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A44636 The Trinity asserted a sermon preach'd before the Lord-Mayor and aldermen of the city of London, at the cathedral church of St. Paul, upon Trinity-Sunday, Anno Dom. 1700 / John Howard. Howard, John, 1647-1729? 1700 (1700) Wing H2983; ESTC R15897 20,219 33

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the meanest Production in Nature and may find a thousand things in themselves to baffle their Reason and therefore it must be very unfit to judge of the Divine Nature and Sibsseveral timesstence And if we observe what ways they take to evade those plain Scriptures before-mention'd we shall quickly see their Reason is not very formidable in Matters of Faith whatsoever it may be in other things For some of them they deny to be Scripture as they do these Words of my Text others they put such strain'd and foreign Interpretations upon and use such miserable Shifts to escape the Force of them that one would think they are passionately in love with Heresie that defend it at this rate But these Things have been answer'd to their Shame by several worthy Authors and I hope also to the Conviction of some of them Their Exception against the Word Person as applied to these Three in my Text is also impertinent For he to whom those Names Actions and Prerogatives before-mention'd do belong must be a Person tho' he were not call'd so in Holy Scripture Heb. 1.3 But the Father is there term'd a Person when the Son is call'd the express Image 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of his Person and it 's hard if a Son who hath all the Perfections of his Father may not be call'd a Person too But whether these captious Men will or no the Scripture hath given him that Denomination with respect to his Divinity 2 Cor. 2.10 If I forgave any thing to whom I forgave it for your sakes forgave I it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Person of Christ Where the Apostle affirms that when he forgave or absolv'd a Penitent he did it in the Person of Christ that is in his Name as his Deputy and Representative who as God hath Power to forgive Sins From these Places there is Warrant for those Terms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Greek Fathers commonly us'd to signifie a Person in the Trinity And when we find them thus applied to the Father and the Son who can deny them to the Holy Ghost since the Glorious Properties and Works of the Deity are also ascrib'd to him Thus have I given you some Account of the Doctrine of the Trinity as it is discover'd to us in Holy Scriptures which hath been constantly believ'd and defended by the Churches of Christ in all Ages And seeing we have such Evidence from Scripture and so General a Consent for the Truth of this Doctrine we may with great Satisfaction believe and confess it And because our Faith in the Trinity is of the greatest moment to us as we are assur'd also from the Scripture and very much for the Honour of our Religion and the Author of it we ought zealously to defend it against those Antichrists in our Days as St. John calls them who deny the Father and the Son 1 John 2.22 2. I should now say something of the Record that these Three bear that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God But this will not require much Proof after that which hath been given o●●●●ly concerning his Divine Nature and doth consist of Testimonies from the Three several Persons of the Trinity Therefore to these I shall only add That this is witnessed by them to the Saints and Angels in Heaven who have the Beatisick Vision of the Glorious Trinity and particularly of the Divinity of Christ united with his Human Nature It hath been attested from Heaven by the Voice of God the Father at our Saviour's Baptism and Transfiguration asserted by Christ himself several times who said also that he came from God and was one with him and manifested by the Holy Ghost when he descended upon Christ in a visible Shape at his Baptism and upon the Disciples in a miraculous manner according to our Saviour's Promise From whence it appears that as these Three are One in their Essence or Nature so also in their Testimony concerning the Messias which some think is only meant by those Words These Three are One But because they are true in an higher Sense as I have prov'd to you and the Words are in a General Form they ought chiefly to be understood of that and from hence an Unity in their Record or Testimony will necessarily follow The Holy Ghost doth also constantly give this Testimony in the Holy Scriptures and in his Effects upon the Hearts of his People Which may probably be meant of that Witness which he is said to bear in Earth at the 8th Verse of this Chapter and one of these Effects is afterwards mention'd Ver. 10. He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself Let us therefore daily pray to God for this excellent Grace which will assure us of the Truth of such Doctrines as we cannot comprehend And that we may receive it together with an Improvement in all Divine Knowledge let us sincerely do all those Duties God requires of us and then he will certainly discover himself and the Mysteries of Salvation more to us Now to the Ever-blessed and Glorious Trinity the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost Three Persons and One Eternal and Only Wise God be all Honour Praise and Dominion both now and for ever Amen FINIS BOOKS Printed for John Lawrence at the Angel in the Poultry Two Sermons by the Reverend Mr. John Howard THE True Interest of a Nation Or The Duty of Magistrates Ministers and People in order to the further Settlement and Prosperity of these Kingdoms A Sermon preach'd at the Assizes held at Buckingham July the 5th 1692. The Evil of our Days with the Remedy of it A Sermon preach'd at a Visitation at Ruthwel in Northamptonshire Octob. 12.1697 MR. Pool's English Annotations on the Whole Bible wherein the Sacred Text is inserted together with the various Readings and Parallel Scriptures c. In Two Volumes Folio The Works of the late Reverend Mr. Stephen Charnock In Two Volumes Iolio The Life of the Reverend Mr. Richard Baxter with the History of the Times he lived in Written by himself and published by Mr. Matthew Sylvester In Folio Mr. Lorrimer's Apology for the Ministers who subscribed only unto the Stating of the Truths and Errors in Mr. Williams's Book from the Exceptions made against them by Mr. Trail Quarto His Remarks on Mr. Goodwin's Discourse Proving That the Gospel-Covenant is a Law of Grace And answering the Objections to the contrary c. Quarto Mr. Shower's Thanksgiving-Sermon on the Discovery of the Assassination-Plot April the 16th 1696. Quarto His Mourners Companion Or Funeral Discourses on several Texts The Second Edition In Two Parts Octavo His Sermons on Isaiah 55.7 8 9. God's Thoughts and Ways above ours especially in the Forgiveness of Sins Octavo His Sermon at the Funeral of Mr. Nath. Oldfield Dec. 31. 1696. Octavo A Preservative against Deism Shewing the great Advantage of Revelation above Reason in the two Great Points Pardon of Sin and a Future State of Happiness With an Appendix in Answer to a Letter of A. W. against Revealed Religion in the Oracles of Reason Octavo A Discourse of the Nature and Necessity of Faith in Jesus Christ With an Answer to the Pleas of our modern Vnitarians for the Sufficiency of bare Morality or meer Charity to Salvation Octavo A Brief Discourse of Infant Baptism Twelves These Three last by the Reverend Mr. Nathanael Taylor The Whole Duty of Man Epitomiz'd for the Benefit of the Poor with select Prayers suited to every Petition In Twenty fours Price bound Six Pence
explains the Words of the Psalmist when he saith God hath rais'd up Jesus again Acts 13.33 as it is also written in the Second Psalm Thou art my son this day have I begotten thee and he may from hence be fitly term'd as he is the first-born from the dead and the first-fruits of them that slept yet he can no more be call'd the Only-begotten Son of God for this Reason than the First-born of a numerous Issue can be said to be all the Children or the First-fruits the whole Crop For it is evident from many Places of Scripture that the Church shall be also rais'd to a Glorious State and those very Terms the First-born and the First-fruits are us'd to assure us of it and on this Account they are call'd the Children of God by our Blessed Saviour who saith Luke 20.35 36. They which shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world and the resurrection from the dead neither marry nor are given in marriage neither can they die any more For they are equal unto the angels and are the children of God being the children of the resurrection Now what difference soever there was between the Perfections of Adam and Christ as Man or between the Glory he was rais'd to and that which the Saints shall have hereafter this cannot properly distinguish his Relation to God the Father from theirs For tho' a First-born who hath many Brethren should have a greater Inheritance than all of them and a Right of Dominion too as the Ancient Patriarchs had over the whole Family yet he cannot justly be call'd the Only Son for these or any other Advantages he might have above the rest Christ is therefore call'd the Son of God chiefly in respect of his Divine Nature and so the Ancient Jews understood this Term as it was applied to the Messias Therefore upon Occasion of Christ's calling God his Father it is said The Jews sought the more to kill him Joh. 5.18 because he not only had broken the Sabbath but said also that God was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his own or his proper Father making himself equal with God Jesus was now generally look'd upon as the profess'd Messias because John the Baptist had given a Publick Testimony concerning him which was confirm'd on all Occasions by his Disciples and had been confess'd by himself Therefore the Jews having a Notion of that Eminent Relation which the Messias had to God the Father as his Eternal Son when they heard our Saviour mention God as his Father put a very different Sense upon these Words from what they would have done from another Person and because they did not believe him to be the Christ they interpreted them to his Disadvantage For tho' they themselves were ready to say upon Occasion Joh 8.41 We have one Father even God yet they accounted such an Expression from our Saviour to be Blasphemy and attempted several times to put him to Death for it And this was the pretended Crime for which he was at last condemn'd For the High-Priest having not such Witness against him as he desired Mat. 26.63 c. put an Oath upon him to tell him whether he were the Christ the Son of God to which when our Saviour had intimated his Consent the High-Priest rent his cloaths saying he hath spoken blasphemy and asking the judgment of the council concerning it they all pronounced him to be guilty of death But the Disciples believing that he was the Christ did also acknowledge him to be the Son of God in the Sense before-mention'd in several Confessions which they made to him But I shall now only take notice of such as were attended with some Remarkable Circumstances which will help us to understand the Meaning of them When our Lord had done two Miracles together walking himself with Peter upon the Sea in a Tempest and causing the Wind to cease on the sudden Mat. 14.33 so soon as he was come into the ship the disciples and others that were with them came and worshipped him saying of a truth thou art the son of God By which Words it appears they acknowledg'd him to be God because they gave him Divine Worship at the same time And if they had committed a Mistake in these Things there is no question but our Saviour would have corrected it in them The like Adoration was also given to Christ by the Man who was born blind Joh. 9.38 so soon as he understood from him that he was the Son of God But nothing is more Remarkable to this Purpose than Martha her Confession who when our Saviour had ask'd her Joh. 11.25 c. whether she believ'd him to be the Resurrection and the Life that is that he could by his own Power raise Men from the Dead to Life again and that Faith in him would save them from Death and make them Partakers of Everlasting Life she answers him Yea Lord I believe that thou art the Christ the Son of God which should come into the world So that this Confession did imply as much in her Opinion as that Christ was Omnipotent and the Great Object of a Divine and Saving Faith And in that she saith the Son of God which should come into the world this supposes it was formerly believ'd the Messias should be such a Person There are several other Testimonies in the Gospel to this Purpose but I shall add but one more from St. John himself which gives a great Confirmation to all the rest who speaking of the Signs which Jesus did saith These are written Joh. 20.31 that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that believing ye might have life through his name These Words Jesus is the Christ the Son of God are certainly meant of his being God as well as Man because many Signs done by him did plainly prove it And in this Chapter the Apostle mentions two of them namely our Saviour's Appearing two several times in a miraculous manner to his Disciples the latter of which Appearances drew that Confession from St. Thomas My Lord and my God And it is Remarkable that immediately after these Words and Christ's Answer to them the Apostle adds many other signs did Jesus in the presence of his disciples which are not written in this book but these are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God which Words have no doubt a particular Respect to Thomas his Confession as those which follow have to our Saviour's Answer to him For Christ having said to Thomas Because thou hast seen me thou hast believed blessed are they that have not seen and yet have believed The Apostle tells us how far this Blessing goeth even to Eternal Life in these Words and that believing ye might have life through his name And indeed the Occasion of St. John's writing this Gospel and the Arguments that are every where contain'd in it do sufficiently
prove this Truth For this Gospel was written by him at the Request of the Elders of Ephesus and other Christians as we are assur'd from good Authority in Opposition to the Ebeonites and Cerinthians who denied the Divinity of our Saviour and whosoever reads it may see the Apostle makes it his main Business to assure the World that he is God This he affirms at the very beginning of his Gospel and records many of our Saviour's Sayings by which he asserted it and several of his chief Miracles by which he prov'd it that are omitted by the other Evangelists And if this appears to have been his chief Design in this Gospel as certainly it was who can doubt of his Meaning in the Place before-mention'd which is near the Conclusion of it where he saith These are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God Now this with the other Citations which I mention'd before will clear the Sense of those Expressions in this Chapter of my Text Ver. 1. Ver. 5. Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God And who is he that overcometh the World but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God that they assert him to be God as well as Man And therefore this is the Doctrine which the Apostle proves in the following Verses as I said before and I hope have now made it more evident to you The last Name which I shall mention as given to Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 render'd the Word under which Name St. John saith Chap. 1.1 that he was in the beginning that is before the World was created as appears not only from the same Expression us'd in that Sense in the first Chapter of Genesis but because all things are said to be made by him ver 3. which supposes he was before them and because Time began with the Creation of the World therefore the Word which was before it must be Eternal And the Apostle here expresly affirms that the Word was God and that this Word was made flesh and dwelt among us and was the only-begotten of the father v. 14. the same person whom John the Baptist bare witness of namely Jesus Christ as in the following Verses And the Notion of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is understood of a Divine Person who together with God the Father made the World was well known amongst the Jews as appears from many Places in the Chaldae Paraphrase where the Word is added to explain the Sense more fully when there is only God or Lord in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vid. Bishop of Worcest Vindic. of Trin. p. 128. and it is render'd by such a Term as several Learned Men assure us is us'd there to signifie the Word only in the Sense of a Person And I think any indifferent Reader would understand it of a Personal Word in many if not all those Places wherein it is found and particularly in these It is said in that Paraphrase Gen. 6.6 It repented the Lord with his word that he had made man upon the earth Then shall the word of the Lord be my God Gen. 28.21 Ex. 19.17 Lev. 26.46 Deut. 1.30 Moses brought forth the People to meet the Word of God These are the statutes and judgments and laws which the Lord made between his word and the children of Israel The word of the Lord your God which goeth before you he shall fight for you according to all that he did for you in Egypt before your eyes The word of the Lord the God is a consuming fire Deut. 4.24 Chap. 31.6.8 Job 42.9 10 12. a jealous God The word of the Lord thy God will go before thee he will not fail thee nor forsake thee The word of the Lord accepted the face of Job And the word of the Lord turn'd the captivity of Job c. So the word of the Lord blessed the latter end of Job more than the beginning Now to be chosen by Jacob as his God to meet his People to be a Party in a Covenant between himself and them to conduct his People and fight for them to accept of Job's Person to turn his Captivity to bless and enrich him and to be a consuming Fire a jealous God do all suppose a Person and some of them plainly assert that he is God The ancient Jews therefore who had a great Veneration for this Paraphrase and were oblig'd to read it constantly with the Hebrew Text did believe from these and many other Places in it that there was a Divine Substance called the Word by whom God made the World So Philo the Jew speaking of God the Father of all mentions another Divine Person Quaest Solut. De Agricult whom he calls the Word and his Only-begotten Son by whom he made the World From whence we may conclude that St. John first received the Notion of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the Jews and he speaks so briefly of it at the Beginning of his Gospel because it was commonly known to them Tho' it is true also that many of the Heathens had receiv'd the Doctrine of the Trinity and the Notion of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Second Person in it either from ancient Tradition or the Scriptures which were read by several Learned Men amongst them But Plato was especially noted for it therefore when Amelius who was one of his Followers read this Gospel of St. John he challeng'd this Notion of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if it was taken from Plato But there is no Reason to think he receiv'd a Notion from any Heathen which he knew was better understood by the Jews and was well acquainted with those Places of Scripture upon which it was grounded Now St. John doth not only call Christ the Word in that Place and in my Text but mentions him also as the Word of Life at the beginning of this Epistle and speaking of him Rev. 19.13 he saith His name is called the word of God Neither is St. John the only Writer of the New Testament who applies this Name to Christ but St. Luke seems to use it in the same Sense Luke 1.2 when he speaks of the Apostles as eye-witnesses and ministers of the word for that Word of which they were Eye-witnesses was our Lord himself And this Sense of that Place is more probable because St. Peter uses the same Expression with respect to Christ and saith of himself and the other Apostles that they were eye-witnesses of his majesty 2 Pet. 1.16 And in the Epistle to the Hebrews this Divine Word is mention'd and the Omniscience of God attributed to him The word of God is quick and powerful Heb. 4.12 and sharper than any two-edged sword piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit and of the joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart That is he perfectly sees the