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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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dying of our Lord Iesus that is euery where we doe in a manner die daily for Iesus his sake 1. Cor. 15. 38. But wherefore That the life of Iesus might also be made manifest in our bodies 2. Cor. 4. 10. But what meaneth he by making manifest the life of Iesus in our bodies Nothing but this that by their constant patient and cheerfull sufferings of so many things as it were so many deaths for Christs sake all men might the better see how Christ had quickned them and what great measure of spirituall life he had wrought in them So the Apostle telleth the Romanes that they were dead to sinne but aliue to God in Iesus Christ our Lord. Rom. 6. 11. Of himselfe he saith I am crucified with Christ but I liue yet not I any more but Christ liueth in me and in that that now I liue in the flesh that is in this fraile and mortall condition as the word flesh is taken Heb. 5. 7. I liue by faith in the sonne of God c Gal. 2. 20. Many other the like places to the same purpose I doe willingly for beare that I may not be too tedious By these we doe sufficiently see that being borne anew vnto God in Christ we are not still-borne as men vse to speake of children dead before birth but that we haue a spirituall life in him and by him Yet let vs vnderstand this by the way that our spirituall life by Christ Iesus is not altogether the Note same that our former spirituall death was by Adam and by our sinnes traduced from Adam For as we haue heard we were perfectly dead not halfe dead in our sinnes by Adam euen so dead that wee were altogether void of the life of God and without any remnants of the former image of God in vs. But our life renewed by Iesus Christ is not in this world perfect and without some remnant of the old Adam in vs. Therefore we are willed euery day to put off the old man Ephes 4. 2. and that we cast away all filthinesse and superfluity of malitiousnesse I am 1. 21. 1. Pet. 2. 1. as also that we put on Christ Rom. 13. 14. and the new man which after God or according to God is created vnto righteousnesse in true holinesse Ephes 4. 24. c. No man therfore hath so put off or cast off the old man but that there be still some ragges and patches remaining of him No man hath so put on the new man but that he may put him on somewhat more As no man putteth on all his apparell at once but first one thing then another so is it with putting on of Christ Iesus All our life here is but as it were the morning of the life to come to dresse vs for our mariage vnto Christ as Paul saith that he had prepared the Corinthians that is he had laboured to dresse them for one husband and to present them a pure virgin vnto Christ 2. Cor. 11. 2. Notwithstanding that which remaineth of the old man is but as I said peeces and patches For there is such a rent made in him by Christ that all remaining is but as ragges torne one from another and not sowen together and therefore such as in the end will be the more easily shaken off Though all our former sinnes doe remaine in substance in vs yet Christ hath so taken away their life from them that they are but as wounds in a dead body As Christ in his resurrection Note had some scarres remaining in his body of the wounds which he had receiued before his death and that the better to assure weake and vnbeleeuing Thomas and all other therein like to Thomas that he was the same that had been before put to death so in our regeneration to be the children of God whereby we are buried with Christ vnto his death Rom. 6. 4. Colos 2. 12. and raised vp likewise with him by his resurrection to newnesse of life Coloss 3. 1. there remaine some scarres of our old man and of those things whereby and wherein before we were dead to put vs the better in mind what we were by nature before Christ quickned vs and restored vs to life The said sinnes also so remaining touching their bodies as it were are so without life by Christs quickning of vs that they are but as dead carcases to shew what a mighty victory Christ hath gotten in vs. Furthermore the most that can be said of the sinnes remaining in the regenerated is this that being wounded to death they are mortified as quicksiluer is mortified in oyntments For as the quicksiluer in the bodily substance of it remaineth but is killed touching the life and all hurtfull power that before it had and so is made soueraigne to some healthfull vses by mixture of other things with it which also may be said of the conuerting of any other things of a venemous nature in themselues to be antidots and preseruatiues against poison by art and mixture of other things with them so the sinnes of the regenerate remaining touching their carcases are spoiled of their life and of all hurtfull power before in them and being mixt as it were with the grace of God infused in vs and communicated vnto vs by Christ in some respects partly before and partly afterward to be more spoken of are turned to our good Finally touching the life of our sinnes remaining in vs after regeneration it is no other then the life that remaineth in the body of a serpent the head whereof is crushed in pieces For though the body of such a serpent may perhaps moue a little yet it is but for a time and it can doe no harme at all This spirituall life thus hitherto spoken of is to be discerned by our spirituall breathing and by other spirituall effects thereof As the naturall life is to be discerned by naturall breathing and by other naturall effects sutable thereunto so is our spirituall life by spirituall breathing and by other spirituall effects By spirituall breathing I meane spirituall thoughts and meditations of the mind and the like motions and affections of the heart If therefore whereas naturally our minds are set altogether vpon earthly things there shall be such a change wrought in vs that they shall be as much set vpon the things that are aboue where Christ Iesus sitteth at the right hand of God Coloss 3. 1. as before they were set vpon the things here below and if we shall couet and desire and euery way affect heauenly things as much as euer we haue done earthly then shall we haue good testimony to our selues that we are borne from aboue and are the children of him that is the father of lights and of euery good and perfect gift whereas before also we loathed the Manna that came down from heauen as much as the people of Israel euen loathed that Manna that God gaue them in the wildernesse for feeding of their bodies we shall
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
preferments of the Iewes aboue the Gentiles before the comming of Christ that the Lord gaue them his word his statutes and his iudgements Psal 147. 19. and that to them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3. 2. viz. outwardly and concerning the letter to be kept by them whereas no other nation had the like benefit then how great is this priuiledge of the children of God aboue the wicked that they only haue the keeping of his word in the closets and cofers of their hearts to their euerlasting good Thus much of the dignity of Gods children by the word of God It remaineth now to speake of the Sacraments wherein I may and will be the shorter because they are only seales for confirmation of the word and either to strengthen our faith the more in the promises of God or to quicken our obedience the more vnto the commandements of God For as touching baptisme it is instituted first of all the better to assure vs of the forgiuenesse of our sinnes by the bloud of Christ by that visible element of water which therein is to be vsed This Peter teacheth when he exhorteth them that by his sermon were pricked in their hearts to bee baptized in the name of Iesus Christ for the remission of sinnes Acts 2. 38. because as the water washeth away the filth of the body so the bloud of Christ clenseth vs from all our sinnes Rom. 5. 9. Ephes 1. 7. Coloss 1. 20. 1 Iohn 1. 7. Reuel 1. 5. Secondly baptisme was instituted as a Sacrament also of repentance and regeneration because the bloud of Christ doth not onely wash vs from the guilt of our sinnes but also from the spot and blemish of them as we haue heard before And therefore Peter saith that we were elect or select viz. in our calling vnto sanctification of the spirit through the obedience and sprinkling of the bloud of Christ 1. Pet. 1. 2. and againe that We were redeemed from our vaine conuersation receiued by tradition of our fathers by the pretious bloud of Christ c. verse 18. 19. Another Apostle also saith that the bloud of Christ shall purge our consciences from dead works to serue the liuing God Heb. 9. 14. Therfore to apply these things vnto baptisme the baptisme of Iohn is called the baptisme of repentance Acts 19 4. and Iohn neuer baptized but hee preached repentance Mat. 3. 8. Luk. 3. 8. Therefore also baptisme is said to teach vs to die vnto sinne and to liue vnto righteousnesse Rom. 3. 4. Gal. 3. 27. Col. 2. 12. In the same respect Paul saith that Christ gaue himselfe for the Church that he might sanctifie it and clense it by the washing of water through the word Ephes 5. 26. In which words the Apostle at least alludeth vnto baptisme and againe he seemeth to vnderstand baptisme by the washing of the new birth Tit. 3. 5. The Apostle also to the Hebrews seemeth to allude to baptisme when hee saith that wee are purged in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies with pure water Hebr. 10. 22. Finally touching both the former ends of baptisme baptisme is said to bee the baptisme of repentance and forgiunesse of sinnes Mark 1. 4. As baptisme so serueth for confirmation of faith and instruction in godlinesse so doth also the supper of the Lord. The bread that wee eate and the wine that wee drinke in a religious manner according to Christs institution doth teach vs that as the bread and wine are incorporated into our bodies and made one with them so Christs his flesh and blood are spiritually incorporated into vs and wee into Christ through faith whereby it is said as wee heard before that Christ dwelleth in our hearts Ephes 3. 17. In which respect the cup of blessing which the Minister in the celebration of the Supper blesseth that is which hee praieth God to blesse to that speciall and holy vse is said to bee the communion of the blood of Christ and that the bread which he so blesseth is said to be the communion of the body of Christ 1. Cor. 10. 16. And indeed the Supper of the Lord by the visible elements and the visible actions therein commanded by Christ himselfe putting vs better in remembrance of all that Christ hath done for vs and better shewing his death till he come 1. Cor. 11. 24. 25. 26. then bare preaching would doe for so our eies doe see our hands doe handle our tongues doe taste and our stomaks by the vertue of the bread and wine do feele that which in the word preached our eares doe heare it cannot but be a maruellous and most comfortable confirmation of our faith both for euerlasting saluation in the world to come and also for all things necessary for this life in this present world For how can we doubt of saluation which Christ Iesus hath so deerly purchased for vs and the price whereof we see in so liuely manner represented vnto vs by the bread and the wine by the breaking of the one and the pouring out of the other would he giue so much for vs and then leaue vs in the suds or in danger Yea do not the bread and the wine with the eating of the one and drinking of the other teach vs that Christs flesh and bloud are meat indeed and drinke indeed to preserue vs to that eternall life which he by his death hath purchased for vs Ioh. 6. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. Hath Christ paid so deerly for vs and doth he feed vs so daintily and with such costly diet better then Angels food and will he lose vs and suffer vs to perish and to be taken out of his hands yea sith we that eat his flesh and drinke his bloud spiritually not only in the word but also in the Sacrament doe dwell in Christ and haue Christ dwelling in vs as Christ himselfe in the place before alledged doth testifie will he dispossesse himselfe of his habitation or hauing all power in heauen in earth and euery where els in his hands can he violently by any other power be thrust out of his house and home yea sith as we haue heard the supper of the Lord doth plainly teach vs that wee are flesh of his flesh c. can we perish and he not also perish Touching things necessary for this life whiles we liue in this world the supper of the Lord by putting vs in such remembrance of Christ himselfe doth also most comfortably assure vs of them For he that spared not his owne sonne but gaue him for vs all how shall he not with him giue vs all other things also Rom. 8. 32. And he that spared not his owne life and his owne soule but gaue them for vs and daily doth giue them vnto vs by faith how shall he not being made the heire of all things Heb. 1. 2. and hauing all things in his power and at his disposition how shall hee not I say with himselfe giue
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
downe that is when through weaknesse of body he could not continue the holding them vp in praier then Amaleck preuailed Ezod 17. 11 So his praiers were of greater force then all the host of Israel besides So mighty were the praiers of the said Moses afterward and such power had they with God when he praied for the Israelites hauing greatly prouoked Gods wrath by making them a golden calfe that the Lord both as it were intreated him to let him alone that his wrath might wax hot against them and also promised that if he would so let him alone that is if he would hold his peace and not sollicit God with his praiers for the Israelites he would make of him a mighty people Exod. 32. 10. c. insinuating notwithstanding thereby that if hee would for all that hold on in praying for them and would not be hired by the former great promise to hold his peace then hee could not proceed in his wrath against them as they had deserued but must needs yeeld to Moses intreating mercy for them What can bee more powerfull then to ouercome and as it were to withhold him that is of all power from doing of that which otherwise he would haue done So mighty were the praiers of Ioshua and so did he preuaile with God by them that after an imperious and commanding manner they made the Sunne and the Moone whose course is swifter then the weauers shettle or then the flight of the swallow or of the arrow to stand still in the firmament till hee and the rest of the Israelites had auenged themselues of their enemies Iosh 10. 12. 13. So the very celestiall bodies are as it were at the command of the praiers of Gods children So mighty were the praiers of Elijah that he praying earnestly that it might not raine it rained not on the earth at least in that country for three yeeres and six moneths and that praying againe for raine the heauens gaue raine and the earth gaue foorth her increase Iames 5. 17. 18. out of 1. King 17. 1. and 18. 42. c. So the children of God by their praiers can make the clouds to forbeare raine or to giue raine as shall make most to Gods glorie So mighty were the praiers of Elisha and such power had hee with God by them that they obtained of God a sonne for the Shunamite that was barren and recouered life againe for him when he was dead 2. King 4 16. and 35. and that also after that praying the Lord to smite the armie of the Aramites with blindnesse they were smitten with such blindnesse that albeit they could see other things yet they could not see to discerne their way but as men stone-blinde were led by Elisha till they were brought into the midst of Samaria and were there in the hands of their enemies 2. Kings 6. 18. c. So mighty were the praiers of Hezekiah and such power had they with God that whereas he was sicke vnto the death that is so sicke that he was vnrecouerable either by strength of his own nature or by the art and skill of any Physitian and God also by his Prophet had told him he should die and had therefore also willed him to put his house in order that is to make his last will and Testament because hee should die and not liue yet the Lord reuoked that his owne word and contrary in some sort thereunto as also aboue the strength of nature and the art of man did restore him to health and added fifteen yeers vnto his life 2. Kings 20. 2. 3. c. So mighty were the praiers of Ester Mordecai and the rest of the Iewes and such power had they with God by their praiers that the Lord turned the wrath of Ahashuerosh from them against Haman and other their enemies albeit Haman had before that so far preuailed with Ahashuerosh that he had written his letters and sealed them with his ring and sent them by his Posts into all prouinces for the destruction of the said Mordecai and all the rest of the Iewes yong and old Ester 3. 12. compared with 4. 16. and 17. and 7. 5. and 8. 1. c. So the praiers of Gods children haue had power with God for children for them that are barren for life for them that are dead for blindnesse vpon them that see for health for them that are sicke euen vnto death and past all hope and for the changing of the hearts of men from extreame wrath to exceeding loue and fauour So mighty were the praiers of the Church for Peter by Herod committed to prison and such power had they with God that the Angell of the Lord came with great power and glory into the prison and brake off Peters chaines opened the prison dores brought him out and made the yron gate open of it owne accord c. Acts 12. 7. So the praiers of Gods children are stronger then any yron So mighty were the praiers of Paul and Silas in prison that at midnight suddenly there was a great earthquake so that the foundation of the prison was shaken and by and by all the dores opened and euery mans bonds were loosed c. Act. 16. 25. 26. So though the earth be set vpon her foundation that it shall neuer moue viz. wholly out of her place Psal 10 4. 5. yet we see it to haue been shaken by the praiers of Gods children Neither are the praiers of Gods children so effectuall for other only of their own sort but also sometime for the wicked reprobate How did the Lord heare Abraham for Abimelech king of Gerar Gen. 20. 7. Moses praying often for Pharao and the Prophet praying for the restoring of the withered hand of Ieroboam 1. Kings 13. 6. Do not all these mighty effects of praier besides many other the like both old and new plainly testifie in what grace and fauour the children of God are with God Verily they doe for all the praiers before mentioned whereof we haue heard those mighty effects were not the praiers of any wicked men but only of the children of God For indeed none can pray so by praier to haue power with God but only Gods children For how shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued Rom. 10. 14. This question how shall they c. noteth it an impossible thing for them that haue not faith to call vpon God But such are all the wicked as before we haue heard therefore none of the wicked can call vpon God Therefore all the commandements of God for praier are only to the children of God and to such as are godly When the Prophet had set downe the commandement of God for calling vpon God in the day of trouble with promise of deliuerance c. Psal 50. 15. presently by way of opposition he addeth But vnto the wicked God said What hast thou to doe to declare mine ordinances and to take my couenants in thy mouth c.
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
to make his house like the house of Ieroboam the sonne of Nebat that made Israel to sinne and like the house of Baasha the sonne of Ahijah because of the prouocation wherewith hee had prouoked and made Israel to sinne and touching Iezebel who for Ahabs sake had commanded to put Naboth to death that the dogges should eat her by the wall of Izreel and further that the dogges should eat him of Ahabs stocke that died in the Citie and that the fowles of the field should eat him that should die in the field As I say the Lord had threatned all this for the innocent blood of Naboth euen of poore Naboth that had but one vineyard to so great a King and Queene as Ahab and Iezebel were 1. King 21. 21. c. so was not all performed accordingly partly 1. King 22. 38. and partly 2. King 9. 35 As the Lord from time to time by Ieremiah had threatned captiuitie and desolation to the Iewes partly for their other sinnes partly for their hard dealing with him so was not all performed As our Sauiour threatned to make Ierusalem desolate not only for her great contempt and obstinacie generally in that he hauing laboured to gather her children together as an hen gathereth her chickens they would not for all that be so gathered together but also particularly because they had killed the Prophets and stoned them which had beene sent vnto them Mat. 23. 37. so was it not performed in due time and is not that citie desolate as touching the habitation of the lewes to this day and are not the Iewes more scattered heere and there thorow all countries vpon the earth then any other nation whatsoeuer As the Lord had commanded Moses to write in a booke the vtter destruction of the Amal●kites and that the Lord would haue euerlasting warre with them till they should bee confounded so did hee not remember this booke of remembrance 400. yeeres against after-generations when all men thought it to haue beene so raked vp in dust that it should neuer haue beene reuiued Did not the Lord for execution of that which he had written before raise vp Saul telling him that he remembred though all other had forgotten and did not so much as dreame of any such thing what Amalek had done to Israel how they had laid wait for them in the way as they came vp from Egypt a worthy thing to bee considered by all such as securely sleepe in their old sius long sithence committed Note because God doth not speedily execute sentence Eccl. 8. 11. and therefore straightly commanding him to goe and to smite Amalek and to destroy all that pertained vnto them hauing no compassion on them but slaying both man and woman both infant and suckling both oxe and sheepe both camell and asse 1. Sam. 15. 2. 3. As the Lord threatned by the mouth of Zechariah the son of Iehoiada when he was most wickedly and vnkindly put to death by Ioash whom Iehoiada the father of Zechariah preserued when all his other brethren were murdered and aduanced to the kingdome of Iuda as I say the Lord threatned by the said Zechariah at the time of his stoning to death that the Lord would looke vpon his death and require it so did not the Lord indeed looke vpon it and require it For did he not send a fourefold iudgement vpon Ioash and his people in that behalfe First when the yeere was out Aram came against him and against Iudah and Ierusalem and destroied all the Princes of the people sending the spoile of them to the King of Damascus Yea though the army of Aram were but asmall company yet did not the Lord deliuer a very great army of loash into their hands Secondly did not he being left by the Aramits fall into great diseases Thirdly did not his owne seruants so thirst after his blood that though they saw his diseases to signifie hee would not liue long yet they could not stay till he died of them but conspired against them for the blood of the children of Iehoiada the Priest not so much respected by them as they were directed by God to reuenge it and slew him on his bed Fourthly when he was so slaine is it not noted that they buried him indeed in the cily of Dauid but for his dishonour not in the Sepulchre of Kings 2. Chron. 24. 21. c. Not to trouble the reader with too many examples I will adde but one more of the performance both of Gods promise and also of his threatning as well in the life to come as before wee haue heard the same by the former examples to haue beene performed in this life For how doth our Sauiour describe his last sentence in the day of iudgement Doth he not giue this the reason why hee placed the sheepe on his right hand and pronounced them blessed and bade them inherit the king dome prepared for them from the foundations of the world viz. that when hee was hungry they had giuen him meat when he thirsted they had giuen him drinke when he was a stranger they had lodged him when he was naked they had clo●hed him when he was sicke they had visited him when he was in prison they had come vnto him And when they are described to reply when they had seene him so and so and when they had done so and so vnto him doth not our Sauiour answer Verily I say vnto you inasmuch as yee haue done it vnto one of the least of these my brethren ye haue done it vnto me Doth hee not in like ma merset downe the reason of his sentence a●ainst the goats placed on his left hand and condemned to euerlasting fire prepared for the dineil and his angels viz for that he had beene hungry and they had giuen him no meat hee had beene thirsty and they had giuen him no drinke he had beene a stranger and they had not lodged him c. And when they are there produced as replying When saw we thee thus thus and did not thus thus vnto thee doth not our Sauiour returne this answer Verily I say vnto you Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these ye did it not to me Mat. 25. 34 c. Do not these things further demonstrate the excellent state of Gods children Do we not heereby see in what grace and fauour they are with God What greater interest can there be what sweeter fruit then the reward of the kindnes that is shewed vnto the children of God what heauier losse what sharper sauce then the iudgements of God vpon them that shew any vnkindnesse vnto the children of God Though they perhapssee no benefit for the present but rather may seeme to impaire their outward state yet in the end they shall find that in respect whereof they shall thinke wharsoeuer cost they haue bestowed vpon the children of God to be the best bestowed money that euer they laid out in all
ministers of the word by the children of God instrumentally begotten by them to God as before we amplified the dignity of Gods children by the honor of the ministers of the word This is the more to be obserued because in the first creation of man God did all himselfe alone not vsing therein the ministery of any Angell That now therefore in the second creation and restoring of man he imploieth men to effect the same it is no small grace and credit to them whom he doth so imploy the rather because it hath been before shewed that this second creation of man in the iudgement of man cannot but be acknowledged a far greater worke then the first creation either of man only or of all other things Had I not been so plentifull as I haue been already in the former part of this treatise and were not some other things remaining not altogether to be omitted the manifold indignities that in these last daies are euery where offered as generally to all the children of God so specially to the ministers of the word would require this vse to be much stood vpon Of many indignities so offered vnto the ministers of the word it is not the least but rather the chiefest and that which woundeth most that ariseth from the people themselues where such ministers haue exercised their gifts and spent their strength and perhaps also for example of liberality to other or by necessary charges exhausted their owne outward states hauing either nothing or very little left for maintenance os themselues in their age when they most need comfort or at least not hauing halfe so much to leaue to many children as their parents left to them alone For such to be neglected and contemned yea also oppugned and pursued by their owne people with many vnkindnesses cannot but be a grieuous sinne against God and an heauy discouragement of such ministers This indignity also is the greater if it be at such times as when such Ministers are vnder other afflictions either publike or priūate For what is this but to adde affliction to the affl●cted Psal 69. 26. and 109. 16. whom rather they should comfort verily this cannot be excused but must be acknowledged an hainous sinne yea though it be not doneroughly and as it were with stones or staues to pelt them away or otherwise violently to driue them out of their townes but rather vpon other pretenses after a curteous manner to intreat them to depart and as it were to goe out of their coasts Did not the Gergasens or Gadarens so to Christ Mat. 8. 34 Mark 5 17. Did not the gouernors of Philipp● the like to Paul and Silas Acts 16 34. yet either of them had some colour at least of carnall reason to do as they did The Gergasens or Gadarens had as then receiued but little benefithy Christ onlv he had cured one man in their coasts that was bodily possessed of a legion of diuels the working of which cure had cost them the losse of an heard of swine of about ●000 Mark 5. 13. The Philippian magistrates hauing ouershot themselues in beating and imprisoning Paul and Sil●s being Romanes and in that respect exempted from all such indignities in all places vnder the Roman iurisdiction might feare great danger to themselues by their said hard dealing with Paul and Silas if Paul and Silas should haue taken aduantage against them and might haue had the benefit of the Roman law for their said aduantage Yet hath the Scripture recorded these things both of the Gergasens of Gadarens and also of the Rulers of Philippi as great barbarisme vnder the pretext and cloke of a certaine kinde of humanitie what then is to bee said of such in these daies of the cleere light of the Gospell that shall vse the like smooth discouragements of their Ministers that haue faithfully preached the Gospell to them and theirs that haue neuer hindred them the worth of a little pigge but rather perhaps haue sustained much losse at some of their hands and at whose hands they need not to feare any manner of danger by their stay amongst them or their taking any aduantage against them Let all such vnthankfull people towards their faithfull Ministers well consider what is said of the children of Israel for not shewing kindnesse to the posterity of Gideon otherwise called Ierubbaal euen after the death of the said Gideon or lerubbaal The children of Israel saith the holy historie remembred not the Lord their God which had deliuered them out of the hands of all their enemies on euery side Neither shewed they mercy on the bouse of Ierubbaal or Gideon according to all the goodnesse which he had shewed vnto Israel Iudg. 8. 34. 35. If the Israelites not shewing kindnesse to the house of Ierubbaal or Gideon were so noted and obserued yea so blamed and censured by the holy Ghost as also ioined with their not remembring God himselfe when as Ierubbaal or Gideon had onely deliuered them from bodily enemies wil not the Lord note and obserue much more all inhumanity and vnkindnesse shewed not to the posteritie of godly Ministers but to such Ministers themselues in their owne persons but to such Ministers themselues in their owne persons by whom instrumentally God hath deliuered or at least offred to deliuer such people out of the hands and from the power bondage and thraldome of their spirituall enemies that so they might be children to God himselfe Yea such may rather feare lest by such discouragements offred to their Ministers whereby they are forced to depart and to seeke for more peace and comfort elswhere the Lord Iesus Christ may say vnto them in behalfe of such Ministers as sometimes he said to the Iewes touching himselfe viz. that when such are so gone from them then they seeke them and shall not f●●de them Iob. 7. 34. that is then they wish they had them againe but shall not haue their desires Especially it were well that all such would feare in time that which followeth in the same place viz. that where they shall be when God shall haue taken them to himselfe into heauen they cannot come But wishing and praying for better things to the most mortall enemies of any ministers of the word I do thus leaue this vse and proceed now to other Another common vse therfore of this doctrine of the dignity of the children of God is that the more excellent we hear their state and condition to be the more all sorts of men should take delight and pleasure in their society and fellowship The rather because it is no small meanes both to make them that are not the children of God to be his children For he that walketh with the wise shall be wise pro● 13. 20. and also to strengthen them that are already the children of God the better so to continue and the more to grow in all those things wherein doth consist the being of the children of God and which are the notes and
that doe not beleeue at all As the want of faith hindreth vs from seeing the glory of God so also it hindreth from seeing the glory of his children and any speciall worke of God towards them for which hee may be glorified by them As our Sauiour signifieth that the weaknesse of her faith might hinder her from seeing the present resurrection of her brother Lazarus and so consequently from the sight of the glorie of God which therein should bee shewed so it cannot bee but that the nullitie of faith in the wicked must much more hinder them from seeing the glorie of the Saints at the last day and in the kingdome of Heauen The vnbeleefe of men did sometimes hinder Christ himselfe from doing those workes which otherwise hee would haue done and whereby hee would haue shewed his owne glorie and the glorie of his father Matth. 13. 58. Yea it is said that in some places hee could doe no great workes because of the maruellous vnbeleefe of them that dwelt in such places Marke 6. 5. 6. If vnbeleefe did so hinder Christ that hee did not neither could doe any great workes for the bodily good of men doth not vnbeleefe much more hinder men from the sight of the euerlasting saluation of his elect for which they shall giue glory vnto God and vnto the Lambe for euermore By this vnbeleefe it hath come to passe that mens eies haue beene shut vp in such sort that they haue not seene the saluation of the children of God from many dangers of this life how apparant and manifest soeuer the same haue beene Consider the vniuersall flood and behold the manifold manifest tokens both thereof and also of the preseruation of all that beleeuing the same should either haue repaired to Noah to goe with him into the Arke which hee had made or by true repentance haue preuented it Noah with many other busied themselues for the space of one hundred and twenty yeeres in building the Arke When the time of the flood it selfe approched he prouided all things fit for preseruation of himselfe and of his companie and of all other creatures that should resort vnto him to bee preserued by him Who would not by these things haue thought that there had beene some great worke of God towards Who would not haue seene the purpose of God for the glorious preseruation of all those that should beleeue the preaching of Noah and doe accordingly Yet behold more When the time of the flood approched neerer all creatures as well wilde as tame as well fierce as gentle as well flying fowles as foure footed beasts came to Noah and offred themselues to bee put into the Arke Wolues Beares Tigres Elephants Lions Hawkes of all sorts Eagles and such like All these I say came by the secret commandement of God for their so comming No man did fetch them No man did call them No man did driue them No man vsed any art to gather them together Who would not haue wondred at this Who would not haue thought all the former preaching of Noah touching the destruction of the world by the flood to haue beene true Who would not haue beleeued it Who would not haue beene perswaded of it Who would not haue seene the future saluation of Noah and his familie in the Arke Notwithstanding though they had seene what Noah had beene yet it did not appeare vnto them what hee and his should bee as touching their safetie from that great iudgement which hee so long had preached This is the more admirable because those creatures which then came so willinglie neither before could nor sithence can either without much force or without great art and skill be brought into subiection The like may bee said of the deliuerance of the people of Israel out of the Land of Egypt Who would not haue thought and seene by all the miracles that the Lord did in the Land of Egypt euen before the Egyptians by the turning of Moses his rodde into a serpent by the changing of all the waters in Egypt into blood so that all the fish that was in the same water died and stanke Ex●d 7. by the frogges by the lice by the noisome flies Chap. 8. by the rot of all sorts of beasts all the beasts of Israel being in that time safely preserued by the like scabbe and blister vpon all the people of Egypt themselues by the most fearefull haile thunder and lightning Chap. 9. by the innumerable number of grasse-hoppers by the dreadfull darknesse Chap. 10. and by the remooue from time to time of all these iudgements at the praier of Moses lastlie by the death of all the first borne of Egypt euery house of the Israelites being passed ouer Chap. 12. Who I say by these things would not haue thought and seene what the Israelites should bee and how great saluation the Lord had prepared for them Come wee a little further to the comming of the Israelites to the red sea when the Lord made the waters to stand vpon heapes and to be as a wall of each side of them what could bee more euident then that the Lord would both saue Israel and also destroy the Egyptians A man would thinke that these two things the saluation I say of the Israelites and the ouerthrow of the Egyptians by all the former things had beene as plaine as the nose as men vse to speake of a mans face Yet for all this so were the Egyptians blinded so were their hearts through infidelitie and vnbeleefe hardened that it did not appeare vnto them how either the Israelites should be saued or themselues destroied The like may be said of the great miracles that our Sauiour wrought heere vpon the earth as also of the great signes that were done at the putting of him to death viz. of the renting of the veile of the Temple of the generall darknesse vpon the whole Land from the sixth houre to th● ninth and the rising and appearing of many of the Saints that slept For who would not haue thought but that by all these things it should haue appeared what Christ was and what hee should bee Yet such was their extreme infidelitie and vnbeleefe that for all that they could not see those things which were so euident viz. neither what Christ was nor especially what Christ should be The same is to bee said of those things whereby God manifested plainly what Steuen should bee especially that the whole Councell did behold his face as the face of an Angell of God Act. 6. 15. Who would not haue thought but that they should haue seene thereby in what grace and fauour hee was with God and what glorie hee should haue likewise before God Yet when hee said Behold I see the heauens open and the sonne of man standing at the right hand of God they were so farre from seeing any such thing that they shouted with a loud voice and stopped their eares and ran vpon him all at once and cast him out of
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