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

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ISACK where indeed hee did but shew himselfe willing and readie to offer him and u Mat. 5. 6. Christ promiseth that they that hunger and thirst after Righteousnesse shall be satisfied To come to some other notes of Sanctification in the second place many parts of Holinesse are vndoubted signes of it First our intercourse with God by priuate and feruent Prayer of Faith is the most infallible signe of all the rest A singular fruit and testimonie to a mans conscience that hee is regenerate for this is the very marke which the Holy Ghost setteth vpon prophane men They x Psal 53. 5. call not vpon God and the reason is plaine and euident for either Prayer will make men to leaue sinne or sinne will make men to leaue to pray The wicked though they seeme to pray in secret doe it seldome or neuer with companie to fill vp the number and for their credit sake or for some worldly respect they can be content to make one But howsoeuer it bee their Prayers differ farre from the properties of true Prayer that are onely to bee found in Gods Children Which properties and wherein the wicked differ from them may all be gathered out of that most absolute Prayer both for matter and forme which our Sauiour himselfe hath taught vs and are these that follow First The faithfull man is furnished with the y Zach. 1● ● Spirit of Prayer or Supplication that is an excellent Grace facultie or abilitie wrought in a man by the holy Spirit whereby he is made able willing and readie to pray vnto God for euery want as the present occasion doth require for as the z Rom. 8. 26. Apostle saith Of our selues we know not what to pray Therefore our Sauiour deliuers vnto vs in few wordes all the maine Graces wee can desire and maine wants we any way can stand in need of to aske at the hands of God which may serue for a Store-house continually to put words in our mouth But the carnall man though he can speake and tell a perswasiue Tale for worldly things he is vtterly ignorant how to aske heauenly Secondly That we may pray as we ought the a Rom. 8. 26 27 Spirit helpeth our infirmitie and teacheth vs to pray according vnto God with grones and sighes that cannot bee expressed But this the Worldling is farre from to whom such sighes and gronings of the Spirit are as strange and vnheard of as is the b Iohn 14. 17. Spirit it selfe the Authour of it Thirdly Gods Children in all their necessities addresse themselues to him and seeke for good things at the hands of their heauenly Father through Christ the wicked howsoeuer with c Numb 23. 14 Balaam they may breake forth into wishes and woulds Let my soule dye the death of the Righteous and my latter end be like to him haue neither the face nor the heart to goe to God by humble Prayer as Dauid in the like case did Psal 26. 9. Take not away my soule with sinners nor my life with bloudie men This diuersitie you may finde Psal 4. 7. Many say Who will shew vs good IEHOVAH lift vp vpon vs the light of thy countenance Fourthly The godly prepare themselues to Prayer by d Eccles 4. 13. meditating before-hand of the dutie they are to performe and of the arguments and reasons that may stirre them vp vnto it And so our Sauiour in that Prayer teacheth vs to doe by the vsing of a Preface The wicked neuer make conscience of their Prayers Fiftly True Prayer cannot be without Faith whereby wee apply particularly to our selues the loue of GOD in Christ to call him Our Father for how shall they call on him in whom they doe not beleeue Rom. 10. 14. but this the carnall man hath not Sixtly Gods Children come with boldnesse and confidence vnto him as a Child vnto his Father whereas the carnall man flyeth from him and is afraid of him as of a Iust and Righteous Iudge This difference in the point of Prayer the Apostle teacheth Rom. 8. 15. Wee haue not receiued the Spirit of bondage to feare any more but the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Seuenthly Reuerence is in the true and faithfull Caller vpon of Gods Name e Eccles 5. 1. knowing that God is in Heauen and himselfe vpon Earth the carnall man rusheth without all reuerence into his presence Eightly Our Sauiour requireth of his Zeale and earnestnesse in Prayer that all our affections bee taken vp and wholly bent vpon it which the shortnesse of the Prayer teacheth and the concluding of it with this word Amen and the rather to kindle in vs a feruencie in Prayer he beateth vpon it with many words f Mat. 7. ● Aske Seeke Knocke c. For cold Suiters prooue cold Speeders But such as euen rent the Heauens with their Prayers and pull as it were by violence Gods Graces from him are those that hee delighteth in but this the carnall man is farre from whose minde is alwayes stragling and thinketh vpon his penny his businesse and worldly delights Ninthly In Gods Children there is a greater feruencie of Spirit in praying for the things that concerne Gods glorie then for those that concerne our owne good yea though it be the saluation of our soules and in those that concerne our owne good greater zeale and feruencie for heauenly things then for earthly that are sought but as additaments and appendances to the other all which the very order of petitioning in the Lords Prayer sheweth Contrariwise of these worldly things are altogether or at the least most sought after Tenthly The godly pray to set forth Gods glory as may be seene there The g Iames 4. 3. wicked aske to imploy it vpon their lusts Eleuenthly Gods Children in their prayers remember not themselues onely but the Church their brethren and fellow-members in a fellow-feeling and loue one of another Our Father Our bread Our trespasses Lead vs not Deliuer vs c. The wicked are euery one for himselfe Twelfthly The Elect pray with assurance of obtayning the things wee pray for earthly things with condition so farre as God hath appointed them for our good All other absolutely without condition which assurance is noted in the word Amen signifying that not only so we desire it may be but that so vndoubtedly it is and shall be whereunto wee are induced both by the consideration of the loue of God who is our Father and therefore willing and of his power which is in heauen and therefore able to doe vs good Which two his Goodnesse and his Greatnesse are the two maine pillars and props of our Faith And to this vertue in prayer our Sauiour doth exhort vs Mark 11. 24. All things whatsoeuer yee aske when yee pray beleeue yee shall receiue them and they shall be yours The wicked are as h Iames 1. 6. waues of the Sea tossed about with euery wind doubting and distrusting
giuen vnto much wine but teachers of honest things that z 1. Pet. 5. 3. they may instruct the younger women to be sober-minded that they loue their Husbands that they loue their children Not as though yee were Lords of Gods Heritage but that ye may be ensamples to the flocke a Iob 29. 8. The young men saw me and hid themselues and the aged rose and stood vp his wise and graue carriage procuring reuerence and credit to him Secondly Vsing of the things wherein they are preferred And vsing of the things wherein they are preferred to the others benefit to the others benefit being content to yeeld vnto them when they are in the right as to their brethren So Deut. 17. 20. it is specially commanded to the King That his heart bee not lifted vp aboue his brethren And b Iob 31. 13. Iob professeth his care to practise this Lesson If I did condemne the iudgement of my Seruant and of my Maid when they did contend with mee Thus did c 2. King 5. 13 14. NAAMAN harken to the aduice of his Seruants and returning washed in Iordan and was made whole The Dutie of such Superiours as are in authoritie From them in authoritie First instruction of their Inferiors in the things of God and of their speciall callings whatsoeuer the same be is Instruction of their Inferiours in the things of God and of their speciall callings as Ioshua did the d Iosh 24. Israelites And in this respect Iob e Iob 29. 15. saith of himselfe that he was eyes vnto the Blind and feet vnto the Lame Secondly Due recōpence of good or euil actions which Peter f 1. Pet. 2. 14. Then due recompence of good or euill actions sheweth to bee the cause why Magistrates are erected for the punishment of euill doers and prayse of them that doe well And g Ro. 13. 2 3 4 Paul saith that Princes are not to be feared for good workes but for euill Wilt thou then be without feare of the Power Doe well so shalt thou haue prayse of the same for he is the minister of God for thy wealth In h Col. 4. 1. another place Ye Masters saith hee doe vnto your Seruants that which is iust and equall knowing that yee also haue a Master in Heauen Thirdly Protection from wrongs for whither should And lastly protection from wrongs the eyes i Psal 123. 2. of the Seruant looke but to the hand of the Master and the eyes of the Mayden but to the hands of her Mistris Hereupon Gen. 20. 16. Abimelech telleth SARA that ABRAHAM her Husband was the couering of her eyes and the man that was to protect her Iosias also Lam. 4. 20. is said to be vnto the people the breath of their nostrils The Dutie of Magistrates From publike authoritie that is to say from Magistrates maintenance aswell of true Religion as of peace and honestie of life Anabaptists which reiect Magistracie The Papists which teach that it belongeth not to the Magistrate to deale in matter of Religion And also exempt their Clergie from the Iurisdiction of the Ciuill Magistrate is First Maintenance of true Religion Secondly Maintenance of peace and honestie of life for to him hath God committed the maintenance of both the Tables So the k 1. Tim. 2. 2. Apostle teacheth that the Ciuill Magistrate is raysed vp of God vnto that high estate of Dignitie that we might liue vnder them a peaceable and a quiet life in all godlinesse and honestie A part of this Dutie is the deciding of Controuersies betweene man and man and the true ministration of Law and Iustice as Moses did Exod. 18. 13. For the performance of both these God hath furnished him with power and to this end put the Sword into his hands which hee may not suffer to rust in the Scabbard but must draw it out to punish all offenders l Rom. 13. 4. If thou doe euill feare for hee beareth not the Sword for nought for he is the Minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill In all which punishments a proportion is to be obserued That euery one be according to the nature and qualitie of the offence Those against the first Table most seuerely and sharply after the example of God himselfe whom the Prophet m Ier. 5. 7. bringeth in saying How should I spare thee for this Thy children haue sworne by them that are no Gods In the second Table Murder Incest Rape with death Trespasse with the recompence of the hurt c. In all which the Iudiciall Lawes of Moses albeit wee are not tyed to the precise and strict forme of that Common-wealth are notable precedents to goe before vs for the equitie and substance of them The contrarie whereof is the not punishing or light censuring of capitall crimes and letting them escape whom God bringeth into our hands Of the first we haue a Law Numb 35. 31 33. Ye shall take no recompence for the life of the Murderer which is worthy to dye but he shall be put to death for bloud defileth the Land and the Land cannot be clensed of the bloud that is shed therein but by the bloud of him that shed it And 1. Kin. 20. 42. A Prophet telleth the King of Israel as from the Lord Because thou hast let goe out of thy hands a man whom I had appointed to dye thy life shall goe for his life and thy people for his people For the second ELI is reprooued 1. Sam. 2. 23. who for foule and shamefull faults committed by his sonnes such oppressing of the people as made men abhorre the Seruice of the Lord lying with the women that assembled at the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation c. reprooued them onely with a few words and that in a milde sort Why doe you such things for of all this people I heare euill reports of you Doe no more so my sonnes for it is no good report which I heare of you that you make the Lords people to trespasse Take here-with-all some cautions First That the Magistrate being Gods n Rom. 13. 1. Minister in this behalfe doe all things holily and reuerently as in his presence whereof we haue Ioshua o Iosh 7. 19. 25. for a worthie patterne who said vnto ACHAN My sonne I beseech thee giue glorie to IEHOVAH the God of Israel and make confession vnto him and shew me now what thou hast done hide it not from me Afterwards when the fact was confessed by him IOSHVA said In as much as thou hast troubled vs IEHOVAH shall trouble thee this day And all Israel threw stones at him and burnt them with fire and stoned them with stones Secondly He must propound a right end before him that is to say first the parties good and reformation not his shame and destruction for that the p Pro. 20. 30 Wiseman teacheth vs to bee the scope and marke
from being our guide to leade vs vnto Heauen the same being the proper office of Christ Who b Ioh. 14. 6. is the Way the Truth and the Life as contrariwise they conuince vs euery mothers childe both of impietie to God and iniustice to men in that wee shew not forth the power thereof in our liues but restrayne and keepe it backe vniustly to doe quite the contrarie Insomuch as men naturally knowing c Rom. 1. 19 20 God both his eternall Power and Godhead yet they glorifie him not as God but wax vaine in their reasonings and disputes and rush forth into all vnrighteousnesse against men as the Apostle there at large declareth And the like may bee said of the conscience also that it tendeth onely vnto this to take away all excuse from vs Rom. 2. 15. So as our Desire Will Affections retayne now no part of our former conscience but are wholy brutish sensuall and slaues vnto sinne as wee heard before Not that hereby wee take away all freedome of will from man but we teach that the same hath place onely in the naturall inclinations common to all liuing Creatures which naturally seeke their own good life nourishment maintenance preseruation propagation c. or in the outward actions of this life for matter of manners gouernment of Houses Families Common-wealth Cities c. but not to doe the things that are good and pleasing vnto God The reliques of our former dignitie that yet remaine In the bodie a kind of maiestie in the bodie are c Gen. 9 6. Maiestie and comelinesse of person which bring men many times into a loue and admiration of vs. In the whole d Gen. 9. 2. man there is a certaine soueraigntie that keepeth in awe the brute Creatures insomuch as In the whole man a certain soueraigntie that keepeth in awe the brute creatures The creature here through the fall of mā receiueth an impaire of his first perfection many sauage beasts that farre excell man in strength doe willingly yeeld themselues to be tamed of him Lastly the punishment of mans transgression resteth not in man alone it is of a more large extent reacheth for mans sake to the other creatures for as they were for his seruice and command made in all excellencie of perfection So by the fall of Adam he hath not onely vndone himselfe and his posteritie but euen the brute beasts and all the dumbe creatures are impayted by it grone vnder that impayre for so God pronounceth Gen. 3. 17. Cursed bee the earth for thy sake And againe Verse 18. Brambles and Bryers shall it bring forth vnto thee And the Apostle Rom. 8. 22. The whole Creation that is all the things created grone and trauaile together vnto this present time And that hee calleth there vanitie or a vanishing and a flitting estate subiect to corruption and decay they hauing a part in the punishment of man to agrieue his curse and to make it more appeare how fearfull his transgression was whereof all the Creatures and the whole frame of the Creation doth feele the smart as e Rom 8. 20. Paul saith They are subiect vnto vanitie for him that subdued them that is to obey the Creatours pleasure who by casting them into this vanitie would leaue it testified how much he is offended with man for whose good he had created them in a farre more excellent condition So much of that which is in part The fulnesse of the curse after death is damnation with the Deuill and his angels This which you haue heard is that miserable and wretched estate which sinne hath drawne vpon all the sonnes of Adam so long as they liue in this World That which we call full cursednesse is a sorer and a more grieuous punishment the full cup of Gods heauie indignation insupportable of all his Creatures No Angell no man not all the Angels or men of the World able to before it or to indure the least brunt of it but forceth miserable man vpon whom it lighteth downe into Hell that horrible place of darknesse where they indure euerlasting torments with the Deuill and his angels such as no tongue can expresse or vtter And therefore it is called The f 2. Thes 1. 9. destruction of the creature The second g Reuel 2. 6. 21. 8. death h 1. Cor. 11. 32. damnation and there is said to bee i Mat. 22. 13. 25. 30. weeping and wayling and gnashing of teeth for first they are separate and quite cut off from the gracious presence of God Present indeed they find and feele him by experience but that presence separated from his fauour is an increase of their feare and horrour not onely so but the wrath of God sensibly pursuing them giueth no rest vnto their soules but as a Worme biteth and gnaweth on them continually the fearefulnesse of which torment what heart is able to conceiue But to giue some glimpse of it the Scriptures vse diuers names The k Mar. 9. 43 44 45 46 47. Worme that neuer dyeth Hell fire Vnquenchable fire The l Reuel 19. 20. 20. 10 14. burning Lake Therefore wretched and fearefull is their condition yea thrice miserable are they and happie had it beene for them if neuer they had beene borne as also our m Mat. 26. 24. Sauiour Christ doth say Two circumstances there are whereby these torments insupportable in themselues are made yet more grieuous First By the place Hell where they are kept fast bound in chaines and fetters of darknesse In regard whereof it is called Outer n Mat. 22 13. 25. 30. Darknesse Secondly By the eternitie of the punishment o Mat. 18. 8. 2. Thess 1. 9. Dan. 19. 2. being euerlasting without all hope of ransome no strong nor mightie man to be looked for that may breake this Prison and let the Prisoners loose no end of punishment nor hope of any end alwayes dying and neuer seeing an end of death Their p Esay 66. Mat. 9. 44 45 46 48. Worme neuer dyeth their Fire neuer goeth out they finde not so much as one q Luke 16. ●4 drop of cold water at any time to quench their thirst A paine otherwise not so grieuous if it haue no intermission nor hope of any ease is worse then a thousand deaths O how much more then doth this exceede which with the first waight thereof breaking the very bones and all the veines and sinnewes of their heart must needes in the euerlasting continuance of it infinitely be increased The sinfulnesse annexed to this estate is hatred of God finall desperation and the full height and top of all iniquitie as in the damned spirits we saw before Further to this estate three things are proper In soule presently till the latter Day First it lighteth vpon men one by one presently after death So hath the wisdome of God ordayned that when the course of this life is runne out
in the end Death which is the separation of Soule and Body Yet in all this some Reliques of former D●gnitie doe remaine namely in the Minde common Principles of Good and Euill sparkes of that light of Nature and some Seedes of Conscience which notwithstanding are wholly sinfull and doe but serue partly to keepe Men from breaking forth without all shame or regard of honestie partly to make them vnexcusable In the Body a kind of Maiestie in the whole Man a certaine Soueraigntie that keepeth in awe the brute Creatures The Creature here through the Fall of Man receineth an impaire of his first perfection So much of that which is in part The fulnesse of the Curse after Death is Damnation with the Deuill and his Angels In Soule presently till the Latter Day at what time God for that purpose raysing vp their Bodies the whole Man shall receiue the like Doome and Execution accordingly A miserable Change to such Men as then are liuing shall be instead of a Death and rising from it The Creature is then also subiect to an vtter abolition THE SECOND BOOKE OF DIVINITIE Of EMANVEL God and Man our Redeemer CHAP. 1. Of CHRIST THis is the summe of that Doctrine which we haue concerning GOD. The other followeth concerning Emanuel GOD with vs. Emanuel GOD with vs is in one Person the Sonne of GOD and very Man conceiued of a Virgin by the Holy GHOST Who is also CHRIST or Anointed called of his Father euer since the Fall of Adam to be a Mediatour betweene GOD and Man of a Couenant to saue through Faith in him that is by apprehending of the Couenant certaine few Men whom GOD his Father hath chosen from Eternitie and giuen vnto him to set forth in them the prayse of his Mercie This Couenant is called the Couenant of Grace And ratified by the Death of Him that made it hath also the Name of a Testament Being alwayes one and the same in substance it is neuerthelesse distinguished or distinctly to be considered in the Old and the New Testament The Old Testament was the Couenant through CHRIST to come The New Testament is the Couenant through CHRIST alreadie come IESVS the Sonne of Marie CHAP. II. Of the Priesthood of Christ OF the Office of Mediation there be two parts Priesthood and Kingdome Priesthood is in the things which he doth to God for those Elect. The parts are Oblation and Intercession Oblation is the offring vp of Himselfe for them It standeth in two things First the sanctifying of his Humane Nature in all Holinesse from the very first moment of his Conception for the worke of the Mediation Then in the performing of the most excellent measure of Obedience to the Law of God that can possibly fall vnto any Creature One principall part whereof are his Sufferings in taking vpon him our Sinnes and the whole Curse both that of this Life and the fulnesse of it due vnto them after Death All which he fully satisfied The Curse vpon vs here in the whole course of his Life the fulnesse of the Curse vpon the Crosse and Death by dying vnder the power whereof he lay three dayes in the Graue This Righteousnesse or Obedience being the Righteousnesse of Him who is both God and Man doth consequently merit a like supreme measure of Blessednesse euidently seene in the G 〈…〉 s that did follow his Sufferings and were in Soule or Bodie apart or ioyntly in them both In Soule hee went to Heauen presently after Death His Body hee rayled from the Dead glorious the third day at the da●●ning of the Day In his whole Person Soule and Body ioyned together he ascended into Heauen the fortieth day after his Resurrection and there sitteth at the right hand of God that is to say imoyeth all Soueraigntie Power and Glory Hitherto of Oblation Intercession is the continuall presenting of his Merites to God his Father on the behalfe of those Elect. CHAP. III. Of Christs Gouernment of the World in generall SVch is the Priesthood of Christ his Kingdome followeth Kingdome is in the things which hee doth from God for those Elect. The Kingdome of Christ hath two parts One whereby hee gouerneth all the World according to their owne Nature since the Fall In the Angels perfect in Deuils and Men corrupted in the rest of the World peruerted CHAP. IIII. Of the Propheticall Office of Christ And of his Word THe other which is vnto his Church a Companie of Men culled out of the World This latter part contayneth his Propheticall Office and that which the Scripture by excellencie termeth the Kingdome Propheticall Office whereby hee hath a Church vnto himselfe by his Word and the Power of his Spirit The Word of Christ is his publishing of the Couenant of Grace Which of the Old Testament was called the Promise of the New is called the Gospel CHAP. V. Of the outward Church HIs Church is the outward Church or the Church of Gods Elect. Outward is of those that professe to beleeue in Him Seuerall Companies that assemble for the Exercises of the Word are so many Churches and Members of the Whole And in euery of these God hath alwayes some that are His indeed Their Children also are of the Church Vpon the outward Church Christ bestoweth Gifts both for the Churches common good and for a Man 's owne priuate For the common good are first things committed to the Churches keeping then Ministeries and Graces The things committed are his Word whereof wee haue spoken to be preached Sacraments to be administred and other holy Things Preaching is an Instruction of the Church by liuely Voice in the Word of Christ and that by Doctrine or Exhortation Doctrine in laying forth the Truth and confuting of contrarie Errors Exhortation to apply it also to all good vses of comforting denouncing sti●●ing vp reprouing A Sacrament is a signe and seale of the Couenant either for our entrance or continuance in the Couenant The administration is to deliuer them with declaring Christs Institution and Prayer vnto God to make the same effectuall to the end for the which they were ordayned Which the Scripture calleth Blessing or Consecration It followeth to speake of Ministeries and Graces Ministeries are publike Functions in the Church specially for Preaching which includeth the dutie of offering the Churches Prayers and Administration of the Sacraments Among the Ministers of the Word some haue beene extraordinarily inspired of Christ to deliuer both by liuely Voyce and Writing so as they could not erre the whole Truth of Christ and had power to worke Miracles for the confirming of their Doctrine All other Ministeries are to fetch their Light from the Doctrine of those that were so inspired Graces are Gifts for the discharge of those publike Functions Gifts for a Man 's owne priuate are Knowledge of the Word of Christ and a Taste of the sweetnesse of it Which being the highest Step that it is possible for any Reprobate to ascend changeth after a
wherein they are preferred and making our vse of them them the principall whereof are these that follow First Rising vp before them Thou h Leuit. 19. 32. The notes of which Reuerence are rising vp before them shalt rise vp before the hoarie haires and giue honour to the face of the aged Secondly Giuing them the place and honour of speaking first I am i Iob 32. 6 7. the youngest in yeeres and yee are aged Therefore I was afraid and feared to shew my opinion among you I said Men of yeeres shall speake and the aged shall declare wisdome Thirdly To meete them comming towards vs. So Gen. 18. 2. ABRAHAM lifting vp his eyes and looking lo Giuing them the place and honour of speaking first c. three men stood by him and when he saw them hee ranne to meet them from the Tent doore 1. King 2. 19. When Bathsheba came to speake with King Salomon the King rose to meete her Fourthly To bow vnto them as both Abraham and Salomon did in the places aboue mentioned ABRAHAM ranne to meete them bowed himselfe to the ground The King rose to meete his Mother and bowed himselfe vnto her Of this kind is the bowing of the knee Mark 10. 17. When Iesus was gone out of the way there came one running and kneeled to him Fifthly To stand by them whilest they sit downe And of this also Abraham is there set for an Example k Gen. 18. 8. He tooke Butter and Milke and the Calfe that he had prepared and set before them and stood himselfe by them vnder the Tree and they did eate l Exod. 18 13. Exod. 18. 13. When Moses sate to iudge the people the people stood about him from morning vnto euen Sixthly To giue them the chiefest seates as m 1. King 2. 19 Salomon did to his Mother when himselfe setting downe on the Throne caused a seate to be set for her and shee set at his right hand So the n Gen. 43. 33. children of Iacob eating Meate in Iosephs house sate before him the eldest according to his age and the youngest according to his youth Insomuch as the Egyptians maruailed among themselues Seuenthly To vse Titles of Reuerence when hee talketh with them As o 1. Pet. 3. 6. SARAH obeyed ABRAHAM called him Lord whose Daughters yee are whilest you doe well Ye p Iohn 13. 13. call me Master and Lord and yee say well for I am so Eightly To keepe silence in Courts and places of Iudgement till we haue leaue to speake which modesty is noted in PAVL Acts 24. 10. who after that the Gouernour had beckened vnto him that he should speake and not before answerd c. The contrarie of this reuerence is First Contempt and Vnreuerent behauiour in deriding or speaking euill and reuiling them When q Gen. 9. 22. HAM the father of Canaan saw the nakednes of his father he told his two brethren without The r Pro. 30. 17. eye that mocketh his father and despiseth the instruction of his mother let the Rauens of the Valley picke out and the young Eagles eate it Hee Å¿ Gen. 21. 17. that curseth his father or mother shall dye the Death Secondly Extolling our selues aboue our betters as Abimelech did who being a Concubines sonne would needes raigne before the lawfull sonnes of his father I udges 9. To those in any Authoritie whatsoeuer whether the To them in authoritie Subiection in a readie submission to their gouernment and Obedience voluntarily to doe what they command same be publike or priuate doth belong First Subiection in a readie submission to their gouernment Secondly Obedience in a voluntary doing of that commanded For these two are to bee performed to all in authoritie and that not onely to the good and courteous but also to the froward as the Apostle exhorteth 1. Pet. 2. 18. First It must be from Seruants to Masters t Eph. 6. 5 6 7. Seruants bee obedient vnto them that are your Masters according to the flesh Secondly Fom Children to their Parents u Ephes 6. 1. Children obey your parents in the Lord for that is right Thirdly From Wiues to their Husbands x Ephes 5. 22 23. 4. 14. Wiues submit your selues vnto your Husbands as vnto the Lord for the Husband is the Wiues head euen as Christ is head of the Church and the same is the Sauiour of his bodie Therefore as the Church is in subiection vnto Christ euen so let the Wife be to her Husband in euery thing Fourthly From the People to the Ministers y Heb. 13. 17. Obey them that haue the ouersight of you and submit your selues for they watch for your soule as those that must giue an account that they may doe it with ioy and not with griefe for that is vprofitable for you Fifthly From Subiects to Magistrates both the supreme Magistrate subordinate ones Submit z 1. Pet. 2. 13 14. your selues vnto all manner erdinance of man for the Lords sake whether it bee vnto the King as vnto the Superiour or vnto Gouernours as vnto them that are sent of him Let a Rom. 13. 1. euery soule be subiect vnto the higher powers for there is no power but of God and the powers that be are ordayned of God Contrary to this subiection are First Contempt as that of b Gen. 16. 4. Hagar Sarahs Hand-maid who when shee saw her selfe to conceiue her Mistris was set light by in her eyes Secondly Shaking off the yoke of subiection to Princes as the Papists doe Thirdly The resisting of lawfull power whereof the Apostle c Rom. 13. 2. saith Whosoeuer resisteth authoritie resisteth the Ordinance of God and they that resist shall receiue to themselues iudgement Contrary to the other is disobedience which is one of the sinnes the Apostle reckoneth vp Rom. 1. 30. disobedient to Parents But this obedience is not absolute without bounds or limits It must bee Or when it cannot with a good conscience be done in the Lord for that which the Apostle writeth vnto Children Ephes 6. 1. Children obey your Parents in the Lord reacheth farther and hath a place in all Therefore Coloss 3. 22. hee maketh the feare of God the Rule of Seruants obedience Seruants obey your Masters c. fearing God And the like is to be said of Magistrates as we are taught Acts 4. 19. Whether it be right in the sight of God to obey you rather then God iudge ye What must be done then if they command things vnlawfull such as with a good conscience wee cannot yeeld vnto Verily in such cases wee are patiently to abide the punishment patiently to beare the punishment In which doing we no way violate the obedience due vnto them To this patient suffering of the punishment the Apostle doth exhort vs 1. Pet. 2. 19 20. For this is thank-worthy if a man for conscience towards God endure griefe suffering wrongfully for what
Fruits of the Earth by the Caterpiller the g 40. Oliue Tree to cast her Oliues In goods the h 17. basket the Dough the i 18. increase of the Kine and the flocke of the Sheepe to be accursed that which k 29 33. one hath to bee taken from him by Rapine and Fraud his l 31. Oxe to be slayne before his eyes and he not eate of it his Asse taken away and come no more to him his Sheepe to bee giuen to his Enemies and none to keepe him from this violence And thus for m 48. outward sustenance to be brought to extreme penurie and want of all things that n 44. hee must bee driuen to borrow and not able to lend In estate and honour the o 43. Stranger amongst them to climbe aloft high high and they to come downe lowe lowe the p 44. Stranger to bee the head and they the tayle In ones name fame and estimation to be a q 37. taunt a by-word and a Prouer be vnto all people and to get r 20. shame and rebuke in whatsoeuer they set their hand vnto Particularly of this kind are First Ignorance losing all that excellency of Wisedome Ignorance Knowledge and vnderstanding that was in Adam and in stead thereof a putting on a contrarie habit of blindnesse and errour a manifest fruit of sinne and so noted Deut. 28. 28. Secondly Shame comming from that nakednesse Shame whereby wee are stripped of all the ornaments of our Glorie for that by sinne shame entred into the World it is plaine in that ſ Gen. 2. 25. compared with Gen. 37. before Adam and his Wife were naked and yet not ashamed Thirdly All kinde of paine weaknesse and infirmitie the t Gen. 3. 19. woman in sorrow to conceiue and beare the man u Gen. 3. 19. Infirmitie Sicknesse in the sweat of his browes to eate his bread Againe x Deut. 28. 1 22 27 35. hunger thirst wearinesse sores itches sicknesse c. And that these and such like are the fruits of sinne appeareth also by the warning our Sauiour gaue to him that hee had healed of his sicknesse Iohn 5. Iehoua shall make the pestilence cleane vnto thee vntill be hath consumed thee Iehoua shall smite thee w●●h a Consumption and with the Feuer and with a hot burning Ague and with a feruent heate Iehoua shall smite thee with the Botch of Egypt and with the Eme●ods and with the Scabs and with the Itch. Iehoua shall smite thee in the knees and in the thighes with a sore Botch that thou canst not be healed euen from the sole of thy foot vnto the top of thy head and in the end Death which is the separation of soule and bodie 14. Behold thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee Therefore Mat. 9. 2. when hee was to heale the man sicke of the palsie hee said vnto him Be of good comfort sonne thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Fourthly Death the separation of the soule and bodie So the Apostle telleth vs Rom. 5. 12. Through death sinne came into the World which bodily death is a part of that death threatned at the first Gen. 2. 17. What day thou eatest of it thou shalt dye And this is as it were the last and vttermost period of all our former miseries in which one they all are comprehended for in death our shame weaknesse and dishonour is most apparant as the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 15. 42 43. that our bodie is sowne that is buried and committed to the ground in corruption in dishonour and in weakenesse And of this nature is a y 1. Co 15 51 52. 1. Thes 4. 15 16. Yet in all this some reliques of former dignitie doe remaine namely in the minde miserable change like to death which shall befall them that are aliue in the latter Day But in all this God hath beene pleased to vse a temper leauing still some reliques of our dignitie and first condition That part indeed of his image which standeth in righteousnesse and true holinesse is quite and cleane abolished that not so much as any steps or fragments doe remayne the z Ephes 2. 1. Apostle bearing witnesse that we are borne dead in sinne but the Image of GOD standeth also in the excellencie of man aboue other Creatures of which dignitie or excellencie but not of holinesse or Innocencie some reliques wee carrie yet about vs And they are first in the minde or bodie alone and by themselues considered then in the whole man In the minde First Common principles of good and euill which Common principles of good and euil sparkes of that light of nature the a Rom. 1. 18. Apostle calleth Truth that is some seed of the eternall Truth both for knowledge of God and of our duties to our brethren as that there is one God and that the same God is to bee serued that hee rewardeth those that keepe his Law and punisheth the transgressors that men must reuerence their Superiours and not harme their Neighbours nor doe iniurie one vnto another And from this light that euerie one carryeth about him and is borne and bred together with him commeth the Law of nature that nature which now wee haue since the fall of Adam therefore Iohn 1. 9. it is said that euery man comming into the World is lightened therewithall And this serueth notably for the collection and gathering of his Church out of the wicked World for if all common honestie all seedes of comelinesse and vertue were vtterly extinguished and put out how could either the Church bee gathered at all or preserued or kept when it is once gathered Secondly A conscience when we doe amisse whereof some seedes of conscience naturally some seedes are left in euerie one the better to represse the vnbrideled course of our affections howsoeuer some struggle to shake them off Rom. 2. 15. their conscience accusing or excusing Now this light of Nature and seedes of conscience which notwithstanding are wholy sinfull left in man are good and holy things in themselues and of their owne nature but in vs vtterly corrupt and naught All whose parts and powers are wholy tainted and defiled with sinne that truly the a Titus 1. 15. Apostle saith Both our minde and conscience is defiled Therefore they serue not at all to iustifie vs as though and doe but serue partly to keepe men from breaking forth without all shame or regard of honestie partly to make them vnexcusable by our owne Wisedome Reason Will Desire or Affections wee were able to doe or to indeuour that that is good but partly to keepe men from breaking out without shame vnto an ouer-bold and audacious defiance of all godlinesse and honestie partly to make vs inexcusable in the sight of God Rom. 1. 20. For first those seedes of Truth and Light which wee haue of God are so farre
euerlasting Spirit hath offered vp himselfe to God c In this part of his Oblation the sufferings which he did indure obserue First That Christ himselfe performeth all the parts his taking vpon him and his whole person hath a stroke in it for both hee is the Sacrifice or thing it selfe offered the Priest or the Offerer and the Altar or that which sanctifieth the offering whereupon in his whole person as GOD and Man he is said to be our Priest Heb. 5. 6. First As Man he is the Sacrifice his whole humanity suffering both Soule and Bodie which was the Tabernacle of his Deitie wherein he performed this Sacrifice whereupon the Apostle calleth him The x Heb. 8. 2. Minister of that true Tabernacle which the Lord pight and not man and that y Heb. 9. 11. Christ being come an High Priest by a better and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands that is not of this building which the earthly Tabernacle was of but euen by his owne bloud entred into the holy Place Wherefore the Scripture attributeth the remission of our sinnes by this oblation sometimes to his whole person sometimes by a Synecdoche of the part for the whole to his Bodie flesh or bloud and sometimes to his Soule Who z 1. Tim. 2. 6. gaue himselfe a ransome for all who a Titus 2. 19. gaue himselfe for vs that hee might redeeme vs by b Heb. 10. 10. the which wee are sanctified euen by the offering of the Bodie of Iesus Christ once made c 1. Pet. 2. 14. he bare our sinnes in his Bodie on the Tree he d Col. 1. 22. reconciled vs in the Bodie of his flesh through his Death he e Col. 1 20. reconciled vs making Peace by the bloud of his Crosse he f Esay 53. 10. made his Soule sinne or a Sacrifice for sinne The g Mat. 20. 28. Sonne of man came to giue his Soule a ransome for many Else must our soules haue perished This Marke 10. 45. was both prefigured in the Law by the bloud which is the soule of the brute creature and otherwise by the Holocaust or whole burnt Offering and is signified in the Sacrament of the Gospell for the Ceremonie of breaking bread vsed in the Lords Supper cannot bee so properly referred to his Bodie which had not a bone broken as to his Soule most specially h Esay 53. 5. bruised and broken in pieces with heauinesse and sorrow Secondly As God he is the i Heb. 13. 13 Altar or the Sanctifier Wee haue an Altar c. of his Man-hood which hee offereth by giuing it power to ouercome for that is the propertie of the Altar to k Mat. 23. 17. sanctifie the gift God saith PAVL Acts 20. 28. hath by his owne bloud redeemed the Church As if he should haue said It was indeed the Man Christ Iesus that shed his bloud but of small effect had that beene vnlesse he had beene God whereby his bloud obtayned strength and power to sanctifie those that are his And in the Epistle to the l Heb. 9. 14. Hebrewes How much more shall the bloud of Christ which by the euerlasting Spirit offered himselfe vnblameable vnto God purge your conscience from dead workes to serue the Liuing God Laying the whole vertue and efficacie of Christs death vpon the eternall Spirit that is the fulnesse of the God-head which dwelleth in him So that in a sort God himselfe who is not subiect vnto suffering did suffer when he suffered that was both God and Man Whereupon the Apostle saith that euen in respect of his God-head he emptied himselfe c. Philip. 2. 7. The difference of this part of Christs Priest-hood from that of Aaron stood in these points First Hee himselfe was offered here there other Oblations and Sacrifices Secondly They offered many times himselfe being here the Sacrifice could bee but once offered whereof the Apostle hath many notable speeches in the Epistle to the Hebrewes By m Heb. 10. 10. the which will we are sanctified euen by the Oblation of the Bodie of Iesus Christ once made but he hauing offered one Sacrifice for sinnes setteth for euer at the right hand of God for by one Oblation hee hath consecrated for euer those that are sanctified And in the ninth Chapter Christ n Heb. 9. 26. being once offered in the end of the World to beare the sinnes of many c. Thirdly He o Heb. 7. 27. did it for vs and our good onely for for himselfe he needed not The Priests of Aaron offered first for themselues and then for the people In the second place are to be obserued the things hee of our sinnes suffered and tooke vpon him to wit First our verie sinnes all layd vpon Christ as our Pledge and Suretie otherwise wee must needes haue remayned in them whereupon he is called p Heb. 7. 22. The Suretie of the New Testament And hereof it is that the Apostle saith q 2. Cor. 5. 27. Him that knew no sinne he made to be sinne for vs in regard of our sinnes cast vpon him and imputed to him Secondly taking our sinnes hee tooke with-all the and the whole curse guilt and the whole Curse and punishment due vnto them By reason of the guilt there befell him feare and horror from the sense of his Fathers wrath Heb. 5. 7. Sorrow trouble of mind astonishment heauinesse vnto death Math. 26. 38. Which specially appearing towards the end of his dayes when he was to enter into the lists and to fight the great combate hand to hand with his angrie Father did withall stretch it selfe in some measure to the rest of the parts of his life Of the r Esay 53. 5. other wee read The chastisement of our peace did lye vpon him For this cause he is said ſ Math. 20. 28. Mark 10. 45. to haue giuen his soule a Ransome for many and to be a t 1 Tim. 2. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ransome equiualent for all Therefore he is called u 1. Iohn 2. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Propitiation for our sinnes is said to be x Rom. 3. 25. set vp of God for a Propitiatorie by allusion as it seemeth to the couer which was vpon the Arke of the Couenant called the y 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Propitiatorie couering a type of the Propitiation wrought by Christ and manifested in and through him when he brake downe the vayle of Ceremonies that stood betweene God and vs. To this E●●hu z Iob 33. 23. doth allude when he bringeth in the Minister of God praying for the deliuerance of the afflicted person because God hath elsewhere found an expiatorie Propitiation which is Christ his Sonne For this cause we are said to bee a Rom. 3. 25. redeemed by him and that b Heb. ● 3. by himselfe he hath made the purgation of our sinnes And herevpon
flesh he was iustified in the Spirit And g Acts 2. 22. PETER calleth him a man approued of God by the excellent Deedes and miracles and signes which God had done by him Which as h Iohn 2. 11. Iohn noteth were to manifest his glorie In regard whereof he saith i Iohn 1. 14 Wee saw his glorie as the glorie of the onely begotten Sonne of God But yet sometimes more gloriously then at other he was pleased in an extraordinary manner to reueale it as in his Transfiguring vpon the Mount when k Matth. 17. 2. his face shined as the Sunne and his garments were made white as the light In his l Iohn 2. 15. whipping of the Buyers and Sellers out of the Temple In his m Iohn 18. 6. causing of them that came to apprehend him onely by the power of his Word to fall vnto the ground c. yea in the very midst of all his sufferings and euen vpon the Crosse it selfe how did his glorie shine taking vpon him to n Luk. 23. 42 43. dispose of Paradise the kingdome of heauen at his pleasure and making heauen and earth the liuing and the dead to worke together for the celebrating of his greatnesse When the Sunne ashamed of their doings o Matth. 27. 45 pulled in his beames and refused to giue them Light when at p Matth. 27. 50 51 52. his voice and the noyse of his roring the Earth trembled and shooke the Vale of the Temple rent a sunder from the top vnto the bottome Rockes flew in pieces the Graues were opened and the Bodies of many dead Saints did arise when hee wrung out of the q Matth 27. 54 Centurions mouth a confession of his person and made the r Iohn 19. 19 20 21 22. hands of Pilate imbrued with his bloud to be the instruments of the publishing of his Office and to lift vp the Standard of his prayse to all people Latines Greekes and Hebrewes that not without iust cause doth the ſ Coloss 2. 15. Apostle say that He spoyled Principalities and Powers and led them in open shew triumphing vpon the Crosse So as the shamefull and ignominious Crosse was contrary to its nature so altered and changed by Christs Diuine Power that it serued now for a Trophee and Monument of his Victorie being as a Chariot wherein he rode more glorious then any Emperour or Potentate of the World in the middest of his greatest Triumph and had all the enemies of our Saluation Satan Sinne Hell and Condemnation led after him chayned and fast bound with all their weapons pulled from them as men taken captiues But this Glorie of his afterwards shined foorth most were in soule or bodie apart or ioyntly in them both In soule he went to Heauen presently after death cleerely in foure steps or degrees In the first place may bee reckoned though it were not conspicuous to the World that he went in soule vnto Heauen after death So hee t Luke 23. 43. saith to the Thiefe This day thou shalt bee with mee in Paradise And after being readie to giue vp the ghost u Verse 46. Father into thy hands I commit my Spirit Which to bee meant of his present going to God his Father is manifest by other places where the like phrase is vsed as Acts 7. 59. in the Prayer of STEPHEN Lord receiue my spirit The second step is his Resurrection when in the His bodie hee raysed from the dead Chambers of death he conquered death it selfe and being a Morsell that the graue was not able for to swallow arose from the dead and made thereby a perfect conquest of all his foes and full demonstration of his Glorie as the Apostle saith x Rom. 1. 4. He was mightily declared to be the Sonne of God as touching the spirit of Sanctification by rising from the dead In his Resurrection I note these sixe things First The cause of his Resurrection which was by his owne Diuine Power Secondly The manner of his rising mightily and powerfully not bound hand and foote as Lazarus came forth but like Samson hee y Acts 2. 24. brake the bands of death and of the graue in sunder Thirdly What bodie hee rose withall a Bodie freed glorious from all infirmitie hunger thirst wearinesse c. and indued with immortalitie strength nimblenesse agilitie Behold my hands and my feet It is euen ● touch me and see mee A Spirit hath not flesh and bones as yee see mee to haue Acts 2. 32. Acts 3. 13 15. able to mooue vpwards aswell as to goe downewards glorious and shining and therefore called z Phil. 3. 21. A bodie glorious Howsoeuer it Vbiquists that teach Christs body since his Resurrection to bee Omnipotent euerywhere remayne a a Luke 24 39. bodie still to bee handled touched felt hauing length breadth c. with all other essentiall properties belonging to a Bodie and locally comprehended in one certaine place Fourthly The time when hee rose which was the the third day at the dawning of the day b Mat. 16. 21. Luke 24. 7. 11. Acts 10 40. 1. Cor. 15. 4. third Day early in the morning Fiftly The fruit and benefit in all those good and excellent things which are to bee remembred when wee speake of the Kingdome of Heauen The third step is his most blessed and glorious Ascension whereby in stead of the lower part of the In his whole person soule and bodie he ascends into Heauen Earth whither for his great loue vnto vs he did willingly come downe God hath taken him vp and set him aboue the highest Heauens as the Apostle noteth Ephes 4. 10 11. Now this that he ascended what is it but that hee first descended into the lower parts of the Earth He that descended is the selfe-same that ascended farre aboue all the Heauens c. Of this is the Storie recorded Marke 16. 19. Luke 24. 51. and more fully Acts 1. 29. that whilest they looked he was lifted vp or as the Angell calleth it Acts 1. 11. taken vp from them into Heauen that is his humane nature by the power and vertue of his God-head was truly and locally translated from the Earth into the highest Heauens of the Blessed where it is to remayne in all glorie and excellencie till the latter Day as the Angell telleth his Apostles Acts 1. 11. This Iesus that is taken vp from you into Heauen shall so come as you haue seene him going into Heauen And Peter more plainly Acts 3. 21. Whom Heauen must contayne till the times of the restoring of all things For where our Sauiour saith Mat. 28. 20. I am with you alwayes to the end of the World and a c Mat. 26. 11. little before had said Me you shall not haue alwayes among you it appeareth that the manner of his presence is to bee distinguished for hee is present indeed alwayes with his Church but by the
and of edification one towards another Destroy not for meates sake the worke of God All things indeed are cleane but it is ill for the man that eateth with offence It is good not to eate flesh nor to drinke wine nor to doe any thing whereby thy Brother stumbleth or is offended or made weake To set downe therefore the cautions that are to bee giuen heerein and how and in what cases wee are so to bridle our Christian libertie The first caution is that it bee in things which GOD hath once restrayned for no Law of God nor rule of Charitie bindeth to forbeare meates or drinkes or other things which neuer were vnlawfull by the Commandement of God but by the vaine superstition of men that being but to giue strength and countenance to the doctrine of Deuils with which name the Apostle brandeth them 1. Tim. 4. 1. Secondly It must bee but to beare with our weake Brethren and for awhile t Act. 15 28 29 till they may be better informed of the libertie they haue in Christ it must not bee to nourish or strengthen men in euill nor when it tendeth not to edification but destruction So did u Act. 16. 3. Paul circumcise Timothy not as the Sacrament that God had once ordayned but as a bare Ceremonie and thing indifferent which he had free power to vse for the edification of the Church till the abolishing of Ceremonies by the comming of Christ were better knowne But x Gal. 2. 4 5. Titus he would in no sort circumcise when he saw he could not doe it without betraying the Truth of the Gospell and giuing occasion to the aduersaries against him The second step of our Soueraigntie renewed is the and deliuerance from the bondage of Satan setting vs free from the bondage and slauerie of Satan vnder whom we were held before in thraldome in a continuall feare of death as the Apostle teacheth Heb. 2. 14. 15. that by death he might abolish him that hath the power of death that is to say the Deuil and might set free from his tyrannie and dominion as many as through feare of death were all their life long subiect vnto bondage This was the first promise made in Paradise y Gen. 3. 15. The seed of the woman Christ and in him and by his power all those that are his shall bruise the head of the Serpent The third last is a noble priuiledge and prerogatiue This also as a noble accesse added thereunto that the holy Angels themselues are made Ministers for our good to Gods children ouer aboue all that Adā had that the holy Angels themselues are made Ministers for our good whereof there bee many most glorious promises in the Word Psal 91. 11. Hee will giue his Angels charge ouer thee to keepe thee in all thy wayes A fauour principally meant to Christ the Head of the Church and after him to all the faithfull Generally the Apostle to the z Heb. 1. 14. Hebrewes saith They are ministring Spirits sent forth for their sakes that are to inherit saluation And in the Psalme a Psal 34. 9. The Angell of IEHOVAH pitcheth his Tents round about those that feare him Hereupon our Sauiour calleth them our b Mat. 18. 10. See you despise not one of these little ones for I say vnto you that their Angels in Heauen doe alwayes behold the face of my Father c. Angels for first thorowout the course of our life they watch ouer vs to keepe vs in all our wayes that no euill should come vnto vs as it followeth in that c Psal 91. 12 13 Psalme and as wee are taught not onely by the Example of d Dan. 1. 3. Daniel for whose sake God sent his Angell to stop the mouth of the Lyons that they should not hurt him And of Shadrach e Dan. 3. 28. Meshach and Abednego deliuered by an Angell from the fury of the flame which the prophane King himselfe was driuen to acknowledge and of diuers others whose liues are registred in the Scriptures but beside by the manifold experience that euery one of vs hath in our selues in so many so wonderfull and so strange escapes whereof no reason can be assigned but the Angels watchfull attendance and garding of vs. Secondly In the houre of death they are about vs readie at the last gaspe to receiue our Soule and by their Ministerie to conuey it vp to Heauen for when Lazarus dyed f Luke 16. 22. He was carryed saith our Sauiour Christ of the Angels into ABRAHAMS bosome The right whereby wee haue this is because being seruants vnto Christ who is the Head consequently they are to serue the faithfull which are his members The excellencie of their seruice the Scripture commendeth vnto vs by diuers arguments First By their nature qualified and made fit for it in that they are Spirits Secondly By their rule and soueraigntie being themselues called Thrones Dominions Principalities Gouernments Chiefe Princes c. And what a thing is it then to haue so great Princes attending on vs Thirdly By their power able to throw downe whatsoeuer doth withstand them Whereof among many other we haue a famous Example of one Angell that in one night slue one hundred fourescore and fiue thousand of the Assyrians Campe 2. Kings 19. 25. Fourthly By their Glorie to terrifie and amaze our Aduersaries as we reade in MATTHEW The g Mat. 28. 3 4. Angell of the Lord came downe from Heauen whose countenance was like lightening and his garment white as snow for feare of him the Keepers were smitten and became as dead men Fiftly By their Wisdome and Knowledge Sixtly By the place where they dwell being in Heauen and therefore haue all aduantages to doe vs good Seuenthly By the multitude and number of holy Angels which maketh not a little for the strengthening of our Faith for euen among men A h Eccles 4. 12. threefold cord is not easily broken When i Gen. 32. 1 2. Iacob went on his way to returne into his Countrey as God had commanded him the Angels of God met him euen a whole Armie and troope of Angels in so much as hee called the name of the place Machanaima a payre of Armies his owne and the Angels Armie So in k Luke 2. 13. Luke it is said that there was with the Shepherds a multitude of an heauenly Armie In the l Psal 68. 17. Psalmes They are named many thousands of Angels And to the m Heb. 12. 22. Hebrewes Myriades that is ten thousands of Angels n Dan. 7. 10. DANIEL also reckoneth a thousand thousand standing before the Ancient of dayes By this Argument o 2. Kings 6. 15 16 17. Elisha the man of God incourageth his Seruant when seeing the Companies and troopes of men that compassed the Citie and Horses and Chariots hee cryed out Alas Master what shall wee doe To whom ELISHA said Feare not for there
bee moe with vs then are with them Then praying to Iehouah the Seruants eyes were opened and he saw the Mountaynes were full with Horses and Chariots of fire round about ELISHA And our Sauiour Christ by the same argument sheweth how able he had beene to free himselfe from the hands of his enemies p Mat. 26. 53. Could not I pray vnto my Father and he would giue mee more then twelue Legions of Angels Eighthly and lastly by their willingnesse vnto this Seruice declared for the most part by three circumstances First They stand continually in Gods presence wayting as it were for a Commission from him to doe vs good Mat. 18. 10. Their Angels see alwayes the face of my Father which is in Heauen Secondly They are glad and reioyce at the good of his Saints So Luke 2. 13 14. they declare themselues not a little affected with the ioy of the glad tydings which they brought vnto the Shepheards They praysed God and said Glorie vnto God on high in Earth peace and good will towards men And our Sauiour telleth vs There q Luk. 15. 7 10 is ioy in Heauen with the Angels of God for sinners that repent Thirdly They are prest and readie at Gods Commandement with all speed to put the same in practice This the r Psal 103. 20. Psalmist commendeth in them Blesse IEHOVAH ye his Angels which doe his Word which harken to his voice Our Sauiour likewise teacheth vs to pray Thy will bee done in Earth as it in Heauen The speed and cheerfulnesse they vse in executing Gods Commissions was figured vnder the Law by the Cherubins in the Tabernacle painted with wings wherefore Psalme 18. 10. God is said to come riding vpon them as vpon Chariots and flying as it were with wings In the Vision of ſ Esay 6. 2. Esaia they haue each of them six wings whereof with two they flye yea so swiftly and so earnestly doe they flye that as it were they wearie themselues with flying as of the Angell t Dan. 9. 21. Gabriel it is expressely spoken These qualities before named are all of them figured in the Vision of u Ezech. 1. 10. 10. 14. Ezechiel where the foure liuing creatures which are the holy Angels are said to haue each of them foure faces the face of a man the face of a Lyon the face of an Oxe and the face of an Eagle By the Similitude of a man their wisedome and vnderstanding is incled which among all earthly Creatures is onely to be found in man in a Lyon their strength and power their labour and industrie in an Oxe or Heifar without whom the Crib is emptie but much increase commeth by his trauell saith the Wiseman in his Prouerbs And lastly their swiftnesse in an Eagle which the better to recommend in that Fowle x Reuel 4. 7. Iohn giueth him the Epithete of a flying Eagle The glorie of these Angels hee describeth saying that y Ezech. 1. 4. out of the middest of that fire the visible signe of Gods presence sparkled as it were a most liuely hiew which he explayneth z Verse 13. afterwards to be like vnto coles of fire burning as Lampes not onely themselues set on fire but affecting all the creatures with the glittering of their glorie as the Lampes disperse their flame The last of those generall heads wherein we place our Fourthly in a spirituall glory and wisdome and other graces happinesse in this life is a spirituall glorie and wisdome and other graces whereof the Preacher a Eccles 8. 1. speaketh The wisdome of a man maketh his face to shine And Paul b 2. Cor. 3. 18. We all with open face beholding as in a Glasse the glorie of the Lord are transformed into the same Image from glorie to glorie that is by the participation of his glorie our selues become glorious as it were by the reflexion of his beames Our perfect Blessednesse or Redemption which commeth After this life commeth the fulnesse of Blessednesse in the last place to bee handled wee consider in foure steps or degrees of glorie which all the members of Christ shall bee made partakers of answerable to their Head To them all two things pertayne in common the more or lesse according to the diuers measure of our Faith here To the soule in Heauen presently after death till the latter Day place where wee shall enioy it Heauen and the differing measure of glorie But these two will come in better when the rest are once handled Wherefore the first degree is that which is to the soule onely and that presently after death till the latter Day our bodies resting in the graue vnto the time of the restoring of all things as the bodies of the wicked also doe betweene whom and vs there is in this respect no difference But for our soules assoone as the period Popish Purgatorie and Limbus Patrum of this life is runne out they are forthwith carryed into Heauen by the Ministerie of the holy Angels So the Preacher saith c Eccles 12. 9. Dust that is the bodie of man returneth to the Earth as it was before and the Spirit returneth vnto God that gaue it And the Apostle PAVL Wee d 2. Cor. 5. 1. know when this our earthly Tabernacle is dissolued we haue a building from God not made with hands euerlasting in Heauen And the same dwelling in the Heauens hee e Verse 6 7 8. by and by interpreteth to bee as much as to goe and dwell with the Lord We know that while wee dwell in the bodie wee are absent from the Lord for we walke by Faith not by sight Therefore we desire rather to remooue out of the bodie and to dwell with the Lord. So to the f Phil. 1. 23. Philippians I do desire to loose from hence that is to haue my soule depart from my bodie A Metaphor taken from Ships that loose or set from the shore to be with Christ And this to be his meaning the next words make it very plaine but to continue in the flesh is more necessarie for you This is it which our Sauiour g Luke 23. 43. Christ saith to the Thiefe This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise In the h Reuel 6. 10. Reuelation the soules of the Martyrs are said to be at rest vnder the Altar And the Apostle to the i Heb. 12. 23. Hebrewes reckoneth the Spirit of the righteous that are perfi●ed For this cause our Sauiour k Luke 23. 46. Christ vpon the Crosse commendeth his Spirit into the hands of his Father that it might be an assurance vnto vs that our spirits also shall goe to him when they depart out of this bodie And this estate both of the Elect and Reprobate our Sauiour Christ expresly sheweth in the Parable of the Rich man The very scope whereof driueth vnto this that although the wicked in this life for the
Iudgement should then beginne vpon the soules both of the Elect and Reprobate presently departing into their place of ioy or of torment a third place there is not any So saith Peter t 1. Pet. 3. 19. of the wicked disobedient in the time of NOAH That their spirits are in Prison chayned with the fetters of darknesse And the Rich man as soone as he dyed was cast into Hell for being in Hell saith our u Luke 16. 23. Sauiour Christ in torments he saw ABRAHAM a farre off and LAZARVS in his bosome For men in this most excellent part of theirs perish not like bruit beasts as the Sadduces of old and now-a-dayes the Libertines doe teach neither Sadduces and Libertines doth their soule vanish in the Ayre or dye with the bodie till the time of the restoring of all things which is contrarie to the propertie of that spirituall nature but it still liueth and continueth either in paine or comfort Mat. 10. 28. Bee not afraid of them that kill the bodie but are not able to kill the soule Secondly Their soule onely feeleth this heauie torment their bodies resting in the graue till the time of the dissolution of all things Thirdly The condition that men also must vndergoe in the end is the whole extremitie and fulnesse of Gods wrath to seize then vpon them many degrees heauier then the punishment they felt before that Iudgement going before the great and solemne Day wherein all flesh is to bee presented before the Iudge of all the World as it were a pettie Sessions before the grand Assises Wherefore the Apostle calleth the last Day in respect of the wicked x Rom. 2. 5. A Day of wrath because then God will tread out the full Wine-presse of his wrath and y 2. Pet. 2. 9. Peter by excellencie A Day of Iudgement whereto the wicked are reserued to be punished And againe z 2. Pet. 3. 7. A Day of Iudgement and destruction of vngodly men For to this purpose will God rayse vp their bodies in the latter Day that so their bodie and soule which haue both sinned together may be both together punished whereof they shall then receiue their sentence and last doome with execution accordingly But of these two Doctrines the Resurrection and the last Iudgement wee shall haue iust cause to speake more fully and at large hereafter A miserable change to such men as then are liuing A miserable change to such men as then are liuing shall bee in stead of a death and rising from it The creature is then also subiect to an vtter abolition shall be in stead of a death and rising from it The creature also to make the curse of man the greater is then subiect to an vtter abolition hauing in the meane time their being and continuance for the Elects sake as the a 2. Pet. 3 9. Apostle Peter teacheth when to the wicked Scorners that make a mocke of the Comming of Christ and of the end of the World for that all things continue hitherto as they were from the Creation hee opposeth the patience of God deferring the same because of the Elect for whose sake hee holdeth vp the World till their number bee fulfilled that none of his might perish And so that saying of Salomon Pro. 10. 25. may not vnfitly be interpreted howsoeuer another sence serueth very well That the iust man is the foundation of the World yet true it is the Creature shall not at the last Day be in fact vtterly done away but that is not long of the desert which the sinne of man had brought vpon them but by a further mercie of God towards the Elect for whose comfort in Christ they shall stand and be renewed an euident proofe that otherwise in the damnation of all flesh they should vtterly haue beene abolished The end of the first Booke THE SECOND BOOK OF DIVINITIE OF IMMANVEL GOD AND MAN OVR REDEEMER CHAP. I. Of Christ BEfore wee enter vpon This is the summe of that Doctrine which we haue concerning God The other followeth concerning Immanuel God with vs. this part because Christ the subiect it treateth of a Rom. 10. 4. is the end of the Law somewhat would bee said as an inducement to the principall concerning the power efficacie and vse of the Law of GOD for if such bee the condition of all Mankind as wee haue hitherto left them in what shall wee say Is there no means by any thing we can do to attain vnto saluation No verily there is not any for b Ephes 2. 13. we are borne dead in sinnes and are by nature the children of wrath accursed euery Mothers sonne and vnable of our selues or by our owne strength to get out of that curse It is true the Law or Couenant of workes is of sufficient power and abilitie in it selfe to iustifie for by it the Holy Angels that kept their first estate are iustified in the sight of God and by it our Sauiour Christ was iustified and so should Adam and all his posteritie haue beene if they had continued in the obedience thereof but in respect of our weaknesse who are not able to performe it it is now become c Rom. 8. 3. Gal. 3. 21. impossible for the Law to saue vs. Wherefore the d Rom. 3. 20 Gal. 3. 11. Scripture euery where proclaymeth as a thing euident e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and cleere that by the Law no man is iustified before God for saith the Apostle Gal. 3. 17. 18. The Law which was foure hundred and thirty yeeres after cannot disanull the Couenant that was confirmed afore of God in respect of Christ that it should make the promise of none effect The meaning is Abraham foure hundred thirtie yeeres before the giuing of the Law was iustified by faith in the promise or couenant of Grace which could not bee made void by the Law comming so long after as it must if the Law should iustifie To what vse then doth it serue for vs that are fallen It serueth for a threefold vse First To shew and discouer sinne Rom. 3. 20. Therefore by the workes of the Law no flesh shall be iustified in his sight for by the Law commeth the knowledge of sinne Rom. 7. 7. I had not knowne sinne but by the Law for euen lust I had not knowne if the Law had not said Thou shalt not lust Secondly Through corruption of our nature who are sharpest set to doe things forbidden to increase and stirre vp sinne within vs Rom. 7. 8 9 10 11. But sinne taking occasion by that Commandement wrought in me all lust for without the Law sinne was dead but I liued without the Law once But when that Commandement came and was truly vnderstood of me sinne reuiued and I dyed And the Commandement which was for life was found to mee to be vnto death for sinne taking occasion by that Commandement deceiued me and thereby slue mee Thirdly By