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A66823 The abridgment of Christian divinitie so exactly and methodically compiled that it leads us as it were by the hand to the reading of the Holy Scriptures, ordering of common-places, understanding of controversies, clearing of some cases of conscience / by John Wollebius ; faithfully translated into English ... by Alexander Ross.; Christianae theologiae compendium. English. 1660 Wolleb, Johannes, 1586-1629. 1660 (1660) Wing W3256; ESTC R29273 215,518 472

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the end of the Law Rom. 10.4 when it is called a School-master to lead us to Christ Gal. 3.24 and when the Law is said not to be contrary to him who doth the works of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 23. For that righteousness which the Law requires that the Gospel exhibites in Christ to the Believer and albeit we cannot in this life yield full satisfaction to the Law yet the regenerate begin to obey it by the grace of sanctification CHAP. XVI Of the Person of Christ God and Man THe parts of the Gospel concerning Christ our Redeemer are two the first is of his person the other of his Office In respect of the Person the Redeemer is God and man that is Gods eternal Son being incarnate or made man in the fulnesse of time John 1.14 And the word was made flesh and dwelt amongst us Gal. 4 4. But after the fulnesse of time came God sent his Son made of a Woman 1. Tim. 3 16. and without controve●sie great is the mystery of godliness God made manifest in the flesh The RULES I. The Incarnation of Christ originally is the work of the whole blessed Trinity but terminatively or in respect of the object it is the work of the Son alone For the son onely assumed mans nature which the father in the Son by the Holy Ghost formed of the substance of the blessed Virgin II The person of Christ is considered either disjunctively as the Word and the eternal Son of God or conjunctively as God and man the first consideration is according to Divinity the latter according to Oeconomie or Gods gracious dispensation III. Likewise the divine nature is considered either in it self and simply or relatively as it is in the Person of the Word by dispensation IV. Alth●ugh then it be true that Christ-God is become man yet it follows not that therefore the Divinity is incarnate or because the Son is Incarnate that the Father also and Holy Ghost are Incarnate V. The matter out of which the Incarnation was effected is the seed of the Woman or of the blessed Virgin Gen. 3.15 VI. The forme of it consisteth in the Personal Vnion whereby the word was made flesh and Christ remained the same he was and became what he was not VII The end is Gods glory and our salvation VIII Both the truth of God as also our salvation do evince the necessity of Christs incarnation IX The truth of God because in the Old Testament it was uttered by divers Prophesies and was shaddowed by divers types These are the chief Prophesies Gen 3.15 I will put enmity between thee and the Woman and between thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel Gen. 22.18 In thy seed all nations shall be blessed Esa. 7.14 Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bring forth a Son and they shall call his name Emanuel Esa. 9.6 7. For unto us a child is borne and unto us a Son is given Jer. 23.5 Behold the dayes shall come in which I will raise to David a righteous branch and a King shall reign and prosper and shall execute judgement and justice on the earth In his dayes ●udah shall be saved and Israel shall dwell safely and this is his name whereby he shall be called The Lord our righteousness But his types were the Tabernacle the Arke of the Covenant and such like of which we have said but chiefly Melchisedeck without father without mother Hebr. 7.3 and that humane shape or form in which he appeared of old frequently to the Fathers X. Our salvation for this cause doth evince and prove the necessity of his Incarnation in that we could not be saved but by such a redeemer who was both God and Man in one Person or God-man XI That he should be God was requisite in respect of both parties on the one side the Majesty of God required it on the other side our wants the greatness of the evil that was to be removed and the good that was to be restored Such is the Majesty of God that no man could interpose himself but he who was one with the Father the very Angels durst not do this because they also stood in need of Christ the Mediator Col. 1.16 17. Because they being compared with God are unclean Ioh. 15.15 and for this cause they cover their faces in Gods presence Isa. 6.2 How much lesse then could any man intercede whereas there is not one just person Rom. 3.10 The evill that was to be taken away was sin and the consequents of sin the wrath of God the power of Satan both temporal and eternal death Now I pray by whose suffering could that infinite Majesty be satisfied which was offended unlesse by his suffering who was also Infinit● By whose Intercession could the wrath of God be appeased but by his onely who is that best beloved son of God By whose strength could Satan with the whole power of darknesse be overcome except by his who in power exceeds all the Devils who finally could overcome death except he who had the power over death Heb. 2.15 But the good things that were to be ●estred were perfect righteousness adoption into sons the Image of God the gifts of the holy Ghost life eternal and such like but now who could bestow that righteousness on us except he who is justice it self Who is so fit to make us the sons of God as he who is by nature the Son of God Who was so fit to restore in us the image of God as he who is himselfe the Image of the invisible God who can bestow on us the holy Spirit so assuredly as he from whom the spirit proceedeth Who at last can give us life eternal but he who is life it self Iohn 1.4 XII That he might be man the justice of God required which as it leaves not sin unpunished so it punisheth not sin but in that nature which sinned The first branch of this Rule is plain both by the justice and by the truth of God By his justice because God by this doth not onely resist but also punish sin Psal. 5.4 5 6. For thou art not a God that hast pleasure in wickednesse nor shall evil dwell with thee the foolish shall not stand in thy sight thou hatest all workers of iniquity thou shalt destroy them that speak lies the Lord will abhor the blody and deceitful man Now by the truth of God because the threatning which was given before the fall could not be in vain therefore Socinus is idle and foolish who that he might overthrow the merit of Christ feigns such a justice of God which doth not necessarily inflict eternal death or require satisfaction and which in this respect can be content to loose its own right but if sins were to be punished they were surely to be punished in our nature for to man the Law was given and to man death was threatned therefore it lies upon man to suffer the punishment
blessed 2. For the production of this visible world which was not altogether destitute of form but of perfection separation and beauty which by degrees then it received 3. For sending in of the primitive Light which was neither the Elementary fire nor a bright Cloud nor any other body but a Quality sent into the air by God who is that inaccessible light This created quality of Light was afterward the fourth day placed in the Stars IX The second day the Firmament was created or the Aerial heaven which by its lower part separates the waters above that is the ●louds from the waters beneath that is the Sea X. The third day God 1. separated the inferior waters which as yet covered the earth and gathered them into certain channels that the rest of the earth called dry land might afford a commodious habitation for man and beast 2. He gave to the earth a fructifying power to produce herbs and plants without the h●lp of seed or sun XI The fourth day the Stars and great Luminaries w●re placed in heaven whose motion proceedeth not from a soul or any assistant intelligence as the Philosophers affirm but from that power which God gave them in the beginning no otherways than the earth by its innate power stands immovable XII There is a threefold use of the Stars 1. To distinguish the day night 2. To note the times seasons of the year 3. To impart their vertue to inferior bodies XIII The fifth day were made the Birds Fishes and creeping things XIV The sixth day after the earthly Creatures were produced and this whole Vniverse as a large house was furnished with all kinde of furniture Man at last was created Of all these Creatures Men Angels are chiefly considered in Divinity because on them God bestowed his Image The RULES 1. Although the whole World be the Looking-glass of Gods power wisdom and bounty yet properly Gods Image is attributed to Angels and Men onely 2. Gods Image doth partly consist in natural gifts to wit in the invisible and simple substance of Angels and Mens souls in their life understanding will and immortality partly in supernatural gifts to wit in their primitive blessednesse in the uprightness of their intellect will in their majesty dominion over the other creatures Angels are intelligent Creatures void of bodies The RULES I Angels are not accidents nor qualities but true substances II Angels are void of bodies and are not subject to destruction III. The bodies in which the Angels appeared were not meer apparitions nor yet united to them hypostatically but were freely assumed to perform some service in IV. Angels are in a place not by way of circumscription but by way of definition V. Angels cannot be together in many places VI Angels truly move from place to place Man is a creature whose body originally was formed of earth but afterwards is propagated of seed by traduction consisting of a reasonable soul infused into him by God immediately Here we disallow not the Philosophers definition by which they call man a reasonable creature but we describe man in the Divinity-School more fitly for our purpose as we have now described him The RULES I. There 's a threefold miraculous production of mans body mentioned in Scripture the first was of the dust of the earth without Father and Mother the second production was out of Adam's rib without a Mother the third was of the blood of the Virgin without a Father II. The soul of man is not propagated of seed by traduction but is immediately created by God and infused into the body Of mans creation Moses writes thus Gen. 2. ver 7. The Lord breathed into his nostrils the breath of life and man became a living soul. In this place three things are mentioned 1. The immediate Creation of the soul for it is call'd the breath of God 2. His breathing for he saith He breathed into his nostrils 3. The personal union of body and soul in these words And he was made a living soul metonymically that is a living sensitive creature But that the souls now are immediately created by God infused into the body is proved by these subsequent Reasons 1. Because otherwayes our souls should have another original than Adam's had for ours must proceed of some pre-excistent matter where as Adam's proceeded of none Neither will that objection hold concerning the d●fferent way or reason of generation and creation for nothing is generated of matter but what in the beginning was created of matter 2. Because the soul of Christ was not formed of seed by traduction for he was conceived not by the the help of man but by the operation of the holy Ghost of the blessed Virgins blood 3. Because the Scripture when it speaks of the original of our souls it speaks as of a work of Creation not of nature Iob. 33.4 The spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life Zac. 12.1 The Lord stretcheth out the heavens and layeth the foundation of the earth and formeth the spirit of man within him where it is plain that this is reckoned among the works of Creation 4. Such is mans generation as his dissolution is but mans dissolution is that his body returns to dust and his spirit to God that gave it Eccl. 127. VVhereas then in mans dissolution the spirit returns immediatly to God doubtless it was immediatly formed by him 5 Because the Scripture doth plainly distinguish between the parts of bodies spirits Heb. 12.9.6 Because the soul is indivisible into parts therefore cannot be produced but of nothing 7. Because if it were generated by traduction either it must be generated of a soul or of a body or of a soul and body together but it is not generated of a soul because of that which is incorruptible nothing can be generated not of a body because it is not corporeal not of a body and soul together because so it should be partly corporeal partly incorporeal seeing then it is produced of nothing it must be produced by God alone whose alone property it is to make things of nothing III. These physical Axiomes like begets like and Man begets man remaine true also in this case both because man begets man a person begets a person as also because by the work of the Parents the body is begot as it were the subject of the soul and so is united to the soul which is infused by God and thus the whole man is brought into this World by generation 'T is true that man is the efficient cause of man but not according to all his parts for as he is said to kill a man that kills only his body so man is said to beget man though he begets not the soul. Neither again is man in this respect nobler than other living creatures whereas rather for this very cause mans generation is more excellent in that Gods immediate operation concurs
larger extent then the word person For Hypostasis or Hyphistamenon is any individual substance but the word Person signifieth an individual substance compleat rat●onal and differing by incommunicable properties from another yet the Apostle Heb. 1.3 useth the word Hypostasis for Person by the figure called Metalepsis III. The Person in the Deity is neither the species of God or of the Deity nor a part thereof nor another thing besides the Deity nor a bare relation nor the manner onely of subsisting but the very essence of God with a certain manner of subsisting IV. Neither yet is the person a thing compounded of entity and non-entity neither are the essence of God and the manner of subsisting two different things but a thing or entity and the manner of the entity The Persons of the Deity are three Father Son and Holy Ghost The Father is the first person of the Deity existing from himself begetting the Son from eternity and with him producing the Holy Ghost The Son is the second person begotten of the Father from eternity with the Father producing the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost is the third Person of the Deity proceeding of the Father and the Son from eternity The RULES I. The Trinity is not the number numbring but the number numbred II. The Doctrine of the Trinity is not a bare tradition of the Church but a Doctrine expressed in Holy Writ This is against the Papists who to evince the insuffi●iency of Scripture are not afraid to affirm the contrary III. Although in the Old Testament the Doctrine of the Holy Trinity was somewhat obscure yet it was not altogether unknown Gen. 1.1 In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth and ver 2. The Spirit of God moved upon the water and ver 26 Let us make man Gen. 3 22. c. Behold the man is become as one of us Psal. 33.6 By the word of the Lord the heaven● were made and by th● breath of his mouth all the host thereof 2. Sam. 23.2 The Spirit of the Lord spake in me his word was in my tongue Esay 6 3. holy holy holy Lord of host Esay 63.9 The Angel of his countenance to wit of God the Father saved them and ver 10. They rebelled and grieved his holy Spirit Which testimonies though the obstinate Jews go about to elude yet they will content sober Christian minds IV. But there are cleerer Testimonies in the New Testament Matth. 3.16 And the heavens were opened to him to wit to Christ And he saw the Holy Gh●st descending and coming upon him and ver 17 And behold a voice came from heaven saying This is my b●loved Son in whom I am we● pleased Matth. 28 19 Baptise them in the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost ●oh 4.16 I will ask the Father and he will send you ano●her Comfo●ter and 15 26 ●hen th● Comforter shall c●me w●om I will send to you from the Father 2. Co● 13.14 The Grace of our Lord Ie●us Christ and the love of God and communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all 1 Joh 5.7 There are three which bear witness in heaven the Father the word and the Holy Spirit V. To these may be added the Testimonies which prove the Divinity of the Son and Holy Ghost 1. From their Names 2. From their Properties 3. From their works 4. From their Divine Honours 1. The Diety of the Son is proved I. From his Divine Names In the old Testament The A●gel of the covenant Malach. 3.1 He who oftentimes appeared to the Fathers to foreshew his incarnation was the Son of God is every where called Iehovah and God Gen. 16.13 18 1. 32 1.9 which place may be compared with Hosea 12.6 Ex. 3.15 Ios. 6.2 Zac. 2 1● 3.1 2. But for the Testimonies of the New Testament they are very clear Joh. 1. ver 1 And the word was God and 17.3 This is life eternal to know thee the onely true God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ. Joh 20 31. but these things are written that you may believe that Iesus is the Christ the Son of God Act. 20.28 God redeemed the Church with his own blood Rom. 9.5 God blessed for ever Tit. 2.31 The mighty God Such phrases are frequent in the Revelation II. From the Divine Properties and 1. From Eternity Joh 8.58 Before Abraham was I am Rev 1.8 I am Alpha and Omega which was which is and which is to come 2. From his Omniscience Joh. 2. ver 24 25. He knew all men and needed not that any should testifie of man for he knew what was in man 3. From his Omnipresence Matth. 28.20 I will be with you to the end of the world 4. From his Omnipotency Joh. 5. ver 19. Whatsoever the Father doth that likewise doth the Son Heb. 1.3 He supporteth all things by the word of his power III. From his Divine Works Joh. 14.11 Believe that the Father is in me and I in the Father if not at least believe for the works sake IV. From Divine Honour We must believe in him Joh. 3.16 We must baptize in his Name Matth. 28.19 at his Name eve●y knee shall bow Phil. 2.10 2. The Divinity of the Holy Ghost is proved I. From his name God Act. 5.3 Then Peter said Ananias why hath Sathan filled thy heart to lie against the Holy Ghost and ver 4. Thou hast not lied against man but against God II. From his Properties and 1 From his Eternity Gen. 1.2 The Spirit moved upon the waters 2 From his Omnipresence Psal. 139.7 Whither shall I go from thy Spirit 3 From his Omniscience 1 Cor. 2.10 The Spirit searcheth all things even the deep things of God 3. From his Omnipotency Which is known by his works III. From his Divine works and 1 From the Creation of all things Gen. 12. Psal. 33.6 Job 26.13 and 33.4 2 From the conservation of all things Gen. 1.2 He moved on the waters a simile taken from a H●n siting on her Chickens and cherishing them 3 From sending and anointing of Christ. E●y 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me 4. From the Gifts of Tongues and Miracles 1. Cor. 12.4 There 〈◊〉 divers gifts but the same Spirit IV. From his Divine Honours 1. We must believe in him accord●ng to the Creed 2. We must baptize in his Name Matth. 28.19 To him we must direct our prayers 2 Cor. 13.13 Rev. 1.4 Where are said to be seven Spirits not in number but in the diversities of gifts whence the antici●nt Churc● was wont to sing Thou sevenfold Spirit in respect of gifts V The difference of the persons is seen in the Order Properties and manner of Working they differ in Order because the Father is the first the Son the second and Holy Ghost the third person they differ in properties because the Father is from himself not only by reason of his essence but also of his personality The
The instrumental cause of this is Faith III The matter or subject are faithful men IV. The matter about which this is conversant are the Law the service of sin and death affliction of conscience in things indifferent and mens commandments V The form is expressed by divers conditions as the objects are various VI. We have shewed above in the doctrine of the Law how we are freed from the Law VII We are not quite in this life free from the inherence of sin in us but we are freed from the guilt and dominion of it from that by justification from this by sanctification Rom. 6.12 Let not sin therefore reigne in your mortal bodies that you should obey sin in the lusts thereof VIII From indifferent things that is such as are neither commanded nor prohibited we are so freed that our conscience is not bound to keep or break them Rom. 14 2.3 For one believeth that he may eat all things another who is weak eateth hearbs let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not and let not him that eateth not condemn him that eateth IX Now in these cases a special care must be had of Faith and charity of faith lest we take things not indifferent for indifferent of charity lest we offend our weak brother Of Faith Paul spakes Rom. 14·23 He that doubteth if he eat he is already condemned because he eateth not of faith but what is not of faith is sin of Charity cap. 14. ver 1. He that is weak in the faith receive you but not unto doubtfull disputation c. X. The same care of liberty is about mens commandements for our conscience is not obliged to those things which are against Gods commands or being adiaphorous are obtruded as necessary but we must not for conscience refuse obedience to those things that are consonant to Gods command XI The end of this liberty 1. Is true consolation arising out of our freedom from sin death and solicitude in things indifferent 2. The service of righteousnesse which indeed is true liberty 3. The true worship of God free from superstition or the scandal of our neighbour XII Contrary to Christian liberty is the ●iberty of the flesh and wantonnesse Jud. v. 4. there are some men crept in now of old ordained for this condemnation ungodly men turning the grace of our God into wantonnesse CHAP. XXIV Of the coming of Christ and Resurrection of the flesh which go before the last Iudgement HItherto of the State of Grace now follows the State of Glory To this belongs the doctrine of the last Judgment The parts whereof are three 1. Of its Antecedents 2. Of the Judgement it self 3 Of the Consequents thereof The Antecedents are Christs coming and the Resurrection of the flesh Christs last coming is his return from Heaven to which he ascended to judge the Earth The RULES I. It is most certaine that Christ will returne to Iudgement This was revealed even in the Patriarks times Iud. v 14 Enoch also the seventh from Adam prophesied of these saying Behold the Lord commeth wi●h ten thousand of his Saints to execute judgement upon all and to convince all that are ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which they have ungodly committed and of all their hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken against him The rest of the Scripture is full of such testimonies Psal. 50 3 c. Dan. 12. Matt. 24. and 25. Act. 17. Rom. 2. and 14. 2 Cor. 5.10 1 Thess 4. and 5. 2 Pet. 3. Rev 19 c. II. Although no man knows the time of Christs coming exactly in respect of the day and hour yet there are signes set down by Christ and his Apostles showing that that day is not far off III. These Signes are either common or proper IV. Those are common which were to signifie both the destruction of Ierusalem and Christs last coming Such were those predict●ons of Christ Mat. 24.4 5. c. when he speaks both of his own comming and of the destruction of Ierusalem as the type thereof to wit False Prophets false Christ● wars pestilence famine earthquakes persecutions for Christs sake treacheries want of faith and charity c. V. The proper signes are extream security and impiety the revealing of Antichrist and his destruction by the breath of Christ mouth The ruine of Rome with the forsaking and burning of the Whore VI To these signes some adde A visible and generall uniting of the Iews to the Church of Christ which they teach must be expected in the last times This opinion is plausible if it were found in Scripture The Prophetical testimonies which they alledge were fulfilled in the Apostles times when upon the breaking down of the partition-wall the Jews and Gentiles were united into one body In the Revela●ion we find nothing that doth solidly confirm this opinion Their chief hold is in that of Rom. 11.25.26 For I would not bre●hren ● that yee should be ignorant of this mysterie lest ● should be wise in your own conceit that blindness in part is happened to Israel until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in and so all Israel shall be saved The Apstles scope in this is to dehort Christians from insulting over the Jews that are rejected because they themselves are called The reason is because by their ruine the gentiles have received salvation ver 11. Yet so that all hope of reconciliation is not cut off from the Jews ver 1● Nor are they exempted from being rejected who being Christians onely in name are puffed up in their mindes ver 20.21 That former passage of the rejection of the Jews which was not altogether without hope of pardon doth shew in a mystery that the Jews were not totally but in part onely rejected not in respect of time for it was to last onely awhile but in respect of that part of the Jewish Nation which contains the Reprobates so that the meaning is this blindness hath hapned not to all the Jews but to a part only that is to the Reprobates Neither have these words until the fulness of the Gentiles come in this meaning that there shall be such a plausible calling of the Jews after the fulness of the Gentiles is come in For there is nothing more usual than that th●se particles till or untill and while being denyed or affirmed signifie the same that never or alwayes As we shewed above c. 19. Neither doth that which the Apostle subjoyns v. 26. hinder anything this interpretation And so all Israel shall be saved For by the name of all Israel he understands the elect which indeed are the true Israelites as above c. 9.7 c. he sheweth And also in the following places v. 28. c. 11 he explains saying As concerning the Gospel they ar● Enemies for your sakes but as touching the Election they are beloved for their fathers sakes The summe of the whole place is this the rejection of the Iews Nation
into everlasting fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels XV. The execution of the Iudgement will presently follow upon the pronouncing of the sentence So that the wicked in the presence of the godly shall be carried away to Hell but the godly being caught up to meet Christ they shall with him enter into life eternal Mat. 25 ult 1 Thes. 4 17. XVI The end of the last Iudgement is a full and consummate execution of Gods counsel for manifesting his justice and grace XVII We must not rashly define where the place of the last judgement shall be Some will have it to be in the valley of Iehosaphat which is between the hills Sion and Oliver and that Christ shall descend no lower than to that part of the ayr in which a cloud took him up which they gather out of the Prophesie of Ioel cap. 3.2 But that place speaks nothing of the last judgment but of a temporary judgement to be inflicted on the Enemies of the Church of Israel alluding to that great overthrow which was given in the valley of Iehosaphat which was in the sight of Ierusalem But if this be transferred anagogically to the last Judgement this will be the meaning As the Enemies of Iehosaphat and of the Jews were slain in the fight of Ierusalem so likewise shall the Infidels be judged and thrown down to Hell in the sight of spiritual Ierusalem that is the Church And in this sense the Apostles Mat. 19.28 the Martyrs Rev. 20.4 yea all the Faithfull 1 Cor. 6.2 3. shall judge the World and the Devils Not that Christ will share with the Saints the honour of Judicature but that they shall approve of the sentence shall p●aise the wisdome and justice of the celestial Judge CHAP. XXXVI Of the end of the world and life eternal the Consequents of the Iudgement THere are two consequents of the last Judgement to wit the end of the World and Life eternal The end of the World is the destruction of this visible Universe after the wicked are thrust down to Hell and the godly elevated into the Heaven of the blessed The RULES I. This is called the consummation of the World Mat. 24 3. and 28. ●● II. The efficient cause of this consummation shall be God for it belongs to the same power to create and to destroy the world III. The matter i● this visible world heaven and earth and the things therein contained Peter expresly names the heavens and the elements with the earth and its contents 2 Pet. 3.10 11 12. IV Neither Hel● nor the Heaven of the blessed shall be destroyed Fo● there the w●●ked shal be eternally tortured and here the godly for ever glorifi●d V. Concerning the form of this consummation it is demanded 1. Whether it shall be mediate or immediate 2. In the substance or qualities onely VI. Peter answers the first question saying God will destroy it by fire 2 Pet. 3.6 7. The wo●ld that then was perish●d by water being overflow●d but the heavens the ea●th which are n●w by the same word are kept in sto●e reserved unto fi●e c and v. 10 The heaven● shall pass away with a great n●ise and the element● shall 〈◊〉 with fervent heat the earth also and works therein shall be burned up and v. ●2 The heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat But what kinde of fire thi● shall be he onely know who is himself 〈◊〉 co●suming fire VII Concerning the other question there be divers opinions For some will have this world de●troyed in its substance others in its qualities onely They who think it shall be destroyed only in qualitie by this word consumation mean a purg●ng and instauration Being moved ● By testimonies Rom. 8 19 20 21 22. For the earnest expectation of the crea●ure wai●eth for the manifestation of ●he sons of God For the c●eature was made subject to vanity not willingly but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in hope because the creature it self also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liber●y of the sons of God For we know that the who●● crea●ion groaneth and traveleth in pain together untill now 1 Cor. 7.31 The fashion o● figure of this world passeth away 2 Pet. 3.13 But we 〈◊〉 for new hea●ns a new earth according to promise Rev. 2● ● ●h●n I saw a new heaven a new earth II. By reasons 1. In the deluge the earth was not destroyed in i●s substance 2. Because man shall not be changed in his substance but in his qualities But they who are of the contrary opinion I. Rely on these Scriptures Psa 102.26 27. Heb. 1.11 They shall perish but thou dost remain they all shall wax old as doth a garment and thou shalt change them as a vesture c. Isa. 51. 6. Lift up your eyes to heaven and behold the earth below the Heavens shall vanish as smoak and the earth shall wax old as a garment Matth. 24.35 Heaven and earth shall pass away but my words shall not pass away 2 Pet. 3 7. But the Heavens and the Earth which now are by the same word are laid up in store and reserved for fi●e c. and verse 10. The Heavens shall passe away with a great noise and the elements shall melt with fervent heat the earth and all therein shall be burned and v. 12. The Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt c. Rev. 21.1 The first Heaven and the first Earth passed away and there was no more Sea II. Reasons 1. Because this visible world was made for man to sojourn in whilest he was a traveller but when his journey is ended and he in Heaven there will be no more need of this world 2. Because this stands with the order of things For seeing eternity belongs to God who is without beginning ending but to Spirits aevum which is that duration that hath beginning but wants ending to Physical things time is ascribed consisting both of beginning and ending To the former objections thus they answer The place of Rom. 8.19 20 21 22. is not meant of the restauration of this world but of its freedome from vanity to which it is subject which vanity consists in this that most men do most wickedly abuse the service of the creatures hence by Prosopopoeia or fiction of the person they are said to desire liberty The place in 1 Cor. 7.31 teacheth rather the contrary to wit that this world shall not remain although in that place mention is not made of the world it self so much as worldly things to wit riches pleasures and such like They teach that the new heaven in 2 Pet. 3. and Rev. 21. doth as it were point out the new world which the elect shall inhabite in their heavenly countrey For there is nothing more frequent than that allegory whereby the heaven of ●he blessed is likened sometimes