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A36185 The nature of the two testaments, or, The disposition of the will and estate of God to mankind for holiness and happiness by Jesus Christ ... in two volumes : the first volume, of the will of God : the second volume, of the estate of God / by Robert Dixon. Dixon, Robert, d. 1688. 1676 (1676) Wing D1748; ESTC R12215 658,778 672

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c. and when they were gone out of sight they erected their Statues and conceited that the power of their Numens was confined to those Stocks and Stones and raised Temples to their honour that they might keep them near to themselves and have recourse to them in all their necessities As the Children of Israel who though they heard Gods voice and saw fire upon the Mount and the Pillar of a Cloud and of fire in the Red Sea as visible tokens of his presence yet because the Thunder and Lightning was terrible they could not endure it and because Moses was gone up to the Mountain for forty daies they gave him for gone whom they wished to speak unto them and now they lacked some visible Gods such as they saw in Egypt and forced Aaron to make them a Golden Calf and cried saying Make us Gods to go before us for as for this Moses we know not what is become of him And when they had their Idols to their mind they said with joy These be thy Gods O Israel Thus the greatest part of Mankind though they had in them by the light of Nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sufficient knowledge of God yet they glorified him not as God neither were thankful Ro. 1.21 c. but became vain in their imaginations and their foolish heart was darkened professing themselves wise they became fools and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an Image made like unto corruptible Man and to Birds and four-footed Beasts and creeping things wherefore God gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts to dishonour their own Bodies between themselves who changed the Truth of God into a Lie and worshipped and served the Creature more than the Creatour who is blessed or evermore Amen And this carnal and gross humour cauled the opinion of carnal Gods and of a carnal worship by them of the true God Wherefore God knowing the dull temper of the Jews and their fond disposition of being like unto the rest of the World commanded them Altars and Sacrifices of Beasts and Birds to the true God which otherwise they would have erected and raised to false Gods Till the time of Reformation God winked at this Ignorance in them and the rest of the World and brought in by his Son the full revelation of the True God and his True worship in Spirit and in Truth The CONTENTS Natural Religion Supernatural Religion Revelation TITLE III. Of Religion ALL men being convinced that there is a God from what they are and from what is within their Souls and Bodies as also from the Magnificent Beautiful and Harmonious works of God in the World round about them and that he is most Powerful Wise Holy Just and Gracious c. It must necessarily follow that this God ought to be worshipped and served Natural Religion which is the Natural Religion due to God from all his Creatures who do also express it in one kind or other but more especially the Rational Creatures who are most able and most obliged to give unto God this their reasonable service and most especially Mankind who have most need and who stand in peculiar relation to God who made them but a little lower than the Angels and Lords of this Inferiour World and designed them for the Inheritance of Glory with Angels and Arch-Angels in heaven To which Estate they should have passed by Grace and Favour if they had kept his Law which he first gave them and then all their religious Applications to God should have been in the quality of Saints in Honour and Praise and Thanksgiving for evermore But since the First man did disobey and die all since do and suffer the same sin and death therefore all their religious Addresses to God must be made in the quality of Sinners and Sufferers Being therefore thus sinful and miserable in all their transactions from time to time with a Deity they have been complaining and bemoaning their condition and imploring relief and mercy to cleanse the stain of their Guilt and to remove their sorrow and plague and after pardon to return praise and thanks For this purpose they all along poured out their Supplications and offered their gifts and Sacrifices of their best things even of their Children sometimes by a blind zeal thinking to pacifie and attone if it might be the wrath of a provoked God This way of Service in their approaches to Heaven Nature prompted them unto even to do the best they could to purifie themselves and appease their Maker Yet even this they quickly forgot and performed the same Devotion to the Creatures that were below themselves and forsook their Creatour out of an idle fancy that they could not see him nor hear nor feel him because he was far above out of their sight and reach Therefore this Natural Information of Divine duty and worship did not do the work as is proved by the experience of Idolaters for some thousands of years Supernatural Religion Therefore it was necessary that there should be a supernatural Revelation from God to Man for his conduct and guidance in the way of Religion In order to which practice and the end of Salvation whereto it was to tend God that was in Christ reconciling the World unto himself revealed his Will what he would have done by Man and his Promises what was to be had of him for a Reward by degrees more and more till Christ came from the bosom of his Father who brought in all Perfection and taught us all things As namely 1. By common instinct unto all men 2. By special Impulse to the first Fathers 3. By Dreams and Visions to the Prophets 4. By Providences and Dispensations of all sorts 5. By Miracles and great Wonders 6. By Christ Jesus saying This is my welbeloved Son in whom I am well pleased hear ye him Heb. 1.1 So great is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past to our Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last daies spoken unto us by his Son whom he hath made Heir of all things That is Before the Law immediately By the Law Angels and Moses mediating By the Gospel Christ and his Spirit mediating Revelation The Subject of Gods Revelation all along more or less is Gods Bounty Blessedness and Mans Duty Holiness The Manner all along move or less is Instinct oral Instruction Writing in Tables Writing in Heart the Law Will Testament and Word of God This Divine commerce and interposure of Revelation of Gods Will is the true means of serving God aright which was never wanting in some degree sufficient to all that endeavoured after it But through Carelesness and Sensuality the greatest part of Mankind have been imposed upon by fantastical Dreams and magical Divinations of Astrologers Sooth-sayers Poets Philosophers Enchanters Prophets Priests Running to Oracles and Entrails of sacrificed Beasts and Flying of
be enlarged to all places in the World and that not after this nor that manner of outward and carnal worship but after the only manner of inward and spiritual Service John 4.24 for God was a Spirit and therefore the true worshippers of God should always worship him in Spirit and in Truth From hence therefore the world is given to understand the two great Doctrines First That the true worship of God is onely Spiritual Secondly That there is greater perfection in Christianity than in Judaism or Heathenism Worship Spiritual 1. That the True Worship of God is only Spiritual Religion is a Spiritual service that is Prayers Praisings Eucharists Acts of Love Acts of Faith Acts of Hope Acts of Humility Fasting Alms c. Excepting the two Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper whose effects are Spiritual Sense mysterious Rites easie and number smallest I dare in meekness and charity challenge all perswasions to shew me if they can in the whole Digest of the Christian Law any other external Rite or Ceremony enjoyned or that is necessary that it should be enjoyned Reason Because as the Christian Religion intends wholly an exclusion of all Mosaick Ceremonies made by God so it will not admit of a Body of new and superinduced Rites made by men for they are or may be as much against the Analogy of the spiritual Worship of Jesus Christ as the body of Rites made by Moses and more because they were made by the Will of God but these meerly by the Wills of men Ceremonies The Ceremonies of the Christian Services may be Practised but must be no part of Religion it self but either the Circumstances thereof or the imperate acts of some moral Virtue As thus The Christian must be in some place when he prays and that place may and it is fit it should be determined by Authority for the publick prayers and thither he must go and yet for his private prayers he may go any where else And so for preaching And because the Religious actions of a Christian are finite therefore they must be done as in a place so at a time and that time may and it is fit it should be determined by Authority and then he must do his Devotions in publick at that time only but for his private devotions he may do them at any time else The Religious Actions of a Christian must be in some posture of his Body and that posture may be appointed and it is fit it should be appointed by Authority for the publick worship as to kneel or stand or bow c. and then he must do it in that posture that he is commanded in that publick place and yet he may use what postures he pleases at any other time or place for his private devotions And when the Christian comes to the publick place at the time appointed for Publick Prayer his prayers though in the Spirit must be of some form or manner of expressions by words and that form and manner of expressions by words may and it is fit it should be ordained by Authority for the whole Congregation openly and yet he may be and is at liberty to use what other form he pleases in his private addresses to God And this is enough to satisfie all those that have the true spirit of Christ who though he had no need of the Circumcision of the Law nor yet of the Baptism of the Gospel because there was no superfluity of evil to him to be cut off nor any stain of sin to be washed away yet he suffered himself to be circumcised and baptized and did obey that Law which he came to abolish and was subject to those Powers that were then over him in the world and quarrelled at nothing but was willing to fulfill all Righteousness And if our Fanaticks had the true spirit of Christ they would do as he did and be obedient to his Laws and to the Laws of the Powers that God hath set over them The Differences betwixt the Mosaick Rites under the Law and the Christian Rites Difference of Mosaick and of Christian Rites besides what Christ himself hath ordained under the Gospel are these 1. The Mosaick Rites were only appointed by God but these Christian Rites are appointed by men 2. They were necessary parts of that Religion that then was so far as it was discerned but these are not 3. The Mosaick Ceremonies did oblige every where but the Christian only in publick 4. They were integral parts of the Jewish Religion but these are but circumstances and investitures of our Religious Actions 5. They were done all of them in the spirit of Bondage and great fear but ours are done in the Spirit of Liberty and great Love They were lasting as long as that Religion was to last but ours are alterable though our Religion be everlasting 7. They were many and burdensome and very costly for they were at greater charges to buy Cattel c. for the Sacrifices and the Priests and Levites were as Butchers and Porters and Cooks to knock down Oxen or cut the throats of Calves c. and slay them c. but ours are few and easie and cheap but neither theirs nor ours did or ever will please God The sum is the Ceremonies of Christians they may be the accidents of their worship they must be no more but a just investiture of Time Place Form Habit and Posture He that would have his body decently vested must not wear five and twenty Cloaks a Stole and a Tunick will suffice some thing for warmth and something for ornament does well But as the tender and delicate Woman that will scarcely vouchsafe to set her foot upon the ground for delicateness and tenderness and thinks no ornaments curious enough for her head and the rest of her body makes it the work of half a day to dress and deck her self is a slave to her fine trinkets and thinks neither her Soul nor Body but her habiliments to be the principal part of her care So they that are superstitious and over much righteous in Will-worship and count no formalities nor bodily exercises enough to set out their Devotions are servants to their Beads and trumperies and think not of the substance of Religion but make the out sides thereof the principal part of their care Church of Rome Thus the Church of Rome whose Ceremonies are described in a great Book in folio Quem mea vix totum Bibliotheca capit and my purse strings will not stretch to buy it And although by such means Religion is made pompous and ap●●o allure them that admire their gay nothing yet then it also spends their Religious passions and wonderments in that which effects nothing upon the Soul The Priest must be intent upon his Rubrick that he miss nothing of his Bowings Crosses Anointings Sprinklings Perfumes c. and the people are taken up with staring upon the dumbe Images the Larges and the Priests
serious and profitable services in Church and State as the Ambassadors of God the Counsel of Souls the Priests of Justice and Equity the Legates of Princes and States the Guides of Souls in all religious and civil Transactions by their Preaching Praying Praising Pleading Judging Treating and Executing of Laws Divine and Humane I have reason therefore I think to wave the laziness of such men of good Talents but not improving them to the best advantage but staying behind in the enjoyment of Vulgar notions content themselves with Vulgar errors Mercurial Spirits There are in this latter Age of the world men of Mercurial spirits that by their labours have advanced all kind of Learning to a higher pitch than ever No disparagement to our Ancestors at all who some of them fairly aimed at the same mark but were unhandsomly cried down and discouraged in their several Ages as Trismegistus Plato Socrates Hierocles Hippocrates c. of old and Paracelsus Helmont Harvy c. of late So for Divines Clement Ignatius Irenaeus Justin Hierome Chrysostome Basil Theophylact c. of old and Cassander Melancthon Arminius Grotius Hammond Lushington Taylor c. of late This may be granted perhaps in Philosophy Physick and Mathematicks and in Mechanick Arts as of Navigation c. but to assert any improvement in Divinity will be thought Heresie Schism or Innovation at the least which is counted dangerous Principles sure As for the Foundations and Principles of Faith there is no doubt but they alwaies have been and are and will be the same but for the superstructures and consequences they are now by Discerning men more clearly drawn out for Spiritual advantages than ever they were before by a more perfect understanding of the Scriptures without the mixture of Traditions or the Doctrines of Men. Christianity unmixt The Reason is because at the first Christianity was compleatly revealed by Christ to his Apostles who with him taught the purity and perfection of Divine worship far above the Jewish dispensation and the Wisdom of the world But this Treasure after their daies was a little hid yea in the Apostles daies this mischief began to work which was by them wisely observed especially by St. Paul who in all his Epistles especially to the Romans and Galatians clears up the absolute independent necessity of the Gospel without Moses and the help of vain Philosophy against the Jewish and Heathenizing Christians But in the daies of their Disciples and their Successors the streams that arose from pure fountains ran farther through the channels of Judaism and Heathenism and though they kept themselves in their own nature unmixt and do still yet Men of weak Judgments through Ignorance and of Corrupt minds through too much Worldly wisdom did and do taste too much of their own muddy waters and keep the savour of them as is apparent in their Expressions and Superstitions to this very day And why then should not some if they can Aspire to perfection be wiser and honester too than some Must we be always Children dwell always upon beggarly Elements be always biassed by Parties and Sides for favour and gain The older the World is it should grow the wiser and not stand at a stay It is no Solecism to say We are elder in our Generations than our Fathers and have more experience than our Teachers and our Children and Disciples will be wiser than we And that Antiquity which we so admire and trust unto is Junior and Neoterick properly to us The first Ages are the Youth of the World in their Minority but we are the Antients and Adult We are beholding to them and they would now if alive be beholding to us Neither are the Truths among them altered at all but the same far better understood and kept pure by themselves and enlarged to more profitable uses It is a dull thing to fit still like Children and venture no farther than we have been taught to go All men have not the same drowzy spirits all men will not be so contented Some men will put on lively and try to add something more upon the old stock and not suffer themselves to be led by the nose as for those that will be deceived there is no remedy let them be deceived And they are for the most part of these kinds Vain Sciences Such as for ostentation heap up variety of Learning from vain and unnecessary Logick Philosophy History Tongues Mathematicks Antiquities c. and little regard Morality for life and action to govern themselves and others Hence they become Imperious and Magisterial in their Determinations though for the most part unprofitable and too often hurtful to the Publick good 2. Such as call themselves and are called Poets and Orators fine tongued fellows that can seemingly set off what smattering knowledge they have the easier to gull themselves and others by false Reasons guilded over by fucous enticing expressions by whom a full clear grave and solid style conveying the digested conceptions of the mind to the ears and minds of men by significant terms and fit to do business is derided as rude and barbarous These profound Sages with other folks learning as the Bird with strange feathers or the Asse with the Lion's skin are mightily elevated with their great Parts of Memory and Utterance How they can recite Councils Fathers Philosophers Historians Pick Hebrew Greek and all kind of Roots Coin subtil Distinctions without difference and engross all knowledge to themselves Although all this cry makes but a little wool all is but borrowed nor can they manage the stock of others but spoil it mar it in the using This is meer Pedantry here 's nothing of Judgment and right Reason of their own nor a spirit to discern but to quit the Authorities and Sentences of the Ancients Right Reasoning But where is the true and solid way of Reasoning and Method which a Piercing man without all these Tawdries principally aims at He that follows his own sound Reason without favour and affection to any extream and does his work as is pleasing to his own mind with his own well chosen and disposed materials shall make a far better structure than he that busily collects several materials of several mens framing and fashioning which being all jumbled together must needs be botching A man 's own clear Notions maturely disposed fully expressed in genuine terms is his best Wisdom and most flourishing Rhetorick A structure strongly and usefully contrived and beautified with serviceable and agreeable stuff is better than a Medly or Hotchpotch gawdily painted without frame or fashion Still he that builds for his own conveniences and is neat in his own Nest prosecutes his own end and uses the means accordingly But several mens fancies and contrivances especially wanting Art do not fit the scope of one Man's work That therefore which we call Learning acquired Sound Judgment is an excellent thing in it self but unless a man have sound
promoted thereby and more than by any other course that hath been taken hitherto For what our several sorts of Postillary Cabbalistical Critical Casuistical Scholastical Systematical Sceptical or Rosicrucian Divinity could never yet attain unto for the setling of Unity and Peace This one Testamentary way may by God's blessing effect if rightly understood and fairly prosecuted without prejudice passion biassed Judgment pride or gain Moreover I make bold to tell you Quotations that I hope I am not vainglorious in this unusual way of not stuffing my Margin as Index-Rakers do with Quotations of Divines Philosophers Lawyers Historians c. I am alone and want Labourers to do that drudgery nor will I hire them nor have I will or leisure to do it my self Nor care I to shew my reading by plagiary of Matter and Method what I have read I have read I had rather utter a sound Reason than an Authority without reason I avoid all riming reasons and quaint distinctions and allusions and quirks and flourishes I count it Pedantical to interrupt a continued discourse with interlarded phrases or inlaid adagies and sentences of other men when the Author himself may speak the same sense in his own as good or better words for his purpose without pumping or racking his natural genius If therefore I have laid my foundation strong or made my building uniform with good lights and chambers and necessary offices therein and have seated it from the injury of weather I have satisfied my self and may satisfie all equal and ingenious Judges though I have wanted Carvers and Painters to set out the Fabrick with Antiques or other curious Imagery The true end of stately structures and vessels of Precious matter is to be useful plain and goodly for aspect artificial symmetry and true composure though not all over enamelled and powdered with sparks of Diamonds Gems or gaiety of Sculptures Surely a pure smooth flowing style True Eloquence solidly and clearly expressing sound matter in genuine words and a natural method is the best conveyance and insinuation of Doctrine into the Judgment of the Learners and the best motive to stir up their affections And this is the Eloquence used by learned and wise men who scorn the Pedantry of vulgar Orators as much below them Thus I have given an account as I ought of the purpose and scope which I aim at in this ensuing Discourse and of the style and phrase therein used For which if any brand me for an Opiniator Novelist Legist Neuter or any other Nick-name they can invent I retort nothing but hope in time they may come to their wits and be free to use their own Judgments as I have done and then they will tell me another story Farewel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THE Standard of this whole Book OR A Grain of Salt to season every Proposition therein THE First light of Nature well observed and better improved creates a knowledg most kindly and similary to the common sense and genius of Mankind and is the most certain infallible fairest and freest way of reasoning and perswading without subtilties and sophistries of Logick or Rhetorick falsly so called By this First light and law of Nature we do well and truly understand our whole duty to God and to our Neighbour And are thereby capacitated to receive the Second light and law of Revelations into our minds and facilitated to embrace Divine impulses upon our wills and every way to be fitted for Christian perfections Without this plain Rule and Guide which some Learned men scorn and most men take little notice of all sorts of men fall upon incertainties and believe little but fluctuate much in empty and vast speculations and warp to every Fantastical Idea embracing the cloud of Error for real Truth without this we grope and wander in the dark If this solid foundation of prime natural easie Truths were well laid the Consequences agreeing together and resembling one another in their Principles would be known as Daughters by their faces and the features and tempers of their common Mother But Learned men are to blame to admire as they do Notions wild new and rare above the vulgar ken and consequential to no common foundation desiring to stoop so low as to dig out of those natural veins the precious minerals contained in them but flie to Chymical extractions of gold and silver out of lead and iron and neglect the true ore because every Bungling operator they think can do that But they would erect a Laboratory of Furnaces and Limbecks to extract more than the Sun can do out of the rich mass of the earthy and watry Globe In a word They reach at all things and catch nothing The great Scholar loses the day when the illiterate Rationalist carries the Truth in triumph upon his naked shoulders This First knowledge is as the Alphabet in all Books incorporated in all other knowledg A Light to the understanding of the Scriptures and all other Sciences This is the root spring and foundation of all Arts and without this we learn nothing This knowledge wanteth no other but all others want it This presupposeth no Grammar Logick Philosophy nor any of the Liberal Sciences but they presuppose this as the first and necessary Art that ordereth all others to the good ends of truth and happiness Because it teacheth man to know God and to know himself and to do as he would be done by to know why he is made and by whom and to whom he is obliged And except a man do know these things what will all other knowledge profit him This is easily learned without other helps and is not easily forgotten This makes a man cheerful humble liberal just obedient to hate all vice and love all vertue and it puffs not up at all This knowledge argues by infallible Arguments such as no body can deny because every man feels them true by his own experience within himself This knowledge seems at the first to be very vile and low and of no strength because it begins from the smallest matters as the Mathematicks do which every one is apt to slight but at last the high and noble fruits being discerned in the true knowledge of God and Man makes them of another mind Because by how much the more low the foundation is laid in easie and terrestrial things by so much the more lofty the structure is raised in hard and celestial matters Other knowledge is contrived in methods and terms Pedantick and unintelligible it puffeth up and the Professors and Scholars of several Faculties fall together by the ears and are never the wiser nor the more honest at all but impose upon themselves and the world of Fools that are willing to be cheated Which kind of slavery is abhorred and loathed by all liberal and noble Spirits So they most Majestically in their chains and purple Robes determine undeterminable things triumphing as the masters and conquerers of all Truth And can you blame
them seeing that by this craft they get their living Let it not be grievous therefore for these high Lytae and stately Regents to stoop down to this inferiour Science as they deem it because it is more profitable for them than all their sublime Arts and Sciences can be without it and because it precedes all other wisdom even the sacred Scriptures themselves Quoad nos This strong Foundation well laid will bear up stoutly all that shall be fairly built upon it This plain Rule will try the truth of every Proposition There will be no tottering Hypotheses nor crooked Conclusions if the analogy and proportion of Natural truths be faithfully inspected and followed We may all agree in all main things if we would all look this way and fairly comply in these Principles Amphibologies Equivocations Distinctions Fallacies Tropes and Figures will be found as so many vizards and fucus's to cast a mist before the eye of the Mind and darken the clear light of the Understanding and so in time will be abandoned by all wise men This is the Light under God by which together with the Supernatural light thereupon I have wrote these things not without many failings God knows and by the same Lights they are to be examined and understood or not at all For I have had no other meaning than what is contained in natural and supernatural Revelations whatsoever is more than these is Error By these 't is safe to abide and as safe to be tried And so every man may judge and satisfie himself in his own and others Notions as well as he can and be content And this is all that can be done when all is done Do but bring all things to the common Test touchstone and standard of this Light of natural and supernatural Law and we shall all quickly meet agree kindly and pardon one anothers mistakes and be in a fairer way of mending all that is amiss every day more and more This is the way to truth and peace But alas Proud men strongly interested for honour favour and riches Ignorant men Self-conceited men Opiniators Flatterers and Lazy men that resolve to stick to their education and practice and the sentiments of their Ancestors with the Examples and Doctrines of their admired Masters will never go this way to work while the World stands There is therefore no remedy for these things but Patience The World it is to be hoped will grow older and wiser but still there must be errors and sects for the trial of steady and unbiassed Souls and the Truth at last will be no loser thereby Magna est veritas praevalebit THE CONTENTS OF THE First Volume of the Will of God To the Reader RIghts Laws Jural sense of Scriptures Title of Scriptures Distinction of old and new Testament Legists Hugo Grotius c. Will of God Superstition Fathers Schoolmen Rosicrucians Promises preached Pacification Means to understand Scriptures Mercurial spirits Principles Christianity unmixt Aspire to perfection Valn Sciences Right reasoning Sound Judgment Eloquence Demonstrations Confutations Papists Offences Two Testaments Quotations True Eloquence Prolegomena Title 1. Of Principles Theology and Laws Axioms Moral Entities Demonstrations Mathematicians Topicks Principles Aristotle Demonstrations The Authors Apology Compendiums Rules of Civil law Precepts of the law of Nature p. 1 Title 2. Of God Soul imperfect Soul under a Law Soul hath vast desires Works of God magnificent Works of God beautiful Works of God harmonious Idolatry p. 12 Title 3. Of Religion Natural Religion Supernatural Religion Revelation p. 17 Title 4. Of Scriptures Of Scriptures Writings Traditions Inspiration Testament Ethnick Theology p. 19 The First Book Of a Testament Title 1. Of Ownership Owners Proprietaries Power Gods absolute Propriety Gods disposition p. 23 Title 2. Of a Testament Testament Berith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Covenant Sanction Asseveration Title of Scriptures Other Covenants Old Covenant New Covenant Proofs for the title of a Testament Acts of a Testament Confirmation of a Testament Instrument Inheritance Dispositions Oath Testament to Christ. Law no disannulling of Testament Law given 430 years after Promise p. 25 The Second Book Of a Covenant Title 1. Of the Nature of a Covenant Definition Precept Penalty Promises Free grace All hope from Covenant God our God by Covenant Covenant advances the Creature above Nature p. 34 Title 2. Of a Covenant with God To give ones self to God To give our Souls to the Devil Claim by Covenant p. 36 Title 3. Of the distinction of Covenants First Covenant with Adam Second Covenant with Adam Resemblance of Covenants First Covenant inculcated from the Creation Second Covenant inculcated from the Creation Law written Spirit more plentiful in the Gospel Predestination of Rewards in Christ Men would be Gods to themselves Natural to have a God Natural to be in covenant with God p 38 The Third Book Of the Law or Old Testament Title 1. Of the Nature of the Law Definition of Law p. 53 Title 2. Of Moses Law Letter Spirit Promises Precepts Judgments Works Contract Revelation of Eternal life reserved Temporals prepare for Eternals Outward obedience Sufficient means under law Love of God Love of Neighbour Life Christ expounded the law p. 55 Title 3. Of the Weakness of the law Eternal life Rites troublesome and chargeable Permission Things not originally good Sacrifices Sacrifices first from men Imperfection Rigour p. 59 Title 4. Of the Deceit of the law Sin deceives Grace undeceives My Defect Fruition High understanding Ignorance True knowledge Means to discern Truth Rules Principles Authority Infallibility Will. My lust Vnderstanding Physical and Moral Agents Will. Casual Cause of sin Law p. 63 Title 5. Of Deceit without a law Law of Nature Law Positive p. 67 Title 6 Of Deceit with a Law By all good Law Lust a Law Law a Restraint Law an equivocal word Law of mind Law of Flesh Law of God Law of sin Grace a sole Remedy By all bad Law By one Law in the same law Words and sense of Law Letter and Spirit By one Law in another By the Law of God in the law of Man By the law of Man in the Law of God By one Moral law in another By the law of Nature in a Positive law By a pretended Law of God in a certain law of Man By a Private law in a Publick law By the Moral law in the Ceremonial law By the Ceremonial law in the Moral law By one Law in all other laws p. 69 Title 7. Of the Reasons of Deceit Deliberation by halves Judgment by likelyhood Ampliations and limitations of Law Weighing my action by one Law Suspense between two Laws Sin hath the casting voice Reason of Law p. 78 Title 8. Of slavery under the Law Transition Nature of slavery Tye of slavery p. 80 Title 9. Of the Seat of slavery The Soul Spirit 's free p. 81 Title 10. Of the Cases of slavery Restraint from proper end Restraint from proper guide Restraint from proper act Restraint from
act from an inward Principle 34. Every one by Nature is obliged to a Sociable Life 35. Parties in a Covenant must know themselves to be Parties and must know each other and understand what they covenant about 36. God is the Lord Paramount of all Fees 37. A Fee is a Benefice and Grace 38. Angels have and hold in Fee 39. Men have and hold in Fee 40. Grace in Feudo is defeisable 41. Glory in Feudo is indefeisable 42. Christ shall deliver up the Kingdom to God the Father 43. God shall be all in all 44. Church hath no Legislative Power it is Christs Prerogative 45. If the things be done that are to be done then the things are to be had that are to be had But if the things be not done that are to be done then the things are not had that are to be had 46. Unusquisque potest cedere Jure suo Every one may depart from his own Right It seemeth therefore absurd that these Principles and such as these and what may rationally flow from them should not be certainly known by men the practise whereof in life and conversation is enjoyned by the Authority of God as well as those the practise whereof in life and conversation is forbidden by the Authority of God If we may and do know some things certainly which may be left unknown by us without damage Why should we not as certainly know some things which are better which are commanded to be known and if they be not known we incurr a penalty for not knowing them And if we cannot know them how can we do them and if we cannot know the contrary how can we avoid them The World of wise men have been too careless in the understanding of Moral Truths upon a false opinion and supposition received that there can be no firm or infallible Certainty in them but only a flexible and fallible Probability And this hath been the cause of their sloath in not setting their excellent wits to work upon the search of them as they might have done because they found others before them groping in the dark in great doubts and they were afraid to look out further or tread harder upon such sinking Sands when as the light was hard by and the ground firm under them if they had but dared to venture and few or none did encourage them nay others autoritatively bound them up and charged them not to advance upon the pain and punishment of Heresie and Rebellion that should fall thereon But God hath not dealt so with us but hath bid us try all things and hold fast that which is good and bids us aspire to perfection and shews unto us a more excellent way Aristotle a man rarely learned Aristotle hath done a great deal of mischief in this kind to learned men that have tied themselves up too close to his Oracles because of his mighty Name for a portentous Wit above all men which Estimation by a kind of Fatal Errour he hath had for many ages cast upon him And that proud Emblem which he hath fixed upon the Frontispiece of his Book of Morals hath frightned most men from all hopes of ever obtaining any more than a Probability Indeed and in Truth if we rightly consider things Demonstrations The Subject of a Demonstration is the Proposition to be demonstrated that is in which the necessary Connexion of the Predicate with the Subject is to be manifested by some Principle or more general Effatum which must contain the Reason of that so necessary Connexion So that it sufficeth to make a Demonstration if any Thing or Action hath an Attribute or Predicate whose necessary connexion with the Subject may by some comprehensive Axiom of undoubted Truth be mediately or immediately demonstrated whether that Action or Thing of its self depends upon necessary Causes or not If therefore searching Wits would be more free and bold not without modesty and fear to exert their Faculties they might worthily advance the Commonwealth of Learning in using their great Judgments to the finding out of higher Truths from the plain and prime Principles of Natural and Supernatural Light obvious to them that have skill and want only courage to use them For my own part I acknowledg my own weakness to do any great matters I have attempted to build upon these golden Foundations such matter as may be suitable and durable in my poor Judgment and I wish the stupendious Wits of this Age would help me in these Essayes and vent their famous thoughts more clearly and largely upon these so stately Subjects These and the like Prime Principles here and elsewhere scattered in these volumes are as so many Veins and Arteries Nerves and Fibres from the heart and brain of the Scriptures insinuating themselves and creeping into all the Parts and Members of this Body to enliven and strengthen the same If there be withal a Symmetry and due proportion therein it is the chiefest Beauty it hath or could have as for the Colour or outward Ornaments to set it off to please the Curiosity of the outward view it hath few or none nor did I intend it should or if I had I should according to my Genius industriously wave all tedious wordings or dawbing fucus upon such Notions as to the Judicious Reader will appear more lovely I am sure more useful without them I know full well I might have shortened these Books and Titles very much That others may do for themselves that are more knowing The Authors Apology but the less skilful perhaps would not understand my meaning For to them dum brevis esse laboro obscurus fio if I should be short I should be dark And so as I have contrived by the help of God I go on with my Work In which I protest to determine nothing magisterially but to submit my Judgment humbly to the Scriptures and to the judgment of the wisest freest and most moderate opinions from them which is all in effect that can be said or done to the Worlds end always resting satisfied with the substance of all when all is said that can be said or done that can be done namely Faith and a good Conscience which are all in all Compendiums Lastly I do not say that all these Principles are alike uncontrolable or that because of their number some of them may interfere The Candidly Judicious will pardon in long Tractats what is not strictly and severely Logical in ●ood and Figure and will give some fair allowances to the expatiations of Rhetorick when they do no harm If I had gone contractedly to work to give Hints only by Definitions Aphorisms and Observations I might have tied my self closer to exact Rules which are now implicitely couched in Larger Titles and may easily be reduced into closer Compendiums I cannot tell what the matter is but before I go any further I must needs tell the Reader what troubles me I cannot be rid of some
Law for ever It is a Change for the better Carnal things for Spiritual Temporal things for Eternal A New Covenant established upon better Promises 1. And indeed here is the continuance of the same Priesthood that ever was but never so known before and that ever will be and be better understood 2. And here is the continuance of the same spiritual Temple Altar and Sacrifice that ever was but never so known before and that ever will be and be better understood 3. And here is the continuance of the same spiritual Law that ever was but never so known before and that ever will be and be better understood Christ is a Priest without beginning or end of daies The Law of Nature began with nature and God's worship therewith The Carnal Priesthood Worship and Law were Intermedial Temporal and Typical and by their intervention there was no interruption of the spiritual Priesthood Worship or Law which was the same for substance not perfection before under and after all the Mosaical Dispensation O the depths of the manifold wisdom of God! how unsearchable are his waies Melchisedec was greater than Abraham Moses Aaron and all the Prophets but behold a greater than Melchisedec is here 1. The King and Prince of Righteousness and Peace indeed 2. The Priest that truly blesseth and titheth all men even the Blessers and Tithers themselves and to him they offer their spiritual Offerings and Tithes in token of Subjection and Thankfulness Now is the Truth of all things even the full Will of God revealed by this Great Prophet Look for no more Kings Priests nor Prophets for CHRIST is all these Heb. 10.19 c. Having therefore boldness to enter into the Holiest by the Blood of Jesus by a new and living way which he hath consecrated through the Vail that is to say his Flesh and having an High Priest over the house of God let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil Conscience and our bodies washed with pure water let us hold fast the profession of our Faith without wavering for he is faithful that promised and let us consider one another to provoke unto Love and to Good works for if we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins but a certain fearful looking for of Judgment and fiery indignation which shall devour the Adversaries He that despised Moses 's Law died without mercy of how much sorer punishment shall he be thought worthy who hath troden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the Blood of the Covenant wherewith he was sanctified an unholy thing and hath done despite unto the Spirit of Grace It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God The CONTENTS Few Disciples in Christ's time Resipiscence True Wisdom TITLE II. Of the Nature of the Gospel THE New Testament contains the compleat Will of God in toto in solido for Duties to be done and Trespasses to be left undone and for Rewards to be had and Punishments to be avoided And this Religion admits of no Intermixtures but must be pure and free from all compliances with any other especially from the two extreams of Judaism and Gentilism While Christ was alive and preached this New Religion Few Disciples in Christs time he gained but few Disciples who dared to confess him openly for fear of the Jews Joh. 9.21 and 12.42 But after his death multitudes of all Ages Sexes Sects and Nations believed and confessed him though with the Cross So true was that saying of Christ If I ascend up to Heaven I will draw all men after me Joh. 12.32 Then Joseph Nicodemus the Centurion and many of the Priests and Jews that crucified him made open Confession of him But ten days after his Ascension Three thousand were converted by one Sermon of St. Peter's The Reason was Act. 2.41 Reason because the Resurrection of Christ after all his Miracles made ample Demonstration to the World that he was the Son of God and the Saviour of the World This Doctrine Conversation Miracles Sufferings Death Resurrection and Ascension of Christ and the Mission of the Holy Ghost opened a wide door of Hope to all Sinners by Repentance to be saved from all Sins and Miseries and admitted to all happiness from which they could not be delivered and unto which they could not be received by any other means or mediation whatsoever This Resipiscence or after-wisdom of blinded Souls Resipiscence disclaiming their own seeming Excellencies and relying upon the Grace of God is divine and coming from above opposed to the earthly Wisdom which is natural sensual and carnal This is the true Conversion and Transforming from the World unto God from Darkness unto his marvellous Light the Regeneration and new Creation the putting off of the old Man with the Corruptions and Lusts and the putting on of the New man which after Christ is renewed in Righteousness and true Holiness This is Justification Sanctification Separating Cleansing Mortification Self-denyal Circumcision of the Spirit Crucifixion taking up the Cross Death unto sin Life unto Righteousness Planting into the likeness of Christ's Death Burial with him in Baptism the Power of his Death the Fellowship of his Sufferings and Vertue of his Resurrection All these and such like precious things are comprehended under the Notion of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Repentance of the Gospel for the Kingdom of Heaven Mat. 3.2 Mat. 4.17 Luc. 24.47 True Wisdom This is the Foundation of all Christian Comforts No Jew by the Law written nor Gentile without the Law attained unto this Wisdom All the Wisdom of the World was Foolishness unto it the Gospel only effected this saving Reformation and all other things were but Loss and Dross and Dung in comparison of the excellency of the Knowledg of Christ Jesus in whom are hid all the Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledg This was the Day-spring from an High that visited them that sate in Darkness and in the shadow of Death that made the Jew amazed at the insufficiency of all his Service and the Gentiles confounded at their vain Philosophy and Worship This confounds the Wisdom of the wise and brings to nought all the imaginations of Mankind This makes the proud and stubborn veil their high Conceits and stoop to the Contrivances of the Great God By this they see themselves outwitted and their Freedom purchased by a way they could never have invented Thus they are brought from their own Darkness into the marvellous Light of God and translated from the power of darkness into the Kingdom of the dear Son of God Here they perfectly see and feel that Holiness and Blessedness which before they groped after but by no means could attain unto till Christ who is the Way the Truth and the Life made demonstration of it to the World in whom all the Nations of
grievous in such cases The CONTENTS Writing Testimony Confirmation Execution Christ the Executor Executorship conditional Flesh and Blood Christ's Assention Spirit 's Mission TITLE VI. Of the Confirmation of the New Testament NOW the New Testament though it were not written as was the Old with the finger of God upon Tables of Stone but was Nuncupative yet this Nuncupation was by God himself not by any Angel and that unto Christ himself only to be published and accordingly was published by him in his own Person and by his Spirit in the persons of the Apostles and their Disciples through the whole World and afterwards committed to writing by the chief of the Apostles and not only so Writing but written again after a better manner by the spirit of God himself upon the Tables of Mens Hearts Testimony And as for the Testimony given thereunto to prove it to be the Will of God Christ himself did testifie thereof with such mighty miracles as never had been done before Besides the unquestionable Holiness of his life and the solemnity of his death Which things were not done in a corner but in the full view of a greater Congregation than was at Mount Sinai for he preached in their Temple and Synagogues and did wonders in all Judea and suffered death upon Mount Calvary Mat. 27.51 At which time the Vail of the Temple was rent in twain from the top to the bottom the Earth did quake and the Rocks rent and the graves were opened and many bodies of the Saints which slept arose The Sun also was darkned after an extraordinary manner when the Moon was at the Full. And after all this was added as the last and greatest Proof of all the glory of his Resurrection and Ascention into Heaven He saith therefore of himself John 18.37 To this end was I born and for this cause I came into the world that I should bear witness unto the truth And the Apostle said of him 1 Tim. 6.13 Rev. 3.14 that before Pontius Pilate he witnessed a good Confession Hence he is called the Amen the faithful and true Witness the Martyr of the New Testament to testifie it with his Blood His death was not only a Testimony Confirmation but a Confirmation of the New Testament because his death doth wholly and for ever extinguish in him all will or power to revoke it and evidence that immediately from that Death God's Testament was ipso facto in force and began to take effect for the Justification of Mankind to all the Rights in that Testament contained by the Access of their Faith Thus the immortal God came as near to Death as he could by the Death of his Son in his Divine Nature immortal but made a mortal man to dye in his Father's stead and to demonstrate his own and his Father 's unconceivable Love to lay down his Life for Sinners Which thing deserves a perpetual Commemoration so commanded by Christ in the Holy Eucharist instituted by him for that purpose And as Wills are to be proved and confirmed Execution so they are to be executed and performed or else the Will it self is as dead as he that made it and so was made to no purpose The publick Wills of Legislators are to be put in Execution by sworn Magistrates or else the Law is in vain and a dead Letter And the private Wills of Testators are to be put in Execution by their Heirs or Executors covenanting and swearing so to do else the Will or Law of the Testator is frustrated Now of this New Testament Christ is the Executor or Mediator Christ Executor between God the Testator and the Legataries in the Will expressed to convey unto them from God as a Priest the Expiation of their Sins by his Sacerdotal offering up of himself to God in the Temple of Heaven and the Mission of his Spirit to cleanse their hearts and as a King sitting in the Throne of Heaven to rule his Church and protect them from their Enemies and to raise them up from Death and set them at his Right hand and at his left in heavenly places and as a Prophet to lead them into all Truth And Christ as an Executor and Mediator received to himself this benefit to be the universal Heir of God who was so by Nature and was so appointed by Grace to be Heir of all things Heb. 1.2 And for this purpose had all Power given unto him both in Heaven and Earth Mat. 28.18 and universal honour also wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name That at the name of Jesus Phil. 2.9 every knee should bow of Persons in Heaven and Earth and under the Earth For let all the Angels of God worship him Heb. 1.6 and he hath spoiled Principalities and Powers and triumphed over them openly 1 Cor. 15.27 and hath put all his Enemies under his feet The Reason is because Christ's Executorship was conditional Reason 1 Executorship Conditional that is charged upon the Condition of his own Death he must dye before he can enter upon it and therefore dye that he may perform it because every Testament is a Decree of things to be done after Death and this Testament of God hath this strange Prerogative above the Testaments of men that it is confirmed by the Death of a Man who was God and that the Executor not the Testator dyes and that the Disposition of things to be had or done is made after the Death of the Executor who for that purpose rose from the dead that he might justifie the faithful to the Inheritance of Heaven A Cause quite contrary to the Testaments of men wherin the Testator only dies to confirm his Testament and the Executor surviving performs it Therefore as Christ the principal Heir was fitted to receive his Inheritance ordained for him in that Testament whereof he was Executor So we that are Christ's Co-heirs must be fitted to receive the same Inheritance ordained for us in that Testament wherein we are Legataries Reas 2 Flesh and Blood 1 Cor. 15.5 Joh. ● 14 1 Cor. 15.45 Heb. 2.9 2. Because Flesh and Blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of heaven And CHRIST the Word was made Flesh but afterwards he was made Spirit For the last Adam was made a quickning Spirit And JESUS who was made a little lower than the Angels for or by they suffering of Death was crowned with glory and Honour And so Christ was made perfect For it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things in bringing many Sons unto glory Heb. 2.10 to make the Captain of their salvation perfect through Sufferings And though he were a Son yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered and being made perfect he became the Author of Eternal Salvation unto all them that obey him And so Christians they are first Flesh For that which is
had shewed them his last Sign of Rising from the dead and had given power to his Apostles to work Wonders when they left the World he sent no more Angels nor Prophets nor did no more Signs or Wonders nor left no more Oracles but the Scriptures and minds of the Faithful enlightned by his Spirit to lead them into all Truth and to be with them to the end of the World Therefore we may not expect any Angel or Prophet nor any Thundrings or Lightnings Sword Famine or Pestilence Peace Plenty Health or Prosperity particular or general Judgments or signal Deliverances upon any such account as formerly to manifest thereby God's special favour or wrath to particular Persons or Nations in general as to their Spiritual or Eternal condition For God goes another way to work more free easie natural and rational to the Souls of men and made sweetly convincing and attracting to a more sublime and holy Worship suitable and pleasing to the Majesty of Heaven and therefore we are not to be frighted by Judgments nor allured by Prosperities into Religion as Children but informed convinced and perswaded like men by sound reason and understanding through any good or bad condition in this life unto the hopes of a glorious and blessed Immortality It becometh not Christians adult that know their Fathers Will to be in fear and bondage all their life long because of temporal Plagues nor to be ravished with temporal Joys but to live above them all by faith and not by sight as Pilgrims and Strangers here declaring by their Conversation that they have no abiding City below but that they seek one that is above whose builder and maker is God Eternal in the Heavens The Fifth BOOK OF A MEDIATOR The CONTENTS Transition Mediator Reconciliation Moses TITLE I. Of the Name and Thing THE Dispositions of the Will and Estate in God's Testament are to pass through the hands of the Mediators or Executors of them both Transition who are Moses and Christ The word MEDIATOR is rarely Mediator if at all found in any Heathen Author being proper to the Holy Scriptures only Philo the Jew uses it whose form of writing resembles the Old Testament so familiar to that Nation The said Philo calls the High Priest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Jews had a High-Priest as a Mediator between two that by some middle Person they might appease God God dispenses his Graces to Men using as it were the Ministery and Subserviency of some certain Person Reconciliation CHRIST first obtained of God that to Mankind fallen into heinous Sins God would neither shut up the door of Repentance nor refuse to grant pardon to the Penitent which is that first Conciliation that was procured for all Mankind Rom 5.10 When we were Enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son All things are of God who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 5.18 19. and hath given to us the Ministery of Reconciliation to wit that God was in Christ reconciling the World unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them c. So Job was a Mediator to God for his two Friends My Servant Job shall pray for you for him will I accept Job 42.8 The great Benefits that accrue to the World by Christ are not only obtained by his Prayers but by his vast obedience unto death who gave himself a Ransom for all Eph. 1.10 11. to be testified in due time That in the Dispensation of the fulness of time he might gather together in one all things in Christ In whom also we have obtained an Inheritance being predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will A Mediator therefore is an Arbiter Herald or Messenger that intervenes between two Persons to relate their mutual minds and meanings to each other and to propound Articles of peace and agreement between them that are at variance or to propose and declare Rules and Laws for both Parties to consent unto Moses Moses was the Mediator or Intercessor between God and the Israelites to make and finish up a Covenant between them and this Covenant was the Law Gal. 3.19 20. Ordained by Angels in the hand of this Mediator Now a Mediator is not a Mediator of one but God is one Note that though the Law was ordained by Angels yet it was not immediately delivered by them to the People but by the intervention or means of the Mediator Moses who passed between the Angels and the People God gave the inheritance of Canaan to Abraham immediately by Promise but the Law that was added because of Transgressions four hundred and thirty years after till the Seed should come to whom the Promise was made was delivered by the ordination of Angels and the Mediation of Moses 1. Because Law was a Terror but the Inheritance was a matter of Grace As is the manner of great Princes to bestow their Graces and Favours by themselves but to execute matter of Law and Justice by their Officers and Judges Moses was the Receiver of the Law from the Angels and the Repeater of it to the People three daies together for the Commandments thereof but the Judgments were published by Moses only upon the Peoples request because of the terror of the Angels voice who first wrote them in a Book and afterward read them openly to all the Congregation So for the Ceremonies Moses had a Pattern delivered unto him in the Mount Exod. 22. Exod. 25.9 Deut. 5 5. Act. 6.11 called therefore the Law of Moses and Moses We have heard blasphemous words against Moses ye have one that accuseth you even Moses in whom ye trust So the Archangel was the Minister of God to the People not the Mediator 2. Because the Archangel sustained the very Person and Majesty of God and therefore spake not as an Embassador or Messenger for every Embassadour distinguisheth his own Person from the Person of his Master that sent him and speaketh not in his own name but in the name of the Prince or State that imployed him whom he also represents But the Archangel spake as if God himself were present without other Angels to attend him Whereas it is said that the Commandments were delivered by the hand of Moses it is as much as to say by his Ministery because the Hand is the greatest Instrument of working Exod. 32.15 and 34.29 So the two Tables are said to be written by the Finger of God and were delivered into Moses's hand But the Judgments and Ceremonies which made up the greater bulk of the Law so passed through Moses's hand as that he wrote them in a Book The hand writing of Ordinances which was against us Exod. 24.4 Heb. 9.19 Deut. 31.9 10. Col. 2.14 and contrary unto us was nailed to the Cross of Christ So they were written by Moses the Mediator of the first Testament and cancelled by
and purity of an Evangelical spirit We dwell too much upon outward and carnal things which are lawful as of Water in Baptism Bread and Wine in the Communion Fasts and Feasts Rites and Ceremonies Penances Judgments Prosperities and stretch them too far or lay too hard a stress upon them The two Sacraments ordained by Christ and the other decent Orders of the Church for edification and the Dispensations of outward Punishments and Blessings are reverently to be observed and practised but not in the outside and Gaiety only to move humiliation and fear but in the intrinsecal and essential virtue to create spiritual Communion Love Joy and hope of Glory To use Rites is comely and for Edification but to multiply them to distraction is Jewish and Paganish and of it self a dead way without any spirit or life at all Covet therefore after the best of Gifts and behold I shew unto you a more excellent way to make it our meat and drink to do the will of God to fulfil all Righteousness outward but not to rest there but to taste the good Word of God and the Powers of the VVorld to come and to have our Spirits throughly exercised to discern the Truth in all Shadows I will not slight but reverence every Ordinance of Man for the Lord's sake and for Conscience sake I will read and hear and see the description of Christ in a Book or Sermon or Picture but I will come nearer to Christ and close in my Soul with his Spirit I will be ravished with his Love that died for me and rose again and admire and draw a Curtain and be silent when I cannot describe nor imagine the infiniteness of his Shames and Glories Call me to Joy and Gladness after I have tried all other waies and to a constant walking with God and full Assurance of Heaven 1. Because Christ hath entred into his Temple and opened the Kingdom of Heaven to all Believers 2. Because Christ hath offered and presented himself to God for all his Saints 3. Because Christ sits and rules in Heaven and by his Spirit in all Saints and over all his and their Enemies 4. Because Christ as a Prophet teacheth us and leads us into all Truth 5. Because Christ makes Intercession for us 6. Because Christ will come again in great glory to raise from the Dead to Judge and to call to the full possession of Glory And this practice is truly and solidly comfortable unmixt with Carnal VVorship or VVorldly Policy Nothing but honesty and love in all this no scandal of the Cross because of the ample recompence of Reward No true and proper Priest Prophet or King but Christ All Priests and Prophets and Kings in Christ who is all in all God blessed for evermore The Second Use therefore is to conform to his Exaltation and Glory The CONTENTS Victory over Sin Imputation of Righteousness Jural Righteousness Reasons of Victory over Sin Light conquers Darkness Sin no Native Propension in Nature to its proper state Genuine Nature of the Spirit Superior Faculties predominate Active Co-operation Christ's Victory over Law Outward Covenant of Works Inward state of Mind Alive to Sin Dead to Law Carnal Liberty to Sin Legal Perfection Our Victory over Law Grace stronger than Law Spirit of Grace stronger than Spirit of Law God delights more in Mercy than Vengeance Man object of God's Love Christ's Pleading undeniable to God Christ's Victory over Death Victory procured meritoriously by Christ's Death Victory obtained by the Spirit of Faith Our Victory over Death Sin conquered Law conquered Devil conquered Christ entred into the Holy of Holies TITLE VIII Of Christ's Exaltation CHRIST's Resurrection manifested his Death to be effectual against Sin 1 Cor. 15.57 Law and Death else our Faith had been in vain and we yet in our sins For he was delivered to death for our sins and rose again for our Justification Ro. 4. If Death had held him then neither Sin nor Law nor Death nor Satan that hath the power of Death had been conquered and then Sin and Law and Death and Hell must have held us for ever This therefore is the greatest of all Christ's Miracles for the World to believe him to be a perfect Saviour which without it could never have been believed This takes away all scandal of the Cross for we worship not one was as the Jews call him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as Lucian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Crucified or Staked-God But when the Lord was Risen then Faith revived The Disciples thought this had been he which should have restored the Kingdom to Israel but he was dead and buried and therefore all their hopes of that ever coming to pass were dead and buried with him But now he is Risen from the Dead both theirs and ours is risen up again with him who though he was crucified through weakness yet he liveth by the power of God Christ's Resurrection assures us of Life after death of which the World was never assured before 'T is he that hath abolished Death and brought Life and Immortality to light through the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 Who after he had overcome the sharpness of Death did open the Kingdom of heaven to all Believers The Reasons of Philosophy to prove the Soul's Immortality and the Bodie 's Resurrection though demonstrative enough yet are so thin and subtil that they glide and slip away quickly from Vulgar Apprehensions But Christ his Soul being in Paradise during the Body's abode in the Grave and his Resurrection Appearances and Conversations and Visible Ascension into heaven do put the matter out of question and more strongly affect Vulgar minds By and after Christ's Resurrection he was made Lord and Christ King and Saviour Christ's Oeconomical Kingdom is calculated from the Epocha of his Resurrection and Ascension and sitting at the Right hand of his Father in heaven Let all the house of Israel know assuredly Act 2.36 that God hath made that same Jesus whom ye have crucified both Lord and Christ Jesus whom ye slew and hanged on a Tree him hath God exalted on his Right hand Act. 5.31 to be a Prince and a Saviour He humbled himself to the Death Phil. 2.9 even to the death of the Cross wherefore God hath highly exalted him and given him a Name above every name that at the Name of JESUS every knee should bow c. All Power is given to me both in Heaven and Earth Matth. ult 1 Cor. 15.27 God hath put all things in subjection under Christ's feet the Vicegerent of God a Mediatorious King till he hath put down all Rule and all Authority and Power and hath delivered up the Kingdom to God the Father that God may be all and in all A great Comfort that one of our Flesh and tempted as we and therefore knows the better how to pity us and succour us when we are tempted A great Comfort that our Flesh is in Heaven already as
of God have been thoughts of love and kindness in him all along from the beginning of the world but especially in the days of the Gospel And that God's love was always to mankind though not so clearly demonstrated as it is now by Christ How therefore this frowning face of terrors and amazements in his dealings here giving mortals no rest for the little space he hath afforded them to stay in this world and plunging them into eternal torments in the world to come can consist with the gentleness and justice of his nature I can in no wise be satisfied I am not able to conceive of a good Prince but that he will be always careful to preserve the lives and fortunes of his good Subjects and use all possible means to reduce the rebellions and still to be sparing of the blood of his People even where his Justice calls for it Nay every petty King of a Town or Family will do the same within the circuit of his power How much more then shall the Great and Gracious not only Potentate but Creator and Redeemer of the World hover over his poor creatures and servants for good and be infinitely and therefore inexpressibly tender of their Temporal and Eternal Wellfare But I am told that God reprobates the far greatest part of the world to shew the Glory of his Justice and absolute Soveraignty over his creatures And here I must cry out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O the Depth and if I be one of these Cast-aways must be as the rest contented and for ever silent 'T is true I must if so and there can be no help for it nor must Mortals complain for who art thou O Man that thou shouldest dispute against God But how these men more than others of equal judgments should come to this pitch of Knowledg to determine this thing thus I cannot imagine nor whence they had this revelation And how this agrees with God's declaration of himself to be willing that all men should be saved and come to the knowledg of the Truth and not to delight in the death of any Sinner will put them to a stand Well however it is I am sure that God is good and if God hath given men reason to understand what is Justice and Mercy how the wisdom of God though infinitely above should be as infinitely contrary to this our humane understanding will be very hard to conceive Still Justice is Justice and Mercy is Mercy in God or Man though in vast differences of degrees We shall never know how but we may always know that God is Just and can and will do us no wrong I take the safest side therefore I hope if I interpret humbly all his dispensations though seemingly never so harsh to be cum favore that if he do as certainly he does severely punish yet he will as graciously reward those that fear him for all their miseries in this life And if God inflicts as he doth the same Calamnities now under the Gospel as he did before under the Law yet it is in a different manner in the Church's Majority from what it was in her Minority And that though the former Dispensation was in wrath yet now it is in Grace and was always just Well let the Inhabitants of the earth work righteousness as well as they can and trust God for his Mercies and through the tender mercies of God they shall be sure never to miscarry I am certain Grace is Grace and above Wrath though I suffer never so much And that God does not dodgenor lie upon the catch with mankind to destroy them but rather waits for their conversion to save them I will trust in God therefore though I am never able to understand the reasons of his workings From henceforth I will never go about to measure the depths of God's Providences by the shallowness of my comprehensions I will be meditating and doing good and leave all to God But it is high time to leave this dreadful Subject of mis-representing God in his Counsels so fatal to mankind Gospel-Dispensations Let us see what other mis-understandings there are of God's Dispensations God was pleased suitably to the non-age of the Church to address himself very much to the lower faculties of the Soul and the outward senses that were nearest to them and did most affect them Therefore he ordained splendid Types solemn services and many miracles as the pillar of a Cloud and of Fire the walls of water in the Red Sea the burning Mount Sinai the tabernacle and rays of Glory visible therein the Temple c. But they which look for any such apparent Expressions of Divinity now mistake the Genius of a Gospel-Dispensation to a Church Adult and capable of higher Administrations All things since Christ's coming are managed in a sedate smooth and serene temper The mysteries of the Gospel came forth in plain and intelligible forms of Speech from Mount Sion without drawing the Soul into Raptures and Extasies of amazements God doth not fright men into heaven by visible Terrours God expects now a reasonable Service a Judicious Religion acted by the Spirit of Love and of a sound mind under the Graces Truths and Glories of a Gospel-state for ever to endure This Spirit of the Gospel arriving to our Spirits in this aimable and winning manner creates a generous Spirit above the Evils or Goods in this world resolved to go through them and overcome them and settle upon absolute Eternal Goodness When men's hopes and fortunes are most embarqued in the Ship of this World without Faith They are in continual fears of Shipwrack because then all is lost that is before their sense But when men's hopes and fortunes are all embarqued in one bottom of Divine Faith they are in continual Hopes and Assurances of arrival in the Haven of Glory because then all is found that was before their Spirit in the Eye of Faith This Hope so full of glorious and blessed Immortality hath supported the spirits of such as live by their Faith better than all the Fatality of the Stoicks or the Jollity of the Epicureans These can look Sin and Death in the face by the Spirit and not be daunted by the Flesh The high Religion of the Gospel teacheth higher things than ever that of Moses or the Law of Nature or Nations or Philosophy could do Reformation This great Reformation of Religion in the World Christ declared plainly to the woman of Samaria requiring of him as a Prophet to tell her the place of worship whether it was not to be upon Mount Gerizim in Samaria where the Fathers had worshiped and not in Jerusalem as the Jews believed Upon this occasion he told her that neither she nor the Samaritans her Country-men nor the Jews nor yet the Gentiles of the World should from that time ever trouble themselves about the place or manner of Divine worship For it should be neither confined to Samaria nor Judea but should
'T is very hard But Noble Spirits cannot brook it their Tongues and Pens and their whole Bodies may be captivated against their Wills but in their Souls they will be free Is there any greater Idleness Idleness than to stay and rest on that which men have formerly done said or written to attribute all to the Ancients without leaving any thing to be mended by those that come after them Surely all the Mysteries of God and Nature are not yet discovered the greatest things are difficult and long in coming and Truth is the Daughter of Time Many things which were hidden are come to light and more will come to light and our Successors will wonder that we were ignorant of them We do not build now adaies after the fashion of Vitruvius Improvements nor Till the ground or plant according to Varro or Columella we use not food or physick after the rules of Galen or Hypocrates we judg not exactly after the Civil Law of the Romans or the Feudal Customs of the Lombards neither plead we as Demosthenes and Cicero nor govern as Solon or Lycurgus did we war not fail not sing not c. as did the Ancients but much better And therefore the World is beholding to those brave Souls that have adventured by long Study care charges and bodily Labours to excel their Predecessors in finding out such rare secrets as serve more for the benefit of Mankind The Antipodes the Sailing by the Compass the Circulation of the Blood the Chymistry of Plants and Minerals Guns Printing c. were strange things to be believed before the truth of them was seen by Experience The Wisest men may not scorn better helps though offered by far meaner hands It must be pride that rejects teaching though from an Ant or Sow And let them be choaked that refuse to be drawn out of a Dungeon by Ropes and rotten Clouts Let the infection of Leprosie stick close to their Skin that scorn to wash it off in a narrow or shallow Stream Knowledg does very ill to puff up so as to scorn Ignorance much more to despise greater knowledg A Sickness a Disease of the Mind in men of high parts is hard to be cured but if their Bodies be in danger they will not disdain Album Graecum or the Receipt of a poor Beggar While they ail little or nothing they will resolve to die by the Book but if all the Great Doctors give not ease to the Gout or Stone Strangury or Flaming Feaver an Emperick a Quack an Old Woman any body that can be gotten for God's sake at any rate and thank you too a thousand times Obj. It is not safe to leave the old Road. Sol. What if it be rugged What if it be about c. What is he that will read in no bodies book but his own or that shuts his good book is wise enough and will read no further that begins to build and leaves off in the first story that goes half his journey and then comes back If Columbus had not discovered another World and Americus Vespucius conquered the same it had been no world still to us We must have wanted our Plantations of Virginia New-England c. and the King of Spain his Gold and Silver Mines Is there no progress to be made Must we stand at a stay Look into all Mechanick Trades Mysteries and Professions they grow more ingenious every day to their great Commendation Observe Lawyers Philosophers and Physicians Oratours Poets c. improving daily God's Blessing on their hearts for so doing Obj. But Divines must not stir a foot others may Sol. No Why so Stay let us consider more of this matter It is for certain that no other Foundation can be laid than what is already laid of Gold and Silver and pretious Stones But we may build upon this foundation suitable matter which will endure the Fire Christ Jesus delivered the full perfection of all truth the most pure precepts and highest promises in the Gospel The Apostles but it was a long time first understood it and preached it to the world The chiefest things which Christ did suffered and spake are written in the Gospels as also the Sermons Miracles and Acts of the Apostles in the Epistles also are occasionally taught the pure Doctrine of Christ unmixed with Moses and Vain Philosophy The Apostles by Inspiration understood the whole Will of God and preached infallibly and from their Light we all receive Light But Inspiration and Infallibility dying with them the Disciples of the Apostles and their Disciples were good men and kept the Faith which was delivered to them and so it hath been kept and would have been kept by constant tradition of Preaching if so much had not been written as is written In a word the Will of God was plainly revealed Corruption and as plainly understood but some after the Apostles days grievous Wolves entred into the Flock of Christ even Jewish and Gentile Christians who wrested the Scriptures both Old and New to their own destruction and too much trusting to art and subtilty corrupted the simplicity of the Gospel Then as mens Pride with their wealth and worldly polities encreased came in the Doctrines of Infallibility Supremacy Transubstantiation Purgatory Masses worshipping of Saints and Angels innumerable Superstitions of Will-worship and carnal services And though in all these ages good men saw the clearness of Gospel truths through these mists of vulgar errors yet could not swim against the Stream and the common sort relying upon men of mighty names grew careless to search any further believing all that was told them by their Leaders The rest contented themselves and sate still under those Tyrannies wishing for Reformation but they were poor and weak and the violence of the Powers and Multitudes was too strong against them Such was the humour of those dark and ignorant ages when the modest Disciple would not presume to know more than his admired Master though he were fit to be a Master himself to others And so the world lay in a trance for a long time and fetcht a sound sleep and was almost dead especially in and about the Eleventh Century that unhappy age overspread with Ignorance and Barbarity Reformation Till by degrees some more Heroick Spirits appeared and boldly told the world those glorious truths which they had discovered as Luther Melancthon Cassander Calvin c. who weeded out many Tares that the Enemy had sown while good men were fast asleep And since that greater men than these have more and more illustrated the Spiritual Dispensation of the Gospel to all mankind far different from that which was before the Law and under the Law And still we go on to perfection not for a new Faith or Religion but for the understanding of the old way of God more perfectly The Reformation grows higher and higher every day and the Faithful grow more and more spiritual and fitted for glory walking more sublimely and
neck that he might chop it off at a blow and he that set Rome on fire on purpose to please his ungodly will and sense to see the flames like Troy and sing Homer's Iliads over it What shall we think of these things and whither will the ill natures of Men run while they make an ill natured God like themselves Can these things be right let the world judge SECT XLIV The safest way is to think speak and do justly and charitably of and to God and Man Collect. 10. Wrong none 1. Not to wrong the inanimate creatures nor the brutes which groan under the abuses of wicked Men. 2. Not to wrong the Heathen as if it were lawfull to destroy them because God will destroy them as Reprobates and Castawayes and fuell for Hell-fire that they may be undone both here and hereafter 3. Not to wrong Christians but to do good to all Men especially those of the houshold of Faith Walk honestly as in the day not in rioting and drunkenness Rom. 13.13 not in chambering and wantonness not in strife and envy c. Walk spiritually in the clear light and day-spring from on high that hath visited us that lighteth every Man that cometh into the world for these things are right and just in the sight of God and Man It is easy to be honest because 1. God hath shewed it 2. Conscience hath shewed it 3. Laws have shewed it 4. Examples have shewed it But Self-love hath hid it Gain hath perverted it Power and cruelty have overthrown it Subtilty hath puzzled and perplexed it Eloquence and finery have minced and stain'd it Favour and Friends have put it by O bone Deus quid respondebimus in die illo judicii O Good God! what shall we answer at the Great day for these mockeries and crossed walkings against God and all Goodness SECT XLV The Truth is every where with every one Truth evident and yet no body will do it The Papist sayes It is with me I cannot err The Jew sayes It is with me I am God's peculiar The Turk sayes It is with me My sword defends it The Enthusiast sayes It is with me the Spirit teaches it The Atheist cares not where it is let it go for him if it be so hard to find and if not he had rather be without it But these and every of these and all the world have so much of God and of the Truth in them as may save them for God hath shewed it unto them if they would obey the Truth and cease to commit Idolatry and to blaspheme and to wrong their Neighbour SECT XLVI The truth indeed is plain if searched for in our selves only Caution 1. Be not too credulous to take it upon trust from others 2. Be not too curious and subtil to mask it over and hide it from our selves while it is in our bosoms Oh! the conscience knows and would do better things if it were better used and set to work by reason and sensuality kept down Honesty is known but is refused by our selves and taken away from others It can find no place but we shall dearly want it one day No Man is safe without it no Man is wise without it Mine and thine preserves me and thee and mine and thine It is easy to do right it is easy to do wrong all is but right and wrong truth and falshood just and unjust Mercy and cruelty God and my right the Devil and my wrong What shall I say 1. Give all right 2. Forgive all wrong 3. Do all right 4. Undo all wrong Wrongs and offences will come but woe be to them by whom they come it were better they had never been born but had been like the untimely fruit of a Woman that never saw the Sun But happy is he that doth right peace shall be upon him and upon the Israel of God The CONTENTS Transition Intention Execution Free will Imperfection Willingness Implicit faith Social Actions Jussion TITLE IV. Of Actions Transition NExt to the state of things and the conditions of persons to whom the rights annexed to things do belong the manner of Actions is to be considered by which rights are induced and acquired All Persons for themselves and in communion with others have Actions or business about things in which and to which they have a right These Actions are Thoughts and Words the tokens of thoughts or deeds the effects of words or signs the representation of deeds By all which Men act either by themselves or by their proxies or for themselves or for others SECT I. Intention 1. In Actions there is required the Intention of the Agent which proceedeth from the Uunderstanding and the will for he that acts must understand what he acts that he may perform and direct them wisely to the right objects and be affected with his actions that he may be zealous in them The Law requires all thing to be done with full purpose and understanding and free desire or will for else nothing can be finished or well done Else if any thing be done ignorantly or rashly pro non facto est The free will and consent is necessary for then that is of force which is done Therefore he is not judg'd to will who is under the will and command of another Man as of his Father or Lord nor hath a Minor or fool or Mad-man any will at all Ejus est velle qui potest nolle He is said to will that can also nill And the Will is expressed by silence or speaking or writing or signs or a Messenger Actions done in heat or passion are no Actions till they be ratified by perseverance in them and thereby they are confirmed to the judgment of the mind indeed They that err are not properly said to consent to Action and in business if such mistakes do intervene that which is so done by error is of no force meaning the error of fact not of Law Nam Juris ignorantia nocet facti non nocet That which comes to pass by chance is imputed as a crime to no Man Fate destroyes all liberty of will or action Also nothing is so contrary to consent as force or fear if the force be of greater violence than can be opposed and if the fear be such as may fall upon a Man of valour SECT II. In Actions also there is required the Execution of them Execution that they may take their full effect else the Actions are imperfect The Actions must appear to be consummate or otherwise it is as if they were not at all so for words clearly spoken and understood The Action so done is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the thing completely finished for the use intended and words effectually spoken according to their true meaning That which is done or spoken obscurely must receive interpretation from the affection of the doer or speaker or from that which is most likely or for the most part is
my poor wife and Children for I know my doom and accordingly am hastening as I am driven into Hell And I can expect no help from thee And this he expressed with a sedate mind as one that was earnestly going a journey The example of Francis Spira is fearful although there were not wanting some signs of hopes in him Alas the Church of Rome is a sad Mother leading her Children in a Maze affording them no assurance in Life or Death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the most part her Teachers deny the certainty of Salvation unless it be to some choice and eminent Saints and that not without a special Revelation As for others they have but poor hopes Yet Ambrosius Catharinus and Martin Eisengenius incline to the orthodox judgment Catharinus and Sotus oppose one another and Vega both The sense of the Council of Trent is versatile like the Oracles of Apollo Some were for a revealed Assurance some for no Assurance at all Some confessed ingeniously their ignorance in the point SECT I. 1. Doctrines of Masses c. The subtilty of maintaining this Doctrine of the uncertainty of Faith is contrived to uphold the Doctrine of Masses Dirges Indulgences Purgatory visiting of Saints Shrines c. such filthy gains as they daily make by such delusions which otherwise would altogether come tumbling down headlong to the ruin of the Politick Church One of them saith I have many a time and often visited the sick M. Eisenc and them that have died and no Man can say of me but that after they had declared their repentance and Faith I exhorted them with all diligence to have an undanted and certain confidence He farther saith That all the chiefest Divines of the World taught the same Doctrine ever since the Apostles daies So say Fisher of Rochester Gropper the Divines of Colen Ruard Dean of Lovain Castalius Vega c. So forcible is the Truth that falls from the mouths and pens of those that unreasonably oppose it SECT II. Doctrine of no Salvation without the Pale of the Church 2. The subtilty of maintaining the Doctrine of the certainty of Faith and absolute Assurance of eternal Justification is invented to uphold as the Doctrine of the Romish Church no hope of salvation without the Pale of that Church so to maintain the Doctrine of other Selected Churches of no hope of salvation without the narrow precincts of their several Conventicles So that as the Great Vicar holds the Keyes of Heaven and Hell at his girdle and hath all his Children at his beck even so the Petty-Vicars pin their Election or Reprobation on their sleeves And make their Subjects admire or fear their favours or frowns and dare not stir or budge from them upon pain of eternal damnation This Great and Lordly one over God's free People and Inheritance makes them 1. Slaves in their Judgments to believe all that their Grand Superintendents magisterially dictate unto them though it be never so absurd painful and costly 2. Slaves in their Persons to ride go or row dig or torl in the Gallies or Mines like Beasts or any other slavish and foolish actions even to Planting and watering of a dry stick to try their obedience To marry into what Families they please to enrich the Church or State 3. Slaves in their Estates to give all they have at or before their death from their Parents Children or Kinsmen Friends to Strangers of their own Sect. SECT III. Doctrine of lying still in Sin 3. The subtilty of this Doctrine of maintaining the Certainty of Faith and absolute Assurance of Eternal Justification is invented by Satan as his greatest stratagem to make him who is his vassal and lives in sin to believe that he is the Child of God and in the state of Grace that he may commit sin and not be the servant of sin but have his share in Christ An Assurance without a Warrant from the Spirit subscribed with the hands of Flesh and Bloud Perfection we would learn and pretend to attain it without ever learning to attain it by working it out with fear and trembling and making our Calling and Election sure Freedom we like but not to be restrained by the Laws of Christ which makes perfect Freedom Assurance we build upon but never build up our Assurance SECT IV. Imputed Righteousness We dare to talk of the imputed Righteousness of Christ while we have no real Righteousness of our own Boast of God's Spirit and Grace while we grieve the one and turn the other into wantonness This we call appearing clothed in our Elder Brother's Robes or as Jacob did we may steal away his Blessing Thus the Adulterer may say I am chast with Christ's chastity the Drunkard I am sober with Christ's temperance the Covetous I am poor with Christ's poverty the Revenger I forgive with Christ's charity The irregenerate and voluptuous dead in trespasses and sins I am born again mortified crucified dead and buried in Christ and with Christ Sen. Calvisius Sabinus fancied that he did every good work which his Servants did If they were Poets Orators Artificers c. he was all this So we say what Christ did we do what he suffered we suffer though we never so much as do or suffer any thing like him Therefore as Seneca said of that Grand Opimator I never saw a Man whose happiness did less become him So may it well be said of these who like Men clothed in Lions Skins or Owls with the Feathers of other Birds Their borrow'd Graces and Vizards do full ill become them their gay apparel sits ill upon them We talk of applying the promises to our selves which they may do that as enemies to the Cross of Christ never perform any one of them The applying of the promises of Christ is not a speculative but a practical thing an act much rather of the Will than of the Understanding If we keep God's word the promises will apply themselves when the Will of Man is subject to the Will of God The Blessing of God will fall like dew from Heaven of it self If we walk according to God's Rule God's Grace Mercy and Peace shall be upon us and upon the Israel of God If we put on the Lord Jesus Christ by imitation of his Righteousness obedience and Love in this his likeness he will own us and approve of us SECT V. 1. We may not think uncharitably Collections Uncharitableness that every one that is not of our Sect though he be an honest Man and feareth God is a Reprobate by the same uncharitable Rule they may think the same of us who differ just as much from us as we do from them and are as confident of their being in the right as we are of our being in the right 2. We may not think that our judgment of our own Estate or our Enemies judgment of our Estate shall be the rule by which God will proceed to judg both
when they have the Fee which their Fathers had and kept by their Allegiance to their death for them to succeed after them and they are punished when they have lost their Fee which their Fathers lost and did not keep by their felony to their death for them to lose after them what they might have had if their Fathers had performed the Condition So if Parents for their Vertue be made free their Children shall be free but this hath no true respect of reward but good fortune So if Parents for their Fine be reduced to slavery their Children shall be slaves but this hath no true respect of punishment but evil fortune Because no body before he is can have right that he should be born in such or such a condition but when he is born so or so it is his good or bad chance As an Infant in his Mothers womb is not properly acquitted when his Mother is acquitted and saved her life nor properly condemned when his Mother is condemned and loseth her life The CONTENTS Transition Demonstrations Traditions Scriptures Representative Church Some body must determine Pride Calumnies Scriptures Collections TITLE V. Of a Judge of Christs Laws Transition AFter all the discourse of Laws and the Law-maker there is a great cry that makes a great disturbance Who shall be the Judge and Interpreter of Christs Laws No hopes ever to convince such that take all upon trust and will be blinded for Policy and Interest but let Wisdom still speak and she will be justified of her Children and none but wilful Souls will stop their ears A Judge they lack and such as must be infallible but they cannot agree who this should be If some Moral Truths are as demonstrable as others which they call Mathematical then what need of a Judge When such moral Propositions are as Scientifical of themselves and create as full an assent to the understanding as Natural things which are perceptible of themselves and create a full apprehension to the sense The Laws of Nature are plain and as plain consequences may be made from them As that no man should steal or kill and from thence it is demonstrated That if Sejus or Titius do steal or kill they sin against the Law of Nature And such Ratiocinations as are rightly framed from necessary Principles create as undeniable Demonstrations As that a man is Risible Demonstrations because he is Rational That a Horse is one true and good because he is an Ens or that the Periphery of a Circle is Equidistant from the Centre Now if the Laws of Nature be so plain then they need no Judge And if the Positive Laws are so plain as they are or ought to be then they need no Judge also All Intellectual Entities have hitherto by the most of men been accounted probable only allowing by great favour infallibility to Revelations and therefore have been the more slighted and nothing thought worthy of credit but material Entities and objects of sense Now if Revelations come as they may do to the understanding as well as Natural notions and Sensual objects why may they not as plainly be apprehended supposing them as they must to be as plainly revealed as the rest are imprinted in the Soul or conveyed thither by the sense But still the Question is Who shall be the Judg and this Judge must be infallible too The old beaten way is to believe as the Church believes and the Churches Faith is resolved into the Pope or a general Council with or without him not yet agreed Surely there is a fallacy in the word Church as in the word People The Church is either taken for all the Church and the People for all the People which cannot meet to agree all or for the most part or best of the Church or People which can hardly meet to agree all So there is no certainty in either SECT I. Universal Traditions are doubtful Traditions The Eastern Church had one Tradition about Easter from St. John the Western another from St. Peter the Millenaries received their Tradition from Papias St. John's Disciple the rest denied it Councils were hardly ever universal or universally agreeing and mostly packt a few popular Orators and Politicians swayed all the rest So that we are at no certainty by these Certainty is either in Nature things actually existent to sense or in Morality from prime principles undoubted conclusions in the mind by Rational or Mathematical Demonstrations actually existent to Reason The Law of Nature is plain enough Consequences from thence are clear if rightly deducted by the help of Art Laws Positive are to flow from thence Subjects may know by these Laws what they are to have and what they are to do SECT II. Scriptures The Scriptures are God's Positive Laws commanded in his Will and Testament with Promises of Rewards so that by them all Subjects and Legatees understand what they are to have and what they are to do And as the Laws and Testaments of wise and good men are evident so much more the Laws and Testaments of God And therefore in all these Laws there is sufficient Certainty to every one who when all comes to all must judge as well as they can for themselves and the Laws fundamental and necessary are so plain that they may judge Else why should those Promises be made and those Duties be commanded if they to whom they were made and enjoyned could not possibly apprehend them and what other infallible Judge can be imagined especially when besides their own Judgments the Spirit is promised to all that will use what God hath already given them to lead them into all truth And so Christ the only Infallible Judge hath promised to be present by his Spirit unto the end of the World If in this state of Imperfection there remain doubts as there will we must be content to doubt as we do about such manners and circumstances of things as are not absolutely necessary to salvation the ignorance whereof may safely consist with our salvation If others be given over to believe lies it is a just Judgment of God upon them for their carelesness and sensuality As is the case of the Heathen Idolaters who though they knew God yet they glorified him not as God but became vain in their imaginations and their foolish hearts were darkened But still Wisdom is justified of all her Children and the true Faith hath been kept by them and will be kept unto the end of the World and Truth is Truth still In natural Principles all conceptions agree as to worship God to do as we would be done by c. and in supernatural Principles there is the same harmony of Faith in God and a good life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Thus the whole Church i. e. all Christians in all ages have received the Gospel and kept the Faith and so the Church is the pillar and ground of Truth The Church of God is guided
ought to be exploded and rooted out of minds innocently tender and good and willing to be taught better Discerning Party The honest searching and discerning Clergy and Laity discover them to be pious frauds to get Reputation and Gain and labour wisely and carefully to undeceive and satisfie the world by the few necessary and plain Truths of Christ as he and his Disciples have published them to all Mankind in the four Gospels and the Acts and Epistles of the Apostles And till this course be taken the Church and the World will never be at peace Primitive Times This Course was prosecuted in the first four hundred years with plainness and simplicity of Life and Doctrine by the best of Saints not without some intrusion of Judaism and Gentilism betimes even in the daies of the Apostles with other workings of men of Antichristian spirits But afterwards when Riches and Honour and with them Pride and Worldly Interests came crowding in amongst Church-men out went the old plain way of preaching and living and in came vain Philosophy Oratory Flattery Ambition Persecution Division and what not most unlike to the profession of Christianity and contrary to the power of godliness Many noble Souls had their eyes fixed and their hands exercised in the old way of Truth and grieved for the Deviations which they could not help or reform at all but protested manfully against them like faithful Witnesses and Followers of their Lord and Master and kept the Faith all along which was once delivered to the Saints and some died for it But at last after many overtures of Truth that could not be hid Reformation a greater assault was made than ordinary to shake off her chains bring her out of the Dungeon and rowse her up against Lies and it was done effectually to rare intents and purposes Then were the Ages filled with more learned and unbiassed men than ever since the Apostles daies Then together with Religion Arts and Sciences revived and flourished not without great augmentations of Honour Plenty and Peace that accrued thereunto in the kingdoms of the World which fared the better for the Church Yet envious men were never wanting nor ever will to sow Tares still foggs and vapours arise but the Sun shines and climbs his Meridian The strong man keepeth his house and there is none stronger than he to turn him out The old abominable Heresies though revived and new ones added nevertheless their monstrous heads are and will be cut off by the mighty Giants defenders of the Faith They sneak into corners hang down their heads dare not shew their guilty faces save to the ignorant and rebellious others hiss them out of doors The Ancient paths are now more and more enquired for and glorious Captains lead the way They that do not follow are nevertheless convinced and cannot but approve of the things they refuse to practice Those therefore that aspire to this Evangelical temper are the noblest Souls and tread in the stateliest paths of Vertue and Peace and bring more Souls unto God For which their labour and moderation they feel the odium of the World and the unlucky blows of their Enemies but are commended and defended by God and all good men for their so honourable and gallant undertakings Besides what Errors have been of old there have been since by degrees brought in so many as threaten corruption of the whole Mass of Christian Doctrine As the setting up Infallibility and Supremacy where none should seek to be the greatest the Idol of the Masse the Worship of Daemons the Diana for Gain Purgatory and Pardons the cheat of Auricular Confessions Images Penances Reliques and innumerable Ceremonies repugnant to the simplicity of Gospel worship To these may be added the Chymistry of Rosicrucians Behemists Cabbalists Casuists Summists School-men Postillers and Enthusiasts of all sorts These high and Magisterial dictates imposed upon the pain of Damnation together with the intolerable Pride Avarice and Luxury of Church-men open the mouths of the Adversary to cry down the Clergy for Cheats and Robbers of the Souls Honours and Estates of Mankind cause them to question all Truths and fall into direct Atheism and Profaneness Yet am I not without powerful hopes and do already see and wonder at the wise and gracious Providence of God in stirring up the spirits of Rare men to baffle the Carnal Fallacies and Superstitious Riddles that have bewitched the Age and advance the power of Godliness and pure worship with obedience to Princes 1. God hath abolished the Jewish Service 2. God hath silenced the Heathenish Oracles 3. God hath ceased from Miracles frighting Mortals by Comets Plagues Famines c. into faith and obedience 4. Never purer Wits since the world stood 5. Never braver Clergy since the World stood 6. Never holier Souls since the world stood 7. Never baser Spirits since the world stood As for this Dross of the Age the Ranters and Atheists they will die and be damned like base fellows as they are they will soon be kick't off the stage and drove out of the Hives as useless and hurtful in Church and State the very shame of Mankind a fair riddance in God's good time and Truth which is greatest will prevail Wisdom shall be justified of her Children shame shall be unto Fools and God shall be glorified above all Amen The Clench for good and all The Dispositions of God's Will and Estate by Testament are concerning Things to be had videlicet a present Right to a future Inheritance and concerning Things to be done for the having them or for Justification to them by Faith and for the holding of them by Sanctification or Tenure of Love In Gods last Will and Testament managed and ratified for ever by Christ's death and performed by his Resurrection Ascension Oblation Session and Last Judgment is disposed a present Right to a future estate of Eternal Blessedness The Earnest and Assurance whereof is sealed unto us by the Spirit of God in the means of Faith justifying thereunto The Last stroke God is the Sole Lord of Blessedness to which the Faithful have the true Right by oath of Fealty to their Liege Lord to hold it in Fee by personal homage and service When they have performed their Faith and Allegiance and done their full homage constantly to the end of their Spiritual warfare then are they invested in the full and indefeisable Estate of Blessedness in a quasi Allodium for ever The End of the Second Volume