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

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he followeth it for the most part and preferreth it before all the rest Maxima ex parte amplector caeteris omnibus antepono He speaks of the New Testament onely and of that Latine Translation of the New Testament in comparison of all other Latine Translations which were before him as Erasmus Castalion and such like These places may serve to shew that the vulgar Latine is corrupt no Book being entire or free from error Isidore Clarius Brixianus praefat in Biblia a great learned man of their own affirmeth That it hath 8000 places in which the sense of the Holy Ghost is changed Since the Councel of Trent two Popes have set forth this vulgar Edition diversly which of these shall be received as authentical How often do the Papists leave the vulgar in all their controversies when it is for their advantage so to do it is a matter ordinary with them and needless to be proved There is no Edition Ancienter then the Hebrew if the Latine hath been used a 1000 years in the Church the Hebrew hath been used almost 3000 years the Chaldee Arabick Syriack and Greek Editions also have been used above a 1000 years and so should be authentique by the Papists Argument Having spoken of the authority of the Scriptures the Canonical Books and the authentical Editions I now go on to treat of the end of the Scripture its adjuncts or properties fitted to that end and Interpretation of Scripture The end of the Scripture comes next to be considered of this I have spoken somewhat afore but shall now inlarge my self The end of the Scripture is considered 1. In respect of God 2. In respect of us In respect of God the end of the Scripture is a glorifying of him Iohn 7. 18. 2 Cor. 4. 6. by it we may learn to know love and fear him and so be blessed The glory of God is the chief end of all things Prov. 16. 4. In respect of us The end of the Scripture is 1. Intermediate Temporal Edification which is fitly referred to five principal uses The two first respect the minde the other three the heart will and affections It is profitable for Doctrine it serves to direct to all saving truth nothing is to be received as a truth necessary to salvation but what is proved out of Scripture Where that hath not a tongue to speak I must not have an ear to hear Hoc quia de scripturis non habet autoritatem eadem facilitate contemnitur qua probatur Hieron 2. Reproof or Confutation to refute all errors and heterodox opinions in Divinity By this sword of the Spirit Christ vanquished Satan Mat. 4. 4. 7. 10. by the Scripture he opposed the Jews Iohn 5. 45. 46. 47. 10. 34. by this he refuted the Scribes and Pharisees Mat. 9. 13. and 22. 1. Luke 10. 25 26. 27. Matth. 19. 34. and 21. 12 13. the Sadduces Matth. 22. 29. Thus Apollus convinced the Jews who denied Jesus to be the Christ Acts 18. 28. Thus the Apostles convinced those which urged Circumcision and the observation of the Jewish Law Acts 15. 15. H●reticks are to be stoned with Scripture-Arguments Lapidandi sunt Heretici sacrarum literarum argumentis Athanasius By this Austin refuted the Pelagians Irenaeus the Ualentinians Tertullian the Mareionites Athanasius the Arrians 3. Correction of iniquity setting straight that which is amiss in manners and life 4. Instruction to righteousness Instruunt Patriarchae etiam errantes Basil saith The Psalms are a common Store house and Treasury of good Instruction The Title of the 32 and some other Psalms is Maschil that is A Psalm of Instruction 5. Comfort in all troubles Psal. 19. 8. and 119. 50. and 92. the Greek word for Gospel signifieth glad-tidings The Promises are the Christians best Cordials as Gods Promises are the rule of what we must pray for in faith so they are the ground of what we must expect in comfort All things which belong to the Gospel are comfortable 1. God the Author of the Gospel and revealed in it is the God of all comfort 2 Cor. 1. 3. 2. Jesus Christ the Subject of the Gospel is called Consolation in the abstract Luke 2. 25. 3. The Holy Ghost which breathes in the Gospel is called The Comforter Iohn Chap. 15. 16. 4. The Ministers or Ambassadors of the Gospel are the Messengers of peace and comfort 2. Ultimate and chiefest our Salvation and Life eternal Iohn 5. 39. and 20. 31. 2 Tim. 3. 15. It will shew us the right way of escaping hell and attaining Heaven It will shew us what to believe and practise for our present and eternal happinesse This was Gods aim in causing the Scripture to be written and we shall finde it fully available and effectual for the ends for which it was ordained by God CHAP. VIII Of the Properties of the Scripture THe properties which the Scripture must have for the former end are these It is 1. Of Divine Authority 2. True and Certain 3. The rule of Faith and Manners 4. Necess●ry 5. Pure and Holy 6. Sufficient and Perfect 7. Perspicuous and Plain 1. It s of Divine Authority we must believe it for its own sake It is Divine 1. In its Efficient cause and Original which is God the Father dictating in his Son declaring and publishing by his holy Spirit confirming and sealing it in the hearts of the faithful He wrote the Decalogue immediately with his own finger and commanded the whole Systeme and all the parts of Scripture to be written by his servants the Prophets and Apostles as the publique Actuaries and Pen-men thereof therefore the authority of the Scripture is as great as that of the Holy Ghost who did dictate both the matter and words Those speeches are frequent The Lord said and The mouth of the Lord hath spoken 2. In the subject matter which is truth according to godliness certain powerful of venerable antiquity joyned with a sensible demonstration of the Spirit and Divine presence and with many other things attesting its Divine Authority Whence it follows that the Authority of the Holy Scriptures is 1. Infallible which expresseth the minde and will of God to whom truth is essential and necessary 2. Supreme and Independent into which at last all faith is resolved from which it is not lawful to appeal By which singular authority the Scripture is distinguished both from all prophane and Sacred writings and Paul honors it with this Elogie A faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation 1 Tim. 1. 15. A more sure word 2 Pet. 1. 19. the Comparative for the Superlative in which there is no doubting and uncertainty but all things firm As God is Iehovah of himself so is his word Authoritative of it self and is true and to be obeyed whether thou think it Scripture or no. There is no higher authority for thee to appeal to it is above opinions of men conscience and therefore it must
vers 14. 1 Pet. 3. 15. Christians should be ready to give an answer to every man which doth ask them a reason of the hope which is in them the foundation is that which is first and surest laid and hath an influence into all the building Men should do all upon trial and solid conviction 1 Thess. 5. 21. 1 Ioh. 4. 1. The Papists would have the people take things upon trust they say those places concerne the Doctours of the Church not the people but compare the 20 and 21. vers in the Thessalonians and 1. vers with 6. in Iohn and we shall see the contrary This trial is profitable First Because truth then will have a greater force on the conscience Secondly This is the ground of constancie 2 Pet. 3. 17. Thirdly Hereby we shall be able to maintain the truth Matthew 11. 19. The Scriptures are fundamentum quo the fundamental writings which declare the salvation of Christians Iohn 5. 37. Christ fundamentum quod the fundamental means and cause which hath purchased and doth give it Iohn 4. 42. The person we must build on is Christ 1 Cor. 3. 11. He is called the foundation of foundations Isa. 28. The doctrinal foundation is the written Word of God which is not only the object and matter of our faith but the rule and reason of it Hold Christ as your Rock build on him the Scripture as your rule and the reason of your believing this is general there are some particulars First Some things are simply necessary It were a notable work for one to determine this how much knowledge were required of all Secondly Not absolutely necessary Some make the foundation too narrow some again too wide some say that if a man nean well and go on according to the light he hath though he know not Christ he shall be saved Others say that all are bound to know distinstly the Articles of the Creed Fundamental truths are all such points of Doctrine which are so plainly delivered in Scripture that whosoever doth not know or follow them shall be damned but he that doth know and follow these though erring in other things shall be saved All the principles of Religion are plain and easie delivered clearly in 1. Scripture they are to be a rule to judge of other Doctrines 2. They are very few say some reduced to two heads by Iohn Baptist Mark 1. 15. and by Paul 2 Tim. 1. 13. 3. In all principles necessary to salvation there hath been agreement among all the Churches of Christ Ephes. 4. 5. though they may differ in superstructures Quod ubique quod semper quod ab omnibus creditur Catholicam est Vincent Lyrin These Fundamentals said a Reverend Divine now with God are twelve three concerning God three concerning Man three concerning the Redeemer three concerning the means of attaining good by this Redeemer Concerning God 1. There is one God which is an Infinite Perfect and Spirituall Essence 2. This one God is distinguished into three Persons or manners of subsistence after an incomprehensible way which we believe but cannot perfectly understand The Father begetting the Son begotten and the holy Ghost proceeding 3. This one God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost is the Maker Preserver and Governour of all things by his Wisdom Power Justice Providence Concerning man 1. That he was made by God of a visible body and an immortal and spiritual soul both so perfect and good in their kindes that he was perfectly able to have attained eternal life for himself which was provided as a reward of his obedience 2. That being thus made he yielded to the temptations of the Devil and did voluntarily sin against God in eating of the Tree forbidden and so became a childe of wrath and heir of cursing an enemy to God and slave to the Devil utterly unable to escape eternal death which was provided as a recompence of his disobedience 3. That he doth propagate this his sinfulnesse and misery to all his posterity Concerning Christ. 1. That he is perfect God and perfect Man the second Person in the Trinity who took the Nature of man from the Virgin Mary and united it to himself in one personal Subsistence by an incomprehensible Union 2. That in mans Nature he did die and suffer in his Life and Death sufficient to satisfie Gods Justice which man had offended and to deserve for mankinde Remission of sins and Life everlasting and that in the same Nature he Rose again from the Dead and shall also Raise up all men to receive Judgement from him at the last Day according to their Deeds 3. That he is the only sufficient and perfect Redeemer and no other merit must be added unto this either in whole or part Lastly Concerning the Means of applying the Redeemer they are three 1. That all men shall not be saved by Christ but onely those that are brought to such a sight and feeling of their own sinfulnesse and misery that with sorrow of heart they do bewail their sins and renouncing all merits of their own or any creature cast themselves upon the mercies of God and the only merits of Jesus Christ which to do is to repent and believe and in this hope live holily all the remainder of their life 2. That no man is able thus to see his sinnes by his own power renounce himself and rest upon Christ but God must work it in whom he pleaseth by the cooperation of his Spirit regenerating and renewing them 3. That for the working of this Faith and Repentance and direction of them in a holy life he hath left in writing by the Prophets and Apostles infallibly guided to all truth by his Spirit all things necessary to be done or believed to salvation and hath continued these writings to his people in all ages Observe those places Act. 15. 11. 1 Tim. 1. 15. Let a man hold this that there was nothing but death in the world till Christ came and that he is come to save sinners Ioh. 17. 3. Secondly There are practical places 1 Cor. 6. 9. Titus 3. 8. Let us 1. See our selves dead without Christ and wholly trust in him 2. Let us be exemplary in our lives and conversations There are other Fundamentals which are only comparatively necessary that is expected from one man which is not expected from another and more from those that live in the Church Have these six Principles of the Apostle not only in your heads but hearts 1. That a man is dead in himself 2. That his remedy lies out of himself 3. Know the Doctrine of the Sacraments 4. The Word of God 5. Have some apprehension of the life to come 1. That there is a passage from death to life 2. That there is a fixed and irrevokable estate after this life 6. Hold the Doctrine of Faith so that Christ may live in you and you be delivered up into that forme of Doctrine lay hold on
determine all controversies 2. It is true and certain verity is affirmed of the Scriptures primarily interternally and by reason of it self which is called the truth of the object which is an absolute and most perfect agreement of all things delivered in the Scripture with the first truth or divine will of which the Scripture is a symbole and lively image so that all things are delivered in it as the Holy Ghost hath dictated whence those honorable Titles are given to it the Scripture is called A sure word 2 Pet. 1. 19. Psal. 19. 7. The Scripture of truth Dan. 10. ult words of truth Eccles. 1● 10 Yea truth it self Iohn 17. 17. having the God of truth for the Author Christ Jesus the truth for the witness the Spirit of truth for the Composer of it and it worketh truth in the hearts of those which hear it 2 Pet. 2. 2. The Apostle prefers the Scripture before the revelation made by Angels Gal. 1. 8. Christ commend● the certainty of it above all other sorts of revelation 1 Pet. 1. 19. above information from the dead Luke 16. 31. The word of God is not onely true but eminently true truth it self Prim● veritas and pura veritas The Scripture hath a twofold truth 1. Of assection it containeth no error 2. Of promise there is no unfaithfulness in it The first truth refer to the matter which is signified properly called Truth o● Verity The second refers to the in●ention of the Speaker which is properly called veracity or fidelity the latter is implyed Psal. 19. Thy Testimonies are sure and so th● sure mercies of David the former is implyed in that the word is purer then gold seven times refined There are two signs of truth in the Scripture 1. The particularity of it it names particulars in geneolagies dolosus versat●r in generalibus 2. Impartiality toward friends and their adversaries the most holy men have their faults described they give due commendation to their adversaries The truth of Scripture is 1. More then any humane truth of sense or reason 2. Above all natural reason as the Doctrine of the Trinity the ●ncarnation of Christ Justification by faith in Christ. 3. A truth which evidenceth it self 4. The standard of all truth nothing is true in Doctrine or Worship which is not agreeable to this 3. The Scripture is the rule of faith and manners It is termed Canonical generally by the Fathers of the word Canon which signi●ieth a rule because it contains a worthy rule of Religion faith and godliness according whereunto the building of the house of God must be fitted These properties saith Suarez are required in a rule 1. That it be known and easie the Scripture is a light 2. That it be first in its kinde and ●o the measure of all the rest 3. It must be inflexible 4. Universal 1. It is a perfect rule of faith and obedience able to instruct us sufficiently in all points of faith or doctrinals which we are bound to believe and all good duties or practicals which we are bound to practise Whatsoever is needful to believe or to do to please God and save our souls is to be found here whatsoever is not here found is not needful to beleive and practise for felicity Christ proveth the resurrection of the dead being an Article of our faith against the Sadduces Mat. 22. 32. and the use of the Sabbath being a rule of life against the Pharisees by an inference made from the Scripture Mat. 12. 7. The heads of the Creed and Decalogue are plainly laid down in Scripture therefore there we have a perfect rule of faith and manners It is a rule 1. For Faith Ierome in his controversie with Helvidius saith Credimus quia legimus non credimus quia non legimus We believe because we read we do not believe because we do not read Christ often saith Have ye not read is it not written what is written in the Law Luke 10. 26. Faith and the word of God must run parallel This we first believe when we do believe saith Tertullian that we ought to believe nothing beyond Scripture When we say all matters of Doctrine and Faith are contained in the Scripture we understand as the Ancient Fathers did not that all things are literally and verbally contained in the Sripture but that all are either expressed therein or by necessary consequence may be drawn from thence All controversies about Religion are to be decided by the Scripture Deut. 12. 32. and 4. 2. Iosh. 1. 7. Franciscus de Salis a Popish Bishop saith The Gospel was honored so much that it was brought into the Councel and set in the midst of them and to determine matters of faith as if Christ had been there Erasmus in his Epistles tells us of a Dominican that when in the Schools any man refuted his conclusion by shewing it contrary to the words of Scripture he would cry out Ista est argumentatio Lutherana protestor me non responsurum This is a Lutheran way of arguing I protest I will not answer to it 2. It is a perfect rule for our lives and practice Psal. 19. 11. and Psal. 119. 9. In Scriptures there are delivered remedies against all vices and means are there laid down for the attaining of all vertues We must follow the Scriptures exactly and not swerve to the right hand or left a metaphor taken from a way or rule saith Chamier When Linacer a learned English man heard the beginning of the 5 of Matthew read Blessed are the poor in spirit c. he broke forth into these words Either these sayings are not Christs or we are not Christians 1. It is a perfect not a partial and insufficient rule as the Papists make it As God is a perfect God so his word is a perfect word if it be but a partial rule then it doth not perfectly direct and he that should perfectly do the will of God revealed in Scripture should not yet be perfect Secondly if the Scripture be a partial rule then men are bound to be wise above that which is written that is above the Law and Gospel Regula fidei debet esse adaequata fidei aut regula non erit Whitakerus 1. All addition and detraction are forbidden to be made by any man to the word Deut. 4. 2. and 12. 32. Deut. 5. 32. Gal. 1. 8. 2. The Scripture is said to be perfect to beget heavenly and saving wisdom Psal. 19. 8. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16 17. 3. Men in the matter of Faith and Religion are sent to the Scripture onely 2. The Scripture is an infallible rule Luke 1. 4. of which thou hast had a full assent Regula rectè definitur mensura infallibilis quae nullam vel additionem vel detractionem patitur 3. It is a just rule Lastly It is an universal and perpetual rule both in regard of time and person ever since the Scripture hath been it hath been the onely
infallible ground there is none such of supernatural truth but the Scripture Because our Adversaries do contend for Traditions not written hotly and zealously against the total perfection of the Scripture that they might thrust upon us many points by their own confession not contained in Scripture and usurp to themselves irrefragable authority in the Church it shall not be amisse largely to consider of this matter And first to enquire of the signification of the words Greek and Latine which are translated Tradition and then to come to the matter which is controverted between us and the Papists The Greek word signifying Tradition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in the New Testament is used onely in these places Matth. 15. 2 3 6. Mark 7. 3 5 8 9 13. 1 Cor. 11. 2. Gal. 1. 14. Colos 2. 8. 2 Thess. 2. 15. and 3. 6. and in the vulgar Latine is rendred Traditio Mat. 15. 2 3 6. Mark 7. 3 5 8 9 13. Gal. 1. 14. Col. 2. 6. 2 Thess. 2. 15. and 3. 6. and Praecepta 1 Cor. 11. 2. Whereto the Rhemists translation which seemeth to be but a bare translation of the Vulgar Latin doth wholly agree using the word Tradition every where excepting 1 Cor. 11. 2. where they use the word P●ecepts but set in the margent the word Tradition Arias Montanus in his interlineal Translation doth render it Traditio Beza doth commonly express it by the word traditio In the English Geneva Bible we translate it by the word Instruction Tradition calling mens precepts Traditions the Apostles Doctrine Ordinances or Instructions not that we feared the word Tradition but because we would not have the simple deceived as though the unwritten verities of the Papists were thereby commended or as though we had some honourable conceit of them and what we did herein the signification of the word doth give us free liberty to do in our last English Translation we use the word Tradition as often as the Vulgar Latine or the Rhemists have done not that we were driven by fear or shame to alter what was done before but because we would cut off all occasion of carping at our Translation though never so unjust First We contend not about the name Tradition the word may lawfully be used if the sense affixed thereto be lawful 2. All Traditions unwritten are not simply condemned by us 3. The Apostles delivered by lively voice many observations dispensable and alterable according to the circumstances of time and persons appertaining to order and comelinesse only we say That they were not of the substance of Religion that they were not general concerning all Churches 4. We receive the number and names of the Authors of Books Divine and Canonical as delivered by tradition but the Divine Truth of those Books is in it self clear and evident unto us not depending on the Churches Authority The Books of Scripture have not their Authority quoad nos from the approbation of the Church but win credit of themselves and yield sufficient satisfaction to all men of their Divine Truth whence we judge the Church that receiveth them to be led by the Spirit of God yet the Number Authors and Integrity of the parts of those Books we receive as delivered by Tradition 5. The continued practice of such things as are neither expresly contained in Scripture nor the example of such practice expresly there delivered though the Grounds Reasons and cause of the necessity of such practice be there contained and the benefit and good that followeth of it we receive upon Tradition though the thing it self we receive not for Tradition Of this sort is the Baptism of Infants which may be named a Tradition because it is not expresly delivered in Scripture that the Apostles did baptize ●nfants nor any expresse precept there found that they should so do yet is not this so received by bare and naked Tradition but that we finde the Scripture to deliver unto us the ground of it Bellarmine and Maldonat both do confesse That the Baptism of Infants may be proved by the Scripture and therefore Maldonat concludes Nobis verò traditio non est Bellarmine as Whitaker shews contradicts himself for first he saith That the Baptism of Infants is an unwritten Tradition and after That the Catholicks can prove Baptism of Infants from the Scriptures To this head we may referre the observation of the Lords-day the precept whereof is not found in Scripture though the practice be And if for that cause any shall name it a Tradition we will not contend about the word if he grant withall that the example Apostolical hath the force of a Law as implying a common equity concerning us no lesse then it did them If any man shall call the summary comprehension of the chief heads of Christian Doctrine contained in the Creed commonly called The Apostles Creed a Tradition we will not contend about it For although every part thereof be contained in Scripture yet the orderly connexion and distinct explication of those principal Articles gathered into an Epitome wherein are implied and whence are inferred all Conclusions Theological is an Act humane not divine and in that sense may be called a Tradition But let it be noted withall that we admit it not to have that credit as now it hath to be the Rule of Faith for this is the priviledge of holy Scripture The Creed it self was gathered out of Scripture and is to be expounded by the Scripture therefore it is not given to be a perfect Canon of faith and manners By Tradition is noted 1. Whatsoever is delivered by men divinely inspired and immediately called whether it be by lively voice or by writing 2. In special it notes the word of God committed to writing 1 Cor. 15. 3. 3. It signifies Rites expresly contained in writing Act. 6. 14. 4. It betokens that which is not committed to writing but only delivered by lively voice of the Apostles 5. It signifieth that which is invented and delivered by men not immediately called In Scripture Tradition is taken 1. In good part for any Rite or Doctrine of God delivered to his Church either by word or writing whether it concern faith and good works or the external Government of the Church 2 Thess. 2. 15. 1 Cor. 11. 15. and 23. 2. In ill part it noteth the vain idle and unwarrantable inventions of men whether Doctrine or Rites Mat. 15. 3. Mar. 7. 8 9. When the Fathers speak reverently of Traditions by the word Tradition either they understand the holy Scripture which also is a Tradition it is a Doctrine left unto us Or by Traditions they understand observations touching Ecclesiastical policy Du Moulin Reasons confirming the sufficiency of Scripture against Popish Traditions 1. The whole Church is founded upon the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles which were not true if any Doctrine was necessary to Salvation not revealed by the Prophets and Apostles 2.
the repentance of Ahab 2. Of punishment by which he appointeth to the delinquent creature the punishment of eternal death for the least sinne Gen. 2. 17. Rom 6. 23. which death is begun in this life in divers kindes of miseties and punishments which for the most part are proportionable to their sins Gen. 3. 17. and 20. 18 but is perfected in the life to come when the full wrath of God is poured upon it Iohn 3. 36. 2 Thess. 1. 16. This justice is so essential to God immutable and as I may so speak inexorable that he cannot remit the creatures sins nor free them from punishment unlesse his justice be satisfied God cannot dispense against himself because sins do hurt the inward vertue of God and the rule of righteousnesse the integrity therefore and perfection of God cannot stand if he satisfie not that yet through his bounty and goodnesse he hath found out a way by which due satisfaction may be given thereunto viz. By Christ who hath born a punishnent equivalent to our sins for us The Scripture proves the justice of God 1. Affirmatively when it calls him Just A Revenger Holy Right and extols his Justice Exod. 9. 27. Psal. 11. 7 Ier. 12. 1. 2. Negatively when it removes from him injustice and iniquity respect of persons and receiving of gifts and also all the causes and effects of injustice Deut. 32. 4. 10. 17. Dan. 9. 14. Iob 8. 3. 3. Affectively when it Attributes to him zeal anger fury Exod. 20. 5. 32. 10. Numb 11. 10. which are not in God such passions as they be in us but an act of the immutable Justice 4. Symbolically when it calls him a consuming fire Deut. 4. 24. compares him to an angry Lyon an armed Souldier Isa. 38. 13. 5. Effectively when it affirms that he renders to every one according to his works 1 Sam. 26. 23. Gods Justice comprehends his righteousnesse and truth he is just in words and deeds Gods Justice is considered four ways 1. As he is free Lord of all and so his decrees are just Rom. 9. 13. 14. 2. As he is God of all and so the common works of preserving both the good and bad are just 1 Tim. 4. 14. Mat. 5. 45. 3. As a Father in Christ and so he is just in performing his promises and infusing his grace and in bestowing the justice of his Son 1 Iohn 1. 5. 4. As Judge of all the world and so his justice is not onely distributive but corrective His Justice is 1. Impartial he will not spare 1. Multitude all S●dome and Gomorrha and the old World perished 2. Great ones the excellency or greatnesse of any creature will not exempt it from punishment the Angels and Adam fell he spared not the Angels but threw them into hell Adam was cast out of Paradise for one sinne 3. Neernesse the Jews Gods people formerly are now cast off Moses and David were punished 2. General it extends to a mans posterity God will visit the iniquity of fathers upon their children 3. Inexorable no sinners can escape unpunished the sins of the godly are punished in their surety Christ and they are afflicted in this life God is Justice it self justice is essential to him his will is the rule of justice a thing is just because he willeth it and not he willeth it because its just He will right the wrongs of his children 2 Thess. 1. 6 7 8. He cannot be corrupted nor bribed Gods Justice comprehendeth two things under it 1. Equity in that he directs men equally and requites them equally commanding all and onely good things such as they in reason ought to do promising and threatning fit and due recompences of their obedience and disobedience 2. Truth whereby he declareth nothing to them but as the thing is and fidelity whereby he fulfilleth all that he hath spoken The Arminians urge How can God in Justice command a man by his word the performance of that which cannot be done by him without the inward help of the Spirit and yet in the mean time God denies this inward grace unto him God may without blemish to his Justice command man to perform his duty although he have now no strength to do it because once he had strength and he hath now lost it Precepts and Exhortations ordinarily signifie the approving w●ll of the Commander and his duty to whom they are propounded although sometimes the duty rather of the hearer then the will of the speaker be declared by them Rescrip Ames ad responsum Grevinch c. 12. Deus jubet aliqua quae non possumus ut noverimus quid ab illo petere debeamus Aug. de grat lib. arbit c. 16. Gods Commandments and Exhortations shew what he approves and wills to be done as good but his promises or threatnings shew what he intendeth effectually to bring to passe Mr. Pemble of Grace and Faith Da Domine quod jubes jube ●uid vis said Austin God giveth thee although thou be unable a Law to square thy life by for three causes Ut scias quid acceperis ut videas quid amiseris ut intelligas unde repetendum sit quod amiseris It reproves such as live in sin Exod. 34. 17. Psal. 5. 5. Gal. 6. 6. if God be merciful that he may be feared much more is he just that he may be feared 2. We must take heed of justifying the wicked we should be just in our actions to man in buying and selling in rewarding and punishing Magistrates Ministers Masters Parents should be just We should not murmure at Gods disposing justice in making us poor and should yield to his directing justice obeying his Commandments seem they never so unreasonable Mauritius the Emperor when his wife and children were murthered before him and his own eyes after bored out uttered this speech Iustus es Domine recta judicia tua We should get Christs righteousnesse to satisfie Gods Justice for us and to justifie us The consideration of Gods Justice should afright us from hypocrisie sinning in secret keeping bosom sins It ministers comfort to the godly who are wronged by the wicked they shall have an upright and just Judge who will uphold them in a good cause Psal. 33. 24. It may serve to exhort us to glorifie Gods Justice both in fulfilling of his promises and punishing wicked men Psal. 7. 18. and 51. 15. 4. God is True Truth or veracity is by which God is true as in himself so in his sayings and deeds He revealeth himself to his creature such a one as indeed he is Real truth or the truth of things is a property of them by which they are the same indeed which they seem It is an agreement betwixt the being and appearance of things it is double 1. Essential or of the very substance of things 2. Accidental of the qualities and actions of things and this as it is referred to the reasonable creature for
such truth can be no where but in it is inward and outward according as the actions are Inward truth of understanding is an agreement betwixt its conceit of things and the things themselves contrary whereto is error or misjudging and of the will contrary to hypocrisie and dissimulation Outward 1. Of word which is Logical when I speak as the thing is Moral when I speak as I conceive the thing to be and also in the matter of promises when I mean as I say and hold still that meaning till I have actually made good my words 2. Of deeds when they are such in the intention and meaning of my minde as in the outward pretence and are agreeable to the promises I have made God is true in all these respects 1. His Essence is real and true he is a God indeed not in imagination alone the Scripture calls God the true God To know thee saith our Saviour Christ the onely true God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ. He is the true God not a bare conceit of our own head or siction He hath not an imaginary and counterfeit but a very real being he is indeed such he saith he is for that which gives being to other things must needs it self be in very deed The other supposed gods alone in name and in fancy of the worshippers but he is 2. He hath a true not an erroneous conceit of things he knows all things most exactly he is indeed a willer of true goodnesse 3. He speaks nothing but as the thing is and as he doth conceive it he means what he promiseth and doth what he means the Lord dissembleth not with men he is true in his word and his whole word whether Narrations Promises Threats Visions or Predictions He is abundant in truth Exod. 34. 6. what he telleth it is as he telleth it what he promiseth or threatneth to do he intendeth and will perform Psalm 89. 33 34 Deut. 7. 9. 2 Cor. 1. 20. Promissa tua sunt quis falli timeat cum promittit veritas Aug. Confes. l. 12. c. 1. 4. God is true in his works they are not done counterfeitly as those of the Devil but truly Psal. 145. 17. Rev. 15. 3. The Scripture proves the truth of God 1. Essentially when it affirms God to be true in his works Deut. 32. 4. Psal. 25. 10. Rev. 15. 3. 16. 7. 2. In his words which is proved both affirmatively Iohn 17. 17. 2 Sam. 7. 28. and negatively Num. 23 19. 1 Sam. 15. 29. Heb. 6. 18. Reason 1. All lying and falshood ariseth from weaknesse and imperfection or wickednesse neither of which is in God seeing to be God is to be perfect and absolute He is the Lord God of truth Psal. 34. 5. his Son is truth Iohn 14. 6. his holy Spirit the Spirit of truth Iohn 17. 6. the Gospel is the word of truth Col. 1. 5. God is the chief and first truth the Author of truth truth is in him essentially and immutably Psal. 100. 5. onely true Rom. 3. 4. This distinguisheth him from false gods 2 Chron. 15. 3. Iohn 17. 3. God is worthy to be trusted honored and esteemed ergo most true Where it is said God seduced the Prophets it is not so understood as if God inspired a false prophecy and an error but that he delivered them to the devil to be seduced 1. It serves to reprove the wicked who believe not threats and the weak Christians who in temptations and desertions doubt of promises 2. It exhorts us to desire the manifesting of this truth Psal. 43. 3. we should be true like God Zach. 8. 16. in our words and deeds keep our vows with God and promises with men God loves truth as in himself so in his creatures but abhors dissimulation and hypocrisie Prov. 12. 22. The true Church is the pillar of truth Gods word the word of truth Psal. 19 9. We should therefore believe Gods word and depend upon his promise seem it never so unlikely or impossible give him the glory of his truth He that believeth setteth to his seal that God is true he that believeth not maketh God a lyer Will you receive the testimony of men and will you not much more receive the testimony of God He that believeth Gods promises will surely do the things to which the Lord by promises encourageth him He that believes the threats will forbear the thing which God by his threats seek to deter him from This is matter of solid comfort for all the true children of God if he be faithful they must be happy Truth is that vertue of the will by which it is moved to goodnesse for Gods sake when the thing moving us to be good is Gods Commandment and the end whereat we aim is the glorifying and pleasing of God then we serve God in truth 5. God is Faithful Rev. 19. 11. First In himself by an uncreated faithfulnesse Secondly In his Decrees Isa 14. 24 27. Thirdly In all his ways and works Psal. 145. 17. 1. Of Creation 1 Pet. 4. ult 2. Of Redemption Heb. 2. 17. 3. Of Justification Iohn 1. 19. 4. Of Protection and Preservation of his Church Rev. 19. 11. Fourthly In all his words and speeches 1. His Commandments are the rule of truth and faithfulnesse to us Psalm 19. 9. 2. His Predictions are all faithfully accomplished many thousand years after as Christs incarnation in the fulnesse of time so Gen. 49. 10. 3. His Menaces are most faithful 4. His Promises Exod. 12. 41. Heb. 10. 23. There is a difference between faithfulnesse in the Creator and in the Creature 1. This is the ocean and fountain from whence all faithfulnesse and truth in men and Angels issue 2. This is the rule and measure of that and the nearer it comes to this the more compleat it is 3. It is unchangeable in him the Angels that fell were faithful but soon changed so Adam 4. It is in God in most high perfection Reasons 1. Because of his most just and righteous nature whose most righteous will is the rule of all his ways Psal. 145. 17. 2. He is most perfect and unchangeable in perfection 3. Because of his most pure and holy affection 4. There is no imperfection in him to hinder his faithfulnesse Gods faithfulnesse is the ground of all true Religion 1. We must ground all the Doctrine of faith all the Articles of faith all our judgement and opinion in matters of faith upon this faithfulnesse of God and this by holding fast all the faithful word Titus 1. 9. Rom. 3. 4. 2. All our obedience of faith must be grounded on this Iohn 3. 33. Heb. 11. 11. 10. 23 Zeph. 3. 5. Heb. 6. 30. 3. All our prayers of faith must be grounded on Gods faithfulnesse Dan. 9. 16. 1 Iohn 1. 9. 1 Pet. 4 19. Psal. 1. 5. 4. All sound profession of faith must be grounded on this Genes 17. 1. Psal. 91. 4. 5. All
Saviour had spiritually so he would corporally or externally manifest his power over Devils This possessing was nothing but the dwelling and working of the Devil in the body one was demoniack and lunatick too because the Devil took these advantages against his body and this hath been manifested by their speaking of strange tongues on a sudden The causes of this are partly from the Devils malice and desire to hurt us and partly from our selves who are made the slaves of Satan and partly from God who doth it sometime out of anger as he bid the Devil go into Saul or out of grace that they may see how bitter sin is Vide Voet. Thes. de Energ Quest. 5. The meaning of Christs temptation by Satan and how we shall know Satans temptations Matth. 4. The Devil carried Christs body upon the pinacle of the Temple It is hard to say whether this were done in deed or vision only although it seem to be real because he bid him to throw himself down headlong but now this was much for our comfort that we see Christ himself was tempted and that to most hideous things Satan was overcome by him Damascene of old and some of our Divines say That Satan in his temptations of Adam and Christ could not have accesse to their inward man to tempt them therefore he tempted Adam by a Serpent and audible voice and Christ by a visible Landskip of the world Satans temptations say some may be known by the suddennesse violence and unnaturalnesse of them All these are to be found in the motions of sinne which arise from ones own heart original sinne will vent sinne suddenly Isa. 57. 20. Violently Ier. 8. 6. and it will break forth into unnatural lusts blasphemies against God and murders against men Mark 7. 21 22. Mr Liford saith if they seize upon us with terrour and affrightment because our own conceptions are free it is very difficult to distinguish them When thoughts often come into the minde of doing a thing contrary to the Law of God it is an argument Satan is at hand The Devil tempts som●●o sinne under the shew of vertue Iob. 16. 2. Phil. 3. 6. Omnis tentatio est assimila●●●●o●i say the Schoolmen Some under the hope of pardon by stretching t 〈…〉 ds of Gods mercy lessening of sinne propounding the example of the multitud 〈…〉 e●ting before men what they have done and promising them repentance hereafter before they die The difference between Gods temptations and Satans they differ First In the matter the matter of Gods temptations is ever good as either by prosperity adversity or commandments by chastisements which from him are ever good but the matter of Satans temptations is evil he solicits us to sinne Secondly In the end the end of Gods temptation is to humble us and do us good but of Satans to make us dishonour God Thirdly In the effect God never misseth his end Satan is often disappointed A question is made by some Whether Satan may come to the same man with the same tentation after he is conquered Mr Capel resolves it that he may part 1. of Tentation cha 7. pag. 132 133. It is also a question An omnia peccata committantur tentante Diabolo John 8. 41 44. Every work of sin is a work of falshood and all falshood is from the Devil And likewise it is questioned Whether man might not have sinned if there had not been a Tempter To that it is answered he might for Satan fell without a tempter the angelical nature was more perfect then the humane 2. Nature is now so depraved that we cannot but sin Iam. 1. 14. Non eget daemone tentatore qui sibi factus est daemon saith Parisiensis Fourthly What is meant by delivering up to Satan 1 Cor. 5. 5 Some with Chrysostome think it was a corporeal delivering of him so that he was vexed of him by a disease or otherwise and that they say is meant by destruction of the flesh and so expound that Mark 6. They had power over the unclean spirits that is not onely to expel them but to put them in whom they pleased but this is not approved therefore others make it to be a casting out of the company of the faithful and so from all the good things that are appropriated unto that condition and therefore to the destruction of the flesh they expound to be meant of his corruption for so flesh is taken in Scripture Sixthly Whether the Devils may appear 1 Sam. 28. He which appeared was 1. Subject to the Witches power therefore it was not the true Samuel 2. If Samuel had been sent of God he would not have complained of trouble no more then Moses did Matth. 17. 3. The true Samuel would not have given countenance to so wicked a practice to the Magick Art 4. True Samuel would not have suffered himself to be worshipped as this did 5. Saul never came to be with the soul of Samuel in blisse yet he saith 'to morrow shalt thou be with me 6. God refused to answer Saul by Prophet Vision Urim or Thummim therefore he would not answer him by Samuel raised from the dead 7. True Samuel after his death could not lie nor sinne Heb. 12. 23. He said Saul caused him to ascend * and troubled him if he had been the true Samuel Saul could not have caused him to ascend if not he lyed in saying he was Samuel and that he troubled him If God had sent up Samuel the dead to instruct the living Why is this reason given of the denial of the Rich mans request to have one sent from the dead because if they would not believe Moses and the Prophets They would not believe though one rose from the dead In so doing the Lord should seem to go against his own order The souls of Saints which are at rest with the Lord are not subject to the power or inchantment of a Witch But Samuel was an holy Prophet now at rest with the Lord. Bellarmine answereth That Samuel came not by the command of the Witch but by the command of God and that rather impeached then approved Art Magick which he proveth because the Witch was troubled But the Scripture expresly teacheth that her trouble was because it was the King who having lately suppressed Witches had now in disguised apparel set her on work and so deceived her Bellarmine objecteth The Scripture still calleth him that appeared Samuel as if it were not an ordinary thing in Scripture to call things by the names of that which they represent or whose person they bear the representations of the Cherubims are called the Cherubims And things are often called in Scripture not according to the truth of the thing or Scriptures judgement thereof but according to the conceit and opinion of others The Angels which appeared to the Patriarchs are called men Gen. 18. the Idols of the Heathen are called gods Gen. 25. because
And so much for the Matter of true Worship The Manner followeth which is as carefully to be looked unto as the Matter neither shall any service we perform be acceptable unto God further then the manner of performing the ●an●● is agreeable to his will Know four things are required to the right performing of Gods Services in this kinde 1. Sincerity 2. Diligence 3. Faith 4. Reverence And when we do worship truly diligently faithfully reverently then we also worship him acceptably and fruitfully For sincere worshipping of God we may learn it by the Apostles denying it of some that preached Christ of contention what we do for a right end attain●●g of grace and for the right motives Gods Commandment and Honour that is done truly for truth in this case is the agreement betwixt the shews we make and meaning we have To the sincere performing of the acts of Worship three things are requisite 1. That we do it upon a right motive which must be Gods Commandment because he requireth us so to serve him not pray to be seen of men 2. For a right end which must be the shewing of our obedience to God and winning of grace from him according to his promise 3. With the joyning together of the inward and outward man the Soul and Body The Scripture requireth this in prayer by special name saying that God is neer to all those that call upon him in truth that is with a true intention to please him and a true desire to get grace from him The thing which ought to make a Preacher preach is that he may be Gods Instrument in converting and edifying souls seeing God hath appointed to do this work by the Ministry of men The thing which should make the people come to Church is that by hearing their souls may live seeing God hath appointed preaching to save men When we do in our souls aim at the right end of the several kinds of Worship we perform seeking to approve our selves to God so in them that by them we may profit according to his institution this is Truth The second thing is Diligence which will follow upon Truth and is joyned with it for alwaies they go together as the contrary vices and therefore in the Hebrew one word signifies both negligently and guilefully in that speech Cursed be he that doth Gods work negligently He that would serve God acceptably must serve him heedfully Eccles. 5. 1 2. Mark 4. 23 24. Heb. 2. 1 2. Reasons 1. Because of Gods peculiar presence in his Ordinances Ezek ult ult Revel 21. 3. he is there present 1. In Majesty Exod. 40. 34. 2 Chron 5. 14. Isa. 6. 7. the Ordinances of the Gospel are compared to a wedding Feast Matth. 22. where the King comes in therefore we are said to come to a throne of grace 2 In holiness Isa. 6. 3. Psal. 48. 1. Ezek 45. latter end Rev. 4. 8. 3. As a Judge Ezek. 22. 2. Rom. 2. 14. Iob 9. 15 4. In jealousie as in the second Commandment which is quicksighted Iosh. 24. 19. 2. Look to the rule of all your converses with God Rom. 12. 1. word-service it may be rendred as 1 Pet. 2. 2. It is 1. A straight rule Psal. 19. 7. one may quickly go awry 2. A spiritual rule Rom. 7. 12. 3. An harmonious rule Iam. 2. 10. 3. Consider the evil frame of your spirits that are to walk with God in this rule 1. There is much enmity in them to every duty 2. Much inadvertency in the things of God 3. Looseness and vanity in the thoughts Ier. 4. 14. 4. God is more honoured or dishonoured in your religious duties then in all the actions of your lives there they actively intentionally and solely intend his glory therefore more of their spirits should be laid out in these duties then in all their other actions Psal. 103. 5. 5. The Devil is there present Matth. 13. 19. 1. As an accuser as of Iob. 2. As an Opposer Zach. 1. 2. 3. As an Executioner Isa. 29. 13 14. This diligence is a setting ones self to procure to ones self the benefit of the exercise an indeavour and striving in good earnest to have the graces wrought in us which these exercises are to work This Diligence consists in three things 1. A taking pains to fit and prepare our selves for these Exercises before hand 2. A due carriage of our selves in them 3. A due use-making afterwards For the first we must all know that there is a very great natural unfitness in our hearts to perform any religious work any good work at all that which is of it self unfit to effect any thing must be fitted for the work before it be imployed in the same The heart of the best man is very apt to be out of tune as it were for Prayer Meditation hearing when it is exercised about worldly matters it is made very unapt to matters of godliness because it cannot converse in the world in that holy and discreet manner it ought wherefore it must be new tuned and that is to be the first pains of a good man without which his following labour is lost This preparation is double 1. Common to all Exercises of Religion 2. Proper to some special Exercises The common Preparation stands in four things 1. In knowledge of the Exercise to be performed both that it is by God required and what good he intends by and how he would have u● perform it For it is impossible that any man should well worship God in anything who hath not received convenient information of the nature and use of that thing No man can pray except he know what it is to whom to be made in whose Name and what good he shall attain by it Nor reade nor hear unless he know the needfulness and nature of these Ordinances For it is the Word of God by which all things are sanctified in that our minds are thence instructed of the lawfulness and manner of performing them This is the foundation which must be first laid to all that follows to be made acquainted what the exercise is what good it will bring how necessarily required that so a man may do what he does out of this knowledge and not serve God he knows not with what 2. A man before he comes into Gods presence about such works must repent of his sins yea renew his repentance bethinking himself of the several things which he latest committed to work a fresh measure of grief in his soul with a full determination of heart to strive more against them for God cannot endure to be served with a foul hand The sprinkling water must be sprinkled upon us and we must purge our selves from all uncleanness if we draw near to him So in the old Law they were to wash their clothes after some pollution and when God came to them to put off their shooes And that is it which David saith I will wash mine hands in
may be done or not But if thou beleevest answer me some Questions with which things the Philosopher being astonished answered I beleeve and giving him thanks that he had overcome him was not onely of the same judgement with the old man but also began to give counsell to others who were before enemies to the Christian Faith as well as himself to assent to the Christian Doctrine and added an Oath that he was not onely changed by a divine Deity but also by a certain unexpressible force was converted to the Christian Religion If Zanchy may be credited the perseverance of Saints in the Faith is a main part of the Gospel Vedelius in his Panacea Apostasiae bono constantium lapsorum praescripta l. 1. c. 3. shews that an Apostate breaks all the ten Commandments I wish that the Reformed Churches by their unhappy divisions fomented by the Boutefeus of Christendom the lesuites do not weaken themselves and accomplish their enemies great design It is observed by Chemnitius that in the year 1540. the Iesuites by the Intercession of Cardinal Contarenus did obtain from Paul the III that he would confirm that order by his Pontificial Authority who did ratifie it with this caution that onely threescore men should be of that Society But when afterward they observed that that order was more active then others in upholding the tottering Church of Rome he decreed in the year 1543. that this Society of the Iesuites should not be limited to any either terms of places or number of persons It is also observable what Campanella laies down in his discourse of the Spanish Monarchy It is manifest saith he that the King of Spain if he could subdue England with the Low-countreys would soon become Monarch of all Europe and a great part of the world Now nothing so much conduceth to overthrow the English as a dissension and discord stirred up amongst them and the Dutch and perpetually nourished which will soon saith he afford better occasions In Chap. 27. of the same Book he speaks much to the same purpose Parsons the English Jesuite in his Memorial for Reformation or a remembrance for them that shall live when Catholick Religion shall be restored unto England he would have the grand Charter burnt the municipal Laws abrogated and the Innes of Court converted to some other use that for Lawyers Then for Divines The Colledges in both the Vniversities should be onely in the power of six men who should have all the Lands Mannors Lordships Parsonages c. and what ever else belonged to Church or Cloister resigned into their hands That at the beginning no mans conscience be pressed for matters in Religion then that publick disputations between Papists and Protestants be held in both the Vniversities That for some years it will be more commodious for the publick and more liberty for the Preachers to have no Appropriation nor Obligation to any particular Benefice but Itinera mitto caetera M. Smiths Preface to Dailles Apology for the Reformed Churches translated by him He saith there he hath been told by the London Booksellers that at the least thirty thousand Popish Books have been printed here within these three last years Shall the Iesuitical and heretical party be so active for Popery for errour and shall not the Orthodox be as studious to hold fast and hold forth the Truth Let Magistrates make the interest of Christ his Truths his Worship his People their great interest let them discountenance gross errors and damnable heresies Let Ministers preach down pray down live down those abominable Doctrins now amongst us Let all the people of God study Fundamentals labour to be stablisht in the Truth and in their places oppose Falshood Libertinism and all horrid Blasphemies and pray earnestly to God that he would cause the false prophets and the unclean spirits to pass out of the Land Zech. 13. ● and I should yet hope though our case be very sad that God would continue his Gospel still amongst us in power and purity though by our sins we have forfeited so great a mercy Which blessing that it may be vouchsafed unto us though altogether unworthy shall be the prayer of Your true Christian Friend and hearty well-wisher Edward Leigh TO THE Christian and Candid READER READER DIvers have since the publishing of my Treatise of Divinity consisting of three Books exprest their good esteem thereof and withall have said that if the like were done upon the whole Body of Divinity it would be a very usefull and profitable work I have therefore inserted divers things into the former Treatises and also enlarged them so farre by the addition of other Subjects as to make a compleat Systeme or Body of Divinity I relate not here of the Covenant and Promises Asslictions or Martyrdoms because I have in my Books of Divine Promises and Saints Encouragements sufficiently discussed those several points Divines go different wayes in their handling of positive Divinity and give several Titles to their Books Some call their Work A Systeme of Divinity Others A Synopsis Others A Syntagma Others Common places Some The M●rrow Some The Body of Divinity Others The Summe of Divinity There are Calvins Institutions Bullingers Decads Zanchies Works Gerhards Common places Ursins Summe of Divinity and some others that have more fully handled the Body of Divinity but there are few of our English Writers unlesse Master Perkins of old and Bishop Usher lately who have largely and fully written in English this way Some reduce all the Principles of Religion into more some to few Heads Some referre all to those four Heads 1. Quae Credenda What things are to be beleeved in the Creed 2. Quae Facienda What things are to be done in the Commandments 3. Quae Petenda What things are to be begged in the Lords Prayer 4. Quae Recipienda What things are to be received in the Sacraments The Creed Commandments the Lords Prayer and the Sacraments Though I do not punctually observe that method yet I handle all those four Subjects I speak of God and his Attribute Almighty in the second Book and handle all the Articles which concern Christ in the fifth Book where I treat of the Recovery of man by Christ and somewhat of the holy Ghost in the seventh Book where I handle the Benefits by Christ in Sanctification Sanctification of the Church and Communion of Saints I speak of in the seventh Book Of Forgivenesse of sins in the fifth Petition of the Lords Prayer and in the Doctrine of Iustification Of the Resurrection of the Body and Last Iudgement and Life Everlasting I treat in the last Book I handle the Commandments in the ninth Book The Lords Prayer and Sacraments among the Ordinances in the seventh Book I shall now particularize the several Subjects of each Book according to the method I observe First I treat of the Scriptures or Word of God the Divine Authority of both the Old and New Testament
determines the matter That part of Theology which treateth of God and his Nature of his Simplicity Eternity Infinitenesse is altogether contemplative for these things fall not within compasse of action that part of it which treateth of our manners and the well ordering of our lives is meerly practick for it is wholly referred unto action Theology is more contemplative then practick seeing contemplation is the scope of action for by good works we aspire unto the beatificall vision of God Theology amongst the Heathens did anciently signifie the Doctrine touching the false worship of their gods but since it is applied as the word importeth to signifie the Doctrine revealing the true and perfect way which leadeth unto blessednesse It may briefly be defined The knowledge of the truth which is according to godliness teaching how we ought to know and obey God that we may attain life everlasting and glorifie Gods name or thus Divinity is a Doctrine revealed by God in his Word which teacheth man how to know and worship God so that he may live well here and happily hereafter Divinity is the true wisdom of divine things divinely revealed to us to live well and blessedly or for our eternal Salvation Logica est ars benè disserendi Rhetorica ars benè loquendi Theologia ars benè vivendi Logick is an art of disputing well Rhetorick of speaking well Divinity of living well Tit. 2. 11 12. Iam. 1. 26 27. It is such an art as teacheth a man by the knowledge of Gods will and assistance of his power to live to his glory The best rules that the Ethicks Politicks Oeconomicks have are fetcht out of Divinity There is no true knowledge of Christ but that which is practical since every thing is then truly known when it is known in the manner it is propounded to be known But Christ is not propounded to us to be known theoretically but practically It is disputed whether Theology be Sapience or Science The genus of it is Sapience or Wisdom which agreeth first with Scripture 1 Cor. 2. 6 7. Col. 1. 19. 2. 3. Prov. 2. 3. Secondly with Reason for 1. Wisdom is conversant about the highest things and most remote from senses so Divinity is conversant about the sublimest mysteries of all 2. Wisdom hath a most certain knowledge founded on most certain principles there can be no knowledge more certain then that of faith which is proper to Divinity The difference lurketh in the subject Wisdom or Prudence is either Moral or Religious all wisdom whether moral and ethical political or oeconomical is excluded in the definition and this wisdom is restrained to divine things or all those Offices of Piety in which we are obliged by God to our neighbour The third thing in the definition is the manner of knowing which in Divinity is singular and different from all other arts viz. by Divine Revelation The fourth and last thing in the definition is the end of Divinity which is 1. Chiefest The glory of God 2. Next A good and blessed life or eternal salvation begun in this life by the communion of Grace and Holinesse but perfected in the life to come by the fruition of glory This end hath divers names in Scripture it is called The knowledge of God John 17. 3. Partaking of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. Likenesse to God 1 John 3. 2. Eternal Salvation the vision and fruition of God as the chiefest good The next end of Divinity in respect of man is eternal life or salvation of which there are two degrees 1. More imperfect and begun in this life which is called Consolation the chiefest joy and peace of Conscience arising 1. From a confidence of the pardon of sins and of freedom from the punishment of it 2. From the beginning of our Sanctification and Conformity with God with a hope and taste of future perfection in both 2. More Perfect and Consummate after this life arising from a full fruition of God when the soul and body shall be perfectly united with God III. How Divinity is to be taught In the general it is to be handled Methodically There is a great necessity of method in Divinity that being usefull both to enlighten the understanding with the clearnesse of truth and to confirm the memory that it may more faithfully retain things therefore in Divinity there will be a special need of art and orderly disposal of precepts because the minde is no where more obtuse in conceiving nor the memory more weak in retaining There is a different way of handling Divinity according to the several kinds of it Divinity is threefold 1. Succinct and brief when Divine Truth is summarily explained and confirmed by Reasons and this Divinity is called Catechetical Systematical 2. Prolix and large when Theological matters are handled particularly and fully by Definitions Divisions Arguments and Answers this is called handling of Common-Places Scholastical and Controversal Divinity 3. Textual which consists in a diligent Meditation of the holy Scriptures the right understanding of which is the end of other instructions This again is two-fold either more Succinct and applied to the understanding of the Learned as Commentaries of Divinity or more Diffuse and Popular applied to the Capacity and Affections of the Vulgar as Preaching which is called Patheticall Divinity and is especially usefull to correct the manners of men and stirre up their Affections IIII. How Divinity is to be learned There is need of a four-fold minde to the study of it 1. Of a godly and heavenly minde most ardent Prayers in our learning being frequently poured out to God the fountain of light and wisdom that dispelling the darknesse of ignorance and errour he would deign to illuminate our minds with the clear knowledge of himself we cannot acquire Divine Wisdom as we do the knowledge of other arts by our own labour and industry it is a praise to learn humane a●● of our selves here we must be taught of God 2. O● a sober minde that we may not be too curious in searching out the profound Mysteries of Religion as about the Trinity Predestination we must be wise to Sobriety and not busie our selves about perplexed and unprofitable Questions being content to know such things which are revealed to us for our Salvation 3. Of a studious and diligent minde other arts are not wont to be gotten without labour this being the Queen of arts requires therefore much pains both for its difficulty and excellency 4. Of an honest and good minde Luk. 8. 40. We must learn 1. With a denial of our wit and carnal reason not measuring the unsearchable wisdom of God by our shallow capacities 2. With denial of our wicked affections 1 Pet. 1. 2 3. 3. With a firm purpose of Obedience Ioh. 7. 17. Psal. 50. 23. Prov. 28. 28. V. The things contrary to Divinity are 1. Heathenism being altogether ignorant of and refusing the true and saving knowledge of
most unjust means extort money from Gojim that is the Gentiles Paulus Fagius in his Annotat. on Deut. 17. 17. Scripture Arguments are the chiefest to convince an unbeliever Christ by divers Arguments Iohn 5. labours to convince the Jews that he was the Messiah promised 1. Iohn bare witnesse of him vers 33. 2. His works bare witnesse of him verse 36. 3. The Father did bear witnesse of him vers 37. 4. He produceth the Testimony of the Scriptures vers 39. They are they which testifie of me Will you not believe Iohn my miracles my Word from Heaven then believe the written Word If we believe not the Testimomy of Scripture nothing will convince us though one rise from the dead nor Christ himself if he were here in the flesh and should preach unto us Ioh. 5. ult The Lord in executing of his Judgements commmonly observes proportion and retaliation Antichrist is the greatest opposite to Gods Law and Word he is called therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thess. 2. 8. The lawlesse one He is without Law above Law against Law He abuseth Scripture takes upon him to jud●● and interpret Scripture therefore it shall be his ruine 2 Thess. 2. 8. God shall destroy him with the Spirit of his mouth id est Verbo suo Beza God hath consecrated the Word to this purpose the end of it is not only to save but destroy being the savour of death to some and it is a fit instrument for such a work Antichrists strength is in mens consciences only this will pierce thither Heb. 4. 12. God useth the Word for the destruction of Antichrist these wayes 1. It discovers him his doctrine his errors 2. It hardens him 3. It condemneth him and passeth sentence against him CHAP. III. II. The Books of Scripture FRom the Divine ●lows the Canonical Authority of the Scripture The books of Scripture are called Canonical books say some from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which word is used 2 Cor. 10. 13. Phil. 3. 16. Gal. 6. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mark the double Emphasis this notable Canon because they were put into the Canon by the Universal Church and acknowledged to be divinely inspired by it and also are made a perfect Canon or Rule of all Doctrine concerning Religion Credendorum agendorum of Faith and Manners of all things which are to be believed or done toward salvation But Cameron thinks it is not termed Canonical because it is a Rule for that book saith he is called Canonical which is put into the Catalogue which the Ancients called a Canon of those writings which are esteemed Divine Becanus saith They are called Canonical both because they contain a Rule which we ought to follow in faith and manners and because they are put into the Catalogue of Divine books The Conditions of a Canon are these 1. It must contain Truth or be an expresse Form and Image of Truth which is in the Divine minde 2. It must be commanded sanctified and confirmed by Divine Authority that it may be a Canon to us in the Church These books were sanctified either commonly all of both Testaments by the Testimony of the Spirit and Church and Canon it self or the books of the Old Testament were specially and singularly confirmed by Word Signs and Event as the Pentateuch but the Prophetical books and Hagiographa before their carrying into Babylon by extraordinary sign the Cloud and Veil in the Temple 1 King 8. 10. Levit. 16. 2. and Gods answer by Ephod Urim and Thummim Exod. 28. 30. after their carrying away into Babylon by singular testimonies of events The books of the New Testament are confirmed by the Son of God revealed in flesh by his sayings and deeds Heb. 1. 2. and by the powerful Ministry of the Apostles by Signs Vertues and Miracles Mark 16. 20. There is a three-fold Canon in the Church Divine Ecclesiasticall and False The Divine Canon is that which properly and by it self is called the Word of God immediately inspired of God into the Prophets and Apostles This according to the divers times of the Church is distinguished into the Old and New Testament 2 Cor. 3. 6 14. this is a common division of the sacred Bible among Christians as in the version of Tremellius and Iunius Testamenti veteris novi Biblia sacra and the Geneva gives that Title to their Bible La Bible qui est toute la Saincte Escriture du vi●l noveau Testament Augustine thinks they are better called Vetus novum Instrumentum Heinsius Grotius Vetus novum Foedus Vide Grotii Annotat. in libros Evangelii A Covenant is an Agreement between two a Testament is the Declaration of the Will of one It is called in regard of the Form Convention and Agreement between God and man a Covenant in regard of the manner of confirming it a Testament For 1. In a Testament or last Will the Testators minde is declared so is the Will of God in his Word therefore it is called a Testimony often Psal. 19. and 119. 2. Here is a Testator Christ a Legacy eternal life Heirs the Elect a Writing the Scripture Seals the Sacraments 3. Because it is ratified by the death of Christ Heb. 9. 16 17. The Books of the Old Testament are the holy Scriptures given by God to the Church of the Jews shewing them what to believe and how God would be worshipped The New Testament containeth the books which treat of salvation already exhibited and Christ already come in the flesh All the books of the Old Testament were written originally in Hebrew because they were committed unto the Hebrews Rom. 3. 2. except what Daniel and Ezra wrote in the Chaldee The Jewish Church receiving them from God kept them and delivered them to Posterity Many grave Authors hold That the Hebrew was the first Tongue and Mother of all the rest and it may probably be collected from the names of our first Parents It was called Hebrew saith Erpenius not from Heber of the Posterity of Shem as Iosephus Ierom and others think when it is manifest that he rather spake Chaldee then Hebrew because Abraham the Patriarch which drew his original from him was a Chaldean but it was so called saith Erpenius as all the Rabbins Origen and others testifie from the Hebrews which people arose from Canaan It is honoured with the Title of the Holy Tongue saith the same Erpenius because the most holy God spoke it to his Prophets delivered his holy Will written in it to the Church and because it is very probable from the opinion of great men that holy men shall use it with God hereafter in Heaven Vide Buxtorfium de Linguae Hebraeae origine Antiquitate Sanctitate There are many Hebraisms also in the New Testament many words and phrases rather used according to the manner of the Hebrews then the Greeks by which it is manifest that the same Spirit was
the person if it be publick in regard of the means is not forbidden for it is lawful for one man with Scripture Toti resistere mundo saith the Glosse of the Canon-Law the meaning of this place is That the Prophets were no Interpreters or Messengers of their own mindes but Gods The Catholicks hold saith Chamier meaning still by that Title the Protestants that the Scripture is to be interpreted by private labour and industry viz. of Augustine Ierom Chrysostom but not in a private sense that is in a sense arising from the brain of the Interpreter It is true saith Cartwright against the Rhemists that the Scriptures cannot be expounded of every private spirit nor which is more of any private spirit nor yet of all private spirits together but only of those which are inspired of God viz. the Prophets and Apostles which are here opposed unto private Interpretation And therefore it is evident That the Exposition of the Scripture ought not to be fetched from Ecclesiastical either Fathers or Councels which speak not by Inspiration but from the Scriptures themselves what he meaneth he declareth in the next verse where he sheweth the reason of his saying namely that it must be interpreted as it was written and by as high Authority Seeing therefore it was first spoken by holy men which spake as they were led by the holy Spirit and were inspired of God it followeth that it must be interpreted by the same Authority The Interpretation therefore that is brought out of the Apostles and Prophets is not private although it be avowed by one man only On the other side that Interpretation which is not brought from thence although it have the allowance of whole general Councels is but private This is a principal meaning of our Saviour Christ when he willeth that we should call no man Father or Master in the earth that is in matter of Doctrine we should depend upon the Authority of no man nor of all men in the earth but only upon Christ and upon God Our reasons by which we prove that the chiefest Judgment and Authority of interpreting Scriptures is to be given not to the Church but to the Scriptures themselves and the holy Ghost 1. That which only hath power to beget faith that only hath the chiefest Authority of interpreting Scripture and of determining all Controversies concerning Faith and Religion but the Scriptures onely and the Holy Ghost have this force Rom. 10. 17. The Holy Ghost onely can infuse saving Faith into our hearts which is called by the Schoolmen Infusa Fides The Faith which we have from the Church is acquired and sufficeth not to a certain perswasion 2. The Scriptures cannot be interpreted but by the same Spirit wherewith they were written that Spirit is found no where but in the Scripture whosoever have promises from God to understand the Scripture may interprett it but so have all the faithfull 3. Christ himself makes the Scripture a Judge Iohn 12. 48. and still appealed to it 4. Although the Fathers were men indued of God with excellent gifts and brought no small light to understanding of the Scriptures yet learned men in our dayes may give a right sense of sundry places thereof which the Fathers saw not yea against the which perhaps they consent Hath any man living read all the Fathers Nay have all the men living read them Nay Can they shew them Can they get them I had almost said Can they name them In the Exposition of those words Tu es Petrus super hanc petram almost every one of the Fathers at least the most part of them and the best expound it of Peters faith yet the Papists understand it non de fide sed de persona Petri. Here they disagree themselves from the Fathers Iohn 10. 16. by the title of one Shepheard Augustine Chrysostome Ierome Cyril Theodoret Theophylact Euthimius Rupertus Cyprian and other Fathers agree that Christ is theredesigned but Stapleton saith the Pope is there meant In the Division of the Law they go clean contrary to the greatest part of the Fathers for they divide the Commandments as we do but the Papists make the two first one and the tenth two 2. They have no father to countenance them in this but Augnstine Revet de Authoritate Patrum c. 5 6 7. There were no writings of the Fathers for a time many of them wrote 400 years after Christ but some 500 and 600 years after Christ what rule had they before that time of interpreting Scriptures The Fathers were given too much to allegorizing Cajetane therefore in the Preface of his Commentaries upon the Books of Moses saith That the exposition of the Scripture is not tied by God to the sense of the Fathers therefore he admonisheth his Readers not to take it ill if he sometime dissent from the stream of the Fathers 4. The Doctrine of the Church must be examined by the Scriptures Acts 17. 11. If Pauls doctrine much more may the decrees of the Pope Church Councels be examined by the Scriptures 5. The interpretation of the Scripture is a gift freely given by God for the edification of the Church Rom. 12. 6. 1 Cor. 12. 10. therefore it is not tied to a certain kinde of men but common to the faithful 6. The faithful are commanded diligently to try and examine every doctrine 1 Thess. 5. 21. 1 Iohn 4. 1. which cannot be altogether done without interpretation What means must be used in the interpretation of Scripture The end of the Scripture we heard was to direct the Church to all saving truth The means to be used for the attaining of that end by the Minister is diligent study and humble Prayer by the People attentive reading hearing prayer and meditating First the Teachers must pray earnestly to God for his spirit to inlighen them Mat. 7. 7 8 9. Rom. 15. The Scriptures are understood by that spirit that dictated them Secondly The Pastors and Teachers of the Church must diligently and painfully study the Scriptures giving themselves to read compare place with place Iohn 5. 39. Search the Scriptures it is a metaphor taken from such as search for Gold and Silver Oar in the earth who will search and sift and break every clod to finde out the gold Solomon useth the same metaphor Prov. 2. 4. and to this diligence in searching doth the Apostle exhort Timothy 1 Tim. 4. 13. This diligence of often exprest in Scripture in the Old Testament by the phrase of meditating in the word Iosh. 1. 8. Psal. 1. 2. Thirdly they must labour for a competent knowledge in the original tongues the Hebrew and Greek in which the Scripture was written that so they may consult with the Hebrew Text in the Old and the Greek in the New Testament and see with their own not anothers eyes as Gen. 3. 15. The Papists read it corruptly She shall break here the original soon determines the
saith Dr Twisse Bucer also was an excellent Divine He hath written a two-fold Exposition on all the Psalms one more large and Paraphrastical the other briefer and ad verbum Francis Iunius the very Oracle of Textual and Scholastical Divinity as Dr Hall cals him Epist. 7. Decad. 1. Vatablus his Annotations upon the Old Testament and Beza's on the New are commended by Zanchy in his Miscellanies But Arnoldus Boot in his Index Autorum before his Animadversiones Sacrae saith Robert Stephens and not Vatablus was the Author of those Scholia which are in Vatablus his Bible Doctus Vatablus prae caeteris quos adhuc videre contigit omnibus abstrusa quaequ● in Psalmis explicuit partim suo sano judicio partim doctissimorum Hebraeorum testimonio quem etiam admirandus Calvinus studiose sequitur ferè ubique quasi à sententia Vatabli non tutum esset discedere Foord in Ps. 45. 1. Quid hac phrasi denotetur optimè exposuit D. Beza suis in Novum Testamentum nunquem satis laudatis notis Constantin L'Empereur in Dan. 2. 8. See more of him in Zanchies Epistles Amama Paulus Fagius Drusius Ludovicus Capellus Livelie Cameron Ludovicus de Dieu have been great Lights and by their skill in the Tongues have excellently interpreted Scripture Peter Martyr Lavater Musculus Zanchy Paraeus Rollock Rivet are sound Expositors Ex omnibus antiquis recentioribus medullam variarum interpretationum circa eos disceptationem collegit Willetus in hexaplis ad Genesin Exodum Leviticum Danielem Epistolam ad Romanos in libros Samuelis sibi dissimilis est compendio atque alia plane methodo commentatur optandum esset telam illam à Willeto tam foeliciter coeptam eadem methodo in reliquos Scripturae libros pertexi Voetius Biblioth Theol. lib. 1. cap. 14. 4. For Popish Expositors Aquinas is esteemed by the Papists as the Oracle of the Romish School whom for his profound learning and search into the mysteries of all Divinity they sirnamed Angelical He was the first thorow-Papist of name that ever wrote and with his rare gifts of wit learning and industry did set out Popery most Maximo altissimo ingenio vir cui ad plenam absolutamque totius tam divinae quam humanae eruditionis gloriam solus defuit linguarum eloquentiae usus quem eruditi istius saeculi utpote sublimioribus studiis intenti neglexere Sixtus Senensis Vide plura ibid. Luther on Gen. 9. chiefly commends Lyra for following the literal sense Nicolau● Lyranus Vir tanta tamque pura vera germana Sacrae Scripturae scientia praeditiu ut in illa exponenda nullum habeat illius temporis parem Rainold de lib. Apoc. Tom. 1. praelect 21. Vide plura Tom. 1. praelect 42. He was a Jew converted Ex antiquioribus tanquam universales communes Commentatores habiti fuerunt Lyranus Glossa Voetius in Biblioth Theol. Jansenius eruditus moderatus Interpres Neque Pontificiorum quisquam doctius interpretatus est Evangelicam historiam Rainold de lib. Apoc. Tom. 2. Praelect 194. Cajetane went over all the Scripture saving the Canticles and Prophets which dying he left begun and the Revelation Quam de industria attingere noluit He was both a learned and moderate Papist as Chamier and Whitaker both shew He was chiefly intent on the literal sense and that according to the Hebrew truth of which Tongue he had little knowledge but had by him those that were skill'd in the Hebrew who would interpret ad verbum not onely exactly but superstitiously and often absurdly which often drew the like Expositions from the Cardinal Tostatus was admirable for his deep skill and almost incredible pains in interpreting holy Scripture There are now five Papists joyned together in several Volumes on the whole Scripture Immanuel Sa Estius Gagneius Tirinus and Menochius the last of which Grotius commends in his Preface to his Annotations on the Old Testament Estius doth excellently on all the Epistles The Commentaries of Immanuel Sa the Jesuite upon the Bible are shorter then the Text it self Familiam ducant inter Commentatores Jansenius Maldonatus Montac Analecta Exercit. 6. Sect. 4. Maldonate doth well on the Evangelists but was a most supercilious Writer and no marvel since he was for his Countrey a Spaniard and his Profession a Jesuite Masius hath written learnedly on Ioshua Quanta vir ille linguae Graecae sed praesertim Hebraicae Rabbinicae Syriacae cognitione fuerit imbutus nemini docto opinor incognitum Morinus lib. 1. exercitat 9. c. 6. exercit 1. c. 4. Andraeas Masius linguae Hebraicae Syriacae peritissimus atque in lectione Rabbinica egregiè exercitatus The Popish Postils are the burden of many Camels as Lipsius speaks of the Books of the Law and are sitly stiled by godly Divines Pigrorum pulvinaria Vide Zepperi Artem Habendi Andiendi conciones sacras lib. 1. cap. 4. pag. 38 39. c. Ministers to all the means formerly mentioned for the interpreting of Scripture must adde a conscionable practice of what they know and must in all humblenesse of minde seek the peoples edification The means to be used by the people to understand the Scripture and finde out the sense and meaning of it 1. If they be learned they may make use of most of the former means prescribed to Ministers 2. Such as are unskilfull and know not how to make use of those means are 1. Diligently to read the Scripture in which are to be considered 1. Antecedent Preparation that they come to the reading and study of the Scriptures with Prayers and greatest Reverence relying on the Divine Promises for the inlightening of their minds by the holy Ghost The Scripture may well be called The Revelation of Christ Rev. 1. 1. See Rev. 5. 5. 2. The Adjuncts of reading which are 1. Chiefest Attention in reading and a pious disposition and spiritual frame of the heart that they may not understand only but cordially affect what they understand 2. Application of all things to the Examination Correction and amendment of their own lives 3. Diligent Meditation 4. Conferring of it with others and catechizing 2. They ought to have recourse to those that are more skilfull then themselves and to consult with the best Commentaries and Expositions of the Scripture and reade them judiciously We teach concerning our Means that they all together do make a perfect way whereby we may finde the right sense of the Scripture Our Adversaries prescribe this method and course to be taken in expounding of Scripture which consists in four Rules The general Practice of the Church The Consonant Interpretation of the Fathers The Decrees of general Councels Lastly The Rule of Faith consisting partly of the Scriptures partly of Traditions unwritten In all these means the Pope is implicitely understood for the Rule of Faith is that which the
his den the Director of nature her self herein must be something above nature which is God 3 Others adde these Reasons to prove that there is a God 1. The heroick motions and prosperous success of some famous men in undertaking and acting those things which exceed the common capacity of humane nature the gifts of minde in Aristotle Achilles Alexander 2. The hainous punishments inflicted on particular men families and Kingdoms for great offences some of which were wonderfully brought to execution when by their power and subtilty they thought they could escape the Magistrates Sword 3. There are vertues and vices therefore there must be some law There can be no eternal reason in the things themselves If we speak of Atheists strictly and properly meaning such as have simply denied all Deity and denied it constantly Tullies sentence is most true that there was never any such Creature in the world as simply and constantly to deny God The name of an Atheist in this sense is nomen ociosum a name without a ●●ing If we speak of Atheists in a larger sense for such as have openly though not constantly denied the Divinity of such professed Atheists there have not been past two or three If we speak of Atheists in the largest sense meaning such as denied Gods providence justice goodness though they have done it but weakly rather upon some suddain passion then any settled resolution their number hath scarcely amounted to a score I mean of such open Atheists as have made any publike profession of their Atheism though but even in these secondary points Those Atheists that denied a God spake what they wished rather then what they thought or else they opposed the Heathenish gods or to shew their wit Diagoras the chiefest of them did Potius Gentilium D●os r●dere quam Deum negare He rather derided false gods then denied the true 〈…〉 he was not a meer Atheist appeareth in that he thus began his P●em● Quod a numine su●●no reguntur omnia It is reported of him that at the first he was very devout and a great worshipper of the gods but having committed some certain money unto a friends keeping and afterwards demanding it again his friend loath ●o forego such a booty forswore that he had received any whom when Diagoras●aw ●aw notwithstanding his horrible perjury to thrive and prosper and no Divine judgement to fall upon him he presently turned Atheist and enemy to the gods and then labored by all means to bring other men to like impieties Athenians also condemned Protagoras for an Atheist yet not for denying God but for seeming to doubt of him Because in the beginning of his Book he propoundeth this Probleme De diis quidem statuere nequeo neque an sint necn● For this the Athenians banished him and decreed That his Books should be publiquely burned Theodorus who for his notable prophanenesse was sirnamed Atheos though at the first he was noted of Atheism yet at the last he fell into Autotheism professing himself a god as Laertius reporteth though carrying God in the name he was an Atheist in his opinion saith Fuller in his prophane State of this Theodorus A Pope dying said Now I shall be resolved of three things 1. Whether there be a God 2. Whether the soul be immortal 3. Whether there be an Heaven and Hell Some indirectly deny God by denying his providence as Epi●urus who denied not Gods Essence but only his Providence He granted that there was a God though he thought him to be such an one as did neither evil nor good But God sitteth not idle in Heaven regarding nothing that is done upon the Earth as the Epicure conceiteth he is a most observing God and will reward and punish men according to their actions First This serves to blame and condemn the miserable corruption of our evil hearts which are so farre over-run with Atheism though this be the very first Truth which God hath engraven into the soul of a man That there is a God yet we weakly hold this conclusion for all sinne may and must be resolved into the ignorance of God and Atheism Haereticus disputat contra fidem malus Christianus vivit contra fidem A●g We should be humbled for our thoughts of Atheism for saying in our hearts th●t there is no God the Devil in judgement never was an Atheist because of the sense he hath of Gods wrath Iam. 4 19. we should take notice of and bewail this foul vice There are few Atheists in opinion more in affection and most of all in life and conversation Titus 1. 16. We should beware of opinions and practices that strike at the being of God 1. Opinions that tend directly to Atheism 1. To think men may be saved in all religions Ephes. 4. 4. Micah 4. 4. 2. To deny the particular Providence of God and exempt humane actions from his determination 3. To hold the mortality of the soul. 2. Practices which seem most contrary to the being of God 1. Hypocrisie that is a real blasphemy Revel 2. 9. Psa. 10. 11 12 13. an hypocrite denies Gods omniscience and omnipresence 2. Epicurism this comes from and tends to Atheism Psal. 14 2. 3. Scoffing in matters of religion and applying of Scriptures to prophane occasions 2 Pet. 3. 1. Secondly We should oppose this Atheism and labour to grow more and more in the knowledge of God and to strengthen our Faith in this principle That God is meditate and ponder of his Works and be perfect in those Lessons which the common book of Nature teacheth pray to God to clear the eye of our minde and to imprint a right knowledge of himself in us The Papist is a make-god and the Atheist is a mock-god The Papist deludeth his conscience and the Atheist derideth his conscience Popery comforteth the flesh and Atheism suppresseth the spirit As the Heathen Emperors took upon them the Title of god so doth the Pope Dominus Deus noster Papa His Decrees and Canons are called Oracles Oracle signifieth the answer of God Rom. 3. 2. and 11. 4. And his decretal Epistles are equalled to the Canonical Epistles Deal with thy heart as Iunius his Father dealt with him he seeing his son was Atheistical he laid a Bible in every room that his son could look in no room but behold a Bible haunted him upbraiding him Wilt thou not reade me Atheist Wilt thou not reade me And so at last he read it and was converted from his Atheism The often meditating in the Scriptures will through Gods blessing settle us in these two great Principles 1. That there is a God 2. That the Scripture is the Word of God That God which made Heaven and Earth is the only true God we must beleeve that this God which we reade of in Scripture is the only true God so it is not enough to believe there is a God but that the Scipture of the Old and New
thus to conclude and determine Rom. 8. The Spirit witnesseth with our Spirit Those that finde this in themselves should feed upon this eternal comfort it is absolute eternal immutable nothing shall oppose it who shall lay any thing to the Elect It is full of love and grace We may make our election sure by our calling Rom. 8. 29 30. and our effectual calling by two things 1. By a new light 2. A new life 2 Cor. 4. 5. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Iohn 12. 36. Ephes. 5. 8. We have a new knowledge wrought in us of our selves we see our misery by sin and our inability to help our selves Rom. 2. 23. 2. Of God God in Jesus Christ is discovered to us 2 Pet. 1. 3. We see our need of Christ and know him to be a mediatour who must reconcile God and us 3. A new life is wrought in us Ephes. 2. 1. We now die to sin and live to God 1. By faith Rev. 17. 4. These three are put together faithful chosen and called 2. By new obedience 1. It is every mans duty to give diligence to make his election sure both for the glory of God and the comfort of his soul but in Gods way and according to his Ordinance first Calling then Election 2. When he hath used his utmost diligence if he cannot make it sure it is his misery not his sin 3. When the Spirit of God reveals to a man either the truth of his own graces or else Gods eternall love to him then a man is bound to beleeve it It is 1. A certain assurance 2. Secret Rev. 2. 17. 3. Exceeding sweet rejoyce in that your names are written in the Book of life 4. It is an imperfect assurance the assurance of faith not of sight it may be eclipsed CHAP. II. 2. The Execution of Gods Deeree GOD executes his Decree by Actions Creation and Providence Gods works are in time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Government and preservation Creation is taken 1. Strictly when God makes any Creature of nothing meerly of nothing not as if nothing were the matter but the terme so the souls of men and Angels are created of nothing 2. Largely when of some prejacent matter but very unfit and indisposed a creature is made as Adam of the earth Creation is the action of God whereby out of nothing he brought forth nature it self and all things in nature both substances and accidents in and with the substances and finished them in the space of six daies both to his own glory and the salvation of the Elect. Or It is an action whereby God the Father by his word and holy Spirit made all things exceeding good for the glory of his Name Or thus Creation is a transient or external action of God whereby in the beginning He made the world by a meer command out of his own free will in six dayes space to the glory of his Name 1. An action not a motion or change motion argueth some succession but in the things created the fieri factum esse is all one nor is it a change because that supposeth some alteration in the Agent 2. Transient it passeth from the Agent to the thing created whereas in immanent actions as Gods will decrees and personal actions they abide in himself 3. Of God The efficient cause of all things is God the Father Son and Holy Ghost Creation is the proper work of God alone so that he is God which created the world and he created the world who is God Ier. 10. 11. It is without controversie that the work of creation agrees to God the Father the same is expresly given to the Son Iohn 1. 3. Col. 1. 16. and to the Holy Ghost also Psal. 33. 6. He brooded on the waters Gen. 1. 1 2. Aquinas parte prima Qu. 44. Artic. 1. hath this question Utrum sit necessarium omne ens esse creatum a Deo The Schoolmen much dispute whether God may not give a creating power to a creature and answer no creature can be so elevated as to concur to the execution of an almighty act In Scripture it is alwaies made the work of God Gen. 1. 1. Prov. 16. 4. Psal. 33. 6. 8 9. Creation is an act of omnipotency The Apostles when they dealt with the Heathens urged the works of creation Acts 14. 10. 7. 26. Rom. 1. 19 20. 4. In the beginning by the Scripture it is a matter of faith to hold that the world was not from all eternity in the beginning notes not that there was time first and then God created the world for time is a creature and concreated but it denotes order that is at first 5. The world that is the Heaven and Earth and all things contained in them Act. 4. 4. and 17. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that well ordered decent beautiful and comely frame of heaven and earth 6. By his meer command as appears Gen. 1. Let there be light let there be heavens which argues his omnipotency 7. Out of his own free will for God did not need the world and therefore he created it no sooner He was happy enough in himself without men or Angels Psal. 115. 5. Prov. 8. 30. 8. The final cause to the glory of his Name Rom. 2. 30. Three Attributes especially manifest themselves in this work of Creation Gods power wisdome goodnesse his power in that he made all things by a word and of nothing Isa. 40. 16. his wisdome is seen in the order and variety of his works Psal. 136. 5. and their exceeding wonderful and particular uses his goodnesse in that he would communicate being to the creatures Plutarch writeth that the old Philosophers the ancientest Divines amongst the Pagans were wont to describe pourtrayed out in stone wood and other matters the Images of their Gods with musical Instruments in their hands not that they would teach others or did beleeve it themselves that the Gods were Fidlers or Pipers or used to solace themselves with Lute or Viol but because they held nothing more fit or answering to the nature of God then to do all things in sweet harmony and proportion which the Wiseman calleth in number in measure and in weight Mountague against Seld. c. 1. The work of Creation say some is set out generally in a general proposition In the beginning God created the Heavens and the Earth Which proposition He after explains by its parts That the world was not from eternity but was made by God these arguments may perswade First and principally Faith Heb. 11. 3. which is grounded upon divers places of Scripture as the first and second chapters of Genesis 38 39 chapters of Iob and some Psalms almost whole as 104 136. this also is the first Article of our Creed that the world was created in time by God The Apostle Paul Acts 14. 15. 17. 24. 28 doth point out God to the Heathen by this work
whether may they not be prayed unto The ground and cause which brought in praying ●o Angels is laid down Col. 2. 18. where you have a general prohibition of religious worshipping of Angels with the cause of it There are three causes why they attempted this 1. They entred into things which they did not know as the Papists How can they tell whether the Angels pray for us whether they know our wants 2. They follow their carnal minde because they see in the world that to great Magistrates we use Mediators and Intercessors they dare not go of themselves so here 3. Humility For this they talk as Papists do now We are unworthy to go directly to God and therefore we need the help of Angels but this is vain for Christ is nearer to us then Angels are Ephes. 3. 12. Tutius jucundius loquar ad Iesum quam ad aliquem sanctorum We say that all lawfull and moderate reverence is to be given to Angels which consists in these particulars 1. We acknowledge the great gifts of God in them and praise God for them We confesse it is his mercy that he hath made such noble creatures to be serviceable to us and then for themselves in our judgements 1. We honour them and judge them more noble creatures then man they have greater wisdom holiness and power then man hath 2. For our will and affections we love them because they love us and delight in our good being ready to help us every where 3. We should be carefull of our carriage because of their presence we should not sin because of the Angels 4. We desire to make them examples of our lives that we may do Gods will as they do 5. If Angels should appear visibly to us we should honour them as more excellent creatures but yet still keep within the bounds of civil or sraternal honour as to our fellow servants but yet above us and not honour them with Religious worship The Papists say a Religious worship is due unto them but yet that we may do them no wrong not indeed such as is due to God but secondary yet still Religious and so they say they intercede ●or us not as Christ but in an inferiour way and in this sense they hold they may be worshipped and praied unto Now we will refute their arguments and then confirm the truth with strong reasons For the first All law●ull reverence is commanded by the sust Table and that is Religious or else by the second and that is civil But that manner and degree of their worship is required in neither Therefore it is meerly invented Secondly By general consent Religious worship is that whereby we do acknowledge God to be the primum principium the ultimum finem and summum bonum now this is but one and we may as well say there is a summum bonum secundariò as there is a secondary Religious worship Thirdly There is the same reason of a Religious worship as there is of a Divine act of faith love and hope but if a man should say We may with a Divine faith beleeve in God primarily and Angels secondarily it were ridiculous therefore here if Religious worship were due because of supernatural excellencies then every godly man were religiously to be worshipped Our arguments in generall against this are these 1. Matth. 4. 10. Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve Heb. 1. it is applied to Christ. 2. The promise is to those only which call upon him Psal. 51. 15 Call upon me 3. It cannot be of faith for how shall I know whether they hear me whether they be present 4. Colos. 2. 8. It is condemned for will-worship so that Idolatry is here committed that kinde of it Quando divinè colitur id quod non est verus D●us Iohn was reproved for this Rev. 19. 10. 22. 9. Now Iohn might have distinguished I do not worship you religiously as God but in the second place The second question is Whether every man hath his peculiar Angel This is not a question of faith but yet the more to be suspected because it was generally held among the Heathens who did ascribe to every man born a bad angel to afflict and a good one to defend him a good and ill Genius as they called them Becanus brings places of Scripture to prove it but there is altogether silence in the Scripture concerning it for when the Angels are charged to have care over us it implieth that it is all their care The chiefest place which most seems to favour that opinion is Act. 12. 15. where they said that it was his Angel Now to this some answer that the men spake according to the opinion of men then generally received and not according to the truth as we may give an instance concerning the blinde man when they asked Whether he or his parents had sinned that he should be born blinde How could he sin before he was born but some answer that there was an opinion generally received which all the Platonists held and so Origen and many of the Ancients that the soul was created before it was put into the body and as it did good or ill it was put into a well tempered or a maimed body Especially they thought these Angels did appear a little before or after mens death Calvin thinks that it was an Angel peculiarly destinated to Peter for that time of his imprisonment If it were a peculiar Angel then it would follow that he spake and had the same gestures that men have to whom they belong Therefore it may well be rendred it is his messenger as the word is elsewhere translated But you will say then they thought the messenger spake like him No but it might fall out that they thought Rhode did mistake and when he said I am Peter they might think he said I am come from Peter and so it may be answered If every man have one Angel why did more then one carry Lazarus his soul to heaven And he hath given his Angels charge over thee that is many over one particular man Cameron tom 2. Praelect Vide Rainold de lib. Apoc. tom 1. cap. 61. Voet. Th●s de Angelis The third question What is the meaning of that Let her be covered because of the Angels Where the Apostle commands a woman in publike duties to have power that is covering in sign of her subjection to God and that because of the Angels Some understand this properly of the Angels the heavenly Spirits but differently some because they are present at our Assemblies and if you ask What need that seeing God and Christ are there they answer That he mentioned God and Christ before and now addeth these as inseparable servants which are sent for the salvation of beleevers Others as probably make it a new argument from the Angels Isa. 6. as they covered their feet before God to shew
cleaving f●rmly unto God The ninth and last question concerning Angels is How can they be happy in enjoying Gods face and yet be on the earth Matth. 18. 10. By heaven there is not meant the place but their heavenly estate and condition Now though they go up and down doing service yet this hinders not their happinesse for they do not this with distraction and these things are appointed as means for the end viz. enjoying of God and as the soul is not hindred in its happiness by desiring the body again so it is here 1. We should imitate the Angels 2. It shews us how much we are beholding to Christ no Angels could love us if it were not for him How much are we to love God who hath provided helps for man especially Christ who took our nature upon him not that of Angels Gods Angels are our Angels to defend and keep us God hath committed the care of us to these ministring Spirits 3. It shews the wofull condition of the impenitent when Christ shall come with all these Angels when those great shouts shall be Come thou swearer drunkard how terrible will this be The more potent God is in Himself and in his Ministers the more wretched are they and the surer is their destruction 4. This confutes the Papists in three errours 1. In that they hold nine orders of Angels They are distinguished ratione objectorum officiorum in respect of the object and message they go about 2. They would have them worshipped but the Angel forbad Iohn 3. They say every one hath his good Angel to keep him so Bucan thinks in his Common places 2. The Saducees who said there was neither Angel nor Spirit Acts 24. 8. but held good Angels only to be good thoughts and evil angels to be evil lusts and affections Their names offices actions apparitions shew plainly that they are not bare qualities but true substances It serves for instruction 1. To see the blindness and erroneousness of mankinde in that a great number of men of learning and wit and parts good enough and that such as lived in the Church and acknowledged the five books of Moses to be divine should yet make a shift to wink so hard as to maintain that there were no Angels What falsehood may not the devil make a man entertain and defend and yet seem not to deny the Authority of Scripture if a man confessing Moses writings to be true will yet deny that there be either Spirits or Angels which are things so plainly revealed by Moses that a man would account it impossible to receive his writings and not confess them But if God leave man to the devil and his own wit he will make him the verier fool because of his wit and he will erre so much the more palpably by how much he seems better armed against errour even as a mans own weapon beaten to his head by a farre stronger arm will make a deep wound in him See we our aptness to run into and maintain false opinions and let us not trust in our own wits but suspect our selves and seek to God for direction Secondly Let us learn humility from this and by comparing our selves with these excellent Spirits learn to know how mean we be that we may be also mean in our own esteem So long as a man compares himself with those things and persons which are baser then himself he is prone to lift up himself in his own conceit and to think highly of himself but when he doth weigh himself in the balance with his betters he begins to know his own lightness The Lord hath set us men in the midst as it were betwixt the bruit beasts and the celestial Spirirs we do so far exceed them as the Angels exceed us as for bodily gifts the beasts in many things go beyond us some are more strong swift have more excellent sight and smell then we but in few things do we equal the Angels They are swifter and stronger then we and their excellent reason goes beyond ours in a manner as the understanding which is in us excelleth the fancy of the beasts they know a thousand things more then we do or can know One Angel can do more then all men can speak more languages repeat more histories in a word can perform all acts of invention and judgement and memory farre beyond us Thirdly Since God hath made Angels to serve and attend him should not we that are far inferiour to them be content also to serve him yea exceeding glad and thankful that he will vouchsafe to admit us into his service Doth he need our service that is served with such Ministers and Messengers Let us frame our selves to obedience and do Gods will on earth with all readiness and cheerfulness seeing there is so great store of more worthy persons in heaven that do it An Angel will not esteem any work too difficult or base why should we Fourthly The Angels which wait about the throne of God are glorious and therefore the Lord himself must needs excell in glory Isa. 6. 1 2. Ezek. 1. 28. Of the Devils or evil Angels The Angels which persisted in the truth are called good Angels Luke 9. 26. but those which revolted and kept not the law were called evil Angels or evil spirits angels of darknesse Luke 8. 20. 19. 42. and Angels absolutely 1 Cor. 6. because they were so created of the Lord. In respect of their nature they are called spirits 1 King 22. 21. Matth. 18. 16. Luke 10. 20. In respect of their fall they are called evil spirits 1 Sam. 18. 10. Luke 8. 2. unclean spirits Matth. 10. 1. Zach. 13. 2. not so much because of their instigation to lust as because their natures are defiled with sin Lying spirits 1 King 22. 22. Iohn 8. 44. Devils Levit. 17. 7. 1 Cor. 10. 20. The Hebrew names for the devil are 1. Satan an adversary 2 Sam. 19. 32. of Satan to oppose and resist 2 Pet. 2. 14. Belial 2 Cor. 6. though some reade it Beliar unprofitable He is likewise called Beelzebub or Beelzebul which word comes of Bagnal Dominus a Lord or Master and Zebub a fly the Idol of the Achronites because they thought these best of those pestiferous creatures or else because the devils were apprehended as flying up and down in the air but if it be read Z●bul then it signifieth by way of contempt a Dunghill god Levit. 17. 7. The devils are called Shegnirim the hairy ones because they appeared to their worshippers like hairy goats and in the mountains The devil is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to accuse because he accuseth men to God and God to men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 scio because they know much by creation and by experience The devil is called an enemy or the envious man Matth. 13. 139. The tempter Matth. 4.
divers grounds and roots of Apostacy 1. Unbelief Heb. 3. 12. ult Faith unites the soul to Christ and preserves it in him by it we stand 2. The love of the world 1 Tim. 6. 9. 1 Iohn 2. 15. 3. Living in the practice of a known sin 2 Thes. 2. 10 11. 4. Carnall security 5. Needlesse society with wicked men and base fear Remedies against Apostacy 1. Labour to be well principled in the grounds of Religion 2. Keep your hearts in continual fear Blessed is he that feareth alwaies this will keep a man low in his own eyes Pride of parts and gifts betrayes men to errour 3. Be sincere live up to your knowledge 1 Tim. 1. 19. He that begins in hypocrisie many times ends in Apostacy Blasphemy According to the notation of the Greek word it signifies to hurt ones fame or credit yea in the Hebrew also a blasphemer of God is said to strike through the name of Jehovah Lev. 24. 16. It was so detested of old that whereas it had a name yet they did expresse it by an Antiphrasis and used the word blessing instead of cursing 1 King 21. 10. The Jews were wont to rend their garments at the hearing of the name of God blasphemed Isa. 30. ult 37. 1. Acts 14. 14. to expresse the rending of their hearts with grief and indignation The School Divines thus describe it If one deny any thing concerning God which agrees to him or affirm any thing of him which doth not agree to him or when that is attributed to the creature which belongs to the Creator Vide Aquin. secunda secundae Q. 13. Art 1. The Name of God is blasphemed in regard of the matter and manner In regard of the matter God is blaspheamed two waies either Privatively by taking away from him that which is due unto him and wherein his honour consisteth Or Positively By attributing that unto him which is unbeseeming his Majesty dishonourable to his great Name In regard of the manner when any thing is spoken of God ignominiously contemptuously as Exodus 5. 2. 2 Kings 6. 33. Dan. 3. 15. I would I were able to resist God said Francis Spira Gregory the 9th reckoned three famous impostors of the world Moses Mahomet and Christ. Iulian blasphemed Christ living and dying The Heathens would never suffer their Gods to be blasphemed but punished such as were guilty thereof by the power of the Magistrate Socrates was put to death for blaspheming their multiplicity of Gods Master Burroughes Irenicum chap. 5. The very Turks who account of Christ but as a great Prophet and powerfull in word and deed inflict death upon that man that speaketh blasphemies against Jesus Christ. Hereticks ought to be put to death now as well as false prophets under the law the equity of the judicial law remains of putting blasphemers to death Cartw. against Whit. When Servetus condemned Zuinglius for his harshnesse he answers In aliis mansuetus ero in blasphemiis in Christum non ita In other things I will be mild but not so in blasphemy against God For immediate blasphemy against God himself it was capitall Levit. 24. 16. The Civil law herein followeth the Divine law Blasphemi ultimis suppliciis afficiantur Others have punished this sin with cutting off or plucking out the tongue and that deservedly for that tongue is unworthy ever to speak more that shall dare once to speak against its Creator Lewis the 9th King of France stiled the Saint publisht an Edict for the burning of blasphemous persons in the lips A Noble man having offended in that kinde and being brought to the King many interceded for him that such an infamous punishment might be changed to another The King would not hearken to their requests but said he himself would take it for an honour to be marked so on his forehead if by that means he might drive away that enormous sin out of his Kingdom Helps against it 1. Labour for a distinct well-grounded knowledge in the principles of Christian Religion Iude 10. 2. Receive the love of the truth 2 Thess. 2. 11. 3. Walk in the truth 2 Iohn 4. 2 Cor. 13. 8. 2 Tim. 3. 14. 4. Pray earnestly Iude v. 24. It s a Question among the Schoolmen Utrum damnati blasphement Aquinas thinks it credible that after the resurrection they shall vocally blaspheme as the Saints shall vocally praise God And some say Damnati dum blasphemant Deum in hoc peccant because they are bound to an eternal law After this life the demerit of sin ceaseth you shall give an account for the things done in the body 2 Cor. 5. 10. The soul sins after but shall not be judged for those sins as in heaven good actions Pertinent ad beatitudinis praemium so in hell evil actions Pertinent ad damnationis paenam saith Aquinas in the same place Of Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost It is called the great transgression Psal. 19. 12. and blasphemy against the Spirit Matth. 12. Blasphemy against the Spirit is When a man doth maliciously and proudly revile and despite the truth of the Gospel and Word of God which he certainly knoweth It is called the blasphemy against the Spirit because it is against the knowledge wherewith a man is lightened by the Spirit of God Cartw. on Matth. 12. 31. It is called the sin against the holy Ghost not that it is only against the third Person in the Trinity the three Persons make but one Divine Essence but because it is a direct opposition and resistance of the light of knowledge with which the holy Ghost hath enlightened it Non dicitur blasphemia Spiritus ratione personae illius sed ratione propriae ipsius in hominibus energiae quatenus Spiritus Sanctus est is qui in veritatis lucem introducit Rivet in Exod. 30. Vide Thom. Aquin. 2da 2dae quaest 14. Artic. 1 2 3 4. It is called sin against the holy Ghost not in respect of the Essence but of the Office of the holy Ghost this sin is all malice wilfull without any infirmity he being pleased with malice for it selfs sake Capell of Tentat part 2. c. 3. Origen as Bellarm. l 2. de Paenitentia c. 16. alledgeth thought that every sin committed against the law of God after Baptism was the sin against the holy Ghost so Novatus Austen makes it finall impenitency The Shoolmen say any sin of malice It is conceived by some that the presumptuous sin in the old Testament is the same with or answers to the sin against the holy Ghost in the new and that which leads to this apprehension is because no sacrifice was appointed for that under the Law as this is said to be unpardonable under the Gospel Heb. 10. 20. but by Psal. 19. 12. it seems to be a pitch of sinning beyond presumption It is described to be a general Apostacy and revolt of a man wilfully fallen from the truth known even to a malicious persecuting
and blaspheming of it Mr. Bedford Of the sin unto death out of 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mr. Deering on Heb. 6. 4 5 6. saith It is a general Apostacy from God with wilfull malice and an unrepentant heart to persecute his truth to the end Mr. White in his Treatise of this sin thus describes it It is a wilfull malicious opposing persecuting and blaspheming the truths of God against knowledge and conscience without ever repenting and grieving for so doing but rather fretting and vexing that one can do no more It is a totall falling away from the Gospel of Christ Jesus formerly acknowledged and professed into a verball calumniating and a reall persecuting of that Gospel with a deliberate purpose to continue so to the end and actually to do so to persevere till then and so to passe away in that disposition It is a spitefull rejecting of the Gospel after that the Spirit hath supernaturally perswaded a mans heart of the truth and benefit thereof It is a sin committed against clear convincing tasting knowledge with despight and revenge Heb. 10. 29. 1. It must be a clear knowledge an ignorant man cannot commit it 2. Such a knowledge as le ts in a tast of the goodnesse as well as discovers the truth of the Gospel Heb. 6. 3. yet goes against this knowledge with despight opposeth the motions of Gods Spirit with rage this puts a man into the devils condition Compare Heb. 6. 4 5. with 10. 26 27. It is a voluntary way of sinning after one hath received not only the knowledge but the acknowledgement of the truth so much knowledge as subdues the understanding The will is chiefly in this sin he sins wilfully he trampleth under his foot the blood of the Son of God sins maliciously and with revenge The Jews put Christ to death with the greatest malice The conditions of that sin are 1. Hatred of the truth 2. A settled malice 3. An obstinate will 4. An accusing conscience Therefore this sin is distinguished from other sins by three degrees 1. That they all fall toti 2. à toto 3. In totum 1. Toti Because they fall from God and his gifts not out of infirmity or ignorance but out of knowledge will and certain purpose 2. A toto Because they cast away and oppose the whole doctrine his authority being contemned 3. In totum Because they are so obfirmed in their defection that they voluntarily oppose and seek to reproach the Majesty of God But the specificall difference of this sin is that they reproach those things which the holy Ghost hath revealed to them for true and of whose truth they are convinced in their minde This sin necessarily supposeth the knowledge of the Mediator wheresoever there is any mention of it in the new Testament there comes with it some intimation of the works of the Mediator In Matth. 12. they opposed Christ in his miracles in Heb. 6. Paul instanceth in their crucifying again of Christ Heb. 10. speaks of their trampling under foot the Son of God The devils sinned against light and with revenge but not against the light of the second Covenant this sin is purely against the Gospel Heb. 4. 10. 27 28 29. Objectum hujus peccati non est lex sed Evangelium Matth. 12. 32. He that commits this sin shall neither be pardoned in this world in foro conscientiae nor in the world to come in foro judicii neither in this world per solutionem ministerii by the Ministry of the word nor in the world to come per approbationem Christi When once the means of recovery by the Gospel are neglected contemned and despised then there is no place for remission see Heb. 1● 26. The sacrifices in the old Law were effectual in their time to the expiation of sin if joyned with faith The sacrifice of Christs death was alwaies effectuall but if this also be despised this being the last there is no more sacrifice for sin and yet without sacrifice no remission It is called the sin unto death not because it may kill for no sin but may kill if it be not repented of but because it must kill Divines observe two sorts subject to this sin Some have both known the truth and also professed it as Saul Iudas Alexander the Copper-smith all these made profession of the Gospel before they fell away Others have certain knowledge of the truth but yet have not given their names to professe it but do hate persecute and blaspheme it such were the Pharisees Matth. 13. All they who fall into this sin first do attain unto a certain and assured knowledge of the truth though all do not professe it Absolutely to determine of such a one is very difficult neither is there any sufficient mark but the event viz. finall impenitency But the grounds of suspition are such as these 1. Prophannenesse 2. Doubting of every saving truth and impugning it 3. Envying anothers grace and happinesse 4. Blasphemy 5. Want of good affections Many Christians are ready to suspect that they have sinned against the holy Ghost Some Divines give this as a rule If the Lord give you a heart to fear that you have sin'd against the holy Ghost then you have not Boasting A man boasts when he is full of that which he thinks excellent and to adde worth and excellency to him Psal. 34. 2. 44. 8. 64. 10. It is one of the sins of the tongue 1 Sam. 2. 3. a high degree of pride see Ezek. 28. 3 4. Rom. 2. 17. there is vera and vana gloriatio the highest act of faith is to glory in God we make our boast of God all the day long Psal. 44. but to boast of God when one hath no interest in him is vain Bribery A bribe is a gift given from him which hath or should have a cause in the Court of justice to them which have to intermeddle in the administration of justice Bribery or taking gifts is a sin Exod. 23. 8. the same is repeated Deut. 16. 19. Isa. 1. 23. Prov. 17. 23. Psal. 26. 10. Hos. 4. 18. Amos 2. 12. Micah 3. 11. Reasons 1. From the causes of it 1. Covetousnesse Samuels sons inclined after lucre and took gifts 2. Hollownesse and guile 3. A want of love of justice 4. A want of hatred of sin 2. The effects 1. In the parties self that offends 2. In others 1. In himself The bribe blindes the eyes of the wise 1 Sam. 12. 3. Exod. 23. 8. it makes him unable to see and finde out the truth in a Cause 2. It perverts the words of the righteous that is it makes them which otherwise would deal righteously and perhaps have had an intention of dealing righteously yet to speak otherwise then becomes it exposeth the offender to condigne punishment Solomon saith A gift prospers whither ever it goeth and it makes room for a man meaning that otherwise deserve h no
constitution he can bear it without any disturbance and this hath a woe Woe to those that are strong to drink that have strong brains and bodies to carry their liquor away and never cry out with him Duos soles video 2. Actual either total and compleat when reason is fully intercepted and that is to be stark drunk to be a vivum cadaver as Chrysostome cals it well a breathing carkasse one cals them Ventri-d●mones belly-devils who like D●genes could live in a barrel all their life time 2. Partial when a mans fancy is not wholly disturbed yet he is so farre tipled that both his fancy and judgement are darkned and the house runs round with him Means to avoid it 1. Shun the company of drunkards and all occasions 2. Cry to God to help you against this vice and consider the terrible threats against it 1 Cor. 6. 9. 3. Get thy sensual appetite mortified 4. Taste of Christs wine the sweetnesse of having Communion with him Ephes. 5. 18. CHAP. XVIII Of Envy Error Flattery Gluttony ENVY ENvy is a grief for the prosperity of others Est aegritudo suscepta propter alterius res secundas quae nihil noceant invidenti The first instances that we have of sinne are Adams pride and Cains envy Envy is the mother of strife they are often coupled Rom. 1. 29. 13. 13. 1 Cor. 3. 3. 2 Cor. 12. 20. Gal. 5. 20. Iam. 3. 14. Natural corruption doth most of all bewray it self by envy The Devil first envied us the favour of God and ever since we have envied one another The children of God are often surprized with it Numb 11. 29. Iohn 21. 20 21. It breaketh both Tables at once it beginneth in discontent with God and endeth in injury to man Macrobius l. 2. Sat. c. 2. saith acutely of Mutius a malevolous man being sadder then he was wont Aut Mutio nescio quid incommodi accessit aut nescio cui aliquid boni The Heathens when they saw an envious man sad they would demand whether harm had happened unto him or good unto his neighbour Aristotle cals it the Antagonist of the Fortunate Parum alicui est si ipse sit foelix nisi alter fuerit infoelix Livor semper lippus est saith Petrarch this humour is alwayes ill-sighted All blear-eyed men are offended and hurt with the light so envy is provoked at anothers good and honour The better the party envied is the better he behaveth himself the more bitter the envier doth grow against him and the more his hatred increaseth Saul had still a more violent spleen against David by how much he discovered more wisdom courage and the more the hearts of his servants were set upon him Who can stand before envy saith Salomon Prov. 27. 4. It is the rottennesse of the bones Pro. 14. 3. and so the justest of all vices because it bringeth with it its own vengeance Sed videt ingratos intabescitque videndo Successus hominum carpitque carpitur unà Suppliciumque suum est Ovid. Met. 11. Fab. 12. As the rust consumes iron so this vice the envious man Anacharsis cals it serram animae and Socrates Ulcus When Hercules had vanquished so many fierce monsters Comperit invidiam supremo fine domandam He grapled at last with envy as the worst Erasm. lib. 17. of his Epist. in an Epistle to Sir Thomas More saith of Conradus Goclenius Invidere quid sit ne per somnium quidem unquam intellexit tantus est ingenii candor The objectum quod of it is Good of any kinde true apparent honest profitable pleasant of minde body fortune fame vertue it self not excepted the objectum cui is generally any other man Superiour Inferiour Equal We envy a Superiour because we are not equalled to him an Inferiour least he should be equal to us an Equal because he is our equal Men of the same Trade or Profession envy each other Figulus figulo invidet Faber Fabro Death frees a man from it Extra omnem invidiae aleam Pascitur in vivis livor c. The chief cause of it is pride and inordinate love of a mans self the impulsive cause is manifold as if he be an enemy a corrival Hatred when one loaths and wisheth ill to another agrees with envy 1. In the subject alwayes he which envies another hates him but not on the contrary Secondly In the efficient cause which is pride and a blinde love of a mans self It differs from it First In the subject for hatred may be in one in whom envy is not Secondly In the objectum quod which in envy is only good but in hatred it may be evil Thirdly In the objectum cui which is larger in hatred then envy for we envy men only not God nor our selves but others but we may hate not only other men but our selves and other creatures yea God himself Error Error is to judge otherwise then the thing is taking truth for falshood or falshood for truth Usquequaque fidei venena non cessant spargere saith Augustine of his times In Gregory Nazianzens dayes there were six hundred errors in the Church Selat on 1 Cor. 11. 18 19. The Doctrine onely of the Trinity remains undefiled in Popery Obstinately to defend an error in things indifferent makes a man a Schismatick and in points necessary and fundamental an Heretick It is the greatest judgement in the world to be given over to error Revel 13. 8. Iud● v. 4. 2 Thes. 2. 11. All the primitive Fathers spend most of their zeal and painful writings against heresies and errors All the Primitive Churches to whom the Apostles wrote Epistles areexpresly warned either positively to stand fast in the truth to hold fast their profession or negatively to beware of and to avoid false teachers and not to be carried about with divers and strange Doctrines See Mr Gillesp. Misc. c. 11. 12. It is not difficult to enumerate those heresies which gave occasion for the introducing of every Article in the Creed Vide Sanfordum de Descensu Christi ad infer●s l. 4. p. 29 30. It was well concluded in the 39 Session of the Councel of Constance That every tenth year at the farthest there should be a general Councel held to reform such errors in the Church as probably in that time would arise Preservatives from error 1. Have a care to be established in the truths of God 2 Pet. 1. 12. specially the main truths of religion look to repentance faith daily examination Matth. 13. 45. Rom. 6. 17. Corrupt teachers beguile none but unstable souls 2. Get experimental knowledge Ephes. 3. 17. and mourn to see the truths of Christ corrupted Revel 11. 3. 3. Love not any sin 2 Tim. 2. 19. 4. Try the Spirits 1 Iohn 4. 1. Every man pretends to speak by the Spirit bring their Doctrine to the rule try to what end the Doctrine tends whether to exalt God and abase man Matth. 7.
1. When mens thoughts run after what they shall eat or drink Matth. 6. 25. When animus est in patinis Rom. 12. 13. 2. When we delight too much in it as Philoxenus who wisht he had a neck like a Crane that he might take the longer delight in swallowing of his meat and drink 3. When we feed securely Iude 12. are too much taken up with the creatures 2. More notorious 1. When men eat more then their stomacks will digest Prov. 23. 1 2. When they are too dainty nothing will down but what is delicious and costly as the rich man in the Gospel 3. When they eat and drink unseasonably as Isa. 12. 13. Amos 6. 1 2. when they eat one meal too hastily after another not allowing nature sufficient time for concoction and those that will be still tipling Helps against it 1. Reade hear and practise the word 2. Pray 3. Joyn fasting with prayer 4. Consider the bounty of the Lord in giving us good things and for what end viz. strength CHAP. XX. Of Lying Malice Murmuring Oppression LYING LYing is a voluntary uttering of that which is false against a mans knowledge and conscience with an intention to deceive see Proverbs 12. 19. 22. 13. 5. In respect of the end it is distinguished into perniciosum officiosum and jocosum a hurtfull officious and merry lie August in Enchirid. ad Laurent Aquinas 2ª 2ae quaest 110. Art 2. The end of a pernicious lie is to hurt of an officious lie to profit of a merry lie to delight We must not tell a lie for Gods glory Iob 13. 7. much lesse for to help my neighbour Officious lying is neither permitted nor approved in the word of God God threatens to destroy all those that speak leasing Psal. 5. 6. See Prov. 6. 16. Matth. 5. 37. Ephes. 4. 25. Col. 3. 9. Rev. 21. 27. 22. 15. The very Heathens themselves abhorred all lying Aristotle saith A lie is evil in it self and to be dispraised It is a great sin Reasons 1. The Law of God is against it the ninth Commandment and the Gospel Col. 3. 9. 2. It is against the nature of God the Father is the God of truth Iohn 17. 3. the Son is truth Iohn 14. 6. the holy Ghost is the Spirit of truth Iohn 16. 13. and the Word of God which is the word of truth Ephes. 1. 13. It makes us like the devil Iohn 8. 44. 3. It is against natural conscience a little childe will blush at a lye 4. It is basely esteemed of by all generous men they abhorre above all things the imputation of lying It was in great reproach among the Persians saith Brissonius 5. It is contrary to all civil society takes away all commerce betwixt man and man Mendax hoc lucratar ut cum vera dixerit ei non credatur it is the just reward of a lier not to be beleeved when he tels truth 6. Omnibus peccatis cooperatur Aug. It hath an influence on all sins Lying and stealing are joyned together Ephes. 4. 7. The punishment of it is great as we may see in Gehezi Ananias and Saphira Psal. 5. and often in the Proverbs the Lord abhorres it Rev. 21. 8. 22. 15. liars are joyned with great sinners See Isa. 63. 8. Prov. 6. 17. Popery is a doctrine of lies 1 Tim. 4. 2. The great honour of the Saints is to walk in the truth 3 Iohn 4. see Ephes. 4. 5 Buy the truth and sell it not Erasmus had such an antipathy with lying that from his youth he would usually tremble at the sight of a noted liar Malice It causeth a man to receive pleasure in the practice of cruelty so the brethren of Ioseph and Cain 1 Sam. 19. 13 to the 18. Reasons 1. It is most of all contrary to charity therefore it must needs bring forth quite contrary effects to it and as that makes a man to take pleasure in doing good so this in doing evil for both vertues and vices cause him in whom they rule to take content in those things wherein they are exercised and by which they are strengthened and increased as both charity is by well doing and malice by doing evil 2. Where malice doth rule the Spirit of God is quite gone and the light of nature extreamly dimmed and a man is given over into the power of Satan for in giving place to wrath a man gives place to the devil 3. It distempers the judgement will and affections Murmuring It is first a sin reproved by God and a provocation of him Ion. 4. 8. The Israelites were very guilty of it see Numb 17. 12. Psal. 106 25. Secondly It is a high degree of sin 1. Hereby thou exaltest thy will above Gods and makest it the rule of goodnesse 2. You put God out of his throne out of Government in every murmuring against his dispensations thou deniest his Sovereignty 3. Hereby thou makest thy self wiser then God in divine things 4. This is a way to provoke God to greater displeasure Amos 4. 12. Arguments against murmuring and discontent under Gods administrations 1. It is a Christians duty to be content with the things present Heb. 13. 1 Thess. 518. such a one can never be thankfull 2. All your murmurings are against God Numb 14. 27. Exod. 16. 8. you charge God with folly Iob 1. ult 3. This will heighten your sin and add to your plagues Rev. 16. 19. Isa. 51. 20. 4. If the Lord should hearken to your murmuring you would quickly destroy your selves Hos. 13. 11. Oppression Oppression is a great sin Isa. 3. 15. Psal. 14 4. 17. 12. Amos 8. 5. Mic. 3. 3. Hab. 2. 11 12. 1. 14. Ier. 12. 13. 5. 27 28. Pride and unjustice in the extremity meet in an oppressour The Prophet cries out of them which grinde the faces of the poor of them which are like the wolves in the evening of them which covet fields and take them by force because there is might in their hands Reason It is an abuse of a special gift of God quite contrary to his appointment which gave it God made the stronger therefore to be the stronger that he might defend the weak as the greater sims and bones of the body hold up the burden of it CHAP. XXI Of Perjury Polygamy Pride PERJURY PErjury is mendacium juramento firmatum a lie confirmed with an oath so Peter Lombard Distinct. 39. The same thing by the addition of an oath that a lie is in a bare promise saith Dr. Sanderson It is double 1. When a man affirmeth or denieth upon oath that which he beleeveth in his own heart to be quite contrary 2. When he bindeth himself by oath to do or forbear that which he for the present time hath no purpose nor intention to perform The old saying is Once forsworn ever forlorn No Casuist doubts of it that a Turk may be guilty of perjury and for it be punished by the
no other helps to make him understand the same but his own reason and understanding according to the true principles of it by reading only and barely those writings he should come and that certainly and infallibly to the knowledge of all things necessary for his salvation Neither is any thing requisite to the right understanding of the Scriptures in points of necessity to life and salvation but alone the diligent perusing and meek receiving of the same And yet Christ performeth this outward teaching in a fourth degree by the Ministry of his servants from time to time the Pastors and Teachers of all ages whom he raiseth up and instructeth in the knowledge of his truth that they may instruct the people And this is the outward teaching the inward is noted where he saith You shall be all taught of God it is the work of his Spirit putting into the minde a light to conceive the things taught and inclining it to hearken and consent to them of which there are two degrees the first fainter and lesser breeding a kind of belief or opinion the second is more deep and stable by which men are rooted and grounded in faith and do firmly believe the known truth and are guided and ruled by it The Properties of Christs Prophetical Office are two 1. He is a great Prophet as the people say Luk. 7. 16. indeed the greatest of all the Prophets that reveals all things as the woman of Samaria could say He shall shew us all things 2. He is a faithful Prophet in all his house as Moses also was faithful and his faithfulnesse stands in this that he did acquaint his Church with the whole will of God without adding and diminishing as Moses did and that he did as fully accomplish all the things typified as Moses did declare and set them down but it stands not in this that he gave a particular direction for all external things about his worship and government as Moses did for that we are sure he hath not done in his Gospel neither indeed was to do The Pope opposeth Christ in his Prophetical Office in making himself infallible he brings in new Sacraments unknown to Christ and his Apostles Christ is the onely absolute Doctor of his Church Matth. 23. 8. See Matth. 17. 5. Revel 5. 7 8. The Church of Rome hath added Traditions Will-worship humane Inventions to the Scripture Mahomet is extolled by many as the great Prophet of the world So you have the Prophetical Office of Christ now follows the third viz. He is King to which we may adde that of Lord because his Kingdom and Lordship signifie in a manner the same thing both serving to expresse the power and authority which he hath and exerciseth in and over his Church Psal. 72. per tot Isa. 9. 6. Micah 5. 2. 1 Tim. 6. 14. There is a three-fold Kingdom of Christ mentioned in the holy Scripture The first is his Kingdom of power or excellency whereby he being God is the supream Lord of all things Psal. 24. 1. 2. The Kingdom of his grace whereby he rules in the hearts of all his elect ever since the world began Psal. 2. 6. Zech. 9. 9. Ier. 23. 5. Ezek. 37. 22. Luk. 11. 20. 17. 21. 3. Of glory whereby he himself is now in endlesse and perfect felicity and of which happinesse his Saints shall one day partake Luk. 23. 42. 12. 32. Luk. 13. 29. 1 Cor. 6. 9. 2 Pet. 2. 11. Crakanth of the P●pes Tempor Monarc cap. 2. See more there This Government is a right of immediate executing the soveraign authority of God over all creatures in ordine ad salutem in order to the salvation of his elect Ioh. 3. 34 35. Christ was born a King but he entered not into his Kingly Office till after his resurrection Psal. 2. 6 7. He was a Priest and Prophet on earth Yet this is that which brings in the benefit of all the other Offices and makes us partakers of all the good in Christ. Of which the means are outwardly his Word and the Ministery thereof and inwardly his holy Spirit worketh in and by the Word The parts of it are First Governing and guiding his Subjects in the wayes which he hath appointed them to walk in and subduing the temptations of Satan and the world and lusts of the flesh to them and rewarding them at the last with eternall glory Secondly Confounding and destroying all his enemies and treading them under his feet The properties of it are 1. It is not a civil or earthly but a spiritual Kingdom Iohn 18. 36. 1 Cor. 15. 47. Rom. 14. 1. which doth look to the Spirit reacheth to the conscience and spiritual things it is not carnal nor of this world nor looketh to the outward man alone The King is spiritual viz. the Lord from Heaven the Subjects are spiritual viz. the Church regenerate the Law whereby the Church is governed is spiritual viz. the Gospel the goods bestowed upon the Church are spiritual as remission of sins the Spirit of grace and the manner of government is spiritual 2. Universal and that in four respects 1. In respect of all ages and times other Kings have the time of their rise and fall this dominion is eternal it shall have no end 2. In respect of all places Rev. 5. 9. to the end 3. In respect of all creatures Rev. 5. 4. In respect of all things and actions For him hath God the Father made Lord and King and he doth powerfully administer his Church to the sanctification preservation and salvation of those which refuse not to submit Christ doth one thing more then all Kings for their Subjects for he maketh his Subjects seeing all by nature are his enemies but by his Word and Spirit he subdueth them to the obedience of his will 1 Cor. 14. 25. that he may glorifie himself and his Father in their salvation 3. Absolute Rev. 19. Christ is Lord Paramount 1 Tim. 6. 14. He is a King by a threefold right 1. Of birth Gal. 4. 1. 2. Of donation Psal. 2. 8. Ioh. 17. 2. 3. Conquest Rev. 1. 18. He is King in Heaven in respect of his glory in Earth in respect of his grace in hell in respect of his justice Christ as Mediator is the Churches head 1 Cor. 11. 32. Ephes. 1. 22. 4. 15. 5. 28. Col. 1. 1. 2. 18 19. He is their head Ratione Unionis Ratione Regiminis Ratione Influentiae 1. In respect of Union 2. In respect of Guidance 3. In respect of Influence The Government of the Church is upon his shoulders Isa. 9. 6. 22. 21 22. Matth. 28. 19 20. Ephes. 1. 20 21. Psal. 68. 18. He is the onely head and King of his Church the Government of the Church is part of his Kingly Office He as Mediator hath the Government of the Church committed to him 1. The Church Mystical the number of all the Saints of God whether
practised at Alexandria by Mark the Evangelist Christs meaning is not Luk. 22. 25 26. to make an equality among Ministers but to set a difference between Kings and the Ministers of the Word that none should invade the right of Princes under the pretence of their Ministery Doctor Hampton on that place See more there We confesse saith Bishop Davenant Determinat 42. that according to Christs appointment all the Apostles were equal in degree and power but we deny that that parity among the Ministers of the Gospel is here or any where established which they maintain who oppose the Episcopal Dignity For notwithstanding this command of Christ the twelve Apostles were superiour in Dignity and greater in Power then the twelve Disciples and the chief Pastours were appointed by the Apostles in the Church of Ephesus and Crete which had power of jurisdiction over the Presbyters of those Churches The Apostles had no superiority over the Disciples either of Ordination or Jurisdiction 2. The Question is concerning Officers of the same kinde and the instance is of Officers of different kinds amongst whom there may be superiority and inferiority as there is amongst us between Presbyters and Deacons The Apostles were superiour to Evangelists and Pastors but one Apostle had not superiority over another or one Evangelist over another Smectymn Answer to an Humble Remonstrance Sect. 13. Adde to this Armachanus Bishop Iewel Dr Whitaker and Saravia with others make Bishops and Presbyters the same order though different degrees Learned Divines both Protestants and Papists hold That Bishops and Presbyters differ rather in execution of some acts of their order appropriated to Bishops only then in their essential order A Bishop hath an eminency of degree in the same order but his ecclesiastical order is the same with the Presbyters or Priests D. Featley in a conference with Everard a Popish Priest There is saith Beza Episcopus Divinus Humanus Diabolicus by the divine Bishop he means the Bishop as he is taken in Scripture which is one and the same with a Presbyter By the humane Bishop he means the Bishop chosen by the Presbyters to be President over them and to rule with them by fixed Laws and Canons By the Diabolical Bishop he means a Bishop with sole power of Ordination and Jurisdiction lording it over Gods Heritage and governing by his own will and authority Smectymn Answ. to Humble Remonst Quer. about Episc. See M. Bains Dioc. Trial and Cartw. against Whitg M. Gillesp. Aarons Rod Blossom l. 2. cap. 11. and 3. and Gers. Bu● and Mr Seld. E●tych The Pope would be oecumenical Bishop and pleads that Monarchy is the best Government But Chamier Tom. 2. de Romano Pontifice lib. 9. cap. 8. though he acknowledge that Monarchy simply excels all other kinds of Government because all things created are governed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. by God alone and so that they cannot be more wisely powerfully and profitably administered yet saith he this makes nothing for the Popes cause for in that saith he we do not consider Monarchy simply but described with its certain circumstances viz. of the Persons which rule or are ruled and the Government it self so that is to be judged the best kinde of Government which is most profitable to those who are governed There can be conceived but three forms of Government Episcopal most conformable to Monarchy Presbyterial to Aristocracy and Independent as they term it to Democracy Presbyterial is no elder then the Reformation in Geneva and Independent then New-England Episcopacy was either planted by the Apostles or their immediate Successors in the first and best ages of the Church D. Featleys Sac. nem It is a Question An Ecclesiae regimen sit Monarchicum aut Aristocraticum Whether the Government of the Church be Monarchical or Aristrocratical The Government of the Church in respect of its Head Christ is a Monarchy in respect of the Pastours that govern in common and with like authority amongst themselves it is an Aristocracy or the rule of the best men in respect that the people are not secluded but have their intrest in Church-matters it is a Democracy or popular estate Cartw. Reply in Defence of the Admonit p. 35. He saith the same on Ephes. 4. 5. Whitaker hath the like cont 4. de Rom. Pontif. q. 1. c. 1. Of Councels or Synods The name of Synod doth in in his primary and large acception agree to every Assembly so doth the name of Councel to every Assembly of consultation The former being derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is all one with coetus and imports the Assembly of any multitude which meeteth and cometh together The later being derived of Cilia whence also Supercilium imports the common or joynt intending or bending their eyes both of body and minde to the investigation of truth in that matter which is proposed in the Assembly But both these words being now drawn from those their large and primitive significations are by ecclesiastical Writers and use of speech restrained and appropriated to those Assemblies of ecclesiastical persons wherein they come together to consult of such matters as concern either the Faith or Discipline of the Church Dr Crakanth Vigilius Dormitans cap. 19. Coetus qui Ecclesia nomine ad decidendas controversias convocatur Synodus seu Concilium appellatur Wendelinus A Synod is an ecclesiastical meeting consisting of fit persons called by the Churches and sent as their Messengers to discover and determine of doubtfull cases either in Doctrine or Practice according to the truth Hookers Survey of Church-Discipline part 4. c. 3. If Councels had been simply necessary Christ or his Apostles at least would somewhere have commanded them to be celebrated which yet we reade no where done by them Besides the Church and Faith remained safe for three hundred years without a general Councel from the time of the Apostles even to the Synod of Nice For this is the difference between a Church and Commonwealth that a Commonwealth stands in need of humane Councel and cannot stand without it but the Church is governed and preserved by God and though a Councel conduce to its externall State yet the life and satiety of the Church doth not consist in it A Councel which represents the Universal Church as it is compounded of particular Churches is called Universal or Oecumenical The Councel which represents a particular Church as it consists in one Assembly is called a Presbytery or Ecclesiastical Senate When it represents a particular Church as it is constituted out of the consociation of many Assemblies it is called either a National Councel if Embassadours come from all Provinces into which the Nation is dispersed to that Ecclesiastical meeting or a Provincial Councel if the Churches send onely from one Province Deputies to the same Assembly The most famous lawful and Oecumenical Councels were those four The first Nicene Councel called by the Emperour Constantine the Great
freely to consent and resist every such motion The Romanists plead for the power of mans will but Protestants for the efficacy of Gods grace If the Question be moved Whether free-will may resist grace It is apparent naturally in the unregenerate it may resist according to that Acts 7. 51. But if the Question be moved of them that are called according to Gods purpose Whether they resist the grace of their calling then removing the humour of contention the truth will easily appear The Question is Whether nature in this case doth resist the omnipotent power of God Deo volenti salvum facere nullum resistit hominis arbitrium There is a twofold resistance of the will say the Schoolmen 1. Connata born with it there is possibility to sinne in the best creatures as creatures 2. Actualis The Spirit of God by an Almighty Power overcomes this Psal. 110. 3. The Arminians have revived the old Pelagian heresie they say they magnifie Gods free grace and it was free grace for God to give Christ to be a Saviour and to send the Gospel to a place but then ask them about Gratia discriminans why Simon Peter receives the Gospel rather then Simon Magus they say God determines no mans will but because Peter receives it and the other rejects it it ariseth wholly from his determining himself then Christ should do no more in his own and Fathers intention for a sav'd then a damned person No man hath power to receive Christ when he is offered unlesse it be given him from above Object Why then doth the Lord exhort us to receive him or complain of us and threaten damnation if we receive him not Answ. The Lord useth these reproofs and exhortations as a means to work upon them whom he purposeth to save 2. To shew that some work is to be done on our part though not by our own strength it must be done à nobis though not ex nobis So the Papists argue from Gods commands God would not command us to do good works if we had not power to do them When our Saviour saith Make the tree good and then the fruit will be good He doth not imply that it is in our power to do so but only sheweth what our duty and obligation is See Rom. 7. 15. Gal. 5. 17. God gave the Law for these ends 1. To shew man his duty the obligation that lies on him I may put my debter in minde of his debt though he be turned bankrupt 2. To shew him his disability 3. To shew him the misery he should be in if God would urge this debt on him to discharge it himself 4. To shew the riches of his grace in providing a means to satisfie his justice and also the exceeding love of Christ in fulfilling the Law for him Object The Arminians say How can the will be free when it is determined How can omnipotent grace and free-will stand together and some talk of a Libertas contrarietatis when one can will good or evil This is a great controversie as between the Jesuites and Dominicans so between us and the Arminians Answ. The freedom of the will doth not consist in this that it is free and indifferent to choose either good or evil For so God and the good Angels should not be free seeing they cannot will any thing but that which is good There is no true liberty but unto that which is good because it is a perfection to be able to sinne is an imperfection 2 Cor. 3. 11. Ubi non est Spiritus Domini non est libertas arbitrii August A power to stand or fall was not a part of Adams liberty his power to fall came from his mutability not liberty It is a Question An faci●nti totum quod in se est ex naturae viribus dentur insallibiliter auxilia ad salutem supernaturalia Whether God will give supernatural grace to him that useth well his natural abilities Let any man use the power that God gives him and he shall have more There is not such an infallibilis n●xus that God hath bound himself in the use of our natural abilities to adde supernatural graces Mr F●nn●r on Ez●k 18. 31 32. A man in his natural condition can doe nothing but what is offensive to God No man ever yet by the right use of naturals obtained Evangelical grace that is a vain power which is never reduced into act It is a Question An naturae viribus possit aliqua vera tentatio superari Whether a man by strength of nature be able to conquer corruption or resist temptation Before Conversion we cannot resist sinne as sinne but exchange one sinne with another We cannot discern good from evil sinne is connatural to us Ier. 8. 6. No more are we able to resist temptation without grace All temptations are to draw us to the enjoyment of some temporal good or to the declining some temporal evil by leaving God Till a man be perswaded that God promiseth a greater good and threatneth a greater evil then the world can do he cannot resist such temptations we are saved by faith and stand by faith We had need all to pray Lord lead us not into temptation and keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins See Ephes. 6. 10. Some speak of reconciling Free-will with Gods Decree Grace and sin Others of the Concord of it and Gods Prescience and Providence Tully thought Prescience and Free-will could not stand together and therefore that he might assert the freedome of mans will he denied the Prescience of future things Atque ita dum vult facere liberos facit sacrilegos CHAP. IV. Of Saving Faith FAith in the New Testament is taken 1. For the Doctrine of faith Iude vers 3. Such are sound in the faith that are Orthodox This is the Catholick faith 2. For the habit or grace of faith whereby we receive Christ and accept him for our Saviour so it is often used in the Scripture Faith in its general nature is any assent unto some truth upon the authority of him that speaks it and the general nature of divine faith is to assent to the truth because God sayes it Our assent and perswasion of the truth in matters of Religion may be either huma●e meerly because of custome education and the authority of the Church or divine being enclined and moved thereunto because of divine authority Many Protestants have no more then a humane faith It is the Religion of their Fathers and of the place where they live In the grace of Faith there are three things 1. An act of the understanding an assent to the truths of Christ that he is such a one in respect of his Natures Offices Works as the Scripture reveales him 2. An act of the will consenting that Christ should do for me what the Lord sent him to do for poor sinners 3. A siducial assiance and dependance on him The Soc man by faith
Firm therefore called the riches of assurance of understanding and so opposite to doubting 2. Absolute and illimited beleeves precepts promises and threats Some expressions of Scripture seem to lay much upon assent as 1 Iohn 4. 2. 5. 1. 1 Cor. 12. 3. Matth. 16. 17. The truths of God at first suffering under so many prejudices the Gospel was a novel Doctrine contrary to the ordinary and received principles of reason persecuted in the world no friend to natural and carnal affections and therefore apt to be suspected Assent now is nothing so much as it was then 3. There is a consent to the goodnesse as well as an assent to the truth the one is the act of the understanding the other of the will The soul upon the information that Gods Spirit gives me of the excellency of Christ and his suitablenesse to me assents to the truth of it and consents to the goodnesse of it and makes choice of him for its portion Faith is the consent of the whole soul to receive and accept of Christ as God the Father hath offered him in the Gospel 4. A resting and relying upon Christ alone for grace and salvation Psal. 23. 1 2 6. Psal. 27. 1. Iob 19. 25 27. Rom. 8. 31. The soul leanes on Christ as a feeble man on a staff 2 Chron. 16. 7 8. Prov. 3. 5. Psal. 22. 8. What the Old Testament cals trusting the New cals beleeving This confidence of special mercy is the form and essence of faith without which faith is not faith nor justifies the sinner The Papists and Arminians cannot endure this that faith should be such a special confidence of the remission of sins They say it is a confidence that God may remit and a good hope that he will or it is a conditional confidence that God will remit if we shall be constant in piety to the end of our life The Doctrine of Faith is in three things 1. There is a necessity of relying on Christ alone 2. There is an allsufficiency of ability in him being God and man to be an high-Priest to make intercession for us 3. Of his willingnesse that we should have pardon grace comfort and salvation by him There are promises 1. Of free-grace that God will justifie the ungodly and pardon sin for his own names sake 2. Of grace that God will give Faith Repentance Love and a new heart 3. Unto grace that if we beleeve and repent we shall be saved These promises are all we have to build our faith on for our eternal salvation In all recumbency it is not enough to regard the strength of the act and rightnesse of the object carnal men will say I place my hope in Jesus Christ for salvation Micah 3. 11. but there are other circumstances to be observed First The method and order of this recumbency the resolution of an humbled sinner to cast himself upon Christ the main end and use of faith is to comfort those that are cast down Faith is exprest by taking hold of Christ or the Covenant Isa. 56. 4. by staying our selves upon or leaning upon God which supposeth a sense of misery Secondly The warrant and ground of it we must go to work considerately understand what we do 2 Tim. 1. 12. Psal. 119. 49. natural conscience may pretend fairly to trust in Christ but have no ground for it Ier. 7. 4. Thirdly The effects and fruits it cannot stand with a purpose to sin Ioh. 13. 10. Heb. 10. 23. We are said to be justified by faith to live by it to be saved by it to have it imputed unto us for righteousnesse all which is to be understood not principally immediately meritoriously in regard of any worth or dignity of it or efficaciously in regard of any power or efficacy in it self but mediately subserviently organically as it is a means to apprehend Christ his satisfaction and sufferings by the price and merit whereof we are justified and saved and stand as righteous in Gods sight and as it hath a special respect and relation thereunto There are divers degrees of faith Little faith Mat. 8. 26. Great faith Mat. 15. 28. Full assurance of faith Rom. 4. 21. First There is some unbelief in all the servants of God because there is not in any man in this world a perfection of faith faith is mixt with unbelief Secondly Many have a true faith yet a very weak faith Christ will not break the bruised reed Christ chides his Disciples for their weak faith and Peter Mat. 13. O you of little faith And how is it that you have not faith Luk. 4. See Iohn 4. and Matth. 9. Moses David Abraham Isaac were subject to great weaknesse of faith Reasons 1. Sense and reason do in many things contradict the conclusions of faith to beleeve in the mercy of God when we have so much sin 2. The knowledge of God in the best of Gods people which is the pillar and foundation of their faith is but imperfect 3. Satan above all things most opposeth the faith of Gods Saints because he knows that in this their very strength lies Ephes. 6. 14. 1 Tim. 6. 12. and they resist him by their faith 1 Pet. 5. 9. 1 Iohn 5. 4. In two things the weaknesse of faith most discovers it self First In thinking that we shall not finde the good things which God promiseth to give Secondly That we shall not be delivered from the evil things which he hath undertaken to deliver us from Faith in Gods threats must be confirmed as a principal means of beating back sinful temptations faith in Gods promises must be confirmed as a principal means of keeping us in comfort and obedience All holy exercises serve to strengthen faith especially two First Prayer with the Apostles to the Lord to increase our faith and to fill us with joy and peace through beleeving 2. Meditations specially directed to that end of the omnipotency of God his perfect truth and his accomplishment of his Word formerly to our selves and others There is a twofold state of faith a state of Adherence and a state of Assurance First A state of Adherence Affiance and Recumbence the act of the soul accepting Christ and giving it self to him Isa. 50. 10. Luk. 18. 13. There is a great peace in a faith of Adherence Heb. 4. 3. 1. In respect of the guilt of sinne it shewes the Lord Jesus as a Sacrifice for sinne 2. In reference to God I have heard saith such a one that the Lord is a God pardoning iniquity transgression and sinne there is tranquillity when one casts his sinne on Christ and ventures his soul on the free-grace of God Isa. 50. 10. Secondly Of Assurance 1 Iohn 4. 16. when one hath obtained the witnesse and sealing of the Spirit 1. One may have the faith of adherence roll his soul on Christ and be willing to accept him that hath not the faith of evidence as Heman Psal. 88. The fearing of God
deliver our selves out of his hand and worthy to be subject to him in the lowest degree Thirdly The effects of this fear are most excellent 1. It interests him in whom it is to all the gracious promises of God for this and a better life it plainly proves a man to be regenerate and sanctified and to be Gods true childe and faithful servant 2. It worketh a great tranquillity of minde and a most setled quietnesse of heart it armeth the heart against all carnal and inordinate fear of other things Exod. 1. 17. Isa. 8. 12 13. Luk. 12. 4 5. and strengthens against all temptations There is a double fear 1. Of Reverence a reverent respect to God this is kept up by considering Gods Attributes discovered in the Word Psal. 16. 8. Iob 31. begin Isa. 6. 3. Exod. 23. 11. Hab. 3. 16. 2. Of caution or circumspection in our conversation This is stirred up by considering 1. The strictnesse of the Law Psal. 19. 9. it condemns not only acts but sinfull lusts and motions Psal. 119. 96. 1 Cor. 2. 3. 2. The sad fals of the Saints when they have laid aside the fear of God Peter fell by a damsels question There is a servile fear of God as a Judge and a filial fear of him as a Father the one is ne puniat the other ne deserat Aug. Courage or Boldnesse It is a passion quite contrary to fear which stirreth up and quickneth the minde against evil to repel or bear the same without dejectednesse Saul David and Davids worthies Ionathan Caleb and Ioshua were couragious A godly man is bold as a young Lion Be of good courage Be strong saith God to Ioshua Caleb and Ioshua would have gone up to possesse the Land notwithstanding the strength of the Canaanites There is a double Resolution 1. In sinne and iniquity Ier. 18. 12. The devils are consirmed in wickednesse 2. In the truths and wayes of God Dan. 3. 18. This is an almighty work of Gods Spirit whereby a Christian is able to do and suffer glorious things for God and his cause Dan. 1. 8. Act. 21. Nehemiah Esther Athanasius Luther and others were thus couragious There is boldnesse with God that flows from innocency Iob 11. 15. and that flows from slattery a boldnesse that ariseth from a seared conscience Deut. 29. 19. and from a reprobate conscience Heb. 6. 1. Iohn 14. 17. It must be well ordered First For the Object of it it must be exercised against all sorts of evils Natural which may come upon us in the way of our calling and duty as David used courage against Goliah 1 Sam. 17. 34. Ionathan against the Philistims and Esther against the danger of death the Judges of Israel were couragious and Paul in his sufferings and chiefly Christ Jesus when he set himself to go up to Ierusalem and to bear the curse of the Law It must be withdrawn from unfit objects we must not be couragious against Gods threats nor great works as thunder nor against our betters nor against the evil of sinne and damnation To be bold to do evil and to despise Gods threats is hardnesse of heart This was the sinne of the old world and the Philistims when the Ark came against them and of Pharaoh Secondly For the measure of our courage it must be alwayes moderate so as to resist and bear such evils as do necessarily offer themselves to be resisted and born not to provoke danger 2. It must be used more against publick enemies and evils then private and against spiritual evils then natural we must resist Satan strong in the faith Motives to true Christian Courage 1. It is both munimentum the armour of a Christian and ornamentum the honour of a Christian. 2. Consider what examples we have in Scripture of this vertue Moses Exod. 10. 26. Ioshua Daniel Esther Peter Paul Means of getting Courage 1. See your fearfulnesse with grief and shame and confesse it to God with sorrow for in the acknowledgement of the want of Grace begins the supply thereof 2. Consider of the needfulnesse worth and excellency of this Grace 3. Beg of God the Spirit of Courage 4. Take heed of self-confidence Heb. 11. 34. Frustra nititur qui non innititur Bern. Remember Peter and Dr Pendleton In the last place I shall handle some compound affections Anger Reverence Zeal It sutes well with Gods Attributes and his Dispensations that we should Love Joy and be confident and yet fear Psal. 11. Matth. 8. 8. God discovers different Attributes of Mercy and Justice on which we are to exercise different affections His Dispensations also are various as there is a fatherly love so there is ira paterna Deut. 26. 11. Jude 11. See Phil. 2. 13. Of Anger Anger is a most powerful passion and hath by an excellency engrossed the general name of passion to it self The most usual name used by the Hebrews to signifie Anger is Aph which signifies also the nose and by a Synecdoche the whole face either because in a mans anger the breath doth more vehemently and often issue out of the nose which is as it were the smoke issuing from the flame kindled about the heart or else because in the face anger is soonest discerned The Grecians used two names to expresse this affection 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Latine it is called ira because it maketh a man quasi ex seire as it were to go out of himself Ira furor brevis It is the rising of a mans heart against one that behaveth himself amisse to punish him It is a mixt affection compounded of these three affections Hatred Desire Grief 1. There is hatred in pure just and innocent anger of the sinne and fault principally and a little for the present of the faulty person but in corrupt anger of the fault little or nothing of the person most of all 2. There is Grief in pure anger at the dishonour done to God in corrupt anger at the wrong done to ones self or his friend 3. There is desire in pure anger of using means according to our vocation of bringing the party to repentance and hindering the infection of the sinne in unjust anger of revenging our selves upon the party and delighting in his smart therefore it is so violent a passion because it is composed of those three all which affections are fiery It is easie to perceive all these three concurring in every angry person Therefore such as are in love or in pain or in sorrow or hungry in deep studies are very teachy and soon moved to anger for in all these there is an excessivenesse of some one or two of these passions whereof anger is made and therefore anger is soon provoked seeing that these will soon breed a third as wood and fire will cause a slame with a little blowing The formal cause of it is when any thing is highly esteemed by us and that is contemned by
to our neighbour D. Hall saith Justice comprizeth all vertue as peace all blessings Antiochus of Asia sent his letters and missives to his Provinces that if they received any dispatch in his name not agreeable to justice Ignoto se has esse scriptas ideóque eis non parerent See Speed in the Reign of Henry the 5th concrning his Justice p. 625. Scepters born by Kings and the Maces of all Magistrates are straight emblems of Justice D. Clerk The Rules which must be observed in executing of Justice 1. The doer must have a calling and authority to it Peter had none when the High-priests servants came to lay hold on Christ and he cut off the ear of Malchus 2. He must indifferently hear both parties Philip kept an ear alwaies for the Defendant therefore Suetonius justly chargeth Claudius with injustice for precipitating his sentence before he had given a full hearing to both parties nay sometimes to either Pronunciabat saepe altera parte audita saepe neutra 3. He must lay all he hears in an even balance and poyse them together Res cum re causa cum causa ratio cum ratione concertet 4. He must maturely advise and seriously consider of the matter before he passe sentence Iudg. 19. 30. 5. The person punished must be indeed an offender or guilty person not made so to appear by forged cavillation as Naboth nor so reputed out of the rage of the punisher as the Priests of Nob in Sauls conceit but having indeed done some and being duly convicted to have done some thing worthy of stripes bonds imprisonment for else to strike the innocent is abominable to God 6. The punishment must be proportioned to the sinne as a plaister to the sore a lesse punishment must be inflicted on a lesse sinne and a greater on a greater with this proviso that the greatnesse of the sinne be not measured alone by the matter of the thing done but also by other circumstances considered together with that and chiefly by the mischiefs which will ensue upon the doing thereof and so those faults must be punished with capital punishments which are either in themselves very enormous or in their consequents and effects very mischievous 7. The motive and end in punishing must be a single eye to the stopping and preventing of sinne that God may not thereby be dishonoured not any self-regard Severity is the executing of punishment fully without sparing in any part of the punishment and speedily without too long deferring and putting it off Deut. 13. 8. 19. 21. Ezek. 8. 18. Salomon tels us That a wise King turneth the wheel over the wicked that is is severe to them See Psal. 101. 8. a parent must correct his son and not spare for his much crying God therefore often saith I will not spare nor mine eyes shall not pity we must be just as our heavenly Father is as well as merciful as he is Reasons 1. In respect of God we ought to shew a love to him and conformity to his judgement and a detestation of that which he detests and a care to please him in doing what he commands 2. In respect of the sinne it is a thing wholsome and profitable for their souls the welfare of which is to be preferred before ease Punishment to a fault is like a medicine to a disease or a plaister to a ●ore 3. This is requisite for the good of others as the Scripture expresly noteth that others may hear and fear and do no more so wickedly 4. It is requisite for the publick safety for what sins are not duly punished will grow frequent ordinary general 5. For the honour and credit of the Laws and Law-makers if they did well in appointing such a correction for a fault why is not their order observed and put in practice If ill why did they make the Law 6. The Governour is guilty of the sin if he forbear to punish when there is no just and due cause of sparing David and Eli were sharply punished for failing herein Knowledge or Wisdom Wisdome is 1. Intellectual which consists in the knowledge of the languages and the liberal Arts and Sciences 2. Moral which consists in a gracefull comely and discreet carriage of our selves Ephes. 5. 15. Col. 4. 5. 3. Civil which consists in an orderly Government of Corporations and Societies committed to our charge 4. Spiritual which consists in the knowledge of the true God and in the serving of him in a true manner Prov. 1. 7. 1 Chron. 28. 9. The knowledge of God and Christ is the ground of all our good 2 Pet. 1. 3. Col. 2. 2. Conversion it self is wrought in a way of conviction and illumination Iohn 16. 8 9 10. therefore it is called Illumination Heb. 10. 32. Vocation comes in by knowledge Ephes. 1. 8 9. Justification Isa. 53. 11. Glorification Iohn 17 3. There is a two-fold Knowledge 1. Speculative whereby we assent to the truth revealed this is found in the devils in as large and ample measure as in the Saints they being knowing Spirits know and assent to the truth of every proposition that a childe of God knows 2. Experimental whereby we do not only know that it is so but taste and see it to be so Heb. 5. 14. Phil. 1. 9. where this is there must needs be faith We should labour not only to know God as God in the creatures by the light of nature and reason but to know him in the Gospel by the light of revelation and Christ in the excellency of his person as God-man and the sufficiency that is in him the riches of his grace and satisfaction and our communion with him Matth. 16. 16 17. to know God and Christ as calling and converting us Ephes. 1. 17 18 19. Col. 1. 27. Such a knowledge of God and Christ will fill us with high thoughts of them and high apprehensions will breed strong affections to them and increase all graces Exod. 33. 19. Isa. 6. 5 8. Col. 3. 16. The devil much opposeth this knowledge 2 Cor. 4. 4. Eph. 6. 12. whenever God intends good to any soul he brings it to the means Wisdome is an excellent endowment a principal and one of the cardinal Vertues much to be desired and esteemed Wisdome is the chiefest saith Salomon he speaketh of spiritual wisdome but the proportion holdeth fitly as spiritual wisdome is the principal among spiritual graces so natural wisdome among natural The excellency of a thing saith Salomon in another place is wisdome and who is as the wise man and also Wisdome maketh the face to shine As light is better then darknesse so is wisdome then folly A poor wise childe is preferred before an old foolish King Wisdome is one of the principal Attributes of God for which he is most exalted by his Saints To the onely wise God be glory for ever and ever To the onely wise God our Saviour be glory and majesty dominion and power for ever
Scripture but prosperity See Ier. 15. 9. Amos 8. 9. They also urge that place Rev. 21. 22. Brightman understands it not of the Church militant but of the Jewish Synagogues They shall not worship God after their own manner and worship when the Jews are converted 1. God hath chosen these to be Canales gratiae the Conduit-pipes whereby he derives himself and his graces to his people 1 Cor. 1. 24. 2. He hath commanded us to wait upon them attend to reading search the Scriptures Ioh. 5. 39. be baptized for remission of sins do this in remembrance of me pray continually Despise not prophesying 1 Thess. 5. 19. Paul there intimates an aptnesse in men under the notion of magnifying and advancing of the Spirit to despi●e prophesying and sheweth also that the means to quench and extinguish the illuminations of the Spirit is to have low and unworthy thoughts of the word of God and of prophesying according to the Analogy and proportion of that Word We use the Ordinances not only for the enjoyment of God in them but as a testimony of our obedience God gave not the Spirit for this end to be the onely rule for man to live by but to help him to understand the rule and enable him to keep it 3. God hath limited us so to them that we have no warrant to expect the communication of grace but by the Ordinances 4. He hath threatned a curse to those that reject them Heb. 10. 25 39. Observe the punishment both of Jews and Gentiles which slighted the Ordinances 1 Cor. 1. 22 23 compared with v. 24. If these therefore be children which set so light by the Ordinances they will not live long without bread God hath given up the leaders of this errour to borrid blasphemous opinions they think they have no need of Christ Some think that they are Christ Others that they are God and that they are glorified and cry down Sanctification as an Idol This may suffice for the Ordinances in general of the Ministry and preaching of the Word I have spoken already the other particular Ordinances I shall handle and defend afterwards Others run into another extream and make Idols of the Ordinances 1. By resting in a bare formal attendance upon them as the Harlot in the Proverbs I have had my peace-offerings to day We must remember they are but means the end is communion with God and Christ and therefore we should not rest in the work done 2. By leaning too much upon them they are means to which we are limited but we should not limit the Lord when thou hast done all loathe thy self and all that thou hast done and rest on free-grace We should be careful of duty as if there were no grace to justifie us and so rest upon grace as if no work were to be done ●y us The Ordinances are either 1. Ordinary as Hearing the Word Singing of Psalms Prayer Receiving the sacraments 2. Extraordinary Fasting Feasting Vows CHAP. II. Of Ordinary Religious Duties and first of Hearing the Word I. That we must hear the Word HEaring of the Word preached is a duty that lies upon all Saints Ephes. 2. 17. Heb. 12. 25. 1 Pet. 1. 11. 3. 18 19. It is a necessary and beneficial duty 1. Necessary It is seed to beget and meat to nourish 1 Pet. 2. 2. It is ●eedful in respect of our ignorance Ephes. 4. 18. Forgetfulnesse Heb. 2. 2 3. Isa. 62. 6. 2 Pet. 1. 12. This is the word by which we are to examine our estates and by which God will judge us at the last day 2 Cor. 5. 15 16. All the Persons of the Trinity speak to you in every truth discovered The Father Iohn 6. 45. the Son Heb. 12. 25. the Spirit Hear what the Spirit saith to the Churches 2. Beneficial 1. Souls are converted unto God as death comes by hearing so life Rom. 10. 17. Revel 6. 1. 2. It is a great means of salvation Rom. 1. 16. it is called salvation it self the one thing necessary Iam. 1. 21. 3. The Spirit is conveyed by it both in the gifts and graces 2 Cor. 3. 8. Rom. 1. 12. 4. Growth in grace comes by it 5. Satans Kingdome is overthrown by it he fals from heaven like ligh●●ning Object I can reade the Word at home which is more truly the Word then what others preach If he were a man of an infallible spirit it were something but they may erre as well as we some therefore will hear none but look for Apostles Answ. If they were men of an infallible spirit thou must try their Doctrines by the Word If God should send you Prophets and Apostles you must take nothing upon trust from them Gal. 1. 8. 1 Iohn 4. 1. II. How we must hear the Word SOme things must be done 1. Afore hearing 2. In hearing 3. After hearing I. Afore hearing Thou must pray for thy teacher that he may so speak as he ought to speak Ephes. 6. 19. Col. 4. 3 4. and for thy self that thou maist hear profitably and be blessed in hearing Prov. 2. 3 5. Psal. 25. 4. 119. 10 18 27. II. In hearing 1. One must set himself as in Gods presence when he is hearing of the Word Deut. 32. 2. so Luk. 10. 16. 1 Thess. 2. 13. so did Cornelius Acts 10. 33. 2. Attend diligently to what he heareth Luke 19. 48. Gods people are oft called upon to attend Mark 4. 9 23. 7. 14. It is seven times repeated Revel 2. He that hath an ear to hear let him hear so did Lydia Acts 16. 14. Attentivenesse implies 1. Earnestnesse and greedinesse of soul Bibulae aures James 1. 19. 1 Pet. 2. 2. so the people that slockt after Christ. 2. The union of the thoughts and all other faculties of the soul it is called attending upon the Lord without distraction 1 Cor. 7. 35. 3. Hear the Word with understanding and judgement Matth. 15. 10. Psal. 45. 10. 2 Tim. 2. 7. 4. He should hear with affection and delight Deut. 32. 46 47. Mark 13. 37. Acts 2. 4. 5. He must take every thing as spoken to himself Matth. 19. 25 27. 26. 22. Iohn 5. 27. III. After hearing 1. We must meditate of what we have heard Acts 17. 11. 2. Apply it to our selves To apply the Word is to take it as that wherein I have an interest Psal. 119. 111. every precept promise and priviledge The life of preaching and hearing both is application If one could repeat the Bible from one end to another it would not make him a knowing Christian. When our Saviour told his Disciples One of them should betray him they all ask Is it I A good hearer Isa. 55. 2. is said to eat which notes an intimate application the stomack distributes to every part what nourishment is sutable to it 3. Conferre of it with others Ier. 33. 25. See Iohn 16. 17 19. Mark 4. 10. 7. 17. 10. 10 11. Conference is that whereby
be in Heaven there must our hearts be Praier being an humble discourse of the soul with God Which art in Heaven The natural gesture of lifting up our eyes and hands to Heaven implieth this this is opposed to worldly cares and earthlinesse these are clogs this made David say It is better to be one day in thy house then a thousand elsewhere Call in the help of the Spirit Rom. 8. 27. 2. Consideration of Gods benefits it is good to have a Catalogue of them 3. Study much the fulnesse and all sufficiencie of God and his making over himself to you in his all-sufficiencie Gen. 17. 1. 4. Acquaint your selves with your own necessities Let the word of God dwell richly in you Col. 3. 16. The ground of praier is Gods will acquaint your selves with the precepts promises 5. Give your selves to praier Psal. 109. 4. but I praier so the Hebrew Oratio ego so Montanus Helps against wandring and vain thoughts in holy duties and especially in praier 1. Set a high price upon it as a great Ordinance of God wherein there is a Communion with him to be enjoyed and the influence of the grace of God to be conveyed thorow it 2. Every time thou goest to praier renew thy resolutions against them till thou comest to a habit of keeping thy heart close to the duty 3. Set the presence of God before you in praier his glorie and consider that he converseth with thy thoughts as man with thy words 4. Be not deceived with this that the thoughts are not very sinful whatsoever thoughts concern not the present duty are sinful 5. Blesse God for that help if thine heart hath been kept close to a duty and ou hast had communion with God The godly must pray by this title the Scripture describes true Christians Acts 2. 41. and Paul saluteth All the faithful that call upon the name of the Lord 1 Cor. 1. 2. a heart full of grace is also full of holy desires and requests Cant. 1. 2 4 7. It is called the Spirit of Supplications Zech. 12. 10. suitable to the Spirit of grace is the Spirit of Supplication They must pray daily Psal. 55. 17. 147. 2. Dan. 6. 10. Luk. 2. 47. 1 Thess. 3. 10. 2 Tim. 1. 3. Reasons 1. It is equal that part of every day be given and consecrated to him who is the Lord of the day and of all our time they had a morning and evening Sacrifice in the time of the Law 2. Praier is a singular means of neer and heavenly Communion with God therein the godly enjoy the face of God talk familiarly with him 3. Praier sanctifieth to us that is obtaineth of God for us a lawful and comfortable use of all the things and affairs of the day 4. Every day we stand in need of many things belonging both to temporal and spiritual life 5. We are every day subject to many dangers A gracious heart is full of holy requests to God Psal. 8. 10. Revel 5. 8. Rom. 5. 5. Ezek. 16. 15. Iohn 16. 24. Iude v. 11. Reasons 1. Praier is an act of religious worship Dan. 4. 17. 2. Because of the great things spoken of praier Isa. 46. 11. Rev. 16. 1. Deut. 4. 7. Isa. 37. 3. 3. The Saints have received the Spirit of Supplication Zech. 12. 10. Every godly man must be constant and assiduous in praier persevere in it Psal. 5. 23. Psal. 55. 16 17. Psal. 118. 12 13. Will the hypocrite alwaies call upon God saith Iob Daniel would not forbear the daily exercise of this service although it were with the hazard of his life Dan. 6. 10. Aquinas 2a 2ae Quaest. 83. Artic. 4. determines this Question Utrum oratio debet esse diuturna Reasons 1. From God who hath signified approbation of this service by commanding it expresly saying Pray continually and Christ spake a Parable That we should be constant in praier and not faint Luk. 18. 1. 2. This hath been the practice of all the Saints of God Iacob wrestled with God and praied all night The Canaanitish woman had several repulses yet persevered in praier Moses held up his hands which implies the continuance of his praier Isa. 62. 1. Christ praied thrice and yet more earnestly Luk. 22. 44. 2. From our selves First We have great need for we absolutely depend upon God and he hath tied himself no further to do us good then we shall seek it in his Ordinance at his hands Secondly We have great helps even such as may enable us to perform the dutie notwithstanding any weaknesse that is in our selves for we have Gods Word and Spirit If a man doubt to whom to direct his praiers the Scripture cals him to God To thee shall all flesh come Psal. 65. 2. If in whose name it leads him to Christ Whatsoever you shall ask in my Name If for what to pray for wisdome for the Spirit for patience for daily bread for remission of sins for deliverance from evil for the honouring of Gods name in a word for all good things If for whom for Kings for Rulers for our selves for others for all men except him whom we see to have sinned a sinne unto death If where every where lifting up pure hands If when at all times continually If how oft why morning noon night If on what occasion in all things by praier and supplications If in what manner why fervently with an inward working of the heart in praier with understanding in truth and in faith and without fainting 2. God will assist us with his Spirit all those which addresse themselves to perform this work according to the direction of his Word and beg the Spirit of praier to help them in praying The Spirit maketh intercession Rom 8. Jude v. 20. Praying in the holy Ghost Thirdly Constant supplicating to God doth honour him and actually confesse him to be the universal Lord the Ruler and disposer of all yea to be liberal in giving to be omnipotent in power to be present in all places to see and hear all persons and actions to search our hearts and to sit at the stern of the whole world so that he observeth also each particular creatures need and wants Fourthly It is exceeding advantagious to our selves seeing it acquaints us with God and breeds a kinde of holy familiaritie and boldnesse in us toward him 2. It exerciseth reneweth and reviveth all graces in us in drawing near to God and calling upon him we grow like to him this sets a work and increaseth knowledge of God humilitie faith obedience and love to him Fifthly Because praier it self is not only a duty but a priviledge the chief purchase of Christs bloud Sixthly Because if we persevere and faint not God will come in at last with mercie in the fourth watch of the night Christ came in the morning watch the night was divided into four watches Iacob wrestled all night with God but in the morning he prevailed
of our entrance into the Covenant and admission into the Church Rom. 6. 3. our insition and incorporation into Christ is signified and sealed up by Baptism and hence it is once administred and never again to be repeated because of the stability of the Covenant of Grace Baptism is a Sacrament of Regeneration wherein by outward washing of the body with water In the Name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost the inward cleansing of our souls by the bloud of Christ is represented and sealed up unto us Tit. 3. 5. Mat. 28. 19. Ephes. 5. 2. D. Gouges Catechism It may be thus briefly described It is the first Sacrament of the New Testament wherein every one that is admitted into the Covenant of Grace being by Christs Minister washed in water In the Name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost is thereby publickly declared to belong to Christs Family and to partake of all the benefits that belong to a Christian. First Sacrament because first instituted and by the Lords order first to be administred being a Sacrament of our new birth 2. Of the New Testament because the old Sacraments ended with the old administration of the Covenant wherein the way to the Kingdom of heaven is more clearly revealed 3. Instituted by Christ himself the authour of it 4. The subject it belongs to all persons who can lay claim to the Covenant 5. To be administred by one of Christs Ministers Matth. 28. 19. He never gave commission to any to administer this Sacrament to whom he gave not authority to preach 6. The form to wash with water In the Name of the Father Son and holy Ghost See Aquin. partem tertiam Quaest. 66. Artic. 6. Utrum in nomine Christi possit dari Baptismus See also the 〈…〉 e there 7. The use and end of it is to be a publick declaration from God that one belongs to Christs family and partakes of all the benefits that concern a Christian. See of the uses of Baptism Perk. Cas. of Cons. l. 2. p. 130. to 135. A converted Pagan which makes profession of his faith and a childe not baptized may have right but this is a solemn declaration of it This washing with water In the Name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost properly and by the Lords appointment notes the washing with the holy Ghost Iohn 3. 5. Tit. 3. 5. Mat. 3. 16. The Spirit descended like a Dove not only to confirm the Godhead of Christ but to shew the fruit of Baptism Heaven is opened and the Spirit poured out abundantly The Lutherans and Papists say we make it Signum mutile it is not a naked and bare sign The great Gospel promise was the pouring out of the holy Ghost and the sign water Isa. 44. 3. Zech. 13. 1. The Analogy lies in this the first office done to a new-born childe is the washing of it from the pollution of the flesh which it brings from the mothers womb so the first office Gods Spirit doth is to purge us from our filthinesse In the Eastern Countreys when they would shew no pity to their childe they threw it out unwasht Ezek. 16. 15. Baptism is a publick tessera or seal of the Covenant First The Priviledges of the children of God by Baptism are many 1. I am united to Christ and ingraffed into that stock his Spirit poured out on the soul is the bond of union between Christ and the soul therefore we are often said to be baptized into Christ Rom. 6. 3. Gal. 3. 27. 2. Hereby we are declared to be the sons of God we are said to be regenerate by him that is sacramentally Baptism is a publick standing pledge of our Adoption 3. It is a constant visible pledge that all our sins are done away in the bloud of Jesus Christ therefore these are joyned together in Scripture Mark 1. Act. 2. 38. See Act. 22. 16. Rom. 6. 18. Ephes. 5. 26. 4. It seals to us a partaking of the life of Christ our Regeneration and Sanctification See Acts 19. beginning It is called the Laver of our Regeneration Titus 5. It seals to us the mortifying of all the reliques of corruption and that we shall rise out of our graves to enjoy that eternal life purchased by Christs bloud 6. It gives us a right to all Gods Ordinances Secondly The Duties Baptism doth ingage us unto All that Christ requires of his people either in faithfulnesse to him or love and unity to his Saints Rom. 6. We are buried with Christ in Baptism therefore are obliged to walk holily Ephes. 4. When the Apostle presseth the people of God to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace he saith There is one Baptisme Baptism serveth for two uses 1. To teach us our filthinesse that have need of washing and to binde us to seek to God for the spiritual washing 2. To assure us by pawning the truth and fidelity of God unto us for that end that upon our so doing we shall be washed with the bloud and Spirit of christ We should make use of our Baptism 1. To resist actual temptations I have given up all to Christ 1 Cor. 6. 15. 2. As a cordial in all dejections of spirit Shall I doubt of the love of God and pardon of my siu sealed to me in Baptism 3. In our prayers to God he hath given us his hand and seal 2 Sam. 7. 27. In Baptism we devote our selves to God it s an Oath of fealty to Christs Laws As therefore Baptism is a pledge to us of what we may look for from God so it is likewise a pledge of what he may expect from us it will be a witnesse against us if we make not right use of it Psal. 87. 6. See Ier. 9. 26. and Act. 7. 51. The Turks say what a Mussel man one that is a professed servant of Mahomet as we say baptized to do this See Rom. 6. 2. Luther tels a story of a pious Gentlewoman that when the devil tempted her to sin she answered Satan still Baptizata sum I am baptized Ex veteri Ecclesiae consuetudine in Baptismo renunciatur Satanae pompis ejus Vossius de orig progres Idol We cannot serve both God and the Devil such contrary Lords Mat. 6. 24. See 1 Cor. 10. 21. Baptism is administred but once the use of it continueth as long as we live We should make use of it 1. To quicken our repentance Have I so long ago promised to renounce all sin and yet am I hard hearted and impenitent The Scripture cals it the Baptism of Repentance for remission of sins because it serveth not alone as a bond to tie us to seek to God for repentance and to set upon that work but also to tie the Lord God unto us to give us the grace of repentance when we seek it at his hands and endeavour to practise it and whereby we are said to put on Christ and to be baptized into Christ and
Marks of the growth of grace 1. It is a proportionable growth a growth in all the parts our faith is sutable to our knowledge our love to our faith and practice to both 2. Constant at least in our desires and endeavours 3. It will grow against all hinderances The infallible Signs of growth in grace are these 1. When we grow more spiritual 1. In our aims when we have pure intentions in every action 2. In our duties when the minde is more enlightened to minde spiritual duties and to resist spiritual temptations when we oppose thoughts and lusts not only morally but spiritually evil and when we relish the more spiritual part of the Word 1 Cor. 10. 6. 3. In our motives when we resist sin not because it will damn us but because it is against Gods law purity and defiles us 2. When we grow more solid and judicious 1 Cor. 13. 11. Phil. 1. 9. Growth is not to be measured by the intensnesse and vigour of the affections that is more in young Christians 3. When we grow more humble by long experience reflexive light is increased one is more able to look into conscience and see his own defects Prov. 30. 2. The lowest degree of growth in grace may be discerned by two Marks 1. By longing for food 1 Pet. 2. 2. 2. By being humbled for want of growth Mark 9. 24. It is a good degree of our growth in grace to see how much we want There is difference between growth in gifts and graces 1 Cor. 1. 5 7. Many in these dayes grow in gifts gifts are for others and but for this life growth in gifts often puffeth up but growth in grace humbleth A Christian may grow either quoad amplitudinem scientiae or efficaciam scientiae the enlargement of his knowledge may be both in respect of the matter he may know more things then he did as also in the manner more clearly evidently and firmly then he did or else in the efficacy of his knowledge he knoweth them more practically 2. Means of our spiritual Growth 1. General the Word 1 Pet. 2. 2. it is compared to rain Deut. 32. 2. and such things as will further growth Isa. 55. 5 11. milk Children never grow so much in so short a time as when they are sed with milk sincere milk not mixed with errour 2 Cor. 2. ult 2. Particular Helps 1. We should labour to live under the means of growth and prize them Zech. 4. 12. the Sacrament is a strengthening Ordinance 2. We should overcome our lusts Iam. 1. 21. 1 Pet. 2. 2 3. The good ground hears the Word with a good and honest heart 3. We should be daily questioning our selves how we do grow 1 Cor. 12. ult Heb. 6. 1. 4. Be often in the use and exercise of that grace wherein we desire to grow 1 Tim. 4. 14 15. the right hand and foot are stronger because they are more used improve thy knowledge by teaching others and zeal when the name of God is dishonoured and faith by depending on God in all occurrences by applying the promises exercise repentance 2 Cor. 7. 7. humility God gives grace to the humble self-denial love that sets obedience on work 2 Cor. 5. 5. Constant prayer for Gods blessing on the Word and all other means Iude v. 20. The Disciples said Lord increase our faith Luk. 17. 5. Praying Christians will certainly be growing Christians Strength of grace is discovered by two things 1. When duties are easie Rom. 15. 20. 2. When crosses are light Bonds and afflictions abide me where ever I come saith Paul yet none of these move me Strength is an ability of working powerfully we must have it from Christ Isa. 45. 24. Col. 1. ult All graces shew their vertue and efficacy two wayes 1. When they strongly and lively produce their own acts as a strong assent and most firm and fixed acknowledgement of any truth shews a strong faith 2. By a laborious and earnest resisting their contrary as a strong casting away and loathing and abhorring doubting conceits shews faith also to be strong Christ by his Spirit 1. Increaseth graces in us faith love humility self denial 2. Acts the graces received Cant. 4. 16. Rom. 7. 18. 3. Brings to our mindes the truths of God and former works of God Heb. 12. 5. 4. Renews our comforts and freshly imprints the love of God upon the soul Rom. 5. 5. 1 Iohn 2 6. Obedience flows from love so he strengthens us We should labour to grow First In knowledge Hos. 6. 3. Grace increaseth by the knowledge of God Isa. 11. 18. 2 Pet. 1. 2. 2 Pet. 3. 10. our fairest portion in heaven is the satisfaction of our understanding in the knowledge of God Psal. 17. 15 Knowledge is the great promise of the New Covenant Ier. 31. 34. We should grow in the knowledge of the truths of Christian Religion of God Christ the Sacraments Justification Sanctification and labour to get a powerful practical experimental knowledge of these truths know the power of Christs death and resurrection Phil. 3. 10. Knowledge is the first and chief part of Gods Image Col. 3. 10. See Chap. 1. 10. Growth in knowledge is rather to be reckoned by the degrees of knowledge then by the objects and matters known Prov. 4. 18. I know God and Christ more practically savingly the Covenant more distinctly Heb. 6. 14. We must not from an expectation of new light be hindered from being establisht in the present principles Secondly In faith Matth. 9. 24. Luk. 17. 5. Rom. 1. 17. because faith of all graces is most defective things in Religion are so rare and excellent and most assaulted by Satan and growth in all other graces depends on the increase of faith See Luke 17. 5. We should labour to grow in the assurance of faith Heb. 6. 14. in the exercise of it Heb 10. 38. Gal. 2 20. 1. The people of God here must live a life of holinesse as our faith is so is our conversation 2. Must bear Christs Crosse as our faith is so will our carriage be under the Crosse Iohn 11. 14. 3. They should be full of peace and joy this will be according to our faith Lastly We should search and finde out what our wants are that we would fain have supplied there what we stand in need of we partake of the body and bloud of Christ for the supply and augmentation of those graces we stand in need of Luke 18. 40. The Sacrament is a Grace-increasing Ordinance consider what graces therefore are most defective in you and come to Christ for a supply of them Quest. Whether the Communicants ought to come fasting It is superstitious to think it irreverent receiving if a man have eaten any thing before Christ instituted it after Supper The Papists take it in the morning and fasting it cannot then be called the Lords Supper since it is rather a breakfast II. Directions for our carriage in the Duty By faith
innocency and compass thine Altar A man must bring an undefiled spirit if he will pray he must work his heart to sorrow and resolution to amend his late sins for he cannot be welcome into Gods presence that is not cleansed from his wickedness or hateth to be reformed we must be pure if we will come into Gods presence 3. Prayer to God for his blessing must be prefixed to all religious services for our better inabling thereto for of our selves we can do nothing all our sufficiency comes from him who hath promised to hear us when we pray and to grant our petitions so that without seeking a blessing we cannot expect to finde it and therefore the Apostlē saith that all things are sanctified unto us by prayer even exercises of Religion the Word the Sacraments and the like yea and Prayer too by praying God first for his Spirit of Prayer Therefore he that will serve God aright must first crave his help and grace to serve him The fourth and last part of common preparation is by a preconsideration of the exceeding greatness of the Lord before whom we come and of our vileness baseness unworthiness to come before him that so we may be rightly affected with the regard of him Levit. 26. 2. So Cornelius saith that he and the rest were all there before God to hear what Peter should say unto them they had considered with themselves that God came to speak unto them and that they came to hear him for in what service we do not make account that we have to deal with the Lord our God and Maker and do not put our selves in minde what a one he is we shall not carry our selves aright towards him Abraham said he was dust and ashes when he prayed to God therefore the Lord hath set down a Preface before the Lords Prayer acquainting us what a one God is because by the thinking of him and striving to bring our hearts to conceive of him as such a one we should be better fitted to make the requests and supplications following the heart then must put it self in minde what it goes about and to whom it tenders a service I come before the Lord Almighty that hath my soul in his hand to hear him speak to me or to speak to him I draw near to the King of Heaven and Earth I present my self before his face let me frame my self so as befits his holy and all-searching eyes And this is the common preparation for our religious duties Now special preparation for special services follows to be spoken of that is to the Word to Prayer to the Sacraments and to a Vow For the Word The heart is to be framed to a resolution of obeying it in all things this is the honest and good heart whereof our Saviour makes mention in describing the good ground concerning this it is that our Lord saith again If you will do my will you shall know it This will give a man a good memory and a good judgement and the Lord to recompence this obedient resolution will become as he hath promised a Teacher to the humble so shall he be taught of God that comes with a firm purpose to be guided by God and that in all things Before you come to Church you should spend some time with your hearts to encline them and bow them to the testimonies of God and to say unto your selves I am going to hear what the Lord will say unto me seeing he is my Maker I will not harden my heart against him but I will be ready to know what he teacheth and not gainsay any thing that shall to my conscience appear truth and I will undoubtedly yeeld to that I know in practice for it is the word of him that is Lord of the spirits of all flesh then will the Word be powerful to make us able when we resolve before whatever it be to be willing 2. Before Prayer a threefold consideration is necessary of our special wants and sins and benefits that we may accordingly mention them in our Prayers The Lord hath promised he will grant us whatsoever we shall ask we must bethink our selves therefore what be those things that for our present estate we do stand in need of What sins had need to be pardoned and healed what benefits continued or new given and what we have already to give thanks for that we may with more earnestness pray when we know for what we will pray In the next place we must consider of Gods gracious promises that he hath made unto us to help and of his exceeding mercy goodness and power by which we are sure he is able and willing to help even of those Excellencies of God which the title Our Father which art in Heaven doth offer unto our consideration but principally Gods promise to hear and accept is to fill our mindes when we come before him as suppliants Thirdly For the Sacraments the special preparation is 1. By examining and judging our selves as the Apostle speaks that is a more narrow and diligent search for our estate and for our particular offences if we have forgotten any if through carelesnesse or guile we have let passe the sight and acknowledgment of any that now the old leaven may be cast out So saith the Apostle Examine your selves and again If we would judge our selves God would not judge us 2. We must labour to get a good appetite to this spiritual food to stir up in our selves an earnest hungring and thirsting after Christ and his benefits there God cals all that thirst to come and eat As a good stomack is a necessary preparation to our natural meals so to these spiritual meals is a good desire and longing for the grace there offered remission of sinnes past and power to live more blamelesly and holily hereafter Then when a man hath by special examination and judging himself found out his faults and humbled himself for them and also hath brought his heart to long for Christ Jesus to be his Saviour and to save him from the punishment and power of them by his body and bloud he is now fit to come to the Lords Table 3 He must meditate on Christs sufferings Lastly For a vow because this is a very solemn bond betwixt God and us I speak it not of imposed vows but assumed wherein we enter it behoves us very carefully to weigh the nature of the thing and our sufficiency for the same that we may not be rash with our lips to speak before our Maker which is principally spoken of vowing by Salomon for better not vow then not perform for want of which care many men have so intangled themselves as their vows have been occasion of exceeding much misery unto them as we have one fearful example for all in Iephta who though he did not so bad as is vulgarly thought for can any man imagine that the newly reformed Church of Israel at that time after so
that may be And thus God is dishonoured in heart Now he is dishonoured outwardly and that 1. In tongue 2. In action In word by all such kinde of speeches as are contrary to those four kinds wherein our words touch Good any way that were named in the affirmative part As first contrary to good and charitable wishes there are 1. Formal wishes as when men in a form say God bless you God save all much more when it is in falshood the tongue speaking peace when the heart wisheth mischief as David complains of his enemies that came to visit him and then wished him all welfare in tongue but were so contrary minded that after they wished he might never recover and so were bold to utter their malicious conceits when they came forth 2. Contrary to these good wishes are curses imprecations and execrations against ones self or others especially such as wherein the Devil hath his name honoured as the Devil take thee the Devil go with thee or though God be wished to be the authour of the evil as God confound thee or the like It is a token of an evil heart to be apt to curse they which love cursing shall have enough of it these bad wishes will fly back to the nest where they were hatched The Apostle delivers it as a token of an unregenerate man that the gall of aspes is under his lips and that his mouth is full of cursing and bitterness it is a proof of a soul very much void of the fear of God when a man dareth to speak to God to become his hangman or executioner and a most horrible boldness when a man dare invocate the Devil for revenge S. Iames speaks of it as a wofull and grievous crime that a man should with the same mouth bless God and curse man who was made after the image of God yea not alone to curse men but to curse any creature wishing pox or plague upon it or murrain or the like is a fearful abusing of God from whom we dare ask such things unless we curse in Gods Name being armed by his authority and warrant for if God bid his servants curse they must curse I mean by pronouncing a curse yea by praying God according to his truth to fulfill his curses But of wicked and unwarrantable cursing we have an example in the proud Goliah who cursed David by his gods and of Shimei who cursed David with a horrible and bitter curse And these be against good wishes 2. Against respective mentioning of Gods Titles and Attributes there are two faults the one is a light and foolish speaking of them by way of wonderment or otherwise as O Lord God Good God when a man thinks no more of God nor his goodness then he thinks of the Devil or Pope so in other like occasions 2. There is a mentioning of Gods Titles by way of vilifying and abusing him as Who is God that I should let Israel go and What God can deliver out of my hands and a mentioning of him by way of blaspheming speaking evil of him in such fearful accusations as are not to be named as raging against his justice truth and wisdome and charging him with the contrary imperfections as some in their distemper have done a most hideous and fearful sin Contrary unto good conference of Gods Word and Works there are four faults 1. Vain jangling a discoursing of Gods Word or Works onely to shew wit and win applause or to dispute of them onely to try masteries and get victory especially if a man choose out nice points or genealogies and idle needless questions If a man do jangle and wrangle about the most useful points it is a great fault but if he fill the world with controversies about trifles this is a greater abuse and more dangerous because these matters will most easily breed doubt upon doubt 2. When men make jests of Gods Word alleadging any place of Scripture in merriment to procure laughter or make a mock of any of Gods special Works as the people did of the Apostles speaking in strange tongues as if it had been nothing but the vent of new wine overabundantly swallowed 3. When men misapply Gods Word and Works as by mis-alleadging them to countenance sin and maintain wickednesse or contrarily putting off Gods testimonies and mis-interpreting Scripture as that wicked Syricius would have no Ministers marry because those that were in the flesh could not please God and as the Popish Cardinal would have the Pope take upon him to punish because it was said to Peter Slay and eat and such like But especially the making spels of verses of Scripture by the words written spoken or hanged upon ones neck to cure agues or the like and so by misapplying Gods works to any wicked conclusion as if he did not hate sin because he is patient in not punishing of it Any wrongful wresting of the Scriptures or any of Gods works is a shameful abusing it to Gods dishonour Cavilling and despitefull objecting against Gods Word as if it were false and repugnant to it self or a meer invention of men and against his works as if they were not righteous and just picking a quarrel with God in either of these two is an high dishonouring of him and very displeasing to his Majesty And all these are directly contrary to the holy and good conference which we ought to have together of Gods Word and Works Now some other things are contrary to the confessing of the true Religion and these are 1. Denying and disavowing the same principally if it be against the light of a mans own conscience and after some professing and maintaining of it before for Christ saith that if any man deny him before men him will he also deny before his heavenly Father So Peter denied that he knew Christ but we know how dear it cost him afterwards 2. There is opposing the truth of God setting ones self by shifts and devices to impute falshood unto it and to pull down the pillars of it as the wicked Iews opposed themselves to the faithful and sincere preaching of Paul and did dispute against those things which he spake labouring to make it appear that all he spake was but a meer lie and falshood which is therefore a very wicked thing because it tends to make others also hang back from believing the truth and most wicked when it is done contrary to a mans own knowledge or conscience and so that he himself knows it is truth which he opposeth but most of all abominable when it is as it was in the forenamed Iews joyned with actual persecuting of them which do stand for the truth and labour to uphold the same Lastly when men strive to maintain falshood or false Religion and false Faith indeavouring by coloured and cloaked reasons to get unto it the colour of truth which is heresie when it is joyned with obstinacy and then a most damnable thing when a man is condemned of his own
Christ who wore a Crown of Thorns for me e In the Primitive times they were wont to call Martyrdom by the name of Corona Martyrii the Crown of Martyrdom and Stephen the Protomartyr had his name in Greek from a Crown Erant torti torquentibus fortiores Cyprian Reformati ligneas sanctorum Papistae vivas Dei comburunt Imagines Qui primi relictis patriis ritibus ac lege qui abjectis repudiatis rebus omnibus quae solent esse hominibus in vita gratissima charissima Christum sunt sequuti qui ilii no●a atque admirabilia dicenti fidem tribuerunt gravia dura praecipienti obedierunt denique cervices suas obtulerunt pro illius Doctrina Gloria aliquid certè in co majus excellentius animadverterunt humana sapientia potentia Lod. Viv de verit Fid. Christ l. 2. c. 14. f Non paena sed causa facit Martyrem g Lib. 2. c. 25. Meminerunt Mosis Diodorus Siculus Strabo Plinius Tacitus quoque post eos Dionysius Longinus de Sermonis sub limitate Iamnis autem Mambris qui in Aegypto Mosi restiterunt praeter Talmundicos Plinius Apulcius Grotius de verit relig Christ. * Bish. Andrews in his large exposition on the ten Commandments h Credite me vobis folium recitare Sybille i Vid. Spanhem Dub. par 2. Dub. 34. Sect. 6 7. k Exercit. 1. ad Annal. Bar. * Isa. 8. 20. Psal. 19. The Authors often testifie that they speak not of themselves or by any humane instinct but from Gods command and the Spirit inspiring l Christ commends Moses the Prophets and Psalms by which names are meant all the Books belonging to the Canon of the Hebrews m The holy Ghost inwardly witnesseth in the hearts of the faithfull that the Scriptures are the Word of God 1 Joh. 2. 20 27. 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12. 12. 3. Joh. 16. 23. 14. 26. Isa. 51. 16. Isa. 59. 21. Rom. 8. 16. The inspiration of the Spirit is considered as an efficient cause which disposeth our faculties to believe the truth and not as an argument of the truth The Pelagians say The faculties of the soul are well enough disposed to understand and believe the things of God without the inward inspiration and illumination of the Spirit Scripturam tanquam mortuam literam intuentur meros spiritus inflatis buccis crepant interim tamen neque verbum neque Spiritum retinentes Hic autem audis Paulum Scripturae testimoniis ut firmissimis potissimum nit● c. Luth. in 1 Cor. 15. 3 4. Quocirca noli esse immodicus jactator Spiritus si non apertum externum verbum habueris neque enim bonus e●● qu●m jact●s Spiritus sed ipsissimus Diabolus Id. ibid. Omnes homines quantumvis illustrati Spiritu sancto tamen manent discip●li ●erb● Luth. Tom. 4. The work of the Spirit now is not to perfect Scripture or to adde any thing to its discovery or to be ●● st●a● of a Scripture where it is wanting much lesse where the Scripture is But to remove the darknesse from our understanding that we may see clearly what the Scripture speaks clearly Before the Scripture was perfected the Spirit did enlighten the Prophets and Pen-men of Scripture both wayes But now I know no teaching of the Spirit save only by its illuminating ●● sanctifying works teaching men no new lesson nor the old without book but to read with understanding what Scripture Nature Creatures and Providences teach Mr Baxters Saints everlasting Rest Part 1. Sect. 51. n 1 John 3. 8. 1 John 2. 20. * Fides Christiana non acquiritur sed infunditur n Leviculum est quod objiciunt qui contra sentiunt Si omnis Scriptura Divinitus sit inspirata sequuturum inde etiam Graecorum Gentilium Scripturas esse divinitus inspiratas nam ut benè respondet Theophylactus oportebat eos novisse quod Paulus ante dixerat Sacras literas nosti Rivet Isag. ad Script Sac. o Aliud sanè Prop●●tas hoc vel illud scripsisse aliud verò scripsisse ut Prophetas Spanhem Vide Lod. Viv. de verit Fid. Christ. l. 5. c. 1. p Nothing crosseth humane wisdom more then the Scripture Authoritas sine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scriptur● Illud authenticum dicitur quod sibi sufficit quod se commendat sustinet probat ex se sidem ac authoritatem habet Whitaker q Every principle is known by it self The Scripture is the primum credendum the first thing to be believed we must believe it for it self and all other things for their conformity with it r Eccius reckons this among heretical Assertions Major est Scripturae quam Ecclesiae Authoritas s Nisi Deus hominibus placuerit non erit Deus said Tertullian in Apol. If God please not man he shall not be God as truly and certainly as God is God so truly is the Scripture the Scripture Spiritus sanctus Spiritus veritatis loquitur semper in Scriptura in Ecclesia verò quandoque Spiritus humanus spiritus erroris Rainoldus Thesi. 3. l. 11. t See Chami●rs sixth Book de Canone divers Chapters and Mr Pembles Vindiciae Gratiae pag. 207. to 222. u Superfluus mihi labor videtur eorum qui adco sollicite illud quoad nos inquisiverunt quia n● cogitari quidem potest ulla corum librorum authoritas nisi quoad nos Cham. x Matth. 28. 20 18. 20. John 15. 26. 16. 13. y Scriptura est vel ipsa scriptio literarum per lineas certas pictura vel ipsa doctrina per eas Scripturas significata in iis literis contenta Scriptione fatemur Ecclesiam esse antiquiorem sed negamus esse antiquiorem ea doctrina quae significatur ea scriptione Chamier Tom. 1. l. 1 c. 22. z Fuit Scriptura ante Moysen materialiter non formaliter Quibus lect is verbis adeo exultant quasi reperissent id quod pu●●i in faba se reperisse clamitant tamque considenter ac ●i ad plenum victoriae fructum sola triumphi gloria deesset Chamierus a So Musculus Calvin Peter Martyr and Whitaker expound those words observe the composition of the word it signifieth to move with other things b Gerson saith he taketh the Church for the Primitive Church and that Assembly which saw and heard Christ. c Ecclesi● non habet magisteri●●m supra Scripturas sed Ministerium circa Scripturas There are two causes why the Apocrypha are cast out of the Canon 1. External the Authority of the Church decreeing and the quality of the Authours 2. Internal the style the fabulous and wicked things Chamier d Ecclesiae id est Romano Pontifici vel soli vel cum Concilio magisterium tribuunt summum adeo ut solennis sit apud eos formula indicet magister sidei Amesius e Dr Chalonero Credo Ecclesiam Catholicam Ecclesia dicitur Fundamentum metaphoricè impropriè fundamentum
Son Vide Bezam * Hoc testimouio utuntur omnes Patres contra Arian●s ut probent u●am esse essentiam Patris Filii Bellar. de Christ. l. 1. c. 6 * Ariu● stumbled at the Greek Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Lord created me and on that corrupt Translation grounded his heresie That Christ was a creature Christ is God by nature Gal 4. 8. which place was strongly urged by Mr Cheynel against Earbury who held that the Saints have the same fulnesse of the God-head dwelling in them as it doth in Christ and that the Spirit is but the power of God in the man Christ An Account given to the Parliament by the Ministers sent by them to Oxford In the first Nicene Councel gathered together against Arius the Prince of all Hereticks who denied the Divinity of Christ there were 318 Bishops A man would think that there were but small difference it is but a little Iota between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet the right believers could never be brought as Theodoret witnesseth either to omit the one or admit the other Dr Prideaux Ephesus Backsliding Iustinus 1. Imperator Edicto praecepit ut ne quis vel unicam syllabam in Doctrina Ecclesiae orthodoxae de Trinitate mutaret addita hac ratione quod in ipsis syllabis veritas fidei contineatur Vedel de Prud. vet Eccles l. 3. c. 3. * Vide Bellarm. de Christo l. 1. c. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20. The holy Spirit 1. Works grace in the hearts of all Gods people that is done by an almighty power Ephes. 1. 19. therefore ●e i● an omnipotent Essence 2. Dwels in the hearts of all Gods people therefore he is omnipresent 3. Assists the people of God in their prayers and increaseth their graces therefore he is an omniscient God In the Apostles Creed as I believe in the Father and in the Sonne so in the holy Ghost Credimus multu● sed in ●ibil praeterquam in Deum credimus Quid est in aliquem credere ●isi ●● per omnia assentiri atque in ●o omnem spem ●iduct●m coll●cdr● Hoc autem ●●lli creaturoe sed Deo duntaxat conven●● 1 Pet. 1. 21. He is called the Spirit of truth Iohn 14. 26. the Spirit of adoption Rom. 8. 15. the Spirit of sanctification Rom. 1. 4. the Spirit of renewing Tit. 3. 5. Rom. 9. 1. Una tautum est in Deitate Persona Spiritus Sanctus est ut verba Christi ad Apostolos indidicant Luc. 24. 49. Cate●h Eccles. Polou c. 6. Vide plura ibid. The Father ●s prima Persona in order not in dignity 2. The fountain and original of the Derty unto the Sonne and the holy Ghost unto the Son giguendo unto the holy Ghost together with the Son spirando 3. He is unbegotten and proceeding from none Mr Dow● on Iohn 17. 1. Proprietates patris personales quibus à filio distinguitur Spiritu sancto sunt duae 1. Esse à se Pater enim ab alio non est 2. Gignere filium ab aeterno 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wendelinus Quinque dicuntur de Deo Paternitas innascibilitas filiatio processio communis spiratio August Paternitas innascibilitas conveniunt solummodò Patri Filiatio tantummodò Filio Spiritui verò sancto processio communis spiratio Patri Filio respectu Spiritus sancti Raym. Mart. Pugio adversus Iudaeos part 3. Dist. 1. c. 5. Cartwright in his Harmony saith Hic locus eximius est ad asserendum processum Spiritus à Filio meaning Iohn 14. 15. The holy Ghost is called the Spirit of Christ and of the Sonne Rom. 8. 9. Gal. 6. as he is called the Spirit of the Father Mat. 10. 20. because he is breathed from both Vide Aquin. Sum. Theol. part 1. Quest. 36. Art 3. 4. In Ecclesiaveteri 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in templo ca●tari solebat quam orthodoxi hoc modo 〈◊〉 Gloria Patri Filio Spiritui Sancto in secula seculorum Ariani autem glorioe Filii Spiritus Sancti detpahe●tes fic eam concipiebant Gloria Patri per Filium in Spiritu Sancto Vedel de prudentia veteris Ecclesioe l. 2. c. 5. Dr Field somewhat qualifieth this opinion of the Grecians and saith they differ but modo loquendi they held saith he that the holy Ghost was not à Patre Filio but à Patre per Filium See Dr Halls Peace-maker Sect. 4. 1 Cor. 8. 6. Rom. 11. 36. Heb. 1. 2 3. Nec periculosius alicubi erratur nec laboriosius aliquid quaeritur nee fructuosius aliquid invenitur Aug. 1. de Trin. Simon Magus was the first man that denied the Trinity of Persons he saith they were Diversa nomina sub diversa operatione Irenaeus The Turks at their prayers use often to reiterate these words Hue Hue Hue that is He he he alone is God or There is but one only supreme power which they do in derision of Christians who as they say adore three Gods He who denies any one Person doth not worship the true God as the Jews and Turks and too many others in these dayes Iohn 16. 2. 1 Iohn 2. 22 23. No man can know the Father nor believe in him Iohn 14. 2. but by Christ. Vide Vedel de Deo Synagoga l. 1. c. 6. There are two sorts of the Works of the Lord. 1. Immanent terminated in himself his Decree 2. Transient the execution of his eternal decree in time 1. Quid nominis 2. Quid Rei a Decretum Dei est definita ejus sententia de rebus omnibus per omni potentiam secundum confilium suum efficiendis Ames Medulla Theol. Ephes. 1. 11. b Decretum Dei est actio illius interna atque aeterna quae ex rebus possibilibus atque indefinitis ea omnia sola quae jam fuerunt sunt erunt secundum sapientiae suae judicium immutabili liberrimae voluntatis placito ut ita fierent ad suam gloriam rectè praefinivit Gomarus in Thesibus Decretum est actio Dei ex confilio proposito suae voluntatis omnia omniumque rerum circumstantias omnes ab aeterno in se certò immutabiliter tamen liberè defimens Remonstrantes absolutum nullum admittunt decretum de futuro quovis contingenti sed conditionatum tantum Ames Cotan Though the Lord hath decreed sin to be yet he decreed it not as sin but as a means of the manifestation of his Justice on the wicked and grace on the Saints Ipsum peccatum quamvis non qua peccatum praefinitur in ipsa tamen praefinitione certò videtur aliquo modo dici potest decreti illius consequens effectus autem nullo modo Vult Deus actus bonos qua actus qua bonos malos qua actus non qua malos Rescript Ames ad responsu● Grevinch c. 13. Acts 2. 23. and 4. 28. Gen. 45. 5 6 7. 1 Cor. 10. 13. *