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A25291 The marrow of sacred divinity drawne out of the Holy Scriptures, and the interpreters thereof, and brought into method / by William Ames ... ; translated out of the Latine ... ; whereunto are annexed certaine tables representing the substance and heads of all in a short view ... as also a table opening the hard words therein contained.; Medulla theologica. English. 1642 Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1642 (1642) Wing A3000; ESTC R23182 239,577 422

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of Israel in Faith Psal. 37. 5. Rolle thy way upon Iehova and trust in him Ierem. 17. 7. Blessed is the man who trusteth in Iehova and whose confidence Iehova is 2. To believe commonly signifies an act of the understanding yeelding assent to testimony but because the will is wont to be moved thereupon and to stretch forth it selfe to embrace the good so allowed therefore Faith doth aptly enough set forth this act of the will also in which manner it is necessarily understood in this place For it is a receiving Iohn 1. 12. As many as received him who believe 3. Hence Faith is caried unto that good which by it is made ours is an act of election an act of the whole man which things doe in no wise agree to an act of the understanding Iohn 6. 35. He that commeth to me he that believeth in mee 4. Therefore although Faith alwayes presuppose a knowledge of the Gospell yet there is no saving knowledge in any and which differs from that which is found in some that shall not be saved but what followes this act of the will and depends upon it Iohn 7. 17. 8. 31. 32. 1. Iohn 2. 3. 5. That truly Christian Faith which hath place in the understanding doth alwayes leane upon a Divine testimony as it in Divine yet this testimony cannot be received without a pious affection of the will towards God Iohn 3. 33. He that receiveth his testimony hath sealed that God is true Rom. 4. 20. He was strengthened in Faith giving glory to God 6. Neither yet because it is grounded only upon a testimony is it the more uncertaine and doubtfull but more certaine in its own nature then any humane science because it is caried to its object under a formall respect of infallibility although by reason of the imperfection of the habit whence Faith flowes the assent of Faith in this or that subject oft-times appeares weaker then the assent of science 7. Now God is the object of Faith not as he is considered in himselfe but as we by him doe live well 1. Tim 4. 10. We hope in the living God who is the preserver of all men especially of those that believe 8. Christ as Redeemer is the mediate object of Faith but not the highest for we believe in God through Christ. Rom. 6. 11 to live to God by Christ. 2. Cor. 3. 4. we have trust through Christ to God-ward 1. Pet. 1. 21. Through him believing in God 9. The sentences in the Scriptures or promises doe containe and present an object of Faith and they are called the object of Faith by a Metonimy of the adjunct●… The good which is propounded to be obtained as it is such is the end and effect of Faith not properly the object it selfe But that upon whose power we rest in the obtaining of that good is the proper object of Faith 1. Cor. 1. 23. We preach Christ and 2. 2. I determined to know nothing among you but Iesus Christ 2. Cor. 5. 19. God in Christ. 10. With this Divine Faith which looketh to the will of Cod and our own salvation we must not simply believe any man but God above Rom. 3. 4. Every man is a lyar 1. Cor. 2 5. that your faith consist not in the wisdome of men 11. Therefore the Authority of God is the proper and immediate ground of all truth in this manner to be believed whence is that solemne speech of the Prophets every where the Word of the Lord. Thus saith the Lord. 12. Hence the last resolution of Faith as it sets forth a thing to be believed is into the authority of God or Divine revelation 2. Pet. 1. 20 21. If ye first know this that no prophety of Scripture is of private interpretation c. Iohn 2. 29. We know that God spake to Moses As the last resolution of it as it notes the act of believing is into the operation and inward perswasion of the Holy Spirit 1. Cor. 12. 3. 11. That none can call Iesus Lord but by the Holy Spirit 13. This Faith whereby we believe not only a God or give credit to God but believe in God is true and proper confidence not as by this word is set forth a certaine and absolute perswasion of good to come but as it signifies chusing and apprehending of a sufficient and fit meanes and such wherein such a perswasion and expectation is founded In which sence men are said to put confidence in their wisdome power friends and riches Psa. 78. 2. They believed not in God nor trusted in his salvation 14. This is every where declared in those phrases of Scripture wherein the true nature of solid Faith is unfolded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To lean upon as Isay 10. 20. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pro. 3. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa. 50. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pro. 3. 5. Isa. 50. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal. 71. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 10. 11. 15. Therefore to beleeve in God is in believing to cleave to God to leane on God to rest in God as in our all-sufficient life and salvation Deut. 30 20. by cleaving to him for he is thy life 16. Hence that generall assent which the Papists make to be Faith is not Faith because by their own consession it may be without any life Iames 2 17. 17. But that speciall assent whereby we resolve that God is our God in Christ is not the first act of Faith but an act flowing from Faith for there is no greater certainty of this truth in thee then in another nor a truer apprehension of it in thee then another before thou hast specially applied thy selfe to God by Faith Rom. 5. 1 2. Being justified by Faith we have peace toward God we glory in God 18. Seeing also that Faith is the first act of life whereby we live to God in Christ it must needs consist in union with God which an assent given to the truth concerning God can in no wise doe 19. Further also seeing he that is about to believe out of a sense of his misery and defect of any deliverance either in himselfe or in others must needs cast himselfe upon God in Christ as a sufficient and faithfull Saviour he cannot in any measure so cast himselfe by an assent of the understanding but by a consent of the will 20. Although in Scriptures sometimes an assent to the truth which is touching God and Christ Iohn 1. 50. is accounted for true Faith yet there is a speciall confidence alwayes included and so in all places where there is speech of saving faith either a confidence in the Messiah is presupposed and there is only declared a determination or application of it to the person of Christ or by that assent confidence is set forth as an effect by its cause Iohn 11. 25 26. He that believes in me shall live believest thou this He saith yea Lord I believe that thou art
a cause doth the effect 31. Neither is faith extrinsecally directed toward God by love but in its proper and internal nature it respects God as its object 32. Iustification of Faith doth in no sort depend upon Charity as the Papists will have it but upon the proper object of Faith 33. Where Faith is said to worke by love Gal. 5. 6. It is not because all efficacy of Faith depends upō charity as upon a cause but because Faith doth shew forth and exercise its efficacy in the stirring up of Charity 34. The particle by doth not there shew a formall cause but as it were an instrumentall as when God is said to regenerate us by the word 35. That Faith which is without works is said to be Dead Iames 2. 26. Not because the life of Faith doth flow from workes but because workes are second Acts 〈◊〉 flowing from the life of Faith 36. Faith is said to be perfected by workes Iames 2. 22. Not with an essentiall perfection as the effect is perfected by the cause but by a complemental perfection as the cause is perfected or made actually compleat in the producing of the effect 37. Because the object of Charity is the very goodnesse of God as it is in it selfe but Faith and Hope doe respect God as he is propounded to us to be apprehended therefore that inclination of the mind toward God which belongs to Charity doth more evidently and constantly appeare in weake believers then the speciall acts of Faith or Hope because the goodnesse of God is more manifest in it selfe then the way of apprehending it which is represented to us in this life as it were darkly CHAPTER VIII Of hearing of the Word 1. FRom these vertues of Religiō towards God Faith Hope and Charity there ariseth a double act of Religion which respects that spirituall communion which is exercised betweene God and us Hearing of the word and Prayer 2. The reason or foundation of this distribution is in this that we doe affect God with religious worship when we yeild him due honour whether this be by receiving that which he him selfe propounds to us or by offering that which may be received by him according to his perfection for in both respects we doe that which is immediatly and directly honorable to God 3. The first act of Religion therefore is about those things which are communicated to us from God and the other is about those things which are yeilded to God from us 4. Hearing the word is a religious receiving of the will of God 5. Therefore hearing is here taken for any receiving of the words of God whether they be communicated to us by preaching or by reading or any other way because God is wont to worke in a singular manner and by his own institution in the preaching and hearing of the Word 6. Therefore this word ought not to be taken so strictly that it should either chiefly or necessarily include alwayes the outward sence of hearing but that it may note any percieving of the will of God and chiefly set forth an inward receiving and subjection 7. The receiving of the Word consists of two parts Attention of mind and intention of will 8. Attention is an applying of the understanding to perceive the revealed will of God Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydia that she might attend to the things which were spoken by Paul It is often called in the Scripture especially in the Old Testament A seeking of the will of God or of God himselfe to set forth that great desire wherewith we should be carried to know Gods Will as to the finding out of some thing which we can by no meanes want Esay 58. 2. Yet they seeke me dayly and delight to know my wayes as a Nation which doth righteousnesse and doth not forsake the judgement of their God they inquire of me the ordinances of Iustice they delight in approching to God 9. In this attention there needeth that providence whereby we may discerne what that is that God willeth Rom. 12. 2. That yee may prove what is that good pleasing and perfect Will of God which when it is perceived we must not deliberate further whether it be good or to be observed or no for the will of God itselfe is the last bound of all religious inquiry Gal. 1. 15. 16. When it pleased GOD to reveale his Sonne in mee I did not consult with flesh and blood 10. Intention is an applying of our will to a religious observance of the will of God already perceived Psal. 119. 106. I have sworn and will performe it that I will keepe thy righteous judgement 11. The purpose of the intention ought to be so strong and firme that without all exception we be ready to observe whatsoever God will command Ier. 42. 5 6. The Lord be a true and faithfull witnesse betweene us if we doe not even according to all things for the which the Lord thy God shall send thee to us whether it be good or whether it be evill we will obey the voyce of the Lord our God 12. In respect of this intention the Law of God it selfe is said to be in the heart of a believer Psal. 40. 9. 119. 11. Ier. 31. 33. Heb. 8. 10. 13. This hearing that it may be right ought to be from religious observance bringing subjection of the inward acts and inclinations of the mind Romans 6. 17. From the heart yee obeyed that forme of doctrine to which yee were delivered 14. But that it may be truly religious It is requisite first that it arise from Faith whereby we believe that to be the word of truth which God reveales unto us and also are accordingly affected toward it Hebr. 4. 2. The word being heard did not profit them not being mingled with Faith in them that heard it Luc. 24. 32. Did not our hearts burne in us whilest he spake to us 15. By this Faith we cleave to the word Psa. 119. 31. And the word it selfe cleaves unto and is ingrafted in us unto salvation Iames 1. 21. That ingrafted word 16. Secondly the same hearing must flow from that hope whereby we doe embrace that which God hath promised as the word of life also expecting life by it Deut. 32. 47. Iohn 5. 39. It is your life yee looke in them to finde eternall life 17. By this hope it comes to passe that the faithfull bring forth fruit with patience Luc. 8. 15. 18. In like manner it must have love joyned with it whereby we cleave to the same word or to God revealing himselfe to us in that word as simply good Psa. 119. 97. How doe I love thy Law 1 Thess. 2. 10. They received not the love of the truth that they might be saved 19. In respect of this love the Word of God doth dwell plentifully in the faithfull Colossians 3. 16. So as they are also transformed into the forme and fashion of it Romans 6. 17. 20. Such an
Hearing of the Word of God is the true and proper worship of God 1. Because it doth immediatly and directly bring spirituall honour to God for although the act of hearing is most properly directed to our receiving of the Will of God yet because in the manner of receiving we doe subject our consciences to God therefore we give him that honour of power and Divine truth in the aknowledgement whereof his religous worship is exercised 2. Because it containeth a direct and immediate exercise of Faith Hope and Love in which the worship of God doth most essentially consist 21. Hence no word or sentence of men ought to be mingled with the word of God and propounded in the same manner with it least by this meanes we doe in some sort worship men instead of God 22. Unto this hearing that pride is most formally opposed whereby one doth so affect his owne excellency that he will not be subject to the Will of God For although this pride is contrary to humility of religion and obedience or obedience in generall yet it seemeth to be most properly opposite to them in this act of religion because a proud man as he is such is so far from subjecting himselfe to the will of another as to a Law that he would have his own will in stead of a Law Ierem. 13. 15. Heare and give eare be not proud for the Lord hath spoken Ier. 5. 5. They have broken the yoke they have burst the bonds 23. The proper act as it were of this pride is that contempt whereby one doth set at naught either God or the Will of God and observance of it 2. Sam. 12. 9. Why hast thou despised the Word of the Lord in doing that which is evill in his Eyes 24. Hence pride is said to be the cause of all other sins for a double reason 1. Because all other sinnes are referred in a certaine manner to that excellency which is seene in pride as to an end 2. Because pride casteth away from it selfe in contempt the government of the word by the power whereof alone sin is avoyded 25. Hence there is in every sin found some respect of pride but especially in those which are committed upon deliberate counsell 26. Hence also all consultation with the world flesh or wisdome of the flesh in those things which pertaine to religion is opposed to the hearing of the Word Romans 8. 7. Gal. 1. 16. 27. For as by pride men doe altogether reufse to subject themselves to the will of God So by these consultations of those things which are not after God they doe seeke to themselves as it were other Gods to whom they may be subject 28. The most accursed opposition to hearing of the word of God is in consulting with the Devills Esay 8. 19. Deut. 18. 11 12 13 14 15. Where a certaine religious Faith and Hope due to God only is transferred either explicitly or implicitly to the enemies of God 29. Hence it is that Faith is wont chiefly to be required in such consultations by those who are the masters of such Arts. 30. By vertue of this Faith there is a certaine covenant entred into with the Devill with some religion if not openly and eypressively at least secretly and implyedly 31. But although one have not a direct intentation to aske counsell of the Devill yet if he doe that which either of its owne nature or by use and application which it hath doth infer a compellation of the Devill to receive his helpe or counsell he is made partaker of the same sin 32. Therefore all arts brought in by instinct of the Devill for the knowing of secrets are in this respect to bee condemned 33. All divination therefore which is neither grounded upon certaine revelation of God not the course of nature ordained by God in things created is to be condemned 34. All applying of things or words either to predictions or those operations to which they have no disposition either by their nature or Gods Ordinance is to be condemned 35. As the helpe of the Devill is sought by such like courses they doe containe in themselves a certaine invocation of him and so are opposed to calling upon God but as certaine revelation is expected or a submission of mind used to the receiving and executing his commands so they are opposed to the hearing of the word of God 36. This communion therefore with the Devill is not only in this respect unlawfull because it is joyned with fraud and seducing but also because of its own nature it is contrary to true religion 37. For we have not civill communion or fellowship with the Devill religious communion we cannot have no not as some of old had with the good Angels who are ministring spirits for our good sent of God for that purpose 38. Whatsoever therefore we doe with the Devill besides those things which pertaine to the resisting of him as the enemy of our soules it makes to the violating of true religion and is a certaine perverse religion 39. If he seeme sometime to be subject to the command of men by vertue of certaine inchantements it is only a shew of subjection that by that meanes he may more easily rule over men therefore he doth not hinder but only colour that religious subjection which men performe to him in that communion 40. All those doe in part communicate with such sins who by words figures such like things of no sufficient vertue doe desire to cure diseases in others or suffer such things in themselves or others for that end 41. Sympathies and Antipathies and specificall vertues which are found in some things are hereby differenced from such inchantements in that the common experience of all men doth acknowledge these there is some Faith required in those but in these none 42. A strong imagination doth peradventure concurre in many to make these meanes effectuall but that also doth often arise from a certaine religious Faith neither can it effect any thing in parents for children or in men for Cattell without a certaine diabolicall operation accompanying it 43. They that are most given to the hearing of the word as they doe least of all care for such acts so they doe receive the least fruit by them CHAPTER IX Of Prayer 1. PRayer is a religious representing of our will before God that God may be as it were affected with it 2. It is an act of religion because of its own nature it yeildeth to him that is prayed unto that sufficiency and efficiency of knowledge power and goodnesse which is proper to God 3. Hence it cannot be directed to any other beside God only without manifest idolatry 4. It ariseth first from Faith Rom. 10. 14. How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed Namely from that Faith whereby we doe believe that God is first omniscient who knoweth all things and so the inward affections and motions of our hearts for in them chiefly the
the devills themselves 14. The second fourth and fift are in the will and doe make Faith as it is a vertue and act of religion 15. The third as in the understanding but as it is moved by the will neither is it properly the vertue of Faith but an effect 16. But the perfection of Faith is not but in election or apprehension and so is to be defined by it 17. Hence the nature of Faith is excellently opened in Scripture when the faithfull are said to cleave to God Ioshua 23. 6. Acts 11. 23. 1 Corinthians 6. 17. And to choose the way of truth and to cleave to the testimony of God Psal. 1●…9 30 31. 18. For by Faith we first cleave to God and then afterward consequently we cleave to those things which are propou●…ded to us by God so that God himselfe is the first Object of Faith and that which is propounded by God the secundary Object 19. But because Faith as it joynes us to God is our life but as it is a vertue and our duty towards God it is a act of life therefore in the former par●… we have defined it only by that respect which it hath to obtaine life and salvation but here we have defined it by tha●… generall respect which it hath to all that which God propounds to us to believe Hence Faith cannot exercise all its act about the threatnings of God considered in themselves because they doe not propound the good to be received by us nor about the precepts of God simply considered because they declare the good to be done not to be received nor about meere predications because under that respect they propound no good to us But it is perfect in the promises because in them there is propounded good to be embraced whence also it is that our Divines are wont to place the object of Faith chiefly in the promises 20. They who place Faith in the understanding doe confesse that there is some necessary motion of the will to the yeilding of that assent even as in humane Faith it is said to be a voluntary thing to give credit to one But if Faith depend upon the will it must needs be that the first beginning of Faith is in the will 21. The Objectum quod or materiall object of this Faith is whatsoever is revealed and propounded by God to be believed whether it be done by spirit or by word publickly or privatly Acts 24. 14. I believe all things that are written in the Law and the Prophets Iohn 3. 33. He that receiveth his testimony 22. Hence the propounding of the Church is not absolutly necessary no not in respect of us to make an object of Faith for then Abraham and other Prophets had not given assent to those things which were revealed to them from God without any helpe of the Church comming between which is both against the Scriptures and all sound reason and yet is necessarily admitted and defended by the most learned of the Papists that they may defend the fained authority of their false Church from such arguments 23. This object is alwayes immediatly some axiom or sentence under the respect of truth but that in which Faith is principally bounded of which and for which assent is yielded to that axiom by Faith is Ens incomplexum under the respect of some good Rom. 4. 21. Being fully perswaded that he who had promised was able also to doe it Heb. 11. 13. Not having received the promises but seeing them a far off after they had bin perswaded of them and had embraced them 24. For the act of the believer is not bounded in the Axiom or sentence but in the thing as the most famous Schoole-men confesse The reason is because we doe not frame axioms but that by them we may have knowledge of things Therfore the principall bound unto which the act of the believer tends is the thing it selfe which is chiefly respected in the Axiom 25. The Objectum Quo or formall object of Faith is the Truenes or faithfulnesse of God Heb. 11. 11. Because he judged him faithfull who had promised For the formall and as they say the specificative reason of Faith is truth in speaking that is the Truenes or faithfulnesse of God revealing something certainly because it is a common respect of Faith that it leaves upon the authority of him that witnesseth in which thing Faith is distinguished from opinion science experience and sight or sence but the authority of God is his Truenes or faithfulnesse Tit. 1. 2. God that cannot lie had promised Hence that proposition is most true what soever we are bound to believe with a Divine Faith is true For because nothing ought so to believed unlesse God doe witnesse the truth there of but God testifieth as he is true but Truenes in a witnesse that knoweth all things cannot be separated from the truth of the testimony therefore it must needs be that all that which we are bound to believe with a Divine Faith is true This whole demonstration is manifestly confirmed and used by the Apostle Paul 1 Cor. 15 14 15. If Christ be not raised our preaching is vaine your Faith also is vaine we are also found false witnesses of God because we have witnessed of God that he raised up Christ. That is If the testimony be not true the witnesse is false Unlesse this be admitted that whatsoever God witnesseth is true that consequence which is most firme should availe nothing at all God doth witnesse this or that therefore it is true Hence Divine Faith cannot be a principle or cause either directly or indirectly either by it selfe or by accident of assenting to that which is false or of a false assent 26. Hence also the certainty of Faith in respect of the object is most firme and by how much more it is confirmed in the heart of him that believeth so much the more glory it giveth to God Rom. 4. 20. But he doubted not at this promise of God through unbeliefe but he was strengthened in Faith giving glory to God and being fully perswaded that he that had promised was able also to doe it But in that somitime our Faith doth waver in us that is not from the nature of Faith but from ●…ur imperfe●…ion 27. A sufficient and certaine representation of both objects that is both of those things which are to be believed and of that respect under which they are to be bel●…eved is propounded to us in the Scripture Rom. 16. 26. It is made manifest a●…d by the Scriptures of the Prophets according to the Commandement of the everlasting God m●…de knowen to all Nations for the obedience of Faith 2 Tim. 5. 15. The holy Scripture can make thee wise to salvation by Faith which is in Christ Jesus 28. For al●…hough in the subject that is in our hearts the ligh●… and testimony of the holy Spirit stirring up Faith in us is necessary yet in the object which is to be r●…ceived by
F●…h there is nothing at all required either in respect of the things to be believed or in respect of the cause and way of believing which is not found in the Scripture 29. Therefore Divine Faith cannot be reduced or resolved into the authority of the Church or into other simple externall arguments which are wont to be called Motives by perswading and inducing things preparing to Faith but it is to be resolved into the Scripture it selfe and that authority which it hath imprinted upon it from the author God as into the first and proper cause which causeth the thing to be believed and into the operation of the holy Spirit as into the proper cause of the act it selfe believing 30. Hence that principle from which Faith doth first begin and into which it is last resolved is that the Scripture is revealed from God for our salvation as a sufficient rule of Faith and manners 2 Pet. 1. 19. 20. If you first know this that no prophecy of the Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a private interpretation 31. Faith is partly Implicite and partly Explicite 32. Implicite Faith is that whereby the truths of Faith are believed not distinctly in themselves but in their common principle 33. That common principle wherein all things to be in this manner believed are contained is not the Chu●…ch but the Scripture Act. 24. 14. Who doe believe all things which are written in the Law and in the Prophets 34. He that believeth that the Scripture is every way true he doth implicitly believe all things which are contained in the Scriptures Psal. 129. 86. compared with Verse 28. 33. All thy precepts are truth it selfe open mine eyes that I may see the wonders of thy Law ●…each me the way of thy statuts which I will keepe unto the end David did believe that those were wonderfull and to be holily kept which he did not yet sufficiently understand 35. This implicite Faith is good and necessary but it is not of it selfe sufficient to salvation neither indeed hath it in it selfe the true reason of faith if it subsist by it selfe for it cannot be that the will be effectually affected and embrace that as good which it doth not at all distinctly know Rom. 20. 14. How shall they believe him of whom they have not heard 36. Explicite Faith is that whereby the truths of Faith are believed in particular and not in common only 37. Explicite Faith must necessarily be had of those things which are propounded to our Faith as necessary meanes of salvation Heb. 6. 1. 2. Cor. 4. 3. The foundation of repentance from dead workes and of Faith in God If our Gospell be hid it is bid to them that perish 38. There is required a more explicite Faith now after the comming of Christ then before 2 Cor. 3. 18. Of those who are set over others in the Church then of the common people Heb. 9. 12. Lastly of those who have occasion to be more perfectly instructed then of others Luc. 12. 48. To whom much is given of him much shall be required 39. The outward act of Faith is confession profession or manifestation of it which in its order and in its place is necessary to salvation Rom. 10. 9. 10. Namely in respect of the preparation and disposition of minde alwayes necessary 2 Peter 3. 15. And in respect of the act it selfe when the glory of God and edification of our neighbours shall require it 40. Persisting in confession of the Faith with losse of temporall life doth give testimony to the truth and doth bring most honour to God and so by excellency is called Martyrdome and they who doe so are called witnesses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Martyrs Revel 2. 13. But this is as necessary in its place as confession of Faith so that it cannot be refused without denying of Christ. Mat. 10. 33. 39. 16. 25. 41. There are opposed to Faith Infidelity Doubting Error Heresie Apostasie 42. Infidelity is a dissenting of a man from the Faith who never professed the true Faith 1 Cor. 14. 22. 23. 43. Doubting in him who made profession doth either diminish or take away assent 44. Doubting that doth diminish only assent may stand with a weake Faith 1 Cor. 8. 10. 11. But not that doubting which takes away assent Iames 1. 6 7 8. 45. An error in Faith doth put some opinion contrary to Faith 1 Cor. 15. 46. Heresie addeth stubbornnesse to error Ti●… 3. 10 11. 47. Apostasie addes unto heresie universility of errors contrary to Faith 1 Tim. 1. 19. 20. 2 Tim. 1. 15. 48. These are opposed to Faith not only as they take away that assent of the understanding which is necessary to Faith but also as they bring and include a privation of that election and apprehension of Faith which is in the will CHAPTER VI. Of Hope 1. HOpe is a vertue whereby we are inclined to expect those things which God hath promised us Rom. 8. 25. 2. This Hope respecteth God 1. As the object which it doth expect for the principall object of Hope is God himselfe and those acts whereby he is joyned to us 1 Peter 1. 13. Hope in the grace which is brought to you Hence God himselfe is called the Hope of Israel Ier. 1. 4. 8. And Rom. 15. 13. The God of Hope not so much because he is the Author and Giver of hope as because it is he upon whom we hope 2. It respects God as the Author and Giver of all the good it doth expect Psal. 37. 5. 6. Roll thy way upon the Lord and trust in him for he shall bring it to passe For as it tends unto God to attaine good so also it respects him as to be obtained by his owne Grace Ieremiah 17. 7. Blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord and whose hope the Lord is 3. But the proper reason why we may not trust upon the Creatures in that manner as we trust in God is because the formall object of Hope is not fo●…d in the Creatures Psal. 146. 3. Trust not in Princes nor in any sonne of man in whom there is no salvation For although some power of doing us good and helping us is placed by God in the Creatures yet the exercise of this vertue doth alwayes depend upon God Psal. 107. Sending his word he healed them And Psal. 137. 1. Unlesse the Lord build the house in vaine they labour that build it unlesse the Lord keep the City the watchmen watcheth in vaine 4. Therefore when one saith I hope this or that of such a man doth either signifie that he hopes for that from God by that Creature or it sets forth a humane hope not Divine or finally it is not Christian. 5. But as Faith so also Hope in God doth respect the grace of God and Christ only as causes of good to be commun cared 1 Pet. 1. 13. Col. 1. 27. Hope in the grace Christ the hope of glory 6. Yet Divine Hope
being p. 32. Passive attingency that is the Efficacy of the will of God upon one thing causing another thing ibidem Contingency by chance p. 34. Metonymically by a figure the cause for the effect or the subjects for the quality or contrary wise p. 35. Formacy transien really passing p. 36. Virtually that is in power ibidem Praeexist to be before ibidem Entitie the being of a thing p. 38. Aggregation heaping up or joyning together ibidem Incompleat Imperfect p. 40. Intrinsecally inwardly p. 48. Indissoluble that must not be dissolved ibidem Previous going before p. 50. Sunteresis that part of the understanding in which we keepe severall Notions p. 54. Animall living ibidem Sanction the establishment ofte Law ibidem Adjuvant belying p. 57. Sophisticall by a false argument p. 58. Prediction fortelling p. 59. Homogeneall of the same name and nature p. 67. Detractation with-drawing from the Law p. 70. Theoreticall contemplative p. 72. Inauguration installing p. 97. Ubiquitari that is everywhere p. 108. Promiscuously confused p. 114. Physicall motion an actuall change p. 130. Adequate of the same extent p. 132. Extrinsecall outward p. 136. Manumission freedome p. 139. Transmutation change p. 146. Collectively together p. 153. Integrally wholly p. 154. Genus a logicall terme intimating a nature common to severall kinds d. 155. Species is alogi●…all terme signifying a nature agreeable onely to severall particulars ibidem Theologicall Axiome a rule in Diinitie p. 177. Proems beginnings p. 181. Exordium Preface iibdem Predication Predicated denomination or naming p. 189. Reciprocall interchangeable p. 188. Suspension or abstension withholding p. 191. Secluding orshut out ibidem Proselytes followers p. 127. Intensively the inward vertue of a thing extensively are outwardacts of a thing p. 200. Aberration erring p. 201. Classes the lesser meeting p. 202. Synods the grerater meeting ibidem Oecumenicall universall ibidem Consubstantiation the being of two substances together p. 208 Tropee a translation of the signification of words p. 209. Delegated appointed p. 214. Lesbian crooked p. 225. Ethicks manners p. 226. Mediocrity the meane p. 234. Specificall the same in kind ibidem Ens incomplexum a simple being p. 253. Specifica●…ive that 〈◊〉 divers kinds ibidem Appretiatively valuablely p. 268. Compellation naming or calling p. 275. Sympathies the agreements of nature Antipathies the disagreements of nature p. 277. Appropriatiation applying to one p. 282. Mentall in the understanding ibidem Vocall in word ibidem Deprecation to pray against p. 285. Anthemes songes p. 284. Impetration obtaining p. 287. Celebration praising p. 289. Metaphoricall the property of one thing is translated to another p. 291. Promissory promising p. 293. Assertory affirming ibidem Candidly ingenuously p. 294. Spontaneous willingly p. 295. Exorcismes conjuration p. 296. Indefinite unlimited ibidem Fortuinous casuall p. 297. Conjecture guesse ibidem Petinacious obstinate p. 302. Monomachies Duells p. 306. Accurate perfect p. 309. Redundancy abounding ibidem Detraction slander p. 311. Iotaes tittles ibidem Subjective in this place terminated p. 314. Objectively referred by ibidem Idolothites things offered to indolls p. 315. Situation seating p. 319. Prolepsis or Anticipation The declaring of a thing before that shall bee done afterward p. 323. Polygamy many mariages p. 325. Adumbration shadowing p. 329. Iudiciall the Lawes for the Common-Wealth p. 330. Allegorically figuratively p. 337. Concession granting ibidem Mechanicall Handiwork ibidem Disparity inequality p. 345. Emendative correcting p. 152. Commutative changing ibidem Criminall faulty ibidem Parsimony sparing p. 378. Pedagogy Child-hood p. 330. Accommodation fitting p. 331. FINIS Capit. Of the Contents or summe of the First Booke CHAP. 1. OF the definition or nature of divinity p. 1. CHAP. 2. Of the distribution or parts of divinity p. 4. CHAP. 3. Of faith p. 5. CHAP. 4. Of God and his essence p. 10. CHAP. 5. Of the subsistance of God p. 16. CHAP. 6. Of the efficiency of God p. 21. CHAP. 7. Of the decree and counsel of God p. 26. CHAP. 8. Of Creation p. 35. CHAP. 9. Of providence p. 45. CHAP. 10. Of speciall gubernation about intelligent Creatures p. 50. CHAP. 11. Of Mans Apostacy or fall p. 55. CHAP. 12. Of the consequents of sinne p. 60. CHAP. 13. Of Originall sinne p. 66. CHAP. 14. Of actuall sinne p. 68. CHAP. 15. Of Corporall death p. 73. CHAP. 16. Of the consummation of death p. 75. CHAP. 17. Of the propogation of sinne p. 77. CHAP. 18. Of the Person of Christ the Mediator p. 79. CHAP. 19. Of the Office of Christ. p. 82. CHAP. 20. Of satisfaction p. 87. CHAP. 21. Of the life of Christ being humbled p. 91. CHAP. 22. Of the Death of Christ. p. 99. CHAP. 23. Of the exaltation of Christ. p. 104. CHAP. 24. Of the application of Christ. p. 111. CHAP. 25. Of Predestination p. 116. CHAP. 26. Of Calling p. 123. CHAP. 27. Of Iustification p. 129. CHAP. 28. Of aodption p. 135. CHAP. 29. Of Sanctification p. 140. CHAP. 30. Of Glorification p. 146 CHAP. 31. Of the Church mystically considered p. 151. CHAP. 32. Of the Church instruced p. 157. CHAP. 33. Of the extraordinarie ministers of the Church p. 161. CHAP. 34. Of the holy Scripture p. 167. CHAP. 35. Of ordinary Ministers and their office in preaching p. 173. CHAP. 36. Of the Sacraments p. 183. CHAP. 37. Of Ecclesiasticall discipline p. 188. CHAP. 38. Of the administration of the Covenant of grace be fore the Comming of Christ. p. 193. CHAP. 39. Of the administration of the covenant from Christ exhibited to the end of the world p. 198. CHAP. 40. Of Baptisme and the supper of the Lord. p. 205. CHAP. 41. Of the end of the world p. 210. L. Cap. Of the Contents or summe of the Second Booke CHAP. 1. Of observance in generall p. 215. CHAP. 2. Of Vertue p. 223. CHAP. 3. Of good workes p. 236. CHAP. 4. Of Religion p. 243. CHAP. 5. Of faith p. 249. CHAP. 6. Of Hope p. 257. CHAP. 7. Of Charity p. 264. CHAP. 8. Of hearing of the word p. 271. CHAP. 9. Of Prayer p. 277. CHAP. 10. Of an Oath p. 290. CHAP. 11. Of a Lot p. 296. CHAP. 12. Of tempinhg of God p. 303. CHAP. 13. Of instituted Worship p. 307. CHAP. 14. Of the manner of Divine worship p. 315. CHAP. 15. Of the time of worship p. 322. CHAP. 16. Of Iustice and Caharitie toward our Neighbour p. 341. CHAP. 17. Of the Honour of our Neighbour p. 353. CHAP. 18. Of Humanity toward our Neighbour p. 363. CHAP. 19. Of Castitie p. 368. CHAP. 20. Of Commutative Iustice. p. 374. CHAP. 21. Of telling truth Verracitie p. 380 CHAP. 22. Of Contentation p. 384. FINIS THE FIRST BOOK OF DIVINITY The first Chapter Of the Definition or Nature of Divinity DIvinity is the doctrine of living to God Iohn 6. 68. The words of eternall life Acts 5. 20. The words of this life Rom. 6. 11. Reckon your selves to be alive unto God 2. It is called a doctrine not as if the name of
something proper to the Divine Essence are altogether incommunicable as Omnipotency Immensity Eternity and such like 30. Tenthly those that are said to be communicated to the Creatures doe agree to them by likenesse not altogether in the same manner as they are in God neither yet altogether aequivocally 31. The attributes of God set forth What God is and Who he is 32. What God is none can perfectly define but that hath the Logicke of God himselfe But an imperfect description which commeth neerest to unfold Gods nature and may bee conceived of us is such as this 33. God is a Spirit having life in himselfe Iohn 4. 24. God is a spirit and Chap. 5. 26. The Father hath life in himselfe 34. He is called a Spirit 1. Negatively because he is not a body 2. Analogically or by a certaine likenesse because there are many perfections in spirituall substances which doe more shadow forth the Divine nature then any bodily thing can 35. He is said to be Living 1. Because God doth most especially worke of himselfe not being moved by another 2. Because the vitall action of God is his very Essence 3. Because he is the Fountaine of all being and vitall operation to other living things Acts 17. 25. 28. He giveth to all life and breath and all things in him we live move and be 36. He is said to live in himselfe because he receiveth neither being nor life from any in any part 37. Hence the chiefe title of God whereby he is distinguished from all Idolls is that he is the living God Deut. 32. 40. Psal. 84. 23. Ierem. 5. 2. 38. Hence our Faith seeking eternall life doth rest in God alone because God is the Fountaine of all life Iohn 5. 26. 39. Who God is those properties doe set forth to us wherby he is distinguished from all other things 40. Now those Divine properties doe shew How great God is and what an one he is 41. Under the motion of Quantity he is said to be 1. One 2. Infinite First inwardly because he is unmeasurable Secondly outwardly as he is incomprehensible 3. He is said to be eternall 42. He is said to be One not in kinde but in that most perfect unity which in the Creatures is wont to be called numericall and individuall 43. God is infinite as he is void of all bounds of his Essence Psal. 139 8. If I clime up to Heaven thou art there or make my bed in the Grave be hold thou art there 44. God is unmeasurable as he is void of all matter of dimension or measure 1. King 8. 27. The Heavens and Heavens of heavens doe not containe thee Isa. 66. 1. Heaven is my throne Earth my foote-stoole 45. Hence Faith doth looke for no certaine measure of blessednesse to be communicated from God but unmeasurable glory 46. God is incomprehensible because he is void of any bounds to compasse him 47. Hence he is present every where because there is no place whence he is excluded any where 48. God is also eternall because without beginning and end Psal. 102. 25. 26. Esay 44. 1. 1. Tim. 1 17. 49. Hence it is that our Faith doth apprehend eternall life in God 50. What an one God is those properties doe set forth by which he is said to worke unto these now ought to be attributed all the properties of Essence and quantity simplicity immutability eternity and immensity 51. These qualities are conceived either under the reason of faculties or else of vertues by which those faculties are adorned 52. The faculties are understanding will whence Faith doth leane upon him who knowes what is needfull for us and is willing also to supply it 53. The understanding of God is simple without any composition discourse or representation of shapes Heb. 4. 13. All things are naked and open to his eyes 54. The understanding of God is unchangeable he knowes not otherwise nor more one thing then another nor more before then now or now then before Acts 15. 18. known to the Lord are all his workes from before all ages 55. The understanding of God is eternall it neither beginneth nor endeth Ibid. 56. The understanding of God is Infinite because he perceiveth all truths and reasons of all things Iob 11. 8. 9. The Wisdome of God is heigher then the Heavens longer then the Earth deeper then the Sea Psal. 139. 6. thy knowledge is more wonderfull then that I can conceive it 57. The same way also the nature of the Divine will ought to be conceived of us 58. The will of God is single and onely one in God 59. The will of God is unchangeable because he alwayes willeth the same and in the same manner Psal. 33. 1. The counsell of the Lord remaineth for ever 60. The will of God is eternall because hee doth not begin to will what before he would not nor ceaseth to will that which before hee willed Mala. 3. 6. I Iehova change not 61. The will of God may be said to be infinite because it hath no outward limitation 62. The affections which are given to God in Scripture as love hatred and the like doe either set forth acts of the will or doe agree to God only figuratively 63. A vertue is the perfection of the understanding and will such as is wisdome holinesse and the like in God 64. Virtue is attributed to God as it notes a readinesse of doing not under the respect of an habit distinct from faculty and act 65. But the vertues which in man arise from occasion of sinne and imperfection doe not agree to God as humility chastity shamefastnes and the like 66. Out of all these attributes that perfection of God doth result whereby hee is called blessed 1. Tim. 1. 11. and 6. 15. 67. Hence our Faith hath a firme foundation because it leaneth on God the possessor and author of all perfection blessednesse and glory CHAPTER V. Of the Subsistence of God 1. THe Subsistence of God is that one Essence as it is with its personall properties 2. The same essence is common to three subsistences and as touching the Deity every subsistence is of it selfe 3. Nothing moreover is attributed to the Essence which may not be attributed to every subsistence in regard of the Essence of it 4. But those things that are attributed properly to every subsistence in regard of its subsistence cannot be attributed to the Essence 5. The subsistences are distinguished from the Essence as the manners of subsisting growing together with the same Essence are distinguished from the same absolutely considered 6. They are distinguished among themselves as Relatives by certaine relative properties so as one cannot be another yet they are together in nature neither can they be said to be former or latter but in order of beginning and manner of subsisting 7. But seeing those relative properties are as it were individuating in an Essence that lives spiritually and most perfectly therefore those subsistences are rightly called persons
that which he will but also in very deed doth actually doe whatsoever he will Psal. 115. 3. 135. 6. Eph. 3. 11. 21. The manner of Gods subsistence which shines forth in his Efficiency is first the co-working of all persons secondly the distinct manner of the persons in working 22. Their co-working is that whereby they do inseparably worke the same thing for all externall actions are common to all the persons Iohn 5. 17 19. My Father worketh and I worke Whatsoever he doth the same likewise doth the Son and 16. 13 14. That spirit shall not speak of himselfe but whatsoever he shall heare he shall speak He shall take of mine and give it to you 23. Hence every person worketh of himselfe as touching the causall power which he exerciseth 24. Hence there is no praeeminence of dignity in that co-working but great unity and identity of one and the same cause 25. Hence equall honor is equally due from us to all the Divine Persons 26. The Distinct manner of working is that whereby every person doth worke according to the distinct manner of his subsistence 27. That distinct manner is partly in the order of working partly in the bounding of the action 28. As touching the order the manner of working of the Father is of himselfe by the Sonne and Holy Spirit Hence the beginning of things namely Creation is properly attributed to the Father who in order of beginning is the first Person 29. The manner of operation of the Sonne is from the Father by the spirit Hence the dispensation of things is properly attributed to him namely Redemption the constitution of all the offices in the Church Ephes. 4. 11. He therefore gave some to be Apostles some Prophets c. 30. The manner of working of the spirit is from the Father and the Son by himselfe Hence the communication of things is attributed to the Holy Spirit as Regeneration Tit. 3. 5. The communication of all spirituall gifts 1. Cor. 12. 4. And the perfection of naturall things themselves Gen. 1. 2. 31. As touching the termination of the action that works in which the working or manner of working of one person doth chiefly shine forth is chiefly attributed to that person So Creation is by a speciall application appropriated to the Father Redemption to the Sonne and Sanctification to the holy Ghost CHAPTER VII Of the Decree and Counsell of God 1. IN the powerfull Efficiency of God the Decree of God obtaineth the first place because this manner of working being of all most perfect doth chiefly agree to the Divine Nature 2. The Decree of God is his determinate purpose of effecting all things by his almighty Power and according to his counsell Eph. 1. 11. He doth all things according to the counsell of his own will 3. In the Decree of God there appeareth his constancy truth and faithfulnesse 4. Constancy is that whereby the Decree of God remaines alwayes immutable Num. 23. 23. The strong God is not a man that he should ly or the Sonne of man that he should repent Prov. 19. 21. The Counsell of the Lord it shall stand 5. Truth is that whereby he declares that alone which he hath decreed Ierem. 13. 10. Iehova is a God of truth Rom. 3. 4. Let God be true and every man a lia●… For although his words may seeme sometime to sound another thing yet the sence of them doth alwayes agree with the Decree 6. Faithfulnesse is that whereby he effects that which he hath decreed and as he hath decreed Isay 46. 10. My Counsell shall stand and I will doe all my pleasure 7. Every Decree of God is eternall 1 Cor. 2. 7. Acts 15. 18. 8. To this Decree of God pertaineth Counsell Eph. 1. 11. Acts 4. 28. 9. The Counsell of God is as it were his deliberation concerning the doing of every thing in the best manner after that it is of the understanding and will approved 10. Counsell is given to God in respect of perfect judgement whereby he doth all things advisedly I. E. willingly and of set purpose not in respect of any inquisition upon which such a judgement doth depend us men For God seeth and willeth all and every thing together Therefore it is called as it were deliberation not deliberation properly so called 11. Three things concurre to the perfection of this Counsell 1. A scope or end propounded 2. A conceipt of the minde tending towards that scope 3. An intention and well pleasingnesse of the will 12. The scope or end of this Counsell is the glory of God himselfe that is that goodnesse or perfection of God which is made manifest by his Efficiency and shines forth in his works Eph. 1. 6. To the praise of his glorious grace 13. In every artificer or one that workes by counsell ad extra outwardly there is a platforme afore hand in the mind which when he is about to work he lookes into that he may fit his worke to it so also in God seeing he worketh not naturally nor rashly nor by constraint but with greatest perfection of reason such a platforme is to be conceived to praeexist before in his mind as the exemplary cause of all things to be done Heb. 11. 3. Those things we see were made of things that doe not appeare 14. The platforme of all things is the Divine Essence as it is understood of God himselfe as imitable by the Creatures or so as in some sort the Image of that perfection or some footstep thereof may be expressed in the Creatures that is the Creatures themselves as they are conceived in the Mind of God are the platforme or image of that nature which they have in themselves 15. A platforme in the mind of man who attaines to knowledge by Analysis or resolution is collected of things themselves and so things are first in themselves then they come unto the senses of men and then to the understanding where they can make some Idea to direct the following operation But because God understandeth all things by Genesis or composition and doth not require knowledge by Analysis or resolution of things therefore all things are first in his minde before they are in themselves 16. In us the things themselves are the example platform or copy and our knowledge is the Image but in God the Divine knowledge is the coppy-platforme and the things themselves the Image or expresse likenesse of it 17. An Idea in man is first imprinted and afterwards expressed in the things but in God it is only expressing properly not impressed because it doth not come from any other thing 18. From this one foundation may all errors of merits and foreseene faith be sufficiently refuted For if any Decree of God should depend properly upon such foresight then the Idea of God should come to him from something else which doth in no wise agree with his nature 19. The Idea or platforme as it is absolutly considered in God is only one but as it
doth alwayes flow from him that worketh with proportion 21. Where this also is to be observed that a substantiall dignity such as was in Christ doth more properly confer to the dignity of the work then an accidentary dignity such as is in some men 22. From this dignity of the person it comes to passe that the satisfaction of Christ was sufficient as touching the substance and superabundant as touching certaine circumstances which did not at all agree to Christ. CHAPTER XXI Of the Life of Christ being humbled 1. THe parts of Christs humiliation are two his Life and Death 2. Of his Life there are two parts the first in his Conception and Birth the second after hee was Borne 3. Unto his conception there were two principles that did worke together one active and another passive 4. The Passive was the blessed Virgin Mary which 〈◊〉 called a passive principle not because she did nothing unto the bringing forth of Christ but because she did nothing of her selfe but that she did administer that matter of which the flesh of Christ was formed Neither yet could she administer it immediatly fit for she had no pure matter but it was made fit by a certaine supernaturall preparation and sanctification Luc. 1. 35. Because that which shall be borne of thee is holy yet Christ was truly and really the Sonne of Mary and the seed of the Woman promised from the beginning Neither are there therefore two Son-ships in Christ really distinct or two sonnes joyned together for that temporall Son-ship whereby he is referred to his Mother was a respect of reason only Indeed the humane nature of Christ had a reall relation to Mary as to a cause but the Son-ship doth no way agree to the nature but to the person only yet there is that relation of the humane nature to the person and of Mary to that nature that it may be truly and rightly said Mary was the Mother of God 5. The active principle of this conception was not a man whence blessed Mary was a Mother and Virgin together Mat. 1. 23. Isay 7. 14. But the holy Spirit Neither yet can Christ be called the Sonne of the holy Spirit no not in as much as he is man for as he is man neither is he of the same nature with the holy Spirit neither doth it agree to a nature but to a person to undergoe the respect of a Sonne 6. In the first instant of this conception Christ received according to his humane nature fulnesse of all grace as touching the first act Iohn 1. 14. Full of grace and truth Luc. 2. 40. He was filled with wisdome yet so as that it might be increased as touching the second acts and by spreading forth to new objects Luke 2. 25. Hee grew in Wisdome 7. Hence Christ was indeed erriched with blessednesse from the very instant of his conception but so as that as travellers doe he proceeded in it untill he came to highest exaltation 8. In the birth of Christ there was humility of greatest poverty with an attestation of gratest glory that both natures and both parts of mediation might be declared from the beginning 9. All the earthly things which did belong to the birth of Christ were most humble But the Angels and Starres of Heaven did declare that glory wherewith all kinds of men Shepheards wisemen Herod and the Priests with all the people were moved Luc. 1. 18. Mat. 2. 2. 3. 10. By reason of this birth he was according to the flesh the Sonne of the Patriarches of all the world yet specially he was that seed of Abraham in whom all Nations should be blessed and that Sonne of David who was to possesse a Kingdome not of this but of another for ever Iohn 18. 36. My Kingdome is not of this world Luc. 1. 33. And he shall raigne in the house of Iacob for ever and of his kingdom there shall be no end 11. The time place and the like circumstances accompanying his Birth did make the same truth manifest 12. After the birth of Christ was his life Private and publique 13. He lived a private life before publike because the condition of man did so require to which he had subjected himselfe because the Law of God had so determined and so also the infirmity of man did require that by degrees the Sunne of righteousnesse should appeare unto them and that they should be lead as it were by the hand from every imperfect thing to that which is perfect 14. In his private life there was his infancy and subection to his parents 15. In his infancy there was his 1. Circumcisio●… and offering 2. His flight unto Egypt and returning thence 16. Christ was circumcised and offered because he did subject himselfe not only to the eternall and morall Law but also to the Ceremoniall and every Law of God 17. Those ceremoniall observations were so many confessions of sinne Therefore Christ who was made sin for us was fitly made conformable to them 18. Also they were certaine outward meanes belonging to Divine worship therefore Christ observed them that he might fulfill all righteousnesse 19. Lastly they were certaine types shadowing forth Christ now that he might fulfill those and by this meanes sanctifie the same he would apply them to himselfe 20. Circumcision was the Seale of the Covenant of God 21. Offering was a presenting and dedicating the first born unto God therefore Christ was fitly both circumcised and offered because hee was to confirme that saving Covenant by his blood and among the first borne hee was onely perfectly holy to God of whom all others were only types 22. His flight into Egypt and his returne thence was 1. That he migt shew from the beginning of his age that he was borne to undergoe misery 2. That according to the condition to which he had submitted himselfe he might provide for his life after the manner of men 3. That he might withal shew that he was the man that should bring us out of spirituall Egypt into the promised Land 23. In his subjection to his parents which pertaineth to the fift precept of the Decalogue he did shew that he was subject to the whole morall Law 1. Because there is the same reason of one precept as of all 2. Because there is no part of morall obedience from which Christ the Lord of Heaven and Earth might seem to be more free then from subjection to men 24. Although that this legall obedience was required of Christ now made man by right of Creation yet because he was made man not for himselfe but for us it was a part of that humiliation satisfaction and merit which God required and accept of him for us 25. In this subjection these two things are to be observed The exception which hee did suffer and the effect which it did bring forth 26. The exception was the disputation which he had with the Scribes when he was but twelve yeares old 27. This disputation was a foregoing
be saved And 13. 48. As many as were ordained to life believed Rom. 8. 30. Whom he predestinated them also he called Tit. 3. 5. Not by works of righteousnesse but of his own mercy Iane●… 1. 18. Of his owne will begat he us by the word of truth 7. The parts of Calling are two The offer of Christ and the receiving of him Iohn 1. 11. He came to his own and his own received him not But to as many as receive him he gave to them c. 8. The offer is an objective propounding of Christ as of a meanes sufficient and necessary to salvation 1. Cor. 1. 23. 24. We preach Christ the Power of God and the wisdome of God Heb. 7. 25. He is able perfectly to save those that come to God by him Acts 4. 12. Neither is there any other name under Heaven which is given among men by which we must be saved 9. But there is nothing propounded nor ought to be propounded of Christ in the Calling of men to be believed as true which is not simply and absolutely true For this is both against the nature of a testimony as it is an object of that Faith which is in the understanding the formall reason whereof is truth and also is against the nature of the Gospell it selfe which by an excellency is called the word of truth Eph. 1. 13. 10. The offer of Christ is outward or inward 11. The outward is a propounding or preaching of the Gospell or of the promises of Christ. Acts. 9. 15. That he may beare my name in the sight of the Gentiles 12. Yet that man be prepared to receive the promises the application of the Law doth ordinarily goe before to the discovery of sin and inexcusablenesse and humiliation of the sinner Rom. 7. 7. I knew not sinne but by the Law 13. Those promises as touching the outward promulgation are propounded to all without difference together with a command to believe them but as touching the propriety of the things promised which depends upon the intention of him that promiseth they belong only to the elect who are therefore called the sonnes and heires of the promise Rom. 9. 8. 14. The inward offer is a spirituall enlightning whereby those promises are propounded to the hearts of men as it were by an inward word Iohn 6. 45. Whosoever hath heard of the Father and hath learned commeth to me Eph. 1. 17. That he might give unto you the spirit of wisdome and revelation the eyes of your mind being enlightened that ye may know what is that hope of your calling 15. This also is sometime and in a certaine manner granted to those that are not elected Hebrewes 6. 4. 10. 29. Mat. 13. 20. 16. If any one oppose himselfe out of malice to this illumination he commits a sin against the Holy Ghost which is called unpardonable or unto death Hebr. 6. 6. 10. 29. 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mat. 12. 32. 17. The receiving of Christ is that whereby Christ being offered is joyned to man and man unto Christ. Iohn 6. 56. He abides in me and I him 18. In respect of this conjunction we say that we are in Christ 2 Cor. 5. 17. And to put on Christ. Gal. 3. 27. To be dwelled in by Christ. Eph. 3. 17. The house of Christ. Hebr. 3. 6. the Temple of Christ 2 Cor. 6. 16. To be espoused to Christ. Eph. 5. 23. Branches of Christ Iohn 15. 5. Members of Christ 1 Cor. 12. 12. And the Name of Christ is a certaine manner communicated to us 1 Cor. 12. 12. So also is Christ. 19. By reason of this receiving Calling is called conversion Acts 26. 20. Because all they who obey the call of God are wholly converted from sin to grace from the world to follow God in Christ It is also called regeneration as by that word the very beginning of a new life of a new Creation of a new Creature is often set forth in the Scriptures Iohn 1. 13. 3. 6. 1 Iohn 3. 9. 1 Pet. 1. 23. 22. As in respect of the offer it is properly called Calling as God doth effectually invite and draw men to Christ. Iohn 6. 44. 20. Receiving in respect of man is either passive or active Philippians 3. 12. That I may apprehend I was apprehended 21. Passive receiving of Christ is that whereby a spirituall principle of grace is begotten in the will of man Eph. 2. 5. He hath quickned 22. For this grace is the foundation of that revelation whereby a man is united with Christ Iohn 3. 3. Except a man bee borne againe hee cannot see the Kingdome of God 23. But the will is the most proper and prime subject of this grace because the conversion of the will is an effectuall principle of the conversion of the whole man Phil. 2. 17. It is God that worketh in you both to will and to doe of his own good pleasure 24. The enlightning of the mind is not sufficient to produce this effect because it doth not take away that corruption which is in the will neither doth it communicate unto it any new supernaturall principle by vertue whereof it may convert it selfe 25. Yet the will in respect of this first receiving hath not the consideration either of a free agent or a naturall patient but only of obedientiall subjection 2 Cor. 4. 6. Because God who hath said that light should shine out of darkenesse he it is who hath shined in our hearts 26. Active receiving is Actus olicitus an act of Faith drawn forth whereby he that is called doth now wholly leane upon Christ as his Saviour and by Christ upon God Iohn 3. 15. 16. Whosoever believes in him 1 Pet. 1. 21. Through him believing in God 27. This act of Faith doth depend partly upon a principle or habit of grace ingenerated and partly upon the operation of God moving before and stirring up Iohn 6. 44. None can come to me unlesse the Father draw him 28. It is indeed drawen out and exercised by man freely but certainly unavoydably and unchangeably Iohn 6. 37. Whatsoever my Father giveth mee shall come unto mee 29. With this Faith wherewith the will is turned to the having of the true good there is alwayes joyned repentance by which the same will is turned also to the doing of the true good with an aversnesse and hatred of the contrary evill or sinne Acts 19. 4. Marc. 1. 15. Repent and believe the Gospell 30. Repentance hath the same causes and principles with Faith for they are both the free gifts of God Eph. 2. 8. Faith is the gift of God 2 Tim. 2. 25. Whether God will at any time give them repentance They have the same subject because both have their seat in the heart or will of man Rom. 10. 9. 1 Kings 8. 48. With the heart man believeth They shall returne with all their heart They are also begotten at the same time But first they have divers objects for Faith is properly
of edifying so alwayes before his eyes that he diligently take heed 〈◊〉 turne not aside from it to vaine laughing 1 Tim. 1. 6. To striving about words 2. Tim. 2. 14. To unprofitable controversies or speculations of science falsly so called 1 Kin. 6. 20. But shew himselfe to be an holder fast of the faithfull word which tends unto doctrine Tit. 1. 9. And which cannot be condemned Tit. 2. 8. 16. But because the Will of God is to be propounded out of his Word to this end therefore he is not fit for his Ministery who hath not his sences exercised in the holy Scriptures even beyond the common sort of believers so that he might be said to be with Apollos mighty in the Scriptures Acts 18. 24. Hee must not trust to Postils and Commentaries 17. That the Will of God may be propounded with fruit of edification these two things are necessary to be done 1. That a declaration be made of those things that are contained in the Text. 2. That application of the same be addressed to the consciences of the hearers as their condition doth seeme to require 1 Tim. 6. 17. Charge those that are rich in this World that they be not high minded nor rust in uncertaine riches c. 18. They deceive their hearers and altogether forget themselves who propound a certaine text in the beginning as the beginning of the Sermon to be had and afterward doe speake many things about the text or by occasion of the text but for the most part draw nothing out of the text it selfe 19. In declaring what truth there is in the text first it ought to be explained and then afterward what good doth follow from thence That part is spent in doctrines or documents this in use or derivation of profit from those doctrines 2. Tim. 3. 16. All the Scripture is profitable for doctrine for reproofe for correction and instruction in righteousnesse 20. They who invert and confound those parts doe not provide for the memory of their hearers and doe not a little hinder their edification because they cannot commit the chiefe head of the Sermon to memory that they may afterward repeate it privatly in their families without which exercise the greatest part of that fruit doth perish which would by Sermons redound unto the Church of God 21. Doctrine is a Theologicall Axiom either consisting in the expresse word of Scripture or flowing from them by immediate consequence 22. A doctrine must first be rightly found out and then afterward handed 23. The finding it out is by Logick Analysis unto which Retoricke also and Grammar serveth 24. Analysis depends chiefly upon the observation of the scope or purpose and the meanes by which it is attained according to the act of Logick 25. Unto this must be subjoyned for confirmation the interpretation of those things which are doubtfull in the Analysis but manifest things and such as are perspicuous of themselves doe neither require nor admit a needelesse interpretation 26. Handling of a doctrine doth partly consist in proving if it may be questioned by the hearers for it is unfit carefully to confirme that which all acknowledge and partly in illustration of the thing sufficiently proved 27. Proving ought to be taken out of the more cleere testimonies of Scripture reasons also being added where the nature of the thing will suffer But here that measure is to be kept which the commodity of the hearers will dictate 28. Illustration may be drawen almost from all places of invention b●… dissentaneous and comparate arguments have here the chiefe place 29. Every doctrine being now sufficiently explained must presently be brought to use in which pa●…t also unlesse some speciall reason doe otherwise require we must most insist because it containes the end and good of the other and is more joyned with the chiefe scope of the Sermon namely the edification of the hearers 30. They faile therefore who stick to a naked finding out and explication of the truth and neglecting use and practise in which Religion and so blessednesse doth consist doe little or nothing edifie the conscience 31. Neither yet are all the doctrines which may be drawn out of the text to be propounded nor all the uses to be inculcated but those are to be chosen out which the circumstances of place time and persons shall teach to be most necessary and of those such especially are to be chosen which make most to stir up or confirme the life of Religion 32. They faile therefore who care not much what they say so they may seeme to have observed and spoken many things nay they doe this not seldome that they may extort many things out of the text which are not in it and oftentimes draw from other places unto it bringing every thing out of many things whereby indeed the subversion rather then the edification of the hearers especially those that are more unskilfull doth follow 33. Both doctrine and use as much as may be ought so to be framed that they may have some connexion among themselves and doe also shew it For the minde is not drawen from one thing to another without disprofit neither is there any thing doth more helpe memory then order of deduction 34. An use is a Theologicall Axiom drawne from the doctrine shewing the profit goodnesse or end of it 35. The reason of the deduction is to be opened if it be not very plaine unto which also must be subjoyned probation or illustration as the necessity of the hearers and prudence of the speaker shall advise 36. This use either pertaines to the judgement or to practise 2 Tim. 3. 16. 37. In the judgement there is Information and Reformation of the minde 38. Information is the proving of some truth 39. Reformation is the confutation of some error 40. But although every truth may be taught upon occasion yet every error is not every where to be refuted For old heresies which are already buried are not to be digged up againe that they may bee refuted neither are wicked blasphemies easily to be repeated this doth trouble and offend especially when they are solemnly nominated explained and refuted 41. In practise of life there is direction which consists of instruction and correction 42. Iustruction is a demonstration of that life that is to be followed 43. Correction is a condemning of that life that is to be shunned 44. After declaration application ought to follow which hath so great agreement with derivation of uses that it may often be mingled with it 45. To apply a doctrine to his use is so to whet and put on some generall truth with speciall accommodation as it may pierce into the minds of such as are present with a moving of godly affections 46. Men are to be pricked to the quick that they may feele in every one of them that of the Apostle namely that the Word of the Lord is a two edged sword that pierceth into the inward thoughts and affections and goeth
the worship and glory of God Mat. 12. 5. Iohn 5. 8 9. For in that case those workes which are of their owne nature servile do passe into the nature of holy actions neither are they properly our workes but Gods works 44. This rest although in it selfe absolutely considered it is not neither ever was a part of worship yet as it is commanded of God as a certaine necessary thing unto his worship and is referred also to it so far it is a part of that obedience which pertaines to religion and the worship of God 45. The sanctification of this rest and day is a speciall applying of our selves to worship God upon that day which is intimated in those phrases He sanctified that day and it is a Sabbath to the Lord thy God 46. Here publick worship ought chiefly to be respected whence also it is that the Sabbath is called an holy Convocation Levit. 23. 13. Acts 13. 14. 15. 23. 16. 13. But that that publick convocation of the Church ought to be had both before and after noone upon the Lords day it appeares sufficiently by that double burnt-offering of the Sabbath in the morning and the evening Num. 28. 9. 47. But the rest of the day ought to be spent in exercises of piety for although there was of old an offering peculiar to the Sabbath yet the continuall or daily offering with his drink-offering was not to be omitted Num. 28. 10. 48. Also the publick worship it selfe seeing it is most solemnely to be celebrated doth necessarily require these exercises of reading the Scripture meditation prayer holy conferences and contemplation of the workes of God whereby we may be both more prepared to publick worship and that worship may be made truly effectuall to us 49. Contrary to his ordinance of the Lords day are all feast dayes ordained by men they being accounted for holy dayes as the Lords day ought to be accounted 50. For it is most agreeable with the first institution and with the writings of the Apostles that one only day in the week be sanctified 51. The Iewes had no feast dayes rightly sanctified but by divine institution 52. Yet any dayes may be piously turned into occasion of furthering the worship of God 53. Also when God by his speciall judgements cals to more solemne fasting those dayes are to be accounted as it were for extraordinary Sabbaths 54. Contrary also to the observation of this day and all transactions of businesse exercises feastings sports and such like whereby the minde of man is this day drawn away from the exercises of religion CHAPTER XVI Of Iustice and Charity toward our neighbour Thus much of Religion Iustice followes which is contained in the Second Table 1. IUstice is a vertue whereby we are inclined to performe our duty due to our neighbour So the duty of children towards their parents is said to be just Ephes. 6. 1. And the duty of masters towards their servants is called right and equall Col. 4. 1. And all those things which we owe to our neighbour are performed in living justly 2. But justice in this place is not taken most generally as setting forth every duty to another for so it containes even religion it selfe for that justice which i●… said to be generall is no other thing then vertue in generall as hath been before declared when we did shew that justice was the chiefe among the generall affections of vertue neither must it be understood most particularly to respect the quantity either of the thing deserved or received for so it containes only a few duties of the second table namely those whereby like is returned for like but it is here used in a certaine middle way wherby it sets forth the mutuall duty between those who are bound by the same right in which sence it containes all the force of the second Table 3. It hath for the object our neighbour that is every one whether man or Angell also who is or may be with us pertaker of the same end and blessednesse Luke 10. 36 37. 4. Hence neither holy men whatsoever they shal be nor Angels themselves can be a fit object of religion or of that religious worship which is commanded in the first Table but only of Iustice or of that dutie that is due to our neighbour which is contained in the second Table whence also those arguments taken from the nature of the thing doe exclude all adoration of the Creatures Acts 10. 26. Rise for I my selfe also am a man Revel 22. 9. See thou doe it nor for I am thy fellow servant and of thy brethren the Prophets and of those that keepe the words of this Booke worship God Rev. 22. 9. 5. Buth in this number and name every one is by proportion included even in respect of himselfe for every one is first a neighbour to himselfe then to others Whence also it is that there is no singular precept given whereby a man may be ordered toward himselfe for whilest he is rightly ordered toward God and toward his neighbour he is also ordered toward himselfe but with this difference that that disposition whereby any is made fit to performe his duty to God and his neighbour pertaines to his perfection but he must also performe the same duties both to his neighbour and himselfe but not to God and himselfe 6. But because that monner whereby duties are to be exercised toward our neighbour is with respect and affection to their good hence this same vertue is called charity toward our neighbour Matt. 22. 29. Marc. 12. 31. 7. In this charity there is alwayes love of union of welpleasednesse and good will as in that love which is toward God but there is also added oft times the consideration of mercy when the misery of our neighbour is respected which hath no place in our charity toward God 8. But this band of Iustice and affection of Charity ought alwayes to flow and be derived from Religion toward God for seeing Religion gives the chiefe honour to God it causeth that obedience be given to his will in those things also which doe immediatly respect the Creatures whence all they who neglect their duty towards men are denied to honour God but rather doe contemne him 1. Sam. 2. 30. Also charity towards God which is contained in Religion doth of its own nature produce charity towards men as they are in some sort partakers of the Image of God whence also we are said to love God in men and men in God which is one reason of that phrase beloved in the Lord. 9. Hence nothing is properly due to man which is contrary to Religion Acts 4. 19. 5. 29. Whether it be right in the sight of God to obey you rather then God judge yee we must obey God rather then men 10. Hence also the truth of Religion cannot consist with the neglect of Iustice and Charity toward our neighbour Iames 1. 27. Religious worship pure and undefiled before
whereby we are inclined to observe truth in giving testimony Mat. 23. 22. Eph. 4. 25. Psal. 15. 2. 3. Of this telling truth in giving testimony the ninth precept doth properly handle and not of those things only or chiefly which pertaine to the fame of our Neighbour For fame pertaines to that honour the consideration whereof is had in the fift precept neither is it to be put after riches and the profits of this life whereof it was handled in the eight Commandement Pro. 22. 1. Neither doth a testimony true or false pertaine to the same of others only but also to their possessions and life it selfe Pro. 30. 14. 4. It is also manifest that the words themselves of this precept doe most directly respect proceeding in judgement Numb 35. 30. Deut. 17. 6. 19. 15. In which places many other things are handled beside fame although they ought also to be extended to all publick politick and sacred testimonies 1. Cor. 15. 15. Iohn 1. 7. 8. 15. 19. 32. 34. 5. Hence actions in places of judgement have not only approbation but also direction from this precept namely that judgements ought alwayes to be grounded on fit testimony unlesse there be that evidence of the matter which needs to witnesse or at least strong and violent as they call them presumptions which are equall to testimonies 6. The words of a testimony must alwayes be used in that sence as they are understood or are thought to be understood by those to whom the witnesses endeavour to give credence without equivocation doubting or mentall reservation 7. Truth in a testimony is threefold 1. When that which is said is conformable to the thing which is in hand 2. When it is comformable 3. When t is conformable both to the thing and to the mind 8. The second truth is that which is most properly looked at in a testimony and in veracity yet the third is required in those things a certaine knowledge of which we are either bound or professe to have 9. This veracity is in a simple assertion or in a promise 10. The truth of an assertion is alwayes thus farnecessary that if we affirme any thing it doe consent with the mind and our judgement 11. Also sometime an assertion it selfe is necessary when either Iustice or Charity requires it of us 12. Iustice requires it in publick judgements of the Iudge of the plaintife the defendant of the witnesse of the advocate the notary and the proctor and out of judgement when we are bound to beare witnesse by some speciall right 13. Charity requires this when good comes to our Neighbour by it without equivalent hurt to our selves or others 14. Truth of a promise is called fidelity 15. Fidelity is a vertue whereby we are inclined to keepe constantly our credit given 16. This Fidelity is the foundation of civill Iustice and all agreements and contracts for a reciprocall promise is a contract 17. To the truth of a testimony is opposed a Lye Eph. 4. 25. 18. A lie is properly a testimony whereby one pronounceth otherwise then is in his heart Act. 5. Whence is that phrase in Scripture of a double heart of a man that is a lyer Psal. 12. 3. 19. But because a thing pronounced doth not consist only in outward words but chiefly in their sence therefore the same words which are true in one sence in another sence become a lye Mat. 26. 61. 20. Ironies fables jests repeatings also of false things and the like are not lies because they are not testimonies and they are not testimonies because they are not confirmed by the credit and authority of the speaker 21. An intention of deceiving although it doe almost alwayes accompany a false testimony yet it is not of the essence of it neither is it necessarily required to a lie for although one know that he with whom he hath to doe cannot be deceived by his lie yet if he have an intention in speaking to affirme that which is false he lyeth no lesse then if he had hope of deceiving 22. An intention of hurting doth indeed increase the mischiefe of a lie but it maketh not the nature of it for if a man out of jesting or a desire to please and be officious confirme that by his credit which he knowes to be false it is a lie pernicious of its own nature if not others yet to the author himselfe as it is in those who are given to flatteries or boastings or are delighted in confirming monstrous fables or fictions unto others 23. An intention to speake that which is false makes a lie although that which is spoken be most true 24. The asseveration of a thing incertaine for certaine is accounted with a lie although we thinke it to be true 25. Also that secrecy whereby one doth not speake the truth when Justice or Charity requires it doth partake of the nature of a lie 26. But when neither Iustice nor Charity requires to give testimony then the truth or part of it may be concealed without sin Ier. 38. 27. 27. Among lies those are more hainous in which the testimonie is more solemne as in publick judgements which are chiefly respected in the words of the ninth precept in sacred matters and in the like Matth. 26. 59. 1. Cor. 15. 15. 28. Hence subscriptions testimonies or commendatory letters given against the knowne truth are foule lies 29. That dissembling which consists in deeds or signes and not in words is not properly a lie unlesse the same either of their own nature or by some certaine appointment have the force and use of speech as 1. Sam. 20. 20. 21. 22. Mat. 26. 49. Because such deeds and signes that are not verball have no certaine and determinate signification so as they can have the force of a testimony 30. Therefore such dissembling is sometime lawfull as in warlike stratagems Ios 8. 31. But it is made unlawfull when in respect of the end or manner it fights with religion Iustice or Charity 32. Unto fidelity is opposed perfidy or unfaithfulnesse 33. A lie is committed in a promise if there be not an intention of doing that which is promised unfaithfulnesse is committed if there be not an answerable indeavour to performe the same therefore a lie and unfaithfulnesse may be joyned together and they may be also severed 34. When a testimony toward our Neighbour is confirmed by an oath then the oath is an adjunct of that testimony and although it doe in it selfe respect God only yet in this use it respects our Neighbour also 35. Therefore perjury in such a testimony is directly and immediatly a sin against reverence due to God but mediatly it violates also that Iustice which is due to our Neighbour 36. Asseveration is the manner of a testimony whereby the sincerity of the witnesse and the certitude of knowledge which he hath of the thing witnessed is declared whence also it is not unfitly by some called a protestation because it produceth a witnessing