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A47625 A systeme or body of divinity consisting of ten books : wherein the fundamentals and main grounds of religion are opened, the contrary errours refuted, most of the controversies between us, the papists, Arminians, and Socinians discussed and handled, several Scriptures explained and vindicated from corrupt glosses : a work seasonable for these times, wherein so many articles of our faith are questioned, and so many gross errours daily published / by Edward Leigh. Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1654 (1654) Wing L1008; ESTC R25452 1,648,569 942

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vers 14. 1 Pet. 3. 15. Christians should be ready to give an answer to every man which doth ask them a reason of the hope which is in them the foundation is that which is first and surest laid and hath an influence into all the building Men should do all upon trial and solid conviction 1 Thess. 5. 21. 1 Ioh. 4. 1. The Papists would have the people take things upon trust they say those places concerne the Doctours of the Church not the people but compare the 20 and 21. vers in the Thessalonians and 1. vers with 6. in Iohn and we shall see the contrary This trial is profitable First Because truth then will have a greater force on the conscience Secondly This is the ground of constancie 2 Pet. 3. 17. Thirdly Hereby we shall be able to maintain the truth Matthew 11. 19. The Scriptures are fundamentum quo the fundamental writings which declare the salvation of Christians Iohn 5. 37. Christ fundamentum quod the fundamental means and cause which hath purchased and doth give it Iohn 4. 42. The person we must build on is Christ 1 Cor. 3. 11. He is called the foundation of foundations Isa. 28. The doctrinal foundation is the written Word of God which is not only the object and matter of our faith but the rule and reason of it Hold Christ as your Rock build on him the Scripture as your rule and the reason of your believing this is general there are some particulars First Some things are simply necessary It were a notable work for one to determine this how much knowledge were required of all Secondly Not absolutely necessary Some make the foundation too narrow some again too wide some say that if a man nean well and go on according to the light he hath though he know not Christ he shall be saved Others say that all are bound to know distinstly the Articles of the Creed Fundamental truths are all such points of Doctrine which are so plainly delivered in Scripture that whosoever doth not know or follow them shall be damned but he that doth know and follow these though erring in other things shall be saved All the principles of Religion are plain and easie delivered clearly in 1. Scripture they are to be a rule to judge of other Doctrines 2. They are very few say some reduced to two heads by Iohn Baptist Mark 1. 15. and by Paul 2 Tim. 1. 13. 3. In all principles necessary to salvation there hath been agreement among all the Churches of Christ Ephes. 4. 5. though they may differ in superstructures Quod ubique quod semper quod ab omnibus creditur Catholicam est Vincent Lyrin These Fundamentals said a Reverend Divine now with God are twelve three concerning God three concerning Man three concerning the Redeemer three concerning the means of attaining good by this Redeemer Concerning God 1. There is one God which is an Infinite Perfect and Spirituall Essence 2. This one God is distinguished into three Persons or manners of subsistence after an incomprehensible way which we believe but cannot perfectly understand The Father begetting the Son begotten and the holy Ghost proceeding 3. This one God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost is the Maker Preserver and Governour of all things by his Wisdom Power Justice Providence Concerning man 1. That he was made by God of a visible body and an immortal and spiritual soul both so perfect and good in their kindes that he was perfectly able to have attained eternal life for himself which was provided as a reward of his obedience 2. That being thus made he yielded to the temptations of the Devil and did voluntarily sin against God in eating of the Tree forbidden and so became a childe of wrath and heir of cursing an enemy to God and slave to the Devil utterly unable to escape eternal death which was provided as a recompence of his disobedience 3. That he doth propagate this his sinfulnesse and misery to all his posterity Concerning Christ. 1. That he is perfect God and perfect Man the second Person in the Trinity who took the Nature of man from the Virgin Mary and united it to himself in one personal Subsistence by an incomprehensible Union 2. That in mans Nature he did die and suffer in his Life and Death sufficient to satisfie Gods Justice which man had offended and to deserve for mankinde Remission of sins and Life everlasting and that in the same Nature he Rose again from the Dead and shall also Raise up all men to receive Judgement from him at the last Day according to their Deeds 3. That he is the only sufficient and perfect Redeemer and no other merit must be added unto this either in whole or part Lastly Concerning the Means of applying the Redeemer they are three 1. That all men shall not be saved by Christ but onely those that are brought to such a sight and feeling of their own sinfulnesse and misery that with sorrow of heart they do bewail their sins and renouncing all merits of their own or any creature cast themselves upon the mercies of God and the only merits of Jesus Christ which to do is to repent and believe and in this hope live holily all the remainder of their life 2. That no man is able thus to see his sinnes by his own power renounce himself and rest upon Christ but God must work it in whom he pleaseth by the cooperation of his Spirit regenerating and renewing them 3. That for the working of this Faith and Repentance and direction of them in a holy life he hath left in writing by the Prophets and Apostles infallibly guided to all truth by his Spirit all things necessary to be done or believed to salvation and hath continued these writings to his people in all ages Observe those places Act. 15. 11. 1 Tim. 1. 15. Let a man hold this that there was nothing but death in the world till Christ came and that he is come to save sinners Ioh. 17. 3. Secondly There are practical places 1 Cor. 6. 9. Titus 3. 8. Let us 1. See our selves dead without Christ and wholly trust in him 2. Let us be exemplary in our lives and conversations There are other Fundamentals which are only comparatively necessary that is expected from one man which is not expected from another and more from those that live in the Church Have these six Principles of the Apostle not only in your heads but hearts 1. That a man is dead in himself 2. That his remedy lies out of himself 3. Know the Doctrine of the Sacraments 4. The Word of God 5. Have some apprehension of the life to come 1. That there is a passage from death to life 2. That there is a fixed and irrevokable estate after this life 6. Hold the Doctrine of Faith so that Christ may live in you and you be delivered up into that forme of Doctrine lay hold on
Babylon the great Whore with all the Kingdoms of Antichrist The subject of it is two-fold 1. The present state of the Church 2. The future state of it The things which are and the things which shall be hereafter Revel 1. 19. The three first Chapters of this Book contain seven several Epistles to the seven several Churches of Asia the other following Chapters are a Prophetical History of the Church of God from Christs Ascension to his second coming The holy Ghost foreseeing what labour Satan and his instruments would take to weaken and impair the credit and authority of this above all other Books wherein he prevailed so far as some true Churches called the truth and authority of it into question hath backed it with a number of confirmations more then are in any other Book of Scripture First The Author of it is set in the fore-front or face of it The Revelation of Iesus Christ Chap. 1. vers 1. who professeth himself to be the first and the last vers 11. so in the several Epistles to the Churches in several styles he challengeth them to be his Thus saith he 1. That holdeth the seven starres in his right hand 2. He which is first and last which was dead and is alive 3. Which hath the sharp two edged Sword 4. Which hath eyes like a flame of fire and his feet like brass 5. Which hath the seven Spirits of God and the seven stars 6. He who is holy and true who hath the key of David 7. He who is Amen the faithful and true witness the beginning of the creatures of God Secondly The Instrument or Pen-man his servant Iohn the Evangelist the Apostle the Divine who for the farther and more full authority of it repeateth his name at least thrice saying I Iohn Chap. 1. 9. and 21. 1 2. and 22. 8. whe●●●● in the Gospel he never maketh mention of his name there he writes the History of Christ here he writes of himself and the Revelations declared to him Thirdly In the last Chapter are five testimonies heaped together vers 5 6 7 8. 1. Of the Angels 2. Of God himself the Lord of the holy Prophets 3. Of Jesus Christ Behold I come shortly 4. Of Iohn I Iohn heard and saw all these things 5. The Protestation of Jesus Christ v. 18. Fourthly The matter of the Book doth convince the Authority thereof seeing everywhere the Divinity of a Prophetical Spirit doth appear the words and sentences of other Prophets are there set down part of the Prophecies there delivered are in the sight of the world accomplished by which the truth and authority of the whole is undoubtedly proved there are extant many excellent Testimonies of Christ and his Divinity and our redemption by Christ. Fifthly The most ancient Fathers Greek and Latine ascribe this Book to Iohn the Apostle Theophylact Origen Chrysostome Tertullian Hilary Austin Ambrose Iren●us To deny then the truth of this Book is contrasolem obloqui to gainsay the shining of the Sun it self The Chiliasts abuse many testimonies out of this Book but those places have been cleared long ago by the learned as bearing another sense See Dr Raynolds Conf. with Hart c. 8. p. 406. Calvin being demanded his opinion what he thought of the Revelation answered ingeniously saith one He knew not at all what so obscure a writer meant Se penitus ignorare quid velit tam obscurus scriptor Cajetane at the end of his Exposition of Iude confesseth that he understand● not the literal sense of the Revelation and therefore Exponat saith he cui Deus concesserit It consists of two and twenty Chapters the best Expositors of it are Ribera Brightman Paraeus Cartwright Fulk Dent Forbes Mede Simonds Foord 1. The Scriptures written by Moses and the Prophets sufficiently prove that Christ is the Messiah that was to come The Old Testament may convince the Jews which deny the New Testament of this truth Iohn 5. 39. They that is those parts of Scripture written by Moses and the Prophets there were no other Scriptures then written The 53 of Isaiah is a large History of his sufferings We have also another Book or Testament more clearly witnessing of Christ The Gospel is the unsearchable riches of Christ Ephes. 3. 8. So much may suffice to have spoken concerning the Divine Canon the Ecclesiastical and false Canon follow CHAP. V. Of the Books called Apocrypha SOme Hereticks utterly abolisht the Divine Canon as the Swingfeldians and Libertines who contemned all Scriptures the Manichees and Marcionites refused all the Books of the Old Testament as the Jews do those of the New as if they had proceeded from the Devil Some diminish this Canon as the Sadduces who as Whitaker and others hold rejected all the other Prophets but Moses some inlarge it as the Papists who hold that divers other Books called by us Apocrypha i hidden do belong to the Old Testament and are of the same authority with the other before named and they adde also their traditions and unwritten Word equalling it with the Scripture both these are accursed Rev. 22. 18. But against the first we thus argue Whatsoever Scripture 1. Is divinely inspired 2. Christ commandeth to search 3. To which Christ and his Apostles appeal and confirm their Doctrine by it that is Canonical and of equal Authority with the New Testament But the holy Scripture of the Old Testament is divinely inspired 2 Tim. 3. 16. where he speaks even of the Books of the Old Testament as is gathered both from the universal all writing viz. holy in the 15 verse and from the circumstance of time because in the time of Timothies infancy little or nothing of the New Testament was published 2. Christ speaks not to the Scribes and Pharisees but to the people in general to search it Iohn 5. 39. this famous elogium being added That it gives testimony of him and that we may finde eternal life in it 3. Christ and his Apostles appeal to it and confirm their Doctrine by it Luke 24. 27. Rom. 3. 21. Acts 10. 43. and 17. 11. and 20. 43. and 26. 20. the New Testament gives testimony of the Old and Peter 2 Pet. 1. 19. of Pauls Epistles The Ecclesiastical Canon which is also called the second Canon followeth to which these Books belong Tobit Iudith first and second of the Maccabees Wisdom Ecclesiasticus Baruch Additions to Daniel and Esther for these neither contain truth perfectly in themselves nor are sanctified by God in the Church that they may be a Canon of faith and although abusively from custom they were called Canonical yet properly in the Church they are distinguished from the Canonical by the name of Apocryphal The false Canon is that which after the authority of the Apocrypha increased was constituted by humane opinion for the Papists as well as we reject for Apocryphal the third and fourth Book of Ezra the prayer of Manasses the third
such truth can be no where but in it is inward and outward according as the actions are Inward truth of understanding is an agreement betwixt its conceit of things and the things themselves contrary whereto is error or misjudging and of the will contrary to hypocrisie and dissimulation Outward 1. Of word which is Logical when I speak as the thing is Moral when I speak as I conceive the thing to be and also in the matter of promises when I mean as I say and hold still that meaning till I have actually made good my words 2. Of deeds when they are such in the intention and meaning of my minde as in the outward pretence and are agreeable to the promises I have made God is true in all these respects 1. His Essence is real and true he is a God indeed not in imagination alone the Scripture calls God the true God To know thee saith our Saviour Christ the onely true God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ. He is the true God not a bare conceit of our own head or siction He hath not an imaginary and counterfeit but a very real being he is indeed such he saith he is for that which gives being to other things must needs it self be in very deed The other supposed gods alone in name and in fancy of the worshippers but he is 2. He hath a true not an erroneous conceit of things he knows all things most exactly he is indeed a willer of true goodnesse 3. He speaks nothing but as the thing is and as he doth conceive it he means what he promiseth and doth what he means the Lord dissembleth not with men he is true in his word and his whole word whether Narrations Promises Threats Visions or Predictions He is abundant in truth Exod. 34. 6. what he telleth it is as he telleth it what he promiseth or threatneth to do he intendeth and will perform Psalm 89. 33 34 Deut. 7. 9. 2 Cor. 1. 20. Promissa tua sunt quis falli timeat cum promittit veritas Aug. Confes. l. 12. c. 1. 4. God is true in his works they are not done counterfeitly as those of the Devil but truly Psal. 145. 17. Rev. 15. 3. The Scripture proves the truth of God 1. Essentially when it affirms God to be true in his works Deut. 32. 4. Psal. 25. 10. Rev. 15. 3. 16. 7. 2. In his words which is proved both affirmatively Iohn 17. 17. 2 Sam. 7. 28. and negatively Num. 23 19. 1 Sam. 15. 29. Heb. 6. 18. Reason 1. All lying and falshood ariseth from weaknesse and imperfection or wickednesse neither of which is in God seeing to be God is to be perfect and absolute He is the Lord God of truth Psal. 34. 5. his Son is truth Iohn 14. 6. his holy Spirit the Spirit of truth Iohn 17. 6. the Gospel is the word of truth Col. 1. 5. God is the chief and first truth the Author of truth truth is in him essentially and immutably Psal. 100. 5. onely true Rom. 3. 4. This distinguisheth him from false gods 2 Chron. 15. 3. Iohn 17. 3. God is worthy to be trusted honored and esteemed ergo most true Where it is said God seduced the Prophets it is not so understood as if God inspired a false prophecy and an error but that he delivered them to the devil to be seduced 1. It serves to reprove the wicked who believe not threats and the weak Christians who in temptations and desertions doubt of promises 2. It exhorts us to desire the manifesting of this truth Psal. 43. 3. we should be true like God Zach. 8. 16. in our words and deeds keep our vows with God and promises with men God loves truth as in himself so in his creatures but abhors dissimulation and hypocrisie Prov. 12. 22. The true Church is the pillar of truth Gods word the word of truth Psal. 19 9. We should therefore believe Gods word and depend upon his promise seem it never so unlikely or impossible give him the glory of his truth He that believeth setteth to his seal that God is true he that believeth not maketh God a lyer Will you receive the testimony of men and will you not much more receive the testimony of God He that believeth Gods promises will surely do the things to which the Lord by promises encourageth him He that believes the threats will forbear the thing which God by his threats seek to deter him from This is matter of solid comfort for all the true children of God if he be faithful they must be happy Truth is that vertue of the will by which it is moved to goodnesse for Gods sake when the thing moving us to be good is Gods Commandment and the end whereat we aim is the glorifying and pleasing of God then we serve God in truth 5. God is Faithful Rev. 19. 11. First In himself by an uncreated faithfulnesse Secondly In his Decrees Isa 14. 24 27. Thirdly In all his ways and works Psal. 145. 17. 1. Of Creation 1 Pet. 4. ult 2. Of Redemption Heb. 2. 17. 3. Of Justification Iohn 1. 19. 4. Of Protection and Preservation of his Church Rev. 19. 11. Fourthly In all his words and speeches 1. His Commandments are the rule of truth and faithfulnesse to us Psalm 19. 9. 2. His Predictions are all faithfully accomplished many thousand years after as Christs incarnation in the fulnesse of time so Gen. 49. 10. 3. His Menaces are most faithful 4. His Promises Exod. 12. 41. Heb. 10. 23. There is a difference between faithfulnesse in the Creator and in the Creature 1. This is the ocean and fountain from whence all faithfulnesse and truth in men and Angels issue 2. This is the rule and measure of that and the nearer it comes to this the more compleat it is 3. It is unchangeable in him the Angels that fell were faithful but soon changed so Adam 4. It is in God in most high perfection Reasons 1. Because of his most just and righteous nature whose most righteous will is the rule of all his ways Psal. 145. 17. 2. He is most perfect and unchangeable in perfection 3. Because of his most pure and holy affection 4. There is no imperfection in him to hinder his faithfulnesse Gods faithfulnesse is the ground of all true Religion 1. We must ground all the Doctrine of faith all the Articles of faith all our judgement and opinion in matters of faith upon this faithfulnesse of God and this by holding fast all the faithful word Titus 1. 9. Rom. 3. 4. 2. All our obedience of faith must be grounded on this Iohn 3. 33. Heb. 11. 11. 10. 23 Zeph. 3. 5. Heb. 6. 30. 3. All our prayers of faith must be grounded on Gods faithfulnesse Dan. 9. 16. 1 Iohn 1. 9. 1 Pet. 4 19. Psal. 1. 5. 4. All sound profession of faith must be grounded on this Genes 17. 1. Psal. 91. 4. 5. All
raised The first principles of heavenly Doctrine are named here a foundation because they are the first things which are known before which nothing can be known and because upon the knowledge of these things all other parts of heavenly knowledge do depend They must be so firmly laid and received at the first as they should never be questioned more not that Ministers may not preach again of Principles Those that deny Fundamentals must of necessity destroy Religion Perfection is building on the old foundation In no age since the Gospel dawned in the world were all fundamentals in Religion denied till now The Apostles are the foundation of the Church Ephes. 2. 20. Revel 21. 14. in three respects 1. Because they were the first which founded Churches and converted unbelievers to the faith 2. Because their doctrine which they received immediately from God by most undoubted revelation without mixture of errour or danger of being deceived is the Rule of Faith to all after-comers 3. Because they were Heads Guides and Pastors of the whole universal Church The Proposition or Observation which ariseth from these words thus opened may be this The Principles and Foundations of Christian Religion must be well laid Or thus Catechizing and instructing of the people in the Principles of Religion is a necessary Duty to be used The Apostle illustrates this by a comparison first from Schools secondly from building the foundation must be first laid The excellent definition of catechising which the Apostle here gives yeelds us two good proofs of its necessity 1. It is the Doctrine of the beginning of Christ by some rendred not unfitly for the sense which gives beginning in Christ. 2. It is a foundation which bears up all the building without this preaching is to no purpose which though it makes the least shew yet it is of greatest use it establisheth men and keeps them free from wavering 3. This course is most agreeable 1. To Art all Arts proceed from principles Physicians have their principles Lawyers their maxims Philosophers their chief sentences 2. To Nature which first forms the vital parts then the more remote 3. It is sutable to reason Principles are 1. Easiest in themselves 2. Facilitate other matters 3. Are the most necessary Doctrines of all the rest they bear up all the rest 4. Are of continual and constant use Principia sunt minima quantitate maxima virtute 4. Gods order and practice hath been still to lay principles things might easily passe from one to another at first they lived so long Cain and Abels sacrificing is an evidence of catechising before the Flood there was no Word written then therefore it is like their Fathers taught them It was practised by Abraham Gen. 18. 19. the fruit of which observe in his sonne Gen. 24. 63. and servant Gen. 12. 26. God himself writes a Catechism for the Jews describing a short compendium of Religion in the two Authentick Tables of the Law Hannah delivered Samuel to Eli his Instructor so soon as he was weaned Iehoiada taught the young King Iihoash David and Bathsheba practised it 2 Chron. 28. 8 9. Psal. 34. 11. Prov. 4. 4. 31. 1. and Salomon himself seems to give that precept out of the most experience of his own most excellent education Teach a childe the trade of his way and when he is old he shall not depart from it though himself scarce did so and Eccles. 12. 23. he draws all which he had said in his whole Book to two heads Fear God and keep his Commandments Catechizing was also practised by Christ and his Apostles Luke 2. 4. Acts 22. 3. Heb. 6. 1 2 3. Christ allowed of H●sanna sung by children He begins with regeneration to Nicodemus and he drew the whole Law into two heads Matth. 22. 37. Iohn and Christ preacht Faith and Repentance and the Apostles after them Theophilus was catechized Luke 1. 4. Apollos Act. 18. 23. Timothy 1 Tim. 3. 15 2 Tim. 2. 2. The Apostle Paul commends to Timothies custody a patern of wholsome Doctrine which he cals A form of Doctrine Rom. 6. 17. and the Analogy of faith Rom. 12. 6. that is certain plain rules unto which all others must hold proportion The Magdeburgenses observe from these places and that Heb. 6. that there was Catechismus ab Apostolis tra●itus that the Apostle drew the Doctrine of the Gospel into short heads for the instructing of the children of the Church This Duty principally belongs to Ministers their Office is set down under the name of catechizing Let him which is catechized make him that catechizeth partaker Gal. 6. 6. Ministers must plant and beget as well as increase and build up feed the Lambs as well as the Sheep they are compared to Nurses wise Stewards skilfull builders it must be performed by Housholders also Ephes. 6. 4. God chargeth Parents to perform this Duty Deut. 6. 6 7. Rehearse them continually whet them upon thy children often go over the same thing as a knife doth the whetstone They are bound to bring up their children in the nurture and information of the Lord Children were to be taught the meaning of the Passeover Exod. 12. 16. Masters of Families also must instruct their servants which are ungrounded as children Christ instructed his Apostles he taught them how to pray he being the Master of the Family and they his Family as appeareth because he did eat the Passeover together with them and the Law appoints that every family should celebrate that Feast together The reason why God specifieth not this point in the Masters duty is because if it be performed by the Father it shall be needlesse seeing it is done to the Masters hand but if the Father neglect it surely the Master which succeeds in the Fathers room and hath his Authority must see it done For as a Father in Israel was bound to see his own sonne circumcised so he was bound to see his servant circumcised and if to circumcise him sure he must as well make him as his childe to know what Circumcision meaned And what Christ did as a master of a Family that must every Master of family do seeing we must be followers of Christ every one in his place therefore every one must instruct his ignorant servants in the truths of Religion The Jews did use Catechizing Cyprian saith Optatus exercised it at Carthage and Origen at Alexandria Clemens Alexandrinus had his Poedagogus Lactantius and Calvin their Institutions Athanasius his Synopsis Augustine his Enchiridion his Books De Doctrina Christiana and De Catechizandis rudibus Catechizing is Institutio viva voce a kinde of familiar conference The Hebrew verb Chanach signifieth to instruct or train up even from childehood and to initiate or dedicate from which word holy Henoch had his name importing nurture in the fear of God The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth to sound or
life eternal Secondly There are some particular principles There is a natural light and supernatural The light of Nature teacheth some principles That you must do as you would be done by that no man hates his own flesh that one must provide for his family that there is a God and one God that he is to be honoured and reverenced above all 2. Supernatural Let all our actions be done 1. In Love 2. In Humility 3. In Faith 4. In God This the Gospel teacheth Shew your selves Christians in power go beyond the Heathen in practising the good rules of Nature 1. Be carefull to make a wise choice of principles one false principle admitted will let in many errours and erroneous principles will lead men into erroneous practices 2. Labour to act your principles if you captivate the light God will put it out 3. Be sure you work according to your principles we pity another in an errour when he follows his principles Here is an Apology for those Teachers which tread in Pauls steps are carefull to lay the foundation well It was the Observation of our most judicious King JAMES That the cause why so many fell to Popery and other errours was their ungroundedness in points of Catechism How many wanton opinions are broached in these dayes I wish I might not justly call them Fundamentall errours Some deny the Scriptures some the Divinity of Christ some the Immortality of the Soul Errours are either Contra against the foundation which subvert the foundation as that of the Papists who deny the all-sufficiency of Christs once suffering 2. Circa about the foundation which pervert the foundation as the Lutherans opinion of the ubiquity of Christs body 3. Citra meerly without these divert the foundation as in the controversies of Church-Government whether it be Social or Solitary this strikes not at the foundation Laurentius saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 3. 11 12 13 14 15. speaks not of heretical Teachers and those which erre in fundamentals but of those which erre in lighter matters because he saith of both they build upon one and the same foundation Christ. See Mr Burgess of Justific p. 80. We should contend for a known fundamentall necessary truth Iude vers 3. The common faith not every opinion entertained on probable ground It is a great Question in Divinity An Magistratui Christiano liceat capitales poenas de Haereticis sumere Whether Hereticks are to be punished by the Christian Magistrate with death The Papists say Haeretici qua Haeretici comburendi That Hereticks for Heresie sake though they do not trouble the State ought to be put to death Luther doth not approve of the capital punishment of Hereticks especially for the pernicious sequel of it among the Papists against the Protestants He thinks it better that they be banished The present Lutherans hold the same almost concerning that Question Meisner doth distinguish between Haereticus simplex and Haereticus seditiosus ac blasphemus these last he saith may be punished with capital punishments The Socinians being themselves the worst of Hereticks would have no outward forcible restraining of any errour though never so grosse and pernicious You must not look say the Socinians into the Old Testament for a a rule of proceeding against false Prophets and Seducers Nor saith Calvin and Catharinus can you sinde in the New Testament any precept for the punishment o● Thieves Traitors Adulterers Witches Murtherers and the like and yet they may or at least some of them be capitally punisht For the Protestants hear what Zanchy saith Omnes fere ex nostratibus hujus sunt sententiae quod haeretici sint gladio puniendi Beza hath written a peculiar Tract De Haereticis à Magistratu puniendis Calvin also hath written Aure●m librum as Beza cals it of this very Argument We do deservedly condemn the cruelty of Turks and Papists which go about by force alone to establish their superstitions The Church of Rome and the Pope will judge what Heresie is and who is an Heretick and they appropriate to themselves the name of Catholicks and all such as dissent from them must presently be pronounced Hereticks The Pope and Canonists hold him to be an Heretick Qui non in omnibus ac singulis Papae decretis obtemperat He that readeth the Bible in his Mother-tongue will be esteemed an Heretick with them Virgilius a Germane Bishop and a Mathematician was sent for to Rome by the Pope and condemned of Heresie because he held that there were Antipodes Because Heresie is not easily defined as Augustine saith and because faith should be perswaded not compelled We conceive that all fair means should be first used to convince men of their errours and heresie which indeed is so Therefore we will premise some things concerning the nature and danger of Heresie before we speak particularly of the punishment of Hereticks Chillingworth thus defines Heresie It is saith he an obstinate defence of any errour against any necessary Article of the Christian faith Two things must concurre say some to constitute an Heretick 1. Error in side 1 Tim. 1. 19. 2. Pertinacia Titus 3. 10. Errare possum Haereticus esse nolo See Mr Vines on 2 Pet. 2. 1. p. 46 47. Neque vero alia magis ratione definimus quam si veterum trium Symbolorum vel si veterum quatuor Generalium conciliorum ulli contraveniat Episc. And. Tert. Dr Field thus describes the nature of Heresie Heresie is not every errour but errour in matter of Faith nor every errour in matter of Faith for neither Jews nor Pagans are said to be Hereticks though they ●●●e most damnably in those things which every one that will be saved must believe and with all the malice fury and rage that can be imagined impugn the Christian faith and verity but it is the errour of such as by some kinde of profession have been Christians so that only such as by profession being Christians depart from the truth of Christian Religion are named Hereticks Secondly For the danger of Heresie Heresie is a fruit of the flesh Gal. 5. 20. An Heretick after the first and second time reject Tit. 3. 10. Heresie or false doctrine is in Scripture compared to Leaven and to a Gangrene for the spreading and infectious nature of it The Heresie of Arius was more dangerous to the Church then the Sword of all the persecuting Emperours It is compared to a Land-floud Revel 12. because it did overcome all presently We need not to ask whether he joyn obstinacy to his errour saith Dr Field which er●eth in those things which every one is bound particularly to believe because such things do essentially and directly concern the matter of our salvation and he is without any further enquiry to be pronounced an Heretick and the very errour it self is damnable as if a man saith he shall deny Christ to be the Son
Epithete The holy Scriptures Rom. 1. 2. 2 Tim. 3. 15. The Scriptures of the Prophets Rom. 16. 26. Some think that Enoch the seventh from Adam wrote but Iude 14. speaketh only of his prophesying which might rather be by word of mouth then writing because our Saviour citing Scripture ever gives the first place to Moses and undertaking by the Scriptures to prove himself to be the Messiah that he ought to suffe● began at Moses Luke 24. 27. No doubt if there had been any more ancient then Moses our Saviour would have alledged it because all the Scripture that was before him was to give testimony of him The Author of the Scriptures was God himself they came from him in a special and peculiar manner commonly called inspiration which is an act of Gods Spirit immediately imprinting or infusing those notions into their brains and those phrases and words by which the notions were uttered 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is given by Divine inspiration or by inspiration of God Prophecy came not of old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moved or carried by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 21. They did not write these things of their own heads but the Spirit of God did move and work them to it and in it 2 Sam. 23. 2. The spirit of the Lord spake by me that is did immediately guide me and tell me what matter to utter and in what words Stephen saith they resisted the Holy Ghost when they did disobey the Scriptures The Holy Ghost by the mouth of David and the mouth of Isaiah spake Acts 1. 16. 4. 25. 28. 25. The Inscriptions of many Prophetical Books and Epistles Apostolical run thus The word of the Lord which come to Hosea Amos Ioel Paul Peter Iames a servant of God and an Apostle of Christ. The Proeme that is set before divers Prophecies is this Thus saith the Lord and the Prophets inculcate that speech The mouth of the Lord hath spoken it because they would take off the thoughts of the people from their own persons and lift them up to consideration of God the chief Author It is all one to say The Scripture saith Rom. 4. 3. 10. 11. 11. 2. Gal. 4. 30. 1 Tim. 5. 10. and God saith Rom. 9. 25. Heb. 4. 3. 8. 5. 13. 5. and the word Scripture is put for God speaking in the Scripture The Scripture saith to Phara●h Rom. 9. 7. and The Scripture hath shut up all men under sin Galat. 3. 22. for which in another place God hath shut up Rom. 11. 32. All other disciplines were from God and every truth whosoever speaks it is from the Holy Ghost but the Scripture in a singular manner is attributed to the Holy Ghost he immediately dictated it to the Holy men of God The efficient principall cause then of the Scripture was God the ten Commandments of which most of the rest is an exposition were written after a secret and unutterable manner by God himself therefore they are called the writings of God Exod. 32. 16. Secondly all the rest which was written though men were the instruments was done by his appointment and assistance Exod. 17. 14. ●sai 8. 1. Ier. 30 2. The Scripture is often attributed to the Holy Ghost as the Author and no mention is made of the Pen-men Heb. 10. 15. The Prophets and Apostles were the Pen-men of the Scripture whose Calling Sending and Inspiration was certainly Divine for whatsoever they taught the Church of God or left in writing they learned not before in the Schools 1 Cor. 2. 13. The Divine Authority of the Word may be defined a certain dignity and excellency of the Scripture above all other sayings or writings whatsoever whereby it is perfectly true in word and sense it deserves credit in all sayings narrations of things past present and to come threatnings and promises and as superiour doth binde to obedience if it either forbid or command any thing 1 Tim. 1. 15. 2 Pet. 1. 19. Iohn 5. 39. Heb. 6. 18. Rom. 1. 5. 2 Cor. 10. 5 6. 13. 3. 12. 12. Gal. 1. 1 12 13. though the things in mans judgement seem unlike or incredible or the Commandments hard and foolish to the carnal minde Hereticks have laboured to prove their corrupt and damnable opinions out of the Scripture and have received some books if not all as Divine The Turks at this day so esteem the five books of Moses as they will kisse such patches of Paper as they finde having any part thereof written in the same Aristaeus an Heathen when he had determined to have disputed against Scripture confesseth that he was forbidden by God in a dream Plato is termed Moses Atticus Moses speaking Greek The holy Scripture in it self is Divine and Authentical though no man in the world should so acknowledge it as the Sun in it self were light though all the men in the world were blinde and could not or would not see it but in respect of us it is Divine and Authentical when it is acknowledged and esteemed so to be The Scripture is the word of God written by holy men as they were inspired by the holy Ghost divinely containing all Divine Truth necessary to salvation for the edification and instruction of Gods Church thereunto and for the glory of God The holy Scriptures are that Divine Instrument and means by which we are taught to believe what we ought touching God and our selves and all creatures and how to please God in all things unto eternal life Robins Essayes 8th Observ. Divines have given almost fourty several Arguments to prove the Scriptures to be the word of God That the Scriptures were from God may appear by several Reasons 1. Intrinsecal taken out of the Scriptures themselves 2. Extrinsecal acts of God and works of providence about them 1. Intrinsecal 1. From the excellency of their matter which is heavenly the divine and supernatural matter contained in it It telleth us of such things as do far exceed the reach of mans reason and which it was impossible for any man to counterfeit and feign and which being told are so correspondent to reason that no man can see just cause to call them into question as the Doctrine of Creation of all things in six dayes the Doctrine of the fall of our first Parents the Story of the Delivering Israel out of Aegypt of the Delivering of the Law and ten Commandments the Doctrine of the incarnation of Christ Jesus of the Resurrection of the dead of the last Judgement of the life to come and of the Immortality of the soul for though this last was taught also by Philosophers yet it is so doubtfully and unperfectly handled by them in comparison of the delivering thereof in Scripture that it is apparent it was another Spirit which guided the teachers of it here then they were guided withall What Angel
could ever have found out such an admirable temper and mixture of Mercy and Justice together as the Gospel revealeth in the reconciliation of God with man God hath declared himself to be most just yet most merciful Rom. 3. 24 25 26 Justice requires that there should be no freeing of a guilty person without satisfaction sinne deserved an infinite punishment that satisfaction could not be made by man himself mercy therefore provides a Saviour which God bestows on him vers 25. God in giving and establishing his Law useth no other Preface but I am the Lord Exod. 20. nor Conclusion but I the Lord have spoken it upon his absolute authority without other reasons to perswade commanding what is to be done though it be contrary to our natures forbidding what is to be left undone though pleasing to us he promiseth things incomprehensible requiring Faith he relateth and teacheth things strange above likelihood above mans capacity and yet will have them to be believed to be understood There is nothing in the Law against reason or common equity A Jesuite reports in his History that when his fellows came first to preach in the East-Indies the Gentiles and Indies there hearing the ten Commandments did much commend the equity of them See Sr Walter Rawleighs History 2. It teacheth the Nature and Excellency of God and the Works of God more clearly and distinctly than any other writings nay then any without God could have contrived viz. That there are three Persons and one God that God is Infinite Omniscient Omnipotent most Holy that he created all things that he doth by a particular Providence rule all things that he observes all mens actions and will call them to account and give every man according to his works that he alone is to be worshipped and that he must be obeyed in his Word above all creatures 3. It requireth the most exact and perfect goodnesse that can be such as no man could ever have conceited in his brain and yet such as being taught and revealed the conformity of it to right reason will enforce any well-considering man to acknowledge it to be most true and needful for example that a man must love God above all and his neighbour as himself that he must keep his thoughts free from all the least taint of sinne that he must lay up his treasures in Heaven not care for this life and the things thereof but all his study and labour must be to provide well for himself against the future life that he must not at all trust in himself nor in any man but only in God and that he must do all he doth in Gods strength that he can deserve nothing at Gods hand but must look for all of free favour through the merits and intercession of another 4. The end of the Scripture is Divine viz. The glory of God shining in every syllable thereof and the salvation of man not temporal but eternal These writings leade a man wholly out of himself and out of the whole world and from and above all the creatures to the Creator alone to give him the glory of all victories therefore they are from him and not from any creature for he that is the Author of any writing will surely have most respect of himself in that writing The Scriptures manifest Gods glory alone Ier. 9. 23 24. 1 Cor. 1. 31. ascribe infinitenesse of being and all perfections to him Nehem. 9. 6. The Doctrines Precepts Prohibitions and Narrations tend to the setting forth of his glory and bring solid and eternal comfort and salvation to their souls which follow their direction They make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15 23. Shew the path of life Psal. 16. 11. Guide our feet into the way of peace Luk. 1. 79. Christ Iohn 7. 18. proves that he came from God because he sought not his own glory but the glory of him that sent him 5. Another reason is taken from the difference of these writings from all other whatsoever in regard of their phrase and manner of writing There is a certain authoritative or God-like speaking unto the creature from place to place See the first Chapter of Isaiah and 53. and the eighth Chapter to the Romans The Prophets and Apostles propound divine truths nakedly and without affectation 1 Cor. 2. 1. Habent sacrae Scripturae sed non ostendunt eloquentiam August They expresse the things they handle with a comely gravity the form of speech is fitted both to the dignity of the speaker the nature of the thing revealed and mans capacity for whose sake it was written All other Writings use perswasive and flourishing speeches these command and condemn all other Gods all other Religions all other Writings and command these only to be had in request and esteem and acknowledged as the will of God without adding or diminishing requiring every conscience to be subject to them and to prepare himself to obedience without any further objecting or gain-saying and to seek no further then to them for direction Both the Simplicity and Majesty of stile shew it to be from God the wonderfull plainnesse and yet glorious Majesty the Simplicity because it is plain in no wise deceitful and because it describes great matters in words familiar and obvious to the capacity of the Reader the Majesty since it teacheth so perspicuousl● the chiefest mysteries of Faith and divine Revelation which are above humane capacity Whether we read David Isaiah or others whose stile is more sweet pleasant and ●hetorical or Amos Zachary and Ieremiah whose stile is more rude every where the Majesty of the Spirit is apparent There is an Authority and Majesty in them above all other Writings of other Authors the Scriptures command all both King and People Ier. 13. 18. 1 Sam. 12. ult and binde the heart to its good abearing Ierom could say As oft as I read Paul it seems to me that they are not words but thunders which I hear Iunius reading the first Chapter of Iohn was stricken with amazement by a kinde of Divine and stupendious Authority and so he was converted from Atheism as himself saith in his life Divinitatem argumenti authoritatem sentio Iohannes Isaac a Jew was converted by reading the 53. of Isaiah Our Saviour spak● As one having Authority not as the Scribes So this book speaks not as men it simply affirms all things without proof other Autho●s use many Arguments to confirm the truth of what they say Therefore Raimundus de Sabunda hence proves That he who speaketh in the Bible is of that Authority that his bare word ought to be believed without any proof whereas Galen Atheistically urged it the other way The Socinians reject all things in Religion which they cannot comprehend by reason Nihil credendum quod ratione capi nequeat They hold That a man is not bound to believe any Article of Faith nor any Interpretation of
Apostles wrote in Greek which wrote peculiarly to the Jews as I●mes and Peter Matthaeum Hebrai●è scripsisse convenit inter antiquos Citat Iren●um Origenem Athanasium Epiphanium Chrysostomum Hieronymum Vossius de genere Christi dissertat Scripsit Hebraea lingua quia praecipuè Iudaeorum quos viva voce hact●nus docuisset haberet rationem Id. ibid. Vide Grotium in libros Evangel It was needfull that the Gospel should be written by many First for the certainty Secondly for the perfection of it Amongst all the Evangelists there is a general Agreement and a sp 〈…〉 rence they all agree in the main scope and subject Christ they d●●●●r in 〈…〉 al Argument and Order All describe the life of Christ some more largely some more briefly some more loftily some more plainly yet because all were inspired by the same spirrit they all have equal Authority The difference of Evangelists in some smaller matters proveth their consent in the greater to be the voice of Truth for had they conspired all together to have deceived the world they would in all things have more fully agreed The Doctrine of the Covenant of Grace is more plainly expounded the will of God and way to Salvation more plentifully set down in the New Testament then ever it was in the dayes of Moses or the Prophets and in these books of the New Testament all things are so established as to continue to the end so that we must not look for any new Revelation All these Books we receive as Canonical because they are Divine for matter and form divinely inspired by God sanctified and given to the Church for their direction written by the Apostles or Apostolical men sweetly con●enting with other parts of holy Scripture and with themselves received alwayes by the greatest part of the Church of God They were written after the death of Christ by the direction of the holy Ghost the Apostles by lively voice first preached because it was needful that the Doctrine of the Gospel should by their preaching as also by signs and wonders be confirmed against the contradictions and cavils of the Jews and Gentiles and be allowed by the assent of believers generally before it was committed to writing that we might be assured of the certainty of those things which were written These Books are acknowledged Canonical both by us and the Papists so that touching this matter there is no controversie between us and them Among the confest writings of the Scriptures attested by all and not contradicted by any The four Gospels are first to be placed and then the Story of the Acts of the Apostles See Euseb. Eccles. Hist. lib. 3. cap. 3 4. and lib. 5. cap. 8. and lib. 6. cap. 18. The Epistles doubted of by some for a while were first the Epistle to the Hebrews the Epistle of Iames the second Epistle of Peter the second and third Epistles of Iohn the Epistle of Iude and the Revelation of which I shall treat more when I come to handle the Books of the New Testament particularly The Story of the woman taken in Adultery hath met with very much opposition See Gregories Preface to his Notes upon some passages of Scripture Crojus defends the truth of it Observat. in Nov. Testam c. 17. Vide Seldeni uxorem Ebraicam cap. 11. The Inscriptions and Titles prefixed before the Epistles are no part of holy Scripture written by the Apostles but added to the Epistles by some others The Subscriptions and Postscripts also of divers Books are false counterfeit and erroneous not written by the Apostles but added afterward by the Scribes which copied out the Epistles The Subscriptions of the later Epistle to Timothy and also to Titus are supposititious they are neither found in the Syriack nor in all Greek Copies nor yet in the vulgar Latine translation these additions were made some hundred years after the Apostles The Canonical Books of the New Testament are either Historical Doctrinal or Prophetical 1. Historical containing matters of fact the History of 1. Christ exhibited in the four Evangelists or Gospels as they are stiled by God himself Mark 1. 1. Matthew Mark Luke and Iohn called Gospels because they contain a message of joy and gladnesse They all treat of one subject Christ Jesus incarnate are most true Historians Luk. 1. 2. Ioh. 21. 24. 2. His Apostles in the Acts written by Luke thirty years after Christs Ascention so termed of the principal subject of the History though the acts of others not Apostles are there recorded 2. Dogmatical or Doctrinal such as were written by the Apostles for the instruction of the Church of God in faith and manners commonly called Epistles and that by warrant of the Scriptures 1 Thes. 5. 27. 2 Pet. 3. 1 16. because they were sent to them who had already received and professed the Gospel of Christ. The Apostles being oft times unable to instruct by their personal Presence supplied that by writing Epistles These are one and twenty written 1. By Paul 1. To whole Churches 1. Gentiles To the Romans To the C●ninthians To the Galatians To the Ephesians To the Philippians To the Colossians To the Thessalonians 2. Jews To the Hebrews 2. To particular Persons 1. Timothy 2. Titus 3. Philemon 2. Iames one 3. Peter two 4. Iohn three 5. Iude one 3. Prophetical wherein under certain resemblances the state of the Church of Christ till the end of the world from the time of Iohn the Evangelist is most truly and wonderfully described and receiveth its name Apocalyps of the Argument Beza Piscator Calvin Erasmus Grotius have done well on all the New Testament Of the Papists Iansenius hath done well on the Harmony of the Lutherans Chemnitius and Gerhard of the Protestants Calvin Maldonate and De Dieu Cameron Scultetus and Grotius have done well likewise on the Evangelists Matthew and Iohn were Apostles of the twelve Mark and Luke Evangelists Apostle is a name of Office or Dignity It notes one sent from another with command in special certain famous Embassadours of Christ. The Evangelists were Comites vicarii Apostolorum they accompanied the Apostles in preaching the Gospel and had curam vicariam omnium Ecclesiarum as the Apostles had curam principalem The Title Evangelist is taken 1. For such as wrote the Gospel 2. For such as taught the Gospel and these were of two sorts either such as had ordinary places and gifts or such whose places and gifts were extraordinary such Evangelists were Timothy and Titus Smectymn Answ. to an Humble Remonstrance Sect. 13. Matthew There was never any in the Church which doubted of its Authority Some say he wrote in Hebrew but that is uncertain as hath been already declared He interprets the Hebrew name Emanuel Chap. 1. 23. and those words C● 27. 46. therefore it is likely he wrote not in Hebrew for why should one that writeth in Hebrew interpret Hebrew words to such as
Scripture were not inspired of God for as God is true so is his Word Ioh. 17. 17. sweetly agreeing with it self and every part with other these Books commend false things as true and approve things evil as right Iudith Chap. 9. v. 2. commends killing the Sichemites against Gen. 49. 6 7. 2 Maccab. 14 42. Razis is commended for killing himself the fact is not only related but commended also in these words nobly manfully and this commendation doth plainly shew that the Author thereof was not inspired of God When the D●natists out of this Book urged that it was lawful for them to kill themselves as Razis did Augustine then was forced to acknowledge That the Authority of this Book was uncertain and questionable and proves it by the judgement of the Jewish Church Christ and the Christians Manifest Fables are told in some of them for true Histories as that of Toby Iudith Bel and the Dragon If any desire a particular confutation of the several Books of the Apocrypha I commend to his reading that learned Treatise of Dr Raynolds de libris Apocryphis who hath so exactly handled this subject that to write of it after him were to write Iliads after Homer or to draw a line after Apelles 5. The most ancient Fathers and Councels which lived the best and first five hundred years after Christ rejected the same Books which we doe Ierome on Matth. 23. saith concerning a Testimony cited out of the Apocrypha Hoc quoniam ex Scriptura nihil habet authoritatis eadem facilitate rejicitur qua profertur Because this hath no authority out of Scripture it may as easily be rejected as it is offered All that the Papists object for these Books in the general is That the third Councel at Carthage the Florentire Councel and that of Trent do approve the said Books to be Canonical as also Augustine and Innocentius To which it may be answered 1. That the Councel of Carthage was but a Provincial Councel and therefore it cannot binde the whole world Moreover in that Councel there are divers things which the Papists will not endure as in the 26 Canon there is a Decree that no Bishop shall be called chief or universal Bishop no not the Bishop of Rome how should the Papists binde us with the authority of that Councel with which they will not binde themselves 2. The Latine Fathers judged these Books fit to be read for example of life and instruction of manners but not for confirmation of faith or establishing any Doctrine 3. These Books are not Proto-canonical truly and properly Canonical inspired by God containing the immediate and unchangeable truth of God sanctified by him and given to the Church to be a perfect rule of sound doctrine and good life but Deutero-canonical or rather Ecclesiastical as they are styled In this sense Augustine and Innocentius are to be taken when they reckon these Books among the Canonicall 4. No Councel hath Authority to define what Books are Canonicall what not seeing Books truely Divine receive Authority from God himself and are to be esteemed of undoubted truth although all the world should bark against them These two Councels are of too late standing to oppose against the other ancient Councels which reject these Books The Councel of Trent was gathered and kept against all Civil and Ecclesiastical Right neither was there any forme of justice observed in it 1. It was not kept in a lawfull place for whereas it was intended against the Protestants and the Germans were the parties accused it ought to have been kept in Germany according to the request exhibited by the Body of the States of Germany assembled at Noremberg this equity was not observed the parties accused being called into Italy 2. In that Councel matters were concluded and the sentence passed the adversary not being heard speak nor so much as present for the Protestants might not be admitted to hearing neither could they obtain to propound their opinion in the Councel much lesse to avouch it by lawfull reasoning Sleidan fol. 29. and yet were condemned against Divine and Humane Law for they both forbid the condemning of any before he have lawfull liberty granted him to plead for himself 3. In that Councel the Accuser and Judge were the same for the Pope did accuse the Protestants of Heresie he did convocate the Councel he by his Delegates was President and Moderator in it and so together was Accuser Judge and Witnesse whereas the Reformation of the Pope was the thing in question Lastly All Councels ought to be free but in this Protestants might not propound their cause nor defend it neither might any thing be proposed but according to the minde of the Legates or otherwise then they approved no man had any voice in the Councel but such as were sworn to the Pope nothing was there determined which was not first concluded of at Rome by the Pope in the Colledge of Cardinals and sent from Rome to Trent whereupon this Proverb arose Spiritum Sanctum Roma per peram mitti Tridentum The holy Ghost came to Trent packt up in a Cloke-bag We hope therefore since the Apocrypha are justly rejected out of the Canon that hereafter they will neither have the honour to be bound with our Bibles nor read in our Churches The Apocrypha was never received by the Church of the Israelites before Christ his coming nor of the Apostolick and Primitive Church for more then three hundred years after as both Eusebius out of Origen and the Councel of Laodicea Can. 59. confirmed afterward by the sixth general Councel of Constantinople sheweth for the Greek Church and St Ierom for the Latine CHAP. VI. Of the Authentical Edition of the Scripture NOw we must enquire which is the Authentical Edition of holy Scriptures it being necessary that this heavenly truth committed to writing should be delivered in some form of words and in some language which may be understood Lawyers from whom the use of the word Authentick seemeth borrowed do call those instruments and writings Authentick which have a certain and just authority in themselves A Book or writing is Authentick either by Divine or humane institution those are by Divine Appointment and Institution authentical which have from God sufficient and absolute Authority to command and approve themselves worthy credit and faith in as much as God himself doth approve them by humane Institution such writings are held authentical which by the opinion and sentence of learned men in their several professions may be esteemed worthy credit and belief for themselves and for the truth in them There is a great diversity of Editions of holy Scripture all cannot be simply and perpetually Authentical in of and for themselves without reference unto another no more then many draughts of the same Lease or Deed or copy of one pardon can be Some amongst many are authentick whence the others are transcribed yea
rule in the Old Testament to the Law and the Testimony in the New they confirmed all things by the Old it directs in every case 2. To all persons this is able to make a Minister yea a Councel a Church wise to salvation to reform a yong man whose lusts a●e unbridled Psal. 119. 9. to order a King Deut. 17. 29 30. Object Faith was before the Scripture therefore the Scripture is not the rule of Faith Answ. The word of God is twofold 1. Revealed that preceded faith 2. Written that did not Though it be a rule yet first it doth not exclude other Ministerial helps as Prayer Preaching the knowledge of the Tongues and the Ministery of the Church these are means to use the rule and subordinate to it we need no more rules Therefore it is a vain and absurd question of the Papists Let a man be lockt up in a study with a Bible what good will he get by it if he cannot read 2. There must be reason and judgement to make use of it and apply it Iudge What I say saith Paul 1 Cor. 10. 15. The Scripture should rule our hearts thoughts and inward cogitations our words and actions we should pray hear receive the Sacrament according to the directions of it buy sell cloathe our selves and carry our selves toward all as that bids us 2 Sam. 22. 23. the people of God wrote after this copy followed this rule Psal. 119. 5 59 111. because they desired in all which they did to please God now God is pleased when his own will is done and to glorifie him in their lives and therefore they framed themselves according to his statutes We cannot better express an high esteem of God and his excellencies then by following him in all things Every one esteems that person most excellent to whom he gives up himself most to be ruled and ordered The Scripture is necessary In respect of the substance thereof it was always necessary in respect of the manner of revealing it is necessary since the time that it pleased God after that manner to deliver his word and shall be to the worlds end It is not then absolutely and simply necessary that the word of God should be delivered to u● in writing but onely conditionally and upon supposition God for a long time for the space of 2400 years unto the time of Moses did instruct his Church with an immediate living voyce and had he pleased still to go on in that way there had been no necessity of Scripture now more then in that age there was a continual presence of God with them but now there is a perpetual absence in that way and the word of God was written 1. For the brevity of mans life See the 5 the 11 Chapters of Genesis The Patriarchs were long lived before and after the flood to the times of Moses they lived some centuries of years therefore afterward the purity of the word could not fitly be preserved without writing By writing we have the comfort of the holy word of God which from writing receiveth his denomination in being called Scripture which is nothing else but Writing 2. That the Church might have a certain and true rule and Canon whereby it might judge of all questions doubts and controversies of Religion Luke 1. 4. Every mans opinion else would have been a Bible and every mans lust a Law 3. That the faith of men in Christ which was to come might the better be confirmed when they should see that written before their eyes which was done by the M●ssias and see all things that were foretold of him verified in the event 4. That the purity of Gods worship might be preserved from corruption and the truth propagated among all Nations 5. To take off excuses from men that they did not know Rom. 10. 18. Civil Laws are written and published that offenders may be inexcusable The Pen-men had a command from God 1. A publike and outward command as Ieremie 30. 2. and 36. 2. Moses Exod. 17. 14. and 34. 17. and Iohn was commanded twelve times in the Revelation to write Rev. 1. 11. and 2. 1. 8. 12 18. and 3. Ch. 1. 7. and 14. and 14. 13. and 19. v. 9. 21. 5. 2. an inward command by private inspiration and instinct 2 Pet 1. 21. 5. The Scripture is Pure and Holy it commands all good and forbids reproves and condemns all sin and filthiness it restrains not onely from evil words and actions but thoughts glances Those are frequent adjuncts of the word of ●od holy pure and clean Psal. 12. 6. and 18. 31. and 119. 40. Prov. 30. 5. It is pure in its narrations it speaks purely of things evil and unclean It is termed holy Rom. 1. 2. and 2 Tim. 3. 15. 1. From its efficient principal cause God who is the holy of holies holiness it self Isa. 6. 3. Dan. 9. 24 he is the author and inditer of it Luke 1. 67. 2. In regard of the instrumental cause the Pen-men of it were holy men 2 Pet 1. 21. Prophets and Apostles 3. From its matter the holy will of God Acts 20. 27. the Scripture contains holy and Divine Mysteries holy precepts of life holy promises Psal. 105. 42. holy Histories 4. From its end or effect the holy Ghost by the reading and meditation of the Scripture sanctifieth us Iohn 17. 17. it sanctifieth likewise all the creatures to our use so as we may use them with a good conscience 1 Tim. 4. 5. From the purity of it the Scripture is compared to a glass Iames 1. 23. to fire Ier. 23. 29. to light Psal. 119. 105. The reason of it is because God himself is pure most pure Psal. 92. ult Hab. 1. 13. It is pure 1. Subjectively in it self there is no mixture of falshood or error no corruption or unsoundness at all in it Psal. 12. 6. Prov. 8. 6 7 8. 2. Effectively so as to make others pure Iohn 15 3. It begets grace Iames 1. 18. 1 Pet. 1. 23. and preserves and increaseth it Acts 20. 32. Ephes. 4. 11 12. The assertory part is pure what it affirms to be is and what it denies to be is not Psal. 19. 7. and 93. 5. Iames 1. 18. 2. What it promiseth shall be performed and what it threatneth shall be executed Numb 23. 19. 1 Sam. ● 30. Zach 1. 6. 3 What it commandeth is good and what it forbiddeth is evil Deut. 4. 8. Psal. 119. 108. and 19. 8 9. Rom. 7. 12. In other Books some truth is taught some good commmended some kinde or part of happiness promised But in the inspired Oracles of God all truth is taught all goodness commanded all happiness promised nay we may invert the words with Hugo de sancto victore and say Quicquid ibi docetur est veritas quicquid pr●cipitur bonitas quicquid promit●itur felicitas All that is there taught is truth all that is there commanded is goodnesse all that is
we are not hereafter to expect or look for any fuller or more clear Revelation of Divine Mysteries then that which was then delivered 4. Christ is called a Mediator of the New Testament or the New Covenant Heb. 9. 15. because all things are established by him as they ought to continue for ever for that which is old decayeth and is ready to vanish but that which is new abideth Heb. 8. 13. 5. It pleased the Lord in great wisdom to reveal the Covenant of grace to the Church that she might not despair but obscurely at the first that she might earnestly long for the coming of that Messiah who was to make known what he had heard and seen of the Father which dispensation was needful that the grace of God might not be contemned as haply it would have been if God had fully revealed and made known his bounty unto man before he had seen his misery and the necessity thereof Our Saviour Christ for substance of Doctrine necessary to Salvation taught nothing which was not before in some sort contained in the writings of Moses and the Prophets out of whom he confirmed his Doctrine but that which was in them more obscurely aenigmatically and briefly he explained more excellently fully and clearly the Apostles proved their Doctrine out of the Book of Moses and the Prophets Act. 17. 11. and 26. 22. Luke 24. 27. Rom. 1. 2. Act. 28. 23. Sixthly All things necessary in that manner as we have spoken were taught and inspired to the Apostles by our Saviour Christ and there were no new inspirations after their times nor are we to expect further hereafter which we prove 1. By places of Scripture Ioh. 14. 26. he that teacheth all things omitteth nothing Christ said all things to his Apostles as appears Iohn 15. 15. and 17. 8. Iohn 16. 13. 2. By reasons drawn from thence 1. The plentiful pouring forth of the Spirit was deferred till the glorifying of Christ he being glorified it was no longer to be delayed Christ being exalted on the right-hand of God obtained the Spirit promised and that was not according to measure and poured the same in such abundance as it could be poured forth and received by men so that was fulfilled which was fore-told by Ioel 2. 28. Acts 2. 33. Iohn 3. 34 35. Acts 2. 16 17. 2. The Scripture and the Prophecies of the Old Testament do teach and declare That all Divine Truth should fully and at once be manifested by the Messias who is the only Prophet high-Priest and King of his Church there is no other Revelation promised none other needful besides that which was made by him Isa. 11. 9. Act. 3. 23 24. Ioel 2. 23. Vide Mercerum in loc therefore the last inspiration was made to the Apostles and none other to be expected The Doctrine of the Law and the Prophets did suffice to Salvation yet it did send the Fathers to expect somewhat more perfect 1 Pet. 1. 10. but to the preaching of the Gospel nothing is to be added we are not sent to wait for any clearer vision 3. So long as any truth needful to be known was unrevealed or not plainly taught the Lord did stir up some Prophet or other to teach the same unto the Church therfore the Lord surceasing to speak since the publishing of the Gospel of Jesus Christ and the delivery of the same in writing is unto us a manifest token that the whole will of God is now brought to light and that no new Revelation is to be expected Our seventh Proposition is Christ and his Apostles were able to propound and teach by lively voice that Doctrine which pertains to perfection Iohn 1. 18. and 11. 11 32. Iohn 8. 26 and the Apostles perfectly taught all things which are or shall be necessary for the Church Acts 20. 27. Gal. 1. 7 8 9. The Doctrine of repentance and remission of sins in the name of Christ doth summarily contain all things necessarily to salvation Act. 5. 31. and 11. 11. but this Doctrine the Apostles preached Act. 13. 38 39. Luke 24. 47. The Word of God is not only Milk for Babes but strong Meat for men of ripe years 1 Cor. 3. 1 2. Heb. 5. 14. and 6. 1 2. therefore it containeth not only matter of preparation but of perfection Our eighth Proposition is The summe and substance of that heavenly Doctrine which was taught by the Prophets and Apostles was by them committed to writing the holy Ghost giving them a commandment and guiding their hands therein that they could not erre so that the Word preached and written by them is one in substance both in respect of matter which is the will and word of God and inward form viz. the Divine Truth immediatly inspired though different in the external form and manner of delivery Our ninth Proposition is That nothing is necessary to be known of Christian over and above that which is found in the Old Testament which is not clearly an● evidently contained in the Books of the Apostles and Evangelists Our last Proposition is that all things which have been are or shall be necessary to the salvation of the Church to the end of the world are perfectly contained in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles long since divinely inspired writte● and published and now received by the Church of God so that no new Reveltion or Tradition beside those inspired published and comprehended in the Scripture are necessary for the salvation of the Church There are three opinions 1. Of the Papists who altogether deny it 2. Of the Socinians which would have all things expresly contained in Scripture and if it be ●●● totidem verbis they reject it 3. Of the Orthodox who say it contains all things expresly or by consequence Crocius in his Antiweigelius cap. 1. Quaest. 8. shews that private Revelation Dreams Conferences with Angels are not to be desired and expected in matters ●● faith the Canon of the Scripture being now compleat The Weigelians talk of ●● Seculum Spiritus Sancti as God the Father had his time the time of the L●● Christ his time the time of the Gospel so say they the holy Ghost shall ●●● his time when there shall be higher dispensations and we shall be wiser then the Apostles See Mat. 24. 14. and 28. 20. 1 Cor. 11. 26. See Mr Gillesp. Miscel. c. 10. Some say the Scriptures are but for the training up of Christians during their ●●nority as Grammar rules for boyes and are not able to acquaint the soul ●● the highest discoveries of God and truth And most corruptly they serve themsel●●● with that expression of the Apostle 1 Cor. 13. 11. This Glasse say they is ●●● Scriptures through which we see something of God indeed whilst we are ●●●●dren in understanding but very obscurely and brokenly and therefore say the●●● if ye would discern of God clearly and see him as he is ye must break the Glasse and look quite beyond Scriptures
at Geneva in Calvins time he denied that Christ was Gods Son till Mary bore him Servetus Trinitatem idolum item Cerberum Tricipitem vocabat The Ministers of Transylvania in a most pestilent book of theirs often contumeliously call him Deum Tri-personatum whom we holily worship Hoornbeeck Anti-socin l. 2. c. 5. sect 1. p. 415. Those of Polonia in their Catechism say That there is but one Divine Person and urge Iohn 17. 3. 1 Cor. 8. 6. Ephes. 4. 1. Zanchy long since hath vindicated the truth and refuted them Socinus cals him Deum tripersonatum ridiculum humanae curiositatis inventum Infaustus Socinus omnium haereticorum audacissimus saith Rivet See Cheynels rise of Socinianism chap. 3. and ch 1. p. 6. Some glory in this as a great argument against the three Persons in the Trinity If there be Persons in the Trinity they are either something or nothing Nothing they cannot be Non entis nullae sunt affectiones if something they are either finite or infinite finite they cannot be nor infinite then there should be three Infinites It is 1. plain in Scripture there is but one God 1 Cor. 8. 4. 2. The Scripture speaks of Father Sonne and holy Ghost or Spirit these are said to be three 1 Iohn 5. 7. 3. The God-head is attributed to all and the essential Properties belong to all 4. Something is attributed to one in the Scripture that cannot be said of all The Sonne was made flesh and the Sonne is begotten this cannot be said of the other the Sonne and the Spirit are sent but this cannot be said of the Father It is not strange among the creatures that a Father should be distinguished from himself as a man the Persons are something and infinite each of them infinite as each of them is God yet not three Infinites nor Gods so Athanasius in his Creed A Person is Essentia divina cum proprietate sua hypostatica the divine Nature distinguished by an incommunicable property though we cannot expresse the manner of this great mystery yet we should believe it The ground of Arminianism and Socinianism is because they would examine all the great truths of God by their Reason That saying of Bernard here hath place Scrutari haec temeritas est credere pietas est nosse vero vita aeterna est That the Father is God is confessed by all and it is manifest from Scripture we are directed to pray to him The Apostle saith Grace to you and peace from God our Father Philem. v. 3. See Rom. 1. 7. 1 Cor. 8. 6. Ephes. 1. 3. That Christ is God is proved 1. By clear Texts of Scripture affirming this truth in so many words The Prophet fore-telling of him saith this is his name by which you shall call him Iehovah or The Lord our Righteousnesse Jer. 23. 16. and The mighty God Isa. 9. 6. Paul saith Rom. 9. 5. Who is God over all blessed for ever and St. Iohn saith 1 Iohn 5. 20. This is very God and St. Paul saith 1 Tim. 3. 16. Great is the mystery of Godlinesse God manifested in the flesh and accordingly Thomas made his confession Ioh. 20. 28. My Lord and my God which title he accepteth and praiseth Thomas for believing and that he could not have done without extream impiety had he not been God Vide Bellarm de Christo l. 1. c. 4 5 6 7 8 9. 2. By evident Reasons drawn from the Scripture He hath the Name Titles Works essential Attributes and worship of God ascribed unto him in Scripture 1. Divine Names and Titles are given to Christ He is the only blessed Potentate 1 Tim. 6. 15. The King of Kings Revel 1. 5. and Lord of Lords Apoc. 17. 14. and 19. 16. He is called The Image of the invisible God Col. 1. 15. The brightnesse of his glory Heb. 1. 3. The word and wisdom of the Father Prov. 8. 12. and 9. 1. He is called the Word because he is so often spoken of and promised in the Scripture and is in a manner the whole subject of the Scripture he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cum articulo Joh. 1. 1. Act. 20. 28. 1 Tim. 3. 16. The great God Titus 2. 13. The true God 1 John 5. 20. God over all or Blessed above all Rom. 9. 5. The most high Luk. 1. 76. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which name the Septuagint have expressed Iehovah the proper name of God alone Iohn 20. 28. My Lord Jude 4. The only Lord Acts 10. 36. The Lord of all 1 Cor. 15. 48. The Lord from Heaven 1 Cor. 2. 8. The Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2. 8. The Lord of Heaven and Earth Matth. 28. 18. These Titles are too high and excellent to be given unto any meer man whatsoever God therefore who will not have his glory given to another would never have given these Titles to another if he were not God 2. The works of God even the principal and most eminent of all which are proper to the Lord only are ascribed to Christ. 1. The work of Creation even of creating all things Iohn 1. 3. and Col. 1. 16. He for whom and by whom all things were created is very God For Christ and by him all things were created therefore he is very God Heb. 1. 10 11 12. The foundation of the earth and the creation of the Heavens and the change which is to happen to both at the last day are attributed to the Sonne of God 2. The work of Preservation and Government is attributed to him also he is before all things and by him all things consist Heb. 1. 2. He who upholds all things by his powerful word is God So doth Christ therefore he is God 3. The working of Divine miracles raising up the dead by his own power is given to him Ioh. 6. 54. and Ioh. 5. 21. He that can quicken and raise the dead is God So doth Christ therefore he is God 4. Redeeming of mankinde Luke 1. 68. Matth. 20. 28. Ephes. 1. 7. Revel 1. 5. 5. Sending of the holy Ghost Iohn 21. 22. and 14. 16. and of Angels is ascribed to him Mat. 13. 41. Revel 1. 1. He forgives sins Mark 9. 2 5. He gives eternal life 3. The principal and incommunicable Attributes of God are given to him 1. Omniscience Iohn 2. 24 25. He knew all men and he knew what was in them Ioh. 21. 17. Lord thou knowest all things 2. Omnipotency Revel 1. 8. and 4. 8. and 11. 17. Phil. 3. 21. 3. Eternity Ioh. 17. 5. Revel 1. 18. Iohn 1. 1. Isa. 9. 6. He is called The everlasting Father 4. Omnipresence Matth. 18. 20. 5. Unchangeablenesse Heb. 1. 11 12 13. and 13. 8. He that is Omniscient Omnipotent Eternal Omnipresent Unchangeable equal to the Father in Majesty and Glory Phil. 2. 16. is God So is Christ therefore he is God Lastly Worship due to God is ascribed to him Heb. 1. 6. Let all
7. The object of it are some sinful men or the greatest part of sinful men which are called vessels of wrath fitted for destruction Rom. 9. 22. that there are more damned then saved is proved Matth. 20. 16. Matth. 7. 14. The end of reprobation is the declaration of Gods justice in punishing of sin There is no cause of reprobation in the Reprobate that they rather then others are passed by of God that is wholly from the unsearchable depth of Gods good pleasure but that damnation whereto they are adjudged is for their own sins There are five dreadful consequences of reprobation or preterition 1. Such whom God passeth by he never calls or not effectually calling is according to purpose 2. He deserts leaves them to follow their own corrupt lusts 3. Hardens them Rom. 9. 4. They shall prove Apostates 1 Tim. 2. 18. 5. They are liable to that dreadful sentence Matth. 25. 41. Obj. 1 Tim. 2. 4. Who will have all men to be saved Ans. That is God would have some of all sorts of men to be saved so all men is taken verse 1. Let prayers be made for all men that is all manner of men he instanceth in one kinde viz. Kings All is likewise here to be taken not pro singulis generum but pro gen●ribus singulorum So Austin expounded this place above a thousand yeers since All manner of men of all Nations and qualities All in this place doth not signifie universally every man in every age and condition but All opposed to the Jews onely all indefinitely and that in the times of the new Testament of which the Apostle speaketh Obj. 2 Pet. 3. 9 Not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repen tance therefore there is not an election of some and reprobation of others Ans. He speaks there onely of the Elect and he would have none of them to perish He speaks that for the comfort of the godly and includes himself amongst them long-suffering to us-ward therefore he means those in the same condition with himself He shews why God staies the execution of his wrath because all his Elect are not gathered See 1 Pet. 2. 8. There is nothing doth more set out the glory excellency and sufficiency of God then his Decree O the infinite depth of the wisdome of God which hath fore-seen decreed and determined with himself the innumerable things that ever did or shall come to passe We should not search into the depths of his counsels Deut. 29. 29. but in all things professe our dependance on him and refer all to his decree Psal. 37. 5. They are justly blamed that ascribe any thing to chance fate fortune or good luck as also such as are impatient under any crosse Admiring the methods of Gods eternal Counsel and the execution of it for the salvation of our souls will be a great part of our work in heaven That is a desperate inference If I be predestinated I shall be saved * though I neglect and scoff at sanctity God hath predestinated the means as well as the end he hath decreed us to be holy as well as happy 2 Pet. 1. 3. Ephes. 1. 4. Christ laid down his life not onely to save us from the guilt of our sins but to sanctifie us Tit. 2. 14. The Spirit of God is a Spirit of sanctification 2 Thess. 2. 13. In good things the Devil strives to sever the means from the end in evil the end from the means We must not reason whether we be predestinated but use the means prove our Election by our calling we should judge of our predestination not so much descendendo by prying into Gods secret Counsel as ascendendo by searching our own hearts It was good counsel that Cardinal Poole gave to one who asked him how he might most profitably reade the Epistle to the Romans He advised him first to reade the twelfth chapter to the end and then the beginning of the Epistle to the twelfth chapter Because in the twelfth chapter the Apostle falls on matter of duty and sanctification which is the onely way to attain to the knowledge of those great mysteries handled in the beginning of Predestination Take heed of abusing this Doctrine 1. Quarrel not with Gods justice because he hath determined not to give grace to some Rom. 9. 14. That any are saved it is from Gods mercy there can be no injustice in refusing when it is the meer mercy of God to take any as if of many Traitors the King spare some and hang up the rest neither have the Elect a just cause to glory nor the reprobate to complain since undeserved grace is shewed to the one due punishment inflicted on the other It bewraies no more want of mercy in God that he takes but such then it did want of power because he made not many worlds since the exercising of one and the other is determined by his wisdome It were unjust say the Polonian Churches in their Catechisme to punish any one because he hath not done that which by no means he could do But when God punisheth the wicked and those that are refractory to his word what doth he do else but punish those which do not do that which they cannot do See more there cap. 10. of the same branne 2. This may comfort the people of God who may be certain of their election and salvation Rom. 8. 38. 39. Paul had not this by immediate revelation because he concludeth upon such arguments as are general to all the godly see 1 Ioh. 3. 14. Certainty of mans election and salvation is not such as we have of arts and sciences yet the truths of God are more to be adhered unto then any humane principle 3. Nor is it such as we have of doctrinal truths we are not so perswaded of Gods favour in particular to us as that there is a God and that there is Jesus Christ because the dogmatical truth is contained in the Scripture the other is but a practical conclusion drawn from the General 3. It is not such an assurance as expelleth all doubting and wavering Mar. 9. 24. yet doubting is a sin and we are to bewaile it but the Papists teach doubting and praise it under the name of humility and say it keeps us from presumption They say we can have but a conjectural and wavering knowledge of our salvation justly therefore did Luther terme the Romish Doctrine concerning uncertainty of salvation Non Doctrinam fidei sed diffidentiae no Doctrine of faith but distrust 4. It is not such as presumption and carnal security excluding all use of the means work out your salvation with fear those which have been most perswaded of Gods love to them have been most active for him the love of Christ constraineth us 5. It is more then probable conjectural or moral 6. It is not of our own conscience and Spirit onely but inabled by the Spirit of God
men Let us sanctifie God in our hearts by contemplating this great work We see the truth of one part of the narration of Scripture in the increasing and multiplying of creatures and we see it done by a secret and hidden way let us therefore believe his promises Can God promise any thing to us more exceeding our reason to conceive how it should be effected then it exceeds our reason to think how the kinds of things are increased and continued in the world for so many hundreds of years We can see no reason how an egg by the Hens sitting upon it for a few dayes should be made a Sparrow Starling Hen or other Bird. God prepareth fit nourishment for all the creatures to eat and conveyeth it to each of them in that quantity and season which is fittest for them Psal. 104 27 28. 145. 15. 147. 9. Psal. 136. 25. Reasons He that provideth food for all must know their number their nature and places of abode and their several needs and he that knows these particulars must be none other but God he must know the quantity of the thing provided for food and the quality of it and the season of it and none can do these things but an infinite Essence that is to say a God 2. God in providing for the Creatures provideth for man who feedeth on them and he declareth his own wisdom and goodnesse in continuing the kinds of things and continuing them in welfare This should teach us faith in Gods promises by which he hath undertaken to seed and to provide for us so our Saviour argues Mat. 6. 26. Object The adversity of the good and prosperity of the wicked seem to oppose Gods providence If there were any providence God would see that it should be Bonis benè malis malè si Deus est unde mala si non est unde bona Answ. There is no man absolutely good or absolutely evil but as the best have some evil so the worst have some good and therefore God will punish that evil which is in the good with temporal punishments and give temporal blessings to the evil for the good that is in them that seeing all good must be rewarded with good and all evil with evil the good of the good might have an everlasting reward of good and on the contrary the evil of the evil might have an everlasting reward of evil The godly are many times brought to great straights 1. That their sufficiency may be in God alone and that they may live by Faith 2. That he may make them partakers of Christs sufferings Rom. 8. 29. 3. Though they be in wants God is all-sufficient to them in the losse of all things 2 Cor. 6. 10. Hos. 14. 3. The wicked often have great abundance Psal. 73. 7. but they receive these things ex largitate from an over-flowing bounty not from any interest and propriety in God 2. These things are their portion Psal. 17. 14. they are but solatium to the godly and praemium to them as Prosper speaks as afflictions are justi exercitium and injusti supplicium saith he 3. These outward things are often their snare Iob 20. 22. 1. It refutes the fancy of Atheists and Epicures which pretend that the observation of such slender matters holds no correspondence with Gods greatnesse Aristotle said It was as unfit for Gods knowledge to descend into these inferiour things as for a Prince to know what is done in the kitchin Whereas it is Gods greatest greatnesse to be Infinite the light of the Sun extends to every little hole 2. Some say he cares for universal things only and not singular but then he should not care for himself and his Knowledge should not be Infinite He takes care for all things as if they were but one and for every thing as if that one were all 2. We must admire and adore the excellency of God which knoweth all things David contemplating this point confesseth this knowledg is too wonderful for him 3. Let us often put our selves in minde of this truth that it may work in us a reverent care of ordering all our words and actions aright in his sight that nothing may slip from us unworthy his eye and ear offensive to his most great and pure Majesty and all-seeing eye How careful are we of our speeches and actions when we know that they are marked by some one of note and quality 4. God hath a general providence about all things yea even in sins God determines sin in regard of time and measure and orders it and evils of punishment Iob 1. 21. 2. 10. The Lord hath taken away when the Sabaeans spoiled him Amos 3. 6. Is there evil in a City and the Lord hath not done it God preserves the persons and estates of his people in evil dayes They are called The hidden ones Psal. 81. 3. See Isa. 26. 12. Esth. 6. That the King should not sleep that night and that then he should call for a book rather then any thing else and that book of the Chronicles and that in that book ●e should light on that place which specified Mordecai's service 1. The Lord decrees their preservation from eternity there is an election to preservation as well as to salvation See Isa. 4. 3. Dan. 12. 2. 2. In evil times the Lord sets his mark upon them Ezek. 9. Revel 7. he will order all things so that the judgement shall not come till they be secured 3. He so orders all things that every thing shall tend to their deliverance 4. The Lord will speak to the hearts of those that are the instruments of vengeance that they shall shew kindnesse to them the great rule of God in the world is over the spirits of men Ier. 39. 11 12. 5. Sometimes God raiseth up the spirits of his people that they overcome their oppressors Isa. 41. 15. Zech. 16. 3. 6. By ordering of counsels reports and apprehensions A Philosopher could say in danger of shipwrack in a light starry night Surely I shall not perish there are so many eyes of providence over me We shall never feelingly applaud and acknowledge Gods Wisdom Justice Goodnesse or other Excellencies if we contemplate not the exercise of them in the works of his providence but in observing these we shall surely attain an high esteem of him and be ready to confesse his worth When Gods works imprint not in our hearts a reverent fear of him a hearty love to him a confident trusting in him a dutiful submission to him and the like vertues they are fruitlesse to us and we receive no profit by them In respect of God there is no confusion but he rules wonderfully in the midst of all disorder that seems to be in the world wisely disposing of the same to the glory of his great name Eccl. 5. 7. 3. 17. Isa. 26. 20 21. Iob 21. 30. It teacheth us thankfulness and patience if things make for us to
and blaspheming of it Mr. Bedford Of the sin unto death out of 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mr. Deering on Heb. 6. 4 5 6. saith It is a general Apostacy from God with wilfull malice and an unrepentant heart to persecute his truth to the end Mr. White in his Treatise of this sin thus describes it It is a wilfull malicious opposing persecuting and blaspheming the truths of God against knowledge and conscience without ever repenting and grieving for so doing but rather fretting and vexing that one can do no more It is a totall falling away from the Gospel of Christ Jesus formerly acknowledged and professed into a verball calumniating and a reall persecuting of that Gospel with a deliberate purpose to continue so to the end and actually to do so to persevere till then and so to passe away in that disposition It is a spitefull rejecting of the Gospel after that the Spirit hath supernaturally perswaded a mans heart of the truth and benefit thereof It is a sin committed against clear convincing tasting knowledge with despight and revenge Heb. 10. 29. 1. It must be a clear knowledge an ignorant man cannot commit it 2. Such a knowledge as le ts in a tast of the goodnesse as well as discovers the truth of the Gospel Heb. 6. 3. yet goes against this knowledge with despight opposeth the motions of Gods Spirit with rage this puts a man into the devils condition Compare Heb. 6. 4 5. with 10. 26 27. It is a voluntary way of sinning after one hath received not only the knowledge but the acknowledgement of the truth so much knowledge as subdues the understanding The will is chiefly in this sin he sins wilfully he trampleth under his foot the blood of the Son of God sins maliciously and with revenge The Jews put Christ to death with the greatest malice The conditions of that sin are 1. Hatred of the truth 2. A settled malice 3. An obstinate will 4. An accusing conscience Therefore this sin is distinguished from other sins by three degrees 1. That they all fall toti 2. à toto 3. In totum 1. Toti Because they fall from God and his gifts not out of infirmity or ignorance but out of knowledge will and certain purpose 2. A toto Because they cast away and oppose the whole doctrine his authority being contemned 3. In totum Because they are so obfirmed in their defection that they voluntarily oppose and seek to reproach the Majesty of God But the specificall difference of this sin is that they reproach those things which the holy Ghost hath revealed to them for true and of whose truth they are convinced in their minde This sin necessarily supposeth the knowledge of the Mediator wheresoever there is any mention of it in the new Testament there comes with it some intimation of the works of the Mediator In Matth. 12. they opposed Christ in his miracles in Heb. 6. Paul instanceth in their crucifying again of Christ Heb. 10. speaks of their trampling under foot the Son of God The devils sinned against light and with revenge but not against the light of the second Covenant this sin is purely against the Gospel Heb. 4. 10. 27 28 29. Objectum hujus peccati non est lex sed Evangelium Matth. 12. 32. He that commits this sin shall neither be pardoned in this world in foro conscientiae nor in the world to come in foro judicii neither in this world per solutionem ministerii by the Ministry of the word nor in the world to come per approbationem Christi When once the means of recovery by the Gospel are neglected contemned and despised then there is no place for remission see Heb. 1● 26. The sacrifices in the old Law were effectual in their time to the expiation of sin if joyned with faith The sacrifice of Christs death was alwaies effectuall but if this also be despised this being the last there is no more sacrifice for sin and yet without sacrifice no remission It is called the sin unto death not because it may kill for no sin but may kill if it be not repented of but because it must kill Divines observe two sorts subject to this sin Some have both known the truth and also professed it as Saul Iudas Alexander the Copper-smith all these made profession of the Gospel before they fell away Others have certain knowledge of the truth but yet have not given their names to professe it but do hate persecute and blaspheme it such were the Pharisees Matth. 13. All they who fall into this sin first do attain unto a certain and assured knowledge of the truth though all do not professe it Absolutely to determine of such a one is very difficult neither is there any sufficient mark but the event viz. finall impenitency But the grounds of suspition are such as these 1. Prophannenesse 2. Doubting of every saving truth and impugning it 3. Envying anothers grace and happinesse 4. Blasphemy 5. Want of good affections Many Christians are ready to suspect that they have sinned against the holy Ghost Some Divines give this as a rule If the Lord give you a heart to fear that you have sin'd against the holy Ghost then you have not Boasting A man boasts when he is full of that which he thinks excellent and to adde worth and excellency to him Psal. 34. 2. 44. 8. 64. 10. It is one of the sins of the tongue 1 Sam. 2. 3. a high degree of pride see Ezek. 28. 3 4. Rom. 2. 17. there is vera and vana gloriatio the highest act of faith is to glory in God we make our boast of God all the day long Psal. 44. but to boast of God when one hath no interest in him is vain Bribery A bribe is a gift given from him which hath or should have a cause in the Court of justice to them which have to intermeddle in the administration of justice Bribery or taking gifts is a sin Exod. 23. 8. the same is repeated Deut. 16. 19. Isa. 1. 23. Prov. 17. 23. Psal. 26. 10. Hos. 4. 18. Amos 2. 12. Micah 3. 11. Reasons 1. From the causes of it 1. Covetousnesse Samuels sons inclined after lucre and took gifts 2. Hollownesse and guile 3. A want of love of justice 4. A want of hatred of sin 2. The effects 1. In the parties self that offends 2. In others 1. In himself The bribe blindes the eyes of the wise 1 Sam. 12. 3. Exod. 23. 8. it makes him unable to see and finde out the truth in a Cause 2. It perverts the words of the righteous that is it makes them which otherwise would deal righteously and perhaps have had an intention of dealing righteously yet to speak otherwise then becomes it exposeth the offender to condigne punishment Solomon saith A gift prospers whither ever it goeth and it makes room for a man meaning that otherwise deserve h no
and all the rest are nought for they came from Satan and serve to set him up in mens mindes and to quench the respect and fear of God Division All creatures in their natural estate are severed and divided one from another 1. They are divided from God the only and chiefest good 2. From the Angels 1 Cor. 11. 10. 3. One from another Isa. 19. begin 4. From themselves We are joyned to Satan and comply with the Idols of our own hearts Ezek. 14. begin 1. The nature of this division is not only local as that of Reuben Judg. 5. 15 16. by the river Iordan or in externals but spiritual which is the worst as spiritual union is the best This makes the difference in mens mindes judgements wils consciences Acts 26. 9. Iohn 16. beg divided in the very ends they propound and the means that lead to those ends and the rule The causes of it are sad the lusts and sins of our own hearts the just indignation of God These sins especially 1. Idolatry Iudg. 5. 8. 2. Covenant-breaking Levit. 26. 25. 3. Pride Ier. 13. 9. compared with 14. 4. Hypocrisie Isa. 10. 6. 5. Apostasie Arguments against division and falling into parties First Divisions are a judgement of God upon a Nation Zech. 13. 14. Secondly Consider the several sins that falling into parties puts men upon 1. It puts them on great thoughts of heart Iudg. 5. 15. 2. Men break forth into bitter censuring and reviling of those which are not of their own party Prov. 21. 24. Iames 4. 11. they set up their own will in opposition to God 3. It causeth men to be glad to hear evil one of another and take up any report for truth Nehem. 6. 6. and glad of any mischief that shall befall them Ezek. 25. 6. 4. This layes upon men a necessity of joyning with any to oppose that party though they be never so contrary in religion or affection Thirdly Falling into parties is a certain way of ruine 1. In the just judgement of God Hos. 10. 2. 2. In the nature of the thing Iudg. 5. 5. In cause of religion every subdivision is a strong weapon in the hand of the contrary part Hist. of Councel of Trent lib. 1. pag. 49. Two earthen pots floting with this Inscription Si collidimur frangimur If we knock we crack were long ago made the embleme of England and the Low countries but may now be extended to all Christians We shall finde in our English Chronicles that England was never destroyed but when divided within it self our civil divisions brought in the Romans the Saxons Danes and Normans Though our Civil and Ecclesiastical breaches be very great Lam. 2. 13. yet God can and will heal all the breaches of his Saints 1. Because he hath promised to do it Isa. 2. 4. 11. 6 7 8 9 13. 30. 26. 32. 18. 33. 20. Ezek. 28. 24. Ier. 32. 39. Zeph. 3. 9. Zech. 14. 9. 2. Christ hath prayed for it three times in Iohn 17. viz. 21 22 23. verses 3. Christ died to make his people one Ephes. 2. from 14. to the later end See 1 Cor. 12. Rom. 8. to the end There are some cementing or reconciling graces faith repentance charity Col. 3. 14. and humility There is much talk of peace and unity peace with truth or peace and holiness are joyned together in Scripture We should pray to Christ to heal our divisions that he would make us one we should put on love which is the bond of perfectnesse Col. 3. 14 15. See Phil. 3. 14 15. Drunkennesse Drunkennesse is a great sin Isa. 28. 1. Deut. 32. 32. Prov. 23. 29 30 31. The Scripture condemns it Be not drunk with wine saith the Apostle Salomon forbids to keep company with a wine bibber the Prophet denounceth a woe to the drunkards of Ephraim Drunkennesse is one of the fruits of the flesh and a drunkard one of those whom Paul excludes from heaven Nature condemns it it trampleth under foot at once the whole Law and Gospel too First For the Law it violates each Commandment The first the drunkard makes his belly his god he cannot exercise knowledge of God love fear confidence remembrance of sin or any vertue It breaks the second Commandment it is a direct breach of our vow made in Baptism and renewed in the Lords Supper for this is one of the works of the Devil which we then renounced Again it hinders a man from praying reading meditating or doing any good and religious duty It breaketh the third Commandment because it is an abuse of one of Gods creatures and so takes Gods name in vain it causeth that one can neither see God in his works nor do any works to his glory nor shew forth thankfulness for benefits nor patience in crosses and because it fils the mouth full of foul and desperate oaths The fourth he is unfit to sanctifie the Sabbath and if one be drunk on the Lords-day it is a great prophanation of it for it is farre from a holy work The fifth it makes one despise Parents Magistrates all Governors it makes him abuse Wife Children Servants and all his Inferiours it makes him lift up himself above his equals and despise all in comparison of himself The sixth it is a hurt to his own body and breeds vile diseases dropsie fever rednesse of eyes makes him rail revile quarrel and kill and commit all insolent injuries and hazards himself to untimely death Gal. 5. 21. The seventh for it fils heart and tongue and all full of filthinesse it inflames the body to lust a drunken Lot will commit incest Rom. 13. 13. The eighth it is a wasting of time and goods and a robbing of a mans self and family it often enciteth to cozenage and beguiling it is grosse injustice The ninth it makes him full of bragging and boasting and backbiting his tongue is as full of vanity as his head of vapours The tenth it fils the minde full of leud imaginations and exposeth him to Satans suggestions Perkins on Revel 2. 14. shews that Popery breaks every Commandment Mr Paget in his admonition touching Talmudique allegations pag. 422. to 436. shews how the Jewish Rabbins break every Commandment It is against the Gospel it oppresseth the heart and takes away reason that a man grows hard-hearted and fils men full of presumption There was a street in Rome called Vicus sobrius the sober street but is there a village in England that may be called Villa sobria the sober village If a man though he loaths drunkennesse should to symbolize with wicked company drink immoderately yet it is drunkennesse it is true he is not ebriosus an old soaking drunkard yet he is ●brius he hath committed the sinne of drunkennesse There is a two-fold privation of reason 1. Aptitudinal when a man drinks so immoderately that there is a disposition to disturb reason yet because he is of a strong brain and
constitution he can bear it without any disturbance and this hath a woe Woe to those that are strong to drink that have strong brains and bodies to carry their liquor away and never cry out with him Duos soles video 2. Actual either total and compleat when reason is fully intercepted and that is to be stark drunk to be a vivum cadaver as Chrysostome cals it well a breathing carkasse one cals them Ventri-d●mones belly-devils who like D●genes could live in a barrel all their life time 2. Partial when a mans fancy is not wholly disturbed yet he is so farre tipled that both his fancy and judgement are darkned and the house runs round with him Means to avoid it 1. Shun the company of drunkards and all occasions 2. Cry to God to help you against this vice and consider the terrible threats against it 1 Cor. 6. 9. 3. Get thy sensual appetite mortified 4. Taste of Christs wine the sweetnesse of having Communion with him Ephes. 5. 18. CHAP. XVIII Of Envy Error Flattery Gluttony ENVY ENvy is a grief for the prosperity of others Est aegritudo suscepta propter alterius res secundas quae nihil noceant invidenti The first instances that we have of sinne are Adams pride and Cains envy Envy is the mother of strife they are often coupled Rom. 1. 29. 13. 13. 1 Cor. 3. 3. 2 Cor. 12. 20. Gal. 5. 20. Iam. 3. 14. Natural corruption doth most of all bewray it self by envy The Devil first envied us the favour of God and ever since we have envied one another The children of God are often surprized with it Numb 11. 29. Iohn 21. 20 21. It breaketh both Tables at once it beginneth in discontent with God and endeth in injury to man Macrobius l. 2. Sat. c. 2. saith acutely of Mutius a malevolous man being sadder then he was wont Aut Mutio nescio quid incommodi accessit aut nescio cui aliquid boni The Heathens when they saw an envious man sad they would demand whether harm had happened unto him or good unto his neighbour Aristotle cals it the Antagonist of the Fortunate Parum alicui est si ipse sit foelix nisi alter fuerit infoelix Livor semper lippus est saith Petrarch this humour is alwayes ill-sighted All blear-eyed men are offended and hurt with the light so envy is provoked at anothers good and honour The better the party envied is the better he behaveth himself the more bitter the envier doth grow against him and the more his hatred increaseth Saul had still a more violent spleen against David by how much he discovered more wisdom courage and the more the hearts of his servants were set upon him Who can stand before envy saith Salomon Prov. 27. 4. It is the rottennesse of the bones Pro. 14. 3. and so the justest of all vices because it bringeth with it its own vengeance Sed videt ingratos intabescitque videndo Successus hominum carpitque carpitur unà Suppliciumque suum est Ovid. Met. 11. Fab. 12. As the rust consumes iron so this vice the envious man Anacharsis cals it serram animae and Socrates Ulcus When Hercules had vanquished so many fierce monsters Comperit invidiam supremo fine domandam He grapled at last with envy as the worst Erasm. lib. 17. of his Epist. in an Epistle to Sir Thomas More saith of Conradus Goclenius Invidere quid sit ne per somnium quidem unquam intellexit tantus est ingenii candor The objectum quod of it is Good of any kinde true apparent honest profitable pleasant of minde body fortune fame vertue it self not excepted the objectum cui is generally any other man Superiour Inferiour Equal We envy a Superiour because we are not equalled to him an Inferiour least he should be equal to us an Equal because he is our equal Men of the same Trade or Profession envy each other Figulus figulo invidet Faber Fabro Death frees a man from it Extra omnem invidiae aleam Pascitur in vivis livor c. The chief cause of it is pride and inordinate love of a mans self the impulsive cause is manifold as if he be an enemy a corrival Hatred when one loaths and wisheth ill to another agrees with envy 1. In the subject alwayes he which envies another hates him but not on the contrary Secondly In the efficient cause which is pride and a blinde love of a mans self It differs from it First In the subject for hatred may be in one in whom envy is not Secondly In the objectum quod which in envy is only good but in hatred it may be evil Thirdly In the objectum cui which is larger in hatred then envy for we envy men only not God nor our selves but others but we may hate not only other men but our selves and other creatures yea God himself Error Error is to judge otherwise then the thing is taking truth for falshood or falshood for truth Usquequaque fidei venena non cessant spargere saith Augustine of his times In Gregory Nazianzens dayes there were six hundred errors in the Church Selat on 1 Cor. 11. 18 19. The Doctrine onely of the Trinity remains undefiled in Popery Obstinately to defend an error in things indifferent makes a man a Schismatick and in points necessary and fundamental an Heretick It is the greatest judgement in the world to be given over to error Revel 13. 8. Iud● v. 4. 2 Thes. 2. 11. All the primitive Fathers spend most of their zeal and painful writings against heresies and errors All the Primitive Churches to whom the Apostles wrote Epistles areexpresly warned either positively to stand fast in the truth to hold fast their profession or negatively to beware of and to avoid false teachers and not to be carried about with divers and strange Doctrines See Mr Gillesp. Misc. c. 11. 12. It is not difficult to enumerate those heresies which gave occasion for the introducing of every Article in the Creed Vide Sanfordum de Descensu Christi ad infer●s l. 4. p. 29 30. It was well concluded in the 39 Session of the Councel of Constance That every tenth year at the farthest there should be a general Councel held to reform such errors in the Church as probably in that time would arise Preservatives from error 1. Have a care to be established in the truths of God 2 Pet. 1. 12. specially the main truths of religion look to repentance faith daily examination Matth. 13. 45. Rom. 6. 17. Corrupt teachers beguile none but unstable souls 2. Get experimental knowledge Ephes. 3. 17. and mourn to see the truths of Christ corrupted Revel 11. 3. 3. Love not any sin 2 Tim. 2. 19. 4. Try the Spirits 1 Iohn 4. 1. Every man pretends to speak by the Spirit bring their Doctrine to the rule try to what end the Doctrine tends whether to exalt God and abase man Matth. 7.
1. When mens thoughts run after what they shall eat or drink Matth. 6. 25. When animus est in patinis Rom. 12. 13. 2. When we delight too much in it as Philoxenus who wisht he had a neck like a Crane that he might take the longer delight in swallowing of his meat and drink 3. When we feed securely Iude 12. are too much taken up with the creatures 2. More notorious 1. When men eat more then their stomacks will digest Prov. 23. 1 2. When they are too dainty nothing will down but what is delicious and costly as the rich man in the Gospel 3. When they eat and drink unseasonably as Isa. 12. 13. Amos 6. 1 2. when they eat one meal too hastily after another not allowing nature sufficient time for concoction and those that will be still tipling Helps against it 1. Reade hear and practise the word 2. Pray 3. Joyn fasting with prayer 4. Consider the bounty of the Lord in giving us good things and for what end viz. strength CHAP. XX. Of Lying Malice Murmuring Oppression LYING LYing is a voluntary uttering of that which is false against a mans knowledge and conscience with an intention to deceive see Proverbs 12. 19. 22. 13. 5. In respect of the end it is distinguished into perniciosum officiosum and jocosum a hurtfull officious and merry lie August in Enchirid. ad Laurent Aquinas 2ª 2ae quaest 110. Art 2. The end of a pernicious lie is to hurt of an officious lie to profit of a merry lie to delight We must not tell a lie for Gods glory Iob 13. 7. much lesse for to help my neighbour Officious lying is neither permitted nor approved in the word of God God threatens to destroy all those that speak leasing Psal. 5. 6. See Prov. 6. 16. Matth. 5. 37. Ephes. 4. 25. Col. 3. 9. Rev. 21. 27. 22. 15. The very Heathens themselves abhorred all lying Aristotle saith A lie is evil in it self and to be dispraised It is a great sin Reasons 1. The Law of God is against it the ninth Commandment and the Gospel Col. 3. 9. 2. It is against the nature of God the Father is the God of truth Iohn 17. 3. the Son is truth Iohn 14. 6. the holy Ghost is the Spirit of truth Iohn 16. 13. and the Word of God which is the word of truth Ephes. 1. 13. It makes us like the devil Iohn 8. 44. 3. It is against natural conscience a little childe will blush at a lye 4. It is basely esteemed of by all generous men they abhorre above all things the imputation of lying It was in great reproach among the Persians saith Brissonius 5. It is contrary to all civil society takes away all commerce betwixt man and man Mendax hoc lucratar ut cum vera dixerit ei non credatur it is the just reward of a lier not to be beleeved when he tels truth 6. Omnibus peccatis cooperatur Aug. It hath an influence on all sins Lying and stealing are joyned together Ephes. 4. 7. The punishment of it is great as we may see in Gehezi Ananias and Saphira Psal. 5. and often in the Proverbs the Lord abhorres it Rev. 21. 8. 22. 15. liars are joyned with great sinners See Isa. 63. 8. Prov. 6. 17. Popery is a doctrine of lies 1 Tim. 4. 2. The great honour of the Saints is to walk in the truth 3 Iohn 4. see Ephes. 4. 5 Buy the truth and sell it not Erasmus had such an antipathy with lying that from his youth he would usually tremble at the sight of a noted liar Malice It causeth a man to receive pleasure in the practice of cruelty so the brethren of Ioseph and Cain 1 Sam. 19. 13 to the 18. Reasons 1. It is most of all contrary to charity therefore it must needs bring forth quite contrary effects to it and as that makes a man to take pleasure in doing good so this in doing evil for both vertues and vices cause him in whom they rule to take content in those things wherein they are exercised and by which they are strengthened and increased as both charity is by well doing and malice by doing evil 2. Where malice doth rule the Spirit of God is quite gone and the light of nature extreamly dimmed and a man is given over into the power of Satan for in giving place to wrath a man gives place to the devil 3. It distempers the judgement will and affections Murmuring It is first a sin reproved by God and a provocation of him Ion. 4. 8. The Israelites were very guilty of it see Numb 17. 12. Psal. 106 25. Secondly It is a high degree of sin 1. Hereby thou exaltest thy will above Gods and makest it the rule of goodnesse 2. You put God out of his throne out of Government in every murmuring against his dispensations thou deniest his Sovereignty 3. Hereby thou makest thy self wiser then God in divine things 4. This is a way to provoke God to greater displeasure Amos 4. 12. Arguments against murmuring and discontent under Gods administrations 1. It is a Christians duty to be content with the things present Heb. 13. 1 Thess. 518. such a one can never be thankfull 2. All your murmurings are against God Numb 14. 27. Exod. 16. 8. you charge God with folly Iob 1. ult 3. This will heighten your sin and add to your plagues Rev. 16. 19. Isa. 51. 20. 4. If the Lord should hearken to your murmuring you would quickly destroy your selves Hos. 13. 11. Oppression Oppression is a great sin Isa. 3. 15. Psal. 14 4. 17. 12. Amos 8. 5. Mic. 3. 3. Hab. 2. 11 12. 1. 14. Ier. 12. 13. 5. 27 28. Pride and unjustice in the extremity meet in an oppressour The Prophet cries out of them which grinde the faces of the poor of them which are like the wolves in the evening of them which covet fields and take them by force because there is might in their hands Reason It is an abuse of a special gift of God quite contrary to his appointment which gave it God made the stronger therefore to be the stronger that he might defend the weak as the greater sims and bones of the body hold up the burden of it CHAP. XXI Of Perjury Polygamy Pride PERJURY PErjury is mendacium juramento firmatum a lie confirmed with an oath so Peter Lombard Distinct. 39. The same thing by the addition of an oath that a lie is in a bare promise saith Dr. Sanderson It is double 1. When a man affirmeth or denieth upon oath that which he beleeveth in his own heart to be quite contrary 2. When he bindeth himself by oath to do or forbear that which he for the present time hath no purpose nor intention to perform The old saying is Once forsworn ever forlorn No Casuist doubts of it that a Turk may be guilty of perjury and for it be punished by the
gap Ieremiah prayed so much and earnestly for the people till God was even fain to discharge him Paul almost in every Epistle tels them to whom he writeth That he maketh mention of them in his prayers and the Apostle tels the Colossians that Epaphras a Minister of theirs did labour for them fervently in his prayers Reasons 1. It is one of the most excellent means to make their other labours prosperous by procuring a blessing upon them from God 2. This is the next way to provoke in his heart a holy Christian and spiritual love of them Let any man accustom to pray to God fervently for any person and it will increase an holy and heavenly affection to them as much as any one thing in the world graces grow and increase by exercise prayer is an exercise of love and charity 3. This is the best way to prevent discouragement in ones labours We may communicate with evil Ministers See 1 Sam. 3. 12 25. 30. 1. Our Saviour hath taught us to hold communion with wicked men for the godly's sake that were among them Yea with such as were tied in the cords of sinne with such as did manifestly live and die in their sins without repentance Iohn 8. 21 59. with Luk. 22. 7 8. Of the Brownists Mr Paget in his Arrow against the Separatists Chap. 8. shews That both Ainsworth and Barrow hold that Baptism administred by Papists is to be retained Ministers must be faithful in their Calling Christ was a merciful and faithful high-Priest His faithfulnesse consists in these things First In revealing the whole counsel of God Acts 20. 27. and only the counsel of God Secondly In dwelling among their people and using their best indeavour to know them well Prov. 27. 23. Iohn 10. 14. Acts 20. 20 28. Phil. 2. 19. 1 Thess. 3. 5. Col. 4. 8. Heb. 13. 17. One saith It is but the least part of a Ministers work which is done in the Pulpit Paul taught them from house to house day and night with tears Act. 20. 29 31. To go daily from house to house to see how they live Ministers must be themselves of an unblameable life Matth. 5. 13. Act. 20. 28. 4. 12. 5. 22. They must frame their lives answerable to their Doctrine This was typed by Aarons Urim and Thummim which he was to carry in the Brest-plate upon his heart for the one betokened Light and Verity of Doctrine the other Uprightnesse and Integrity of life The same was also signified by the golden Bels and Pomegranates hanging round about upon the hemme of his priestly vestment for the Bels are no other then the sound of wholsom preaching and the Pomegranates then the fruits of good living Peaceable not given to sutes and contentions with the people 1 Tim. 3. 3. They should be couragious and bold as Luther Painful Their Calling is a labour 1 Thess. 2. 9. and a travel 2 Thes. 3. 8. Those that labour in the Word and Doctrine I laboured more abundantly then they all Send forth labourers into thy harvest Verbi Minister es hoc age was Mr Perkins Motto See 2 Tim. 4. 1. He must be diligent and painfull both in Study and Preaching Melancthon said there were three hard labours Regentis Docentis Parturientis I have heard it as a certain truth concerning Reverend Mr Bains that every Sermon cost him as much in his sense as he thought as it did ordinarily cost a woman to bring a childe into the world I travel in birth till I see Iesus Christ formed in you Chrysostome saith The work of a Minister is more laborious then that of a Carpenter When he hath wrought hard all day he goes home and comes again in the morning and findes his work as he left it but we hew and take pains and leave our people and come again and finde them worse then before The Honour and Dignity of this Function Although the Ministery above all Callings be most subject to the contempt and disgrace of prophane men yet the Function is a worthy and excellent work and as God himself hath greatly honoured them so can they not but be honoured of all those who are the children of God 1. The subject of this Office is the souls of men their far better and more worthy part the spiritual immortal and most heavenly part of man other functions are conversant about the body or estate 2. The proper end of this is to procure Gods greatest glory in subduing souls to him and in bringing men to the greatest happinesse whereof they are capable even to grace here and glory hereafter This is to establish the spiritual Kingdom of grace in the hearts of men to convert them to God and make them heirs of everlasting happinesse At the last day shall Andrew come in with Achaia by him converted to the saving knowledge of the truth Iohn with Asia Thomas with India Peter with the Jews and Paul with the Gentiles See 1 Thes. 2. 19. A Minister is called a man of God 1 Sam. 9. 5. 1 Tim. 5. 1. 2. 3 17. His chief busines is to deal with God and to be his Messenger unto men the man of his counsel who was admitted to be familiarly with him yea whose whole life was to be consecrated to a specia●●ttendance upon God and his special service of making his waies known unto the sons of men They are called Messengers of the Lord of Hosts Mal. 2. 7. Embassadours of Christ 2 Cor. 5. 10. Angels of the Churches Fathers of their people 2 Cor. 5. 19 20. God tels Levi he will be his inheritance Deut. 10. 8 9. God protects them Revel 2. Christ holds the Starres in his hand We are commanded to receive them in the Lord to hold them in reputation to esteem them very highly for their works sake to hold them worthy double honour and to obey them Good men have loved faithful Ministers 2 Chron. 30. 22. 31. 4. 35. 2. Mat. 10. 11. Act. 16. 15. Aquila and Priscilla preferred Pauls safety before their own Obadiah hid the Prophets with the hazard of his life 1 King 18. 4. See against the contempt of them as Ministers 2 Chron. 36. 16. Luk. 10. 16. Of their Maintenance A sufficient maintenance is due to the Minister 1 Cor. 9. 9 10 14 15. The stipend of Ministers must be sufficient honourable and stable but the quota pars is not determined 1 Tim. 5. 17. Honour there is maintenance the Elder is the Minister If they be worthy to receive then it is not in the pleasure of man to pay as he list If the maintenance must be honourable then it must not be of benevolence for that is commonly both scant and uncertain which is a thing miserable not honourable Tenuitatem beneficiorum sequitur ignorantia Sacerdotum It is a great Question An decimae Ministris jure divino sint solvendae The Schoolmen are generally for the negative
Papa praesit aliis Episcopis Whether the Pope be above all other Bishops The Title of Universal Bishop of the Church which Bellarmine calleth notable and proper to the Bishop of Rome St Gregory sometime Bishop of Rome did renounce in himself and detest in all others calling it a title of novelty errour impiety blasphemy pronouncing any one that shall presume to challenge it to be the fore-runner of Antichrist B. Mort. Appeal l. 1. c. 2. Sect. 29. The Universal Bishop of the Church necessarily betokens an absolute monarchical Jurisdiction of some one over all other Bishops of the Church but Bishop of the Universal Church signifies the care and study any Bishop hath for the universal good of the Church as 2 Cor. 11. 28. so the King of Spain is styled The most Catholick King or King of the Catholick Church not Universal King and Soveraign over all other Kings in the Church There is another Question An Papa possit conferre Bullas Indulgentias Whether the Pope can confer Buls and Indulgences Their own learned Authours plainly confesse That there is not found any one expresse testimony for proof hereof either in Scriptures or in the writings of ancient Fathers 2. That there was no use of Indulgences in the primitive Church but that afterwards the fear of Purgatory hatched Indulgences 3. That the first who extended Indulgences unto Purgatory was Pope Boniface the 8th more then a thousand years after Christ. Luther began his opposition unto Rome in reprehending their Article of Indulgences He would have set down at the first if the matter of Indulgences had been granted but God led him on to declare against the whole Doctrine of Popery The Indulgences whereof we reade in the ancient Fathers were mitigations of some Censures of the Church before inflicted on the living for their amendment These now granted by the Pope are relaxations from satisfactory pains in Purgatory flames after this life It is a Question An Papa possit leges condere quae obligent Conscientias Whether the Pope can make Laws to binde the Conscience Conscience is said to be bound when it is charged by him who hath Power and Authority over it to perform its duty to bear witnesse to all our actions unto God and according to the quality of them to accuse or excuse us Rom. 2. 15. God is the only binder of conscience Iam. 4. 12. he is greater then the Conscience Rom. 13. 5. affirms only that Conscience is bound but determines not that mans Laws binde it Bellarmine saith Mens Laws binde Non minus quam Lex divina We deny not rem but only differ from them in modo they binde not immediately but mediately not primarily but secondarily not in them and of their own power but in the force and vertue of divine Law They say If the Pope determine vice to be vertue they are bound to believe it yea Tolet saith a man should merit of God in so believing There be these Questions An Papa sit supra Reges Whether the Pope be above Kings An possit Reges excommunicare Whether he can excommunicate Kings He hath soveraign Dominion say they over all Princes in temporal cases indirectly But Espencaetis ad Titum cap. 3. pag. 513. confesseth from that Scripture Rom. 13. 1. that Chrysostome Theodoret Theophylact and all the Greek Doctours and in the Latine Church Gregory and Bernard do from thence teach that every Apostle and Prophet and Priest was commanded to acknowledge a subjection unto Emperours The Pope Hadrian the 4th was not only angry with Frederick the Emperour but for a while denied him the Imperial Crown because he held his right stirrop when he should have held his left which errour he excused because he was unaccustomed to such services Bellarmine saith the Pope hath power in temporal things indirectly only but his book should have been burned for it Object Christ had a natural Dominion over all Kingdoms Therefore the Pope his Vicar hath also Answ. Tertullian cals the holy Ghost the Vicar of Christ upon earth See Iohn 14. There is another Question An Papae solius sit statuere de controversiis fidei Whether it belongs to the Pope alone to determine controversies of faith We deny not but a Judge and a Law might well stand together but we deny that there is any such Judge of Gods appointment Had he intended any such Judge he would have named him lest otherwise as now it is our Judge of controversies should be our greatest controversie Chillingworth part 1. cap. 2. Sect. 10. pag. 57. It is a Question An Papa possit remittere peccata Whether the Pope can pardon sins Trecelius affirmed That if a man had lien with our Lady the mother of Christ and had gotten her with childe yet the Popes pardon was able to set him free The Pharisee said true though he misapplied it Luk. 5. 21. Who can forgive sins but God alone There is another Question An Papa possit errare Whether the Pope may erre The Pope say they as a private person or Doctour may erre but not as the Vicar of Christ and the Successour of Peter in the Chair yea judging from the Chair he may erre in questions of fact but not in questions of faith nay he may erre in discussing questions of faith in respect of the premisses not in respect of the conclusions E Cathedra docens hoc est ex tripode oracula fundens nullo modo errare potest Summus Pontifex saith Bellarmine de Rom. Pont. lib. 4. cap. 3 cum totam Ecclesiam docet in his quae ad fidem pertinent nullo casu errare potest See our Rhemists on Luk. 22. 31. The high-Priest of the Old Testament saith Bellarmine de Pontifice l. 4 c. 3. had on his Brest-plate Doctrine and Truth according to the vulgar version therefore the high-Priest of the New Testament the Pope when he teacheth the whole Church in these things which belong to faith cannot erre in any case How well that argumentation proceeds from the high-Priest of the Old Testament to the high-Priest of the New let the learned judge Nescio cur non possit dici quòd Gregorius Papa cum homo fuerit non Deus potuerit errare Durand l. 4. distinct Quaest. 4. Of the Iesuites and Monks Of the Jesuites The Pope in divers Buls cals them Beloved sons in which title they much glory The Jesuites above all other Regulars make to the Pope a vow of present and absolute obedience to do whatsoever he shall command them to go whithersoever he shall send them to Turks Infidels Hereticks without excuse denial or delay They are to the Pope what the Janizaries are to the Turk and uphold him chiefly Their Order was erected in the year 1540. Hospin de orig Iesuit l. 1 c. 1. They are the frogs spoken of in the Revelation that croke in Kings Chambers to provoke them to warre As in ancient time there was no
this life thus 1. In the letter of it though delivered by never so faithful Ministers it is able to do nothing therefore these things are often preacht and men not bettered when the Spirit accompanies it it is efficacious See Rom. 1. 16. Phil. 2. 15. The preaching of the Gospel is 1. The only means of the revelation of this life 2 Tim. 1. 10. 2. It is the divine seed whereby the Lord conveys this life and begets it in the soul 1 Pet. 1. 23 25. This work of the Gospel consists in five things 1. The preaching of the Gospel opens the understanding makes us see the misery of sinne and the excellency of Christ and the things of God Ephes. 1. 2 Cor. 5. 2. It makes the will and affections to relish Christs sweetnesse perswades the heart to chuse him and consent that God and they may be united in a league of friendship this is the work of faith 3. Turns the heart from all evil wayes it walkt in men are said to be pull'd out of the power of Satan 4. Creates in the soul and stampes in it all the Graces wherein Gods Image stands 5. By administration of the promise and instruction fortifieth the soul and makes one do all things belonging to this life Arminians give too much to man and too little to Christ. Antinomians and Familists give too much to Christ and too little to man They give so much to Christ that they abolish the nature and act of the creature they say Christ must do all and we can do nothing They dream of an insensible motion without us place Grace in a naked apprehension there must be not onely a work for us but in and by us The work of the Father is in heaven of Christ on the Crosse of the Spirit within us Col. 1. 29. They deny not onely mans work but the Spirits work in us Rom. 16. 20. Secondly They say Christ must do all and we after we have received Grace nothing there is not a coordination but subordination of our wils to his grace though at our first conversion we were meerly passive yet when Grace is received we may act motion follows life Col. 2. 4. The Familists deny all inherent graces in the Saints because it is said we do not live but Christ he they say beleeves repents as if we lived not at all and he is formally all habits and graces but the Scripture grants habits and graces to be in a man Iohn 19. 28. Matth. 12. 33. 1 Iohn 3. 9. 2. The sins of our actions then could not be charged on our selves but on the faint operations of his grace Marks and Evidences of spiritual life First Every creature which lives values life A living dog is better then a dead Lion If one values his life he will prize 1. Pabulum vitae Attend on the Ordinances the Word Sacrament Prayer Communion of Saints 1 Peter 2. As new born Babes Cantic 4. latter end 2. He will avoid what is destructive to life Beware of grieving and quenching the Spirit Ephes. 4. 30. 1 Thess. 5. 19. by neglecting the motions of it or noysome lusts 3. He will endure any evil and part with any good rather then part with life Secondly This new life brings alwayes a great change along with it when a childe quickens in the mothers womb she findes a great change so when Paul and Manass●h and the blinde man Ioh. 9. were converted unlesse they were religiously trained up as Timothy from their youth Thirdly Sense a spiritual sense in the soul senses exercised savour the things of God Rom. 8. Fourthly Every life hath some kinde of motions and actions that are sutable to it as in this spiritual life 1. That inward work of adhering to Christ as their chief portion the fountain of all their good a true faith 2. Repentance labouring to cast out corruption and to turn to God 3. The Spirit of Prayer You have received the Spirit of Adoption whereby you cry Abba Father Our Law judgeth a childe alive that was heard to cry 4. The minding of heavenly things Col. 3. 1 2. 5. Life hath a sympathy a fellowship with those that are members of the body the same quickning Spirit lives in all Christians weep with them that weep and rejoyce with them that rejoyce 6. If we be regenerated we do that to God which children do to their Father 1. Honour him and stand in awe of him 2. Rely on him as the fountain of all our good as children do on their parent● for a supply of all their wants 3. Are obedient to him Motives to live to God 1. It is a dishonour to God when the creature seeks to exalt self that which I make my utmost end I make my God Phil. 3. 10. 2. Consider the self-denial of Christ he came from heaven to do the will of him that sent him Rom. 15. 3. Means of spiritual life 1. Labour to get thy miserable condition by nature set close upon thy spirit how thou art dead in sin 2. Study to get into Christ 1 Iohn 5. 12. onely he can quicken he is never got but by Faith Luke 15. the Prodigal is the pattern of a converted soul. See vers 31. CHAP. XIV The Sanctification of the whole Man Soul and Body VVE should live more to the soul then body Psal. 119. 175. 141. 8. 142. 7. 143. 11. 1. The soul is distinct from the body as the operations of it shew 2. It lives when the body dies Eccles. 12. 7. Mat. 10. 28. 3. It is far better then the body 4. The concernments of the soul are higher then those of the body 1 Pet. 3. beginning 5. The sicknesse and death of the soul is worse then that of the body 1 King 8. 38. Ioh. 8. 21 23. 6. We never live to any purpose but when the soul lives 1. Of the faculties of the soul. Grace spreads it self through all the faculties A faculty is an ability of producing some effect or operation agreeable to our nature and for our good implanted in man by nature There are three reasonable faculties proper to men alone 1. The Understanding by which we know truth 2. The Will by which we desire good 3. Conscience a power of ordering our selves to and with God I. Of the Understanding It is that power which God hath given a man to acquaint himself with the Being Properties and Differences of all things by discourse Or it is that faculty by which we are able to inform our selves of the general natures of things Sense alone perceives particulars the understanding abstracts things and forms in it self the general natures of things I see this or that man but understand the nature of man The Object of it is omne intelligibile Truth in general in the utmost latitude and universality of it is the object of the Understanding good in the general in the universality of its nature is the object of the Will therefore till
Word doth most clearly distinctly and fully make him known to us Iohn 5. 37. See Acts 9. 15. and 21. 13. 4. His Works Rom. 1. 29. of Judgement Psal. 9. 16. Isa. 30. 27. of Mercy Isa. 48. 9 10 11. 5. Gods Name is his Glory Exod. 9. 16. Psal. 8. 1. so Name is taken Gen. 11. 4. 12. 2. To hallow or sanctifie signifies either to make holy or to acknowledge and declare holy the later is here meant That which is holy in it self is said to be hallowed by esteeming acknowledging and declaring it to be as it is this is all the hallowing or sanctifying that can be done to the Creator We sanctifie the Name of God when in our hearts words and deeds we do use it holily and reverently To sanctifie God is 1. To know him to be a holy God Prov. 9. 10. and to keep this knowledge alwayes active in us Out of him no evil can arise he can take no pleasure in sin he favours it in none he loves all holy persons and things is the fountain and rule of holinesse in the creature We should keep this knowledge alwayes active in us it should be the matter of our meditation day by day the Angels continually give God the praise of his holinesse 2. To observe and admire his Holinesse in all his waies and works Levit. 10. 3. Exod. 15. 3. 3. To come into the presence of God in all services with a holy heart Heb. 9. 14. The acceptation of the person is before acceptation of the service in the second Covenant 4. In our coming into Gods presence to look on Gods holinesse as the fountain of holinesse to us Exod. 29. 43. 5. To strive to be spiritually pure in the inward man Isa. 8. 13. 1 Pet. 3. 5. 6. To eye the rule of holinesse in every thing we do Levit. 10. 3. 7. To be humble and abased before God in all our holy duties because of their imperfections Act. 3. 12. Semper peccamus etiam dum benefacimus 8. To bring the Lord Jesus Christ with us still into Gods presence 1 Peter 2. 5. Petition 2. Thy Kingdome come In this second Petition we have the primary means by which the name of God is sanctified among men viz. by the coming of his Kingdom This word Come is diversly to be expounded according to the divers significations of the Kingdom of God The universal Kingdom or Kingdom of power is said to come when it is manifested and made apparent that all things are guided by the power and providence of God The Kingdom of grace is said to come unto us when it is either begun and erected in us or continued and increased amongst us The Kingdom of Glory when the number of the Elect is accomplished and all Gods enemies subdued and all the Saints possessed of that glorious place Kingdome in general is a government or state of men wherein one ruleth and others are subject to him for their good The Kingdom of God is a state in which God hath supream power and men are so subject to him that they partake of eternal happinesse by it To Come properly notes a motion whereby a man goeth from one place to another Five things are meant in this Petition 1. Let the Gospel the Scepter of this Kingdom be published and propagated 2. Let the Subjects of this Kingdom be converted 3. Let the graces of this Kingdom be increased 4. Let the enemies of this Kingdom be subdued 5. Let the glory of this Kingdom be hastened Christs Kingdom is two-fold 1. His Universal Kingdom by which he ruleth over all creatures even the Devils themselves called the Kingdom of power and providence so he is called King of Nations Ier. 10. 7. 2. Peculiar his Mediatory Kingdom which he exerciseth over his Church as King of Saints Revel 5. 3. which is such an order wherein Christ doth rule and the faithfull obey to their special good and benefit or that government in which God most graciously ruleth and we most willingly obey to our everlasting good This is two-fold 1. Of grace in the Church militant 2. Of glory in the Church triumphant The former is the way to the later The Kingdome of grace is that government whereby the Lord doth effectually rule in our hearts by his Word and Spirit The Kingdom of glory is the blessed estate of the godly in heaven The particular things which we desire are these 1. That God would cast down the Kingdome of Satan all men by nature are his subjects untill they be brought out of his Kingdom into the Kingdom of God and then Gods Kingdom is said to come to them 2. That God would plant both outwardly and inwardly the external face and inward substance of his Kingdome where it is not yet Cant. 8. 8. 3. For them that are planted we pray that God would supply to them what is wanting and continue and increase what good they enjoy 4. For the Church in persecution that the Ministers of the Gospel may be enabled to preach and professe the truth with all courage be faithfull unto death The Gospel is called 1. The Word of the Kingdom Mat. 13. 19. 2. The Keys of the Kingdom 3. The entrance into the Kingdom 4. The means whereby men are set in it therefore we pray that it may runne swiftly 2 Thess. 3. 1. and be a light to the world and that God would by his Spirit 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. make it efficacious that men may see their misery the glory of the Kingdom and give themselves wholly to God that God would make Magistrates nursing Fathers and Mothers Isa. 49. 23. that the Seminaries of learning may be pure and religious rightly ordered religiously governed and well seasoned with truth for Ministers that the Lord would send forth labourers into his harvest and give them utterance that they may open their mouth boldly to make known the mystery of the Gospel Christs Kingdom is carried on by degrees Psal. 110. 1. 1 Cor. 11. 21. it is a growing Kingdom Isa. 39. 6 7. The Scripture seems to intimate that in the later dayes there shall be a greater enlargement of Christs Kingdome Rev. 11. 15. and that it shall begin with the calling of the Jews Micah 4 7 8 But Christs great imperial day when all creatures shall be brought into a subjection to him is at the day of judgement Isa. 45. 23. Phil. 2. 10. Petition 3. Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven The will of God though but one is considered several wayes First As secret This will of God is ever just although the reason of it be incomprehensible to us But the Petition is not meant of this 1. Because no man can know it till it come to passe whereas knowledge is necessary to the doing of this will 2. Because it is irresistible and cannot be withstood by any man Prov. 19. 21. Rom. 9. 19. 3. There are no promises for the performing
creature cut off from the old stock and ingraffed into a new thou must close with Christ and accept of him and then vertue will come from him Gal. 2. 20. Bread and Wine are turned into the substance When the Sacrament is received without due and diligent preparation it is received unworthily vers 28. The Apostle prescribes this remedy against unworthy receiving we should diligently prepare for every religious duty We should be much in examination the strongest acts of grace are reflex acts this is a Gospel command therefore carries with it a Gospel-promise it is a duty at all times Our examination is a setting our selves in the presence of God and passing sentence on our wayes as God would have us There is a twofold preparation required 1. Habitual standing in the having of all such dispositions and graces as qualifie a man for the work of receiving knowledge faith and repentance love obedience this is at our first conversion Ephes. 2. 10. 6. 14. 2. Actual which stands in the exciting and awakening of those graces and dispositions and renewing of them when one is to receive Both these must be in him that will receive in due order Actual preparation consists 1. In the solemn sequestration of a mans self 2. In examination of our sins and graces 3. In being humbled for our sins and in renewing and quickning the former graces 4. In raising and stirring up in our selves strong desires after Christ. 5. In stirring up in our selves a strong expectation of the benefit of the Sacrament 6. In seeking God in special and more then ordinary manner by prayer 1. A solemn sequestration of the soul from all other avocations whatsoever There must be some sitting of a mans self for the duty from the time that a man hath notice of the Sacrament to be administred But at the day before a man should at the least toward the end of the day separate himself from all other thoughts and occasions and minde wholly the work of preparation to the Sacrament This sequestration of a mans self stands in two things 1. In setting aside all lawfull thoughts occasions and businesses of our callings 2. In summoning calling and collecting together all the powers and faculties of the soul to attend upon the businesse now in hand Examination of our sins and graces of the multitude and hainousnesse of our sins of the truth of our graces the growth of them and our wants I shall lay down the rules of examination and the things to be examined 1. The Rules whereby we are to examine our selves are the Law and Gospel 1. For finding out the number of our sins 2. The uses of them for finding out the measure of them The things to be examined are our sins and graces I. Of the Rules The Law The Summe of the Law is set down in the ten Commandments and they are divided into two Tables The Commandments of the first Table are the four first and they teach us our duty which we owe unto God immediately The Commandments of the second Table are the six last and they teach us our duty which we owe unto our Neighbour Our duty to God is to love him with all our hearts with all our strength with all our might with all our thoughts Our duty to our Neighbour is to love him as our selves both in soul and body goods good name person chastity The first Commandment is Thou shalt have no other gods but me or before me The general duty of it is to make God my God by yeelding unto him all such respect as appertaineth to him in regard of his being our Creator and the first fountain of all being This is a total and general subjection of the whole man unto him Duties required herein are 1. Of Dependance whereby we make God the chief and principal object of all the powers of our whole man so far as they are capable of him 2. Of Conformity whereby we order all our powers toward other things in that manner and measure that he doth require and so become subject to that authority power and command that he hath over us as a Creator 1. Duties of Dependance We must set all the powers of the soul principally upon him 1. The Understanding 1. To know him as he hath revealed himself in his Word and Works 2. Faith to believe him that is to think things true because he saith them 3. Humility acknowledge him to be the first and best Essence rightly discern the infinite distance and difference between him and us and confesse his unspeakable excellencies above us and our most vile basenesse in comparison of him 2. The will willing his glory above all things and then choosing his favour and grace 3. The imagination or thinking power to be thinking of God more plentifully largely constantly then of all other things 4. Memory perpetually to remember him and to set him at my right hand as David saith 5. The affections of Love Fear Joy Confidence must be set upon him with all their strength We should also speak more abundantly of God and his Excellencies then of all things else besides 2. Duties of Conformity All the powers of man are to be set on other things according to his direction and appointment 1. The Understanding 1. To know his will 2. To believe his promises and threats 3. To make use of the things we know 4. To esteem of heavenly things above earthly 2. Conscience or a knowing with God in which 1. The acts it is to perform 2. The rule which it must follow in performing those acts The acts it is to perform are twofold 1. In regard of our estate to acquit and condemn 2. In regard of our actions I. Before the doing if need be to admonish me to them 2. If sinful to restrain me from them 3. If indifferent to leave them to our wils II. After the doing 1. To comfort in them if commanded 2. To check for them if forbidden The Rule which it must follow in performing these acts is the revealed will of God III. In the manner of doing 1. Sincerely in checking for one sin as well as another 2. Tenderly for a little thing 3. Effectually so as not to suffer corruption to gain-say 4. Peaceably to drive to God not from him 3. The will to be flexible to Gods will 1. Obedience a full purpose to do all that God requires and leave all that he forbiddeth for his sake 2. For good things received thankfulnesse for evil patience 4. The thinking power Memory Speech Senses and Affections to be exercised more abundantly on heavenly things then earthly The general Duty of the second Commandment is to perform such solemn worship to God as he requires in his Word to worship him in spirit and truth Divine Service must be according to Gods command 1. For Matter of it in regard 1. Of the Person worshipped the living God alone conceived of in the pure apprehension of the
And so much for the Matter of true Worship The Manner followeth which is as carefully to be looked unto as the Matter neither shall any service we perform be acceptable unto God further then the manner of performing the ●an●● is agreeable to his will Know four things are required to the right performing of Gods Services in this kinde 1. Sincerity 2. Diligence 3. Faith 4. Reverence And when we do worship truly diligently faithfully reverently then we also worship him acceptably and fruitfully For sincere worshipping of God we may learn it by the Apostles denying it of some that preached Christ of contention what we do for a right end attain●●g of grace and for the right motives Gods Commandment and Honour that is done truly for truth in this case is the agreement betwixt the shews we make and meaning we have To the sincere performing of the acts of Worship three things are requisite 1. That we do it upon a right motive which must be Gods Commandment because he requireth us so to serve him not pray to be seen of men 2. For a right end which must be the shewing of our obedience to God and winning of grace from him according to his promise 3. With the joyning together of the inward and outward man the Soul and Body The Scripture requireth this in prayer by special name saying that God is neer to all those that call upon him in truth that is with a true intention to please him and a true desire to get grace from him The thing which ought to make a Preacher preach is that he may be Gods Instrument in converting and edifying souls seeing God hath appointed to do this work by the Ministry of men The thing which should make the people come to Church is that by hearing their souls may live seeing God hath appointed preaching to save men When we do in our souls aim at the right end of the several kinds of Worship we perform seeking to approve our selves to God so in them that by them we may profit according to his institution this is Truth The second thing is Diligence which will follow upon Truth and is joyned with it for alwaies they go together as the contrary vices and therefore in the Hebrew one word signifies both negligently and guilefully in that speech Cursed be he that doth Gods work negligently He that would serve God acceptably must serve him heedfully Eccles. 5. 1 2. Mark 4. 23 24. Heb. 2. 1 2. Reasons 1. Because of Gods peculiar presence in his Ordinances Ezek ult ult Revel 21. 3. he is there present 1. In Majesty Exod. 40. 34. 2 Chron 5. 14. Isa. 6. 7. the Ordinances of the Gospel are compared to a wedding Feast Matth. 22. where the King comes in therefore we are said to come to a throne of grace 2 In holiness Isa. 6. 3. Psal. 48. 1. Ezek 45. latter end Rev. 4. 8. 3. As a Judge Ezek. 22. 2. Rom. 2. 14. Iob 9. 15 4. In jealousie as in the second Commandment which is quicksighted Iosh. 24. 19. 2. Look to the rule of all your converses with God Rom. 12. 1. word-service it may be rendred as 1 Pet. 2. 2. It is 1. A straight rule Psal. 19. 7. one may quickly go awry 2. A spiritual rule Rom. 7. 12. 3. An harmonious rule Iam. 2. 10. 3. Consider the evil frame of your spirits that are to walk with God in this rule 1. There is much enmity in them to every duty 2. Much inadvertency in the things of God 3. Looseness and vanity in the thoughts Ier. 4. 14. 4. God is more honoured or dishonoured in your religious duties then in all the actions of your lives there they actively intentionally and solely intend his glory therefore more of their spirits should be laid out in these duties then in all their other actions Psal. 103. 5. 5. The Devil is there present Matth. 13. 19. 1. As an accuser as of Iob. 2. As an Opposer Zach. 1. 2. 3. As an Executioner Isa. 29. 13 14. This diligence is a setting ones self to procure to ones self the benefit of the exercise an indeavour and striving in good earnest to have the graces wrought in us which these exercises are to work This Diligence consists in three things 1. A taking pains to fit and prepare our selves for these Exercises before hand 2. A due carriage of our selves in them 3. A due use-making afterwards For the first we must all know that there is a very great natural unfitness in our hearts to perform any religious work any good work at all that which is of it self unfit to effect any thing must be fitted for the work before it be imployed in the same The heart of the best man is very apt to be out of tune as it were for Prayer Meditation hearing when it is exercised about worldly matters it is made very unapt to matters of godliness because it cannot converse in the world in that holy and discreet manner it ought wherefore it must be new tuned and that is to be the first pains of a good man without which his following labour is lost This preparation is double 1. Common to all Exercises of Religion 2. Proper to some special Exercises The common Preparation stands in four things 1. In knowledge of the Exercise to be performed both that it is by God required and what good he intends by and how he would have u● perform it For it is impossible that any man should well worship God in anything who hath not received convenient information of the nature and use of that thing No man can pray except he know what it is to whom to be made in whose Name and what good he shall attain by it Nor reade nor hear unless he know the needfulness and nature of these Ordinances For it is the Word of God by which all things are sanctified in that our minds are thence instructed of the lawfulness and manner of performing them This is the foundation which must be first laid to all that follows to be made acquainted what the exercise is what good it will bring how necessarily required that so a man may do what he does out of this knowledge and not serve God he knows not with what 2. A man before he comes into Gods presence about such works must repent of his sins yea renew his repentance bethinking himself of the several things which he latest committed to work a fresh measure of grief in his soul with a full determination of heart to strive more against them for God cannot endure to be served with a foul hand The sprinkling water must be sprinkled upon us and we must purge our selves from all uncleanness if we draw near to him So in the old Law they were to wash their clothes after some pollution and when God came to them to put off their shooes And that is it which David saith I will wash mine hands in
innocency and compass thine Altar A man must bring an undefiled spirit if he will pray he must work his heart to sorrow and resolution to amend his late sins for he cannot be welcome into Gods presence that is not cleansed from his wickedness or hateth to be reformed we must be pure if we will come into Gods presence 3. Prayer to God for his blessing must be prefixed to all religious services for our better inabling thereto for of our selves we can do nothing all our sufficiency comes from him who hath promised to hear us when we pray and to grant our petitions so that without seeking a blessing we cannot expect to finde it and therefore the Apostlē saith that all things are sanctified unto us by prayer even exercises of Religion the Word the Sacraments and the like yea and Prayer too by praying God first for his Spirit of Prayer Therefore he that will serve God aright must first crave his help and grace to serve him The fourth and last part of common preparation is by a preconsideration of the exceeding greatness of the Lord before whom we come and of our vileness baseness unworthiness to come before him that so we may be rightly affected with the regard of him Levit. 26. 2. So Cornelius saith that he and the rest were all there before God to hear what Peter should say unto them they had considered with themselves that God came to speak unto them and that they came to hear him for in what service we do not make account that we have to deal with the Lord our God and Maker and do not put our selves in minde what a one he is we shall not carry our selves aright towards him Abraham said he was dust and ashes when he prayed to God therefore the Lord hath set down a Preface before the Lords Prayer acquainting us what a one God is because by the thinking of him and striving to bring our hearts to conceive of him as such a one we should be better fitted to make the requests and supplications following the heart then must put it self in minde what it goes about and to whom it tenders a service I come before the Lord Almighty that hath my soul in his hand to hear him speak to me or to speak to him I draw near to the King of Heaven and Earth I present my self before his face let me frame my self so as befits his holy and all-searching eyes And this is the common preparation for our religious duties Now special preparation for special services follows to be spoken of that is to the Word to Prayer to the Sacraments and to a Vow For the Word The heart is to be framed to a resolution of obeying it in all things this is the honest and good heart whereof our Saviour makes mention in describing the good ground concerning this it is that our Lord saith again If you will do my will you shall know it This will give a man a good memory and a good judgement and the Lord to recompence this obedient resolution will become as he hath promised a Teacher to the humble so shall he be taught of God that comes with a firm purpose to be guided by God and that in all things Before you come to Church you should spend some time with your hearts to encline them and bow them to the testimonies of God and to say unto your selves I am going to hear what the Lord will say unto me seeing he is my Maker I will not harden my heart against him but I will be ready to know what he teacheth and not gainsay any thing that shall to my conscience appear truth and I will undoubtedly yeeld to that I know in practice for it is the word of him that is Lord of the spirits of all flesh then will the Word be powerful to make us able when we resolve before whatever it be to be willing 2. Before Prayer a threefold consideration is necessary of our special wants and sins and benefits that we may accordingly mention them in our Prayers The Lord hath promised he will grant us whatsoever we shall ask we must bethink our selves therefore what be those things that for our present estate we do stand in need of What sins had need to be pardoned and healed what benefits continued or new given and what we have already to give thanks for that we may with more earnestness pray when we know for what we will pray In the next place we must consider of Gods gracious promises that he hath made unto us to help and of his exceeding mercy goodness and power by which we are sure he is able and willing to help even of those Excellencies of God which the title Our Father which art in Heaven doth offer unto our consideration but principally Gods promise to hear and accept is to fill our mindes when we come before him as suppliants Thirdly For the Sacraments the special preparation is 1. By examining and judging our selves as the Apostle speaks that is a more narrow and diligent search for our estate and for our particular offences if we have forgotten any if through carelesnesse or guile we have let passe the sight and acknowledgment of any that now the old leaven may be cast out So saith the Apostle Examine your selves and again If we would judge our selves God would not judge us 2. We must labour to get a good appetite to this spiritual food to stir up in our selves an earnest hungring and thirsting after Christ and his benefits there God cals all that thirst to come and eat As a good stomack is a necessary preparation to our natural meals so to these spiritual meals is a good desire and longing for the grace there offered remission of sinnes past and power to live more blamelesly and holily hereafter Then when a man hath by special examination and judging himself found out his faults and humbled himself for them and also hath brought his heart to long for Christ Jesus to be his Saviour and to save him from the punishment and power of them by his body and bloud he is now fit to come to the Lords Table 3 He must meditate on Christs sufferings Lastly For a vow because this is a very solemn bond betwixt God and us I speak it not of imposed vows but assumed wherein we enter it behoves us very carefully to weigh the nature of the thing and our sufficiency for the same that we may not be rash with our lips to speak before our Maker which is principally spoken of vowing by Salomon for better not vow then not perform for want of which care many men have so intangled themselves as their vows have been occasion of exceeding much misery unto them as we have one fearful example for all in Iephta who though he did not so bad as is vulgarly thought for can any man imagine that the newly reformed Church of Israel at that time after so
special a blessing could have endured to see Gods holy Altar by any of his Priests polluted with so fearfull an abomination and so expressely forbidden yet he procured himself and his daughter great reproach in that he was fain to consecrate his only daughter to God as a perpetual Nazaritesse Whence followed at least in the opinion of those times a necessity of remaining a Virgin and child lesse so that his example must warn us before vowing to consider distinctly and seriously what we vow Thus we have shewed you what diligence is required before the worship In the worship is required as great diligence Rom. 12. 11. First With our understanding and thoughts to make them attentive that we may heed what we do and apply our thoughts and conceits alone that way that so there may be an agreement betwixt body and minde Thus in praying we must mark what it is that we ask confesse or give thanks for so that we understand our selves and be able to approve that we have asked nothing but what we might In hearing we must listen and attend that we may carry away the Word and let it not leak we must binde our mindes to give heedful attention according to that Let him that hath an ear hear what the Spirit saith Hear O Israel saith Moses often Hear O children saith David So in the Sacraments we must mark each action and busie our mindes in observing the thing signified as well at our eyes in the thing that is outward When we see the bread consider of Christs presence and power to nourish when we see the wine of his presence and power to comfort so in the other actions when we see the breaking of the bread think of his death when we see the giving consider of Gods offering him and so in every action we must serve the Lord with our whole heart whereof one part is this observing attending marking the action Secondly We must bring our affections to be so moved as the nature of the exercises requireth which is that which is commended in the good Iosiah his heart melted in hearing threatnings and the Thessalonians received the Gospel with joy in prayer we must be fervent and in the Sacrament we must bring our hearts to a feeling sorrow for Christs death and our sins and to a joyful remembrance of the great work of our redemption so it must be a sweet mixture of joy and sorrow so must we worship God with our whole heart for then we worship him with our whole heart when our minde and affections are taken up with the matter of his worship as hath been said so in prayer David cried unto God was earnest about his requests This earnestnesse of affection is a very necessary thing to make the worship of God we perform acceptable and this is diligence in the worship There must also be diligence after the worship in a care to make good use of it and to observe our growth by it and to perceive what proceedings we make in godlinesse by all the services we perform seeing all that we do tends to this end the Sacrament Word Prayer should nourish grace all to confirm and strengthen the grace of the inward man All duties to God must be done with all the faculties of the inward man 2. With the intention of all the faculties The demeanour of the body lies in this that it is a fit instrument to serve the soul. The Turks worship Mahomet more reverently then Christians the true God a vain carriage of the body is an evident argument of a vain minde 2. The soul should be active the whole inward man the understanding should be ready to apprehend truth the will to choose it the memory to retain it the conscience to submit unto it Isa. 58. 5. 1 Cor. 14. 15. Reasons why the inward man must be active in worship 1. God will be worshipt according to his nature Iohn 4. 24. 2. The soul is the man the main of sinne lies in the soul Mic. 6. 7. 3. The soul only is the seat of grace Ephes. 3. 17. 4. The end of all Christian duty is communion with God he can have no communion with the body 5. In this doth the glory of all a Christians duties consist Mark 13. 33. Revel 5. 8. 6. This onely makes the duty fruitful the fruit of the duty lies in the activity of it After the duties done there should be 1. An impression of Gods holinesse upon us Exod. 34. 29. Acts 4. 13. a savour of the duties we have done 2. When we have found out God in a duty we should ingage our hearts to that duty ever after Psal. 116. 2. and it should encourage us in all the services God requires Gen. 29. 1. 3. We should be very thankful to God for every good motion thought new discovery 1 Chron. 29. 13. The special duties after the Word Prayer and a Vow are these After the Word to call our selves to account what we remember and so to search if it be true and ponder upon it our selves with a chewing of the cud and the life of hearing depends on it This is digesting the Word this is causing it to take root this is ingraffing it in the heart and if we have convenient means of company we ought to conferre of it and advise together about it that one may help another so did the Bereans searching the Scriptures after Pauls speaking the Gospel to them The next for prayer is as David saith to wait on God to look for and continue though we be defer'd to look for what we have begged and to observe how it is granted that accordingly we may be thankfull or humbled and increase our earnestnesse When a man prefers a Petition to the King he gives his attendance to see what successe so must we to God Our eyes must behold him as the eyes of the handmaids the Mistresse so that we may be able to see whether he be angry against our prayers or condescend to them and if he do seem angry yet we may not faint but follow him still if we have praid against a temptation we must look for power against it and if we feel power rejoyce in God that gave it if not pray again and still wait renewing our supplication so if we have desired any grace or benefit either temporal or spiritual according to Gods Word we must not make haste or be heedlesse but even wait and attend his leisure as one that is infinitely better and wiser then our selves Next for vows the uses must be a special care of our vow to fulfill it for the word is expresse Thou shalt pay thy vows and thou shalt not go back if the vow be of things lawful else we must not stand to it but with great repentance for the vow perform Gods Commandment rather then our vow Thus you have heard of truth and diligence there are required two things more Faith which is a
speak the truth These are the occasions of swearing the rules of swearing upon these occasions are three as the Prophet Ieremiah hath set them down ch 4. 2. 1. Truth 2. Iudgement 3. Righteousness Truth is opposed to falshood or perjury Judgement to rash and common swearing Righteousness to unjust and unlawful Oaths 1. Truth that is when the words of the mouth agree with the meaning of the heart and both with the thing it self whereof the speech is and that without all doubting halting equivocating shifting according to the meaning that we would seem to have to him which giveth or requireth the Oath of us He that indeed intendeth what he pretendeth in the words of his Oath sweareth truly in a promissive Oath and in an assertive Oath he that sweareth what he knoweth to be or not to be 2. Iudgement is a serious consideration of the nature of an Oath and of the thing which we do swear about and it is opposed to rashness headdiness and unadvisedness that we may swear with due respect to the great Name of God which we do take into our mouths when we swear 3. Righteousness is when we do swear so as to give God and man his due in our Oath having due reverence to God and swearing about things good honest and lawful that we may settle peace betwixt our selves and others and so may declare our honourable account of Gods Name but the principal point of righteousness in swearing is when we swear onely to good and honest things for good and honest purposes and accordingly stand to our Oaths and the Prophet pu●s judgement in the middest betwixt these two because it is an help to both seeing he that sweareth rashly cannot tell but he may soon stumble upon falshood and unrighteousness so that judgement respecteth the manner of swearing chiefly and truth and righteousness the matter Thus you see the nature and use of an Oath and to swear thus is a most worthy service of God We must speak now of a Lot and shew also the nature and use thereof To the constituting of a Lot three things must concur 1. Some controversie or matter in doubt not agreed upon 2. A casual act that is such an act as in regard of the event dependeth not upon the will or wit or activity of any man or creature but upon the secret disposing of Gods providence which men do fondly thrust out of sight by the name of luck or chance 3. A referring of the determination of that controversie to the event of that casual act whether by the mutual consent of parties or appointment of some superiour And in this reference there are contained and implied the same things that before were contained in an Oath viz. 1. A secret acknowledgement of Gods infinite Wisdome and Authority over us viz. that he knoweth how to dispose of all things in the best manner and that all men ought to be content without any more ado to stand to his determination 2. An Invocation or calling upon him to exercise his Authority and Wisdome in the disposing of the casual event so as shall seem best to him for the determining of the present controversie according to his minde 3. A binding or tying of the parties to stand to his determination a profession that he will be satisfied with such determination as he shall please to make by disposing of the Lot So the casting of a Lot is none other thing in effect but an actual expressing of such a form of words as these Lord thou knowest in all cases what is best and fittest to be done and we here are all equally subject unto thee wherefore there being a thing in controversie betwixt us which we cannot so well agree upon our selves but that there will be some discontent betwixt us we are willing to stand to thy determination and as thou shalt shew thy own pleasure to be by ordering this casual event which nothing but thy secret providence can order so shall we rest satisfied and we beseech thee now to declare thy mind herein accordingly The casting of a Lot is but a compendium or abridgement or actual expressing of such a prayer wherefore also the Apostles to the casting of a Lot for the choice of an Apostle did adde such a prayer Acts 1. Shew whether of these two thou hast chosen By this which hath been said it is evident that a Lot and an Oath are both of the same nature and that the due use of them is a special honour to God in the exercising of humble submission to him and faith in his Providence Truth and Goodness This is the nature of a Lot it follows to declare the use both in regard of 1. The occasions of using 2. The manner of using 1. The occasions of using a Lot can be none other then to determine something in controversie All controversies must needs be about matters Past Present To come As who is to do or have such or such a thing who hath done or who doth it Now for the determining of things past and present a Lot doth not serve at all once or twice it was used for that extraordinarily but it is not ordinary for that purpose But doubts about things to come are of two sorts 1. Contingent doubtful and uncertain events and accidents as Haman by lot would foreknow how his device against the Iews should speed and for these a lot is not ordained 2. Dispositions or distributions of labours offices rewards punishments possessions or the like and for these purposes was a lot appointed as Solomon noteth saying Prov. 18. 18. The lot parteth or maketh division among the mighty But we must put our selves in minde that doubts and controversies about such things are of two sorts some made by men of their own will and not existent in nature of themselves some existent in nature and not onely made by men Now if men will needs make a doubt for satisfying of their own fancies where none is or need to be the thing being already by other means put out of doubt it is a presumptuous boldness to put such a doubt to God to umpire seeing no wise Superiour would take it well to be so imployed by his inferiour but would utterly refuse to intermeddle in such decisions For example A man gave unto his four servants 10l l a piece or so many pence and they will needs make such a bargain among themselves of this 40l l One of us shall have twenty marks the other 12l l and the other 12l l and the other just nothing and the remainder shall be to relieve the poor wherefore they come to their Master to tell who of the four shall have the forenamed summes and who just nothing would he not be discontented with them and reprove them and not have any hand in such a division as being foolish and unequal and so stands the case in all Lotteries and yet they are bold to use a lot to
one in their bosome so the elect are cherished in the bosome of the Father of all the faithful There is perfection perpetuity immutability there is Foelix securitas secura foelicitas Bernard Blessednesse is the fruition of the essential absolutely chief first eternal independent perfect only sufficient good and chiefly to be desired The object of this blessednesse is God himself Psal. 50. 23. 33. 1 Iohn 2. 3. for all these properties agree to him and none other Gen. 15. 1. Psal. 16. 5. and he being the first cause of all things must needs be the chief good and last end Blessednesse is two-fold 1. Incomplete Beatitudo viae as Iam. 1. 12. 2. Perfect Beatitudo Patriae as the Schools call it which consists in the enjoyment of a good commensurate to all our desires Nothing but the Divine Essence can make us happy in the life to come 1. Not the glorious place of heaven Paul was taken up thither yet after had a messenger of Satan to buffet him 2. Not the company of Saints and Angels 3. Not the perfection of grace 1 Cor. 13. 12. perfection of grace is rather a consequent of felicity 2 Cor. 5. 17. 4. Not a perfect injoying of Christ the Mediator because he as Mediator hath his happinesse in another Psal. 16. ult it is spoken of Christ. The highest object of faith must be to the soul the highest ground of joy the essence of God is the ultimate object of faith 1 Pet. 1. 21. This only perfects the graces 1 Iohn 3. 3. Matth. 18. 10. gives rest and satisfaction to the soul Psal. 17. ult In beatitudine complebitur omne desiderium beatorum Aquinas The essence of God cannot be seen by creatures glorified with bodily eyes 1 Tim. 6. 16. though the body then be spiritual it shall not lose its essential properties we shall see Christ then Iob 19. 26. it is an intellectual vision yet this is Cognitio apprehensiva not comprehensiva as the Schoolmen speak Iob 11. 2. There shall be fulnesse of fruition Frui est cum gaudio uti to requiesce with delight in the thing obtained therefore mediis uti fine frui dicimur Psal. 16. ult Vide Aquin. Sum. part 1. 2. Quaest. 11. Art 3 4. But though their solemn and substantial happinesse lies in God Psal. 17. 15. Psal. 73. 25 26. 1 Cor. 15. 28. yet it is an additional comfort to enjoy the company of the Saints all the Patriarchs Prophets Apostles and Martyrs Matth. 8. 11. Heb. 12. 22. We love to be in the Assemblies of the Saints on earth to pray fast and receive with them then we shall more delight in them when we shall converse with none but real Saints here the sheep and goats are mingled together and they perfect we shall all agree in the same work and aim communion with them will be constant The Communion between the blessed spirits will not be mental only but vocal 2 Cor. 12. 3. Paul speaks not so much of what he saw as what he heard whether every man shall be understood by others in his own tongue or whether they shall speak Hebrew as Act. 26. 14. is uncertain The place of this happinesse is the highest heavens farre above all heavens a place that no Philosopher ever wrote of a place which God from all eternity appointed to be his throne where he would shew all his glory and for a receptacle of his Saints The society the Saints shall there have are innumerable multitude of elect Angels and all the glorified Saints which God hath called out of the world All their knowledge shall be by vision sight not by faith discourse the will perfectly conformable to God the affections which have any perturbation shall cease as hope desire care grief love and joy shall continue the whole Church shall then see and enjoy God immediately and this vision and fruition of God is properly heaven First Vision they shall see his face Mat. 5. 8. The happinesse of heaven is often exprest by knowledge they shall see God it is called the beatifical vision 1. All the faculties shall be glorified the minde is the most noble faculty the soul enjoyes pure content in the contemplation of any truth Psal. 19. 10. 2. Our fruition increaseth by light as our light is so is our love Iohn 4. 10. God presents himself immediately to the understanding 1 Cor. 13. 9. 1 Iohn 3. 2. Secondly Fruition they shall enjoy God possesse him he shall be all in all They shall not see him with bodily eyes so the Deity cannot be seen but with the soul so far as the understanding can be enlarged it doth simul semel behold all the glorious perfections of God Christ and the Trinity knows him as he knows us for the kinde 1 Cor. 13. 12. The true Christian is thus disposed toward heaven he prizeth it above all things it is his inheritance portion he conceives of it as a place where God doth give himself to him fully 2. He would willingly be there it is the end of his race and hope 2 Cor. 5. 1. if he might enjoy all the benefits of this world for ever according to his desire he would willingly leave all to be with Christ. 3. He hath his conversation in heaven travels the way that leads to it The way to obtain eternal life 1. We must seek it of God in an earnest and serious way Matth. 11. 12. Luke 16. 16. 2 Pet. 1. 10. it is called striving 1 Cor. 9. 24 25. We strive for an incorruptible crown saith Paul See Phil. 2. 2. We must take great care lest in this we come short 1 Cor. 9. ult 3. We should take heed of our darling sin 1 Cor. 9. 26 27. 4. We must be guided in this life by the counsel of God Psal. 73. 24. 5. We should have our conversation in heaven before hand 6. We should keep our spirits in a continual readinesse Luke 12. 36 37. Col. 1. 12. Because all that handle the Commonplace of the glory of heaven handle that Question Whether the Saints there shall have the like degree of happinesse therefore I shall speak something of it The generality of the Fathers Schoolmen and modern Divines are for diversity of degrees The Papists lay the degrees of glory on the several merits of men and tell us of seven Crowns This preheminence of glory the Schoolmen term Aureola that is an Additament of felicity to that essential glory in the vision of God which they term Aurea This Aureola or Coronet to be added to the Crown of glory they ascribe to three sorts of persons to Virgins to Martyrs and to Doctors or Prophets Vide Aquin. Supplem 3. Part. Quaest. 96. Artic. 1 2 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13. God rewards a man not propter but secundum opera according to the matter of his work so shall be the substance of his reward according to the manner of his work the
were Transcribere animas publish their own faults Dr Preston They dispraise all mankinde abase man and make him the vilest of all creatures except the devils 1 Tim. 1. 13. Revel 22. 8. o Matth. 9. 9. The Writers of the Scriptures wrote them when the world bare greatest hatred against them and yet never any durst write a Book against Moses in his time or against the Gospel in these dayes Acts 4. 13. Dan. 1. Exod. 5. 2. Levit. 18. 3. Ezek. 8. p Solls Canonicis d●b●tur fides Caeteris omnibus judicium Lutherus q Incredibilis quaedam planè divina conspiratio atque concordia tot virorum qui diversis locis temporibus linguis occasionibus sacra volu mina conscripserunt ut non tam ipsi Scriptores diversi quam uuius Scriptoris diversi calami fuisse videantur Bellar. Tom. 10. d● verbo Dei l. 1 c. 2. Amicae sunt Scripturarum lites The Socinians hold Dari in Scriptura res leviores minoris nullius momenti in quibus Scriptores sacri facilè errare potuerint dissidere inter se atque pugnare whom Hoornbeck in his Antisocinianismus confutes l. 1. c. 1. controv 1. Sect. 1. 2. c. This is one of the three hundred sixty seven places or as others ●eckon three hundred and seventy which are cited out of the Old Testament in the New Dr Prideaux on Acts 23. 5. See Bifield on 1 Pet. 1. 16 r Ezechiel prophetans in Babylone concordat cum Ieremia prophetante in Iudaea See Dr Hals Passion Sermon 2. Arguments extrinsecal acts of God and works of his providence about the Scriptures Num. 11. 9. 20. 10. Mark 16. 20. Joh. 3. 2. 2. 23. 10. 37. Acts 5. 12. Joh. 5. 36. In caecitate surditate natis Christus videndi audiendiusum non quem amiserant reddidit sed largitus est omniuo novum Deambulavit super ●umentes undas ut nos super solidam terram imperavit ventis mari tempestati parucrunt dicto Expulit daemones ex humanis corporibus abstulit l●pram roboravit membra compages humani corporis dissolutas sanavit omne genus morborum reddidit lucem vitam mortuis Lod. Viv. de veritate Fidei Christ. lib. 2. cap. 12. Many of the Bibles were taken from Christians and burnt in those cruel persecutions ●nder Dioclesian and Maximinianus his Collegue Deut. 31. 24. Jer. 36. 23 27 28. ult t Veritas odiunt parit u Cartwright in his Preface to the Confutation of the Rhem. Annotations on the New Testament Tertullian said That Gospel must needs be good which Nero persecuted x Many delivered the Bible to the Emperour to be burned whence the name of Proditores Traditores Bibliorum Sanguis Martyrum semen Ecclesiae Foecundi sunt Martyrum cineres Vide Lod. Viv. de verit 1. Fid. lib. 2. cap. 19. de verb. 1. People by seeing the sufferings of the Martyrs came more to look into and understand that profession then formerly which made them patiently endure such torments Qui enim scit illum intelligere potest non nisi grande aliquod bonum à Nerone damnatum Terrul Apolog. cap. 5. A precious Gospel that was purchased by the bloud of Christ and sealed with the bloud of Martyrs Miracula quae sunt à Deo mu●tis notis distinguuntur à fictis miraculis daemo●●m Nam daemon ut qui Deum odit nos à Deo vellet avertere omnia quaecunque potest Divina aemulatur Et tanto accuratius miracula quod videt eam rem maximè ad potentiam Divinitatis accedere quae est supra naturam Lod. Viv. de verit Fid Christ. l. ● c. 13. Miracula has habent notas rei ipsius veritas essentia qualitas modus actionis causa efficiens causa movens ante rem finis Ad hos tanquam ad lapides Lydios examinanda sunt miracula tum Christi sanctorum nempè divina tum ficta diabolica Idem ibid. vide plura y They are Miranda non miracula A ma●vel or wonder is nature mightily improved a miracle is nature totally cross'd if not contradicted If miracles be ceased yet marvels will never cease Dr Hals Select Thoughts z There were six hundred thousand witnesses of the Seas rising up in wals Deut. 4. 3. See Mat. 27. 45. a See Dr Willet on Exod. 7. 9. what a miracle is and how true and false miracles differ And Dr Prideaux on Psal. 9. 16. the distinction between miracles signs prodigies and Portenta out of Aquinas Christi miracula tanta tam manisesta suerunt orbi ●t nulla unquam gens fuerit vel tam impudens vel tam Christo inimica infensa ut ea sit negare ausa Itaque Gentiles Iudaei Agareni omnes grandia mirabilia esse edita opera consitentur sed alii alias in causas referunt Agareni Deum authorem illorum fatentur Iudaei Gentiles daemonem Sed res ipsa clamat apertissimè Deo authore atque approbatore illa omnia esse acta Lod. Viv. de verit Fid. Christ. l. 2. c. 13. b When many agree in a thing and they wise and learned men and one generation after another this is much All those generally which professe Christian Religion consent in this main truth To which testimony these things give weight 1. To them were committed the Oracles of God Ro. 3. 2 2. They have constantly professed the truth in great misery whereas by the only denying thereof they might have been partakers both of liberty and rule 3. Notwithstanding the High-Priests and others persecuted the Prophets while they lived they yet received their writings as Prophetical and Divine c Vide Croii observat in Novum Testamentum cap. 15. By universal tradition we know much better that those Books were written by Christs Disciples who are sufficient witnesses of what he taught then the Aristotelians know that these were Aristotles works or the Academicks knew Plato's since Christians have both kept them with more care and in the acceptance of them used more caution as thinking them so much more important My L. Falkl. Reply concerning the infallibility of the Church of Rome part 2. Ecclesia totum mundum convertit sanguine oratione Luther Christian Religion's chiefest glory is that it increaseth by being persecuted and hath that advantage of the Mahumetan which came in by force In the two Dominions of France and the seventeen Provinces within the space of little more then five years under Charles the ninth of France and Philip the second of Spain two hundred thousand suffered as Martyrs See Foxes Martyrology Meteranus de rebus Belgicis and Fullers prophane State of the Duke of Alva p. 440. d A Martyr answered Bishop Bonner My Lord I cannot dispute but I can die for the truth Iohn Hus said when he had a Cap of paper wherein were 3 devils painted with the title Haerefiarcha Shall I grudge to wear this paper Cap for
2. 19. * This acception of the word Catholick can hardly be proved out of ancient Writers Ecclesia Catholica vocatur 1. Respectu Ecclesiae Veteris Testamenti 2. Respectu particularium Ecclesiaru● 2. Respectu Catholic● Fidei Gerh. loc common This word Catholick is not found in all the Bible yet the sense being there it may be retained the word is the same both in Latine and Greek and signifies General It is used 1. Unproperly and so it signifies as much as Orthodox in which sense sometimes the Fathers use it this is the Catholick Faith 2. Properly so it signifies universal and so it is here taken Putant multi Catholicam dictam Ecclesiam ut distingueretur ab Iudaeorum Synagogis terrae Canaan limitibus circumscriptis Sed parum id verisimile fit cum Apostolorum aetate non in Palaestina modò sed etiam extra illam religione fuerint Iudaei quin plures quàm in Palaestina Eoque magis sit ver●simile Catholicae nomen opponi coepisse ut Ecclesia quae toto orbe obtineret distingueretur à conventiculis haereticorum s●h●smaticorum quales Novationarum postea Donatistarum Vossius de tribus Symbolis The Church is called Holy in three respects 1. In respect of the Righteousnesse and Holinesse of Christ imputed which may be termed Sanctitas imputata 2. In respect of those degrees of sanctification wherewith it is endowed in this life which may be termed Sanctitas inchoata 3. In respect of the Rule and Law by which it is directed to serve God in Holinesse and Righteousnesse which therefore may be termed Sanctitas imperata Dr. Chaloners Credo Ecclesiam sanctam Catholicam part 2. sect 1. Ubicunque Dei verbum syncere praedicari atque audiri ubi Sacramonta ex Christi instituto administrari videmus illic aliquam esse Dei Ecclesiam nullo modo ambigendum est quando ejus promissio fallere non potest Mat. 18. 10. Calvin Instit. lib. 4. c. 1. Symbola Ecclesiae dignoscendae verbi praedicationem Sacramentorumque observationem posuimus Nam haec nusquam esse possunt quin fructificent Dei benedictione prosperentur Non dico ubicunque praedicatur verbum illic fructum mox exoriri sed nullibi recipt statam habere sedem nisi ut suam efficaciam proferat Id. ibid. Si solus essem in toto orbe terrarum qui reti●erem verbum solus essem Ecclesia rectè judicarem de reliquo toto mundo quod non esset Ecclesia Luth. Loc. Commun Class 1 cap. 37. de Ecclesia Luthers holy pains preaching and writing was not a Novation but a Renovation not a planting of a new Religion but a renewing and replanting of the ancient Religion not an Institution but a Restitution of the truth of God not an Introduction but Reduction of the true and holy Religion Dr Taylor on Rom. 1. 18. Rev. 2. 3. Epistola Pauli ad Romanos est epistola Pauli in Romanos Faius Vide Poly. Vir. hist. A●g l. 6. Shew me that man who before the Councel of Trent held all the points of your Faith as they are now taught and received in your Church Dr Featleys Case for the Spectacles c. 4. See more there Bishop Iewel in a Sermon at Pauls Crosse made a publick challenge to all the Papists in the world to produce but one clear and evident Testimony out of Scripture or any Father or other famous Writers within six hundred years after Christ for any one of the many Articles which the Romanists at this day maintain against us and upon good proof of any such allegation he promised to reconcile himself to Rome Papists call themselves Catholicks but falsly being both heretical in Doctrin and Idolatrous in worship a Catholick is a right beleever all true beleevers in the world make but one Catholick Church Lyford Papists call themselves Roman Catholicks Catholick is universal Roman particular that is of the whole world this of one City So the Roman Catholick is as much as to ●ay Particular universal that is no● Catholick Catholick Downs Defence of former Answers against the Reply of N. N. See more there The Mahometists at this day assume the name of Saracens as your men do the name of Catholicks as if they came from Sarah the free woman Abrahams true and lawful wife when in truth they took their first beginning fram Agar the bond woman Dr Featleys Case for the Spectacles Chap. 6. Ecclesia Catholica universalis est tota est per orbem diffusa ac dissem●nata est Rom ana pars solum est particularis est Romae Pomaeriis circumscripta Extra Catholicam salus omnino nulla extra Romanam servati multi servan●● Crakanth Defens Eccles. Anglic. Ut Donatistae nullam Ecclesiam praeter Africanam ita Papistae nullam agnoscant Ecclesiam Catholicam praeter Romanam quàm absurdè Catholicam Romanam quasi dicas universalem particul●rem vocitant Down Diatrib de Antichristo part 1. l. 3. c. 6. * See Rev. 18. 4. 2 Chro. 11. 14. Hos. 4. 15. 1 Cor. 10. 14. 2 Cor. 6. 17 1 Tim 6. 3. 1 John 5. 21. Vide Stresonem in Act. 14. 48. Conc. 162. pag. 528 529. If any man fall away from that Church which is not Christ his Spouse he cannot be charged justly with Apostasie Nullus pudor est ad meliora transire It is no shame to change for the better we left not Bethel the house of God until it became Bethaven the house of iniquity Dr. Hampton on 1 John 2. 19. See more there Vire●us ●oc suasit suadeo etiam ut ab illa Ecclesia non solum abstineamus quae haeresibus idololatria polluta est conventus habeamus ubi possum●s in quibus duo aut tres congregentur in nomine Christi si plures non possint Novam tum Ecclesiam non colligimus sed veteri nos adjungimus Rivet Grotianae Discus Dialysis Sect. 5. Certè praecipuum communionis vinculum missa est quam nos ut maximum sacrilegium abominamur Calv. Instit. l. 4. c. 2. Nos dicimus Ecclesiam bano aut illam posse errare ut Ecclesiam Corinthiorum Galatarum Ephesiorum reliquas hujusmodi nec errare modò verumetiam obrui tandem erroribus desicere quod ipsa experientia in multis demonstravit Dicimus autem veram Christi Ecclesiam Catholicam quae est electorum tantùm errare non posse si errores mortiseros insanabiles intelligamus at in levioribus rebus posse errare ●empe qua non simpliciter absolutè ad Ecclesiam necessariae quaeque fundamentum non evertunt Whitak controvers 2. de Ecclesia quaest 4. cap. 1. 1 Tim. 6. 12. 2 Tim. 3. 17. Gen. 20. 1 Sam. 9. 9. Ezek. 3. 1. Ezek. 34. 2. 1 Pet. 5. 1. Luk. 12. 24. 1 Cor. 4. 1. 1 Cor. 11. 10. Revel 1. 20. Quid magis Ecclesiae curandum quam ut idoneus praesit Episcopus At in Ambrosio obstare visum quod B.
perferre nequeant Exclamant gemitus edunt vincuntur enim dolore quia deest illis inspirata patientia Lactant. de Iustitia l. 5. Vide plura ibid. Pax itaque corporis est ordinata temperatura partium Pax animae irrationalis ordinata requies appetitionum Pax animae rationalis ordinata cognitionis actionisque consensio Pax corporis animae ordinata vita salus animantis Pax hominis mortalis est Dei immortalis ordinata in fide sub aeterna lege obedientia Pax hominum ordinata concordia Pax domus ordinata imperandi atque obediendi concordia cohabitantium Pax civitatis ordinata imperandi atque obediendi concordia civium Pax coelestis civitatis ordinatissima concordissima societas ●ruendi Deo invicem in Deo Pax omnium rerum tranquillitas ordinis August de civit Dei lib. 19. cap. 13. Vide Thes. Theol. Salmur part 1. De perseverantia fidei The sure mercies of David Isa. 55. 7. * Quae promissi● non potest esse conditio nata ut quidam excipiunt quia cond●tio esset nugatoria quasi diceret Dabo ut non recedatis si non recedatis ut perseveretis si perseveretis Rivet Disp. 11. de persev sanct Vide Croc. in Aug. confes Quaest. 4. c. 67. 2 Cor. 5. 14. Phil. 3. 7. We must deny our own natural wisdome in the things of God Prov. 3. 5. Christianity is a school sect of men that deny themselvs on religious reason See Luk. 24. 27 28 29. We should not only look to the setling of our particular assurance but also cast up our reckoning what religion may cost us Matth. 19. 21. Psal. 45. 10. Rom. 8. 3. 29. 15. 2 Cor. 8. 9. He denied himself for us in the joyes of heaven and in the glory of his Father See M. Hilders on Ps. 51. Lect. 74. M. Ball of the Cov. ch 11. D. Gouge on Ephes. 6. 14. One is said to please one when the chief cause which swayes him to a thing is the consideration of his will made known unto him that he would have it so It respects three several things 1. In reference to the act of any grace it implies truth opposite to hypocrisie prayer which proceeds not out of feigned lips truth in the inward parts Heb. 10. 22. Repentance Faith Love must be unfeigned 2. In reference to the object it takes it entirely thorowly without reservation loves God all in God his holinesse as well as his mercy hates all sinne and all in sinne Psal. 119. 6. 12. 7. 12. 8. 3. In respect of the motive or end singlenesse onenesse of heart Isa. 44. 20. Jam. 4. The comfort of all the Scriptures right to all the creatures benefit of all the Ordinances belongeth to the upright M. Harris The same boldnesse that innocency gives us before men sincerity will give us at the judgement of God * He is the same at all times when goodnesse is persecuted he is good when evil is in credit he is against it in all companies places he is the same in secret and publick because God is alwayes present and the same and so apprehended by the true hearted Revel 21. 3. See Mr Bridges Sermon entituled A vindication of Ordinances on Deut. 18. 15. D Hill on Eph. 4. 15. p. 18 19. M. Manton on Jam. 1. 19. pag. 153 154. M. Symonds Christian plea at the end of sight faith The Familists talk of living in God and upon God immediately they call Ordinances by way of scorn forms they are so if they be rested in but otherwise they are means of serving pleasing and obeying God M. Laurence his vindication of the Scriptures and Christian Ordinances See his Plea for the use of Gospel-ordinances In my first Book I have spoken of reading and meditating in the Word See Isa. 55. 20. Prov. 22. 17. Nehem. 8 3. We must hear the Word with faith Heb. 4. 2. that brings every truth to the soul with divine authority 1 Thes. 2. 13. Heb. 12. 25. and causeth the soul thence to receive it with assurance 1 Thess. 1. 5. and to submit to it See Job 5. ult Luk. 24. 15 30 Obedient hearing is made a sign of grace John 10. ●● See Joh. 8. 27. A Song or Psalm is a composition of words in strict numbers fit to be uttered in a tunable voice or with an instrument David made many of these The word Psalme is usually limited to signifie a holy Song Fuisse in usua apud Christianos ab ipso exordio nascentis E●clefiae ut in conventibus Ecclesiasticis Psalmodia primum locum haberet cognosci potest ex loco illo Apostoli 1 Cor. 14. 26. Item ex Tertulliano in libro de velandis virginibus extremo Bellarm. de bonis operibus lib. 1. cap. 14. That singing of Psalmes is a duty of the Gospel see Mr Cotton of Singing of Psalmes cap. 4. and M. Manton on Jam. 5. 13. and M. Fords Singing of Psalms a Christian Duty All the while the burnt-offering was in offering they bestowed themselves in singing and gladnesse as we sing a Psalm in the celebration of our Sacrament warrantably by this Mr Hildersam Heron. Singing of Hymns is by some counted an Ordinance that is any person of the Congregation exercising their own gifts should bring an Hymne and sing it in the Congregation all the rest being silent and giving audience M. Edw. See Dr Willet on Exod. 15. pag. 192. See 1 Chron. 15. 27 28. 17. 4 5. Baptisteria multae Ecclesiae retinent quaedam tollunt Organis p●eumaticis quaedam utuntur aliae non utuntur Nullae quod sciam ut Antichristianas Ceremonias damnant Crocius in August Confes. Quaest. 2. cap. 29. Hinc fracta illa Musica quae intelligentiam excludit abesse debet à sacris exercitiis pictatis saltem quae cum aliis habemus Ames Medul Theol. l. 2. c. 9. Hujusmodi Musica instrumenta magis animum movent ad delectationem quam per ea formetur interius bona dispositio In veteri autem Testamento usus erat talium instrumentorum tum quia populus erat magis durus carnalis Unde erat per hujusmodi instrumenta provocandus sicut per promissiones terrenas tum etiam quia hujusmodi instrumenta corporalia aliquid figurabant Aquin. 2a 2ae q 91. Art 2. ad 4 tum Musicae Organicae aec instrumentalis usus ita est permissus ac privatim inter Christianos indifferens ut multo satius sit publicè ●● eo abstinere quam eam introducere aut continuare quia majus subest periculum quam aedificatio Rivet in Cathol Orthodox Talis debet esse Cantus qui intelligentiam verborum non impediat sed potius juvet Proinde quo modo probari potest illa fracta clamosa fragesa Musica in Templis qua ita canitur ut nihil penitus intelligas aut percipias praet●r harmoniam Musicam Zanchius in Ephes. 5. 19. Minimè omnium
Saviour had spiritually so he would corporally or externally manifest his power over Devils This possessing was nothing but the dwelling and working of the Devil in the body one was demoniack and lunatick too because the Devil took these advantages against his body and this hath been manifested by their speaking of strange tongues on a sudden The causes of this are partly from the Devils malice and desire to hurt us and partly from our selves who are made the slaves of Satan and partly from God who doth it sometime out of anger as he bid the Devil go into Saul or out of grace that they may see how bitter sin is Vide Voet. Thes. de Energ Quest. 5. The meaning of Christs temptation by Satan and how we shall know Satans temptations Matth. 4. The Devil carried Christs body upon the pinacle of the Temple It is hard to say whether this were done in deed or vision only although it seem to be real because he bid him to throw himself down headlong but now this was much for our comfort that we see Christ himself was tempted and that to most hideous things Satan was overcome by him Damascene of old and some of our Divines say That Satan in his temptations of Adam and Christ could not have accesse to their inward man to tempt them therefore he tempted Adam by a Serpent and audible voice and Christ by a visible Landskip of the world Satans temptations say some may be known by the suddennesse violence and unnaturalnesse of them All these are to be found in the motions of sinne which arise from ones own heart original sinne will vent sinne suddenly Isa. 57. 20. Violently Ier. 8. 6. and it will break forth into unnatural lusts blasphemies against God and murders against men Mark 7. 21 22. Mr Liford saith if they seize upon us with terrour and affrightment because our own conceptions are free it is very difficult to distinguish them When thoughts often come into the minde of doing a thing contrary to the Law of God it is an argument Satan is at hand The Devil tempts som●●o sinne under the shew of vertue Iob. 16. 2. Phil. 3. 6. Omnis tentatio est assimila●●●●o●i say the Schoolmen Some under the hope of pardon by stretching t 〈…〉 ds of Gods mercy lessening of sinne propounding the example of the multitud 〈…〉 e●ting before men what they have done and promising them repentance hereafter before they die The difference between Gods temptations and Satans they differ First In the matter the matter of Gods temptations is ever good as either by prosperity adversity or commandments by chastisements which from him are ever good but the matter of Satans temptations is evil he solicits us to sinne Secondly In the end the end of Gods temptation is to humble us and do us good but of Satans to make us dishonour God Thirdly In the effect God never misseth his end Satan is often disappointed A question is made by some Whether Satan may come to the same man with the same tentation after he is conquered Mr Capel resolves it that he may part 1. of Tentation cha 7. pag. 132 133. It is also a question An omnia peccata committantur tentante Diabolo John 8. 41 44. Every work of sin is a work of falshood and all falshood is from the Devil And likewise it is questioned Whether man might not have sinned if there had not been a Tempter To that it is answered he might for Satan fell without a tempter the angelical nature was more perfect then the humane 2. Nature is now so depraved that we cannot but sin Iam. 1. 14. Non eget daemone tentatore qui sibi factus est daemon saith Parisiensis Fourthly What is meant by delivering up to Satan 1 Cor. 5. 5 Some with Chrysostome think it was a corporeal delivering of him so that he was vexed of him by a disease or otherwise and that they say is meant by destruction of the flesh and so expound that Mark 6. They had power over the unclean spirits that is not onely to expel them but to put them in whom they pleased but this is not approved therefore others make it to be a casting out of the company of the faithful and so from all the good things that are appropriated unto that condition and therefore to the destruction of the flesh they expound to be meant of his corruption for so flesh is taken in Scripture Sixthly Whether the Devils may appear 1 Sam. 28. He which appeared was 1. Subject to the Witches power therefore it was not the true Samuel 2. If Samuel had been sent of God he would not have complained of trouble no more then Moses did Matth. 17. 3. The true Samuel would not have given countenance to so wicked a practice to the Magick Art 4. True Samuel would not have suffered himself to be worshipped as this did 5. Saul never came to be with the soul of Samuel in blisse yet he saith 'to morrow shalt thou be with me 6. God refused to answer Saul by Prophet Vision Urim or Thummim therefore he would not answer him by Samuel raised from the dead 7. True Samuel after his death could not lie nor sinne Heb. 12. 23. He said Saul caused him to ascend * and troubled him if he had been the true Samuel Saul could not have caused him to ascend if not he lyed in saying he was Samuel and that he troubled him If God had sent up Samuel the dead to instruct the living Why is this reason given of the denial of the Rich mans request to have one sent from the dead because if they would not believe Moses and the Prophets They would not believe though one rose from the dead In so doing the Lord should seem to go against his own order The souls of Saints which are at rest with the Lord are not subject to the power or inchantment of a Witch But Samuel was an holy Prophet now at rest with the Lord. Bellarmine answereth That Samuel came not by the command of the Witch but by the command of God and that rather impeached then approved Art Magick which he proveth because the Witch was troubled But the Scripture expresly teacheth that her trouble was because it was the King who having lately suppressed Witches had now in disguised apparel set her on work and so deceived her Bellarmine objecteth The Scripture still calleth him that appeared Samuel as if it were not an ordinary thing in Scripture to call things by the names of that which they represent or whose person they bear the representations of the Cherubims are called the Cherubims And things are often called in Scripture not according to the truth of the thing or Scriptures judgement thereof but according to the conceit and opinion of others The Angels which appeared to the Patriarchs are called men Gen. 18. the Idols of the Heathen are called gods Gen. 25. because
they were so esteemed by those which worshipt them First We must walk warily and watchfully against Satans temptations We should be sober 1 Thess. 5. 6 8. Strong 1 Cor. 16. 13. 1 Pet. 5. 8 9. Watchfull 2 Tim. 4. 5. Matth. 26. 41. Prov. 4. 23. Wise Heb. 5. 14. Prov. 2. 9 10. and of good courage Josh. 1. 9. 1 Chron. 28. 10. Taking unto our selves the whole armour of God Ephes. 6. 12 13 14. that we may be able to stand in the evil day Secondly Believe not Satan though he flatter 2 Cor. 11. 3. 1 Tim. 2. 14. Foar him not though he rage 1 Pet. 5. 8 9. Hearken not to him though he tell the truth 2 Cor. 11. 14. Acts 16. 17. For if he transform himself into an Angel of light it is to s●duce He assaulted our first Parents in innocency and Christ himself 1 Cor. 7. 5. But 1. He cannot hurt the people of God 1 Iohn 5. 18. 2. All his assaulting is by leave Luk. 22. 32. See Matth. 8. 31. he hath not onely a general warrant to tempt but a new commission for every act of temptation Compare Iob 1. 12. with 2. 6. 3. God looks after him still 4. This opposition of Satan is more for the honour and safety of our spiritual life 5. He is a foiled enemy Christ hath conquered him Col. 2. 15. 6. Wait till death and thou shalt then have a full conquest over him 1 Pet. 5. 11. Rom. 16. 20. Thirdly See Gods great goodnesse who offers us repentance and Christ when he absolutely refused the Devils Fourthly See the exact justice of God no greatnesse can priviledge one from punishment none can be greater nearer holier then Angels yet if they sinne they shall be tumbled out of heaven Therefore we must leave all sin if we desire to go to heaven it would not hold the Devils when they had sinned No unclean thing shall come thither Fifthly Be not like the Devils then thou art one of his children Wicked men are called sons of Belial Certain particular sins make us like the Devil 1. A liar or murderee is like to him John 8. 44. 2. A slanderer or an accuser of another 3. Envious and malicious persons as Witches 4. He that tempts others or perswades them to sin the Devil is called the tempter Eve spoke for the Devil therefore she hath two punishments more then man sorrow in childe-bed and subjection to her Husband 5. He that goes about to hinder others from godlinesse as Elimas Act. 13. Thou childe of the Devil 6. A drunkard 1 Sam. 1. 15 16. 7. A proud person especially take heed of pride in spiritual Illuminations and Gifts Sixthly See the folly of those who do the Devil service how ill will he repay them Never did any trust in the Devil but he deceived him even for the base things of this life Witnesse all Witches his most devoted and professed servants if ever he made any one of them wealthy all Ages are not able to shew one Seventhly Satans great businesse in the world is to study men Hast thou considered my servant Iob When he comes near to us in his temptations there is something in us to take part with him 1 Iohn 5. 6. there is abundance of self-love self●lattery and natural blindenesse 2 Cor. 2. 11. He hath a strange power to make all his suggestions take with us they are called fiery Darts fire will quickly take We are led Captive to doe his will He comes to us sometimes in the Name of God and can transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. He can raise up in mens spirits strange ravishments and can swallow them up with joy as well as sorrow CHAP. VIII 2. Of MAN VVHen God had created Heaven and Earth he rested not in Heaven nor any heavenly thing neither in Earth nor any earthly thing but only in man because he is a heavenly thing for his soul and earthly in regard of his body Prometheus fashioned the bodies of men out of clay but was fain to steal fire from Heaven for the quickning of them with souls Man is a living creature made after the image of God Gen. 1. 26. The efficient cause of man was the holy Trinity God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost In the Creation of man three things are considerable 1. The consultation of the Trinity Let us make man Gen. 1. 26 Quia rationalis creatura quasi cum consilio facta videretur 2. The work made not an Hermaphrodite as some would have 〈…〉 Adam comprehended both sexes but he is distinguished into both sexes 〈…〉 lows after male and female The man was made of the dust of the earth the woman was made of the mans rib to shew the near and social conjunction between man and wife She was not made of his head because she should not rule over him nor of his feet because she should not be servilely subject to him So Aquinas 3. The patern of it the image of God 1 Cor. 11. 7. Col. 3. 10. Bellarmine distinguisheth between an image and similitude the first saith he consists in natural endowments the other in supernatural graces rather image and similitude represent an exact likenesse These two words are in an inverted order joyned together Chap. 5. 3. Iam. 3. 9. mentions only likenesse leaving our image which is a certain sign that there is no difference between them but that the second is added to insinuate the perfection of the image Mans primitive and pure condition was the enjoying of Gods image Gen. 1. 26. his Apostate condition is the losse of Gods image his renewed condition is the repairing of Gods image 1 Cor. 3. ult his blessed condition in the state of glory is the perfection of Gods image Psal. 17. 15. The image of God in Adam and the Saints is not specifically distinct though his image was conveyed to him by God immediately and ours by a Mediator Rom. 8. 29. the old image is renewed in his people Col. 3. 10. Man is said to be after Gods image Gen. 1. 27. in that he was indued with perfect knowledge and with true holinesse and righteonsnesse Col. 3. 10. Ephes. 4. 24. There is a four-fold image or likenesse First Where there is a likenesse with an absolute agreement in the same nature and so the Son of God is called the expresse image of the Father Secondly By participation of some universal common nature so a man and beast are like in the common nature of animality Thirdly By proportion only as when we say the Governor of a Commonwealth and the Pilot of a ship are like Fourthly By agreement of order when one thing is a patern or exemplar and the other thing is made after it Now when man is said to be like God it is meant in those two last wayes Christ was the essentiall image of God Mans was Imago representantis aliter Imago imperatoris