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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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Earth for the other or Hell accidently for eyther Heauen we call the highest World made for the Angels to inhabit As our f Mar. 12. 25. Sauiour Those that phantastically teach that Heauen is euery-where teacheth They are as the Angels in Heauen In Heauen g Mat. 18. 10. their Angels alwayes behold the face of my Father which is in Heauen This is it which the Scripture calleth h 1. King 8. 27. The Heauen of Heauens for the excellencie The i 2. Cor. 12. 2. third Heauen for the situation aboue the Ayre and the Skie both which haue the name of Heauen and k 2. Cor. 12. 4. Paradise for the pleasure being the place of the residence of Gods glory Earth is the middle World made for man Psal 115. 16 The Heauens are IEHOVAHS and the Earth which hee hath giuen vnto the sonnes of men Two things in it come to be considered the parts and the ornaments The parts I call the foure Elements l For the Philosophers agree that nothing giueth light but that which hath some fire in it wherefore from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Light the Chaldees were wont to call Fire Oru● whom they worshipped for their god Fire the vppermost Globe wherein was Light an adiunct and qualitie of the Fire Ayre or as Moses calleth it an m Following the Greekes who name it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 extent we improperly the Firmament comprehending all that voyd place betweene the Cloudes and the Earth which giueth breath of life to all things that breathe Water with all the Chanels thereof the Seas the Floudes the Lakes the Springs And Earth or the dry ground the Bottome and Center of the World for man to inhabit Ornaments are the things wherewith these Elements are garnished and set forth being all things necessary both for the vse and command of man For his vse were made the n Gen. 1. 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19. insensible things Grasse and Trees continually fructifying in the Earth the Sunne the Moone the Starres placed aboue the Cloudes in the highest Globe in or aboue the vppermost part of that extent which Moses calleth the o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 extent of Heauen that is to say that part of the extent which is neerest to the Heauens and furthest from the Earth where the Element of Fire is and these being the vessels that now receiue and send forth the Light which it seemeth most probable the Fire is it before for the Scripture speaketh of Light before the Sunne haue in that place of Moses a three-fold vse assigned to them First To distinguish Light from Darknesse that is to say the naturall Day from the Night Secondly To bee signes for the noting out of times and seasons A thing common to them all as appeareth Iob 9. 9. Where ARCTVRVS ORION PLEIADES and the Planets of the hidden South are vsed to note out the parts of the Yeere Autumne Winter the Spring and Summer But this neuerthelesse is proper to the Sunne and Moone that by the running of their compasse they after a speciall sort rule and gouerne the Sunne the Day and the Moone the Night and make the difference of ciuill Dayes Moneths and Yeeres Thirdly They serue not onely to enlighten the Earth but by their influence to refresh and giue growth to all earthly bodies For the command of men were made the dumbe and vnreasonable Creatures which yet haue a sensitiue life and feeling As in the Water Fishes in the Ayre Birds in the Earth Beasts both going and creeping all of them Male and Female for the propagation of their kind Hell is the lowest World a soule Those that teach also that Hell is no certayne nor locall place and fearefull place of punishment made for Angels and men that should transgresse Peter p 2. Pet. 2. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 giueth it a name which signifieth asmuch as a place of terrible confused darkenesse whereof that which q Iob 10. 22. Iob speaketh touching the graue is much more to bee verified that there bee no orders there no alterations of times and seasons sometimes darke sometimes light but whatsoeuer shineth most is as the shaddow of death continuall night and a whole day as a man may say of darknesse for out of the Kingdome of Heauen there is no light at all Therefore are the heires of that Kingdome termed The r Luke 8. 31. sonnes of Light And contrariwise this place the ſ Mat. 8. 12. outer darknesse Luke t Luke 8. 31. calleth it The deepe or bottomlesse Gulfe placed beneath as a most deepe and darke Dungeon a foule and hideous Prison as Peter u 1. Pet. 3. 19. nameth it when hee saith that Christ by the power of his God-head in the Ministery of NOAH preached to the spirits now in Prison And againe x 2. Pet. 2. 4. that the Angels which sinned are kept there in chaines of darkenesse or as y Iude verse 6. IVDE hath it with euerlasting bonds vnder darkenes as in a Gaole vnto the Iudgement of the great Day Wee haue done with the World made for these reasonable Creatures Come wee now to the reasonable Creatures themselues and first of the parts of reason come to them both vnderstanding and will The vnderstanding part in men for distinction sake and our better conceiuing of it we commonly terme the minde the will in them is properly called the soule although the reasonable soule comprehending both bee but one In the vnderstanding part two faculties are comprehended First Knowledge that teacheth what we ought to doe and is the Fountaine and beginning not onely of the other faculties but of all the Actions and Motions of our life Vnder this two other faculties are comprehended Iudgement or Wisdome which is the top and perfection of knowledge for discerning of things that differ and conscience which is a part of our vnderstanding determining of our particular actions eyther with them or against them called therefore Conscience as if you would say A knowing with or before God vpon a right examination of our wayes in his sight Secondly Memory to lay vp in our mindes the things which wee know and vnderstand The will is a facultie freely choosing whatsoeuer it selfe pleaseth and mouing vs to doe it and this hath the soueraigne command in euery one for therefore we doe a thing not because wee thinke it ought to bee done but because wee will doe it vnder the name of will I comprehend in this place aswell the desire onely which is before and without consent as that which most properly in common speech is onely termed the will when a settled and full consent is come And here affections are the same that conscience is in the mind Not seuerall or distinct faculties but parts or motions of the wil diuersly inclining it to this or that appearing good according to the diuersity of obiects that are offered
his Throne and Kingdome in the dispensation of his great and glorious purposes established before any time In which regard the Psalmist g Psal 78. 69. saith of the Land of Canaan That he founded it for his people the Iewes from euerlasting meaning in his eternall counsell and h Esay 45. 7. ESAY Since I disposed an euerlasting people the Church in the purpose and appointment of God eternally elected And when the Psalmist i Psal 103. 17. cryeth out The kindnesses of IEHOVAH are from euerlasting to euerlasting doth he not euidently point hereat But more cleerely to this purpose serueth that of Paul k Ephes 3. 11 commending the excellency of the Doctrine of the Gospell in the gathering together of the Churches of the Gentiles aswell as Iewes in that it was according to his euerlasting purpose As also l 1. Cor. 2. 7. in another place hee saith of the Wisedome of God lying hid in the Mystery of the Gospell that God had fore-ordayned it before the World And of Christ Peter m 1. Pet. 1. 20. saith that he was fore-appointed before the foundation of the World was layd The truth hereof not onely shineth forth in these and other great and high points of our Faith and namely of Election and Reprobation which come hereafter to be considered but reacheth farther and hath a place in all So n Psal 193. 15. 16. Dauid speaketh of his conception an ordinary course of nature When I was secretly framed and as it were curiously wrought and wouen together thine eyes did see my very lumpe what time they were fashioned yea euen then when none of them was extant that is from euerlasting And the saying of Iames o Acts 15. 18. hath no exception All the workes of God are knowne to him from Eternitie In this Argument I finde that the Prophet Esay from whom the Apostles p 2. Pet. 2. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Peter and Iude seeme q Iude verse 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to haue taken it delighteth himselfe much to set out the Eternitie of Gods Decrees by the Phrase of Long r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 agoe In the two and twentieth ſ Esay 22. 5 8 11. Chapter Thou diddest looke in that day when the enemie did besiege you to the Armour of the Forrest House c. But ye looke ●●ot to the Authour of it nor had respect to him that framed it long agoe Chap. 25. The t Esay 25. 1. counsels long agoe eternally decreed and in their time prophesied and made knowne to the Church are Faith and Truth And so himselfe doth in another u Esay 37. 26. place expound it to import as much as from all Eternitie Secondly The cause why all things are so decreed is not the knowledge or fore-knowledge of God but his absolute will and pleasure for causes resting onely in himselfe although vnknowne to vs yet most iust and holy Ephes 1. 11. Hee worketh all things after the counsell of his will Thirdly The generalitie in that hee hath decreed all things and all the meanes and circumstances of euery thing Acts 15. 18. All the workes of God are knowne to him that is purposed and decreed of him from Eternitie So that whatsoeuer experience sheweth or the Word of God confirmeth to come to passe in Heauen or in Earth or in the lowest Hell both the confounding of the wicked the Saluation of the Elect and the things that pertayne to the businesse and affaires of this life the same are all eternally decreed of God and that for his owne good pleasure onely the x Ephes 11. 1. Apostle bearing witnesse That hee worketh all things after the counsell of his will CHAP. III. Of Creation IN the Creation which is the second thing The workes of God are the execution of his purpose And are Creation and Prouidence Creation is his making all things wherein his Kingdome standeth I obserue fiue things which the Story of the Creation penned by Moses in the first and second Chapters of Genesis doth offer vnto vs. First The things which God made All things without exception and in saying all things it is manifest that we leaue nothing vncreated excepting onely him that did create them no not the Angels themselues the most glorious and super-excellent Creatures of God of whō albeit Moses maketh no mention in expresse termes no more then of their fall specifying onely the visible workes of God in respect of the people to whom he wrote yet the Holy Ghost else-where concealeth not their Creation for when the Psalmist had exhorted the Angels and Host of Heauen the Sunne the Moone the Starres the Heauen of Heauens to prayse the Lord hee addeth a reason common to them all Let a Psal 148. 2 3 4 5. them prayse the Name of IEHOVAH for he commanded and they were created But most manifest is that of PAVL Col. 1. 16. By him were all things created which are in Heauen and vpon the Earth things visible and inuisible whether Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers By which words it is most certaine he vnderstands the Angels This all things you may not vnfitly deuide into b 1. Cor. 4. 9. reasonable Creatures Angels and Men and the World of them both whereto aptly serueth the place of the Colossians before and Moses in the very first words of his Story hath so deuided it In c Gen. 1. 12. the beginning God made Heauen and Earth that is both the vtmost compasse of this vniuersal World together with the Spirits and Angels that inhabit it and that Chaos or first lumpe and matter whereout the Earth and Heauen as we call Heauen and all heauenly and earthly bodies were made Moses therefore as Paul in that place maketh a most perfect diuision of all the whole frame of Gods Creation sundring it into two Heauen and Earth The Ayre it selfe the Sunne the Moone the Planets and whatsoeuer in that whole Chapter is spoken of seemeth to be comprehended vnder the name of Earth For so hee doth proceed resuming the latter member And touching the Earth it was vnshapen c. By Heauen is meant the place of blessed Spirits and the Angels inhabiters and dwellers in it All which appeareth further in the next Chapter Thus d Gen. 2. 1. were the Heauen and the Earth perfited and all the Host of them that is whatsoeuer is within the compasse of the highest Heauens vnto the very bottome and Center of the lowest Earth things visible and inuisible Angels or whatsoeuer else wherewith the Heauen and Earth are beautifully adorned The World of these two Creatures is either the vnseene World Heauen and Hell or the World visible and subiect to our eyes which Moses in one word termeth Earth But a better and more apt diuision to this purpose may bee made to say it is eyther the naturall place and World for these two Creatures Heauen for the one
Apostle bearing witnesse that by faith onely wee vnderstand it for howsoeuer many of the Heathen who knew not God especially the wiser sort haue in a kinde acknowledged a Creation Neyther in truth can any bee so blockish as not to see it if he looke but vp to Heauen and the frame of this World which haue the name of their Workeman and Creatour written in their fore-head yet neuer was there any not so much as the wisest of them that could attaine to this How the World should bee made of nothing Heere therefore all reason of man must stoope and bee content to learne of him in whose Schoole it is better to bee Schollers then Teachers and Professors any where besides who not onely maketh men wiser then the beasts of the field as it is in the p Iob 35. 11. Booke of Iob but teacheth his wisedome aboue the wisedome of the wise and guideth them by pathes that no foote of vaine Philosophie is able for to walke Thirdly I note the order and manner how all this was effected First The Angels and their World the highest Heauens were without more adoe immediately made of nothing But for men and the World which here we see it was somewhat in another sort For touching the World it selfe First God minding to erect such a large and goodly Theater wherein hee would make full demonstration of his incomparable both Power Wisedome and Goodnesse q Gen. 1. 1 2. framed first an empty an vnshapen lumpe without fashion without forme called Waters for the vast hugenesse of it Darknesse for the confusion and lacke of forme and the Deepe for the emptinesse without bottome to rest vpon which lest it should vanish and come to nothing hauing no steaddinesse to vphold it the Spirit of God lay vpon it and ouer-spred it to keepe it from decay Secondly Out of this lumpe and vnformed confusion did God afterwards distinctly forme this World and all the parts of it First those foure Elements called the simple bodies by fetching one contrary out of another as Light out of Darknesse the Firmament out of emptinesse dry Earth out of Waters then the compound bodies out of the same Elements and for the most part of all foure vnequally mingled together euery one principally out of the same Element which they garnish or inhabit As Grasse and Trees out of the Earth The Sunne the Moone the Stars wholly or specially out of the r For it is plaine by Moses that the Heauens thēselues and those celestiall bodies were made not of any fift essence as Aristotle and some other dreame but of elementary matter namely of the fire Whereupon the very substance and the whole frame and compasse of them all which wee call the Skye is termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aether from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is to burne for that al things there are fiery as Ana●ag●r an old Philosopher did well deriue it Albeit Aristotle in his first Booke de C●lo reiect this Etymologie and preferres another rather from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it is in perpetuall motion But that seemeth neither so naturall for the Word nor so apt for the matter fire as may not vnprobably be gathered Fishes out of the Waters Birds out of the Ayre Beasts out of the Earth But men and women as a piece of singular worke hee framed in a more artificiall sort The body of man by ſ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 2. 7. whereunto Paul alludeth 1. Tim. 2 1● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 forming and figuring it as a Potter doth his Vessels out of the Clay of the Earth And therefore heauy and lumpish dead of it selfe and without any sence or feeling Whereinto he breathed a soule not as a part of the Diuine Nature or of Gods owne essence which to thinke were impious and absurd but because it was made neyther of the Ayre nor of any other elementary matter but onely by his Word and the power of his Spirit and this hee knit vnto one person with the body to quicken and giue life vnto it and to make it a perfect man The woman hee framed and formed out of the Rib of man And all this Moses plainly expresseth Gen. 2. 4 5 6 7 * Finished in six dayes The fourth thing I obserue in the Creation is the time which it pleased GOD to take for the finishing of this worke in that he created not all at once and in a moment as he could haue done but tooke the space of sixe t Gen. 1. 31. 2. 1. 2. 3. dayes for it within which compasse Heauen the place of the blessed Angels together with the Angels themselues were made as Moses plainly teacheth Gen. 2. 1 2. Therefore the first day God made First Heauen and Hell For Hell it is probable to bee supposed hee did then make when Heauen the other part of the vnseene World was made And that Heauen was the first worke of all is easie to be gathered by the very order wich Moses u Gen. 1. 1. 2. 1. vseth Secondly The Angels those Creatures of x 2. Cor. 11. 4. Light the Tenants and Inhabitants of the highest Heauens who in Iob y Job 38. 7. are said to shoute and sing forth the prayses of God when those heauenly Bodies the Sunne the Moone the Starres were made as astonished at the excellency of their beautie And therefore themselues were before that time created Thirdly That vnfashioned lumpe Fourthly Fire The second Day he made the Ayre The third Day First Water Secondly Earth Thirdly Grasse and Trees The fourth Day the Sunne the Moone the Starres The fifth First Fishes Secondly Birds The last Day hee made First Beasts Secondly Man and Woman A fift and last thing to be obserued in the Creation is And was of euery Creature in excellency of perfection that all the Creatures were made exceeding good whether you consider them singly and apart or all of them together As from God that is goodnesse it selfe nothing can come but absolutely good For the further sealing vp of which Doctrine wee haue the testimony of God himselfe both in euery speciall God z Gen. 1. 4. saw the Light that it was good and so in the rest and in the generall conclusion of all God a Gen. 1. 31. looked vpon all that hee had made and behold it was exceeding good This goodnesse in the Creatures generally is the excellencie of perfection according to that their nature is capable of for goodnesse in that place is not to bee taken as opposite vnto vice and to that foule deformitie which is a breach of the righteous Law of God but it noteth that perfection and excellency of estate that euery Creature was framed in according as his nature was fit and able to receiue No weaknesse or infirmitie was then any where to be seene No corruption or decay nothing out of frame or ioynt so as now wee see the whole
most part enioy pleasure and the Saints of God are pinched with penury yet that after death there abides a large recompence for the godly when to the wicked shall be anguish and sorrow Therefore he saith l Luk. 16. 22 23 That LAZARVS when he dyed was carryed of Angels into ABRAHAMS bosome and the Rich man buried and cast into Hell For being in Hell saith our Sauiour Christ in torment he saw ABRAHAM afarre off and LAZARVS in his bosome The second degree is a better and more excellent At what time condition after that both to soule and bodie for the full effecting whereof there bee two most glorious and renowned workes the wonders of the World which Christ our Lord and King shall by the power and force of his Kingdome and by vertue of that Office giuen vnto him of his Father performe in the latter Day to the euerlasting ioy and comfort of his Children In respect whereof that Day is called The Day of the Lord. And those are a generall Resurrection and the last Iudgement By the generall Resurrection I meane that there shall our bodies being raysed vp be a raysing vp of all the dead bodies which haue slept or shall sleepe in the Dust of the Earth that so being knit againe into one person with their soules both bodies and soules may receiue according to the things they haue done in this World whether they be good or euill So saith the Prophet m Dan. 12. 2. DANIEL At the length many of them that slept in the dustie earth shall awake these to euerlasting life and those to shame and reproch euerlasting And our Sauiour Christ Iohn 5. 28 29. The houre commeth wherein all that are in the graues shall heare his voyce and shall come forth they which haue done good things vnto the Resurrection of life and they which haue done euill things vnto the Resurrection of condemnation In this Doctrine of the Resurrection I note First Who shall arise All the dead without exception both iust and vniust as it is said Acts 24. 15. Secondly By what power they shall arise by the power and voyce of Christ vsing the Ministerie of an Archangell or a Chiefe and a Principall Angell Iohn 5. 28. The houre commeth when all that are in the graue shall heare his voyce and shall come forth c. 1. Thes 4. 16. The Lord himselfe with a showting with the voyce of an Archangell and with the Trumpet of God shall come downe from Heauen and the dead in Christ shal arise 1. Cor. 15. 52 The Trumpet shall sound and the dead shall be raysed vp Thirdly In what sort we shall arise In the selfe-same bodies that we now carrie about vs as n Iob 19. 25 26 27. Iob saith I know that my Redeemer liueth and that the latter man shall rise vp vpon the dust Therefore after I shall awake and the Wormes haue digged thorow this yet in my flesh shall I see God euen I the selfe-same that I am and not a stranger shall see for my selfe and mine own eyes shal behold after that my reines with my bosome shall be consumed Else it could be no Resurrectiō vnlesse the very same bodies did arise Fourthly Two things are to bee considered proper to the Elect for First They shall rise glorious like to the glorified bodie glorious of our Sauiour Christ In which respect it is said They shall o Mat. 13. 43. shine as the Sunne And the Apostle saith * 1. Co. 15. 42 43 It is sowne a bodie subiect to corruption it is raysed incorrupt it sowne dishonorable it is raysed glorious it is sowne weake it is raysed powerful And afterwards p Verse 47 c The first man from the Earth the second Man the Lord from Heauen such as the earthy one was such also are the earthly men and such as the heauenly one is such also shal the heauenly ones be And as we haue carryed the image of the earthy one so also shall we carrie the Image of the heauenly One. Coloss 3. 4. When Christ shal be manifested which is our life then shal ye also be manifested with him glorious Phil. 3. 21. Who wil transforme this our base bodie that it may be fashioned like to his glorious body wherby he is able to subiect all things vnto himselfe So as they shal not any more be quickned by meat or drink or the vse of outward things but by the onely participation of the Power of Christs Spirit whereupon they are called q 1. Cor. 15. 44. Spirituall bodies liuing onely by the Power of Christs Spirit immediately quickening them for euer as those we carrie now about vs are called naturall bodies because they liue by naturall meanes and the power of the foule that quickeneth them which is another thing wherein our state is bettered in Christ aboue that it was in Adam whose bodie though it were comely and beautifull yet was not glorious as ours shall bee being glorified through Christ Secondly This is done by the speciall Power and Vertue of his Resurrection whose members they are and in r Ephes 2. 6. whome and together with whome when hee arose from the dead all the Church did rise Wherefore the ſ 1. Thes 4. 14. Apostle saith If we beleeue that Iesus is dead and risen againe so also will God bring together with him those that slept through Iesus And hereupon 1. Cor. 15. 20 21 22. hee calleth him The first fruits of the dead who in and by his rising againe hath sanctified the Resurrection of all his For as by man came death so also by Man commeth the Resurrection from the dead for as in ADAM al dyed so also in Christ shall all be quickened that is all the faithfull of whom he there speaketh for the Reprobate he doth not rayse vp as hee doth the Elect whose Head he is by vertue of his owne Resurrection but onely the force of that curse t Gen. 2. 17 What Day thou eatest of the forbidden fruit thou shalt certainly dye shall restore to them their bodies wherein to suffer euerlasting torments Whence it is that this Comming of theirs out of the Graue being onely vnto death is scarce vouchsafed in the Scripture the name of a Resurrection whereas to GODS Children being one principall part of their redeeming and freeing into euerlasting Glorie it hath the name of Regeneration giuen to it Mat. 19. 28. for this cause it is also called u Luke 14. 14. The Resurrection of the Righteous and they named Children of the x Luke 20. 36. Resurrection for that the fruit and comfort of the Resurrection doth properly and onely appertayne to them In the last Iudgement I note First Who shall bee iudged All both Deuils and the whole man shall meete men as it is said y Rom. 14. 10. 1. Cor. 5. 10. All of vs must be presented before the Iudgement Seat of Christ And of
doing whereof a promise is belonging This distinction of a secret and a reuealed will of God Moses teacheth Deut. 29. 30. The hidden things belong to IEHOVAH our God but the reuealed things to vs and our children to doe all the words of the Law Howbeit for all that they are not two wils but one will as God himselfe is one The doctrine which thus reuealeth and setteth forth his will is called the Law of God commanding vs in all things to serue and please him The contrary whereof is sinne being a breach of the Law as the Apostle doth define it 1. Iohn 3. 4. And this law I say is giuen to the reasonable Creature not onely men but Angels also respect being had vnto their nature which neither admitteth actions that are to be done by the instrument of the bodie nor is tyed to the things that belong to the necessities of this life But that the Angels are bound to the obseruation of the Law our Sauiour would haue vs learne when he willeth vs to pray Thy will be done as in Heauen so vpon the Earth But to leaue the Angels doing the will of God gloriously in Heauen we will for more cleere euidence apply the things that follow as they are fitting to our selues First it must be of all duties without failing in any one doing all good and abstayning from all euill Therefore perfection which is a thorough doing of all without falling of any whit is the general vertue of the whole Law of God Contrariwise the failing in any one iot either of the matter or the manner is a breach of all g Gal. 3. 10. Cursed is euerie one that continueth not in all things that are written in the Law to doe them h Iam. 2. 10. Whosoeuer keepeth the whole Law and yet faileth in any one point he is guiltie of all Againe all these things not onely in the Seruice of God but in the duties wee owe to men wee must doe as vnto God because it is his good will and pleasure seruing him aswell in the workes of Righteousnesse as of Holinesse as the good Father Zacharie speaketh Luke 1. 75. And heereof it is that the Apostle commending to vs many excellent points of brotherly loue and duties of the second Table willeth vs in them all to serue the Lord Rom. 12. 11. So making a difference betweene Christian duties and Philosophicall vertues As on the other side all sinnes euen of the second Table what iniurie soeuer they offer vnto men yet are indeed bent in such a sort against the diuine Maiestie that the i Psal 51. 6. Prophet Dauid feareth not to say of those two foule sinnes of his speaking as in comparison Against thee against thee onely not against Vriah or his Wife haue I sinned This therefore is a vertue belonging to the whole Law to doe whatsoeuer we doe in obedience vnto God As the k Col. 3. 23. Apostle saith Euery thing whatsoeuer ye doe worke it from the heart as to the Lord and not to man submit l 1. P●t 2. 13. your selues to all manner of ordinance of man for the Lords sake m Ephes 5. 22. Wiues submit your selues vnto your Husbands as vnto the Lord. n Ephes 6. 5 6. Seruants obey your Masters according to the flesh c. as to Christ not with eye-seruice as men pleasers but as the seruants of Christ doing the wil of God from your hearts with a good will seruing the Lord and not men So that the contrarie to this obedience is eye-seruice when we do good things as vnto men and not of conscience to God For the manner of the doing first it bindeth the whole With that whole strength of their naturall integritie Creature the whole strength of the Creature and in euery thing requireth so much the greater strength as the dutie doth more excel These three must concurre for the making of perfect righteousnesse Vnder the terme of Creature I comprehend all ones naturall powers that is to say in Angels their whole spirituall nature in vs the whole man and whatsoeuer is of and in man which standing of two parts the soule and the body in the soule as wee vse by a generall name to call it the Scripture is wont to note when it speaketh more distinctly two faculties or powers the minde or the spirit that is to say the vnderstanding part of man comprehending Knowledge Iudgement Conscience Remembrance and the Soule properly so called the seat of our Desire Will Affections To all which the Law of God extends as may appeare by that the Apostle writeth o 1. Thess 5. 23. 1. Thess 5. That your spirit soule and bodie may bee kept vnblameable for the Lawes of God are not like the Lawes of mortall men which looke but to the outward act and are not able to reach the thoughts and intentions of the heart but God being a p Iohn 4. 24. Spirit his Lawes are also q Rom. 7. 24. spirituall and binde the whole Creature within and without from one end vnto another euen the least and smallest motion so as there must be both an Integritie of Nature and a Righteousnesse of Action Integritie of Nature or in a right frame and disposition of all those parts and powers our mindes to be of aptnesse and abilitie to know discerne make conscience of and retayne the whole will of God our soules prone and inclining onely vnto good in our desires will and affections the will being able of it selfe and his owne inward free voluntary and naturall motion to choose that which is good and to reiect that which is euill and this wee call Free-will Lastly our bodies to bee apt instruments of offering good things to the soule and of executing and performing of them which Integritie of Nature when all our parts and powers are conformable hereunto the Apostle r Rom. 8. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8. maketh a part of the Righteousnesse of the Law or one thing among the rest of that which the Law requireth The contrarie whereof is that originall sinne or naturall corruption whereof we shall haue cause to speake hereafter Likewise all our actions inward and outward proceeding from those powers must be holy and pure the contrary whereof is actuall sinne Our minde therefore ought actually and indeed to know discerne make conscience of and remember the things that are good our soule both to desire to will and to effect them our Bodie and all the Members thereof to practize and put them in execution All which for the excellencie of the Doctrine and because here especially the Scripture presseth mans obedience it is necessary to goe thorow in order as they were propounded Knowledge is the first both in nature and worthinesse as that wherein wee must resemble the Diuine Essence Genesis 3. Yee shall be as Gods knowing good and euill It standeth chiefly in the knowledge of God himselfe then of those duties
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
whilest they liued vpon the Earth can hee not immediately before sprinkle them with one iot of Knowledge asmuch Faith as the graine of a Mustard Seed and make them by the tip of the hand of the soule and as it were the fingers end to touch him whom they shall immediately haue the full fruition of Secondly The example of Iacob is very forceable for his and his brothers rushing together in the Wombe or dashing one against another Iacobs holding of Esau by the heele the Prophet y Hosh ●2 3. interpreteth to bee a kind of striuing with him for the Grace and Blessing Thirdly z Ier. 1. 5. Ieremie was sanctified before hee came out of the Wombe and a Luke 1. 15. Iohn the Baptist filled with the Holy Ghost being yet in his Mothers belly shall we thinke that in the Wombe they were in Christ and so sanctified one way and when they came to yeeres of vnderstanding by another Fourthly Forasmuch as there is but one way of ioyning vs to Christ when wee come to Heauen which is b 2. Cor. 5. 7. Sight whereunto our faith now is answerable being of the same nature and qualitie onely differing in the measure for faith is nothing else but to c Iohn 6. 40. 12. 44 45. see and to behold him I cannot make my selfe beleeue but the same way which serueth here for all the rest of Gods Elect especially being of such neere affinitie with that wee shall haue then and rather to bee termed a kinde of d 1. Cor. 13. 21. sight then a deuided member from it doth serue for children also that as there is but one life e Iohn 5. 24. 6. 47. begunne here and perfected in Heauen so there should bee but one line to leade vnto it namely the light of the minde to see and behold Christ now in a Looking-glasse hereafter face to face Fiftly Of any other way or meanes for Infants to come by Righteousnesse or Saluation but by beleeuing the condition of the Couenant of Grace as doing is of the Couenant of workes the Scripture so farre as I can learne speaketh not a Word but to the contrarie giueth generall and vniuersall rules without any incling of exception as Iohn 17. 3. This is life euerlasting to know thee the onely true God and him whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ Therefore some sparke of knowledge cannot bee denyed to these who hauing the Sonne f 1. Ioh. 5. 11 12 in whom this life is must needes bee confessed to haue euerlasting life Againe Iohn 6. our Sauiour defining first what it is to come to him g Iohn 6. 35. He that commeth to me shall not hunger and hee that beleeueth in me shall not thirst immediately addeth h Verse 37. Whatsoeuer the Father giueth mee meaning all those whom God in his euerlasting counsell hath appointed to be Christs shall come vnto mee or beleeue in mee The opposition that is made Gal. 3. 22. The Scripture hath shut vp all things that is all men and whatsoeuer is of and in man vnder sinne that the promise by Faith in Iesus Christ might be giuen to those that beleeue proueth that Faith which is the remedie must needs bee as generall as the disease that spreads ouer all So the similitude which our Sauiour doth inforce Iohn 3. 14. As MOSES lift vp the Serpent in the Wildernesse so must the Sonne of man bee lift vp that euery one which beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life The brazen Serpent was figure of Christ and as none were holpen by the Serpent but those that looked vpon it No more doth any vertue come from Christ but to those that beleeue in him Lastly i Gal 3. 7. Those that are of Faith they are the sonnes of ABRAHAM for k Rom. 4. 16. to all his seed the promise is firme by Faith and his title is l Rom. 4. 11. The father of the faithfull But the Scripture maketh him m Rom. 4. 16. the father of vs all and that all n Rom. 9. 8. the children of the promise that is the whole number of Gods Elect for of that primarie cause of our saluation Gods holy Election Paul there disputeth are reckoned in his seed for since the cause why wee are said the seed of Abraham is o Gen. 22. 18. Gal. 3. 16. signed to be for the interest we haue in that blessed seed in whom Abraham and all his posteritie are partakers of the heauenly Inheritance To exclude Infants from being Abrahams seed were as much as to barre them from hauing part in Christ whereupon it followeth and so the Apostle doth conclude Gal. 3. 8 13 14. that in the same manner as he obtayned the blessing which was by Faith so doe all Nations of the World Iewes and Gentiles and euery particular person all and as many as lay vnder the curse before But of this enough we come vnto the causes Faith commeth not from our selues it commeth from the Holy Ghost and is the speciall worke of the Spirit of Christs a may appeare by the Prayer of the Apostles Lord p Luke 17. 5. increase our faith and by him that said q Marke 9. 24 I beleeue Lord helpe my vnbeliefe This worke of the Spirit making vs so to beleeue is termed A drawing of vs to Christ Iohn 6. 4. Cant. 1. 3. A Calling Rom. 8. 30. but in a more strict signification then the calling spoken of before and many wayes differing from it for That is but a Calling to the Profession of Christ and therefore outward and externall onely This to the participation and enioying of Christ himselfe and therefore a true and effectuall Calling That but to the visible Church This to be a member of the true Catholike and inuisible Church of God The cause that moueth God to bestow this gift of Faith vpon vs is his owne speciall Grace and the good pleasure of his Will So saith the Apostle Phil. 1. 29. To you it is freely giuen to beleeue in Christ and Acts 28. 27. Hee did much helpe them that had beleeued through Grace We come therefore to apprehend Christ onely because through his Grace and Goodnesse wee are apprehended of him wrought ordinarily by preaching The onely instrument that God vseth ordinarily to beget faith is the preaching of the Word as the r Ro. 10. 14 17. Apostle saith How can they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard and how can they heare without a Preacher concluding Therefore Faith is by hearing and hearing by the Word or Ordinance of God And ſ 1. Cor. 1. 21. againe Because in the wisdome of God this Frame and Gouernment of the World wherein the wisdome of God shineth so cleerely the World yet by that Wisdome knew not God it pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to saue those that beleeue as in another t Rom. 1. 16. place he saith
doest so graciously extend to vs being thy selfe eternall and therefore exercising an eternall power and dominion in the World not onely confounding those whome thou hast appointed to destructiō to the praise of thy glorious Iustice but which is principally here considered creating anew an eternall people to thy selfe to the prayse of thy glorious Grace Hauing thus finished the Lords Prayer because the sence which I gaue of the fourth Petition may seeme new though it cannot bee called new which a number of the Fathers doe so expound yet for the better satisfying of the godly Reader let mee shortly render my reasons for it First I hold this Prayer to bee a compendiarie summe of all the holy Doctrine concerning God and our Saluation in Christ wherein it cannot bee thought that he himselfe and our incorporating into him the roote and bases of all good things wee haue from him should be omitted being that which he so presseth vs to seeke and giueth the first place vnto in all his Doctrines Iohn 3. 3. Iohn 4. and Iohn 6. which Chapter may serue for a Commentarie vpon this place Secondly The method and order of the Petitions were not so naturall to aske earthly benefits before heauenly Blessings Thirdly the Analogie and correspondence of these latter Petitions with the former three for as they beginning with the great and glorious Name of God fall afterwards to his adioynts of Kingdome and Honour so these beginne with Christ and Regeneration through him the fruits whereof are Iustification and Sanctification which follow in their place as the Apostle agreeably hereunto reduceth the benefits we haue by Christ to these three heads that in the same order Regeneratiō the root mother of the rest Iustification and Sanctification the two twinnes and noble payre that commeth from it 1. Ioh. 5. 8. There be three that beare record in Earth to the Soule and Conscience of euery true Beleeuer The Spirit or part regenerate Water whereby wee are washed and clensed from our sinne and Bloud purging and abolishing both the roote and fruites of it which is attributed to the bloud of Christ Heb. 9. 14. 1. Iohn 1. 7 9 And that is so to bee taken in this place not for expiatition I gather by that the Apostle p 1. Iohn 5. 6. said before This is he that came by Water and Bloud that is to say not our Iustifier only which all men doe willingly imbrace but to sanctifie vs also which men will not so easily bee brought vnto Fourthly Seeing it is plaine that by obtayning pardon for our sinnes and Righteousnesse in Christ which is asked in the fift Petition consequently wee haue all the Blessednesse that belongeth to it one part whereof is this to haue all outward things as additaments and appendances cast vnto vs so farre as God hath appointed them for our good as our Sauiour Christs both speech and promise is Mat. 6. 33. and further then that wee haue no warrant to desire them it seemeth not so likely that either our Sauiour Christ would rent these things a sunder and transplant one from another especially to set the fruit before the branch that beareth it or in so short a summe admit of repetition which must needs follow if being else-where included wee aske them here by name And this also may serue to prooue that no defect or maime can iustly be imputed to this absolute forme of Prayer though outward things come not within compasse of the fourth Petition Fiftly The doubling of the Article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sheweth it to be no common Bread but a Bread of some rare and singular qualitie the very like doubling of the Article to that purpose you finde in this selfe-same argument Iohn 6. 32. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And most aptly is Bread here taken vp to expresse our spirituall coniunction with Christ being that which to the Worlds end must represent him in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper Lastly the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which maketh all the doubt being neuer read but in this Prayer onely and therefore of an vncertayne signification I deriue from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the best Interpreters as I make no doubt it must of necessitie be but not in that sence which I see them to do who expound it competent or sufficient for our nature that is for our sustenance and nourishment Of which signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you shall hardly finde any example as H. Stephen in his Greeke Thesaurus noteth But in that sence which the Scripture vseth it Luke 14. 12 13 and neuer otherwise as it signifieth wealth and substance from whence I take to bee deriued two words of neere affinitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Titus 2. 14. one noting that which as the remayne and ouerplus of our substance we lay vp in store and keepe for a Iewell the other that which excelleth all wealth and substance which among many other is one signification of the proposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 9. 5. Ephes 4. 6. and so doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aptly answere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 119. 14. I reioyce in the way of thy Testimonies as aboue all substance And it seemeth vnto mee that our Sauiour Christ doth herein allude to that saying of SALOMON Cant. 8. 11. If a man would giue all the substance of his House for this Loue of Iesus Christ to whome I am euen now ascending out of the Wildernesse of this World to ioyne and vnite my selfe by Faith hee should bee vtterly despised yet the other Interpretation which the most Learned and best Diuines of our time do follow carryeth a sound and a godly sence against which no exception can be taken And therefore in such cases men are not to striue To come to the other notes whereby wee may assure our owne soules and giue good testimonie vnto other that we are of the number of those which are sanctified through Christ Next vnto Prayer is the q Luke 21. 9. patient bearing of afflictions Our Sauiour calleth it The r Mat. 16. 24. taking In your patience possesse your soules Col. 1. 11. That yee may bee strengthened vnto all patience and long sufferance with ioy vp of our Crosse which being so hard a Lesson to take out and ſ Heb. 10. 36. Patience a thing that wee haue speciall need of the Scripture vseth many Arguments to perswade vs thereunto Taken from the causes of affliction both principall in GOD and secondarie in our selues from the end from the effects and lastly from the things that doe accompanie and are adioyned to it If any man will come after mee let him denie himselfe and take vp his Crosse and follow me For first the consideration of this that God is the Authour of all iudgements hath a singular vse for the quieting of our mindes in the stormes and tempests of afflictions for whether
Touchstone of his Tryall And therefore this kinde of satisfaction is bla●phemous and derogatorie from the death of Christ who is our onely Sat 〈…〉 ction Ransome and Redemption therefore or practice of Repentance I call A continuall sorrow for our sinnes and a purpose to resist against them for sorrow a griefe for sinne committed is one speciall part of Repentance whereof the whole many times doth take the name 1. Cor. 10. 7. The sorrow which is according vnto God worketh a change of mind vnto saluation neuer to bee repented of where both these parts as you see are comprehended Six things are to be noted in true Repentance First The notes or signes of Repentance the Apostle 2. Cor. 7. 11. reckoneth these seuen First Studie or diligence to rouze our selues out of sleepe and securitie of sinne Secondly A defence excuse or cleering of our selues not by standing in it as if we had done well or making lesse of it then the qualitie of the offence deserueth but asking pardon for our fault in that we did it not wilfully and with malice but of frailty and infirmity and that so as none more then we are offended therewithall A notable example whereof wee haue in that Confession of the Church Cant. 5. 1. I slept but my heart waked Thirdly Indignation or an holy anger against our selues for it Fourthly A feare lest wee should fall againe into the like Fiftly A longing to bee deliuered from the bodie of sinne and to be made perfect Sixtly Zeale to God and to all goodnesse Seuenthly Reuenge by taming and chastizing the flesh and taking as it were our penniworths of it that we runne not into the like hereafter And therefore both forbearing lawfull things that wee may the better abstayne from vnlawfull and flying lesser sinnes lest wee fall into greater and all those things that haue beene the meanes to lead vs vnto sinne before The second is the fruit of this Repentance A restoring of vs vnto the former good estate from the which through frailtie wee are falne So saith ELIHV Iob 33. 25 26. His flesh is softened more then in his childhood he returneth to the dayes of his youth when hee doth humbly pray to God he doth accept him so as hee beholdeth his face with reioycing and he restroreth a man to his Righteousnesse And Dauid after his great fall prayeth t Psal 51. 14. Restore vnto mee the ioy of thy Saluation Thirdly What sinnes true Repentance doth free vs from All without exception how great soeuer and how many soeuer the same bee secret knowne wilfull or whatsoeuer else except that one sinne against the Holy Ghost which none of the faithfull can fall into nor can be repented of for the multitude of our sinnes is not to be compared with the Infinitenesse of GODS Merits but is infinitely surpassed and ouercome of it Esay 1. 18. If your sinne were as Scarlet double dyed they shall be as white as Snow if they were as red as Purple they shall be made like vnto the Wooll for my thoughts saith the Lord Esay 55. 8 9. are not as your thoughts nor my wayes as your wayes my thoughts and wayes of mercie and forgiuenesse as your thoughts and wayes of wickednesse they are too base and shallow to bee compared to them but as the Heauens are higher then the Earth so and infinitely more are my wayes higher then your wayes and my thoughts aboue your thoughts DAVID Psal 103. 10 11 hath the like comparison Hee dealeth not with vs according to our sinnes nor requiteth vs according to our iniquities but as high as the Heauens are aboue the Earth doth his kindnesse preuaile towards them that feare him Fourthly That Repentance is not in our owne power when wee are once renewed but it is the speciall worke and Grace of God to touch our hearts being falne as it was at the first to quicken our soules Therefore it is the Prayer of Ephraim that is of the Church of GOD u Ier. 31. 18. Conuert thou me that I may be conuerted And in the x Lam 5. 21. Lamentations Turne thou vs vnto thee O IEHOVAH and we shall be turned So Cant. 5. 1. it was the voyce of Christ that awakened and raysed vp the Church when she slept in her sinnes Fiftly That God in his time will rayse vp all that are his how long soeuer they sleepe in sinne as hee promiseth in y Hoshea 2. 14 Hoshea and as wee see in Dauid who lay in his sinne without Repentance some whole yeere as it is very like and that seemeth to bee the force of the Argument which the Church vseth Ierem. 31. 18. Conuert thou me that I may be conuerted for thou art IEHOVAH my God As if she should say For thou onely art able to doe it and wilt doe it for thy Couenant sake Howbeit this must not make vs the lesse to feare sin because the Children of God at one time or other repent them of it No not onely the vgly face of sinne contrarie to the Image of God who is Holinesse it selfe and the authour Satan from whom it commeth but the fruits and lamentable effects thereof shew how much it is to be detested First Wee offend God and make sad his holy Spirit Esay 63. 10. But they rebelled and grieued his holy Spirit Ephes 4. 30. Grieue not the holy Spirit of God by the which you are sealed vnto the day of Redemption Secondly We grieue and offend his Children So the Apostle z 2. Cor. 2. 5. to the Corinths declareth himselfe and all the Church to haue beene grieued with that fact of the incestuous person If any man haue grieued he hath not grieued me but in part that I doe not ouer-charge him you all Thirdly We cause his Gospell to be blasphemed and euill spoken of Rom. 2. 24. The Name of GOD for your sakes is blasphemed amongst the Nations Hereby is Dauids sinne made the fouler and more hatefull 2. Sam. 12. 14. Because in so doing thou hast caused the enemies of IEHOVAH to prouoke and contemne him Fourthly We make other to stumble and fall whereof we know what our Sauiour saith Mat. 18. 6. Whosoeuer offendeth one of these little ones that beleeue in me it were better for him that a Milstone were hanged about his necke and he drowned in the bottome of the Sea Fiftly Wee wound our owne soules with the conscience of our sinnes and the terror of Gods Iudgements As Dauid confesseth of himselfe a Psal 51. 10. Make mee to heare ioy and gladnesse that the bones which thou hast broken may reioyce Sixtly We bereaue our selues of the sweet comforts we haue felt and that are to be had in him as it followeth in that Psalme b Psal 51. 14. Restore vnto me the ioy of thy saluation and with thy free Spirit vphold me Seuenthly Wee bring manifold troubles and afflictions vpon our persons vpon our Wiues Children Families and those that belong
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
by lying miracles deceiuing and deceiued make the bodie which seeke Christ vpon the Earth in their Sacrament of the Altar place Religion in an Eremiticall or Monkish life not holding Christ the Head nor Iustification by Faith alone in his bloud And therefore are not the Church of Christ but the Synagogue of Satan The second signe is that o Verse 29. The Heauen shall be darkned The Moone shall not giue her Light the Starres shall fall from Heauen and the powers of Heauen or powerfull and potent Heauens shall be shaken Such Metaphors as these the Scripture is wont to vse when it would expresse a notable change to fall out in the World the ruine and ouerthrow of some great State or Monarchie p Esay 13. 10. Esay in his thirteenth Chapter speaking of the destruction of Babel The Starres of the Heauen and their Planets shall not giue their light and the Moone shall not shine bright the Sunne shall bee darkned at his rising q Ioel 4. 7. IOEL prophecying of the seuere Iudgement against the enemies of Gods Church The Sunne and the Moone shall be blacke and the Stars shall take in their Light And r Ezech. 32. 7 8 Ezechiel to Pharaoh King of Egypt I will couer when I put thee out the Heauens and I will make their Stars blacke The Sunne I will couer in a Cloud and the Moone shall not make her Light shine All the Planets of light in the Heauen will I make blacke for thy sake And I will set darknesse in the Land So in the ſ Reuel 6. 12 13 14. Reuelation When hee opened the sixt Seale there was a great Earthquake and the Sunne became blacke as hayrie sackcloth and the Moone became as bloud and the Starres of Heauen fell to the ground and Heauen parted asunder as a Booke rolled together and euery Mountayne and Iland were remooued out of their places Which things point not to the end of the World seeing many things were to fellow vnder the seuenth Seale but are meant as it seemeth of that great ouerthrow which Constantine gaue to Dioclesian and other Tyrants of the Church turning the whole Empire of Rome vpside downe from Gentilisme to Christianitie This second signe therefore I iudge to bee the Turkes ouerthrow which shall fall out t Reuel 16. 19. 19. 20. 20. 10. as soone as the Church is deliuered from the Tyrannie of Antichrist that is as our Sauiour speaketh heere immediately after the affliction of those dayes The third Signe is the calling of the Iewes wherein foure things may be obserued First The time And then saith u Verse 30. he that is x Ezech. 38. 39. to the end of the Prophecy Reuel 20 7 8 9 10 11 c. immediately vpon the Ruine of the Turkish Empire for though some y Ezech. 37. Reuel ●6 12 13 14 15 16. beginnings are to bee made before an indeuour to and preparation to seeke Christ whereupon z Dan. 1. 12 ● shall insue the forest time of affliction to that people that euer was in the world yet their full and thorow Call beginneth not till the Turke be done away Secondly The glorie of their Church two wayes described one by calling it The Signe of the Sonne of man the other The Comming of the Sonne of man in the Clouds of the Heauen for so is the latter vsed Reue. 1. 7 And before in this Chapter Verse 27. and they both import the selfe same thing which Paul 2. Thess 28. calleth The brightnesse of his Comming to wit not a corporall but a spirituall Comming powerfully and royally in the great and glorious Conuersion of this Nation Thirdly The generalitie of their call that all the Tribes of Israel aswell as Iudah shall bee saued Which very word of Tribes if there were no more sheweth of what people it must be meant Fourthly Their true and vnfayned Repentance for the mourning heere spoken of is that bitter mourning for the sinne of all sinnes the sinne of refusing Christ whereof you reade Zacharie 12. 10 11 c. Reu. 1. 7. The fourth Signe is the generall publishing of the Gospell thorowout the World for this sending of his Angels with a Trumpet and great voyce and their gathering of the Elect out of the foure Windes from one end of the Heauen to another Verse 31. cannot bee that voyce of an Archangell and Trumpet of God which the Apostle speaketh of 1. Thes 4. 16. nor the gathering mentioned Mat. 25. 32. for it is expresly said here Verse 33 34. When you see all those things whereof this which we now speake of is one know hee is neere at the doores not yet come as he must be when the Archangels voice doth sound Verily I say vnto you The same a So is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taken Luke 17. 34. age the Age wherein the last of these things shall bee fulfilled shall not passe away till all things be done Therefore it must needs bee taken of a glorious spreading of the Gospell among all Nations not spoken figuratiuely or by Hyperbole and excesse of speech as that other Verse 14. but in a true literall and proper sence And as the former was giuen to the Apostles for a Signe that should goe before the Iewes desolation and consequently before Antichrist should come who was not to appeare till some Ages after they were destroyed So this is to come after After his after the Turkes destruction after the Iewes repayre for b Reuel 21. 24. then shall the Nations bring their Honour and Glorie to the new holy Citie c Ezech. 47. Then shall waters flye out of the Temple into the East and to all the quarters round about by the sweetnesse whereof shall be ingendred a multitude of fish exceeding many Then d Dan. 7. 14. after the small horne taken away which is the Turke a Kingdome shall be giuen to him that was like the Sonne of man that all People Nations and Tongues shall serue him Then e Zach. 14. 19. shall IEHOVAH be King ouer all the Earth And in that Day there shall be one IEHOVAH and his name one Hauing done now with the Signes the last circumstance is the manner of his Comming which shall bee sudden manifest and notorious vnto all and full of State and Maiestie For the suddennesse of it it is compared to a f 1. Thess 2. 2. Reuel 16. 5. Thiefe in the night to g 1. Thess 5. 3. trauaile that commeth on a sudden to a woman with child and to a h Luke 21. 35. snare that catcheth men vnawares Whereupon it is also compared to the dayes of i Mat. 24. 37 38 39. Noe and of Lot for as men then were taken before they were aware so shall they bee in the Day of Iudgement which serueth to stirre vs vp to watchfulnesse as our Sauiour in k Luke 21. 35. Luke maketh that vse of it As a
and keepeth my workes vnto the end I will giue vnto him power ouer the Nations and he shall feed them with a rod of Iron as Potters Vessels they shall bee broken as I also haue receiued of my Father And I will giue vnto you the Morning Starre So it is said Reuel 5. 10. Thou hast made vs vnto our God Kings and Priests and we shall raigne vpon the Earth From this Power and Rule two things proceed First That together with Christ our Head wee shall iudge the World aswell the Angels that fell as reprobate and wicked men 1. Cor. 6. 2. Know yee not that the Saints shall iudge the World And againe Verse 3. Know yee not that wee shall iudge the Angels That also which m Mat. 19. 28. Christ saith to the Apostles When the Sonne of Man shall sit vpon his glorious Throne then shall you also sit vpon twelue Thrones iudging the twelue Tribes of Israel is in some measure common to all the Elect as appeareth Reuel 20. 4. Secondly That wee shall be made the heires of Heauen and Earth in and through him Who as the n Heb. 1. 2. Apostle saith is made heire of all things 1. Pet. 1. 4. Who hath begotten vs anew vnto an Heritance incorruptible and vndefiled which cannot fade away reserued in Heauen for vs. Reuel at 21. 7. Hee that ouercommeth shall inherit these things Fourthly The glorie and excellencie that then shal be in our Knowledge Memorie and all other parts and faculties as you haue it set forth 1. Cor. 13 11 12. Insomuch as there is no doubt wee shall know one another for hereby our Sauiour setteth forth the state of the Blessed Mat. 17. 3 4. Wee come now to the measure or quantitie of these good things albeit not infinite yet wonderfull such as no man knoweth but God and hee o Esay 64. 4. that doth enioy them which is the third benefit that we haue by Christ aboue that which was in Adam who lacking that sweet coniunction which wee haue with Christ from whom as from our Head his owne very Blessednesse is deriued downe vnto vs could not haue the good things that were in him to be so great and excellent In the measure of our happinesse two things are to be obserued The one proper to this estate that the fulnesse of it after the last Iudgement exceedeth that which our soules separated from our bodies had before for when the Soules of the Martyrs slaine for the Word of God and the testimonie of Iesus if at the least you vnderstand that place of the soules deceased cry How long O Lord holy and true Wilt not thou iudge and auenge our bloud of the Inhabitants of the Earth And it was answered them that they must rest a while till the number of their fellow seruants and brethren bee filled vp which should be killed aswell as they it sheweth that their full rest is not yet accomplished To this purpose it serueth that the generall Iudgement of all the dead is termed A time of giuing a reward to Gods seruants the Prophets and to the Saints and to all that feare his Name As not hauing yet the full reward that is promised in that Day whereunto Gods Children lift vp their head as to the top and perfection of all their comfort Hereafter saith PAVL is layd vp for mee a Crowne of Glorie which God the righteous Iudge will render in that Day And the Prophet DAVID I when I awake that is rise from the dead in the Resurrection of the righteous shall bee satisfied with thy likenesse IOHN also referreth our full perfection vnto that time When hee that is Christ shall bee manifested we shall bee like vnto him And hither tendeth the speech of the Apostle That his Spirit may bee saued in the Day of the LORD IESVS CHRIST The second is that beside the Happinesse common to them all there are some which shall haue ioy aboue their fellowes Not that this argueth any want in those that haue lesse for though all receiue not alike measure yet all shall bee full As a Vessell contayning a Gallon is as full for the bignesse as that which contayneth ten And this difference groweth from the diuers measure of Faith which God in this life doth indue vs with for Faith as wee heard before is that which ioyneth vs to Christ And as our Faith groweth so are wee more deeply and firmely rooted and built in him The greater therefore that our Faith is the neerer and the straighter is our coniunction with Christ and the neerer wee are knit to him the greater our glorie and excellencie must bee And because our Faith is discerned by the fruits great faith many fruits small faith few fruits thereof it is that for the most part wee see the measure of Happinesse ascribed to the multitude and qualitie of the fruits 1. Corinth 3. 8. Euery one shall receiue his owne proper reward according to his owne proper labour Philip 4. 17. I desire a fruit that may abound in your account To giue a taste of some that are noted in the Scripture thus to excell though it hold not in euery particular person yet generally these sorts and estates are obserued First Those that instruct others shall shine as the brightnesse of the Firmament and those that iustifie many that is are the good Instruments of God to bring men to Christ shall be as the starres Dan. 12. 3. Secondly The Master-builder that planteth and layeth the foundation shall haue greater glorie then he that watereth and buildeth thereupon 1. Cor. 3. 8 10. Thirdly The Martyr shall bee made a p Reuel 3. 12. Piller in the Temple of God and preferred before other The last thing is the Chiliastes which place happines after the Resurrection in the pleasures of the bodie and vpon the Earth and that to indure but for a thousand yeeres abusing the place Reuel 20. 4. They raigned with Christ a thousand yeeres which is not to bee vnderstood of the condition of the Elect after this life but in this present World during all that time that Satan by the Ministerie of the Gospell should be bound that he might not deceiue the Nations which was very neere a thousand yeeres after Christ all which time some truth remayned in the Churches as concerning the maine points of Christian Doctrine eternitie and continuance of our Happines As it is said q 1. Thes 4. 17. So shall wee bee alwayes with the Lord. r Reuel 22. 5. They shall raigne for euer and euer And Å¿ 1. Pet. 1. 4. Peter calleth it an inheritance incorruptible vndefiled and which withereth not wherein also it is much more excellent then that we lost in Adam which was mutable and subiect vnto change whereas this by the speciall grace and goodnesse of God continually supporting vs is immutable and the same for euer t 2. Cor. 5. 4. immortalitie being sallowed vp of life That all must dye
4. 25. 8. 32. deliuered vp to death for vs the exceeding measure of whose Mercie and Loue in this behalfe is commended in the Scripture by two circumstances one is the giuing of his Sonne his onely Sonne his beloued Sonne for our Redemption ſ 1. Iohn 4. 9. In this saith the Apostle was the loue of God manifested towards vs that he hath sent his only begotten Sonne into the World that we should liue by him And our Sauiour Christ in t Iohn 3. 16. IOHN God so loued the World that hee gaue his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life The second is the time of this giuing of his Sonne for vs euen then when we were his enemies This the same Apostle ioyneth with the former u Iohn 4. 20. Herein is loue not that we loued God but that he loued vs and sent his Sonne a Propitiation for our sinnes But most notably doth Paul vnto the Romanes inlarge this circūstance x Rom. 5. 6 7. 8 9 10. For Christ when yet we were of no strength in his time dyed for the vngodly Verily for a righteous man one would scarce dye peraduenture for a man that hath beene beneficiall and good vnto him some man would indure to dye But God commmendeth his loue to vs that when we were yet Sinners Christ dyed for vs for if being enemies wee were reconciled to God through the death of his Sonne how much more being reconciled shall we be saued Wherefore Called of his Father he thrust not himselfe into this Office of Mediation but had the warrant of a lawfull calling for it for y Iohn 6. 27. him as hee speaketh of himselfe hath God the Father sealed And the Apostle to the Hebrewes z Heb. 5. 4 5 6 No man taketh this honour to himselfe but hee that is called of God as was AARON So also Christ did not take this Honour to himselfe to become a High Priest but he that spake vnto him Thou art my Sonne this day haue I begotten thee gaue it him as also in another place he saith Thou art a Priest for euer after the order of MELCHISEDECH for this cause he is called an Apostle Heb. 3. 1. and the Angell of the Couenant Malach. 3. 1. And Nicodemus though hee knew him not aright acknowledgeth that he was a Teacher come from God Iohn 3. for how else might any man presume to set his hand vnto so great a worke Therefore the Prophet saith a Ier. 30. 31. His Noble one shall be of him And I will make him to approch that he may come neere vnto me for who is hee that can promise in his heart to draw neere vnto me saith IEHOVA that is as the Apostle speaketh to the Hebrewes b Heb. 5. 4. Who can take this honor to himselfe but Christ who is called of God and made our King and Priest It standeth as euery other lawfull calling doth on two parts First Gifts and Graces necessarie for the discharge of his Office which God neuer seuereth from his callings Secondly A solemne inuesting of him vnto his place Both which concurre in Christ Esay 61. The Spirit of the Lord IEHOVA is vpon me therefore IEHOVA hath anoynted mee to preach vnto the poore he hath sent me c. Of his Graces the Psalmist saith c Psal 45. 8. Heb. 1. 9. God hath anoynted thee with Oyle of gladnesse aboue thy fellowes for being the d Pro. 8. 12. Wisdome of God and in the e Iohn 1. 18. bosome of his Father how can hee bee without any Grace requisite for him that should be a Mediator And necessary it was hee should thus bee called and appointed that wee might bee out of doubt of GODS acceptance of that which Christ hath done for vs being his owne ordinance and appointment and of his good pleasure to saue vs through him whereupon the Apostle calleth him f Ephes 5. 1. an offering and sacrifice of a sweet smelling sauour to God without which all his sufferings had bene in vaine But albeit his Office of Mediation in Gods appointment were before all eternitie yet actually it beganne euer since the fall of Adam vpon Adams fall comming after the Couenant of workes which was from the beginning assoone as Angels and men were made when as yet the purpose of God to saue vs through Christ lay hid within himselfe which first hee reuealed in Paradise assoone as man had fallen The g Gen. 3. 15. seed of the woman shall breake the head of the Serpent Hereupon wee finde him inuested into the place not onely after he had taken flesh when a voyce came from Heauen saying h Mat. 3. 17. This is my welbeloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased but before his comming into the World by him that sware i Psal 110. 4. Heb. 5. 6. Thou art a Priest foreuer after the order of MELCHISEDECH And againe k Psal 2. 7. Heb. 1. 5. Thou art my Sinne this day begate I thee In regard partly of his calling to the Office of Mediation partly of the Graces that God his Father did adorne him with hee is named Christ that is to say Anoynted and because also of Gods euerlasting Decree it is said Prouerbs 8. 23. He was anoynted before the World This Office of Mediation belongeth to whole Christ to be a Mediator not to any one seuerall nature in that great worke of our Redemption the Man-hood being assisted of the God-head and the God-head in an vnspeakable manner working by the Man-hood So whole Christ is called l Heb. 3. 2. The Apostle and high Priest of our Profession m Eph. 2. 13 14 our Peace n 1 Cor. 1. 29 30 our Wisdome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption and finally o Rom. 1. 4. Our Lord and p Eph. 1. 20 22 Head of the Church An Office so appropriate vnto him that there neither are nor can be any more the Apostle telling vs that he hath a Priesthood q Heb. 7. 24. which cannot passe vnto any other but remayneth in himselfe for euer And Acts 4. 12. There is no other name giuen vs vnder Heauen whereby we may be saued Therefore he proclaymeth of himselfe I am r Iohn 14. 6. the Way I am ſ Iohn 10. 7. the Doore Touching the parties for whom Christ is a Mediator betweene God and men this benefit is proper to Mankinde Neither the Angels that fell are redeemed by him whose fall being with a high hand presumptuously and without temptation can neuer bee repayred and therefore our Sauiour saith Mat. 25. 41. that Hell fire is prepared for the Deuill and his angels neither are those that stand vpholden by Christ as Mediator for hee tooke not their seed or nature wherefore those places Ephes 1. 10. That he might gather into one bodie all things in Christ both the things in Heauen and
the things vpon the Earth And Colos 2. 10. It pleased God to reconcile through him all things vnto himselfe both the things vpon Earth and the things in Heauen 〈◊〉 not to bee vnderstood of the Angels but of the Sa●●●● and blessed Spirits now deceased Mediation as the Apostle doth define it Gal. 3. 20. is to set at one parties that are at variance Wherefore the very point and propertie of Christs Office of Mediator or that wherein it standeth and whereunto all the parts doe tend is the reconciling of the World to bring them againe into fauour with God his Father and to the recouerie of his former loue as it is said 2. Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World vnto himselfe And Rom. 5. 10. When we were enemies wee were reconciled vnto God by the death of his Sonne This was the foote of the Angels Song Glorie to God in the highest Heauens on Earth Peace Good will towards men Luke 2. 14. It was the t Acts 10. 36. summe of our Sauiour Christs Embassage Comming he preached Peace vnto vs Ephes 2. 17. And thereupon the Gospell is called u 2. Cor. 15. 18 19. The Word or Ministerie of reconciliation x Ephes 6. 15. The Gospell of Peace c. The meanes whereby hee worketh our Peace is by of a couenant making of a Couenant betweene God and vs wherevpon he is called The Mediator of the New Testament Hebrewes 12. 24. and The Angell of the Couenant Malachie 3. 1. In this Couenant I obserue the end and fruit the substance or foundation the meanes or the condition and the extent of the Couenant The end or fruit is the sauing of our soules So the to saue Apostle doth expresse it Heb. 9. 5. Therefore is Christ the Mediator of a new Couenant that through death comming betweene for the redemption of the transgressions that were in the former Couenant they that are called may receiue the promise of an euerlasting Inheritance Christ himselfe is the foundation and ground-worke through faith in him of this Couenant Esay 49. 8. and the substance of all the Gospell as the Apostle defineth Rom. 1. 1 2 3 4. and in 〈…〉 other places The meanes to make the Couenant effectuall vnto vs that is by apprehending of the Couenant is Faith the condition of the Couenant Beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and thou shalt bee saued Acts 16. 31. Touching the extent of the Couenant all Mankinde certaine few men whom God his Father hath chosen are not partakers of this benefit but some certaine men onely which certaine men though wee cannot certainly define the number are but a handfull in respect of the great multitude of those that perish being elect before the World was and giuen vnto Christ that in time through faith incorporated into him and becomming one with him they might as members make that Bodie whereof hee is the Head and so bee quickened by his Spirit vnto euerlasting life And this election of some necessarily implyeth the reiecting of other some Wherefore here the whole doctrine of Gods holy Predestination is summarily comprehended A matter aboue all other most religiously and soberly to be dealt in not so much for any hardnesse that is in it which if wee keepe within the bounds and limits of the Word is easie enough to bee conceiued as in regard partly of the curiousnesse of men prying without all reuerence into the secret Counsels of God and climbing vp by other steps then himselfe hath hallowed and partly of their owne corrupt affections who either swelling with Pride or cast downe with feare can hardly keepe along the coast of this Doctrine without wrecking themselues either at the Rockes of Presumption or the Flats of desperation Wherefore to auoyd both these extremes wee are to hold such a middle course as may not be after the randome of our owne wit but at the direction of God in the wisedome of his Word for as for them that thinke this Doctrine is not at all to bee taught vnto the people it is manifest that they erre very grossely this being as the rest one part of the reueiled will of GOD whereof y Deut. 30. 29. Moses speaketh to the people T 〈…〉 things belong to IEHOVAH our God but the reueiled things to vs and our children for euer And as the z Rom. 15. 4. Apostle saith Whatsoeuer things are written are written for our profit that by patience and comfort of the Scriptures which cannot be without knowing of them we might haue hope This being written by the singer of GOD in the Table of his Word must needs haue a place in that number amongst the rest And the speech a Iohn 5. 30. of our Sauiour Christ is generall willing vs to search the Scriptures for whatsoeuer things they beare record of What That the Apostle Paul writing to the b Chap. 9. 10 11 Romanes doubteth not to debate this Argument at large discoursing of all the secrets and mysteries thereof the causes effects c. And in the Epistle to the c Ephes 5. Ephesians he layeth it as the foundation and ground-worke whereupon to build the Doctrine of Faith and Holinesse of life Nay Moses himselfe who for the grosse conceit and rudenesse of the Iewes kept backe the creation of the Angels and their fall and many other Mysteries yet how d Deut. 4. 37. 7 8 9 10. 14. 73. 5. oft doth hee deale with this The Disciples of Christ were not c Iohn 16. 12. able to beare many things which hee was to vtter vnto them yet hee passeth not by this Doctrine when f Luke 10. 20. hee biddeth them to reioyce that their names were written in Heauen yea and both the points of Election and Reprobation hee plainly setteth forth Mat. 25. 34. and 41. This will bee yet more euident if we call to minde the manifold vse of this Doctrine being the Roote of all Pietie and the Base of all our comfort then the which none more highly exalteth the glorie of God in his Mercie and Iustice nor throweth downe the pride of man more lowe as in the processe Christ assisting more fully shall appeare Wherein for a better light of that which followeth it is necessarie I should first define Predestination Predestination is one principall branch of Gods purpose or eternall Decree concerning the finall estate of the most excellent creatures Angels and men The parts whereof are Election and Reprobation Election which is of some certaine ones vnto Saluation of men but few in respect of those that are to perish Reprobation which is of some certaine ones vnto damnation The waight and degree of both aswell of glorie as of shame to some in a lesse to some in a greater measure To explaine this a little better God who onely is eternall the Father Sonne and holy Spirit purposing before all times the glorifying of himselfe as is most meet