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

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the Eares of Corne and eate Of the second you haue a Commandement Leuiticus 23. 22. When you reape the Haruest of your Land thou shalt not rid cleane the corners of thy Field when thou reapest neither shalt thou make any after-gathering of thy Haruest but shalt leaue them vnto the poore and to the stranger I am IEHOVAH your GOD. An Example you haue Ruth 2. 8. Then said BOAZ vnto RVTH Hearest thou my Daughter Goe to none other Field to gather neither goe from hence but abide here by my Maydens The contrarie whereof is y Ex. 22. 21 2● vnmercifulnesse to the Stranger Fatherlesse Widdowes Poore Impotent c. As First In not paying the poore Labourer his wages that speedily Thou z Deut. 24. 14 15. shalt not oppresse the hired poore or needie one of thy Brethren or of the stranger that is in thy Land At his day shalt thou giue him his hyre the Sunne shall not goe downe before he haue it Behold a Iam. 5. 4. the hyre of the Workemen that haue reaped your Fields which is kept away by you cryeth and their cryes are come vp vnto the eares of the Lord of Hosts Secondly In not restoring the pledge of the poore whereof wee haue a Law Exod. 22. 26 27. If thou take to pledge thy Neighbours garment before the Sunne go downe thou shalt restore it to him Thirdly In keeping from them such commodities whereby their life should be sustayned He b Pro. 11. 26. that withdraweth Corne the people will curse him but a blessing shall be vpon the head of him that selleth his Corne. To forgiue offences Be c Ephes 4. 31. towards one another kinde not onely forgiuing offences full of compassion forgiuing one another as Christ also forgaue vs If d Mat. 6. 14. you forgiue men their offences so also will your heauenly Father forgiue you This is it which wee are taught in the Lords Prayer Forgiue vs our trespasses as we forgiue them that trespasse against vs. Thirdly To ouercome euill with good The contrarie but recompencing good for euill is Reuenge whereof Paul e Rom. 12. 19 20 21. saith Reuenge not your selues beloued but giue place to wrath for it is written Mine is vengeance I will repay saith the Lord. If therefore thine Enemy hunger feed him if he thirst giue him drinke for so doing thou shalt heape coles of fire on his head Be not ouercome of that which is euill but ouercome euill with good Not that by this Doctrine all going to Law is to bee condemned or that we are to find fault with the execution of Murderers and others or with Warre leauied by Princes against Tyrants abroad or Rebels at home No for to these purposes God hath erected the sacred and high estate of ciuill Magistrates as wee haue shewed before in the fift Commandement CHAP. XI Of the seuenth Commandement THE seuenth Commandement requireth Chastitie is of the duties that touch the purity of one person both soule and bodie and that aswell in single life as in the state of Marriage which God hath instituted for a remedie against vncleanenesse that wee bee chaste and pure in soule and bodie f 1. Thes 4. 3 4 5 Possessing our Vessell as the Apostle willeth vs in Holinesse and Honor what estate soeuer wee bee in whether single life or in the estate of holy Marriage I call the lawfull coniunction of a Anabaptists and Nicolaitanes that would haue wiues to be common man and woman into one flesh for out of this estate of Matrimonie there is no honest copulation nor g Mal. 2. 15. seed of God as the Prophet termeth it Holy Marriage I say First for that it is a holy remedie instituted of God for such as otherwise cannot containe to keepe their Vessell in honestie and honour it being h 1 Cor. 7. 9. better to marrie then to burne wherefore for i 1. Cor. 7. 2. auoyding of fornication let euery man haue his Wife and euery woman her husband saith the Apostle Againe k Heb. 13. 4. Marriage is honorable among all or in all things and the Bed vndefiled But Whoremongers and Adulterers God will iudge Secondly Because here especially that rule holdeth which wee are to obserue in all duties whatsoeuer That it be l 1. Cor. 7. 39. in the Lord. All sorts of men may The Papists that restrayne their Priests from Marriage which notwithstanding ridiculously they make a Sacrament indeed lawfully contract Matrimonie neither is there any state or condition of persons exempted from it for as the disease is generall so the remedie belongeth to them all Therefore we are told Marriage m Heb. 13. 4. is honourable among all and the Bed vndefiled For n 1. Cor. 7. 2. auoyding of Fornication let euery man haue his Wife and euery woman her Husband yet I adde in the third place Lawfull coniunction to shew that it must be betweene such persons as by no degree of Consanguinitie or Affinitie are prohibited to contract it which to doe is Incest Those degrees you haue all reckoned Leuit. 18. and are these that follow The o Leuit. 18. Verse 7 8. Sonne to marrie the Mother or the Stepmother The p 9. Brother the Sister of the whole or the halfe bloud whether borne in lawful wedlock or otherwise The q 10. Father his Sonnes Daughter or his Daughters Daughter the Sonne r 11. to marrie the Daughter of his Father borne by his Stepmother One ſ 12 13. to marrie his Aunt being his Father or his Mothers Sister or to t 14. marrie his Vncles Wife The Father u 15. to marrie his Sonnes Wife The x 16. Brother to marrie his Brothers Wife A y 17. Man to marrie his Wiues Daughter or his Wiues Sonnes Daughter or his Wiues Daughters Daughter All which degrees are in like sort and by the same analogie and proportion forbidden to the Woman and in the right line either ascending or descending the same prohibition reacheth in a manner infinitely All which Rules are perpetuall not for the Iewes onely confirmed by the Law of Nature for the breach of this common honestie is reckoned z Le. 18. 27 28 amongst those abominations for which the Land of Canaan did vomit vp her Inhabitants In the fourth place I say a man The defenders of Polygamie and a woman because Marriage is betweene two Euery a 1. Cor. 7. 2. man to haue his proper Wife and euery woman her proper Husband Two b Mat. 19. 5. saith our Sauiour shall be one flesh The contrarie whereof is Polygamie that is the hauing of moe Wiues then one at once which howsoeuer it pleased God for a time to tolerate in the Iewes and in the Patriarkes before them for the increase of the World but principally of his Church yet was alwayes a corruption of holy Marriage and vnlawfull without speciall
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The other is that of Tremellius and Iunius which is also the receiued interpretation I haue gotten a man from Iehouah by an Ellipsis of the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Gen. 14. 4. and Deut 34. 1. But neyther doe these places nor I thinke any other that you can bring warrant such an Ellipsis And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Verbe here vsed hath alwaies going with it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and no Ellipsis of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at any time As for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it selfe neuer signifieth from It is commonly the note of an Accusatiue case 〈◊〉 ●ny times of an Ablatiue and signifieth with Ioyned with a neuer ●ll it may stand for a Nominatiue as 1. Sam. 17. 34. 2. King 6. 5. So if it be ioyned with a Passiue as L●u●t 13. 49 But none of these can agree here and in any other sense I doe not find that it is euer taken EVE conceiued and bare KAIN and said I possesse the man IEHOVAH that is GOD by opening my wombe and making mee the Mother of a goodly Childe hath put me in possession as if now I had and held him in mine armes of that blessed Seed which in the fulnesse of time he will send into the World who being the LORD from Heauen shall tread downe the head of the Serpent Prophetically spoken like to that of IACOB Gen. 48. 22 I giue thee one portion aboue thy Brethren which I tooke out of the hand of the Amorite with my Sword and with my Bow It was not taken till foure or fiue Generations after but by faith hee did apprehend it as certaine as if it were then wonne and tooke vpon him to dispose thereof as of his owne Wherefore Kain had that name not for his owne sake nor was hee the purchase or possession the woman fixed her eyes vpon Shee lifted them vp higher and by so sweet a Babe such as the World had neuer seene before shee held her faith confirmed in the expectation of the Messiah God and Man who many yeeres after was to come out of the loynes of one of Eues Daughters In effect shee calleth him The man IEHOVAH in the same sense that God the Father Zach. 13. 7. calleth him the man my fellow Here therefore is a cleere testimonie of the Deitie of Christ which I would not willingly lose the hold off being not onely so plaine and pregnant and such a noble euidence of Eues faith but withall an Antiquity of such price the first thing recorded after man was throwne out of Paradise Which addeth I know not how a great waight maiestie to this most sweet and gracious speech And that Christ is euery-where called Iehouah may appeare both by the Old Testament it selfe and especially if it be conferred with the New For proofe whereof I lay before this ground as most certayne and infallible that wheresoeuer the true God Iehouah is said to haue appeared in the likenesse of an Angell or man this was the person not of the Father nor of the Holy Spirit but of the Sonne who appeared to the Fathers as a man to note out the great Mystery of his Incarnation and is called an Angell not by nature but by office as in i Malach. 3. 1. MALACHY The Angell of the Couenant and him whom k Zachar. 3 2. Zachary calleth The Angell of IEHOVAH IVDE l Iude verse 9. cermeth Michael the Arch-angell which is Christ our Sauiour This foundation laide which cannot faile I come to those places where the Name of Iehouah is giuen to him And first to those where this Angell appeared as a man Gen. 18. Three men being indeed Angels appeared vnto Abraham of which three one was Iehouah for so the very beginning of the Chapter hath it Further IEHOVAH appeared vnto him in the plaine of Mamre for when he lift vp his eyes behold three men stood before him and afterwards m Gen. 18. ver 13 15 17 20. Iehouah one of them had communication with him and his wife Againe of these three men two n Gen. 19. 1. went towards Sodome who are called Angels But Iehouah still remayned with Abraham till hee had left communing with him The very o Gen. 19. 24. next Chapter it is said IEHOVAH powred downe vpon Sodome and Gomorrah fire and brimstone out of Heauen from IEHOVAH that is Christ from his Father Gen. 32. 24 When Iacob was left alone beyond the Riuer after he had sent away his Companie a man wrestled with him till the morning whom IACOB calleth The mighty God naming the place where this was done Peniel that is The place where hee saw the face of the mighty God whereby appeareth manifestly that it was Iehouah which in the Prophet p H●sh 12. 5. H●sea is yet more euident where Iehouah saith that at Bethel God found him that is met Iacob and appeared vnto him and there saith that IEHOVAH he spoke with vs. Ioshua 6. IOSHVA being at Ierico a man stood before him with a Sword drawne in his hand Ioshua demanding who hee was hee said Hee was the Prince of the Host of IEHOVAH whereupon Ioshua fell downe vpon his face and worshipped him Then hee bade Ioshua plucke off his shooes from his feet for the place where hee stood was holy And afterwards Iehouah said to IOSHVA Lo I giue Ierico into thy hands c. Here the Epithere Of the Prince of the Host of IEHOVAH the adiuncts of worship belonging to GOD onely which the Angels doe renounce and of plucking off the shoo because the place is holy a peculiar marke of the Maiesty of God and lastly the effects of giuing Ierico into his hands prooue this man to bee Iesus Christ the true Iehouah and God alone Hee q Iudges 6. 21. which appeared vnto Gedeon with a walking staffe in his hand and is called The Angell of IEHOVAH is also named Iehouah and confirmeth Gedeon that by the power which hee had giuen vnto him sending him and promising his presence with him he should saue Israel out of the hands of the Midianites whereby hee doth manifestly declare himselfe to be the Lord of glory The Angell r Iudges 13. 8 10 22 23. of God which appeared to Manoah and his Wife by them both expresly called a man when he had declared himselfe wonderfull by his miraculous ascending in the flame of the fire that was vpon the Altar MANOAH said vnto his Wife wee shall certainly dye for wee haue seene God But his Wife said vnto him If IEHOVAH had pleased to kill vs hee would not haue receiued at our hand a burnt Offering nor gift nor haue shewed vnto vs all these things c. Here Manoah calleth him God and his Wife Iehouah so that this also must needes be the eternall Sonne of God the Angell of the Couenant Genesis 31.
thing from this at the Margent follow that which is by it selfe at the beginning Difference in substance there is not any but the Copie for that at the Margent was not altogether so perfect THE FIRST BOOKE OF DIVINITIE OF GOD THE CREATOR CHAPTER I. Of GOD the FATHER the SONNE and the HOLY GHOST DIuinitie is a Doctrine of glorifying God whereof there bee two parts One that concerneth God The other concerning Emanuel God with vs. God is Iehouah three Persons Iehouah which is Being or Perfection it selfe signifieth a Nature that hath all good and perfect things in a most perfect and incommunicable manner The perfect things in God beside Life Vnderstanding and Will without which no perfection can bee are Holinesse and Blessednes Holinesse is the puritie of his Nature from whence commeth a Righteousnesse in all his Wayes specially seene to vs in foure chiefe and principall Vertues which in the Scripture you shall find for the most part to goe by couples or payres The first couple are Kindnesse and Truth Kindnesse in being ready to bestow all good things Truth faithfully to performe whatsoeuer he speaketh The other couple are Iustice and Mercy flowing from the former Iustice to render to euery one his due Mercy in being ready to helpe in time of need This is the Holinesse of GOD and his Righteousnesse comming from it Blessednes is his All-sufficiency of things that make one happy and standeth in Kingdome and Power or Glorie Kingdome is his Soueraigntie of commanding whatsoeuer he will Power his ablenesse to doe whatsoeuer hee commandeth Glorie comprehendeth all the excellencies of his Nature as Wisedome and other Graces of the minde Strength Comelinesse and Beautie Graciousnesse or an amiable and louely Nature a complete furniture of Riches Honour and of all kind of Pleasures and Delights These are the Perfect themselues His perfect and incommunicable manner of hauing of them is Infinitenesse and Eternitie Infinitenesse whereby he is without circumscription and therefore of a most single Nature that whatsoeuer is in God is God himselfe and therefore also inuisible and incomprehensible Eternitie whereby Hee is without beginning or ending and therefore of himselfe and vnchangeable This is it we meane by IEHOVAH who vpon all that hath beene said is nor can be but One. The three Persons are each of them that one Iehouah diuersly subsisting and are the Father and the Sonne or the Holy Ghost The Father is a Person who from all eternitie hath begotten the Sonne The Sonne is a Person from all eternitie begotten of the Father The Holy Ghost is a Person eternally proceeding from the Father and the Sonne CHAP. II. Of the Eternall Decrees of God GOD being thus in his Nature and Person most glorious hath further embroidered himselfe in glorie by two notes of excellencie which he taketh to him Kingdome and Honour Kingdome is that whereby hee doth exercise an absolute Soueraigntie toward others The order whereof answerable to the relation betweene the Persons themselues is from the Father in the Sonne by the Holy Ghost to whom is attributed the immediate doing of them The Kingdome of God hath two parts Purpose and Works Purpose is his Decree before all times of euerything CHAP. III. Of Creation THe Works of God are the execution of his Purpose and are Creation and Prouidence Creation is his making all things of nothing finished in sixe dayes and was of euery Creature in excellencie of perfection Of the reasonable Creatures Angels and Men it was after his owne Image and Likenesse in Holinesse and Happinesse Holinesse in a mind inlightned with the knowledge of the whole Will of God and all the strengths of Nature conformed thereunto Happinesse in the fruition of Gods loue and from thence comming a Coniunction and Communion with him Coniunction is an inioying of his Personall presence Communion is a participation in some sort of his Blessednes both Kingdome Power and Glorie CHAP. IIII. Of Prouidence PRouidence is his gouerning of the things created CHAP. V. Of the Morall Law SO much of the Kingdome of God the honour due vnto him is That the reasonable Creatures Angels and Men doe his Will with that whole strength of their naturall integritie Euery thing with so much the greater strength as the dutie doth more excell the doing whereof is termed Righteousnesse CHAP. VI. The first Table and the first Commandement RIghteousnesse hath two parts Pietie and Iustice Pietie is of the immediate duties to God whereof this is the whole that wee haue God to be our God The parts are two One to cleaue vnto him Louing Reuerencing Feating Beleeuing Trusting and Hoping in him from whence arise Patience and Humilitie The other to worship him which worship comprehendeth all kind of Seruice publike and priuate One principall part whereof is Prayer both petition for the obtayning of good things or turning away of euill and thanksgiuing for all wee doe inioy A piece also of this Seruice when iust cause requireth is swearing and cursing by his Name making our Vowes vnto him and by lotterie to commit into his hands the successe of our doubtfull affaires CHAP. VII Of the second Commandement TO the worship of God two things doe belong a holy manner of worshipping God and a holy rest The manner standeth in Obedience and Reuerence Obedience is the worshipping of him according to his Commandement CHAP. VIII Of the third Commandement REuerence is a religious affection in the seruice of God whereunto are requisite Preparation and Humiliation and when need is both Fasting to quicken vs to petition in the acknowledgement of our vnworthinesse and wants and Feasting to expresse our thankefulnesse for his benefits CHAP. IX Of the fourth Commandement THis is the manner of Gods worship A holy rest is a sanctifying of a time vnto his seruice which beside other times as occasion shall be offered in a Family or for ones selfe apart ought ordinarily to bee in the Morning and Euening of euery day for Church-meetings on such Dayes and Times of the day as may stand with the conuenience of that Church But of necessitie one whole day in seuen is thus to be kept holy both with publike and priuate exercises In which number the duties of brotherly loue as distributing to the Poore according to Gods blessing vpon vs visiting the Sicke helping our Neighbour or any thing that is his in their distresse come also to bee reckoned when they are done as works of Mercy This Day in the first institution was the seuenth Day from the Creation and called the Sabbath Day beginning on the euening of the day before when the Creation of the World was finished CHAP. X. Of the second Table of the Law and of the fift Commandement IVstice followeth which is of the duties among our selues and is honour or the generall duties of Loue. Honour is a performance of duties in respect of a degree First among vnequals from Inferiours to their Superiours and contrariwise As To all Superiours in
sort Mans corrupt Nature yet so as it may be lost againe But whoso once of Malice falleth from it can neuer be repayred CHAP. VI. Of the Church vnder the Law THe Church is One and cannot be diuided but hauing regard to the diuersitie of Gods Dispensation it may be distinguished into the Church vnder the Old Testament and the Church in the New That vnder the Old Testament had diuers Rites Ceremonies and Sacrifices Figures of Christ and of the good things we haue in him especially among the Iewes his then peculiar People Whereby the Dispensation of those Times was more obscure and lesse accompanied with Knowledge and other Graces But of all these things as also of their Sacraments which in regard of the outward Signes were a part of the Legall Paedagogie and likewise of the Ministeries that were among them both that of Prophets inspired by whom were written the Bookes of the Old Testament and of other I haue written at large in a Treatise entituled The Old Testament or the Promise CHAP. VII Of the Church in the time of the Gospell TO the Church of the New Testament the Dispensation is in all cleerenesse and perfection Touching the Sacraments and Ministeries of the New Testament there be two Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper Baptisme is a washing with Water to assure our entrance into the Couenant the forme whereof is thus or to this effect I baptize thee in the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost The Lords Supper is a feeding with Bread and Wine to assure our continuance in the Couenant the forme whereof is thus or to this effect For the Bread Take ye eate ye This is my Body which is giuen for you Doe this in remembrance of me For the Cup Drinke ye all of this for this is my Bloud of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sinnes Doe this as oft as ye shall drinke it in remembrance of me The Ministers of the New Testament were Apostles inspired by whose Ministerie were written the Bookes of the New Testament Prophets Euangelists Pastors Teachers c. CHAP. VIII Of the Church of Gods Elect. THus farre of the outward Church The other is the Church of Gods Elect drawne to beleeue in Christ ordinarily by Preaching Wherefore with these God maketh indeed his Couenant By vertue whereof our Faith albeit apprehending Christ absent it apprehend Him weakely yet confirmed by the Word and Sacraments Prayer and other holy meanes it neuer letteth goe the Hold but continually groweth till we come to see Christ in his glory So as Faith hath alwayes Hope that is an assured waiting for of that blessed Sight going with it CHAP. IX Of Regeneration HItherto of Christs Propheticall Office The Kingdome by excellencie so termed is that whereby destroying the Old Man by the Power of his Death and Sufferings all that are of the Church of Gods Elect He doth regenerate by the Power of his Resurrection The Day of his Rising which was the first Day of the Creation is for an euerlasting Remembrance of that Benefit come in place of the Sabbath and called the Lords Day beginning when he arose and began to renew the World Regeneration is our spirituall incorporating into Christ euery Member in his due proportion whereby being one with him through him with God and his Spirit ours we become Gods children by adoption Of a regenerate estate there be two Degrees as it were two Ages Infancie and Mans estate Infancie which is during this Life by Faith and therefore by meanes of the Word and imperfectly sealed vp in our owne inward assurance of the Spirit not in the Worlds discerning of it and growing according as our Faith doth grow And this is called the State or Kingdome of Grace Mans estate which is after this Life by Sight and therefore immediately by Christs Spirit and in all Perfection And that is called the State or Kingdome of Glorie CHAP. X. Of Wisedome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption THe Spirit of Christ being ours consequently doth saue vs from our sinfull and cursed estate to inioy all the Good that is in him It standeth in Illumination and Iustification and from thence comming Sanctification and Redemption Illumination Whereby expelling Darkenesse he doth inlighten our Minds with the Knowledge of the Will of God in Christ which the Apostle calleth Wisdome Iustification Whereby forgiuing our sinnes by his taking them vpon him he doth account the Holinesse of his Nature and Righteousnesse to be ours From whence as I said come Sanctification and Redemption Sanctification Whereby slaying Sinne he putteth a new Life of Holinesse into vs to bring forth fruits of Righteousnesse Wherein there is no more now required but that Sinne beare not the rule in vs and our Workes of Righteousnesse though all mingled with sinne are not onely pleasing vnto God through his forgiuenesse of the sinne but haue beside of Gods free Goodnesse looking vpon them in the perfection of his Sonne speciall Promises of Reward made vnto them both in this Life and in the Life to come Redemption Whereby freeing vs from the Curse himselfe becomming a Curse for vs he maketh vs blessed by the participation of his Blessednesse Our Blessednesse in this estate standeth First in the Loue of God anew Whereby all things not the Calamities and Troubles of this Life and also Death it selfe but euen our very sinnes turne vnto our good and in the assurance whereof wee haue Peace of Conscience and Ioy in the Holy Ghost Secondly in that wee are made neere vnto him and haue continuall accesse with boldnesse into his Presence Thirdly in our former Soueraigntie and Power ouer the Creatures whereof commeth free liberty of vsing them all and deliuerance from the Bondage of Satan This also as a noble accesse added thereunto that the holy Angels themselues are made ministers for our good Fourthly in a Spirituall Glorie and Wisedome and other Graces After this Life commeth the fulnesse of Blessednesse more or lesse according to the diuers measure of our Faith here To the Soule in Heauen presently after Death till the Latter Day At what time our Bodies being raysed vp glorious the whole Man shall meete CHRIST comming to Iudgement in the Ayre and there receiue Sentence of all fulnesse of Blessednesse for euer Which we shall inioy taken vp into Heauen by the vertue of his Ascension Certaine Men vpon our Sauiour CHRISTS Resurrection rose againe and are alreadie with him in Heauen So are Enoch and Elias both aliue assumed thither Those that are liuing at the Latter Day shall suddenly be changed after the dead are once risen The Creatures also for our sake shall then be renewed into a Glorious estate not subiect to Corruption A TABLE OF ALL THE principall Points handled in this BOOKE The first Booke CHAP. I. THe scope and drift of the Doctrine of Diuinitie Fol. 1. The Parts 6. Of God his Being Life Vnderstanding and
Lords Supper 391 CHAP. VI. Of the Church of Gods Elect. 399 Of Faith The nature of it the persons to whom it is appropriate the causes principall and instrumentall the prerogatiue of the Faithfull the weakenesse and degrees of it the growth that it neuer can be lost the fruit and effect of it 401 Of Hope 418 Of Sight 417 CHAP. VII Of a new World 419 Of the alteration of the Sabbath for the Day Name Time of Beginning 425 Of Regeneration Of Christ the Head and our vnion with him of 4. Petition the Spirit of Adoption the Infancie of Regeneration and Mans estate 427 CHAP. VIII Of Saluation 5. Petition Of remouing the Vayle of Ignorance of Wisedome Of forgiuenesse of Sinnes Imputation of Righteousnesse Iustification Of Mortification and Sanctification 1. Branch of the 6. Petition Of imperfect Sanctification and the degrees thereof Of the notes and markes of Sanctification Of the Lords Prayer Of the Church Militant The enemies we fight against the two Generals of the Field the Weapons which both the enemies and we fight withall the Goale or Mastrie we fight for The Issue of the Conflict Of Repentance The Notes or Signes the Fruit and whence wee haue it Of Fasting The outward abstinence the end and true vse the time of keeping a Fast it is in the nature of a Sabbath Gods acceptation of our Workes and how The reward due vnto them they no whit merit the necessitie of doing good Workes Of Celestiall Holinesse and of the Church Triumphant Of Redemption 2. Branch of the 6. Petition Of the Blessednesse of Gods children in this life Of the state of the faithfull departed Of the generall Resurrection Who shall rise by what power and in what sort Speciall things touching the resurrection of the Elect. Of the last Iudgement The persons to be iudged The Iudge Christ Of his comming to Iudgement the place from whence he shall come the signes and manner of his Comming The Place where the Iudgement shall be Of the Sentence The preparation to it the order of the Sentence the Sentence it selfe the Reason the execution of the Sentence and the order of execution Of our taking vp into Heauen and by what right we come thither Of our full Blessednesse The root and foundation of the same the parts the measure and quantitie the degrees of Glory and whence it groweth the eternitie Of certaine that rose vpon our Sauiours Resurrection Of Enoch and Elias Of the sudden change of those that shall be aliue at Christs comming Of the renewing of the Creatures FINIS THE FIRST BOOKE OF DIVINITIE OF GOD THE CREATOR CHAP. I. Of God the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost AS all other Sciences are Diuinitie is a Doctrine of glorifying God commended by their end and euery one esteemed so much the more eminent as the end doth more excell so it is the worthie prayse of the Doctrine of Religion which is the same that we call Diuinitie that it looketh to such an end as is incomparably most to be desired most to be loued and embraced of vs that is to say the glory of God a Rom. 11. 39. From whom and by whom and to whom are all things And whose glory ought to be a thousand-sold more deare vnto vs then our liues yea then the saluation of our soules This therefore is the scope and marke Heresies and Errors A Theists that say There is no God whom not onely the Word of God but all the Things created especially this goodly Frame and Workmanship of the World and euen their owne Consciences sufficiently confute since they cannot but see vnderstand hereby that there must needs be some Diuine Power before all and aboue all of whom these things were made and by whom they are gouerned in so wise and gracious sort as the ●postle teacheth Rom. 1. 20. For his inuisible Things that is his Eternall Power and Godhead being vnderstood by the things created are clearely seene by this Frame of the World to the end that men might be vnexcusable And therefore these Wretches that striue against their Conscience to put out so cleare a Light which will they nill they shineth thus bright in their eyes are to be left vnto themselues and Gods iust hand vpon them as vtterly vnworthie to be dealt with by any further Arguments The whole Doctrine of Poperie which in all the points of their Religion spoyleth God of his glorie for 1. In stead of the true blessed God they set vp an Idoll of their owne braine one neither perfectly righteous which accepteth an imperfect satisfaction as whatsoeuer proceedeth from man whom they will haue able to satisfie for his owne sins must of necessitie be nor perfectly mercifull if he do not freely forgiue sinne but receiue some part of recompence at our hands contrary to that of Esay 43. 25. I I for my selfe that is freely for mine own mercie and glorie do away iniquities 2. His incomprehensible and incorruptible glorie they transforme into the image of a corruptible creature as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 1. 23. painting him out sometimes after the likenesse of an old man sometimes in one shape sometimes in another as if Time did weare him or Age alter him who is the Eternitie of Israel and neuer changeth 3. Their prayers to Hee Saints Shee Saints and angels which is a glorie proper vnto God Psal ●0 15. Call upon ●● and I will deliuer thee so shalt 〈…〉 fie mee And their bowing to Stocks and Stones whereof the Lord saith Esay 4● ● I will not give my glorie to another nor my praise to carued Images 4. They teach that the predestinating as well of the elect to life as of the reprobate to condemnation is for their workes fore-seene which the Apostle Rom. 9. 22 23. sheweth to be of his owne free pleasure to shew forth the riches of his might and glorie 5. Touching 〈◊〉 ●●w of God they are not only altogether ignorant of the true vse thereof which is by a right humiliation of ones selfe to prepare the way and to lead him vnto Christ but spoyle God of the glory due vnto him whilest they teach That it is possible for a man to fulfill the Law himselfe and so falsifie that goldē saying of the Apostle Rom. 11. 32. God hath sh●t all vnder sinne that he might haue mercie vpon all 6. The means of saluation they attribute in part to the worthinesse of men and to their due desert which is the free grace and gift of God that he that glorieth might glorie in the Lord 1. Cor. 1. 32. 7. Whereas the wonderfull glorie of God in his loue vnto mankind hath herein shined forth most clearely that when we were dead in sinnes and enemies vnto God he hath quickened and reconciled vs to himselfe they contrarily imagine that the wound is not to deepe but that there remaineth still a kind of life in man and a disposition to receiue
and part in another and therefore they are many men But God because he is a most single and perfect and infinite essence to whomsoeuer hee communicateth his nature as hee hath before all times to his Sonne and holy Spirit must needes communicate the same wholly and perfectly and infinitely So as there can be but one God for if there be many one must differ from another in hauing that the other hath not so can they not be perfect much lesse can they be perfection it selfe perfection being that which both is perfect of it selfe and giueth perfection to all other things But being many gods if one should giue perfection to the other that other were not God For hee had not his God-head of himselfe if all had of themselues none should giue to other so none of them were God And infinite how can that be which is distributed among many for where there be many all must be circumscribed because where one is there cannot bee the other But our God is such a one as filleth Heauen and Earth and cannot be circumscribed therefore in trauelling with a multitude of gods they bring forth no God at all But because in so high and deepe a point of Christian Religion we are not to rest vpon naturall reasons leauing them I come vnto the vndoubted Oracles of holy Scripture whereby it is most cleerely and euidently confirmed Deut. 6. 4. Harken Israel IEHOVAH thy Gods meaning the persons in the God-head are one Iehouah or one diuine Essence Deut. 32. 39. See now that I am he and there is no God with mee For who k Psal 18. 32. saith the Psalmist is God beside IEHOVAH Esay 44. 6. Thus saith IEHOVAH I am the first and I am the last and besides me there is no God Againe l Esay 45. 5. I am IEHOVAH and there is none but I beside me there is no God And the m 1. Cor. 8. 4. Apostle to the Corinths We know there is no other God but one for albeit there be that are called gods both in Heauen and vpon Earth as there be in the vaine conceits of men many gods and many lords yet to vs there is but one God the Father of whom are all things and one Iesus Christ c. The same hee inforceth in the n Ephes 4. 5. Epistle to the Ephesians There is one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all c. which also is a notable reason For if there were many gods there must also be many faiths one beleeuing in this god another in that god And here the sleights of Satan haue from time to time beene wonderfull who not able to wring out of mens minds the opinion of a God so strongly settled in them hath cunningly abused the World by bringing in an imaginary multitude of gods bewitching them to worship partly fained powers partly bare creatures neglecting the Creatour blessed for euer Amen By how much The three persons are each of them that one Iehouah diuersly subsisting and are the Father and the Sonne and the Holy Ghost the more wee are to striue for the holding fast of this Truth as the Piller of Faith and ground of all Pietie howsoeuer it bee a truth of all other most true and certayne that there is nor can be but one onely God for the causes before alleaged ye the Scripture telleth vs that in this most simple and single essence there bee three subsistences or persons truely subsisting whereof euery one is distinct from other and each hath the whole God-head in him The Father which eternally begat the Sonne The The Father is a Person which from all eternitie hath begotten the Sonne Sonne eternally begotten of the Father The Holy Ghost eternally proceeding both from the Father and the Sonne And these three Persons are all one God or one Diuine Nature The Scripture is wont to expresse them vnder the name The Sonne is a Person from all eternitie begotten of the Father The Holy Ghost is a Person eternally proceeding from the Father and the Sonne of Elohim gods not as if there were more gods then one but to note the diuers subsistences in the God-head as you may see Deut. 6. 4. Esay 54. 5. and in a number of other places and therefore vseth for the most part to couple it with a Verbe singular Wee call them Persons because they are liuing and vnderstanding natures subsisting by themselues which are the things that make a Person For first brute creatures are no persons because hauing life yet they want vnderstanding Secondly euery person must subsist that is bee some one particular thing as Iohn Peter c. For the whole nature of man wee doe not call a person but a thing common to many persons Thirdly this subsistence must be by it selfe neyther the part of another thing nor sustayned of another thing as the Soule of a man whilest it is coupled with the Body subsisting all that while not alone but together with the Body is not called a person And so wee rightly say that the humanity of Christ consisting of a reasonable Soule and Body as all other men doe yet in him maketh not a person as it doth in Iohn and Peter because it subsisteth not alone but in the Deitie which supporteth it To prooue the Sonne and Holy Ghost Samosetan ' Seruetus c make the Sonne and eternall Word of God a bare Idea and imaginary thing The Holy Ghost nothing else but an operation or moouing whereby God worketh in his Children And so rob the Church of the true God blessed for euer Amen to bee persons truly subsisting indued with Iudgement will vnderstanding and a liuing nature not bare qualities or actions the place of Genesis o Gen ● 26 is most cleere and subiect to no cauill Let vs make man according to our Image God the Father consulteth not there with his Angels for the glory of Creation he reserueth to himselfe alone neyther was man made to the Image of Angels but of God he speaketh not of himselfe in the plurall number for honour sake for that kind of speech you shall not finde so ancient nor knowne to the former Ages but he speaketh and consulteth after his manner which is Diuine and Spirituall with his Sonne Holy Spirit which how could it be if they were not vnderstanding substances So in the diuision of Tongues he taketh counsell Come p Gen. 11. 7. let vs goe downe and confound their speech This was not with the Angels but with the Sonne and Holy Ghost For straightway Moses addeth So IEHOVAH scattered them Touching the Sonne In the beginning was the Word Iohn 1. 2. was that is truely subsisted for so is the nature of that word How could hee bee the q Iohn 1. 18. onely begotten Sonne of God r Col●s 1. 15. borne before any thing was created if hee were not a liuing person He that ſ Dan. 9. 13.
knoweth all the secrets of his Father as perfectly as if they were numbred before him must not hee needes be wise himselfe and of an vnderstanding substance And how can he else be tempted as Paul t 1. Cor. 10. 9. saith that some of the Fathers in the Wildernesse tempted him To conclude what can bee more plaine then that in the u Pro● 8. ●0 Prouerbs where he is said before the World was made to haue beene the daily delight of God sporting before him continually and in Iohn 17. 5. to haue beene glorious with his Father before the World was Whereunto adde the effects attributed vnto him he x Gen. 32. 4. 〈◊〉 with Moses 〈◊〉 wrestled with Iacob spake and blessed him came out from the Father when he y Iohn 16. 18. came into the World c. Touching the Spirit although wee grant this word to bee often vsed by a Metonymie of the cause sometimes for the motions and working of the Spirit in the faithfull as when z 1 Thess 5. 19. Paul saith Quench not the Spirit sometimes for the grace and gifts themselues wrought by the Spirit in which sense a Acts 2. 4. the diuersity of Tongues is called the holy Spirit yet there want not infinite testimonies to prooue the Spirit properly taken not onely distinct from the graces which it worketh which the Apostle doth most b 1. Cor. 12. 18. euidently saying There bee diuersity of graces but the selfe-same Spirit but to bee withall a liuing and vnderstanding substance Therefore to him is attributed will and that a most free and voluntary will c 1. Cor. 12. 11. He distributeth to euery one according as hee will Knowledge d 1. Cor. 2. 11. None knoweth the things of God but the Spirit of God Iudgement e Acts 15. 22. It seemeth good to the Holy Ghost and to vs hearing and declaring the same to others f Ioh. 16. 14 15. Of mine shall he take saith Christ and declare to you Againe g Iohn 16. 13. Whatsoeuer he heareth he shall speake And if hee were no liuing and vnderstanding substance how could hee be grieued as the Prophet speaketh h Esay 63. 10. They grieued his Spirit His actions likewise prooue the same i Esay 61. 1. Hee anoynted Christ sent him to preach vnto the poore k Esay 63. 14. led the people of Israel thorow the Wildernesse l Luke 1. 35. The Holy Ghost saith the Angell to MARY shall come vpon thee and ouer-shaddow thee framing and creating out of thy substance the flesh or humane nature of Christ Our Sauiour in Iohn calleth him m Iohn 14. 16. and 15. 26. and 16. 13. a Comforter he saith not comfort it selfe but a Comforter that is a liuing and vnderstanding person comforting Gods Elect. The point of their personall subsistence being thus cleered let vs goe on to that which followeth There be in all foure things to be considered touching these persons First That they are each distinct from other Sabellius who as the former robbeth vs of these persons but in a more subtill manner So infinite are the sleights of Satan who to deceiue and abuse the world changeth him self into a thousand formes For granting the Sonne and holy Spirit to be persons truly subsisting diuine eternall and vncreated yet he taketh away all distinction between the Father and them maketh but one Person in the God-head As if God were termed the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost no otherwise then as wee terme one and the same man to be wise learned rich c. seuerall and distinct persons When IOHN n Iohn 1. 1. saith that the Word was with God that is with the Father as in another o 1. Iohn 2. 2. place he doth expound it if he did not meane that it had some thing proper to it selfe beside the essence common with them both he had which is to be detested mistaken his kind of speech and hereunto it serueth that Christ expresly calleth the Father another then himselfe Iohn 5. 33. There is another that beareth witnesse of me So of the Spirit Iohn 14. 16. I will pray the Father and hee shall giue you another Comforter the Spirit of Truth as in the p Iohn 15. 26. next Chapter hee doth expound himselfe And how else could the comparison stand That the q Phil. 2. 6. Sonne is equall with God his Father vnlesse there be a distinction betweene them But among all other that place is very r Iohn 8. 13 14 15 16 17. 18. notable where to the cauill of the Iewes excepting that the testimony of our Sauiour Christ was not true because he bare record of himselfe he answereth If I iudge any thing my witnesse is true for I am not alone but there is I and the Father that sent mee Now in your owne Law it is written that the witnesse of two is true there is I beare witnesse of my selfe and the Father that sent mee beareth witnesse of me c. manifestly making himselfe and his Father two As also of the Spirit it doth appeare in the Prophet ESAY ſ Esay 48. 16. IEHOVAH hath sent me and his Spirit The second point is the Trinity of Persons euident and cleere by that which hath beene said yet for further illustration it shall not be amisse to note from the beginning such places as serue vndoubtedly to prooue it that it may appeare by what degrees the wisedome of God hath from time to time made knowne so great a Mystery to his Church which no reason can demonstrate nor since the fall could once haue entred into the thought or imagination of man if God had not reuealed it In the first Chapter of t 〈◊〉 1. 1 2. Genesis MOSES though more obscurely layeth downe this same God his Word and Spirit The Spirit of God mooued vpon the Waters And GOD said Let there bee Light c. whom anon hee bringeth in taking counsell together in the making of man diuision of Tongues c. as before wee haue declared Long after that as it were in a middle Age Esay u Esay 63 ● 11 doth reuiue it and speaketh somewhat playner I will declare the kindnesse of IEHOVAH towards the house of Israel The Angell of his face Christ the Mediator betweene God and man saued them but they rebelled and grieued his holy Spirit which he had put in the middest of them Last of all in the conclusion and winding vp at it were of the times of the Law hee manifesteth it more fully by the hands of the x Hag. 2. 5 6. Prophet HAGGAI Now therefore ZERVBBABEL and IEHOSHVA and all the people of the Land be strong and doe the worke for I am with you saith IEHOVAH of Hostes with my Word in whom I made a Couenant with you when you came out of Egypt and my Spirit that abideth among you And thus farre out of the Old
Testament In the New as all other Mysteries of God so this especially is more cleerely reuealed by that great Prophet which was to come into the World the High Priest and Apostle of our Profession y Mat. 3. 16 17 and 2. Pet. 1 17. Christ Iesus vpon whom in his first imitation to the worke of our Redemption being himselfe the Sonne one of these three Persons the other two shewed themselues from Heauen The Holy Ghost in his Gifts and Graces represented by the visible shape of a Doue the Father by his voyce from the Seate of Glory This is my Beloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased In his last farewell to his Disciples being to leaue the World and to goe vnto the Father hee left this Doctrine as a perpetuall Monument religiously to bee obserued of the Church to the end of the World willing to baptize all Nations z Mat. 28. 19. In the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost That as in other respects so in this it is most worthily said a Iohn 1. 18. No man hath seene God at any time The onely begotten Sonne who is in the bosome of the Father hee hath reuealed him With these two Testimonies I willingly content my selfe as most pregnant of all the rest And therefore I passe ouer diuers other that might bee alleaged to this purpose because these twaine may stand in stead of many Onely I will adde that golden testimony of his beloued Disciple b 1. Iohn 5. 7. There bee three that beare record in Heauen the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost It is cleere that to the earthly witnesse or testimony of men in the things which we feele and haue experience of within our selues Regeneration Righteousnesse Sanctification hee opposeth the heauenly Witnesse or Testimony of these persons greater in regard of the excellence of the witnesses but equall in the number whereby appeareth the cleere euidence of this place The third point is that these persons Tritheites who though they acknowledge the three Persons to bee euery one God indeede yet teach that they are not onely distinct but seuered and deuided haue euery one the whole God-head and Diuine nature and are all three that one onely true and euer-liuing God For both the Apostle c 1. Iohn 5. 7 9. there calleth them so expresly and the testimony of all three hee knitteth vp in one when he saith If wee receiue the testimony of men the testimony of God is greater Euen as Moses d Deut. 6. 4. also doth when from the multitude of the Persons hee calleth them to the vnity of the substance Therefore the Apostle Paul e Col. 2. 9. saith In him Christ the Sonne of GOD manifested in the flesh dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily that is personally which is to bee extended to all the other Persons For to whomsoeuer God communicates his nature he must needes communicate it wholly as hath beene said And this mystery how in that most simple and single essence of God there bee certaine substances or persons truly subsisting three in one and one in three differing but not deuided seuerall but not sundred many and yet the same all one for their nature all distinct for three persons is a secret of all secrets passing all reach and vnderstanding of man rather reuerently to be adored then too curiously to be searched into The fourth last point is the incommunicable properties whereby these persons are distinguished in thēselues To the Sonne is proper to be begotten to the Holy Ghost to proceede the Father is of himselfe neyther begotten nor proceeding but which from all Eternity hath begotten his Sonne and hee and the Sonne together send forth the holy Spirit Of the Father wee shall not neede to speake But that the Sonnes proper subsistence is to be begotten as the name of Sonne importeth giuen vnto him of God Marke 3. 17. This is my well beloued Sonne and so called before hee tooke flesh Psal 2. 13. Kisse the Sonne lest hee be wroth But most cleerely in the f Pro. 30. 4. Prouerbs What is his Name or his Sonnes Name So the Scripture in many places sheweth Iohn 1. 18. The onely begotten Sonne which is in the bosome of the Father And a g Iohn 2. 14. little before Wee beheld his glory as the glory of the onely begotten of his Father The like wee say of the Holy Ghost who is sometimes called the Spirit of God sometimes the Spirit of Christ Rom. 8. 9 10. 11. But you are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so be the Spirit of God dwell in you but if one haue not the Spirit of Christ this man is not his But if the Spirit of him that raysed Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raysed Christ from the dead will also quicken you by his Spirit dwelling in you Sometimes hee is said to bee sent from the Father or to proceed from the Father which is all one sometime to be sent from the Sonne Iohn 1. 5. 26 The error of the Greeke Churches who deny the Holy Ghosts proceeding from the Sonne But when the Comforter shall come whom I will send vnto you from the Father the Spirit of Truth which proceedeth from the Father As touching the God-head of Arius denyed Christ to be of the same nature with his Father but as it were a secondary god acknowledging hee was an excellent Creature created before the World by whom God created the World and saued Mankind and therefore as a God in office to bee adored not in essence The like of the Holy Ghost But since it is plaine that God made all things in six daies both the Sonne and the Spirit if they were creatures must haue beene comprehenced in that worke these three Persons Of the Father no man euer doubted But the God-head of the Sonne and Holy Ghost some Heretikes haue called in question wherefore to confirme our faith herein let vs take Arguments for them both For the God-head of the Sonne we haue these He is IAH IEHOVAH EHIEH that is to say being or perfection it selfe Psal 68. 19. Ascending on high thou leddest captiuity captiue and gauest gifts vnto men euen the Rebels thou dwelling there that is to say in Heauen leddest captiue O IAH God meaning Christ To whose Ascension the Apostle doth apply it Ephes 4. 8. EHIEH hee calleth himselfe manifestly Iohn 8. 58. Before ABRAHAM was made I am Not made but of my selfe and from my selfe without beginning for that i● the force of am elegantly opposed vnto made The name Iehouah is giuen him Genes 4. 1. h This interpretation floweth naturally from the Hebrew Text. Beside it there be two other which of all the rest seeme most probable One is Ieromes With or by ●ehouah that is by his goodnesse and blessing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But in that sence it should haue beene 〈◊〉
come aswell as others which hee declareth afore hand vnto his Church As the same y 1. Pet. 1. 16. Apostle saith The fore-witnessing Spirit of Christ declared the things that were to befall vnto him and the glory that was to follow And by this Argument is his God-head manifestly prooued z Esay 42. 22 23 26. Esay 41. where God prouoking all false gods and their worshippers to bring their proofes and to vse their strongest arguments hee saith Let them vtter and declare vnto vs the things that shall fall out The former things what they were declare that we may set our minde vnto them and know the end of them or the things to come declare vnto vs nay saith hee declare but the signes of the things hereafter that wee may know you to be gods At the length hee concludeth There is none that can declare there is none that can fore-tell there is none that can heare your wordes A chiefe man in Sion in whom behold behold these things and to Ierusalem a Publisher of glad tydings I will giue The summe is none can declare things immediately nor at the length to come to passe nor giue any incling or signification of future things but all this glory God taketh to himselfe in Christ yea so infinite is this his Knowledge that euen the secrets of all hearts which God onely discerneth are knowne vnto him for that is it which the Euangestlist Iohn a Iob. 2. 24 25. expresly noteth Hee committed not himselfe into the hands of the Iewes which after a sort beleeued in him because hee knew all men and had no need that any should testifie of man for himselfe knew what was in man In another b Matth. 9. 4. place hee is said to haue seene their thoughts and Reuel 2. 14 to search the hearts and the reines Neyther doth this knowledge rest here but it soundeth the bottomlesse counsels of God his Father vnsearchable of all his Creatures Reuelation 5. The Booke with seuen Seales in the right hand of him that sate vpon the Throne which none in Heauen nor vpon the Earth nor vnder the Earth was able to open nor so much as to looke vpon it this Lyon of the Tribe of Iudah the root of Dauid by his owne Power preuayled to open Hereof it is that in the Prophet c Dan. 8. 13. Daniel wee find him set forth by the name of PALMONI Then I heard saith he a certaine Saint speaking for the Saint said vnto PALMONI the speaker that is to Christ the Interpreter of his Fathers will How long shall this Vision be PALMONI is a compound word and signifieth as much as to haue all hidden and secret things ready told and as wee vse to speake at ones fingers ends most absolutely and perfectly knowne which is the proper Epithete of our Sauiour Christ in whom are hidden all the treasures of Wisedome and Vnderstanding and who is said to bee in the Bosome of the Father yea who is the very Wisdome of God as manifestly appeareth by conference of the two Euangelists Matthew and Luke for that which Christ saith in MATTHEW d Matth. 23. 24 Behold I send among you Prophets and Wise-men and Scribes c. LVKE c Luke 21. 49. hath it Therefore also the Wisedome of God saith I will send among you Prophets and Apostles c. Last of all hee is called Eternall Psalm 93. 2. Thy Throne is established from before then meaning any time whereof a man may say then thou art from euerlasting And that this Psalme is spoken of Christ appeareth in the very first beginning Iehouah raigueth Salomon in his Prouerbs f Prou. 8. 22. doth notably inforce the same IEHOVAH possessed mee in the beginning of his way before his workes before then Before the World was I anoynted before the beginning before the first things of the Earth when yet there were no deepes was I brought forth when there were no Fountaines heauy with water when yet Mountaines were not fastened before the Hils was I brought forth yet he had not made the Earth nor streets no not the beginning nor dusts of the inhabited World When hee fitted the Heauens there was I when he appointed the circuit vpon the face of the Deepe when he fortified the Cloudes aboue when he strengthned the Fountaines of the Deepe when he laid his Decree vpon the Sea that the waters should not passe the commandement of his mouth when hee appointed the foundations of the Earth And hereunto serueth that to the Col●ssi●●s g Col. 1. 15. Begotten before all Creation or before any thing was ●reated and therefore from euerlasting Agreeable whereunto is that whereby he calleth himselfe in the h Reuel 18. Reuelation Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end which was and which is and which is to come And in IOHN i Iohn 8. 5 8. before ABRAHAM was made I am Againe k Iohn 17. 15. Glorifie mee O Father with the glory which I had before the World was with thee That also to the l Heb. 9. 14. Heb. 1. 2. Hebrewes where hee is said to haue offered vp himselfe by his euerlasting Spirit is verie pregnant to prooue his Eternall Deitie And when by him God made all Ages the times and courses of all things must not he the Maker and Beginner of Time be himselfe before all Time But that of all other is most emphaticall where he is called m Esay 9. 5. The Father of Eternity not onely eternall but Eternity it selfe and the Author of it Thirdly being the Sonne and begotten as before appeared hee must needes bee vnderstood to bee of his Fathers Essence For he that begetteth and they that are begotten are all of one nature especially he that hath not the like but the same very Essence and whole God-head in him As he is therefore Consubstantiall so is he coequall with his Father A sonne is inferiour to his father because his father is more excellent then hee in priority of Time in priority of Dignity For his Wisedome and other parts which the sonne by instruction receiueth from him Againe because hee bestoweth freely this benefit vpon his sonne to beget him for fleshly Parents in gender voluntary of their free will and election not by nature These things set aside a sonne who hath not the same but the like nature with his father were equall with him How much more therefore is this true in the Sonne of God who is not of the like but of the selfe-same nature and Essence with his Father and in whom none of the things before alleaged can take place Priority of Times there is none for all are Coeternall nothing vnperfect for what is the God-head but perfection it selfe Neyther doth the heauenly Father like vnto fleshly Parents beget his Sonne voluntarily so as he might haue begotten him or left him vnbegotten or may beget moe but hee begetteth him by nature and therefore him alone
Fourthly Hee sendeth forth the Holy Ghost out of his owne substance and therefore is indeede and truth God if as shall bee prooued anon the Holy Ghost himselfe be God Fiftly The workes which only belong to God Christ doth the same and that in the same manner as hee saith in o John 5. 19. IOHH Whatsoeuer the Father doth the same the Sonne doth likewise And p Iohn 5. 18. againe My Father worketh hitherto and I worke Whereupon truely and rightly the Iewes concluded that hee made himselfe equall with God It were long to goe thorow all but to select the chiefe and principall among all the workes of God none is more neere and inward to the Sacred Maiesty then the Eternall Election which is within himselfe and knowne onely to himselfe and whereof he alone doth keepe the Booke This is attributed vnto Christ Iohn 15. You haue not chosen mee but I haue chosen you that you might bring forth fruit and that your fruit may remaine which properly ment of the dignity and office of Apostle-ship whereunto Christ had chosen them giueth them withall this comfort that as they had this honour to be the Arch-Masons and Master-Builders of the Church which is the House of the liuing God so themselues were liuely stones of that spirituall Building and to haue part in the fruite which by their Ministery they should reach forth for the euerlasting good of many in q 2. Tim. 4. 6. sauing of themselues as well as others without which their ioy had not beene full And aptly doth this follow as the Root and Fountaine of that most Honourable Title to bee his friends which hee had vouchsafed to giue vnto them immediately before But more manifest is that Iohn 13. 18. I speake not of you all I know whom I haue chosen But it behooueth that the Scripture should bee fulfilled He that eateth bread with mee hath lift vp his heele against mee The circumstance of exempting one of the Apostles out of the number of the blessed making his Election the cause of this their difference referring the same to his owne secret knowledge and finally opposing to the Chosen him that should betray him the r Iohn 17. 12. sonne of destruction as afterwards he calleth him who yet in familiaritie of conuersation was a choice and speciall friend eating bread continually at his Table shew plainly that hee speaketh of Election vnto life As other Å¿ Mat. 24. 31. where hee doth when speaking of his second Comming vnto Iudgement hee saith The Sonne of man shall send his Angels with a great sound of a Trumpet Who shall gather together his Elect from the foure winds c. And no maruell though hee call them his Elect for since hee hath power and authority to t Reuel 3. 5. blot mens names out of the Booke of Life it cannot bee chosen but hee must haue interest to write them in for of contraries there is one and the same respect in nature Therefore to shut vp this point and to leaue it without question the Booke of Life in the u Reuel 13. 8. Reuelation is expresly called The Lambes Booke of Life Come to that which is more glorious in the World And first vnto the Creation the proper marke of the true God As the x Psal 124. 8. Psalmist teacheth Our helpe is in the Name of IEHOVAH that hath made both Heauen and Earth And y Ier. 10. 11. IEREMY The gods that made not Heauen and Earth let them perish from the Earth and from vnder the Heauen He it is that wrought with the Father in the creating of all things Iohn 1. 13. All things were made by him and without him was nothing that was made not a iot of any thing So saith Paul to the z Col. 1. 16. Colossians By him were created all things both in Heauen and vpon the Earth things visible and inuisible whether Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers all things were created by him and for him Therefore he is called The a Reuel 3. 14. beginning of the Creation of God or the first and prime cause from whence the Creatures take their beginning being all made and formed by him And notable is that of the 102. Psalme which the Apostle to the Hebrewes b Heb. 1. 10. applyeth vnto Christ Thou Lord in the beginning laydst the foundation of the Earth and the Heauens are the worke of thy hands And By him saith the same c Heb. 1. 2. Apostle God made the Ages that is Time and the course and succession of all things with this glory of Creation is coupled another not inferior of the cherishing and preseruing of the things created So Prou. 8. 30. he saith that he is with God his Father nourishing and gladding them continually Hither belong those Diuine Workes and Miracles manifestly pointing out his God-head He rebuked the Winds and they obeyed him raysed vp the dead opened the eyes of them that were blind cast out Deuils had power to send them into Hell to their fearefull place of torment for d Luke 8. 31. they besought him not to doe it And all this he did not as the Prophets and Apostles but by his owne Soueraigne Power As the Euangelist e Luke 5. 36. noteth that hereupon feare came on all the people maruelling what this might be For euen say they with Authority and Power he commandeth the vncleane spirits and they come out And how must not this Power needes be his owne when hee taketh vpon him to giue it to others The f Matth. 10. 8. Euangelist recording that hee gaue power vnto the twelue Apostles to clense Lepers to rayse the dead to cast out Deuils c. which authority they like faithfull Seruants did so pursue as it might easily appeare they deriued their whole vertue from him alone Hence is that of g Acts 3. 6. PETER In the Name of Christ arise and walke and h Acts 9. 34. AENEAS Iesus Christ doth heale thee I stand not heere to presse those glorious workes whereby his God-head shineth most cleerely in the Church in subduing the proud enemies thereof and generally all the Reprobates hardening their hearts and deliuering them vp vnto their owne damnation For so the i Iohn 12. 39 40. 41. Euangelist when hee had shewed that the Iewes could not beleeue because ESAY had said He hath blinded their eyes and hardened their hearts lest they should see with their eyes and vnderstand with their heart and I should heale them immediately addeth These things said ISAIAH when hee saw his glory and spake of him Contrariwise he bestoweth vpon his Children all good graces Therefore the Apostle continually prayeth for Grace and Peace from him He sendeth the Holy Spirit vnto them The k Iohn 15. 16. Comforter whom I will send And Iohn 20. 22. He breathed vpon them and said Receiue the Holy Ghost He giueth Faith as appeareth by that Prayer
of the Apostles l Luke 17. 5. Lord increase our Faith Pardoneth and remitteth sinnes and that by his owne Authority He m Luk. 7. 48 49 said vnto her Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee And they that sate downe with him began to say in themselues Who is this that doth also forgiue sinnes As n Luke 5. 21. elsewhere vpon the like occasion they said He did blaspheme grounding themselues vpon a certayne truth That none can forgiue sinnes but God onely He washeth and sanctifieth the Church as a glorious Spouse vnto himselfe which because it is the proper worke of God is therefore expresly o Rom. 1. 14. attributed to his Spirit or Diuine Power And by this Argument he confirmeth his God-head Ioh. 5. 21. As the Father rayseth the dead in sinne and quickeneth so also the Sonne quickeneth whom hee will This is he which is to iudge the World Iohn 5. 22. The Father iudgeth no man but hath committed all iudgement to the Sonne Hee rayseth vp by his mighty voyce the bodies of the dead Iohn 5. 22. p Iohn 5. 28. For the time shall come when all that are in the graues shall heare the voyce of the Sonne of man and shall come forth So in q Iohn 6. 34 40 another place And I will rayse him vp in the latter Day Rom. 1. 4. he is said to haue raysed vp himselfe And in IOHN r Iohn 10. 18. I haue power to lay downe my soule and to take it vp againe Yea he is called the ſ Iohn 11. 25. Resurrection to note that hee doth this of himselfe and by his owne authority who were hee not God could not rayse vp himselfe much lesse rayse vp and quicken others To conclude as a Crowne of all the rest this is he which t Iohn 1. 12. to as many as receiue him giueth this dignity to bee the Sonnes of God u Reuel 1. 6. hath made vs Kings and Priests to God his Father and giueth euerlasting life which x Rom. 6. 23. is the gift of God alone To y Reuel 3. 21. him that ouercommeth I will giue to sit with mee in my Throne So Iohn 10. 27 28. My sheepe heare my voyce and I know them and they follow me and I giue euerlasting life vnto them Sixtly maruellous are those markes whereby as by certaine steps and footings we may trace out the Maiesticall glory of his God-head Iohn 1. 14. We beheld his glory as the glory of the onely Begotten comming from the Father PAVL also calleth him The Lord of glory 1. Cor. 2. 8. For had they knowne they would not haue crucified the Lord of glory By which very phrase if there were no more wee may easily discerne him to be selfe-same mighty God full of Maiesty and of Power whom z Psal 24 9 10 Dauid termeth the King of glory and forthwith addeth Who is the King of glory IEHOVAH of Hosts he is the King of glory In the Acts a Acts 7. 56. when hee shewed himselfe to STEPHEN the Heauens are said to haue beene opened as it were the Creature to giue place vnto the Creator He is the b Col. 1. 15. Image of the inuisible God The c Heb. 1. 3. engrauen forme of his Fathers Person and resplendence of his glory hath one d Reuel 22. 1. and the selfe-some Throne with his Father whereby equall Power and Dignity is meant In e Iohn 1. 18. IOHN He is said to be in the bosome of the Father Hither belongeth that Honourable Title which the Father giueth vnto Christ when hee calleth him f Zach. 13. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the man my fellow as it were another himselfe the representer of his Person as the Hebrew word doth signifie The Elect and holy Angels are called the Angels of God and neuer the Angels of any Creature as by way of noting out any authority ouer them But Christ is not onely the g Iude verse 9. Arch-angell chiefe h Dan. 10. 13. of the heauenly Princes and i I●sh 8. 2. Prince of the Host of IEHOVAH but further they are said by name to be k Reuel 12. 7 8. Mat. 13. 4. his Angels and l Heb. 1. 6. willed to doe him homage Let all the Angels of God worship him In the Prophets you may euery where see how they minister to Christ are sent by him and runne at his Commandement Ezech. 10. 6. The man clothed in linnen with a Writers Inke-horne by his side which was Christ the Priest and Mediatour of his Church sealing them to eternall Life by the Bloud of the New Testament being commanded of his Father to fill his fists with coles of fire from betweene the Cherubins and to scatter it vpon the City Assoone as he came and stood by the wheeles one of the Cherubs an Angell tooke of the fire and put it into his fists prest and ready to serue him as he was to obey his Father In m Zach. 1 9 11 Zachary the Angell that spake to the Prophet being the same n Verse 9. Angell that stood betweene the two Myrrh-trees called also the man that stood betweene the Myrrh-trees that it might bee knowne to be meant of Christ taketh of the other Angels a reckoning and account of their doings The same Angell in the o Zach. 2. 3 4. next Chapter biddeth another Angell that came forth to meete him as it were to know his pleasure what he would command him to runne and informe the Prophet of those promises which there hee maketh to his Church So p Dan. 8. 16. Daniel hauing seene a great Vision which he vnderstood not heard the voyce of a man which was Christ calling and saying GABRIEL make this man vnderstand the Vision But in the times of the Gospell when the Propheticall Visions were more cleere then vnder shaddowes of the Law his also is more manifest For in the very beginning of the Booke of the q Reuel 1. 1. Reuelation the things which Christ receiued from his Father he is said to haue sent and shewed them by his Angel to his Seruant IOHN And in the r Reuel 2● 16. cōclusion of the Booke againe I IESVS haue sent my Angell to testifie these things vnto you The conference of which place with ſ Reuel 22. 6. that which went immediately before The Lord God of the holy Prophets hath sent his Angel to shew his Seruants the things which must come to passe shortly noteth him out plainly to bee that IEHOVAH The true God which spake by the holy Prophets Wee are t Mat 28. 19. Acts 2. 38. baptized into his Name A forme of speech signifying that we dedicate and consecrate our selues to him as to our GOD and Lord. Whereupon u 1. Cor. 1. 14. Paul worthily detesteth it to haue beene thought as if hee baptized any into his owne Name God x Mat. 4. 10. onely is to bee
worshipped But this honour Christ also hath For both Stephen giueth it vnto him when he saith Lord y Acts 7. 59. Iesus receiue my spirit And it is the Epithete of all the Church that they z Acts 9. 14. 1. Cor. 1 2. call vpon the Name of Christ IOHN likewise in the a Reuel 21. 22. Reuelation maketh the Lord God Almighty and the Lambe alike the Temple of that holy City the heauenly Ierusalem meaning that hee is equally to bee worshipped and with the same honour Faith doth onely rest vpon God but wee are commanded to beleeue in Christ Yea b Iohn 16. 1. beleeue in God beleeue also in me Further it is the pleasure c Ier. 9. 24. of GOD that whosoeuer glorieth should glory onely in this That he knoweth him to be IEHOVAH But Paul doubteth not to professe that he d Gal. 6. 14. gloried onely in the Crosse of Christ and neyther preached nor chose to know any other thing saue e 1. Cor. ●2 onely him alone Christ f Iohn 17. 3. also himselfe coupleth these two together This is euerlasting life to know thee the onely true God and him whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ But what stay I hereupon when testimonies are so cleere vpon the marke and notes when the things themselues are so euident and expresse his God-head being euerywhere to bee found in most plaine and manifest termes Which that it may the better appeare I will sort all the testimonies of this kind into three Orders or Rankes The first is of such as attribute the spirit vnto him Not as the spirit or soule of a man but so as it appeareth plainly by the Epithetes adioyned to be the Diuine Spirit or GOD himselfe 1. Cor. 15. 45. The first man ADAM was made a liuing Soule the latter ADAM a quickering Spirit As bee noteth out in Adam the whole man by the more excellent part the Soule so doth he in Christ the whole Person by that most excellent Nature of the God head bodily dwelling in him calling him another Adam for that as Adam imparted fleshly life vnto all that come from him so doth Christ the Spirituall Life to all that are his And that this may bee the better conceiued to be meant of his Eternall Deity in the seuen and fortieth Verse hee doth more cleerely frame the comparison The first man out of the earth earthly the second man the Lord himselfe from Heauen Therefore is his Spirit or Diuine nature sometime called The g Heb. 9. 14. euerlasting Spirit a thing proper to the God-head sometime The h Rom. 1. 4. Spirit of Sanctification whereby hee sanctifieth all Gods Elect and sanctified his humane Nature otherwise infirme and weake and not able to rayse vp it selfe As in i Iohn 6. 63. Iohn he saith It is the Spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing And k 1. Pet. 3. 18. Peter that he was put to death as touching the flesh but quickened as touching the Spirit Finally the Apostle l 2. Cor. 13. 4. Paul expounding as it were this place For though saith he he were crucified of infirmity yet he liueth by the power of God In the name of infirmity or weaknesse manifestly alluding to the Hebrew En●ch which signifieth a fraile or weake and mortall man and in the name Power vnto El the mighty God of the second sort are those where he is said to haue the m Col 29. For in him dwelleth all the fulnes of the God-head bodily that is personally and substantially fulnesse of the God-head in him to bee n Phil. 2. 6 7. Who being in the forme of God emptied himself taking the forme of a Seruant becomming in the likenesse of men and in habit found a very man Where the forme of a Seruant noting a verie seruant and abiect person indeed sheweth that to bee in the forme of God signifieth as much as to be really and essentially God himselfe in the forme of God to be o Iohn 8. 15. For this cause the Iewes sought to kill him because hee called God his owne Father making himselfe equall with God Phil. 2. 6. He thought it no robbery to be equall with God equall with God And to conclude to bee p Dan. 10. 13 21. Michael of equall Power with the Almighty God And this to be an honour belonging vnto Christ alone and not to any created Angell the Apostle Iude q Iude verse 9. teacheth expresly when he so termeth Iehouah himselfe that in Zachary stroue with Satan about the Body of Moses or the truth and perfection of the Law of Moses namely the whole Doctrine of the Gospell Remission of sinnes Imputation of Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption as in that Chapter the Angell reasoneth of them all But most manifestly this appeareth Reuelat. 12. 7. where MICHAEL and his Angels fought with the Dragon and his angels Against the Dragon that is the Deuill head of the malignant Church opposing Michael that is Christ Head of Saints and Angels and therefore calling them his Angels which agreeth to God alone Finally the holy Ghost so expoundeth it Verse 10. Now is the Saluation and Might and Kingdome of our God and the Power of his Christ In the third and last ranke come those that call him expresly r Iohn 1. 1. The Word was God 2. Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World Luke 1. 16. 17. Many shall he that is Iohn Baptist turne vnto the Lord their God and himselfe shall goe before him in the spirit and power of Elias Where before him being referred to Christ as it must sheweth him to bee the true and vndoubted Lord God And hither tendeth the confession of Thomas sirnamed Didymus my Lord my God Iohn 20. 28. Of this sort also is that 2. Peter 1. 1. Through the righteousnesse of our God and Sauiour Iesus Christ The coupling and context of the sentence without any Article before Sauiour which otherwise by the vse of that tongue ought to haue beene shewing plainly that the word God can haue no reference but to Christ our Sauiour M 〈…〉 plaine is that Co● ● 2 Vnto the knowledge of God both the Father and Christ Where God as a common antecedent is attributed to them both God The ſ 1. Iohn 5. 20. We are 〈…〉 true one in his Sonne Iesus Christ Th●● is that true God and life euerlasting true God The t Titus ● 13. Wayting for the blessed hope and glorious bright appearance of the great God and Sauiour of vs Iesus Christ Where not onely the knitting of the sentence as in the place of Peter before but the phrase of bright appearance neuer spoken but of the Sonne enforceth that whole sentence to be meant of him great God The mighty u Esay 9. 6. To vs a Child is borne wh●le name is called Wonderfull The might● God Most strong c. God The onely x Iude
verse 4 Denying the onely God and Master our Lord Iesu Christ God God y Rom. 9. 5. Of whom is Iesus Christ touching the flesh who is God ouer all blessed for euer Amen ouer all blessed for euer Amen To proue the Holy Ghost to be God First he also is Iehouah for he that led the people in the Wildernes whom they tempted so oft was Iehouah as wee haue obserued But Esay z Esay 63. 14. saith this was the Spirit of God As a beast that goeth downe into a Valley the Spirit of IEHOVAH quietly led them and a Esay 63. 10. a little before They rebelled and grieued his holy Spirit The b Heb. 3. 8 9. Author also to the Hebrewes noteth it to bee the speech of the Holy Ghost Harden not your hearts as in the prouocation as in the day of temptation in the Wildernesse where your fathers tempted me prooued me and saw my workes Againe that which the same c Esay 6. 9. Prophet speaketh of IEHOVAH that he had-him goe and say vnto this people Hearing ye shall heare c. PAVL d Acts 28. 25. applyeth to the Holy Ghost Well said the Holy Ghost by ESAIAS the Prophet to our fathers saying Goe vnto this people and say Hearing ye shall heare c. Secondly the essentiall properties of the God-head are here likewise to be found He is termed Truth it selfe to note the singlenesse of his Nature 1. Iohn 5. 6. The Spirit is Truth hath an Immensity and Infinitenesse of place dwelling at once in the heart of all the Elect. 1. Cor. 3. 16. Know yee not that yee are the Temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you Rom. 8. 9 11. The Spirit of Christ that dwelleth in you Hee lay ouer that whole masse and lumpe whereof the Heauens and Earth was afterwards made Gen. 1. 2. The Spirit of God lay vpon the Waters ouer-spreading it as a Hen doth her Chicken Hee filleth all things with his presence Psal 139. 7. Whither shall I goe from thy Spirit Hath a free and absolute power of working after his owne pleasure 1. Cor. 12. 11. He distributeth his gifts as he will for hee is the very power of God So called Luke 1. 35. The Holy Ghost shall come vpon thee and the power of the most High shall ouer-shaddow thee And for that which e Mat. 12. 14. Matthew saith I will cast out Deuils by the Spirit of God f Luke 11. 20. LVKE hath it If I cast out Deuils by the finger of God Yea he is the giuer of all Power and Vertue Micah 3. 8. But I am filled with Vertue from the Spirit of IEHOVAH with Iudgement and with Power Is of infinite Wisedome and Knowledge euen to fore-tell things to come The g Iohn 16. 14. things that are to come shall hee declare to you saith Christ yea to sound the very bottome of the most secret things of God 1. Cor. 2. 20. The Spirit searcheth the depths of God And all this hee hath from himselfe and of himselfe as most elegantly the h Esay 40. 13 14. Prophet teacheth Who hath instructed the Spirit of IEHOVAH as a man of his counsell taught him with whom hath hee communicated counsell that he might instruct him and teach him the way of Iudgement euen teach him Knowledge and the way of Wisedomes most absolute and perfect Wisedome make knowne vnto him For of Goodnesse what shall I need to speake whose Name it selfe proclaymeth his Holinesse and whose i Gal. 5. 22. 23. fruites are Lenity Kindnesse Goodnesse Faith Meekenesse Temperance and whatsoeuer good is Eternity is also his in that as shall bee shewed anon he is the Creator of all things and therefore must needes be before any thing began Thirdly not onely his proceeding from God but the very Name of Spirit sheweth the Essence and Nature which hee is of For as the spirit of a man must needes be truely of mans nature and is the most formall and essentiall part of man so and much more it must bee thought of the Spirit of God vpon whom no composition falleth This in effect is the Apostles owne Argument 1. Cor. 2. 11. For who of men knoweth the things of man but the spirit of man that is in him So also none knoweth the things of God but the Spirit of God who is in him and of his owne Essence and Nature as the opposition sheweth plainely Fourthly touching the Workes which onely belong to God of the eternall Decrees registred in the Booke of IEHOVAH the Prophet saith His k Esay 38. 16. mouth hath commanded and his Spirit hath collected them Secondly In the Creation of all things he wrought together with the Father and the Sonne Gen. 1. 2. The Spirit of God lay vpon the Waters meaning that as a Bird lying vpon her Egges and couering them vnder her wings doth by a naturall warmth and heate which commeth from her hatch and bring forth her young ones So did the Spirit of God by his liuely power and working frame and fashion the World out of that lumpe of Waters Iob 26. 13. By his Spirit he beautified or beautifully framed the Heauens Esay 40. 1● Who helpe the Spirit of IEHOVAH meaning in the Creation which he spake of next before Hence it is that Elihu l Iob 33. 4. in the Booke of Iob professeth himselfe to be his Creature and the workmanship of his hands The Spirit of the Mighty God hath made mee and the breath of the Almighty hath put life into mee Thirdly hee gouerneth and administreth the things created Zach. 4. 10. The seuen Eyes or Spirits of IEHOVAH roule vp and downe vpon all the Earth Fourthly He hardeneth the wicked and deliuereth them into a reprobate minde For so the Apostle m Acts 28. 26. noteth it to be the voyce of the Holy Ghost which is said in n Esay 6. 10. ESAY Goe make fat the heart of this people make their eares heauy and cloze vp their eyes Fiftly hee is infinite in variety of gifts 1. Cor. 12. 11. All these things worketh that one and the same Spirit distributing them to euery one a part as he will Iohn 16. 23. When the Spirit of Truth commeth he shall lead you into all Truth Hereupon Iohn in the o Reuel 1. 4. Reuelation termeth him The seuen Spirits of God in regard of the manifold graces which God by him giueth vnto his Church Grace be to you and Peace from him that is and that was and that is to come and from the seuen Spirits which are before his Throne and from Iesu● Christ where by the seuen Spirits I make no question the Holy Ghost is meant and not the holy Angels First because these seuen Spirits stand before the Throne are inserted meane betweene the Father and the Sonne the Apostle wisheth Grace and Peace from them they are the Hornes and Eyes of the Lambe yea of his owne very
proofe of the God-head of the Spirit This is the summe of our most precious Faith concerning the God-head of the Sonne and Holy Ghost against Arrius Seruetus and all that hellish crue which either bring in a multiplicitie of gods and so in truth make no God at all or imagine a secondary kind of God-ship making them inferior to the Father or of the like but not of the selfe-some essence against whatsoeuer Heresies else that Hell hath forged and Satan set abroch to the dishonour of these three Persons the one onely true and euer-liuing GOD Coequall Coeternall and Consubstantiall whom we onely honour and serue CHAP. II. Of the Eternall Decrees of God THE glory of God which from all Eternitie God being thus in his nature and Persons most glorious hath further embroidered himselfe in glory by two notes of excellency which he taketh to him Kingdom and Hanour Kingdome is that whereby he doth excite an absolute soueraigntie toward other The order whereof answerable to the relation betweene the persons themselues is from the Father in the Sonne by the Holy Ghost to whom is attributed the immediate doing of them did shine in and to himselfe it hath further pleased him both to manifest in the exercising of a Kingdome and to inlarge by taking honour vnto him Therefore our Sauiour in the Lords Prayer after the Name of God comprehending his nature and persons which hitherto haue beene handled addeth these other two Thy Kingdome come thy will bee done c. By the one he ruleth by the other his rule is obeyed This to speake properly is not any other Kingdome then that which he had before but the actuall exercise and putting into practice of that Kingdome or Soueraigntie which is of his very nature as our Sauiour doth distinguish them Matth. 6. when saying Thy Kingdome come c. he addeth by and by For thine is the Kingdome c. The order or the administration of it is in this manner The Father is first in Order not in Power nor in Time is the supreme working cause who doth whatsoeuer hee doth in the Sonne and they both by the holy Spirit To whom is attributed the immediate doing of them nor as if eyther the Sonne or Spirit were instruments to worke by but both of them be principall efficient causes and they all that one and the same God that worketh all in all The place for this diuersitie of working is manifest ●n the Epistle to the Romanes a Rom. 8. 11. But if the Spirit of him that raysed Iesus from the dead dwell in you hee that raysed Christ from the dead will quicken also your mortall bodies by his Spirit dwelling in you Here as you see all is comprehended The Father quickening in Christ by his Spirit that dwelleth in vs for to this end hee maketh mention of Christs raysing from the dead More cleere betweene the Father and the Sonne is that to the b 1. Cor. 8. 6. Corinthians But vnto vs there is one God The Father from whom are all things and one Lord Iesus Christ through whom are all things From he giueth to the Father as the Fountaine of the Action Through to the Sonne in regard of the personall Distinction So in the Epistle to the c Heb. 1. 2. Hebrewes Through his Sonne hee made the World Of the Holy Ghost also it is said By his d Iob 26. 13. ●pirit he beautified the Heauens And our Sauiour Iohn 16. 14. He shall glorifie me for he shall receiue of mine and shew it vnto you whose proper kind of working as the next and immediate cause of all things is most liuely set forth e 1. Cor. 12. 4 5 ● 7 ● 10 11. 1. Cor. 12. Now there are differences of gifts but the same spirits there are differēces of Ministeries but the same Lord. And there are differences of working but there is the same God who worketh all in all But to euery one is giuen the manifestation of the Spirit to profit for vnto one by the Spirit is giuen the Word of Wisedome and to another the Word of Knowledge by the same Spirit and to another Faith by the same Spirit and to another the gifts of healing by the same Spirit and to another the working of Powers and to another Prophecie and to another discerning of Spirits and to another kinds of Tongues and to another interpretation of Tongues But all these things worketh one and the same Spirit distributing them seuerally to euery one as he pleaseth This Kingdome standeth in three things whereof the first are his Purposes or Decrees Then his Creation and The Kingdom of God hath two parts purpose workes Purpose is his Decree before all times of euery thing thirdly the Gouernment of the World the Apostle reduceth them vnto two purpose and workes Ephes 1. 21. Who worketh all things after the counsell of his will In the Counsels and Workes of God putting them both together fiue things may be noted one proper to the purpose of God the other in common appertayning both to his Workes and Purpose The first is as touching the Eternitie of this Decree that it is before all times that is to say from euerlasting The second is the generalitie of his Dispensation that it stretcheth it selfe to all things to wit to all kinds and each particular of euery kind Thirdly the relation betweene his Purpose and Workes that he effecteth nothing which before he hath not decreed decreeth nothing which in time hee doth not effect whereupon followeth the ineuitable necessitie of the execution of his counsels The fourth is touching the Lords most free and absolute stroke in this whole dispensation Lastly That all this is proper vnto God within the compasse of one of which will fall whatsoeuer wee are to speake concerning the Gouernment and Kingdome of God The Apostle in that one sentence elegantly comprehendeth all for in saying Him that worketh c. meaning God he sheweth the supreme cause before assigned and maketh it proper to God by calling him as it were by that name and saying all things hee leaueth nothing free Now where he addeth recording to the purpose after the counsell he giueth to vnderstand that nothing is wrought but that which is decreed nothing decreed but in time it is effected In which words of purpose counsell the Eternity of this Decree is also included as fore-running all his Works yea the first worke of Creation it selfe Lastly the free-will of God is expressed in adding after the counsell of his will But for a better view to be taken of them all let vs handle these three apart Therefore to begin with his Purposes or Decrees obserue in them three things First The Eternitie of those Decrees for as God himselfe is eternall so are his deep and vnsearchable counsels all of them written and decreed or euer the World was And as f Psal 93. ● He is from euerlasting so is
Gouernments Chiefe k Dan. 10. 13. Princes c. 1. Pet. 3. 22. Ephes 1. 21. Col. ● 16. Fourthly For their Power the name it selfe of Power l Rom. 1. 38. is giuen to them And the m Psal 103. 20. Prophet by name doth set it forth Yea Angels mighty in power And to the Thessalonians n 2. Thess 1. 17. When the Lord Iesus shall bee reuealed from Heauen with his most mighty Angels The Angels saith PETER in power o 2. Pet. 2. 11. and might greater then these As if hee would say other manner of persons whereby hee doth insinuate their exceeding and incomparable power Fifthly For their Glory what it is that one place may serue in stead of many where it is coupled with the glory of the Father and the Sonne When the p Luke 9. 26. Sonne of man shall come in the glory of himselfe and of his Father and of the holy Angels In the q Luke 2. 9. second of Luke when the Angell of the Lord stood before the Shepheards it is forth-with added that the glory of the Lord shone round about them Hither it maketh that the Glory and Maiesty which the Lord made to appeare in the face of Stephen for the daunting of his Aduersaries is r Acts 6. 15. resembled to the countenance of an Angell In the Vision which ſ Esay 6. 1. Esay saw they are brought in with two of their wings couering their feet Thereby to meete with the infirmitie of men who are not able to abide the brightnesse of their glory DANIEL t Dan. 10. 5 6. excellently describeth this in that great Vision which hee saw by the Waters of Chiddekel Lifting vp mine eyes I saw and behold a man clothed with Linnen whose loynes were girt with excellent Gold of Vphaz his Bodie was like vnto Sea-coloured blue as if hee would say of an heauenly colour his face to looke to like the Lightening and his eyes like to Lampes of fire and his armes and feete like vnto the colour of polished Brasse glittering and twinkling like sparkles of fire the noyse also of his words were like vnto the noyse of a whole multitude At whose appearance the men that were with Daniel trembled exceedingly and flying hid themselues hee also himselfe had no strength left within him but euen his beautie and comelinesse were turned into corruption And hither belongeth their wonderfull and admirable wisedome growne into a Prouerbe As u 2. Sam. 18. 14 the wisedome of an Angell The holinesse wherein men were created is recorded Genes 1. 26 27. Let vs make man according to our owne Image after our owne likenesse And wherein this Image and likenesse of God doth stand the Apostle doth informe vs Ephes 4. 24. Put on the new man which according to God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Coloss 3. 10. Putting on the new man which is renewed in knowledge according to the Image of him that hath created him And in this respect Adam also in his innocencie is called The sonne of God Luke 3. 38. Touching the happinesse of Adam and Eue in their integritie First They were beloued of God his sonnes and children Secondly They enioyed his presence but vpon Earth which was their habitation and therefore lesse gloriously then the Angels did but that they also had it is apparant by Gods familiar conference with Adam Gen. 2. 29. Thirdly They had Dominion and Power ouer all the Creatures of the Earth and were set as the Monarches of the World Gen. 1. Let x Gen. 1. 26. vs make man after our image c. and let them rule ouer the fishes of the Sea and ouer the Fowles of the Ayre and ouer Beasts and ouer the whole Earth and all creeping things that creepe vpon the y Gen. 20. 19 20 Earth Which soueraignty of man is declared Gen. 2. First by Gods bringing to Adam all the Beasts of the field and all the Fowles of the Ayre putting him in seisin and possession of them and making them to present themselues before him as subiects are wont to doe at their Princes Coronation Then by the names hee gaue vnto euery one that so hee might know how to call for them whensoeuer hee should need them to attend vpon him and to doe him seruice Fourthly They were indued with strength of nature not subiect to sicknesse or other infirmities Insomuch as their very labour was without all wearinesse paine or griefe which sinne hath brought vpon vs as appeareth by the Curse z Gen. 3. 17 19. Gen. 3. Because thou hast obeyed the voice of thy Wife and eaten of the fruit of the Tree which I forbade thee Cursed be the Earth for thy sake In sorrow shalt thou eate of it all the dayes of thy life In the sweate of thy face shalt thou eat thy meate Fifthly They were all glorious both in their bodie which being naked had an excellent dignitie and comelinesse in it without the least vnseemelinesse that might make them ashamed and in their minde furnished with all Graces and namely of wisedome and knowledge vnderstanding the nature of all the Creatures and able according to their nature to giue apt names vnto them Last of all for a further increase of their happinesse they were seated in Paradise a place of al kind of pleasure where for the exercising of man to labour in some honest and lawfull calling GOD gaue him charge to dresse and keepe the Garden CHAP. IIII. Of Prouidence AFTER the euerlasting Epicures which deny all Prouidence of God Those Philosophers that held nature That is some Power or Vertue Spirit or Minde as they terme it mingled and infused into the parts of the World that holdeth vp and stirreth all things to bee God Whereas in truth nature is nothing else but that course order which God at the first Creation set in things and which hee altereth and changeth at his pleasure Deuter. 8. 3. Man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of Iehouah Decrees of GOD and Prouidence is his gouerning of the things created the Creation of the World his Kingdome thirdly standeth in gouerning the things created Both the course which at the first Creation hee set in nature and the actions and euents of things Herein consider wee first the generalitie of this gouernment that it reacheth to all in generall and to euery thing in particular past present or to come To set forth this more distinctly that so we may make the better vse of the generalitie of his Prouidence it stretcheth First To all Persons and liuing Creatures euen the vilest and most contemptible The a Psal 145. 15 16. eyes of all things looke vp to thee and thou giuest to them their meate thou openest thy hand and fillest euery liuing thing with thy good pleasure The b Psal 104. 21. young Lyons roare for their prey seeking their meate from
Dauid to Murder and Adulterie Lot to Incest Noah to Drunkennesse c. And the best of all their actions are stayned with some corruption that is his and commeth from him But is not God hereby made the Authour of sinne God forbid The Manichees indeed when they knew not how otherwise to excuse him plunged themselues into a foule and monstrous absurditie for they made two beginnings of things God from whom all goodnesse commeth and the Deuill from whom all euill or which is all one two gods a good and an euill god This is a horrible and a fearefull Blasphemie and striketh at the verie roote of all Religion But for auoyding all danger that may grow hereby it is necessarie first to know how and in what sence wee say that God hath a stroke in vnrighteous and sinfull actions not because he instilleth or powreth into his Creatures a poyson which before they had not or inclineth them vnto wickednesse for that were indeed to make God the authour of sinne but partly in that hee forsaketh and leaueth them to their owne naturall corruption either by taking away the grace they had or not bestowing new grace which they want whereby they runne head-long vnto euill partly that he letteth Satan loose vpon them to bee by him blinded and misse-led because they haue refused to be ruled and gouerned by Gods Word and Spirit To the former those places are to be referred where he is said to tempt or try them as the Holy Ghost recordeth y 2. Chron. 32. 21 of EZECHIAS that when hee dealt with the King of Babylons Ambassador God forsooke him trying him what was in his heart And Moses z Deut. 8. 2. in Deuteronomie Remember all this way wherein IEHOVAH thy God hath led thee now fortie yeeres in the Desart that he might afflict thee in trying what was in thine heart whether thou wouldest obey his Precepts or not So afterwards a Deut. 29. 3. 4. he vpbraydeth the people that notwithstanding these great tryals signes and wonders which Iehouah had done for them Yet he had not giuen them a mind to know eyes to see and eares to heare wherin we may not think God vniust who is indebted to none For who b Rom. 11. 35. gaue vnto him first and he shall be recōpenced And who according to his owne free pleasure bestoweth the measure of his graces how and where he will I c Rom. 9. 15. will haue mercie vpon whom I will haue mercie And is d Mat. 20. 15. it not lawfull for me to doe what I will with mine own Of the latter we haue an Example 1. Kin. 22 23. IEHOVAH hath sent a lying spirit into the mouth of all thy Prophets And the 1. Sam. 16. 15 16. An euill spirit from IEHOVAH vexed SAVL And that nothing herein falleth from the holinesse and Iustice of the Lord as all men not forsaken of common sence doe easily discerne for else as the e Rom. 3. 6. Apostle reasoneth how should God iudge the World So the Holy Ghost in many places teacheth very plainly for when the f Hosh 13 9 Prophet cryeth out Thy destruction is from thy selfe O Israel doth it not follow of necessitie that the cause also of destruction which is sinne is wholly from our selues and that GOD hath no part in it Which g Iames 1. 13. Iames more plainly vttereth Let no man when he is tempted say I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted of euill neither tempteth he any man And 1. Iohn 2. h 1. Iohn 2. 15. Whatsoeuer is in the World as the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not from the Father but is from the World For this cause sinne is called The i 1. Iohn 3. 8. he that committeth sinne is of the Deuill for the Deuill sinneth from the beginning For this cause was the Sonne of God manifested that he might destroy the worke of the Deuill worke of the Deuill And our Sauiour Christ saith When k Iohn 8. 44. he speaketh a lye hee speaketh of his owne The sinne therefore of the Action is wholly to bee ascribed to the depraued nature and corruption of men wherein God is no way to be blamed l Eccles 7. 29. Who made all righteous but they haue sought many inuentions to themselues To illustrate this by one or two Similitudes Hee that spurreth a lame Horse is the cause of his stirring but not of his halting The Sunne that shineth vpon a filthie carcasse maketh the sauor yet it is no cause of any stench for out of sweete Flowres it bringeth a pleasant odour Such is the worke of God in the actions of wicked men And the better to apprehend how God in all this remayneth without any touch of sinne wee must consider that sinne hath alwayes three things going with it whereof it is impossible that any one should fall vpon God First To bee subiect to a Law For m Rom. 5. 13. where no law is there is no transgression And the n 1. Iohn 3. 4. Apostle defineth sinne to bee a breach of the Law Now God who made his Lawes for others is not himselfe to bee tyed to them Secondly Impuritie and corruption a thing most contrarie to the nature of God who is not onely holy and pure but holinesse and puritie it selfe and so farre off from being euill that he o Iames 1. 13. cannot be tempted of it Thirdly An euill and a wicked end Whereas GOD euermore seeketh his owne glorie which is absolutely good and the chiefe Good of all Therefore beside that the will of God is the Rule of all goodnesse the difference in these sinfull actions betweene that hee worketh and the worke of wicked men lyeth plaine aswell in the cause that mooueth him as in the end hee setteth before him and in the manner of doing all which though they bee in respect of wicked men vniust and sinfull yet as they proceede from God they are most iust and holy for first by reason of this diuersitie of the causes moouing and of the diuers ends which these two Agents God and wicked men set before them it falleth out that the selfe-same Action which in respect of the corruption of wicked men becommeth vnto them sinfull and damnable is as in regard of God most holy and righteous being led thereto for most gracious and iust respects either to set forth the riches of his Iustice or Mercie or for the chastizement and tryall of his Children or for some other cause as he seeth good which ends the wicked neuer set before them but all the contrarie what more blessed or glorious worke and of greater loue to vs was there euer or can possibly be then the reconciling of the World by the death of his Sonne And what more iust in respect of God then to inflict all these punishments vpon him who was our suretie and tooke
excellent meanes to auoyde stealth Let x Ephes 4. 28. him that stole steale no more but rather let him labour working with his hands the thing that is good So 2. Thess 3. 11 12. hee saith Wee heare that there are some which walke among you inordinately that worke not at all but are busie-bodies Therefore them that are such we warne and exhort you by our Lord Iesus Christ that they worke with quietnesse and eat their owne bread And 1. Tim. 5. 13. he blameth the Widdowes for being idle and going vp and downe houses Thirdly Honest recreation a thing that fitteth vs for the seruice of God and of euery good dutie as Shooting Musike putting forth of Riddles and the like for these the Word of God doth by name speake of So Dauid 2. Sam. 1. 18. to teach the children of Iudah to handle the Bow vttered that Lamentation which is there extant of Saul and Ionathan And himselfe by the sweetnesse of his Musike refreshed the troubled heart of Saul 1. Sam. 16. 24. Of the other wee haue an Example in the Riddle put forth by SAMSON Iudges 14. 14. Out of the eater came meate and out of the strong came sweetnesse The contrarie whereof is first the dulling of our selues by a continuall wearying of the minde and bodie without intermission Secondly An excessiue vse of lawfull pleasures and delights without referring them to the right end The y Esay 5. 12. Harpe and Violl Timbrell and Pipe and Wine are in their Feasts but they regard not the worke of IEHOVAH neither consider the worke of his hands who z Amos 6. 5 6. play vpon the Violl as DAVID they inuent Instruments of Musike and drinke in Basons of Wine and anoynt themselues with the chiefe of Oyntments but are not grieued for the affliction of IOSEPH I a Eccles 2. 2. said of Laughter Thou art mad and of ioy What is that thou doest Woe b Luke 6. 25. be to you that now laugh for ye shall waile and weepe Fourthly Imitation of good Examples first and principally of God himselfe Be c Ephes 5. 1. yee followers of God as beloued children And to the beholding of this Example of God our Sauiour doth lift vs vp when he saith Ye d Mat. 5. 48. shall therefore be perfect as your Father which is in Heauen is perfect Be e Luke 6. 63. ye mercifull euen as your Father is mercifull The Lord also himselfe taketh vs forth that Lesson saying Be f Leu. 11. 44. ye holy for I am holy And g 1. Ioh. 33. Iohn maketh it that perpetuall strife and indeuour of GODS Children Whosoeuer hath this hope in him purifieth himselfe as he is also pure And againe h 1. Ioh. 4. 17. As he is such also are we in this World for therefore saith the i Heb. 12. 10. Apostle God chastiseth vs for our profit that we might partake his holinesse Next is the example of Christ our Sauiour God manifested in the flesh For k 1. Pet. 2. 21. Christ also suffered for vs leauing vnto vs a prescript that yee might walke in his steps Then of the holy Angels as our Sauiour teacheth vs to pray Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heauen Likewise of Adam in his innocencie vnto whose Image the Apostle l Colos 3. 10. Ephes 4. 24. euery where willeth vs to bee renewed Lastly of good and holy men that beholding the issue of their conuersation we may follow their faith as the Apostle exhorteth Heb. 13. 7. And againe Heb. 6. 12. That ye be not Bastards but followers of them that through faith and long sufferance inherit the promises 1. Cor. 4. 16. hee saith I beseech you be followers of me Wherein notwithstanding wee must take heed because in the best men much corruption is to bee found that wee follow them no m 1. Cor. 11 1. further then they follow Christ The contrarie whereof is the following of euill and wicked examples n Iob 31. 33. If I haue hid my sin as ADAM or after the manner of men especially of the Deuill the father of Lyes for which our Sauiour taketh vp the Iewes Iohn 8. 44. Fiftly Societie and companie with the good for such as ones companie is such lightly is ones selfe I o Psal 119. 63. am companion to all them that feare thee and keepe thy Commandements The contrarie whereof is First Leauing and lothing the companie of the good forsake p Heb. 10. 25. not your assembling together c. Secondly Societie with the wicked for which the good King Iehosaphat is reprooued by the Prophet What q 2. Chro. 19. 2. thou to helpe the wicked one and to loue the haters of IEHOVAH But for these thngs is hot displeasure towards thee from IEHOVAH Ill r 1. Cor. 15. 33. companie corrupts good manners To this purpose Salomon in his Prouerbs hath many excellent sayings Make no Å¿ Pro. 22. 24 25. friendship with an angrie man nor companie with a furious man lest thou learne his wayes and get a snare for thy selfe Hee t Pro. 28. 7. that keepeth the Law is an vnderstanding childe but hee that associateth himselfe to Gluttons shameth his father Where opposing companie-keeping with Gluttons to the keeping of the Law hee sheweth how forcible a meanes ill example is to leade vs into sinne Of this kind especially is the contracting of our selues in marriage with the vngodly for which the same Kings sonne Iehoram is taxed He u 2. Kings 1. 18 walked in the wayes of the Kings of Israel as the house of AHAB did for AHABS Daughter was his Wife and he did euill in the eyes of IEHOVAH yea this is noted as the prime sinne that corrupted the olde World and brought the floud vpon them for that the x Gen. 6. 1 2. sonnes of God the professors of Pietie and true Religion of the Posteritie of Sheth and ENOSH seeing the Daughters of men who made no conscience of seruing God to bee beautifull tooke them from any indifferently without respect of what Religion they were of wiues such as they chose Therefore were the Children of Israel precisely forbidden y Deut. 7. 3. to ioyne affinitie with those Nations of the Land of Canaan to giue their daughters to any of their sonnes or to take any of their daughters for their sonnes for saith the Lord They will certainly draw your sonnes away from following me to serue other gods The second part of watchfulnesse is that which vseth all diligence in that which is good Continue z Rom. 12. 12. Coloss 4. 2. in Prayer or lye at it continually a Ephes 6. 18. Watch thereunto with all assiduitie The contrary whereof is negligence and slacknesse In b Rom. 12. 11. doing seruice be not slacke Hitherto of watchfulnesse whereunto we are to couple in the fourth and last place continuance and perseuerance in wel-doing the crowne and
wherein they are preferred and making our vse of them them the principall whereof are these that follow First Rising vp before them Thou h Leuit. 19. 32. The notes of which Reuerence are rising vp before them shalt rise vp before the hoarie haires and giue honour to the face of the aged Secondly Giuing them the place and honour of speaking first I am i Iob 32. 6 7. the youngest in yeeres and yee are aged Therefore I was afraid and feared to shew my opinion among you I said Men of yeeres shall speake and the aged shall declare wisdome Thirdly To meete them comming towards vs. So Gen. 18. 2. ABRAHAM lifting vp his eyes and looking lo Giuing them the place and honour of speaking first c. three men stood by him and when he saw them hee ranne to meet them from the Tent doore 1. King 2. 19. When Bathsheba came to speake with King Salomon the King rose to meete her Fourthly To bow vnto them as both Abraham and Salomon did in the places aboue mentioned ABRAHAM ranne to meete them bowed himselfe to the ground The King rose to meete his Mother and bowed himselfe vnto her Of this kind is the bowing of the knee Mark 10. 17. When Iesus was gone out of the way there came one running and kneeled to him Fifthly To stand by them whilest they sit downe And of this also Abraham is there set for an Example k Gen. 18. 8. He tooke Butter and Milke and the Calfe that he had prepared and set before them and stood himselfe by them vnder the Tree and they did eate l Exod. 18 13. Exod. 18. 13. When Moses sate to iudge the people the people stood about him from morning vnto euen Sixthly To giue them the chiefest seates as m 1. King 2. 19 Salomon did to his Mother when himselfe setting downe on the Throne caused a seate to be set for her and shee set at his right hand So the n Gen. 43. 33. children of Iacob eating Meate in Iosephs house sate before him the eldest according to his age and the youngest according to his youth Insomuch as the Egyptians maruailed among themselues Seuenthly To vse Titles of Reuerence when hee talketh with them As o 1. Pet. 3. 6. SARAH obeyed ABRAHAM called him Lord whose Daughters yee are whilest you doe well Ye p Iohn 13. 13. call me Master and Lord and yee say well for I am so Eightly To keepe silence in Courts and places of Iudgement till we haue leaue to speake which modesty is noted in PAVL Acts 24. 10. who after that the Gouernour had beckened vnto him that he should speake and not before answerd c. The contrarie of this reuerence is First Contempt and Vnreuerent behauiour in deriding or speaking euill and reuiling them When q Gen. 9. 22. HAM the father of Canaan saw the nakednes of his father he told his two brethren without The r Pro. 30. 17. eye that mocketh his father and despiseth the instruction of his mother let the Rauens of the Valley picke out and the young Eagles eate it Hee Å¿ Gen. 21. 17. that curseth his father or mother shall dye the Death Secondly Extolling our selues aboue our betters as Abimelech did who being a Concubines sonne would needes raigne before the lawfull sonnes of his father I udges 9. To those in any Authoritie whatsoeuer whether the To them in authoritie Subiection in a readie submission to their gouernment and Obedience voluntarily to doe what they command same be publike or priuate doth belong First Subiection in a readie submission to their gouernment Secondly Obedience in a voluntary doing of that commanded For these two are to bee performed to all in authoritie and that not onely to the good and courteous but also to the froward as the Apostle exhorteth 1. Pet. 2. 18. First It must be from Seruants to Masters t Eph. 6. 5 6 7. Seruants bee obedient vnto them that are your Masters according to the flesh Secondly Fom Children to their Parents u Ephes 6. 1. Children obey your parents in the Lord for that is right Thirdly From Wiues to their Husbands x Ephes 5. 22 23. 4. 14. Wiues submit your selues vnto your Husbands as vnto the Lord for the Husband is the Wiues head euen as Christ is head of the Church and the same is the Sauiour of his bodie Therefore as the Church is in subiection vnto Christ euen so let the Wife be to her Husband in euery thing Fourthly From the People to the Ministers y Heb. 13. 17. Obey them that haue the ouersight of you and submit your selues for they watch for your soule as those that must giue an account that they may doe it with ioy and not with griefe for that is vprofitable for you Fifthly From Subiects to Magistrates both the supreme Magistrate subordinate ones Submit z 1. Pet. 2. 13 14. your selues vnto all manner erdinance of man for the Lords sake whether it bee vnto the King as vnto the Superiour or vnto Gouernours as vnto them that are sent of him Let a Rom. 13. 1. euery soule be subiect vnto the higher powers for there is no power but of God and the powers that be are ordayned of God Contrary to this subiection are First Contempt as that of b Gen. 16. 4. Hagar Sarahs Hand-maid who when shee saw her selfe to conceiue her Mistris was set light by in her eyes Secondly Shaking off the yoke of subiection to Princes as the Papists doe Thirdly The resisting of lawfull power whereof the Apostle c Rom. 13. 2. saith Whosoeuer resisteth authoritie resisteth the Ordinance of God and they that resist shall receiue to themselues iudgement Contrary to the other is disobedience which is one of the sinnes the Apostle reckoneth vp Rom. 1. 30. disobedient to Parents But this obedience is not absolute without bounds or limits It must bee Or when it cannot with a good conscience be done in the Lord for that which the Apostle writeth vnto Children Ephes 6. 1. Children obey your Parents in the Lord reacheth farther and hath a place in all Therefore Coloss 3. 22. hee maketh the feare of God the Rule of Seruants obedience Seruants obey your Masters c. fearing God And the like is to be said of Magistrates as we are taught Acts 4. 19. Whether it be right in the sight of God to obey you rather then God iudge ye What must be done then if they command things vnlawfull such as with a good conscience wee cannot yeeld vnto Verily in such cases wee are patiently to abide the punishment patiently to beare the punishment In which doing we no way violate the obedience due vnto them To this patient suffering of the punishment the Apostle doth exhort vs 1. Pet. 2. 19 20. For this is thank-worthy if a man for conscience towards God endure griefe suffering wrongfully for what
that all corrections ought to leuell at The bluenesse of the wound serueth to purge the euill and the stripes within the bowels of the belly Secondly The terrifying of others to commit the like offences which God in the execution of his Lawes hath a speciall eye vnto That q Deut. 13. 11. all Israel may heare and tremble Lastly concerning Magistrates Let it bee knowne that the vse of the Sword standeth also in lawfull and iust Warre in fighting the Lords Battailes as shee speaketh r 1. Sam. 25. 28. vnto DAVID For IEHOVAH will certainly make for my Lord a sure House if my Lord fight the Battailes of IEHOVAH and euill bee not found in thee all thy dayes The Ministers Dutie is to attend publike teaching From the Ministerie publike teaching to be diligent therein I ſ Esay 62. 6. haue set Watch-men vpon thy wals O Ierusalem which all the day and all the night shall not cease the t Rom. 12. 7. 8. teacher let him continue in his teaching the exhorter in his exhortation c. The u 1. Pet. 1. 2. Elders among you I exhort c. Feed the Flocks of God that dependeth vpon you Take x Acts 20. 28. heed to your selues and to all the Flocke wherein the Holy Ghost hath made you Bishops that you feede the Church of God which hee hath purchased with his owne bloud The contrarie whereof are First Idoll shepheards that cannot teach at all such as the Prophet complayneth of Their y Esay 56. 10. watch-men are all blinde they haue no knowledge they are dumbe dogges they cannot barke Secondly Negligent Preachers which as Esay there saith lye and sleepe and delight in sleeping Wherefore God telleth z Ezech. 3. 17 18. EZECHIEL Sonne of man I haue appointed thee a Watch-man to the House of Israel and thou shalt heare the Word out of my mouth that thou maist giue warning vnto them from me when I say vnto the wicked man Thou shalt certainly dye and thou doe not giue him warning nor speake to warne the wicked man of his euill way to keepe him aliue that wicked man shall dye by his owne iniquitie but his bloud will I require at thine hand The Dutie of those that haue any charge or gouernment From priuate authoritie Prouision of Food and Rayment is First Prouision of food and rayment whereof the a 1. Tim. 5. 8. Apostle saith If any prouide not for his owne and specially for those of his owne house he is worse then an Infidell For this doth SALOMON commend the vertuous woman Prou. 31. 15. Rising whilest it is yet night she giueth meate to her houshold and the ordinarie to her Maides And b Verse 21. againe She feareth not the Snow for her Family For all her Family is clothed with double clothes And Pro. 27. 27. he saith not onely Let the milke of the Goates be sufficient for thy food but further also for the food of thy Family and for the sustenance of thy Maides Secondly Familiarly to teach their Inferiours as the c Ephes 6. 4. Familiarly to teach their Inferiours Apostle exhorteth fathers to bring vp their children in instruction and information of the Lord for which Abraham d Gen. 18. 19. is highly commended of God I know saith hee that he will command his Sonnes and his Family after him to keepe the way of IEHOVAH in doing righteousnesse and iudgement Thirdly To goe before them in Prayer so did e Gen. 25. 20. and in Prayer to goe before them Isack pray vnto IEHOVAH ouer-against his Wife that is in her presence and together with her and for her because she was barren The Dutie of Parents more particularly is From both the Parents To apply their children to that they are fit for First To apply their children to that they are fit for f Pro. 22. 6. Instruct a childe after the manner of his way euen when he is verie old he will not depart from it ADAM g Gen. 4. 2. in the first beginning of the World practised this Lesson for hauing two sonnes CAIN and HABEL HABEL was a Shepheard and CAIN an Husbandman Secondly To prouide for them For h 2. Cor. 12. 14. Children ought and to prouide for them From the Father to name the Childe not to store vp for Parents but Parents for their Children Speciall to the Father is to name the Childe which authoritie Zacharie Father of Iohn Baptist tooke vpon him when the Mother of the friends i Luk. 1. 62 63. striuing about the name hee decided the Controuersie and called him Iohn Of the Mother another Dutie is more specially to bee From the Mother to nurse it obserued that she nurse the Childe Holy women haue alwayes reckoned this to belong vnto them k Gen. 21. 7. Sarah a great Princesse maketh no doubt but that hauing a Childe she was to giue it sucke Who would haue said to ABRAHAM SARAH shall certainly giue sucke for I haue borne a Sonne In like sort l 1. Sam. 1. 23. Anna is recorded to haue giuen suck to Samuel as was the common course then of religious and godly Matrones whereupon the m 1. Tim. 5. 10. Apostle requireth this in the first place as one of the most special good workes which hee would haue that woman to bee well reported for that should be associate into the number of Widdowes that she haue nursed her Children From Masters due respect of their Seruants trauailes The Dutie of Masters is to haue a due respect of their Seruants trauailes whereof there is a speciall Law n Deut. 15. 12 13 14. When thou sendest out free from thee in the seuenth yeere thy brother an Hebrew that hath serued thee six yeeres thou shalt not let him goe away emptie but shalt giue him a liberall From Husbands cherishing of their Wiues with all entyre affection reward of thy Sheepe and of thy Corne and of thy Wine c. The Dutie of Husbands is that they cherish their Wiues with all entyre affection Ye o Eph. 5. 25. 29. Husbands loue your Wiues euē as Christ hath loued the Church for no man at any time hath hated his own flesh but nourisheth it cherisheth it The Dutie of Equals one vnto another is Secondly it is of equals one vnto another in louing honouring and First To loue and to honor each other Be p Rom. 12. 10. affectioned to loue one another with brotherly loue In giuing honour go one before another submitting q Ephes 5. 21. your selues one vnto another in the feare of GOD. Wherefore wee are to testifie that our loue and respect to others by all holy tokens and outward signes of salutation or otherwise Greet r 1. Pet. 5. 14. ye one another with the Kisse of loue Salute ſ Rom. 16. 16. one another with an holy Kisse The Churches of Christ salute you
12 2. 3. recorded to haue taken a pound of oyntment of spikenard very costly and to haue anoynted Iesus feete that all the house was filled with the sauour of the oyntment Temperance in marriage-matters is when we vse it soberly and with seemelinesse rather to suppresse then to satisfie the flesh which is one part of the z 1. Thes 4. 4. possessing of our vessell in holines and honor For this cause it is that the Apostle a 1. Tim. 434. teacheth vs our marriages and the liberty that God hath giuen vs therein are to be sanctified by prayer and thankesgiuing The contrary whereof among other is that forbidden in the Law Leuit. 18. 19. and reckoned vp as one of those sinnes that bring Gods heauie wrath Ezech. 18. 16. CHAP. XII Of the eighth Commandement THE three Commaundements following Those that respect the good things belonging to the person are vprightnes and contentednes Vprightnes is to hold a lawfull course in dealing about them and slandeth in right and truth concerne one common subiect or matter which they all bend vnto that is to say the outward good things of this present life of what nature soeuer the same be Lands Possessions Goods Good name Credit or the like wherein because the greatest part of our life is spent in tumbling and tossing about them it hath pleased the wisdome of God to allot vnto them three Commandements as men for the most part three manner of wayes offend in them comprehended by Iohn the Baptist in one Verse Luke 3. 14. in his answere to the Souldiers Shake no man in his estate by pilling polling rapine or other violence nor circumuent by guile and be content with your wages The two former which are the neerer in affinitie Dauid hath twice in b Psal 111. 7 8. one Psalme in two seuerall Phrases applyed vnto God First in the Phrase of c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Truth or Faithfulnesse and Iudgement then by d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Truth or Faithfulnesse and Rightnesse The first of those three wayes wherein men so offend Right which is in dealing iustly is by meere wrong forbidden in the eighth Commandement whether the same haue force and violence ioyned with it in which case the difference betweene this and the Commandement following is easie to be discerned or though it be without force and violence yet by meere wrong and iniurie without colourable shewes and shifts or other disguisings to hide it by whereby it is also distinguished from the ninth Commandement though the difference in this point lyeth not so plaine In the eighth therefore we are The Anabaptistical communitie of goods commanded First To deale vprightly and iustly in all things concerning goods both for the meanes of comming by them and in the vsing of them Wherefore our Sauiour Mat. 23. 22. noteth out this Commandement by the name of iudgement or right in doing that which is iust and equall betweene man and man as the word d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iudgement in the Hebrew Phrase doth signifie And Dauid doth so interpret it Psal 111. where that which in the seuenth Verse hee calleth Iudgement in the next Verse he calleth Rightnesse or Equitie as wee commonly translate it The contrarie whereof is meere wrong in such sort as before was opened The lawfull meanes of comming by goods is double First Lawfull purchase as e Ge. 23. 14 15 Both for the meanes of comming by them That it bee by lawfull purchase Abraham purchased of Ephron the Field and caue of Macpela for the full value that it was worth which Ephron himselfe had set And Dauid f 1. Chron. 21. 22 23 24 25. or Descent bought of ORNAN the threshing floore to build an Altar to IEHOVAH for sufficient money Secondly Descent when by course of Inheritance it is cast vpon vs whereof we haue a Law g Le. 25. 45 46 Of the children of the strangers that are soiourners among you of them shall you buy and of their Families that are with you whichthey beget in your Land These shall be your possession So ye shall take them as inheritance for your children after you to possesse them by inheritance ye shall vse their labours for euer When h Num. 27 8 9 10 11. a man dyeth and hath no sonne ye shall transferre his inheritance to his Daughter and if hee haue no Daughter ye shall giue his possession to his brethren and if he haue no brethren ye shall giue his possessions to his fathers brethren and if his father haue no brethren then shall you giue hi● possession to his Kinsman the next vnto him of his Family and he shall inherit it The contrarie to these two are First Theft He i Ephes 4. 28. that stealeth let him steale no more but rather let him labour c. The speciall kinds of these are Sacriledge when it is of things consecrated to God in which sort k Iosh 7. 7. c. Achan offended And of this the Wiseman l Pro. 20. 25. speaketh It is a snare for a man to deuoure that which is sanctified and after vowes to inquire Robberie by the high-way The companie m Hosh 6. 8 9. of Priests is like vnto Troopes that waite for one by the high-way side Piracie vpon the Sea Burglarie in the night breaking of houses c. If n Exod. 22. 1. a Thiefe bee found breaking vp and bee smitten that he dye no bloud shall be shed for him Stealing mens seruants or children which sinne the Apostle o 1. Tim. 1. 10. wrappeth vp in the number of those things that are contrarie to wholesome Doctrine filching or pilfering the least Pinne or Point Secondly Oppression But p Esay 3. 14 15 yee haue eaten vp the Vineyard the spoyle of the poore is in your houses What ayle ye that ye beat my people to pieces and grinde the faces of the poore Thirdly Extortion as q Luke 3. 14. Souldiers not content with their wages Counsellors with their Fees c. This was the sinne of Elies sonnes of whom it is said r 1. Sam. 2. 12 13 14 15 16 17 Now the sonnes of ELI were wicked men and knew not IEHOVAH For the Priests custome towards the people was this when any man offered Sacrifice the Priests Boy came while the flesh was a seething and a flesh-hooke with three teeth in his hand and thrust it into the Kettle or into the Caldron or into the Pan or into the Pot all that the flesh-hooke brought vp the Priest tooke vp for himselfe Thus they did vnto all the Israelites that came thither to Shiloh yea before they burnt the fat the Priests Boy came and said to the man that offered Giue me flesh to roste for the Priest for he will not haue sodden flesh of thee but raw And if any man said vnto him Let them burne the fat according to the custome then take as
pronouncing against vs the iudgement and condemnation f Rom. 3. 9. due vnto sin to driue vs to seeke Righteousnesse and thereby Saluation in another that is to say in Christ For Christ is the end of the Law for Righteousnesse to euery one that beleeueth Rom. 10. 4. So g Gal. 3. 22 23 24. The Law shutteth all men vnder sinne not that they should perish but that the promise by Faith in Iesus Christ might be giuen to those that beleeue And thus are wee led by the hand to the second part of this most holy Doctrine the Doctrine concerning Christ and the ioyfull and glad tydings of Saluation in and through him In speaking of Christ we are to handle both his Person Immanuel God with vs is in one person and his Office And first his Person In regard wherof the Scripture giueth him the Name of h Esay 7. 14. Mat. 1. 23. Immanuel God with vs or God-man The true Iehouah Coessentiall and Consubstantiall with the Father and the holy Spirit true man of our very nature and substance Wherefore in his Person are to be considered First The two distinct natures Secondly The vnion of them into one Christ The two distinct natures the Sonne of God Samosetanus held that Christ was not before hee tooke flesh Patropassians held that the Father tooke flesh and suffered are his Deitie and Humanitie his God-head or Diuine Nature being not the Person of the Father who was not incarnate nor of the Holy Ghost but of the Sonne as it is confessed by all as many as admit the distinction of persons and euident by the Scripture Gal. 4. 4. When the fulnesse of time came God sent downe his Sonne made of a woman c. Iohn 3. 16. God so loued the World that hee gaue his onely begotten Sonne c. This is also the confession of PETER Mat. 16. 16. Thou art the Sonne of the Liuing God and infinite other places Whatsoeuer therefore is disputed before concerning the God-head of the Sonne and his eternall Deitie falleth into this Man Christ Iesus And this nature doth of it selfe make a person supporting and holding vp the Manhood that wholy is subsisteth in the person of the God-head Wherefore that which is said Iohn 1. 14. The Word became flesh is expounded Heb. 2. 16. to be by taking it to his God-head therein to haue the being and subsistence and of the same to be supported and holden vp for euer The other nature is his Humanitie and very man Marcian and Valentinus taught that Christ tooke his bodie from Heauen and passed thorow the Virgin as water thorow a Pipe or that he tooke it out of the Ayre and so denyed the truth of his humane nature in that hee was perfect man of the very flesh of Marie So we reade Rom. 1. 3 Made of the Seed of DAVID according to the flesh that is his humane nature and Heb. 2. 16. He tooke not to his Godhead the nature of Angels but the Seed of ABRAHAM Againe Galat. 4. 4. he is said to be made of a woman the Preposition of noting her very substance and flesh And this is it that was prophecied long before that i Gen. 3. 15. the seed of the woman should tread downe the head of the Serpent And that k Psal 132. 11. Acts 2. 30. of the fruit of DAVIDS Loynes God would rayse vp Christ as touching the flesh Wherefore to make this more manifest he is called Shilo that is the After-birth of IVDA Gen. 49. 10. and is said to haue opened the Virgins wombe Luke 2. 23. Hee was therefore made of the Seed of Dauid and was a Plant of the Roote of Iesse a perfect man consisting as all other men doe of a bodie and soule indued with the faculties of vnderstanding and will That hee had a bodie it is plaine Heb. 10. 5. A bodie thou hast fitted for mee That it was a true bodie flesh and bones appeareth Luke 24. 39 euen after his Resurrection See mine hands and my feete for it is I my selfe handle mee and see for a Spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye behold me to haue Of his soule l Mat. 26. 38. the Holy Ghost saith His Apollinaris thought that Christ tooke a bodie onely and not a soule but that his God-head stood in stead of a soule soule was heauie vnto death And hee himselfe Father m Luke 22. 46. into thy hands I commit my spirit And when he had said so he dyed Now this could not possibly fall into the God-head which is not subiect to any passion was not nor could not be seuered from the bodie seeing it is euery-where Therefore it must needs be meant of that part of mans nature which properly wee terme the soule According whereunto he attributeth Monothelites which hold there was but one will in Christ vnto himselfe a will and that distinct from the will of his Father Not n Mat. 26. 39. as I will but as thou wilt So he is said to haue an Vnderstanding Luke 2. 47. They maruailed at his answeres and at his vnderstanding And in both these parts was he subiect to o Heb. 4. 15. 2. 14. all humane frailties and imperfections without sinne In his bodie to p Mat. 4. 2. hunger q Mar. 4. 38. sleepe r Iohn 4. 6. wearinesse Å¿ Marke 3. 9. wringing t Iohn 20. 25. 19. 37 38. piercing wounding and death it selfe u Luke 2. 52. growing in height and stature as other mens bodies grow finite and circumscribed Vbiquists that would haue his bodie to be euery-where Papists that would haue it to be in many places at once in place that when hee was in one hee was not in another but x Iohn 20. 19. remooued from place to place being y Mark 16. 19. Acts 1. 9. Luke 21. 27. taken vp and corporally ascending into Heauen from z Mat. 25. 31. Acts 1. 11. whence hee shall corporally come downe againe In his minde he was subiect to ignorance of some things but not sinfull ignorance for he grew a Luke 2. 52. and increased by degrees in Wisdome b Heb. 5. 8. He learned obedience by the things hee suffered yea of some things hee had no knowledge at all as it may be probably gathered out of Mar. 11. he had not c Mar. 11. 13. of the Fig Tree whether it had any fruit or no d Mar. 13. 32. of the day houre of Iudgement in his soule hee was subiect to all kinde of naturall passions e Iohn 11. 4 35 not sinfull loue f Heb. 5 7. feare g Mar 3. 5. griefe anger h Mat. 9. 36. 14 14. pittie i Iohn 11. 15. ioy k Mar. 10. 14. indignation l Iohn 11. 33. trouble of heart m Mat. 8. 10. Mar. 6. 6. wondering n Iohn 11. 27. perplexitie
o Mat. 26. 37. heauinesse p Mar. 14. ●3 amazement The difference of Christs Hebion Cerinthus and others said he was conceiued by ordinarie procreation of man and woman as other men are humane nature from all other mens standeth in this that hee was not conceiued according to the ordinary procreation of man and woman but of a Virgin and therefore by the immediate power of the Holy Ghost not begetting him of his owne substance as fathers doe their children but by his Almightie Power framing and fashioning the same after a wonderfull manner miraculously and without mans helpe in the wombe of Marie That she was a Virgin the Storie is plaine q Mat. 1. 23. Mat. 1. according as it was r Esay 7. 14. long before prophecied Behold that Virgin shall conceiue and beare a Sonne The ſ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word in both the Tongues signifieth one hidden vnknowne vnto a man And fondly doe the Iewish Rabbins pretend the place t Pro. 30. 19. Prou. 30. to delude the truth of this Interpretation which indeed doth confirme and giue strength vnto it for when Salomon saith The way of a man in a u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Maide Is it not plaine that hee speaketh by an Ironie meaning a Strumpet of that brazen fore-head and so impudent as notwithstanding her filthinesse will needs goe for as good a Mayde as the best Therefore he addeth in the next Verse Shee eateth and then wipeth her mouth saying I haue done none iniquitie yea this seemeth though more obscurely to haue beene pointed at in that promise The seed of the woman shall tread downe the head of the Serpent for in saying the seed of the woman and not of the man who in the ordinarie course of generation hath the first and chiefest place what can else bee meant but a wonderfull and strange conception of a woman without the helpe of man And of this interpretation Esay may bee the Authour who doth not say simply A Virgin shall conceiue but that Virgin that is to say that Virgin so famously and so long before spoken of to Gods people of whom as touching the flesh Christ should come which no other Scripture but this doth warrant Last of all the efficient and worker of this so wonderfull by the Holy Ghost a conception is expressed Mat. 1. 20. That which is conceiued in her is of the Holy Ghost And l●st you should take of here for the materiall cause which is repugnant to the Diuine Nature of the Spirit of God and ouerthroweth the true humane Nature of our Sauiour Christ the Angell Luke 1. 35. declareth the whole order and manner of this conception The Holy Ghost shall come vpon thee and the power of the most High shall ouer-shaddow thee Next is the vnion of Who is also these two Natures Nestorius deuided the Person and made two persons one God the other man Eutyches confounded the two natures and made them but one attributing to the Man-hood all the properties of the God-head as to be vncreated omnipotent euerywhere c. and to the God-head to be subiect to suffer and whatsoeuer else belongeth to the humane Nature Both which in the first moment of his Conception inseparably knit together and still remaining in substance propertie and action distinct one from other and each keeping his seuerall and proper qualities make one Person Iesus Christ as the soule and bodie personally conioyned make one man A Mysterie of all Mysteries that a man should make one Person with GOD whom the glorious and blessed Angels are not able to behold and yet cleerly and manifestly taught in the Scriptures x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 2. 16. For he tooke not to an Angellike nature but hee tooke to the Seed of ABRAHAM This taking to which must needs bee meant vnto his God-head doth it not most manifestly shew a distinction of the Natures not a drowning or swallowing vp of either against Eutyches and againe a personall vnion of them in an vnspeakeable sort against Nestorius The place to the y Col. 2. 9. Coloss 2. 9. as it spake before for the God-head of Christ So it speaketh for the vnitie of his natures For in him that is in Christ whom he opposeth to those traditions of men dwelleth all the fulnesse of the God-head bodily When he saith In him dwelleth the God-head hee distinguisheth two Natures one the God-head dwelling the other the man in whom it dwelleth By which phrase of dwelling also he noteth not an abode for a time but a perpetuall habitation for which cause he vseth the present time And adding bodily hee signifieth that the same is not by communication of his power and vertue in which sence God is said to dwell in all his Saints nor in a Sacramentall manner as God is said to dwell in his Temple but by a substantiall and personall vnion of both Natures making one Christ Therefore Paul vnto the Romanes speaking of both apart his Manhood first and then his God-head afterwards knitteth them in one IESVS CHRIST z Rom. 13. 4. concerning his Sonne made of the Seed of DAVID according to the flesh mightily declared to bee the Sonne of God as touching the Spirit of Sanctification by rising from the dead euen IESVS CHRIST our LORD Againe a Rom. 9. 5. that CHRIST as touching the flesh came from the Father being also ouer all God to be blessed for euer And 1. Peter 3. 18. CHRIST was put to death as touching the flesh and quickened touching the Spirit To conclude this was plainly fore-told by the Prophet Esay 7. 14. that hee should be EMANVEL that is God with vs. Wherefore that of Iohn 1. 14. The Word became flesh and whatsoeuer other speeches like to that may not be vnderstood of a confusion but of an vnion of the natures and as the natures themselues are not mingled no more are their properties it being impossible that the properties of one nature should agree vnto the other for as the God-head cannot die no more can the Man-hood be infinite omnipotent euery-where c. By reason of the vnion of these natures into one person these two things follow First Beside that touching the Deitie he is the Sonne of God by nature In which respect hee is indeed most properly called the Sonne the b Heb. 7. 3. Apostle witnessing that He was without Father according to his Man-hood and without Mother according to his God-head hee is also in his humanitie the Sonne of God by this personall vnion Luke 1. 35. That holy One that is borne of thee shall be called The Sonne of God And yet for all that there is but one onely Sonne of God not two though the same by reason of this personall Vnion bee in two respects the Sonne Secondly Hereof it is that hee is to bee adored of all his Creatures euen the holy Angels Heb. 1. Let all the Angels of God
worship him Phil. 2. 9. Therefore God did also exceedingly exalt him and gaue vnto him a name aboue all names that al the Name of IESVS euery knes should bow of things in Heauen and vpon the Earth and vnder the ground Thirdly Hence groweth a borrowed manner of speech which the Learned in other Professions call Synedoche Diuines for the most part The c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 communication of properties whereby sometimes that is attributed to whole Christ which agreeth to him but in respect of one of his natures As when wee say d 1. Cor. 15. Christ suffered was crucified dead and buried wee meane it of his Man-hood onely not of the Godhead which could not suffer when he saith of himselfe e Iohn 8. 58. Before ABRAHAM was Iam this is to bee vnderstood of his God-head onely not of his Man-hood which came of the Seed of Abraham Sometimes it is spoken of some one nature which agreeth to his whole person as that of the Apostle There f 1. Tim. 2. 5. is one Mediator betweene God and men the Man CHRIST IESVS meaning he which is so God as hee is also Man Sometimes of one nature which fitteth not that but the other As when the Apostle saith g 1. Tim. 3. 16. God was taken vp in Glorie h 1. Cor. 2. 8. If they had knowne him they would not haue crucified the Lord of Glorie i Acts 20. 28. God hath purchased his Church by his bloud And when our Sauiour saith k Mar. 13. 23. The Son himselfe knoweth not of that Day of Iudgement who seeth not that it is spoken of Christ by the Name of God which belongeth but to his Man-hood Againe in saying l Iohn 3. 13. The Sonne of man which is in Heauen hee giueth to himselfe as Man that which appertayneth to the God-head But note this phrase of speech or communication of properties hath place in the Name of m The Learned say in concreto not in abstracto God and Man not of the God-head and Man-hood Therefore as it is most certaine against Nestorius deuiding the person that the Man Christ was God and therefore eternall not in his Man-hood but in his God-head that Christ God was also Man and therefore crucified taken vp into Heauen c. not in his God-head but in his Man-hood So it is most wicked and blasphemous to say that the Man-hood of Christ is his God-head vncreated omnipotent euery-where c. or that his God-head is his Man-hood subiect to suffer c. as Eutyches did confounding the natures Thus farre of the person of Christ who it was necessarie should indeed be man First That God might be pacified in that nature that had offended Secondly that hee might vndergoe the punishment due to sinne which the God-head free from all suffering could not And therefore also it was necessarie hee should haue a soule and not his God-head stand in stead of a soule for our soules must haue perished euerlastingly except his soule had suffered for them Thirdly That he might be a fit Intercessor for vs hauing tasted of our miseries All this the Apostle teacheth Heb. 2. from the tenth Verse to the end of the Chapter setting forth most notably the rich and plentifull comfort that we reape from hence by many goodly Arguments And Heb. 4. 15. hee saith Wee haue not an High Priest that cannot suffer together with vs in our infirmities but one that was tempted in all things like vnto vs. Againe it was necessarie he should be God First Because none but God could reueale vnto vs the will and pleasure of God For none hath ascended into Heauen but the Sonne of man that descended from Heauen and is in Heauen Iohn 3. 13. that is to say No man euer did nor by nature can attayne to the true knowledge of heauenly things but hee that is also God to wit the Sonne the eternall Wisdome of the Father as Iohn also saith No n Iohn 1. 18 man hath seene God at any time the onely begotten Sonne of God which is in the bosome of the Father that is of one nature and essence with him hee hath reuealed him Neither had hee beene able to sustayne the infinite wrath of God due to our sinnes much lesse to ouercome it if himselfe had beene but a finite nature Yea meete it was hee should be the Sonne of GOD for being so by nature hee is able to bestow this priuiledge on those that beleeue to bee the sonnes of GOD by adoption Iohn 1. 12. The Vnion of both natures into one person was also necessarie First That in him God and Man wee might see and behold the Father for seeing God in his owne essence and nature is inuisible and no conceit can possibly bee framed of him the Apostle sheweth that for the staying of our faith and that our minde and vnderstanding might haue somewhat to rest vpon we haue Christ o Col. 1. 15. the Image of the inuisible God the p Heb. 13. brightnesse or resplendence of his Glorie and the ingrauen forme of his Person whom whosoeuer seeth seeth the Father also as he himselfe speaketh Iohn 1. 2. For the Sonne being q 1. Tim. 3. 16. God himselfe the second Person in Trinitie manifested in the flesh is as a Glasse in whose substantiall and visible Glorie as hee was made Man the Father giueth vs to see and almost to grope and feele his owne infinite Maiestie and Loue that cannot be comprehended without whom if we looke vpon God wee see indeed some small sparkes of Glorie to terrifie and amaze vs but in Christ God and Man we behold the liuely and expresse face of God not any more as a fearefull and terrible Iudge to affright vs but as a most gracious and louing Father to comfort and refresh vs. Secondly That thereby the obedience of Christ performed in the Man-hood might be of infinite merit as being the obedience of God himselfe 2. Cor. 5. 12. Him that knew not sinne he made to be sinne for vs that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him After the person of Christ followeth his Office of Christ or Anoynted Mediation to set vs at one with God whereof the Apostle speaketh 1. Tim. 2. 5. There is one Mediator betweene God and men the Man Christ Iesus In this Office of Mediation three things may bee considered First The persons both of the Mediatour and of those for whom Mediation is made Secondly The point and propertie of the office of Mediation Thirdly The meanes to effect it The Mediator is Christ the Sonne of God whom his Father in his infinite Wisdome Goodnesse and Mercie prouiding a meanes when there was no other meanes left in Heauen or vpon the Earth to saue vs sent downe his owne Sonne in the likenesse of sinfull flesh to saue all Beleeuers whereupon it is not onely said that Christ died but that he was r Rom.
the things vpon the Earth And Colos 2. 10. It pleased God to reconcile through him all things vnto himselfe both the things vpon Earth and the things in Heauen 〈◊〉 not to bee vnderstood of the Angels but of the Sa●●●● and blessed Spirits now deceased Mediation as the Apostle doth define it Gal. 3. 20. is to set at one parties that are at variance Wherefore the very point and propertie of Christs Office of Mediator or that wherein it standeth and whereunto all the parts doe tend is the reconciling of the World to bring them againe into fauour with God his Father and to the recouerie of his former loue as it is said 2. Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World vnto himselfe And Rom. 5. 10. When we were enemies wee were reconciled vnto God by the death of his Sonne This was the foote of the Angels Song Glorie to God in the highest Heauens on Earth Peace Good will towards men Luke 2. 14. It was the t Acts 10. 36. summe of our Sauiour Christs Embassage Comming he preached Peace vnto vs Ephes 2. 17. And thereupon the Gospell is called u 2. Cor. 15. 18 19. The Word or Ministerie of reconciliation x Ephes 6. 15. The Gospell of Peace c. The meanes whereby hee worketh our Peace is by of a couenant making of a Couenant betweene God and vs wherevpon he is called The Mediator of the New Testament Hebrewes 12. 24. and The Angell of the Couenant Malachie 3. 1. In this Couenant I obserue the end and fruit the substance or foundation the meanes or the condition and the extent of the Couenant The end or fruit is the sauing of our soules So the to saue Apostle doth expresse it Heb. 9. 5. Therefore is Christ the Mediator of a new Couenant that through death comming betweene for the redemption of the transgressions that were in the former Couenant they that are called may receiue the promise of an euerlasting Inheritance Christ himselfe is the foundation and ground-worke through faith in him of this Couenant Esay 49. 8. and the substance of all the Gospell as the Apostle defineth Rom. 1. 1 2 3 4. and in 〈…〉 other places The meanes to make the Couenant effectuall vnto vs that is by apprehending of the Couenant is Faith the condition of the Couenant Beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and thou shalt bee saued Acts 16. 31. Touching the extent of the Couenant all Mankinde certaine few men whom God his Father hath chosen are not partakers of this benefit but some certaine men onely which certaine men though wee cannot certainly define the number are but a handfull in respect of the great multitude of those that perish being elect before the World was and giuen vnto Christ that in time through faith incorporated into him and becomming one with him they might as members make that Bodie whereof hee is the Head and so bee quickened by his Spirit vnto euerlasting life And this election of some necessarily implyeth the reiecting of other some Wherefore here the whole doctrine of Gods holy Predestination is summarily comprehended A matter aboue all other most religiously and soberly to be dealt in not so much for any hardnesse that is in it which if wee keepe within the bounds and limits of the Word is easie enough to bee conceiued as in regard partly of the curiousnesse of men prying without all reuerence into the secret Counsels of God and climbing vp by other steps then himselfe hath hallowed and partly of their owne corrupt affections who either swelling with Pride or cast downe with feare can hardly keepe along the coast of this Doctrine without wrecking themselues either at the Rockes of Presumption or the Flats of desperation Wherefore to auoyd both these extremes wee are to hold such a middle course as may not be after the randome of our owne wit but at the direction of God in the wisedome of his Word for as for them that thinke this Doctrine is not at all to bee taught vnto the people it is manifest that they erre very grossely this being as the rest one part of the reueiled will of GOD whereof y Deut. 30. 29. Moses speaketh to the people T 〈…〉 things belong to IEHOVAH our God but the reueiled things to vs and our children for euer And as the z Rom. 15. 4. Apostle saith Whatsoeuer things are written are written for our profit that by patience and comfort of the Scriptures which cannot be without knowing of them we might haue hope This being written by the singer of GOD in the Table of his Word must needs haue a place in that number amongst the rest And the speech a Iohn 5. 30. of our Sauiour Christ is generall willing vs to search the Scriptures for whatsoeuer things they beare record of What That the Apostle Paul writing to the b Chap. 9. 10 11 Romanes doubteth not to debate this Argument at large discoursing of all the secrets and mysteries thereof the causes effects c. And in the Epistle to the c Ephes 5. Ephesians he layeth it as the foundation and ground-worke whereupon to build the Doctrine of Faith and Holinesse of life Nay Moses himselfe who for the grosse conceit and rudenesse of the Iewes kept backe the creation of the Angels and their fall and many other Mysteries yet how d Deut. 4. 37. 7 8 9 10. 14. 73. 5. oft doth hee deale with this The Disciples of Christ were not c Iohn 16. 12. able to beare many things which hee was to vtter vnto them yet hee passeth not by this Doctrine when f Luke 10. 20. hee biddeth them to reioyce that their names were written in Heauen yea and both the points of Election and Reprobation hee plainly setteth forth Mat. 25. 34. and 41. This will bee yet more euident if we call to minde the manifold vse of this Doctrine being the Roote of all Pietie and the Base of all our comfort then the which none more highly exalteth the glorie of God in his Mercie and Iustice nor throweth downe the pride of man more lowe as in the processe Christ assisting more fully shall appeare Wherein for a better light of that which followeth it is necessarie I should first define Predestination Predestination is one principall branch of Gods purpose or eternall Decree concerning the finall estate of the most excellent creatures Angels and men The parts whereof are Election and Reprobation Election which is of some certaine ones vnto Saluation of men but few in respect of those that are to perish Reprobation which is of some certaine ones vnto damnation The waight and degree of both aswell of glorie as of shame to some in a lesse to some in a greater measure To explaine this a little better God who onely is eternall the Father Sonne and holy Spirit purposing before all times the glorifying of himselfe as is most meet
calleth them Iohn 8. 44. he is the Seed of the woman to bruise and tread downe their head in perpetuall enmitie and defiance with them not a friend to dye and suffer for them being that wherein he doth so much l Rom. 5. 8. commend his loue Christ indeed gaue an infinite merit to all his Actions to the end whereunto he purposed them and suffered in waight and measure a proportionable punishment for the Redemption of all Gods people But the Scripture speaketh euidently that m Gal. 2. 21. Christ dyed not he suffered nothing in vaine nor more then was of necessity for the sauing of his Church And when Prayers and Intercession which hee offered not for all are one part of his Priesthood and consequently of that sufficiencie which it was requisite hee should performe to God-ward for vs it is manifest that in the Ordinance and Decree of God his death without the same had not beene thorowly sufficient for the sauing of the Elect themselues much lesse of all the World And why should we imagine a halfe sufficiencie wrought for them in his death and sufferings when the other part of his Prayers and Intercession without which there is no complete nor perfect sufficiency at all cannot be drawne vnto them No better is the Dreame of vniuersall Grace in Christ offered vnto all and that for the vnbeliefe which God fore-saw would be in some hee hath decreed to reiect them which beside the Word of God common sense and experience doth controll since it is plaine and stands prooued before at large that all men are not called no not without an outward call Sixtly The end of all is the setting forth of his Glorie to set forth in them the prayse of his Mercie specially in Election to shew the riches of his Mercie in Reprobation the seueritie of his Iustice as the Wiseman saith n Pro. 16. 4. God hath made all for himselfe that is for his Glorie sake euen the wicked vnto the day of euill The end therefore of these Decrees is not simply the sauing of the one and the destroying of the other but a farther and a farre more excellent and precious end to manifest the Glorie of God in them both His Wisedome Power Truth Lenitie Patience Long sufferance Hatred of sinne loue of Righteousnesse and other Vertues as hath appeared before out of the ninth to the Romanes But especially his Mercie and Iustice heere shine foorth and carrie away the prayse His wonderfull and seuere Iustice in punishing transgression and inflicting wrath which end the Apostle teacheth Rom. 9. 22. What if God willing to shew wrath c The riches of his Mercie and Goodnesse in helping out of miserie in and of and by for himselfe poore silly and wretched man whom otherwise saluation it selfe had not beene able for to saue This end the Apostle there teacheth plainely That o Rom. 9. 23. he might make knowne the riches of his Glorie vpon the vessels of mercie which he hath before prepared vnto glorie And Ephes 1. 5 6. He that predestinated vs to be his adopted sonnes through Iesus Christ to the praise of the glorie of his grace That so no flesh p 1. Cor. 1. 29. might reioyce before him but euerie q Phil. 2. 11. tongue might confesse that Iesus Christ is the Lord to the praise of God the Father To returne to the Couenant mediated by Christ Because This Couenant is called the Couenant of Grace the same commeth from the onely mercie and fauour of God in his Sonne it is called the Couenant of Grace Here therefore is another Couenant that God hath made with man ouer beside the Couenant of Works which he made before A Couenant of another and a quite differing nature for First it is grounded vpon the free mercie of God in Christ otherwise it is in the Couenant of Works where Christ or the Grace of God in Christ was no part at all of the Couenant for there needed then no Mediator because in the beginning God and man were not at oddes Secondly the conditions of these two Couenants differ the Law or Couenant of Workes offereth saluation vnder condition of perfect obedience The Gospell or Couenant of Grace vnder the condition of faith that is to say if we beleeue in Christ who hath done it for vs. Of both these Couenants the Couenant of Workes and the Couenant of Grace Ieremie r Ier. 31. 31. speaketh in his one and thirtieth Chapter and Paul to the ſ Gal. 4. 24. Galatians sheweth how they were shadowed by two women as by two types that is to say by Hagar the bond and Sara the free-woman for these women saith hee are the two Couenants You may see further touching them both t Phil. 3 9. That I might be found in him that is not hauing mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through Christ Phil. 3. u Rom. 9. 30 31 32. What shal we say then that the Gentiles which followed not righteousnesse haue attained vnto righteousnesse euen the righteousnesse which is of faith Put Israel which followed the Law of righteousnes could not attain vnto the Law of Righteousnesse Wherefore because they sought it not by faith but as it were by the workes of the Law Rom. 9. x Rom. 10. 3 ● 5 6 7. For they beeing ignorant of the righteousnesse of God and going about to establish thei owne righteousnesse haue not submitted themselues to the righteousnesse of God for Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse to euerie one that beleeueth for Moses thus describeth the righteousnesse which is of the Law that the man which doth these thinks shall liue thereby But the righteousnesse which is of faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart Who shall ascend into Heauen That is to bring Christ from aboue Or Who shall goe downe into the deepe That is to bring vp Christ from the dead Rom. 10. y Gal. 3. 11 12. That no man is iustified by the Law in the sight of God it is euident for the iust shall liue by faith Now the Law is not of faith but the man that doth these things shall liue by them Gal. 3. And these two being the onely meanes whereby true happinesse may bee attained are so contrarie one vnto another that where the one is the other cannot bee neyther can saluation come in part by the one and in part by the other Whereupon the Apostle vseth to dispute that we are iustified by workes onely or by faith alone This is the summe of his whole Argument in the three first Chapters of the Epistle to the Romans Eyther we are iustified by Workes or by Faith But not by workes neyther of the Law of Nature nor of the morall Law neyther Gentile which is without the Law written nor Iew which hath it
giuen to all Christians alike for that all of vs communicate with the Priesthood of Christ and are Priests to God to ſ 1. Pet 2. 5. Reuel 1. 6. offer spirituall Sacrifices First our selues as Paul saith Ro. 12. 1 in the deniall of our owne lusts then the Sacrifice of Prayer and Thankesgiuing Almes and other Christian The parts are Oblation and Intercession Oblation is the offering vp of himselfe for them It standeth first in the sanctification of his humane Nature and Righteousnes then in his suffrings with the glories that did follow The sanctification of his humane Nature is the consecrating of it in all holinesse from the very first moment of his conception duties whereof the Apostle speaketh Heb. 13. 15 c. In the parts of his Priesthood we put first the offering of himselfe to God his Father for vs I say for vs because Christ is to bee considered not as one priuate man but as a publike person representing all men that are to come to life eternall as Adam did all his Posteritie for so the Apostle doth compare them Rom. 5. 14. From the vertue of this Oblation cōmeth the full matter of our peace with God In it we are to consider foure principall heads whereunto all may be referred first is the sanctification of his humane nature to be a fit instrument to worke our reconciliation vnto God wherein two things are comprehended First That the Man-hood or humane Nature by the wonderfull worke of the Holy Ghost was sanctified in the Virgins wombe from all kind of sinfulnesse and indued with an habit of most perfect Sanctimonie and Holinesse in the verie first minute and moment of his conception In which regard the t Luke 1. 35. Angell vnto Marie calleth him That holy thing that shall be borne of thee c. wherein he differeth from all the sonnes of Adam as well as he doth in the manner of his conception Secondly It was made a fit instrument for the whole for the worke of the Mediation worke of the Mediation that is to say not onely for his owne performance of the Priestly Offices but both for our incorporating into himselfe and for the quickening and giuing of Life and Righteousnesse and all good things to those that are incorporate and that by the power of his God-head sanctifying the Man-hood as hee saith Iohn 17. 19. For their sake doe I sanctifie my selfe It is not therefore the God-head onely that quickeneth vs but the humanitie also as an instrument or Conduit whereby he doth it And this is that our Sauiour saith Iohn 5. 26. As the Father hath life in himselfe As if he should haue said With God indeed is the fountaine of Life and Grace and all good things but that which is locked vp and buried in his vnaccessible Light hee hath powred vpon the Sonne manifested in the flesh that from him as from the Head it might flow to euerie member of the Church yea hither driueth the whole tenour of his disputation Iohn 6. 53 57 63. concerning the true cause of our eternall Happinesse After hee had said Vnlesse yee eate the flesh of the Sonne of man and drinke his bloud you haue no life in you hee addeth As I liue by the Father so he that eateth mee hee also shall liue by mee And anon It is the Spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing When hee saith himselfe meaning his Man-hood which was it onely which the Iewes beheld in Christ liueth by the Father that is the God-head dwelling in him which for the Iewes sake hee vttereth vnder the name of his Father rather then of himselfe he sheweth the fountaine of his Life that is of his quickening power to be that essentiall vnion of the God-head to his humane Nature in regard whereof the Father was 〈…〉 lled before The Liuing Father Againe where hee 〈◊〉 The flesh profiteth nothing and yet had said before 〈◊〉 ye eate the flesh of the Sonne of man and drinke his bloud ye haue no life in you he distinguisheth two things most manifestly First that his humane Nature whether you consider the essence of his Soule or Bodie or any created vertue or qualitie inherent hath not of it selfe any quickening vertue in it which is onely proper to his God-head then that the same is neuerthelesse not vnprofitable but a most necessarie instrument which being first it selfe quickened by the God-head whereunto it is personally knit doth from the God-head powre life into as many as by faith are vnited to him without whose flesh the Spirit neuer quickeneth no more then the soule maketh a man to vnderstand but by the braine Therefore is the Man-hood aptly compared to a Fountaine which sendeth forth most sweet and comfortable streames of water of life vnto all his members and the Deitie to the Well-head or to a Spring that ministreth continually vnto this Fountaine The second head is the performing of thorow Righteousnesse The Righteousnesse of Christ is his performing of the most excellent measure of obedience to the Law of God that can possibly fall into any Creature and being the Righteousnes of him who is both God and Man consequently it meriteth a like supreme measure of Blessednesse for vs being in all his Actions supernaturally vpholden from all possibilitie of sinning and performing the most exact and perfect obedience of the Law Iohn 8. 29. I doe alwayes the things that are pleasing to my Father Supernaturall I say because being a true Man and hauing all the infirmities of the sonnes of men sinne onely excepted he was as all other in his owne Nature subiect to temptation and of a mutable disposition to imbrace euill as Adam did if it had beene possible for the God-head to the which hee was personally vnited to haue left him In this part I consider the measure First of his Righteousnesse and then of the Blessednesse which hee merited both of them in the highest most supreme excellencie that can bee more then I say not men but all the Angels of heauen are capable of being the righteousn●● of him which is both God and Man therefore 〈◊〉 The u 1. Cor. 4. 21. Righteousnesse of God which notwithstanding as a qualitie inherent to the humane Nature of Christ is to be distinguished from that essentiall Righteousnesse of his that he hath as God which is the verie God-head To the third head are to be referred the sufferings of Suffering one principall part of that obedience is Christ a principall part of his obedience as hee tooke vpon him the Office of Mediator but in nature and consideration of the Doctrine to be distinguished from the former And herein especially standeth that offering of himselfe vp to God his Father for vs. As the Apostle The abomination of the Popish Masse wherein the Priest offereth vp Christ euery day vnto his Father testifieth Hebrewes 9. 14. How much more shall the bloud of CHRIST who by his
lesse from desperation for euen when hee cryed out in the anguish of his soule Why hast thou forsaken me yet he ceaseth not to call him his God of whom he complayneth himselfe to bee forsaken but it grew out of a meere humiliation for howsoeuer as touching his Diuine Nature he were equall with GOD the Father yet he found in his humanitie wherein hee was to pay our ransome an exceeding vnabilitie to satisfie Gods Iustice vnlesse hee might bee pleased fauourably to accept the Sacrifice of his Bodie not as the Sacrifice of a man but as the Sacrifice of his onely begotten Sonne and what was wanting in the weaknesse of his humane Nature to account sufficiently made vp in the worthinesse of his God-head Besides he feared not an vtter desertion or forsaking which to feare were desperation but lest his humane Nature should for a time be left alone without any comfortable assistance of the God-head fearing in that distressefull agonie of his and the verie confusion of the powers of his nature how long it might hold him and how infinitely more it might increase vpon him seeing that hee was not yet come to the greatest of his Passion from whence by a meere naturall desire abhorring paine which may well be without sinne he would haue gladly beene released And therefore praying it might passe from him yet presently submitteth himselfe vnto it Mat. 26. 39. O my Father if it be possible let this Cup passe from me Neuerthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt And againe Verse 42. O my Father if this Cup cannot passe away from mee but that I must drinke of it thy will bee done y Mar. 14. 36. MARKE hath it thus Father all things are possible to thee take away this Cup from mee Neuerthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt The third thing to bee obserued in his sufferings is All which hee fully satisfied that by the power of his God-head hee did indure and went thorow with them and did not take the foile for as a huge stone falling vpon a piece of britle glasse grindeth it all to powder but if it light vpon a thing as huge as it selfe it is not able for to wagge it so the infinite power of his God-head strengthened the humane Nature of Christ to indure the brunt of the infinite wrath and displeasure of his Father in such sort as it did not ouer-whelme him but that in the middest of all his sufferings hee did in a manner conquer and ouercome laying in his humilitie the beginning as it were and foundation of his Glorie and of his Kingdome in his lowe estate Whereof it followeth First that in the middest of his most bitter sufferings he was freed from hatred of God finall desperation and such like which are not of the substance of the punishment but lamentable and fearefull effects in those that are ouercome of it Secondly That hee was not nor could not bee crushed with the waight of it into Hell the place of the damned Thirdly That making satisfaction he did not lye for euer vnder it But how then did hee pay the ransome of our sinnes which is Hell fire the second Death euerlasting condemnation if he neither were in Hell to suffer there and came so quickly out of his suffering here These things as hath beene shewed are no part of the punishment but effects and things annexed to it when the punishment it selfe is not able to bee indured and hath no place where that is borne and satisfied And yet it is more that Christ the onely begotten Sonne of God yea God himselfe should for a small while thus beare the Curse of the Law then if the whole World had suffered eternall punishment in Hell fire The fourth thing is how and which way he satisfied our cursednes here in the whole course of his life all this and when First Our cursednesse here he satisfied in the whole course of his life as z Mat. 8. 16 17 the Euangelist out of the Prophet noteth He healed all that were sicke that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esay the Prophet saying Hee tooke our infirmities and bare our sicknesse Secondly the infinite wrath of God his Father hee our full cursednesse vpon the Crosse satisfied vpon the Crosse for thither doth the Scripture euer call vs a 1. Pet 2. 24. Who bare our sInnes vpon the Wood that b Ephes 2. 16. hee might reconcile both in one bodie vnto GOD through the Crosse killing enmitie through it c Coloss 2. 14. blotting out the hand-writing of ordinances that was against vs which was secretly contrarie to vs hee tooke it away nayling it to the Crosse Thirdly Death in the graue where beeing solemnely and death by dying vnder the power whereof he lay three daies in the graue buried to assure vs his death was a true death and not counterfeit nor fayned he lay three dayes vnder the ignominious dominion of it The fift and last thing is the end which is also the vse and fruit of his sufferings Forgiuenesse of sins Mortification or Abolishing of our sinful lusts and the Freeing of vs from death and condemnation as shall appeare hereafter To come vnto the last of those foure heads our Sauiours The glories of Christ that followed his suffrings humbling of himselfe so farre as to be obedient vnto death the death of the Crosse it pleased God to crowne with an infinite waight of blisse as the Apostle teacheth Phil. 2. 9. Agreeable whereunto is that of the Prophet d Esay 53. 10. Esay Seeing he giueth himselfe an Oblation for sinne hee shall see a seede and prolong his dayes And Reuel 5. 12 13. It is the voyce of infinite thousands of holy Angels applauded by all the creatures in heauen and vpon the earth and by the foure liuing creatures and the foure and twentie Elders Worthie is the Lambe that was slaine to receiue power and riches and wisdome and strength and honor and glorie and praise In which two e 1. Pet. 1. 11. Psal 22. the sufferings of Christ the glories that did follow the whole substance of the Gospell standeth as he himselfe teacheth his Disciples Luk. 24. 26. Must not Christ haue suffered these things and so enter into his glorie But had he no glorie at all before he had finished his sufferings Indeed during the time of his humiliation which was all his life long whilest he bare the infirmity of our natures and the punishment due to the same the great happinesse belonging to him was smothered in some sort that it did not so appeare neyther was the time for the full manifesting thereof yet come Howbeit euen then he did not obscurely make ouerture of it many wayes For first in that weakenesse of his flesh he gaue so liuely tokens of his glorie that the f 1. Tim. 3. 16. Apostle feareth not to say euen then When he was manifested in the
power and comfort of his Spirit whereby he doth communicate himselfe and all he hath vnto vs not in any corporall or bodily presence The time that hee thus ascended both in Soule and the fortieth day after his Resurrection Bodie was fortie d Acts 1. 3. dayes after his Resurrection during all which time hee was conuersant with his Disciples teaching and instructing them aswell in all points of Christian doctrine as in those that belong to the Policie and Gouernment of his Church whereupon the e Heb. 3. 2 3 4 5 6. Apostle saith He was faithfull in all the House of God after a more excellent sort then Moses was The fruit of Christs Ascension into Heauen is our comming thither as shall appeare more at large hereafter And this entrie into Heauen to purchase full Redemption for vs belonged to his Priestly Function wherof the High Priests entring into the Holy of holies once a yeere was a type or figure Heb. 8. 7 12. The fourth and last step is his f Iohn 7. 39. Acts 3. 13. Glorification or the and there sitteth at the right hand of God that is to say enioyeth all Soueraigntie Power and Glorie inriching of him after hee was ascended with an vnspeakeable and incomprehensible though not an infinite measure of all Happinesse Ioy Wisdome Knowledge Excellencie more then all men and Angels haue whereof the g Psal 45. 8. Heb. 1. 9. Psalmist speaketh God euen thy God hath anoynted thee with the Oyle of gladnesse aboue thy fellowes Therefore this is called also his h Acts 2. 33. Exaltation or i Phil. 2. 9. Superexaltation hauing in stead of shame and contempt which for our sakes hee did willingly vndergoe becomming subiect vnto death the most ignominious death of the Crosse all and all manner of excellencie both Kingdome Power and Glorie bestowed vpon him and this is that which figuratiuely is meant by his sitting or standing at the right hand of God his Father Heb. 1. 3. Hauing by himselfe purged our sinnes hee sitteth at the right hand of Maiestie in the highest places Marke 16. 19. The Lord after he had spoken these things was taken vp into Heauen and sitteth at the right hand of God Acts 7. 55. He being full of the Holy Ghost looked stedfastly vp to Heauen and saw the Glorie of God and Iesus standing at the right hand of God A phrase or forme of speech taken from earthly Princes who are said to set them at their right hand whom they are pleased to k Mat. 20. aduance into the principall place of Honour and Administration of their Kingdome First touching his Gouernment and Dominion both the Apostles so expound this Phrase when that which l Psal 110. 1. Dauid saith IEHOVAH said vnto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstoole The one m 1. Cor. 15. 25 rendreth thus He shall raigne till he haue put all his enemies vnder his feet The n Acts 2. 36. other inferreth vpon it Let all the house of Israel therefore know for a certaine that Him God hath made both Lord and Christ For power and dominion both that serueth Ephes 1. 10 20 21. According to his mightie power which hee wrought in Christ when he raysed him from the dead and set him at his right hand in the heauenly Places far aboue all Principalitie and Power and Might and Dominion and euery name that is named not in this World onely but also in that that is to come and hath made all things subiect vnder his feet Of his Glorie the same is manifest in that this verie setting at the right hand of God is o Acts 3. 13. called his Glorification and the p Acts 7. 55. Storie of Stephen coupleth them together He saw the Glory of God and Iesus standing at the right hand of God The fruit of his setting at the right hand of God is very great and in a manner all in all both for his Intercession and Kingdome as we shall haue occasion to note hereafter All that hitherto hath beene said concerneth our Sauiours Hitherto of Oblation Intercession is offering of himselfe we come now to the other part of his Priesthood standing in his Intercession A thing most necessarie to be added to the rest for in vaine were all his Offerings and Oblation if by his Prayers and Supplications to his Father and the continuall presenting of his Merits hee did not purchase Grace that the same should bee made effectuall for vs. Wherefore this as one step higher is added to the former Rom. 8. 34 Who shall condemne It is Christ that dyed nay rather which is risen who also is at the right hand of God who also maketh Intercession for vs. In his Intercession I obserue First that it is the proper Office and Honor of Christ by whom onely we come vnto God Heb. 7. 25. Secondly That it is the requesting and intreatie of the continuall presenting of his Merits to God his Father the continuall presenting of himselfe and the Merits of his Death and Passion whereupon hee is called our q 1. Iohn 2. 1. Aduocate or Spokesman and is said to r Heb. 9. 24. appeare on our behalfe before the face of God and to make If any man sin we haue an Aduocate with the Father euen Iesus Christ that righteous one Å¿ Rom. 8. 34. Heb. 7. 25. his Father Intercession for vs. The word appearing being a word taken from the Courts and Seats of Iustice as we vse to say when the Plaintife or Defendant is called Who is heere to appeare for him Christ therefore is as it were our Attournie to appeare for vs before his Father I make mention of the Father onely because the Father is the first of the three Persons in order who being appeased the Sonne and Holy Ghost are also pleased they all being one as in essence and nature so in will and agreement Thirdly When and how he performed this Intercession namely whilest hee was vpon Earth in so many so sweet so heauenly and so feruent Prayers as he powred forth from time to time for the Saluation of his Elect especially that most solemne and sacred one aboue the rest Iohn 17. wherein being anon to be offered hee did consecrate both himselfe the onely and eternall Sacrifice and vs in and through him vnto his Father by the power and force of which his Prayer the Church of God hath euer stood and shall stand vnto the end And what he did then vpon the Earth the same he doth though not in the same manner now in Heauen not with knees bowed and hands stretched out but yet in such sort as is fit for him to giue and fit for his Father to receiue Fourthly That hee maketh Intercession for all the Elect on the behalfe of those Elect. and for them alone not for the Reprobate and Worldlings Iohn 17. 9. I pray not
telleth vs that Hee which vpon Adams fall began his Mediation had a Being long before and together with his Father and Holy Spirit weilded a greater Scepter being the Lord and Creatour of Adams selfe and of the whole World besides and the great King out of whose Throne proceed those euerlasting counsels that rule and moderate whatsoeuer is or shall be Thy Throne is established before any time thou art from euerlasting The other degree is in the tayming and bringing downe of the proud enemies of his Kingdome whose rage and furie hee compareth with the loud noyse of mightie waters when the Waues and Surges of the Sea arise Christs Dominion that sitteth aloft as Lord Paramount with the stilling and ouer-ruling of them Then followeth the second mayne Arme and Branch of his Kingdome in the Scepter of his Word Thy testimonies are exceeding true And lastly the euerlasting Righteousnesse which by the Spirit of Sanctification hee bestoweth vpon his Church In thy House is comely holinesse O IEHOVAH for euermore The first of these is properly called his Iudicature or Office of a Iudge the second is his Propheticall Office the third is wont by excellencie to be called The Kingdome All most glorious and noble effects of his Ascension into Heauen and sitting at the right hand of God as the Apostle telleth vs Ephes 4. 8. Ascending on high he led captiuitie captiue whereby he meaneth the absolute power giuen vnto him for the gouernment of the World seene specially in the subduing of the proud enemies of the Church And gaue gifts vnto men which g Verse 10. by and by hee interpreteth to bee as much as to fill all things that is the whole bodie of his Church and all the parts of it with the varietie of his Graces Not that Christ had not this excellencie or did not raigne at all before his Ascension into Heauen for h Iohn 1. 49. Nathaniel telleth him Thou art the King of Israel And i Iohn 18. 37. hee himselfe when Pilate asked Art thou a King answereth Thou sayest true for I am a King But the full and reall manifestation of this Kingdome in his flesh or humane nature did then first beginne To prosecute now these parts in such order as wee One whereby he gouerneth all the World according to their owne nature since the fall did propound them The first is that which extendeth generally to all the World and to the whole gouernment and administration of it which hee himselfe is wont to call his Iudgeship or Office of iudging Iohn 5. 27. He hath giuen vnto him dignitie to execute iudgement as he is the Sonne of man And Iohn 5. 22. The Father iudgeth no man but hath giuen all iudgement to the Sonne where that it may appeare how large his Power in this behalfe extendeth hee calleth it all iudgement Agreeable whereunto is that of the Apostle Heb. 1. 3. where hee is said to sustayne all things by the power of his Word Therefore Iohn 5. 17. he makes this generall proclamation My Father worketh hitherto and I worke without restraint of time or place or of the subiect or persons towards whom it is wrought God therefore who before gouerned immediately and by himselfe hath euer since the fall of Adam appointed Christ his Vicegerent and Lieutenant generall in whose person he would afterwards rule the World Not that himself sitteth idle in heauen as Iosephs Master did when he had committed vnto Ioseph the Administration of his house but being in him and with him and working all things by and through Christ who againe vseth to that end beside his Spirit and the power of his Word the seruice also the ministery of his holy Angels all which is figured by many excellent and goodly Similitudes in the Vision of k Ezech. 1. Ezechiel where the foure liuing Creatures representing the innumerable company of Angels whose Ministerie extendeth vnto all the foure parts of the Earth haue vnder their feet foure wheeles noting the whole vncertaine course of this changeable and vnconstant world which moue when they moue and rest when they stand still And when the liuing creatures lift vp themselues from earth into heauen to receiue from God new Commandements the wheeles also as it were doe follow them and cease from wheeling to wait their direction Aboue which Angels is a Curtaine or Extent betweene God and them all of Christal cleare and transparent thorow the which as he beholdeth these inferior creatures so they both Angels and men according to their mediocritie are able to see him and the brightnesse of his glorie Ouer that Extent higher than the highest heauens is a most glorious Throne erect whereupon doth sit the likenesse of the Sonne of man Christ the blessed Lord of glorie God and man whom all obey and stoope at his command All this for the good of his Church and people for whose sake it was necessarie he should be armed with so great a Command and Power In this part of his Kingdome I note First The largenesse thereof in that it reacheth euery where and no place exempted from it I will giue the Nations l Ps 2. 8. for thine inheritance and the ends of the earth for thy possession m Zach. 9. 10. His dominion shall be from Sea to Sea and from the Riuer vnto the ends of the earth n Dan. 7. 14. And to him was giuen Dominion and a Glorie and a Kingdome that all people nations and tongues should serue him o Ps 72. 8. 11. He shal beare rule from one Sea vnto another and from the floud as farre as the ends of the earth All Kings shall bow downe vnto him and all Nations shall serue him p Math. 28. 18 All power is giuen me in heauen and vpon the earth Secondly In this Kingdome Christ alone perfecteth all things not like to other Kings and Potentates who rule by deputies but here hee himselfe doth all for though there he vsed instruments yet all commeth from his strength and vertue and hee himselfe is euery-where present by his Spirit Whereupon his Kingdome is called q Esay 9. 6. Wonderfull because the effects and working of Gods Spirit are strange and marueilous Thirdly the vertues and properties of this our King arming and inabling him for the effecting of those great things are two Counsell to aduise of things wisely and Strength to put them in execution beeing both the stayes and props of a Kingdome as it were the two pillers Iacin and Bohas whereupon r 1. King 7. 21. Salomons Porch was built Therefore Rabshake to discourage Hezekias vanteth of these two as of the things whereon the hope if battaile standeth as if Hezekias were not in them to be compared to the King his Master Å¿ Esay 6. 5. Say yet they are but lip words that thou haue counsell and strength for the warre yet in whom doest thou trust And Salomon though hee preferre the one maketh
Chro. 15. 3. Israel by which is meant not the ten Tribes onely but Iudah and Beniamin as the sequel of the Chapter sheweth is said to haue beene a long time without the true God without Priest to teach without the Law And Paul 2. Thess 2. 3. telleth of a generall defection and falling from the Truth that no face of a visible Church should be discerned Antichrist should so vniuersally set vp his throne which in the height and fulnesse of Poperie we see to haue bin accomplished Although that God hath and alwaies had some that are his as appeareth by that which the Lord d Rom. 11. 2 3. answered to Elias But I call it a visible Church because it may be seene and knowne who are such Professors though the Church of the Elect cannot be seene This outward Church vniuersall is further Seuerall companies that assemble for the exercises of the Word are so many Churches members of the whole to be considered in the beautie it receiueth by companies and assemblies drawne by the power of Christs Spirit to associate and ioyne themselues together in the profession of his Name which is a singular ornament and a marueilous gracing of the whole thus to be distinguished into particular meetings as it were the field of the Lord into seuerall closures or a garden into seuerall beds or alleyes Whereby Gods glory is much the more conspicuous Such a Church or Congregation for so in ordinary sense the Scripture vseth the word Church neither standeth of one or two nor a few in a corner but of many enough to performe all seruices of the Church and those publiquely assembling So the Apostle speaketh of the e 1. Cor. 11. 18. Corinths Comming together to the Church and to the Hebrewes f Heb. 10. 25. Leaue not your assembling together as the manner is of s●me But not euery assembly of Professors doth forth with make a Church but their assembling in the name of Christ for Prayer Administration of the Sacraments or other spirituall matters whereby the Church is distinguished from the Common-wealth and ciuill meetings And this badge or marke our Sauiour setteth vpon it Matth. 18. 20. Where two or three are gathered together in my name And Paul 1. Cor. 1. 5. 4. 5. I haue decreed when you and my Spirit are gathered together in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ with the power of our Lord Iesus Christ to deliuer such a one to Satan So wee read in the Acts that the first day of the Weeke the Disciples gathered together to breake bread Act. 20. 7. And not in vaine doe the Churches so assemble God And in euery of these hath alwaies some that are his indeed hath made vnto them this large and ample promise that he will be alwayes effectuall to renue some of them by the power of his Spirit vnto euerlasting life for the ministery of the Word with the vse of the Sacraments and the exercise of true discipline sounding in euery Church g Math. 13. 3 ● 5 6 7. neuer returneth emptie but howsoeuer much of it fall by the way or vpon stonie places or among the thornes yet some alwayes lighteth vpon good ground and bringeth forth fruit in that measure that God hath appointed A promise anciently made to the Church as appeareth Esay 9. 251. This shall be my Couenant with them saith IEHOVAH My Spirit that is in thee and the words I haue put into thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed nor out of the mouth of thy seedes seede saith IEHOVAH from this time forth for euermore Which promise our Sauiour hath also renued Matth. 28. 19 20. Goe therefore and gather Disciples of all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to keepe all things whatsoeuer I haue commanded you And behold I am with you alwayes vnto the end of the world Hereof it is that so many things are generally attributed to the Churches professing Christ because the same is alwaies true in some that are among them As where they are called h Eph. 1. 1. Faithfull ones i Eph. 1. 1. Holy k 1. Cor. 1. 2. Sanctified and the Iewes in generall l Exod. 19. 5 6. A holie Nation A peculiar people c. So Deut. 32. 15. They are called leshurum that is The righteous people for that all being called to that honour many of them were such indeed although of a number it were also true that they m Vers 5. were none of his sonnes Another noble Prerogatiue belongeth to the outward Their children also are of the Church Church that they purchase not onely this dignity for themselues by the profession of their faith but their children also are borne free Burgesses of this Citie as the promise is made to n Gen. 17. 7. ABRAHAM I will be the God of thee and of thy seed for as the Apostle saith The gifts which Christ bestoweth vpon the outward Church are for the Churches cōmon good or for a mans owne priuate for the common good are first things committed to the Churches keeping then Ministeries and Graces The things committed are his Word whereof we haue spoken to be preached Sacraments to be administred and other holy things Rom. 11. 16. If the Root be holy so are the branches also Else-where doth the same Apostle Gal. 2. 15. oppose Iewes by nature to sinners of the Gentiles but to shew that from the very birth the children of beleeuing parents are within the outward Couenant of the forgiuenesse of sinnes And this is not to be restrayned to such children onely as are borne of both parents beleeuers but if any one of them be of the Church so is the child likewise for the vnbeleeuing man is sanctified by the beleeuing wife and the vnbeleeuing woman is sanctified by the beleeuing husband so farre as to make our children that otherwise were vncleane to be holy 1. Cor. 7. 14. Christ not onely gathereth a Church vnto himselfe a precious possession out of the world and the delight and ioy of the earth but he garnisheth it also and setteth it forth with many goodly ornaments and rich endowments which the Apostle calleth Gifts Ephe. 4. 7 8. Some for the publique some for a mans owne priuate Of these the first are certaine rich Iewels of inestimable price and valew his Word Sacraments and other holy things which Christ hath layed vp in the Arke of his Church and committed to their care as a treasure which he will trust none but his Church withall As vnder the Law in the Holy of holies wherein was the Arke were kept the o Heb. 9. 3. Tables of the Testament the Word the golden pot that had Manna a Sacrament and Aarons Rod that had budded for p 〈◊〉 ●7 10 1. Cor. 4. 21. a signe against the rebellious His word
the Apostle by this Argument condemneth those that in the Congregation pray in a strange Language there being none for to interpret it For then saith he how shall hee that supplyeth the place of an vnlearned man say Amen at thy giuing of thankes forasmuch as he knoweth not what thou sayest To the Ministers also belongeth the Administration of and Administration of the Sacraments the Sacraments for in that they haue power to deale with the Word it selfe the dispensation of those holy things which are but Seales and Pledges of the Word of the promises made in Christ cannot be denied them the Sacraments being as it were a visible Word in which respect they are said to haue a t Exod. 4. 8. voyce wherefore our Sauiour Mat. 28. 19. coupleth them together Teach all Nations baptizing them c. The Ministers of the Word being some of them extraordinarily Among the Ministers of the Word some haue bin extraordinarily inspired of Christ raysed vp of God other comming in by the ordinary calling of the Church in those of the former sort wee are specially to consider the Ministerie of certaine select persons inspired of GOD to deliuer the truth of Christian Doctrine both by word and writing which were the Prophets of the Old Testament and the Apostles of the New Whereupon wee are said to bee u Ephes 2. 21. built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Iesus Christ himselfe being the head corner stone And Peter x 2. Pet. 3. 1. stirreth vp those to whom hee writes to remember the words spoken before of the holy Prophets and the Commandement of vs saith hee the Apostles of the Lord and Sauiour So it is said Reuel 21. 14. The wall of the Citie new Ierusalem had twelue foundations and vpon them the twelue names of the twelue Apostles of the Lambe And in that sence Peter and the rest may well bee taken to bee that y Mat. 16. 18. Rocke vpon which Christ doth build his Church In this point of the Propheticall and Apostolicall Ministerie I obserue foure things First That they spake and wrote by Diuine Inspiration for Prophesie in times past saith the Apostle 2. Pet. 1. 21. came not by the will of man but as they were mooued by the holy Spirit did the holy men of God speake And Paul z 2. Tim. 3. 16. to TIMOTHIE All Scripture is inspired of God and is profitable to teach c. Secondly The manner how they deliuered this Doctrine to deliuer both by liuely voyce which was in two sorts by liuely voyce or writing The liuely voyce was euer in the Church from the beginning to the death of the Apostles All which time there was almost no Age wherein at the least some holy man of God was not extraordinarily stirred vp to deliuer the Doctrine of Truth from the immediate mouth of God although there were many times intermissions as the Historie doth shew And the Church complayneth in the a Psal 74. Psalmes yea this Doctrine was oftentimes corrupted and adulterated but by new Reuelations restored againe and kept in the first Integritie In limiting the liuely voyce to the time of the Apostles it must not so bee taken as if the liuely voyce of the Ministers of GOD did not continue still in the Church but that is of Pastors and Teachers who are and alwayes were to fetch their light from the direction of the Prophets and Apostles it is not of extraordinarie men inspired of the Holy Ghost as the Prophets and Apostles were The reason why a liuely voyce continuing so long as from the beginning of the World vntill the Apostles time should cease with their death doth appeare Heb. 1. 1 2. where it is said that God in many pieces and after diuers fashions of old spake to the Fathers by the Prophets but in these latter dayes he hath spoken vnto vs by the Sonne For so long as the Word was deliuered but by parcels and that there remayned something still behind more cleerely and manifestly to be reuealed which was till he spake fully and lastly by his Sonne so long a liuely voice was necessarie wherewith euery new Reuelation doth beginne but longer there can be no vse of it for that should plainly argue that the Reuelation of the Mysterie of Christ by Christ himselfe were not yet perfect By writing they did deliuer it in the Canonicall and writing Bookes of the Old and New Testament which by way of excellencie wee call the Scriptures or the written Word begunne by Moses and continued during all the time before-mentioned euen to the death of the Apostles Those Bookes are in the Old Testament Genesis c. In the New Matthew c. As for the Bookes commonly called Apocrypha wee acknowledge therin many profitable things contayned and good for morall instruction especially in Ecclesiasticus and in the Booke of Wisdome and some things also necessarie for the vnderstanding of the Storie of the Church yet because they carrie not the print of Gods Spirit which the spirituall man discerneth they are not equalled or matched with the Scriptures And because in many of them flat vntruths and contrarieties may be found and in one and the same Storie contradictions with the true Storie penned by the Holy Ghost and in most of them diuers things either friuolous and absurd or manifestly false and forged or Doctrines taught and commended which the Word of God condemneth we cannot without impiety lift them vp into the Chaire of Truth Beside They were neither written in the Hebrew nor receiued of the Iewes b Rom. 3. 2. 9. 4. to whom were committed all the Oracles of God vnder the Old Testament But that those which we call Canonicall Scriptures were inspired of God is to be proued by arguments and reasons taken from the Bookes themselues As first the Maiestie of the Word in so great simplicitie and so familiar and plaine a stile so piercing and effecting the conscience which all the eloquence of the world and lay it all together is not possibly able to doe although there lacke not also eloquence in the Word but heauenly and diuine Secondly The harmony and consent of so many persons writing at seuerall times in seuerall places and ages of seuerall arguments and matters all iumping and concurring in one as led by one and the same Spirit Thirdly The holinesse of the matter it selfe not sauouring of the world but leading vs by the hand out and from aboue the world Fourthly The prediction of future things many hundred yea thousand yeeres before they came to passe which all fell out accordingly Fiftly The secret and hidden things there discouered which no wisdome of the earth no wit of man was able to reach vnto Some few sparkes whereof stollen from hence haue cast such a light in the writings of Heathen men as hath made them to seeme diuine Sixtly The faithfull and sincere dealing of the Pen-men whom
not able to discerne of the Godhead of Christ lying hid vnder the vaile of his flesh not of euery one in particular for some wittingly and willingly and contrarie to their owne conscience went against him knowing what hee i Iohn 7. 28. was and wher●e he came which gaue our Sauiour occasion to handle this Argument Matthew 12. Marke 3. Luke 12. Fourthly It is a sinne not simply against knowledge but against the light of the Spirit or that sweetnesse and comfort which once they felt in Christ And so it appeareth that many of the Iewes offended of whom our k Iohn 5. 36. Sauiour saith that they did with cheerfulnesse reioyce for a time in the Ministerie of Iohn Baptist preaching Christ vnto them and yet afterwards l Iohn 5. 38. fell backe and had no m Iohn 5. 40. list to come vnto Christ This inlightening is n Mat. 12. 43. 2. Pet. 2. 20 23. Heb. 6. 5. 10. 29. a diuine and supernaturall worke of GODS Spirit changing a mans corruption and entring him into the high-way that leadeth to Regeneration So that I cannot thinke that either the sinne of Angels if you consider their first fall though then they were most glorious Creatures and Children of Light and their fall presumptuous or yet their sinne being now become Deuils though they o Mat. 8. 29. know Christ to bee the true Messias the Son and the Holy One of God and he of whom they must bee iudged and yet with all their might and mayne oppugne him can bee said properly the sinne against the Holy Ghost in that sence which the Scripture speaketh of it though I denie not but it is at the least equiualent or rather much beyond it for both at the first they sinned against that naturall light onely that they had by their first Creation which also was immediatly bent against the Maiestie of God without the respect of a Redeemer and since that time they are not vouchsafed grace to haue any taste at all of the sweetnesse in CHRIST nor possibly can haue seeing he p Heb. 2. 16. came not for a Sauiour vnto them Fiftly It is a witting and q Heb. 10. 2. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 voluntarie sin freely without compulsion or other not cause onely but colour or shew of cause Sixtly It is of meere malice against that which their owne conscience telleth them to be so good and against Christ the Authour of it r Heb. 6. 6. crucifying him in their hearts and making a mocke of him because if they will be his they see they cannot enioy those Pleasures Profits or Preferments which they dote vpon and are resolued to hold though they lose their owne soules for it whereof commeth a persecuting and blaspheming of things they haue beleeued and of all that doe professe the same an vtter ſ Heb. 6. 6. 10. 29. reuolt from Christ and open warre against him It seemeth the Holy Ghost noteth this sinne to haue beene in Saul 1. Sam. 22. 17. Kill the Priests of IEHOVA He saith not simply Kill the Priests but the Priests of IEHOVAH as if hee should haue said I Hath Christ indeed serued me so not onely to turne me out of my Kingdome and to giue it to my seruant but will he now by his answeres and Oracles teach him how to rise vp and lye in waite against mee Well though my malice cannot reach to him who is in Heauen yet I will wracke it vpon his Darlings the Priests Goe kill me all his Priests c. It is not a falling of frailtie and infirmitie though wittingly as that of Peters was By all which may appeare that this being a hidden and a secret sinne lurking in the heart is most hard to bee discerned saue when it pleaseth God himselfe as it were from Heauen to reueale it which in the time of the Apostles to whom the extraordinarie Graces of his Spirit were more plenteous hee did now and then as appeareth in those that seduced the Galatians and further by that alleaged out of Paul and Iohn before but in the succeeding Ages more rarely whereof notwithstanding Iulian the Apostata may bee an example against whom the Prayers of the Church were simply to cut him off Seuenthly It is an vtter reuolt not from Christ or any good thing wee haue in him vpon which Rocke whosoeuer is firmely built the gates of Hell cannot preuaile against him though they may sorely shake him but from a loue and t Mat. 13. 20 21 ioy in some sweet thing which yet neuer had roote in their heart Therefore they that once beleeue in Christ and by faith are rooted in him can neuer come within the compasse of this sinne With this sinne against the Holy Ghost a u Heb. 6. 6. finall can neuer bee repayred vnrepentance is vnseparably ioyned so that they which commit it can neuer come to Faith and Repentance nor euer be in Christ which maketh it x Mat. 12. 32. vnpardonable CHAP. V. Of the Church vnder the Law And CHAP. VI. Of the Church in the time of the Gospell THE Church is one and cannot bee diuided The Church is one and cannot be deuided but hauing regard to the diuersitie of Gods dispensation it may be distinguished into the Church vnder the Old Testament and the Church in the New That vnder the Old Testament had diuers Rites Ceremonies and Sacrifices Figures of Christ and of the good things we haue in him Especially among the Iewes his then peculiar people whereby the dispensation of those times was more obscure and lesse accompanied with Knowledge and other Graces But of all these things as also of their Sacraments which in regard of the outward Signes were a part of the Legall Paedagogie and likewise of the Ministeries that were among them both that of Prophets inspired by whom were written the Bookes of the Old Testament and of other I haue written at large in a Treatise entituled The Old Testament or The Promise To the Church of the New Testament the dispensation is in all cleernesse and perfection But according to the difference of times it is to bee distinguished into the Church vnder the Law I meane the Ceremoniall Law whilest the promise was afoot and the Church in the time of the Gospell differing onely by the diuersitie of dispensation before and since his comming God saith the Apostle to the Hebrewes in many pieces y Heb. 1. 1 2. and after diuers fashions of old spake to the Fathers by the Prophets but in these latter dayes he hath spoken vnto vs by his Sonne The manner therefore and the measure of the Reuelation of Christ did differ First For the manner it was vnto them in diuers Rites Ceremonies Types and Figures and therefore darke and obscure To vs all things are plainly without any shaddowes the bodie being come which is Christ Secondly Though the substance of the doctrine it selfe was alwayes
childrens bodies are not able to beare the other And here a three-fold Ceremonie is to bee obserued First The sprinkling secondly The lying as it were vnder the water thirdly The rising out of it all which the Apostle noteth Rom. 6. 3 4. The grace signified is our incorporating into Christ And therefore it is called i Tit. 3. 5. According to his mercie he hath saued vs by the Lauer of Regeneration The Lauer or Sacrament of Regeneration and thereupon wee are said in Baptisme k Gal. 3. 27. As many of you as are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ to put on Christ Whereof followeth First That it is the first Sacrament of the Church as birth is the first beginning of our life Secondly Children of beleeuing Catabaptists that denie the baptisme of Children parents in that they are members of the Church and partakers of the Couenant cannot bee shut from Baptisme which is the Sacrament thereof no more than they might from Circumcision Wherefore our Sauiour l Mark 10. 14. saith Suffer little children to come vnto me for vnto such belongeth the Kingdome of God Thirdly that is to bee done The Donatists and Nouatians that hold Rebaptization The Papists teach that Baptisme hath onely force to purge sinnes past The Nouatians denie forgiuenesse of sinnes to them that fell after Baptisme but once only as men are borne but once yet it assureth vs of our vnion with Christ not once but all the dayes of our life and testifieth the forgiuenesse of all sinnes past present or to come And therefore is said to saue vs 1. Pet. 3. 2. Fourthly Hereupon wee are said to be baptized into the name of the m Math. 28. 29 Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost because by Baptisme we being consecrate to God are ioyned to him to beare his name as the wife beareth the name of her husband Fiftly It is a Sacrament also of our vniting into the Church Therefore n Gal. 3. 27. Paul after he had said As many of you as are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ immediately addeth For all you are one in Christ Iesus Sixtly Being a seale of Regeneration consequently it sealeth vp the fruits thereof Iustification and Sanctification Hee hath saued vs saith o Tit. 3. 5 6 7. PAVL by the Lauer of Regeneration and of the renewing of the holy Spirit which hee hath shed forth vpon vs richly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour That beeing iustified by his grace wee might be made heires in hope of euerlasting life A seale it is of Iustification in this sort first Of the hiding and couering of sinnes by the couering of the childes face with water Secondly of Christs accomplishment of the Law making vs righteous by the water washing and making cleane the Bodie It is a seale of Sanctification thus First The water lying vpon the childes face declareth that the old Adam in the baptized person is buried with Christ our Sauiour Secondly As after the water shed from the Bodie the Bodie appeareth white and cleane so doe wee rise and appeare in newnesse of life and hereof it is called a p Mark 1. 3. Sacrament of Repentance Iohn baptized in the Wildernes and preached the baptisme of Repentance vnto the forgiuenesse of sinnes Matth. 3. 11. I baptize you with water vnto Repentance The forme whereof is thus or to this effect I baptize thee in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost All these vses both for Iustification and Sanctification and the distinct parts of euery one the Apostle notably setteth forth Rom. 6. 3 4 5 6. Know yee not that all wee which haue beene baptized into Iesus Christ haue beene baptized into his Death Wee are buried then with him by Baptisme into his Death that like as Christ was raysed from the dead vnto the glorie of the Father so also wee should walke in newnesse of life For if wee bee grafted with him to the similitude of his death euen so shall we be to the similitude of his resurrection Knowing this that our olde man is crucified with him that the bodie of Sinne might be destroyed that henceforth wee should not serue Sin The forme of Baptisme which the Minister is here to vse is this q Matth. 28. 19 I baptize thee in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost The Lords Supper is a receyuing of Bread and Wine to assure our growing vp in Christ where the outward signe is double as before in Baptisme The Lords Supper is a feeding with Bread and Wine First The matter both r Matth. 26. 26 27. bread Papists by their Doctrine of Transubstantiation take away the signes in the Supper and wine of which Elements God made choyce because they are the chiefest meanes of nourishment And of them both to shew how plentifull and assured a Redemption we haue in Christ The kind of Bread must bee The Popish Wafer-cakes ordinarie Bread according as our Sauiour Christ tooke such as was vsed at the common table at that time Secondly The action which is the Ministers breaking of bread and powring forth The Superstition of the Papists which will haue it thrust into their mouthes of wine with his deliuering of them both and the peoples receyuing of them Matth. 26. 26 27. As they did eate Iesus tooke Bread and when he had blessed he brake it and gaue it to his Disciples and said Take eate c. Also he tooke the Cup and when he had giuen thankes he gaue it to them saying Drinke c. And of this Wine all are to The sacriledge of Poperie robbing the people of the vse of the Cup. Their priuate and Corner-Masses drinke aswell the people as the Minister so expresly prouided Matth. 26. 27. Drinke yee all of this which is more than he said of the Bread The graces signified are our growing vp in Christ to assure our continuance in the Couenant wherein is noted our continuance in him with increase and consequently iustification and holinesse of life for in the elements themselues the Bread and Wine set before vs the Bodie and Bloud of Christ Matth. 26. 26 27 28. He brake the Bread and said Take eate this is my Bodie Also he tooke the Cup and said Drinke yee all of it for this is my bloud of the New Testament that is shed for many Their nourishing of our Bodies signifie his spirituall feeding of our Soules 1. Cor. 12. 13. By one Spirit we are all made to drink into one Spirit which quickneth and putteth life into vs. In the Actions the Bread broken before our eyes doth represent Passion and sufferings 1. Cor. 11. 24. ſ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As Matth. 23. 38. Behold your house is left 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnto you desolate That is most certainely shall be left and that shortly He tooke
of Gods goodnesse in the things they pray for Thirteenth Gods Children are constant in their prayers and continue in them Giue vs this day c. euery day renewing their supplications The wicked faint and quickly giue ouer or pray but by starts These circumstances to be obserued out of the manner of the Lords Prayer lead mee by the hand to some consideration of the matter it selfe and parts of that Prayer wherein also vnlesse I deceiue may selfe we shall nothing digresse from our purpose There be two parts of that as of all other Prayers for it standeth partly in petition partly in thankes-giuing The Petitions are sixe in number all in that course and order as the Doctrine before was handled whereof the first three comprehēded in the first part of Diuinity are of those things that belong vnto Gods glory without any respect of our owne good as the particle Thy in euery one doth shew And this one thing wh●eein the soundest Diuines agree being well obserued bringeth a great light for the distinguishing of all the sixe Petitions according to their proper bounds and limits in such sort as hereafter followeth The first Peticion Hallowed bee thy name O thou the blessed and great IEHOVAH Father Sonne and holy Spirit three persons and one onely true and euer-liuing God whose i Esay 9. 3. name is wonderfull and who alone art glorious and excellent thy Mercie great vnto the Heauens thy Truth vnto the Cloudes thy Righteousnesse as the mightie Hills thy Iudgements like the bottomlesse Deepe exalt thy selfe O God aboue the heauens thy Glorie ouer all the earth And make it knowne vnto thy creatures that thou the Creator blessed for euer Amen art a Nature Spirituall and Diuine of thy selfe and in thy selfe and by thy selfe subsisting Eternall Immeasurable Incomprehensible Infinite in Power Wisdome Holinesse Truth Mercie Iustice and whatsoeuer good is yea Goodnesse and Perfection it selfe So that both whatsoeuer thou doest is absolutely good and holy and all good and perfect gifts are thine there being no iot of good in any creature but that onely which they haue from thee who art the Father of Lights And this respecteth the first branch of that part of Diuinitie concerning the Nature Persons and Properties of the Godhead The second Petition Thy Kingdome come Aduance the Throne and Scepter of thy Kingdome in the Gouernment of the World according to all thy counsels and purposes decreed from Eternitie Whether of sauing the Elect or destroying of the Reprobate or of the businesses and affaires pertayning to this life and the generall Prouidence ouer all things that thy hands haue fashioned and made together with the meanes which thou hast sanctified thereunto thy Gospell with the Ministerie and preaching thereof the Sacraments Censures and Discipline of the Church and all other good things thou hast ordayned may prooue to thy Children a sauour of life vnto life and to none of them a sauour of death vnto death And that thou wouldest so dispose of things by thy hidden and secret prouidence that all persons and creatures although they many of them sinfully and wretchedly mooued with other causes and ends then in obedience vnto thee yet in regard of thy worke most holily and iustly may concurre to doe whatsoeuer thy hand and thy counsell hath fore-determined to be done Neither let any power or policie of Satan or man or any other creature hinder the execution of thy most glorious and magnificent most wise and iust Decrees But let them all bee as the Mountaines of Brasse that cannot be remooued but stand fast for euer And this respecteth the second branch touching the Kingdome of God and the dispensation of his Counsels The third Petition Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heauen Haue thou alwayes in the World euen here among men as thou hast among thy holy Angels and Spirits of the Righteous that are deceased a Church and chosen Companie which may k Zach. 8. 8. refresh and delight thy Spirit by yeelding with free and readie hearts all cheerfull obedience to thy knowne and reuealed will whilest they bee seene to preferre the loue they beare to thee before the loue of themselues their owne pleasure profit or liues or whatsoeuer else that is most deare vnto them And this which is the third branch the honour due to God riseth by a necessarie consequence from the former two for he that is in himselfe and in his workes so glorious is worthie and alone worthy to be honoured and serued of vs. The three latter Petitions comprehended in the second part of Diuinitie are of those things that concerne our owne and our Neighbours good whereof the first being the fourth Petition in number is for the Fountaine of all good that excellent l Iohn 4. 4. gift of Christ himselfe and all the meanes and Graces Faith especially whereby he may be ours and we come to be his The fift and sixt are for the streames of Righteousnesse that flow from it and spring vnto euerlasting life So that in these last Petitions the whole substance of the Gospell is contayned for touching the other Righteousnesse which is our owne or by the Law the same being impossible through our owne corruption to be had our Sauiour teacheth vs not to pray for it But contrariwise in teaching Regeneration and Righteousnesse through him he doth vtterly exclude all Righteousnesse from our selues or by our owne Creation And in willing vs to pray to bee deliuered from euill he sheweth the right vse of the Law whereby euill is discouered to be the rule of our obedience The fourth Petition Giue vs this Day that Bread of ours that bread aboue substance or better then all wealth and riches which consume and perish whereas this indureth to euerlasting Life being the Bread of God that commeth downe from Heauen and giueth life vnto the World euen Christ himselfe the spirituall Manna promised in Paradise figured in the Wildernesse forespoken by the Prophets shaddowed in the Law manifested in the Gospell thy onely Sonne of thine owne eternall nature and Essence conceiued and borne of the Virgin by the wonderfull worke of thy holy Spirit sanctified from the Wombe to bee the mightie and powerfull Instrument in and by whose flesh or humane nature vnited to the God-head personally hee quickeneth all those that by F●ith are ingraffed in him replenished with all Righteousnesse and fulnesse of the Spirit aboue measure And therefore in himselfe most blessed and happie but for vs and for our sakes accursed in that he bare the whole wrath due to our sinnes and became subiect to death the most ignominious death of the Crosse it selfe vnder which notwithstanding he did not lye for that it was impossible he should bee holden of it but loosing the pangs and sorrowes of death hee arose againe and ascended into Heauen where he sitteth at the right hand of thy most excellent Maiestie to make continuall Intercession for those that are his
the same come immediately from God without the hand of man wee are to remember him that said t Psal 39. 10. I am dumbe I opened not my mouth because thou hast done it Or if hee plague and scourge by men we are taught not to bee impatient nor to rage against the meanes but to looke vp vnto God as the chiefe working cause This made the holy man of God to say IEHOVAH u Iohn 1. 21. gaue and IEHOVAH hath taken blessed be the Name of IEHOVAH And Dauid when rayling Shimei threw stones at him and cursed him to his face Let x 2. Sam. 16. 11 him alone for IEHOVAH hath commanded him to curse DAVID How could Ioseph haue borne with patience the malice of his Brethren throwing him out of his fathers house and selling him into a strange Countrie had not this perswasion preuayled with him that it was the Lord that did it It y Gen. 45. 8. is not ye that sold me into Egypt but God that sent me hither Secondly God hath from euerlasting purposed and decreed vs to this end to glorifie his Name by suffering of afflictions For z Rom. 8. 29. whom hee hath fore-knowne them hee hath also predestinate to bee this way conformed to the Image of his Sonne And therefore being his will and purpose the Lord forbid that any man should be found so hardie as to oppose against it for Gods Counsels are alwayes best Whereupon the a 1. Thess 3. 3 4 Apostle saith Let no man bee mooued with these afflictions for your selues know that hereunto we are appointed Thirdly Not onely they come from God according to his euerlasting purpose but the same is in his loue and fauour towards vs For b Pro. 3. 12. whom the Lord loueth hee chasteneth euen as a father doth the sonne in whom hee taketh pleasure or as the Apostle to the Hebrewes hath it rendring the sence not incumbring the wordes And hee c Heb. 12. 6. scourgeth euery sonne whom he doth imbrace Fourthly Affliction as d Iob 5. 6. Eliphaz telleth IOB commeth not out of the dust neither doth tribulation spring from the Earth but man is borne vnto trouble as the little sparkes do flye vpward that is it commeth not by chance or fortune neither are we to lay the fault vpon any other but to impute vnto our selues the iust desert of our offences that e Leu. 26. 23 24 because we walke rashly with God therefore hee also walketh rashly with vs and therefore to f Micah 7. 9. beare the indignation of IEHOVAH because we haue sinned against him As also the Prophet teacheth Why g Lament 3. 39 40 41 42. should a liuing person keepe a wruling a man when he is chastized for the punishment of his sinnes Rather let vs sift our wayes and search and returne vnto IEHOVAH lifting vp our heart We know that to them that loue God all things worke together to good with both hands to the mightie God of Heauen saying We haue falne away and rebelled thou pardonest not c. Fiftly The end of them is for our h Rom. 8. 28. good and profit i Heb. 12. 10. as the Apostle speaketh that we may partake his Holines and that as k Deut. 8. 16. Moses saith hee may doe good vnto vs in the end for when l 1. Cor. 11. 31. wee are iudged wee are chastized of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the World Sixtly They worke m Heb. 12. 11. at the least the peaceable fruites of Righteousnesse to those that are exercised thereby Rom. 5. 3 4. Affliction worketh Patience and Patience Experience and Experience Hope and Hope maketh not ashamed PAVL by this Lesson was taught not to n 1. Cor. 1. 9. trust in himselfe but in God that rayseth vp the dead And againe That o 2. Cor. 12. 1. I might not be lift vp by the excellencie of Reuelation there was giuen vnto me a pricke in the flesh some exceeding affliction the messenger of Satan to buffet me that I should not be puffed vp Yea Christ himselfe p Heb. 5. 1. though he were the Sonne yet he learned by the things hee suffered Obedience and was perfited thereby It is q Psal 119. 7. good for me saith DAVID that I was afflicted that I may learne thy Statutes And ESAY r Esay 26. 16. O IEHOVAH in affliction they visited thee they powred out submisse Prayers when thy chastizement was vpon them So God to whom our nature is best knowne telleth afore-hand Heb. 5. 5. In their affliction they will seeke mee early An example whereof is to be seene Psal 78. When ſ Psal 78. 34. he slew them then they sought vnto him and returned and went earely vnto the mightie God And notable is that of Ieremie I haue t Ier. 31. 18 19 certainly heard EPHRAIM mourning to himselfe and saying Thou hast chastized mee that I might bee chastized for I was an vntamed Hayfer Conuert me that I may be conuerted for when I shall bee conuerted it shall repent me and after I shall be shewed my fault I will clap vpon the thigh in signe of mourning I blush and am ashamed because I beare the reproch of my youth Seuenthly It is the way that leadeth vnto Glorie for if we suffer with him we shall also be glorified together with him Rom. 8. 17. Eighthly Affliction is a Crowne of Glorie an excellent and a noble benefit Philip. 1. 29. To you is this grace freely giuen not onely to beleeue in Christ but also to suffer for him 2. Cor. 12. 7. he boasteth of it as of a bountifull gift of God that I might not be lift vp by the excellency of Reuelations there was giuen vnto me a prick in the flesh Ninthly It is the common lot of all Gods Children For u 2. Tim. 3. 12. whosoeuer will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution And what x Heb. 12. 7 8. sonne is there saith the Apostle to the Hebrewes whom the Father doth not chastize Therefore if ye be without chastizement whereof all are made partakers then are ye Bastards and not children Therefore Ioha y Reuel 1. 9. calleth himselfe our brother and partner in affliction and kingdome and suffering for Christ Iesus And the speech of our Sauiour Christ is generall If any man will follow me let him take vp his Crosse c. For this cause is the Church called his z Esay 21. 10. threshing and the Sonne of his Floore One whom he beateth and thresheth with afflictions a● the Corne in the Barne is threshed with the Flaile and is compared to a a Exod 3. 2. Bush burning in the fire and to b Zach. 1. 8. Mirrh Trees that grow in a bottome in a place exposed to wind and weather and to all stormes A thing most necessary to be known and thorowly disgested for preuenting of those temptations
that haue alwayes troubled the Saints of God and held them as it were amazed Insomuch as comparing the happinesse of the wicked and the drunkennesse of their pleasures with their owne bitter potions they through the infirmitie of the flesh call many times in question the prouidence of God to say How should the mightie God know or how can there be any knowledge in the most High Behold these are the wicked ones and they prosper for euer and multiply riches but I am smitt●n all the day long and my rebuke is euery Morning whereby they come almost to make a scoffe of the generation of GODS Children as in the seuentie three Psalme the Prophet Dauid sheweth in his owne person how these conflicts doe assault them from which he professeth there that hardly he could get out till he went into the Sanctuarie of GOD to the holy meetings and assemblies of the Church where he learned the the end of those men how the Lord had set them in slippery places c. The whole Psalme is very notable and full of many sweet and heauenly Meditations which are as the Wine and Apples spoken of in the c Cant. 2. 5. Canticles to stay and cheere vp the hearts of the faithfull that they faint not vnder this temptation Another an excellent man of God and a Prophet sanctified from his Mothers wombe is bold to dispute this question with God Why d Ier. 12. 1 2 3. the way of the wicked prospereth why transgressours are at rest why they be planted and also rooted continue and bring forth fruit In whose mouth God is nigh but farre from their reines At length he satisfieth his owne soule by shewing first in himselfe the singular good that aduersitie bringeth to the godly For thou O IEHOVAH knowest me thou seest me therefore thou tryest my minde to cleaue vnto thee Afterwards the end of the prosperitie of the wicked who are fed and fatted vnto destruction Thou pullest these away as Sheepe vnto the Butchery and preparest them vnto the day of slaughter The Booke of Iob swarmeth with these complaints and Salomon the wise thought it fit to arme men against it If e Eccles 5. 7 8. thou see the oppression of the peere and the wresting of right and Iustice in place of Iudgement maruell not at this their will for the High aboue the High obserueth yea the most High●nes the eternall Father Sonne and Holy Spirit aboue these Tenthly We are hereby made like to Christ and conformed to his Image Rom. 8. 29. Whom he hath foreknowne them hee hath predestinate to bee conformed to the Image of his Sonne And againe Verse 17. If wee suffer together with him Now f Col. 1. 24. doe I fulfill saith PAVL in my flesh the remainders of the sufferings of Christ who hauing before suffered in his owne person as the Head doth now suffer in the daily infirmities of his members which is it the Apostle calleth To g 1. Cor. 4. 10. carrie about vs alwayes in our bodie the dying of the Lord Iesus And this Argument Peter h 1. Pet. 4. 13. specially taketh vp to perswade vs not onely to heare but to reioyce in afflictions In as much as ye partake of the afflictions of Christ reioyce that when his glorie shall be reuealed ye may reioyce and be glad And the reason is great and singular for if as the Apostle saith Heb. 2. 10. to bring many children into Glorie it was necessary to consecrate the Prince of their saluation through afflictions whereupon hee is not ashamed to call vs Brethren who is he that would sticke to goe thorow fire and water with such a Brother especially when it is to obtayne so great a Garland Eleuenthly God is able and will deliuer vs and send a gracious issue out of all whereof wee haue a promise Psal 50. 15. Call vpon mee in the day of trouble and I will deliuer thee so shalt thou glorifie mee And 1. Cor. 10. 13. No temptation hath laid hold vpon you but that which befalleth vnto men Now God is faithfull and will not suffer you to be tryed aboue that you are able but together with the temptation will make an issue that you may bee able for to beare For the Church of God howsoeuer it be in continuall floate tumbling and tossed with contrarie windes yet can neuer be sunke but is like to a i Exod. 3. 2. Bush burning in the fire but not consumed and to the k Zach. 1. 8. Mirrh Tree which though it grow in a bottome in a place that lyeth open to all kind of tempestuous weather yet is euer greene and flourishing full of fruit sweete and edoriferous God so tempering their afflictions that euen l Esay 42. 25. then when hee is angry with vs for our sinnes yet hee doth but sprinkle vpon vs a few drops and letteth out a small quillet of his wrath that hee might not waste vs with the extremitie of the heate as he doth his m Esay 66. 15. foes but disple vs with the shaking of his Rod to bring vs home vnto himselfe Whereupon the Apostle saith n 2. Cor. 4. 8 9. In all things we are pressed but not distressed doubting but not despayring persecuted but not forsaken in it cast downe but perish not This is it which maketh so large a difference betweene Gods Children and the vngodly that whereas a little trouble amazeth the one that their heart with o 1. Sam. 25 37 Nabal is as heauie as a stone and readie to dye within them the other ioyfully vndergoe whatsoeuer affliction because come life come death come what will else they know it is from God who is able and will set them free The Psalmist noteth that diuersitie when he saith p Psal 34. 20 22 Many are the afflictions of the iust but IEHOVAH deliuereth them out of all but one affliction killeth the wicked man Againe q Psal 32. 7. Great and many are the sorrowes of the wicked man but he that trusteth in IEHOVAH kindnesse shall compasse him about And Salomon in his Prouerbs Though r Pro. 24. 16. the righteous man fall seuen times yet hee riseth vp againe but the wicked at one euill fall down-right ſ Esay 40. 30 31 Children saith the Prophet ESAY faint and are wearied and young men fall downe flat that is whosoeuer either through childishnesse as Babes seeke not vnto GOD or in a iollitie and vaine confidence of their owne strength as lustie Youths care not for him but they that wait vpon IEHOVAH renew their strength they flye vp with the wing as an Eagle which in swiftnesse of flying vpwards passeth all other Birds so they speedily get out and passe ouer all affliction trusting in the loue and fauour of God They runne and are not wearied they goe forward and doe not faint Twelfthly Christ himselfe is our supporter and ministreth strength vnto vs Philip. 4. 13. I am able
the Angels that fell the Apostle saith z 1. Cor. 5. 1. Know ye not that wee shall iudge the Angel● a Iude verse 6. The angels that kept not their first estate hee hath kept in euerlasting chaines vnder darknesse vnto the Iudgement of the great Day Secondly Who shal be the Iudge Euen Christ who Christ b Acts 10. 42. is appointed of God the Iudge of the liuing dead Christ Iesus I say God and Man appearing in his Man-hood visible to be seene in the flesh c Acts 17. 31. For hee hath set a Day saith PAVL wherein hee will iudge the World in Righteousnesse by the Man whom hee hath appointed The Father nor Holy Ghost shall not appeare Thirdly The comming of this Iudge Wherein I obserue comming to Iudgement foure circumstances First The place from whence hee shall come as wee reade This d Acts 1. 11. IESVS who is taken vp from you into Heauen shall so come from Heauen as yee haue beheld him going into Heauen e 2. Thess 1. 7. When the Lord IESVS CHRIST shall be reuealed from Heauen with his mightie Angels f 1. Thess 4. 5. The Lord himselfe with a showting shall come downe from Heauen Secondly The time of his comming the Day and houre whereof is vncertaine g Mat. 24. 36. Of that Day or houre saith hee knoweth no man no not the Angels of Heauen but my Father onely and as another h Marke 13. 32 Euangelist hath it nor the Sonne himselfe meaning as hee is the Mediatour of his Church and not as hee is God equall with his Father Thirdly As earthly Princes haue sundry States to goe before them in great brauerie and ostentation to giue warning of their comming and at length followeth the Prince with all his Nobles So this King of Kings sendeth before him certayne glorious signes and foretokens of his Comming before hee himselfe doe come These Signes you shall finde all recorded Mat. 24. of which Chapter so much thereof as appertayneth to this purpose it shall not bee amisse before wee goe further to make some short Analysis or resolution both for the excellencie of the matter and to cleere some difficulties in the passage for I know it is commonly taken that some of those tokens are immediately vpon his Comming and as it were at his setting forth whereas the truth is the very neerest of them is at the least some Age of yeeres before as appeareth Verse 33 34. To come therefore to the foure and twentieth of Matthew our Sauiour hauing finished the Signes of Ierusalems ouerthrow in the first 22. Verses of the Chapter beginneth in the 23. Verse to enter vpon those that were to fore-runne his Comming vnto Iudgement whereof hee mentioneth foure of all other the greatest and most memorable The first is the Kingdome of Poperie where see how hee painteth out the Romish Synagogue euen in her colours First It is a Church in shew and semblance else false christs and false prophets could not be spoken of but yet in truth it is no Church at all For if any man saith he shall say vnto you Lo heere is Christ or there beleeue it not Secondly They shall say Here is Christ and there is Christ. Notably verified in the Popish Masse which to make it appeare to all the World that they are of the number of these false prophets proclaymeth Christ to be really in the Sacraments Thirdly It is a persecuting Church So he saith Verse 29. Immediately after the affliction of those dayes Therein comprehending the whole Antichristian Tyrannie Fourthly Of this Church Antichrist is the head whose whole succession he termeth False christs and false prophets Not such false christs as hee speaketh of with another manner of style Verse 5. which should say I am Christ falsly belying his very Person but that great seducer and false prophet who vnder the Name of Christs Vicar and Peters Successour should iustle Christ out of his Chaire Fiftly The Armes Legges and Shoulders of it or the Tayle rather for the Sting and Poyson of these Scorpions is in their Tayle are a Rabble of false teachers False prophets as he termeth them Sixtly By these false teachers are wrought a multitude of false and fayned miracles Seuenthly The bodie is their Romish catholike apostaticall Church seduced by such false teachers and by those lying signes and miracles How maruellously doe these things iumpe with that which we finde recorded in the Epistle to the Thessalonians and by Iohn in the Reuelation They shall saith Christ heere worke great Signes and Wonders insomuch as they should deceiue if it were possible the very Elect. So saith i 2. Thess 2. 9 10 11. PAVL Whose comming shall be by the effectuall working of Satan with all power and signes and lying wonders and with all deceitfulnesse of iniquitie in them that perish c. Therefore God shall send them effectuall errours to beleeue lyes And in the k Reuel 13. 12 13 14. Reuelation he maketh the Earth and the Inhabitants thereof to worship the first Beast and worketh great signes insomuch as he maketh fire come downe from Heauen vnto the Earth before men and deceiueth the Inhabitants of the Earth by the signes which were giuen to him to doe These are the signes and wonders which the Papists so bragge of and make one speciall marke of their Church as Vniuersalitie that is their vniuersall Apostasie here also mentioned is another These seuen are in the 23. and 24. Verses Eighthly The errour and superstition of the times placing all Religion and Christianitie in the Wildernes among the Eremites or in their Monkish Cels and Cloysters Against which hee armeth vs with a double argument first l Verse 27. The Light saith he of the Gospell that he meaneth by the Comming of the Sonne of Man as it is taken much in the same sence 2. Thes 2. 8. is as the Lightening which flasheth from the East to the West and lighteneth all the World So doth the Gospell not the Desarts and Cloysters onely but in euery place He that feareth God and worketh Righteousnesse is accepted of him Againe as the m Verse 28. Eagles or with vs Crowes and Rauens flock vnto a Carcase wheresoeuer it may be found So doe the faithfull to Christ wheresoeuer hee n Gal. 2. 2. by the preaching of the Gospel is crucified before their eies And so ninthly and lastly deliuering a most certayne and infallible note of the true Church hee giueth a Bill of Diuorce to the Romish Synagogue that holdeth not Christ the Head nor Iustification by Faith alone in his bloud Thus haue wee in the whole a liuely description of the Romish Catholike Church which for the ROMANISTS better helpe may out of this place bee defined thus The Romish Catholike Church is a cruell persecuting Church whereof Christs Vicar falsly so named is the head multitude of false teachers and a whole World of mis-beleeuers