God and violating this precept many waies without an oath as for example First when we speake irreverently of divine things to wit either I. of God himselfe or II. of his law or III. of his threatnings or IV. by wresting and perverting the examples of Gods judgements or V. by jesting of Scripture inter pocula in our mirth Secondly when wee abuse it unto inchantments Answ 2 and spels as is done with Saint Iohns Gospel and Psal 50. Thirdly when we abuse it unto Execration and cursing as God quite it or the vengeance of God light upon him for it or the like Fourthly when it is abused for gaine thus I. Beggars daily and hourely profane the name of God II. those also who pretend religion that they may deceive the better III. And they who teach chaffe for wheate the inventions of man for the word of God Fifthly Magistrates are here faultie when they doe not use the power which is given them by God unto the glory of God and his truth All these are transgressors of this precept and yet without an oath But these being more remote from our Saviours scope in this verse I leave them Secondly more particularly there is here a double fault which our Saviour meetes withall in the Pharisees to wit first that they condemned no rash oathes by the name of God but only Perjurie if a man did not sweare falsely then they thought him not faulty although hee swore by God Secondly as they condemned not those oathes which were dierctly sworne by God except they forsweare themselves so neither did they blame those oathes which were indirectly sworne by God to wit by his creatures of both which particularly First the Jewes thought that they were not bound to performe their oathes except the oath were by God Observ or by the gold of the Temple or by the gift upon the altar Mat. 23.16
that hate you pray for them which persecute you Quest 1 Why doth our Saviour expresse or adde these particulars doth not this generall exhortation Love your enemies imply and include all these Frustrà fit per plura quod fieri potest per pauciora is not this unnecessarily to multiply words Answ This our Saviour doth for the hardnesse and senselesnesse and dulnesse of our hearts because spirituall things are difficultly aright understood except they be very plainely and clearly laid downe wee can sometimes understand generalls but are not able to inferre those particulars which are therein included Quest 2 Why are spirituall things so hard to bee understood by us Answ 1 First because they cannot be perceived without the helpe of the Holy Spirit 1 Corinthians 2.14 Answ 2 Secondly because we can easily find a knot in a rush we can find something to cavill at or to object against being in the reading and study of Scripture prompted hereunto by Satan and carnall reason who will invent some arguments against the truth of Gods sacred volume Answ 3 Thirdly because spirituall things are contrary to our natures and naturall affections wee can easi y understand those things which suite with our dispositions and are deare unto our affections but those things which are opposite unto them we cannot understand Vers 45 VERS 45. That yee may be the children of your Father which is in Heaven for he maketh his Sunne to rise on the evill and on the good and sendeth raine on the just and on the unjust Sect. 1 § 1. That ye may be the children of your Father Object Stapleton urgeth and objecteth this place to prove the merit of charitie because our Saviour commandeth us to love both our Neighbours and enemies in the former verses Vt fiamus filii patris that so we may be made the children of our heavenly Father Answ 1 First we deny that any merits of counsell or command or supererogatory workes can make us the sonnes of God Answ 2 Secondly we say that merits follow our filiation and doe not goe before it Answ 3 Thirdly the sense therefore of this place is one or both of these I. Shew thy self to be the son of God by thy love unto all Approba filiationem Calvin Beza Muscul Marlor approve thy filiation to be true by thy love unto thy enemies and by doing good unto those who doe evill unto thee II. Walke worthy of thy adoption and sonne-ship as if our blessed Saviour would say walke in your Fathers steps who doth good unto all There are here two things considerable namely First the Argument Secondly the Consequence First the Argument which our Saviour here useth is this Because ye are sons therefore c. as if hee would say The chiefest care of man is or should be that hee may bee made the sonne of God Obser Why should we principally endeavour to be Quest 1 made the children of our heavenly Father First in generall because all the promises of the Answ 1 Gospel depend upon this we cannot bee made partakers of any promise of God untill wee are his children for all the promises are made to such Secondly because adoption and filiation are Answ 2 seales of salvation we never can be assured that we shall be saved untill we are assured of our filiation Thirdly because it is the greatest dignitie in Answ 3 the world to be made the sonne of God David thought it a great honour to be an earthly Kings sonne in Law how much greater is it then to be the adopted sonne our heavenly Father which is the King of Kings and a Lord of Lords The blessed Virgin Mary was more blessed in being Gods daughter then Christs mother Fourthly because Christ onely loves those Answ 4 who are the children of God Fifthly because Christ died for this end that Answ 5 he might gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad Iohn 11.52 Sixthly because if we be not the children of Answ 6 God we are the children of the Divell Ioh. 8.44 Seventhly because if we be the sonnes of God Answ 7 wee shall be directed by his holy Spirit in our lives and conversations for as many as are led by the Spirit are the Sonnes of God Rom. 8.14 and contrarily Eighthly because if we be the sonnes of God Answ 8 by adoption wee shall then have communion with God and fellowship with his naturall and eternall Sonne Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 1.9 and 1 Iohn 3.2 Ninthly if we be sonnes wee are heires yea Answ 9 heires of glory if we be here adopted into the fellowship of sonnes we shall hereafter be crowned with a wreath of glory and raigne with Christ for ever and ever Reade Rom. 5.2 and 8.17 21. and Gal. 4.7 And therefore to conclude this Question If we desire 1. To bee assured that all the gracious and comfortable promises of the Gospel belong particularly unto us If 2. wee desire to be assured that we are of the number of those who shall be saved If 3. We desire to be promoted unto the greatest honour in the world If 4. Wee desire to be assured of Christs love unto us If 5. we long to be gathered by Christ into his fold If 6. We would not be the sonnes of Satan If 7. We desire the direction and conduct of the blessed Spirit If 8. We desire union and communion with God and Christ we must then labour and endevour to be made the sonnes of God We hope we are the sonnes of God and not of Quest 2 Satan but how may we be not only well perswaded but also certainely assured hereof Answ Wee may undoubtedly know whether we be the children of the most High by these signes Signe 1 First faith is a note of the sonne of God and therefore we must try whether we have faith or not Wee are the children of God by faith in Christ Iesus Gal. 3.28 And therefore if we have no faith we are strangers from God and the Covenant of grace Ephes 2.12 and 4.18 Signe 2 The next Signe is the Spirit and the testimony of the same he who is adopted into the fellowship of Sonnes is endued with the Spirit which unto his spirit testifieth the truth of his filiation Reade Rom. 8.16 and Gal. 4.6 And therefore we must examine what manner of certainty we have of our adoption I. If we have no assurance hereof we are very miserable II. If our perswasion be a lying presumption and our hope without any solid ground then our condition is much more miserable III. If our assurance be weake like a smoaking flax or bruised reede then we must labour that it may be more strengthned IV. If our assurance be strong and built upon that never-failing Rocke then wee are happy and blessed Rom. 8.38 and 2 Tim. 4.8 Signe 3 The third Signe is this if wee be the children of God we are led by the Spirit Gal. 5.25 and Rom. 8 14. wherefore we should examine
for ours it is then a signe that our treasures are disallowed and disliked by Christ Answ 2 Secondly if we heape up riches with the discommodity of others or by any wicked means it is an argument of a prohibited treasure Answ 3 Thirdly when we place our hope trust and confidence in our riches treasured up distrusting the good providence of God it is an infallible signe of an unlawfull treasure Quantum quisque sua nammorum servat in arca tatnum habet fidei b Iuvenal When men by their riches heaped up hope to bee releeved helped and succoured come what can come unto them it is an argument that their hearts are set too much upon their treasures and their confidence is too great in them Answ 5 It was said in the second answer that wee must not treasure up riches by wicked meanes hence it may be demanded how doth a man wickedly lay up treasures First when he acquireth them by unlawfull Answ 1 and unjust meanes to wit either by theft or fraud or perjury or false weights or measures or adulterated wares or by suppl●nting of others or usury or oppression or detaining of the hirelings wages or the like Woe be to that man who gathereth riches by those meanes Secondly a man treasureth up riches wickedly Answ 2 when he keepes them too close that is reserves them I. Cruelly by denying to affoord helpe either to that Church and Common-wealth wherein hee lives when there is neede or by releeving the poore when they are in distresse Many are so carefull to keepe what they have that the poore shall rather die then bee preserved by their riches they will rather have no preaching then procure it with their purses yea the kingdome or City wherin they live shall be undone as Constantinople was rather then they will helpe it with the exhausting of their treasures I. Men sometimes reserve their riches Sordidé basely denying themselves their part of them when having riches they want hearts to use them Eccles 4.8 and 6.1 Woe be to that man who is so carefull to reserve his riches that hee withholds them in the time of need either from King Church Poore or himselfe and his Thirdly a man treasureth up riches wickedly Answ 3 when he heapes them up too much that is I. Without any necessity as was said before II. Without any measure never saying it is enough of which afterwards § 5. Ye cannot serve God and Mammon Sect. 5 Our blessed Saviours generall scope is here to teach us how impossible it is for a man to serve religion and the world sincerely and ex animo What is meant by Mammon Quest 1 First some say that hee is one of the foure principall divels which are opposite to the foure cardinall vertues the first of which divels is Asmodeus which is the spirit of luxury and uncleannesse and is opposite to the vertue of Chastity the second divell is Beelzebub which is the spirit of gluttony and drunkennesse and is opposite to Temperance the third divell is Mammon which is the spirit of coveteousnesse and is opposit to Charity and liberality the fourth divell is Lucifer the spirit of pride opposite unto Humility c Dor●●●secur Ser. dominica ser 19. But certainely Mammon is not a divell because a man may lawfully make him friends of Mammon which he cannot of the divell as followes by and by Secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is according Answ 2 to the Syriake signifieth gaine or lucre thus Eli●● and the Chaldeans and also the Germans who derive it from the Hebrew word M●● which signifies a reproach because immoderate and unlawfull gaine is worthy of reprehension blame But this is not the meaning of the word because wee may not make us friends of evill gotten goods as followes by and by but we may of Mammon Answ 3 Thirdly some say that Mammon signifies Riches not wickedly got but unprofitable to the possessor or riches whereof a man hath no use or need Thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was described by Suidas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mammon is those riches and that substance which doth not proceed from the divell but whereof there is no necessary use This is probable and likely to be true Answ 4 Fourthly sometimes Mammon indefinitely signifies riches and wealth and so I take it to signifie in this place Quest 2 What manner of service is heere spoken of Yee cannot serve God and Mammon Answ There are two sorts of service First the service of the divell by whom some are taken captive at his will 2 Tim. 2.26 thus Witches Enchanters Sorcerers Magitians and the like are the divels servants Secondly there is a service of the servants of the divell namely the service of sinne and of the world which are thus distinguished I. The service of sinne is thus by St. Paul described the servants of sinne 1 yeeld themselves and are content to obey sinne Rom. 6.1 617 19. and 2. are free from righteousnesse Rom. 6.20 II. The service of the world which is the service here spoken of is a willing subjecting of a mans selfe unto the allurements and provocations and baites of the world or a yeelding unto the inticements unto evill which are found in the world Whence it is that a man cannot serve God and the world Quest 3 Why cannot a man serve both God and the world Answ 1 First because there is neither of them but requires the whole man Nemo repentè fit bonus Nemo repentè fit dives None are quickly good non are quickly rich if a mā desire to be good he must accustome himselfe to a long constant and continuall trade of religion if a man desire to be rich he must rise up early and goe late to bed and eat the bread of carefulnesse yea hee must imploy both head and heart And therefore religion and the world cannot both be served by one and the same man Answ 2 Secondly because God and Mammon are contraries the Lord labours to withdraw our affeictions from the world and Mammon strives to seduce and intice us from the Lord. And therefore both cannot be served Quest 4 What difference is betweene God and Mammon Answ 1 First Mammon vexeth and turmoileth his servants night and day but the Lord continually comforts his Answ 2 Secondly Mammons servants are never satisfied the servants of the Lord never want necessary things and having that which is sufficient are contented with it Answ 3 Thirdly Mammon at length handles h●s servants as enemies but the Lord calleth his no longer servants but friends Ioh. 15. yea the children and coheires of Christ Rom. 8. Fourthly he who serves Māmon must necessarily Answ 4 hate God he who serves the Lord ought to hate the world and to renounce Mammon How may wee know whether wee serve our Quest 5 riches or our riches serve us First if wee use our riches as servants sending Answ 1 them abroad at
1.4 or laid up 2 Tim. 4.8 but prepared Mat. 25.34 and 1 Cor. 2.9 yea what is prepared Mansions Iohn 14.2 and seats Mat. 20.23 And the sinne of man cannot frustrate or make void the covenant and decree of God Rom. 11. because if those fall for whom this kingdome is prepared God will restore them againe by grace and repentance Psal 37.24 Answ 2 Secondly it appeares by Gods preferring of us before the Angels Quest 2 How doth God preferre man before the Angels Answ 1 First in offering repentance unto us which he did not unto the Angels Jude 6. and 2 Pet. 2.4 Answ 2 Secondly in giving Christ for us which hee did not for the Angels Answ 3 Thirdly in planting a Ministerie in the world for bringing men unto Repentance and unto Christ Ephe. 4.11 Answ 4 Fourthly by giving the Spirit of God in our hearts Vers 28 VERS 28. And why take ye thought for rayment Consider the Lillies of the field how they grow they toile not neither doe they spinne And why take ye thought for rayment Quest 1 Doth Christ here condemne apparell Answ No but carefulnesse for apparell for procurandae non curanda vestes Garments are to bee procured and provided not to be cared for Quest 2 Whether were and are garments necessary Answ 1 First they were not from the beginning that is before sinne as appeares thus I. There was no uncleannesse filthinesse or unseemelinesse in the body in the first creation thereof II. There was no unseasonable weather nor any hurtfulnesse in the ayre before the curse And therefore till after the fall there was no use Answ 2 of garments Secondly but now garments are necessarily used Quest 3 What use is there of garments now a dayes Answ 1 First they are now used to cover the nakednesse this after sinne was taught by nature Gen. 3. and confirmed by God Answ 2 Secondly they now are used to defend us from heate and cold Answ 3 Thirdly for comlinesse and ornament and for this cause was given unto Benjamin five changes of rayment Gen. 4.22 Answ 4 Fourthly to admonish us of Sinne and our present uncleannesse thereby The ornament of the soule how carefully that should be adorned 1 Tim. 2.9 and 1 Pet. 3 3 4. Fifthly to distinguish First sexes women from men Deut. 22.5 Secondly ages thus young Ioseph had a garment of divers colours Gen. 37.3 Thirdly orders Thus sometimes I. The Kings were distinguished by their garments II. Sometimes the Priests Exod. 28.2 and 29.5 c. III. Sometimes the Rich Luk. 16.15 Mat. 11.8 IV. Sometimes the Poore Eccles 40.1 Forthly occasions actions affections and times namely I. Holy garments Exod. 39.1 and 40.12 Levit. 8.8 and 16 4 II. Wedding garments Mat. 22.11 III. Garments of mirth Exod. 33.4 and Esay 61.3 IV. Mourning garments sackcloth 2 King 6.30 V. Garments used for travellers on foot on horseback by men warring and sleeping VERS 29. And yet I say unto you Vers 29 that even Salomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these § 1. And yet I say unto you Why doth our Saviour here use this asseveration Sect. 1 Tamen dico yet I say unto you Quest 1 To teach two things unto us namely I. That Christ is of another opinion in many things then the world is II. Answ That wee must beleeve Christ whatsoever the world saith First Christ saith I say unto you as if he would say Many and it may bee you also thinke otherwise Obser 1 but I say it is thus to teach us That he teacheth many things otherwise then reason opinion or the world doth He teacheth that the poore and persecuted are blessed Mat. 5.2.11.12 but the world thinks them miserable Hee teacheth that godlines is great gaine but the world holds gaine godlinesse Reade 1 Tim. 4.8 5.6 How doth it appeare that Christ and reason Quest 2 and the world teach contrarily It is cleare by these three things to wit Answ First Christ is truth it selfe but reason is ignorant of the truth Philosophie it selfe looking upon man as pure and hence affirming that man following the conduct of nature cannot erre Secondly reason nature and the world looke too much upon themselves but Christ teacheth us to looke upon God nature and reason perswadeth us to respect our selves more then Gods glory as Peter said Master spare thy selfe c. Mat. 16.22 but Christ teacheth us to seeke the glory of God in all things and above all things and to deny our selves Mat. 16.24 Whether can a naturall man be the servant of Quest 3 God or not Answ No because he understands nothing beyond or above naturall reason For the better taking up of this observe What the naturall man Can understand namely these things First gaine glory quiet peace estimation and the like Secondly to avoide grosse enormious and criminall offences Thirdly to be of an affable meeke and courteous nature to bee true and just in his dealings and injurious unto none Cannot understand namely these sixe things to with First what is meant by the purity of the heart Secondly the presence of God to be every where Thirdly the internall conduct and direction of the Holy Ghost Fourthly what is meant by the internall fulnesse of God Ephes 3.19 Fifthly to glorifie God in every action Sixtly to be zealous for Gods glory and in Gods service These things are strange unto him untill hee bee taught them by Christ Secondly Christ saith I say unto you as if he would say it matters not what the world saith Obser 2 but what I say Teaching us that wee must beleeve the word of God whatsoever reason opinion custome or the world saith to the contrary Ioh. 10.4.27 and 8.51 Quest 4 Why must wee beleeve the word of God before all these Answ 1 First the word is Christs and he is worthy to be beleeved before all these Ioh. 1.1.14 Answ 2 Secondly the word is true yea a perpetuall truth and therefore deserves to be believed Esa 40.8 Answ 3 Thirdly the word regenerates us and is the spirituall seed whereby we are begotten Iam. 1.18 and 1 Pet. 1.23 Answ 4 Fourthly the word directs our life and conversation Read Psal 19. and 119. Answ 5 Fifthly the word must judge us at the last day and therefore is more worthy to believed then those things which neither must judge us nor we be judged by Ioh. 12.48 and Rom. 2.16 and 2 Thes 1.8 Sect. 2 § 2. Salomon in all his glory was not arayed like one of these Quest How did the Lillies exceede Salomon in glory Answ 1 First the ornaments of Salomon in all his glory were but artificiall but the cloathing of the lillies are naturall and looke how farre nature exceedeth art for art is but an imitratrix of nature and her perfection is to imitate nature Therefore the Lillies exceed Salomon in all his glory Answ 2 Secondly Salomon when he was so gloriously decked was beholden to many creatures hee was beholden to
good thing in them but what they have received from God and therfore it were great pride to be proud of it and insolent arrogancie to boast of it as though they had not received it Fourthly he departs because he would not be Answ 4 hindred from praying teaching us thereby that prayer is not to be neglected but frequently to be performed Ephes 6.18 Mat. 7.7 Col. 4.2 Fiftly Christ leaves this multitude and departs Answ 5 because it was necessary that he should preach to others as well as to these Sixthly he departs from this multitude lest Answ 6 they should go about to make him a King Ioh. 6.15 Seventhly he commands his Apostles to put Answ 7 off from these because he knew they were wicked and he judged them unworthy of his presence or of his preaching Eightly Gualter sup gives another reason of Answ 8 Christs departure and that is this because his Disciples who were hitherto accustomed and acquainted with nothing but pleasant things might be accustomed unto afflictions and dangers for afterwards verse 24. we finde that they were in perill by reason of a great tempest upon the Sea Vers 20. And Iesus saith unto him Vers 20 The Foxes have holes and the birds of the air have n●sts but the Son of man hath not where to lay his head § 1. But the Son of man hath not where to lay his Sect. 1 head Christ here calleth himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Object the Son of man not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Son of a woman and therefore he was born and begotten of mans seed Answ 1 First this phrase the Son of man is an Hebraisme for Ben Adam the Son of man signifieth no more than Adam Man as evidently appears thus because Adam himself is called Ben Adam The son of man although he was neither begotten by a man nor born of a woman Answ 2 Secondly Nazianzen answers Christ is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Son of man in the singular number because he came from man onely ex unâ parte in regard of his humane nature which he took from his mother Mary and not from man But others are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sons of men in the plurall number because they have their bodies both from Father and Mother Answ 3 Thirdly Augustine answers Christ is called the son of man that he might manifest and shew unto us the great benefit which man hath received by his taking mans nature upon him Answ 4 Fourthly he is called the son of man that so his Humanity may be distinguished from his Deity Answ 5 Fiftly Tertullian answers he is called the son of man that so we might acknowledge him to be true man as well as true God But the true sense of the vvords is gathered from the Hebrevv phrase Ben Adam i. e. Adam the son of man that is Man We see here how Christ calleth himself the son of man although the phrase be elswhere a phrase of contempt as Iob 25.6 and Psa 8.5 to teach us Observ 1 That Humility becomes the best Reade for the proof hereof Prov. 11.2 and 16.19 and Mat. 11.29 Gen. 28.17 Phil. 2.7 Quest 1 Why must the children of God be humble Answ 1 First because it is a laudable and praise-worthy vertue Prov. 25.7 and Luke 14.10 Answ 2 Secondly because God will avenge himself upon those who injure or wrong the humble Psal 18 27. and 34.18 Prov. 22.22 Answ 3 Thirdly because God will teach the humble to wait and expect for him with patience Psalme 33.20 Answ 4 Fourthly because Humility is a signe of a good spirit for the spirit of the world doth exalt and puffe up but the spirit of God doth humble as we see in Iacob Ioseph and David Psalme 131.1 Answ 5 Fifthly because God will in his due time exalt those who are humble for Humility goes before Honour Prov. 18.12 and 29.23 Answ 6 Sixthly because God will hear the prayers of the humble Psalm 10.17 c. and 102.17 and 138.6 Our Saviour by these words The Son of man hath not where to lay his head doth shew the poor Observ 2 estate wherein he was thereby teaching us That the best and most holy are sometimes brought to great poverty and want Quest 2 How doth it appear that the pious are often poor for they have promises in the Word to the contrary and that whatsoever they do shall prosper and they shall have no lack Answ It is evident by the examples of Christ and his children First if we look upon Christ we shall finde him in his Nativity born in a stable and laid in a manger Luke 2.17 afterwards nourished and maintained by others Luke 8.3 not having mony to pay Tribute withall Mat. 17.27 yea robbed of his garments Mark 15.24 and destitute when he was dead of a sheet to be wrapped in of a Sepulcher to be laid in of sweet odours to embalm him d Ioh. 19.38 Secondly if we look upon the Patriarchs e Heb. 11.36 c. or Apostles we shall see them to be as poor as their Lord and Master f Acts 2. and 4. and 3.6 Why doth the Lord permit Christ or the Saints to be poor seeing he hath promised his Quest 3 delight shall be in them and his care for them First Christ was made poor that he might Answ 1 make us rich 2 Cor. 8 9. And. Secondly the Saints are often poor that they Answ 2 may learn Contentation in outward things 1 Tim. 6.6 8. And Thirdly the Lord permits Christ and his children Answ 3 to be poor that so he might sanctifie Poverty which otherwise is a punishment of sin And Fourthly the Lord lets the righteous fall into Answ 4 poverty that so he might commend the poor unto us as companions of our afflictions And Fifthly Christ was poor that so the prophesies Answ 5 concerning him might be fulfilled David saith He was poor and in misery and herein he was a Type of Christ or as some think speaks it prophetically of Christ g Carthus su● And Sixthly Christ was poor that so he might Answ 6 shew to the people that he did as he said and practised what he preached He came to preach and teach men the contempt of riches and of the world and therefore it was not sutable for him to abound in riches Carthus s Seventhly Christ was poor that not onely by Answ 7 words but also in deed he might shew the truth of the life to come for by a contempt of all temporall things is fully declared a sure and certain hope of another life after this Eighthly Christ was poor left it should have Answ 8 been thought that he drew Disciples after him for covetousnesse sake Ninthly Christ was poor to teach us that his Answ 9 kingdom was not of this world § 2. Iesus saith unto him Sect. 2 In this verse is contained Christs answer to the Scribe who offered to follow him and in the answer two
man trust Quest 6 in or adhere unto First not to his naturall strength in performing Answ 1 of what is good for that is but weaknesse Iob 14.4 and 15.14 Secondly not to his wit or wisdom in understanding Answ 2 of what is good for although he may understand many things which concern his body and temporall estate and be very crafty in outward things yet spirituall things he is not able truly to take up 1 Cor. 2.14 Thirdly not to his wisdom in avoiding of Answ 3 evill for Sathan is more crafty to tempt and assault than any naturall man can be to resist and withstand temptation because naturally our judgment erres and our care sleeps Fourthly not to the strength of his resolution Answ 4 many a man resolves that he will never swear more nor be drunk more nor fall into his accustomed sins any more but yet at length starts aside like a broken Bow turning with the Dog to his vomit of sin Indeed a natural man may be resolute in worldly things but not in the things of the Lord because he hath no true love unto God or goodnesse within nor any true change of his affections Fifthly the naturall man may not trust to his Answ 5 own honesty in obeying for he cannot obey God either generally in all things or perpetually for all times but onely sometimes and in some things which comes far short of true obedience Sixthly he must not trust to his conscience Answ 6 in repenting or condemning of sin for I. Often the naturall man condemns another mans sins but not his own And II. Often erects a false repentance as the Drunkard after his Cups and the Swearer after his Oathes will cry God mercy and beat their hands upon their brests and think this their repentance will serve the Lords turn and procure from him pardon Yea III. Oftentimes the naturall man seems to expresse a great measure of hearty sorrow but it is for the punishment not for the sin as Ahab did 1 Kings 21. And therefore God will not accept of it Seventhly and lastly let not the naturall man trust to his confi●ence or faith in beleeving for Answ 7 the faith of such is but blinde presumption Esa 28.18 Thus I say the naturall man must neither trust to his strength in working nor to his wit in understanding nor to his prudence in avoiding nor to his power in resolving nor to his honesty in obeying nor to his conscience in repenting nor to his confidence in beleeving for in all these he may be deceived Quest 7 What things or works may a spiritually dead naturall man do The naturall man may do these things to wit Answ First he may sin greedily with the full bent and consent of the will Ephes 4.19 he may run on unto sin as a horse unto the battell Secondly he may perform naturall works as eat drink sleep and the like Thirdly he may perform politick and civill works as buying selling trading purchasing c. Fourthly he may perform Morall works or the acts of vertue he may give Alms forgive offenders love true and honest dealing be chaste and temperate and the like Fifthly he may perform religious actions quoad materiam informem in regard of the dead letter or livelesse outward work for he may hear the word he may pray he may fear the wrath and anger of God he may be pricked in heart yea with Herod Mark 6.20 he may obey in many things Reade Heb. ● 4 5 6. But Sixthly he can do nothing well quoad formam form lly or in regard of the manner of d●ing This form of goo works is faith and wit●out this nothing we do can be plea●●●g unto God Deus r●●u●e ●ator Adverbiorum God rewards Benè onely that which is w●ll done in regard of the manner And therefore naturall men being without faith all their works are but like Sodoms fruit or deaf Nuts or as Bellarmine saith a carkasse which hath strong and well set members but wants life Quest 8 Is there no hope of life then to the naturall man Answ He may live again although he be dead But by the help Of another not Of himself and that Miraculously not Naturally or Physically A man that is dead cannot infuse life into himself but he may be restored unto life by another as many were whereof we reade in holy writ But even this is above nature and plainly miraculous for any to restore a dead man to life So is it with naturall men they are dead in sin and it is not i● their power to quicken themselves or to infuse the l●fe of grace into themselves but it is the work of another namely of Christ and that not by any naturall but by a supernaturall work who regenerates us by his Spirit Ioh. 3.3 4 5. How may dead men be revived and restored Quest 9 unto life They must do as Martha did when she desired Answ that her dead brother Lazarus might bee raised up to life that is First they must fetch Christ unto the dead soule Then Secondly they must pray that the stone of insensibility may be removed that is that their hard hearts may be mollified and softned and made sensible of sin Thirdly pray that he may heare the voice and call of Christ and word of God which calleth him from the grave of sin and perdition Fourthly pray that being called and hearing Christs voice hee may come out from the grave of sin forsaking it and leaving it for ever Fifthly pray that his face being unbound hee may see Christ Iohn 11.44 Sixthly when he is raised up by Christ and seeth him then let him sup with him and stay with him and never depart from him Revelations 3.20 Seventhly by how much longer hee hath laid in the grave of sin or death or by how much the worse hee stinks in regard of his wicked life by so much the more fervently and constantly pray untill he be raised and restored How may we know whether we are spiritually Quest 10 dead or not Examine in thee these things namely First art thou given to thy pleasure Answ following that with joy but hearing the word of God with wearinesse calling that a hard saying b Iohn 6.60 Then certainly thou art but a dead man Secondly art thou glewed unto the world and thy wealth and profit Iames 4.4 1 Iohn 2.15 Vndoubtedly then thou art yet dead in sin Thirdly art thou puffed up with worldly wisedome which is contrary to the wisedome of the Spirit then it is a signe that thou art not as yet quicked Rom. 8.6 c. These three hold men diversly to wit First pleasure luls men asleepe Secondly the world compels men as in chaines to obey and serve her Thirdly wisedom deludes and deceives men with false shewes Fourthly art thou not as yet regenerated and changed then certainly the life of grace is not as yet infused Iohn 3.5 Fifthly dost thou not as yet beleeve then it is
the rules of Christian charity who knowes that the Church is disquieted and disturbed only by reason of some personall hatred against him and that the Church might have peace and his particular Congregation leave to enjoy as good a Pastor yea in every regard as able to edifie them as he is if hee were gone and yet rather than he will undergoe the trouble molestation and danger of exile will stay and suffer the Church in generall and his particular flocke to be disquieted and hindred from the peaceable enjoyment of the Word Rule 8 Eightly in fleeing persecution wee must respect the utility and profit of the Church that is I. If the Church by the retaining and keeping of a Minister may reape spirituall gaine and advantage then he is not to flee Or II. If the Church may reape comfort courage or benefit by the example of the Ministers constant and couragious suffering for the truth then I conceive that he is not to flee because a good Shepheard will lay downe his life for the good of his sheepe But III. If a Minister can have no leave to discharge his Ministeriall function no liberty to preach unto his flocke or to pray with them or to administer the Sacraments unto them nor any hope by his presence to benefit the Church or to gaine more soules unto Christ nor cause any occasion likely to be offred whereby he may propagate and further enlarge the kingdome of Christ without doubt then he may safely and lawfully flee for his life and shun persecution IV. If a Minister can see in likelihood that if some certaine time or brunt were over he might much benefit and comfort the Church but for the present there is small hope either of saving his owne life or doing good to his flocke hee may then for a while run unto the Wildernesse and hide himselfe in the Desart and shelter himselfe untill the showre bee over Now all these Rules belong unto the Ministers of the Gospel because the Text speakes only of their flight in the times of persecution Sect. 2 § 2. Vntill the Sonne of man come Quest 1 How doth Christ come Christ comes diversly namely Answ First he came unto us In carne in the flesh when he tooke our nature upon him This is past Secondly In gloria in glory when hee comes unto judgement Rom. 2.6 This is to come Thirdly In protectione in preservation and defence Behold I am with you unto the end of the world Matth. 28.20 that is by protection care and speciall assistance This Comming is alwayes and thus he is for ever present with his children Fourthly In donatione Spiritus he comes unto us by the donation of his Spirit and this is either extraordinary as he came to the Apostles giving singular and extraordinary gifts unto them Act. 2. or ordinarie and thus he comes unto all the faithfull in their regeneration when new and spirituall habits principles and graces are infused into them Fiftly In interno lumine In internall illumination enlightning the heart and opening the eyes for he enlightens every one that comes into the world Iohn 1.9 Now these two last are one and our only and true felicity Whence we might observe That true happinesse doth consist in the presence of Christ in the heart Observ when Christ came to Zacheus then came salvation to his house and consolation to his heart when Christ comes unto the heart of the faithfull then and never untill then comes joy unto their soules then and never untill then are they truely happy And therefore this we should desire first that is before and above all other things Psalm 27.4 and 42.2 Why are wee made happy by the fruition of Quest 2 Christ First because then and never untill then doe Answ 1 wee truely see A blind man would thinke himselfe a blessed man to enjoy his sight now wee by nature are blind and our eyes are opened and our understandings enlightned onely then when Christ enters into the soule And therefore happy are we when becomes unto us Psal 4.6 80.3.7.19 Secondly because the comming of Christ unto Answ 2 the soule doth represent the beatificall vision wherein our chiefest heavenly happinesse doth consist therefore thereby wee are made truely blessed Reade Psalme 16.11 and Psalme 98. and Matth. 5.8 VERS 24. The Disciple is not above his Master Verse 24 nor the Servant above his Lord. Christ by this title Disciple would teach us Observ That those whom he receives he will teach Reade for the proofe hereof Esay 54.13 Ierem. 31.33 c. Proverb 8.1 and 9.1 How Quest or how many wayes doth Christ teach his servants First he teacheth them by his Word Matth. Answ 1 28.19 Prov. 8.1 and 9.1 Secondly he teacheth them by his Spirit Psal Answ 2 143.10 and 1 Iohn 2.27 And without this the other is ineffectuall and therefore we must first labour to be taught by the Word and cleave close unto that Esay 2.3 it being the meanes of regeneration 1 Pet. 1.24.25 And then labour to be taught inwardly by the Spirit For without his gracious illumination wee can know nothing aright 1 Cor. 8.2 certainly humane knowledge must needs deceive us and misleade us and therefore we must not be instructed by that Tutour nor consult with flesh and blood concerning the things of our soules Rom. 8.6 7 8 and 1 Corinth 3.18 but labour that we may be taught of God The truth of this more particularly appeares thus namely First naturally we know not God aright but have these grosse and false conceits of him viz. I. We thinke that he sees not our sinnes Psalm 50.21 But the Spirit of God teacheth us that his eyes are over all the world and run too and fro through the whole earth from which lesson proceeds these things First a fearefulnesse to sinne for if God see us how shall we then dare to do evill Secondly a watchfulnesse over our waies in secret because God seeth all things therefore we dare not privately do evill or so much as conceive or imagine mischiefe in our hearts Thirdly because God seeth all things therfore the Spirit workes in us humiliation and godly sorrow for our evill thoughts Yea Fourthly hence comes alacrity and cheerfulnesse in the wayes of God and every good work because God sees them and writes them in his Book of remembrance Malach. 3. II. We think that God is like unto us as the Heathens conceit of their Gods as Saturne Iupiter Mars and the rest and that sinne is not so displeasing unto him as we say it is But the blessed Spirit teacheth us that he is of such tender and pure eyes that he cannot endure to behold any thing that is evill Habak 1.13 And hence the spirituall man is afraid to commit the least sinne Matth. 12 36. and 1 Thessal 4.6 III. We thinke that God may be deceived but the Spirit admonisheth us to take heed that we do not deceive our selves for our God will not
this were enough to move the affections to love God Thirdly Elicitus or love freely proceeding now this love proceeding freely is that when the affections make choise of God freely when as the consideration of his goodnesse breeds admiration in us when the consideration of his bountie breeds love in us and his sweetnesse doth so satisfie our whole desires that wee thinke nothing so worthy an object to be beloved as our God who hath all these excellent properties in him Why must we love God above all others Quest 3 Because he loved us first Iohn 3.16 Answ and 1 Iohn 4.10 and therefore wee are bound to love him againe and that above all things Here observe that there are three sorts of love viz. First the love that seeks his owne profit only as when a subject loves his Prince only for his goods such was the love of Laban to Iacob here the Prince is not bound to love his subject againe neither was Iacob bound to love Laban for this sort of love Secondly the love that lookes to lewdnesse and dishonestie such was the love which Potaphars wife carried to Ioseph Gen. 39.9 Now Ioseph was not bound to love Potaphars wife againe in this sort of love Thirdly there is a most pure and holy love and in this love we are bound to love back againe God loved us before we loved him yea he loved us freely and for no by-respect therefore wee are bound to love him first and above all things Weems Image of God part 2. pag. 191. Verse 38 VERS 38. And he that taketh not up his Crosse and followeth after me is not worthy of mee Sect. 1 § 1. And followeth after me Observ Our Saviour here expresly teacheth that it is not sufficient to beare the Crosse except also wee follow him Mat. 8.22 and 4.20.22 and 9.9 and 19.27 Luke 18.43 Revelat. 14 4. Iohn 10.4.27 Quest 1 Why is it not enough to suffer but we must also follow Christ Answ 1 First because wee cannot suffer persecution for any other cause for to beare the Crosse for error or pride or vaine glory or desperation or the like belongs not at all unto Christ it being the cause not the punishment that makes the Martyr Answ 2 Secondly because this is the end of persecution it being so hard to follow Christ that a man cannot do it without some persecution or other or without crosses in some kind or other Many are the enemies of Christ and religion and therfore we must suffer that so wee may follow our Saviour which without suffering wee cannot doe for if a man could follow Christ without persecution there were then no need that hee should suffer at all Quest 2 To whom doth it belong to follow Christ or who must doe it Answ This duty of following Christ belongs unto all and is common to all none being excepted or exempted but onely those who exclude themselves Here observe three sorts of men viz. First some thinke that sanctity belongs not unto them but onely unto Ministers but these must know that they who follow not Christ in the waies of holinesse follow the Divell in the waies of wickednesse Secondly some say they have their labours and employments and callings to follow and therefore have neither leasure nor spare time to follow Christ but these must know that to follow Christ is the principall and most generall vocation of the soule and woe bee to him that puts Christ into the Manger and post-pones the following of him unto wordly affaires Thirdly some binde themselves Apprentices and give themselves wholly up to the service of Christ both in prosperity and adversity both in persecution and peace And these as the best of the three by much are to bee imitated But it may bee objected that this dedicating of men unto the service of God Object doth make them neglect their vocations and callings And therefore is it not to be imitated Religion doth not teach this Answ and therefore they who under colour of Sanctity and profession neglect their callings doe amisse and are neither to bee imitated nor excused For First Religion teacheth us to devote our selves wholly up to the service of the Lord. And Secondly to follow our callings in the Lord because hee hath so ordained so commanded § 2. He is not worthy of mee Sect. 2 None is worthy of God or Christ Object and therfore this censure of our Saviours is needlesse First certainely no man in himselfe is worthy Answ 1 of God or Christ Secondly without doubt none can repute or Answ 2 think themselves worthy of God or Christ without a great measure of pride for if any be worthy indeed then grace is no grace Rom. 11. Thirdly but the Lord is graciously pleased Answ 3 to esteeme those who are in grace worthy of him as was shewed before verse 13. Hence wee may then observe That those who endeavour to give themselves Observ 1 up in love to the service of Christ Christ will esteeme them as worthy of himselfe by his grace See before verse 10. and Luke 21.36 Culos 1.12 and 2 Thes 1.5 Why will Christ esteeme such as these worthy Quest 1 First because their persons are worthy both Answ 1 in regard of the Covenant contracted betweene the Lord and them and in regard of their participation of Christ and also in regard of that New Garment of Christs which they have put on Secondly the Lord is pleased to thinke such Answ 2 worthy because the holy Spirit leads them unto worthy workes Ephes 4.1 and 3 Iohn 6. Galath 5.22 And therefore if wee desire that our Lord should thinke us worthy of him let us walke worthily bringing forth fruits worthy of amendment of life Mat. 3.8 Acts. 26.20 Philip. 1.27 Colos 1.10 and 1 Thessal 2.12 For I. This God commands And II. Unto this the Spirit aid● and assists us What is the scope of these words He is not worthy Quest 2 of mee First our Saviour hereby would teach us why Answ 1 others are rejected namely because they were unworthy Mat 7.23 and 22.8 Secondly our Saviour hereby would teach us Answ 2 why others are unworthy namely because they despise Christ who gives such great things for vile and base things Whence we learne That it is a most unworthy thing to preferre Observ 2 worldly things before Christ Ierem. 2.13 Ionah 2.8 Esa 1.4.28 and 1 Samuel 8.8 and 15.11 How doth it appeare that it is an unworthy Quest 3 thing to preferre other things before Christ First because God hath done such great Answ 1 things for us Iohn 3.16 Secondly because hee is the living fountaine Answ 2 of all good Ierem. 2.13 Iames 1.17 Thirdly because Christ purchased us at so deare a rate to wit by his death and suffring Answ 3 Fourthly because all worldly things in regard Answ 4 of Christ are base and vile Philip. 3.8 And therefore to preferre such things such a God and Saviour and Redeemer is a most unworthy
better by affliction and that affliction is good unto us Wee may observe hence againe Iohn being in prison was excluded and shut out of the presence of Christ hee could not now come unto him but he could heare from him and although hee were caged and hindered from comming abroad yet not from the hearing of the Gospel for that penetrates the prison When he was in prison be heard of the great workes of Christ To teach us That the Gospel penetrates into the most Observ 2 close and hidden places The word wee see comes to prisons Act. 5.19 and 16.26 the word penetrates into the hearts of those who deride and mocke it Act. 2.37 the word comes to Ner●●s Palace Philip. 1. And divideth betwixt the marrow and the bones Hebr. 4.12 yea it flies through the whole world Rom. 10. And is the mighty power of God unto salvation Rom. 1.16 Psalme 45.4 How may this History of Iohns incarcerating Quest 3 be profitably allegorized If we consider this literall History Allegorically Answ it is an exemplar of our Conversion For First by nature we are free from Christ Rom. 6.18 Then Secondly we are imprisoned under the Law and spirit of bondage Rom. 8.35 being deprived of all true comfort Then Thirdly wee heare of Christ by the heare Iob 42 5. In a darke speaking 1 Corinth 13. Then Fourthly wee receive a message of comfort 2 Cor. 3.18 being assured by the Spiris that Christ is our Lord and our God Sect. 3 § 3. Hee sent two of his Disciples Quest 1 What two were these whom Iohn sent unto Iesus Answ 1 First they are no where named and therfore hard to define or positively to name Answ 2 Secondly it matters not much to know what their names were Answ 3 Thirdly but because some name them and affirme these two to be the same which are mentioned Iohn 1.40 I answer that certainly these two were not those two The two mentioned there are Andrew and his companion which could not be these two sent from Iohn to Christ as appeares evidently thun I. These two at least one of them remained with Christ and were his Disciple And therefore II. They could not doubt of Christ which followed him And III. The great rumour and report of Christs miraculous workes which is judged to be the cause of the sending these two Disciples unto Christ was long after Andrewes departure unto Christ Iohn 3.26 Quest 2 Why did Iohn send these two Disciples unto Christ Answ Many reasons are given hereof which may be reduced unto these three heads namely First for his owne sake II. For his Disciples sake III. For Christs sake First Iohn sent when he was in prison unto Christ Suâ c●i●sâ for his owne sake or in regard of himselfe and that either I. Because hee was ignorant whether hee of whom he heard so great things were the Messias and Christ or not for although he knew that the Messiah was now to come yea was already come yet hee did not know him by his face neither could particularly point at the person untill by the Spirit hee was taught which was hee Iohn 1.31.33 Thus Tertull. Iustin answer But to this I answer that Iohn could not now be ignorant of Christ because the Spirit had shewed him which was he Iohn 1.31.33 and 3.29 And hee that was a Prophet yea the Prophet of Christ in the wombe could not bee ignorant of him after hee had published and proclaimed himselfe unto the world Or II. Because now being in persecution hee was fearefull Nam Spiritus sanctus posiquam auctus in Christo a Iohanne disessit Tertul. For the Spirit of God had departed from Iohn unto Christ or at least the more Christ increased in Spirit the more Iohn decreased according to his owne words Hee must increase but I must decrease Iohn 3. ●0 To this I answer these things to wit First If wee even all the faithfull have received and doe daily receive of his fulnesse Iohn 1.16 then the Spirit is increased being increased in Christ rather then diminished or decreased and therefore it followes not that because the Spirit was increased in Christ therefore it was decreased in Iohn Secondly the Spirit was given to David and taken away from Saul not ab penuriam Spiritûs for any want or defect in the Spirit as though it could not have inspired them both and that sufficiently and abundantly but because Saul was rejected Now I know the Reverend Father and Father which I reverence will not say that Iohn was so Thirdly Iohn was not incarcerated or cast into prison for the profession of Christ but through the hatred that Herodias bare unto him And therefore there was no need that he should feare persecution for the confessing and acknowledging of Christ Fourthly if Iohn had feared persecution for Christs sake then certainely hee would never so openly have sent his Disciples on this message unto Christ seeing it must needs be every way as dangerous and full of perill as to confesse him Or III. Because hee did doubt whether Christ were hee that should offer himselfe to death or whether hee would send another Many of the Ancients run this way saith Maldonat s But is rejected even of the Papists themselves Or IV. Because being now in prison pressed with affliction griefe and sorrow he desireth to nourish and increase and strengthen his faith by more testimonies then yet he had of Christ And this of all the rest I conceive most likely to bee most true Whence we may learne That we must labour so to nourish our faith Observ 1 that it may be increased 2 Cor. 10.15 Colos 2.7 and 1 Thes 4.10 and 2 Thes 1.3 Why must we be thus carefull to nourish and Quest 3 increase our faith First because so long as we are in this life we Answ 1 are but In augmento non statu in a growing age not come unto our full growth our perfection here being respective not absolute Read for the proofe hereof 1 Cor. 13.9 Ephes 4.12 and 3.19 and 2 Cor. 3.18 Secondly because this worke to increase in Answ 2 faith is imposed upon us by God Matth. 13. Phil. 2.12 Thirdly because the impediments of faith Answ 3 will arise daily for without are distractions and within are doubtings and cares and therefore wee had need labour to overcome these and having removed them out of the way to increase our faith Fourthly because it is the nature of true Answ 4 faith to hunger and thirst and desire a greater measure and increase of faith the truely faithfull alwayes crying with the Apostles Lord increase our faith Iohn 6.34 Secondly Iohn Baptist sent when he was in prison his Disciples unto Christ Disciputorum causâ for their sakes and that either I. To stay their murmuring for they seeme to tell Iohn the great workes which Christ did with some disdaine or indignation against Christ He say they whom thou baptizedst now baptizeth himselfe and all runne after him
Organ and the Object then the Object cannot be perceived by the Organ for Sensibile positum supra sensorium non facit sensationem Lay any thing upon the eye and the eye cannot see although it be open because there is no Midst to see through Therefore unto sight it is required that there should be a Midst Secondly although there be a midst yet if it be darke the Organ cannot take up the Object The Egyptians in that palpable darkenesse could see nothing not because there was no Object to be seen or because their eyes were put out or blinded but because the Midst was obscured and darkened through which they should see And therefore unto sight it is required that there should bee a Midst and that the Midst should bee cleare and light Thirdly although there bee an Object and an Organ and a Midst yea and that Midst bee enlightned yet there must be a true and equall Intercapedo or distance of place for suppose there was as even and levell and plaine a peece of ground as could be imagined of a hundred miles in length and at noone day one man were set at the one end and another at the other end thereof yet these two could not see one another propter intercapedimum by reason of the long and unequall distance of place And therefore unto fight it is required that the Organ should be rightly disposed the Midst rightly composed and the Object rightly Proposed Thus wee cannot truely see or perceive those things which are spirituall without the Midst be enlightned by the Sunne or some other light that is without the light of the Spirit from above naturall wisedome not being able to take up these things The Philosopher threw away the Pentateuch as a frivolous Pamphlet not worthy to bee received or read Yea from hence the Fathers say that Philosophi Haeresiarchae The Philosophers were Arch-heretickes As I might instance and prove both by Caelius Porphyrius Iulianus and divers others but I passe them by concluding this Question with the Apostles assertion Romans 8.6 c. The carnall mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be And therefore wee must labour that we may bee enlightned by the Sunne of righteousnesse or wee are no better then blinde men who can see nothing Quest 5 What must we doe to prevent this naturall blindnesse that is in us Answ 1 First seeke for and unto the holy Ghost to be thy Doctour and Teacher Psalm 143.10 Answ 2 Secondly purge the eye and common sense I. Purge the eye from all evill humours And II. Common sense from all diseases and sicknesses that is labour that thy mind and judgement and affections yea the whole inward man may be purged from all sinne and truely sanctified Answ 3 Thirdly use the meanes hereunto there being a necessity thereof God not working now by Miracles but by meanes That is Reade heare meditate and study the word of God and pray daily unto Christ thy heavenly Physitian that hee would be pleased to annoint with eye-salve and to open thy blind eyes Observ 2 Secondly by grace we receive our sight or Christ gives new light unto those who shall bee saved Ephes 5.14 Luke 1 79. and 2.32 Quest 6 How doth it appeare that our eyes are opened by Christ or that wee receive spirituall light and knowledge onely from him It appeares thus Answ First the world is darke yea full of blindnesse Reade Luke 12.38 Iohn 12.35 and 3.19 Esa 60.2 Luke 1.79 Secondly as the world so we are dark For I. Partly wee are sleepie and drowsie Ephes 5.14 And II. Partly we are blind Ephes 4.18 and 5.8 Thirdly true light is onely in Christ and therefore all comes from him Iohn 1.5.9 and 8.12 Acts 26.18 Ephes 1.18 Quest 7 How manifold is light Answ Twofold namely First internall and passive of the mind And Secondly externall and active of the life and conversation Now this is never called the Eye but the former and therefore I will treat only of that a word or two The light of the mind is rightly resembled to an eye in many regards viz. First the eye is the most Noble part of the body and most profitable for the body Math. 6.22 So knowledge and the true illumination of the mind is most profitable for the soule and of great excellency and worth Secondly there are two eyes a right eye and a left Mat. 5.29 So the mind being enlightned judgeth sinisterly of all evill wayes and lookes upon the wicked world with the left eye but upon the wayes of God and all goodnesse with the right Eye and with a dexterous opinion Thirdly the best sight is when both the eyes looke upon one and the same thing for otherwise wee are squint-eyed Man looked thus when hee was first created but hath looked asquint ever since or else lookes with both the eyes upon a wrong object Man in his first creation looked with both his eyes stedfastly upon God and happy had man been if he had so continued but by the fall of Adam man was so corrupted in his sight that now both his eyes are commonly set upon evill and hee is but squint-eyed at the best The nearer man comes to his first estate the better hee is now when the mind is truely enlightned then wee beginne to withdraw our eyes from vanity and to lift them up to the hills where our hope and helpe and happinesse is Fourthly the left eye being shut the right eye seeth the more and contrarily So the more earnestly we looke with the right eye of the Mind and understanding upon spiritual things the more wee see and discerne of them and the lesse of carnall and mundane things On the other side if we looke with the left eye upon the world and wickednesse then it is but small insight we shall have into spirituall things but into corporall and carnall much Fiftly it was disputed of old whether the eye saw intromittendo or retromittendo so now adayes it is disputed whether man bee saved by an active or passive faith But I will not dispute it only let the Reader reade and marke Ephesians 2.8 Sixtly the eye is accurately and most carefully defended both by a fore-head which hangs over it and eye-lids which hang before it Oculus dicitur ab occulendo Varro because it is covered wrapped and veiled with many folds and fine coverings yea it stands in need of all because it is so tender a part and so quickly endangered Thus the mind and soule had need bee kept with watch and ward because a little thing hurts endangers and ruins it The tongue that speaks proud words destroyes the soule Polluted thoughts destroy the soule Jerem. 4.14 And the least evill thing shall not goe for nought but shall endanger the poore soule and therefore it had need carefully to be looked unto Seventhly the act of seeing comes from the spirits which are in the
Ghost it shall not be forgiven him neither in this world neither in the world to come Sect. 1 § 1. But the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven Quest 1 Concerning blasphemy against the blessed Spirit divers Questions will be made to wit What is the sinne against the Holy Ghost Answ 1 First some of the Ancients call it finall impenitency some hatred of all Christian and brotherly love and some desperation of mercy But these are improperly called blasphemy Answ 2 Secondly that sinne whereby the essence and person of the Holy Spirit is hurt or blasphemed certainly is not this irremissible sin and blasphemy for many Sabellians Eunomians and Macedonians Heretickes at first spake wickedly of the holy Spirit and denied his Deity but afterwards repenting found mercy and obtained remission of sinnes Answ 3 Thirdly neither is this unpardonable blasphemy a simple Apostacy from a knowne truth because hope of pardon is not denied to these Apostates neither is the gate of mercy eternally shut against them if they wil but repent This appeares from our Saviours prayers Father lay not this sinne to their charge and yet these for whom he prayes had called him Devill had said he had an uncleane spirit although they were convinced of his Doctrine and divine workes I argue hence thus Those who commit unpardonable blasphemy against the Holy Ghost are not to be prayed for But Christ prayed for those who spake evill of him and his Doctrine and workes against their consciences Therefore these had not committed that unpardonable sinne and consequently might have obtained mercy if they had but repented Answ 4 Fourthly Augustine serm 11. de verbis Apost saith it is Impugnatio finalis agnitae veritatis a finall opposing or resisting of a knowne truth Our Divines more largely and clearely define it thus Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost is an universall apostacy and totall relapse inseparably conjoyned with an hatred of the truth Or thus it is a deniall and opposition of a knowne truth concerning God and his will and workes of which truth the conscience is convicted and which denying and impugning thereof is done of set purpose and with deliberation We have an example hereof in the Emperor Iulian who was a learned and an eloquent man and a professour of the Religion of Christ but afterwards fell away and turned Apostate and hence is called Iulian the Apostate and wrote a Book against the Religion of Christ which was answered by Cyrill Afterwards being in a battle against the Persians hee was thrust into the bowels with a dart no man then knew how which dart he pulled out with his owne hands and presently blood followed which hee tooke in his hand as it gushed forth and flung up into the Ayre saying Vicisti Gallilae vicisti O Galilean meaning Christ thou hast now conquered me and so ended his dayes in blaspheming of Christ whom he once professed w Theod. lib. 3. hist Ca. 25. Why is this unpardonable blasphemy called Quest 2 the sin against the Holy Ghost First not because the Holy Spirit may bee offended Answ 1 and the sinne not reflect upon the Father and Sonne for he who sinnes against the third person sinnes also against the first and second from whom he proceeds Secondly it is the sinne against the Holy Ghost Answ 2 because the manifestation of spirituall and supernaturall truth is a divine worke which worke is immediately wrought by the Holy Spirit and therefore although they who wittingly and willingly oppose this truth sinne against all the persons of the blessed Trinity yet after a more singular manner they sinne against the Holy Ghost because they blaspheme his proper and immediate worke in their minds and maliciously impugne and resist his proper grace and power Thus I say it is called the sin against the Holy Ghost because it is against the operations of the Spirit which are three namely I. To enlighten the Minds with the light of the Gospell and hence it is called the Spirit of Revelation Ephes 1.17 II. To perswade the Mind to receive and embrace those truths which are revealed by the Gospell Heb. 6. for this is to receive the knowledge of the truth III. To worke in a man a certaine perswasion of the goodnesse of those things which he beleeves and this is to taste the good word of God And therefore the sinne against the Holy Ghost is a contumellous and reproachfull rejecting of the Gospel after that a mans mind by the blessed Spirit is supernaturally perswaded of the truth and goodnesse of this word and will of God laid downe in the Gospel Quest 3 Why is this sinne against the Holy Ghost called unpardonable or a sinne which cannot bee forgiven Answ 1 First not because it exceeds in greatnesse blasphemy against the Father and the Sonne Answ 2 Secondly nor because the Father and the Son are lesse then the Holy Ghost For all the three Persons are coeternall and coequall Answ 3 Thirdly neither because the greatnesse thereof exceeds either Gods mercy or Christs merit For both are infinite the mercy of God is above all his workes and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or price laid downe by our Saviour is of infinite value and Answ 4 worth Neither Fourthly it is called unpardonable because it is more difficultly pardoned then other sinnes are For every sinne is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a breach of Gods Law and therefore he can pardon if he pleaseth the greatest as well as the least Nor Answ 5 Fifthly because it is an inexcusable sinne for in many other sinnes men are altogether left without excuse which yet are frequently pardoned upon their repentance Answ 6 Sixthly but it is called a sinne which cannot be forgiven because simply all remission is denied unto it neither did any man ever obtaine pardon that committed it nor ever shall And that for these reasons to wit I. Because such are punished by God with such a finall blindnesse of mind and hardnesse of heart that they can never returne either to themselves or unto God by true and unfained repentance and therefore being excluded and debarred of repentance they must necessarily be denied remission because no penitencie no pardon Hence Saint Iohn forbids us to pray for such an one because it is impossible for such to be renewed by repentance Heb 6.5 II. Because such reject the only meanes of salvation as the sicke man who will not be cured For as that disease is incurable which doth so take away or destroy the power of nature that neither the retentive nor concoctive facultie can doe their duties So there is no cure for him who rejects the balme of Gilead no water to wash away his sin who tramples under his feet the blood of the Covenant and despiseth that all healing Iordan Heb. 6.4 and 10.20 and Act. 4.12 and cleare-purging and white-washing Fountaine no sacrifices to take away his transgressions who crucifieth unto himselfe the Lord of glory
the taste that it makes the sicke man refuse all good meat and medicine yea this sinne doth not onely disinable a man from doing good but makes him decline from the right rule and disorder and deprave himselfe more and more for they sinne not only simply out of malice but out of malice and that de industria What are the remedies against this sin or rather Quest 7 the meanes to preserve us from it First let us watch against all sinne yea against Answ 1 all beginning of evill Ephes 4.27 Hebr. 3.11 As those who feare the plague fly farre from the house infected therewith Secondly let us highly prize the presence and Answ 2 grace and operation of the Spirit for if wee so doe then we shall not reject him neither be rejected by him but if wee contemne and despise him then he will give us over unto strange delusions 2 Thess 2.10 11. Thirdly let us learne to esteeme and value Answ 3 Christ above all things and then wee shall not sleight the Gospel but thinke it a joyfull and blessed message Fourthly if with Peter wee have fallen Answ 4 then let us with him labour speedily to recover our selves As the most deadly poyson becomes not mortall if it be suddenly evacuated or purged out or vomited up So the greatest sin becomes not damnable if by and by with teares and sighes wee repent us of it Fifthly while our spirits are something soft Answ 5 and mollified with the sight and sense of our sins and while the Spirit of God workes in our hearts by his good motions let us pray fervently unto our God to pardon our by-past sinnes to plucke us out of the dominion and power of sinne and Sathan and to preserve us from all sins for the time to come § 2. Neither in this world nor in the world to Sect. 2 come Who are confuted by these words Quest 1 The Sadduces Answ who denied the immortality of the foule and affirmed that there were neither Spirits nor Angels Orig. contra Cels Non agnoscunt se Seculum nisi praesens that is they acknowledged not a time to come when there shall be a Resurrection Although our Saviour saith here Neither in this life nor in the life to come whereby is intimated both the immortality of the soule and the Resurrection of the body Hence by the Iewes these Sadduces were called Menaim or Probrosi contentious or calumnious Gabia the sonne of Pesisa reasoneth against the Sadduces thus x Talm. phesikra Si quod non fuit id fuit Ergo quod fuit erit That is if that which was not was Therfore that which was shall be He meant if God created and made the world of nothing may he not make our bodies of something againe Object Bellarmine strongly presseth this place for the proofe of Purgatorie arguing thus Blasphemy against the Spirit shall not be forgiven neither in this world nor in the world to come Therefore some sins shall be forgiven in the next world by the prayers and suffrages of the Church But this remission is neither obtained in heaven nor in hell Ergo it is in Purgatory and therefore there is a Purgatory Bell. de purgat lib. 1. Cap. 1. loc 1. ex novo Testam Because this objection is abundantly answered by our men I may be the shorter in the answer of it I referre the Reader to Amesius Bell. enervat tom 2. pag. 197. 198. and Chemnitius exam part 3. pag. 135 136. Arg. 7. and Hill of the knowledge of the true God pag. 387. 388. Pareus s And because this place is urged by the Rhemists upon Matth. 12. § 6. I therefore referre the Reader to venerable Fulke and Cartwright upon the place onely entreating him to observe that this is no Categoricall Argument but only an Enthymeme in which the Antecedent is Christs and therefore most true but the Consequent will appeare to be most false Answ 1 First that which is fully paid and satisfied is not remitted But the Papists say that by Purgatory paines the debt is paid and Gods justice satisfied and therefore sinnes are not remitted in Purgatory It is one thing to pardon an offence and another to punish it and therefore if sinnes be punished in Purgatory as they say then how are they pardoned It is one thing fully to satisfie a debt another freely to remit it for how can he be said to remit a debt which makes the debter pay the utmost farthing as they say the soules in Purgatory doe Now this place speaking not of a paying but of pardoning not of recompensing but of remitting It shall shall neither be forgiven in this life nor in the life to come belongs not at all to their Purgatory where men satisfie Gods justice as they wickedly say to the full and wherein for the time men are extremely tormented the paines thereof being as some of them say equivalent to the paines of hell for the time And therefore by this their Argument instead of raising the fabricke of Purgatory they have razed the foundation as appeares thus The scope of their Objection is to prove that the sinnes of beleevers are remitted in the world to come now to remit and to punish are opposites as Chrysostome Hom. de poen confes saith Nemo remittit qui punire vult and therefore if the sinnes of the faithfull be remitted and pardoned in the world to come as they would prove from this place then undoubtedly they are not punished in the world to come And thus instead of confirming they have confuted instead of planting they have plucked up Purgatory by the roots for to deny that soules are punished in Purgatory is to deny Purgatory it selfe Secondly by this world is meant a mans life Answ 2 time in this world from the birth to the dying day and it is certain that in this time sins may be remitted the world to come is after this life is ended but a mans sins may be remitted at the hour of death And therefore by a Synechdoche it may be true that sins are also remitted in the other because the hour of death is the beginning of that other world The sense and meaning of this place therfore is That the sin against the holy Ghost is neither remitted in life nor death Now according to this exposition the place maketh nothing for Purgatory at all Thirdly or by the world to come may be Answ 3 meant as is generally understood the world succeeding this and so answereth to the world present as Mark 10.30 They shall at this present receive an hundred-fold and in the world to come life everlasting Wherefore Purgatory being imagined to be now present it cannot be taken to belong to the world to come And so also Ephes 1.21 and Heb. 6.5 the world to come is taken for the world which shal be after this is ended Willet Synops fol. 405. yea the Papists I think are not able to produce one place of Scripture
if it shine in his face he will not question the existence of it A man often times dreams that he is awake when he is asleep but none are so sottish or doltish as not to know when they are awake that they are awake And therfore he that cannot tell whether Christ have taught him the knowledge of God or the mysteries of the Gospel may be assured to his grief that he is yet ignorant of them Secondly but because many dream that they Answ 2 are awake when indeed they are fast asleep and that they see the Sun at midnight when there is nothing lesse I will therefore give some signes Signes of the knovvledge of God whereby this may be known and principally such as serve for the convincing of those who falsly presume that they know God when indeed they are ignorant of the knowledge of him First if our hearts be inflamed with a desire Signe 1 of God it is a good signe that we know him for Ignoti nulla cupido a man cannot fervently desire what he knows not Here observe that this desire is two-fold namely I. Inchoate and begun and this is an earnest desire to know God 1 Iohn 5.20 For God is wont First to inflame and kindle the desire And then Secondly to communicate light we first cry Draw me O Lord and then I will run after thee Cant. 1.3 And by and by the Lord in mercie reveals himself unto us Wherefore we should here examine whether this desire of the Lord be in us or not do we make the knowledge and fruition of God that one thing which we desire before all other things Psal 27.4 do we long for him as the Hart doth for water Psal 42.1 or the thirsty earth for rain Psal 63.1 Certainly then we may be assured that God hath begun this heavenly knowledge in us and Christ is now about more fully and cleerly to reveal unto us the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven II. There is a permanent and continuing desire which lasts untill the desire be accomplished that is when we do not hunger after the knowledge of God or desire to enjoy him out of some sudden flash but out of a solide and serious affection and therefore cry earnestly for him and seek diligently after him and continue therein untill he hath been pleased to come and reveal himself unto us A loving wife desires alwaies the presence and society of her husband and could wish that he were alwaies at home so must we continually desire to be present with the Lord and never be at peace so long as we are absent from him for this permanent and continued desire of the Lord is an excellent sign of some true knowledge of him Object Against this permanent and continued desire it may be objected that Christ hath promised his children that they shall never hunger or thirst any more Ioh. 4.14 and 6.35 and Rev. 7.16 And therefore this earnest longing after God cannot stand with these promises nor become the faithfull Answ 1 First certainly the faithfull shall not lament as a widow who hath lost her husband irrecoverably Esa 47.9 Thren 1.1 Or like one who is ready to pe●ish through thirst as Sampson was Iudg. 15.18 For unto the faithfull shall be given grace which shall be as a living spring Ioh. 4.14 yea as flowing streams Ioh. 7.38 and not like a dry well But yet Answ 2 Secondly they shall thirst through a desire of more there is such sweetnesse in grace and in the fruition of God that the childe of God saith alwaies It is good for me to draw neer unto God yea he is my chiefest good and therefore the neerer I come unto him the more happy and blessed shall I be He who knows the sweetnesse of honey desires it the more and the faithfull are covetous of God and grace as the worldling is of gold Crescit amor nummi quantum ipsa pecunia crescit Though Dives store of money have Yet nought but money he doth crave For as his wealth doth daily grow Even so his love doth thereunto The more grace a Saint hath the more he desires for nothing is so good for him as that The more full sight and knowledge a man hath of God the more greedy he is of a little more If God be pleased to talk with Moses the servant is then so delighted therewith that he desires further to see his face If it be a thing so full of sweetnesse thinks Moses to hear of the Lord or to hear the Lord with the ear then it must needs be a transcendent felicity to see him with the eye and therefore O Lord let me see thy face They that once have been made partakers of the bread and water of life cry O Lord give us evermore of this bread Iob. 6.34 and this water Ioh. 4. He that is delighted with Musick desires it again and again and he that is taken with the pleasantnesse of wine drinketh often unto drunkennesse Certainly the Apostle had an eye unto this when he said Be not drunken with wine but be filled with the Holy Ghost Ephes 5.18 Intimating that those who have once a true tast of heavenly gifts wil desire a greater measure and degree of them The Spouse is sometimes absent and then the Church mournes Cantic 3.2 and 5.6 Not because she is uncertaine whether she have a husband or not or because she doubts of his love but because she is sicke of love Cantic 5.8 and therefore would perpetually enjoy his presence And therefore let us seriously prove and examine our selves by this desire of God which is the first signe and token of his knowledge Secondly examine whether we can cry truely Signe 2 unto God in faith Abba Father Galath 4.6 For none can be assured that God is their Father without some measure of true knowledge Thirdly try whether we unfainedly contemn Signe 3 and despise the world or not are wee exalted in spirit heightned in affection are our thoughts upon heaven and heavenly things not upon earth and earthly Colos 3.1 2. Indeed this is not an easie thing to doe for many say they care not for the world when indeed all their care is for it all their delight in it Undoubtedly he that doth indeed despise the world and weane his affections from it doth thereby shew that he looks for another world wherin dwels righteousnesse and in which a Crowne of glory is reserved for him and consequently hath some true knowledge of the ever living Lord and of the Mysteries of the Kingdome of heaven Fourthly we must prove and see whether wee Signe 4 be humbled or not 2 Corinth 10.5 and 1 Cor. 14.25 Spiritus sanctus in columbà igne quia igne zeli ardentes columbae simplicitate mansuetos efficit Greg. hom The Holy Ghost descended in the likenesse of a Dove and in fire because hee makes the faithfull to burne with the Fire of zeale and to be meeke and
to haven and from one Kingdome to another Thirdly in a Ship there are Vela sayles and Clavus a Rudder and this is the word of God whereby the Church is governed Fourthly there is Ventus wind now this is two-fold namely I. A faire wind which carries the Ship to his wished Port and this is the Holy Spirit who agitates and animates the sayles of the word II. A crosse contrary and tempestuous wind which endangers the Ship Now the hurtfull and troublesome winds are either I. Heretikes who deceive the simple and cause them to make shipwracke of faith as did Ebi●n Arius Cerinthus and divers others of old and many in our ages Or II. Tyrants who persecute the Church as did Maximinus Decius Diocletianus Iulianus and many moe besides Or Secondly Intra nos within us and this is the Devill who raiseth sometimes the wind of pride promising honour as he did unto Christ sometimes the wind of pleasure as he did unto David sometimes the wind of covetousnesse as hee did unto Nabal yea sometimes hee blowes one blast sometimes another according to the nature and disposition of him hee tempts Fifthly there are Conscensus the steps or ladder by which a man climbes up to the Ship This is Baptisme which is the ordinary admission and entrance into the Church For as Noah numbred the creatures which entred into the Arke by steps made for that purpose So by Baptisme the faithfull are publikely admitted into a covenant with God Sixthly there is Naulum the fraught or fare which is paid for passage over the sea in a Ship this is the Covenant which wee make with our Christ in Baptisme hee promiseth to carry us safe over the troublesome and dangerous sea of this world and bring us to our wished haven and wee promise him that wee will faithfully without fraud or coven pay our fraught He promiseth to bring us to our eternall countrey and immortall kingdome and wee promise him to render due and faithfull obedience throughout our whole passage and space of life Seventhly there is Co●●eatus provision of victuals and diet which the Master of the Ship must provide for the Passengers So Christ gives bread to all the faithfull in the Church and invites those who are thirsty to drinke that is hee gives himselfe who is the bread which came downe from heaven Iohn 6. and his blood which is drinke indeed And these hee gives freely Esay 55.1 Eighthly there is Terminus ad quem the haven unto which the Ship is bound and this is the Ierusalem which is above which all the faithfull Patriarkes Prophets Apostles and blessed Saints have desired and longed for when they were on the sea of this world Verse 25 26. VERS 25 26. And in the fourth watch of the night Iesus went unto them walking on the sea And when his Disciples saw him walking on the sea they were troubled saying it is a spirit and they cryed out for feare § 1. In the fourth watch of the night Sect. 1 Wee may here observe that the Iewes divided their night into foure quarters or greater houres termed foure Watches each Watch containing three lesser houres The first they called Caput vigiliarum the beginning of the Watches Lament 2.19 The second was the middle Watch Iudg. 7.19 not so termed because there were only three Watches as Drusius would have it s Iudg. 7.19 but because it dured till midnight The third Watch began at midnight and held till three of the clocke in the morning h Luke 12.38 The fourth and last Watch was called the morning Watch Exod. 14.24 And began at three of the clocke and ended at six in the morning And this is the Watch here spoken of Now these Watches were called also by other names according to that part of the night which closed each Watch. The first was termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Even The second was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Midnight The third was named 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cock-crowing And The fourth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Dawning Yee know not when the Master of the house will come at Even or a● Midnight or at Cock-crowing or at the Downing l Marke 13 35. Sect. 2 § 2. Walking on the sea Object It is questioned betweene us and the Church of Rome concerning the corporall presence of Christ whether a true body can be in a place and yet not occupy a place And Bellarm. lib. 3. de Euchar. Cap. 5. proves it thus from this verse It doth no more agree to a corporall substance or true reall body to fill and occupy a place then it doth to a heavie body to descend and sink downward or to a lucide and bright body to shine or to a coloured body to be seene or to a hot body to warme c. But God can make that a heavie body shall not sinke c. as is plaine from this verse where Christ vvalkes on the water and sinkes not and so also Luke 4.30 and 24.31 and Iohn 8 5● Therefore a body may bee in a place and yet not occupy or take up the place First the proposition is false because all Answ 1 the other things may bee done supernaturally but they are not contrary to nature But for a Body not to be in a place is directly contrary to nature And therefore these are wrong conjoyned Secondly it is evident from Scripture that Answ 2 God hath made a heavie body not to sinke as hee did Iron to swim and the rest but wee have no Scriptures to confirme this that a body may bee in a place and yet not fill it and therefore these are unequally ranked Thirdly it is false which the Iesuite avoucheth Answ 3 namely that in Scripture wee reade of heavy things which weighed not c for the bodies of Christ and Peter were no lesse ponderous when they walked upon the water then they were before but onely when they so walked they were sustained by a divine power and therefore when Peters faith failed he began to sinke whence it is cleare that he was as ponderous then as ever but that hee was upheld by an Almighty arme Fourthly although the bodies of Christ Peter Answ 4 when they walked upon the water were made light yet even then their bodies remained in a place circumscribed and ●illed the place wherein they were And therefore there are not the like reasons of these instances Fifthly that which Bellarmine saith of the invisibilitie Answ 5 of Christs body is false because it alwaies remained in it selfe visible but it is said to be invisible in regard of the multitude from whom suddenly hee withdrew himselfe or whose sight miraculously he hindred from seeing him and therfore Luke 24.51 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from them is added Scharp curs Theol. pag. 1474. § 3. And they cryed out for feare Sect. 3 The Disciples seeing one in the form of a man walking towards them upon the surface of the water thought certainly
hinder good things from us Or III. That our present estate makes more for Gods glory then another condition of life would doe Or IV. That the Lords appointed time is not yet come And therefore in this case wee must bee subject and patient and awaite the Lords leisure with perseverance in prayer Secondly the Lord often seemes not to regard Answ 2 his servants when they seeke for Christ Reade Psalme 104.229 Cantic 3.1 and 2 Corinth 3.18 Why doth God seeme herein not to regard Quest 2 his servants First because they are not as yet purged from Answ 1 the pollution of sinne but are captivated and contaminated by the reliques of rebellious lusts Or Secondly because they are not as yet truely Answ 2 humbled but selfe-conceited as the two sonnes of Zebedee were Or Thirdly because they are not as yet weaned Answ 3 from the world nor the world crucified unto them The Apostles wee see forsooke all for Christs sake and yet they strive who shall be the greatest so hard a matter is it for us to be weaned from the world Or Fourthly because they seeke not Christ fervently Answ 4 but coldly in their be is as the Church did Cantic 3.1 Or Fifthly perhaps because they have omitted Answ 5 or lost or let slip some occasion or meanes which hath beene offered unto them as the Church did Cantic 5.2 c. Or at least Sixthly because the Lord would have them Answ 5 being at first but probationers to be exercised that so grace may take the deeper impression in their hearts for that which is with much labour and difficulty acquired is the most charily kept and more highly prized And therefore if any have begun to set their faces towards Sion and to seek the Lord and after some long search have not found him Let them then confesse that the reason is either I. Because some sinne yet gets the upper hand over them Or II. Because they are yet proud and selfe-conceited Or III. Because they are not yet weaned from the world Or IV. Because they seek not Christ fervently and industriously Or V. Because they have not been so carefull as they ought to nourish and obey the motions of of the Spirit and to lay hold upon the offers of mercy and to use those means which God hath prescribed in his word Or else VI. Because God would inure them to labour at the first that so by exercise they may grow the stronger Wherefore if we desire to find Christ and to bring him home to our souls let us labour to remove these impediments and learn First to subdue and bring under all our corruptions and take heed that we be not subdued or brought under by any And Secondly to be humble and poore in Spirit and low in our own eyes And Thirdly to use the world as though we used it not and not to love it or set our hearts upon it And Fourthly to seek Christ with all our hearts and with all our soules And Fifthly To be carefull to attend to the motions of the Spirit and the calls of the word And. Sixthly to be constant and couragious in the use of all Holy meanes untill the Lord have fully revealed himselfe unto us for although hee come not within a little time yet he will certainly come at the last And therefore I. Be not discouraged neither faint II. Pray unto him to reveale himselfe and to be found by us Psal 31.16 and 80.3 7 19. and 119.135 III. Doe not delay or slack this search of Christ And IIII. Labour to remove all impediments out of our way and then hee that shall come will come and not tarry Sect. 5 § 5. O VVoman great is thy Faith Many profitable Quaeres will here bee made namely Quest 1 Whence had this Woman this great Faith Answ St. Marke saith that she heard of Christ and so according to St. Paul Rom. 10.14 her faith came by her Hearing Quest 2 How did the Woman approve her Faith to bee great Answ By her works as true faith ought to be confirmed Iames 2. Quest 3 What workes were remarkable or observable in this Woman Answ 1 First her comming unto Christ she flyes not to Witches or Inchanters or Idols or the intercession of the Saints or the mediation of the Apostles but onely unto Christ the Saviour of the world Secondly this woman by her comming unto Answ 2 Christ doth shew her love unto her Neighbour For the Law enjoynes the love of our Neighbour and the Gospell commends it as a good worke and this woman doth shew by her petition Lord be mercifull unto me and help me that she was as sensible of her daughters miseries as if they had been her own and besought Christ as earnestly in her behalfe as she could have done for her self observing herein the Apostles lesson Weep with those that weep Rom. 12.15 Thirdly this Woman prayes unto Christ Answ 3 which is an acceptable worke unto God when it is performed by his Children yea she invocates and implores his mercy in whom she only beleeves She doth not call upon or cry after the Apostles but onely prayes unto Christ And yet the Papists do alleadge this place to prove the intercession of the Saints But I. We doe not reade that she cryed after the Apostles but only unto Christ And II. The Apostles as yet were living and we deny not but the living may pray for the living though neither for the dead nor unto them III. The Apostles though not sought unto sue unto Christ as it seemes to help her because Christ answers I am not sent but to the lost sheep of Israel verse 24. but yet they prevail not and herein the Popish invocation of Saints is like unto this But Pareus s pag. 755 thinkes that the Apostles did not entreat Christ in her behalfe but disdained her desired that Christ would stint her lowd clamour and cause her to depart because with her cryes she troubled them Dimitte eam vel abige Drive her away Lord because she troubles us And therefore let us not with Papists forsake Christ and flee unto the Saints but with this faithfull Female let us First pray our selves unto our God his Christ And Secondly let us continue praying as she did untill we be heard And Thirdly let not our basenesse or unworthinesse hinder either us from praying or our faith in praying but let it be rather an Argument unto us that we shall be heard because the Lord never sends such empty away as are truly sensible of their unworthinesse Fourthly another good worke observable Answ 4 in this woman is Patience for shee patiently suffered her selfe to be called Dog and to bee sleighted as it were by Christ Fifthly in this woman we see a singular humility Answ 5 as well as perfect patience For our Saviour saith It is not good to take the Childrens bread and to cast it to Dogs And what saith this woman unto it I. She doth not
under his Sect. 2 charge § 2. Ye shall sit upon twelve thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel Object Some object this place to prove that CHRIST is not the judge of the world arguiug thus It is said here that the Apostles shall judge the twelve Tribes of Israel and 1. Corinth 6.2 The Saints shall judge the World Therefore Christ is not the onely Iudge of the world Answ The authority of judgement and giving sentence at the last day is proper to CHRIST alone and doth neither belong to the Apostles nor Saints so that they then shall judge onely as witnesses and approvers of CHRISTS judgement but of this something morefully in the following question How shall the Apostles judge the twelve Tribes of Israel seeing that CHRIST himselfe saith Iohn 5.22 The Father hath given all judgement to the Sonne First at the last day of judgement there shall be Answ 1 three sort of Iudges to wit I. Some shall judge in power now this power is either First absolute and independent and thus God the Father shall judge the world Genes 18.25 Shall not the Iudge of all the world doe that which is just Or Secondly delegate and derived and thus Christ as man shall judge the world Iohn 5.22 II. Some shall judge Assessoriè as Judges laterall or assistants and thus the Apostles shall judge the world as it is said in this verse III. Some shall judge by approbation that is they shall sit with the Judge in judgement to approve the sentence of the Judge and thus all the Saints and faithfull shall judge the world 1. Cor. 6 2. Secondly the Apostles shall judge the twelve Tribes of Israel three manner of wayes to wit Answ 2 I. By their doctrine and preaching of the Gospell because according unto that the sentence shall be pronounced at the last day Rom. 2.15 That is those at the day of judgement shall be acquitted that have beleeved and obeyed the Gospell and on the other side they shall be condemned that would not beleeve and obey it II. The Apostles shall judge the Jewes by their testimony which shall so convince them that they shall not be able to pretend ignorance of that doctrine according to which they shall be judged As CHRIST saith Matth. 24.14 That the Gospell shall be preached in the whole world for a testimony against them So the conscience of the Jewes will convince them and bring unto their remembrance when they see the Apostles what they both did and said amongst them for their edification and salvation and which obstinately and perversely they contemned and despised III. The Apostles shall judge the Tribes of Israel by their example for if the Jewes should pretend that the doctrine of the Gospell was too abstruse and sublime for them and that they were neither able to perceive it nor receive it then the Apostles will be set before them as exemplars of the contrary who being rude and illiterate men did notwithstanding vnderstand the doctrine of the Gospell and were thereby regenerated and made the children of God Chem. harm pag. 1827. § ult § 3. And shall inherit everlasting life Sect. 3 Who are enemies unto eternall life or erroneous Quest 1 and hereticall concerning it First the Atheists who deny it Answ 1 Post mortem nulla volupt●●s in any thinke that it is with man as with beasts when they are dead they are gone and they are neither sensible of paine nor of pleasure after this life But this is directly contrary to the text Answ 2 Secondly those are here erroneous who divide life everlasting that is which grant that the soule is eternall but deny the Resurrection of the body This belongs unto the enemies of the Resurrection whereof we have to speake elsewhere and therefore here I omit it Answ 3 Thirdly the Chiliastes and Millenaries are also here erroneous now amongst them there are divers opinions namely I. Some hold that the joyes of heaven and eternity it selfe were onely to continue for the space of 1000 yeares and then to cease Danaeus 29. Prateol 347. b●et 128. II. Some held that the Saints should wallow in the life to come in all carnall delights and fleshly pleasures and this is reported to be the opinion of the Mahumetanes but Mr. Bedwell shewes the contrary III. Some hold a double time namely First that the righteous should have joy and the wicked sorrow and paine for the space of one thousand yeares And Secondly that after that time the world should be renewed and the devils and damned spirits freed from their torments This was Origens opinion and it was condemned and judged erroneous by the 5. Counsell of Constantinople Prateol 378. § 9. IV. Some expresse and explicate this opinion by a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or transmigration of the soule thus not knowing how to agree amongst themselves Answ 4 Fourthly they erre concerning life eternall who hold that it may be merited by the labours endeaouvers and workes of man Object Against this Bellarmine objects life eternall is promised to good workes in this verse but a promise made with a condition of worke makes that he which fulfils the worke doth deserve the thing promised and may of right require it as his due and deserved reward Answ Durande in 2. d. 27. q. answers singularly two things for us viz. I. Promissio divina in Scripturis sanctis non sonat aliquam obligationem sed insinuat meram dispositionem liberalitatis divinae II. Quod redditur ex promissione praecedent e non redditur ex merito operis de condigno sed s●lum vel principalitèr ex promisso Quest 2 What and how many are the causes of this eternall life Answ There are three causes thereof to wit First Primaria the prime and principall Cause and that is God namely I. God the Father who gives it from himselfe and from whom all good things come Iohn 3.16 and .5.21 and. Iames. 1.17 II. God the Sonne who gives it from the Father yea gives it as the Father Iohn 5.21 and .10.28 Rom. 8.10 III. God the holy Ghost who gives it from the Father and the Sonne for the Spirit is life Iohn ● 5 Rom. 8.10 And therefore if we desire to be assured of eternall life let us be carefull to please God the Father and obey the God Sonne and seeke after God the holy Ghost Secondly Impulsiva the impulsive and moving cause and this is the onely mercy of God And therefore we must not arrogate any thing to our owne workes but laud the mercy and free grace of God Ephes 1.6 Thirdly Medians causa the instrumentall Cause or Meanes whereby we are made partakers of this life Now the meanes are these I. The Spirit of Regeneration who workes the beginning of this spirituall life Rom. 8. II. The word of Reconciliation 2. Cor. 5.20 and salvation Acts. 18.28 Iohn 6.68 Rom. 1.16 III. The Sacraments because they seale unto us the grace of God and confirme our faith IV. Hence
operations motions and gifts of the holy spirit are called Spirit c. Thirdly sometimes the regenerate part of man and the spirituall life of the regenerate and internall motions and revelations are called Spirit Answ 2 Secondly here this word Spirit is taken literally for an essence incorporeall incomprehensible and uncreated and this essence is called a Spirit for these causes to wit I. Because he is incorporeall A sight saith Christ hath not flesh and bones And thus Angels and humane soules are incorporeall also but they differ from this holy Spirit thus they are not infinite and incomprehensible essences as he is And II. Because he inspires and breathes into us the breath of spirituall life and thus the Father and the Sonne also doth give spirituall life of grace But it is by the Spirit And III. Because Spiratur he proceeds from the Father and from the Sonne Quest 3 How is this Spirit which is an incorporeall incomprehensible and uncreated essence called Sanctus holy The blessed Spirit of God is not onely called Sanctus Answ holy essentially because he is holy but in his nature and essence also Causally because he makes holy being the immediate temper of this impression of holinesse in the Creatures From this name of holy Spirit we may conclude that this blessed person is true God Object 1 Some against this affirme That the holy Spirit signifieth no other thing then that spirit of regeneration which is infused in man by God and so is as it were a creature This they would confirme from these two reasons namely Reason 1 First because this Spirit is said to pray for us Rom. 8.26 Now it is the spirit in us which prayeth for us and consequently this holy Spirit is not God To this J answer Answ 1 I. The Spirit is said to pray because he makes us to pray and so the worke it selfe seemes to come wholly and altogether from the blessed Spirit And. Answ 2 II. The Spirit also is said to cry Abba Father Gal. 4.6 not that he cryes but that we cry by him Rom. 8.15 Secondly they say the holy Spirit knowes not Reason 2 the Sonne because no man knowes the Sonne but the Father Matth. 11.27 To this we answer I. That our Saviour there excludes not the Answ 1 persons of the blessed Trinity but the creatures And II. That indeed none knowes the Sonne of Answ 2 themselves which are different from the Father in nature and essence but the holy Spirit is the same God by nature and essence though distinct in person And thus CHRIST saith That it was not his to give to sit on his Fathers right hand and on his left and else-where denies that hee knowes the time when the last day will be but both these were spoken onely in regard of his humanity And III. Jt is evidently false that the Spirit knowes Answ 3 not the Sonne For First the Spirit discernes all things 1 Cor. 2.15 And Secondly the Spirit teacheth us the knowledge of the Sonne yea all things Iohn 14. And Thirdly he is called the Spirit of the Sonne Object 2 Some againe grant that the Spirit is God but not that he is a ●istinct person from God but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Patris the vertue and power and operation of the Father and they would ground this upon those words The power of the most high That is the holy Spirit shall overshadow thee Luke 1.35 First it is not necessary that the place should be Answ 1 so interpreted and indeed the scope of the Angell in that place seemes to me to be double to wit I. That the blessed Virgin might understand the immediate worker of this great worke namely God the holy Ghost and hence he saith The holy Ghost shall come upon thee And II. That she might understand the primary Authour of this great worke and the true Parent of the child to be borne to wit God the Father and hence he saith The power of the most high shall overshadow thee Secondly although it were thus understood Answ 2 and that by the power of the Almighty were meant the holy Spirit yet it would not follow that therefore he is not a distinct person from God the Father For as although the Sonne by the word of the Father Iohn 1.1 And yet that takes not away the distinction of the person so the Spirit may be the power of the Father he proceeding partly from the Father and yet a distinct person from him as followes by and by How doth it appeare that the holy Spirit is God Quest 4 or how may it be proved First he created the world and therefore he is Answ 1 God Gen. 1 2. Iob. 33.4 And Secondly we are baptized in his name in this Answ 2 verse and therefore he is God for we are baptized onely unto God And Thirdly the Apostles were taught of God but Answ 3 it was the Spirit which taught them Luke 12 12. yea which teacheth all things Iohn 14.26 Fourthly we must pray onely unto God but in Answ 4 the Scriptures the holy Ghost is invocated therefore hee is God 2 Corinth 13 13. Answ 5 Fifthly but because Harding and Bellar. say That it cannot be proved out of Scripture that the holy Ghost is God we will produce some cleare testimonies where he is called God As I. That which the holy Spirit speakes Acts 28.25 Iehovah himselfe speakes Esa 6.8 Therefore the holy Spirit is Iehovah II. Our bodies are called the Temples of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6.19 and the Spirit dwelleth in us 1 Cor. 3.16 But our hearts are the Temples of God 1 Cor. 3 16. and 2 Cor. 6.16 and God dwels in us 2 Cor. 6.18 III. Ananias lyed against the holy Ghost Acts. 5.3 but he lyed not against men but God verse 4. And therefore the holy Spirit is God thus Augustine disputed contr Petil. 3.48 IV. The Father the world and the holy Spirit are one Iohn 5.7 Quest 5 How doth it appeare that this holy Spirit is a distinct person from the Father and the Sonne Answ 1 First He descended upon CHRIST in the likenesse of a dove when a voyce came from heaven from the Father This is my welbeloved Sonne c. Luke 3.22 Where there was the Father speaking from heaven the Sonne baptized upon earth and the holy Ghost descending from heaven to earth Therefore the holy Spirit is a person subsisting by himselfe and distinct from the rest Answ 2 Secondly He is called the Comforter Ioh. 14.16 and he was sent from the Father in the same place and from the Sonne Ioh. 16.7 and therefore hee differs from them both Iohn 14.26 Answ 3 Thirdly he is called the Spirit of the Father Ioh. 15.26 and the Spirit of the Sonne Gal. 4.6 Therefore he is neither the Person of the Father nor of the Sonne Answ 4 Fourthly three Persons are named Matth. 28.19 and 2 Cor. 13.13 and 1 Iohn 5.7 Object 3 But he is said to be the same with the