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A73267 The dignitie of Gods children. Or An exposition of 1. Iohn 3. 1.2.3 Plentifully shewing the comfortable, happie, and most blessed state of all Gods children, and also on the contrarie, the base, fearefull, and most wofull condition of all other that are not the children of God. Stoughton, Thomas. 1610 (1610) STC 23315.5; ESTC S117855 406,069 519

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on the contrary hunger as much after the bread of God that lasteth to eternall life and thirst after the water of life which whosoeuer drinketh of he shall neuer thirst againe and if we shall as new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word that we may grow thereby 1. Pet. 2. 2. this shall be a further assurance to our own hearts that we our selues are borne of God The like is to be said of other spirituall actions so also of our spirituall growth and increase For as the naturall child new borne doth daily wax and increase in stature and in strength till it be able to goe and to doe other things answerable to the growth thereof as digesting of stronger meats bearing of burdens speaking like a man c so is it with all that are new borne not of mortall but of immortall seed by the word of God They will be able to digest high points of doctrine and not say of some things as some said of Christs doctrine touching his flesh to bee meat in deed and his bloud to be drinke indeed This is an hard saying who can heare it and so take occasion to leaue Christ and to walke no more with him Ioh. 6. 60. and 66. They will be able to walke strongly vp and downe not stumbling at euery straw They will bee able to beare Gods chastisements without murmuring wrongs at the hands of men without seeking reuenge c. They will be able to do the works of God both belonging to all Christians and also which are more sutable to their speciall callings These things I say and such like will all borne againe grow to doe and by these things they shall discerne their spirituall birth and the life of God to be in them Notwithstanding these things are not alike in all that are new borne no not in all of the same spirituall age For as it is amongst naturall men touching naturall strength some are of a low stature some of a taller some are strong men some are weaklings yea sometimes the yonger are taller and stronger then their elders by many yeeres so is it amongst spirituall men touching this spirituall life and this spirituall birth wherof now we speake But these things shall be more manifest by other things after to be spoken This life of God is the more excellent because it is euerlasting Being once begun it shall neuer haue end being once giuen it shall neuer be taken away Our naturall life shall haue an end I meane the life of the body and soule together begun and continued by naturall meanes and no man knoweth how soone But the life of God shall continue as God himselfe abideth for euer and as the seed whereby men are begotten to this life is not mortall but immortall But of this also more afterward In the meane time by that which hath been said it may appeare that this benefit of our spirituall life is a matter well worthy of all good account and reckoning This present life which our bodies doe liue in this world by their communion with the soule is greatly to be esteemed yea more then all other things appertaining thereunto Satan himselfe could say vnto God Skin for skinne and all that euer a man hath will he giue for his life Iob 2. 4. Amongst the benefits for which wisedome is commended about siluer and gold and pearles and all things that can be desired length of daies is not only one but also the first and placed in the right hand of wisedome whereas riches and glory are in the second place and said to be in the left hand Pro. 3. 16. Our Sauiour saith Is not the life more worth then meat Mat. 6. 25. What then is to be compared vnto it what benefit shall a man haue by any other thing yea by all other things if he haue not meat The Prophet saith that none of those that trust in their goods and beast themselues in the multitude of their riches can redeeme his brother viz. appointed by God to dye or giue a ransome for him that is no man can by any mony prolong the daies of his friend or buy out his death so precious is the redemption of their soules c. that he may liue for euer Psal 49. 6. 7. 8. 9. Is this naturall life so precious which yet as I said shall haue an end and no man knoweth either how soon or in what place or in what manner How excellent then is that spirituall life the life of God and the life that is eternall The more excellent therefore that this life is being a part of that matter wherein consisteth our new birth next to Christ himselfe and comming by Christ the more excellent also is the new birth it selfe of the children of God and their state and condition thereby Thus much for the life of God which all the children of God haue in their regeneration by Iesus Christ CHAP. X. Of some other things further concerning the matter of the regeneration of the children of God and of their very being the children of God viz. of their knowledge of God and of their true wisedome declared by the opposition thereunto of the ignorance foolishnesse and madnesse of all meere naturall wicked and vnregenerate men TO proceed further in declaration of other things concerning the very matter and being of the children of God the next point to be considered is the true knowledge vnderstanding and wisedome wherewith all the children of God are indued and enlightned And these things are to bee taken as some particular degrees of the life of God generally before spoken of as also as parts of the new man and of the image of God repaired and restored in our regeneration yea finally as parts also of our said regeneration it selfe Of these things I will speake as before I haue done generally of the life of God viz. by opposing vnto them the naturall ignorance foolishnesse and madnesse of all naturall men not regenerated that so by this opposition of their contraries the said true knowledge vnderstanding and wisedome may be made manifest to be the more excellent things and the more to set foorth the dignity of our regeneration Now as these things I meane this our naturall ignorance foolishnesse and madnesse be contrary to true knowledge vnderstanding and wisedome so the contrary may be said of these euils that hath been said of those vertues viz. that as those vertues are degrees and parts of the life of God of the new man and of the image of God newly created in all that are regenerated so these euils are also to be accounted as degrees and parts of that death of that old man and of that image of Satan in all the vnregenerate before generally touched Touching both these contraries they are expressed first by certaine metaphors the better to set forth their nature These metaphors are light and darknesse sight and blindnesse and such other phrases as are sutable to the
common saying that the law resteth in pectore Iudicis in the Iudges breast and so one thing is law one yeere and the cleane contrary is lawe another But the word of God being no more variable in sense then in words but alwaies is constant as God himselfe is alwaies the same is so much the more excellent Therefore also the dignity of the children of God that haue this word for their constant rule both of their faith and of their manners is so much the greater For if once they haue the true sense of any part of the word they haue it for euer I might heere speake of a third perpetuity besides the former two of the letter and of the sense viz. touching the efficacy thereof in whomsoeuer it taketh roote downward to bring foorth fruit vpward For in such it neuer dieth but abideth to the eternall life of them in whom it is so effectual and powerfull For such are said to fulfill the word of God and to abide for euer 1. Ioh. 2. 17. Their soules in death it selfe liue with God in heauen and though their bodies consume for a time yet they perish not but shall be raised vp againe at the last day and be made like vnto the glorious body of Christ as afterward we shall heare Phil 3. 21. and so God continueth their God as well in death as in life in which respect it is said that God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Marke 12. 27. But because by many occasions in many places of this treatise I fall into mention of this point therefore heere it shall be enough thus only to haue named it Thus much for the perpetuity of Gods word and so also for the first thing touching the word in this place viz. as it is a rule of faith and manners Now followeth the second consideration of the word in this place namely as it is a part of the armor of God whereby we are to defend our selues against the enemies of our saluation Touching this it is called the sword of the Spirit Ephes 6. 17. yea we are to obserue that in that place it hath not onely a single place but a double in the christiā armor there prescribed For the Apostle doth not only generally bid them to take the sword of the spirit which is the word of God but also more particularly he doth will them in verse 15. that their feete should bee shod with the preparation of the gospell of peace Neither is the word of God one part or two parts onely of the spiritual armor wherby we are to defend our selues against our spiritual enemies but also in a manner our whole christiā armor or at least the armory and storehouse out of which all the other parts of Christiā armor are to be had yea the principall meanes also whereby they are to bee obtained For from whence or by what means are we to haue the girdle of truth the brest-plate of righteousnes the shoes of the gospel of peace the shield of faith the helmet of saluation from whence I say or by what meanes are we to haue all these but frō by the word of God Therfore it seemeth that the Apostle did of special purpose set Note that in the last place as the meanes fountaine of all the rest By the word as there the Apostle calleth it the sword of the spirit we are to vnderstand all sentēces of Scripture touching doctrine all commandements of God negatiue against euill affirmatiue for that which is good all promises of blessings and all threatnings of iudgements and all examples both of such sinnes as are forbidden with the execution of Gods iudgements vpon such as haue committed them and also of all vertues with the performance of Gods promises vnto thē We are also further to obserue that the word is called the sword of the spirit not only because the word was first giuen by inspiration of God 2. Tim. 3. 16. and holy men spake as they were moued by the holy ghost 2. Pet. 1. 21. and the Prophets searched when and at what time the fore-witnessing spirit of Christ in them should declare the things that are now shewed c. 1. Pet. 1. 11. but also because we know not how to vse this sword but by direction of the spirit neither hath this sword any sharpnes for defence of our selues and wounding of our aduersaries except it bee accompanied and as it were edged by the spirit This sword was so vsed by Steuen against his aduersaries that they were not able to resist the wisedome and the spirit by the which he spake Acts 6. 10. By this sword Peter defended himselfe and other that spake strange tongues against them that maliciously said They were full of new wine Acts 2. 14. 15. c. By this sword Apollo mightily confuted the Iewes publikely shewing by the Scriptures that Iesus was the Christ Acts 18. 28. By this sword Iesus Christ himselfe defended himselfe against the diuell himselfe and at last put him to flight repelling all his assaults with this weapon It is written Man shall not liue by bread onely c. It is written Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God c. It is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serue Mat. 4. 4. c. Christ could haue repelled Satan by his secret power but he did it rather by his Note word to commend his word in like cases against all his assaults He could haue put him to flight without any answer at the first but he suffered him to assault him diuers waies and answered all by It is written to teach vs likewise by the same weapon to defend our selues not against some but against all tentations This then is the priuiledge of all the children of God that though they haue many and mighty aduersaries yet they haue alwaies armour sufficient sufficiently to defend themselues against them all If at any time they receiue any hurt it is either because they draw not forth this sword of the Spirit or because they doe not rightly vse it Neither is this word only a sword to defend them but also a salue to cure them if by neglect thereof at any time or by not vsing it rightly they receiue any wound What was the cause of the death I meane of the spirituall death of our first parents Adam and Eue Because they drew not out the sword of Gods word against the Serpent as they should haue done Whereby were they cured and restored to life againe By the voice of God calling and as it were crying after them when they fled hid themselues from him What was the cause of the grieuous wound that Peter receiued in the high Priests hall a thousand times greater then that which before he had giuen to the high Priests seruant in cutting off his eare was it not because he had forgotten the former word of Christ admonishing him
Cor. 5. 17. Galat. 6. 5. and to be created in Christ Iesus Ephes 2. 10. and 4. 24. So farforth therefore as we are in Christ we are the children of God And so many as are not thus incorporated into Christ are not in truth neither ought to be called the children of God Such perhaps may be so accounted by other yea peraduenture they may so account themselues But as those that are begotten in adultery by an adulterer may be reputed the children of the lawfull husband to the adulteresse and yet are indeed bastards and for the most part may be discerned so to be by their bastardly conditions so is it with them that liuing in the Church of God doe professe them selues to be the children of God and be so reputed by other and yet haue no communion with Christ Though they be reputed to be the children of God yet they are no better then bastards and bastards they bewray themselues to be by their bastardly minds and conuersation Although therefore in one respect we reckoned Christ before amongst the efficient causes of our regeneration and that therfore in respect of his excellēcy our regeneration also is to be accounted the more excellent yet in another respect he may also be accounted the materiall cause of our regeneration euen as naturall parents are both the efficient causes of our naturall birth and doe likewise communicate the matter of their bodies vnto ours And so the more excellent that before we heard Christ to be the more we may againe conclude the dignity of Gods children to be by his being the chiefe materiall cause as well as the efficient cause of their regeneration For as that that is made of siluer or gold or any other such like pretious matter is it selfe more pretious then other things made of brasse tinne lead yron Copper or any other such vile and base matter the quantity of things being alike otherwise a great vessell of copper may be better then a very small cup of siluer so the more excellent that Christ himselfe is who is the chiefe matter of Gods children and of whom they be called Christians as that that is made of gold is called golden and the children of God the more excellent needs must be their state and condition CHAP. IX More largely shewing other things concerning the matter of regeneration especially the renewing of the life of God in vs all that are new borne which before were vtterly void of the said life BVT leauing that point till afterward let vs in the next place looke into the excellent gifts and graces which by the former incorporation into Christ the children of God doe receiue and in respect whereof we are said to be partaker of the diuine nature and the which likewise may be esteemed as parts as it were of that matter whereof they do consist These things let vs consider by opposition of that vnto them that men are since the fall of Adam as naturally descending from Adam and being as it were boughs and branches of him In Adam and by Adam since his fall all men Christ himselfe onely excepted haue vtterly lost that excellent and glorious image wherein Adam and Eue at the first were both created Genes 1. 26. 27. This losse of that excellent and glorious image is described by this phrase of dying the death Genes 2. 17. This death was not a naturall death but it was a spirituall death It was not the separation of the soule and the body but it was the separation of God and man as touching that gratious familiarity which before had beene betwixt them As the soule is the life of the body so is God the spirituall life of the whole man For man is not said to be aliue vnto God any longer then he is in grace and fauour with God so that to die the death in that place was to be vtterly depriued of the inherent grace and fauour of God which before they were created in From that time therefore that our first parents had eaten of the forbidden fruit and thereby had defaced the image of God in them they were drowned ouer head and eares in all sinne and so now also in the state of condemnation and were no more able of themselues to haue gotten out of the same then a man drowned and dead in the bottom of a great riuer or pond is able of himselfe to get out And this is that dying the death before spoken of euen a spirituall death ten thousand times worse then any naturall death I meane then any separation of the soule and body though the same be by neuer so violent meanes For it is the beginning and first step vnto that euerlasting death of body and soule whereof afterward we shall speake more at large and from the which neither wee could haue freed our selues neither could any other creatures or all creatures if God himselfe had not sent his owne sonne as before hath been shewed And that spirituall life which is contrary to the said death and which is also the first effect of Christ in vs after that once wee are ingrafted and incorporated into him is the next point of the matter of our regeneration and being the children of God That we may the better see what this life of God is in vs let vs first more largely consider what the former death is and how all men are by nature wholly possessed thereof That therefore which the Apostle saith of the Ephesians is to be vnderstood of all men by nature viz. that they are dead in sinnes and trespasses Ephes 2. 1. without God and without Christ in the world verse 12. as not beleeuing in God or Christ and therefore being condemned already as before we heard our Sauiour to say Ioh. 3. 18. and the rather were they so indeed dead in their sinnes because they were the children of him that had the power of death that is of the diuell Heb. 2. 14. compared with Ioh. 8. 44. For Sathan hauing once put out the light and the life of God in Adam whereby he was the child of God like vnto God did make him a sonne to himselfe so that as before hee did beare the image of God so for euer afterward hee and all his Christ onely excepted did beare the image of the diuell in which respect it is saide generally that hee that committeth sinne is of the diuell 1. Iohn 3. 8. Thus we see that our naturall state is not as the Papists plead it to be by allegorizing vpon him that our Sauiour saith did fall into the hands of theeues and was by them wounded and left halfe dead Luk 10. 30. but farre worse not halfe miserable but altogether miserable not wounded and yet aliue though halfe dead but so wounded that we are altogether dead We haue a vegetatiue and an animall life as all liuing and brutish creatures haue we haue a reasonable life to talke and reason and discourse and determine and conclude of
the second death Reuel 2. 11. And this second death is tenne thousand times worse then the first death I meane then the separation only of the soule and the body yea it were better ten thousand times that the soule and the body of the wicked should die and vtterly perish and come to nothing as the life and body of beasts doe then that they should bee tormented as they shall be Therfore it is called by the name both of the second death and also of fire euen of the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone Reu. 19. 20. and 20. 10. It is likewise called a worme and a fire Marc. 9. 44. c. where in verse 43. the word hell and sire are ioined together How intolerable also the paines and torment of hell bee it appeareth by that of the rich mans soule in hell Luk. 16. 23. 24. where it is said that he being touching his soule in hell and seeing Lazarus a farre off in Abrahams bosome marke this word afarre off against the Papists that will haue Abrahams bosome to be neere vnto hell and a part of hell it selfe he cried out to Abraham that Lazarus to whom before he had denied all comfort and to whom his dogs had shewed more mercy then himselfe he cried I say that Lazarus might be sent to dip the top of his finger in water for the cooling of his tongue Why so Because said he I am tormented in this flame Such then were his paines and torments that if he might haue had but a little ease for one member he would haue accounted it an exceeding fauour Such also shall be the torments of all other the wicked that shall be condemned And although the torments of condemnation be thus described by these fearfull things in this life yet the truth is that no fearefull thing in this world can sufficiently expresse the torments of the wicked in the world to come The most exquisite torments that euer haue been deuised by any mercilesse cruell and sauage tyrants for the bodies of men hanging burning either all at once or by piece-meales renting in pieces with wild horses pinching the flesh off with hot irons boyling in lead sawing broiling vpon gridyrons and such like all these I say are but sports pastimes delights and pleasures in respect of the torments to come in an other world All these degrees of condemnation hitherto spoken of are the more because the said condemnation so described shall be euerlasting without end without any mitigation that is signified by the worme that dieth not and by the fire that neuer goeth out Mark 9. 44. c. as also by the answer before spoken of of Abraham to the rich man tormented in hell therefore also we heard it before called euerlasting fire and euerlasting paine Mat. 25. 46. and euerlasting perdition 2. Thes 1. 9. Yea so farre is the condemnation of the wicked from all end and mitigation that when all other things shall haue a kind of end and when the soules of the wicked shall be ioyned to their bodies in the day of iudgment then likewise shal their torments be increased This much amplifieth all the former It is much to haue the frowning countenance and wrathfull sentence of God to be banished from his gratious presence and to be depriued of all good company and of all other good things to bee made a companion of diuels and to be cast into the place of vtter darkenesse where is weeping and gnashing of teeth and there to be tormented with a worme gnawing and a fire burning all these things I say are very much though they should be but for a time but neuer to haue God to looke cheerefully vpon them or to speake comfortably vnto them to bee banished from his gratious presence for euer neuer to haue any good company nor any other comfortable thing to be alwayes companion with the diuels and to be throwne into the place of darkenesse from whence there is no hope of any redemption and to be tormented vnspeakably for euer without any mitigation to haue a worme alwaies gnawing within and neuer dying and a fire euer burning without and neuer consuming or wasting alas alas what eare doth not tingle to heare what heart doth not quake and ake tremble and shiuer to thinke vpon it Yea who quaketh not who in euery member and ioynt trembleth not to consider of it though himselfe be assured of freedome and discharge from it How then shall they quake quiuer and tremble that shall indeed bee so condemned All miserie and punishments here are somewhat mitigated to him that suffereth them by hope of an end at the last if not before yet at least in the houre of death The hardest apprentiship that euer was with the most cruel merciles master after the longest time serued had some cōfort by thinking the time thereof to come to bee shorter than that that was past The like may besaid of any other bondage But in the condemnation of the wicked the longest time is alwaies behind A beginning there is but no ending An hundred yeers past a thousand follow and so million after million O dolefull ô wofull ô fearfull condition When Saul heard of the losse of this life the day following not by the spirit of truth but by the father of lies satan himselfe not transformed into an Angell of light but only appearing in the habit of a Prophet He fell straightway all along vpon the earth and was sore afraid because of those words so that there was no strength in him neither could any body almost comfort him 1. Sam. 28. 17. Belshazzars countenance was changed and his thoughts troubled him at the sight of the hand writing vpon the wall writing indeed his present ouerthrow yet not to his vnderstanding till Daniel did read and interpret the said writing that the ioints of his loines were loosed and his knees smote one against the other Dan. 5. 6. His bones as we say did rattle in his skin because from the guiltinesse of his conscience he feared the worst though as yet hee knew nothing How then think we was he perplexed when the sentence of God therein contained was executed vpon him Felix trembled to heare Paul but dispute or preach of righteousnesse temperance and the iudgement to come Acts 24 25. Alas then how do al those tremble and gnash their teeth that do already feele the execution of the sentence of condemnation in their soules And how shall they and all other the wicked quake and tremble in the day of iudgement when they shall receiue the full sentence of condemnation against their soules and bodies for euer and euer without reuocation without mitigation The more fearfull that thus it appeareth and is manifest shal bee the condemnation of the wicked that die in their sinnes the greater priuiledge prerogatiue and dignity it shall be to the children of God to be freed and discharged from the same I might haue illustrated all before
in the description of the resurrection 1. Cor. 15. 52. there is no other sort mentioned but the dead to bee raised and the liuing at that time vpon the earth to be changed The trumpet shall blow and the dead shall be raised vp incorruptible and we viz all which at that day shall be liuing shal be changed The like is 1. Thess 4. 15. 16. 17. This say we vnto you by the word of the Lord that we which liue and are remaining in the comming of the Lord shall not preuent them which sleepe for the Lord himselfe shall descend downe from heauen with a shout and with the voice of an Archangell and with the trumpet of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first Then shall wee which liue and remaine be caught vp with them also in the clouds c. In neither of both these places is there any mention of any but of the dead and of the liuing and remaining here vpon the earth Enoch therfore and Elias must be reckned with the dead accounted as dead though they died in an extraordinary maner neither violent or painfull to themselues or discerned by other Fifthly all the elect being compared to a body and it being contrary to the nature of a body that any one member should bee perfected till the body haue all the members belonging thereunto how can it bee that one or two of the members of Christs body should be perfected and wholly glorified in heauen Christ wanting many members and not being compleat in his said body till the very last age of the world and till the last point of the said age For who can deny but that there are many of the elect yet vnborne When also they shall bee all borne who can deny but that they shall be called one after another Till all be borne and all be called Christs body is not perfect Sixthly who can deny the Ministers of the Gospell to bee more excellent especially the Apostles and Euangelists who first planted the Churches among the Gentiles who I say can deny these to bee more honorable then any Ministers vnder the Law Much more then any before the Law This hath beene shewed before therefore I doe not now stand vpon it This only I adde that it is said of the Apostles as an honourable thing and as a dignity and prerogatiue of them aboue all other namely that they should sit vpon twelue seats or thrones and iudge the twelue tribes of Israel Matth. 19. 28. It is likewise to be acknowledged that as the calling was more honourable then the calling of any of the Prophets so also they had more excellent graces not only speciall for discharge of their speciall places but also generally of sanctification Is this so How vnlikely then is it that any especially vnder the Law or before the Law should haue any degree of glory and be perfectly glorified before them Seuenthly there were some as wicked in their time before their time and after their time and daily are as they now in question were godly yea former times and these last times doe affoord many much more wicked then they then were or any other are godly Such was Ieroboam that made Israel to sinne Ahab and many other of the kings of Israel So Iudas that betraied our Sauiour the Pharisees that sinned against the holy Ghost the man of sinne called likewise the sonne of perdition the aduersarie that exalteth himselfe against all that is called God c. and many other contemners of the Gospell Yet none of these doe goe bodily into the place of all the damned till the day of iudgement Why then should wee thinke that they before named Enoch and Elias went bodily into heauen the place of the blessed This that I haue hitherto written of Enoch and Elias is the iudgement of diuers other that must bee acknowledged to haue beene glorious lights and worthy of much praise in the Churches Caluin indeed writeth heerein somewhat obseurely and I confesse somewhat aboue my reach and capacitie for first thus hee writeth vpon Genes 5. 24. euen word for word the Latine turned into English In summe saith hee speaking of Enochs taking away such a rapture or taking away was but a gentle and ioifull passage out of this world Yet he was not receiued into the heauens to glorie but was onely released of the miseries of this present life vntill Christ the first fruits of them that rise again s●ould come And sith bee was one of the members of the Church it was necessarie that hee should wait till all the members together should come foorth to meet Christ that the whole body might bee vnited to the head Notwithstanding in the very next words he doth much obscure that which before hee had written adding If any shall obiect that of the Apostle It is appointed all men to die once the solution is easie namely that death doth not alwaies make a diuorce of the soule and body but they are said to die which put off the corruptible nature in which manner they shall die whom the last day shall finde remaining These last words I confesse I cannot conceiue namely how any may be said to die whose soules and bodies are not separated and how they that shall be liuing at the last day may be said to die whom the Apostle expresly saith shall not die but only be changed Peter Martyr according to his manner writeth very largelie and somewhat I confesse different from something before written by me namely in his Commentarie vpon 2. King 2. 11. Notwithstanding in another place he commeth neerer vnto me and agreeth more with me In the former place first he writeth that it is not probable or Consent●●eum like that these two Enoch and Elias should be taken to the places of blessednesse before Christ himselfe which is the first fruits of all had aduanced himselfe thither The words also of our Lord may seeme to perswade this who in Iohn saith No man hath ascended into heauen but the sonne of man that descended from heauen He therefore denieth any man to haue ascended into heauen before himselfe c. Yet afterward hee saith that they went bodie and soule into Abrahams bosome and he maketh Abrahams bosome a place aboue yet distinct from the glorious place where Christ and all his Saints departed this life are How sound this is I leaue to other of sound iudgement For my part I know no such distinction as he there maketh After this he proceedeth further denying them to haue died opposing himselfe to them that said as I haue written viz. that they died but yet an extraordinary kinde of death neither by any defect or decay of nature nor by any force and violence but after some other sort with ease and delight c. Notwithstanding in the other place before insinuated he differeth from that which himselfe had before written and agreeth with me For writing of the Eucharist against Steuen Gardiner
Loc. 1. and answering the 11. obiection of Gardiner thus he writeth If you doe beleeue that Enoch and Elias doe yetliue you doe beleeue it without the Scripture Elias was taken away after an admirable sort and withdrawen from Elizeus in a firie chariot but that his spirit was not stript from his body by what testimonie of Scripture will you prooue it Then immediately concerning Enoch hee acknowledging that which is written Heb. 11. 5. to haue beene done that God might testifie by his said extraordinary kinde of translating his loue towards him for the better prouocation of other to the imitation of his goodnesse hee demandeth of Gardiner But how know you that afterward viz. after his taking from the Common sight of men he dyed not when he was safe and out of danger of sinne you will say that the epistle to the Hebrewes bath that he might not see death A man may vnderstand that that he might not feele death whiles he was in the world that he might not die a common and an ordinarie death But that hee died not after his translation how will you make vs belieue And there want no Hebrew writers which expounding the second booke of the Kings doe say that Elias his body and all his garments except his cloake or mantle were consumed in the whirlweinge but that the Spirit of the Prophet went vnto God Oecolampadius in Heb. 11. 5. citing the words of Genesis translated by the Septuagints And Enoch pleased God and was not found because God translated him Notwithstanding saith he by these words it is not prooued that hee did not die Because if hee were of the seede of Adam it must be that hee was mortall And truely this is most agreeable to truth and consonant to the analogy of faith For Christ alone is the first begotten of the dead and hath opened paradise to them that beleeue And that which moueth me more so long time as Christ had not payed the price of our redemption so long also a long sword or a fierce and shaken sword did stop all passage into paradise If also he were translated into paradise how did Christ bold safe his dignitie But if you will make here a miracle then he must yet looke for death and a change But if any will obserue the maner of the Apostle bee will not meruaile that he hath said that he did not see death For as wee haue seene him to doe before touching Melchisedech hee would affirme nothing besides the testimonie of the Scripture and because that he saith not expresly that he died therefore he did not endeauour to set downe so much In the meane time notwithstanding he denyeth him not to haue died as likewise he doth not Melchisedeth c. Thus much Occolampadius Martinus Borrhaus a learned writer about the yeare 1539. in his commentaries vpon Genesis Chap. 5. 24. doth so interpret that place as I doe That worthy and famous man M. Doctor Fulke also is most plainly of my side and agreeth fully with me For confuting the marginall note of the Rhemish translators of the new testament vpon Heb. 9 8. he saith that heauen was not opened by the sacrifices of the first tabernacle c. and that our Sauiour was the first that entred into perfect glorie of heauen So to their marginall note vpon Heb. 11. 5. that there it appeared that Enoch yet liueth and is not dead against the Caluinists he briefly answereth thus It appeareth not that Enoch yet liueth in bodie more then Moses or Elias but that hee was translated by God out of the world and died not after the common maner of men So he insinuateth that he died but not after the common maner of men To their notes at large vpon Reu. 11. 3. he answereth thus You will saith he proue that they that is Enoch and Elias are aliue in paradise But what place is paradise but heauen as the Apostle declareth 2. Cor. 12. 2. and 4. for earthly paradise either by the flood or before was defaced Now what doctrine it is to affirm● that men in mortall bodies ascended into heauen I leaue to the learned to consider And presently after It is euident indeed saith he that Elias was taken vp aliue but not that hee continueth aliue Yea because it is said expresly that he was taken vp into heauen it is certaine that his body was not carried into heauen for Christ was the first that in whole humanity ascended into heauen Master Samuel Bird likewise a learned and godly minister late of Ipswich in Suffolke writing vpon Heb. 11. 5. saith thus It is said that he was taken vp that he might not see death the meaning is that he did not die after the common maner of men he was exempted from the violent separation of the soule from the body which nature doth abhorre not but that his bodi● did wast away and did not ascend into heauen For Christ is the first that entred in his body into heauen to take possession of it for vs. Heb. 9. 12. With the former testimonies affirming that Enoch and Elias are not bodily yet in heauen but that their bodies were dissolued as well as the bodies of other though after an extraordinary maner I may ioine the testimonie of Doctor Downam For in his second booke of Antichrist chap. 6. page 59. though he doe not plainely affirme as much as the former Authors haue done yet he maketh it so doubtfull of their bodies yet being in heauen that a man may easily perceiue that he rather inclineth to the former writers then otherwise The obiections to the contrary are of no moment and be answered before Onely where it is said that Elias was carried vp in a whirlewinde into heauen first wee must vnderstand that some read this word heauen in the geniti●e case thus carried vp in a whirlewinde of heauen Secondly the word heauen in the scripture is often vsed for the aire or for all aboue the earth Let the foule flie vpon the earth in the open firmament of the heauen Gen. 1. 20. so the foules of the heauen verse 26. and in diuers other places And that it is so here to be taken it is the more probable because it is not to be thought but that Elias had other garments besides his mantle Except therefore his said other garments were carried vp into the high heauen we must grant that the word heauen doth only signify the aire in the which his body might as well waste as his other garments besides his mantle which fell from him did consume Some man perhaps may thinke all this discourse of Enoch and Elias to bee altogether idle and impertinent vnto my present treatise of the dignity of Gods children and a meere digression from the same But if it be well considered it maketh much for it as much amplifying the said dignity of Gods children For sith Enoch and Elias were so rare and excellent men for their times as the Scriptures
immediately make our soules how then c●me we stained with originall sinne it may receiue a double answer First that they come by sinne at their entrance into the body as in old time men might get the leprosie by entring into an house only infected with the leprosie and as men may now get the plague by going to the house lately visited therewith though no man dwell in the said house as also by putting on a garment comming from one that had the plague For the body is an house or garment of the soule comming from our polluted and defiled parents Secondly touching the said great obiection it is altogether curious to inquire of the manner when the thing is manifest For a man may as well inquire of Note them that were raised from death to life by the Prophets and by our Sauiour and his Apostles especially of the faithfull so raised Lazarus Dorcas c. how after their said restoring to life againe they became sinners againe and so subiect to death againe For being dead and their soules and bodies in death separated it cannot be denied but that during that time they were free from sinne both in body and in soule If therefore this bee a curious question how they became againe def●led with sinne and to need to pray for forgiuenesse of their trespasses then also is the former For there is the like reason of the one and of the other To returne to our former speech of adoption although God haue such a Sonne of his owne in whom he is well pleased yea many other sonnes likewise by creation keeping still that glorious image wherein they were created viz. al the blessed Angels yet because Adam had transgressed and that through his fal he had no children amongst the sons of men therefore it pleased him also to adopt vs vnto himselfe This then is one difference betwixt the adoption of God and the adoption of men that men only adopt children when they haue none of their owne but God adopteth vs though he haue one of his owne by nature and many by creation like vnto himselfe Another difference is that when men doe adopt there is Note not neither can be any second generation of him that is adopted whereby to make him like to him that doth adopt him being before vnlike vnto him For to make one like to another passeth the worke of any man But in our adoption to God there is not onely an acceptation of vs for his children but there is also an actuall regeneration and second birth wrought in vs by Gods spirit therefore called the spirit of adoption whereby we are made like to our Father that doth adopt vs. Secondly men hauing no children of their owne cannot adopt other in any or by any but God hauing a Sonne of his owne as we said doth in him and by him and through him as it were by marying of vs vnto him and incorporating vs into him adopt vs for his children Moreouer touching adoption the whole number of children adopted to God considered iointly together are accounted as one viz. as a daughter so made by marriage to the only Sonne of God Psal 45. 10. Hos 2. 9. in which respect the whole Catholike Church comprehending all the elect and children of God and no other is often called by the name of a Spouse and of one spouse vnto Christ Cantic 4. 8. 9. 10. and 5. 1. Iohn 3. 29. Reu 21. 2. and 9. and as of one wife Ierem. 3. 1. c. and the Church is said to be but one euen one alone and the only daughter of her mother Cantic 6. 8. and one body in Christ Rom. 12. 5. 1. Cor. 12. 12. Ephes 4. 4. But the children of God being seuerally considered according to the seuerall sex of euery one they are called the sonnes and daughters of God as before we heard Thus much of the eighth particular word in this text In the last place the Apostle doth rather repeat the name of 〈◊〉 God God then vse the relatiue his saying that we should be called the children of God rather then his children the more to keepe them to whom he wrote in a serious consideration of this their dignity whereof he speaketh and to make them the more to lift vp their eies and their minds and whole hearts to him whose children they are Thus much as breefly as I well could for the consideration of the particular words of this exhortation to the beholding of the great loue of God in making vs his children CHAP. IIII. Of the dignity of Gods children from the excellency of God himselfe who is their Father the rather because it is further prooued by the difficulty and greatnesse of the worke of regeneration that the sayd worke is altogether and only the worke of God NOW according to my method and order first propounded to my selfe I will more amply lay forth the mayne point of the dignity of Gods childrē viz. How great how admirable how incomprehensible this loue of God is in making declaring vs to be the childrē of God in such fort as hath been before touched For it cannot be but of very great excellency sith the Apostle hath made such a graue exhortatiō to the beholding thereof cuery word wherof is so emphatical significant as we haue heard And indeed so excellēt is it that as M. Rogers saith Chap. 3. of his sixt treatise so I may also say that when I haue said what I can of their state I must confesse that I haue said but a little NOtwithstanding I hope that this little shall be somwhat for the helping of them that considered not so much before and for the prouoking like wise of other to enter into further meditation of this argument and perhaps to write more largely there of then I haue done or could do For it is well worthy of the best meditation and largest writing that may be for the better comfort of such weake ones as whose hearts are almost broken with the manifold indiguities that dayly they meete with in the world and for the prouoking of all aduanced thereunto to more thankful ●es to him that hath so aduanced them and to make such other vses as after the point it selfe more largely handled shall be breefely noted To come therefore to the matter touching this dignity of the children of God let vs first of all consider the same by the excellency of him whose children they are h●●e sayd to bee For he is described to be high and excellent to inhabite the eternity to be called by the name of The holy one and to dwelin the high and holy place Isai 57. 15. He is called The God of Gods and Lord of Lords A great God mighty and terrible Deut. 10. 17. Hens●d to haue 〈◊〉 his hands the deep places of the earth the height of the mountains the sea c. Psalm 95. 5. and to haue greatnesse and power and gl●ry and victory
the first creation was as it were but one worke namely to make that which was not made before But in this worke of regeneration there is a double worke first to take away our naturall corruption secondly in stead thereof to create and forme Gods owne image 2. In the first creation there was no opposition no enemies no let no hinderance to God But in our regeneration there are many and mighty enemies and many great lets and hinderances and as it were blocks layd in Gods way Satan himselfe with all his angels and the whole power of hell do labor what they can to hinder t●●s worke So also doth the whole world with all the power thereof Our hearts likewise with all the thoughts lusts and affections thereof and our whole man doe striue and struggle with God by all meanes resisting him and opposing themselues vnto this worke Yea sometimes the children of God themselues euen being regenerated doe interpose and oppose themselues to the regeneration of other For did not Iohn say to our Sauiour Master wee saw one casting out diuels by thy name which followeth not vs and we forbad him because he followed vs not Mark 9. 38. Could Iohn and the other disciples with him forbid another casting out of diuels in the name of Christ and not hinder the worke of regeneration Peter aduised Christ not to goe to Ierusalem there to suffer those things which he was to suffer Marke 8. 32. The like did all the Apostles Ioh. 11. 8. Peter also seeing Christs glory in the mountaine where Christ transfigured himselfe being rauished therewith would haue had Christ to haue continued there still and to haue built three Tabernacles one for him another for Moses a third for Elias Mark 9. 5. Could Christ by the foresaid counsell haue auoided death and not haue hindered the whole worke of mans redemption and therefore also of his adoption and regeneration yea had not the hinderance of Christs death been the way to haue fet all the saints from heauen that in their soules had been there before by vertue of Christs death after their translation into heauen to be suffered for them in earth The taking away of the cause must needs be the nullifying of the effects depending vpon that cause If any in great place doe bestow an office vpon an other as pretending the bestowing thereof to belong vnto his place shall not the receiuer of that office though hauing for sometime enioied the same be dispossessed thereof afterward by another that shall find the right of collating the same to be in him and neuer to haue been in the other that before had bestowed it The like might besayd euen of the dispossessing of the soules of the righteous of heauen it selfe if they had been admitted thereunto by virtue of his death that had not died Thirdly touching the difficulty of our second creation aboue the first in our sayd first creation God did no more for vs in our kind then for all other creatures in their kind He made vs perfect and so he made euery other creature perfect in his kind But in our second creation God doth not only more for vs then for the Angels that had fallen but also then for the Angels that stand as afterward we shall heare Fourthly in the first creation God wrought as God alone but in our second creation regeneration and adoption it was needfull that God should be made man and that God and man made one person should worke the said worke of our second creation regeneration and adoption as afterward also we shall heare more largely Fiftly our first creation and the first creation of all things was made as of nothing so also for nothing But our second creation was not only wrought of nothing and of lesse or at least worse then nothing for the new man is formed in vs but not of vs but it was also wrought at a price or by a price Note For Christ gaue himselfe for vs and we are said to be bought with a price as likewise shall be shewed anon Sixtly the first creation of all things was perfected and consummated in six daies but albeit our regeneration be begun in a moment yet it groweth by small degrees yea if one of the children of God be inclined to some speciall sinne as who is not how hard a thing is it in long time and by many m●●●es to represse and reforme the same And though a man doe liue many yeeres after his regeneration begun yet it is neuer perfected in this life neither shall be till our corruptible bodies haue put on incorruption and till that that is mortall be made immortall Seuenthly to illustrate this by similitude as it is more easie for the potter or glasse man to make an whole house full of pots or glasses then to set one together and make it as sound as it was being broken all to peeces so was it more easie for God at the first to make an whole world of creatures then now only to restore and build man vp againe and as it were to set him together againe being touching the image of God in him destroied and as it were broken in peeces All this of the difficulty of our second creation in comparison Note of the first creation is to be vnderstood but only in respect of mans iudgement touching the difficulty of things not simply in consideration of Gods power For to speake simply of Gods power all things are alike thereunto There is nothing harder or easier then another with God It is as easie for him to make an whole world yea many worlds as to make the least creature By this greatnesse of this worke the worke it selfe is the more manifest to be the worke only of God For if to make a man or to make an whole world be not the worke of any but of God himselfe as the whole Scripture teacheth vs how much lesse may we say that any but God alone can regenerate a man and make a man the child of God this worke being as hath beene shewed greater then the work of creation The more proper therefore that this worke of regeneration is only to God the more excellent needs must be the condition of them that by this worke are made the children of God According to the rarenesse of the workeman so is the worke it selfe esteemed If but one man in a country or in a kingdome can doe some speciall worke in what estimation is the worke it selfe what then shall wee say of this worke of regeneration and of making the sonnes of men the sonnes of God which none can doe in the world but only one euen God himselfe How honorable therefore is their state● CHAP. V. Of the first moouing cause of our regeneration viz. which first mooued God to regenerate vs. AS in the former Chapter the dignity of Gods children hath been declared by the excellency of God who is their Father as also by this that God
them and therein had shed their bloud for vs it had been nothing to the blood of Christ because Christ was the Lord of the Angels and all the Angels were to worship him Heb. 1. 6. But to leaue that which was not and to returne to that which was it is much and exceeding much that God hath honored mankind especially his children by giuing vnto them all liuing creatures to be killed for preseruation of their present life Much more then is this honor and ten times greater then the heart of man can conceiue that God hath not spared his owne sonne but giuen him to the death Rom. 8. 32. yea to such a death as he suffered euen the cursed death of the Crosse that being dead in sinnes we might be made aliue Ephes 2. 5. and so receiue the promise of the spirit Gal. 3. 14. where by to call God our father and to be called the children of God This were a worthy meditation euery time we see sheepe or lamb or pigeon or chicken or any thing els by butcher or by any other body to be killed for vs it were I say a worthy meditation if then we could thinke and say This is a great honor of God towards vs that this innocent and harmelesse creature must die to preserue vs aliue But O Lord how hast thou honored vs by giuing thy sonne thy only sonne thy sonne whom thou louedst most deerely euen as thy owne soule thy sonne Iesus to be slaine and to suffer more then a thousand bodily deaths to make vs thy children that so we might liue in thy sight Did not Abraham greatly honor God when he was so willing to take now without delay or any stay for issue of him his sonne his only sonne his sonne Isaack in whom the promise was made of blessing for all nations his sonne whom he loued most tenderly not only for natures sake but also for the promise sake and to goe to the land of Moriah an vnknown country and to offer him that is to kill him with his own hands not to giue him to another to be offered and killed for a burnt offring an honourable but an hard and wofull kind of death for the naturall father to put his own naturall sonne vnto vpon one of the mountaines which God should shew him Genes 22. 2. he could not tell where did not Abraham I say greatly honor God by being willing and ready to doe it and by going so farre in the doing of it that the knife was in his hand to haue killed his owne sonne vpon Gods commandement in that behalfe and that therefore he had done it indeed if God himselfe had not countermanded him and forbidden it Doubtlesse Abraham did so thereby honour God that Abrahams faith in that behalfe hath beene the more renowned and honorable euer sithence and shall be renowned and honorable to the end of the world How then hath God honored vs by giuing his sonne for vs and how hath Christ Iesus honoured vs by giuing and offring vp himselfe a sweet smelling sauour and sacrifice to God for vs that did by our sinnes stinke most noy somely in the nostrills of God Abraham had receiued his sonne from God God had not receiued his sonne from vs. Abraham might haue had an other sonne from God as well as he had Isaak God could not haue an other besides Christ Abraham did owe his sonne and all that he had yea himselfe also to God God oweth nothing to vs. Abraham had a commandement to offer his sonne Isaak vnto God Had God any commandement or could any command God to giue his sonne vnto vs and for vs. Abraham and his sonne both were to dy at the last The sonne of God was as immortall and free from death as God himselfe because he was God with his father Abraham had had his sonne but a while but God had had his sonne from all eternity Abrahams sonne was like to himselfe but in part Gods sonne was perfectly and fully like vnto him In all these respects and in diuers other we plainly see how much more God hath honored vs by giuing his sonne as also how much more Christ hath honoured vs by giuing himselfe for vs then Abraham honored God by giuing his sonne vnto God that had first giuen him to Abraham Againe were it not a great honour to any poore and base subiect c. being in miserable bondage and captiuity as before I said for his Prince being wise and knowing what he doth or for such a sonne of such a Prince to giue a very great price for his ransome who then can expresse the honor that Christ Iesus hath done to vs in that being the sonne of his father tender and deere vnto him as Salomon speaketh of himselfe in respect both of his father and mother Pro. 4. 3. and being euen the sonne of his fathers desires as Bethsheba spake of Salomon and to Salomon Pro. 31. 2. and being full of wisedome and grace Luk 2. 40. and being the wisedome of his father Luk. 11. 44. And hauing all treasures of wisedome and knowledge hid in him Coloss 2. 3. who I say can expresse the honor that Christ Iesus being such as he is and alwaies was hath done vnto vs in giuing a greater price for our ransome and adoption to his father then all the kingdomes of the world ten thousand times told are worth For do we not account of all things according to the price that wise men doe giue for them Is then the adoption of Gods children lightly to be accounted for which Christ gaue as great a price as for our saluation This of the price which Christ hath giuen to make vs the children of God is the more because he gaue not the same price or any other for to redeeme the Angels that kept not their standing that they might with vs receiue the adoption of sonnes Before their fall they were so much more glorious then man before his fall by how much more their habitation and employment in heauen was more glorious then Adams in earth yet hath Christ Iesus in making in vs his children altogether passed them ouer and they are still reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknesse vnto the iudgement of the great day Iude 6. How greatly therefore hath Christ honoured vs by giuing such a price to make vs the children of God who dwell in houses of clay and who touching part of vs are but wormes meat whereas he hath giuen none at all for them that before their fall were most glorious spirits dwelling with God himselfe in heauen Because also the holy ghost is of the same glory and excellency with God the father and God the sonne therefore the worke of the holy ghost in our adoption is likewise to be considered with the worke of the father and of the sonne For the father and the sonne worke not without the holy ghost As in the first creation it is said that the spirit of God
his right hand bold them from escaping If they should say the darknes shall hide vs the night should be light round about them Psal 139. 1. c. Therefore if God he thus from them touching his grace and only present in his wrath power iustice against them what alas shall it boote them to haue any of his creatures with them Truly nothing at all They were as good be alone If Salomon say Wo vnto him that is alone for hee falleth and there is no asecond to to helpe himvp Eccles 4. 10. how much more wocfull is the state of the wicked that are altogether destitute of the gracious presence of God For if he withdraw himselfe from them who dareth accompany them for any good By these things we see how great the prerogatiue of the children of God is by their communion with God But this is not all For this communion with Christ Iesus and so consequently with the other two persons in the deity is the more excellent not onely in respect of the excellency of the persons with whom our base nature is vnited neither in other respects before spoken but also because being once made it is indissoluble and vnteparable All the vnions before mentioned whereunto this vnion metaphorically and by way of similitude is resembled may be dissolued For the garment put on is also put off The most of our meat and drinke touching the matter thereof is eiected and cast out The vine and the branches as also any other tree and the boughs may be diuided by the axe or some other toole So may the corner stone and the rest of the building therewith coupled The inhabitant or tenant is oft times turned out of his house yea sometime the lawfull owner is cast out of his owne free-hold The naturall head and the naturall body yea the body and the soule of man are for a time separated by death Finally by the same meanes there is a separation betwixt the man and the wife But nothing whatsoeuer can euer dissolue the vnion betwixt the children of God and God himselfe Father Sonne and holy Ghost As the personall vnion betwixt the two natures in Christ the Godhead and the manhood could not be dissolued euen when the humanity it selfe touching the parts thereof was by death for a time dissolued the soule being in heauen with the father and the body lying in the graue but the knot once knit did continue in death it selfe and shall continue for euer so also is the vnion betwixt God and the children of God an euerlasting vnion As therefore the misery of man is in the separation of man from God who is blessed for euer and blessednesse it selfe so the happinesse of man is in his vnion and communion with God especially in the continuance thereof for euer As all the wicked and vngodly are most miserable by their being without God in the world as before wee haue heard euen so long as they so continue because all that while they are as farre from heauen as earth yea as hell it selfe and remaine in darknesse and in the power of satan Acts 26. 18. oh wofull condition so all the children of God hauing in their adoption this communion with God are happy and ten times happy because the benefit and comfort thereof hath no end CHAP. XVII Of the benefits of the children of God by their fore said communion with Christ and with the whole Deity and first of the forgiuenesse of sinnes TO proceed a little further into the foresaid communion of the children of God with Christ Iesus and by Christ Jesus with the father and with the holy ghost let vs somewhat more behold the excellency thereof by such benefits as the children of God doe thereby enioy wherein all wicked and naturall men so continuing haue no part or portion Here let vs first consider the great benefit of forgiuenesse of sinnes It is indeed a principall point as hath been before obserued of that mercy of God which was one of the principall motiues of God to worke the worke of our regeneration And of that mercy of God I haue spoken a little generally before Notwith standing this particular point thereof touching the forgiuenesse of sinnes is a little more largely here to be handled because this place in some respects is fitter for that purpose then the former the rather because it is not onely to be considered as a cause of regeneration but also as an effect and fruit of our foresaid communion with God Touching this benefit therefore that it is by our communion with Christ Iesus it is manifest because he is said to be the reconciliation for our sinnes and not only for our sinnes but also for the sinnes of the whole world 1. Ioh. 2. 2. By reconciliation for our sinnes and for the sinnes of the whole world the Apostle meaneth the sinnes both of all already regenerated and new borne and also of other the elect of God in the world remaining yet in their naturall and vnregenerate state Paul also saith that Christ gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquity c. Tit. 2. 19. What is it to redeem vs from all iniquity but to purchase a free and absolute pardon for vs of all our sinnes Moreouer he saith that in Christ we haue redemption through his bloud the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace Ephes 1. 7. Coloss 1. 14. In both which places let this be obserued Note that the Apostle interpreteth the redemption of the elect to be the forgiuenesse of sinnes Why shall we so obserue this interpretation of the word redemption Because thereby the Apostle insinuateth a twofold or double redemption wrought by Iesus Christ one proper onely to the elect consisting in the forgiuenesse of sinnes and other things depending thereupon the other common to all as well to the reprobate as to the elect But what is this so common a redemption viz. It is a release from the bondage and obedience of the ancient ceremoniall law touching the going diuers times of the yeere to Ierusalem and performing there diuers rites and ceremonies in the worship of God namely the paiment of tithes and of first fruits the bringing of diuers oblations and sacrifices as also touching diuers kinds of washings and clensing men of the leprosie of pollution by handling the dead by any issue c. and concerning likewise abstinence from diuers kinds both of fish and flesh and many other the like things The redemption I say of men from obedience of these things is common to the reprobate and not peculiar to the elect For Christ Iesus hath so nailed the whole law of ceremonies and ordinances to his crosse that although Christ were taken down from the said crosse that although Christ were taken down from the said crosse yet they shall as it were so remaine fast fixed thereunto that they shall neuer come downe or be in force with men by anv authoritv from
thereof verily it was and therefore the remembrance of it afterward was that whereby he was healed of that wound Mat. 26. 75. What was the cause why the angell of the Church of Sardi was so wounded that though he had a name to be aliue yet hee was dead that is ready to die and at the point of death Euen because he had let go his hold of the sword of the spirit Therfore for curing of his said wound our Sauiour biddeth him to remember how he had receiued and heard to hold fast c. Reuel 3. 2. 3. the like may be said of all wounds of any other of the children of God at any time Thus the children of God must vse the word of God viz. not as a thing to play or sport with or whereof to make iests Note for the mirth of other but as a weapon and as a sword to fight with yea thus they will vse it that are indeede the children of God If at any time they be prouoked by other or by their owne hearts to distrust Gods prouidence they will defend themselues by many precepts for trusting in the Lord Psal 37. 3. and 62. 8. and for casting their care vpon God Psal 37. 5. and 52. 22. and 1. Pet. 5. 6. and by such sentences of scripture as pronounce him blessed that trusteth in the Lord Psalm 40. 4. and 84. 5. and 12. by many promises to them that so do annexed expresly for the most part to the former commādements by the iudgements of God vpon such as haue murmured against God Num. 11. 1. vpon such as haue doubted of Gods promises as vpon the noble man of Samaria that would not beleeue the Prophet in the name of the Lord prophecying of great plenty the next day 2. Kings 7. 2. and 20. yea vpon Moses himselfe for his distrust Num. 20. 12. and 27. 14. and Deut. 32. 50. 51. and lastly by the prouidence of God towards the widow of Zarepta and the Prophet Elijah 1 Kings 17. 6. and 8. c. and towards a widdowe of one of the sonnes of the prophets 2. Kings 4 1. c. and towards many thousands that following our Sauiour for foode of their soules were fed likewise abundantly and miraculously with corporall foode Mark. 6. 36. and 8. 2. c. If they be prouoked to security they can draw out this sword and plead Blessed is the man that feareth alway c. Pro. 28. 14. and that they are commanded to spend the time of their welling here in feare 1. Pet. 1. 17. and the iudgement of God threatned to them that were at ease in Zion c. Amos 6. 1. c. and the fearefull fall of Dauid by security 2. Sam. 11. 2. c. If they be prouoked to idolatry they can draw out the second commandement and many other scriptures as commentaries vpon the said commandement so also that that is written of the wrath of God against Israel for their golden Calfe Exod. 32. and for their other idolatry Iudg. 10. and often els where The like is to be said of tentations against the third and fourth commandement When they are moued to pride they can call to mind the manifold precepts and sentences against it Deut. 8. 14. Psal 75. 4. Pro. 6. 17. and 16. 5. Iames 4. 6. 1. Pet. 5. 5. so also the examples of Haman and Nebuchadnezer with Sancherib and the iudgements of God not onely vpon them but also vpon Vzzia King of Iuda for presuming to meddle with the Priests office in offering of sacrifice 2. Chron. 26. 20. and vpon Dauid for numbring the people in a kind of pride 2. Sam. 24. and vpon Hezekiah for hauing his heart lifted vp after the recouery of his health 2. Chron. 32. 25. c. Being tempted to dishonor of parents they can repell such tentations by the fift commandement and by many other Scriptures against the same sinne as also by Agars curse against the eye that mocketh his father and despiseth the instruction of his mother viz. that the rauens of the valley shall pluck it out and that the yong Eagles shall eat it Pro. 30. 17. as also they can remember the examples of Absalom and of Adonijah and the iudgements of God vpon them Being enticed by Papists or other to rebellion treason or lifting vp their hand against Princes and the Lords annointed they can oppose the contrary commandements for obedience and subiection in the Lord of euery soule to the higher powers Rom. 13. 1. 1. Pet. 2. 13. and the fearefull iudgements of God vpon Corah Dathan and Abiram with their complices yea the deposing also of Abiathar the high Priest from the priesthood by Salomon because he had ioyned with Adonija for preuenting Salomon of the Crowne before he was King 1. Kings 1. 7. and 2. 35. If either their owne hearts or any other perswade them to contempt of the ministers of the Gospell either for plaine rebuking them for their sinnes or for any other causes they can obiect that the Lord hath commanded such to be had in singular loue for their works sake 1. Thes 5. 12. 13. that our Sauiour hath said He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me Luk 10. 16. and that It shall be easier for them of the land of Sodome and Gomorrha in the day of iudgement then for that City and consequently for that family and for those persons that shall not receiue such nor heare their words Mat. 10. 13. 14. and that likewise the Lord did not only not prosper good king Asa after that he had put Hanani the Seer into prison for rebuking him for resting vpon the king of Aram c. 2. Chro. 16. 10. but that also he did send two beares out of the forrest that tare in pieces 42. of those wanton children that had reuiled mocked the Prophet Elisha and said vnto him Come vp thou bald-head Com vp thou bald-head 2. King 2. 23. 24. and that yet the least minister of the gospell is greater then Iohn Baptist who notwithstanding was greater then any Prophet Mat. 11. 11. Being moued to murder or to any other cruelty they can hold out the sixt commandement Luk. 6. 36. the commendation of mercy aboue sacrifice Hose 6. 6. and that Iames saith there shall be iudgement or condemnation mercilesse to him that sheweth no mercy Iam. 2. 13. the iudgement of God vpon Cain for the murder of Abel Gen. 4. and vpon the Egyptiās for their cruelty towards the Israelites and vpon all Israel by a great famine towards the latter end of the raign of Dauid for the cruelty of Saul against the Gibeonites 2. Sam. 21. 1. c. and after that vpon Iuda long after the death of Manasses as for other sinnes of Manasses so also for the innocent blood that he had shed 2. Kings 24. 4. Against temptations to adultery fornication and other vncleannesse
abiect persons much more may they be no more esteemed then boies or children The suffering also the losse of all that they haue in the world and of the world and the submitting themselues to the most shamefull death that is for Christs sake that died the cursed death of the crosse for them what doth it declare but that they haue that noble mind for the contemning of the world and all that is therein that was in Christ Iesus himselfe Who for the ioy that was set before him is said to haue endured the Crosse and despised the shame Heb. 12. 2. What is more princely and kingly then this If it be also accounted fortitude for the common souldier to follow his captaine and to aduenture any danger though it be with losse of life wherein he hath seene his Captaine goe before him shall wee not account it fortitude likewise for the children of God to endanger and to lose their liues in such things as wherein Christ Iesus their chiefe Captaine hath gone before them To proceed yet further in the consideration of the Kingly dignity of Gods childrē let this be our fourth meditation in that behalfe that whereas by nature through our foresaid bondage to sinne and Satan and to euery wordly vanity wee were also captiues vnto death it selfe and prisoners of hell and in the state of condemnation now being made the children of God and members of Christ Iesus God hath giuen vs such victory through our said Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 7. ●5 that we may victoriously triumph ouer death hell and condemnation saying Death is swallowed vp in victory O death where is thy sting O graue where is thy victory 1. Cor. 15. 55. and againe Now there is no condemnation to vs that are in Christ Iesus Rom. 8. 1. Fiftly as Kings that haue power and courage doe protect and defend their subiects from forraine powers so also the children of God doe valiantly protect and defend those that are committed to their charge against all the enemies of their saluation except themselues doe cowardly and slauishly run vnto them or will not be released from that bondage wherein by nature they are Sixtly as when God the father set Christ Iesus his King vpon Sion his holy mountaine that is ouer his Church he gaue him vpon his asking the heathen for his inheritance and the ends of the earth for his possession euen to crush them with a scepter of iron and to breake them in peeces like a potters vessell Psal 2. 8. so also the children of God hauing Christ Iesus the heire of all things Heb. 1. 2. all other things likewise are said to be theirs 1. Cor. 3. 21. and they shall inherit all things Reu. 21. 7. Yea Christ hath promised to giue them and will giue them power ouer nations to rule them with a rod of iron and to breake them in peeces like a potters vessell Reu. 2. 26. 27. Heereby therefore it is that onely the children of God hauing by Iesus Christ recouered that right vnto al the creaturs of God which was lost by Adam and hauing likewise liberty now in the time of the gospell to vse al those things which for the time of the law were restrained that such restraint of some things might be to the Church then and to the Church also in these daies a testimony and a witnesse of the former losse of all things Hereby I say it is that only the children of God haue power with sobriety and without offence according to their ability and beseeming their calling and with obseruation of some other rules in the word to vse all the creatures of God freely to Gods glory and to their comfort not only for necessity but also for their honest delight For vnto the pure only are all such things pure but vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing that is vnto all that are not the children of God nothing is pure but euen their minds and consciences are defiled Tit. 2. 15. But of this right of the children of God vnto all things more afterward Moreouer thereby also howsoeuer the children of God are here for a time by their enemies and the enemies of Christ Iesus molested and vexed yet the time shall come when all such enemies shall bee fully subdued vnto them euen as a pot broken in peeces by the potter yea they shall bee indeed broken in peeces by Christ Iesus the head of all the children of God and that which is done by him being their head shall bee accounted as done by them yea euen as the head doth vse the hands and other parts of the body for executing what it selfe shall thinke good against all the aduersaries thereof and of the whole body so shall Christ Iesus vse the members of his Church not onely by the Ecclesiasticall and spirituall power and censures thereof to correct them that shall be of heathenish conditions and behauiour amongst them and to binde their Kings with chaines and their Nobles with fetters of yron that is by excommunication and such other like seuere courses to make such as were as Kings and captaines in all euill to stoope and bend as if they were bound with chaines and fetters of yron Psalme 149. 7. 8. not onely I say shall Christ thus vse the members of his Church to bridle and subdue the wicked but also hee shall vse Christian Kings and Princes by little and little euen by the sword to vanquish all the great enemies of the Church till there be scarce a man left that shall professe himselfe an enemie thereof Especially Christ Iesus shall vse such christian Kings and Princes and some other also to ioine with them though perhaps in worldly respects and in desire of the spoile in hatred of the whore of Babylon euen of Antichrist the Pope and of all that shall take his part Princes as well as other euen to make them desolate and naked and as it were to eat their flesh and to burne them with fire Reuel 17. 16. Seuenthly touching other princely vertues as kings are to be amiable and courteous to the good and austere and seuere to the wicked so the children of God are indued with this kingly grace A vile person is contemptible in their eies but they honor them that feare the Lord Psal 15 4. All their delight is in the Saints and in them that are excellent vpon the earth Psal 16. 3. but they haunt not with vaine persons neither keepe company with the dissemblers but hate the assembly of the wicked Psal 26. 4. 5. Yea they may call God himselfe t● witnesse that such as hate him they also doe hate and they doe earnestly contend with them that rise vp against him yea that they hate them with an vnfained hatred as if they were their owne enemies Psal 139. 21. 22. Yea though the children of God bee aduanced to kingly dignities in the earth as well as they are kings spiritually by Christ Iesus together with other yet
them in nothing to feare their aduersaries Why so Because saith he this is to them a token of perdition but to you of saluation Philip. 1. 28. So he sheweth by an argument taken from comparison of equals that euen as to be an aduersary to the children of God and to persecute them is a token and manifest testimony to such so long as they continue such that they shall perish so to be hated of them and persecuted by them is a great assurance of saluation Only this is the difference that they that by hatred and persecution of the children of God haue a great signe of perdition may for all that by faith working repentance be saued but they that once by any good testimony be assured of saluation shall neuer perish Sixtly by suffering a little smart of the fruit of sinne heere they doe the better learne both what all is that they haue deserued in the life to come and also what Christ hath suffered for them in bearing the whole punishment of all their sinnes and therefore how they ought to loue him in that behalfe and how thankfull they ought to bee to God for their deliuerance from euerlasting torments in respect whereof these light and momentany afflictions of this life are but as fillips and fleabites and consequently also they learne how they are to pity them that are going towards the place of such torments and how in pity they are to labor their reclaiming and conuerting These are the principall particular points of the lawe of God which the children of God doe learne by the afflictions of this life the least whereof is more worth then all outward prosperity and all which might be much more enlarged but finding this treatise to arise to a far greater volume then at the first I made account of I am thereby forced in many things to write the more briefly By this that I haue thus briefly set downe in that behalfe it may sufficiently appeare that the exchange sometimes of momentany afflictions for temporary blessings is no detriment to the children of God but rather an exceeding gaine and benefit If it be obiected that some of Gods children are subiect also to extraordinary deaths as Eli brake his neck falling backward● 1. Sam. 4. 18. The Prophet that had done contrary to the word of God was killed by a lyon 1. Kings 13. 24. Noble Iosiah died of the wound that he had taken by the sword of the vncircumcised Egyptians 2. King 23. 29. and that for going somewhat obstinately as it seemeth against Pharo Neco 2. Chron. 35. 2. Many of the Corinthians are said to haue slept that is to haue died somwhat extraordinarily by an vntimely death for abuse and disorder in the supper of the Lord 1. Cor. 11. 30. If I say this be obiected and so confirmed by these former and other the like examples and vpon those grounds it be further demanded how such things can be for the good of the children of God and for the learning any thing out of the word of God sith the dead praise not God neither is there any remembrance of God in death Psal 6. 5. and 30. 9. To this I answer briefly that although after death there be no learning any thing except only either of torments to the wicked or of ioy and happinesse to the godly and that by sense and feeling as the rich man and Lazarus did Luk. 16. 23. yet in such sicknes vnto death there may be before death and no doubt is repentance in al the children of God of such particular sinnes as whereby they see they haue procured such particular chastisements vpon themselues and so by iudging of themselues for the said sins they haue the better assurance that they shall not be iudged of the Lord. Therefore the Apostle saith in the place before alledged after mention of sicknesse and death when we are iudged we are chastned of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the world 1. Cor. 11. 32. which is all one with the generall end of afflictions before mentioned viz. that we may liue Heb. 12. 9. Againe both further to amplifie that answer to the former obiection and also now to shew some other vses of the afflictions of Gods children in respect of other they are so afflicted especially for particular sins that other as well as themselues liuing after their said vntimely death seeing how he whom they call father iudgeth euerie man as well his own children as other according to their worke in this world without respect of persons may afterward passe the time of their dwelling here in the more feare 1. Pet. 1. 17. and make an end of their saluation with the more trembling Philip. 2. 12. Secondly in respect of other they are afflicted and loaden with affliction for the manifestation of their faith patience and other graces to such as did before doubt thereof as thinking all that they did in the worship of God to be in hypocrisie and rather because God had so compassed and walled them about with his mercies then in a simple and a pure loue towards God himselfe Is not this euident by the answer of satan vnto God when God had asked him if he had not considered Iob and all his vprightnesse c. Doth Iob saith satan feare God for nought Hast thou not made an hedge about him and about all that he hath on euery side Thou hast blessed the worke of his hands and his substance is encreased in the land But stretch out now thine hand and touch all that he hath to see if hee will not blaspheme thee to thy face Iob 1. 8. 9. 10. Doth not satan in these words plainly accuse Iob to haue done all that he had done only in hypocrisie c Therefore the Lord gaue him leaue to try Iob to exercise him with many afflictions one after another one in the neck of another for the confutation of that slanderous accusation of Iob by satan for declaration of his integrity to al the world Yea by this occasion to insert here another benefit by afflictions to the children of God concerning themselues as by wrastling a man somtimes knoweth his own strength better then before he did so oftentimes by afflictions a man better knoweth his owne faith and other graces of God in himself for his further comfort then before he did Thirdly in respect of other sometimes the children of God are so afflicted that the workes of God may be shewed on them Our Sauiour being asked by his disciples of the man that was borne blind whether he or his parents had sinned that he was borne blind answered Neither hath this man sinned nor his parents but that the worke of God might be shewed on him Ioh. 9. 2. 3. So it seemeth that Lazarus was therefore sick died of his sicknesse sooner then by the course of nature he should haue died not for any speciall sinne of his owne but for the
they should and as sometime they behold the same This made the Prophet to say I haue clensed my heart in vaine Psal 73. 13 ●nd to thinke the state and condition of himselfe to be no better then the state and condition of the wicked yea to iudge theirs better then his Yea Dauid being banished from the Arke of God and in danger of many enemies had such trouble of mind and feares of heart that he was faine to rebuke himselfe in that behalfe and to say to his soule as before we heard why art thou cast down O my soule and why art thou disquieted within me Ps 42. 5. 11. 43. 5. Finally somtime such seares of the children of God the error of their iudgement touching them arise from some bodily cause euē from a melancholik cōstitutio wherby the iudgemēt is so crazed that it doth not erre only in matters of God which cōcern saluation but also in things of this world which cōcern this presēt life For the abundāce of melancholy oftentimes taketh away from men the knowlege of their best friends makes them to think that they are vtter enemies to feare thē accordingly No maruel then though the said humor doe somtime obscure the fauor of God and darken the peace of conscience euen in the best of Gods children These that are thus occupied with feares doe measure their condition more by feeling then by faith and other arguments of greater certainty then feeling But howsoeuer the children of God in these and the like respects be troubled with such feares for a time yet as before we said of other troubles of this life so I may also say of those feares that the Lord doth at the last deliuer them our of all and turne them likewise to their great good yea for the most part the Lord giueth his children most inward peace when they haue most outward calamities at least when they haue Note most need of such inward peace then also haue the godly most peace yea most comfort When the wicked are most dismaied namely in the times of greatest stormes and tempests euen of most mighty and fearfull thundrings lightnings at such times the wicked quake and tremble as fearing some greater euill towards them and so indeed oftentimes it falls out but contrariwise the childrē of God looking not so much to the lightnings nor hearkning so much to the thundrings as considering therin the great power of God how able he is to saue them how soon he can subdue their enemies do in this respect both follow their callings the more quietly and also hold vp their heads the more cheerfully The like may be said of them in the howre of their death Mark saith Dauid the vpright man and behold the iust for the end of that man is peace Psal 37 37. and why so the sonne answereth the father I meane Salomon answereth Dauid saying the day of death is better then the day that one is borne that is to the child of God Ec●l 7 3. and why is this because the day of death to the children of God is the day of deliuerance from all their misery The children of God themselues die not but their misery then dieth yea then also their sinne the cause of their misery and chiefe misery it selfe maketh an end Secondly death to the godlie is but a short bridge and a speedie passage to eternall life they take not onely their leaue of all calamities but they enter also into their Masters ioie and take now more full possession then euer before they had of that moste blessed inheritance whereof before they heard and which they had a long time most earnestly longed for On the contrary howsoeuer the wicked for a time especially in prosperity seem to be at peace and so liue securely fearing nothing yet if aduersity once come then they rage and storme then they fret and chafe then they raile and raue then they curse and sweare then they speake not only against men but also against God himselfe especially the day of their death is most fearfull vnto them as being the end of all their happinesse and the beginnings of their greatest woe and misery and so they finish their daies most heauily most fearfully yea sometime they are so discontent with some things befallen vnto them or so tormented in their minds with feare of Gods iudgements against themselues that they play the bloody butchers vpon themselues So Achitophel in malcontent mind hanged himselfe 2. Sam. 17. 23. so Iudas as before we heard in great desperation of Gods mercy did make the like fearfull end of himselfe Mat. 27. 5. That sometime the children of God die vnquietly in outward appearance it is to admonish other the better to prepare themselues for their end and to labour the more to treasure vp for themselues comfort by keeping a good conscience for the day of their death That the wicked die sometime peaceably and in shew comfortably either it is to admonish all men not rashly to iudge sith God can in a moment secretly worke repentance or else howsoeuer some will say of such that they went away like a bird or died like a lamb yet rather if they shewed no repentance especially if they did not indeed repent they are to be thought to haue died like beasts that for the most part dying naturally of some disease and not being killed violently doe only pant and grone and make no other noise As it is said of Nabal that when Abigail had related what Dauid had purposed against him and what she had done to saue Nabal from the execution thereof that his heart died wit hin him and he became like a stone and so about ten daies after he died 1. Sam. 25. 22. 28. so the wicked dying in their sins and yet not dying raging nor rauing c. doe die like stocks or stones that is neither shewing any more repentance neither any whit more regarding any goodnesse then stocks or stones But to returne to the children of God such is their peace vpon the grounds before mentioned that as they are freed from the seruile feare of Gods wrath and iustice so they are likewise freed from all such feare of other creatures as whereby they should be dismaied or disabled from such duties as belong vnto them For what need they feare any thing sith God hath made a league with all creatures in their behalfe and sith they know that all things doe worke together for their good as before we haue heard we may therefore Note conclude they need not to feare any euill tydings Psal 112. 7. yea though they walke through the vale of the shadow of death Psal 23. 4. but that euery one of them may say the Lord is my light and saluation whom shall I feare the Lord is the strength of my life of whom shall I be afraid Psal 27. 1. and againe I will lay me downe and also sleep in
made knowen by the Church the manifold wisdome of God Ephes 3. 9. 10. By this place we plainly see that the Angels haue the benefit of more knowledge then before they had Of the fellowship of the foresaid mysterie and that by the Church What is the Church but the companie of Gods children This is the more manifest by that that there is said of that mysterie to haue beene before hidden in God himselfe and not so to haue beene opened to the sonnes of men in other ages as now it is vers 5. and to haue beene kept secret since the world began Rom. 16. 25. For doe not these phrases intimate that the said mysterie had beene hidden so in God himselfe from the beginning of the world that the very Angels themselues did not fully vnderstand it till it was made knowen by the Church The same is to bee thought of many mysteries contained in the Reuelation because it is said of the booke in the right hand of him that sate vpon the throne written within and on the backe side sealed with many seales whereby the Chapters in the Reuelation following seeme especially to be vnderstood because I say it is said of that booke that none in heauen nor in earth nor vnder the earth was able to open the booke or to looke thereon but only the Lion of the tribe of Iuda that is Christ Iesus Reu. 5. 2. This Lion of the tribe of Iuda doth not only vnderstand the same booke himselfe but also by his spirit maketh it knowen to the Church by whom also the Angels attending thereupon in all assemblies thereof seeme likewise to come to know it and not by any immediate reuelation thereof vnto them in heauen neither as some doe weakly imagine by contemplation of God himselfe in whom all things past present and to come are as it were ingrauen For so they should know the secrets of mens hearts and the day of iudgement which none knowes but God himselfe For are not all those things ingrauen in God as well as others I grant the Angels to know much more of their owne nature and of the nature of God himselfe then the Church knoweth yea then perhaps is reuealed in the written word yet this letteth not but that the Angels may bee ignorant of the meaning of some things contained in the word concerning Gods pleasure towards the Church till the same by the spirit of Christ be reuealed to the Church I will not so inlarge this point in this place as Isee it handled in some late printed bookes but I will content my selfe with this thus generally spoken thereof Another benefit of the Angels by the children of God is that they haue great iov of their conuersion and repentance This our Sauiour teacheth plainly by a double parable Luk. 15. 3. c. one of the lost sheepe the other of the lost groat for the finding whereof there was great ioy the application of b●th which parables is thus made by our Sauiour hin selfe I say vnto you that likewise ioy shall bee in heauen ouer one sinner that repenteth c. and againe I say vnto you there is ioy in the presence of the Angels of God for one sinner that conuerteth 7. and 10. And indeed there is a great reason of this their ioy for doe men reicice in earth for the birth of a sinner and shall not the Angels in heauen reioice for the regeneration of a christian Doe men reioice for the birth of one of Gods enemies and shall not the Angels reioice for the birth of one of Gods children Doe the true subjects of an earthly prince reioice and declare their ioy by some testimony at the birth of a child to such an earthly Prince how much more should the Angels in heauen Gods perfectest subjects reioice at the birth of a child to God himselfe the king of heauen and earth euen of one that shall it selfe be and is as soone as it is borne not only a Priest but also a king as before we heard Is there ioy in earth for the birth of one that shall die againe and perhaps a miserable death how then should the Angels not reioice in the birth of one that shall neuer die more but shall liue for euer a life of grace here till the time of translation from hence do come and then a life of glory with themselves yea with Christ Iesus Did the Angels reioice when Christ was borne a man vpon earth and shall they not reioice when men are borne partaker of the diuine nature from heauen and for heauen yea wherefore did the Angels so reioice at the birth of Christ was it not because by his birth in the world many should afterward be borne vnto God As soone as euer Christ had taken the book before spoken of out of the hands of his Father to open the same to the Church how did the Angels reioice and sing for ioy as wel as the 24. Elders Reu. 5. 8. 9. Did they so reioice at the taking of the book to be opened to the Church how much more cause haue they to reioice and sing when by the opening of mysteries in the same book contained men shall be enlightned with true sauing knowledge of God and of his Sonne Iesus Christ and be also new borne children vnto God As the Angels doe thus reioice in the first regeneration of the children of God that is when men first begin to be the children of God so it is not to be doubted but that their ioy is increased as such graces are increased in men whereby they are the more declared both to men and Angels to be so regenerated and new borne vnto God I might amplifie this point much more but hauing been large in other things it shall be sufficient thus briefly to haue spoken of this matter So we see what great benefits both men and other creatures the inferior creatures of this inferior world and the superior creatures euen the blessed Angels in heauen haue by the children of God Is not this therefore a great increase of their dignity Is it not an high commendation of their state and condition That the wicked are hurtfull to all and beneficiall to none doth make their estate the more base and vile abiect and contemptible Therefore that the children of God are hurtfull to none and so beneficiall and helpfull to many it must needs make their condition more honorable and noble CHAP. XXIX Of diuers similitudes and comparisons setting foorth the dignity of Gods children TO omit diuers other arguments whereby the dignity of Gods children might bee furthered enlarged and illustrated let vs now come to certaine comparisons Herein I will a little transgresse the order of Logicians as I haue not hitherto been curious therein and therefore I will begin with some similitudes whereby the holy ghost in respect of some things before handled doth set forth the excellency of the children of God From these similitudes I will
markes of them For if a little leauen sowreth the whole lumpe 1. Cor. 5. 6. and if euill words corrupt good manners 1. Cor. 15. 33. then it cannot be but that good words and the good behauiour of men must be and are of great efficacy not only to conuert at the first but also afterward to strengthen and further in all goodnesse them that are already conuerted And this is taught both by our Sauiour Mat. 5. 16. and also by the Apostle Peter 1. Pet. 2. 12. Therefore also so amiable should the society of Gods children be to all euen to the wicked that although they should not purpose to make vse of the fellowship of Gods children to their conuersion yet if at any time they should be violently depriued thereof then they should be so distempered as it were and disquicted therwith that nothing else should please satisfie and content them till they doe againe recouer the same When the enemies of Daniel by their exceeding importunity had ouercome Darius for tne casting of Daniel into the lyons denne how was the said Darius though an heathen affected therwith verily so that he went into his palace and remained fasting and forbad the instruments of musique to be brought before him and lastly that his sleepe went from him Dan. 6. 18. If Darius not only a wicked man but also a meere heathen and altogether out of the Church were so affected and so disquieted with the losse of Daniels company for a time till he recouered him againe how should all other wicked men especially liuing within the Church take their losse of the company of the godly till the same be restored againe Againe if the company of some of the godly ought to be so amiable and their absence so dolefull as it were to the wicked themselues how amiable should the communion of an whole Church be vnto them yea to all so long as they may enioy it And therefore wofull and dolefull ought the casting of them out to be from the communion of an whole Church if they shall so continue in their wickednesse as to deserue the same what then is to be said both of those that are so contumatious and obstinate as to continue in their sinnes till the Church proceed iustly and according to the rule of the word to the fearfull sentence of excommunication against them whereby they are giuen ouer vnto satan and also of those that being so proceeded against do not regard the same and lastly of those that in a kind of pride and high conceit of their owne excellency and sufficiency without iust and sufficient cause do make a wilfull separation of themselues from such whole Churches as haue the pure ministery of the word and administration of the sacraments according to the word and wherein they haue been bred and borne not only as men but as the children of God if they haue at all receiued the spirit of adoption and where also after their regeneration and according to their regeneration if they be regenerated they haue been maintained nourished and increased by the sincere milk of the word To inlarge this point of the desire of all men yea of the delight that all men euen the wicked should haue in the communion of the godly let the same be further applied to the matching of themselues in mariage with the children of God yea though themselues ●e neuer so honorable and noble in the world and the children of God for worldly things neuer so meane base and contemptible For as the Lord doth often forbid his children to match with the wicked and as such matches are testified oftentimes by many examples to haue been very dangerous for the peruerting of the children of God especially by the example of Salomon Neh●m 13. 26. so it cannot be denied but that the matching euen of the wicked with the godly is very effectuall and helpfull to draw them that are so matched though before wicked to be the children of God themselues also And why should any honorable and noble personages in the world being vn●egenerated disdaine to match with the children of God being otherwise for education qualities conuersation and behauior fit yea rather why should not the children of God disdaine to match with the wicked though themselues be neuer so meanly borne and the said wicked neuer so honorably descended in the world what is carnall nobility to nobility of the spirit what is it to come of Princes in the world in respect of being of the bloud roiall of God himselfe the king of kings yea why also in that respect should not the greatest nobles in the world not regenerated thinke it a great aduancement to match with a sonne or daughter of God fit for qualities as before I said though borne of neuer so meane and poore parents As it is honorable and no manner of disparagement at all for the wicked though neuer so nobly descended according to the flesh to match in mariage with the children of God though in worldly respects neuer so meanly borne being otherwise as I said for conditions fit to match with so honorable persons so are such matches likewise of no meane efficacy to draw such wicked ones as sometimes they match with to be themselues of the number of Gods children So saith the Apostle as before we heard what knowest thou O wife whether thou shalt saue thine husband or what knowest thou O man whether thou shalt saue thy wife 1. Cor. 7. 16. Hereof Ruth is a most pregnant and liuely example For being her selfe an heathen and hauing matched with one of the sonnes of Elimelech and Naomi she was so effectually conuerted by this match that after the death of her husband she would by no meanes part from Naomi Indeed Orpah that matched with another sonne though she seemed a while to be very earnest to goe with Naomi into the land of Iudah yet she was at the last perswaded to returne backe to her owne people but Ruth had tasted so deeply of the spirit of adoption by her foresaid match and marriage that her mother in law Naomi for the better triall of her soundnesse therein vsing many words to perswade her to returne backe as Orpha had done she answered most gratiously constantly and resolutely to the contrary saying I●●reat me not to leaue thee nor to depart from thee for whither thou goest I will goe where thou dwellest I will dwell thy people shall be my people and thy God my God where thou diest I will die and there will I be buried The Lord do so to me and more also if ought but death depart thee and me Ruth 1. 16. 17. O rare example O noble paterne O admirable president Let not men therefore only match and mate themselues with them that are the children of God but let them also so animate and hearten themselues to hold fellowship and communion with them that albeit they should be most earnestly perswaded by the children of God themselues
denie the resurrection and say that we shall not haue the same bodies in the resurrection that heere we haue but other newly created in their stead may bee thought to speake also reason It is therfore as certain that the same soules do remaine in the children of God after regeneration as well as the same bodies Yea the wicked doe also see the godly to retaine the same shape the same fashion the same outward forme and the same countenance that they had before regeneration and whiles they were vngodly as well as others It may bee indeed that after regeneration of the heart there is also some change in the countenance and outward behauiour and so verily it ought to be in men and in women For Wisdome is in the face of him that hath vnderstanding but the eies of a foole are in the corners of the world Prou. 17. 24. And those men that before regeneration had light countenances wanton and adulterous eies and did either weare long haire contrary to the decencie of nature 1. Cor. 11. 14. or that otherwise did disfigure themselues by setting vp a foretop starching their beards and such like after regeneration doe frame countenance haire and all things to manly and Christian modesty and grauity So likewise women that before did paint their faces as lezabel or that did lay foorth or set vp their haire top and top gallant or wreath it in most vncomely sort that did likewise lay forth their naked brests in most lasciuious manner that did weare mans apparell doublets and ierkins as mine owne eies haue lately seene directly contrary to the word of God as hath beene before shewed and that did euery way conforme themselues to those wanton wenches who are by the Prophet described to walke with streched out necks and with wandring eies walking and mineing as they went and making a tinkling with their feet and whose ornaments the Lord doth threaten to take away c. Isa 3. 16. c. Such women I say being new borne and made daughters to God doe change their countenance attire and gate co●tenting themselues with that natural beautie which God hath giuen them and which will not fall off with the steame of hot broth yea which need not daily bee renued and arraying themselues in comely apparell with shamefastnesse and modesti● and with good workes 1. Tim. 2. 9 10 But howsoeuer there bee a change in these things yet the wicked seeing the godly still to be of the same complexion and naturall countenance that they were of they are therfore the blinder in seeing that great and glorious change that afterward shall be in them and whereof afterward we are to speake Secondly forasmuch as they see the godly to be subiect to the same sicknesses and to the same other outward calamities that themselues are subiect vnto yea that many times the afflictions of the righteous are greater then of other men Io● 21. 6. Psal 34. 19. as before wee haue declared with the differences notwithstanding betwixt the afflictions of the wicked and of the children of God therefore also they can the lesse see and they are the more hardly perswaded that there is any difference betwixt the future state of them and of other men Yea this maketh the children of God themselues many times to doubt of their future state and to say yea in a maner to conclude with themselues in their owne hearts for a time till they goe into the Sanctuarie of God and consult with God himselfe and with his word that certainly they haue cleansed their hearts in vaine and washed their hands in innocencie sith they are daily punished and chastened euery morning Dauid himselfe had these thoughts Psalm 73. 13. 14. long after his regeneration No maruell therefore though the wicked bee so blinded that it doth not appeare vnto them what the children of God shall be in the life to come Thirdly they doe not onely see the children of God for a time to bee thus subiect to the same outward afflictions that other are subiect vnto but also sometime that such afflictions doe continue all the daies that the children of God doe liue heere yea that at the last also they die oft times the common death of men yea that they are taken away also in the same manner and doe perish in the same sort that the wicked themselues doe perish viz. touching their outward man and touching outward appearance yea that sometimes as touching still their outward man they perish somwhat extraordinarily and are taken away somewhat suddenly and strangely as well as the wicked As rebellious Hophni and Phinebas were slaine in one day by the Philistins according to the word of the Lord in that behalfe 1. Sam. 2. 34. so their good father El● himselfe also when he heard thereof and of the taking of the Arke of God fell backward from his seat and brake his neck● 1 Sam. 4. 18. As wicked Saul was hit and sore wounded by the Archers of the said vncircumcised Philistins and therefore fell vpon his owne sword and thereby hastned his owne death so good and vertuous Ionathan also was slaine in the same battle 1. Sam. 31. 2. c. The Prophet that being deceiued by another old Prophet did contrary to the word of God before spoken vnto him in his returne homeward was killed by a Lion 1. King 13. 24. That most worthy King Iosiah who hath this high commendation by the spirit of God that cannot lie Like vnto him there was no King before him that turned to the Lord with all his heart and with all his soule and with all his might according to all the Law of Moses neither after him arose there any like him 2. King 23. 25. euen this most worthy King was slaine by Pharao Necho King of Egypt verse 29. that is he was so wounded that hee was carried away sicke out of the battle and died of that wound 2. Chron. 35. 23. c. and that because hee would fight against the said Pharao Necho though by him hee were aduised to the contrarie So for some abuse in the Supper of the Lord it is said not only that many in the Church of Corinth were weake and sicke but that also many were asleepe 1. Cor. 11. 30. that is that the Lord had taken many of them away by death These things being so as well with the children of God as with the wicked is it any maruell though it doe not appeare vnto the wicked what the children of God shall be heereafter Fourthly the children of God are neuer freed heere from sinne Sinne indeed doth not raigne in them They are freed from the bondage of it yet still they are subiect to sinne of infirmitie as before we haue heard yea they sometimes fall into one and the same sinne often yea they doe sometimes commit very great sins euen such as whereby they doe greatlie scandalize and offend other and cause the glorious name of God to be euill
all maiestie accompanied with his holy Angels and comming to iudge the quicke and the dead as at his former comming in the forme of a seruant he came to be iudged and not to iudge This is called his appearing because as the Gospell or grace of God which bringeth saluation vnto all men is said now to haue appeared Tit. 2. 11. in respect it had beene kept secret before since the world began and had not beene so opened as it is now reuealed vnto the sonnes of men c. Rom. 16. 25. Ephes 3. 5. so Christ Iesus being ascended into heauen and there sitting at the right hand of his father is not now so manifested at least to the bodily sight as hee shall manifest himselfe at his second comming This time of this his appearing is his mariage day whereas all time before is but as it were the time of his and our betrothing and of the preparing of vs for that mariage day to be the fitter spouse for him All this sentence of our certainty and knowledge of our being Note made like vnto Christ at his appearing is not to bee taken as spoken in the person of the Apostle onely and of them to whom he did write but of all other the children of God whatsoeuer None must looke for this perfection and likenesse vnto Christ before this time of his appearing What then will some man aske doe you say of Enoch and Elias Of the one it is said that he walked with God and was no more seene for God tooke him away Genes 5. 24. And againe that By faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death neither was he found for God had translated him Heb. 11. 5. Of the other of Elias that he went vp by a whirlewinde into Heauen 2. King 2. 11. Concerning therefore the two former examples of whom the question is mooued whatsoeuer men haue thought or doe thinke and whatsoeuer the former words may seeme to insinuate which their insinuated sense shall be opened afterward this I thinke that they are not yet bodily in heauen Enoch and Elias not bodily yet in heauen neither shall be till the resurrection of all flesh when all the rest of Gods elect shall receiue their consummation and perfect blisse My reasons for this opinion are briefly these First Heb. 11. 13. after the mention as well of Enoch as of 1. Reason Noah Abraham and Sara it is expresly said All these died in faith It were absurd to restraine the generall word all onely to the three last and not to extend it also vnto Enoch and Abel Therefore it is manifest that these two died as well as the other three If it be obiected that it is said before that Enoch was translated that he might not see death and that therefore if here this verbe died bee as well vnderstood of him as of the rest then there shall be contrarieties in one and the same place I answer that the reconciliation of this doubt is very easie namely by interpreting the former phrase that hee might not see death of not feeling death after the common painfull manner of men And so the word to see for to feele or to discerne or by experience to perceiue is often taken in the Scripture The waters saw thee O God the waters saw thee c. that is they did as it were feele and by experience perceiued thy power Psal 77. 16. So the Apostle saith I see another Law in my members c. that is I feele Rom. 7. 23. There might bee many other the like places alleged but these are sufficient That also of being translated signifieth nothing els but he was taken away in an extraordinary manner not seen of men but so secretly that no man knew or by any outward thing could iudge otherwise of him but as if God tooke him immediatly into heauen And so would God in that euill and sinfull age take him away so gently and extraordinarily dissoluing the soule and the body that men might thinke him to goe body and soule into heauen for the better honoring that holy life which he then liued the rather because all other liued so wickedly To any but very meanly exercised in the Scripture it is well knowen that many things are spoken according to the opinion of men according to that which they seemed vnto men So Samuel is said to haue been raised after death by the witch and to haue spoken vnto Saul 1. Sam 28. 11. c. Not that it was Samuel For they that die in the Lord rest from their labors Reu. 14. 13. and are not therefore at the call or command of witches but onely because he appeared in the likenesse of Samuel as Satan can change himselfe into the likenesse of an Angell of light 2. Cor. 11. 14 and because Saul and his company tooke him so to be My second reason is out of the same Chapter For of all the former and of diuers other examples afterward mentioned it is written thus All these through faith obtained good report and receiued not the promise God prouiding a better thing for vs that they without vs should not be made perfect verse 39. 40. If Enoch had beene taken vp in body into heauen then had hee beene made perfect without vs. My third reason is out of the same Epistle also Chapt. 9. 8. where the Apostle by the entrance or going once yee●ely of the high Priest alone into Sanctum Sanctorum into the most holy place doth teach that vnder the Law and whiles the first Tabernacle was standing the way into the holiest of all was not yet opened What meaneth the Apostle by the holiest of all but heauen especially for the bodies of men to enter thereinto For howsoeuer God had prepared heauen to be the common receptacle of the soules of the righteous after death yet Christ was the first that entred in body And this seemeth to bee the stronger argument because in the description of heauen in the same epistle afterward Chap. 12. 23. it is called the city of the liuing God the celestial Ierusalem which hath the company of innumerable Angels the assembly of the congregation of the first borne which are written in heauen and God the iudge of all and the spirits of iust and perfect men and Iesus the Mediator of the new Testament Heere therefore is mention of Angels of God of the spirits of iust men and of Iesus the Mediator heere is no mention at all of any bodies or of any men altogether in heauen If any will reply that this is a description of the whole Church in heauen and in earth both gouernours children and seruants I answer that then the words the congregation of the first borne must comprehend the Church militant in earth and so there will bee none found in heauen but God Iesus Christ the spirits of iust and perfect men and the Angels So all bodies beside the body of Christ are yet excluded Fourthly
better manifestation of the glorie of God by his miraculous raising againe after buriall and after death and buriall diuers daies So our Sauiour saith to his disciples before hee was dead This sicknesse is not vnto death viz. to lie or continue in death till the generall resurrection but for the glory of God that the sonne of God might be glorified thereby Ioh. 11. 4. So he said after he was dead and buried vnto Martha who obiected that he had been dead foure daies Said I not vnto thee that if thou didst beleeue thou shouldst see the glory of God vers 40. Fourthly the godly are sometimes taken away by an extraordinary kind of death not onlie to teach other the more to take heede of all such sinnes as for which they are so taken away but also to admonish men not alwaies to iudge other by their end except their life haue also been wicked but rather to hope well of them if their former life haue been godly albeit their end be somewhat vncomfortable Finally to make an end of my answer to the former obiection touching the afflictions of the children of God sith all afflictions are threatned only to the wicked as all blessings are promised only to the godly though the troubles of the righteous be great yet the Lord deliuereth him out of all Yea though they continue long yet the Lord keepeth all his bones not one of them shall be broken whereas the afflictions of the wicked shall slaie them and they that hate the righteous shall perish Psal 34. 19. 20. 21. Therefore Salomon admonisheth the wicked not to lay waite at the house of the righteous because though the iust man fall seuen times yet he riseth again that is though he haue many afflictions be now vp now presently down yet at the last the Lord deliuereth him out of all but the wicked doe fall into mischiefe or do perish and be vtterly at the last ouerthrowne in their misery Pro. 24. 15. 16. Yea though they crie yet there shall be none to saue yea though they cry vnto the Lord yet he shall not answer them Psal 18. 41. Of both these viz. of the deliuerance of the children of God out of their troubles and of the perishing of the wicked in theirs wee haue mentioned diuers examples before not needfull now to be repeated Though also the Lord do suffer the afflictions of his children to continue yet in the end he will most gratiously deliuer them by death and translate them to himselfe where they shall rest from their labor and where they shall reap the fruit of all their workes Reuel 14 13. of the which rest and other reward of their workes all the afflictions of this life are not to be accounted worthy Rom 8. 18. Yea in respect of which most excellent and eternall weight of glorie all affliction here is but exceeding light and momentany 2. Cor. 4. 17. But of this more afterward In the meane time the Lord will either mitigate the said afflictions of his children or shew his power in their weaknesse not laying more vpon them then he giueth strength to beare neither suffering them to be tempted aboue their strength 1. Cor. 10. 13. The Lord knoweth to deliuer the godly out of tentation and to reserue the vniust vnto the day of iudgment vnder punishment or to be punished 2. Pet. 2. 9. Are not these things singular priuileges Are they not excellent dignities To haue the right of all the blessings of this life and to haue the very afflictions of this life made so many waies beneficiall so that the children of God may not only say that light is sowen for the righteous and ioy for the vpright in heart Psal 97. 11. but also that vnto the righteous ariseth light in darknesse it selfe Psal 112. 4. But is this all that may be said touching the blessings of this life and the afflictions thereof in respect of the children of God No we may further adde both of such blessings and of such afflictions and also of all other things that we that are the children of God do not vncertainly hope but fully and most certainly know that all things work together for the good of them that loue God Rom. 8. 28. What all things yea all things youth as well as age weaknesse as well as strength trouble as well as peace sicknesse as well as health pouerty as well as wealth the single state as well as the married disgrace as well as credit contempt as well as honor low degree as well as high imprisonment as well as walking at large bondage as well as freedome losses as well as gaine barrennesse of the body as well as fruitfulnesse a troublesome wife as well as a comfortable wife wicked and rebellious children as well as good and dutifull death of father mother brother sister husband wife children and other friends as well as the life and long continuance of them trauelling abroad as well as keeping at home banishment as well as abiding in our owne country the hatred and displeasure of men euen of the mighty men of the world as well as their loue and friendship dangers as well as safety foule or cold weather as well as faire and hot weather to conclude death as well as life and any one thing els as well as another All this is so to be vnderstood that wee may admire the wisedome of God in turning all things to good to them that loue Note him and that we acknowledge the state and condition of such to be the more honorable and happy not that therefore we make choice of one thing as well as of another but that we direct our choice according to his reuealed will and yet to be content with whatsoeuer the Lord shall doe and to possesse our soules in patience as knowing that howsoeuer things fall out a while yet at the last the end will be good for vs. But this being a matter of good moment it shall not be lost labor to insist somewhat more vpon it and to make it more plaine that all men may the better see that all things worke indeed to the good of them that loue God that is of his children because we haue heard before that they only do loue him and that all the wicked are often said to be enemies and haters of him This therefore is manifest first because God is with al them that loue him as hath been before declared If God bee with them who can be against them Rom. 8. 31. or what skilleth it who or what is against them They may then say as Elisha said 2. Kings 6. 16. and as Hezekiah did 2. Chron. 32. 7. They that be with vs are more then they that be against vs. God is greater then all Ioh. 10. 29. viz. not only in power but also in wisedome and goodnesse as before also hath been shewed Whatsoeuer he will in heauen or in earth that he doth Psal 135. 6. He will not
also depriued of all other good company and of all other comforts how wofull is his state and condition What then is to be said of the condemnation of the wicked in this behalfe in that I say they shall not only be cast out from the presence of God but also be bereaued of alother good cōpany comfort The fourth degree of condemnation is that besides the three former they shall be awarded the company of the diuell and his Angels So our Sauiour saith Depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the diuell and his angels In this description of euerlasting fire from the persons to whom the same belongeth or for whom it is prepared and who also were first thrown into it namely the diuell and his angels we see who shall be the companions of those that shall be thrown out from the presence of God How fearfull this is let it be considered by the fearfulnesse that is in the best and stoutest hearted men at the apparition euen of blessed spirits For to omit how Mary feared when the Angell appeared vnto her with the ioyfullest salutation that euer before she had heard To omit I say her feare because she was but a woman To omit also the feare of the shepheards when the Angell of the Lord came vpon them c. and brought them glad tidings that should be to all people viz. that vnto them was that day borne a Sauiour c. Luk. 2. 8. c. To omit I say this also because they being but simple poore and plaine men might perhaps be afraid without a cause and yet who oftentimes of better courage then such How did Cornelius a valiant man a man of courage a Captaine of a band called the Italian band a deuout man also or a religious man and one that feared God how did he feare when an Angell came to him as he was priuately humbled before God in praier and fasting oh how few such or other great persons in these daies are so exercised in their priuat closets and when the said Angell called him by his name Cornelius Acts 10. 3. 4. Neither onely is the apparition of spirits indeed thus fearfull to flesh and bloud euen to the stouest but also the very suspition and imagination of a spirit is very fearfull not to one alone but to many together When all the disciples saw our Sauiour come walking vpon the sea in the night toward their ship how were they troubled how cried they out for feare saying according to their imagination It is a spirit Mat. 14. 26. After that also how were the said disciples abashed and afraid when in the meane time by the companie and sermons and works of our Sauiour they should haue gathered more strength supposing only they had seen a spirit Luk. 24. 37. because Christ came vnto them and stood in the midst of them all the dores of the house where they were being fast shut Was the apparition of a blessed spirit from heauen sent with most comfortable message so fearfull to them before mentioned Was the bare supposition and imagination of a spirit so fearefull to all the disciples not once but twice Alasse then how fearefull shall it be to the wicked in the end to haue the company of no other but of all vncleane spirits euen of all the diuels in hell Dauid crieth out as bewailing his condition that in the time of his exile he was not only banished from the Courts of God and from the tabernacles of God and from those ioifull assemblies that sometimes he had had in those places but was also forced to dwell for a time with the wicked Woe is to mee saith he that I remaine in Meshech and dwell in the tents of Kedar● My soule hath too long dwell with him that hateth peace Psal 120. 5. 6. Indeed the companie of the wicked here is the porch or portall of hell and the wicked are called diuels Ioh. 6. 70. yet they are but yoong diuels and little diuels in respect of the diuels in hell and some of them are sometimes by the mercie of God made Saints If therefore Dauid thought it so wofull and if it be indeed so wofull to be but in the porch or portall of hell and to dwell but a little and as it were to lodge a night or two by the way in our pilgrimage heere and our iourney towards heauen in an Inne with yoong and little diuels how wofull may the wicked thinke it will be to dwell alwaies withall the great and master diuels in hell it selfe Truly how lightly soeuer they account it now because they do but slightly think of it yet one serious thought of it would make their haire stand vpright on their heads If it doe not the lesse feare they finde by hearing and thinking of it heere the more shall their feare be when they shall see this foule company and none but them The fifth degree of condemnation is that besides all hitherto said of this argument they shal be throwen into a place of vtter darknesse Matth. 8. 12. and 22. 13. and 25. 30. And indeed how can it be otherwise For sith God is light and in him dwelleth no darknesse 1. Ioh. 1. 5. and seeing he dwelleth in the light that none can attaine vnto 1. Tim. 6. 16. and seeing Christ Iesus also is the Sunne of righteousnesse and the light of the world as before we haue heard therefore it cannot be but that such as are shut out from the presence of God and of Christ are also in extreme darknesse As also the wicked doe heere loue darknesse more then light Ioh. 3. 19. so it is meet they should afterward be committed to a place of darknesse Therefore also when the wicked are heere conuerted they are said to be turned from darknesse to light Act. 26. 18. and to bee called out of darknesse into his maruellous light 1. Pet. 2. 9. How fearefull in this behalfe the condemnation of the wicked shall be may appeare if we shall consider both that which I haue before written in Chap. 10. of the spirituall darknes and blindnesse of the wicked in this world as also that which wee daily see of outward darknes heere and of the vncomfortable condition of such as are either blinde and so liue continually in darknesse or that are cast into prisons and dungeons where they are depriued of all light The sixth degree of condemnation is that besides all the former points the wicked shall haue most exquisite yea vnspeakable torments yea such as no heart of man can conceiue These are expressed by the names of such things in this world as are to flesh and blood most fearefull For in those places before alleged Matth 8. 12. and 22. 13. and 25. 30. the place of condemnation is not onely called a place of vtter darknesse but a place also where is weeping and gnashing of teeth It is also called by the name of death Rom. 6. 23. yea also of