Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n holy_a lead_v spirit_n 7,650 5 5.6570 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

There are 14 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

A BODY OF DIVINITIE OR THE SVMME AND SVBSTANCE OF Christian Religion Catechistically propounded and explained by way of Question and Answer Methodically and familiarly handled Composed long since by JAMES VSHER B. of ARMAGH And at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now Printed and Published VVhereunto is adjoyned a Tract intituled IMMANVEL OR THE MYSTERY OF THE Incarnation of the SON OF GOD Heretofore writen and published by the same Author JOHN 17. 3. This is life eternall that they might know thee the onely true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent LONDON Printed by M. F. for THO DOVVNES and GEO BADGER and are to be sold in S. Dunstans Church-yard in Fleetstreet MDCXLV To the Christian Reader CHristian Reader I doe here present and commend unto thee a booke of great worth and singular use which was written and finished about twenty years since the Author whereof is well knowne to bee so universally eminent in all Learning and of that deepe knowledge and judgement in sacred Divinity that he transcendeth all elogies and praises which I can give him I commend it unto the Christian Reader under a two-fold notion the first respecteth the subject matter of this whole Work which is of greatest excellency ad being The summe and substance of Christian Religion upon which as a most sure foundation we build our faith ground all our hopes and from which we reap and retain all our joy and comfort in the assurance of our salvation which as at all times it is most profitable to be read studied and known so now if ever most necessary in these our days wherein men never more neglected these fundamentall principles as being but common and ordinary truths and spend their whole time study and discourse about Discipline Ceremonies and circumstantiall points and herein also not contenting themselves with those common rules and that clear light which shineth in the Word they are onely led by their own phantasies daily creating unto themselves diversity of new opinions and so falling into sects and schismes they break the bond of love and fall off from the communion of Saints as though it were no Article of their Creed and being in love with their own new Tenets as being the conception and birth of their own brains they contend for them more then for any fundamentall truths and not onely so but also hate maligne and most bitterly and uncharitably censure all those that differ from them in their opinions though never so conscientious and religious as though they professed not the same faith yea served not the same God nor beleeved in the same Christ but remain still Aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel and in comparison of themselves no better then Papists or at the best but carnall Gospellers The second notion under which I commend it respecteth the Work it self or the manner of the Authors handling it which is done so soundly and solidly so judiciously and exactly so methodically and orderly and with that familiar plainnesse perspicuity and clearnesse that it giveth place to no other in this kind either ancient or modern either in our own or any other Language which ever yet came to my view in which regard I may say of it as it is said of the vertuous woman Many have done excellently but this our Author exceedeth them all I will adde no more in the deserved praises of this Worke but leave it Christian Reader to thy self to peruse and judge of it commending thee to the Word of Gods grace and the good guidance of his holy Spirit who is able to build thee up in fruitfull knowledge to lead thee into all truth to direct and support thee in the wayes of godliness and to give thee an everlasting inheritance amongst the blessed Thine in the Lord Jesus Christ JOHN DOWNAME The Connexion of these Points together and Dependence of them one upon another IN Christian Religion wee are to consider the Ground thereof contained in the Scripture Parts which treat of Gods Nature in his Essence considered absolutely in it selfe where the doctrine of divine Attributes which respect either His perfection in his Simplenesse whereby he is exempted from Composition and division Infinitenesse wherby he is exempted from all measure of Time by his eternity Place by his immensity Life whence he is called The living God Considered in his All-sufficiency Al-seeing wisdom Foreknowledge Counsell Almighty power Holy will wherein is seen his Goodnesse and therein his love unto his creatures mercy or grace shewed them in their misery Iustice in his word called his Truth deeds disposing of all things rightly rendring to the creatures according to their works Persons subsisting in one and the same undivided Essence Kingdome in his Eternall decree which men must not curiously prie into but content themselves with what is made manifest Execution thereof in the workes of Creation of things Invisible The highest Heavens Angels Visible Unreasonable Reasonable man consisting of Body Soule Providence Common unto all creatures Proper respecting the everlasting condition of principall Creatures Angels Good Bad. Men who are ordered in This life by the tenor of a two-fold Covenant Nature or Workes where we are to consider the Conditions and Events Shame Primary the fall of our first parents Secondary the corruption of Nature originall Actions actual of omission commission Death comprehending all the curses of the Law whereunto the nature of man standeth subject Grace wherein we are to consider the state of Christ the Mediator in his Person and there in his Natures and their Union where of his Conception Nativity Distinction Two fold state of Humiliation Exaltation Office with his Calling thereunto Execution thereof concerning God the party offended wherein his priestly office is exercised the parts whereof are Satisfaction giving contentment to Gods Iustice by his Obedience to the Law Suffering for our sinne Intercession soliciting Gods mercy for those he hath redeemed Man the party offending to whom he communicates the grace by him purchased by his Propheticall office Kingly office The rest of mankind who are called by participation of his grace where we are to consider 1. The company thus called out of the world The Catholike Church of Christ where such as obey this calling in Outward profession alone hold onely externall communion with it Inward affection also internall with the Head Christ Iesus there being a Mutuall donation whereby the Father gives Christ to them them to Christ. Mysticall union whereby they are knit together by Gods quickning Spirit The rest of mankind whence ariseth the Communion of Saints 2. Grace whereunto they are called Reconciliation Iustification where of Iustifying Faith Adoption and therein of Hope Sanctification and therein of Love here consider the Rule of Holines the morall law contained in the ten Commandements wherein are to be considered Generall rules to be observed in the exposition of them Distinction of them into two tables containing the duties we owe unto God namely Having the
they did at the first from the Creation untill the time of Moses for the space of 2513. years First because then God immediately by his voice and Prophets sent from him taught the Church his truth which now are ceased Heb. 1. 1. Secondly traditions might then be of sufficient certainty by reason of the long life of Gods faithfull witnesses for Methusalem lived with Adam the first man 243. years and continued unto the Flood Shem lived at once with Methusalem 98. years and flourished above 500. yeares after the Flood Isaac lived 50. years with Shem and died about 10. years before the descent of Israel into Aegypt So that from Adams death unto that time three men might by tradition preserve the purity of Religion but after the comming of Israel out of Aegypt mans age was so shortened that in the dayes of Moses the first Penman of the Scriptures it was brought to 70. or 80. years as appeareth by the Psal. 90. 10. Thirdly God saw his true religion greatly forgotten in Aegypt Israel then falling unto Idolatry Ezekiel 20. 8. and having brought Israel then his people from thence did not onely restore but also encreased the same adding thereunto many more particulars concerning his service which were needfull for mens memories to be written Fourthly God having gathered his Church to a more solemn company then before it was his pleasure then to begin the writings of his will and therefore first with his own finger he wrote the ten Commandements in two Tables of stone and then commanded Moses to write the other words which he had heard from him in the Mount Exod. 34. 27 28. Fiftly thus God provided that the Churches of all ages and times might have a certain rule to know whether they embraced sound Doctrine or no and that none should be so bold as to coin any new Religion to serve him with but that which he had delivered in writing What is Scripture then The Word of God written by men inspired by the holy Ghost for the perfect building and salvation of the Church or holy Books written by the inspiration of God to make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. 2 Pet. 1. 21. 1 Pet. 20. 21. Joh. 20. 31. If that the Scriptures be written by men which are subject unto infirmities how can it be accounted the Word of God Because it proceeds not from the wit or mind of men but holy men set apart by God for the work of God spake and writ as they were moved by the holy Ghost therfore God alone is to be counted the Author therof who inspired the hearts of those holy men whom he chose to be his Secretaries who are to be held only the Instrumentall cause thereof When Jeremy brought the Word of God to the Jews they said it was not the Word of the Lord but he spake as Baruc the son of Neriah provoked him Jer. 43. 2. and so some perhaps in these days are so ungodly as to take the Jews part against Jeremy and all his fellowes How may it appeare therefore that this Book which you call the Book of God and the holy Scriptures is the Word of God indeed and not mens policy By the consonant testimony of men in all ages from them that first knew these Penmen of the holy Ghost with their writings untill our time and reasons taken out of the Word themselves agreeable to the quality of the writers both which kind of arguments the holy Scriptures have as much and far more then any other writings wherefore as it were extream impudency to deny the works of Homer of Plato Virgil Tully Livy Galen c. when as consent of al ages have reached delivered them unto us which also by the tongue phrase matter and all other circumstances agreeable are confirmed to be the works of the same Authors whose they are testified to be so it were more then brutish madnesse to doubt of the certain truth and authority of the holy Scriptures which no lesse but much more then any other writings for their Authors are testified and confirmed to be the sacred Word of the ever-living God not onely testified I say by the uniform witnesses of men in all ages but also confirmed by such reasons taken out of the writings themselves as doe sufficiently argue the Spirit of God to be the Author of them for we may learn out of the testimonies themselves as David did Psa. 119. 125. That God hath established them for ever Let me hear some of those reasons which prove that God is the Author of the holy Scriptures First the true godlinesse and holinesse wherewith the writers of the Scriptures shined as Lamps in their times and far surpassed all men of other religions which sheweth the work of Gods Spirit in them and how unlikely it is that such men should obtrude into the Church their own inventions in stead of Gods Word Secondly the simplicity integrity and sincerity of these Writers in matters that concern themselves those that belong unto them doing nothing by partiality 1 Tim. 5. 21. neither sparing their friends nor themselves so Moses for example in his writing spared not to report the reproach of his own Tribe Gen. 34. 30. 49. 5. 7. nor the incest of his parents of which he himself was conceived Exod. 6. 20. nor the Idolatry of his brother Aaron Exod. 32. nor the wicked murmuring of his sister Miriam Numb 12. nor his own declining of his vocation by God to deliver the Children of Israel out of Egypt Exo. 4. 13 14. nor his own murmuring against God in his impatiency Num. 11. 11 12 13 14. nor his want of faith after so many wonderfull confirmations Num. 20. 12. 27. 14. Deut. 32. 51. And though he were in highest authority and having a promise of the people to beleeve whatsoever he said Exod. 19. 8. 20. 19. 24. 3. he assigneth no place for his own sons to aspire either to the Kingdome or to the high Priesthood but leaveth them in the mean degree of common Levites all which things declare most manifestly that he was void of all earthly and carnall affections in his writings as was meet for the Penman and Scribe of God hereunto also may be added that he writeth of himself Numb 12. 3. that he was the meekest of all the men that were upon the face of the whole earth which no wise man would in such sort report of himself if he were left to his own discretion Thirdly the quality and condition of the Penmen of these holy writings some of whom were never trained up in the school of man and yet in their writings shew that depth of wisdome that the most learned Philosopers could not attain unto Some also were before professed enemies to the truth whereof afterwards they were Writers Amos was no Prophet but an Heard-man and a gatherer of wilde figges Amos 7. 14. Matthew a Publicane
an eye-witnesse of many wonders by which the Ministery of Moses was confirmed testifieth his writings to bee the undoubted Word of God the same doe the Prophets which continued the History of the Church in the time of the Judges both of Moses Joshua Likewise all the Prophets which successively recorded the holy Story and Prophesies by divine Revelation from Samuel unto the Captivity and from the Captivity to the building again of the Temple and of the City and sometimes after receiving the same book of heavenly Doctrine from the former age delivered them to their posterity And Malachi the last of the Prophets closeth up the Old Testament with a charge and an Exhortation from the Lord to remember the Law of Moses delivered in Horeb and to use the same as a Schoole-master to direct them unto Christ untill hee came in person himself Mal. 4. 4. Finally from that time the Church of the Jews untill the comming of Christ in the flesh imbraced all the former writings of the Prophets as the book of God Christ himself appealeth unto them as a sufficient testimony of him Joh. 5. 39. The Apostles and the Evangelists prove the writings of the New Testament by them and the Catholike Church of Christ from the Apostles time untill this day hath acknowledged all the same writings both of the Old and New Testament to bee the undoubted Word of God Thus have wee the testimony both of the Old Church of the Jews Gods peculiar people and first-born to whom the Oracles of God were committed Act. 7. 38. Hos. 8. 12. Rom. 3. 2. 9. 4. and the view of Christians together with the generall account which all the godly have made at all times of the Scriptures when they have crossed their natures and courses as accounting it in their soules to bee of God and the speciall testimony of Martyrs who have sealed the certainty of the same by shedding their blood for them Thereunto also may bee added the testimony of those which are out of the Church Heathens out of whom many ancient testimonies are cited to this purpose by Josephus contra Appion Turks and Jews who to this day acknowledge all the books of the Old Testament and Hereticks who labour to shroud themselves under them c. Are there not some divine testimonies which may likewise bee added to this Yes first the known Miracles which the devill was never able to doe that did so often follow the writers and teachers of the Scriptures Secondly the manifold punishments and destruction of those that have reviled and persecuted the same Are these motives of themselves sufficient to work saving faith and perswade us fully to rest on Gods Word No besides all this it is required that wee have the Spirit of God as well to open our eyes to see the light as to seale up fully into our hearts that truth which wee see with our eyes for the same holy Spirit that inspired the Scripture 1 Cor. 2. 10. 14. 37. Ephes. 1. 13. inclineth the hearts of Gods children to beleeve what is revealed in them and inwardly assureth them above all reasons and arguments that these are the Scriptures of God therefore the Lord by the Prophet Isaiah promiseth to joyn his Spirit with his Word and that it shall remain with his children for ever Esa. 59. 21. The same promiseth our Saviour Christ unto his Disciples concerning the Comforter which hee would send to leade them into all truth and teach them all things and to put them in minde of all things which hee had said unto them Joh. 14. 26. 15. 26. The Lord by the Prophet Jeremiah also promiseth to give his Law into their mindes and to write them in the hearts of his children Jer. 31. 33. And S. John saith to the faithfull that by the anointing of the holy Spirit which is on them they know all things 1 Joh. 2. 20. This testimony of Gods Spirit in the hearts of his faithfull as it is proper to the Word of God so it is greater then any humane perswasions grounded upon reason or witnesses of men unto which it is unmeet that the Word of God should bee subject as Papists hold when they teach that the Scriptures receive their authority from the Church for by thus hanging the credit and authority of the Scriptures on the Churches sentence they make the Churches work of greater credit then the Word of God whereas the Scriptures of God cannot bee judged or sentenced by any and God onely is a worthy witnesse himself in his Word and by his Spirit which give mutuall testimony one of the other and work that assurance of Faith in the Elect that no humane demonstrations can make nor any perswasions or inforcements of the world can remove Shew some further reasons that the authority of the Scriptures doth not depend upon the Church First because wee beleeve the Scriptures is a work of Faith but the Church cannot infuse Faith Secondly any authority that the Church hath it must prove it by the Scriptures therefore the Scripture dependeth not upon the Church Thirdly if an Infidell should ask the Church how they are sure that Christ dyed for them if they should answer because themselves say so it would be ridiculous when they should say because the Scripture teacheth so c. What books are the holy Scriptures and by whom were they writen First The books of the Old Testament in number nine and thirty which the Jews according to the number of their letters brought to two and twenty writen by Moses and the Prophets Rom. 3. 2. who delivered the same unto the Church of the Jews Secondly the books of the New Testament in number seven and twenty writen by the Apostles and Evangelists Rom. 1. 16. Rev. 1. 11. who delivered them to the Church of the Gentiles What language were the books of the Old Testament writen in In Hebrew which was the first tongue of the world and the most orderly speech in comparison of which all other languages may bee condemned of barbarous confusion but chosen especially because it was the language of that time best known unto the Church teaching that all men should understand the Scriptures onely some few portions by the later Prophets were left writen in the Chaldean tongue understood by Gods people after their carrying away into Babylon namely the 11 verse of the 10 chap. of Jer. six chapters in Daniel from the 4 ver of the 2 chap. to the end of the 7 chapter and three in Ezra the fourth fifth sixth Had the Hebrew Text vowels or points from the beginning as now it hath Our Saviour saith Matth. 5. 18. that not one jot or prick of the Law shall perish whereby it should appeare that the Law and the Prophets for of both hee speaketh immediately before had vowels and pricks God also by Moses commanded the Law to bee writen upon two great stones at the entrance
so full of Parables and Allegories as they are The whole Doctrine of salvation is to be found so plain that it needeth no Commentary and Commentaries are for other places that be dark and also to make more large use of Scripture then a new beginner can make of himself which we see necessary in all humane Arts and Sciences Further though speech of Scripture seem hard at first yet by custome it becommeth easie as reading doth to children Obj. 4. The godly Eunuch could not understand the Scripture without an Interpreter Acts 8. 31. Though he understood not some harder places yet that hindered him not from reading plainer places Obj. 5. The multitude of learned men that fall into heresies which they labour to confirm by Scripture proveth that the Scripture is dark It is their naughty hearts that come not with an humble and godly affection that maketh them doe so Obj. 6. But now we see by experience that there are many that daily reade the Scriptures and yet understand not the thousandth part of them They reade them not with care and conscience with prayer and study but like the women who are always learning but never come to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 3. 7. Obj. 7. If the Scriptures then be so plain and perspicuous what need is there of an Interpreter First to unfold obscure places Acts 8. 31. Secondly to inculcate and apply plain Texts 2 Pet. 1. 10. 1 Cor. 14. 3. Why did God leave some places obscure in the Scriptures First that we might know that the understanding of Gods Word is the gift of God and therefore might beg it of him by continuall prayer Secondly lest we should flatter our wits too much if all things could presently be understood by us Thirdly that the Word for the high and heavenly mysteries contained therein might be accompted of which for the plainnesse might be lesse esteemed Fourthly that prophane dogs might be driven away from these holy mysteries which are pearls prized highly by the Elect alone Matth. 13. 45. but would be trodden down by swine Mat. 7. 6. Fiftly that wee might be stirred up to a more diligent search of the same Sixtly that we might esteem more of the Ministery which God hath placed in the Church that by the means thereof we might profit in the knowledge of these mysteries What assurance may be had of the right understanding of the Scriptures For the words it is to be had out of the originall Text or Translations of the same for the sense or meaning onely out of the Scriptures themselves Nehem. 8. 8. which by places plain and evident doe expresse whatsoever is obscure and hard touching matters necessary to eternall salvation Why must the interpretation of words be had out of the originall Languages Because in them onely the Scriptures are for the letter to be held authenticall and as the water is most pure in the Fountain by the springing thereof so the right understanding of the words of the holy Scriptures is most certain in the originall tongues of Hebrew and Greek in which they were first written and delivered to the Church out of the which Languages they must be truly translated for the understanding of them that have not the knowledge of those tongues What gather you from hence That all Translations are to be judged examined and reformed according to the Text of the ancient Hebrew and originall Chaldee in which the old Testament was printed and the Greek Text in which the new Testament was written and consequently that the vulgar Latin Translation approved by the Tridentine Councell for the onely authenticall Text is no further to be received of true Christians then it agreeth with the originall of the Hebrew and Greek Text. But what say you of the Greeke Translation of the old Testament commonly called the Septuagint approved by the Apostles themselves The same as we say of other Translations for although the Apostles used that Translation which was commonly received and read among the Gentiles and Jews that dwelt amongst them where it differed not in sense from the true Hebrew yet where it differed from it they left it as by many examples may be confirmed vide Hieron Prolog in Matth. How can the certain understanding of the Scriptures be taken out of the originall tongues considering the difference of reading in divers Copies both of Hebrew and Greek as also the difficulty of some words and phrases upon which the best Translators cannot agree Although in the Hebrew Copy there hath been observed by the Nazarites some very few differences of words by similitude of letters and points and by the Learned in the Greek tongue there are like diversities of reading noted in the Greek Text of the new Testament which came by fault of writers yet in most by circumstance of the place and conference of other places the true reading may be discerned and albeit in all it cannot nor the Translator in all places determine the true interpretation yet this diversity or difficulty can make no difference or uncertainty in the sum and substance of Christian religion because the Ten Commandements and the principall Texts of Scripture on which the Articles of our faith are grounded the Sacraments instituted the form of prayer taught which contain the sum or substance of Christian religion are without all such diversity of reading or difficulty of translating so plainly set down and so precisely translated by consent of all men learned in the tongues that no man can make any doubt of them or pick any quarrell against them Why must the true sense or meaning of the Scriptures be learned out of the Scriptures themselves Because the Spirit of God alone is the certain interpreter of his Word written by his Spirit for no man knoweth the things pertaining to God but the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2. 11. and no prophesie of Scripture is of any mans own interpretation for prophesie was not brought by the will of man but the holy men of God spake as they were led by the holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 20 21. The interpretation therefore must be by the same Spirit by which the Scripture was written of which Spirit we have no certainty upon any mans credit but onely so far forth as his saying may be confirmed by the holy Scriptures What gather you from hence That no interpretation of holy Fathers Popes Councels Customs or practise of the Church either contrary to the manifest words of the Scriptures or containing matters which cannot necessarily bee proved out of the Scriptures are to bee received as an undoubted Truth How then is Scripture to bee interpreted by Scripture According to the Analogie of Faith Rom. 12. 6. and the scope and circumstance of the present place and conference of other plain and evident places by which all such as are obscure and hard to bee understood ought to bee interpreted for there is no matter necessary to eternall
respect of this naturall gift of righteousnesse we say that in the beginning Adam was made just because he was created just and in his whole nature was righteous and good but this righteousnesse was derived from God Whom doe you call just by grace All the elect which are redeemed by the death of Christ and that in two respects First because the righteousnesse of Christ is imputed unto them so by grace and favour in Christ their head they are just before God Secondly because of grace and favour they are regenerated by the holy Ghost by the vertue of whose inherent righteousnesse and holinesse they are made holy and just and whatsoever they doe by it is accepted for just for Christs sake Whom doe you call just and righteous by yeelding perfect and willing obedience to God and his law No man in this world after the fall of Adam Christ only excepted ever was or can be just after that manner What say you of Christ how was he just Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ is most perfectly just and righteous every manner of way First as he is God he is in his own essence of himself and by himself most just even as the Father is eternall righteousnesse it self Secondly as he was Man he was just by nature because he was conceived without sinne and so was borne just and righteous Thirdly by vertue of his union with his divine nature which is eternall righteousnesse it self he is most just Fourthly by receiving the gifts of the holy Ghost without measure he is most just Psal. 45. 7. Fiftly he did most perfectly obey the law of God and kept it most absolutely therefore that way also he is most just and righteous What conclude you upon all this That forasmuch as God onely is in his own essence and nature by himself and of himself eternall justice and righteousnesse therefore this attribute of justice or righteousnesse doth most properly agree to God In how many things is God just In three things First in his Will Secondly in his Word Thirdly in his Works What mean you when you say that God is just in his Will That whatsoever he willeth is just his will as hath been declared being the rule of justice What mean you when you say that God is just in his Word That whatsoever he speaketh is just What are the parts of Gods Word Four First the History which is all true Secondly the Precepts and the Laws which are perfect Thirdly Promises and Threatnings which are accomplished Fourthly Hymnes and Songs which are pure and holy and undefiled In what respect is God just in his Word First he speaketh as he thinketh Secondly he doth both as he speaketh and thinketh Thirdly there is no part of his Word contrary to another Fourthly he loveth those that speak the truth and hateth those that are liers What are the Works of God 1. His eternall decree whereby he hath most justly decreed all things and the circumstances of all things from all eternity 2. The just execution thereof in time What justice doth God shew herein Both his disposing and his rewarding justice What is Gods disposing justice That by which he as a most free Lord ordereth all things in his actions rightly Psal. 145. 17. In what actions doth that appear First he hath most justly and perfectly created all things of nothing Secondly he hath most wisely justly and righteously disposed all things being created What is Gods rewarding justice That whereby he rendreth to his creatures according to their works Wherein doth that appear First he doth behold and approve and reward all good in whomsoever Secondly he doth behold detest and punish all evill in whomsoever to which justice both his anger and his hatred are to be referred What must we understand by anger in God Not any passion perturbation or trouble of the mind as it is in us but this word Anger when it is attributed to God in the Scriptures signifieth three things First a most certain and just decree in God to punish and avenge such injuries as are offered to himself and to his Church and so it is understood Joh. 3. 36. Rom. 1. 18. Secondly the threatning these punishments and revenges as in Psal. 6. 1. Hos. 11. 9. Jonah 2. 9. Thirdly the punishments themselves which God doth execute upon ungodly men and these are the effects of his anger or of his decree to punish them so it is taken in Rom. 2. 5. Mat. 3. 7. Eph. 5. 6. What use may we make of this Attribute First it teacheth us that anger of it self is not simply evill but then it is good when it is such as the Scripture attributeth to God and commendeth to men when it saith Be angry and sin not Eph. 4. 26. Secondly Gods anger seemeth to raise us up from security Thirdly we must not be slothfull when we see the signs of Gods wrath comming but use ordinary means to prevent it What is that hatred that is attributed to God Not any passion or grief of the mind as it is in us but in the Scriptures these three things are signified thereby First his deniall of good will and mercy to eternall salvation as Rom. 9. 13. I have hated Esau that is rejected him and have not vouchsafed him that favour and grace which I have shewed upon Jacob and we also are said to hate those things which we neglect and upon which we will bestow no benefit nor credit but doe put them behind other things and therefore it is said If any man come unto me and hate not his father and mother and wife and children c. he cannot be my Disciple that is he that doth not put all these things behind me and neglect them for me so that the love which he beareth to them must seem to be hatred in comparison of the love which he must bear to me and in this sense it is properly attributed to God Secondly the decree of Gods just will to punish sin and the just punishment it selfe which he hath decreed as in Psal. 5. 6. Job 30. 21. Thou turnest thy selfe meerly against me and art an enemy unto me with the strength of thine hand that is thou dost so sore chasten me as if thou didst hate me and in this sense also it is properly attributed to God for it is a part of his Justice to take punishment of sinners Thirdly Gods displeasure for those things which we hate doe displease us and in this sense it is also properly attributed to God for it is the part of a most just Judge to disallow and detest evill as well as to allow and like that which is good By what reason may this be confirmed It is the property of him that loveth to hate and detest that which is contrary to himselfe and that which he loveth For love cannot be without his contrary of hatred and as therefore the love of good things doth properly agree to God so doth also the
after a man hath been enlightned with it and felt a taste thereof manifested in outward action by some blasphemous oppugning the truth of set hatred because it is the truth What are you to consider in this sin The nature thereof and the deadlinesse of the same What note you in the nature The reason why it is so called and the quality thereof Why is it called the sin against the holy Ghost Not because it is committed against the third Person only for it is committed against all three but because it is committed against the light of knowledge with which the holy Ghost hath enlightned the heart of him that committed it and that of set malice for every one that sinneth against his knowledge may be said to sin against the holy Ghost as Ananias and Sapphira were said to doe Act. 5. 3. But that is not this great sin of malice resisting the truth because it is the truth but of infirmity What qualities and properties hath this great sin First it must be in him that hath known the truth and after falleth away Heb. 6. 5. therefore Infidels and Heathens doe not sin this sinne neither any that are ignorant though maliciously they blaspheme the truth Secondly it must be done of set malice because it is the truth as the Pharises did Mat. 12. 31. Heb. 6. 6. Therefore Peter that cursed himself and denyed that he knew Christ to save his life did not sinne this sin nor Paul that did persecute him doing it of ignorance Thirdly it must be against God himself directly his Son Christ Jesus Mat. 12. 31. Heb. 6. 6. Therefore it is not any particular breach of the second Table nor a slip against any speciall sin of the first Can these qualities at any time befall the elect or children of God No and therefore they that feel in themselves the testimony of their election need not fear their falling into this sin nor despair VVhat is the deadlinesse of this sin above other sins First God hath pronounced it shall never be pardoned not because God is not able to pardon it but because he hath said he will not forgive it Secondly this sin is commanded not to be prayed for when persons are known to be guilty of it 1 Joh. 5. 16. whereas we are bound to pray for all other persons Thirdly this is the ordinary and first sin of the Devill and therefore is he never received into mercy no more then those that are guilty of it Thus much of the sinne against the holy Ghost Shew now the differences of actuall sins in regard of the degrees attained Some are only sins but others are wickednesses and some beastlinesses or devilishnesses for though originall sin be equall in all Adams children yet actuall sins be not equall but one much greater then another Are not sins well divided into Veniall and Mortall None are Veniall of their own nature but only to the faithful they are so made by the mercy of God in Christ. Doe all naturall men alike commit all these kinds of sin No for though all are alike disposed unto all manner of evill Rom. 7. 14. having in their corrupt nature the seeds of every sin yet doth God for the good of humane society restrain many from notorious crimes by fear of shame and punishment desire of honour and reward c. Rom. 13. 3 4 5. How doth God employ men in this state of sin First he guideth them partly by the light of nature Rom. 2. 14 15. Joh. 1. 9. and partly by common graces of the Spirit Esa. 44. 28. unto many actions profitable for humane society and for the outward service of God Secondly he over-ruleth their evill and sinful actions so that thereby they bring to passe nothing but what his hand and counsell had before determined for his own glory Act. 3. 16. 4. 27 28. What are the things that generally follow sin They are two Guilt and punishment both which doe most duly wait upon sin to enter with it and cannot by any force or cunning of man or Angel be holden from entring upon the person that sin hath already entred upon both likewise doe increase as the sinne increaseth What is the guilt of sin It is the merit and desert of sin which is as it were an obligation to the punishment and wrath of God whereby we become subject to Gods debt or danger that is to condemnation Rom. 2. 15. 3. 9. 10. 19. For every man by reason of his sin is continually subject to the curse of God Gal. 3. 10. and is in as great danger of everlasting damnation as the Traitour apprehended is in danger of hanging drawing and quartering Is there any evill in the guilt before the punishment be executed Very much for it worketh unquietnesse in the mind as when a man is bound in an obligation upon a great forfeiture that very obligation it self disquieteth him especially if he be not able to pay it as we are not And yet more because where other debts have a day set for payment we know not whether the Lord will demand by punishment his debt this day before to morrow What learn you from this That sith men doe shun by all means to be in other mens debt or danger as also the Apostle exhorteth Rom. 13. 8. Owe nothing to any man and Solomon also counselleth in the matter of suretiship Prov. 6. 1 2 3 4 5. we should more warily take heed that we plunge not ourselves over head and ears in the Lords debt for if it be a terrible thing to be bound to any man in stature Staple or Merchant or recognizance much more to God who will be paid to the uttermost farthing How else may the hurt and evill of the guilt of sinne be set forth unto us It is compared to a stroake that lighteth upon the heart and soul of a man where the wound is more dangerous then when it is in the body Gen. 44. 16. 1 Sam. 24. 4 5 6. and so it is also a sting or a bite worse then of a viper as that which bringeth death Have you yet wherewith to set forth the evill of the guilt It seemeth when the Lord said to Cain if he sin against his brother his sin lyeth at the door Gen. 4. 7. that he compareth the guilt to a dog that is always snarling and barking against us which is confirmed by the Apostle who attributeth a mouth to his desert of sin to accuse us Rom. 2. 15. What is the effect of this guilt of Conscience It causeth a man to flie when none pursueth and to be afraid of the fall of a leaf Prov. 28. 1. Levit. 26. 36. VVhen a man doth not know whether he doth sin or no how can he be smitten or bitten or barked at or flie for feare therefore against all this evill ignorance seemeth to be a safe remedy No verily for whether we know it or no his guilt remaineth as
mercy of God in Christ whereby grace reigneth unto life through the obedience of one which is Jesus Christ. Rom. 5. 21. For there being three persons of the Trinity the Father sent his Son to accomplish the work of our Redemption and both of them send the Holy Ghost to work saving grace in our hearts and apply unto our soules the holinesse purchased by the Son of God What is promised therein The favour of God and everlasting salvation with the means thereof as Christ and in him Conversion Justification and Sanctification What is the condition on mans part The gift being most free on Gods part nothing is required on mans part but the receiving of grace offered which is done in those that are of capacity by Faith in Christ John 1. 12. 14 15. Acts 16. 31. whence followeth new obedience whereby the faithfull walk worthy of the grace received and this also is by Gods grace What then is the summe of the Covenant of grace That God will be our God and give us life everlasting in Christ if we receive him being freely by his Father offered unto us Jer. 31. 33. Acts. 16. 30 31. John 1. 12. How doth this Covenant differ from that of works Much every way for first in many points the Law may be conceived by reason but the Gospell in all points is farre above the reach of mans reason Secondly the Law commandeth to doe good and giveth no strength but the Gospell enableth us to doe good the Holy Ghost writing the Law in our hearts Jer. 31. 33. and assuring us of the promise that revealeth this gift Thirdly the Law promised life onely the Gospell righteousnesse also Fourthly the Law required perfect obedience the Gospell the righteousnesse of Faith Rom. 3. 21. Fifthly the Law revealeth sin rebuketh us for it and leaveth us in it but the Gospell doth reveale unto us the remission of sins and freeth us from the punishment belonging thereunto Sixthly the Law is the ministery of wrath condemnation and death the Gospell is the ministery of grace Justification and life Seventhly the Law was grounded on mans own righteousnesse requiring of every man in his own person perfect obedience Deut. 27. 26. and in default for satisfaction everlasting punishment Ezek. 18. 14. Gal. 3. 10. 12. but the Gospell is grounded on the righteousnesse of Christ admitting payment and performance by another in behalfe of so many as receive it Gal. 3. 13 14. And thus this Covenant abolisheth not but is the accomplishment and establishment of the former Rom. 3. 31. 10. 4. Wherein doe they agree They agree in this that they be both of God and declare one kind of righteousnesse though they differ in offering it unto us What is that one kind of righteousnesse It is the perfect love of God and of our neighbour What thing doth follow upon this That the severe Law pronounceth all the faithfull righteous forasmuch as they have in Christ all that the Law doth aske But yet those remaine transgressors of the Law They are transgressors in themselves and yet righteous in Christ and in their inward man they love righteousnesse and hate sin What are we to consider in the Covenant of Grace The condition 1. Of the Mediatour 2. And then of the rest of mankind In the former consisteth the foundation of this Covenant The performance whereof dependeth on Christ Jesus Acts 10. 43. 3. 24. Rom. 1. 3. 4. To the latter belongeth the application thereof for salvation unto all that will receive it 2 Cor. 5. 20. Mat. 6. 33. When was the Mediatour given 1. If we regard Gods decree from all eternity Eph. 1. 4. 2. If the vertue and efficacie of his Mediation as soon as need was even from the beginning of the world Rev. 13. 8. 3. If his manifestation in the flesh in fulnesse of time Gal. 4. 4. 1 Tim. 2. 6. from whence we reckon now 1643. yeares Who is this Mediatour between God and man Jesus Luk. 2. 11. Mat. 1. 21. 1 Tim. 2. 5. the Son of the Virgin Mary the promised Messias or Christ whom the Fathers expected the Prophets foretold John 1. 45. 8. 56. Whose life death Resurrection Ascension the Evangelists describe Joh. 1. 1. Act. 1. 1. Whose word preached unto this day subdueth the world 1 Tim. 3. 16. 2 Cor. 10. 4. 5. Finally whom wee look for from heaven to bee the Judge of quick and dead Acts 10. 42. What doe the Scriptures teach us touching Christ our Mediatour Two things first his person Joh. 1. 14. 3. 33. Secondly his office Esa. 61. 1 2. Luk. 4. 18. What is his Person The second Person in the Godhead made man John 1. 14. What have we to consider herein First the distinction of the two natures Secondly the hypostaticall or personall union of both into one Immanuell What be those two natures thus wonderfully united in one person First his divine nature or Godhead which maketh the person Secondly his humane nature or Manhood which subsisteth and hath his existence in the person of the Godhead and so we beleeve our Saviour to be both the Son of God and the son of man Gal. 4. 4. Luk. 1. 31 32. Rom. 1. 3 4. 9. 5. 1 Tim. 3. 16. Mat. 26. 24. What say you of him touching his Godhead I beleeve that he is the only begotten Son of the most high and eternall God his Father His Word Wisdome Character and Image begotten of his substance before all worlds God of God Light of Light very God of very God begotten not made finally God coessentiall coeternall and coequall with the Father and the Holy Ghost Why call you him the onely begotten Sonne of God Because he is the alone Son of God by nature even the onely begotten of the Father full of grace and truth John 1. 14. 3. 18. For though others be the Sons of God by Creation as Adam was and the Angels Job 1. 6. Others by Adoption and Regeneration as the Saints and the man Christ Jesus in another respect by hypostaticall union yet none is his Son by naturall generation but the same Christ Jesus and that in regard of his Godhead not of his Manhood according to the Apostle who saith that he is without Father according to his Manhood and without Mother according to his Godhead Heb. 7. 3. But it seemeth that he is called the Sonne of God in respect of the generation of his humane nature wherein it is said that the Holy Ghost did that which Fathers doe in the naturall generation especially seeing he is therefore said to be the Sonne of the Highest Luk. 1. 35. He is the naturall Sonne of God onely in regard of the eternall generation otherwise there should be two Sonnes one of the Father and another of the Holy Ghost but he is therefore called the Sonne of the Highest for that none could be so conceived by the Holy Ghost but he that is the
〈…〉 benefits received How many Petitions are there in the Lords Prayer Six equally divided as it were into two Tables whereof 〈…〉 concerne God as doth the first Table of the Law three doe concern● our selves and our neighbours as doth the second Table For in the three first we make request for those things that concerne Gods Majesty whose glory and service we are to preferre before our owne good Iohn 12. 27 28. In the three latter for those things that concerne the necessity of man and our owne welfare which we must referre to the former Psalme 50. 15. So that by the very order of the Petitions we learne this instruction that we must and ought first to thinke upon Gods glory before any thing that appertaines or belongs to us and that we should seeke the service of God before our owne good John 12. 27 28. yea and preferre the glorifying of the name of God before our owne salvation Rom. 9. 3. As also by the order of the Commandements which being divided into two Tables the first concernes the Worship of God the second our selves What observe you from this Our hypocrisie for were it not for our selves and our wants we would not come to God at all in prayer As in Popery all their prayers are for themselves and their salvation c. whereas this word thy in all these Petitions doth shut forth the consideration of our selves to the end that we might have our minds altogether fastened upon the service of God What further observe you proper to those Petitions that concerne the glory of God That as they must be begged in the first place so must they likewise be performed with further zeale of spirit and earnestnesse of affection as may be gathered in that they are propounded without any band or coupling of one with another How are the three first Petitions divided Thus the first concerneth Gods glory it selfe the other two the things whereby God is glorified as when his Kingdome commeth and his will is done What are the words of the first Petition Hallowed be thy Name Mat. 6. 9. Luke 11. 2. What is the summe of this Petition That in all things God may be glorified That he who in himselfe his words and works is most glorious and holy may be acknowledged and honoured for such by us Psal. 46. 8. 1 Pet. 2. 9. Why is this Petition set before all Because it is that which ought to be dearest unto us and for that all things are to be referred unto it Prov. 16. 4. 1 Cor. 10. 31. What is to be considered for the further opening of this Petition First for the meaning of the words apart then of them together What is meant by the word Name By the name of God we are to understand God himselfe 1 King 5. 5. Isa. 26. 8. as he maketh knowne to us the fame and glory of his nature otherwise unconceivable Gen. 32. 29. For the name of God in the Scripture signifieth God himself because the nature of a thing is taken for that it is the name of as Acts 1. 15. his Essence and all things by which he is knowne unto us What are those Names whereby God is made knowne unto us First his Titles as Jehovah Elohim the Lord of Hosts and such like Exod. 3. 14. and 6. 3. Secondly his Attributes and Properties as his wisedome power love goodnesse mercy justice truth Exod. 33. 18 19 c. 34. 5 6 c. which being essentiall in him are for our capacity expressed under the name of such qualities in us and are called the names of God because as names serve to discerne things by so God is knowne by these things Thirdly also his memorials signified by his name because he getteth glory by them What are these Memorials First the works and actions of God as the Creation and government of the world Psal. 104. but especially the worke of redemption Psalme 19. 14. Secondly the things that belong unto God as his Worship Word Sacraments and disclipine but especially his Word Psalme 138. 2. 19. c. which is the booke of grace and the boxe of ointment out of which the sweet savour of his name is most effectually powred Cant. 1. 2 3. What is meant by the word Hallowed Sanctified and reverenced for to hallow is to set apart a thing from the common use to some proper end and therefore to hallow the name of God is to separate it from all profane and unholy abuse to a holy and reverend use Can any man adde any thing unto Gods holinesse No no we cannot adde any holinesse unto God or take any from him but as God is holy in his properties and actions and also in his Ordinance both in the Church and Common-wealth so wee desire they may be and that not onely by our selves but also by all men acknowledged and reputed as they are worthy in themselves to be reputed and accounted And in this respect onely are we said to hallow his name when we acknowledge it and honour it for such Psal. 96. 7 8. thereby as it were setting the Crowne of holinesse and honour upon the head of God contrariwise failing so to doe we are guilty of the profanation of Gods holy name not that he can receive any pollution from us but onely as a man that lusteth after a chast woman is said by our Saviour to be guilty of adultery with her though she remaineth in her self spotlesse and undefiled Matth. 5. 28. May none else be glorified but the name of God When it is said Hallowed be thy name thereby is noted that no glory or honour should be given to any thing in the world but to the name of God Esa. 42. 8. 48. 11. further then they are instruments whereby we may arise to the glorifying of it for God will not give his glory to any other thing no not to the manhood of our Saviour Christ. What is to be considered in the words together That it is a singular benefit of God to admit us to the sanctifying of his name and as it were to set the Crowne which is his glory upon his head and to hold it there especially seeing he is able himself alone to doe it and when he would use others thereto he hath so many Legions of Angels to doe it yea can raise up stones to doe it What doe you then aske of God in this Petition That as God is glorious in himselfe so he may be declared and made knowne unto men that therefore God would have himselfe known and acknowledged by all men but especially by my selfe to be most holy that whether we speak think or any way use his name properties works or Word we may doe it holily and with all reverence That his wisdome power goodnesse mercy truth righteousnesse and eternity may more and more be imparted unto me and other of Gods people That he may be acknowledged just wise c. in
Christians enabled by understanding and grace to judg and aright to performe this weighty duty Zach. 12. 12 c. unlesse any be exempted by present debility Matth. 12. 7. 1 Sam. 14 29 30. but differently according to the divers occasions of fasting and the kindes thereon depending whereof before hath been spoken May those that are under the government of their Parents or Masters fast without leave of them No but in the publike all may fast Are all persons meet for this exercise of fasting By the unfitnesse of his owne Disciples for it our Saviour Christ teacheth that they that are meet for this exercise must not be Novices in the profession of the truth no more then hee that is accustomed with the drinking of old wine can suddenly fall in liking of new wine Luke 5. 33. Is it so hard a matter to abstaine from a Meales meat and such bodily comforts for a small time which the youag sucking babes and the beasts of Nineveh did and divers beasts are better able to performe then any man No verily but hereby appeareth that there is an inward strength of the mind required not onely in knowing of our behaviour in this service of God but also of power and ability to goe under the weight of the things we humble our selves for which strength if it be wanting the fast will be to those that are exercised in it as a peece of new cloath sewed into an old garment which because it is not able to beare the stresse and strength of hath a greater rent made into it then if there were no peece at all What gather you hereof That it is no marvell that where there is any abstinence and corporall exercise in Popery yet that the same makes them nothing better but rather worse having not so much as the knowledge of this service of God much lesse any spirituall strength and ability to performe it with What then are the parts of a true Christian Fast They are partly outward partly inward 1. Bodily exercises serving to the inward substances 1 Tim. 4. 8. 2. An inward substance sanctifying the bodily exercise and making it profitable to the users What is the bodily exercise in fasting It is the forbearing of things otherwise lawfull and convenient in whole or in part for the time of humiliation so as nature be chastised but not disabled for service and the delights of the sense laid aside but yet without annoyance and uncomelinesse What are those outward things that are to be forborne during the time of fasting First food Esther 4. 16. Ionah 3. 7. from whence the whole action hath the name of Fasting and the word doth signifie an utter abstinence from all meats and drinkes and not a sober use of them which ought to be all the time of our lives Wherefore this outward exercise is thus described Luke 5. 33. The Disciples of John and the Pharisees fast but thine eat and drinke What is here to be considered A charge upon Popery For the greater sort of people amongst them in the day of their Fast fill their bellies with bread and drinke and the richer sort with all kinde of delicates flesh and that which commeth of flesh onely excepted So that the fasting of the one and the other is but a fulnesse and the latter may be more truely said to feast then a fast It seemeth you make it unlawfull for those that fast to eat any thing during their fasting Not so if for help of weaknesse the taking of meat be moderately and sparingly used as before hath been observed What other things are outward The ceasing from labour in our vocations on the day of the Fast Num. 29. 7. to the end wee may the better attend to the holy exercises used in fasting in which respect such times are called Sabbaths Levit. 23. 32. The laying aside of costly apparell or whatsoever ornaments of the body and wearing of homely and courser garments Exodus 33. 4 5. Jonah 3. 5 6. The forbearing of Sleep Musicke Mirth Perfumes c. Dan. 6. 18. 10. 2 3. And this abstinence is required of all that celebrate the Fast But of married persons there is further required a forbearance of the use of the marriage bed and of the company each of other 1 Cor. 7. 5. Joel 2. 16. What is the meaning of the abstinence from these outward things By abstinence from meat and drinke by wearing of courser apparell by ceasing from labour in our Callings and by separation in married persons for the time wee thereby professe our selves unworthy of all the benefits of this present life and that we are worthy to bee as farre underneath the earth as wee are above it yea that we are worthy to be cast into the bottome of hell which the holy Fathers in times past did signifie by putting ashes upon their heads the truth whereof remaineth still although the ceremony be not used What is the spirituall substance of duty whereto the bodily exercise serveth It is an extraordinary endevour of humbling our souls before the Lord and of seeking his face and favour Ezra 8. 21. wherein that inward power and strength whereof we speak is seen Wherein doth it consist 1. In the abasing of our selves Joel 2. 13. by examination confession and hearty bewailing of our own and the common sins Ezra 9. 3 4. Neh. 9. 1 2 c. Dan. 9. 3 4 5 c. 2. In drawing near unto the Lord by faith Luk. 15. 18 21. and earnest invocation of his name Iona. 3. 8. Esa. 58. 4. The former is grounded upon the meditation of the Law and threats of God the later upon the Gospel and promises of God touching the removing of our sins and Gods judgments upon us for them How agreeth this with the Popish Fast It faileth in both parts for in stead of humbling themselves and afflicting their soules they pride themselves and lift up their mindes in thinking they deserve something at Gods hands for their fasting which is great abomination Neither have they upon the dayes of their Fast any extraordinary exercise of prayer more then upon other dayes of all which it may appeare how small cause they have to boast of their fasting which in all the warp thereof hath not a thread which is not full of leprosie What is required in our humiliation Anguish and grief of our hearts conceived for our sins and the punishment of God upon us for which we ought to be humbled in fasting For the effecting whereof we are to set before our eyes 1. The glasse of Gods holy Law with the bitter curses threatned to the breakers thereof 2. The examples of vengeance on the wicked 3. The judgments now felt or feared of us 4. The spirituall contemplation of our blessed Saviour bleeding on the Crosse with the wounds which our sinnes have forced upon him Zach. 12. 10 c. What is required in our drawing neare unto the Lord by Faith Not onely
not by the ordinary way of naturall generation is thereby freed from all the touch and taint of the corruption of our flesh which by that means onely is propagated from the first man unto his posterity Whereupon hee being made of man but not by man and so becomming the immediate fruit of the womb and not of the loyns must of necessity bee acknowledged to be that HOLY THING which so was born of so blessed a Mother Who although shee were but the passive and materiall principle of which that precious flesh was made and the holy Ghost the agent and efficient yet cannot the man Christ Jesus thereby bee made the Son of his own Spirit Because Fathers doe beget their children out of their own substance the holy Ghost did not so but framed the flesh of him from whom himself proceeded out of the creature of them both the handmaid of our Lord whom from thence all generations shall call blessed That blessed womb of hers was the Bride-chamber wherein the holy Ghost did knit that indissoluble knot betwixt our humane nature and his Deity the Son of God assuming into the unity of his person that which before he was not and yet without change for so must God still bee remaining that which hee was whereby it came to passe that this holy thing which was born of her was indeed and in truth to bee called the SON of GOD. Which wonderfull connexion of two so infinitely differing natures in the unity of one person how it was there effected is an inquisition fitter for an Angelicall intelligence then for our shallow capacity to look after to which purpose also wee may observe that in the fabrick of the Ark of the Covenant the posture of the faces of the Cherubims toward the Mercy-seat the type of our Saviour was such as would point unto us that these are the things which the Angels desire to stoope and look into And therefore let that satisfaction which the Angel gave unto the Mother Virgin whom it did more specially concern to move the question How may this bee content us The power of the Highest shall overshadow thee For as the former part of that speech may informe us that with God nothing is impossible so the latter may put us in minde that the same God having overshadowed this mystery with his own vaile wee should not presume with the men of Bethshemesh to look into this Ark of his lest for our curiosity wee bee smitten as they were Onely this wee may safely say and must firmely hold that as the distinction of the Persons in the holy Trinity hindreth not the unity of the Nature of the Godhead although every Person intirely holdeth his owne incommunicable property so neither doth the distinction of the two Natures in our Mediatour any way crosse the unity of his Person although each nature remaineth intire in it self and retaineth the properties agreeing thereunto without any conversion composition commixtion or confusion When Moses beheld the bush burning with fire and yet no whit consumed he wondred at the sight and said I will now turn aside and see this great sight why the bush is not burnt But when God thereupon called unto him out of the midst of the bush and said Draw not nigh hither and told him who he was Moses trembled hid his face and durst not behold God Yet although being thus warned we dare not draw so nigh what doth hinder but we may stand aloof off and wonder at this great sight Our God is a consuming fire saith the Apostle and a question wee finde propounded in the Prophet Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire who amongst us shall dwell with the everlasting burnings Moses was not like other Prophets but God spake unto him face to face as a man speaketh unto his friend and yet for all that when hee besought the Lord that he would shew him his glory hee received this answer Thou canst not see my face for there shall no man see me and live Abraham before him though a special friend of God and the father of the faithfull the children of God yet held it a great matter that he should take upon him so much as to speak unto God being but dust and ashes Yea the very Angels themselves which are greater in power and might are fain to cover their faces when they stand before him as not being able to behold the brightnesse of his glory With what astonishment then may wee behold our dust and ashes assumed into the undivided unity of Gods own Person and admitted to dwell here as an inmate under the same roofe and yet in the midst of those everlasting burnings the bush to remain unconsumed and to continue fresh and green for evermore Yea how should not wee with Abraham rejoyce to see this day wherein not onely our nature in the Person of our Lord Jesus is found to dwell for ever in those everlasting burnings but in and by him our own persons also are brought so nigh thereunto that God doth set his Sanctuary and Tabernacle among us and dwell with us and which is much more maketh us our selves to be the house and the habitation wherein he is pleased to dwell by his Spirit according to that of the Apostle Yee are the Temple of the living God as God hath said I will dwell in them and walk in them and I will be their God and they shall be my people And that most admirable prayer which our Saviour himself made unto his Father in our behalf I pray not for these alone but for them also which shall beleeve on me through their word that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us that the world may beleeve that thou hast sent me I in them and thou in mee that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me To compasse this conjunction betwixt God and us he that was to be our JESUS or Saviour must of necessity also be IMMANUEL which being interpreted is God with us and therefore in his Person to be Immanuel that is God dwelling with our flesh because he was by his Office to to be Immanuel that is he who must make God to be at one with us For this being his proper office to be Mediatour between God and men he must partake with both and being before all eternity consubstantiall with his Father he must at the appointed time become likewise consubstantiall with his children Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and bloud he also himself likewise took part of the same saith the Apostle We read in the Romane history that the Sabines and the Romanes joyning battell together upon such
the glory of Christ. We read in the holy story that God took of the spirit which was upon Moses and gave it unto the seventy Elders that they might bear the burden of the people with him and that hee might not bear it as before hee had done himself alone It may bee his burden being thus lightned the abilities that were left him for government were not altogether so great as the necessity of his former imployment required them to have been and in that regard vvhat vvas given to his assistants might perhaps bee said to bee taken from him But wee are sure the case was otherwise in him of whom now wee speak unto whom God did not thus give the Spirit by measure And therefore although so many millions of beleevers doe continually receive this supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ yet neither is that fountain any way exhausted nor the plenitude of that well-spring of grace any whit impaired or diminished it being Gods pleasure That in him should all fulnesse dwell and that of his fulnesse all wee should receive grace for grace That as in the naturall generation there is such a correspondence in all parts betwixt the begetter and the Infant begotten that there is no member to bee seen in the Father but there is the like answerably to bee found in the Childe although in a farre lesse proportion so it falleth out in this spirituall that for every grace which in a most eminent manner is found in Christ a like grace will appeare in Gods Childe although in a far inferiour degree similitudes and likenesses being defined by the Logicians to bee comparisons made in quality and not in quantity Wee are yet further to take it into our consideration that by thus enlivening and fashioning us according to his own image Christs purpose was not to raise a seed unto himself dispersedly and distractedly but to gather together in one the Children of God that were scattered abroad yea and to bring all unto one head by himselfe both them which are in Heaven and them which are on the Earth That as in the Tabernacle the vail divided between the Holy place and the most Holy but the curtaines which covered them both were so coupled together with the taches that it might still bee one Tabernacle so the Church Militant and Triumphant typified thereby though distant as farre the one from the other as Heaven is from Earth yet is made but one Tabernacle in Jesus Christ In whom all the building fifty framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord and in whom all of us are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit The bond of this mysticall union betwixt Christ and us as elsewhere hath more fully been declared is on his part that quickning Spirit which being in him as the Head is from thence diffused to the spirituall animation of all his Members and on our part Faith which is the prime act of life wrought in those who are capable of understanding by that same Spirit Both whereof must bee acknowledged to bee of so high a nature that none could possibly by such ligatures knit up so admirable a body but hee that was God Almighty And therefore although wee did suppose such a man might bee found who should perform the Law for us suffer the death that was due to our offence and overcome it yea and whose obedience and sufferings should be of such value that it were sufficient for the redemption of the whole world yet could it not be efficient to make us live by faith unlesse that Man had been able to send Gods Spirit to apply the same unto us Which as no bare Man or any other Creature whasoever can doe so for Faith wee are taught by S. Paul that it is the operation of God and a work of his power even of that same power wherewith Christ himself was raised from the dead Which is the ground of that prayer of his that the eyes of our understanding being enlightned wee might know what is the exceeding greatnesse of his power to us-ward who beleeve according to the working of his mighty power which hee wrought in Christ when hee raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places far above all Principality and Power and Might and every Name that is named not onely in this World but also in that to come and hath put all things under his feet and gave him to bee head over all things to the Church which is his body the fulnesse of him that filleth all in all Yet was it fit also that this Head should bee of the same nature with the Body which is knit unto it and therefore that hee should so bee God as that hee might partake of our Flesh likewise For wee are members of his body saith the same Apostle of his flesh and of his bones And except yee eate the flesh of the Son of man saith our Saviour himself and drink his blood yee have no life in you Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in mee and I in him Declaring thereby first that by this mysticall and supernaturall union wee are as truely conjoyned with him as the meate and drink wee take is with us when by the ordinary work of Nature it is converted into our own substance Secondly that this conjunction is immediately made with his humane nature Thirdly that the Lamb slaine that is Christ crucified hath by that death of his made his flesh broken and his blood powred out for us upon the Crosse to bee fit food for the spirituall nourishment of our soules and the very well-spring from whence by the power of his Godhead all life and grace is derived unto us Upon this ground it is that the Apostle telleth us that wee have boldnesse to enter into the Holyest by the blood of Jesus by a new and living way which hee hath consecrated for us through the vaile that is to say his flesh That as in the Tabernacle there was no passing from the Holy to the most Holy place but by the vaile so now there is no passage to bee looked for from the Church Militant to the Church Triumphant but by the flesh of him who hath said of himself I am the way the truth and the life no man commeth unto the Father but by mee Jacob in his dream beheld a ladder set upon the Earth the top whereof reached to Heaven and the Angels of God ascending and descending on it the Lord himself standing above it Of which vision none can give a better interpretation then hee who was prefigured therein gave unto Nathaniel Hereafter you shall see Heaven opened and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man Whence wee may well collect that the onely meanes whereby God standing
Secondly in men the thing which is understood and the understanding it self is not all one but in God it is all one What reason have you for this The reason is because only God is altogether life and his life is altogether understanding and his understanding is the highest degree of life and therefore he hath his conceiving and begetting most inward of all What mean you when you say most inward of all I mean that the Father conceiveth of himself and in himself and his conceiving is a begetting and his begetting abideth still in himself because his understanding can no where meet with any thing but that which he himself is and that is the second subsistence in the Trinity which we call Everlasting Son of God Now let me hear what the holy Ghost is and how he proceedeth from the Father and the Son For the understanding of this matter wee must consider two things First that in the essence of God besides his understanding there is a will Secondly what be the properties of this will in God Esa. 46. 10. What are the properties of Gods will First it applieth his power when where and how he thinks good according to his own mind Secondly it worketh everlastingly upon it self as his understanding doth What doe you gather by this That because it hath no other thing to work upon but it self it doth delight it self in the infinite good which it knoweth in it self for the action of the will is delight and liking And what of that That delight which God or his will hath in his own infinite goodnesse doth bring forth a third Person or subsistence in God which we call The holy Ghost What is that same third subsistence in God The mutuall kindnesse and lovingnesse of the Father and the Son What mean you by this mutuall lovingnesse and kindnesse The Father taketh joy and delight in the Son or his own Image conceived by his understanding and the Son likewise rejoyceth in his Father as he saith himself and the reason thereof is this the action of the will when it is fulfilled is love and liking What resemblance can you shew thereof in some thing that is commonly used amongst us When a man looketh in a glasse if he smile his image smileth too and if he taketh delight in it it taketh the same delight in him for they are both one If they be all one then there are not three beeings The face is one beeing the image of the face in a glasse is another beeing and the smiling of them both together is a third beeing and yet all are in one face and all are of one face and all are but one face And is it so in God Yea for even so the understanding which is in God is one beeing the reflection or image of his understanding which he beholdeth in himself as in a glasse is a second beeing and the love and liking of them both together by reason of the will fulfilled is a third beeing in God and yet all are but of one God all are in one God and all are but one God Which of these three is first There is neither first nor last going afore or comming after in the essence of God but all these as they are everlasting so they are all at once and at one instant even as in a glasse the face and the image of the face when they smile they smile together and not one before not after another What is the conclusion of all As we have the Son of the Father by his everlasting will in working by his understanding so also we have the holy Ghost of the love of them both by the joint working of the understanding and will together whereupon we conclude three distinct Persons or in-beeings which we call the Father the Son and the holy Ghost in one spirituall yet unspeakable substance which is very God himself But what if some will be yet more curious to know how the Son of God should be begotten and how the holy Ghost should proceed from the Father and the Son how may we satisfie them Well enough for if any will be too curious about this point we may answer them thus Let them shew us how themselves are bred and begotten and then let them aske us how the Son of God is begotten and let them tell us the nature of the spirit that beateth in their pulses and then let them be inquisitive at our hands for the proceeding of the holy Ghost And what if they cannot give us a reason for the manner of their own beeing may they not be inquisitive for the manner of Gods beeing No for if they must be constrained to be ignorant in so common matters which they daily see and feel in themselves let them give us leave to be ignorant not only in this but in many things moe which are such as no eye hath seen nor ear hath heard nor wit of man can conceive Let us now hear out of the Scriptures what the holy Ghost is He is the third Person of the Trinity by communication of essence eternally proceeding from the Father and from the Son Are you able to prove out of the Scripture that the holy Ghost is God Yes because the many properties and actions of God are therein given to him as to the Father and to the Son Let us hear some of those proofs 1t. Gen. 1. 2. the work of Creation is attributed to the Spirit of God 2ly Esa. 61. 1. the Spirit of the Lord God is said to be upon Christ because the Lord anointed him c. 3ly 1 Cor. 3. 17. and 2 Cor. 6. 16. Paul calleth us Gods Temples because the Holy Ghost dwelleth in us Saint Augustine in his 66. Epistle to Maximinus saith it is a cleare argument of his God-head if we were commanded to make him a Temple but of timber and stone because that worship is due to God only therefore now we must much more think that he is God because we are not cōmanded to make him a temple but to be a temple for him our selves What other reason have you out of the Scripture Peter reproving Ananias for lying to the Holy Ghost said that he lyed not to men but to God Acts 5. 3 4. Have you any more reasons from the Scripture Yea two more one from Saint Paul and another from Saint Paul and Esay together What is your reason from Saint Paul When he sheweth how many sundry gifts are given to men he saith that one and the selfe-same Spirit is the distributer of them all therefore he is God for none can distribute those gifts which Paul speaks of but God 1 Cor. 12. ver 6. 11. What is your reason from Esay and Saint Paul together Esay saith in the Chapter 6. 9. I heard the Lord speaking which place Paul expoundeth of the Holy Ghost Acts 28. 25. But how can you prove out of the Scriptures that the Holy Ghost is God proceeding from
the Father and the Sonne First John 15. 26. When the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father he shall testifie of me That he proceedeth from the Father is here expresly affirmed that hee proceedeth from the Sonne is by necessary consequence implyed because the Sonne is said to send him as John 14. 26. The Father is said to send him in the Sonnes name by which sending the order of the persons of the Trinity is evidently designed because the Sonne is of the Father and the Father is not of the Sonne therefore we find in Scripture that the Father sendeth his Sonne but never that the Sonne sendeth his Father In like manner because the Holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and from the Son we find that both the Father and the Son doe send the Holy Ghost but never that the Holy Ghost doth send either Father or Sonne Secondly John 16. 15. the Sonne saith of the Holy Ghost all things that the Father hath are mine therefore said I that he shall take of mine and shall shew it unto you All things that the Father hath the Sonne receiveth from him as coming from him and so whatsoever the Holy Ghost hath he hath it not of himselfe vers 13. but from the Sonne and so from the Father as a person proceeding as well from the one as from the other Thirdly Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into your hearts As the Holy Ghost is called the Spirit of the Father Esa. 48. 16. The Lord and his Spirit hath sent me so is he here also called the Spirit of the Son and Rom. 8. 9. the Spirit of God and the Spirit of Christ. Now if the spirit of man in whom there is no perfection be all one with man much more the Spirit of the Father is all one with the Father and the Spirit of the Sonne is all one with the Sonne and so the Holy Ghost with the Father and the Sonne is the same in deity dignity eternity operation and will Why is the third Person called the Spirit Not onely because he is a spirituall that is an immateriall and pure essence for so likewise is the Father a Spirit and the Sonne as well as he but first in regard of his person because he is spired and as it were breathed both from the Father and the Sonne that is to say proceedeth from them both Secondly in regard of the creatures because the Father and the Sonne doe work by the Spirit who is as it were the breath of grace which the Father and the Sonne breatheth out upon the Saints blowing freely where it listeth and working spiritually for manner means and matter where it pleaseth John 20. 22. Psal. 33. 6. John 3. 8. Acts 2. 2 3 4. 1 Cor. 2. 12 13. Why is he called the Holy Ghost Not onely because of his essentiall holinesse as God for so the Father and the Sonne also are infinitely holy as he but because he is the authour and worker of all holinesse in men and the sanctifier of Gods children Why doth not the Father and the Sonne sanctifie also Yes verily but they doe it by him and because he doth immediately sanctify therefore he hath the title of Holy What other titles are given unto him in the word of God The Holy Ghost who is the Spirit of the Father speaking in the old Testament hath these names and properties First the good Spirit because he is the fountain of goodnesse Psal. 143. 10. Secondly the Spirit of God because he is God 1 Sam. 11. 6. Thirdly the finger of God because God worketh by him as a man by his hand Luke 11. 20. Fourthly the Comforter because he strengthneth the weak hearts of his Saints John 20. 26. Fiftly the spirit of Adoption because he assureth our hearts that we be the adopted Saints of God Rom. 8. 15. Sixtly the spirit of love power sobriety wisdome c. because it worketh all these things in us 2 Tim. 1. 6 7. Esa. 11. 2. What are the speciall comforts which the children of God receive from the holy Ghost He is in their hearts the pledge of Christs presence Ioh. 14. 16 17 18. 26. The witnesse of their Adoption Rom. 8. 15 16. The guide of their life Joh. 16. 13. The comforter of their soule Joh. 14. 26. 15. 26. 16. 13. The seale of their Redemption Eph. 1. 13. 4. 30. And the first fruits of their salvation Rom. 8. 23. But how are you assured that you have the Spirit Because it hath convinced my judgement Joh. 16. 18. converted my soul Act. 26. 18. Esa. 61. 1. and having mixed the word with my faith Heb. 4. 2. it is become as life to quicken me Joh. 6. 63. as water to cleanse me Ezek. 36. 25. as oyle to cheer me Heb. 1. 9. as fire to melt and refine me Mat. 3. 11. And how may you keep the Spirit now you have it By nourishing the good motions and means of it 1 Thess. 5. 17 18. 20. being fearfull to grieve quench resist or molest it Eph. 4. 30. 1 Thess. 5. 19. Acts 7. 51. and carefull to be led by it and shew forth the fruits of it Rom. 8. 1. 14. Gal. 5. 18. 22. Thus much of the three Persons severally what now remaineth more to be spoken of the mystery of the Trinity To set down briefly what be the things common wherein the three Persons agree and what be the things proper to each of them whereby they are distinguished one from another What are the things wherein the three Persons doe communicate They are considered in regard either of themselves or of the creatures What are they in regard of themselves They agree one with another in nature beeing life time dignity glory or any thing pertaining to the divine Essence for in all these they are one and the same and consequently Co-essentiall Co-equall and Co-eternall What mean you when you say they be Co-essentiall That they be all the self-same substance or beeing having one individuall essence or deity common to them all and the self-same in them all VVhat mean you when you say they be Co-equall That as they agree in deity so they agree in dignity being of one state condition and degree and the one having as great excellency and Majesty every way as the other therefore their honour and worship is equall and alike and one of them is not greater nor more glorious then another John 5. 18. 23. Apoc. 5. 12 13. What mean you when you say that they be Co-eternall That one was not before another in time but that one hath been of as long continuance as another and all of them have been and shall be forever as being all of one self-same everlasting continuance How prove you this John 1. 1. In the beginning was the word c. and at that
his mouth and works of his hands are all stained with sin Be not outward sins more grievous then inward Some be and some be not for if they be against the same Commandement and the same branch thereof they are much more wicked and evill because first God is more dishonoured outwardly Secondly other men are offended if godly or inticed by their example if wicked Thirdly a man doth more ingrosse himselfe in sin outward then in a bare thought that he restraineth from outward action But how may some thoughts be more evill then actions If they be of more wicked matters as the denying of God in heart is worse then an idle word What use are we to make thereof It serveth first to condemn the common sort that say and hold that thoughts are free which are oft so sinfull Secondly to assure us that many though they lead an outward civill life in actions yet if their hearts be not cleansed by faith may be more odious in Gods sight that knoweth their thoughts then a godly person that may be left to some outward weaknesses in his life What be the degrees by which men doe proceed in the committing of actuall sin Out of James 1. 14 15. these foure degrees may be observed First temptation to sin James 1. 14. 2 Sam. 11. 12. which then only is sin to us when it either ariseth from our own corruption or from outward occasions to which we have offered our selves carelesly For if every temptation to sin offered unto us should be sin simply then our Saviour that was tempted should have sinned Therefore the outward or inward temptations that Satan may offer be not sins to us till they get some hold in us which is when we are the occasion of them our selves by inward corruption or outward carelesnesse in venturing upon temptations Secondly concupiscence bringing sinne to conception James 1. 15. which is done by these degrees First entertaining the sinne whereunto we are tempted and suffering it to have abode in the mind or thought Secondly withdrawing the heart from God whom we ought to feare with all our hearts and his Commandements Jam. 1. 14. Thirdly consulting whether that sinne which we ought to hate may be done or no. 3. Consent of the mind to commit sinne whereupon ensueth the birth of sin Jam. 1. 15. by which it is brought forth into act against God or man 4. Often repetition of sin by custom and continuance wherein the heart finally is hardened Heb. 3. 13. and sinne is come to a perfection or ripenesse Jam. 1. 15. which is the strength that sin getteth over man whom it ruleth as a Master doth a slave in which estate who so continueth must look for eternall death Jam. 1. 15. for sin then reigneth which it never doth in the godly Are these actuall transgressions all of one sort No for they are diversly considered in respect of the Commandement broken the object offended the disposition followed and the degrees attained How for the Commandement The breach of a Commandement that biddeth is a sin of omission but of one that forbiddeth is a sin of conversion the one is an omission of duty required the other a Commission of evill forbidden by the one we offend in omitting those things which we should doe by the other in committing those things which we should not doe Which be the inward sins of omission The not thinking so often or religiously of heavenly things respecting the first table or of good duties to man as we should but suffering our minds to be a through-fare for vaine or wicked thoughts to passe through more then good which sinne if it were thought of well would make men more humble before God and to make more conscience of their houres dayes and nights to mark how their mind is occupied What be inward sins of Commission All actuall sins of the mind and thoughts whether we be awake dealing with God or man or asleep dreaming Examples of the first against God are to think there is no God Psal. 10. 45. or to have vile and base conceipts of him or his government Psal. 10. 41. 1 Cor. 2. 14. And towards man every inward breach of the second table But doth man commit sin in the night when he dreameth Yes surely the soule is never idle but when it thinketh not of good it thinketh of evill and the godly may mark that after they have had any dreams of things unlawfull their heart is in a measure wounded till they obtaine peace and pardon from God What use are we to make thereof To pray earnestly that God would sanctifie our corrupt hearts that it may be a fountaine of holy and not sinfull thoughts and in the night 1. To commit our selves specially to God that because we having our Senses and Judgement bound and silent are lesse able to resist and judge our sinfull thoughts God would preserve us from them by his grace And 2. That we avoid all occasions thereof in the day What be the outward sins of Commission Such as to the committing of them beside the thought of our mind any part of our body doth concurre as our tongue to words and other parts to deeds How are sinnes distinguished in regard of the object offended Some sins are more directly against God some against men either publique or private and others against a mans self How in regard of the disposition followed Either as we partake with others sins Esa. 6. 5. or as we commit the sin in our own person What be the differences of partaking with others sins First when we conceal and winke at other mens sins which we ought to reveal and rebuke as Magistrates and Ministers oft doe 1 Sam. 3 13. Secondly when we further it by our consent presence or counsell Act. 7. 58. 8. 1. 22. 20. 23. 14 15. Rom. 1. 32. Thirdly when we provoke others to sin Mark 6. 25. VVhat difference of disposition is there in those sins which a man doth commit in his own person Some sins are committed of Ignorance 1 Tim. 1. 13. Ps. 19. 12. or of an erring conscience 1 Cor. 8. 7. which a man doth either not know or not mark others are done of knowledge Doth not Ignorance excuse Affected Ignorance doth rather increase then diminish a fault VVhat be the differences of sins of knowledge 1. Some are of infirmity and temptation for feare of evill or hope of good Rom. 7. 19. Mat. 26. 69 70. 2. Some of presumption obstinacy and stubbornesse in sinning against which David earnestly prayed Ps. 19. 13. 50. 21. Eccles. 8. 11. and this may proceed if men have not the grace of God to obstinate and wilfull malice against God and his truth and to the unpardonable sinne against the holy Ghost Heb. 6. 4 5 6. 10. 29. Mark 3 29 30. What is the sin against the holy Ghost the highest of all sins It is a wilfull and malicious falling from and resisting of the Gospell