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A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

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of him before he was how much more now he is What note you thereof That man hath not to boast of his antiquity all the creatures being made before him even to the vilest worm What is to be observed in his creation That here for the excellency of the work God is brought in as it were deliberating with himselfe the Father with the Sonne and the Holy Ghost and they with him the whole Trinity entring into a solemn counsell to make man after their Image Gen. 1. 26. which is not said of any other creature for whereas the other creatures were made suddenly man was as we shall see not so but with some space of time hitherto also belongeth that the Holy Ghost standeth longer upon his creation then upon the rest What learn you from hence That we should mark so much the more the wisdome and power of God in the creation of him thereby to imitate God in using most diligence about those things which are most excellent What parts doth he consist of Of two parts of a body and a soule Gen. 2. 7. Job 10. 11 12. Whereof was his body made Of the very dust of the earth Gen. 2. 7. in which respect the work of God in making him is set forth by a similitude of the potter which of his clay maketh his pots Rom. 9. 21. and the name of Adam is from hence in the Hebrew given unto man to put him in mind not to bee proud nor to desire to be like God which God foresaw he would doe through Satans temptations What learn you from hence That seeing it pleased God to make mans body more principally of the basest Element that thereby he would give man to understand of what base matter his body was framed that so hee might have occasion of being lowly and humble in his owne sight according as the Scripture it self directeth us to this instruction Gen. 18. 27. Jer. 2. 2. 29. What else learn you The absolute authority that God hath over man as the Potter hath over his pots and much more Rom. 9. 21. How was the soul made His soul was made a spirituall substance which God breathed into that frame of the earth to give it a life whereby man became a living soul Gen. 2. 7. Mal. 2. 15. Why is it called the breath of God Because God made it immediately not of any earthly matter as he did the body nor of any of the elements as he did the other creatures but of a spirituall matter whereby is signified the difference of the soul of man which was made a spirituall and divine or everlasting substance from the soul or life of beasts which commeth of the same matter whereof their bodies are made and therefore dieth with them whereas the soul of man commeth by Gods creation from without in which respect God is said to be the Father of our spirits Heb. 12. 9. and doth not rise as the soul of beasts doe of the temper of the elements but is created of God free from composition that it might be immortall and free from the corruption decay and death that all other creatures are subject unto and therefore as it had life in it self when it was joyned to the body so it retaineth life when it is separated from the body and liveth for ever What other proofs have you of the immortality of the soul besides the divine nature thereof Eccl. 12. 7. It is said that at death the dust shall return to the earth as it was and the spirit unto God who gave it Our Saviour Christ Luk. 23. 46. and his servant Stephen Acts 7. 59. at their death commend their souls unto God Luk. 23. 43. The theeves soul after separation from the body is received into Paradise Mat. 10. 28. The soul cannnot be killed by them that kill the body Psal. 49. 14 15. Mat. 22. 32. Rev. 6. 9. 7. 9. The guiltinesse of the Conscience and feare of punishment for sin proveth the same Otherwise all the comfort of Gods children were utterly dashed for if in this life only we have hope in Christ we are of all men most miserable 1 Cor. 15. 15. Why is it said that God breathed in his face or nostrils Gen. 2. 7. more then in any other part To put man in mind of his frailty whose breath is in his nostrils Esay 2. 22. Because the soul sheweth her faculties most plainly in the countenance both for outward senses and inward affections But is the head the seat of the soul It is thought that in regard of the essence of it all of it is over all and every part of the body as fire is in hot iron but howsoever the severall faculties thereof appear in the severall parts of the body yet the heart is to be accompted the speciall seat of the soul not only in regard of life being the first part of man that liveth and the last that dieth but for affections also and knowledge as appeareth by 1 Kings 3. 9. 12. Mat. 15. 18 19. Rom. 2. 15. 10. 10. 1 Pet. 3. 4. Is there many or one soul in man There is but one having those faculties in it of vegetation and sense that are called souls in plants and beasts What reason have you for this saying Otherwise there should be divers essentiall forms in man God breathed but one breathing though it be called the breathing of lives Gen. 2. 7. for the divers lives and faculties In all Scripture there is mention but of one soul in man Mat. 26. 38. Acts. 7. 59. When may the soul be truly said to come or be in the body of a child When in all essentiall parts it is a perfect body as Adams was when God gave him his soul. What be the faculties of the soul The Understanding under which is the Memory though it be rather one of the inward senses then one of the principall faculties of the soul and the Conscience The Will under which are the Affections So there be five speciall faculties What is meant by the image of God after which man was made Gen. 1. 26 27. Not any bodily shape as though God had a body like man but the divine state wherein his soul was created How many ways is the image of God taken in Scripture Either for Christ as Col. 1. 15. Heb. 1. 3. Joh. 12. 45. 14. 9. or for the glory of mans lively personage as Gen. 9. 6. or for his authority over the woman as 1 Cor. 11. 7. or for the perfection of his nature indued with reason and will rightly disposed in holinesse and righteousnesse wisdome and truth and accordingly framing all motions and actions both inward and outward Col. 3. 9 10. Eph. 4. 24. How is it here then to be taken It may be taken either strictly and properly or more largely and generally What is the strictest and most proper acception of it When it is taken for that integrity of nature which was
not those spirituall creatures sinning against him neither will he spare us rebelling against his Majesty 2 Pet. 2. 4. Thirdly to feare to offend God that hath such messengers to send at his command Fourthly to learn to arm our selves with the shield of faith and fear of God since we have such great enemies to fight against Eph. 6. 11. 1 Pet. 5. 9. Fifthly to be comforted that though the Devill be powerfull and most malicious against us yet Christ hath broken his head Gen. 3. 15. and at last will tread Satan under our feet Rom. 16. ●0 Thus much of the providence that concerneth Angels Shew now how God doth deale with man As with that creature in whom above all other he intendeth to set forth the glory of his Wisdome Power Justice and Mercy Prov. 8. 31. Psal. 8. 3. c. 1 Cor. 9. 9 10. and therefore the Scriptures doe most plentifully declare the dealing of God with man both in the time of this world and for ever hereafter How is man upheld in his being Two wayes First as all other bodily creatures partly by maintenance of every mans life here on earth for the time alotted by God himselfe Acts 17. 28. Ps. 36. 6. 1 Tim. 4. 10. Partly by propagation of kind unto the end of the world through the blessing of procreation Gen. 1. 28. Eccl. 1. 4. Secondly as Angels after a sort God so providing that though the body of man returneth to the earth from whence it was taken yet the soule perisheth not but returneth to God that gave it Eccl. 12. 7. yea that the same body also and every part thereof is preserved in the grave and shall be joyned intire to the soule at the last day so to continue for ever Job 19. 26 27. How manifold is the state wherein man is to be considered Threefold first the state of innocencie commonly had and lost of all mankind both elect and reprobate without difference Eccl. 7. Secondly the state of corruption and miserie seising on all men naturally but abiding without recoverie only in the Reprobate Rom. 3. 23. Thirdly the state of Redemption proper to the elect 1 Pet. 2. 9. Psal. 130. 8. All which doe make way unto that finall and everlasting estate of honour or dishonour fore-appointed unto all men beginning at the end of this life perfected at the day of judgement and continuing for ever in the world to come And thus touching this part of Gods providence the Scriptures doe teach us both the benefits of God bestowed upon man before his fall and likewise his justice and mercy towards him after his fall his justice upon the Reprobate who are left without hope of restitution and reserved together with the Devills unto everlasting punishment Matth. 25. 41. Rev. 20. 10. 15. His mercy upon the elect who notwithstanding their fall are restored again by grace Gen. 3. 15. Is it not likely that all the visible world together with man is fallen without hope of restitution by mercy Yes for it standeth well with the justice of God that seeing the visible world was made for the use of man Gen. 2. 9. that with the fall of man it should be punished Gen. 3. 17 18. and with his raising up be restored Rom. 8. 20 21 22. What is that speciall order of government which God useth towards mankind in this world and in the world to come In this world he ordereth them according to the tenor of a two-fold Covenant in the world to come according to the sentence of a two-fold judgement What understand you by a Covenant An agreement which it pleaseth Almighty God to enter into with man concerning his everlasting condition What be the parts of this agreement Two the one is the Covenant that God maketh with us the other is the Covenant that we make with God the summ of the former is that he will be our God of the latter that we will be his people Jer. 31. 33. What gather you from the former The sir-name of God as it is in divers places of Scripture and namely Exod. 3. 15. where it is said The Lord God of your Fathers the God of Abraham the God of Isaac the God of Jacob hath sent me unto you this is my name for ever and this is my memoriall unto all generations from whence we may observe the singular glory and priviledge of Gods people in that God is content to take his sir-name of them Heb. 11. 16. Why is this sir-name added For that it is a fearfull thing to think of the proper name of God alone unlesse this be added to it whereby he declareth his love and kindnesse to us What gather you from the latter That man standeth bound by these Covenants of agreement to perform that duty which God requireth at his hands How many such Covenants be there Two First the Law and Covenant of works Secondly the free promise or Covenant of grace which from the comming of Christ is called the Gospell Rom. 10. 5 6. Gal. 3. 11 12. Which of them was first The Law for it was given to Adam in his integrity when the promise of grace was hidden in God How so since it is said that the Law was first given to Moses That is to be understood of the written Law as it was written by Moses and ingraven in tables of stone by the finger of God otherwise the same was imprinted in the beginning in the hearts of our first parents and therefore it is called the Law of nature Rom. 2. 14. How was this Law given unto Adam in the beginning It was chiefly written in his heart at his creation and partly also uttered in his eare in Paradise for unto him was given a will both to good and also to evill and also to be inclined thereto with ability to perform it There was something likevvise outwardly revealed as his duty to God in the sanctification of the Sabbath to his neighbour in the institution of marriage and to himselfe in his dayly working about the garden How doth it appeare that the substance of the Morall Law was written in the hearts of Adam and Eve First by the effect of it in them both who immediately after their fall were forced by the onely guilt of conscience not yet otherwise charged to hide themselves from Gods presence Gen. 3. 8. Secondly by the remainders thereof in all mankind who even without the Law are by light of nature a Law unto themselves Gen. 4. 6. Rom. 2. 14 15. How hath the Morall Law been delivered since the fall The summe thereof was comprised in ten words Exod. 34. 28. Deut. 4. 13. commonly called the Decalogue or ten Commandements solemnly published and engraved in tables of stone by God himself Deut. 10. 4. Afterwards the same was more fully delivered in the books of holy Scripture and so committed to the Church for all ages as the Royall Law for direction of obedience to God our King Jam.
their labours 2 Thes. 1. 9. and a Crowne after their Combate 2 Tim. 4. 8. and after their long pilgrimage an everlasting habitation 2 Cor. 5. 1 Be patient saith the Apole and settle your hearts for the comming of the Lord draweth neere 2 Pet. 2. 9. when they that have sowne in teares shall reap in joy James 5. 7. Heb. 10. 36. Thirdly from this Doctrine excellent arguments may be drawne to presse Christians to a holy life 2 Pet. 3. 11. Seeing then all these things must be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse And verse 14. Wherefore seeing yee look for such things give diligence that you may be found of him in peace We should alwayes live in expectation of the Lord Iesus in the Clouds with oyle in our Lamps prepared for his comming Blessed is that servant whom his Master when he commeth shall finde so doing he shall say unto him Well done good and faithfull servant enter into thy Masters joy FINIS The Table ALL men desire eternall life and happinesse 3 Religion the meanes to obtaine it No salvation but by true Religion The divers kindes of false Religion What Christian Religion is Of Catechising 4 What Catechising is Where to be used and by whom The necessity of it True happinesse consisteth in God How we come to enjoy God Meanes to know God By His divine works His holy word 5 Of the divine workes of God The uses of knowing God by his works Of Gods holy Word the Scriptures 6 How the Scriptures were delivered By Revelations By Oracles By visions 7 What the Scripture is That the Scriptures are the Word of God 8 Reasons to prove God to be the Author of the holy Scriptures 1. Efficient instrumentall 2. The simplicitie and sincerity of the Writers 3. The quality and condition of the pen-men of the holy Scriptures 9 4. The holy matters of holy Scriptures 5. The doctrine of Scriptures are above humane capacity 6. The concord of the severall Writers one with another 7. The Prophesies fulfilled in their due times 8. The Majesty and authority of the Scriptures 10 9. The motives used in them to perswade not reason but commands 10. The end and scope of the Scripture which is Gods glory 11. Their admirable power 12. Their antiquity 13. The hatred of the devill and wicked men against them 14. The preservation of the Scriptures 15. The power to humble a man and raise him up againe 16. The consonant testimony of all men at all times 11 17. The knowne miracles done by the Writers 18. The testimony of the Spirit in the hearts of men What are the books of holy Scripture 12 In what language the old Testament were first written with vowels and pricks That the Scriptures of the old Testament were first written without pricks or vowels 13 The Book of Moses The Booke of the Prophets The Historicall Books The Doctrinall Books The Poeticall books The Prosaicall books 14 The Apocryphall Bookes The erroors of the Apocryphall books 15 Of the books of the New Testament 16 The properties of the holy scriptures 17 1. Holy 2. Highest in authority 18 3. Sufficient in themselves That the Scriptures are a perfect Rule for doctrine life and salvation Objections against the sufficiency of the holy Scriptures answered 20 Of the perspicuity of the holy Scripture 21 The Papists objections against the perspicuity of the Scriptures answered 22 Why God hath left some places of Scripture obscure 23 Of the translations of holy Scriptures An objection grounded on various readings answered 24 Why the Scriptures must be expounded by the Scriptures The use of the holy Scriptures 25 Who must read the Scriptures That all must read the Scriptures proved The Papists objections against reading the Scriptures answered 26 That there is a God 27 Of the nature of God 29 Of Gods essence 30 The Name of God Of the Properties or Attributes of God 32 A description of God God is a spirit 33 The perfection of God The felicity of God Of the simplenesse or singlenesse of God 35 Gods infinitenesse 36 Gods immensity or greatnesse 37 Gods eternity 38 The life of God 39 Of the knowledge or wisedome of God Fore-knowledge or counsell of God The counsell of God Gods absolute wisdome and knowledge The uses 45 Of the omnipotence or almighty power of God Of Gods absolute power 47 Of Gods actuall power Gods power infinite The uses 50 Of Gods will Whether God doth will evill 56 The holinesse of Gods will 61 Of Gods goodnesse The use of Gods goodnesse 62 The graciousnesse of God 63 Of the love of God 64 Uses of Gods love 67 Of the mercy of God The uses of Gods mercy Of the justice of God 70 The uses of Gods justice 72 That there is but one God 73 Of the unity of the God-head Of the Trinity 75 What a Person in the Trinity is 78 Of the Father the first person of the Trinity 79 Of the other persons of the Trinity in generall Of the second person in the Trinity 80 Of the third person in the Trinity 83 How to know that wee have the Spirit 86 Things commune to the three persons 87 In what they all agree 1. Coessentiall 2. Coequall 3. Coeternall Things proper to each of the persons Of the kingdome of God 88 The parts of Gods Kingdome Of Gods decree Of Predestination 91 Parts of Predestination Election Reprobation Election Of Reprobation Execution of Gods decree 93 Creation Providence Creation in generall Vses of the creation Creation of the particular creatures The Heavens The earth Of the invisible Creatures the third Heaven and Angels Of Angels Of the creation of visible things 98 Of the Chaos or rude masse Of the parts of the rude Masse Heaven Earth Of the frame of the world Of the Elements The foure Elements Of the mixt or compound bodies The severall works of the six days 100 The 1. day heaven earth and the light The 2. day the firmament The third day grasse corne trees Of the water and earth The 4. day of the Creation of lights 101 The 5. day of the creation of fishes birds The 6. day of the creation of man and woman 102 Of the parts of man and 1. Of his body 2. Of the soule of man 103 Of the immortality of the soule Of the seat of the soule What is the Image of God in man 104 Of the womans creation 106 The end of the creation Of Gods providence 107 Definition of Gods providence 108 The uses of the Doctrine of Gods providence 115 Of Gods speciall providence over Angels Good Angels 116 Of the Evill Angels 120 Vses of the Doctrine concerning evill Angells 122 Of Gods particular providence over man Of Gods providence towards mankind 123 Of the Covenant between God and man First Covenant of works 124 The state of man in the time of his innocency 126 Of man in the state of corruption and of his fall 127
King 4. 33. Mat. 10. 29 30. The uses Of the Omnipotency or almighty power of God Gods absolute power Gods actuall power Gods power Infinite The uses Of Gods will Whether God doth will evil 1 Cor. 10. 31. The holinesse of Gods will Esa. 6. 3. Psal. 145. 17. Of gods goodnesse 1 Tim. 2. 2. The uses of Gods goodnesse The graciousnesse of God Of the love of God Uses of Gods love Of the mercy of God The uses of Gods Mercy Of the Justice of God The uses of Gods Justice Of the Trinity What a person in the Trinity is Vide Melanchthon loc com Of the Father the first Person of the Trinity Of the other Persons of the Trinity in generall Of the second Person in the Trinity Of the third Person in the Trinity Prov. 8. 3. How to know that we have the Spirit How to keep the Spirit Things common to the three persons In what they all agree 1. Coc-essentiall 2. Co-equall 3. Co-eternall Things proper to each of the Persons Of the Kingdome of God The parts of Gods Kingdome Of Gods Decree Of Predestination Parts of Predestination Election Reprobation Election Reprobation Execution of Gods decree Creation Providence Creation in generall Uses of the Creation The creation of the particular creatures The Heavens Of the earth Of the invisible creatures The third heaven and Angels Of Angels Of the creation of visible things Of the Chaos or rude masse Of the parts of the rude masse Of the frame of the world Of the Elements The foure Elements Of the mixt or compounded bodies The severall works of the six dayes The first day Heaven and earth and the light The second day The Firmament The third day Grasse corne trees Of the water and earth The fourth day The creation of the lights The fift day Of the creation of fishes and birds The sixt day Of the creation of man and woman Of the parts of man and first of the body Of the soul of Man The immortality of the soul. Of the seat of the soul. What is the Image of God in Man Of Gods Providence Definition of Gods Providence The uses of the doctrine of Gods Providence Of Gods special providence over Angels Good Angels Of the evill Angels Uses of the doctrine concerning evill Angels Of Gods particular providence over man Of Gods providence towards mankind Of the Covenant between God and man 1. Covenant of works The state of man in the time of his Innocency Of man in the state of corruption and of his fall That the breach of all the Commandements concurred in Adams and Eves sin The effects of the fall Sin guiltinesse punishment Of our first parents nakednesse Of their hiding themselves Hab. 3. 2. Of sin Why all Adams posterity are partakers of his sin and misery What sin is Imputed sin Inherent sin Originall sin a Gal. 3. 22. Rom. 8. 3. b Phil. 3. 9. Tit. 3. 5. The propagation of originall sin The mind corrupted The corruption of the memory The corruption of the will The corruption of the affections The corruption of the conscience Of the corruption of the body Actuall sin Of the sin against the holy Ghost Of the divers differences of actuall sins Guilt of sin Punishment of sin Of Gods Covenants with man Of the Covenant of grace The differences between the Covenant of works and and the Covenant of grace Wherein they agree Of Jesus the Mediatour of this Covenant The foundation of it Of the person of Christ. The natures of Christ. Divine Humane Of the divine nature of Christ. Why it was requisite that Christ should be God Of the humane nature of Christ. Why it was requisire that Christ should be Man Of the union of the two natures of Christ. Of Christs office of Mediatorship That there is but one Mediatour Of his names Jesus Christ. Mar. 9. 23. Luke 4. 18. Joh. 3. 34. Of Christs Priesthood The Popish Priesthood overthrown 1 Sam. 2. 25. Of Christs Satisfaction Of Christs sufferings Esa. 53. 10. Christs sufferings in his soul. Christs sufferings in his body Uses of Christs Passion Christs buriall His descending into hell Christs righteousnesse in fulfilling the Law Christs originall righteousnesse Christs actuall holinesse Of the intercession of Christ. Of the Propheticall office of Christ. Of the Kingly office of Christ. Act. 2. 9. Mat. 25. 24. 31. 33 34. Of Christs Humiliation Of Christs Exaltation Of the Resurrection of Christ. Phil. 3. 10. Of Christs Ascension Heb. 10. 20. Of the third degree of Christs Exaltation His sitting at the right hand of God The state of the godly in Christ. Mat. 13. 15. Acts 14. 16. 17. 30. Of the Church of Christ. Eph. 1. 1. 5. 23. Col. 1. 21. 27. Catholick Church Gal. 4. 26. 1 Pet. 1. 13. 14 15 16 17. Lev. 20. 7. The property and office of the head of the Church The triumphant Church The Church militant Prerogatives of the members of the Catholick Church VVhat Sanctification is VVhat Redemption is Of our Vnion and Communion with Christ. Communion of Saints Rom. 12. 13. 1 Ioh. 1. 17. Eph. 4. 3. The benefit of our Communion with Christ. Justification Glorification Of Justification and first what Justificaon is Vses arising from the doctrine of Justification Of Faith The various acceptions of Faith The divers kinds of Faith Historicall Faith Temporary Faith Miraculous Faith Justifying Faith The Popish implicite faith confuted That the whole soule is the seat of Faith What Reconciliation is What Adoption is The benefits of Adoption Sanctification The differences between Justification and Sanctification Eph. 1. 19. 2. 1. 2 Cor. 3. 18. 2 Pet. 3. 18. Phil. 3. 16. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. Job 22. 22. Joh. 17. 17. Eph. 4. 20 21. The differences between the Law and the Gospel * John 5. 23. 14. 1. Mat. 19. 23. The Morall law the rule of Sanctificatiō * Deut. 10. 4. Ceremoniall Law Judiciall Law The Morall Law The end and use of the Law 1. Knowledge of the Law required Rules to be observed for the interpretation of the Law 1. Rule The Law is spirituall 2. Rule That the Law is perfect 3. Rule In every Commandement there is a Metaphor or Synecdoche 1. Branch of the third Rule 2. Branch 3. Branch Why the Commandements are propounded in the second person Good company required Why the Commandements are propounded negatively The division of the Decalogue The sum of the first Table The summe of the second Table The division of the first Table The Preface of the Commandements How the reason of the first Commandement belongs to us The first Commandement The scope and meaning of this Commandement What is forbidden and required in this first Commandement The severall branches of the first Commandement What it is to have a God Of the knowledge of God Opposites to the knowledge of God Ignorance of God Affiance in God Patience Hope Love of God Thankfulnesse Feare of God Reverence Humility Pride Sorrow Ioy. Vnity in Religion What it is
places in heaven and in earth and the sea and hell all at one time neither can he be contained in any compasse of place as is a man or Angel or any other creature but he is in all places and filleth all places at once and is beyond all compasse of place that we can imagine 1 King 8. 27. Ps. 139. 7. 145. 3. Job 9. 7. Esa. 66. 1. 40. 12. Jer. 23. 24. Is God every where bodily No for he hath no body Is God every where in speculation only No for he worketh in every thing which he beholdeth How then is he every where He is every where essentially for his essence is not contained in any place because he is incomprehensible Doth he not remove himselfe from place to place He filleth heaven and earth and all places therefore he can neither depart from any place nor be absent from any place Is he not half in one half of the world half in the other half of the world No but as the whole soul is in the whole body and every part thereof so God is whole and wholly in every part of the world Obj 1. If God be every where essentially then he is in the most filthiest sink and puddle It is no abasing of the glory of his Majesty to say that he is there no more then it is to the Sun whose beams and light are there or to a Physitian to be amongst those that are sick All the creatures of God in themselves are exceeding good and when he is in the most filthiest sink in the world he is not in a more filthy then our selves whether we be sick or sound They are his workmanship and it is no abasement of the workmaster to be amongst his works Obj. 2. If God be every where why is it said he dwelleth in the heavens Psal. 2. 4. Because his glory and Majesty which is every where alike shineth most perspicuously and visibly in heaven Obj. 3. It is said Numb 14. 42. he is not amongst the wicked He is not amongst them with his grace and favour to protect and defend them but otherwise by his power and providence he is amongst them to bridle their raging affections to plague their furious obstinacie and dispose of their desperate attempts to his own glory and good of his people Obj. 4. If God be every where at the same instant of time how is he said to be sometimes near sometimes farther off Esa. 56. 6. God is said to be near unto us when by his word or any other means he offereth us grace and favour by them and when he heareth and granteth our prayers as Moses saith Deut. 4. 7. What nation is there so great who have God so nigh unto them as the Lord God is in all things that we call upon him for Obj. 5. If God be in hell then all goodnesse is there for he is all goodnesse and so consequently there is no want of joy in the damned The damned in hell feel no part of his goodnesse that is of his mercy and loving favour but of his power and justice So that God is in hell by his power and in his wrath To what purpose and use serveth this doctrine of the immensity or infinite greatnesse of God The consideration thereof should put us in mind that nothing which is vile and base should be offered unto God in the worship of him Secondly it serveth to drive all grosse and idolatrous conceits of God out of our minds and to detect and bewray the impiety and blasphemy of those persons who either by making of pictures as they thought of God or by maintaining of them being made or by suffering them to stand still without defacing especially if it be known have thereby denied God to be incomprehensible For those pictures and resemblances of God which ignorant men have forged in their own brain doe tell us and say that God may be comprehended and contained within a place yea in a small place or in any place as a man or other creature which is most high blasphemy against the Majesty of Almighty God What is his eternity It is an essentiall property of God whereby his essence is exempted from all measure of time and therefore is the first and the last without either beginning or end of dayes 1 Tim. 1. 17. Esa. 41. 4. 44. 6. Psal. 90. 2. Rev. 1. 8. 11. In what respect is God called eternall in the Scriptures That he hath been from all eternity without beginning is now and shall be for all eternity without end That all times are present with him continually and so nothing former nor latter nothing past nor to come That he is the Author of everlastingnesse unto others because he hath promised to give his children of his eternall goodnesse and to have a continuall care of them through all eternity and will have a Kingdome in Angels and men whereof shall be no end Is it necessary that we should know this Yea that we may here stay our selves with the certain hope of eternall life grounded upon his eternity How may that hope be grounded upon his eternity Very well for God being eternall he can for ever preserve us and seeing he hath promised he will for ever preserve us Ps. 48. 14. 103. 17. Hereby likewise are we strengthned not only in the immortality of our soule but also in the immortality of our bodies after the resurrection considering that by his everlastingnesse he giveth continuall beeing to such of his creatures as he is pleased to give a perpetuall continuance unto Why else is God said to be eternall That so he might be discerned from all other things created for nothing is like unto God as the Scriptures testifie Esa. 40. 18. Psalm 113. 45. How is God said to be alone everlasting seeing Angels and soules of men shall be also everlasting In regard of the time to come they are everlasting but not in regard of the time past for though they shall continue alwayes yet they had their beginning which cannot be said of God who therefore is called Alpha and Omega Rev. 1. 8. Their continuance is such as it is not absolute and by it selfe but proceeding from the power of God who is able if so he pleased to give unto them an end as well as a beginning in which respect God is said onely to have immortality 1 Tim. 6. 16. Is it necessary we hold God to be eternall that so he may be discerned from all things created Yea we hold it in that respect for two causes First because certain hereticks have thought either all the creatures or some of the creatures at least to be derived from the very nature and essence of God by propagation as children from their mothers womb Secondly that all idolatrous cogitations of God may be excluded out of our minds What is the life of God It is an essentiall property of God whereby the divine nature
Such as are made of the four Elements equally mingled together How many kinds be there of them The things that have 1. A being without life 2. A being and life without sense 3. A being life and sense without reason 4. A being life sense and reason as man What is common to the three last kinds That together with life there is power and vertue given unto them to bring forh the like unto themselves for the continuance of their kind which blessing of multiplication is principally in the two last sorts of creatures that have the life of sense beside the life of increase and therefore the Lord is brought in to speak to them in the second person Gen. 1. 22. 28. which he did not to the grasse corne and trees which are creatures of the second kind What learn you from hence That the chiefe and speciall cause of the continuance of every kind of creature to the worlds end is this will and word of God without the which they or sundry of them would have perished ere this by so many means as are to consume them Declare now in order the severall works of the six dayes and shew first what was done the first day The rude masse or matter of heaven and earth being made of nothing the first night of the world as hath been declared God did afterward create the light and called it day Gen. 13 4 5. What note you hereof The wonderfull work of God not onely in making something of nothing but bringing light out of darknesse 2 Cor. 4. 6. which are contrary and distinguishing betwixt day and night before either Sun or Moon were created What was the work of the second day The Firmament was created to divide the waters above from the waters below What was done the third day The third night as it seemed God caused the waters to retire into their vessels and severed them from the dry land calling the one seas the other earth Then in the third day which followed that night he clad the earth with grasse for the use of beasts only corn and trees for the use of man also What shape is the water and earth of They both together make a round globe Whether is the water or the earth bigger The water Why then doe they not overwhelme the earth They are restrained and kept in by the mighty power of God How many sorts of waters be there Two salt waters as the sea and fresh waters as floods springs lakes c. What be the parts of the earth First Hills Secondly Valleys and Plaines How many benefits doe you receive by the earth in generall Foure First we are made of the earth Secondly we dwell on the earth Thirdly it giveth fruits and nourishment to all living creatures Fourthly it is our bed after death What benefit receive you by the hills They are a shadow against storms and heat they be fit for grasing of cattle they are fit places to set Beacons on to shew that the enemies are at hand c. What benefits receive you by the Valleyes and Plaines 1. They receive water to water the earth 2. They are most fit places to bring forth all kind of fruit and herbes and grasse How cometh it to pass that God first maketh the grass corne and trees ere he made the heavenly bodies of the Sunne Moon and Starres from whose influence the growth of these proceedeth To correct our errour which tye the increase of these so to the influence of the heavenly bodies even to the worshipping of them therein forgetting the Lord who thereby sheweth that all hang upon him and not on them forasmuch as he made them when the heavenly bodies were not What doe you gather from hence That the fruitfulness of the earth standeth not so much in the labour of the husband-man as in the power which God hath given the earth to bring forth fruit Thus much of the works of the 3d. day what was made the 4th day Lights which are as it were certain vessels wherein the Lord did gather the light which before was scater'd in the whole body of the heavens How are these lights distinguished Although they be all great in themselves to the end they might give light to the dark earth that is farre removed from them yet are they distinguished into Great Small Sunne Moon Starres Why doth Moses call the Sun and Moon the greatest lights when there are Starres that exceed the Moon by many degrees First because they are greatest in their use and vertue that they exercise upon the terrestriall bodies Secondly because they seem so to us it being the purpose of the Holy Ghost by Moses to apply himselfe to the capacity of the unlearned What is the use of them First to separate the day from the night Secondly to be signs of seasons and dayes and yeares Thirdly to send forth their influences upon the whole earth and to give light to the inhabitants thereof How are they signs of times and seasons First by distinguishing the time spring summer autumne winter by their work and naturall effect upon the earthly creatures Secondly by distinguishing the night from the day the day from month the month from the yeare Have they not operation also in the extraordinary events of singular things and persons for their good and evill estate No verily there is no such use taught of them in the Scriptures What creatures were made the fift day Fishes and birds What were the fishes made of Of all four Elements but more it seemeth of the water then other living things Gen. 1. 20. VVhat were the birds made of Of all foure Elements yet have more of the earth Gen. 2. 19. and therefore that they are so light and that their delight is in the ayre it is so much the more marvellous VVhat did God make in the sixt and the last day of Creation It is probable that he made in the Night thereof the beasts of the earth going creeping Tame or home-beasts Wilde or field-beasts Day man in both sexes that is both man and woman the history of whose creation is set down Gen. 1 26 27. in the discourse of the sixt days work and repeated in cap. 2. v. 7. and more at large after the narration of the Lords rest in the seventh day vers 18 19 20 c. Why was man last made of all the creatures 1. Because he was the most excellent of all the works of God in this inferiour world 2. Because he was the end of all unreasonable creatures and therefore that he might glorifie God for all the creatures that he saw the world was furnished with for his sake 3. Because God would have him first provided for ere he brought him into the world that so he might have this world for which God had made him Prince as it were his Palace furnished with all things convenient and if he had care
Nature 4. Fortune and luck 5. Casualty and chance 6. Destiny 7. Free-will How manifold is Necessity Two-fold 1. Absolute necessity the contrary whereof cannt be 2. Necessity with a condition which is such as puts down the cause the effect followeth but take away the cause the effect ceaseth How prove you that God hath a government in things that come by chance and casualtie Prov. 16. 33. The lots are cast in the bosome yet the issue of them and their event hang upon the Lord. Exod. 21. 13. Deut. 19. 13. Is there not then any fortune or chance of things in the world Not in respect of God by whose appointment the very haires of our heads are governed and numbred but in respect of man that knoweth not future things the Scripture useth such words to shew the suddennesse and uncertainty of a thing Exod. 21. 13. Eccl. 9. 11. Luk. 10. 31. Doe the creatures ever since the first six dayes continue of themselves being onely governed of God No the creation still is after a manner continued in that all things are sustained by the same power whereby they were made for God is is not like a builder that is the cause onely of the making and not of the being of his building but he is such a cause of being to all creatures as the Sunne is of light unto the day so that without his continuall working all would return to nothing What proofe have you of this continuall working of God Our Saviour saith John 5. 17. my Father worketh untill this time and I also work meaning in continuance and preservation of all creatures For in him we live move and have our being Acts 17. 25 26 27 28. And the Apostle testifieth Heb. 1. 3. That our Saviour Christ by whom the world were made beareth up all things and upholdeth them in their being with the word of his power his mighty word Thus Moses teacheth how the Lord established the continuance and preservation of all the creatures in the world both living and void of life Gen. 1. So doth the Prophet also in the 104. Psal. 119. 91. How doth God sustain all creatures Partly by the continuation of particulars either for the whole time of this world as heaven and heavenly bodies earth and other Elements c. 2 Pet. 3. 4. or for the time of life allotted as all living creatures Psal. 36. 6. Psal. 104. 27 c. Partly by propagation of kind whereby creatures even of shortest continuance doe successively abide unto the end of the world Gen. 7. 3. 8. 21 22. Thus God sustaineth and preserveth all that he hath made how doth he govern and dispose of them God ordereth all his creatures according to his pleasure guiding and imploying them and their natures to those severall ends and uses whereby they may best serve unto his glory Ps. 119. 91. Dan. 4. 34 35. and the good of themselves and of their fellow creatures especially of man Ps. 8. but he hath one generall manner of government belonging to all and another speciall which is proper to the principall creatures How doth God work in all the creatures generally First he doth move and stirre up that power which he hath given the creatures unto working Secondly he doth assist direct and help it in working of that which is good Thirdly he doth work together and give being unto that which is wrought What are the principall creatures you speak of The reasonable creatures Angels and Men which were created like unto God in a high estate of holinesse and happinesse Psal. 8. 4 5. 103. 20. 104. 4. Luke 2. 13. Mat. 25. 31. How commeth it to passe that there is a particular kind of government for the reasonable creatures above others Because that they are creatures of another nature then the rest being not only acted and moved in one course as the other are but having a power of understanding what doth concern them and of moving themselves accordingly What government doth follow hereupon That which is by teaching and answerable fulfilling of that which is taught How by teaching By instructing commanding praising forbidding promising threatning and permitting How by fulfilling Especially by blessing and cursing What is the manner of Gods working in his providence It is sometimes ordinary other times extraordinary What is the ordinary course of Gods providence When he bringeth things to passe by ordinary meanes and that course which he hath setled in nature Esa. 55. 10. What is the extraordinary When he bringeth things to passe either without meanes or by means of themselves too weak or beside the course of such means and course of nature which works are usually called Miracles May we indifferently expect Gods extraordinary working as we may his ordinary No where ordinary means be had we cannot look for an extraordinary work What doe they that run unto the immediate and extraordinary providence of God without necessary occasions They doe tempt God How many wayes is God tempted First by distrust Secondly by presumption When is God tempted by Distrust When men think that God either cannot or will not fulfill his promises When is God tempted with Presumption When men depend upon the immediate providence of God without any warrant of the word so to doe How many sorts of men doe thus tempt God First they that doe wastfully mis-spend their goods Secondly they that having received gifts of mind and strength of body doe not use them in some lawfull calling for the maintenance of them but doe live idlely Thirdly they that make an occupation of dicing and carding and such like Fourthly they that thrust themselves upon unnecessary dangers Fifthly they which take pains for the maintenance of their bodies in this life but have no care of those things which belong to the salvation of their soules in the life to come What are the means by which God doth use to exercise his providence Two the first passive the second active What call you passive means Those which although the Lord doth use them yet have no knowledge nor understanding to move or direct themselves but are wholly moved and directed by God What call you active meanes Those which although God useth yet have reason knowledge and understanding in themselves how to move or direct themselves such are men and Angels whether they be good or evill Doth God work after the same manner by the wicked that he doth by the godly No for God worketh by the wicked but not in them as for the godly he worketh not only by them but also in them wherby it cometh to passe that the work of the godly is acceptable unto God but the work of the wicked is not acceptable unto God although they doe the same thing which the godly doth How can it be shewed out of the Scriptures that God hath a hand whereby he governeth even the transgressor against his holy will Gen. 45. 8. Is is expresly said that God did send Joseph before into
onely be directed by Gods holy word How is the Memory corrupted First with dulnesse and forgetfulnesse of all good things that we should remember notwithstanding we have learned them often Secondly with readines to remember that we should not and to retain errors and vanities as tales and playes much more then godly matters What use make you hereof As first to bewaile the defects of our understanding so to lament our forgetfulnesse of good things Secondly to distrust the faithfulnesse or strength of our memories in hearing and learning good things and to use all good helps we can as often repeating them writing and meditating on them Thirdly not to clogge our memories with vanities for which we should rather desire the art of forgetfulnesse How is the Will corrupted First with a disablenesse and impotency to will any thing that is good in it selfe Rom. 5. 6. Phil. 2. 13. Secondly with slavery to sin and Satan the will being so enthralled Rom. 6. 20. 7. 23. and hardened Eph. 4. 18. that it onely desireth and lusteth after that which is evill Gen. 6. 5. Job 15. 16. Thirdly with rebellion against God and any thing that is good Rom. 8. 7. What use are we to make hereof First that we have no free will left in us since Adams fall for heavenly matters Secondly that for the conversion either of our selves or any other we must not look for it from man but pray to God to convert man who worketh in us both the will and the deed Phil. 2. 13. Heb. 2. 5. as the Prophet saith Convert thou me and I shall be converted Lam. 5. 21. How are the affections corrupted The affections of the heart which are many as love and hatred joy and sorrow hope and feare anger desire c. are subject to corruption and disturbance Gal. 5. 24. James 4. 15. Job 15. 16. First by being set upon unmeet objects in affecting and being inclined to the things they should not be and not to those they should thus we hate good and love evill 1 Kings 22. 8. And in a word our affections naturally are moved and stirred to that which is evill to embrace it and are never stirred up to that which is good unlesse it be to eschew it Secondly by disorder and excesse even when we doe affect naturally good things as for our own injuries we are more angry then for Gods dishonour when we are merrie we are too merrie when sad too sad c. What use make you of the disorder of the affections First to keep our selves from all occasions to incense them to sinne whereunto they are as prone as the tinder to the fire Secondly to labour to mortifie them in our selves that we may be in regard thereof pure Nazarites before God Gal. 5. 24. Col. 3. 5. How is the conscience corrupted It is distempered and defiled Tit. 1. 15. both in giving direction in things to be done and in giving judgment upon things done How in the former It sometime giveth not direction at all and thereupon maketh a man to sin in doing of an action otherwise good and lawfull Rom. 14. 23. sometime it giveth direction but a wrong one and so becometh a blind guide forbidding to doe a thing which God alloweth and commanding to doe things which God hateth 1 Cor. 8. 7. Col. 2. 21. John 16. 2. How in the latter When it either giveth no Judgement at all being left without feeling or when it hath an evill feeling and sense How is it left without feeling When it is so senselesse and benummed with sin that it never checketh a man for any sin Eph. 4. 18 19. called a cauterized conscience 1 Tim. 4. 2. which reseth from the custome of sinning Heb. 3. 13. How doth it faile when it hath a feeling but a naughty one Sometimes in excusing sometimes in accusing How in excusing First when it excuseth for things sinfull making them no sinnes or small sins and so feeding the mind with vain comforts Mark 10. 20. Gen. 3. 10. 12. Secondly when as it excuseth us for having a good intent without any warrant of Gods word 1 Chron. 13. 9. How in accusing First when for want of time direction and lightening it condemneth for doing good as a Papist for going to Sermons condemning where it should excuse and so filling the mind with false feares Secondly when accusing for sin it doth it excessively turmoyling a man with inward accusations and terrors Esa. 57. 20. and drawing him to despair by such excessive terror as may be seen in Cain and Judas What use are we to make of this confusion of the conscience First seeing it doth thus abuse us we are never to make it a warrant of our actions unlesse it be directed by Gods word Secondly we are to feare the terror of the great Judge of heaven and earth when we are so often and so grievously terrified with our little Judge that is in our soul. What corruption hath the body received by originall sinne It is become a ready instrument to serve the sinfull soule having both a pronenesse to any sin the soul affecteth and likewise an eagernes to commit it and continue in it Rom. 6. 12. 19. whereby it is come to passe that the bodily senses and members are 1. As Porters to let in sin Job 31. 1. Psal. 119. 37. Matth. 5. 29 30. 2. The instruments and tooles of the mind for the execution of sinne Rom. 3. 13 14 15 6. 13. VVhat use are we to make of this doctrine of originall sinne First the due knowledge thereof serveth to humble the pride of man remembring that he is conceived in so sinfull a sort that howsoever the branches of his actions may seem green yet is he rotten at the root Secondly it should move him with all speed to seek for regeneraon by Christ seeing he hath so corrupt a generation by Adam VVhat is actuall sinne It is a violation of Gods Commandements done by us after the manner of Adams transgression Rom. 5. 14. to wit a particular breach of Gods Law in the course of our life which proceedeth as an evill fruit from our naturall corruption and leaveth a stain in the soule behind it Jer. 13. 23. which polluteth the sinner and disposeth him to further evill How is such sin committed Either inwardly or outwardly How inwardly First by evill thoughts in the mind which come either by a mans own conceiving Gen. 6. 5. Matth. 15. 19. or by the suggestion of the Devill John 13. 2. Acts 5. 3. 1 Chron. 21. 1. Secondly by evill motions and lusts stirring in the heart against the righteousnesse of the Law which condemneth the very first motions of evill that arise from our corrupt nature How outwardly By evill words and deeds Esa. 3. 8. which arise from the corrupt thoughts and motions of the heart when any occasion is given Matth. 15. 19. So that the imagination of mans heart the words of
unlawfull to make the Image of God First because God being Infinite and Invisible cannot without a lye bee resembled by any Finite or visible thing Acts 17. 20. Secondly God by such Images is as it were mocked Rom. 1. 23. Thirdly when the Law was delivered by God himselfe unto the Israelites he appeared in no shape unto them lest they should make a likenesse of him and fall to Idolatrie And therefore Deut. 4. 10. 12. hee forewarned them that as they saw no Image of him when he gave the Law but onely heard a voyce they should learne that the knowledge of God commeth by hearing and not by seeing Esa. 40. 17 18. where the matter is laid downe at large But what moved the Papists to paint God like an old man The false expounding of that place in Daniel where God is described to be that Ancient of dayes Dan. 7. 13. whereby is meant his Eternity that he was before all times Deut. 27. 15. But whatsoever property in God it bee that they should set it forth by an Image it is execrable so to doe May we then paint Christ for remembrance of his death No verily For 1. It is a part of the worship here forbidden because his body is a creature in Heaven therefore not to be represented by an Image in the service of God 2. An Image can onely represent the man-hood of Christ and not his God-head which is the chiefest part in him Both which Natures being in him unseparable it were dangerous by painting the one apart from the other to give occasion of Arianisme Apollinarisme or other Herisies 3. Sith that in all the Scriptures which speake so much of him there is no shew of any portrayture or lineament of his body it is plain that the wisedome of God would not have him painted 4. Sith by Preaching of the Gospell and Administration of the Sacraments Christ is as lively painted as if hee were crucified againe amongst us Gal. 3. 1. it were to no purpose to paint him to that end What lastly may be added to these former Reasons That although the painting of Christ were both lawfull to doe and profitable for remembrance yet because it hath been so much abused and no where in the Scripture commanded it is not now to be used As Ezechias worthily brake the Brazen Serpen being abused although Moses had set it up at the Commandement of the Lord and might have served for a singular Monument of Gods mercies after the proper use thereof had not the superstitious opinion thereof been What is meant in this Commandement by things in the Earth The likenesse of man or woman or or beasts or creeping things Ezek. 23. 14. Deut. 4. 16 17 18. Isa. 44. 13. Rom. 1. 23. What by things in the Waters under the Earth The resemblance of any Fish or the like Deut. 4. 18. So much for the making of Images What is meant by the bowing unto them and worshipping them That we must not give the least token of Reverence either in Body or in Soule unto any religious Images Psal. 97. 7. Hab. 2. 18. Isa. 44. 15. Exod. 32. 4. For that is a further degree of Idolatry as to shrine elothe and cover them with precious things to light Candles before them to kneele and creep to them or to use any gestures of religious Adoration unto them 1 King 19. 18. wherein although the grosse Idolatry of Popery be taken away from amongst us yet the corruption cleaveth still to the hearts of many as may be seen in them that make curtesie to the Chancell where the High Altarstood and gave the Right hand unto standing Crosses and Crucifixes c. But though we doe not reverence the Images themselves may we not worship God in or by the Images No For the Israelites are condemned not for the worshipping the golden Calfe as a God but for worshipping God in the Calfe How doth that appeare In that they said Let us make a Feast to morrow to Iehovah Exod. 32. 5. And that Moses otherwise might seem not to have done well in making them to drinke that against their conscience which they judged to be God ver 20. Wherein did they sinne so grievously In tying the presence of God to the worke of their owne hands and coupling him with their Idols which he cannot endure For God saith by his Prophet Hosea You shall no more call me Baal Hos. 2. 16. So impossible it is truly to serve God by an Idoll as the Papists doe What kind of Images are here forbidden to be worshipped All kinds whither such as are made with mans hands of which Esay speaketh saying One peece of wood is cast into the fire and another of the same Tree is made an Idoll Isa. 44. 15 17. or such as in themselves are the good Creatures of God as those which Hosea speaketh of saying They worship their Gold and Silver Hos. 8. 4. Yea of whatsoever things it may be said That they have eyes and see not eares and heare not noses and smell not feet and goe not Psal. 115. unto them is this Worship forbidden to be performed What gather you of this That the Popish Idolatry is here flatly condemned For although they worship not Jupiter Mars and such like Heathen Idols but the holy Saints as they say in and by their Images yet that worship of theirs is alike with the other because these places of Scripture doe agree as well to the one as to the other and therefore it is impious and abominable Idolatry So much for the practising of Idolatry What is forbidden in the countenancing of it All the meanes and occasions of and to Idolatrie and giving the least allowance or liking that can be thereunto As 1. Vrging by Authority or tolleration of Idolatry 2 Chron. 15. 16. 2. Approbation thereof by speech praising and extolling these inventions of men by silence or any gesture 3. Presence at Idolatrous worship as going to Masse and communicating with false Service 1 Cor. 10. 18. 20 21. 2 Cor. 6. 16 17. 4. Contributing towards the maintenance thereof Num. 7. 3. 5. Nehem. 32. 39. 5. Making a gaine thereby as those Merchants do which sell Beads and Crosses and those Painters which take money for religious Images Acts 19. 24 25. 6. Retaining and preserving any superstitious Reliques or Monuments of Idolatry as Images 2 Kings 18. 4. Books Acts 19. 19. Names Psalme 16. 4. and such like 7. Keeping company with teachers of Idolatry 2 Epistle of Iohn ver 10 11. 8. Making leagues of familiarity society and friendship with Idolators 2 Chron. 19. 2. 9. Ioyning in marriage and affinity with them 2 Cor. 6. 14. Neh. 13. 23. 26 27. Deut. 7. 3 4. What Reasons doth God use to strengthen this Commandement withall They are taken partly from his Titles and partly from his Works What have we to learne from hence That if we consider aright of the Titles and Works of God it
the King of Jericho might not revile the Spies but should have failed in her duty if she had betrayed them at the Kings Commandement and therefore in this case shee did well in preferring the obedience she owed to God before the duty she owed to man Josh. 2. 3. In like case also Ionathan revealing his Fathers counsell unto David and preferring the greater duty before the lesser did well 1 Sam. 19. 3. So we owing a greater duty to our Countrie then to our naturall kindred must rather refuse to reliefe them if they be Trayters then suffer any hurt to come to our Countrie But what if two have need of that which I can give but to one onely I must then preferre those that bee of the houshold of faith before others Galat. 6. 10. and my kinsemen and those that I am tyed unto by a speciall bond before strangers Iohn Chap. 1. v. 14. Acts 10. 24. What are we specially forbidden to doe by the Commandements of the second Table To doe any thing that may hinder our neighbours dignity in the fift Life in the sixth Chastity in the seventh Wealth in the eighth or good Name in the ninth though it bee but in the least secret motions and thoughts of the heart unto which we give no liking nor consent for unto that also the last Commandement doth reach How are these six Commandements of the second Table divided Into such as forbid all practise or advised consent to any hurt of our neighbours and such as forbid all thoughts and motions of evill towards our neighbour though they never come to advised consent of the Will The first five Commandements doe concerne such things as come unto consent and further the last such as come not unto consent at all How are those five Commandements of the first sort divided Into those that concerne speciall duties to speciall persons and those that concerne generall duties to all those duties which concerne speciall persons are commanded in the first those that generally concerne all men either in their life chastity goods or good name are enjoyned in the foure Commandements following What gather you hence That we are to distinguish between duties and duties between sinne and sinne done towards men and that to offend principall persons and such unto whom wee are in speciall manner obliged is greater sin because God hath singled out this one Commandement for these persons What are the words of this Commandement which is the fift in order Honour thy Father and thy Mother that thy dayes may be long upon the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee Exod. 20. 12. What is to be considered in these words 1. The Commandement 2. The Reason What is the meaning and scope of this Commandement That the equality of mens persons and places in whatsoever estate Naturall Civill or Ecclesiasticall and with whatsoever relation to us bee duely acknowledged and respected for it requireth the performance of all such duties as one man oweth unto another by some particular bond in regard of speciall callings and differences which God hath made between speciall persons What be these speciall persons Either in Equalls or Superiours and Inferiours for this Commandement enjoyneth all due carriage of Inferiours to their Superiours and by consequent also of Superiours to their Inferiours and likewise by analogy of equalls among themselves under the sweet relation betwixt Parents and Children or betwixt brethren of the same family and the generall duty of honour What are Equalls They be equall in gifts either of Nature or Industrie as brethren in a family Citizens in a Common-wealth Pastors in a Church c. What is required of Equalls That they live equally amongst themselves loving one another and affording due respect to each other Rom. 12. 10. that they live together sociably and comfortably preferring each other before themselves and striving to goe one before another in giving honour 1 Pet. 2. 17. 5. 5. Eph. 5. 21. Phil. 2. 3. that they be faithfull one to another What is here forbidden Want of Love Incivility Strife and Vaine-glory whereby they seek to advance themselves one above another and to exalt themselves above their fellowes Phil. 2. 3. Matth. 23. 6. What are Superiours They be such as by Gods ordinances have any preeminency preferment or excellencie above others and are here termed by the name of Parents 2 Kings 2. 12. 5. 13. 6. 21. 13. 14. 1 Cor. 4. 15. Col. 3. 22. to whom the first and principall duties required in this Commandement doe appertaine Eph. 6. 1 2. Why are all Superiours here called by the name of Parents 1. For that the name Parents being a most sweet and loving name men might thereby be allured the rather to the duties they owe whether they be duties that are to bee performed to them or which they should performe to their inferiors 2. For that at the first and in the beginning of the world Parents were also Magistrates Pastors Schoole-masters c. How doth this agree with the Commandement of Christ Mat. 23. 7 8 9. that we should call no man Father or Master upon earth Very well for there our Saviour meaneth onely to restraine the ambitious Titles of the Pharisees in those dayes who desired not onely so to be called but that men should rest in their authority alone for matters concerning the soule Who are Inferiours comprehended here under the name of Children Such as by the Ordinance of God are any way under Superiours who are principally and in the first place to performe the duties required in this Commandement Why is the Commandement conceived in the name of Inferiours Because their duties are hardest obeyed in all estates What is here contained under the name of Honour Not onely Cap and Knee but every particular duty according to their particular estates Mal. 1. 6. Why are these duties comprehended under the word Honour Because it adds an ornament and dignity unto them What is the Honour that Inferiours owe to all Superiours in generall 1. Reverence in heart word and behaviour Lev. 19. 3. Eph. 6. 1. 5. For the reverence of the mind is to be declared by some civill behaviour or outward submission as of rising before them and of giving them the honour of speaking first c. Lev. 19. 32. Iob 29. 8. 32. 6 7. 2. Obedience to their counsells 3. Prayer to God for them with giving thanks 1 Timothy 2. 1 2. 4. Imitation of their Vertues and Graces 2 Timothy 1. 5. 4. 9. 8. 9. What contrary sinnes are here forbidden 1. Want of Reverence inward or outward 2. Despising of Superiours Iude v. 8 9 10. Prov. 30. 11. 3. Neglect of Prayer and other duties What is the duty of all Superiours towards their Inferiours That they answerably afford unto them love blessing according to the power they receive from God Heb. 7. 7. 11. 20. Gen. 9. 25 26 27. good
for the most part 3. What loseth the obedient childe what injury is done unto him who being taken out of this life is recompenced with a better or what breach of promise is in him that promiseth silver and payeth with gold and that in greater weight and quantity As for the wicked they gaine nothing by their long life receiving by meanes thereof hereafter judgement in hell Doth not the Lord oftentimes revenge the breach of his Commandement even in this life Yes 1. Vpon the Parents who have been ungracious themselves in giving unto them ungracious and disobedient children 2. Vpon the Children themselves who are sometimes immediately stricken from Heaven and sometimes punished by the Law of the Magistrate So much of the fifth Commandement concerning all speciall duties to speciall persons What are the generall duties in the Commandements following which come at least to consent They are either such as concerne the person it selfe of our Neighbour in the sixth or such as concerne the things that belong to his person as his chastity in the seventh his goods in the eighth and his good name in the ninth Commandement What are the words of the sixth Commandement Thou shalt not murder Exod. 20. 13. What is the summe and meaning of this Commandement That the life and person of man as being the Image of God be by man not impeached but preserved Gen. 9. 5. And therefore that we are not to hurt our owne persons or the person of our Neighbour but to procure the safety thereof and to doe those things that lye in us for the preservation of his and our life and health 1 Tim. 5. 23. What is forbidden in this Commandement All kind of evill tending to the impeachment of the safety and health of mans person with every hurt done threatned or intended to the soule or body either of our selves or of our Neighbours What is required in this Commandement All kind of good tending to the preservation of the welfare of mans person that we love and cherish both the soule and body of our Neighbour as we would and ought to doe our owne Heb. 3. 13. Jam. 1. 27. Phil. 2. 12. Eph. 5. 29. For some of the duties here enjoyned concerne our own person some the person of our neighbour What be those duties that doe concerne our owne persons They are either such as ought to be performed by us in our owne life time or when we are ready to depart out of this world What are the duties we are to performe towards our owne selves in our life time They respect either the welfare of our soules or of our bodies What are the duties that respect the welfare of our soules 1. To use the meanes of grace 1 Pet. 2. 2. 2. Diligence to finish our salvation Phil. 2. 12. and to make our election sure by the fruits of faith 2 Pet. 1. 10. 3. To reject evill and approve that which is good Psal. 1. 11. Prov. 1. 10. 15. 4. To imitate the example of good men and not to take scandals given by others 5. To follow our vocation diligently What be the contrary vices forbidden Cruelty to our owne soules by 1. Rejecting the food of spirituall life by not hearing Prov. 28. 9. or not obeying the Word Jam. 1. 22. 2. Corrupting or perverting it by itching eares 2 Tim. 4. 3. or unstable minds 2 Pet. 3. 16. 3. Want of knowledge Prov. 4. 13. 8. 35 36. Hos. 4. 6. especially when people have had the ordinary meanes appointed of God for obtaining the same either of their owne or of others which they might have been partakers of 4. Sin especially grosse sins Prov. 6. 32. and 8. 36. and obstinacy in sinning Rom. 2. 5. Tit. 3. 11. 5. Following of evill counsell and evill examples and taking of scandals 6. Neglecting of our vocation What be the things that respect the welfare of our bodies 1. Sober and wholsome diet 1 Tim. 5. 23. 2. Help of Physicke when need is so that it be after we have first sought unto God 2 Chron. 16. 12. 3. Vsing honest recreation whereby health may be maintained Judg. 14. 12. 4. Preventing unnecessary dangers 5. Giving place to the fury of another as Jacob did to Esau by his mothers counsell Gen. 27. 43 44. What be the contrary sins forbidden 1. Immoderate worldly sorrow as the Apostle saith worketh death 2 Cor. 7. 10. 2. Malice and envy which maketh a man a murtherer of himselfe as well as of his Neighbours for as the Wise man noteth Envy is the rottennesse of the bones Prov. 14. 30. 3. Neglect either of wholsome diet or of exercise and honest recreation or of physicke to preserve or recover health For we must not thinke that there are no more wayes to kill a mans selfe but with a knife c. 4. Drunkennesse and surfeiting eating and drinking out of time Prov. 25. 16. Eccles. 10. 16 17. or spending ones selfe by unchaste behaviour Prov. 5. 11. and 7. 22 23. All which are enemies to the health and life of man 5. Launcing or whipping our flesh 1 King 18. 28. Colos. 2. 23. Ephes. 5. 29. as Idolaters use to doe or otherwise wounding our selves 6. Capitall crimes 1 King 2. 23. 7. Vnnecessary dangers 8. Not giving place to the fury of another 9. Refusing the meanes of life 10. Self-murther 1 Sam. 31. 4. 2 Sam. 17. 23. Mat. 27. 5. Acts 16. 27 28. What are we to doe at the time of our departure out of this life 1. With willingnesse we must receive the sentence of death when God shall utter it 2 Cor. 1. 9. 2. We must then resigne our charge in Church and Common-wealth or Family into the hands of faithfull men Numb 27. 16. 2 Chron. 28. 1 c. 3. We must resigne our soules to God in Christ Psal. 31. 5. with confidence of his love though he kill us Job 13. 15. of the remission of our sins and our resurrection unto immortality Job 19. 25. c. 2 We must leave our body to the earth as a pledge in time to be resumed giving order for the comely and Christian buriall thereof Gen. 49. 29. 1 King 13. 31. Hitherto of the duties that concerne our owne persons What are they that doe respect our Neighbour They likewise are to be performed unto him either while he is alive or after his death What are the duties belonging to our Neighbour while he liveth They are partly inward partly outward What are the inward To love our neighbours as our selves to thinke well of him to be charitably affected towards him and to study to doe him good in respect that we are all the creatures of one God and the naturall children of Adam for which end we are to cherish all good affections in our hearts What be those good affections here required 1. Humility and kindnesse proceeding from a loving heart to man as he is man Rom. 12.
pray for us 2. We must be perswaded that it is our bounden duty to pray for others as well as for ourselves Why doth our Saviour direct us to give such Titles unto God in the beginning and entrance of our Prayers That thereby we may testifie increase and strengthen our faith in God considering what he is to us to whom we are about to pray Heb. 11. 6. What are we taught to consider from this that we are taught to call God Father That God in Christ is become our Father and giveth us both the priviledge John 1. 12. and spirit of sons Gal. 4. 6. so to call him What ariseth from hence First confidence in his fatherly love and compassion towards us as his children Psalme 103. 13. with assurance of obtaining our suites and desires 1 Iohn 5. 14 15. For as young children desire to come unto their Fathers bosome or to sit upon the knee or in the Mothers lap so we by prayers doe creep into the Lords bosome and as it were doe stand between the Lords legges Deut. 33. 3. comming with boldnesse unto him as unto our mercifull Father whose bowels are larger in pittifull affection then any parents yea then the Mothers towards the tendrest childe if we come with faith and affiance that he will grant what we require For if parents will give good things to their children when they aske them much more will the Lord give his spirit to them that aske it of him without doubting Mat. 7. 11. Luke 11. 13. and this doubting is the cause why many goe away so often from prayer without profit and comfort Iames 1. 5. which overthroweth the long and idle prayers of the Papists who have not assurance of Gods love towards them in the thing they demand Secondly necessity of duty on our parts that we both reverence Mal. 1. 6. and imitate him Mat. 5. 45. as our Father Eph. 5. 1. 1 Pet. 1. 17. Thirdly that to come in any other name then our Saviour Christs is abominable which was figured in Moses Exod. 24. 2. 20. 19. and Aaron Levit. 16. 17. But is notably set forth of the Apostle 1 Tim. 2. 5. therefore it is abominable to come by Saints as in Popery they doe What is to be considered by this that we are directed to call him our Father The nature of faith which is to apply it home to himselfe John 20. 28 Gal. 2. 20. Matth. 27. 46. Also that our Saviour Christ is the naturall Son and we his Sons by grace and adoption May not a man say in his prayer My Father Yes verily and that with warrant of our Saviour Christs example Matth 27. 46. Why then are we taught here to say Our Father As the word Father directeth us to meditate upon the relation between God and our selves so the word Our directeth us to meditate upon the relation between our selves and so many as are or may be the children of the same father with us What doth this put us in mind of That we must at all times maintain or renew love and peace one with another but especially when we make our prayers we must come in love as one brother loveth another and therefore reconcile our selves if there be any breach 1 Tim. 2. 8. Esa. 1. 15. Matth. 5. 25 c. Secondly that we are bound to pray and to be suitors to our God and Father one for another as well as for our selves James 5 16. That every one praying for all and all for every one we may jointly encrease and enjoy the benefit of the common stock of prayers laid up in the hands of God Whereto doe the words following direct us when we say Which art in heaven To the meditation of the glory powerfull providence wisdome and holinesse of God in which regard he is said to dwell in the high and holy place Psalm 11. 4. Esa. 57. 15. not that he is excluded from earth or included in heaven or any place who filleth all places Jer. 23. 24. yea whom the heaven of heavens is not able to containe 1 Kings 8. 27. But first because his wisdome power and glory appeareth most evidently in the rule of the heavens as of the most excellent bodily creatures by which inferiour natures are ruled Psal. 19. 1 c. 8. 3. 103. 9. Secondly for that in heaven he doth make himselfe and his goodnesse knowne to the Angels and blessed Spirits of men immediately and without the helps and aids which we have Thirdly because he communicateth himselfe and his goodnesse more powerfully to them then to us and so God is said to be present in the Temple and in the Elect. Fourthly because there and not on earth we should now seek him Psalm 123. 1. Col. 3. 1 2. where also we hope another day to dwell with him in the same happy fellowship which now the holy Angels and blessed soules doe enjoy which teacheth us not to have any fleshly conceit but to have our cogitations above any worldly matter Fiftly to teach us that as we come boldly to him as to a Father so also we are to come with humility and reverence of his Majesty who is so high above us we wretched men being as wormes crauling upon the earth and he sitting in great Majesty in the highest heaven Eccles. 4. 16. 5. 1. Sixtly to teach us to pray not onely reverently but also fervently before him so directing and lifting up our hearts to Almighty God that our prayers may ascend into heaven 2 Chro. 32. 20. Seventhly to encrease our confidence in him who is both ready and able to doe all things for us that acknowledging him to ride on the heavens for our help able as in heaven to doe for us whatsoever as a father he will Psal. 115. 3. we may with full confidence in his power and love ask every good thing of him Psalm 2. 8. Luke 11. 13. Thus much of the preface Now are we to come to the prayer it selfe What is generall unto it That our affections with zeale and earnestnesse ought to wait and attend on prayer which appeareth by the shortnesse of all the petitions What is declared hereby The great affection we should have to the things we come for which giveth a check to our cold prayers where the understanding is witho●● the affection and as it were the sacrifice without the heavenly fire ●o lift it up and make it mount into heaven both in publike and private prayers So much of attention generall to the Prayer What are the parts ther●of A forme of Petition and of Thanksgiving What is taught hereby First that whensoever we come unto God in Petition we are 〈…〉 give him thanks Phil. 4. 6. Luke 17. 17 18. things not to be 〈…〉 meanes to make way for further graces and benefits to be obtain●● Secondly that it is a fault of us when we are distressed in 〈…〉 to come unto God in Petition but not to return Thanksgiving
comming of his Son to judgement for the elects sake who with singular love and affection long for it saying Come Lord Jesus come quickly Rev. 22. 20. 2 Tim. 4. 8. that we and all his chosen may obtaine full salvation and enjoy the fruition of that glory prepared for us before the beginning of the world 3. That God would get himselfe glory by the finall confusion of his enemies What are the words of the third Petition Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heauen Mat. 6. 10. Luke 11. 2. What is the summe of this Petition That God would grant us that we may voluntarily and willingly subject our selves unto him and his providence That renouncing the will of Satan and our owne corrupt inclination 2 Tim. 2. 26. 1 Peter 4. 2. and rejecting all things that are contrary to the will of God we may doe his will not as we will nor grudgingly but readily Psalme 119. 60. and heartily Col. 3. 23. following in our measure the example of the Angels and Saints that are in heaven Psalme 103. 20. Finally that obedience may be given to Christ in ruling us untill we be as the holy Angels What is meant by this word Thy. Hereby we exclude all wils opposed to or diverse from the will of God whether the will of Satan 2 Tim. 2. 26. or our owne 1 Peter 4. 2. naturally corrupt and enthralled to Satan yea whatsoever unlawfull intentions or desires repugnant to the will of God 2 Sam. 2. 7. James 4. 15. For when we pray for obedience to Gods will we pray that all wils of wicked Angels Zach. 3. 2. and men Psal. 140. 8. as contrary to the will of God may be disappointed We desire also the suppression of our owne will as that which being prone to all sin as a match to take fire is naught and repugnant to the will of God so far are we from having any free-will naturally to doe that which is good Psalm 86. 11. 119. 37 Gen. 6. 5. 8. 21. Rom. 8. 6. 7. 24. which we must bewaile both in our selves and others 2 Pet. 2. 7. Ezek. 9. 4. freely acknowledging that we cannot of our selves doe the will of God but by his assistance and desiring grace that we may obey his will and not the lusts of our flesh How manifold is the will of God Twofold Deut. 29. 29. 1. His secret and hidden will whereof the Scripture speaketh thus If so be the will of God 1 Pet. 3. 17. whereunto are to be referred his eternall counsell the events of outward things Pro. 27. 1. times and seasons c. Acts 17. 1. 2. His manifest will which is revealed and made knowne unto us in the Word both in his promises which we are to beleeve and in his precepts and commandements which as conditions of obedience in way of thanksgiving annexed unto the promises we are to performe What will are we to understand in this petition Not so much that part which God keepeth secret from us as that part thereof which he hath revealed in his Word wherein is set downe what we ought to doe or leave undone How doth that appeare 1. Because it is unlawfull to search or enquire into the secret will of God and impossible for man to know it untill it come to passe whereas to the doing of this will knowledge is requisite 2. No man can resist or withstand Gods secret will neither is it any thank for us to accomplish it Acts 4. 28. 3. There are no promises for performing the secret will of God seeing a man may doe it and perish as Pilate c. 4. God proposeth many things in his secret will for which it is not lawfull for us to pray What then must we especially pray for in the secret will of God That when God bringeth any thing to passe by his secret will which is grievous to our natures we may with patience and contentment submit our wils to his will Acts 21. 14. What doe we aske of God in this petition concerning his revealed will 1. That we may know his will without the which we cannot doe it 2. That we may doe all his will being knowne and shew our selves obedient to our heavenly Father and Lord. 3. That he would bestow upon us the gifts and graces of his Spirit that so our hearts being by grace set at large strengthened and directed Psal. 119. 32 36. we may be enabled to doe his will 4. That he would remove from us all things that shall hinder us from knowing his will and putting it in execution as ignorance of the revealed will of God Psal. 119. 18. rebellion dis●bedience murmuring c. 1 Sam. 15. 22 23. all pretences and dispensations or powers presuming to dispence with the will of God In a word that so many as are subjects in the kingdome of Christ may doe the duty of good subjects and be obedient to the revealed will of God seeking his kingdome and his righteousnesse Matth. 6. 33. so that there is a mutuall relation of this petition to the former where we pray that God may rule as here that his rule may be obeyed What understand you in this petition by Doing Not a good intent onely in the heart or profession of obedience in word and pretence Matth. 21. 30. but an actuall and thorough performance of what is required of us Iames 1. 25. And therefore wee pray here that the will of God may not onely be intended and endevoured but also accomplished although it be with griefe and smart Phil. 2. 13. Acts 20. 24. What is here meant by earth and heaven By earth those that are in earth and by heaven those that are in heaven For here we propound to our selves the patterns of the Angels and blessed soules who being freed from all mixture of corruption doe in their kind perfectly obey God Psal. 103. 20 22. whereby we learne that our obedience should be done most humbly willingly readily cheerfully and wholly not doing one and leaving another undone even as the will of God is done by the Angels Matth. 18. 10. who therefore are set forth winged to shew their speedinesse Esa 6. 2. and round footed to expresse their readinesse to all and every commandement of God Ezek. 1. 7. But seeing we are sinfull and the Angels holy how can wee imitate them We desire to imitate them in the manner though we know we cannot equall them in measure and degree of obedience and hereby we are taught that we should endevour to the like holinesse and so grow therein daily more and more till we be like unto them not that we can performe it to the full as they doe As also in this regard God himselfe saith Be ye holy as I am holy Lev. 11. 44. 1 Pet. 1. 16. and yet it were absurd to say or think that any man could come to the holinesse of God whose holinesse he is commanded to follow And this answereth to our desire
instant pronounceth and the conscience apprehendeth the sentence of blessing or cursing Heb. 9. 27. 2. The soule of every man accordingly is by the power of God and the ministery of Angels immediately conveyed into that state of happinesse or misery wherein it shall remaine till the resurrection and from thenceforth both body and soule for ever Luke 16. 22 23 26. Eccl. 11. 3. What gather you of this That the doctrine of Purgatory and Prayer for the dead is vaine seeing it appeareth by the Word of God that the souls of those that die in Gods favour are presently received into joy Isay 57. 2. Ioh. 5. 24. Luke 23. 43. Apoc. 14. 13. 1 Thess. 4. 16. and the souls of those that dye in their sinnes cast into endlesse torments no means being left after death to procure remission of sinnes Isay 22. 14. Iohn 8. 24. Rom 6. 10. What is the generall and finall judgement The great day of assize for the whole world wherein all mens lives that ever have been are or shall be being duly examined every one shall receive according to his works In which judgement we are to consider 1. The preparation to it 2. The acting of it 3. The execution of the sentence Wherein doth the preparation to the last judgement consist In five things 1. In the foretokening of the time thereof which though it be so sealed up in the treasury of Gods counsell that neither men nor Angels nor yet our Saviour himself as man in the dayes of his flesh had expresse notice thereof that from the uncertainty and suddennesse of it we might be taught to be alwayes in readinesse for it yet it hath pleased God to acquaint us with some signes whereby we may discern Christs approaching as men in the Spring time may discerne Summer approaching by the shooting forth of the Figtree What are the signes foretokening the last judgement They are certaine notable changes in the world and Church some further off some nearer unto the comming of Christ as 1. The publishing and receiving the Gospel throughout the world 2. The Apostasie of most part of professors not loving the truth 3. The revealing of Antichrist that Man of sinne and Childe of perdition who under the title of Christs Vicegerent opposeth himselfe to Christ in all his offices and ordinances both in Church and Common-wealth 4. Common corruptions in manners joyned with security as in the dayes of Noah and Lot 5. Warres and troubles in the world and Church 6. False Christs attended with false Prophets and armed with false miracles 7. The calling of the Iewes unto the faith of the Gospell 8. And lastly signes in Heaven Earth and all the Elements As the darkning of the Sunne and Moone c. Yea firing of the whole frame of Heaven and Earth with the signe of the Sonne of man whereby his comming shall then be clearly apprehended by all men What is the second thing in the preparation The comming of Iesus Christ the Iudge of the world who in his humane visible body but yet with unspeakable glory shall suddenly break forth like Lightning through the Heavens riding on the clouds environed with a flame of fire attended with all the host of the elect Angels and especially with the voice and shout of an Archangel and the Trumpet of God and so shall sit downe in the royall throne of judgement What is the third thing The summoning and presenting of all both dead and living men together with Devils before the glorious throne of Christ the judge How shall all men both dead and living be summoned By the voice of Christ appeared by the ministery of Angels and namely by the shout and Trumpet of the Archangel whereto the Lord joyning his divine power as unto the word preached for the work of the first resurrection shall in a moment both raise the dead with their own bodies and every part thereof though never so dispersed and change the living so that it shall be with them as if they had been a long time dead and were now raised to life againe Shall there be no difference betweene the resurrection of the elect and reprobate Yes for howsoever they shall both rise by the same mighty voice and power of Christ in the same bodies wherein they lived upon earth and those so altered in quality as then they shall be able to abide for ever in that estate whereunto they shall be judged yet 1. The elect shall be raised as members of the body of Christ by vertue derived from his resurrection the reprobate as Malefastors shall be brought forth of the prison of the grave by vertue of the judiciary power of Christ and of the curse of the law 2. The elect shall come forth to everlasting life which is called the resurrection of life the reprobate to shame and perpetuall contempt called the resurrection of condemnation 3. The bodies of the elect shall be spirituall that is glorious powerfull nimble impatible but the bodies of the reprobate shall be full of uncomelinesse and horror agreeable to the guiltinesse and terror of their consciences and liable to extreame torment How shall all men be presented before the throne of Christ The elect being gathered by the Angels shall with great joy be caught up into the aire to meet the Lord Luke 21. 28. 1 Thess. 4. 17. The reprobate together with the Devill and his Angels shall with extreame horrour and confusion be drawne into his presence Rev. 6. 15. What is the fourth thing The separation of the Elect from the Reprobate For Christ the great Shepheard shall then place the Elect as his Sheep that have heard his voice and followed him on his right hand and the Reprobates with the Devils as straying Goats on the left hand Matth. 25. 33. What is the fift and last thing The opening of the book of record by which the dead shall be judged Rev. 20. 12. viz. 1. The severall books of mens consciences which then by the glorious illumination of Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse shining in his full strength shall be so enlightned that men shall perfectly remember what ever good or evill they did in the time of their life the secrets of all hearts being then revealed 2. The book of life that is the eternall decree of God to save his Elect by Christ which decree shall then at length be made known to all Thus farre of the preparation to judgement what are we to consider in the second place The act of judgment wherein the Elect shal first be acquitted that they may after as assistants joyne with Christ in the judgement of the reprobate men and Angels How shall the act of judgement be performed 1. By examination 2. By pronouncing sentence The examination shall be according to the Law of God which hath been revealed unto men whether it be the Law of
above and his Israel lying here below are conjoyned together and the onely ladder vvhereby Heaven may bee scaled by us is the Son of man the type of whose flesh the veile vvas therefore commanded to bee made vvith Cherubims to shevv that wee come to an innumerable company of Angels when wee come to Jesus the Mediatour of the New Testament who as the Head of the Church hath power to send forth all those ministring spirits to minister for them who shall bee Heirs of salvation Lastly wee are to take into our consideration that as in things concerning God the main execution of our Saviours Priesthood doth consist so in things concerning man hee exerciseth both his Propheticall Office whereby hee openeth the will of his Father unto us and his Kingly whereby hee ruleth and protecteth us It was indeed a part of the Priests office in the Old Testament to instruct the people in the Law of God and yet were they distinguished from Prophets like as in the New Testament also Prophets as well as Apostles are made a different degree from ordinary Pastours and Teachers who received not their doctrine by immediate inspiration from Heaven as those other Holy men of God did who spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost Whence S. Paul putteth the Hebrews in minde that God who in sundry parts and in sundry manners spake in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last dayes spoken unto us by his Son Christ Jesus whom therefore hee stileth the Apostle as vvell as the High Priest of our profession who was faithfull to him that appointed him even as Moses was in all his house Now Moses wee know had a singular preheminence above all the rest of the Prophets according to that ample testimony which God himself giveth of him If there bee a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known unto him in a vision and will speak unto him in a dream My servant Moses is not so who is faithfull in all mine house with him will I speak mouth to mouth even aparently and not in dark speeches and the similitude of the Lord shall he behold And therefore wee finde that our Mediatour in the execution of his Propheticall office is in a more peculiar manner likened unto Moses which hee himself also did thus foretell The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee of thy Brethren like unto mee unto him yee shall hearken According to all that thou desiredst of the Lord thy God in Horeb in the day of the assembly saying Let mee not heare again the voyce of the Lord my God neither let mee see this great fire any more that I dye not And the Lord said unto mee They have well spoken that which they have spoken I will raise them up a Prophet from among their brethren like unto thee and will put my words in his mouth and hee shall speak unto them all that I shall command him And it shall come to passe that whosoever will not hearken unto my words which hee shall speak in my Name I will require it of him Our Prophet therefore must bee a Man raised from among his Brethren the Israelites of whom as concerning the flesh hee came who was to perform unto us that which the Fathers requested of Moses Speak thou to us and wee will heare but let not God speak with us lest wee die And yet that in this also wee may see how our Mediatour had the preheminence when Aaron and all the children of Israel were to receive from the mouth of Moses all that the Lord had spoken with him in Mount Sinai they were afraid to come nigh him by reason of the glory of his shining countenance so that hee was fain to put a vaile over his face while hee spake unto them that which hee was commanded But that which for a time was thus made glorious had no glory in respect of the glory that excelleth and both the glory thereof and the vaile which covered it are now abolished in Christ the vaile of whose flesh doth so overshadow the brightnesse of his glory that yet under it wee may behold his glory as the glory of the onely begotten of the Father yea and wee all with open face beholding as in a glasse the glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. And this is daily effected by the power of the Ministery of the Gospel instituted by the authority and seconded by the power of this our great Prophet whose transcendent excellency beyond Moses unto whom in the execution of that function hee was otherwise likened is thus set forth by the Apostle Hee is counted worthy of more glory then Moses in as much as hee who hath builded the house hath more honour then the house For every house is builded by some one but hee that built all things is God And Moses verily was faithfull in all his house as a servant for a testimony of those things which were to bee spoken after but Christ as the Son over his own house This house of God is no other then the Church of the living God whereof as hee is the onely Lord so is hee also properly the onely Builder Christ therefore being both the Lord and the Builder of his Church must bee God as well as Man which is the cause why wee finde all the severall mansions of this great house to carry the title indifferently of the Churches of God and the Churches of Christ. True it is that there are other ministeriall builders whom Christ employeth in that service this being not the least of those gifts which hee bestowed upon men at his Triumphant Ascension into Heaven that hee gave not onely ordinary Pastours and Teachers but Apostles likewise and Prophets and Evangelists for the perfecting of the Saints for the Work of the Ministery for the edifying of the body of Christ. Which what great power it required hee himself doth fully expresse in passing the graunt of this high Commission unto his Apostles All power is given unto mee in Heaven and in Earth Goe yee therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you and lo I am with you alway even unto the end of the World Amen S. Paul professeth of himself that hee laboured more abundantly then all the rest of the Apostles yet not I saith hee but the grace of God which was with mee And therefore although according to that grace of God which was given unto him hee denyeth not but that as a wise Master-builder hee had laid the foundation yet hee acknowledgeth that they upon whom hee had