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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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Babylon the great Whore with all the Kingdoms of Antichrist The subject of it is two-fold 1. The present state of the Church 2. The future state of it The things which are and the things which shall be hereafter Revel 1. 19. The three first Chapters of this Book contain seven several Epistles to the seven several Churches of Asia the other following Chapters are a Prophetical History of the Church of God from Christs Ascension to his second coming The holy Ghost foreseeing what labour Satan and his instruments would take to weaken and impair the credit and authority of this above all other Books wherein he prevailed so far as some true Churches called the truth and authority of it into question hath backed it with a number of confirmations more then are in any other Book of Scripture First The Author of it is set in the fore-front or face of it The Revelation of Iesus Christ Chap. 1. vers 1. who professeth himself to be the first and the last vers 11. so in the several Epistles to the Churches in several styles he challengeth them to be his Thus saith he 1. That holdeth the seven starres in his right hand 2. He which is first and last which was dead and is alive 3. Which hath the sharp two edged Sword 4. Which hath eyes like a flame of fire and his feet like brass 5. Which hath the seven Spirits of God and the seven stars 6. He who is holy and true who hath the key of David 7. He who is Amen the faithful and true witness the beginning of the creatures of God Secondly The Instrument or Pen-man his servant Iohn the Evangelist the Apostle the Divine who for the farther and more full authority of it repeateth his name at least thrice saying I Iohn Chap. 1. 9. and 21. 1 2. and 22. 8. whe●●●● in the Gospel he never maketh mention of his name there he writes the History of Christ here he writes of himself and the Revelations declared to him Thirdly In the last Chapter are five testimonies heaped together vers 5 6 7 8. 1. Of the Angels 2. Of God himself the Lord of the holy Prophets 3. Of Jesus Christ Behold I come shortly 4. Of Iohn I Iohn heard and saw all these things 5. The Protestation of Jesus Christ v. 18. Fourthly The matter of the Book doth convince the Authority thereof seeing everywhere the Divinity of a Prophetical Spirit doth appear the words and sentences of other Prophets are there set down part of the Prophecies there delivered are in the sight of the world accomplished by which the truth and authority of the whole is undoubtedly proved there are extant many excellent Testimonies of Christ and his Divinity and our redemption by Christ. Fifthly The most ancient Fathers Greek and Latine ascribe this Book to Iohn the Apostle Theophylact Origen Chrysostome Tertullian Hilary Austin Ambrose Iren●us To deny then the truth of this Book is contrasolem obloqui to gainsay the shining of the Sun it self The Chiliasts abuse many testimonies out of this Book but those places have been cleared long ago by the learned as bearing another sense See Dr Raynolds Conf. with Hart c. 8. p. 406. Calvin being demanded his opinion what he thought of the Revelation answered ingeniously saith one He knew not at all what so obscure a writer meant Se penitus ignorare quid velit tam obscurus scriptor Cajetane at the end of his Exposition of Iude confesseth that he understand● not the literal sense of the Revelation and therefore Exponat saith he cui Deus concesserit It consists of two and twenty Chapters the best Expositors of it are Ribera Brightman Paraeus Cartwright Fulk Dent Forbes Mede Simonds Foord 1. The Scriptures written by Moses and the Prophets sufficiently prove that Christ is the Messiah that was to come The Old Testament may convince the Jews which deny the New Testament of this truth Iohn 5. 39. They that is those parts of Scripture written by Moses and the Prophets there were no other Scriptures then written The 53 of Isaiah is a large History of his sufferings We have also another Book or Testament more clearly witnessing of Christ The Gospel is the unsearchable riches of Christ Ephes. 3. 8. So much may suffice to have spoken concerning the Divine Canon the Ecclesiastical and false Canon follow CHAP. V. Of the Books called Apocrypha SOme Hereticks utterly abolisht the Divine Canon as the Swingfeldians and Libertines who contemned all Scriptures the Manichees and Marcionites refused all the Books of the Old Testament as the Jews do those of the New as if they had proceeded from the Devil Some diminish this Canon as the Sadduces who as Whitaker and others hold rejected all the other Prophets but Moses some inlarge it as the Papists who hold that divers other Books called by us Apocrypha i hidden do belong to the Old Testament and are of the same authority with the other before named and they adde also their traditions and unwritten Word equalling it with the Scripture both these are accursed Rev. 22. 18. But against the first we thus argue Whatsoever Scripture 1. Is divinely inspired 2. Christ commandeth to search 3. To which Christ and his Apostles appeal and confirm their Doctrine by it that is Canonical and of equal Authority with the New Testament But the holy Scripture of the Old Testament is divinely inspired 2 Tim. 3. 16. where he speaks even of the Books of the Old Testament as is gathered both from the universal all writing viz. holy in the 15 verse and from the circumstance of time because in the time of Timothies infancy little or nothing of the New Testament was published 2. Christ speaks not to the Scribes and Pharisees but to the people in general to search it Iohn 5. 39. this famous elogium being added That it gives testimony of him and that we may finde eternal life in it 3. Christ and his Apostles appeal to it and confirm their Doctrine by it Luke 24. 27. Rom. 3. 21. Acts 10. 43. and 17. 11. and 20. 43. and 26. 20. the New Testament gives testimony of the Old and Peter 2 Pet. 1. 19. of Pauls Epistles The Ecclesiastical Canon which is also called the second Canon followeth to which these Books belong Tobit Iudith first and second of the Maccabees Wisdom Ecclesiasticus Baruch Additions to Daniel and Esther for these neither contain truth perfectly in themselves nor are sanctified by God in the Church that they may be a Canon of faith and although abusively from custom they were called Canonical yet properly in the Church they are distinguished from the Canonical by the name of Apocryphal The false Canon is that which after the authority of the Apocrypha increased was constituted by humane opinion for the Papists as well as we reject for Apocryphal the third and fourth Book of Ezra the prayer of Manasses the third
2. 19. * This acception of the word Catholick can hardly be proved out of ancient Writers Ecclesia Catholica vocatur 1. Respectu Ecclesiae Veteris Testamenti 2. Respectu particularium Ecclesiaru● 2. Respectu Catholic● Fidei Gerh. loc common This word Catholick is not found in all the Bible yet the sense being there it may be retained the word is the same both in Latine and Greek and signifies General It is used 1. Unproperly and so it signifies as much as Orthodox in which sense sometimes the Fathers use it this is the Catholick Faith 2. Properly so it signifies universal and so it is here taken Putant multi Catholicam dictam Ecclesiam ut distingueretur ab Iudaeorum Synagogis terrae Canaan limitibus circumscriptis Sed parum id verisimile fit cum Apostolorum aetate non in Palaestina modò sed etiam extra illam religione fuerint Iudaei quin plures quàm in Palaestina Eoque magis sit ver●simile Catholicae nomen opponi coepisse ut Ecclesia quae toto orbe obtineret distingueretur à conventiculis haereticorum s●h●smaticorum quales Novationarum postea Donatistarum Vossius de tribus Symbolis The Church is called Holy in three respects 1. In respect of the Righteousnesse and Holinesse of Christ imputed which may be termed Sanctitas imputata 2. In respect of those degrees of sanctification wherewith it is endowed in this life which may be termed Sanctitas inchoata 3. In respect of the Rule and Law by which it is directed to serve God in Holinesse and Righteousnesse which therefore may be termed Sanctitas imperata Dr. Chaloners Credo Ecclesiam sanctam Catholicam part 2. sect 1. Ubicunque Dei verbum syncere praedicari atque audiri ubi Sacramonta ex Christi instituto administrari videmus illic aliquam esse Dei Ecclesiam nullo modo ambigendum est quando ejus promissio fallere non potest Mat. 18. 10. Calvin Instit. lib. 4. c. 1. Symbola Ecclesiae dignoscendae verbi praedicationem Sacramentorumque observationem posuimus Nam haec nusquam esse possunt quin fructificent Dei benedictione prosperentur Non dico ubicunque praedicatur verbum illic fructum mox exoriri sed nullibi recipt statam habere sedem nisi ut suam efficaciam proferat Id. ibid. Si solus essem in toto orbe terrarum qui reti●erem verbum solus essem Ecclesia rectè judicarem de reliquo toto mundo quod non esset Ecclesia Luth. Loc. Commun Class 1 cap. 37. de Ecclesia Luthers holy pains preaching and writing was not a Novation but a Renovation not a planting of a new Religion but a renewing and replanting of the ancient Religion not an Institution but a Restitution of the truth of God not an Introduction but Reduction of the true and holy Religion Dr Taylor on Rom. 1. 18. Rev. 2. 3. Epistola Pauli ad Romanos est epistola Pauli in Romanos Faius Vide Poly. Vir. hist. A●g l. 6. Shew me that man who before the Councel of Trent held all the points of your Faith as they are now taught and received in your Church Dr Featleys Case for the Spectacles c. 4. See more there Bishop Iewel in a Sermon at Pauls Crosse made a publick challenge to all the Papists in the world to produce but one clear and evident Testimony out of Scripture or any Father or other famous Writers within six hundred years after Christ for any one of the many Articles which the Romanists at this day maintain against us and upon good proof of any such allegation he promised to reconcile himself to Rome Papists call themselves Catholicks but falsly being both heretical in Doctrin and Idolatrous in worship a Catholick is a right beleever all true beleevers in the world make but one Catholick Church Lyford Papists call themselves Roman Catholicks Catholick is universal Roman particular that is of the whole world this of one City So the Roman Catholick is as much as to ●ay Particular universal that is no● Catholick Catholick Downs Defence of former Answers against the Reply of N. N. See more there The Mahometists at this day assume the name of Saracens as your men do the name of Catholicks as if they came from Sarah the free woman Abrahams true and lawful wife when in truth they took their first beginning fram Agar the bond woman Dr Featleys Case for the Spectacles Chap. 6. Ecclesia Catholica universalis est tota est per orbem diffusa ac dissem●nata est Rom ana pars solum est particularis est Romae Pomaeriis circumscripta Extra Catholicam salus omnino nulla extra Romanam servati multi servan●● Crakanth Defens Eccles. Anglic. Ut Donatistae nullam Ecclesiam praeter Africanam ita Papistae nullam agnoscant Ecclesiam Catholicam praeter Romanam quàm absurdè Catholicam Romanam quasi dicas universalem particul●rem vocitant Down Diatrib de Antichristo part 1. l. 3. c. 6. * See Rev. 18. 4. 2 Chro. 11. 14. Hos. 4. 15. 1 Cor. 10. 14. 2 Cor. 6. 17 1 Tim 6. 3. 1 John 5. 21. Vide Stresonem in Act. 14. 48. Conc. 162. pag. 528 529. If any man fall away from that Church which is not Christ his Spouse he cannot be charged justly with Apostasie Nullus pudor est ad meliora transire It is no shame to change for the better we left not Bethel the house of God until it became Bethaven the house of iniquity Dr. Hampton on 1 John 2. 19. See more there Vire●us ●oc suasit suadeo etiam ut ab illa Ecclesia non solum abstineamus quae haeresibus idololatria polluta est conventus habeamus ubi possum●s in quibus duo aut tres congregentur in nomine Christi si plures non possint Novam tum Ecclesiam non colligimus sed veteri nos adjungimus Rivet Grotianae Discus Dialysis Sect. 5. Certè praecipuum communionis vinculum missa est quam nos ut maximum sacrilegium abominamur Calv. Instit. l. 4. c. 2. Nos dicimus Ecclesiam bano aut illam posse errare ut Ecclesiam Corinthiorum Galatarum Ephesiorum reliquas hujusmodi nec errare modò verumetiam obrui tandem erroribus desicere quod ipsa experientia in multis demonstravit Dicimus autem veram Christi Ecclesiam Catholicam quae est electorum tantùm errare non posse si errores mortiseros insanabiles intelligamus at in levioribus rebus posse errare ●empe qua non simpliciter absolutè ad Ecclesiam necessariae quaeque fundamentum non evertunt Whitak controvers 2. de Ecclesia quaest 4. cap. 1. 1 Tim. 6. 12. 2 Tim. 3. 17. Gen. 20. 1 Sam. 9. 9. Ezek. 3. 1. Ezek. 34. 2. 1 Pet. 5. 1. Luk. 12. 24. 1 Cor. 4. 1. 1 Cor. 11. 10. Revel 1. 20. Quid magis Ecclesiae curandum quam ut idoneus praesit Episcopus At in Ambrosio obstare visum quod B.
then godlinesse and yet though carefull of keeping them they have not been able to preserve them from perpetual forgetfulnesse whereas on the other side these holy Writings hated of the most part and carelesly regarded of a number have notwithstanding as full a remembrance as they had the first day the Lord gave them unto the Church The Roman Empire for three hundred years set it self to persecute and extirpate this new Doctrine and in all these troubles the Church grew and in●●cased mightily Acts 12. 1. Herod killed Iames with the sword yet v. 24. the Word grew and multiplied Calvin with all his Works since the time they were written scarce made so many Protestants in France as I have credibly heard it reported that the Massacre made in one night L. Falk reply about the Infallibility of the Church of Rome The Miracles wrought in the confirmation of Scripture differ much from the wonders wrought by the false Prophets Antichrist and Satan himself Mat. 10. 8. Mat. 24. 24. 2 Thes. 2. 11. Apoc. 13. 13 14 they are neither in number nor greatnesse comparable to these 1. They differ in Substance Divine Miracles are above the force of Nature as dividing of the red Sea the standing still of the Sunne the others seem wonderfull to those which are ignorant of the cause of them but are not true miracles simply above the ordinary course of nature but effected by the art and power of Satan or his instruments by natural causes though unknown to men and many times they are but vain delusions 2. They differ in the end those true miracles were wrought by the finger of God for the promoting of his glory and mans salvation these to seal up falshood and destroy men confirmed in Idolatry and Heathenism 2 Thes. 2. 9. See Deut. 13. 1 2 3. Those were not done in a corner or secretly but openly in the presence of great multitudes nay in the sight of the whole world by the evidence of which an unknown Doctrine before contrary to the nature and affections of men was believed Bainham said in the midst of the fire Ye Papists Behold ye look for miracles and here now ye may see a miracle for in this fire I feel no more pain then if I were in a bed of Down but it is to me as sweet as a bed of Roses The miracles done by our Saviour Christ and his Apostles received Testimony of the bitterest enemies they had 2. The Testimony 1. Of the Church and Saints of God in all ages 2. Of those which were out of the Church 1. Of the Church Both Ancient and Judaical And the present Christian Church 2. Of the Members of the Church 1. The Church of the Jews professed the Doctrine and received the Books of the Old Testament and testified of them that they were Divine which invincible constancy remaineth still in the Jews of these dayes who though they be bitter enemies to the Christian Religion do stifly maintain and preserve the Canon of the Old Testament pure and uncorrupt even in those places which do evidently confirm the truth of Christian Religion 2. The Christian Church hath also most faithfully preserved the Old Testament received from the Jews and the new delivered by the Apostles as a depositum and holy pledge of the Divine Will Col. 4. 16. 2. Of the Members of the Church the constant Testimony which so many worthy Martyrs by their bloud have given to the truth Rev. 6. 9. Four things are to be considered in this Argument 1. The Number which suffered for the same is numberlesse many millions that none can imagine it to arise from pride weaknesse or discontent More Christians were slain as hath been observed under the ten bloudy persecutions then Paschal Lambs were offered up under the State of the Old Testament 2. The Quality and condition of them which suffered noble and base learned and unlearned rich poor old young men women children those which were tender and dainty all these could not suffer out of vain-glory that stubbornly they might defend the opinion which they had taken up 3. The torments used were usual unusual speedy slow some hewed in pieces burnt with slow fire cast in to Lions given to be devoured by the teeth of wilde beasts some beheaded some drowned some stoned with stones 4. All this they endured constantly patiently with great joy even a chearfull heart and merry countenance singing Psalms in the midst of the fire so that the madnesse of the enemy was overcome by the patience of them which did suffer Luther reports of the Martyr St Agatha as she went to prisons and tortures she said she went to Banquets and Nuptials That Martyr Hawks lift up his hands above his head and clapt them together when he was in the fire as if he had been in a triumph So that their testimony was not only humane God enabling them so stoutly to die for the truth Phil. 1. 29. See the History of the Councel of Trent pag. 418. and Dr Taylors Sermon on Dan. 3. 22 23 24. stiled The Roman Fornace Martyrs of other Sects differ from the Martyrs of the true Church 1. They were fewer 2. They suffered not with joy of Conscience which the godly Martyrs did 3. They were punished for their errours discovered the Martyrs were burned for having any part of the Bible and the Bible sometime with them where the Inquisition reigns it is death to have any part of the Bible in the vulgar tongue The Gentiles also which were out of the pale of the Church did give testimony to sundry Stories and Examples in the Bible Suetonius and Tacitus speaks of the miracles of Christ Pliny of the miracles of Moses and of the wise mens Starre Macrobius of the slaughtering of the Infants Iosephus of the death of Herod the Poets of the Floud Plutark of the Dove which Noah sent out Iosephus a Jew saith in his time there was a monument of the pillar of Salt into which Lots wife was turned Of Sodoms destruction speaketh S●rabo Diodorus Siculus Galen in his Book of Simples Pliny Solinus Polyst hist. Tacitus lib. ult Mela acknowledging that the remainders of Gods wrath are still to be seen there as the dead Lake the Fruit fair to the eye but falling to cinders and smoke in the hand The Oracles of the Sybillae were in greatest account among the Heathen and held as true of all men and if those be they which we have there is nothing which can more plainly set forth the birth of Christ his life and death Causabon makes it apparent that those prophecies of Sybil were counterfeited pieces and at first entertained by such as delighted in seeing the Christian Religion strengthned with forreign proofs Hereticks also prove the Scripture to be Divine for they quote that and therefore Luther cals the Bible Librum Haereticorum
it cannot be that there should be many but although there may be many counterpanes of the deed yet there is but one or two principal Deeds so amongst this great variety of Editions one or more ought to be as principal and authentical There is a Question betwixt the Church of Rome and the Reformed Churches about the Authentick Edition of Scripture they say That the Edition of the Bible in Hebrew and Greek is not authentical but rather the Vulgar Latine We hold that the Vulgar Latine is very corrupt and false that the Hebrew for the Old Testament and the Greek for the New i● the sincere and authentical writing of God therefore that all things are to be determined by them and that the other versions are so farre to be approved of as they agree with these 〈◊〉 The ●ride●tin● Councel thus decreeth That in all Sermons Readings Disputations Controversies the Vulgar Latine Translation should be taken for authen●●●● before the Hebrew or Greek and that no man should presume upon any oc●●●on to reject ●● or to appeal from it When the Councel of Trent saith the Vul●●● Latine i● authentical it compares it with other Latine Translations not with ●he Hebrew Mu●s de Heb. Edit Author ac ver Vide illum ibid Andradius the chiefest of the Divines at the Councel of Trent thinketh that ●he Councel of Trent did not mean either to condemn the Hebrew truth as he cal●●th it or to acquit the Latine Translation from all error when they called it Authen●●cal but only that the Latine hath no such error by which any pestilent opinion in ●aith and manners may be gathered This saith Rainolds against Hart c. 6. p. 202. and Chamier Tom. 1. l. 12. c. 2. The Rhemists in their Preface to the New Testament translated by them prolixly extoll this Latine Edition and contend that it is not onely farre better than all the Latine versions but then the Greek it self which is the Pro●otype Before we come to defend our own or disprove that opinion of the Papists it is necessary first rightly and fully to state the Question and to premise some things concerning the several Versions and Translations of the Scripture We deny not that part of Daniel and Ezra which was written in the Chaldee Dialect to be Authentical because we know the Lord was pleased that in that language as well as the Hebrew some of his Divine Truth should be originally written 1. For the more credit of the Stories the Lord bringeth forth forraign Nations and their Chronicles for witnesses least any of them should doubt of the truth thereof 2. The Lord would have some part of those Stories come to the knowledge of the Heathen and it was requisite that the Chaldeans should know the sins and impieties of that Nations and the judgements that should befall them to testifie unto all the truth of God therefore in general the alteration of the terrene States and Kingdoms is shadowed forth and published in the Chaldee Tongue that the Gentiles might take knowledge thereof but the particular Histories of the coming of the Messi●s of his Office and Kingdom and of the calamities and afflictions which should befall the people of God are set forth in the Hebrew Tongue as more especially concerning them Likewise it pleased God for the better credit of the Story that the History of those things which were said and done in Chaldea should be written in the same Language wherein they were first spoken and therefore the Epistles and Rescripts of the Kings are delivered in the Chaldee speech as taken on● of their publick Acts and Records and that the History in Daniel set forth in the Cha●dee speech gaining him respect with the Chaldeans might stirre up the Jews to receive Daniel as a Prophet of God whom the Heathens admired If there be any footsteps of the Chaldee and Arabick in Iob as some learned say we do not exclude them from authentick Authority for we say the whole Old Testament for the most part in Hebrew and few parcels in Chaldee are the authentick Edition of the Old Testament The Greek Copies of the New Testament are also from God immediately the very dialect wherein those Prototypes were which the Pens of the Evangelists and Apostles did write For the Gospel of Matthew and the Epistle to the Hebrews being written in Hebrew and Mark in Latine we have refuted that opinion already the Greek Edition of those three Books as well as of all the other of the New Testament is authentical The Versions of the Scripture are either the Chaldee and Greek of the Old Testament the Syriack and Arabick of the new the Latine Italian French and English of both Testaments All the Versions of the sacred Scripture have so farre Divine Authority as they agree with the original Tongue and to say that any Translation is pure and uncorrupt and that the very fountains are muddy is both a foolish and impious blasphemy The tongue and dialect is but an accident and as it were an argument of the Divine truth which remains one and the same in all Idioms therefore the faith of the unlearned depends on God not on men although the Translations by benefit of which they are brought to believe be perfected by the labour of men Gods providence and care of the Church is such that he would never let it be long destitute of a fit Translation which being publisht by learned men and approved of by the Church however it failed in some things yet following the truth constantly in the more principal and necessary things might be sufficient to all for wholsome instruction The Versions differ often much among themselves Arias Montanus differs much from Pagnin a learned Translator and Vatablus from both from all these Luther and from him again the Vulgar Ofiander the LXX varie The Chaldee Edition of the Old Testament is not a Translation done word for word but a Paraphrase and so called the Chaldee Paraphrase by the Jews Targum though some conceive that there is some kinde of distinction to speak accurately between the Chaldee Paraphrase and Targum Targum being a general word signifying an Interpretation or Paraphrase though it usually now by an excellency denoteth the Chaldee Paraphrase There were three Authours of it as it is reported according to the three-fold difference of the Hebrew Books R●bbi Achilam or Aquila who is vulgarly called O●●glos upon the five Books of Moses Rabbi Ionathan the sonne of Uziel upon the former and later Prophets Rabbi Ioseph coecus or as some will a certain Anonymus upon some of the Hagiographa Those Paraphrases of Onkelos and Ionathan are the ancienter and certioris fidei that upon the Hagiographa is farre later and lesse certain it being doubtfull both who was the author and in what age it was made The common opinion concerning Onkelos and Ionathan is that Ionathan wrote a little before Christ the other a
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
Papa praesit aliis Episcopis Whether the Pope be above all other Bishops The Title of Universal Bishop of the Church which Bellarmine calleth notable and proper to the Bishop of Rome St Gregory sometime Bishop of Rome did renounce in himself and detest in all others calling it a title of novelty errour impiety blasphemy pronouncing any one that shall presume to challenge it to be the fore-runner of Antichrist B. Mort. Appeal l. 1. c. 2. Sect. 29. The Universal Bishop of the Church necessarily betokens an absolute monarchical Jurisdiction of some one over all other Bishops of the Church but Bishop of the Universal Church signifies the care and study any Bishop hath for the universal good of the Church as 2 Cor. 11. 28. so the King of Spain is styled The most Catholick King or King of the Catholick Church not Universal King and Soveraign over all other Kings in the Church There is another Question An Papa possit conferre Bullas Indulgentias Whether the Pope can confer Buls and Indulgences Their own learned Authours plainly confesse That there is not found any one expresse testimony for proof hereof either in Scriptures or in the writings of ancient Fathers 2. That there was no use of Indulgences in the primitive Church but that afterwards the fear of Purgatory hatched Indulgences 3. That the first who extended Indulgences unto Purgatory was Pope Boniface the 8th more then a thousand years after Christ. Luther began his opposition unto Rome in reprehending their Article of Indulgences He would have set down at the first if the matter of Indulgences had been granted but God led him on to declare against the whole Doctrine of Popery The Indulgences whereof we reade in the ancient Fathers were mitigations of some Censures of the Church before inflicted on the living for their amendment These now granted by the Pope are relaxations from satisfactory pains in Purgatory flames after this life It is a Question An Papa possit leges condere quae obligent Conscientias Whether the Pope can make Laws to binde the Conscience Conscience is said to be bound when it is charged by him who hath Power and Authority over it to perform its duty to bear witnesse to all our actions unto God and according to the quality of them to accuse or excuse us Rom. 2. 15. God is the only binder of conscience Iam. 4. 12. he is greater then the Conscience Rom. 13. 5. affirms only that Conscience is bound but determines not that mans Laws binde it Bellarmine saith Mens Laws binde Non minus quam Lex divina We deny not rem but only differ from them in modo they binde not immediately but mediately not primarily but secondarily not in them and of their own power but in the force and vertue of divine Law They say If the Pope determine vice to be vertue they are bound to believe it yea Tolet saith a man should merit of God in so believing There be these Questions An Papa sit supra Reges Whether the Pope be above Kings An possit Reges excommunicare Whether he can excommunicate Kings He hath soveraign Dominion say they over all Princes in temporal cases indirectly But Espencaetis ad Titum cap. 3. pag. 513. confesseth from that Scripture Rom. 13. 1. that Chrysostome Theodoret Theophylact and all the Greek Doctours and in the Latine Church Gregory and Bernard do from thence teach that every Apostle and Prophet and Priest was commanded to acknowledge a subjection unto Emperours The Pope Hadrian the 4th was not only angry with Frederick the Emperour but for a while denied him the Imperial Crown because he held his right stirrop when he should have held his left which errour he excused because he was unaccustomed to such services Bellarmine saith the Pope hath power in temporal things indirectly only but his book should have been burned for it Object Christ had a natural Dominion over all Kingdoms Therefore the Pope his Vicar hath also Answ. Tertullian cals the holy Ghost the Vicar of Christ upon earth See Iohn 14. There is another Question An Papae solius sit statuere de controversiis fidei Whether it belongs to the Pope alone to determine controversies of faith We deny not but a Judge and a Law might well stand together but we deny that there is any such Judge of Gods appointment Had he intended any such Judge he would have named him lest otherwise as now it is our Judge of controversies should be our greatest controversie Chillingworth part 1. cap. 2. Sect. 10. pag. 57. It is a Question An Papa possit remittere peccata Whether the Pope can pardon sins Trecelius affirmed That if a man had lien with our Lady the mother of Christ and had gotten her with childe yet the Popes pardon was able to set him free The Pharisee said true though he misapplied it Luk. 5. 21. Who can forgive sins but God alone There is another Question An Papa possit errare Whether the Pope may erre The Pope say they as a private person or Doctour may erre but not as the Vicar of Christ and the Successour of Peter in the Chair yea judging from the Chair he may erre in questions of fact but not in questions of faith nay he may erre in discussing questions of faith in respect of the premisses not in respect of the conclusions E Cathedra docens hoc est ex tripode oracula fundens nullo modo errare potest Summus Pontifex saith Bellarmine de Rom. Pont. lib. 4. cap. 3 cum totam Ecclesiam docet in his quae ad fidem pertinent nullo casu errare potest See our Rhemists on Luk. 22. 31. The high-Priest of the Old Testament saith Bellarmine de Pontifice l. 4 c. 3. had on his Brest-plate Doctrine and Truth according to the vulgar version therefore the high-Priest of the New Testament the Pope when he teacheth the whole Church in these things which belong to faith cannot erre in any case How well that argumentation proceeds from the high-Priest of the Old Testament to the high-Priest of the New let the learned judge Nescio cur non possit dici quòd Gregorius Papa cum homo fuerit non Deus potuerit errare Durand l. 4. distinct Quaest. 4. Of the Iesuites and Monks Of the Jesuites The Pope in divers Buls cals them Beloved sons in which title they much glory The Jesuites above all other Regulars make to the Pope a vow of present and absolute obedience to do whatsoever he shall command them to go whithersoever he shall send them to Turks Infidels Hereticks without excuse denial or delay They are to the Pope what the Janizaries are to the Turk and uphold him chiefly Their Order was erected in the year 1540. Hospin de orig Iesuit l. 1 c. 1. They are the frogs spoken of in the Revelation that croke in Kings Chambers to provoke them to warre As in ancient time there was no
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
Leigh's Body of Divinity 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 Esquire and Master of Arts of Magdalen-Hall in OXFORD Quisquis bonus verusque Christianus est Domini sui esse intelligat ubicunque invenerit Veritatem August de Doctrina Christiana l. 2. LONDON Printed by A. M. for William Lee at the Sign of the Turks-head in Fleet-street over against Fetter-lane M. DC LIV. TO ALL THE Orthodox and Godly MAGISTRATES MINISTERS AND PEOPLE of ENGLAND who are Lovers of Truth and Holiness I Am not ignorant that the Socinians make sport in their Books with the Protestant Authours because they call themselves the Orthodox and say We use that as a spell thinking thereby to charm all dissentiates And some that plead for Universal Redemption Apostasie of the Saints and such corrupt Doctrins seem to slight those mormolukes of Arminianism Pelagianism Socinianism Yet there are those who are Orthodox whose judgement is sound in matters of Faith and there are also without question many in these dayes who are Hetrodox and unsound in the Faith We have no such custome nor the Churches of Christ saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 11. 16. The concurrent judgement of the Reformed Churches is not to be slighted That saying of Vincentius Lirinensis cap. 5. in Commonit adversus Haereses is worthy our serious consideration Mos iste semper in Ecclesia viguit ut quò quisque foret religiosior eo promptius novellis adinventionibus contrairet That custome saith he hath still flourished in the Church that the more religious any one was the more readily he would oppose new inventions Truth is precious and should be maintained Errour is dangerous and should be opposed Buy the truth and sell it not saith Salomon Ierusalem is called a City of truth Zech. 8. 3. The Church is called the pillar and ground of truth 1 Tim. 3. 15. Christ came into the world that he might bear witness to the truth Iohn 18. 27. The Prophet Ieremiah complains That none were valiant for the truth Contend earnestly for the Faith which was once delivered to the Saints We can do nothing against the truth but for the truth saith Paul It is made a sign of Christs sheep Iohn 10. 4 5. to take heed of errours and false teachers Our Magistrates should do well to follow the examples of our Iosiah King Edward the sixth and Queen Elizabeth Two things in King Edward 1. In his honouring the Word of God 2. In his opposing of errour and false worship When he was crowned they put into his hands three Swords he answered there was one yet wanting the Word of God the Sword of the Spirit which was farre to be preferred before all those When he was pressed by Bishop Ridley and others to tolerate his Sister Masse in her own Chappel he would not though importuned yeeld thereunto saying He should dishonour God in it and being much urged by them he burst out into tears and they affirmed That he had more Divinity in his little fingers then they in all their bodies Queen Elizabeth after her Coronation when the Bible was presented unto her at the little Conduit in Cheapside she received the same with both her hands and kissing it laid it to her brest saying That the same had ever been her chiefest delight and should be the Rule by which she meant to frame her Government Fregevill a wise French Writer in his Apology for the general cause of Reformation observes two memorable things in Queen Elizabeths Government 1. That under her first Reformation had free and full course throughout England 2. That she was a favourer of the Clergy She once in her Progress visiting the County of Suffolk all the Iustices of Peace in that County met her Majesty every one of them having his Minister next to his body which the Queen took special notice of and thereupon uttered this Speech That she had often demanded of her Privy Councel why her County of Suffolk was better governed theu any other County and could never understand the reason thereof but now she her self perceived the reason It must needs be so said she where the Word and the Sword go together It is the Duty of the Magistrate not onely to regard that the life of his Subjects be civil and honest but also that it be religious and godly Therefore we are taught to pray for them that we may live under them a peaceable life not onely in all honesty but also in all godliness or true worship of God as the word used by the Apostle doth signifie Therefore the King was commanded to take a copy of the whole Law and not of the second Table only implying that he should look to the execution as well of the first Table as the second Ministers also should appear for the truths of God and be able now if ever to convince the gain-sayers Tit. 1. 9. The Scripture is profitable for doctrine and for reproof 2 Tim. 3. 16. Shall we have the Pelagian Doctrine of Free-will and the power of nature pleaded for and our Bertii maintaining the Apostasie of Saints and shall we have no Bradwardines to write de causa Dei nor Augustines de bono Perseverantiae I remember when the worthy Prolocutor of the Assembly with other Divines brought in the Confession of Faith into the House of Commons he said They had been the longer and had taken the more pains about it that it might obviate the errours of the times Sozomen relates a very remarkable story to this purpose When the Synod of Nice was called against Arius many of the wiser Heathens came thither to hear the Disputation there One Philosopher among the rest behaved himself very insolently there and petulantly derided the Christian Ministers an old plain countrey-man ex illustrium confessorum numero being not able to brook his arrogancy desired to dispute with him and having a last gained liberty he began thus Philosophe audito VNVS EST DEVS COELI TERRAE c. Hear Philosopher making a Confession of his Faith there is one God maker of Heaven and Earth and all things Invisible and then shew'd how Christ was born of a Virgin and conversed here with men and died for them and should after come to judge men for all that they had done here on earth and then concludes That these things are so without any other curious search we certainly beleeve Therefore do not spend your pains in vain in a curious refuting of these things which are only rightly understood by faith or in searching how they
life eternal Secondly There are some particular principles There is a natural light and supernatural The light of Nature teacheth some principles That you must do as you would be done by that no man hates his own flesh that one must provide for his family that there is a God and one God that he is to be honoured and reverenced above all 2. Supernatural Let all our actions be done 1. In Love 2. In Humility 3. In Faith 4. In God This the Gospel teacheth Shew your selves Christians in power go beyond the Heathen in practising the good rules of Nature 1. Be carefull to make a wise choice of principles one false principle admitted will let in many errours and erroneous principles will lead men into erroneous practices 2. Labour to act your principles if you captivate the light God will put it out 3. Be sure you work according to your principles we pity another in an errour when he follows his principles Here is an Apology for those Teachers which tread in Pauls steps are carefull to lay the foundation well It was the Observation of our most judicious King JAMES That the cause why so many fell to Popery and other errours was their ungroundedness in points of Catechism How many wanton opinions are broached in these dayes I wish I might not justly call them Fundamentall errours Some deny the Scriptures some the Divinity of Christ some the Immortality of the Soul Errours are either Contra against the foundation which subvert the foundation as that of the Papists who deny the all-sufficiency of Christs once suffering 2. Circa about the foundation which pervert the foundation as the Lutherans opinion of the ubiquity of Christs body 3. Citra meerly without these divert the foundation as in the controversies of Church-Government whether it be Social or Solitary this strikes not at the foundation Laurentius saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 3. 11 12 13 14 15. speaks not of heretical Teachers and those which erre in fundamentals but of those which erre in lighter matters because he saith of both they build upon one and the same foundation Christ. See Mr Burgess of Justific p. 80. We should contend for a known fundamentall necessary truth Iude vers 3. The common faith not every opinion entertained on probable ground It is a great Question in Divinity An Magistratui Christiano liceat capitales poenas de Haereticis sumere Whether Hereticks are to be punished by the Christian Magistrate with death The Papists say Haeretici qua Haeretici comburendi That Hereticks for Heresie sake though they do not trouble the State ought to be put to death Luther doth not approve of the capital punishment of Hereticks especially for the pernicious sequel of it among the Papists against the Protestants He thinks it better that they be banished The present Lutherans hold the same almost concerning that Question Meisner doth distinguish between Haereticus simplex and Haereticus seditiosus ac blasphemus these last he saith may be punished with capital punishments The Socinians being themselves the worst of Hereticks would have no outward forcible restraining of any errour though never so grosse and pernicious You must not look say the Socinians into the Old Testament for a a rule of proceeding against false Prophets and Seducers Nor saith Calvin and Catharinus can you sinde in the New Testament any precept for the punishment o● Thieves Traitors Adulterers Witches Murtherers and the like and yet they may or at least some of them be capitally punisht For the Protestants hear what Zanchy saith Omnes fere ex nostratibus hujus sunt sententiae quod haeretici sint gladio puniendi Beza hath written a peculiar Tract De Haereticis à Magistratu puniendis Calvin also hath written Aure●m librum as Beza cals it of this very Argument We do deservedly condemn the cruelty of Turks and Papists which go about by force alone to establish their superstitions The Church of Rome and the Pope will judge what Heresie is and who is an Heretick and they appropriate to themselves the name of Catholicks and all such as dissent from them must presently be pronounced Hereticks The Pope and Canonists hold him to be an Heretick Qui non in omnibus ac singulis Papae decretis obtemperat He that readeth the Bible in his Mother-tongue will be esteemed an Heretick with them Virgilius a Germane Bishop and a Mathematician was sent for to Rome by the Pope and condemned of Heresie because he held that there were Antipodes Because Heresie is not easily defined as Augustine saith and because faith should be perswaded not compelled We conceive that all fair means should be first used to convince men of their errours and heresie which indeed is so Therefore we will premise some things concerning the nature and danger of Heresie before we speak particularly of the punishment of Hereticks Chillingworth thus defines Heresie It is saith he an obstinate defence of any errour against any necessary Article of the Christian faith Two things must concurre say some to constitute an Heretick 1. Error in side 1 Tim. 1. 19. 2. Pertinacia Titus 3. 10. Errare possum Haereticus esse nolo See Mr Vines on 2 Pet. 2. 1. p. 46 47. Neque vero alia magis ratione definimus quam si veterum trium Symbolorum vel si veterum quatuor Generalium conciliorum ulli contraveniat Episc. And. Tert. Dr Field thus describes the nature of Heresie Heresie is not every errour but errour in matter of Faith nor every errour in matter of Faith for neither Jews nor Pagans are said to be Hereticks though they ●●●e most damnably in those things which every one that will be saved must believe and with all the malice fury and rage that can be imagined impugn the Christian faith and verity but it is the errour of such as by some kinde of profession have been Christians so that only such as by profession being Christians depart from the truth of Christian Religion are named Hereticks Secondly For the danger of Heresie Heresie is a fruit of the flesh Gal. 5. 20. An Heretick after the first and second time reject Tit. 3. 10. Heresie or false doctrine is in Scripture compared to Leaven and to a Gangrene for the spreading and infectious nature of it The Heresie of Arius was more dangerous to the Church then the Sword of all the persecuting Emperours It is compared to a Land-floud Revel 12. because it did overcome all presently We need not to ask whether he joyn obstinacy to his errour saith Dr Field which er●eth in those things which every one is bound particularly to believe because such things do essentially and directly concern the matter of our salvation and he is without any further enquiry to be pronounced an Heretick and the very errour it self is damnable as if a man saith he shall deny Christ to be the Son
Scripture except it agree with his reason what is above reason cannot be comprehended by it Bernard in 192 of his Epistles speaks of one Petrus Abailardus which vented the Socinian Doctrine in his time Christianae fidei meritum vacuare nititur dum totum quod totum Deus est humana ratione arbitratur posse comprehendere Cum de Trinitate saith he loquitur sapit Arium cùm de ●ratia Pelagium cùm de persona Christi Nestorium He was a man of a fair carriage professing holinesse conversatio●es doctrina venenum But Abailar dus denies this in his Works lately published Tertullian called the Philosophers who followed reason Patriarc●as haer●ti●orum pessimum est illud principium recta ratio non potest statuere de ●ul●u divino There are these uses of reason 1. To prepare us that we should hearken to the Word 2. After we have believed it will help us to judge of things 3. To prevent fanatick opinions Mysteries of Religion are not repugnant to reason 4. That we may draw necessary consequences from truths revealed The Philosophers called the Christians by way of scorn Credentes Iulian derided the Christian belief because it had no other proof then Thus saith the Lord. There is an obedience of faith Rom. 1. 5. 6. Another Argument is taken from the experience of the truth of the Predictions and Prophecies thereof For seeing it is generally confessed that only the Divine Essence can certainly foresee things contingent which are to come many ages after and which depend upon no necessary cause in nature therefore in what writings we meet with such things fore-told and do finde them fully and plainly accomplisht these writings we must confesse to have their birth from Heaven and from God Now in the Scripture we have divers such predictions The two principal and clearest which are most obvious and evident are 1. The Conversion of the Gentiles to the God of Israel by means of Christ. For that was fore-told exceeding often and plainly In him shall the Gentiles trust and he shall be a light to the Gentiles Iacob lying on his death-bed said The obedience of the Gentiles shall be to him And David All the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of God and Isaiah In him shall the Gentiles trust and Malachy My name shall be great to the ends of the earth See Isa. 49. 6. 60. 3 5. Scarce one of the Prophets but have spoken of the conversion of the Gentiles Now we see the Gentiles turned from their Idols a great number of them and imbracing the God of the Jews and the Scriptures of the Jews by means of Christ whom they see and acknowledge to be the Messias fore-told to the Jews Again it was fore-told that Christ should be a stone of offence to the Jews that they should reject him and so be rejected by God from being a people Do we not see that to be performed The accomplishment of these two main Prophecies so long before delivered to the world by the Pen-men of holy Writ shews manifestly that they were moved by the holy Ghost That Promise Gen. 3. 15. was made 3948 years before it was fulfilled as Scaliger computes it It was fore-told of Christ that they should cast lots about his Garments and that his bones should not be broken Look upon this in the inferiour causes the souldiers that brake the other mens bones and it seems to be a very hap and chance yet there was a special ordering of this in Gods providence The predictions of Satan were doubtfull and ambiguous but these are distinct and plain Satans predictions are of things which might be gathered by conjecture for the most part false though Satan cover his lying by likelihoods but these are above the reach of Angels most true and certain Satans end was confirmation in sin and Idolatry 7. The Commandments are 1. Most righteous and equal 2. Impartial they binde all men and all in men the affections thoughts and consciences and that perpetually The severest Law-givers never made Laws for the thoughts because they had no means to discover and controll them Cogitationis poenam nemo patitur We say commonly Thoughts are free therefore it is the Word of God which searcheth the heart Exod. 20. 17. True love to our selves is required and we are to love our neighbour as our selves The Laws of men do not binde the conscience at least primarily and immediately Conscientia immediatè Deo tantùm subjicitur He onely can command the conscience that knows it and can judge it Secondly The Threatnings are general 1. In respect of Persons 2. In respect of things Deut 28. 59 60. 3. The Promises are comprehensive blessings of all kinds Lov. 26. and strange Exod. 34. 24. of eternal life Mark 10. 29 30. 1 Pet. 1. 4. 8. Another reason may be taken from the Antiquity of the Scripture many wonder at the Pyramids of Aegypt being the most ancient structure in the world The Bible contains a continued History from age to age for the space of four thousand years before Christ even from the beginning No Writer of any humane Story can be proved to be more ancient then Ezra and Nehemiah who wrote about the year of the world 3500. Amongst the Grecians some say Homer is the most ancient Author that is extant who lived long after Troy was taken for that was the subject of his Poem Now those times were not near so ancient as those in which the Scripture was written Homer was after Moses six hundred and odde years saith Peter du Moulin That which the Aegyptians brag of their Antiquity is fabulous by their account they were six thousand years before the Creation unlesse they account a moneth for a year and then it maketh nothing against this Argument History is an usefull and delightfull kinde of Instruction Among Histories none are comparable to the Histories of sacred Scripture and that in their Antiquity Rarity Variety Brevity Perspicuity Harmony and Verity Dr Gouge on Exodus 13. 13. That Song of Moses Exod. 15. was the first Song that ever was in the world Orpheus Musaeus and Linus the most ancient of the Poets were five hundred years after this time 9. The Power and Efficacy of the Scripture upon the souls of men sheweth it to be of God and the wonderfull alteration that it makes in a man for God when he doth entertain and believe it in his heart it makes him more then a man in power to oppose resist and fight against his own corruptions it brings him into a wonderfull familiarity and acquaintance with God It puts such a life and strength into him that for Gods sake and his truth he can suffer all the hardest things in the world without almost complaining yea with wonderfull rejoycing Psal. 119. 92. The holy Ghost by means of this word works powerfully in changing and reforming a man 1. It overmasters the
Experience teacheth That all Heresies either began or increased from the mis-understanding of Scripture Some particular places of Scripture have been much abused by Hereticks The Arians laid their foundation upon Prov. 8. 22. and much urged that Ioh. 14. 22. The Manichees perverted that place Phil. 2. 7 8. He was found in the form of a servant Montanus yea and the Turks lay hold on that place Ioh. 14. 16. I will send you another Comforter which the Turks say is Mahomet The Papists wrest that place to their purpose Matth. ●6 18. Thou art Peter and upon this Rock will I build my Church The Familists bring that Luke 17. 21. The Kingdom of God is within you The Antiscripturists stick not to urge those Scriptures Ioh. 6. 45. 2 Cor. 3. 6. Thirdly The Scripture it self doth give testimony to it self that it is Divine it is called a Light Psal. 119. 105. because it discovers it self The Testimony and the Testimony of the Lord because it bears witness to it self The Prophets give Testimony of Moses Mal. 4. 4. The New Testament of the Old 2 Pet. 1. 19 20. Peter gives testimony of Pauls Epistles 2 Pet. 3. 15. and Paul witnesseth That all Scriture was given of God 2 Tim. 3. 16. which must be meant of all Scripture even of the New Testament that being the last Epistle which Paul wrote as appears Chap. 4. 16. Fourthly None of all these Arguments can undoubtedly perswade the heart Certitudine fidei that the holy Scripture or any Doctrine contained in it is the Word of God till we be taught it of God till the holy Spirit of God have inwardly certified and assured us of it This is called the Scaling of the Spirit of God Ephes. 1. 13. by this the Scripture is imprinted in our hearts as the sign of the Seal in the wax Other Arguments may convince but this is absolutely necessary this is allsufficient to perswade certainly Matth. 11. 25. The holy Ghost is the Author of light by which we understand the Scripture and the perswader of the heart by which we believe the things therein to be truly Divine 1 Iohn 5. 6. It is the Spirit that beareth witnesse because the Spirit i. Metonymically the Doctrine delivered by the Spirit is truth But he that is spiritual saith Paul that is the man enlightned with the holy Ghost judgeth all things 1 Cor. 2. 15. that is all things necessary to salvation So to prove that there is a God reasons may be brought from nature and the testimony of the Church but no man can believe it savingly but by the holy Ghost It is hard to carry the matter even between the Socinians Reason and the Familists Spirit Socinians will have nothing but Reason no infused Habits and so they destroy the Testimony of the Spirit The Familists will have nothing but Spirit they rest wholly in an immediate private Spirit There art three that bear witnesse in earth Blood that is Justification by the bloud of Christ and Water i. Sanctification by his Grace And the Spirit say some witnesseth in these But ye have an Unction from the holy One and ye know all things that is Ye have received from Christ the holy Ghost the Comforter and he hath taught and instructed you in all things which are necessary to the salvation of your souls for you to know and be instructed in See vers 27. The testimony is made up by arguing Whosoever believeth and is sanctified shall be saved So the Antiquity Efficacy and Majesty of the Scripture the Fidelity of the Pen men and its wonderful Preservation prove it to be the Word of God The Spirit of God witnesseth That this Word which hath these remarkable advantages above all other Writings is the Word of God The Spirit doth neither witnesse concerning my salvation nor that the Scripture is the word of God immediately but ultimately Because I am a believer and my faith is sound it assureth me that I am in the state of salvation and so he maketh use of the excellencies in the Word to irradiate my understanding We are commanded to try the Spirits true joy is first heard out of the Word before it be felt Psal. 51. 8. Spiritual joy is an affection proper to spiritual life that life is by faith and Faith cometh by hearing Job 33. 22. See Ioh. 16. 14. Some question whether every part and parcel of the Scripture be divinely inspired as those places Touch him and he will curse thee to thy face Curse God and die and that Psal. 14. 1. Some answer thus these places are Historically inspired not Dogmatically Another Question is Whether preaching be not divinely inspired as well as the Word written The preaching of the Prophets and Apostles was divinely inspired but the preaching of our Ministers no further then it agrees with the Word Some say The Scriptures are but a device of mans brain to give assistance to Magistrates in civil government Nothing is more repugnant to prudence and policy What policy was it in the Old Testament to appoint Circumcision to cut a poor childe as soon as he came into the world Two and twenty thousand Oxen were spent at the Dedication of one Altar to sacrifice so many Oxen and Sheep such useful creatures Christ chose silly illiterate men to propagate the Gospel This serves for Information of our judgement and assures us of divers Truths 1. That the Scriptures are for themselves worthy to be believed they have Authority in and of themselves not borrowed from any persons in the world by which they binde the consciences of all men to receive them with faith and obedience for their Authors sake alone and the Divine Truth which shines in them though they should not be commended unto men by any authority of any creature Such as is the Authority of the Authour of any writing such is the Authority of the writing it self for all the strength of the testimony depends upon the excellency of the person which gives the testimony now God is the Author of these writings Thus saith the Lord therefore such Authority as he hath such must they have a supream highest Authority which borroweth from none and is subject to none So this acknowledgment of their original teacheth that we must not believe them for the Authority sake of any man or men for Gods Word can borrow no Authority from men Iohn 5. 34. I receive not testimony from man saith Christ that is need no mans testimony As the first goodnesse is to be loved for it self so is the first truth to be believed for it self saith Aquinas And as Christ by himself could demonstrate that he was the Messias so the Word by it self can prove that it is the Word of God We affirm That the Scriptures are known to be of God by themselves the Papists maintain that we cannot be certain of the Scriptures Divinity by any other
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
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
there promised is happinesse It is a wonderful thing that all the particulars which the Canticles contain being taken from marriage are handled so sincerely that no blemish or spot can be found therein Therefore the Scriptures should be preached read and heard with holy affections and should be reverently mentioned The Jews in their Synagogues will not touch the Bible with unwashed hands they kiss it as often as they open and shut it they sit not on that seat where it is laid and if it fall on the ground they fast for a whole day The Turk writes upon the outside of his Alcorar Let no man touch this Book but he that is pure I would none might meddle with ours Alcoran signifieth but the Scripture you need not be afraid of the word but such as indeed are what other men do but think themselves 6. The Scripture is Perfect The perfection of the Scripture is considered two ways 1. In respect of the matter or the Books in which the holy doctrine was written all which as many as are useful to our salvation have been kept inviolable in the Church so that out of them one most perfect and absolute Canon of faith and life was made and this may be called the integrity of the Scripture 2. In respect of the form viz. Of the sense or meaning of these Canonical Books or of Divine truth comprehended in them which Books contain most fully and perfectly the whole tru●h necessary and sufficient for the salvation of the Elect and therefore the Scriptures are to be esteemed a sole adequate total and perfect measure and rule both of faith and manners and this is the sufficiency of the Scriptures which is attributed to it in a twofold respect 1. Absolutely in it self and that in a threefold consideration 1. Of the principle for every principle whether of a thing or of knowledge ought to be perfect since demonstration and true conclusions are not deduced from that which is imperfect therefore it is necessary that the holy Scripture being the first onely immediate principle of all true doctrine should be most perfect 2. Of the subject for it hath all Essential parts matter and form and integral Law and Gospel and is wholly perfect Both 1. Absolutely because for the substance it either expresly or Analogically contains the doctrine concerning faith and manners which is communicable and profitable for us to know which may be proved also by induction that all necessary opinions of faith or precepts of life are to be found in the holy Sc●ipture 2. Relatively because as it hath a perfection of the whole so of the parts in the whole that perfection is called essential this quantitative For all the Books are sufficient with an essential perfection although integrally they have not a sufficiency of the whole but onely their own yet so that at distinct times every part sufficed for their times but all the parts in the whole are but sufficient for us 3. In its effect and operation it makes men perfect 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. Rom. 15. 4. Iohn 2. ult 5. 39. 2. As opposed to unwritten Traditions all which it excludes by its sufficiency but we do not understand by Traditions generally a Doctrine delivered in Word and Writing but specially all Doctrine not written by Prophets or Apostles whether Dogmatical Historical or Ceremonial for a perfect reason of the primary opinions belonging to Faith and Manners is delivered in Scripture and those things which are out of beside or against the Scripture do not binde the Conscience 2. Historical the Sayings and Deeds of Christ and the Apostles are perfectly contained in the Scriptures as many as suffice us for our salvation Iohn 20. 30 31. Those things which are delivered out of Scripture are to be esteemed mans writings 3. Ceremonial or secondary opinions concerning Ecclesiastical Rites and Customs are for Essentials Substantials and Fundamentals generally contained in the word of God the accidentals accessaries and circumstantials are free and mutable If Traditions agree with the Scripture they are confirmed by it if they oppose it they are disproved by it The perfection of the Scriptures is not First Infinite and unlimitted That is an incommunicable property of God every thing which is from another as the efficient cause is thereby limitted both for the nature and qualities thereof Secondly we do not understand such a perfection as containeth all and singular such things as at any time have been by Divine inspiration revealed to holy men and by them delivered to the Church of what sort soever they were for all the Sermons of the Prophets of Christ and his Apostles are not set down in so many words as they used in the speaking of them for of twelve Apostles seven wrote nothing which yet preached and did many things neither are all the deeds of Christ and his Apostles written for that is contradicted Iohn 20. 30 31. and 21. 25. but we mean onely a Relative perfection which for some certain ends sake agreeth to the Scripture as to an instrument according to which it perfectly comprehendeth all things which have been are or shall be necessary for the salvation of the Church Thirdly The several Books of Scripture are indeed perfect for their own particular ends purposes and uses for which they were intended of the Lord but yet not any one Book is sufficient to the common end the whole Scripture is compleat in all the parts thereof one speaking of that which another doth wholly pass over in silence one clearly delivering what was intric●te in another Paul speaks much of Justification and Predestination in the Epistle to the Romans nothing of the Eucharist or Resurrection Fourthly Since God did reveal his will in writing those writings which by divine hand and providence were extant in the Church were so sufficient for the Church in that age that it needed not Tradition neither was it lawful for any humane wight to adde thereto or take therefrom but when God did reveal more unto it the former onely was not then sufficient without the latter Fifthly The holy Scripture doth sufficiently contain and deliver all doctrines which are necessary for us to eternal salvation both in respect of faith and good works and most of these it delivereth to us expresly and in so many words and the rest by good and necessary consequence The Baptism of Infants and the consubstantiality of the Father and of the Son are not in those words expressed in Scripture yet is the truth of both clearly taught in Scripture and by evident proof may thence be deduced That Article of Christs descent into Hell totidem verbis is not in the Scripture yet it may be deduced thence Acts. 2 27. Some Papists hold That we must not use the principles of Reason or Consequences in Divinity and require that what we prove be exprest in so many words in scripture These are opposed by Vedelius in
his Rationale Theologicum l 1. c. 3. 4 5. 8. and l. 2 c. 5. 6. and also by Daillè in his Book entituled La●foy fondee sur les Sainctes Escritures 1 Partie He shews there That Christ and his Apostles and the Ancient Fathers in disputing against their Adversaries used consequences drawn from the scripture Mat. 12. 32. Acts 17. 2. 3. and 18 23. Acts 17. 3. opening and alledging St Luke there useth two words very proper for this subject the first signifies to open the other to put one thing neer another to shew that the Apostle proved his conclusions by the scriptures in clearing first the prophecies and in shewing the true sense and after in comparing them with the events the figures with the things and the shadows with the body where the light of the truths of the Gospel of it self shined forth Mat. 22. 29 31 32. He blames them for not having learned the Resurrection of the dead by this sentence of the scripture therefore they ought to have learned it Now the sentence which he alledgeth saith nothing formally and expresly of the Resurrection of the dead but infers it from what he had laid down Hic Dominum uti principiis rationis naturae adeo manifestum est ut ne Veronius quidem Magister Artis negandi negare illud possit Vedel Rat. Theol. l. ● c. 6. vide plura ibid. c. 5. The Ancient Fathers prove by consequences drawn from scripture that God the Father is without beginning against the Sabellians and that the Son is consubstantial with the Father against the Arrians that Christ hath two Natures against the Eutychians The Papists will not be able to prove their Purgatory and many other of their corrupt opinions by the express words of Scripture We shall now lay down some Propositions or Theoremes about the sufficiency of Scripture First In every Age of the Church the Lord hath revealed so much supernatural truth as was for that age necessary unto salvation his wayes he made known to Moses Psal. 103. 7. and his statutes to Israel Deut. 4. 6. Psal. 147. 20. Heb. 1. 1. Therefore that is an erroneous opinion that before the Law written men were saved by the Law of nature and in the time of the Law by the Law of Moses and since in the time of the Gospel by the Word of grace Secondly The substance of all things necessary to salvation ever since the fall of Adam hath been and is one and the same as the true Religion hath been one and unchangeable 1. The knowledge of God and Christ is the summe of all things necessary to salvation Ioh. 17. 3. Col. 2. 2. but this knowledge was ever necessary Ier. 9. 23. Act. 4. 12. the fathers indeed saw Christ more obscurely and aenigmatically we more clearly distinctly and perspicuously but yet they knew him and believed in him unto salvation as well as we Ioh. 8. 56. 2. The Covenant of grace which God made with man is an everlasting Covenant therein the Lord hath revealed himself to be one and unchangeable as in nature so in will Heb. 13. 8. Rom. 3. 29. shewing that as God is one in nature truth and constancy and that as well toward the Gentiles as toward the Jews so he would justifie both the Circumcision and Uncircumcision the Jew and the Gentile by one way of Religion that is to say through faith and belief in his Sonne Jesus Christ. 3. Christ and his Apostles professed and taught no new Religion but the same which the Scriptures of the Old Testament did before instruct Matth. 5. 17. Iohn 5. 39. Acts 10. 43. Luke 24. 25 26 27 44 45. Acts 18. 28. and 17. 7. and 26. 22. and 28. 23. Rom. 6. 26. Therefore the believing Jews and the converted Gentiles are stiled the children of faithfull Abraham being justified by Faith as Abraham was Whence we may conclude that before under and after the Law since the fall of Adam there was never but one true Catholick Religion or way to Heaven and happiness Thirdly The Word of God being uttered in old time sundry wayes was at length made known by writing the Lord stirring up and by his holy Spirit inspiring his servants to write his will and pleasure Fourthly So long as there was any truth in any Age necessary to be more fully and clearly known then was already revealed in the Books of Moses it pleased God to stirre up holy men whom he divinely inspired and sufficiently furnished to make the Truth known unto the Church thus after Moses during the time of the Law the Lord raised up Prophets who opened the perfect way of life unto the Church of the Old Testament more clearly then it was before manifested in the Books of Moses the Time and Age of the Church requiring the same The Church of the Jews in the several Ages thereof was sufficiently taught and instructed in all things necessary to Salvation by the writings of Moses and the Prophets which appears 1. In that our Saviour being asked of one What he should do that he might inherit eternal life answered What is written in the Law and Prophets How readest thou Luke 10. 25 26. and out of the Scripture he declared himself to be the Saviour of the world fore-told and promised Matth. 21. 44. and 26. 31. Luk 4. 21. and 24 25 26 27 44. Ioh. 3. 14. 2. The answer of Abraham to the rich man sending his friends to Moses and the Prophets sheweth that they sufficed to instruct the faithful Jews in all things necessary to Salvation Luk. 16. 29 30. by them they might learn how to obtain Life and escape Death when he saith Let them hear them he meaneth them only as that place is meant Mat. 17. 5. The Jews themselves acknowledged the sufficiency of those writings to lead them unto life and happiness Ioh. 5. 39. Fifthly The Prophets did expound the Law of God and speak more plainly precisely and distinctly touching the coming of the Messias then Moses did but the last full and clear Will of God touching the Salvation of man was not manife●●ed by them that was together and at once to be published and taught by the Messias who also at his coming did establish that order in the Church of God which was to continue therein for ever For 1. Christ was ordained of the Father to be the great Doctor of his Church a Prophet more excellent then the rest that were before him both in respect of his Person Office Manner of receiving his Doctrine and the excellency of the Doctrine which he delivered 2. This was well known not only among the Jews but also among the Samaritans insomuch that the woman of Samaria could say I know when the Messias is come he will tell us all things Joh. 4. 25. 3. The time wherein God spake unto us by his Sonne is called the last dayes or the last time Heb. 1. 2. 1 Pet. 1. 20. to note that
when ye become men ye must put away these childish things Blow at the Root p. 82 83. The expresse testimonies of Scripture forbidding even Angels to adde any thing to those things which are commanded by the Lord do prove the perfection of the Scripture Deut. 4. 5 12. and 12. 32. and 30. 10. and 5. 12 13 14. and 28. 58. Ioshua 1. 7 8. Prov. 30. 5. wherefore the Apostle commands That no man presume above that which is written 1 Cor. 4. 6. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. Divers reasons may be drawn from this last place to prove the perfection of the Scripture 1. The Apostle teacheth That the Scriptures are able to make a man wise to salvation therefore there needeth no further counsel nor direction thereunto but out of the Scriptures 2. The Scriptures are able to make the man of God that is the Minister of the Word perfect and compleat unto every work of his Ministery whether it be by teaching true Doctrine or confuting false by exhorting and putting forward to that which is good or dehorting from that which is evil Paul would not have us think that all and every writing viz. of Plato Aristotle is divinely inspired for in ver 15. he not only useth the plural number calling them the holy writings thereby to note the word of God and not one sentence or Book but all the sentences and Books of the Scripture and also useth the Article which hath force of an universal note therefore the Greek words the whole Scripture signifieth the whole altogether and not every part severally in this place 2. No one part of holy Scripture is able to make the Minister perfect therefore it must needs be understood of the whole body of holy Scripture wherein this sufficiency is to be found The Ancient Fathers and other Divines have from this place proved the perfection and sufficiency of the Scripture in all things necessary to salvation We do not reason thus as the Papists charge us it is profitable therefore it is sufficient but because 1. The Scripture is profitable for all these ends viz. to teach sound Doctrine to refute false opinions to instruct in holy life and correct ill manners therefore it is sufficient or it is profitable to all those functions of the Ministery that a Minister of the Church may be perfect therefore much more for the people Argumentum non nititur unica illa voce utilis sed toto sententiae complexu Chamierus Hitherto of the perfection of the Scripture absolutely considered now follows the sufficiency thereof in opposition to unwritten traditions or verities as the Papists speak D Davenant premiseth these things for the better understanding of the sufficiency of the Scripture 1. We speak of the state of the Church saith he in which God hath ceased to speak to men by the Prophets or Apostles divinely inspired and to lay open new Revelations to his Church 2. We grant that the Apostles living and preaching and the Canon of the New Testament being not yet sealed their Gospel delivered Viva Voce was no lesse a rule of Faith and Worship then the writings of Moses and the Prophets 3. We do not reject all the traditions of the Church for we embrace certain Historical and Ceremonial ones but we deny that opinions of faith or precepts of worship can be confirmed by unwritten traditions 4. We call that an opinion of Faith to speak properly and strictly when a Proposition is revealed by God which exceeds the capacity of nature and is propounded to be believed as necessary to be known to Salvation Fundamentall opinions are those which by a usuall and proper name are called Articles of Faith 5. What is not in respect of the Matter an Article of Faith may be a Proposition to be believed with a Theological Faith if you look to the manner of revealing as that the Sun is a great light the Moon a lesse Gen. 1. 16. that Rachel was beautifull Leah blear-eyed The Papists do not cease to accuse the Scripture of imperfection and insufficiency as not containing all things necessary to salvation The Councel of Trent Sess. 4. decret 1. saith That the Truth and Discipline is contained in libris scriptis sine scripto traditionibus The Papists generally divide the word of God into the word written and traditions They affirm that there are many things belonging to Christian faith which are neither contained in the Scriptures openly nor secretly This opinion is maintained by the Papists but it was not first invented by them The Jewish Fathers did use the traditions of the Elders and it hath been said of old Mark 75. Matth. 5. 21. for their errors and superstitions yea at length they affirmed that God gave to Moses in Mount Sinai the Scripture and the Cabala or a double Law the one written the other unwritten The Tridentin Fathers S●s 4. do command Traditions to be received with the same reverend affection and piety with which we imbrace the Scripture and because one Bishop in the Councel of Trent refused this he was excluded In the mean space they explain not what those Traditions are which must be so regarded none of them would ever give us a List and Catalogue of those Ordinances which are to be defended by the authority of unwritten Traditions not of the Word committed to writing onely they affirm in general whatsoever they teach or do which is not in the Scripture that it is to be put into the number of Traditions unwritten The cause of it self is manifest That at their pleasure they might thrust what they would upon the Church under the name of Traditions Vide Whitak de Script contro Quaest. 6. c. 5. See also Moulins Buckler of Faith p. 51. Lindan the Papist was not ashamed to say That it had been better for the Church if there had been no Scripture at all but onely Traditions For saith he we may do well enough with Traditions though we had no Scripture but could not do well enough with Scripture though we had no Traditions Baldwin saith a Testament may be either Scriptum or Nuncupativum set down in writing or uttered by word of mouth But a Nuncupative Testament or Will made by word of mouth without writing must be proved by solemn witnesses The solemn witnesses of Christs Testament are the Prophets and Apostles Let Papists if they can prove by them that part of the Testament of Christ is unwritten Any indifferent Reader will conceive that the Scriptures make most for them who stand most for their Authority and perfection as all the reformed Divines do not only affirming but also confirming that the Scripture is not only a most perfect but the onely infallible rule of faith Titus 1. 2. Rom. 3. 4. God cannot lie and Let God be true and every man a lier that is subject to errour and falshood Every Article of Divine Faith must have a certain and
above others The Doctrine of Creation is a mixt principle partly discovered by nature and chiefly in the word Consider it 1. Ex parte rei so the thing it self was known to the Heathens 2. Ex parte modi faith onely teacheth what it is the manner and circumstances of the Creation how and wherefore the world was made was wholly unknown to them because these things are not matters of sense but depend on the limitation of Gods will nor matters of reason but depend on the exuberancy of his power The same individual assent to the same truth may be both Cognitio Scientiae and Cognitio Fidei By Faith we know that the worlds were made and assent to it And by demonstrations it may be proved that the world was made and these also are sufficient to perswade assent Now we from both grounds jointly assent to this proposition that the world was made The which Assent in respect of the Ground propter evidentiam rei is an assent of Science or natural knowledge In regard of the other Ground propter anthoritatem dicentis is an assent of Faith or supernatural knowledge Mr. Wallis Truth tried ch 8. Secondly and probably the light of nature shining in these reasons 1. The original of Nations laid down by Moses Gen. 10. and elsewhere which could not be fained by him since some memory of them was then extant among many which yet in progresse of time was extinguished 2. The beginning of Arts the first inventers whereof are known and in what time they flourished for it is not probable that so many ages before mankinde lived without Arts and that in these last times they were all both invented and perfected 3. The newnesse of all Heathenish Histories the ancientest of which tell of nothing before Noah's flood or the beginning of the Assyrian Empire under Ninus The holy History it self is only of 4000 yeers or thereabout which neverthelesse is the greatest mouument of antiquity Now it would be a most unworthy reproach and contumely cast upon all those men who had lived so many infinite ages ago to say they were so ignorant that they could not or so slothful that they would not deliver in writing what was done in their times 4. The decay of mans body and age which from a great strength quantity bignesse and time of life is now come down to a narrow scantling which if had decreased so alwaies in infinite ages it would by this time have been brought almost to nothing 5. The certain series and order of causes and impossibility of their proceeding in infinitum for it must needs be that there should be one first which is the universal cause but first it is not unlesse it be One nor One except it be God 6. As a thing is so it works but God doth not depend upon another in his being therefore neither in working doth he require a pre-existent matter 7. Art presupposeth nature and nature matter but God in working is a more excellent cause then art or nature therefore presupposeth nothing in working 8. The first cause viz. God is infinite therefore he can do whatsoever implyeth not a contradiction but the Creation of things in time implieth it not 9. Whatsoever perisheth hath a beginning the world doth perish because all its parts decay and are subject to corruption therefore the whole The Angles and souls of men are changeable by nature as appears by the fall of the Devil and mans fall 10. Either the world was eternal or had a beginning It could not be eternal 1. Because it is compounded of divers parts and those in nature contrary one to another which could not meet together in that order themselves therefore it was made by some-what and then either by it self which could not be for that which makes is before that which is made and the same thing cannot be before it self or else it was made by some creature which could not be because that is but a part of the whole and therefore meaner then it considered as whole and not able to make it 2. The world could not be eternal because it is limited in respect of place quantity power therefore it is not infinite in time That which is eternal is the first thing and consequently the best therefore God is only so having no parts nor being subject to corruption By these reasons it is evinced that the world is not eternal but was created by the chief work-man of all things in time But concerning the time of the yeer when the world was made whether in Summer Autumn or the Spring we will not raise any curious and unprofitable questions See Sarsans Chronologia vapulans page 123. Let it suffice to know that it was created by God in the beginning Gen. 1. 1. that is in the beginning of time or rather together with time then in time for the instant and moment of Creation was the beginning of all following but not the end of precedent time Hitherto concerning the efficient cause there followeth the matter of Creation Of the first and immediate Creation there was no matter at all the Divine power drew out nature it self not out of any Pre-existent matter but out of meer nothing Materiam noli quaerere nulla fuit Nothing but nothing had the Lord Almighty Whereof wherewith whereby to build this City Thus were created all incorporeal and immaterial Substances the Angels the reasonable soul and the highest Heaven as some say for those things which are void of matter cannot be framed out of matter 2. The mediate Creation is when a thing is brought forth of a praeexistent matter yet so rude and indisposed that it may be accounted for nothing so Adams body was created of the dust or slime of the Earth Gen. 2. 7. Beasts and birds out of the Earth Gen. 1. 19. which God did meerly of his good pleasure no necessity compelling him nor the matter he took any way helping him in working it was nothing privatively as they call it Divines observe four things in Gods Creation 1. His Command whereby he said Let there be light and there was light Gods words are things 2. His Approbation whereby all things are acknowledged as good God sa● they were good They were so in respect of their own kinde and nature 2. In respect of the universe that is apt for the end for which they were made free from all defect and deformity God made all the creatures to be serviceable one to another especially to man 1 Tim. 4. 4. I cannot tell by what Logick we call a Toad a Bear or an Elephant ugly they being created in those outward shapes and figures which best expresse those actions of their inward forms And having past that general visitation of God who saw that all that he had made was good that is conformable to his will which abhors deformity and is the rule of order and beauty D. Browns
strong enough he would set upon men also yea a Weezle is a devouring beast as well as a Fox for he kils young chickens and the lik● he is cruel according to his kinde Cursing It is to wish evil to a thing or person it virtually contains in it all evil as blessing contains in it virtually all good The holy Ghost notes it of unsanctified men Their mouths are full of cursing and bitternesse Rom. 12. 3. Reasons 1. Abundance of contempt of God and uncharitablenesse in the heart 2. The Devil stirs up cursed conceits in mens mindes when they are angry Iames Their tongues are set on fire of hell therefore with it they curse their neighbours We must learn to blesse and not curse as S. Peter exhorteth because we are heirs of blessing as our Saviour exhorteth Blesse them which curse you Strive to reverence God and love thy neighbour Consider of the Commandments of God which forbid it and his judgements cursing shall clothe thee as thou didst love it There is a double cursing one is a warrantable lawful needful duty when any man doth in Gods name and by Gods authority pronounce or denounce evil against any thing or person withall praying that the thing may fall out accordingly thus Christ cursed the Fig tree and Elisha the Children The other sinful the vomiting out vile and disgraceful speeches mischievous and wicked wishes The Ancients observe that when God gave the Devil leave to afflict Iobs body he spared his tongue that feeling his pain he might easily raile and curse CHAP. XVII Of Deceit Distrust Divination Division Drunkenness DECEIT DEceit is when we make shew of one thing and do another It is that vice by which men are apt to make shew of good they intend not and again to hide the shew of that evil they do intend or by which men cover over bad purposes with fair pretences that they may the more easily accomplish them as in Saul to David whom he desired to thrust upon his own ruine in fighting with the Philistims and his pretence was to honour his valour by making him his sonne in law Iacobs sons used it against the Sichemites Iudas against Christ he came with a kisse when he meant nothing but mischief It is a great sinne David blameth this fault in Doeg Psal. 52. See Psal. 5. 6. it is a sinne condemned by nature for no man can choose but complain if he meet with it in others and by Scripture more Mark 7. 17. Rom. 3. With their tongues they have used deceit Rom. 1. 29. 1 Pet. 2. 1. Deceitful men shall not live out half their days David The bread of deceit shall be gravel in the belly Salomon The deceitful man shall not rost what he took in hunting Of all vices it takes up most of the lodgings about us 1. Our spirits Psal. 2. 2. 2. Our thoughts Psal. 38. 12. 3. Our hearts Prov. 12. 20. 4. Our mouths 1 Pet. 2. 22. 5. Our lips Psal. 34. 12. ●6 Our tongues Psal. 15. 3. 7. Our bellies Iob 15. 35. 8. Our feet Iob 31. 5. All our members Acts 13. 10. There is fraud in bargaining and conversing Davids whole carriage to Achish was nothing but a pack of fraud Abraham helped himself by deceit saying of his wife She is my sister Isaac practised the same deceit with lesse probability or shew of truth Plain Iacob was drawn by his mother to use deceit to get the blessing Reasons 1. The causes of it are want of the fear of God and of charity to men a Christians faith and love must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without dissimulation S. Paul saith it twice of both 2. It is an abuse of a good gift yea one of the best natural gifts wit reason and understanding Corruptio optimi pessima 3. It overthrows the welfare of humane societies and is contrary to charity equity and all well-ordered laws Distrust It is a kinde of shaking or loosnesse of the heart for want of something to stay upon for attaining of good or avoiding evil Isa. 7. 2. 1. We must not distrust God as Ahaz did in Isa. 7. and Sarah when she heard of her having a son and the Israelites when they murmured in their tents and said They should perish in the wildernesse and David I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul 2. We must not distrust men without cause thinking they will not do such things as they have promised or undertaken or as they seem willing to do which was the fault of Saul who distrusted the loyalty both of David and of the people onely because they in their Song ascribed to David ten thousand and mistrusted Ionathan also as if he had been disloyal 3. We must moderately distrust our selves and our own wit and sufficiency as Salomon did saying I am but a childe and I cannot go in and out before this great people And Paul when he said I am not sufficient to think any thing as of my self We must not so distrust our selves as to be disheartned from attempting to do our duties which was Moses his fault that because he was not eloquent refused to go to Pharaoh but alone in such measure as to make us seek more earnestly to God for his help and assistance Divination Divination is quaedam praenunciatio futurorum saith Aquinas In general is a course way or proceeding to effect strange and unwonted effects by means not allowed or ordained by God either in the course of nature or any special institution as for example to finde out secret and hidden things who did this or that where such a thing is which is lost what shall become of such a man in such a businesse and to hurt a man and strike him with a disease or to help another and cure him of a disease or the like Of these strange effects some are plainly diabolical which are done by a manifest direct and personal concurrence of Satan and association with him such as all Sorcerers Conjurers and Witches use and those which have familiar Spirits who raise up the Devil himself to appear in likenesse to them and answer and do things for them and such as were used of old in Oracles where the Devil disguised himself under the appearance of a god 2. Mixtly natural and diabolical when Satan is not directly consulted withall but certain natural things are imployed to the end whereto in nature they serve not to cover the Devil from mens eyes and so to work more secretly as in all those which are termed curious arts Act. 19. 19. such as are the use of charms and spels and divinations of all sorts and the casting of figures and observation of heavenly bodies out of them to pick the knowledge of contingent events which because they have no certainty in their nature therefore cannot be collected out of these natural things upon which alone certain and necessary things do follow This Art of Divination
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.
turned into flesh as the water was made wine not by any confusion as if the Divine Nature were made the Humane or the Humane the Divine When we say the Divine Nature took our Humane Nature upon him we must not think that that humane Nature consisting of a soul and body was one entire person as it is in us for though it was particular yet it did not subsist of it self before the Union of the God-head to it Thirdly This personall Union is inseparable for when Christ appeared like man in the Old Testament that was n●● an Incarnation because separable Fourthly By this means the Virgin Mary is truly called Deipara the mother of God so in Scripture she is expresly called The mother of the Lord for she brought him who was God and Man though she did not bring forth his Deity the whole Person of Christ was the subject of conception and nativity though not all that was in that Person Consider lastly The end of this Incarnation which is this God and man became one in Person that God and man might become one in the Covenant of Grace Gal. 4. 4 5. Before this man was at as great a distance with God as the apostate Angels but now by this means as he is made sinne for us so are we made righteousnesse by him not that this benefit extends to all but onely to those men who are under the Covenant and therefore Gal. 3. all the mercies which Abraham had are limited to a spiritual seed therefore as the mystery is great for the truth so for the comfort of it and why should faith think it such an unlikely matter to adopt for his children when God hath united our nature to him CHAP. IV. Of Christs Offices SO much may serve concerning Christs Natures both what they be Manhood and God-head And Secondly How they are united into one Person by a personal Union Christs Offices in the next place are to be treated of Wherein consider 1. His calling to his Office 2. The Office to which he was called or which is all one The efficient cause of these Offices and the matter or parts of them For the cause of the Lords undertaking these Offices it was the will and calling of his Father who is said to anoint him that is to say to appoint him to them and sit him for them and himself saith Him hath God the Father sealed that is to say ratified and set apart to that work as a Prince by his Seal doth give Commission to any of his Subjects to undertake such and such a work furnishing him with Authority to fulfill the same And therefore the Apostle to the Hebrews saith particularly concerning his Priesthood that he did not make himself a Priest but he that said unto him Thou art my Sonne this day have I begotten thee and this calling was ratified with an Oath saying That the Lord hath sworn and will not repent Thou art a Priest for ever to let us know the certainty and immutability thereof Now this observation makes to the exceeding great commendation of the goodnesse of God that he himself would take care to provide for us a perfect and sufficient helper against this our misery If we had bethought our selves of a remedy and procured it for our selves so much lesse had been the glory of his grace But when he to whom it little pertained in regard of any good he should get by it but that he counts it a benefit to manifest his grace by doing good to us when he I say bethought himself of a way to effect this work and took order to send a Person that was perfectly sufficient to work it out Now this honour is enlarged exceedingly and the glory of the work redoundeth wholly to him and then it must be confessed to be altogether of his grace It is true indeed that Justice and Mercy do meet together in this work and each shew it self in perfection for that he pardoneth our sins and saveth us Now that Jesus Christ hath deserved pardon of sin and salvation for us it is a part of righteousnesse For he is righteous saith the Scripture to forgive us but in that he himself found out a means to satisfie his Justice and after a sort to tie his righteousnesse to do this for us this is of meer mercy and grace for mercy is the beginning and first cause of our deliverance but yet mercy sees justice satisfied and so accomplisheth the whole work not with any wrong injury or offence to justice and with the help of it So we see our Lord Jesus Christ came to undertake this work the manhood of his own accord did not put himself to do it the Angels did not perswade him we did not intreat him or hire him Nay we nor any other creature had an hand in assigning him to it but the Father being offended with us and finding the way of his justice shut against us by our sins made a Covenant with the Sonne that he should undertake it and appointed it to be done by the way of taking our felsh resolving that that Person should be the raiser up of lost and fallen man to happinesse and felicity Now for the Offices themselves which Christ undertook we must learn them by the Titles which the Scripture giveth unto him These Titles are a Saviour a Redeemer a Mediator a Surety a Christ a Lord and in explicating these six Titles I shall sufficiently declare the Offices of our Lord. First I say he was a Saviour A Saviour is a Person that undertaketh to free any that are in distresse through the want of good things and the presence of evil from that misery under which they lie by taking away those evils from them and conferting those good things upon them Now he is therefore called by the name of Iesus which signifies a Saviour because he was to deliver his people from that misery whereinto Adam and themselves had plunged themselves removing those extream evils which lay on them and bringing unto them those great benefits wherof they were deprived Even among us when any City or Commonwealth is oppressed by a Tyrant who spoileth them of their Liberty and Lands and holds them in slavery and beggery if any person arise and put down that Tyrant and restore every man his Goods and Liberty free them from their miseries and restore them the free use of their Countrey and Laws this man is a Saviour of such a City so is the Lord Jesus to us Therefore is he frequently entituled The salvation of God Mine eyes have seen thy salvation and all the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of God and our God the God of our salvation So was he figured by all the Judges whom God raised up to help his people for it is said God raised them up Saviours which saved them out of the hands of their enemies and God raised them up a
the firstship if I may so speak that is to say the primacy This is such a primacy as a fore-man of the Quest is wont to have in J●ries not a primacy of power as over inferiours but a primacy of order as amongst equals Dr Rainol against Hart c. 5. p. 174 175. The Pope succeeds Peter as night doth the day a tempest a calm sickness health He succeedeth Peter only in denial of Christ. M. Perk. on Iude. The Painter pictured Peter with a red face as blushing at his Successours vices An Pontifex Romanus sit Antichristus Whether the Pope of Rome be Antichrist Papa or Papas among the Greeks signifieth a Father and is the appellative that little children beginning to speak are wont to give to their Parents and in like sort among the Latines noteth a Father or Grand-father hence the Christians in ancient times did use to call their spiritual Fathers and Bishops Papes or Popes So that the name of Pape or Pope was common to all Bishops Ierome writing to Angustin calleth him Pope and writeth to the most honourable Pope who yet was Bishop of little Hippo only therefore that name of Pope doth no way prove every one that is so called to be Universal Bishop D. Field of the Church l. 5. c. 41. Vide Cham. de Oecum Pontif. l. 5. c. 2. The Pope hath appropriated to himself the very name of Papa that is Pope which formerly saith their Jesuite Azorius was common unto other Bishops B. Morton Protest Appeal l. 4. c. 19. Sect. 1. We stand not upon this word Pope it is but Father it was given to Pastours to those that were worthy Pastours ascribed to Fathers in Epistles and superscriptions as to Augustine a poor Bishop and to Paulinus a poor Deacon A name of reverence now grown odious D. Fentons Treatise against reconciliat to the Church of Rome Every Pope at his entrance doth change his name which custom began An. Dom. 687. when he whose Christian name was Os porci forsook it to be called Sergius B. Mort. ubi supra I will not conclude it as an Article of Faith that the Pope is Antichrist I am not of his minde that said It was as clear that the Pope was Antichrist as that Christ was the Messiah Learned Chamier saith Quicunque homo omnes capit notas Antichristi quas Scriptura delineavit is est Antichristus At Episcopus Oecumenicus capit eas omnes notas He to whom all the notes given by the Scripture of Antichrist jointly agree he is Antichrist But to the Pope all the notes given of Antichrist joyntly agree Others go this way also they say It is not enough to prove that Christ was the Messiah because he was born at Bethlehem but because what ever was spoken of the Messiah agrees to him so likewise it is not enough to prove the Pope to be Antichrist because one of the notes given about Antichrist belongs to him but because all But I suppose that those two main circumstances of the time and place of Antichrist agreeing to the Pope it is a weighty argument to prove that the Pope is Antichrist 1. The place the seat of Antichrist is described Revel 17. ult which is Rome and the time when he that letteth was taken away which was the Emperor In these two things the ancient Fathers agree Antichrist as God sitteth in the Temple of God shewing himself that he is God 2 Thess. 2. 4 that is he shall rule and tyrannize over the Church of God making himself Head of the Church Nero was cruel against believers but he ●ate not in the Church To sit here is to take and exercise judiciary authority in the Church of God Vide Grotium in Luc. 20. See Mat. 19. 28. The Popes authority is called Sancta sedes The Apostasie of Antichrist is described 2 Thess. 2. 3. there shall be an ecclesiastical falling away from the true worship of God to idolatry 1 Tim. 4. 1. This Apostasie doth imply their former imbracing of the truth their faith was formerly known to all the world as now their heresie and idolatry is therefore in this respect no Heathen Emperour nor the Turk can be Antichrist He shall not only apostatize but shall seduce many and make them drunk with that deadly poison See M. Medes Apostasie of the later times The Miracles of Antichrist are set forth 2 Thes. 2. 9 11. their end is to confirm a false Doctrine In Transubstantiation there is miracle upon miracle The Priest if he please can turn all the wine in the Town into Christs bloud How often have the people seen bloud in the bread The Vices of Antichrist might also be urged 1. His pride he shall exalt himself above all that is called God that is Prin●es so the Pope He takes the titles of Universal Bishop Head of the Church and Vicar of Christ. Bellarmine is not ashamed to apply that in Isaiah to the Pope Behold I lay in Sion a foundation stone Isa. 28. 16. 2. His cruelty the Whore is said to be drunk with the bloud of the Saints So the Pope And Rev. 13. it was given him to kill whoever would not adore the image of the Beast 3. Covetousnesse he shall with feigned words make merchandize of many So the Pope Adde to this the opinion of the Reformed Churches generally of B. Iewel of Whitaker Downam Perkins Fox Abbot Brightman Rainolds Powel and Dr Sclater on 2 Thes. with divers others For the judgement of the Fathers herein it is not much to be valued because they lived before the times of Antichrist and did not dream of such an Antichrist as afterwards rose up It is a Question between us and the Papists An Antichristus sit singularis homo Whether Antichrist be one person Bellarmine saith he is The Pope is one person not in number and nature as one certain and singular man one at once by Law and Institution though successively so many as have enjoyed the Papacy The Papists when they say that the Pope hath been the Head of the Church and Vicar of Christ this 1500 years do not mean any one Pope but the whole rabble of them since the year 607. So Antichrist is one person not at once ordinarily but continued in a Succession of many When we say the Pope the Emperour the King the Priest the Minister the Eye the Hand we mean not one particular but the whole kinde It cannot be an individual man in that it is said 2 Thes. 2. the mystery of Antichrist did then begin to work and yet it should hold till the very coming of Christ where is the man that lived so long It is a Question An Papa sit Christi Vicarius Whether the Pope be Christs Vicar Innocent the third said I am the Bridegroom because I have a Noble a Rich a Gracious Spouse viz. the Church of Rome which is the Mother of all believers It is a Question An
I have shewed in my first Book of the Scriptures Secondly It tends to the extream dishonour of Christ 1. In making other Intercessours 2. In making each man his own Saviour by his own works 3. In feigning a Purgatory Thirdly It tends to the damnation of mens souls 1. In drawing them to put confidence in their own works 2. In making them content with lip-labour in stead of prayer 3. In mocking them with counterfeit confession 4. In teaching them to commit Idolatry 5. In teaching them the doctrine of venial sins and that these may be pardoned without either confession or contrition There is a double way of advancing Antichrist First In way of Worship and Superstition Some conceive that course was taken here formerly when there was so much cringing and bowing toward the Altar Secondly By publishing and maintaining the Doctrines of Popery the most refined Doctrines conditional Decrees Free-will Auxilium sufficiens omnibus ad salutem media scientia in God and Universal Redemption in Christs intention final Apostasie These are the Jesuites Doctrines Arminius had it from them Christians that have cast off Popery should be so farre from returning again to Babylon that they should pray for the destruction and utter ruine of that man of sinne and with confidence expect the accomplishment of the Prophecies in that kinde The End of the sixth Book THE SEVENTH BOOK OF OUR VNION And Communion WITH CHRIST And our Spiritual Benefits by him and some special Graces CHAP. I. Of our Union with Christ. HAving handled the work of Redemption in the Nature and Person of it Now I shall speak of the Application of it by the holy Ghost That is a special part of Gods Providence whereby those things which Jesus Christ hath purchased are by the operation of the holy Ghost made effectual to all those for whom they were appointed Four things are considerable in it 1. The foundation of it 2. The efficient cause or worker of it 3. The persons who shall be made partakers of it 4. The parts of this work 1. Union and conjunction with Christ. 2. Communion with him The ground work of it lies in three things 1. The donation of God the Father Iohn 6. 39. All that my Father hath given me shall come to me 2. The intendment of Christ in all the work he wrought Iohn 17. 19. For their sakes do I sanctifie my self that is separate my self to the work I undertook 3. The Fathers accepting it done for them as heartily as if they had done it in their own persons 2 Cor. 5. 19. 2. The efficient cause of it the holy Ghost that is the third Person in the Trinity who is equal to the Father and the Son The making of man was in some respect appropriated to the Father redeeming him to the Son the making it effectual and applying it was the work of the holy Ghost 14 15 and 16. Chapters of Iohn I will send the holy Ghost The Comforter he shall lead you into all truth Convince you of sinne righteousnesse and judgement There is no one branch of our partaking of Christ but what is totally ascribed to the holy Ghost The sending of the Gospel is by the holy Ghost they are the gifts and graces of the holy Ghost Faith Union with Christ and Communion with him in all his Offices are from the holy Ghost the Spirit teacheth governeth comforteth Reason Because no inferiour person could effect it Ephes. 1. 19 20. Thirdly The Persons to whom this work of application belongs or who shall be made partakers of Christ but the Decree of Election and Reprobation have been handled already There are a certain number whom God hath appointed to come to life by Christ the Spirit of God will make the means effectuall to all his Fourthly The parts of this work 1. Union and conjunction with Christ. 2. Communion with him 1 Ioh. 5. 12. I shall first speak of our Union with Christ. Christ is said to dwell and abide in us and we are said to be Christs to be partakers of Christ to be cloathed with Christ and abide in him The Spirit of God sets it out in five similitudes 1. Of food made one with the body Ioh. 6. 5 6. 2. Of Head and Members Ephes. 1. 22 23. 3. Of the foundation and building Ephes. 2. 20 21 22. 1 Pet. 2. 4 5 6. 4. Of the stock and branches Ioh. 15. 4 5 6 7. 5. Of the Husband and Wife Ephes. 5. 31 32. We must be one with Christ as we were one with the first Adam say some two wayes 1. Naturally as we bore his image 2. Voluntarily as we consented to his Covenant so with the second Adam 1. Naturally by receiving of his Spirit 2. Voluntarily consenting to his Covenant Though it is not easie to conceive how we can be said to have consented to his Covenant but as being in him and so his consent did include ours The Union begins on Christs part he layes hold on me by his Spirit Rom. 8. 9. Phil. 3. 12. Gal. 4. 5 6. 1 Iohn 4. 13. This Spirit works a principle of faith in us that layes hold on Christ and accepts him for our Head and Husband for ever Iohn 1. 12. Ephes. 3. 17. He will take Christ 1. With all his Offices for a Lord as well as a Saviour 2. With all his graces 3. With all his inconveniences Christ with poverty with disgrace with the stake There is a three-fold Union between Christ and a Believer 1. Mystical with Christ as a Head the fruit of that is intimacy 2. Moral with Christ as a patern or example 3. Judicial with Christ as a Surety whereby we are concerned in every act of Christs mediation the fruit of this is interest This Union between Christ and us is wrought by the Spirit Ephes. 4. 4. He unites God and us and us one with another He works it by the Ministery of the Word 1 Cor. 1. 9. Iohn 6. 44 45. and a religious use of the Seals 1 Cor. 12. 13. Rom. 6. 3 5. 1 Cor. 10. 16. Some make our Union with Christ to be only a relative Union others an essentiall personall Union as if we were Godded with God and Christed with Christ. I would not be too bold with those expressions of Nazianzen because I see they are abused 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 First There is more then a relative Union as that place 1 Cor. 6. 17. forcibly proves 2. These Reasons 1. This Union is set forth by similitudes which shew a real Union Iohn 15. 1. 1 Cor. 12. Head and Body 2. Because our Union with Christ is compared to the Mystery of the Trinity and is like to the Union of the Persons in the Divine Nature Ioh. 6. 57. 14. 20. 17. 21 22 23. We are one not in the same kinde or degree of Union nor in so high and glorious a manner 3. Because it is not a Union founded only in terms of Scripture but
in Christ understand nothing but an acknowledgement of the veracity of the sayings and the promises of Christ which ought to be given them not because Christ is true God with the Father but because God after his death raised him from the dead which he also foretold before and for this reason he was worthy to be believed in what he commanded or promised This is their Doctrine of justifying faith and justification as if Christ had come into the world and suffered such things for no other cause but that he might perswade us that an eternal reward is propounded to the obedient that being allured with the hope of reward we might obey him Bellarmine saith Justifying faith is not so much knowledge as assent and it is not a confidence of Gods mercy but an assent to all things which are contained in the Word of God Faith is more then a bare assent to the truth there is in it a fiducial acquiescence and a resting upon Jehovah as it is expressed in the Hebrew he rolled himself upon God as a man being weary of a burden casts himself and that upon something that sustains him Prov. 3. 5. Isa. 10. 20. 28. 16. 50. 10. The chief act of the soul in true faith wherein the essence of it mainly consists is a resting and relying upon Christ and him alone for the obtaining of favour and eternal life In respect of this property faith is oft called a believing in or on Christ and his name Iohn 3. 16 18 36. Iohn 6. 1. 5. 10. a trusting in Christ Ephes. 1. 12. a resting upon God 2 Chron. 14. 11. a resting upon his promise 2 Chron. 32. 8. a relying upon God 2 Chron. 16. 8. a cleaving and sticking close unto him Act. 11. 23. Mr Hilders on Psal. 51. 6. Lect. 83. There is in Faith First An act of acceptation one is willing to receive Christ on his own termes Secondly Of resignation it gives up the whole man unto Christ. The proper object of justifying faith saith Dr. Ames is not some axiome viz. God is favourable to me or my sins are pardoned but Ens incomplexum as they speak viz. Christ or the mercy of God in Christ and so the proper act of justifying faith is incumber● or acquiescere Christo. Not barely the promises but the person of Christ is the object of faith we are not to rest in the promises alone but to close with Christ in those promises Acts 6. 31. The Saints take comfort in Christ and prize his person above all his benefits First Because that is the greatest gift in which God shews most love Ioh. 4. 10. Secondly He is the person in whom all good things are deposited Cant. 4. 10. 1 Iohn 5. 10. Thirdly The great thing the soul fals in love with is the person of Christ Cant. 5. Phil. 1. 23. It is a great dispute among Divines What is the proper object of saving faith Some say the Evangelical promise which holds out Christ others Christ himself in a strict sense only Christ himself is the object of saving faith Iohn 7. 37. No proposition nor promise saves me only Christ. The common object of faith is every revealed truth but of justifying faith as it justifies that is in the act of Justification Reconciliation in Christ with a certain confidence There is Fides quae faith which saves the soul this closeth with every divine revelation promise threatning story sides qua as it saves me closeth onely with Christ. Faith which saves the soul hath for its object the whole word of God but as it saves the soul it closeth only with Christ. There is nothing in Scripture but it hath relation to Christ the types and old Sacrifices were shadows of him the moral Law is preparative for Christ yea there is something of him in every story and miracle Faith is an instinct after union with Christ Iohn 5. 12. He lives in me by faith Iohn 11. 26. Gal. 2. 20. This receives Christ Iohn 1. 11. it is the condition of the Covenant and so the qualification of them which shall have interest in Christ and his benefits Iohn 3. 16. Acts 8. 37. 16. 31. Faith carries the consent of the whole man a Chron. 30. 8. Quid est credere nisi consentire He that would receive Christ must 1. Know that Christ is designed by God and tendred as a Saviour to him in the Gospel 2. Must consider the reality and fulnesse of the promise and give consent to this prose this is the very act of faith 3. None can thus receive Christ but those whose hearts the Lord hath opened to close with Christ Iohn 6. 36 37. Acts 16. 1. Man sell by self-exalting and ariseth in a self-abasing which is by beleeving 2. Faith is the only way to dissolve the plots of the devil we fell by beleeving the devil rather then God and rise by renouncing him and by beleeving in the grace of God in Christ. What is the act the soul doth when it beleeves There are three acts of faith Notitia Assensus Fiducia Mr. Hildersam saith The effence and being of justifying faith consisteth in four acts of the soul whereof the former two are acts of the understanding the other two of the will First I must know Christ aright and that which the Gospel revealeth to us concerning him Secondly The assent of the minde to this 1 Tim. 1. 15. Heb. 11. 13. Thirdly The consent of the will Iohn 1. 12. Fourthly A resting and relying upon Christ and him alone for the favour of God and eternal life Knowledge comes three wayes 1. By sense 2. Reason as that the part is lesse then the whole 3. From testimony which is faith and relies wholly on witnesse faith is weak when it relates to humane testimony yet there is no such knowledge as that of faith when it relates to the testimony of God that is more sure then sense or reason God is so wise as he cannot be deceived himself and so good as he will not deceive others Knowledge and faith are ordinarily all one in Scripture and joyned together as things inseparable Isa. 53. 11. Iohn 10. 38. Iohn 6. 69. Iohn 17. 3. 1 Iohn 3. 2. 4. 5. 13 19. A beleever is set forth by the terms of an enlightened man and wise man Ephes. 1. 18 19. I know whom I have beleeved Bellarmine saith faith is better defined by ignorance then knowledge Fides melius per ignorantiam quam per notitiam desinitur It captivates reason unto the word of God that is carnall and rebellious reason but the true light of reason is increased and augmented by it This knowledge which faith works in the heart is distinct and certain 2. Assent they beleeved God and the Prophets that is they gave assent and credit to it because of the authority of God who is most true and cannot deceive not for humane motives This assent is 1.
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
walk by faith we die by faith we are saved Faith is an infused not an acquired habit Grevinchovius saith That habitual faith is begot in us by frequent acts of faith proceeding from the special grace of God as by often acts of justice and liberality the acts of justice and liberality are produced in us This opinion of his is not only contrary to the Doctrine of the Schoolmen and Modern Divines both Papists and Protestants which with unanimous consent call Theological Vertues infused habits but also is subject to divers inconveniencies that place Heb. 11. 6 must needs be understood of the habit of faith for if it be to be understood of the act of faith it will follow that the regenerate when they sleep and do not actually beleeve do displease God and are not in a state of Grace That faith is the gift of God the Apostle teacheth Ephes. 2. 8. Phil. 1. 29. 2. 13. See Iohn 6. 44. To come to Christ is to beleeve in Christ witnesse Christ himself ver 35. Whether actual or habitual faith be in Infants Some call it efficacious faith some a principle others an inclination Some dislike the word habit that is more proper to faith grown and ripe the word seed or principle is better 1 Iohn 4. 9. Some think the Question about Infants beleeving is unnecessary and curious and that they must be left to the free-grace of God Mark 16. 16. Such places do not onely concern grown persons The Lord promiseth grace to Infants Isa. 44. 3. and glory Matth. 19. 14. 18. 6. compared with Mark 9. 36. See 1 Cor. 7. 14. Pelagians say Infants are saved by Gods fore-sight of those good works which they should have done if they had lived Augustine refutes this opinion 2 Cor. 5. 10. every one is to be saved according to what he hath done The Lutherans would have them saved by an actual faith though it be unexpressible Beza saith The faith of the parents is imputed to them by vertue of the Covenant of grace Mr. Down hath a Treatise of the faith of Infants and how they are justified and saved and goes much that way but denies that they have habituall or actuall Faith Whether Faith be in the Saints when they are translated into Heaven and see God face to face Some say there is a kinde of faith in the blessed Saints since they both beleeve things past all things which Christ hath done for our sake and things to come viz. the second coming of Christ the resurrection of the flesh the last judgment and the perfection of the Church and this knowledge of things past and to come depends upon the authority of God The office and imployment of faith shall cease though the nature of it doe not It is a great Question An sides justisicans in decalogo praecipiatur Whether justifying faith be commanded in the Decalogue Adam had a power to beleeve what God propounded as an object of faith the righteousnesse of Christ was not propounded to him it is commanded there therefore not directè because not revealed to Adam but redisctivé It stood not with Adams Covenant he was to be righteous himself not to look for the righteousnesse of another Adam in the state of innocency had a power of many things which in that state could not be reduced to act he had the affection of sorrow but could not mourn for want of an object so the Angels had a power to beleeve in Christ for their confirmation though Christ was not made known till the second Covenant There was a power then given not only to obey God in the duties of the first Covenant but to submit to God for the change of the Covenant when the will of the Lord should be not to submit to the change of the Covenant in man fallen is a sin Gal. 4. 21. therefore Adam had a power to submit to it Whether Faith or Repentance precede To repent is prefixed before beleeve Mark 1. 15. In the order of things repentance must needs be first in respect of the act of contrition acknowledgemement and grief for sinne the Law precedes the Gospel and one is not to be raised before he knows himself to be cast down And although saving Repentance considered compleatly according to all its acts be not without faith yet it precedes it according to some act Christians should indeavour to live the life of Faith First The necessity of it It is a Question An sine speciali Revelatione possumus credere mysteria fidei Whether without a special Revelation we can beleeve the mysteries of faith The Arminians cry down faith and call it Scripturarum tyrannidem Theologorum ludibrium and cry down all infused habits would have none but acquired There is a necessity of faith in respect of divers truths of Scripture that are to be beleeved 1. The resurrection of the body none of the Heathens beleeved this See Act. 23. 8. Matth. 22. 23 29. Some that profest the Christian Religion perverted this Doctrine of the Resurrection 2 Tim. 2. 18. the Disciples themselves were long in beleeving it Luk. 24. 11. Ioh. 20. 25. 2. The depravednesse of the soul and the enmity of natural reason to the things of God The Philosophers saw clearly the common principles of justice and injustice but not the corruption of nature Rom. 7. 7. The Wisdom of the flesh is enmity against God 3. The necessity of renovation of the soul and body the great Doctrine of Regeneration Iohn 3. 3. When our Saviour had brought Arguments to prove this Doctrine and answered Objections against it how blinde still is Nicodemus v. 9. of that Chapter 4. The necessity of a Mediator and that Christ is this Mediator 1 Tim. 3. 16. The Devils and damned beleeve these truths with a common faith But we need faith to beleeve these truths savingly 2. We need faith also to bring us unto God Rom. 5. 3. we cannot come to God but by Christ nor to Christ but by faith 3. To conform us to Gods Image Acts 15. 9. 4. Without the life of faith we cannot abide with God Matth. 11. 6. Heb. 3. 12. 13. 5. We cannot take fulnesse of delight and complacency in God but by faith Heb. 11. 6. we cannot please God nor he us till we beleeve The life of a Christian is to please God and to be well pleased with him Secondly What it is to live by faith 1. It is to beleive the goodnesse of all that which God commands as well as that which he promiseth and the real evil of all that evil he forbids as well as threatens The precepts of God are good and for our good as well as his promises Deut. 10. 12. Psal. 73. ult The Devils tremble at Gods threatnings but they beleeve not the evil of sin which he forbids for then they would not rebell against God 2. To look after those things principally that are future rather then the
proving or trying if the matter by no means could be brought to any infallible evidence How can our Calling and Election be made sure unlesse a man may be assured that he is in the state of grace and shall continue therein for ever We are bound to love and desire the last coming of Christ which we cannot do untill we be certified of his love Lastly We are bound to rejoyce in God and that alwayes and that in tribulation Rom. 14. 17. 1 Pet. 1. 8. and when we are persecuted for well-doing which no understanding can conceive to be possible unlesse the soul be assured of life eternal that is to say that he both is and shall continue a true Christian. Can one be glad to suffer the hardest things for Christ if he know not whether he intend to save or destroy him We should have confidence in prayer 1 Ioh. 5. 14. Cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. that is speak it with confidence and courage there should be perfect love to God 1 Ioh. 4. 17 18. The triumph of faith Rom. 8 35. It is the proper work of the Spirit to settle the heart of a believer in the assurance of eternal happinesse 2 Cor. 1. 22. Rom. 8. 16. 1 Cor. 2. 12. There is a three-fold work of the Spirit 1. To reveal unto us the things of Christ to enlighten the minde in the knowledge of them Iohn 16. 15. 2. The Spirit draws the image of these upon the soul conforms our hearts to the whole tenour of the Gospel in the work of Regeneration and progresse of Sanctification 3. It brings in evidence to our souls of our interest in these things Gal. 1. 15 16. Rom. 8. 18. It is difficult to attain Assurance 1. From our own corrupt nature which enclines us to both extreams contrary to this to presume or despair Prov. 30. 12. Ps. 36. 2. Rev. 3. 17. 2. From the world our friends flatter us and others load us with slanders and discourage us as Iobs friends did him 3. From Satan whose chief engine next to hinder our conversion is to keep us from Assurance and to delude us with false assurance and he joyns with our unbelief to make us despair See Ephes. 6. 16. 4. The nature of the thing it self is very difficult because it is a matter of great largenesse one must forsake all sinnes and creatures true and false graces are very like lukewarmnesse and the smoaky flax there is a variablenesse of minde even in the converted Gal. 5. 17. There are three means of difference whereby presumption and the true sense of Gods love are distinguished First Presumption grows from a carelesnesse of ones estate in that he examines it not by the Word True Assurance follows the most serious examination of ones estate Secondly Presumption goes without book True Assurance rests it self upon the evidence of Gods Word Thirdly Presumption imboldens to sinne and makes carelesse of good duties True Assurance encourageth to all goodnesse and withdraws the heart from sinne The proper and natural fruits of Assurance 1. An undervaluing of all things here below Psal. 16. 6 7. it is spoken of Christ who lived on the alms of his servants 2. This will comfort us under all afflictions Psal. 46. 4. 3. Our love will be the more abundant to God Cant. 6. 3. 4. It will make a man to prepare for glory 1 Iohn 3. 3. 5. One will desire daily to be dissolved that he may be with Christ. Motives to get Assurance First Every wise man will labour to get a good thing as sure as he can Many will question our title to eternal life Satan follows believers with many objections and temptations our hearts will joyn with him Secondly When this is once got the soul is possessed of the most invaluable treasure of this world To walk in the light of Gods countenance is a priviledge 1. Of Honour 2. Comfort 1 Iohn 3. 20. Assurance is useful in life and death for doing and suffering Thirdly The Devil most opposeth it and labours to keep men in the dark that is an uncomfortable doubtful condition Isa 50. 11. Fourthly It may be attained in Gods ordinary dispensation under the Gospel the whole Church had it 1 Cor. 2. 12. Means to get and keep it I. To get it First As doubts arise get them satisfied and as soon as sins are committed get them pardoned 1 Iohn 2. 1. be frequent in proving thy self the Word is the rule of this trial and examination proving is a comparing our selves with the rule the precepts and promises of Gods Word to see whether we be such as they require or not David saith Commune with your own hearts upon your beds 1 Cor. 11. 28. The necessity and utility of it will prove it sit to be done 1. The necessity of it because of our exceeding aptnesse to deceive our selves and mistake and Satans diligence to beguile us Else if we be false we shall slatter our selves in vain if true we shall want the comfort of it But often proving will chase out hypocrisie 2. An humble patient self-renouncing heart is that frame of Spirit from which this Assurance will never long be absent never did God reveal himself more to any then Paul who was vile in his own eyes the least of sinners and greatest of Saints 3. Labour to get a high esteem of this priviledge think how happy thou shouldst be if God were thine in Christ Mat. 6. 21. Psal. 4. 6. 63. 3. 80. 3. and beg this Assurance at Gods hands 4. Labour to know faith above all other graces all Assurance comes into the soul by faith know the nature and object of faith the promises the Lord hath made to imbolden thee say with Paul I know whom I have believed renew acts of faith and treasure up experiences Frequently meditate on Gods Commandments to believe and on his faithfulnesse II. To keep it By what means Assurance may be held fast and confirmed more and more 1. For the Judgement 2. For Practice The Judgement must be rectified in some things First It must be concluded as a truth that a man may be the true childe of God and have true faith and holinesse in him and yet not enjoy this Assurance 1 Iohn 5. 13. to believe in the name of the Son of God and to know one hath life are not one and the same thing Secondly One must know that such doubts and objections which are raised up against his being the childe of God without ground out of the Word are to be rejected and sleighted Thirdly One must be rightly informed of the difference betwixt the obedience which the Law and the Gospel require for both require obedience faith establisheth the Law and makes a man become a servant of righteousnesse but the difference is exceeding great the Law exacteth compleat obedience the Gospel expecteth upright obedience 2. For Practice First Renew Repentance often God often cloatheth such with Garments of
it come to enjoy God which doth eminently contain all good in him it can never come to have full satisfaction Light was the first thing in the Creation and so in the new Creature Eph. 4. 23. he hath a new judgement speculative and practical 1. Speculative he apprehends and discerns those Reasons and Arguments against sin and for grace more then ever he did he is amazed to consider what darknesse and folly he lived in before 1 Cor. 2. 15. 2. Practical He applies the things he knows for his humiliation and exercise he so knoweth truths that he loves them and delights in them he knows them experimentally Conversion of a man is a Divine teaching of him Isa. 54. 13. Ierem. 31. 44. Iohn 6. 45. The Properties of this teaching 1. It is necessary without this all other teaching is in vain David often prayes that God would teach him his statutes open his eyes the Ministers teach the ear God the heart 2. Efficacious Iob 36. 22. 3. Clear and distinct hence Gods Word is called a Light and it is called the riches of the assurance of understanding 4. Practical it is an acknowledgement after godlinesse Verba Scripturae non sunt verba legenda sed vivenda said Luther 5. Abundant under the Gospel All shall know me from the greatest to the least Knowledge shall cover the earth as the waters do the Sea A great part of Conversion lieth in the renewing of the minde Rom. 12. 2. Ephes. 1. 17 18. Phil. 1. 4. This renewing consists First In Knowledge and that 1. Doctrinally of the truths to be beleeved this is the very foundation and that which is called historical faith that is a knowledge with an Assent to those truths which are recorded in Scripture many may have this and more which yet are not converted but yet where Conversion is this must necessarily precede 1 Cor. 2. 2. Whom God converts he enlightens Iohn 6. 45. 1 Cor. 8. 2. mans whole Conversion is called a teaching 2. Practically partly of our own filthinesse Iohn 3. it was necessary for Nicodemus to know his natural filthinesse partly of Christ sinne will overwhelm the soul without this Rom. 7. 24 25. Ephes. 1. 19 20. one must know his own poverty and Christs riches his own guilt and his satisfaction 3. It makes the heart beleeve and assent to these truths the understanding doth not only need converting grace to turn but to assent and firmly to adhere to the truths revealed to the promises manifested for the heart doth not turn to God by knowing the promises but by firm relying on them and this is that which is called trusting so much in the Psalms 4. The judgement is induced to approve of Gods Word his precepts and promises a● the best He accounts those things best and worst which the Word doth The converted man esteems of Gods favour and freedom from corruption more then all the glory and riches of the world 5. The minde is in part sanctified in regard of the thoughts they were roving distracted impertinent and very frothy now the minde is renewed about them so that it hath more holy thoughts more composed more profitable and united in all duties and performances more low thoughts of our selves and high thoughts of Christ. 6. It looketh then only to Gods Word My sheep hear my voice To the Law and the Testimony 7. Their minde is renewed in respect of consultations Paul consulted not with flesh and bloud he subjects all to the glory of God and this Word 8. He invents holy purposes means and wayes to propagate Gods glory 9. He discerns things that differ Rom. 12. 7. CHAP. XV. Of the Sanctification of the Will GODS great work in Conversion is in the Will Isa. 1. 19. Revel 22. 17. Ps. 110. 3. Ephes. 1. 19. when ever he converts the soul he subdues the Will 1 Chron. 28. 9. Phil. 2. 13. Grace is a resignation of our selves to the will of God Rom. 6. 17. 2 Cor. 8. 10. Though the will of man be subdued in conversion and made free yet it is not perfectly made free as a degree of blindnesse that remains in the Understanding so a degree of bondage in the Will The work of Conversion is never perfected till the will be gained it begins in the mind Ephes. 4. 23. but ends in the will Deut. ●0 6. All liberty must proceed from Liberum judicium a judgement of the understanding not mislead by sensitive objects Aquinas The Will is renewed in a godly man in these particulars 1. It is made flexible so Paul when he was converted Lord what wilt thou have me to do Psal. 40. 8. 143. 10. This Will is broken which before was contumacious and stubborn Isa. 11. 6. 2. Tender it was hardened before this is implied in that a fat heart that hath no sense or feeling either of Gods displeasure or the fearful e●●a●e it is in the man converted hath a heart of flesh Ezek. 36. 26. which is opposed there to a stony heart that is senslesse and stupid 3. It is moved upon pure motives for the holinesse of the precepts David prizeth Gods Word above thousands of Gold and Silver for the spiritual profit of it it would quicken and enlarge his heart support him in afflictions 4. It is established and setled in a good way the honest heart holds fast the Word of God cleaves to the Lord with full purpose of heart 5. It is made efficacious and fervent in holy things their services are free-will offerings 1 Chron. 29. 14. Rom. 7. 18. 6. In regard of its acts 1. In its election and choice it is sanctified preferring holy and eternal things before sinne and temporal Heb. 11. Moses chose the reproaches of Christ before the treasures of Aegypt Election is an act of the Will about the means and answereth to consultation in the Understanding 2. In its consent it consents to God and Christ Isa. 1. 19. 2 Cor. 11. 2. Rom. 7. 16. 3. In regard of the power it hath over the other faculties for it commands the other powers of the soul as on the understanding to make it think and reason about this or that 2 Pet. 3. 5. it sets the understanding on searching the truth and finding it out and the Will delights it self in good things 7. It is adorned with those habitual graces which are necessary for it 1. Fiducial recumbency and trusting in God the Will renewed rol● it self upon Jesus Christ and hath confidence and boldnesse 2. Love to God above all other things therefore he saith I will circumcise you that you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart 3. A divine hope which keepeth up the soul in all difficulties Lam. 3. 13. Obedience is the vertue of the will by which it is flexible to Gods will in all things and for his sake Here Coeca obedientia blinde absolute obedience is as necessary and commendable as in Friars to their Superiours it is
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
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
Supper of the Lord. There must be an active and lively faith in the Sacrament to take Christ by an a of confidence and give up our selves by an act of resignation The great spiritual graces of the Gospel are Faith and Love 1. Faith is the great command of the Gospel Believe in the Lord Iesus 2. It is the great promise of the Gospel Ephes. 2. 8. 3. It is the great condition on which all the promises hang Isa. 79. Heb. 11. 6. Faith empties the soul more of it self then all other graces it gives all the glory to God Rom. 4. 20. and often besides in that Chapter It is the eye of the soul whereby we discern Christ Heb. 11. 1. 2 Cor. 4. ●lt it is the stomack of the soul. Christ describes believing by hungring and thirsting it is the foot of the soul whereby we approach unto Christ Heb. 10. 22. He that comes unto me shall never hunger and he that beleeves in me shall never thirst It is our hand to imbrace the promises Heb. 11. 30. therefore believing is often called eating and drinking Iohn 6. He that eats my flesh and drinks my bloud hath eternal life Gal. 2. 30. Faith makes Christ precious 1 Pet. 2. 7. and the soul also to Christ 2 Pet. 1. 2. Faith is an assent to all truths revealed yet the special act of justifying faith is our closing with Christ our rolling our selves on him It is a cleaving to the whole word of God and an obediential resting upon Christ alone for salvation This is the only grace that jus●ifieth Whom he hath set forth for our propitiation through faith in his bloud No grace brings so much comfort to the soul The just shall live by his faith Reasons why we must bring faith to the Sacrament 1. It is the Table of the Lord therefore none must be admitted but those which are of his family Gal. 6. 16. Christ hath instituted it that he might give himself by it he gives himself only to his members true believers 2. It is a seal of the Covenant of grace therefore belongs to none but such as are in Covenant none are in Covenant with God and Christ but believers 1 Iohn 3. 24. 3. Because the Sacrament was instituted for the confirming and further strengthening of our faith it begets not faith but presupposeth it Rom. 10. 14 17. 4. 11. 4. The word profits not without faith in them that hear it Heb. 4. 2. the same thing is held forth in both Christ is held forth in the Word sounding to the ear and offered in the Sacrament by the promise there he is visible to the eye of faith Iohn 3. 14 15. and is offered for spiritual nourishment Faith is the hand and mouth of the soul whereby we receive and feed on Christ Iohn 1. 12. Iohn 6. 19. In bodily feeding there is 1. Sense of want so in spiritual of the want of Christ. 2. Apprehension of the sutablenesse of the food to ones condition so here 3. Appetite earnest desire in the soul after Christ. 4. Taking of food so the soul of Christ. 5. Eating 6. Digesting 7. Distribution of the nourishment 5. No benefit is to be expected from any Ordinance but by faith Christ himself profits not unbelievers Tit. 1. 15. we cannot receive the Sacrament to our comfort without it 2 Cor. 13. 5. Of all Texts in the Scripture there is none so full for the trial of this grace as this here are three several words to presse this duty Interpreters generally say the meaning is whether you have faith or not but this is a higher expression Acts 8. 33. Rom. 8. 8 9. We say of a very malicious man such a one is in malice and of one that is drunk such a one is in drink 1 Pet. 1. 7. The trial of Faith is precious 1. By this trial we attain to a certainty 2. By this it attains purity God tries it by affliction men by examination by both it is refined 3. The trial of gold is but for a little time By faith you lay hold on eternal life the purer the faith the surer the hold 4. By trying it hath a higher esteem Revel 3. 18. The trial of gold makes it the more precious in your esteem and the trial of Faith makes it more precious in Gods esteem Marks of Faith First Know whence we had Faith God gives it and whether we have received it in the ordinary way by which God works it the Word Iam. 1. 18. Faith comes by hearing and it is increased by the same means by which it is begotten Dost thou highly prize the Word Hath it wrought Faith in thee Secondly Try by what steps and degrees faith hath been wrought in thee 1. Such see their misery by sinne and their inability to help themselves Acts 2. 37. 2. God reveals to such the excellency of Christ. He is held forth to us as every way able to do us good Isa. 55. 1. hereby one is brought to deny himself and his duties and to have recourse to him and rest on him for comfort Thirdly From the effects where Faith is it will shew it self 1. It purifieth the heart he is clean in heart and life 2 Cor. 7. 1. Acts 26. 9. 18. 2. Overcomes our spiritual enemies the world This is the victory whereby we overcome the world viz our Faith John 5. 4. Satan 1 Iohn 2. 18. 5. 18. Gal. 5. 6. 3. It works by love Ephes. 1. 15. Fourthly True faith is ever growing a true faith may be weak but all living things grow though one do not perceive it Do you trust God now the better for the many experiences you have of him Art thou sensible of thy doubting and unbelief Motives to perswade men to believe Consider 1. Who offers Christ God how will he take it if he be refused 2. The gift the greatnesse of the good offered in the Gospel Heb. 2. 2 3. 1 Tim. 1. 13. 3. The excellencies of faith but that I have shewed before 4. The hainousnesse of infidelity 1 Iohn 5. 10. a sin both against the Law and Gospel The first Commandment commands us to believe what ever God shall reveal it is the condemnation with a witnesse Iohn 3. 2. it exposeth us to the temptations of Satan Heb. 3. 12. 2. To the fearful judgements of God Iohn 3. ul● to his displeasure Prov. 15. 8. Heb. 11. 7. to eternal wrath Iohn 3. 17. Mark 16. 16. 3. It makes all the Ordinances of God ineffectual the Word Heb. 3. 2. afflictions the Sacrament 1 Cor. 11. 29. 5. The willingnesse of God to receive a poor sinner 1. God alone provided the medicine that should cure us Rom. 3. 24. 2. He wrote it in the Gospel this is a true saying 3. Propounds Christ hath set him forth 4. Invites sinners Matth. 11. 1 Cor. 5. 20. He commands you to believe 1 Ioh. 3. 23. threatens if you refuse Iohn 3. ult 6.
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
in us and the full accomplishment of happiness in the Kingdom of Heaven One Reverend Divine now with God saith The duties required more particularly may be referred to two heads Some respect the Essence and Nature of God some the Authority and Dominion of God even as Subjects owe some things to their Prince in regard of his Person some things in regard of his Power of Government so do we the Creatures to our King and Creator The former may fitly be tearmed duties of dependance because they do naturally flow from that total dependance upon God the first being which must needs be found in all secondary beings and because they be certain necessary acknowledgements of our such dependance The latter may be termed Duties of Conformity because in and by them we do conform our selves unto the Will and Authority of God and by both become perfectly subject unto him Duties of dependance in general are those by which we exercise all the powers of our souls upon God principally and above all other things so far as his excellent Nature is fit to be their object for seeing He is the most excellent of all things and doth please to make known unto us his excellencies we should labour to be wholly united to him that is so excellent Duties of Conformity in general are all those by which we order the powers of our souls toward other things according to his good will and pleasure made manifest unto us Our duty concerning God is to know him and his will to believe in him according to his Promises to remember him alwaies and to esteem him above all things to trust wholly upon him to love desire fear and delight in him above all other things and with all our hearts Our duty in respect of good things Spiritual and Temporal is to exercise our wils affections thoughts speeches much more on Spiritual good things then Temporal and to keep them very moderate towards earthly benefits Our duty concerning sin is to hate it fly from it grieve for it be ashamed of it and angry with it more then any natural evil thing The particular duties here required are 1. Perfect knowledge of God in Christ which is a conceiving and apprehending of him to be such a one as he hath revealed himself in his Word and Works specially in the Covenant of Grace and that for measure and degree fully We cannot comprehend God as he is in himself but as he hath manifested himself we ought to know him for knowledge is the guide of the affections the beginning of grace the ground of Worship When we know God as he hath manifested himself then do we come to believe desire fear and love him and trust in him as he requireth We cannot have God our God till we come to know him in Christ therefore it is promised to all the godly in the new Covenant they shall all know me 2. Acknowledgement which is an effectual and affectionate perswasion of the heart not onely that God is but that he is the onely Lord Eternal and Almighty most Wise most Holy most Righteous most Gracious and Merciful most Faithful and True the Creator Governour and Preserver of all things the Supreme Soveraign Judge of all the world and peculiarly the God and Saviour of his people that he hath chosen unto himself and with whom he hath entred Covenant of his free mercy in Jesus Christ. 3. Estimation which is a most high prizing of God according to his Worth and Dignity as the chief Good and our onely all-sufficient portion The estimation we have of any thing must be correspondent to the goodness of it But God is good above measure and our estimation of him should know no measure 4. Faith which is a lively motion of the heart whereby the soul doth invincibly cleave and stick unto God in Christ and unto the word of his Covenant as containing the chief good of man To believe is not barely to assent to the thing which is propounded to be believed for the authority of the speakers who cannot lie as the assenter is perswaded but to adhere to the Word of Truth as certain good and sweet both simply and in comparison Two things are required in Faith Something true and good to be believed and a firm certain assent and adherence to it Thus we are commanded to believe in God through Jesus Christ neither doth Faith respect the Promises Narrations and Prophecies of the Word onely but the Commandments and Threatnings also Psal. 119. 66. 2 Chron. 34. 19 21 27. Ioh. 3. 5. By Faith we possess the Lord as our own and hold fast unto him in whom all help and comfort is to be found 5. Confidence or Affiance whereby we trust lean rely or stay upon the Grace of God in Christ Jesus with assured security in the way of his Commandments for pardon of sin deliverance from all evil and the supply of all good Temporal and Spiritual according to his faithful and never-failing promise This is ever joyned with the true knowledge of God and in nature is of great affinity or rather all one with justifying Faith Who so reposeth all his confidence in God he taketh him in so doing for his God We are to trust in God for the giving and maintaining of all our good both temporal and eternal leaning on him for all defence and deliverance from evils spiritual yea and corporal casting all our care on him having no confidence in the flesh no duty is more frequently pressed in Scripture then this of confidence in God Hope in God is an inseparable companion of Trust which is an assured quiet expectation of what good promised is not yet accomplished grounded upon the free and undeserved kindness and grace of the Lord in Christ Jesus Psal. 119. 166. Heb. 11. 1. Lam. 3. 24. Rom. 15. 4. Hope is commanded in many passages of Scripture commended by many promises Psal. 27. 14. 31. 14. 34. 8. Lam. 3. 26. Psal. 37. 7. 131. 3. 130. 5. Mic. 7. 7. Isa. 8. 17. Psal. 119. 43. Isa. 30. 18. Psal. 146. 5. 40. 4. 84. 12. Isa. 6. 8. Psal. 147. 11. Psal. 33. 18 19. Psal. 31. 24. 33. 20. Psal. 35. 21. 37. 9. 34. Psal. 9. 18. Isa. 49. 23. 40. 31. 6. Love of God in Christ which is a spiritual motion in the reasonable part presupposing Knowledge and Affiance whereby the soul goeth forth to embrace and possess God as the chief Good and with most pure earnest and constant affection to maintain communion with him Love is an affection of union it knits to the thing beloved and would not want the possession of it Love we see makes man and woman one and so doth couple us to God The body is carried by weight into his proper place so is the soul by love which is the weight of the soul unto its proper object Many promises are made to them that love
special a blessing could have endured to see Gods holy Altar by any of his Priests polluted with so fearfull an abomination and so expressely forbidden yet he procured himself and his daughter great reproach in that he was fain to consecrate his only daughter to God as a perpetual Nazaritesse Whence followed at least in the opinion of those times a necessity of remaining a Virgin and child lesse so that his example must warn us before vowing to consider distinctly and seriously what we vow Thus we have shewed you what diligence is required before the worship In the worship is required as great diligence Rom. 12. 11. First With our understanding and thoughts to make them attentive that we may heed what we do and apply our thoughts and conceits alone that way that so there may be an agreement betwixt body and minde Thus in praying we must mark what it is that we ask confesse or give thanks for so that we understand our selves and be able to approve that we have asked nothing but what we might In hearing we must listen and attend that we may carry away the Word and let it not leak we must binde our mindes to give heedful attention according to that Let him that hath an ear hear what the Spirit saith Hear O Israel saith Moses often Hear O children saith David So in the Sacraments we must mark each action and busie our mindes in observing the thing signified as well at our eyes in the thing that is outward When we see the bread consider of Christs presence and power to nourish when we see the wine of his presence and power to comfort so in the other actions when we see the breaking of the bread think of his death when we see the giving consider of Gods offering him and so in every action we must serve the Lord with our whole heart whereof one part is this observing attending marking the action Secondly We must bring our affections to be so moved as the nature of the exercises requireth which is that which is commended in the good Iosiah his heart melted in hearing threatnings and the Thessalonians received the Gospel with joy in prayer we must be fervent and in the Sacrament we must bring our hearts to a feeling sorrow for Christs death and our sins and to a joyful remembrance of the great work of our redemption so it must be a sweet mixture of joy and sorrow so must we worship God with our whole heart for then we worship him with our whole heart when our minde and affections are taken up with the matter of his worship as hath been said so in prayer David cried unto God was earnest about his requests This earnestnesse of affection is a very necessary thing to make the worship of God we perform acceptable and this is diligence in the worship There must also be diligence after the worship in a care to make good use of it and to observe our growth by it and to perceive what proceedings we make in godlinesse by all the services we perform seeing all that we do tends to this end the Sacrament Word Prayer should nourish grace all to confirm and strengthen the grace of the inward man All duties to God must be done with all the faculties of the inward man 2. With the intention of all the faculties The demeanour of the body lies in this that it is a fit instrument to serve the soul. The Turks worship Mahomet more reverently then Christians the true God a vain carriage of the body is an evident argument of a vain minde 2. The soul should be active the whole inward man the understanding should be ready to apprehend truth the will to choose it the memory to retain it the conscience to submit unto it Isa. 58. 5. 1 Cor. 14. 15. Reasons why the inward man must be active in worship 1. God will be worshipt according to his nature Iohn 4. 24. 2. The soul is the man the main of sinne lies in the soul Mic. 6. 7. 3. The soul only is the seat of grace Ephes. 3. 17. 4. The end of all Christian duty is communion with God he can have no communion with the body 5. In this doth the glory of all a Christians duties consist Mark 13. 33. Revel 5. 8. 6. This onely makes the duty fruitful the fruit of the duty lies in the activity of it After the duties done there should be 1. An impression of Gods holinesse upon us Exod. 34. 29. Acts 4. 13. a savour of the duties we have done 2. When we have found out God in a duty we should ingage our hearts to that duty ever after Psal. 116. 2. and it should encourage us in all the services God requires Gen. 29. 1. 3. We should be very thankful to God for every good motion thought new discovery 1 Chron. 29. 13. The special duties after the Word Prayer and a Vow are these After the Word to call our selves to account what we remember and so to search if it be true and ponder upon it our selves with a chewing of the cud and the life of hearing depends on it This is digesting the Word this is causing it to take root this is ingraffing it in the heart and if we have convenient means of company we ought to conferre of it and advise together about it that one may help another so did the Bereans searching the Scriptures after Pauls speaking the Gospel to them The next for prayer is as David saith to wait on God to look for and continue though we be defer'd to look for what we have begged and to observe how it is granted that accordingly we may be thankfull or humbled and increase our earnestnesse When a man prefers a Petition to the King he gives his attendance to see what successe so must we to God Our eyes must behold him as the eyes of the handmaids the Mistresse so that we may be able to see whether he be angry against our prayers or condescend to them and if he do seem angry yet we may not faint but follow him still if we have praid against a temptation we must look for power against it and if we feel power rejoyce in God that gave it if not pray again and still wait renewing our supplication so if we have desired any grace or benefit either temporal or spiritual according to Gods Word we must not make haste or be heedlesse but even wait and attend his leisure as one that is infinitely better and wiser then our selves Next for vows the uses must be a special care of our vow to fulfill it for the word is expresse Thou shalt pay thy vows and thou shalt not go back if the vow be of things lawful else we must not stand to it but with great repentance for the vow perform Gods Commandment rather then our vow Thus you have heard of truth and diligence there are required two things more Faith which is a
believing of Gods truth shew'd in the exercise we perform according to the nature of it Heb. 11. 4. In praying we must believe that God can and will grant our requests asking with boldnesse and assurance When you pray believe saith our Saviour When we reade the Word and hear it we must believe that each thing is true and shall accordingly be performed both predictions promises threats in the like manner we must believe that God will blesse those his Ordinances to our spiritual good and in general we must assure our selves that God will accept us in his Ordinances and bless them to us for our good Truth aims at the right end diligence labours so to do them that we may not misse that end Faith assures us that our diligence shall be prosperous and so these three things hang together and fitly one for the help of another If the Word be not mixed with Faith if Prayer Sacraments every worship be not so mixed then it will not be profitable unto us for the wavering minded shall receive no good The last point is reverence Levit. 26. 2. 10. 3. which will follow doubtlesse upon the former indeed this should have been named first We must worship the Lord with reverence saith David in Psal. 2. and he cals even upon Kings and Princes to have this affection saying Serve the Lord with fear A true apprehension of Gods greatnesse and our own basenesse will work fear This Reverence is double First Inward of the heart which is a framing our selves to a special apprehension of Gods goodnesse and greatnesse over us Hos. 3. 5. Deut. 7. 21. Isa. 40. 17. a mixt working of love and fear love to God and desire to please him fear lest we should displease For so reverence seems to be a compound affection of these three We are still in Gods presence and therefore should walk in fear of him continually but we come near unto him even before him if we addresse our selves to religious services Psal. 100. 2. wherefore there ought to be a fresh renewing and augmenting of our reverence in such cases Secondly The body must also be reverent before God and therefore come and worship before the Lord and bow down and kneel all worship is termed bowing In all services the outward man must be composed in a more stayed quiet and still manner then in any other exercise if we kneel it must be reverent if we stand that must be reverent if we sit that must be reverent and what usual outward testifications of submission we would practise before our betters in worldly respects we must much more practise before God when we draw near to worship him Thus much for the performing of true worship for matter in regard of object parts for manner also in practising diligence sincerity faith and reverence Concerning performance of Gods solemn worship we have spoken Now God would that his worship should also be preserved and upheld for continuance of time generation after generation and that in purity and credit To this purpose two things are necessary Church-maintenance and Church government For without these two things allowance of means for their livelihood that attend any work and a due observation of good order by them that are imployed any way in that work no work or service can have an honourable and respective continuance in the world For the first viz. maintenance the Apostle saith Let him that is taught make him that teacheth him partaker of all his goods and it is Gods will that those should live of the Gospel which preach the Gospel The Ministers maintenance should be competent honourable certain For the second Discipline or Government it concerns 1. The Ministers 2. The People For the Ministers the Government is to provide fit men for fit offices 2. To censure those which be disordered in the Ministery 3. To depose those which be of scandalous life and erroneous doctrine For the People the Discipline is either private or publick The private consists in 1. Admonition 2. Complaint 3. Withdrawing themselves 4. Acknowledging their offences Publick it is 1. Admonition 2. Excommunication 3. Receiving in again the penitent So much for those duties which are commanded in this second Commandment Now we will speak of the things forbidden therein which are of two sorts Sins of Omission and sins of Commission The sins of Omission are in regard of the performance of Gods worship and in regard of preserving and continuing it for performing either in regard of the matter o● manner and for both either total or partial The total omission for matter is when we do even altogether neglect the services commanded of God in his Word or at least the most of them and that with a kinde of contemning them as fruitlesse and unnecessary as when men absent themselves from the Congregation and care not at all or not usually to come to the hearing of the Word or receiving of the Sacraments or when they never reade pray meditate or use any good conference thinking these things needlesse which is the sinne of prophanenesse condemned by the Apostle when he saith Heb. 12. 6. Let there be no prophane person amongst you as Esau. Partial omission for the matter is when one doth these sometimes and sometimes omits them by starts and sits performing Gods worship and then leaving them again either all of them or some of them which is a degree and disposition toward prophanenesse as those who would fast for a day and then after cared no more for Gods service Total omission for the manner is when men do wholly neglect that sincerity faith reverence and diligence which is required making no preparation at all giving no attention nor caring at all to have their affections moved nor at all observing the fruit and benefit they reap by Gods Ordinances so that they perform the thing it self they little or nothing regard in what fashion and so become hypocritical or formal servants of God either wholly moved by custom and example or at least by a kinde of superstitious inclination and so either aiming at credit and pleasing of men onely or else misaiming at better things hoping by the thing done in some form though without all power and zeal to please God this formal hypocritical and irreverent worship is to be taxed when men do the things but alone in outward fashion and carelesly and for custom and mans sake not aiming at the true end● which God hath appointed These are omissions for the performance of Gods worship there is a fault also in omitting the preservation thereof First By niggardice in not cheerfully allowing of things necessary to uphold the worship of God and his Ministers tendering such allowance pinchingly and grudgingly if at all Secondly By carelesnesse in Church-Discipline when there is not due care for the choosing of good Ministers or rejecting of evil viz. when offenders are winked at not admonished not excommunicated or in private when men
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
Regeneration ibid. How the Scripture is to be read l. 1. p. 23 24 Reason Reason the uses of it in matters of Religion l. 9. p. 87 Rebaptizing condemned l. 8. p. 676 Rebellion against God and man l. 4. p. 373 374 Recovery What mans Recovery is l. 5. p. 389. to 392 Redeemer Redeemer Christ how l. 5. p. 408 409 Redemption what l. 5. p. 414 Religion Three characters of the true Religion l. 7. p. 5 Remora able to stay the greatest Ship under sail l. 3. p. 262 Repent How God is said to Repent and how not l. 2. p. 151 Repentance what in us l. 8. p. 649 650 Reproach Christ reproached for our sakes l. 5. p. 427 428 Reprobation Reprobation what it signifies and what it is l. 2. p. 222 The word taken three wayes and five evil consequences of it ibid. Resurrection Christ Rose from the dead and why l. 5. p. 438 to 441 Our Resurrection l. 10. p. 857 858 Revelation The manner of Gods Revealing his will threefold l. 1. p. 5 The Book of Revelation why so called l. 1. p. 52 It is canonical l. 1. p. 51 52 Difficult ibid. The best Interpreters of it l. 1. p. 53 Revenge l. 4. p. 374 375 376 Reverence Reverenco l. 7. p. 577 578 In worship l. 9. p 779 780 Righteousnesse Whether original Righteousnesse was natural to Adam l. 3. p. 291 The Properties of original Righteousnes l. 2. p. 292 Christs Righteousnesse is ours l. 7. p. 522 523 Marks to try whether we have it and means to get it ibid. Rivers Rivers Their original use and motion l. 3. p. 251 252 The River Nilus l. 3. p. 246. 252 Romans Romans an excellent Epistle l. 1. p. 47 Who best expound it ib. Rule The properties of a Rule l. 1 p. 82 83 The Scripture is the Rule of faith and life ibid. 84 Ruth Ruth by whom written l. 1. p. 32 The best Expositors of it ibid. S Sacraments SAcraments their name and nature l. 8. p. 655 656 The Church hath ever had Sacraments l. 8. p. 656 The use of Sacraments and their parts l. 8. p. 656 657 The necessity and efficacy of the Sacraments l. 8. p. 657 658 How the Sacraments of the Jewish Church and ours agree and how they differ l. 8. p. 659 660 The Sacraments of the New Testament only two l. 8. p. 660 Sacraments are to be dispensed only by a Minister l. 8. p. 661 The use of the Sacraments of the New Testament ibid. Sadduce● confuted l. 3. p. 279. 289 Samuel The Authors of the two books of Samuel and the best Expositors of them l. 1. p. 33 Sanctification Sanctification what l. 7. p. 530 53● Its parts and properties l. 7. p. 532 Why all godly men must be pure and holy l. 7. p. 532 The excellency of Sanctification l. 7. p. 533 It is imperfect here and why l. 7. p. 533 534 Evidences of Sanctification and means to get it l. 7. p. 534 The Sanctification of the whole man soul and body l. 7. p. 540 541 Of the minde l. 7. p. 541 Of the will l. 7. p. 542 543 Of the conscience l. 7. p. 544 545 Of the memory l. 7. p. 546 Of the affections l. 7. p. 546 to 579 Of the sensitive appetite l. 7 p. 579 580 Of mans body and all the external actions l. 7. p. 580 to 584 Satisfaction Christ satisfied for us l. 5. p. 416 417 It was convenient Christ should satisfie for us l. 5. p. 417 418 The difference between merit and Satisfaction ibid. Saviour Christ is our Saviour and how l. 5. p. 405 406 Scandal l. 4. p. 376 Schism l. 4. p. 376 377 Schoolmen taxed l. 1. p. 25 Scientia media an errour l. 3 p. 120. m Scripture It is the rule of Divinity l. 1. p. 5 Three general characters to know any word to be the word of God ibid. God revealed himself divers wayes to the Fathers ibid. The divers Epithetes of the Scripture l. 1. p. 5 6 Why called the word of God l. 1. p. 5. m Why the Scripture ib. The Divine Authority of the Scriptures proved by many reasons l. 1. p 6. to 16 A description of the Scripture l. 1. p. 7 The Scripture is not repugnant to humane reason and policy l. 1. p. 17 It is for it self worthy to be believed and known to be of God by it self ib. It hath its Authority from it self not the Church l. 1. p. 17 18 It is to be read by the common people l. 1. p. 20 21 How it is to be read l. 1. p. 22 23 24 Many contemn and unreverently handle the Scripture l. 1. p. 25 26 27 The Canonical Books of Scripture l. 1. p. 28 Of the Old and New Testament l. 1. p. 30. to 54 What parts of Scripture have been questioned l. 1. p. 43 The Authentical Edition of Scripture l. 1. p. 58. to 61 Whether any books of the Scripture be lost l. 1. p. 72 73 Whether the Scriptures of the Old Testament had points from the beginning l. 1. p. 73 74 The end of the Scripture l. 1. p. 80 The Properties of the Scripture its Divine Authority truth it is the rule of faith and life necessity purity perfection perspicuity l. 1. p. 81 to 105 The interpretation of the Scripture 1. It s divers senses 2. To whom belongs the chief authority to expound Scripture 3. The means which must be used in the Interp●e●ation of it l. 1. p. 105. to 121 Sea Sea a great work of God the making of it l. 3. p. 249 252 253 Why called m●re ib. m. Divers Questions about it answered l. 3. p. 249 250 251 Sedition l. 4. p. 377 378 379 Self love l. 4. p. 379 Self-denial l. 7. p. 600 Self seeking l. 4. p. 379 380 Septuagint Septuagint The Greek Translation of the Old Testament l. 1. p. 62 Is not authentical l. 1. p. 75 76 Serpents Serpents a three-fold profit redounds to us from them l. 3. p. 267 268 Why Satan is called the old Serpent l. 4. p. 304 Servants Two kindes of them three things commend a Servant l. 9. p. 843 844 Severity l. 7. p. 588 589 Ship the materials of it wonderful l. 3. p. 254 255 Signs several sorts of them l. 8. p. 655 656 Simple God is most Simple l. 2. p. 138 139 Sincerity l. 7. p. 602 Singing of Psalms a duty and how to be performed l. 8. p. 609 610 Sinne. Sin what it is l. 4. p. 307 Divided into original and actual ibid. l. 4. p. 315 That there is original sin its names and what it is l. 4. p. 308 309 310 The subject of it l. 4. p. 310 It is not the substance of a man l. 4. p. 310 311 Many hereticks extenuate it ib. All equally guilty of original sinne l. 4. p. 312 313 How it is propagated l. 4 p. 313 314 We are all guilty of Adams sin l. 4. p. 306 307 What actual sin is l. 4 p.
speak falshood out of error and mistake I am weak if wilfully I am wicked if I keep not promise it is either because I cannot and then I am weak or will not then I am wicked therefore God cannot possibly lye 1 Kings 22. 23. Ezek. 14 9. Consectaries from Gods truth Ephes. 4. 25. Heb. 10. 23. We should observe how Gods truth is fulfilled Gen. 32. 10. Luke 1. 70. 1. This heightens gratitude Psal. 108. 4. 56. 10. 2. It strengthens faith Psal 18. 30. 116. 1 2. For this end 1. We should get an interest in Christ 2 Cor. 1. 20. the promises are the Churches dowry as she is Christs Spouse 2. Observe all providences and compare them with promises Col. 4. 2. especially observe the fulfilling the promises 1. When God makes good the letter of them Iosh. 23. 19. 1 Kings 8. 56. 2. When you have pleaded them in prayer Psal. 119. 49. 34. 6. 1 All the saints are heirs of all the promises yet many of the temporal promises shall not be fulfilled unto them in this life as the ungodly are heirs of wrath and subject to the curses yet they are not all accomplished on them here God bestows the promises in a kinde of prerogative way 2. God will exercise the patience of the Saints in not accomplishing many temporal promises Patience is shewed in waiting as well as in suffering 3. Those to whom God denies temporal promises in this life he will make them amends to all eternity they shall be gainers not onely by their services and sufferings but deprivements Consectaries from Gods faithfulnesse Heb. 2. 15. 3. 5. What faithfulnesse is Nahum 1. 3. Isa. 30. 18. a Patientia est qua ita iram suam modoratur Deus erga creaturas ut vel poenas disserat vel iram uno momento non essundat Wendelinus b God is sensible of the wrong offered to him and provoked to wrath thereby 2 Pet. 3. 13. he not onely restrains his anger but gives them time to repent Master Bolton saith If but any tender-hearted man should sit one hour in the Throne of God Almighty and look down upon the earth as God doth continually and see what abominations are done in that hour he would undoubtedly in the next set all the world on ●ire Amos 9. 2 3. When man begins through Gods forbearance to have high Atheistical thoughts about him Psal. 50. 20. and to strengthen himself in a way of sinning Eccles. 8. 11. and to grow to that height as to mock at his judgements Isa. 43. 14. 2 Pet. 3. 2 3. Matth. 26. 39. This is in effect the same with patience Num. 14. 18. Nehem. 9. 17. 2 Pet. 3. 9 15 20. Longanimity is toward them of whom we can patience toward them of whom we cannot be revenged Nisi Deus expectaret impium non inveniret quem glorificaret pium Aug. Consectaries from Gods patience and long-suffering * Prov. 14. 29. Posse nolle nobile The discretion of a man deferreth his anger and his glory is to passe by an offence saith Solomon What patience is It is a grace of the sanctifying Spirit of God whereby the soul doth freely submit to the will of God in bearing its own burthen without inordinate for row or fretting discontent Patience is 1. Commanded Luke 1. 19. Iames 5. 7. 2. It is commended to us by special examples 1. Of Christ Heb. 12. 2. Rev. 1. 9. 2. Of all the Saints 1 Pet. 2. 20 21. Iames 5. 10. Periissem nisi periissem There is a twofold holiness 1. Original absolute and essential in God which is the incommunicable eminency of the divine Majesty exalted above all and divided from all other eminences whatsoever For that which a man taketh to be and makes an account of as his God whether it be such indeed or by him fu●cied onely he ascribes unto it in so doing a condition of eminency above and distinct from all other eminencies whatsoever that is of Holinesse Psal. 49. 18. Isa. 17. 7. Habak 1. 12. 2. Derived or relative in the things which are his properly called Sacra holy things Mede on Matth. 6. 9. There is a threefold holinesse 1. Essential the holinesse of God all one with God himself Exod. 15. 11. 2. Habitual an inherent holinesse such as it the holinesse of righteous men so Abraham Iob David and all the Patriarchs are called Saints and holy men this the Greeks call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Latines Sanctimonia 3. Relative a peculiar relation which a thing hath unto God in regard of propriety of possession or speciality of presence That which is holy after this manner the Greeks call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Latines Sacrum for persons things times Mr. Mede on Deut. 3. 8. Our holinesse is terminated in him Exod. ●● 26. Why God must be holy God hath manifested his holinesse 1. In his word his precepts 2. By instituting the Sabbath to be kept holy Isa. 58. 3. 3. By causing a holy Tabernacle and Temple to be erected wherein were all holy thing 4. By instituting holy Priests 5. By inflicting his judgements on those which prophane holy things 2 Sam. 6. 7. and 6. 19 20. In his works 1. Of creation Acts 17. 28. Eccles. 7. ult 2. Of providence Psal. 45. 17. 103. 1. unusquisque operatur ut est Mr Scudder Holinesse is as it were the Character of Christ Jesus the Image of God the beauty the strength the riches the life the soul of the soul and of the whole man It is a very beam of the Divine light called therefore by the Apostle The Divine Nature * Qua de re Iepida fabula acci●isse narratur in concilio Tridentino de quodam Episcopo quem offendit ille Pap● titulus propterea Nam si Deus inquicbat tantum sanctus quomodo cjus vic●●i●us dici potest sanctissimus Adut magnum periculum ●ade causa Drusius in 15. num c. 64. Consectaries from Gods Holinesse See Eccles. 12. 1. Psal. 119. 9. It is a great honor to seek the Lord betimes M●ason was an old disciple See Rom. 16. 17. This of all Attributes is the most over-awing to a sinful creature We should especially think of the holinesse of God when we worship him Iohn 17. 11 22. Psalm 3. because then we draw nigh to God Levit. 10. 3. and his end in ordering ordinances is that we might be partakers of his holinesse If we may judge of the privation by the habits perfection how great an evil must sin be when God is so great a good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q●●st 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l●y the E●ym●logists holy is as much as not earthly Holinesse is a separation both from sinne and the world The will of God is the rule of holinesse as his nature is the patern of it Sec Act 13. 22. This Attribute of kindenesse is the same with goodnesse before spoken of viz Communicative goodnesse Isa. 48. 11. 42. 8. Exod. 20. 4.
● 7 8 9 10 11. * Rescript ad ●●spons G●e●inch c. 1● Ut mea non placent nisi m●cum sic tua non satiant nisi ●ecum Bern. The promises are Objectum q●o Christ Objectum quod that which faith ultimately closeth with and is terminated Gods word is the objectum adaequatum of our faith but we are justified and saved by beleeving in Christ therefore in the Scripture justifying faith is ordinarily called faith in Christ. Act. 20. 12. 21. 26. 18. Gal. 3. 26. and sometimes the faith of Christ Rom. 3. 22. Gal. 2. 16 20. 3. 22. Phil. 3. 9. and sometimes his knowledge B. Down of Justification l. 6. c. 4. See also c. 6. The proper object of justifying faith is God in Christ 2 Cor. 5. 19. or the promise of Gods mercy to us in Christ Jesus This faith is therefore expressed to be faith in Christs name Act. 2. 16. Faith in his bloud Rom. 3. 25. Abbot against Bishop Fidei objectum primarum omnes divinae veritates revelatae 2. Mediatum Christus ut Mediator 3. Ultimatum ens incomplexum inquiunt ●cholastici * On Psal. 51. 6. Lect. 83. Knowledge and belief are often joyned Job 19. 25. John 17. 8. 2 Cor 5. 2 Tim. 1. 12. 1 John 4. 16. * De Iustif. cap. 7. Pontisicii per sidem implicitam intelligunt cam sidem quâ Laici ignota nondum intellecta sidei dogmata credunt implicitè in illo general● quòd vera sint omnia quae Romana Ecclesia credit pro veris amplectitur quae quidem sides non est divina sed humana id est non nititur Dei sed hominum testimonio Baron Philos. Thcol. Ancil exercit 3. Art 5. Vide plura ibid. In which sense implicite faith cannot be defended although B. Mountague Appar 1. saith that is a p●●fi●able as well as vulgar distinction of Fides explicita and implicita and that it is not always a servile opinion or Babylonish bondage because there are in faith and things belonging to saith as in other Sciences certain things more abst●use Quandoque sides vocatur implicita ab imperfecta apprehensione rerum quasi implicitarum Nam quem admodum quod complicatum ac con●elutum est ex toto nec conspicitur nec attingitur sic mysteria pleraque sidei Christianae 2. Vocatur quandoque impropriè implicita sides ipsa promptitudo seu generalis animi praeparatio ad sidem adhibendam verbo Dei simul ac dogma quodeunque sub formali rationc nobis innot●scet Atque hoc sensu quilibet Christianus implicitè dicitur credere quicquid in Scripturis Deus revelavit 3. Illa sides à Papist i● implicita vocari solet Laicis summo opere commendari quae in cognitione Praelatorum involvitur populo interi● dogmata illa quae sic credi dicuntur omnino neseientc Episc. Dav. Determ 1. Quaest. 29. The lowest act of faith is an assent a yeelding in thy soul to the word of God an agreement to the truth of it Exod. 14. 31. Some say the resolution of an humbled sinner to cast himself on Christ is the lowest degree of saith which is discovered by desires pursuit and rejoycing in future hope It is a Question among Divines Wh●● is the subject of saith By the heart a man beleeveth Act. 8. 37. See 12. 13. there saith is seated where the acts of it are exercised therefore the whole soul is the subject of it but chiefly the will It is seated both in the understanding and the will because it is a voluntary assent To believe is an act of the understanding as it is an assent of the will as it is voluntary Down of Justificat l. 6. c. 5. Vide Baron Philos. Theol. Ancil exercit 3. Art 21. Icy done nous remarquons cn la soy deux principales parties dont la premicre est la cognoissan●c l'autre l'apprehension l'application particuliere ou la siance qui tesmoignent assez que ceste excellente vertu a son siege c● l'entendement en la volontè en tout l'homme nouveau regenere sanctifie par une grace speciale sur nature elle de l'●sprit de Dieu qui tout entier recoit l'abondance des benefices offer●s desployez en Iesus Christ. Mais premicrement en son entendement pour les cognoistre comme veritables puis en sa volontè pour se les appliquer comme salutaires bons Motmet Sermon 2. sur 19. Iob 25. Vide Examen epist. expostulat Amyrald ad Rivet per Spanhem Est sides habitus quidam mixtus neque omninò intellectu neque omninò voluntate sed corde id est utroque defini●nd●s Et certè quem ad modum corde ad justitiam creditur Rom. 10. 10. ita quoque intellectus ipse sidei corde consistit Matth. 13 15. Cordis illuminatione persicitur 2 Cor. 4. 6. Cordis plerophoria s●ncitur Col. 2. 2. Abbot ●n Thom● Diat de Incis Iust if Grat. cap. 25. Fidei subjectum duplex est in quo cui subjectum sidei in quo est anima humana ac in ca principales facultates intellectus ac voluntas subjectam cui est Homo Homo solus Mali Angeli illius non sunt ●●paces Jud. 6. Sancti ea non egent Matth. 18. 10. Dr Benefield de side salvisica Fiducia est particularis quidem applicativus assensus pro objecto habens primò Evangelicas promissiones Secundò Internum testimonium sancti Spiritus Nam per siduciam assentimur Doctrinae Evangelij testimonio Spiritus Dei unà testantis cum nostro Spiritu nos esse filios Dei atque ita nobis ipsis applicamus Evangelicas promissiones certò statuentes judicantes nos esse filios Dei proinde illas promissiones non solùm aliis credentibus sed nobis etiam in particulari esse factas Baron Philos. Theol. Ancil exercit 3. Art 19. Mr Gatak against Saltmarsh Shadows without substance p. 56. The truth of any thing doth not depend on the greatnesse but quality of it a childe though never so weak hath the true nature of a man one drop of water is true water 2. If faith be weak it will bring forth weak effects little comfort yet Christ will have regard to it That faith is not assurance see M. Downs Treat of the true nature and definit of just faith p. 5. to 8. In a state of adherence the motive which acts the soul is obedience to God Isa. 50 10. in a state of assurance a sense of the love of God 1 Cor. 5. 12. 2. In a state of adherence one doth all to obtain mercy but in a state of assurance from thankfulnesse because one hath obtained mercy 3. In a state of adherence the motive is to obtain grace and communi●n with God therein of assurance further and constant communion John 14. 21. 1 John 4. 16. 4. In a state of adherence one doth perform the commands of God
perferre nequeant Exclamant gemitus edunt vincuntur enim dolore quia deest illis inspirata patientia Lactant. de Iustitia l. 5. Vide plura ibid. Pax itaque corporis est ordinata temperatura partium Pax animae irrationalis ordinata requies appetitionum Pax animae rationalis ordinata cognitionis actionisque consensio Pax corporis animae ordinata vita salus animantis Pax hominis mortalis est Dei immortalis ordinata in fide sub aeterna lege obedientia Pax hominum ordinata concordia Pax domus ordinata imperandi atque obediendi concordia cohabitantium Pax civitatis ordinata imperandi atque obediendi concordia civium Pax coelestis civitatis ordinatissima concordissima societas ●ruendi Deo invicem in Deo Pax omnium rerum tranquillitas ordinis August de civit Dei lib. 19. cap. 13. Vide Thes. Theol. Salmur part 1. De perseverantia fidei The sure mercies of David Isa. 55. 7. * Quae promissi● non potest esse conditio nata ut quidam excipiunt quia cond●tio esset nugatoria quasi diceret Dabo ut non recedatis si non recedatis ut perseveretis si perseveretis Rivet Disp. 11. de persev sanct Vide Croc. in Aug. confes Quaest. 4. c. 67. 2 Cor. 5. 14. Phil. 3. 7. We must deny our own natural wisdome in the things of God Prov. 3. 5. Christianity is a school sect of men that deny themselvs on religious reason See Luk. 24. 27 28 29. We should not only look to the setling of our particular assurance but also cast up our reckoning what religion may cost us Matth. 19. 21. Psal. 45. 10. Rom. 8. 3. 29. 15. 2 Cor. 8. 9. He denied himself for us in the joyes of heaven and in the glory of his Father See M. Hilders on Ps. 51. Lect. 74. M. Ball of the Cov. ch 11. D. Gouge on Ephes. 6. 14. One is said to please one when the chief cause which swayes him to a thing is the consideration of his will made known unto him that he would have it so It respects three several things 1. In reference to the act of any grace it implies truth opposite to hypocrisie prayer which proceeds not out of feigned lips truth in the inward parts Heb. 10. 22. Repentance Faith Love must be unfeigned 2. In reference to the object it takes it entirely thorowly without reservation loves God all in God his holinesse as well as his mercy hates all sinne and all in sinne Psal. 119. 6. 12. 7. 12. 8. 3. In respect of the motive or end singlenesse onenesse of heart Isa. 44. 20. Jam. 4. The comfort of all the Scriptures right to all the creatures benefit of all the Ordinances belongeth to the upright M. Harris The same boldnesse that innocency gives us before men sincerity will give us at the judgement of God * He is the same at all times when goodnesse is persecuted he is good when evil is in credit he is against it in all companies places he is the same in secret and publick because God is alwayes present and the same and so apprehended by the true hearted Revel 21. 3. See Mr Bridges Sermon entituled A vindication of Ordinances on Deut. 18. 15. D Hill on Eph. 4. 15. p. 18 19. M. Manton on Jam. 1. 19. pag. 153 154. M. Symonds Christian plea at the end of sight faith The Familists talk of living in God and upon God immediately they call Ordinances by way of scorn forms they are so if they be rested in but otherwise they are means of serving pleasing and obeying God M. Laurence his vindication of the Scriptures and Christian Ordinances See his Plea for the use of Gospel-ordinances In my first Book I have spoken of reading and meditating in the Word See Isa. 55. 20. Prov. 22. 17. Nehem. 8 3. We must hear the Word with faith Heb. 4. 2. that brings every truth to the soul with divine authority 1 Thes. 2. 13. Heb. 12. 25. and causeth the soul thence to receive it with assurance 1 Thess. 1. 5. and to submit to it See Job 5. ult Luk. 24. 15 30 Obedient hearing is made a sign of grace John 10. ●● See Joh. 8. 27. A Song or Psalm is a composition of words in strict numbers fit to be uttered in a tunable voice or with an instrument David made many of these The word Psalme is usually limited to signifie a holy Song Fuisse in usua apud Christianos ab ipso exordio nascentis E●clefiae ut in conventibus Ecclesiasticis Psalmodia primum locum haberet cognosci potest ex loco illo Apostoli 1 Cor. 14. 26. Item ex Tertulliano in libro de velandis virginibus extremo Bellarm. de bonis operibus lib. 1. cap. 14. That singing of Psalmes is a duty of the Gospel see Mr Cotton of Singing of Psalmes cap. 4. and M. Manton on Jam. 5. 13. and M. Fords Singing of Psalms a Christian Duty All the while the burnt-offering was in offering they bestowed themselves in singing and gladnesse as we sing a Psalm in the celebration of our Sacrament warrantably by this Mr Hildersam Heron. Singing of Hymns is by some counted an Ordinance that is any person of the Congregation exercising their own gifts should bring an Hymne and sing it in the Congregation all the rest being silent and giving audience M. Edw. See Dr Willet on Exod. 15. pag. 192. See 1 Chron. 15. 27 28. 17. 4 5. Baptisteria multae Ecclesiae retinent quaedam tollunt Organis p●eumaticis quaedam utuntur aliae non utuntur Nullae quod sciam ut Antichristianas Ceremonias damnant Crocius in August Confes. Quaest. 2. cap. 29. Hinc fracta illa Musica quae intelligentiam excludit abesse debet à sacris exercitiis pictatis saltem quae cum aliis habemus Ames Medul Theol. l. 2. c. 9. Hujusmodi Musica instrumenta magis animum movent ad delectationem quam per ea formetur interius bona dispositio In veteri autem Testamento usus erat talium instrumentorum tum quia populus erat magis durus carnalis Unde erat per hujusmodi instrumenta provocandus sicut per promissiones terrenas tum etiam quia hujusmodi instrumenta corporalia aliquid figurabant Aquin. 2a 2ae q 91. Art 2. ad 4 tum Musicae Organicae aec instrumentalis usus ita est permissus ac privatim inter Christianos indifferens ut multo satius sit publicè ●● eo abstinere quam eam introducere aut continuare quia majus subest periculum quam aedificatio Rivet in Cathol Orthodox Talis debet esse Cantus qui intelligentiam verborum non impediat sed potius juvet Proinde quo modo probari potest illa fracta clamosa fragesa Musica in Templis qua ita canitur ut nihil penitus intelligas aut percipias praet●r harmoniam Musicam Zanchius in Ephes. 5. 19. Minimè omnium
aeternitas intelligitur Rami Comment de Religione Christiana lib. 3. cap. 10. It is a witnessing of our faith and of our desire of the things prayed for it is as much as So it is or So be it This we have prayed for and this we heartily desire and most assuredly look for 1 King 1. 36. Mr Dod. Amen in the Creed is not only to assent to the truth of the Articles that Christ was crucisied died but to assure our selves by faith that all those benefits are ours and so in the Lords Prayer Dike Amen imports 1. An assent to all that hath been before mentioned Deut. 27. 15 c. 2. An earnest desire thereof Jer. 28. 6 7. 3. Faith in obtaining our desire 1 Cor. 14. 16. D. Gouge in his Catechism a Jer. 11. 5. b Rom. 1. 25. Liber quisque Psalmorum terminatur Amen ut Psal. 41. alibi hoc verbo crebrò in Evangelio utitur Christus quandoque in Ecclesia primitiva populus respondebat Amen post recitatas preces ut videre est 1 Cor. 14. idem valet ac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut LXX reddunt vel ut alii firmetur stabiliatur ab radice aman id est verax ac fidelis fuit Voss. de Orig Progres Idol l. 1. parte altera c. 8. Haec vocula Hebraica est est vel ass●verantis significantis firmum est vel optantis significans firmum esto ut Psal. 41. ult Piscat Optimè vim ejus explicat Jer. 28. 6. Amen fic saciat Dominus De Dieu in 1 Cor. 15. 14 Est adverbium affirmandi jurandiper ipsam veritatem videtur inde suam traxisse originem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est juro Joh. 16. 23. O ●eatos nos quorum causa Deus jurat O miscrrimos si nec juranti Domino credimus Tertul. li. de poenit Notat haec vo●● solenne illud juramentum quo milites certo ritu praescriptis verbis astringebantur Reipublicae Magistratui se omnia quae Imperator praeceperat strenuè facturos nec signa militaria deserturos Hinc phrasis obligare Sacramento Gerrh loc commun Specialissimè maximè propriè accipitur pro solenni actione divinitus instituta in qua per externum visibile signum applicatur obsignatur promissio Evangelii propria quo sensu duo tantùm N. T. numerantur Sacramenta Baptismus Coena Domini Id. ibid. Est Sacramentum sacrum visibile signum invisibilis gratiae Dei ad eam in nobis obsignandam à Deo institutum Maccov loc commun c. 77. Est divinae in nos gratiae testimonium externo signo consirmatum cum mutua nostra erga ipsum pietatis testificatione Calvin Institut l. 4. c. 14. Est sa●●rritus à Deo institutus promissioni gratiae in Christo factae adjunctus quo tanquam arrhabone testimonio fidelis quisque certus fit promissionem illam gratiae quae in verbo divino explicatur sibi particulatim ad salutem exhiberi ratificari applicari Mornayus de sacra Eucharistia l. 4. c. 1. Vox Sacramentum non occurrit in Scriptura quia est Latina Prophetae verò Apostoli Evangelistae scripserunt Hebraicè Graecè occurrunt tamen quaedam vocabula in duabus his linguis quae Latin●● voce Sacramenti translat● fuerunt quae saepius in versione vulgata generalissimè pro Graeco 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 accipitur vox autem Graca generaliter pro omni secreto minus generaliter pro secreto divino specialiori significatum pro secreto divino symbolis signis figurisque externis proposito ac repraesentato In hac significatione respondet ei vox latina Sacramentum quae deducta est à verbo sacrare à scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis Latinis à militia desumpt● suit in qua juramentum quo milites duci obstringebantur vocabatur Sacramentum Riveti Cathol Orthod Tractat. 3. Quaest. 2. There are three sorts of signs 1. Of Gods wrath such are prodigious events 2. Of his power such are miracles 3. Of his grace such are Sacraments D. Featleys Grand Sacril of Ch. of R. In what sense the Protestants hold the Sacraments to be exhibitive signs see M. Gillesp. Aar Rod blos l. 3 c. 12. p. 496. Veteres de Sacramentis ●loquuti sunt maxima cum reverentia eaque appellarunt horrenda tremenda mysteria River Instruct. Praepar ad coenam Domini ● ● Conditiones Sacramenti sunt tres 1. Ut fit signum institutum 2. Ut fit institutum ad signandum obfignandum gratiam 3. Ut habeat mandatum promissionem in sacris literis unde institutiones Apostolicae non sunt Sacramenta quia Sacramenta sunt ex institutione solius Dei ut apparet ex institutione Baptismi Coenae Domini * The Institution of it Luke 22. 19. Non minus fine Sacramentis salvatus est latro quam cum Sacramentis damnatus est Judas Notum illud Augustini Bernardi non privationem Sacramenti damnare sed contemptum Vossius in Thesibus Sacramenta simpliciter absolutè non sunt necessaria ad salutem tamen ratione infirmitatis nostrae fidei divinae institutionis quia Deus baptismum coe●●●● tanquam certa media instrumenta obsignandae suae gratiae admonendi nostri officii instituit necessarius est ●orunde● usus Snecanus loc commun de Sacramentalibus signis Qui semel à gratiae cognitione exciderunt praecipites ruunt nec ubi sistere possint inveniunt Atque hinc est quod Pontificii gratiam Sacra mentis aliis institutionibus alligatam somniant ita ut nec fide nec bono aliquo motu opus fit quandoquidem ex ipso ut loquuntur opere operato gratiam consequi possint Haec est gratia Pontificia Episc. Carlet consens Eccles. Cathol contra Trident. de gratia c. 4. Per barbarum hoc opus operatum merito illud sic voco quod vocem passivè accipiant quae apud illius linguae autores activè tantum sumitur intelligunt quod novae legis ut vocant Sacramenta in debita materia ac forma administrata produca●t gratiam in iis quibus administrantur tanquam ver● causae Non quemadmodum vetera quae non justificarunt hominem ex eorum opinione nifi quatenus causae morales meritoriae ficut jam credunt opera justificare haec vocant opus operantis Rivet in Catholico orthodoxo Tractat. ● Quest. 1. Tritum est inter Pontificio● Sacramenta veteris legis contulisse gratiam ex opere operantis hoc est ex fide devotione bono motu utentis nostra autem conferre gratiam ex opere operato id est ex ipsa Sacramentali actione quamvis fides nihil agat modò obex non ponatur Episc. Davenant Determinat Quaest. 23. Hoc figmentum de gratia ex opere operato collata fidem suo munere spoliat illis beneficium largitur quibus Deus supplicium minitatur Marc. 16. 16 1
contrary with grace Jer. 4. 14. Dan. 4. 27. Mat. 3. 9. * 1 Thess. 4. 10 1 John 3. 14. Mandatum novum dicitur quia excellentissimum quod nunquam antiquari debet Rivet Rom. 13. 10. See 1 John 4. 20. 3 17. Mat. 7. 12. Non est aliud peccatum aequè buic Sacramento adversum atque discordia Contrarium est enim nomini rei hujus Sacramenti nomen est communio res unitas cordium Luther de praeparatione cordis pro susciptenda sacra Eucharistia Ex convi●andi ritu in locis sacris 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christianorum traxerunt originem quarum non apud Apostolos solos sed patrum etiam cruditissimos crebra sit mentio Coena nostra de nomine rationem sui ostendit Vocatur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id quod dilectio penes Graecos est Tertul. Apolog. Dilher Elect lib. 1. cap. 12. Cùm ex charitate diligatur proximus propter Deum quanto aliquis magis diligat Deum tanto etiam magis ad proximum dilectionem ostendit nulla inimicitia impediente Sicut si aliquis multum diligeret aliquem hominem amore ipsius silios ejus amaret etiam inimicos sibi Aquin. 2a 2ae Q. 25. Art 8. Fuller Mountag Def. of tithes ag M. Selden c. 2. Lutherus quadam concione ait Eum ad coenam Domini optimè dispositum venire qui pessimè fuerit dispositus eum dignè manducare qui indignitatem suam agnoverit 2 Tim. 2. 1. Grace is an instinct put into the soul after union with Christ and with God by him The Familists say Grace is Christ himself working in us that there are no habits of grace we do not believe and repent but Christ in us there is a seed in a man 1 John 3. 9. Grace is called the new-creature the inward man the Spirit and grace are distinguished Gal. 5. 22. 2 Pet. 3 18. This duty suits with our present state we are in a state of progresse and edifying 1 Thess. 4. 1. Prov. 4. 18 * There are four helps to grow in grace by coming to the Sacrament 1. Be sure you bring truth of grace with you God will spie you out if you want the wedding garment 2. Act your graces your faith repentance love to God thankfulnesse 3. Look upon Christ sacramentally ●ye him in the elements see him there crucified before thee that thoumaist receive out of his fulnesse 4. Urge God with that promise Hos. 4. 5. pray him to let the dew of his grace fall on thy heart Aquinas part 3 Qu. 80. Art 8. resolves this Question Utrum cibus vel potus praeassumptus impediat sumptionem hu jus Sacramenti Here is a real though a spiritual presence of Christ. Sacramental 1. Love Cant. 1. 4. call to minde the highest act of Christs love in dying for us when enemies 2. Sorrow in considering how our sins wound Christ. Hope long for sweet communion with Christ in heaven the Supper doth not only sea● comfort but glory There is a union of mysteries The Elements specially represent his humane nature but the Sacrament gives us a right to his whole person Act. 20. 28. Look on him as a compleat Saviour Isa. 44. 24. Col. ● 9 and come with your whole hearts to whole Christ Act. 8. 47. Jam. ● 9. There is a desertion in point of sanctification as well as consolation when God leaves us in the duties we perform Vide Ames de consc l. 4. c. 28. Post Scrmonem celebrandae S. C●nae locus pr●●ser●im dum servebat primus ille Christianorum zelus singulis heb lomadis interdum etiam diebus communicantium nec enim unquam explicabantur sacramenta super mensam Dominicam quin multi ad eam accederent Mo●nayus de sacra Eucharistia l. 1 c. 4. Nunquam in Primitiva Ecclesia Eucharistiae Sacramentum celebrabatur qum omnes qut adessent eidem communicarent Si qui nollet communicare eo die quo conventus fidelium agebatur quod propri● conscientia non● um satis examinata probata cum à communione prohiberet aut quod sibi od●i aut simultatis adversus fratrem conscius esset si aliara quamcunque causam non communicandi haberet non solebat cum aliis ad Synaxim convenire Simpl. Verin Epist. de libro postumo Grot. p. 108. * In Primitiva Ecclesiae Apostolicae vicina flagrame persecutionum incendio fingulis diebus Christiani communicabant Gerh. loc commun de sacra ●oena c. 24. Tempus communicandi esse debet frequentissimum plane quotidianum Baptismus autem non iteratur quia generationi quae unica est respondet Eucharistia vrò saepius iteranda est quia cibo alimontae cujus frequens usus reperitur respondet Maldonati Summula Quaest. 24. Artic. 1. Constat ipsos Apostolos Christianos quotidiè communicasse Act. 2. quotidiè communicabant sicut orabant p●ulò post ubi crevit Christianorum negligentia coeptum est solis diebus Dominicis communicare Id. ibid. Art 2. Cur vetus Ecclesia credidit omnem sidelem omni die communicare debere quod ultra decimum saeculum videmus durasse bodierna autem ac Romana putat sufficere si semel in anno communicatum fuerit Quta nimirum illa nullum usum nec ullum fructum Sacramentorum constituit in videnda audienda eorum actione sed totum posuit in participatione vera corporis sanguinis haec ver● contrarium sumit Simplicii Verini Epist. de libro Postumo Grotii Parker of the Crosle part 1. chap. 3. Gillesp. in his Aarons Rod Bloss Book 3. c. 8. p. 437 438 M. Bowles de Pastore Evangelico l. 4. c. 5. Burrh in his Gospel-worsh p. 264 265. a B. Buckeridge M. Paibody b Sir William Temple ● Institut l. 4. Sect 37. D. Burgess saith the gesture of kneeling in the act of receiving was never any instituted Ceremony of the Church of Rome nor is it at this day Bellar. l. 2. de missa c. 14 15. saith it was only for the conveniency of putting the Hoast into the mouth of the receiver and not for adoration of the Eucharist Vide Dilher Elect● 2. c. 4. M. Down of sitting or kneeling at the Communion Respond●o nos Dei gratia melius ac sanctius in Christi schola fuisse institutos quàm ut putemus aliquam esse religionem Eucharistiam de geniculis sumere Ita sumunt vicini in Anglia fratres neque nos si quando cum iis communicamus eodem ritu samere ●●get totaque res apud nos ita libera censetur ut quanquam stantes sacro ●pulo vescamur ipsi pro fratribus tamen habeamus colamus etiam qui vel sedentes vel ingeniculati Eucharistiam accip●●cut Itaque si nihil à nobis aliud Latini post●lassent quam ut Sacramentum de geniculis simpliciter sumeremus fateor nullam nobis ab ●is discedendi futuram fuisse causam satis idoneam quando quod
of Isaac and the hope of Israel See Jer. 17. 17. Qui nil sperant nisi à Domino nil metuunt praeter Dominum B●rn 5. To love God for himself and all things else for him Zach. 8. ult 6. To observe Gods departings and to be afflicted with nothing so much Numb 14. 9. Deut. 22. 30. The main of godliness is in making God your All therefore the lusts of our hearts are called ungodly lusts The more one can see and taste God in every thing the more he thrives in gruce See Psal. 104. 34. Hereby the soul sees the All-sufficiency of God to satisfie him Prov. 14. 14. This is the onely ground of the triumph of Faith I will make my boast in God See Hab. 3. 17 18. and is the beginning of eternal life Matth. 18. 14. The Centurists observe four kinds of confession in the New Testament 1. A confession of sinne to God alone 1 John 1. 9. 2. A confession coram Ecclesia before the Church when men acknowledge publickly their wicked and scandalous deeds and do professe their repenting and loathing of the same Act. 19. 18. 3. Confession one to another of particular private injuries and offences Jam. 5. 16. 4. The confession or profession of the true faith 1 Joh. 4. 2. M. Gillesp. Aar Rod bloss l. 2. ● 2. Truths to be confessed are 1. Truths of faith 1 Pet. 3. 15. 2. Truths of fact Joshua 7. 14. The just occasions of confessing 1. Our faith are 1. When the true faith is opposed Act. 24. 14. 2. When we are questioned about it by Magistrates Dan. 3. 3. When others go aside from the true faith Act. 17. 23. 4. When it tends to the edification of the Church and State where we live 1 Cor. 14. 4 5 12 19. 2. Matters of fact 1. When there are evidences that such a fact is committed as in Achans case 2. When others are in danger in respect of such a fact I have committed Judg. 17. 2 3. 3. When prejudice else may come to the Church or State where I live 4. When by due course of the Law one is found guilty and sentence pronounced against him in such a case he is bound to make confession so the penitent thief else he shall end his dayes in sin 5. For the case of a mans conscience when his sins are secret he may disclose them confession must be 1. Voluntary not forced 2. Prudently ordered Stephen the Protomartyr They transgresse this Commandment 1. Who swear commonly 2. Who swear to do things unlawful as 1 Sam. 28. 10. 14. 39 44. 3. Who swear falsly or fraudulently or what they minde not to perform Matth. 26. 72. 1 Sam. 19. 6. Ezek. 17. 16 18 19. 4. Who use to swear indirectly as meaning to swear by God name the creatures 5. Who swear by God and by Idols Gen. 31. 53. Ford. Those that swear by the name of God and likewise by the name of Saints offend this Commandment As when the form of their Oath is thus As help me God and all Saints for the Oath must be onely in the name of God B. Hooper of the Command Aquin. 2a 2ae Quaest. 89. Art 6. docet licere per ipsas quoque creaturas jurare ut per Sanctos per Angeios per sacra Dei Evangelia Quod alicubi etiam in Ecclesiis reformatis illa adbuc consuetudo retineatur ut cum quis jurat manu tangat Evangelia sacra atque etiam addat haec verba Ad haec sacra Dei Evangelia juro c. illud excusari utcunque potest Non enim propriè juratur per Evangelium sed est obtestatio qualis est illa Vivit Deus ut sit sensus Sicut verba Evangelii sacrorum Bibliorum verissima sunt sic etiam quod dico verum est Zanch. Tom. 4. l. 1. de Decal in Praecept 3. Iurare per creaturam absolutè ultimatè terminativè ita ut constituatur in aliqua creatura finis vis juramenti sine relatione ad Deum simpliciter illicitum est Secundò jurare per creaturas relativè quasi transitivè ita ut per B. Virginem alios anctos sanctorumve reliquias pertranseat per ipsos deferatur finaliter ad Deum hoc est superstitiosum Sanders de juram prom oblig prael 5. Judg. 21. 1. Nor sworn deceitfully Nihil aliud est perjurium quam mendacium juramento firmatum Ita ut omnino idem fit accedente juramento Perjurium quod est in nuda pollicitatione mendacium Sanderson de Iuramenti promissorii obligatione praelect 2. Sect. 6. It was the ordinary Oath of the Romans Medius fidius as with us was By the Mass or By our Lady and so much used That Tertullian complaineth that the Christians through custome had made it so familiar that in ordinary speech they used Medius fidius and Mehercules not remembring nor yet understanding what they said Consuetudinis vitium est dicere mehercules dicere Medius fidius accedente ignorantiā quorundam qui ignorant jusjurandum esse per Herculem Tertul. de Idolat Students will not swear in English yet in Latine they make no bones of it saying Mehercule medius fidius aedipol per Deos immortales Mr. Perkins in his Government of the tongue Gods me is swearing by a figure s'lid is an Oath by way of abbreviation and As I am a Gentleman is little better Capel of Tentat part 3. c. 5. There are 1. Ridiculous Oaths as By Lakin 2. Pharisaical by Creatures as Light Fire 3. Popish by Saints as Mary Iohn Idols as Masse Rood Amos 8. 14. 4. Heathenish by the gods of the Gentiles 1 King 19. 2. Mehercule Medius fidius c. 5. Blasphemous as by all the parts and members of Christ. B. Down Abstract 3. prec An Oath must not be vinculum iniquitatis Acts 23. 12. Where we have examples of using any thing to serious and weighty purposes and never to ludicrous and sportful there it is far safer for us so to use the same that we may be assured we follow Gods warrant for God by leaving divers such examples to us may seem to intend our direction in the use of that thing we have divers examples for using Lots in weighty matters none in sports 2. A Lot is a sacred thing the casting of a Lot a sacred action because in using it we do especially and immediately refer our selves unto Gods providence for the whole disposing of it is from him Here the old saying is true non est bonum ludere cum sanctis Dr. Taylor cals Cards and Dice the Devils books and bones See him on Temptat Dr. Ames cases of cons. l. 5. c. 45. Cartwright on Prov. 16. ult and Dr. Willet on Lev. 16. 12. p. 375 376 of unlawfulness of games going wholly by Lot Alearum ludvs id genus alij ob sortem aut fortunam in eis omninò dominantem ob turpe lucrum ob in●amiam nec non propter blasphemiarum