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A20766 The summe of sacred diuinitie briefly & methodically propounded : more largly & cleerely handled and explaned / published by John Downame ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1625 (1625) STC 7148.3; ESTC S5154 448,527 580

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of holy Angels yea the Song of Moses the Seruant of GOD and of the Lambe that God onely is holy The righteousnesse of God is to be seene in foure chiefe Specially seen to vs in foure chiefe and principall vertues which in the Scripture you shall find for the most part to goe by couples or payres and principall vertues that haue respect vnto his reasonable creatures in the Scripture you shall finde them for the most part to goe by couples or payres The first couple is p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first couple are Kindnesse Truth kindnesse and truth specially to his Church Exod. 34. 6. IEHOVAH IEHOVAH c. aboundant in kindnesse and truth Psal 25. 10. All the paths of IEHOVAH are kindnesse and truth to them that keep his Couenant and his Testimonies Pro. 3. 3. Kindnesse and truth let them not forsake thee and againe q Prou 14. 22. Kindnesse in being ready to bestow all good things Kindnesse and truth shall be to them that imagine good Kindnesse is that whereby hee is ready to bestow all good things The kindnesse of God offereth it selfe to bee considered for the most part in these degrees First his long suffering whereby he is slow to wrath and goeth as it were with a leaden heele vnto punishment and neuer is a God r So the Iewish Rabbines in their language elegantly say that God neuer is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 till he can no longer bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of vengeance till he can no longer be a God of patience So saith the Apostle Rom. 2. 4. That God sheweth forth the riches of his patience and long sufferance to this end that the kindnesse of God might lead vs to Repentance And ſ 1 Pet. 3. 20. Peter giueth as for a most cleere Looking-glasse to behold this long sufferance of God in both his long patience and wayting for of amendment in the dayes of Noe whilest the Arke was preparing an hundred and twenty yeeres and t 2 Pet. 3. 9. his forbearing to destroy the World Now to the end that none of his may perish but all come to Repentance Secondly His bounty and goodnesse giuing liberally all good things as the Psalmist saith u Psal 145 9. IEHOVAH is good to all and his kindnesse is ouer all his workes And againe x Psal 36. 7. Thou IEHOVAH preseruest men and beasts Thirdly and specially in his grace and fauour whereby he bestoweth all these things without respect of our worthinesse or vnworthinesse as our Sauiour Mat. 5. 45. teacheth vs to behold in the ordinary and daily course of things Hem●keth the Sunne to rise on the euill and the good and raigneth on the iust and the vniust Truth is the faithfull performance of whatsoeuer hee Truth faithfully to performe whatsoeuer he speaketh speaketh whether he promise good or threaten euill A vertue then the which none can more beseeme the Godhead for as the z Iohn 8. 44. Deuill is a Lyar from the beginning and the father of lyes so is God the Author of all Truth yea Truth it selfe and true for euermore True in his words and promises without subtilty or guile true in the accomplishment and performance without colouring or deceit He speaketh and it is promiseth and it commeth to passe threatneth and it taketh effect a Psal 89. 33 34. 35. I will not alter saith the Lord that which is proceeded out of my lips nor falsifie my faith b Titus 1. 2. Nay he cannot lye because hee c 2. Tim. 2. 13. cannot deny himselfe So naturall it is vnto himselfe to bee Truth it selfe Therefore he is called The d Psal 31. 6. God of Truth The e Esay 55. 16. God of Amen What is that else but such a God as is alwayes one and the same true in his words firme in his promises certaine in his performance Whereupon the f Rom. 3. 4. Apostle cryeth out Let God be true and all men lyars The other couple are g 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iustice and Mercy flowing from The other couple are Iustice and Mercy flowing from the former the former both specially seene in the sauing or destroying of men and Angels Psal 116. 5. IEHOVAH is gracious and iust and our God is mercifull Psal 14. 5 7 8. The memoriall of thine abundant goodnesse they shall powre out and thy Iustice they shall sing that IEHOVAH is gracious and mercifull c. Iustice is that whereby he rendreth to euery one according Iustice to render to euery one his due to his workes for else h Rom. 3. 6. as the Apostle reasoneth If there were vnrighteousnesse with God how could God iudge the World Therefore as a most righteous Iudge hee seuerely punisheth the workers of iniquitie and graciously recompenceth those that feare him with that free reward which he hath promised So saith i 1. Pet. 1. 7. Peter that without respect of persons hee iudgeth euery one according to his workes And k Ier. 51. 56 IEREMY The Lord that recompenceth shall surely recompence It is iust saith l 2. Thess 1. 6 7 PAVL with God to render trouble to them that trouble you and to you that are troubled rest with vs at the Comming of Iesus Christ And againe m Rom. 1. 8. The wrath of God reuealeth it selfe from Heauen against all vngodlinesse and vnrighteousnesse of men But of himselfe hee saith n 2. Tim. 4. 8. There is layd vp for mee a Crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord that righteous Iudge will render vnto mee in that Day And o 1. Iohn 1. 9. IOHN If we confsse our sinnes God is faithfull and iust to forgiue them because of his promise sake Mercy is that whereby hee helpeth out of misery Mercy in being ready to helpe in time of neede whomsoeuer it pleaseth him As hee saith to MOSES p Exod. 33. 19. I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious and I will haue mercy on whom I will haue mercy And the q Lament 3. 22 Prophet in the Lamentations It is the wonderfull kindnesse of IEHOVAH that wee are not consumed for his mercies fayle not yea hee wayteth as the Prophet speaketh r Esay 30. 18. to shew mercy to vs being full of compassion in all our miseries and necessities ſ Psal 46. 2. A helpe in affliction very ready to be found as the Psalmist saith Thus he tempereth his mercy with his Iustice as it were water to allay the heate of his burning wrath A vertue that aboue all other he appropriateth to himselfe and taketh as it were most pleasure in Neyther doth hee so oft call himselfe a iust and righteous as hee doth a gracious and mercifull God Therefore beside his patience and long sufferance inuiting vs to Repentance hee doth humble himselfe as it were to mens infirmity vsing all the meanes and helpes whereby our coldnesse may bee quickned and
THE SUMME of Sacred Diuinitie Briefly Methodically Propounded More Largly cleerely handled and explaned PUBLISHED by John Downhame Batchelor in Diuinitie LONDON Printed by William Stansby TO THE CHRISTIAN READER AS in materiall buildings the skil of those Workemen is commendable who can cunningly frame the singular parts and so beautifie set them forth as that they may bee pleasant to the eye and conuenient for vse as they that can make faire Walls and Windowes a gracefull Frontispice and comely Roofe but they are most praise-worthy who can well contriue the whole plot lay a good and sure Foundation and in due proportion can frame out and set vp the principalls and chiefe parts which sustayne and beare all the rest so in the spirituall Edifice they are worthily to be commended who skilfully handle particular points of Diuinitie in their Learned and Religious Tractates whereby the iudgement of the Reader is thorowly informed in those diuine Mysteries and the heart and will inclined to draw them into holy vse but yet none deserue better of the Church of God nor ought rather to haue their names registred with red Letters in the Kalender of the worthiest Saints then they who in their Writings or Sermons doe skilfully contriue the whole building or body of Diuinitie in a wel-framed plot lay a sound and sure foundation and thereupon erect the chiefe Principles and most substantial parts which are the strength and stay of all the rest For if the iudgement bee once thorowly informed in these mayne points then is it able to deduce from them innumerable particular Conclusions for speciall information and direction in the well-ordering of our liues in all singular actions then may wee with profit and without perill of falling into pernicious errours reade the holy Scriptures when we are able to interpret them according to these infallible Canons and Rules then may we heare the Word preached with vnderstanding and trie the spirits of those who preach vnto vs whether they bee of God or no when wee haue skill to examine their Doctrines according to this Analogie of Faith and can trie them by this neuer-deceiuing Touchstone whether they bee pure metall or but reprobate siluer and counterfait coyne Then shall we be more strongly armed against all assaults of enemies and aduersaries to the Truth false Seducers and subtill Heretikes and be better able to defend that Veritie which we professe and conuince them of their errours and lyes then wanting this helpe if we should spend our whole time in reading of Controuersies and euen dimme our eyes and tyre our braynes in the perusing and studying of Polemicall discourses For these many grounds of Truth doe yeeld from them such a cleere light that they do not only appeare in their owne brightnesse but also discouer the blacknesse of errour and from one Principle well vnderstood wee inferre the falshood of innumerable contrarie Conclusions whereof it is that we shall very rarely obserue any well-grounded in the fundamentall points of Religion to fall into the snares of subtill Seducers whereas contrariwise wee may commonly see that those who are ignorant of them though neuer so sharpe-sighted in curious speculations doe become an easie prey and are quickly catched in the nets of their Sophistrie In which respects it were much to bee wished that both Ministers would bee more frequent and diligent in laying these grounds in their Teaching and Writing and also that the people would receyue this more solid and substantiall foode with a better appetite The which of both is too much neglected because how soeuer these grounds are most necessarie yet they doe not make so glorious a shew as other points lesse substantiall because like a sure foundation they are plaine and vnpolished whereas the other being beautifully garnished with wit and eloquence doe delight the sense and more pleasingly worke vpon the heart and affections And yet we must acknowledge to Gods glorie who hath giuen these gifts to men and grace to vse them that there haue not beene wanting in these latter times many famous Worthies who haue happily laboured in this kind and with great soundnesse and perspicuitie haue deliuered and cleered these mayne points by their speaking and writing Among which Christian Reader I commend vnto thee the Author of this Booke as deseruing iustly to be ranked among the best both for Method and Matter sound handling of the chiefe points of Christian Religion and for cleering by the way diuers hard places of holy Scripture All which hee performeth in this worke with such learning iudgement and pietie that had he herein respected the prayses of men hee might well haue graced his Name with his Worke euen as his Worke would haue beene graced by his Name and not as one ashamed of so beautifull an off-spring haue suffered it to come abroad into the World as an Orphan the Father still liuing onely vnder the name of an vnworthy God-father The which I write not to commend the Author who as he is farre aboue my prayses in the high pitch of his owne worth so doth he not desire but rather shunneth them and as to the willing an iniurie is no iniurie so an officious dutie is no benefit but a kind of wrong where the partie nilling it is forced and obtruded Nor yet doe I prayse the worke for the Workers sake which though it commeth abroad without the Fathers name yet will I doubt not in short time bee famous in it owne name and excellencie but that I may with the weake thread of my censure draw thee to peruse it and so will it sufficiently commend it selfe and giue there iust cause of praysing God for stirring vp such Instruments of his Glorie and thy good The Lord make this and all other the godly labours of his faithfull Seruants effectuall for magnifying of his great Name and the further Eph. 4. 12 13. building vp of the body of his Sonne till we all come in the Vnitie of the Faith and the knowledge of the Sonne of God vnto a perfect Man and vnto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ that wee henceforth bee no more children tossed to and fro and carryed about with euery wind of doctrine by the sleight of men and cunning craftinesse whereby they lye in wait to deceiue but speaking the truth in loue may grow vp into him in all things which is the Head euen Christ. AMEN Thine in the Lord Iesus IOHN DOWNAME An Aduertisement to the READER THis Booke tending to explane another intituled The sacred Doctrine of Diuinitie wherein the whole body of Religion is set forth according to rules of Arte it was thought necessarie to place the Arte in the Margent on the one hand and some principall Heresies and Errors contrarie to the Doctrines here handled as they arise on the other Also for thy better helpe we haue herewithall printed the Arte by it selfe before the beginning of the Booke If it differ in any
much as thine heart desireth then he would answere No but thou shalt giue it now and if thou wilt not I will take it by force Therefore the sinne of the young men was very great before IEHOVAH for men abhorred the offering of IEHOVAH Fourthly All iniurious wrōgful dealing in matter of contract buying and selling and such like As first excessiue prices of things not obseruing a proportion and equalitie in the contract to be according to the need and profit of the buyer as the Law doth specially prouide When ſ Leuit. 25. 14 15 16. thou sellest ought to thy Neighbour or buyest at thy Neighbours hand ye shall not oppresse one another But according to the number of yeeres after the Iubile thou shalt buy of thy Neighbour also according to the number of yeeres thou shalt increase the price thereof and according to the fewnesse of yeeres thou shalt abate the price of it for according to the number of increases doth he sell vnto thee Secondly Vsury condemned Psal 15. 5. He that giueth not his money to vsurie And hereof also there is a Law Exod. 22. 25. If thou lend money vnto my people that is to the poore with thee thou shalt not bee as a Vsurer vnto him ye shall not oppresse him with Vsurie Thirdly Monopolies Ingrossing Fore-stalling c. t Esay 5. 8. Woe to them that ioyne house to house and field to field till there be no more place that you may be made the onely dwellers in the middest of the Land The lawfull vse stands in two things Frugalitie and And in the vse of them to doe it frugally Liberalitie Frugalitie I call a keeping together of that which God hath giuen vs for the better bestowing of it to good and profitable vses that u 2. Cor. 8. 14. our abundance may supply other mens wants as the Apostle speaketh Our Sauiour in his owne example doth herein goe before vs when he biddeth x Iohn 6. 12. Gather together the fragments that nothing be lost Which Lesson Iudas the Traytor had learned of his Master though hee vsed it but ill-fauouredly as an Hypocrite to serue his owne turne To what end saith y Mat. 26. 8 9. he is this waste for this oyntment might haue beene sold for much and giuen to the poore The contrarie is First Vnnecessarie and causlesse suretiship He z Pro. 11. 15. shall certainly be crushed that is suretie for a stranger But he that hateth sureties is safe Be a Pro. 22. 26. not thou of them that clap hands of them that are suretie for Debts Secondly In wastfulnesse when a man in dyet apparell furniture of his house building or such like goeth beyond his degree or calling He b Pro. 21. 17. shall be a poore man that loueth i●llitie he that loueth wine and oyntment shall not be rich Liberalitie is a cheerful communicating of our goods and liberally by a cheereful communicating of them all both in giuing and lending by giuing or lending as the case requireth Communicate c Rom. 12 13. to the necessities of the Saints If d Leuit. 25. 35. thy brother bee impouerished and fallen in decay with thee thou shalt releeue him The e Psal 37. 19. righteous man is mercifull and giueth Lend f Luk. 6. 34 35. looking for nothing thereof againe that is to say though it be with losse of the principal wherfore these works of beneficence are in the Scriptures called g Pro. 11. 18. 2. Cor. 8. 9. Iustice for then doth God in thy brothers necessitie make him in right the owner of thy goodst and thee onely the Steward and Distributer So saih SALOMON Hold h Pro. 3. 27 28 not backe goods from the owners thereof meaning those that haue need of it When it is in the power of thine hands to doe them good say not vnto thy Neighbour Goe and come againe tomorrow I will giue thee if thou now haue it For this cause the i Rom. 15. 27. Apostle telleth the Romanes that albeit the Macedonians Almes which they bestowed vpon the poore Saints at Ierusalem were voluntary and free yet it was such as by the Law of brotherly loue they did owe and were debtors of vnto them And to this dutie of liberalitie we are the rather to bee incouraged by that which our Sauiour is reported to haue k Acts 20. 3● had as a common saying in his mouth It is a more blessed thing to giue then to receiue One speciall branch of this well imploying of our One branch whereof is Hospitalitie goods is Hospitalitie Therefore it followeth in that place Rom. 12. 13. Follow after Hospitalitie And l 1. Pet. 4. 9. Peter saith Be harbarous one vnto another without grudging The contrary is Niggardlinesse He m Pro. 11. 24. that spareth more then is meet it onely sorteth to pouertie CHAP. XIII Of the ninth Commandement THE second way that men offend in the Truth which is in dealing faithfully things of this life is by falshood fraud deceit subtiltie cunning shifts and deuices which is forbidden in the ninth Commandement To vnderstand that Commandement as commonly men doe of our Neighbours good name and credit not of his outward goods as if those were spoken of onely in the eight is too much to straighten the bounds of this Commandement and in mine opinion faulteth two manner of wayes for first the greater and weighter Commandement should so come behinde A n Pro. 22. 1 2. good name being more to be desired then great riches Secondly The words Thou shalt not beare false witnesse are borrowed words taken from the Courts of Iustice where Lands and Possessions doe oftener come in question then mens names and credits and therefore cannot without violence bee restrayned to the Letter The ninth Cōmandement then would haue vs to deale truly and sincerely in all things concerning goods whether ones outward estate and worldly riches or his name and credit Our Sauiour Mat. 23. 22. calleth it Faithfulnesse or Faith meaning truth and constancie both in our words and in all our bargaines and agreements which Psal 15. 2 16. is made one speciall note of him that shall dwell in the Tabernacle of the Lord that he speaketh the truth as it is in his heart The o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebrew word whereby Dauid setteth it forth Psal 111. 7 8. signifieth indifferently Faithfulnesse or Truth The contrary whereof is all kind of falsitie namely First Open vntruth or Lyes Therefore p Ephes 4. 25. putting Their errour that hold officious or sporting lyes as they call them to be lawfull all which the Apostle heere condemneth and are all of them contrarie to the nature of God to whose Image wee ought in euery thing to be conformed who is the God of Truth Psal 31. 6. Neither ought any pretence of doing good vnto our Neighbour draw vs to any officious lye seeing the rule
of the Apostle is generall Not to doe euill that good may come thereof Ro. 3. 8. And those holy men and women that this way haue offended it is their faith not their lying which through infirmitie they fell into that the Spirit of God so much commendeth away lying speake the truth euery one with his Neighbour for we are one anothers members Secondly Fraud and deceit DAVID Psal 10. 1 7. ioyneth them together Hee shall not dwell in mine house that dealeth deceitfully he that speaketh lyes shall not remayne in my sight Speciall vertues to bee As Prudence in iudging aright reckoned in this part you haue two prudence and simplicitie which goodly mixture our Sauiour q Mat. 10. 16. requireth of all that are his Be wise as Serpents and innocent or simple as Doues And the r Rom. 16. 19. Apostle to the Romanes I would haue you wise in that that is good and harmelesse in that which is euill Prudence is a vertue to discerne and iudge of things aright whereunto wee attayne by searching out the things which it behooueth vs to know as Iob ſ Iob 29. 16. did The contrary whereof is that which the t Psal 82. 5. Psalmist reprehendeth in Iudges and Rulers of the Earth When these men know not nor giue themselues to vnderstand but walke in darknesse all the foundations of the Earth are mooued Simplicitie is to deale sincerely in the things wee discerne Simplicitie in speaking and doing the truth and iudge of And this hath vnder it two other branches First Speaking and performing the truth These u Zach. 8. 16. are the things which you should doe speake the truth euery one to his fellow and let iudgement of truth and peace iudge in your gates The contrarie whereof is First Euery vniust sentence When x Amos 5. 6 7. men turne iudgement into Wormewood as the Prophet speaketh Secondly Briberie Giuing sentence for reward Thy y Esay 1. 25. Princes are rebellious and compainons of Theeues euery one loueth gifts and followeth after rewards they iudge not the Fatherlesse neither doth the Widdowes cause come before them Where though the sentence bee iust and vpright yet taking of rewards is wicked when men doe not Iustice for Iustice sake To this first branch certaine speciall vertues doe also belong some whereof are in the things that concerne ones good name some in those that concerne worldly goods In the things that concerne ones good name To acknowledge the goodnesse that is in him and to speake of it with a loue and liking of that they doe So doth PAVL 2. Cor. 9. 2. For I know your readinesse whereof I boast to the Macedonians telling them that Achaia is furnished a yeere since Wherein notwithstanding wee must take heed that our loue and liking of the partie draw vs not to an allowance or winking at his faults no more then the Holy Ghost doth in the due commendation of the most choice and excellent men as of DAVID He z 1. King 15. 5. did right in the eyes of IEHOVAH and departed not from any thing that he commanded him all the daies of his life saue only in the matter of VRIAH the Hittite and of IOTHAM He a 2. Chr● 27. 2. did vprightly in the eyes of IEHOVAH according to all that his father did onely he entred not into the Temple of IEHOVAH but the people did yet corrupt themselues The contrarie is First A humour of speaking euill of men which the Apostle would haue all to take heed of Secondly Slandering or open forging of tales or priuie deuising of them fayning or adding any thing to them Thou b Leuit. 19. 16. shalt not walke about with Tales among the people Prou. 26. 20. Without wood the fire is quenched and without a Tale-bearer strife ceaseth And againe Verse 22. The words of a Tale-bearer are as flatterings and they goe downe into the bowels of the belly Rom. 1. 29. 30. Among the sinnes that naturally sticke vnto vs are reckoned Whisperers Tale-bearers c. And the c 2. Cor. 12. 20. Apostle saith Let there not be strife c. backbyting whispering c. among you Whither belongeth all wrongfull accusation whether vtterly false as that of the two wicked men against d 1. Kin. 21. 12. Naboth relating the bare words but not the sence and meaning wherein the two e Mat. 26. 60 91. Witnesses that testified our Sauiour Christ should say I can destroy the Temple of God and rayse it vp in three dayes are said to bee false Witnesses for f Iohn 2. 21. he spake of the Temple of his bodie Or lastly accusing of a truth with an intent to hurt for it was a truth that g 2. Sam. 22. 9. Doeg told of Dauids comming to Abimelech and his asking counsel for him of the Lord and giuing him victuals and other things yet because his end was wicked and naught iustly doth the Spirit of God say of him h Ps 52. 2. 3 4. Thy tongue imagineth mischiefe and is like a sharpe Rasor that cutteth deceitfully Thou doest Loue euill more then good and lies more then to speake truth Thirdly Receiuing tales we heare of others or euill reports that are cast abroad by whisperers talebarers c. Thou i Exod. 23. 1. shalt not receiue a false tale nor put thine hand with the wicked to heare false witnesse Wherefore Dauid k 1. Sam. 24. 10. worthily chargeth SAVL Wherefore giuest thou an eare to mens wordes that say Behold DAVID seeketh euill against thee And Salomon l Prou. 25. 23. in his Prouerbes saith that as the North wind driueth away the rayne so doth an angrie countenance a Slandering tongue Fourthly Babbling talke which the Apostle m 1. Tim. 5. 13. reprehendeth in certaine young women that were not onely idle but also Prattlers and busibodies speaking things which are not comely Fiftly Flattery praysing one aboue that we know in him He n Prou. 27. 14. that prayseth his friend with a loud voice rising earely in the morning it shal be accounted vnto him as a curse With faire o Rom. 16. 18. speech and flattering they deceiue the hearts of the simple Sixtly Foolish and arrogant boasting Let another praise thee saith p Prou. 27. 2. the wiseman and not thine owne mouth Seuenthly Dissembling when men say one thing and meane another q Psal 82. 3. speake peace with their friends but mischiefe is in their heart The vertue occupied in the things that concerne worldly goods is plaine sincere dealing The contrary whereof is all deceit in bargaining buying and selling Whereof the wiseman saith The r Prou. 12. 17. deceitfull man shall not roste that he taketh in hunting Of this kind are selling countrefeit for good as Copper for Gold and mingling any wares bad with good making shew onely of the good Heare ſ Amos. 8. 4 5 6 ye this yee that
extremitie is some way mitigated the same Apostles teach d 2. Pet. 2. 4. one in saying They are deliuered vnto chaines of darknesse to be kept vnto iudgement the e Iude ver 6. other that God keepeth them with euerlasting chaines vnder darknesse vnto the Iudgement of the great Day Whereby it is manifest that the iudgement which they yet lye vnder is not so fearefull and terrible as that which abideth for them So much may suffice for the Angels that fell The Angels that fell not are supernaturally vpholden from all danger of falling The Angels that sinned not are supernaturally vpvpholden from all possibilitie of falling Therefore our Sauiour Marke 12. 25. compareth the state of Gods Children in the Resurrection when all shall be firme and stable vnto the state of the holy Angels as now they stand In the resurrection they neither marry nor are marryed but are as the Angels of God in Heauen 1. Tim. 5. 21. They are called The elect Angels secretly opposed to those that fell Reprobates and Cast-awayes for whome hell fire was prepared Mat. 25. 41. But I say This holding vp is supernaturall they haue it not from their owne vertue or excellencie of nature for why then should not the rest haue had it but by the meere fauour and goodnesse of God Wherefore it is said Iob 4. 18. In his Angels hee put no steddinesse as wee haue shewed before that to bee vnchangeable and not subiect to temptation is the proper prayse of God CHAP. XVII Of the fall of Man IN the fall of MAN I obserue After the fall of Angels First That their sinne was the eating of the forbidden fruit as the Storie specifieth f Gen. 3. 1. vnto Verse 8. Gen. 3. whereunto they came by these degrees first they g Gen. 3. 6. beheld it then they they desired the beautie of it thirdly they tooke and lastly did eate of it Neither was this the onely sinne it was accompanied with a multitude of other sinnes drawing them to this actuall and open disobedience of the Commandement of GOD whereby the foulenesse of their offence doth the more appeare As first Infidelitie in a doubting of the truth of God and falsifying of his Word for he had said What day ye eate thereof ye shall certainly dye EVE reciteth to the Serpent Lest peraduentre yee dye speaking doubtfully as of a thing not certaine Secondly A crediting of GODS enemie and theirs and so preferring the Deuill aboue GOD. Thirdly A false opinion in their heart of God that he enuyed their good estate Fourthly Intolerable Pride and Ambition in desiring to be equall with God Other circumstances there are further to increase their sinne First That it was against their knowledge and conscience though Satan had in some sort blinded the eyes of their vnderstanding Secondly that hauing but one onely Commandement and that so easie to keepe as to abstayne from one onely fruit in so great plentie and varietie of other yet they brake it The next thing to bee obserued in their fall are the Actors themselues or at least such as had some part in his businesse First God may bee said an Actor or rather Ouerseer and Orderer of the act done who for the manifesting of his Iustice and Mercie purposed from euerlasting by leauing our first Parents to themselues and the vse of their owne free-will through his infinite Wisdome Power and Prouidence so to rule and dispose of their fall that it should tend both to his owne glorie and to the good of his Elect. Secondly Satan was the principall Actor who hauing By Satans temptation lately before falne in a desperate hatred of God and enuie of Mankinde tempted them vnto it In which respect our Sauiour saith he was a Murderer from the beginning Iohn 8. 44. The manner of whose temptation is to be considered First In beginning h 1. Tim. 3. 6. with the woman the weaker of Eue. vessell and that when she was away from her Husband Secondly in the instrument that he vsed the Serpent not onely the subtillest of all the beasts of the Field which were to be kept out of the Garden but the nimblest and slyest as the h 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For it commeth of a roote which signifieth to make naked or bare as men vse to doe when they would goe nimbly about a thing word doth also signifie and therefore fittest to creepe in and out till he had done his feat with whom as it seemed the woman talked without suspicion of fraud or astonishment to heare a dumbe creature speake because not then knowing of the fall of Angels shee thought some Angell had spoken in the Serpent The fetches and deuices which he had to draw her into his Nets are worthy to be considered First He playeth the Questionist Hath God c. knowing that vnder the Maske of a Question it was more easie for him to finde a vent for his deuillish and mischieuous designe Secondly He maketh a wonderment Hath i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is so taken interrogatiuely Iob 39. 30. God indeed c As if it were so strange a thing for the Creatour to inioyne a Law vnto his Creature at his pleasure especially one onely Law and that so milde so moderate so easie to be obserued Thirdly Hee proceedes by Equiuocations and Sophisticall Elenches that you may easily know the father of all Equiuocators but yet carrying it closer and in a more subtil manner then his Scholers our grosse Equiuocators doe For first hee makes as if God had forbidden them to eate any of the fruit at all which being so monstrous an vntruth that this father of lyes for all his impudencie durst not speake out yet hee lispes and minces it with ambiguous words and mentall reseruations vsing k These words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ye shall not eat of all or euery Tree of the Garden in the Hebrew phrase doe ordinarily import as much as Yee shall eat of none As Psal 143. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euery liuing creature shall not be iustified before thee The meaning is No liuing creature a speech that in the Phrase of that tongue importeth the one or the other eyther that they might not eate of all or not eate of any at all at the least he would fasten so much vpon her as to make her to beleeue that to forbid to eate of any one was in effect as much as to forbid them all which doubtfulnesse of speech Eue well enough vnderstanding answereth him to both Secondly Perceiuing by her answere that her faith beganne to wauer in making a peraduenture of GODS threatning which was so certaine hee catcheth hold of that and for feare of bewraying himselfe too soone if he should directly contradict that which God had said he thinkes it enough to snatch at her owne words to inferre some doubt of the matter Ye l He doth not say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that
should walke in them Ephes 1. 4. He hath chosen vs to bee vnblameable and vndefiled before him in loue And Iohn 15. 16. I haue chosen you c. that you might bring forth fruit Heere is the comfort of the Saints of God who labour to walke as new Creatures that they haue the same as a most certaine Badge and Marke of their Election Whereto the exhortation of d 2. Pet. 1. 10. Peter tendeth willing vs to make our Election sure by our good workes This vse the Apostle teacheth Rom. 9. 24. c. when hauing established the Doctrine it selfe to the end we should not seeke the testimonie of it in the secret counsell of God but by the calling which is set forth and made manifest in the Church hee layeth before vs the example of the Iewes and Gentiles not of euery one but of so many as by faith apprehended the outward calling and thereby made it effectuall to themselues That hee might make knowne the riches of his glorie vpon the Vessels of his Mercy which hee hath before prepared vnto Glorie euen vs saith he whom he hath called not of the Iewes onely but also of the Gentiles And who those Called ones be of the Iewes and Gentiles hee telleth vs Verse 30. As many as haue attayned to the righteousnesse of Faith So in the tenth Chapter by an excellent gradation he teacheth how and which way wee climbe vp to the consideration of this wonderfull hidden mysterie shewing that true inuocation and calling vpon Gods Name or a sound and syncere profession of the truth whereof hee had spoken Verse 9 10. is a testimonine of true Faith true Faith of a true and sound Calling by the Ministerie of the Word and that an vndoubted argument of our Election to be saued Whosoeuer e Rom. 10. 13 14 15. shall call vpon the Name of the Lord shall bee saued but how shall they call vpon him of whom they haue not heard and how shall they heare without a Preacher This is the meanes whereby we may most surely and infallibly perswade our soules that wee are of the number of Gods Elect and those that vndoubtedly shall be saued for which wee shall not need to slye to Visions and Reuelations God himselfe in his Word hath tracked the path for vs. Otherwise our Sauiour f Luke 10. 20. would neuer will vs to reioyce that our names are written in Heauen vnlesse we had certaine rules to be assured of it Againe that God hath appointed to destitute the Reprobate of his Grace and leauing them in their sinnes to bring them to perdition is euident by g 1. Pet. 2. 3. PETER that those which stumble at the Word and are disobedient were ordayned thereunto And Acts 27. 28. it is said HEROD and PILATE with the Nations and people of Israel came together to doe whatsoeuer the hand and counsell of God had fore-determined to bee done that is to condemne Iesus And Luke 2. 34. Christ is set for the fall and rising of many and for a marke to bee gain-said For this cause GOD sendeth the Ministerie of his Word to some and from some he doth with-hold it Paul was forbidden by the Holy Ghost to speake the Word of God in Asia in Bithynia c. Contrariwise he was commanded to preach in Macedonia at Corinth c. And h Acts 18. 10. why Because saith the Holy Ghost I haue much elect people there Againe in those that heare of some hee toucheth their hearts and openeth their vnderstanding of other some he dawbeth and closeth vp the eyes Mat. 11. 25. I giue thankes vnto thee O Father because thou hast hidden these things from the wise and men of vnderstanding meaning the Reprobate and reuealed them vnto Babes these are the Elect Luke 8. 10. To you it is giuen to know the Mysteries of God but to other in Parables that seeing they should not see and hearing they should not vnderstand The Obiections against all this that hitherto hath bin said are of no value God say some would haue all men saued 1. Tim. 2. 4. and none to perish but all to come to Repentance 2. Pet. 3. 9. And Christ is a Propitiation for the sinnes of the whole World 1. Iohn 2. 2. But they vnderstand not that those generall speeches are to bee restrayned to the subiect there in hand for the Apostle sheweth in the first of those places that howsoeuer that be true which else-where hee teacheth that not many noble not many mightie ones not many of account are called to the profession of the Gospell yet there is no estate so high or great nor any estate or sort of men at all but God hath his among them for whom wee are to pray that in his good time hee would vouchsafe to bring them to the knowledge of the Truth And so is this particle all in sundry places applyed to euery sort and kinde and namely Mat. 4. 23. where our Sauiour Christ is said to haue healed all diseases that is all kind of diseases That of Peter is plainly meant of the Elect alone And Iohn sheweth that our Sauiour dyed not for the Nation of the Iewes or those that liued in his time onely but for all the Elect of Iewes and Gentiles out of euery Kindred Tongue Nation and People as it is said Reuel 5. 9. and of all ages from the beginning of the World And so is this place notably expounded Iohn 11. 51 52. that Iesus was to dye for that Nation and not for that Nation onely but that hee might gather into one the Children of God dispersed According whereunto you must take the name of World Iohn 1. 29. The Lambe of God that taketh away the sinne of the World And Iohn 4. 42. This is of a truth that Christ the Sauiour of the World and in other such like places As for that dotage that Christ should dye for all absolutely and without restriction it is absurd for Christ died not for them for whom he vouchsafeth not to pray nor is a Redeemer where hee is no Intercessor Now he himselfe saith he i Iohn 17. 9. prayeth not he is no Intercessor for all Therefore we may conclude hee dyed not hee is no Redeemer of all Nay the very distinction so common in the Schooles betweene the sufficiencie of Christs death and the efficiencie of it as though his death or one drop of his bloud as some are not afraid to speake were sufficient for the saluation of all though it effect not nor worke saluation vnto all is too light and carrieth no waight with it if it bee waighed at the Lords Beame for the sufficiencie of Christs death is not to be measured by our owne conceit of it but by the Ordinance and Decree of GOD. The Messias was neuer promised but onely to the Church Therefore hee was neuer destinated but vnto them alone To k Gen. 3. 15. the rest the seed or children of the Deuill as hee
to the Church of Professors it standeth in an outward calling and gifts An outward calling when by his Word that is to say his publishing of the Couenant of Grace and people in bestowing vpon them his Word and the fruit it bringeth forth by the working of his Spirit for these three Prophet Word and Church haue a perpetuall relation one vnto another Wherefore in handling the Propheticall Office the Word of Christ is first to be spoken of and then his Church The Word of Christ is all the holy Doctrine that hee hath taught from the beginning concerning our saluation through him Wherein obserue First Christ is the matter and onely subiect and substance of the Word In that regard himselfe is called The g Iohn 1. 1. Word or h Reuel 19. 13. The Word of God Because of him and of him alone it is that there are in the Word so many glorious and excellent speeches and the Doctrine of the Gospell hath the name of the Word of Christ Col. 3. 16. So as it is not any naturall knowledge that this Doctrine teacheth but heauenly and supernaturall which was not in Adam before his fall though he were perfectly holy and endued with all manner of naturall vnderstanding Secondly He himselfe as he is the matter so he is the Authour of the Word In which respect the Scripture giueth these names vnto him First He is called Hamedabber or the Speaker and Interpreter of his Fathers Will Dan. 8. 13. To which place it may be the Apostle i Heb. 12. 25. hath some eye when hee saith Take heed yee reiect not him that speaketh or the Speaker meaning Christ Secondly A Doctor k Mat. 3. 10. or a Teacher Thirdly A l Deut. 18. 15. Acts 3. 22. Prophet the head and Lord of the Prophets Fourthly an m Heb. 3. 1. Apostle Fiftly The n Mal. 3. 1. Angell of the Couenant And that wee may know with what Graces our Sauiour Christ is furnished for o Col. 2. 3. so great a worke all the treasures of Knowledge and Vnderstanding are hidden in him yea he is Wisdome p 1. Cor. 1. 24. it selfe or q Luke 11. 49. the Wisdome of God and called as by a proper name r Dan. 8. 13. Palmonie that is one that hath all hidden things numbred before him or ready told and as we say at his fingers ends which as occasion doth serue he vttereth to his Church Wherefore here is the Touch-stone of all Truth and there is no truth concerning God and our Saluation in Christ but in the Word our Sauiour himselfe bearing record Iohn 17. 17. Thy word is Truth Touching the outward instruments which it hath pleased him to vse in the deliuerie of this Word sometimes he spake by his owne voyce from Heauen sometimes by the Ministerie of his holy Angels But specially this outward Ministerie is either his owne which hee executed personally himselfe when hee was vpon the Earth described Esay 42. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7. in regard whereof he is called a Minister ſ Rom. 15. 8. The Minister of Circumcision and a t Esay 42. 1. Seruant or it is of his Seruants from the beginning of the World of whom hee saith He u Luke 10 16. that heareth you heareth mee and hee that reiecteth you reiecteth me Of whose Ministeries and Functions we shall haue cause to speake hereafter Therefore Christs Office of a Teacher did not first begin when hee tooke our flesh vpon him for his Spirit it was that spake in the Prophets long before hee came into the World as the Apostle beareth record 1. Pet. 1. 11. The forewitnessing Spirit of Christ that was in the Prophets declared the sufferings that should befall Christ and the glorie that was to follow And that which is in the Psalmes x Psal 95. 7. To day if ye will heare his voyce the Apostle y Heb. 3. 7. to the Hebrewes referreth to the voyce of Christ Thirdly I note the perfection of this Doctrine that Christ hath opened the whole will of his Father fully and perfectly in euery Age and neuer left his Church without a full and perfect direction of all things necessarie for their saluation for Moses saith z Deut. 30. 15. Behold I set before you this day life and death which hee could not haue said vnlesse there had beene a certaine direction to lead them vnto life And when hee chargeth a Deut. 4. 2. Not to adde to the words that he gaue them in Commandement nor to take from them doth it not prooue that the same was perfect Fourthly The subiect of the Word being Christ it is more particularly the Couenant made in him which by the Word is promulged and offered vnto all and his Spirit maketh effectuall to as many as receiuing the same by faith make themselues worthy of it The which Couenant being distinguished by the Old which being of the Old Testament was called The promise of the New The Gospell Testament and the New as before hath beene declared the publication of the Old Testament in and through Christ to come was called b Acts 13. 32. Gal. 3. 17. The Promise when hee was exhibited and come indeed that worthy and welcome Message was termed c Acts 13. 32. Marke 1. 1. The Gospell or good newes and glad tydings But it is the glory of Christs administration whether in his owne person when hee was among vs or by his and by the power of his Spirit Seruants that the outward dispensing of the Word is accompanied with an inward working of the Spirit of both which parts his Propheticall Office standeth herein differing from all other Ministers who onely preach the Word set d Mat. 3. 11. on the outward Element e 1. Cor. 3. 6. plant and water but the whole blessing doth come from him for he teaching openeth mens mindes e Luke 24. 45. that they may vnderstand the Scriptures and bestoweth other graces which the Word bringeth forth euen in the wicked by a generall working of his Spirit as we are taught by the f Mat. 13. 24. Parable of the Sower and haue g Marke 6. 20. Herod and the h Iohn 5. 35. Iewes for an example It followeth to speake of the Church That which we he draweth men to that Profession call Church signifieth in i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greeke a select companie gathered called culled picked out from other men In English it hath the name deriued from that which in Greeke signifieth k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord because they belong to Christ the Lord and are separate to his Seruice be it by an inward whereof commeth the word Church or as the Northerne pronounce Kirk or an outward separation But the outward Church is it which wee are to beginne withall which is in generall the whole number of men professing Christ Concerning which take these few
to be preached Sacraments and other holy things to bee administred Here q Matth. 16. 19 therefore are the liuely notes and markes of a Church The Scripture stileth them by the name of the r Matth. 28. 19 20. keyes of the kingdome of Heauen The prime and principall is his Word whereof wee haue spoken already the Treasure of all heauenly Knowledge ſ Rom. 3. 2. This saith the Apostle to the Romans is the chiefe of those excellencies which the Iewes had aboue other men that vnto them were committed the Oracles of God Or as the t Hosh 8. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prophet speaketh the excellencies of the Law Wherefore Gods Word and Precepts Dauid doth many times call u Whereunto it seemeth Paul doth allude 1. Tim. 6. 20. 2. Tim. 1. 14 in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things deposited In regard whereof the Church is said to bee x 1. Tim. 3. 15. the Pillar and S●ate of Truth for the Truth of God is no where to be found but there It is Error Lies Superstition Deceit whatsoeuer cōmeth not from hence The Church onely is the golden Candle-sticke figured in the Law which holdeth vp the eternal Truth of God to giue light vnto all the World and there light is to be had when darkenesse couereth the whole face of the earth beside Preaching for the forme and manner of it is an Preaching is an instruction of the Church by liuely voice instruction by word of mouth opening and interpreting the Scriptures rendring the sense thereof drawing the doctrines that are to be gathered from them making vse and profit of it for the edification and building vp of our faith which the Apostle by a Metaphor from the Sacrifices of the Law calleth y 2. Tim. 2. 15. Cutting aright the Word of Truth It standeth not in the bare and naked reading of them And that you may see Nehe. 8. 8 9. where the people abiding in their standing the Leuites taught them the Law first reading it distinctly then rendring the sense by the Scripture it selfe So Luk. 4. 17 18 19 20 21. Our Sauiour comming into the Synagogue there was giuen him the Booke of the Prophet Esay which when he had vnfolded and read a portion of that Scripture he folded the Booke and gaue it againe to him that wayted and sate downe and the eyes of all in the Synagogue being fastened on him he began to say vnto them To day is this Scripture fulfilled in your eares And of this instruction by word of mouth it pleased God to make choyce rather than of reading for that it pierceth deeper into the heart and mind of man and more doth affect him and that through the blessing of God who vseth the zeale of the speaker for the quickning and putting of life into that which is spoken The argument matter or subiect must be of and concerning in the Word of Christ Christ by teaching our owne corruption and impotencie to fulfill the Law and therefore the necessitie wee haue to flye to him who is made vnto vs of God Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption that he that glorieth might glorie in the Lord. Wherein it differeth from the ministery of Moses or of the Law as the Apostle doth oppose them 2. Cor. 3. 6. Who also hath inabled vs to be Ministers of the new Testament not of the Letter but of the Spirit So Rom. 1. 1 2 3 4. he sheweth He was called to be an Apostle and set apart to preach the Gospell of God concerning his Sonne Iesus Christ our Lord and Rom. 10. 8. This is that Word of faith that we preach In like sort it is said of Philip when he came downe vnto Samaria that he preached vnto them Christ Act. 8. 5. PETER also Act. 10. 43 44. declareth the sum of all that which he was charged of God to preach vnto the people to be this that by his Name should euerie one that beleeueth in him receiue forgiuenesse of sinnes * And that by Doctrine or Exhortation Doctrine in laying forth the Truth and confuting of contrary Errors Exhortation to apply it also to all good vses of comforting denouncing stirring vp reprouing The parts of this instruction of the Church are Doctrine and exhortation both comprehended Rom. 12. 7 8. Doctrine by laying forth the Truth and confuting of contrarie errours that so the puritie of faith may alwayes remayne sound and vncorrupt in the Church Exhortation which sharpeneth the Word and setteth an edge vpon it by applying the same and making vse of it as the necessitie of the people requireth And these two aptly answere to the two parts of the soule of man his minde or vnderstanding and his will and affections Both which by this meanes God prouideth for Sacraments or outward Signes and Seales of the Couenant A Sacramēt is It hath the name Sacrament from the Militarie Oath that Souldiers tooke to doe faithful seruice to their Captaine for in like manner we in the Sacrament sweare our Allegeance to Christ and to fight vnder his Banner against the World the Flesh and the Deuill It is also called a Mysterie or hidden thing because beside the outward Signe there is somewhat inward and Spirituall In the definition of a Sacrament I obserue First They are outward and earthly things to bee seene and felt seruing for the helpe of our weaknesse which if wee were all Spirit we needed not Secondly They are Signes as it is said Gen. 17. 11. a Signe and Rom. 4. 11. The Signe of Circumcision PETER calleth them Types and Figures 1. Pet. 3. 21. Therefore they serue as badges to distinguish true Professors from Infidels and Heathen men and as Monuments to bring heauenly things to our remembrance So saith our Sauiour Christ Luke 19. 22. Doe this in remembrance of me And the Apostle to the z 1. Cor. 11. 26. Corinths As oft as yee eate this bread and drinke this Cup ye publish the Lords death till hee come Thirdly The end why God doth giue them is to be and Seale of the Couenant not Signes onely but Seales and Pledges for the perswasion of our hearts and to confirme and assure vnto vs those spirituall and heauenly things which alreadie wee haue and doe enioy that is to say Christ himselfe and consequently Iustification and Sanctification and withall Saluation through him as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 4. 11. After he receiued the Signe of Circumcision as a Seale of the Righteousnesse of the Faith which hee had when he was vncircumcised Acts 10. 47. Can any man keepe water away that these should not bee baptized which haue receiued the holy Ghost aswell as we From whence we gather a noble vse of the holy Sacraments proper to the faithfull for where the visible and outward Signe is common vnto all yet being to other but bare and naked Signes dead and fruitlesse Ceremonies that profit nothing because
his Throne and Kingdome in the dispensation of his great and glorious purposes established before any time In which regard the Psalmist g Psal 78. 69. saith of the Land of Canaan That he founded it for his people the Iewes from euerlasting meaning in his eternall counsell and h Esay 45. 7. ESAY Since I disposed an euerlasting people the Church in the purpose and appointment of God eternally elected And when the Psalmist i Psal 103. 17. cryeth out The kindnesses of IEHOVAH are from euerlasting to euerlasting doth he not euidently point hereat But more cleerely to this purpose serueth that of Paul k Ephes 3. 11 commending the excellency of the Doctrine of the Gospell in the gathering together of the Churches of the Gentiles aswell as Iewes in that it was according to his euerlasting purpose As also l 1. Cor. 2. 7. in another place hee saith of the Wisedome of God lying hid in the Mystery of the Gospell that God had fore-ordayned it before the World And of Christ Peter m 1. Pet. 1. 20. saith that he was fore-appointed before the foundation of the World was layd The truth hereof not onely shineth forth in these and other great and high points of our Faith and namely of Election and Reprobation which come hereafter to be considered but reacheth farther and hath a place in all So n Psal 193. 15. 16. Dauid speaketh of his conception an ordinary course of nature When I was secretly framed and as it were curiously wrought and wouen together thine eyes did see my very lumpe what time they were fashioned yea euen then when none of them was extant that is from euerlasting And the saying of Iames o Acts 15. 18. hath no exception All the workes of God are knowne to him from Eternitie In this Argument I finde that the Prophet Esay from whom the Apostles p 2. Pet. 2. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Peter and Iude seeme q Iude verse 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to haue taken it delighteth himselfe much to set out the Eternitie of Gods Decrees by the Phrase of Long r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 agoe In the two and twentieth ſ Esay 22. 5 8 11. Chapter Thou diddest looke in that day when the enemie did besiege you to the Armour of the Forrest House c. But ye looke ●●ot to the Authour of it nor had respect to him that framed it long agoe Chap. 25. The t Esay 25. 1. counsels long agoe eternally decreed and in their time prophesied and made knowne to the Church are Faith and Truth And so himselfe doth in another u Esay 37. 26. place expound it to import as much as from all Eternitie Secondly The cause why all things are so decreed is not the knowledge or fore-knowledge of God but his absolute will and pleasure for causes resting onely in himselfe although vnknowne to vs yet most iust and holy Ephes 1. 11. Hee worketh all things after the counsell of his will Thirdly The generalitie in that hee hath decreed all things and all the meanes and circumstances of euery thing Acts 15. 18. All the workes of God are knowne to him that is purposed and decreed of him from Eternitie So that whatsoeuer experience sheweth or the Word of God confirmeth to come to passe in Heauen or in Earth or in the lowest Hell both the confounding of the wicked the Saluation of the Elect and the things that pertayne to the businesse and affaires of this life the same are all eternally decreed of God and that for his owne good pleasure onely the x Ephes 11. 1. Apostle bearing witnesse That hee worketh all things after the counsell of his will CHAP. III. Of Creation IN the Creation which is the second thing The workes of God are the execution of his purpose And are Creation and Prouidence Creation is his making all things wherein his Kingdome standeth I obserue fiue things which the Story of the Creation penned by Moses in the first and second Chapters of Genesis doth offer vnto vs. First The things which God made All things without exception and in saying all things it is manifest that we leaue nothing vncreated excepting onely him that did create them no not the Angels themselues the most glorious and super-excellent Creatures of God of whō albeit Moses maketh no mention in expresse termes no more then of their fall specifying onely the visible workes of God in respect of the people to whom he wrote yet the Holy Ghost else-where concealeth not their Creation for when the Psalmist had exhorted the Angels and Host of Heauen the Sunne the Moone the Starres the Heauen of Heauens to prayse the Lord hee addeth a reason common to them all Let a Psal 148. 2 3 4 5. them prayse the Name of IEHOVAH for he commanded and they were created But most manifest is that of PAVL Col. 1. 16. By him were all things created which are in Heauen and vpon the Earth things visible and inuisible whether Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers By which words it is most certaine he vnderstands the Angels This all things you may not vnfitly deuide into b 1. Cor. 4. 9. reasonable Creatures Angels and Men and the World of them both whereto aptly serueth the place of the Colossians before and Moses in the very first words of his Story hath so deuided it In c Gen. 1. 12. the beginning God made Heauen and Earth that is both the vtmost compasse of this vniuersal World together with the Spirits and Angels that inhabit it and that Chaos or first lumpe and matter whereout the Earth and Heauen as we call Heauen and all heauenly and earthly bodies were made Moses therefore as Paul in that place maketh a most perfect diuision of all the whole frame of Gods Creation sundring it into two Heauen and Earth The Ayre it selfe the Sunne the Moone the Planets and whatsoeuer in that whole Chapter is spoken of seemeth to be comprehended vnder the name of Earth For so hee doth proceed resuming the latter member And touching the Earth it was vnshapen c. By Heauen is meant the place of blessed Spirits and the Angels inhabiters and dwellers in it All which appeareth further in the next Chapter Thus d Gen. 2. 1. were the Heauen and the Earth perfited and all the Host of them that is whatsoeuer is within the compasse of the highest Heauens vnto the very bottome and Center of the lowest Earth things visible and inuisible Angels or whatsoeuer else wherewith the Heauen and Earth are beautifully adorned The World of these two Creatures is either the vnseene World Heauen and Hell or the World visible and subiect to our eyes which Moses in one word termeth Earth But a better and more apt diuision to this purpose may bee made to say it is eyther the naturall place and World for these two Creatures Heauen for the one
Gouernments Chiefe k Dan. 10. 13. Princes c. 1. Pet. 3. 22. Ephes 1. 21. Col. ● 16. Fourthly For their Power the name it selfe of Power l Rom. 1. 38. is giuen to them And the m Psal 103. 20. Prophet by name doth set it forth Yea Angels mighty in power And to the Thessalonians n 2. Thess 1. 17. When the Lord Iesus shall bee reuealed from Heauen with his most mighty Angels The Angels saith PETER in power o 2. Pet. 2. 11. and might greater then these As if hee would say other manner of persons whereby hee doth insinuate their exceeding and incomparable power Fifthly For their Glory what it is that one place may serue in stead of many where it is coupled with the glory of the Father and the Sonne When the p Luke 9. 26. Sonne of man shall come in the glory of himselfe and of his Father and of the holy Angels In the q Luke 2. 9. second of Luke when the Angell of the Lord stood before the Shepheards it is forth-with added that the glory of the Lord shone round about them Hither it maketh that the Glory and Maiesty which the Lord made to appeare in the face of Stephen for the daunting of his Aduersaries is r Acts 6. 15. resembled to the countenance of an Angell In the Vision which ſ Esay 6. 1. Esay saw they are brought in with two of their wings couering their feet Thereby to meete with the infirmitie of men who are not able to abide the brightnesse of their glory DANIEL t Dan. 10. 5 6. excellently describeth this in that great Vision which hee saw by the Waters of Chiddekel Lifting vp mine eyes I saw and behold a man clothed with Linnen whose loynes were girt with excellent Gold of Vphaz his Bodie was like vnto Sea-coloured blue as if hee would say of an heauenly colour his face to looke to like the Lightening and his eyes like to Lampes of fire and his armes and feete like vnto the colour of polished Brasse glittering and twinkling like sparkles of fire the noyse also of his words were like vnto the noyse of a whole multitude At whose appearance the men that were with Daniel trembled exceedingly and flying hid themselues hee also himselfe had no strength left within him but euen his beautie and comelinesse were turned into corruption And hither belongeth their wonderfull and admirable wisedome growne into a Prouerbe As u 2. Sam. 18. 14 the wisedome of an Angell The holinesse wherein men were created is recorded Genes 1. 26 27. Let vs make man according to our owne Image after our owne likenesse And wherein this Image and likenesse of God doth stand the Apostle doth informe vs Ephes 4. 24. Put on the new man which according to God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Coloss 3. 10. Putting on the new man which is renewed in knowledge according to the Image of him that hath created him And in this respect Adam also in his innocencie is called The sonne of God Luke 3. 38. Touching the happinesse of Adam and Eue in their integritie First They were beloued of God his sonnes and children Secondly They enioyed his presence but vpon Earth which was their habitation and therefore lesse gloriously then the Angels did but that they also had it is apparant by Gods familiar conference with Adam Gen. 2. 29. Thirdly They had Dominion and Power ouer all the Creatures of the Earth and were set as the Monarches of the World Gen. 1. Let x Gen. 1. 26. vs make man after our image c. and let them rule ouer the fishes of the Sea and ouer the Fowles of the Ayre and ouer Beasts and ouer the whole Earth and all creeping things that creepe vpon the y Gen. 20. 19 20 Earth Which soueraignty of man is declared Gen. 2. First by Gods bringing to Adam all the Beasts of the field and all the Fowles of the Ayre putting him in seisin and possession of them and making them to present themselues before him as subiects are wont to doe at their Princes Coronation Then by the names hee gaue vnto euery one that so hee might know how to call for them whensoeuer hee should need them to attend vpon him and to doe him seruice Fourthly They were indued with strength of nature not subiect to sicknesse or other infirmities Insomuch as their very labour was without all wearinesse paine or griefe which sinne hath brought vpon vs as appeareth by the Curse z Gen. 3. 17 19. Gen. 3. Because thou hast obeyed the voice of thy Wife and eaten of the fruit of the Tree which I forbade thee Cursed be the Earth for thy sake In sorrow shalt thou eate of it all the dayes of thy life In the sweate of thy face shalt thou eat thy meate Fifthly They were all glorious both in their bodie which being naked had an excellent dignitie and comelinesse in it without the least vnseemelinesse that might make them ashamed and in their minde furnished with all Graces and namely of wisedome and knowledge vnderstanding the nature of all the Creatures and able according to their nature to giue apt names vnto them Last of all for a further increase of their happinesse they were seated in Paradise a place of al kind of pleasure where for the exercising of man to labour in some honest and lawfull calling GOD gaue him charge to dresse and keepe the Garden CHAP. IIII. Of Prouidence AFTER the euerlasting Epicures which deny all Prouidence of God Those Philosophers that held nature That is some Power or Vertue Spirit or Minde as they terme it mingled and infused into the parts of the World that holdeth vp and stirreth all things to bee God Whereas in truth nature is nothing else but that course order which God at the first Creation set in things and which hee altereth and changeth at his pleasure Deuter. 8. 3. Man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of Iehouah Decrees of GOD and Prouidence is his gouerning of the things created the Creation of the World his Kingdome thirdly standeth in gouerning the things created Both the course which at the first Creation hee set in nature and the actions and euents of things Herein consider wee first the generalitie of this gouernment that it reacheth to all in generall and to euery thing in particular past present or to come To set forth this more distinctly that so we may make the better vse of the generalitie of his Prouidence it stretcheth First To all Persons and liuing Creatures euen the vilest and most contemptible The a Psal 145. 15 16. eyes of all things looke vp to thee and thou giuest to them their meate thou openest thy hand and fillest euery liuing thing with thy good pleasure The b Psal 104. 21. young Lyons roare for their prey seeking their meate from
Thessalonians comprehendeth both for when hee incourageth them by this Argument that God had not appointed them for wrath but to the purchasing of saluation through IESVS CHRIST he manifestly noteth some ordayned to Saluation other to destruction as many as come not to haue their part in Christ But that to the o Rom. 9. 21 ●2 Romanes is more manifest Hath not the Potter power ouer the clay of the same lumpe to make one Vessell for Honour and another to dishonour And what if God willing to shew forth his wrath and to make knowne his power hath borne with much long suffering the vessels of wrath framed for destruction and that he might make knowne the riches of his Glorie vpon the vessels of Mercie which he hath before ordayned vnto Glorie Behold how he calleth them heere the one Vessels to Honour Vessels of Mercie prepared vnto Glorie the other vessels to dishonour vessels of wrath framed for destruction which selfe-same phrase Vessels to Honour and to shame or dishonour he keepeth also in the Epistle to p 2. Tim. 2. 20. TIMOTHIE Now in a great house there are not onely Vessels of Gold and Vessels of Siluer but of Wood also and of Earth and some verily for Honour some for dishonour This shall yet further appeare if we cast our eye vnto those meanes whereby this predestinate Decree of God is brought vnto effect for sith it is manifest that some beleeue the Gospell and testifie the same by the fruits of their conuersation other are obstinate and stubborne and giuen vp to their lusts blinded with infidelitie and hardnesse of heart thereof we may conclude that some are ordained vnto life other vnto destruction Notable also to this purpose is that vnto the q 2. Thes 2. 9. Thessalonians The comming of Antichrist shall bee with all power to them that are to perish but wee ought alwayes to giue thankes to God who hath chosen vs to Saluation and called vs by the preaching of the Gospell where these two sorts are manifestly distinguished as also Iohn 17. 19. I pray not for the World but for those whom thou hast giuen me out of the World The very scope of the Apostles disputation Rom. 9. 22. driueth heere unto in the person of Ismael and of Isack children one of the flesh the other of the promise And againe in Isacks two sonnes one loued the other hated to set before vs the generall state of all Mankinde yea God hath not onely predestinated men to ioy or to paine but to the measure of it more or lesse according as there be degrees both of glorie and of punishment Mat. 20. 23. vpon the request of the Sonnes of Zebedy our Sauiour Christ granting a difference of Glorie saith It shall be theirs for whom it is prepared of his Father And of the Reprobate the place in IVDE r Iude v. 4. is manifest Which long agoe were appointed to this damnation In saying this he noteth not a common but a rare and as it were an extraordinary Damnation for so I refer the word Damnation to the end aswell as to the meanes to the iudgement it selfe as to the sinne and disobedience which was the cause of it The truth heere of is euident in Iudas the Traitor of whom ſ Acts 1. 25. Peter saith that he turned aside from the lot of his Ministerie whereunto Christ had called him to goe vnto his owne place In the words his owne hee noteth his proper degree of punishment and calling it his place sheweth that it was reserued for him and allotted from Eternitie Secondly Euery particular person is thus predestinate So as both the number how many and the persons who they bee are before all Eternitie most certainly knowne to God Therefore our t Luke 10. 20. Sauiour saith Their names are written in Heauen And in u Iohn 10. 3. IOHN A good Shepheard calleth his sheep by Name And hither belongeth that in x 2. Tim. 2. 19. TIMOTHIE The foundation remayneth firme hauing this seale God knoweth who are his Agreeably whereunto our Sauiour Christ saith I y Iohn 13. 18. know whom I haue chosen This number of Gods Elect in comparison of the Reprobate is but small for z Mat. 20. 16. Many are called but few are chosen If but few euen of those that haue an outward calling how much more few if you consider the rest of the World beside And this may teach vs the rather to admire Gods goodnesse to our selues as nature and reason doe instruct vs to set more by that which is common but with a few Thirdly The cause of this difference is the The Papists teach that those who God foresaw would willingly beleeue the Gospel do good works them hee chose though not by reason of their workes but freely of his Grace yet so as hee had respect to the good things would bee in them Wherby they make Gods free election in some sort to haue his cause in man and in his goodnesse which in truth is but an effect comming from that Election free-will and pleasure of God without any motiue to it but in and of himselfe Which the name of Predestination speaketh that the Will and Decree of GOD not in time onely but in the very order and nature of causes is first and before all other things And the Apostle a Ephes 1. 11. saith plainly Hee worketh all things after the counsell of his Will God therefore notwithstanding any thing that hath beene ●●id is no respecter of persons nor mooued by any qualit● that is in man but by his owne free-will No fore-knowledge of faith or infidelitie good or euill workes were the cause of this Decree for they are but b Ephes 1. 4. Titus 2. 12. consequences that follow and depend vpon it but all here is free the roote it selfe and all the branches Election free therefore the Apostle calleth it c Rom. 11. 5. The election of Grace d 2. Tim. 1. 9. Calling free e Phil. 1. 29. We beleeue freely through Grace Are f Rom. 3. 24. freely iustified through Faith Our g Ezech. 36. 37 Sanctification free and h Titus 3. 5. eternall life the free gift of God through Iesus Christ Election therefore commeth from the onely will and pleasure of God for aboue this or out of this it is impietie Rom. 6. 13. Luke 12 32. for to goe Therefore the Apostle wrappeth vp all in sinne He i Ephes 1. 6. chose vs in himselfe according to the free pleasure of his will And the sole and onely cause both of Election and Reprobation of one rather then another is his own good wil and pleasure for causes vnknown to vs but yet most holy and iust and righteous in themselues So he saith to the Romans Whom k Rom. 9. ●8 he will he pittieth whom he will he hardeneth Exemplifying both the parts of this diuision by two most singular and
all goodnesse tomorrow may bee altered and so long as this life continueth so long there is a space left for Repentance many are called at the eleuenth houre at the winding and shutting vp of the day in the last act of their life And so was the m Luk. 23. 40. Thiefe vpon the Crosse And our n Math. 21. 31. Sauiour telleth vs that Publicans and Harlots vile and despised persons oftentimes enter into the Kingdome of Heauen before many that carrie a fairer shew Thou oughtest therefore vsing the meanes and setting still at the feete of Christ to esteeme God faithfull that when hee offereth thee grace he meaneth it for thy good and that howsoeuer now thou feele no working of it yet the moments of time are in his hands who calleth how and when he will and still to haue comfort and neuer to despayre Fiftly as Predestination is eyther to Life or Death and giuen vnto him so it is to those subordinate things whereby God hath purposed to bring his determinate Counsell to passe both in the Elect and Reprobate And those are To the Elect an appointment of Christ to be their Mediator and of them to be in Christ which in Gods good time commeth to be wrought by an effectuall calling through faith in him that beeing iustified and sanctified by his Spirit they may so in the end be glorified To the Reprobate hardnesse of heart not to beleeue the Gospell that so they might lye in their sinnes without repentance vntil the wrath of God come vpon them to the vttermost Touching the former the Apostle in one o Rom. 8. 29 30 sentence hath all the lincks of that golden Chaine for whom hee fore-knew and chose vnto life which is Election them also he predestinated to be conformed to the Image of his Son that he might be the first borne among many brethren Here is the first step as if the Apostle should say For them he purposed that his Sonne should die that Christ might be their Head and they through him the adopted sons of God and whom he predestinated thus to be his sonnes This is euerlasting life to know thee the true God and whore thou hast sent ●es●s Christ The perfect distribution of all Diuinity Math. 22. 38 39 40. He diuideth the tenne Commandements into the first and second Table and the whole Scripture then extant that is to say the old Testament into the Law and the Prophets 〈◊〉 6. 33. Seeke first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse where he seemeth to abbreuiate the Lords Prayer and that his Sonne should be theirs them he also called effectually to beleeue in him which is the second step and whom he called them he also iustified or made righteous through Christ from whence doth proceed as an effect from the cause Sanctification or holinesse of life the third and the fourth steps and whom hee iustified and made righteous in Christ them hee also glorified which is the end and last step of all Our p Iohn 6. 37. Sauiour as he is q Iohn 17. 3. wont in all his doctrines shortly reduceth them vnto two giuing vnto Christ and comming vnto him But to speake of all these things apart The first and the fundamentall ground of all vnto the Elect hidden in the secret counsell of God is Christ himselfe r 1. Pet. 1. 20. foreknowne or predestinated and ſ Reuel 13. 6. slaine for vs in his eternall purpose before the foundation of the World was layde and we in like sort elect t Eph. 1. 4. in him that is that being by faith vnited vnto Christ we might be saued by the merit of his death and suffrings And againe u Eph. 1. 5. predestinate to be the adopted Sonnes of God by Iesus Christ This is that our Sauiour saith Ioh. 17. 6. I haue manifested my Name to the men whom thou hast giuen me out of the World for that by giuing he doth not meane the manifestation of his Election by an effectual Calling through faith in Christ but the verie purpose of God to adopt vs in him appeareth Ioh. 6. 36. All that my Father giueth me shall come vnto me Where he doth manifestly distinguish betweene these two making Gods giuing vnto Christ the cause why in their time they come vnto him Christ therefore is Mediator nor any thing that God so respects in him is not the first cause of his Election but onely a subordinate meanes vnto it vnlesse which were absurd a man will say that the disease is not in nature to be thought of before the remedie nor the fall before the meanes of raising vp againe Our Sauiour Christ himselfe for this may be our warrant Iohn 17. 6. where hauing said I haue manifested thy name to the men whom thou hast giuen me out of the World that they should be adopted in and through me By and by he riseth vp a degree higher Thine they were in thine euerlasting purpose for causes onely knowne vnto thy selfe higher and aboue any consideration or respect of me written vnto life and then keeping the respect of order and not of time Thou gauest them vnto me The Apostle likewise to the x Ephes 1. 4 5. Ephesians shewing we are elect in Christ in the verie next words doth explaine it to bee meant of predestinating to adoption through Christ in himselfe that is onely for causes resting in God himselfe not in Christ as he is a Mediator This is it which as we haue heard the Apostle teacheth in the Epistle to the Romanes y Rom. 8. 29 30 Whom hee did foreknow or predestinate vnto life them hee did predestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Sonne What is that Verily the same albeit the Apostle specially apply it to afflictions which wee heard before of giuing vnto Christ and so the words following doe import That he might bee the first borne among many brethren through whom by faith which is the next degree and first manifestation of this counsell being incorporate into him and made one together with him wee obtayne Righteousnesse and Sanctification which are the immediate steps whereby we ascend to glorie Now that men are predestinate vnto both these it is verie plaine for so the Apostle telleth the z ● Thes 2. 13. Thessalonians that God had chosen them to Saluation through sanctification of the Spirit and the faith of Truth Of faith particularly our a Iohn 8. 47. Sauiour saith He that is of God heareth the Word of God you therefore doe not heare because you are not of God So it is in the Acts b Acts 13. 48. They beleeued as many as were ordayned vnto life And for this cause faith is said to be c Titus 1. 1. proper to Gods Elect. Concerning Sanctification of life and the fruits therof the place is very euident Ephes 2. 10. Wee are created in Christ to good workes which God hath before prepared that we
they are not mixed with Faith in those that doe receiue them in the faithfull they seale vp and ratifie the very substance and effect of the Grace signified the Holy Ghost performing that in truth within vs which the outward Ceremonie ioyned with the preaching of the Word representeth to our eyes But albeit these things are all of them in euery Sacrament either for our entrance or continuance in the Couenant set before vs yet it is in seuerall and distinct manner for of the Sacraments some serue to seale vp assure our first ingraffing into Christ and participation of Gods Couenant some our continuance and growing vp in him In which two all Graces are comprehended Fourthly They are to be administred that is to say to The Administration be giuen and deliuered to the Church and by the Church to be taken and receiued Mat. 26. 26 27. As they eate IESVS tooke bread and when hee had giuen thankes hee brake it and gaue to his Disciples and said Take eate c. And taking the Cup and hauing giuen thankes hee gaue vnto them saying Drinke ye all of it c. Whereupon a Sacrament is not onely a Signe and a Seale but a worke and an action This Administration of the Sacraments standeth not is to deliuer them with Prayer vnto God to make the same effectuall to the end for the which they were ordayned which the Scripture calleth Blessing or Consecration onely in reaching forth and ministring the outward Element but as is fitting for so holy an action to consecrate the same by the Word of God and Prayer teaching and declaring the end the vse the nature the institution of the Sacrament with Prayer made before that God would blesse them for the helpe of our weaknesse to which end they were ordayned This is it which is meant by blessing or The Papists which hold Consecration to bee the making of the Signe of the Crosse and the mumbling of a few words whereby as by a Magicall Incantation the Bread Wine should be transubstantiate consecration as may appeare both by a Mat. 26. 26 27. Mar. 14. 22 23. Matthew and Marke who after they had said IESVS tooke the bread and blessed immediatly adde and hee tooke the Cup and gaue thankes making one of these words to expound the other The like is to bee seene in b Luke 22. 17. Luke who leauing the word of blessing contenteth himselfe with that of giuing of thankes Paul c 1. Cor. 11. 24. also reciting the Institution treadeth in Lukes steps And so this word of Blessing is taken in diuers d Mat. 14. 19. Mar. 6. 41. Luke 9. 16. 1. Cor. 11. 26 27 28. other places wee must not therefore imagine that this Consecration altereth the nature or substance of the Sacrament it onely changeth the qualitie in separating them from a common to a holy Paul to make that out of question doth in one e 1. Cor. 11. Chapter after the Consecration thrice call it Bread The Administration of the Sacraments being a Ministeriall action so religiously to bee performed all the Congregation haue their part in it So it was vnder the Law Exod. 12. 6. In the fourteenth day of this moneth let all the Assembly of the Congregation of the Children of Israel kill the Passeouer in the twilight Luke 1. 59. The eighth day the Neighbours and the Kinsmen of ELIZABETH came together to circumcise the child Our Sauiour in the Sacraments of the New Testament doth obserue the same Mat. 26. 27. Drinke ye all of this And the Apostle doth command 1. Cor. 11. 33. When you come together to eate the Supper of the Lord wait one for another Wherefore it is fit that the place of their celebrating be the Church or place where the Congregation vsually meeteth and the time the Lords Day So the Apostle for the place doth sharply rebuke the Corinthians 1. Cor. 11. 22. opposing the Church as the onely place for Gods Sacraments to bee administred vnto priuate houses Haue you not houses to eate and drinke in or despise you the Church of God And for the time wee finde the practice of the Church recorded Acts 10. 7. that the first day of the weeke the Disciples assembled together to breake bread From all that went before these things may be gathered First The resemblance and similitude and in all faithfull Receiuers the inseparable coniunction of these Signes and Seales with the Graces signified and bestowed whether you compare the things or the Actions The things that is to say the Element or sensible and outward matter with Christ and his benefits The Actions to wit the deliuering of the Elements by the Minister and our taking of it which is the outward Action with Gods bestowing his Sonne vpon vs and all good things and our by faith receiuing of him by reason of both which the Apostle saith that in Baptisme f Gal. 3. 27. we put on Christ and that by g 1. Cor. 12. 13. one Spirit wee are all baptized into one Body and made to drinke into one Spirit And hence commeth an ordinarie and vsuall Phrase in the Scripture giuing to the Signe the name it selfe of the Grace signified as when h Gen. 17. 10. Circumcision is called the Couenant the i Exod. 12. 11. Lambe the Passeouer c. To the end they might not bee basely esteemed as ordinarie and common things but holily and religiously thought of Secondly The outward The Papists teach that the verie worke wrought is sufficient to doe away sinne Elements being onely Signes Seales they signifie not conferre Grace hauing no inherent force and power to sanctifie as some kinde of waters haue to cure Diseases And the Ministers which deliuer them giue that which is outward onely The whole power of sanctifying commeth from the Holy Ghost Mat. 3. 11. I baptize you with Water vnto Repentance but he that commeth after mee is stronger then I he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and fire Thirdly They are The Papists imagine a necessitie of participating the Sacrament of Baptisme as if children dying without Baptisme could not bee saued whereas such are aswell within the Couenant of Grace as those that are baptized not of such absolute necessitie as if there could bee no Saluation without them seeing they are but Signes Seales of the things alreadie had and therefore not the want but the neglect and contempt of the Sacraments maketh men offenders which the Lord teacheth vs by his Prophet k Ezech. 11. 16 Ezekiel when he promiseth to be a Sanctuarie to his people that being led captiue could not come to the visible Sanctuarie to worship there before him Though I haue sayth hee driuen them into other Nations and dispersed them into diuers Countreyes yet I the Truth of the Sanctuarie of whom that is but a Sacrament and Figure am a Sanctuarie vnto them Fourthly Great preparation is
the Apostle by this Argument condemneth those that in the Congregation pray in a strange Language there being none for to interpret it For then saith he how shall hee that supplyeth the place of an vnlearned man say Amen at thy giuing of thankes forasmuch as he knoweth not what thou sayest To the Ministers also belongeth the Administration of and Administration of the Sacraments the Sacraments for in that they haue power to deale with the Word it selfe the dispensation of those holy things which are but Seales and Pledges of the Word of the promises made in Christ cannot be denied them the Sacraments being as it were a visible Word in which respect they are said to haue a t Exod. 4. 8. voyce wherefore our Sauiour Mat. 28. 19. coupleth them together Teach all Nations baptizing them c. The Ministers of the Word being some of them extraordinarily Among the Ministers of the Word some haue bin extraordinarily inspired of Christ raysed vp of God other comming in by the ordinary calling of the Church in those of the former sort wee are specially to consider the Ministerie of certaine select persons inspired of GOD to deliuer the truth of Christian Doctrine both by word and writing which were the Prophets of the Old Testament and the Apostles of the New Whereupon wee are said to bee u Ephes 2. 21. built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Iesus Christ himselfe being the head corner stone And Peter x 2. Pet. 3. 1. stirreth vp those to whom hee writes to remember the words spoken before of the holy Prophets and the Commandement of vs saith hee the Apostles of the Lord and Sauiour So it is said Reuel 21. 14. The wall of the Citie new Ierusalem had twelue foundations and vpon them the twelue names of the twelue Apostles of the Lambe And in that sence Peter and the rest may well bee taken to bee that y Mat. 16. 18. Rocke vpon which Christ doth build his Church In this point of the Propheticall and Apostolicall Ministerie I obserue foure things First That they spake and wrote by Diuine Inspiration for Prophesie in times past saith the Apostle 2. Pet. 1. 21. came not by the will of man but as they were mooued by the holy Spirit did the holy men of God speake And Paul z 2. Tim. 3. 16. to TIMOTHIE All Scripture is inspired of God and is profitable to teach c. Secondly The manner how they deliuered this Doctrine to deliuer both by liuely voyce which was in two sorts by liuely voyce or writing The liuely voyce was euer in the Church from the beginning to the death of the Apostles All which time there was almost no Age wherein at the least some holy man of God was not extraordinarily stirred vp to deliuer the Doctrine of Truth from the immediate mouth of God although there were many times intermissions as the Historie doth shew And the Church complayneth in the a Psal 74. Psalmes yea this Doctrine was oftentimes corrupted and adulterated but by new Reuelations restored againe and kept in the first Integritie In limiting the liuely voyce to the time of the Apostles it must not so bee taken as if the liuely voyce of the Ministers of GOD did not continue still in the Church but that is of Pastors and Teachers who are and alwayes were to fetch their light from the direction of the Prophets and Apostles it is not of extraordinarie men inspired of the Holy Ghost as the Prophets and Apostles were The reason why a liuely voyce continuing so long as from the beginning of the World vntill the Apostles time should cease with their death doth appeare Heb. 1. 1 2. where it is said that God in many pieces and after diuers fashions of old spake to the Fathers by the Prophets but in these latter dayes he hath spoken vnto vs by the Sonne For so long as the Word was deliuered but by parcels and that there remayned something still behind more cleerely and manifestly to be reuealed which was till he spake fully and lastly by his Sonne so long a liuely voice was necessarie wherewith euery new Reuelation doth beginne but longer there can be no vse of it for that should plainly argue that the Reuelation of the Mysterie of Christ by Christ himselfe were not yet perfect By writing they did deliuer it in the Canonicall and writing Bookes of the Old and New Testament which by way of excellencie wee call the Scriptures or the written Word begunne by Moses and continued during all the time before-mentioned euen to the death of the Apostles Those Bookes are in the Old Testament Genesis c. In the New Matthew c. As for the Bookes commonly called Apocrypha wee acknowledge therin many profitable things contayned and good for morall instruction especially in Ecclesiasticus and in the Booke of Wisdome and some things also necessarie for the vnderstanding of the Storie of the Church yet because they carrie not the print of Gods Spirit which the spirituall man discerneth they are not equalled or matched with the Scriptures And because in many of them flat vntruths and contrarieties may be found and in one and the same Storie contradictions with the true Storie penned by the Holy Ghost and in most of them diuers things either friuolous and absurd or manifestly false and forged or Doctrines taught and commended which the Word of God condemneth we cannot without impiety lift them vp into the Chaire of Truth Beside They were neither written in the Hebrew nor receiued of the Iewes b Rom. 3. 2. 9. 4. to whom were committed all the Oracles of God vnder the Old Testament But that those which we call Canonicall Scriptures were inspired of God is to be proued by arguments and reasons taken from the Bookes themselues As first the Maiestie of the Word in so great simplicitie and so familiar and plaine a stile so piercing and effecting the conscience which all the eloquence of the world and lay it all together is not possibly able to doe although there lacke not also eloquence in the Word but heauenly and diuine Secondly The harmony and consent of so many persons writing at seuerall times in seuerall places and ages of seuerall arguments and matters all iumping and concurring in one as led by one and the same Spirit Thirdly The holinesse of the matter it selfe not sauouring of the world but leading vs by the hand out and from aboue the world Fourthly The prediction of future things many hundred yea thousand yeeres before they came to passe which all fell out accordingly Fiftly The secret and hidden things there discouered which no wisdome of the earth no wit of man was able to reach vnto Some few sparkes whereof stollen from hence haue cast such a light in the writings of Heathen men as hath made them to seeme diuine Sixtly The faithfull and sincere dealing of the Pen-men whom
and the order of the Text must be respected Seuenthly We must conferre it with other places of the Scriptures the darke and obscure ones with those that are more lightsome Eighthly We must alwaies hold the analogie or proportion of faith neuer framing any exposition to our selues that altereth or declineth from that The fourth and last qualitie is that in euerie age the the whole Truth of Christ whole Truth of God was deliuered by a liuely voyce as touching the substance of the Doctrine although in greater cleerenesse vpon the comming of Christ then euer it was before and lastly and perfectly wherein we are now to rest both for their substance manner of reuelation it is fully and absolutely comprehended in the Scriptures So as we shall not need to flye eyther to Visions and Reuelations Anabaptists Libertines that bring in Visions and Reuelations as if the Word of God were imperfect or to mens Traditions and Inuentions Papists that supply it by mens Traditions and Inuentions Vnwritten Verities Sentences of Fathers Canons of Councels c. to Vnwritten Verities Sentences of Fathers Canons of Councels c. for to helpe vs but all is to be had in the written Word for when our Sauiour saith p Iohn 5. 39. Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures hee manifestly teacheth that all Truth is to bee learnt from thence And the q 2. Tim. 3. 15 16 17. Apostle commendeth the Scriptures as being able to make vs wise vnto saluation for the whole Scripture saith he is inspired of God and is profitable vnto Doctrine vnto Reproofe vnto Correction vnto Instruction which is in Righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect perfectly fitted to euery good worke Which foure things comprehending all that can bee necessarie seeing the Word of God is able thorowly to furnish a Minister withall who is to disclose the r Acts 20. 27. whole counsell of God vnto the people it must needs be able to informe a Common Christian vnto saluation Iohn ſ Iohn 20. 31. also giueth this testimonie of the Scriptures that they are written to the end that beleeuing wee might haue euerlasting life And the Booke of the Reuelation hee shutteth vp with this most earnest protestation If any man adde to the words of the Prophecie of this Booke God will adde vnto him the seuen plagues written in this Booke and if any man take away from the words of the Book of this Prophecie God will take away his part of the Tree of Life c. Reu. 22. 18 19. Which if it be true in that one Booke alone how much more shall it hold in all the Bookes of the Scripture set together Fourthly In the Ministerie of the Prophets and Apostles and had power to worke Miracles for the confirming of their doctrine I obserue that they had the power of working Wonders for the confirmation and sealing vp of their Doctrine being innobled of God with a rare and Heroicall Spirit for the working of mightie and powerfull things As first touching the Prophets what great and wonderfull matters God wrought by their hands the Stories euery-where doe testifie when Elias as it were a pettie God could fetch t 2. Kings 1. fire from Heauen by his Prayer u 1. Kings 17. 1 Iames 5. 17 18. shut vp Heauen that no raine should fall but at his word as the Minister of the Lord before whom he stood and by his Prayers open them againe when those that escaped from the hand of Iehu * 1. King 19. 17 Elisha could cause to dye when x Exod. 4. Moses with his staffe was able to turne the waters into bloud c. The Apostles also haue their Commission in this behalfe recorded Marke 16. 15. Goe into all the World and preach the Gospell c. and these Signes shall follow them that doe beleeue In my Name they shall cast out Deuils they shall speake with new tongues they shall destroy Serpents and if they drinke any deadly thing it shall not hurt them vpon the weake they shall lay their hands and they shall be well And this is it which the Apostle saith to the Hebrewes y Heb. 2. 4. that God himselfe gaue testimony to the preaching of the Apostles both by Signes and Wonders and many powers or powerfull things and distributions of the Holy Ghost Wherefore Miracles wherewith it pleased God to grace the extraordinarie Ministeries Heresies and Errors The Papists which make Miracles a note of their Church are 2. wayes faultie First The Miracles they so bragge and boast of are false and fayned Secondly They vse their Miracles such as they bee to a wrong end for aduancing of erronious and lying doctrines and to shake the truth of the Gospell for confirmation whereof all Miracles ought to serue In which case their pretended Miracles though they should be admitted true are of no worth Deut. 13. 1 2 3 4 5. for the Truth of God shineth of it selfe so bright that no Miracles to the contrarie are of force to obscure it But added for confirmation as they were by Christ and his Apostles and by the holy Prophets they make the same more glorious of the Prophets and Apostles are All other Ministeries are to fetch their light from the Doctrine of those that were so inspired long since ceased neither could they nowadayes serue to any vse the truth being long agoe aboundantly confirmed by Christ and his Apostles Lastly all other Ministeries in the Church are and alwayes were to fetch Graces are Gifts for the discharge of those publike Functions their light from the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles that were so inspired To the Ministerie CHRIST hath added Gifts Gifts z 1. Cor. 12. 7. for profit as the Apostle speaketh that is for the Churches common good which is another of those rich endowments and necessarily coupled with the former for the Largesse of Christ vnto his Church had not beene so bountifull in the seuerall sorts of Ministeries vnlesse he had withall bestowed vpon them graces and abilitie to discharge the same for the glorie of God and edification of his people by giuing them knowledge to teach the Doctrine of Christ out of the Scripture by laying forth the Truth soundly and confuting of contrarie errours Wisdome to apply it also to all good vses of comforting casting downe stirring vp reproouing which in one word we terme exhorting and other the like graces for these also we haue not from our selues but all a 2. Cor. 3. 5. our sufficiencie to be Ministers of Christ vnto other is from God The Apostle calleth these kind of Gifts by the name of b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Graces that make men apt and fit for the worke of the Ministerie 1. Cor. 12. 4. 5 6. Now there bee differences of Graces but the same Spirit and there bee differences of Ministeries but the same Lord. And there bee differences of
operations or faculties to worke great and wonderfull things but the same God there is that worketh all these things in all And so I distinguish those wordes in the question of the High Priests vnto the Apostles c Acts 4. 7. By what power or by what name haue you done this As if they should haue said By what Gifts or Calling noteth the Gift and Grace the other the Function or Calling it selfe Of gifts that are for a mans owne priuate is one knowledge Gifts for a mans owne priuate are knowledge of the Word of Christ and vnderstanding of the Word of Christ An excellent and a goodly grace for howsoeuer knowledge of it selfe without further The Popish assertion that Ignorance is the Mother of Deuotion which the Apostle maketh the Mother of Pride and of Rebellion against God Rom. 10. 3. grace bee not of power to reforme the hart yet it is so necessary that the holy Ghost pronounceth e Pro. 29. 2. Without knowledge the heart cannot bee good And this also is the proper worke of Christ for f Iohn 1. 18. No man hath seene God at any time the onely begotten Sonne who is in the bosome of his Father he hath declared him But knowledge as I said a man may haue and yet be and a taste of the sweetnesse of it which being the highest step that it is possible for any Reprobate to ascend neuer a whit the neerer to his Saluation nor haue made one pace vnto the heauenly Kingdome as touching any reformation of the heart That which followeth bringeth a change and alteration with it which the g Heb. 6. 4. Apostle calleth A tasting of the good Word of God c. meaning the sweet promises of the Gospell and is the furthest step that it is possible for any Reprobate to goe Wherein I obserue foure things First That it is a peculiar worke of Christ and commeth not but from him and h Heb. 10. 29. the Spirit of his Grace Secondly That it is not a counterfeit shew of holinesse or in hypocrisie onely but a matter of truth and an excellent grace of GOD wrought indeed in them touching and affecting their hearts as the Apostle Peter plainly sheweth 2. Pet. 1. 8. They beguile those that i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indeed had escaped from them that were conuersant in errour Thirdly I obserue the neerenesse and affinitie that it hath with the sauing faith and the fruits of this with the fruits of that in which respect it pleaseth the Holy Ghost to call them both by one and the same name for they are said to bee k Heb. 6. 4. enlightened to l Heb. 10. 29. receiue the Spirit of Grace to m Luke 8. 13. They beleeued for a time Iohn 2. 24. Many beleeued yet he would not commit himselfe vnto them because he knew them all and what was in them Acts 8. 13 Then Simon also himselfe beleeued haue Faith to beleeue that the n Mat. 12. 43. vncleane spirit is gone out of them to flye o 2. Pet. 1. 20. the pollutions of the World to be p 2. Pet. 2. 22. washed to be q Heb. 10. 29. sanctified by the Spirit to be made r Heb. 6. 5. partaker of the Holy Ghost And the mayne sinne committed here-against is termed in the Scripture ſ Mat. 12. 13 32 Sinne against the Holy Ghost So that these men come to the skirt of the Holy Land and as Moses did from Mount Nebo behold it from afar or rather are at the very gate of the Kingdome of Heauen though for lacke of Faith they cannot enter in In nature it commeth so neere that they taste the changeth after a sort mans corrupt nature sweetnesse and excellency that is in Christ as we shewed before out of Heb. 6. 4. In the fruits and effects that a great and wonderfull change is wrought in them in all their parts and powers their Vnderstanding Will affections Wayes For touching their Vnderstanding they are t Heb. 10. 26. inlightened to the Knowledge and acknowledgement of Christ Touching their Will they desire to bee like Gods Children and to bee saued as Balaam did Numbers 23. 10. O that my soule might dye the death of the Righteous and that my last end might be like theirs For their Affections to omit those that comming from the Law and Couenant of workes may be in such as neuer heard of Christ as terrour and pricking of conscience for their sinnes which u Acts 24. 25. Felix had when Paul disputed of Righteousnesse Temperance and of the Iudgement to come to bee sorrie for them as x Heb. 12. 17. Esay that with teares sought the blessing and y Mat. 27. 35. Iudas that repented him and in the anguish of his soule hanged himselfe Those that properly belong to this place are First An imbracing of the Truth whereupon they are said to z Heb. 10. 25. receiue the Word and to receiue the acknowledgement of the Truth as it were taking it in their armes and imbracing it Secondly Ioy and Gladnesse in the sweet promises of the Gospell They a Heb. 6. 4 5. taste the good Word of God and the powers of the life to come they b Mat. 13. 20. receiue the Word by and by with ioy So did the c Iohn 5. 35. Iewes who willingly reioyced for a while in IOHNS light And d Marke 6. 20. Herod that heard him gladly Thirdly Zeale which was in the Galatians e Gal. 4. 15. that receiued Paul as an Angell and would haue plucked out their eyes to haue done him good and yet afterwards fell away So was f 2. Kin. 10. 16. Iehu zealous for Gods cause in the defacing of Idolatrie and yet a g 2. Kin. 10. 31 wicked man Fourthly Reuerence of the Ministers as HEROD h Marke 6. 20. reuerenced IOHN knowing him to bee a iust and a holy man and obserued him Changes in their actions and wayes Beside a confession of their faults with i Exod. 9. 27. PHARAOH I haue sinned this time IEHOVAH is most iust but I and my people are most wicked And k 1. Sam. 15. 24 26. 21. SAVL I haue sinned now c. And a conforming of themselues in the outward duties of holinesse as to heare the Word preached which l Marke 6. 20. Herod did to Prayer c. They haue these First Vexation in themselues and disquietnesse of minde before they commit sinne and feare to commit it So m Marke 6. 26. Herod was sore grieued to grant Herodias request when shee asked Iohn Baptists head and n Mat. 27. 24. Pilate much troubled in minde before he condemned Christ and sought all meanes to put it off Secondly Repentance and a kinde of humiliation for sinnes committed as o 1. Kings 21. 27 29. Ahab that rent his clothes and put sackcloth vpon him and fasted
to open more largely the parts of this description there bee eight mayne points lye obuious before our eyes First The nature of Faith Secondly The persons to whom it is appropriate Thirdly The causes efficient both primarie and secondarie principall and instrumentall the begetting and the preseruing causes Fourthly The prerogatiue of the faithfull Fiftly The qualities or adioynts of Faith Sixtly Of sight the full perfection of it Seuenthly Of Hope the sister and companion And eightly the fruits or effects The nature of Faith is to know Christ to lay hold vpon him and with confidence and assurance to apply him to ones selfe Wherein we are to consider both the Obiect of Faith and the Actions The Obiect of Faith is Christ for albeit Faith sometimes take hold of a particular promise as the q Mat. 15. 29. blind men did for the opening of their eyes yet it resteth not in that particular good but thorow it looketh at the generall good which is Christ But Christ is the Obiect of Faith not as he is in himselfe and present but absent in his Word Whereupon it is called r 2. Thess 2. 13. The Faith of Truth or that which imbraceth and layeth hold vpon the Word and Truth of God that is to say the Doctrine of Iesus Christ and Christ himselfe in and by the same And this Word is the Word of the Couenant the Word of Reconciliation published and preached and sealed vp by the Sacraments in regard whereof it is also called Å¿ Phil. 1. 27. The Faith of the Gospell So that to speake properly Faith seeth not so much Christ himselfe as a certaine Image and Picture of Christ in his Word and Sacraments wherein wee behold him but as it were in a Looking-glasse So Paul telleth the Galatians Gal. 3. 1. that by the Gospell which hee preached vnto them Iesus Christ was pictured out before their eyes and among them crucified And hereof are the speeches 1. Cor. 13. 22. We see now as it were in a Glasse in a Riddle 2. Cor. 3. 18. But we all with open face beholding as in a Glasse the Glorie of the Lord c. The Actions are three to know to apprehend to apply First Faith hath her seat in the mind and vnderstanding of man for without knowing of Christ how can one embrace and lay hold vpon him since no t Ignoti nulla Cupido man longeth for that he knoweth not This is apparant by those titles which are giuen to Faith euery-where in the Scripture as where it is called Knowledge Vnderstanding Sight Iohn 6. 40. Euerie one that seeth the Sonne and beleeueth in him shall haue euerlasting life Wherefore 1. Iohn 4. 16. these two are ioyned together Wee know and beleeue Faith and other Knowledges differ thus Knowledge is by Reason or from the Testimonie of the Sences Faith grounding vpon the authority and truth of him that promiseth giueth a u Heb. 11. 1. being to things that are not or bee inuisible Secondly In Faith there is an assent of the mind and certaintie or assurance that the promises of the Gospell are true and good not onely in generall but especially to and of ones selfe for there is a double knowledge of Christ one a generall knowledge which the x Iam. 2. 19. Deuils haue and tremble the other proper to the faithfull which is an apprehending Knowledge or knowing apprehension When y Iohn 6. 40. 12. 44 45. men see and beleeue in him And this assurance euery one that beleeueth hath for seeing Faith whereby we enioy Christ is nothing else but to lay hold vpon him and to receiue him as our owne how weake soeuer ones hold bee for that maketh not a difference of Faith from other things but onely of the measure and degree of Faith it followeth that euery mans conscience may assure him whether hee beleeue and so haue Christ or no as his sences can tell him whether hee reach forth his hand or no. Therefore the Apostle saith z 1. Iohn 5. 10. Hee that beleeueth hath this testimony in himselfe Howbeit wee cannot say that assurance is an inseparable companion of Faith alwayes and at all times for as a hand that is benummed may hold a thing though it doth not feele nor discerne the hold it hath so may it be in Faith That though indeed and truely it apprehend Christ yet sometime by the rage and violence of sinne that lulleth vs asleepe and sometimes by other meanes it may fall out that wee shall haue no sence nor feeling that we haue him Thirdly The peculiar and speciall propertie wherein the verie point of Faith doth lye is in the heart and will particularly applying to one selfe that which he iudged to bee so true and good for Faith is the hand of the soule to apprehend Christ and lay hold vpon him as the hand of the bodie apprehendeth outward things and layeth hold vpon them And therefore hereby wee apply Christ vnto our selues and receiue him for our owne And this to be the nature of Faith the Euangelist expresly teacheth when hee saith a Iohn 1. 12. As many as receiued him or laid hold vpon him he gaue them this dignitie to bee the sonnes of God euen to those that beleeue in his Name And againe b Iohn 6. 35. He that commeth vnto me shall neuer hunger and he that beleeueth in me shall neuer thirst Where comming vnto Christ is expounded by the words following of beleeuing in him and that this carryeth with it a particular application as the word it selfe doth shew So the Apostle c 1. Pe. 1. 2. Peter The Papists teach that Faith layeth hold onely vpon a general mercie propounded generally to the Church and not offered particularly to the seuerall members thereof doth more expresly declare when he calleth it The sprinkling of the bloud of Christ particucularly and specially applyed to our soules for the washing and scowring of them for albeit the promises of the Gospel are generall d Ioh. 3 16. Whosoeuer beleeueth in the Son shall not perish but haue life euerlasting yet the same are to be vnderstood singularly and particularly as if they were spoken to thee and mee and to euery one by himselfe in seuerall Otherwise what should our faith differ from the faith of the e Luk. 4. 41. Deuils who knew him and proclaymed him to be that Christ that Holy one of God Hence are these speeches so common in the Scripture f Psal 17. 15. I in righteousnesse shall see thy face I shall bee satisfied when I awake with thy likenesse g Iob 19. 25 26. I know my Redeemer lineth whom I my selfe shall see and mine eyes shall behold and not any other for mee h Gal. 2. 20. Who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for mee i 2. Cor. 5. 1. Wee know that if this our earthly Tabernacle be dissolued we haue a Building from God a House not made
that the preaching of Christ is the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth And IAMES u Iames 1. 18. Because he would hee begat vs by the Word of Truth for this cause hee calleth x Iames 1. 21. it The ingraffed Word because by the Ministerie thereof God changeth vs anew and the Scripture y Mat. 13. 4. elsewhere compareth it to seed that as no Haruest can be without sowing of the Ground nor no Generation without the seed of our fleshly Parents no more z Mat. 13. 23. can any Faith without hearing of the Word nor any Regeneration without the Seed of the Word of God 1. Pet. 1. 23 24. Being borne againe not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible That is the Word of God who liueth and abideth for euer which maketh much to commend the excellencie and necessitie of GODS holy Ordinance of Preaching Not that preaching hath this fruit and effect by any naturall vertue or power that is in it but by the a Rom. 10. 17. Ordinance and Blessing of God who vseth to hide and conceale his owne supernaturall worke in our conuersion as it is the Glorie of God to hide his counsell Prouerbs 25. 2. Neither in saying so do we tye God vnto the meanes as though without Preaching it could not bee wrought at all for as in the things of nature he is not tyed vnto the meanes being himselfe the Lord of nature no more must we iudge him in this worke aboue nature wherein hee taketh glorie to himselfe to deale how and which way he will in an extraordinarie sort Sometimes in respect of the times sometimes in respect of the persons In the ruinous estate of the CHVRCH when there wanteth a set and stablished forme of gouernment it pleaseth him many times to blesse the very sound of the Word though it bee but read or talked of and sometimes other meanes so farre as to make it effectuall for the planting of faith in the heart as Iohn 4. 39. many of the Samaritanes were brought to beleeue in Christ onely vpon the womans wordes which bare record of him And the b Rom. 10. 18. Apostle to the Romanes sheweth that all the World was without excuse to pretend that they had not heard seeing the sound of the Apostles Doctrine was gone abroad into all the Earth The Wise-men also Mat. 2. were led by a Starre as it were by the hand vnto the true knowledge of Christ And Reuel 12. 6. it is said that the woman which fled into the Wildernesse had a place prepared of God that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes Of the extraordinarie worke in respect of the persons we haue an example in the course which it pleaseth him to take with Infants that are not come to yeeres of discretion and vnderstanding as also with men of age which haue not capacitie bee it naturall fooles madde men or deafe-borne in whom the Spirit of God worketh immediately without this outward Ministerie To the faithfull this prerogatiue doth belong that wherefore with these God maketh indeed his Couenant God not onely offereth but maketh with them his Couenant In the Scripture it is called A striking smiting or as the word doth signifie c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Cutting off a Couenant The phrase seemeth to bee taken from the custome of old-time in making of solemne Couenants which was to cut a beast in twaine and to passe betweene the parts of it Gen. 15. 17 18. Ier. 34. 18 19. The qualities or adioynts of Faith are three First Apprehending Christ now absent onely in his By vertue whereof our Faith albeit apprehending Christ absent it apprehend him weakly Word and Sacraments the knowledge and apprehension must needs be feeble and weake Wherein notwithstanding there are distinct degrees neither are the faithfull that lay hold on Christ endued all with the like measure of Faith for there is a weake and a slender hold as it were by the fingers end there is a strong and a fast hold as it were with the whole hand The first of these is called d Mat. 8. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A little Faith and e Mat. 17. 20. Faith as much as a graine of Mustard Seed But how weake soeuer the Lord accepteth it and promiseth not to quench so much as the f Esay 42. 3. smoking Flax yea hee accepteth the verie desire to beleeue which is the beginning and least step of Faith for faith it selfe And this kinde of Faith is to be seene in the father g Mat. 9. 24. of the childe that cryed with teares I beleeue Lord helpe my vnbeliefe The other by a Metaphore taken from a Ship that commeth into the Hauen with ful Sayles is called Plerophoria or a full assurance whereof we haue h R● 4. 20 21. Abraham for an Example Who was not weake through vnbeliefe but was strengthened in the Faith and gaue glory to God being fully assured that what he had promised he was able also to do Our faith being weake is through the gracious operation yet confirmed by the Word Sacraments Prayer and other holy meanes of the same Spirit that first wrought it strengthened and supported by the Word and Sacraments which are the nourishing and preseruing causes that so long as heere we liue wee haue a continuall need of the Ministerie and all other holy meanes Whereupon Paul bidding the Thessalonians i 1 Thess 5. 19 20. not to quench the Spirit immediately addeth Despise not Prophecies Another thing proper vnto Faith is this that where it neuer letteth goe the hold all other Gifts and Graces of the Spirit if they haue not Faith which is the Roote may wither and come to nothing this neuer can bee lost but groweth to the end Wherefore out of this one Roote two branches as it were doe spring And because they are both worthie of speciall consideration it shall not be amisse distinctly to speake of them One which is the second qualitie of Faith that he which once hath this Faith is sure to haue it still So saith our Sauiour Christ Luke 22. 31. in the person of Peter giuing a perpetuall comfort to all that are his I haue prayed for thee that thy Faith should not faile In another place hee saith k Iohn 6. 35. He that commeth vnto me shall neuer hunger and he that beleeueth in me shall neuer thirst Agreeable whereunto is that of IOHN l 1. Iohn 2. 19. They went out from among vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they would haue abidden with vs. For this is that sweete and euerlasting promise that God hath made vnto his Church m Ier. 32. 39 40 I will not put my feare into their hearts that they shall neuer depart away from mee all the dayes of their life And excellent to this purpose is the speech of
certaine promise or the faith and credit of the Promise-Maker may bee called in question But that hope which the Scripture speaketh of and which here wee deale with respecting celestiall Happinesse and eternall Glorie in Heauen which i Titus 1. 2 3. God that cannot lye hath promised in his Word apprehendeth the same most certainly without all exception and therfore is said k Rom. 5. 5. not to make ashamed being a Noble and a Royall Vertue and of a Diuine Ofspring the Daughter of Faith and Mother of Patience Daughter and inseparable Companion of Faith for what is Faith else but l Heb. 11. 1. the ground-worke or foundation and subsistence of things hoped for Againe it is the Mother of Patience as wee heard euen now out of the Epistle to the Romanes If m Rom. ● 25. wee hope for that we see not wee doe wait for it with patience Therfore the Apostle elegantly termeth it n Heb. 6. 19. The Anchor of our soules to stay vs in the middest of the stormes and troubles of this life til we ariue at the hauē of all our rest Faith and Hope do thus differ Faith imbraceth Christ as present and in him all Happinesse in generall Hope looketh at one certaine Happinesse to come which is the inioying of the glorious presence of God of CHRIST and of the holy Angels in Heauen CHAP. VIII Of Regeneration THE fruit and glorious effect of Faith that The fruit of an effectuall calling is that destroying of the old world that is our sinfull cursed estate by the power of his death and sufferings he maketh is of Christ by Faith apprehended of Gods Elect is this that destroying in them the old World that is our sinfull and cursed estate by the power of his death and sufferings as the Apostle teacheth Gal. 6. 14. and in other places hee maketh of the true Church a new a heauenly World giuing his Sonne vnto them and Righteousnesse Holinesse and life euerlasting in and through him Many points of great waight and singular vse arise from hence seriously to be attended First Here is the reall and royall performance of the Couenant which God that cannot lye not onely offereth vnto all to whose eares the sound of the Word doth come and striketh hands with such as by Faith make it theirs but giueth and performeth the very truth thereof when they are once entred into the societie of the Couenant wherefore it is called o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The exhibiting of the Couenant a putting into possession as it were by liuerie and seisin Ezech. 20. 37. and Paul saith Gal. 3. 23. The promise by the Faith of Iesus Christ is giuen to those that beleeue So wee finde recorded Ier. 31. 34 34. This is the Couenant which I will make with the House of Israel I will put my Law in their minde and write it in their heart and will bee their God and they shall bee my people I will bee fauourable to their iniquities and their sinnes will I remember no more And againe Ezech. 36. 25 26 27. I will powre vpon you cleane waters and yee shall be cleane from your pollutions and from all your abominations will I clense you and I will giue vnto you a new heart and a new Spirit will I put in the midst of you and I will take away the heart of stone out of your flesh and will giue vnto you a hart of flesh and my Spirit will I put in the midst of you and make that yee shall walke in mine Ordinances my Iudgements ye shal obserue doe Secondly This Couenant is exhibited but to a few of the true Church Ier. 31. 33. the House of Israel Gods faithfull people whereas all mankind was partaker of the former Couenant for in Adam all were made righteous Wherefore Faith is the onely meanes and instrument whereby God in this life giueth his Sonne or Christ giueth himselfe vnto vs and is made ours by spirituall Regeneration as the Apostle witnesseth q 1. Ioh. 5. 1. Euerie one that beleeueth that Iesus is that Christ is borne of God And againe r Ioh. 1. 12. As many as receyued him he gaue vnto them this dignitie to become the sonnes of God euen to those that beleeue in his name who are not borne of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God ſ Gal. 3. 26. All yee saith the Apostle to the Galatians are the sonnes of God through faith in Christ Iesus This alone putteth vs in possession of Christ and of all the good things we haue from him for t Eph. 3. 17. he dwelleth in our hearts by faith and there is u Ioh. 6. 35. no way to feed vpon him but by beleeuing in him no way to life but by feeding on him Otherwise wee cannot haue his Spirit which x Gal. 3. 14. wee receiue by faith onely nor y Act. 26. 18. haue our sinnes forgiuen vs or Christs righteousnesse imputed to vs which is euery where called z Rom. 4. 11 13. The righteousnesse of faith a Rom. 9. 13. 10. 6. The righteousnesse by faith b Rom. 3. 22. The righteousnesse of God by faith c Rom. 4. 5 9. Faith imputed for righteousnesse And Faith said to be that whereby we d Abacuc 2. 4. Rom. 1. 17. Gal. 3. 11. Heb. 10. 38. are righteous whereby we e Rom. 3. 26 28. 5. 1. Gal. 2. 16. 3. 8 24. are iustified not for any inherent qualitie that is in Faith more than in Loue Hope or other vertues but because it apprehendeth Christ and maketh him ours who is our onely righteousnesse our hearts cannot else be purified for f Act. 15. 9. that Faith doth alone Else can we not be partakers of the promised bessednesse g Gal. 3. 9. which is giuen to the faithfull onely So wonderfull is the worke of Faith Thirdly Here is the verie life and power of the Kingdome a new of Christ and that wherein his glorie shineth incomparably most of all in that he frameth and fashioneth vs from aboue to be new Creatures of naturall men spirituall heauenly men of carnall h Psal 102. 19. So Eph. 2. 10. a people created againe as the Psalmist speaketh whereby he maketh a new face of things and as it were another world i Esay 65. 17. I make new heauens and a new earth k 2. Cor. 5. 17. If any man be in Christ he is a new creature old things are passed away behold all things are become new The Author to the Hebrewes termeth this excellent condition and estate l Heb. 2. 5. The world to come in opposition to this present world wherof the Apostle saith that m Gal. 1. 4. Christ hath deliuered vs out of this present euill world Wherefore by the world to come is not meant as in our common speech it is
so Esay 45. 24 you shall find this very word to that purpose in the u Matth. 22. 11 plurall And Iohn here placeth wholly in the robe that the Saints put on the x 2. Cor. 5. 21. marriage garment Christ Iesus not in themselues but the y Rom. 1. 17. 3. 21. 22. brightnes wherof is not meant of shining before men but in the eyes of God wherefore in many and elsewhere places it is called The Righteousnes of God as that which may boldly offer it selfe in Gods sight and abide the strict examination of his Iustice being the Righteousnesse of him that is God himselfe But what vse will you say is there of the imputation of righteousnesse if our sinnes that seuer vs from God be forgiuen and taken from vs Yes vndoubtedly verie great and singular as may appeare by those parts of happinesse whereunto otherwise then by this we are able to lay no claime And therefore the Apostle Rom. 5. handleth professedly this Doctrine of imputation of Righteousnesse as without which the other of forgiuenesse of sinnes had not beene perfect And where in z Rom. 4. 6 7. another place he defineth Happinesse by the forgiuenesse of sinnes Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are pardoned it is no full and exact definition numbring all the parts but by a Synechdoche naming one best fitting his present purpose hee giueth to vnderstand the rest as in diuers other places Blessednesse is diuersly defined by those things which yet in truth are but branches of the true and perfect Blessednesse Blessed a Psal 1. 1. is the man that hath not walked in the way of sinners Blessed b Luke 11. 2● are they that heare the Word of God and keepe the same The reason whereof is because all the parts of happinesse are so linked and ioyned together that he which hath one must needs haue all The parts if I may so call them of this righteousnesse the holinesse of his nature imputed to vs are first the perfect Sanctification of Christs humane nature whereby our originall and naturall corruption not imputed to vs our nature it selfe is accounted holy in the sight of God whereof the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. 2 3. The Law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus hath freed me from the law of sinne and of death for which was impossible to the Law for that it was weake by reason of our flesh God sending his own Sonne in the likenesse of sinfull flesh for sinne hath condemned sinne in the flesh that that which the Law requireth might bee fulfilled in vs where the Law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus he calleth that perfect and all-sufficient Sanctification of our nature in him whereby he comming in the likenesse of sinfull flesh for sinne that is to abolish sinne it selfe in our nature taken vpon him condemned or which is all one abolished sinne in the flesh meaning in his own person through whose perfect Sanctification of nature made ours the reliques of sinne that our corrupt nature is tainted with are not imputed to vs and therefore wee bee free from death and condemnation being wholly restored euen in our nature to a greater integritie then we lost in Adam All which the Apostle sheweth was in respect of the weaknesse of the Law being of no strength by reason of the flesh or part vnregenerate which hindreth the worke of the Law otherwise most perfect and is opposite thereto that it neither can or will be subiect to it So as to the end we might fulfill that which the Law requireth which is to be righteous not in our Actions onely but in our verie nature it was necessarie so to haue it sanctified in the person of Christ not supplying that which ours wanteth but wholly and altogether sanctifying vs in himselfe And by this meanes it commeth to passe that wee are after the most precise and exact rule of the Law righteous before God hauing the perfect integritie of our nature absolutely in Christ for which purpose hee saith not might be fulfilled of vs but in vs speaking of Christs owne Sanctitie imputed to vs. Secondly The thorow and perfect obedience which and Righteousnesse to be ours he performed in the whole course of his life both in the duties to God his Father and in respect of men with whom he was conuersant here on Earth whereby all our vile and filthy actions not comming into account our whole life is reckoned most absolutely good and holy not onely void of sinne but full of perfect Righteousnesse as the same Apostle teacheth b Rom. 5. 12. to the end of the Chapter Rom. 5. setting it forth by an excellent comparison of our Sauiour Christ with Adam both in the things wherein they agree in this point and in those wherein they differ They agree in this that each conueyeth his owne to those that are his whom the Apostle therefore calleth many opposing them to that one whom hee considereth as their Head Adam hee conuayeth both guilt and sinne vnto condemnation Christ Righteousnesse and Obedience vnto Iustification they differ in this First Adam deriueth it downe by nature vpon all his posteritie Christ bestoweth it by grace and fauour and free imputation Secondly Adams one sinne condemed all CHRIST iustifieth from many sinnes not that one onely but all other Thirdly Christs Righteousnesse is more auaileable and of greater power to saue then Adams sinne was to condemne for that indeed threw vs downe from the state of Innocencie but Christ hath raysed vs to a more excellent state vnto the heauenly glorie And hereof commeth our Iustification properly so called that is to say Gods censure and Iudgement of vs approouing vs for holy and righteous before him as hauing that Righteousnesse that is able to abide his presence So as euen by the sentence of God himselfe and in his most exact Iustice we are freed and absolued and declared righteous and worthie of euerlasting life which is that the Scripture opposeth to the sentence of condemnation Rom. 8. 33 34. Who shall lay accusation to the Elect of God It is God that iustifieth who can condemne Thus the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5. 18. As by one offence guilt came vpon all men vnto condemnation so by one c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth the matter of our Iustification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iustification it selfe fulfilling of Righteousnesse that is by Christs perfect fulfilling of the Law the benefit came vpon all vnto Iustification of life or to the declaring and approouing of vs iust before God whereby wee obtayne euerlasting life This so noble a benefit commeth to bee wrought by the Resurrection of Christ as the Remission of our sinnes came by his death and sufferings So writeth the d Rom. 4. 25. Apostle to the Romanes He dyed for our sinnes and rose for our Iustification Not that his death had no hand in
strong in Faith and had full assurance of the promise of God And of the y 1. Thes 1. 3. Thessalonians that their Faith did increase exceedingly or aboue the common or ordinarie measure and the 〈◊〉 did abound In another z 1. Thes 1. 3. place hee commendeth not onely the vertues themselue● but the fruit which they shewed of them Remembring the worke of your faith your laborious loue and patient hope c. And the * Iames 5. 11. Scripture setteth before vs the Patience of Iob and the Vertues and Perfections of other men of God as mirrours and glasses for vs to looke into for the reforming of our wayes and that we might become like vnto them Not that such a one hath attayned to perfection or may now set downe and rest as being come to his iournies end but the more graces he hath the more fruitfully he ought to labour for an increase of them and not so much to thinke what hee hath as what he doth yet want following the example of the a Phil. 3. 13 14 15. Apostle PAVL Brethren I count not that I haue attayned vnto the marke that is to say perfection But one thing I doe I forget that which is behind and endeuour my selfe to that which is before As many of vs therefore as are perfect let vs bee thus minded Wherein wee haue the b Mat. 25. 29. promise of our Sauiour Christ to giue vs comfort that to him that hath that is carefully imployeth and vseth to Gods Glorie the good things hee hath receiued more shall bee giuen and hee shall haue abundance Our Sanctification being so imperfect as we haue said it is a noble and necessarie piece of seruice to informe our selues how wee may bee able to discerne it I will point out such notes and markes as I hold to be the principall First is by those common affections noted before which generally belong to all holy Duties and are heere certaine markes of renewed Holinesse As first A loue of the Truth and of the Word c Iohn 17. 17. Thy Word is Truth for the Truths sake for to be of the Truth that is a louer and imbracer of the Truth is all one as to be of God And so our Sauiour Christ expoundeth it when saying in d Iohn 18. 37. one place Euery one that is of the Truth heareth my voyce hee rendreth it in e Iohn 8. 47. another place by this as all one in waight and substance Hee that is of God heareth the words of God O how I loue thy Law saith f Psal 119. 91. DAVID All the day long it is my Meditation The contrarie whereof is an euident signe of an euill and wicked heart and draweth after it many heauie Iudgements fore-runners of destruction for g 2. Thes 2. 11 12. Because saith the Apostle they receiue not the loue of the Truth that they might be saued therefore GOD will send vnto them effectuall errors to beleeue lyes that all may be condemned that beleeue not the Truth but take pleasure in iniquitie Secondly Cheerefulnesse in well-doing Wherevpon the Children of God are euery-where called h Psal 110. 3. Cant. 6. 9. c. A free-hearted people Thirdly A feare of offending in any thing which Salomon maketh the Badge of Gods Children Blessed is the man that feareth alwayes Fourthly Sinceritie and singlenesse of heart which one thing in the middest of many difficulties held vp the Apostle Paul insomuch as he professeth of himselfe This i 2. Cor. 1. 12. is our reioycing the testimonie of our conscience that in singlenesse and sinceritie of God we haue beene conuersant in the World Fiftly Zeale when not onely wee loue God and his Truth but our loue is hot vehement feruent that k Cant. 7. 11. much water cannot quench it no nor the flouds drowne it And if a man should giue all the substance of his house for this loue it should vtterly be contemned PHINEAS for this grace obtayned a great Mercie Numb 25. 12 13. Therefore behold I giue vnto him my Couenant of Peace for he and his seed after him shall haue an euerlasting Priesthood by couenant because he was zealous for his God Sixtly Watchfulnesse ouer our wayes which our Sauiour so often doth beate vpon l Mat. 26. 14. Watch and pray that ye enter not into temptation Seuenthly A constant resolution to cleaue vnseparably vnto Christ So Acts 11. 23 24. BA●NABAS exhorted all with purpose of heart to cleaue vnto the Lord for he was saith the Text a good man and full of the Holy Ghost and Faith Eightly To performe whatsoeuer wee doe of conscience to God Working it from the heart as to the Lord and not to man Col. 3. 23. Ninthly To seeke his glorie in all things which generall rule the Apostle setteth downe 1. Cor. 10. 31. Whether ye eat or drinke or whatsoeuer ye doe doe all to the glory of God Tenthly That the greater and more holy the duties are and the more they doe excell the more excellent our Loue Zeale Cheerfulnesse and Sinceritie bee in the performance of them This Commandement wee haue Matthew 22. 37. Thou shalt loue the Lord with all thy heart The eleuenth and last which yet is so farre from being least that in a manner it carryeth the prayse from all the rest is an entire obedience when we labour to keepe whatsoeuer God hath commanded and to please him in all things being holy as hee is holy Ezechiel in his eighteenth Chapter in one word expresseth it If he keepe all mine Ordinances and then n Ezech. 18. 11 12 c. amplifying it by the contrarie beateth vpon it as his manner is with a heape and multitude of inforcing speeches If he doe to his Brother other then any one of those things and he do not all these things c. For the practice of this Lesson good Cornelius and the rest with him assembled are highly commended Acts 10. 33. We all are here present before God to heare all things that are commanded thee of God And of Dauid the Holy Ghost beareth o Acts 13. 22. witnesse I haue found out DAVID the sonne of IESSE according to my heart that will p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doe all my will in all things Not like to Saul q 1. Sam. 1. 15. who serued GOD but by halues for the which r Marke 6. 20. Herod is also bra●ded that he did many things but not all that he heard of Iohn Baptist And ſ Iames 3. 2. the more to incourage vs to this dutie the Scripture teacheth that though in many things we faile all God accepteth the desire for the thing it selfe that if our heart and purpose be to forsake euery euill path and to cleaue vnto God without being drawne away it is in his sight all one as if we had done it so t Iames 2. 22. Iames saith that ABRAHAM offered his Sonne
naughtie one as they are termed Mat. 13. 38. For l Iohn 15. 19. and 17. 14. because wee are not of the World but GOD hath chosen vs out of the World therefore doth the World hate vs which is the perpetuall state of Gods Church from the beginning and was figured in m Ge. 25. 22 23 Rebecca a Type of the Church in whose wombe were two Nations deuided that stroue and fought together And our Sauiour doth fore-warne vs not to looke for better In n Iohn 16. 33. the World yee shall haue affliction Secondly Whatsoeuer is vnregenerate in the Children of God themselues whereby it many times falleth out that none are greater instruments vnto vs of offending God then they By the flesh I meane our naturall corruption and all the lusts and workes of it an enemie which we alwayes carrie about vs not onely in our bosome but in our very bowels So that heere is the battell between the flesh the Spirit wherof the o Gal. 5. 17. Apostle saith that the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh And these saith he are opposite one to another Rom. 22. 23. It is elegantly described I finde therefore this Law for mee when I would doe well that euill lyeth readie for me to slay and seize on mee as the Lord speaketh of sinne Genes 4. 6. For I am delighted in the Law of God as touching the inner man but I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind leading me captiue to the law of sin that is in my members p 1. Pet. ● 11. PETER in like sort willeth vs to abstaine from fleshly lusts that war against the soule And heereof are the exhortations so common in the Scripture q Gal. 5. 16. Walke in the Spirit and fulfill not the lusts of the flesh Wee r Rom. 8. 12. are debtors not to the flesh to liue after the flesh but to the Spirit to be led by it Take ſ Rom. 13. 14. no care of the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof Christ t 1. Pet. 4. 1. therefore hauing suffered for vs in the flesh Put you on also the same minde that he which suffereth in the flesh hath ceased from sinne Secondly In this conflict are to be considered the two Generals of these Battels The Captaine vnder whome wee fight IESVS the u Heb. 12. 2. Prince and perfiter of our Faith in x Gen. 3. 15. Genesis pointed out by the seed of the woman to note his Manhood in the y Reuel 12. 7. Reuelation by Michael equall with the mightie God to set forth his God-head you shall find him royally described Reuel 19. 11 12 13 14 15 16. The head and generall lifted vp against him is the Dragon the old Serpent Satan or the Deuill as wee heard before Thirdly The weapons of this Warfare both those which our Aduersaries the Flesh the World and the Deuill fight withall and those whereby wee doe resist them The weapon of sinne or of the flesh is Lust as it is said Rom. 7. 8. Sinne taking occasion by the Law wrought in me all manner of lust Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit The weapons of the World are First Outward Afflictions and Persecutions Reproches Slanders c. to draw vs from Christ Iohn 16. 33. In the World ye shall haue afflictions Secondly Ease Credit Pleasure Profit Honour c. Thirdly Euill Examples Satans weapons are outward or inward Outward First The World for wicked men are the Hel-hounds of Satan the Champions and Souldiers which hee fights withall whose head and generall hee is and therefore called the z Iohn 14. 30. and 16. 11. prince of this World which name is giuen to all a Ephes 6. 12. vncleane spirits The b 2. Cor. 4. 4. god of this World And the afflictions of the World as they proceed from him are called The c 2. Co. 12. 7. buffetings of Satan Secondly The obiects of sinne to our eyes our eares and other sences which Satan setteth before vs to draw vs to a loue and in loue to a committing of it as hee did to our first Parents in Paradise and to our d Mat. 4. Sauiour Christ in the Wildernesse and as hee ceaseth not continually to doe to vs. Inward ones are First His kindling of the fire of our owne concupiscence blowing as it were the bellowes and gathering together matter for it to worke vpon Secondly Temptations or Illusions which he casteth into hearts as Venome or Poyson for to infect vs. Our weapons whereby wee doe resist them what they are the Apostle notably declareth 2. Cor. 10. 4. not carnall but mightie and valiant to the throwing downe of all the strong holds of sinne Where though he speake specially of the Ministers yet the like is to bee said in their degree and place of all other Christians Generally it is the Word of God as appeareth 2. Thess 2. 8. Whom God will consume with the breath of his mouth But more particularly they may be reduced vnto two heads Faith and the fruits of Sanctification that come from it for so e 1. Tim. 1. 18. Paul to Timothy vnder these two comprehendeth all willing him to fight that good Fight hauing faith and a good conscience And 1. Thess 5. 8. Put on the Brest-plate of Faith and Loue and for a Helmet the hope of Saluation And 1. Cor. 16. 13 14. Watch stand in the Faith Let all your things bee done in loue In the f Reuel 12. 11. Reuelation they are reckoned these three which come all vnder the other two Faith in the bloud of the Lambe as the Shield the Sword of the Word of God and confession of Christ vnto the death Of Faith the Apostle speaketh 1. Pe. 5. 9. Whom that is the Deuill resist stedfast in Faith And 1. Iohn 5. 4 5 This is the victorie that ouercommeth the World euen your Faith And this as our chiefe and principall weapon the Apostle biddeth vs aboue all to take vnto vs by it hauing Christ himselfe and his Spirit to bee ours And therefore being that g Ephes 6. 16. whereby we are able to quench the fiery darts of the Deuill The fruits of Sanctification are all the Christian Vertues and Qualities which the Word of God requireth The Apostle Ephes 6. reckoneth them vp in this order First Truth or a sound and sincere heart wrought by the Gospell which is the Word of Truth as a belt to gird vs in Secondly Righteousnes both Piety and Iustice in a Holines towards God Innocencie towards our Neighbours for a Brest-plate the habit and perfection wherof being Loue h 1. Tim. 1. 5. out of Faith vnfained The Apostle therfore 1. Thess 5. 8. calleth it The Brest-plate of Faith and Loue. Thirdly Preparation or readinesse of minde which is as it were the shooing of our feet to make them light and nimble