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A25291 The marrow of sacred divinity drawne out of the Holy Scriptures, and the interpreters thereof, and brought into method / by William Ames ... ; translated out of the Latine ... ; whereunto are annexed certaine tables representing the substance and heads of all in a short view ... as also a table opening the hard words therein contained.; Medulla theologica. English. 1642 Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1642 (1642) Wing A3000; ESTC R23182 239,577 422

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8. Now these properties are not inherent qualities but relative affections unto which agrees all that perfection which is found in the like affections of the Creature but no imperfection agreeth to them 9. Hence t is that a relative property in God doth make or infer a person which in the Creatures hath not the same reason 10. Those subsistences are either breathing as Father and Sonne or breathed as the Holy Spirit 11. To breath or send forth is a relation not such as by it selfe can make a person but common to two persons 12. The relative property of the Father is to beget Psal. 2. 7. Thou art my Sonne this day I begot thee Iohn 3. 16. the only begotten Sonne Heb. 1. 6. The first begotten Hence he is the first in Order 13. The relative property of the Sonne is to be begotten that is so to proceede from the Father that he is partaker of the same Essence and doth perfectly resemble his nature and hence he is the second in order Heb. 1. 3. The brightnesse of his glory and the Character of his Person 14. The property of the holy Ghost is to be breathed or sent forth and proceede both from the Father and the Sonne Iohn 15. 26. Whom I will send to you from the Father that spirit of truth who proceeds from the Father Romans 8. 9. The spirit of Christ. Gal. 4. 6. The spirit of the Sonne 15. The difference betweene these two to be begotten which agrees to the Sonne and to proceed which is proper to the holy Ghost cannot be explained by us in proper words but that the Sonne proceeds from the Father alone and the holy Ghost from the Father and the Sonne making one relative together Or making together one relation 16. Yet it may in part be shadowed out in a similitude namely the father is as it were Deus intelligens God understanding the Sonne the expresse Image of the Father is as it were Deus intellectus God understood the holy Spirit flowing and breathed from the Father by the Sonne is as it were Deus dilectus God beloved The Sonne is produced as it were by an act of understanding or speaking from the understanding or fruitfull memory of the Father the holy Spirit is produced by an act of loving or breathing from the fruitfull will of the Father and the Sonne Hence the Sonne is called the word Wisdome Image which are not affirmed of the holy Ghost But because in the Creatures there is found the generation of a sonne but there is not any thing found which doth so immediately procced from two equally perfect as the holy Spirit proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne therefore the procession of the Sonne is properly designed noted or set downe in Scripture but neither is a speciall manner of proceeding nor speciall name absolutly proper given to the third person For it is truly said of the Father and the Sonne that they are spirits and holy and the Sonne also proceedeth from the Father by spirituall generation 17. The proper name of God with his proper titles is given in Scripture not onely to the Father but also to the Sonne Ier. 23. 6. Iehova our righteousnesse Iohn 1 1. The word was God Rom. 9. 5. God blessed for ever 1. Tim. 3 16. God manifest in the flesh Rev. 17. 14. Lord of Lords and King of Kings It is also given to the holy Spirit Acts 5. 3 4. that thou shouldest ly to the holy Spirit thou hast lien unto God Acts 28. 25. with Isay 6. 9. Iehova said the holy Ghost spake 1. Cor. 3. 16. 6. 19. 2. Cor. 6. 16. the Temple of God the Temple of the spirit 18. Divine attributes are affirmed not only of the Father but also of the Son Isay 9. 6. The most mighty God Father of eternity Iohn 2. 25. He knew what was in man and 3. 13. The son of man is in Heaven and 8. 38. Before Abraham was I am In like manner also of the holy Spirit Psal. 139. 7. Whither shall I fly from thy spirit 1. Cor. 2. 10. The spirit searcheth all things even the deepe things of God Heb. 9. 14. the eternall spirit 19. The proper operations of God are attributed not only to the Father but also to the Sonne and the holy spirit Election is attributed to the Sonne Mat. 24. 31. His elect and the eternall counsell of God is attributed to the holy Ghost Isay 40. 13. Who hath waighed the spirit of the Lord as the man of his counsell Creation is attributed to the Sonne Iohn 1. 3. All things were made by him and without him was made nothing that was made Also it is attributed to the holy Spirit Psal. 33. 6. By the Word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the strength of them by the breath of his mouth Upholding governing of things created is attributed to the Sonne Heb. 1. 3. Who upholdeth all things by that his mighty Word Also they are attributed to the holy Spirit Gen. 1. 2. The spirit did move upon the face of the waters Zech. 4. 6. By my Spirit saith the Lord of Hosts Proper Power of doing miracles is given to the Son Act. 4. 10. Through the name of Iesus Christ he standeth before you whole 9 34. Iesus Christ he aleth thee It s also given to the holy Spirit Acts 2. 4. They began to speake with tongues as the spirit gave them utterance The communicating of spirituall life and of all grace in vocation justification adoption sanctiand glorification fication is every where given as well to the Sonne holy Spirit as to the Father the ordaining sending blessing of Ecclesiasticall Ministery is given to the Sonn Eph. 4. 8. 11. He gave gifts he gave some Apostles c. And to the holy Ghost 1. Cor. 12. 11. All these worketh one the same spirit Act. 20. 28. The holy Spirit hath made you overseers The very Resurrection of the flesh is ascribed to the Sonne as the author Iohn 6. 54. I will raise him up Also to the holy Spirit Rom. 8. 11. Hee shall raise up your bodies by his spirit dwelling in you 20. Divine honour also and worship is given not only to the Father but also to the Sonne Heb. 1. 6. Let all the Angels of God worship him And also to the holy Spirit when his Name together with the Father and the Sonne is appointed to be called upon over the Baptised Mat. 28. 19. In the name of the Father and Sonne and holy Spirit In like manner the Sonne and Spirit is called upon in that solemne forme of salutation The grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God the Father and the communication of the holy Spirit be with you all 2. Cor. 13. 13. And whatsoever pertaineth to worship is referred as well to Christ as to the holy Spirit in that the true worshippers of God as they are such are called Temples not only of God the Father but
that which he will but also in very deed doth actually doe whatsoever he will Psal. 115. 3. 135. 6. Eph. 3. 11. 21. The manner of Gods subsistence which shines forth in his Efficiency is first the co-working of all persons secondly the distinct manner of the persons in working 22. Their co-working is that whereby they do inseparably worke the same thing for all externall actions are common to all the persons Iohn 5. 17 19. My Father worketh and I worke Whatsoever he doth the same likewise doth the Son and 16. 13 14. That spirit shall not speak of himselfe but whatsoever he shall heare he shall speak He shall take of mine and give it to you 23. Hence every person worketh of himselfe as touching the causall power which he exerciseth 24. Hence there is no praeeminence of dignity in that co-working but great unity and identity of one and the same cause 25. Hence equall honor is equally due from us to all the Divine Persons 26. The Distinct manner of working is that whereby every person doth worke according to the distinct manner of his subsistence 27. That distinct manner is partly in the order of working partly in the bounding of the action 28. As touching the order the manner of working of the Father is of himselfe by the Sonne and Holy Spirit Hence the beginning of things namely Creation is properly attributed to the Father who in order of beginning is the first Person 29. The manner of operation of the Sonne is from the Father by the spirit Hence the dispensation of things is properly attributed to him namely Redemption the constitution of all the offices in the Church Ephes. 4. 11. He therefore gave some to be Apostles some Prophets c. 30. The manner of working of the spirit is from the Father and the Son by himselfe Hence the communication of things is attributed to the Holy Spirit as Regeneration Tit. 3. 5. The communication of all spirituall gifts 1. Cor. 12. 4. And the perfection of naturall things themselves Gen. 1. 2. 31. As touching the termination of the action that works in which the working or manner of working of one person doth chiefly shine forth is chiefly attributed to that person So Creation is by a speciall application appropriated to the Father Redemption to the Sonne and Sanctification to the holy Ghost CHAPTER VII Of the Decree and Counsell of God 1. IN the powerfull Efficiency of God the Decree of God obtaineth the first place because this manner of working being of all most perfect doth chiefly agree to the Divine Nature 2. The Decree of God is his determinate purpose of effecting all things by his almighty Power and according to his counsell Eph. 1. 11. He doth all things according to the counsell of his own will 3. In the Decree of God there appeareth his constancy truth and faithfulnesse 4. Constancy is that whereby the Decree of God remaines alwayes immutable Num. 23. 23. The strong God is not a man that he should ly or the Sonne of man that he should repent Prov. 19. 21. The Counsell of the Lord it shall stand 5. Truth is that whereby he declares that alone which he hath decreed Ierem. 13. 10. Iehova is a God of truth Rom. 3. 4. Let God be true and every man a lia●… For although his words may seeme sometime to sound another thing yet the sence of them doth alwayes agree with the Decree 6. Faithfulnesse is that whereby he effects that which he hath decreed and as he hath decreed Isay 46. 10. My Counsell shall stand and I will doe all my pleasure 7. Every Decree of God is eternall 1 Cor. 2. 7. Acts 15. 18. 8. To this Decree of God pertaineth Counsell Eph. 1. 11. Acts 4. 28. 9. The Counsell of God is as it were his deliberation concerning the doing of every thing in the best manner after that it is of the understanding and will approved 10. Counsell is given to God in respect of perfect judgement whereby he doth all things advisedly I. E. willingly and of set purpose not in respect of any inquisition upon which such a judgement doth depend us men For God seeth and willeth all and every thing together Therefore it is called as it were deliberation not deliberation properly so called 11. Three things concurre to the perfection of this Counsell 1. A scope or end propounded 2. A conceipt of the minde tending towards that scope 3. An intention and well pleasingnesse of the will 12. The scope or end of this Counsell is the glory of God himselfe that is that goodnesse or perfection of God which is made manifest by his Efficiency and shines forth in his works Eph. 1. 6. To the praise of his glorious grace 13. In every artificer or one that workes by counsell ad extra outwardly there is a platforme afore hand in the mind which when he is about to work he lookes into that he may fit his worke to it so also in God seeing he worketh not naturally nor rashly nor by constraint but with greatest perfection of reason such a platforme is to be conceived to praeexist before in his mind as the exemplary cause of all things to be done Heb. 11. 3. Those things we see were made of things that doe not appeare 14. The platforme of all things is the Divine Essence as it is understood of God himselfe as imitable by the Creatures or so as in some sort the Image of that perfection or some footstep thereof may be expressed in the Creatures that is the Creatures themselves as they are conceived in the Mind of God are the platforme or image of that nature which they have in themselves 15. A platforme in the mind of man who attaines to knowledge by Analysis or resolution is collected of things themselves and so things are first in themselves then they come unto the senses of men and then to the understanding where they can make some Idea to direct the following operation But because God understandeth all things by Genesis or composition and doth not require knowledge by Analysis or resolution of things therefore all things are first in his minde before they are in themselves 16. In us the things themselves are the example platform or copy and our knowledge is the Image but in God the Divine knowledge is the coppy-platforme and the things themselves the Image or expresse likenesse of it 17. An Idea in man is first imprinted and afterwards expressed in the things but in God it is only expressing properly not impressed because it doth not come from any other thing 18. From this one foundation may all errors of merits and foreseene faith be sufficiently refuted For if any Decree of God should depend properly upon such foresight then the Idea of God should come to him from something else which doth in no wise agree with his nature 19. The Idea or platforme as it is absolutly considered in God is only one but as it
also of Christ Rev. 21. 22. The Lord God Almighty is her Temple and the Lambe 1. Cor. 3. 16. Know yee not that yee are the Temple of God and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you and 6. 19. Know yee not that your body is the Temple of the holy Spirit who is in you 21. Finally that authority and majesty which is proper to God is given to the Sonne and the spirit 1. Cor. 2. 8. The Lord of glory 1. Pet. 4. 14. that spirit of glory All holy prophecy is attributed to Christ and the holy Spirit 1. Pet. 3. 19. Christ by his spirit went and preached to the spirits that are in prison 2. Pet. 1. 21. Holy men spake being moved by the holy Spirit Acts 28. 25. The holy Spirit spake by Isaiah the Prophet 22. Now that the holy Spirit is propounded to us in all these as a person subsisting it doth manifestly appeare by this that life understanding will and power is given to him every where together with all acts proper to a person 23 Also his distinction from the Father and the Sonne is cleerly taught when he is called another sent comming from the Father and the Sonne Iohn 14. 24. Hence God is the object of our Faith is every way sufficient to impart salvation to us For all love grace and the communication of those things which pertaine to living well doe flow from the Father Sonne and holy Spirit 2. Cor. 13. 13. CHAPTER VI. Of the Efficiency of God 1. THe Efficiency of God is that whereby he worketh all in all things Eph. 1. 11. Who worketh all things Rom. 11. 36. Of him by him and for him are all things 3. That Effecting working or acting of God being actively taken as they are in God acting not really diverse from God himselfe For no composition ormutation of power and act can have place in the most simple and immutable nature of God Yet it addeth a certaine relation of God to a reall effect 4. He worketh all in all things because the Efficiency of all and every thing depends upon the first cause not only as touching its substance but also as touching all reall circumstances Isay 45. 7. That I Iehova doe all these things Lam. 3. 37. 38. Who is he that saith and it commeth to passe when the Lord commandeth it not Out of the mouth of the most high proceedeth not evill and good Also whatsoever hath any perfection in genere moris in matter of manners is accounted among the workes of God but not imperfection or defects which are opposed to the subjection that is due to God 4. In the efficiency of God shines forth both his Essence and his subsistance 5. That Efficiency which pertaines to the Essence of God is his omnipotency 6. The power of God being considered as simply powerfull is altogether the same with his sufficiency and pertaines properly to the nature of God as it is considered under the respect of a being and so is before the knowledge and will of God Rom. 11. 23. for God is able to graft them in againe 7. But power in asmuch as it is in execution is in some sort after sufficiency and pertaines to the Efficiency of God and so doth follow the knowledge and will of God Psal. 115. 3 and 135 6. Whatsoever he pleased he did 8. In these therefore this order is to be conceived That first we conceive in God Posse to be able secondly Scire to know thirdly Velle to will Lastly Efficere potenter powerfully to effect which differs from the effectuall will of God but only ratione in reason whence is that Syllogisme of Faith which in Matth. 8. 2 3. is distinctly explained Lord of thou wilt thou canst I will Therefore it is done Where the argument is from the will comming to the power 9. Hence the very Will of God as it is an effecting principle hath a kinde of power Rom. 9. 19. Who hath resisted his will neither is executive Omnipotency any thing else then the effecting will of God Psalme 33. 9. Hee commanded and it was done Revel 4. 11. By thy will they are and were created 10. Therefore it is an error against the nature of God to say that God properly willeth to doe many things which yet by his Omnipotency he doth not Eph. 1. 19 20. The exceeding greatnesse of his power in us that believe according to the working of his mighty power 11. The Omnipotency of God is that whereby he his able to effect all things that he willeth or can will 2. Cor. 20. 6. In thy hand is power and strength and none can resist thee Luke 1. 37. With God there is no word which cannot be done Phil. 3. 21. He is also able to subject all things unto himselfe 12. Hence also God is everywhere called in the old Testament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mighty God Isay 9. 6. Ieremy 32. 18. Also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God al-sufficient Gen. 17 1. 35. 11. Ruth 1. 20. 21. And in the new Testament he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord Almighty 2. Cor. 6. 18. Rev. 1. 8. 48. And the only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Potentate 1. Tim. 6. 15. Power is attributed to God actively because he hath power to communicate something to others such as is the power of the cause 13. Potentia vel potestas causae A causing power yet properly active power doth not agree to God as if in respect of himselfe he were first idle and after did put himselfe forth into act for God is a most pure Act. Iames 1. 17. 14. Therefore we must not imagine such an active power in God which is a different thing from his Essence for the very Essence of God is this power whereby he is powerfull As the same Essence is mercy it selfe whereby he is mercifull 15. But an active power agrees to God in respect of the Creature which is properly said to be able to receive and prove that act of God which before it did not feele and prove Matthew 19. 26. All things are possible with God 16. The Omnipotency of God is conversant about things absolutely possible whatsoever God willeth or can will Ibidem 17. It is not therefore exercised about things which are altogether 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impossible and doe imply a certaine contradiction either in God or in the things created 2. Tim. 2. 13. He cannot deny himselfe 18. Hence a certaine distinction ariseth of Divine Omnipotency whereby it is distinguished into absolute power and ordinate or actuall power 19. Absolute power is that whereby God is able to doe all things possible although they never shall be Matth. 3. 9. God can of these stones raise up children unto Abraham and 26. 53. Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray my Father and he shall presently give me more then twelve legions of Angels Mark 10. 27. Eph. 3. 20. 20. The ordinate power of God is that whereby he not only can doe
whereby it comes to passe that such things are but also a mediate action whereby it comes to passe that the matter it selfe should exist of which they are formed so it was in the Creation of plants and living Creatures Genes 1. 20. 11. That nothing or not being of things did goe before their being not only in order of nature for so they might co-exist with God from externity but also in order of duration continuance according to our manner of conceiving 12. Hence that beginning in which God is said to create the world was the end of that duration which nothing had and the beginning of that which a the world had 13. Therefore God would by the Creation both shew forth his perfection that he did not neede any Creature or outward thing for then he had created the world as soone as he could And also his freedome whereby he brought forth all things without naturall necessity for if he had created necessarily he had done it from eternity Rev. 4. 11. Psal. 115. 3. 14. The world neither was made from eternity neither could be created from eternity in that disposition and order of things which now it hath 15. That day had not been if infinite dayes ought to have gone before for those dayes going before had never been ended that that might succeed them 16. Hence also it followeth that no Creature was or could be a cause either instrumentall or principall in the act of Creation 17. Every thing created was very good because it was made neither rashly nor in vaine but unto the end which the Maker did attaine unto Gen. 1. 31. Whatsoever hee made was very good 1 Tim. 4. 4. Whatsoever God made is good 18. Goodnesse of a thing created is that perfection whereby it is fit to the use it serves for Now that use is particular or universall 19. The Particular is that proper operation to which any thing serves in its proper nature 20. Universall use is the ordaining of one thing with others for the perfection of the Universe or whole Psal. 104. 148. Esay 40. 13. 21. By this goodnesse all created things in their naturall manner tend to God from whom they came For the second being is from the first and for the first Hence those phrases From him through him and for him are all things Rom. 11. 36. 22. Now naturall things tend unto God 1. In that they declare Gods Glory Psal. 19. 1. 2. That they give occasion to us to know and seeke God Rom. 1. 20. Acts 17. 26. 3. In that they sustaine our life that we may live well unto God 1 Cor. 10. 31. 1 Tim. 4. 3. 4. 23. Time doth co-exist or hath a being together with all naturall things as appeares in that phrase in the beginning for then was the beginning of time 24. Place also doth co-exist that is a certaine space wherein the extention of the Creature is bounded Genes 1. 22. 25. But these are not properly created but concreated or annexed knit to the things created because they have not an absolute but only a relative entitie or being 26. Because God created all things of nothing therefore our faith rests in him against hope under hope for those things which are not as if they were Rom. 4. 17. 18. 27. The Creation of the world is distributed according to the parts of the world for although the world be one by unity of aggregation order and end yet it consists of parts distinguished not onely according to the situation but also according to the Essence and Existence 28. But the Creation of these parts of the world was not altogether and in one moment but it was finished by parts succeding one another in the space of six dayes 29. Creation then is of the parts of the world that are either immediatly perfect or mediatly Psal. 33. 6. Heb. 11. 3. Gen. 2. 7. 19. 22. 30. Creation of things immediatly perfect is that whereby things were made having their principles both materiall and formall at the first ingenerated in them and that in a compleat existence 31. Hence those Creatures of themselves are subject to no essentiall change as generation or corruption 32. The parts immediatly perfect are the highest Heaven and the Inhabitants of it the Angels 33. The highest Heaven is the dwelling-place of Gods holinesse full of all things which pertaine to eternall blessednesse where the Majesty of God doth present it selfe to be seene as it were Face to Face 1 Cor. 2. 8. Marc. 12. 23. 1 Cor. 13. 12. 34. It is called the third Heaven Empyreum fiery The Heaven of Heavens and Paradise 1 Kings 8. 27. Mat. 18. 10. Marc. 12. 25. 2 Cor. 12. 2. 4. 35. This Heaven is meant Gen. 1. 1. Heb. 11. 10. 16. 36. Angells are Spirits of primary perfection created to minister unto God 37. That Angels were ereated appeareth Col. 1. 16. Psal. 14. 8. 5. That they were created the first day with the highest Heaven appeareth 1. From the likenesse of nature that they have 2. In that they are faid to have as it were applauded God in the Creation of other things Iob 38. 7. 3. In that they are Spirits Heb. 1. 14. Luc. 24. 39. Ministers of God Heb. 1. 7. 14. Of chiefe perfection and of an immortall nature Luke 20. 36. 38. Hence the Angels doe so excell in cleere seeing reason that they are said to be as it were full of eyes presently discerning what God would have done by them and how it is to be done And in liberty of will that they performe their offices with diligence Psalme 103. 20. And in perfection of strength that they are able to doe great things 2 Peter 2. 11. And in greatest agility that as if they had wings they doe swiftly dispatch that which they have in Commission Ezech. 1. 6. 39. Their Ministery is to celebrate the Glory of God and to execute his commands Psal. 103. 20. Especially about those who shall be heires of eternall life Hebr. 1. 14. Psalme 91. 11. 34. 8. 40. They were created sound in holinesse and righteousnesse Lu. 9. 26. Iohn 8. 44. Iude 6. 2. Pet. 2. 4. 41. In number they are very many unto ten thousand times ten thousand Dan. 7. 10. Hebr. 12. 22. Mat. 26. 53. They are distinguished among themselves in respect of their Offices Objects about which they are exercised Ephe. 1. 21. And they are under the command of God and Christ only 42. By the Creation God is known but not God the Father Sonne and Holy Spirit because that effecting power whereby the world was created pertaines to the essence of God and not to his personall subsistence 43. Creation of the parts of the World mediately perfect is whereby things were made of principles that did exist before 44. Hence those Creatures are subject to change and corruption 45. Those things that were mediatly perfect have a double existence first a rude and incompleate then afterwards a compleat distinct and
ancients 35. The Episcopall ordination of a Minister without title that is without a Church to which and in which he should be ordained is as rediculous as if any should be fained to be a husband without a wife 36. A Minister so called to some one Church can neither forsake it at his own will or be cast out from it without just cause neither can another undertake the like care of the Church or neglect that which he hath undertaken by voluntary non-residency without sacrilegious breaking of his covenant 37. Ordinary Ministers are either Pastors and Teachers or ruling Elders to whom are joyned those that take care of the poore that is Deacons Diaconesses or Widowes 38. By these offices Christ hath sufficiently provided for all the necessities of the members of the Church namely that they may be chiefly instructed in the knowledge of the truth by Teachers stirred up chiefly to the practise of piety by Pastors preserved in that course of life and called back to repentance for sins by them and the Rulers and be helped against poverty by Deacons CHAPTER LX. Of Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord. 1. AFter the nature of the New Testament the Sacraments of the same doe follow for they are for number few to be obtained and observed easy and in their signification must perspicuous 2. They were sanctified and instituted by Christ himselfe for although the one Sacrament was first used by Iohn Baptist yet in that very thing he was the forerunner of Christ that he might shew what Christ himselfe afterward would allow and institute neither had it the respect of an ordinary institution by the Ministery of Iohn but by the institution of Christ himselfe 3. These Sacraments are Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord for neither were there either other Sacraments or Sacramentall signes delivered to the Church by Christ or his Apostles neither can there other be appointed by men in the Church 4. In respect of Gods Institution there lieth greatest necessity upon the faithfull to use these Sacraments diligently and religiously yet they are not so absolutely necessary to salvation that the absence or meere privation of them doth bring a privation of this institution neither ought they in that respect to be celebrated either of those that are not lawfull Ministers or out of a Church assembly 5. Baptisme is the Sacrament of Initiation or Regeneration 6. For although it doth seale the whole covenant of grace together to the faithfull yet by a speciall approbation it doth represent and confirme our very ingrafting into Christ. Rom. 6. 3. We are baptised into Christ Jesus and Verse 5. Being planted together with him And 1 Cor. 12. 13. We are baptised into one body 7. But because upon our first ingrafting into Christ by Faith there doth immediatly follow a relation of our Iustification and Adoption therefore Baptisme as the Sacrament of the ingrafting itselfe is unto remission of sins Marc. 1. 3. And it is also a representation of adoption whilst that by it wee are confecrated to the Father Sonne and holy Spirit and their names are called upon the baptised 8. Because also holinesse is alwayes derived from Christ into whom we are ingrafred unto all the faithfull therefore Baptisme also is the seale of our sanctification Tit. 3. 5. He hath saved us by the laver of regeneration and the renuing of the holy Spirit Rom. 6. 4. 5 6. 9. And because Glorification cannot be separated from true holinesse therefore it is withall the seal also of eternall glory Tit. 3. 7. That we might be made heires according to the hope of eternall life Romans 6. 8. If we be dead with Christ wee believe that wee shall also live together with him 10. But because those benefits are sealed according to the measure of initiation in Baptisme hence First Baptisme is but once to be administred because there is but one beginning of spirituall life by regeneration as there is but one beginning of naturall life by generation 11. Hence also Secondly Baptisme ought to be administred to all those to whom the covenant of grace pertaines because it is the first sealing of the covenant it selfe now first begun 12. But that the infants of the faithfull are not to be forbidden this Sacrament it appeareth 1. Because if they be partakers of any grace it is by vertue of the covenant of grace and so both the covenant and the first seale of the covenant also doth pertaine to them 2. In that the covenant in which the faithfull are now contained is the same with that covenant which was made with Abraham Rom. 4. 11. Gal. 3. 7 8 9. But that did expressely extend unto Infants 3. This covenant which is now administred to the faithfull doth bring more large and full consolation to them then of old it could before the comming of Christ. But if it should pertaine onely to them and not to their Infants then the grace of God and their consolation should be more narrow and contracted after Christ is exhibited then before it was 4. Because baptisme succeeded in the place of circumcision Col. 2. 11. 12. And so doth pertaine as well to the children of believers as circumcision itselfe 5. Because in the very beginning of regeneration whereof baptisme is a seale man is meerely passive whence also there is no outward action required of a man either to be circumcised or baptised as in other Sacraments but only a passive receiving therefore Infants are as capable of this Sacrament in respect of the chiefe use of it as these of age are 13. Faith and repentance doe no more make the covenant of God now then in the time of Abraham who was the Father of the faithfull therefore the want of those acts ought no more to hinder baptisme from Infants now then it did forbid circumcision then 14. The signe in this Sacrament is water not simply but as it purgeth the uncleane either by dipping or sprinkling 15. But therefore water was chosen because there is nothing in use that doth more fitly represent that spiritual washing which is performed by the blood or dead of Christ neither is the sprinkling or application of the blood of Christ so fitly expressed by any thing seeing that now since the death of Christ there ought to be no use of naturall blood in holy things 16. The supper of the Lord is the Sacrament of the nourishing and growth of the faithfull in Christ. 17. Hence it ought oftentimes to be administred to the same persone 18. Hence also the supper is onely to be administred to those who are visibly capable of norishment and growth in the Church and so not to Infants but onely to those of age 19. But because most full and perfect nourishment is sealed in Christ therefore here is used not some one and simple signe of nourishing but of a double kind as the nourishment of the body doth require namely Bread and Wine 20. They therefore who take away
an Oath that agrees with such a judgement is to be accounted for true although it should differ from the thing it selfe because it doth not respect the thing it selfe but by meanes of such a judgement whence also the Romans did use that most considerate word I thinke even then when being sworne they spake those things which they were sure of 19. A promissory Oath hath in it the force of an assertory Oath as it tes●…ifieth a present firme intention of the mind but it doth moreover bind to doe that which is declared to be intended 20. But it binds so far only as one can bind himselfe that is to that which both Defacto dejure in deed and in right he may performe and so must be alwayes of a thing lawfull and possible 21. Such an Oath bindeth to the fulfilling of it although the Oath was unlawfull in respect of the manner or the thing promised bring dammage with it to him that promised Ios. 9. 19. Ps. 15. 4. 22. But if the Oath be against the Commandements of God it doth not bind because an Oath ought not to be a bond of iniquity 23. Yet an Oath made in some manner against the command of God doth sometime bind as when the Iewes to whom freedome was promised did sweare to be subject to strangers into whose power they came 24. A promissory Oath whereby something is promised to man only for his sake doth cease to bind if he to whom the promise is made doth either remit or take away that fou●…dation whereupon it was grounded 25. An Oath is lawfull and honest for Christians 1. Because it is of the Law of nature or morall Law which is not abrogated 2. Because it pertaines to Gods honour and Charity to our neighbour 3. Because there are commendable examples of Oathes used even in the new Testament 2. Cor. 1. 23. Rev. 6. 10. 26. Christ in the fifth of Matthew doth not condemne every Oath but such as are rash indirect and made by the Creatures 27. Iames Chap. 5. Ver. 12. Doth condemne the same abuse of an Oath and not all swearing whereby his repeating the words of Christ he doth manifestly shew that those words of Christ sweare not at all doe make one sentence with those that follow neither by Heaven c. And so are to be understood as joyned together not divided asunder 28. Amen Amen is not a forme of swearing but only of a grave asseveration Those words Hebr. 6. 14. Surely blessing I will blesse thee doe not containe the forme but the matter only of that Oath which is Gen. 22. 16. 17. neither doth the word Amen appeare there either in the Greeke or Hebrew as some have rashly imagined 29. The words of an Oath are to be interpreted in the Court of conscience according to the meaning of him that swore if he dealt simply and candidly if not then according to his meaning whom he would deceive or to whom he sware But in the outward Court the words of them that sweare are to bee taken as they are commonly understood 30. A perjured man is not to speake properly but such an one that either sweares against his conscience or witt●…ngly and willingly departs from that which he did lawfully sweare 31. Faith that is confirmed by a lawfull Oath is to be kept the same circumstances remaining even to enemies theeves and Pirates for if the respect of the persons doth not make the Oath unlawfull it cannot make it of no force 32. An Oath that is extorted by feare doth not cease to bind in that respect because those acts which are said to be extorted from a man by feare if they proceed from counsell they are simply voluntary although not absolutly Spontaneous or of good will 33. They that doe not use reason so as they cannot understand the nature of an Oath are not capable of an Oath 34. To require an Oath of him who will sweare by false Gods is not of it selfe a sin Gen. 31. 53. 35. An Oath of a Christian ma●… given concerning his innocency which cannot be reprehended by any certaine arguments ought to put an end to controversies pertaining thereto Exod. 22. 11. Heb. 6. 16. 36. A simple Oath made only in words binds as the most solemne Oath 37. That solemnity which is used in some places in touching and kissing a booke is altogether of the same sort with the lifting up or stretching forth of the hand that is it signifies a consent to sweare and to the Oath it selfe 38. The putting of the hand under the thigh of him that required an Oath Gen. 24. 2. was not for any mysticall significatiō of Christ but for a signe of subjectiō 39. Adjuring is to speake properly that whereby one doth draw another either to sweare Gen. 24. 8. Or to that rel●…gion which is in an Oath Numb 5. 21. Matthew 26. 63. 1. Thess. 5. 27. 40. Therefore it doth most properly pertaine to those who have power to require an Oath of others although in a certaine proportion it is also extended to that religious obtestation which inferiors sometime use towards their superiors and equalls among themselves 41. To adjure the Devills is to exercise command over them and so it is not lawfull for any to exercise adjuration toward them unlesse he have received speciall power from God to that purpose 42. Those exorcismes which were used before Baptisme even in the time of the Fathers were superstitious 43. The adjurings or exorcisings of things without life and consecrations of them to supernaturall operations and uses such as the Papists use in their holy Water Temples Bells and the like are superstitious inchantments 44. The adjuring of a man to accuse himselfe for any crime objected which is used in that Oath which is called the Oath of Inquisition or Ex ●…fficio hath neither ground in the Scriptures and is against the law of nature 45. Neither is an indefinite adjuring to answer to all such things as shall be demanded simply to be admitted CHAPTER XI Of a Lot 1. A Lot is a requesting of a Divine testimony to decide some controversy by the determining of an event to be manifested in a meere contingency Pro. 16. 33. The Lot is cast into the lap but the whole disposition of it is of the Lord. And 11 18. A Lot maketh contentions to cease and decideth among the mighty 2. We call it a request because it hath that nature that it expects that use to which it serves from God alone and in that respect it hath an immediate respect to his providence 3. We define it by contingency that we may avoid the error of those who place the common consideration of a Lot in that manner of the efficient cause whereby it is said to work by fortune 4. For there are many fortuitous causes which doe altogether differ from the consideration of a Lot as when he finds gold who digging sought for coles also there are many Lots wherein fortune