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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
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
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
testimony of that publick calling whereby he was ordained and sent to be a master and teacher of Israel 28. It was also to teach that that knowledge and wisedome wherewith Christ was endued was not gotten by progresse of time but conferred or infused of God from the beginning 29. The effect of this subjection was his labouring with his hands that is an enduring of that curse of ours whereby it comes to passe that we eat our bread with that labour in the sweat of the face 30. His publique life is that whereby he openly manifested himselfe to be the Messias In this life there was 1. The enterance 2. The progresse 3. The conclusion 31. Unto the entrance pertaines his Baptisme and Tentation 32. The Baptisme of Christ was his publick inauguration to the publick performance of his office therefore in it the three offices of Christ are affirmed and confirmed 33. They are affirmed by the testimony of the father publickely pronouncing that Iesus Christ is his Sonne and so that he appointed a king by him even that King in whom he is well pleased that is a chiefe Priest who by his intetcession should take away the sins of the World and a chiefe Prophet Mat. 3. 17. 17. 3. This is my Sonne in whom I am well pleased heare him 34. The same offices are confirmed by signes namely by opening of Heaven descending of the holy Spirit under the bodily shape of a Dove resting upon Christ and an audible voyce sent downe from Heaven whereby the testimony of the Father was signified 35. They were also confirmed by the testimony of Iohn who was appointed for a witnesse preacher and forerunner of Christ and being certified of Christ partly by the revelation of the Spirit partly by those signes before mentioned he did testifie of him before others 36. Moreover by the Baptisme of Christ our Baptisme was confirmed and sanctified and withall the person is declared to whom Baptisme doth so adhere that all the force of it is to be sought for in him 37. Christ was tempted that he might shew that he was much stronger then the first Adam and that he could also overcome tentations and also helpe us with a fellow-feeling 38. The progresse of his publicke life was in poverty and labour 39. The poverty of Christ was without a singular vow and without beggery 40. The labour of Christ was in travailing through divers Countries in watchings and in greatest intention of all his strength to doe good 41. 2. This publique life of Christ was performed in preaching and working miracles unto the preaching of Christ was alwayes joyned in respect of himselfe grace and authority In respect of others either opening or hardening of heart 42. The object of h●…s preaching was properly the Gospell or Kingdome of Heaven Marc. 1. 14. Preaching the Gospell of the Kingdome of God 43. The end of his miracles was 1. To demonstrate the person of Christ. 2. To confirme his doctrine 3. To signifie his spirituall operations 44. Christ wrought miracles in the Angels in men in brute Creatures in things without life In Heaven in Earth in the Aire and in the Sea in things corporeall and spirituall that he might shew his universall and Divine power to be of equall force in every kind of thing 45. The conclusion of the life of Christ was in the very preparation to death 46. His preparation to death was in his instructing his Disciples and conforting them 47. This instruction and consolation was partly exercised in his transfiguration Luc. 9. 31. Moses and 〈◊〉 appearing in glory did tell of his departure And by those Sacraments which looke to the death of Christ by a certaine speciall respect namely the passeover and supper of the Lord partly in example Iohn 13. 15. I have given you example that as I have done to you so also should ye doe partly in his last Sermon Iohn 14. 15. 16. and partly in his prayer Iohn 17. CHAPTER XXII Of the Death of Christ. 1. THe Death of Christ is the last act of his humiliation whereby he did undergoe extreme horrible and greatest paines for the sins of men 2. It was an act of Christ and not a meere suffering because he did of purpose dispose himselfe to undergoe and sustaine it Iohn 10. 11. I am that good shepheard the good shepheard layes downe his life for his sheepe Verse 11. No man taketh it from me but I lay it downe by my selfe by the same reason also it was voluntary not compelled And out of power not out of infirmity only out of obedience to his Father and love to us not out of his owne guilt or desert unto satisfaction by overcomming not to perdition by yeelding 3. It did containe greatest punishments because it did equall all that misery which the sinnes of men did deserve Hence is that plenty of words phrases by which this death is set forth in Scriptures For it is not simply called a death but also a cutting off a casting away a treading under feet a curse an heaping up of sorrowes and such like Isay. 53. Psal. 22. 4. But it did so conraine these punishments that the continuance of them and holding under and such like circumstances which accompany the punishments of the sins of all the damned were removed from this death Acts 2. 24. It could not be that he could be held under by death The reason is first because such circumstances as these are not of the essence of the punishment it selfe but adjuncts following and accompanying that punishment in those who cannot so suffer punishment that by suffering they should satisfie Secondly because there was in Christ both worthinesse and power to overcome as it were by this meanes the punishment imposed 1 Cor. 15. 54. 57. Death is swallowed up in victory Thankes be given to God who hath given us victory by our Lord Iesus Christ. 5. But because there was in this death the consummation of all humiliation whereof that also was the far greatest part hence often in Scriptures by a Synechdoche of the member the death itselfe of Christ is put for all that satisfaction which is contained in his whole humiliation 6. These limitations being had this death of Christ was the same in kind and proportion with that death which in justice was due to the sins of men representing the very same degrees members and kinds 7. The beginning of the spirituall death of Christ in matter of losse was the loosing of that joy and delight which the enjoyment of God and fulnesse of grace was wont to bring But he did loose this spirituall joy not as touching the principle and habit of it but as to the act and sence of it 8. The beginning of spirituall death in matter of sence was the tasting of the wrath of God and a certaine subjection to the power of darknesse But that wrath of God was most properly that Cup which was given to Christ to be Drunke Mat. 26.
whereof others doe ascend Heb. 9. 8. But others had ascended in their soules before in time Col. 1. 20. And some also as it is most like in their bodies Gen. 5. 24. Hebr. 11. 5. 2 King●… 2. 11. 25. The cause of this ascension was the same which before was of the Resurrection namely the power of God which is the same both of the Father and the Son hence in respect of the Father it is called an assumption which in respect of the Son is called an ascension Act 1. 11. But there was added moreover the condition of a glorified body which is carried as well upward as downward 26. The ends of his ascension were 1. That he might place his humane nature now glorified in the mansion of glory 2. That he might shew himselfe to be him who could pierce into the Heavenly and deepest counsels of God Iohn 3. 13. How shall yee believe if I tell you heavenly things For there is none that ascendeth into Heaven but he who descendeth from Heaven namely the sonne of man who is in Heaven 3. That he might prepare mansions for all his in the house of his Father Iohn 14. 3. 4. That hee might in the name of his own take possession of the heavenly Kingdome Eph. 2. 6. Hath raised us up together and hath made us sit together in Heaven in Christ Iesus 5. That by his intercession power he might take care for those things which were to be performed for their salvation Ioh●… 16. 7. If I goe from you I will send the Comforter unto you 6. That we may have a most certaine argument of our ascension into Heaven 1 Cor. 15. 20. He is made the first fruits of them that sleepe 7. That wee also might in thought affection and conversation follow after Heavenly things Col. 3. 1. Phil. 3. 20. Seeke those things that are above where Christ is We carry our selves a Citizens of Heaven from whence also we looke for a Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ. 27. Sitting at the right Hand of God is the highest degree of his Exaltation whereby he enjoyeth the highest glory of his mediation Hence Resurrection and Ascension are motions tending to this sitting hence also Resurrection and Ascension in a certaine manner common to us with Christ but sitting at the right hand of the Father agrees to none but to Christ only 28. That highest glory wherewith Christ is endowed by this sitting is properley and formally a kingly glory Acts 2. 36. Let therefore all the house of Israel know for certaine that God hath made this man a Lord. 29. This Kingly glory is a fulnesse of power and majesty whereby he governeth all things for the good of his Psal. 110. 1. 1 Cor. 15. 25. For he must raigne untill he have put down all his enemis under his feet 30. This majesty and power doth properly agree to the person of Christ the Mediator in respect of which it is also truly said that the humane nature of Christ hath now so much eminency of dignity and ruledome that with power he is above and set over all created things Eph. 1. 20. But from this eminency of dignity to conclude that the humane nature of Christ which was created end remaines finite being absolutely and abstractedly considered hath the same omnipotency and omnipresency with God himselfe it is no other thing then a certaine stupid madnesse and it is not far from blasphemy 31. Vnto this kingly dignity pertaines that power whereby Christ was made the judge of all men and Angells 32. This kingly glory of Christ doth also redound unto other of his offices so that he exerciseth a kingly Priest-hood and a kingly prophecy 33. The kingly priest-hood is that whereby he doth plead our cause not by suffering and humbly supplicating as it were with bended knees but by representing gloriously those things which he did and suffered Hebr. 9. 24. Christ is entred into Heaven it selfe to appeare before the Face of God for us 34. Christ doth exercise a kingly prophecy whilest he powres out his spirit upon all flesh whilest he sends his Embassadors workes together with them and confirmes their word by signes that follow lastly whilest he gather his own out of the world protects builds up and preserves them for ever Mat. 28. 18 19 20. Marc. 16. 20. CHAPTER XXIV Of the application of Christ. So much of Redemption The application of the same Redemption followes 1. THis application is that whereby all those things which Christ hath done and doth as Mediator are made actually effectuall in some certaine Men. 2. This application by a speciall appropriation is attributed to the holy Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 13. By one spirit we are all baptised into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet it doth depend 1. Upon the dceree and donation of the Father whereby he hath given some certaine men to Christ to be redeemed and saved Iohn 6. 36. This is the will of my Father that of that he hath given me I should lose nothing for all those and only those whom the Father hath given to Christ doe come to him Ibid. verse 37. 2. Vpon the intention of Christ whereby he hath determined his satisfaction for the good of those whom he hath appointed to him by his Father Iohn 17. 9. 11. 12. 19. I pray for them whom thou hast given me because they are thine 3. Vpon the acceptation of the Father whereby he doth accept and ratifie that satisfaction for the reconciliation salvation of the same persons 2 Cor. 5. 19. Namely that God was in Christ reconciling the world to himselfe not imputing their sins unto them 3. This transaction betweene God and Christ was a certaine fore-going application of our redemption and deliverance to our surety and to us in him which unto the finishing of that secundary application in us hath the respect of an effectuall example so as that is a representation of this and this is brought forth by vertue of that 4. Hence our deliverance from sinne and death was not onely determined in the decree of God but also granted and communicated to Christ and to us in him before it be perceived by us Rom. 5. 10. 11. We were reconciled to God by the death of his Son By whom we have now received a reconciliation 5. Hence both the Father and the Sonne are said to send the Spirit to performe this application Iohn 14. 16. 16. 7. The Father shall give you an advocate I will send him unto you 6. Hence every good giving and every perfect good is said to descend from above from the Father Iames 1. 17. And all saving things are said to be communicated to us in Christ as in the head For Christ as obtaining it by his merit and through Christ as effectually applying it Eph. 1. 3. 5. 11. 7. Hence also application is the end effect of impetration But seeing the end is intended by God the Father and Christ it hath a certaine connexion with impetration as
justifying Faith 16. Neither is it to speake properly that speciall confidence whereby we doe apprehend remission of sins and justification it selfe for justifying Faith goeth before justification it selfe as the cause goeth before the effect but Faith apprehending justification doth necessarily presuppose and follow justification as an act followes the object about which it is exercised 17. That Faith therefore is properly called justifying whereby we rely upon Christ for remission of sins and for salvation For Christ is the adaequate object of Faith as Faith Iustifyeth Faith also doth no otherwise justifie then as it apprehends that righteousnesse by which we are justified but that righteousnesse is not in the truth of some sentence to which we yield assent but in Christ alone who is made sinne for us that wee might bee righteousnesse in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. 18. Hence are those Sermons so often repeated in the new Testament which doe shew that justification is to be fought for in Christ alone Iohn 1. 12. 3. 15. 16. 6. 40. 47. 14. 1. 54. Romans 4. 5. 3. 26. Acts 10. 43. 26. 18. Gal. 3. 26. 19. This justifying Faith of it own nature doth produce and so hath joyned with it a speci●…ll and certaine perswasion of the grace and mercy of God in Christ whence also justifying Faith is oftentimes not amisse described by the orthodox by this perswasion especially when they doe oppose that generall Faith to which the Papists ascribe all things but 1. This perswasion as touching the sence of it is not alwayes present For it may and often doth come to passe either through weakenesse of judgement or through divers tentations and troubles of mind that he who truly believeth and is by Faith justified before God yet for a time may thinke according to that which hee feeles that he neither believeth nor is reconciled to God 2. There be divers degrees of his perswasion so that neither all believers have altogether the same assurance of the grace and favour of God nor the same believers at all times which yet they cannot properly affirme of justifying Faith without a great deale of detriment of that consolation and peace which Christ hath left to believers 20. Iustification absolves from sin and death not immediatly by taking away the blame or staine or all the effects of sin but that oblation and guilt to undergoe eternall death Rom. 8. 1. 33. 34. There is no condemnation who shall lay any thing to their charge who shall condemne 21. Neither yet doth it so take away the guilt as that it takes away the desert of punishment from the sin which the sinne it selfe remayning can in no sort be taken away but it so takes away the guilt that it takes away the revenging pursuit of the desart of it or the deadly effects of it 22. This absolution from sins is called in a divers respect but in the same sence in holy Scriptures Remission Redemption and Reconciliation Eph. 1. 6. 7. For as the state of sin is considered as a bondage or certaine spirituall captivity in respect of the guilt so his justification is called Redemption but as the same state is considered as a subjection to doe punishment so it is called remission as also a passing by a blotting out a disburdening a taking away a casting away a removing a casting behind the back Rom. 4. 7. Col. 2. 13. Mich. 7. 18. Isay 43. 12. 38. 17. Psal. 32. 1 2. And as the same state is considered as a certaine enmity against God so justification is called a reconciliation Romans 5. 10. As also a certaine winking at sin Numb 23. 25. A covering of sin Ps. 32. 1 2. 23. But not only the sins of justified persons that are past are remitted but also in some sort those to come Numb 23. 25. He seeth no iniquity in Iacob nor perversnesse in Israel because justification hath left no place to condemnation Iohn 5. 24. He that believeth hath eternall life and shall not come into condemnation and it doth certainly and immediatly adjudge one to eternall life It also maketh all that remission which was in Christ obtained for us to be actually ours neither can sins past and present be altogether and fully remitted unlesse sins to come be in some sort remitted also 24. But there is this difference that sins past are remitted by a formall application by sins to come onely virtually sins past are remitted in themselves sins to come in the subject or person sinning 25. Yet those that are justified doe daily desire the forgivenesse of sins 1. Because the continuance of this grace is necessary to them 2. That the sence and manifestation of it may be more and more perceived as severall sinnes required 3. That the execution of that sentence which in justification is pronounced might bee matured and furthered 26. Besides the forgivenesse of sinnes there is required also imputation of righteousnesse Rom. 5. 18. Rev. 19. 8. Rom. 8. 3. Because there may be a totall absence of sin where notwithstanding there is not that righteousnesse which must come in place of justification 27. But this righteousnesse is not severally to be sought in the purity of the nature birth and life of Christ but it ariseth out of all the obedience of Christ together with remission of sins as the same disobedience of Adam hath both robbed us of originall righteousnesse made us subject to the guilt of condemnation CHAPTER XXVIII Of Adoption 1. ADoption is the gracious sentence of God whereby he accepts the faithfull for Christs sake unto the dignity of Sons Iohn 1. 12. As many as receive him to them he gave power to be made the Sons of God to those that believe in his Name 2. It is called a gracious sentence of God because it doth manifest the gracious will of God toward men 1 Iohn 3. 1. See what love the Father hath shewed to us that we should be called the Sons of God 3. This sentence is pronounced with the same diversity of degrees as justification for it was first in Gods predestination Eph. 1. 5. He hath predestinated us that he might adopt us to be Sons Afterward it was in Christ. Gal. 4. 4 5. God hath sent forth his Son that we might receive adoption Afterward it was in believers themselves The same Chapter Verse 6. And because yee are Sonnes GOD hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father 4. It is properly conversant about the faithfull that are called and justified Iohn 1. 12. For by adoption we are not made just which would necessarily follow if adoption were part of justification it selfe as some would have it neither is it a calling unto Christ but a certaine excellent dignity flowing from the application of him Romans 8. 17. Heires together with Christ 5. Yet calling and justification have the respect of a foundation to this relation of Adoption for the right of Adoption is obtained by Faith and
something proper to the Divine Essence are altogether incommunicable as Omnipotency Immensity Eternity and such like 30. Tenthly those that are said to be communicated to the Creatures doe agree to them by likenesse not altogether in the same manner as they are in God neither yet altogether aequivocally 31. The attributes of God set forth What God is and Who he is 32. What God is none can perfectly define but that hath the Logicke of God himselfe But an imperfect description which commeth neerest to unfold Gods nature and may bee conceived of us is such as this 33. God is a Spirit having life in himselfe Iohn 4. 24. God is a spirit and Chap. 5. 26. The Father hath life in himselfe 34. He is called a Spirit 1. Negatively because he is not a body 2. Analogically or by a certaine likenesse because there are many perfections in spirituall substances which doe more shadow forth the Divine nature then any bodily thing can 35. He is said to be Living 1. Because God doth most especially worke of himselfe not being moved by another 2. Because the vitall action of God is his very Essence 3. Because he is the Fountaine of all being and vitall operation to other living things Acts 17. 25. 28. He giveth to all life and breath and all things in him we live move and be 36. He is said to live in himselfe because he receiveth neither being nor life from any in any part 37. Hence the chiefe title of God whereby he is distinguished from all Idolls is that he is the living God Deut. 32. 40. Psal. 84. 23. Ierem. 5. 2. 38. Hence our Faith seeking eternall life doth rest in God alone because God is the Fountaine of all life Iohn 5. 26. 39. Who God is those properties doe set forth to us wherby he is distinguished from all other things 40. Now those Divine properties doe shew How great God is and what an one he is 41. Under the motion of Quantity he is said to be 1. One 2. Infinite First inwardly because he is unmeasurable Secondly outwardly as he is incomprehensible 3. He is said to be eternall 42. He is said to be One not in kinde but in that most perfect unity which in the Creatures is wont to be called numericall and individuall 43. God is infinite as he is void of all bounds of his Essence Psal. 139 8. If I clime up to Heaven thou art there or make my bed in the Grave be hold thou art there 44. God is unmeasurable as he is void of all matter of dimension or measure 1. King 8. 27. The Heavens and Heavens of heavens doe not containe thee Isa. 66. 1. Heaven is my throne Earth my foote-stoole 45. Hence Faith doth looke for no certaine measure of blessednesse to be communicated from God but unmeasurable glory 46. God is incomprehensible because he is void of any bounds to compasse him 47. Hence he is present every where because there is no place whence he is excluded any where 48. God is also eternall because without beginning and end Psal. 102. 25. 26. Esay 44. 1. 1. Tim. 1 17. 49. Hence it is that our Faith doth apprehend eternall life in God 50. What an one God is those properties doe set forth by which he is said to worke unto these now ought to be attributed all the properties of Essence and quantity simplicity immutability eternity and immensity 51. These qualities are conceived either under the reason of faculties or else of vertues by which those faculties are adorned 52. The faculties are understanding will whence Faith doth leane upon him who knowes what is needfull for us and is willing also to supply it 53. The understanding of God is simple without any composition discourse or representation of shapes Heb. 4. 13. All things are naked and open to his eyes 54. The understanding of God is unchangeable he knowes not otherwise nor more one thing then another nor more before then now or now then before Acts 15. 18. known to the Lord are all his workes from before all ages 55. The understanding of God is eternall it neither beginneth nor endeth Ibid. 56. The understanding of God is Infinite because he perceiveth all truths and reasons of all things Iob 11. 8. 9. The Wisdome of God is heigher then the Heavens longer then the Earth deeper then the Sea Psal. 139. 6. thy knowledge is more wonderfull then that I can conceive it 57. The same way also the nature of the Divine will ought to be conceived of us 58. The will of God is single and onely one in God 59. The will of God is unchangeable because he alwayes willeth the same and in the same manner Psal. 33. 1. The counsell of the Lord remaineth for ever 60. The will of God is eternall because hee doth not begin to will what before he would not nor ceaseth to will that which before hee willed Mala. 3. 6. I Iehova change not 61. The will of God may be said to be infinite because it hath no outward limitation 62. The affections which are given to God in Scripture as love hatred and the like doe either set forth acts of the will or doe agree to God only figuratively 63. A vertue is the perfection of the understanding and will such as is wisdome holinesse and the like in God 64. Virtue is attributed to God as it notes a readinesse of doing not under the respect of an habit distinct from faculty and act 65. But the vertues which in man arise from occasion of sinne and imperfection doe not agree to God as humility chastity shamefastnes and the like 66. Out of all these attributes that perfection of God doth result whereby hee is called blessed 1. Tim. 1. 11. and 6. 15. 67. Hence our Faith hath a firme foundation because it leaneth on God the possessor and author of all perfection blessednesse and glory CHAPTER V. Of the Subsistence of God 1. THe Subsistence of God is that one Essence as it is with its personall properties 2. The same essence is common to three subsistences and as touching the Deity every subsistence is of it selfe 3. Nothing moreover is attributed to the Essence which may not be attributed to every subsistence in regard of the Essence of it 4. But those things that are attributed properly to every subsistence in regard of its subsistence cannot be attributed to the Essence 5. The subsistences are distinguished from the Essence as the manners of subsisting growing together with the same Essence are distinguished from the same absolutely considered 6. They are distinguished among themselves as Relatives by certaine relative properties so as one cannot be another yet they are together in nature neither can they be said to be former or latter but in order of beginning and manner of subsisting 7. But seeing those relative properties are as it were individuating in an Essence that lives spiritually and most perfectly therefore those subsistences are rightly called persons
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
of evill are equally extended 2. This propagation of Sinne consists of two parts Namely Imputation and reall communication 3. By imputation the same singular act of disobedience which was Adams is also become ours 4. By reall communication the same singular sin is not derived to us but the same in kind or of the same reason and nature 5. Originall sin seeing it is formally a privation of originall righteousnesse and this privation doth follow the first sin as a punishment hence it hath the respect of a punishment in order of nature before it hath the respect of a sinne As by the Iustice of God that originall righteousnesse is denied so far forth it is a punishment As it ought to be in us and yet through mans fault in wanting so far forth it is a sin 6. Therefore this privation is derived from Adam by way of desert as it is a punishment and by way of a reall efficient as it hath the respect of a sin joyned to it for in that that any is borne a son of Adam he is made worthy to be endowed with righteousnesse when therefore he ought to have it and hath it not that want to him is sin 7. Together with this privation there is also derived an unaptnes and a certaine perversnesse of all the bodily faculties which in their manner are opposite to that rectitude that is approved of God 8. For upon the deprivation of righteousnesse whereby all the faculties were to be directed there followes in them all such a defect whereby it comes to passe that when they are carried to any morall thing that very inclination is morally evill 9. Of these ariseth every actuall Sinne for the mind being blind by the privation of light dotheasily admit any errors And the will being now turned from God doth burne with love of it selfe and evill desires without God 10. From Sinne thus propagated there followes also a propagation of death both begun consummate as well touching sence as touching losse as well corporall as spirituall to all the posterity of Adam 11. Through this apostasie of mankind it comes to passe that our Faith whereby now wee believe in God is not simply for life but for salvation For it is not sufficient for man being fallen that God doe simply give him life but it is also required that he would give it man being dead in Sinne Eph. 2. 1. And this was one difference betweene the question of the rich young man Matth. 19. 16. What good shall I doe that I may have eternall life and that of the Iaylor Acts 16. 30. What must I doe to be saved CHAPTER XVIII Of the Person of Christ the Mediator After the Fall of Man it followes that wee see his restoring 1. THe restoring of man is the lifting him up from an estate of sinne and death unto an estate of grace and life 2. The cause of this restoring was the mercifull purpose of God Eph. 1. 9. According to his free good will which hee had purposed in himselfe For there was nothing in man which could confer any force to procure this restoring but rather much which made to the contrary as sin in which there was an enmity against God which in that respect doth commend this love of God towards us Rom. 5. 8. But God commends his love towards us in that when we were yet sinners Christ died for us 3. There are two parts of this restoring Redemption and the application thereof That is as it were the first act of this restoring this as it were the second act That is as it were the matter this as it were the forme of our salvation That is as it were the Sufficiency this the very Efficiency 4. These parts are altogether of one and the same latitude For the end of redemption is the application of it and the prime reason rule and measure of application is that same gracious Will of God which was the cause of Redemption it selfe Eph. 1. 9. 10. He hath made knowne to us the mystery of his will according to his free good will which he had foreordained in himselfe that in the full dispensation of those times before ordained he might summarily gather together all things in Christ. 5. Therefore Redemption is appointed to all and every one for whom it was in Gods intendment obtained according to that of Christ. Iohn 6. 37. Whatsoever the Father giveth me shall come unto me 6. Redemption is the bringing of man into freedome from the bondage of sinne and the devill by the payment of an equall price 1. Pet. 1. 18. Yee know that yee were not redeemed by corruptible things as silver and gold but with precious blood 1. Cor. 6. 20. Yee are bought with a price and 7. 23. Yee are bought with a price 7. For this freedome was not primarily effected by power nor by prayers although these also had their force in perfecting this businesse but by the payment of a just price 8. This price seeing it could not be paid by man the helpe of a Mediator was necessary who should come betweene God and man making a perfect reconciliation betweene them 1. Tim. 2. 5. Acts 20. 28. The Church of God which he hath purchased by his own blood 1. Tim. 2. 6. The man Christ Iesus who gave himselfe a price of our redemption 9. Now such a Mediator is not given for one age onely but for yesterday to day and for ever Hebr. 13. 8. Iesus Christ yesterday to day and is the same for ever Revel 13. 8. The Lambe slaine from the foundation of the World Although he was only manifest in the fulnesse of time Col. 1. 27. Tit. 1. 2. 1. Pet. 1. 20. For this Meditation was equally necessary in all ages Also is was sufficient and effectuall from the beginning by vertue of Gods decree promise and acce●…tation 10. This M●…iator is only Iesus Christ. Acts 4. 12. Neither is there salvation in any other for among men there is given no other name under Heaven by which wee must be saved 11. In Christ two things are to be considered 1. The fitnesse which he had to performe the worke of redemption 2. The parts of the redemption it selfe 12. His fitnesse consists of two parts The first is his person the second is the office imposed upon his person 13. In the person of Christ the Mediator two things are to be observed the distinction of the two natures and the personall union of them 14. The distinct natures are the Divine nature as it is the second person of the Deity and the humane in all things like to our natures excepting sinne and the manner of subsisting Matt. 1. 23. Emanuel God with us Iohn 1. 14. That word was made flesh c. The distinction it selfe betweene those two natures remaines because they remaine absolutely the same which they were before as well touching their essence as all their essentiall properties Hence neither the Deity in Christ with the humanity nor
the humanity with the deity is either changed or mingled or any way confounded 15. The personall union is that whereby the second person of the deity did take the humane nature that it might inseparably subsist in the same person Iohn 1. 14. 16. For the second person of the deity although it have but one subsistence yet i●… hath a twofold way of subsisting one in the Divine nature from eternity another in the humane nature after the incarnation Rom. 9. 5. Of whom is Christ as touching the flesh who is above all God blessed f●…r ever Amen Which latter way of subsisting doth agree to the Son of God In respect of the union which he hath with the humane nature 17. This union to the divine person and nature doth ad nothing but a certaine relation but in the humane nature it maketh a change whilst by this meanes it is elévated to highest perfection for it is made as it we a proper adjunct of the Divine person by which it is assumed as it were a member of the same whole God man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereof the divine nature is as it were another part as touching the subsistence it is made as it were an effect singularly upheld by the Divine nature and also it is made as it were a subject wherein the Divine nature doth especially dwell Coloss. 2. 9. 18. Wee endeavour to describe this union by many logicall wayes because it cannot sufficiently be explained by any one 19. We use all those termes wherein the fountaines of consent and unity are contained that we may shew the union to be most neere 20. Yet wee temper these termes with that limitation as it were because this union is mysticall and secret so it may not be plainly expressed but onely shadowed forth by humane words and notions 21. From this union there followeth a personall communication of properties which is not a reall transfusion For then the Divine nature should take the properties of the humane and the humane should take the properties of the Divine and so the humane should be the Divine and the Divine the humane or as well the Divine as humane should cease to be Neither it is a reall donation from which should follow that the humane nature might use the Divine properties as its own restruments But it is a Communion or co●…curring unto the same operations so that they are performed together by each nature but according to their own distinct properties 22. Hence it comes to passe that all the doings a●… sufferings of Christ are referred properly to his p●…rson as the proper Terminum bound of them althou●… some are properly to be referred to the one s●…me to the other nature as to their beginning and proper respects 23. And hence followeth the Communication of these properties as touching predi●…ation or attribution whereby the properties of the one nature are attributed either to the whole person as when Christ is said to be dead which is proper to the humane nature and to have beene in the beginning which is proper to the Divine nature Or to the other nature because of the person as when ●…od is said to be taken up into glory 1. Tim. 2. 16. ●…o be crueified 1. Cor. 2. 8. Which doe not properly agree to the Divine nature but to the huma●…e And those things which are proper to the whole person are properly attributed to either nature as when the man Christ is said to be the Mediator betwixt God and man 1. Tim. 2. 5. Which doth not agree to Christ as hee is man but as he is God and man 24. But as that Commu●…ion doth properly respect the person of Christ not the natures considered in themselves so that communication which consists in predication doth respect God or man in the concrete not the Deity or humanity in the abstract 25. Therefore the communication of properties is not meerely verba●…l neither yet is it so reall that the property of one nature doth pa●…se in the other as touching the intri●…secall possession and us●…pation 26. Those examples which are wont to be brought of those that thinke the con●…rary of that communication which is betweene the matter and the forme betweene the soule and the body and betweene Iron and the fire doe neither agree to this mistery nor prove the possition it selfe 27. There were in Christ two understandings one Divine whereby he knew all things Iohn 21. 17. And the other humane whereby he knew not some things as yet Mar●… 13. 32. Also there were two wills one divine Luke 5. 13. And the other humane together also with a naturall appetite Mat. 26. 39. So there is a double presence of Christ but yet the humane presence can neither be every where nor in many places at once 28. Because God in Christ God-man hath restored life to us therefore our Faith is carried towards Christ and by Christ toward God CHAPTER XIX Of the office of Christ. Thus farre of the Person of Christ his office followes 1. THE Office of Christ is that which he undertooke that he might obtaine salvation for men 1. Tim. 1. 15. This is a sure saying and worthy of all acceptation That Iesus Christ came into the World to save Sinners 2. For those that denie that the proper end propounded by God and Christ in this mistery was the salvation of men they deprive God and Christ of their honour and men of their comfort 3. In it two things are to be considered The calling to this office and the office it selfe Heb. 5. 4 6. 6. None takes this honor to himselfe but he that is called of God as was Aaron So also Christ c. 4. The calling is in action of God especially of the Father whereby a speciall covenant being made he ordained his Son to this office 5. This covenant is expressed Isay. 53. 10. That if Christ would make himselfe a sacrifice for sin then he should see his seed he should prolong his dayes and the delight of the Lord should prosper by him 6. This calling therefore containes in it selfe Chusing fore-ordaining and sending Isay 42. 1. Mine elect 1 Pet. 1. 20. Which was sore-knowne before the foundation of the World Iohn 3. 17. God hath sent his Sonne into the World It is called in Scriptures sealing Iohn 6. 27. Sanctification Iohn 10. 36. Anointing Isay 61. 1. Psal. 45. 8. Heb. 1. 9. And a giving Ioh. 3. 16. 7. Chusing respects the end fore-ordaining the meanes sending the execution it selfe of meere grace without any condition foreseene either inmen or in Christ himselfe 8. All things which Christ either did or suffered even as touching all circumstances were foredetermined Luke 22. 22. The Sonne of man goeth as it is appointed Acts 4. 28. That they might doe all things whatsoever thy hand and thy counsell had before determined to be done 9. But this calling was not instituted in an ordinary manner but confirmed with a solemne oath to confirme the excellency
39. My Father if it be possible let this Cup passe from me 9. But the object of this anger was Christ not absolutly but only as touching the punishment which is brought by this anger which he as our surety did undergoe 10. That subjection to the power of darkenesse was not to bondage but to vexation which Christ did feele in his mind 11. From these the soule of Christ was affected with sorrow griefe feare and horror in an agony Mat. 26. 39. Iohn 11. 27. Hebr. 5. 7. Luc. 22. 24. 12. In this manner was the soule of Christ affected not only in that part which some call the inferior but also in the superior part not only nor chiefly out of a fellow-feeling which it had with the body put properly and immediatly not chiefly out of compassion which it had in respect of others but out of a proper suffering which it did undergoe in our name Lastly not out of an horror of temporall death which many of Christs servants also have by his power overcome but out of a certaine sence of a supernaturall and spirituall death 13. There were two effects of this agony First a vehement deprecation shewing a mind astonished and a nature flying from the bitternesse of death yet under condition and with subjection to his Fathers will Mar. 14. 35. He prayed that if it might be that houre might passe from him Iohn 12. 27. My soule is troubled and what shall I say Father keepe me from this houre but therefore came I unto this houre Secondly a watery sweat having clotters of blood mixed with it dropping downe to the ground Luc. 22. 44. Being in an agony he prayed more earnestly And his sweat was like drops of blood falling downe to the ground 14. In this beginning of spirituall death there was a certaine moderation and mitigation that in the meane while there might be place for those duties which were to be finished before his death namely prayers conferences admonitions answeres 15. This moderation was inward or outward 16. The inward was by spaces of time upon the flacking of the pressure and vexation which he did feele in his soule Hence in his understanding he did attend unto the course of his office undertaken to the gl●…ry that would thence arise to his Father and to himselfe and to the salvation of those whom his Father had given to him In his will also hee did chuse and embrace all the miseries of death to obtaine those ends 17. The outward mitigation of this death was by an Angell who did strengthen him in talking with him Luc. 22. 43. And appeared to him an Angell from Heaven comforting him 18. There was no inward beginning of the bodily death of Christ besides that naturall mortality and weakening which the outward force did bring 19. The externall beginning was manifold both in matter of losse and matter of sence 20. In matter of losse he was rejected of his own people counted worse then a murtherer forsaken of his most inward Disciples denied and betrayed of all kind of men especially of the chiefe ones and those who were counted the more wise he was called a mad man a deceiver a blasphemer one having a devill a great man and invader of another mans kingdome he was stripped of his garments and destitute of necessary food 21. In matter of sence there was First shamefull apprehending Secondly a violent taking away in just judgements both Ecclesiasticall and civill Fourthly in working whipping and crucifying with reproches and injuries of all kinds joyned with them Yet there was some mitigation of this death First by manifestation of the Divine Majesty to the working of certaine miracles as in casting the Souldiers downe to the ground with his sight and voyce and in healing the eare of Malchus Secondly by operation of the Divine providence whereby it came to passe that he was justified by the Iudge before he was condemned Mat. 29. 24. I am innocent of the blood of this just man 22. The consummation of the Death of Christ was in the highest degree of the punishment appointed where is to be considered The death it selfe and the continuance of it 23. The consummation of spirituall death in matter of losse was that forsaking of the Father whereby he was deprived of all sence of consolation Mat. 27. 46. My God my God why hast thou forsaken me 24. The consummation of the death of Christ in matter of sence was the curse whereby he did endure the full sense of Gods judgement upon mans sinne Gal. 3. 13. He was made a curse for us The hanging on the Crosse was not a cause and reason of this curse but a signe and symbole of it Ibid. 25. The consummation of bodily death was in the breathing out of his soule with greatest torment and paine of the body 26. In this death there was a separation made of the soule from the body but the union of both did remaine with the Divine nature so that a dissolution of the person did not follow 27. This death of Christ was true not feigned it was naturall or from causes naturally working to bring it not supernaturall it was voluntary not altogether compelled yet it was violent not of inward principles It was also in a certaine manner supernaturall and miraculous because Christ did keepe his life and strength so long as he would and when he would he layd it down Iohn 10. 18. 28. The continuance of this death was in respect of the state of lowest humiliation not in respect of the punishment of affliction for that which Christ said it is finished is understood of those punishments 29. The continuance was the remaining under the dominion of death by the space of three dayes Acts 2. 24. This state is wont properly to bee set forth by descending into Hell 30. Christ being buried three dayes was a witnesse and certaine representation of this state CHAPTER XXIII Of the Exaltation of Christ. 1. THe Exaltation of Christ is that whereby he did gloriously triumph over his and our enemies Luc. 24. 26. Ought not Christ to have suffered these things and so to enter into glory Eph. 4. 8. When he ascended up on high he led captivity captive Col. 2. 15. He hath spoiled principalities and powers and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed over them in it 2. He overcame death by enduring it sinne by satisfying the Devill by spoiling him or taking the prey out of his hands 3. The perfection and manifestation of this victory is in his Exaltation Therefore although there was a virtuall triumph and triumph of merit in his death and in the Crosse in which Christ is said to be exalted or extolled Iohn 3. 14. Not in situation and place only but also in vertue and merit yet the actuall triumph as touching the state of it was not in his humiliation but his Exaltation 4. Christ did triumph in the Crosse as in a Field of victory but in his Exaltation
with its meanes For if the redemption of Christ were of incertaine event then the Father should appoint the S●…nne to death and the Sonne also should undergoe it being yet uncertaine whether any would be saved by it or no then also all the fruit of this mystery should depend upon the free will of men 8. Hence application is altogether of the same latitude with redemption it selfe that is the redemption of Christ is applied to all and only those for whom it was obtained by the intention of Christ and the Father yet for their sakes the same temporall benefits of Christ doe redound unto thers also 9. And in this sence namely in respect of the intention of application it is rightly said Christ did onely satisfy for those that are saved by him although in respect of that sufficiency which is in the mediation of Christ it may be rightly said also Christ satisfied for all or every one and because those counsells of God are hidden to us it is agreeable to charity to judge very well of every one although we may not pronounce of all together collectively that Christ did equally plead their cause before God 10. The way of application whereby God doth with greatest firmnesse performe that which was contained in a covenant formerly made and broken is called in the Scriptures a new covenant Hebr. 8. 8. 10. A covenant of life salvation and grace Rom. 4. 16. Gal. 3. 18. Which in the same sence also is called the Gospell Rom. 1. 16. The good Word of God Hebr. 6. 5. A faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation 1 Tim. 1. 15. A good doctrine 1 Tim. 4. 6. The Word of life Phil. 2. 16. The Word of reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 19. The Gospell of peace Eph. 2. 17. 6. 15. The Gospell of salvation and the Word of truth Eph. 1. 13. The arme of God Isay 53. 1. The savour of life to life 2 Cor. 2. 16. 11. It is called a covenant because it is a firme promise for in the Scriptures every firme purpose although it be of things without life is called a covenant Ierem. 33. 20. 25. My covenant of the day and my covenant of the night if my covenant be not with day and night if I appoint not the statutes of Heaven and Earth 12. Yet because it consists of a free donation and is confirmed by the death of the giver it is not so properly called a covenant as a testament Hebr. 9. 16. Which seeing it is not found in the former that is not so properly called a testament as a covenant 13. But this new covenant differs from the old many wayes 1. In the kind for that was as it were a covenant of friendship betweene the Creator and the creature but this is a covenant of reconciliation between enemies 14. 2. In the efficient for in that there was an agreement of two parties namely God and man but in this God onely doth covenant For man being now dead in sinne had no ability to contract a spirituall covenant with God But if two parties after the manner of a covenant are to be appointed yet then God only is the party assuming and constituting but man is the party assumed 15. 3. It differs in the object for that is extended to all men but this belongs to some certaine ones in a speciall manner For although the promulgation of it be oftentimes propounded promiscuously after the manner of men yet by a special propriety it belongs and is directed to those to whom it was intended by God who are therefore called sonnes and heires of this promise and of salvation Gen. 15. Act. 1. 39. 3. 25. Rom. 4. 16. 13. 9. 7. 8. Gal. 3. 21. 29. 16. 4. In the beginning or moving cause for there God according to his soveraingty did worke out of his wise and just counsell but here mercy only hath place There indeed there did some respect of grace shine forth in appointing a reward due to obedience yet it was not properly directed by grace and so not this covenant of grace but that was accomplished that is it did actually lead man to happinesse 17. 5. In the foundation which in the former was the ability of man himselfe but in this Christ Iesus 18. 6. In the matter or good things promised for in that God promised life only but in this he promiseth righteousnesse also and all the meanes of life because to man being dead not the continance or perfection of life but restoring was necessary 19. 7. In the conditions for that required perfect obedience of workes which was also to be performed by man of his own strength before any effect of the promise that it might have respect of merit unto it but this requires not any condition properly so called or going before but only following after or comming betweene and that to be communicated by grace that it might be a meanes to perfit the same grace which is the proper nature of Faith 20. 8. In the effects for that teached and sheweth what is righteous but this bestowes righteousnesse it selfe in that there was a dead letter and deadly to a sinner but in this a quickning spirit 21. Hence that never brought salvation to any man neither could bring any thing to a sinner but onely death but this doth not properly and of it selfe bring death or condemnation to any but it brings assured salvation to all those of whom it is received 22. 9. In the adjunct of continuance for that is antiquated in respect of those who are partakers of this new but this is everlasting both in respect of the countenance it hath in it selfe because it admitts no end or change touching the substance and also in respect of those to whom it is communicated because the grace of this covenant doth continue for ever with them who are once truly in covenant CHAPTER XXV Of Predestination 1. BEcause this application of redemption is made to some certaine men and not to all so that it sheweth a manifest difference betweene men in respect of the dispensation of grace hence it doth make the predestination of God concerning men appeare to us in the first place 2. Predestination indeed was from eternity Eph. 1. 4. He hath chosen us before the foundations of the World were laid 2 Tim. 1. 9. Which grace was given us before all ages And it did also worke from the beginning of the workes of God but it makes no inward difference in the Predestinate themselves before the actuall dispensation of this application Eph. 2. 3. And we were by nature the children of wrath as well as others 1 Cor. 6. 11. Thus yee were indeed For Predestination before the application of grace doth put nothing in the persons Predestinated but it doth lie hid only in him that doth predestinate 3. This Predestination is the decree of God of manifesting his speciall glory in the eternall condition of men Rom. 9. 22. 23. Willing to shew his
wrath and to make his power knowne he suffered with much long suffering the vessells of wrath prepared to destruction And to make knowne the riches of his glory towards the vessels of mercy which he hath prepared unto glory 1. Thess. 5. 9. God hath not appointed us to wrath but to obtaine mercy 4. It is called destination because it is a certaine determination of the order of meanes unto the end But because God had determined this order with himselfe before any actuall existence of things therefore it is not simply called destination but predestination 5. It is called a decree because it containes a definite sentence to be executed by certaine counsell In the same sence also it is called a purpose and counsell because it propounds an end to be attained unto as it were with an advised deliberation 6. Hence predestination hath greatest wisdome freedome firmenesse and immutability joyned with it because these are found in all the decrees of God 7. Therefore the reason of Predestination is unmoveable and indissoluble 2 Tim. 2. 19. The foundation of God standeth sure having this seale The Lord knoweth who are his And under that respect the number of the predestinated not only the formall number or number numbering as they speake that is how many men at length shall be saved and how many not but also the materiall number or number numbred that is who those severall men are is certaine with God not only by certainty of foreknowledge but also by certainty of order of meanes Luc. 10. 20. Rejoyce that your names are written in the Heavens 8. For Predestination doth not necessarily presuppose either its limit or object as existing but it maketh it to exist so that by force of predestination it is ordered that it should be 1 Pet. 1. 20. Of Christ foreknowne before the foundations of the world were laid 9. Hence also it depends upon no cause reason or outward condition but it doth purely proceed from the will of him that predestinateth Mat. 11. 26. Even so Father because it pleased thee Rom. 9. 16. 18. It is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth mercy he hath mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardeneth 10. Hence it is neither necessary nor agreeable to the Scriptures either to appoint any fore required quality in man as it were the formall object of Predestination or so to assigne any certaine condition of man that the rest should be excluded for it is sufficient to understand that men are the object of this decree so that the difference of the decree doth not depend upon man butthat differēce which is found in men doth follow upon the decree 11. In order of intention there is no fore-knowledge fore-required or ought to be presupposed unto the decree of Predestination besides that simple intelligence which is of all possible things because it depends not upon any reason or eternall condition but doth purely proceed from the will of him that doth predestinate Eph. 1. 5. 9. He hath predestinated us according to the good pleasure of his owne will According to his free good will which he had purposed in himselfe 12. It is properly an act of Gods Will whereby it is exercised about a certaine object which it determines to bring to a certaine end by certaine meanes Eph. 1. 11. We were chosen when we were predestinated according to the purpose of him that worketh all things according to the pleasure of his own will 13. This decree as it doth exist in the mind of God presupposing an act of the will is called fore knowledge whence it comes to passe that fore-knowledge signifies as much sometime as Predestination but lesse properly Romans 11. 2. Hee hath not cast away his people whom hee fore-knew 14. There is only one act of will in God properly because all things in him are together and nothing before or after and so there is only one decree about the end and meanes but after our manner of conceiving God in order of intention doth will the end before the meanes Rom. 8. 30. Whom he hath predestinated those he called although in order of execution he willeth the meanes first before their direction to the end 2 Thess. 2. 13. He hath chosen us to salvation through sanctification and faith 15. Some things are the meanes and the end and the causes also of other meanes Iohn 6. 37. Whatsoever the Father giveth me shall come to me and him that commeth to me I will in no wise cast away yet they are not causes of the act it selfe of Predestination nor of all the effects of it 16. There are some meanes which of their own nature are ordered to the end of Predestination of which sort are all those things which pertaine to the grace revealed in the Gospell but other things in a certaine outward respect are subjected to this order such as are naturall good or evill things which above or beyond their nature through the over-ruling direction of grace doe worke together to our salvation 17. Of Predestination there are two kindes Election and Reprobation 18. Election is the predestination of some certaine men that the glorious grace of God may be manifested in them Eph. 1. 4. 5. 6. He hath chosen us he hath predestinated us to the praise of his glorious grace 19. Election is an act of the will which in God is only one and simple yet after our manner of conceiving it sets forth by Synecdoche by divers acts 20. The first act of election then is to will the glory of his grace in the salvation of some men 2 Thessa. 2. 13. God hath chosed us from the beginning unto salvation 21. The second act is to appoint some certaine men who shal be made partakers of this salvation 2. Tim. 2. 19. The Lord knoweth who are his 22. But the proper reason of election is in this second act which act containes these three things in the conceaving of it 1. Love Rom. 9. 13. 2. Love with respect to a supernaturall and chiefe good Ier. 31. 3. Eph. 5. 25. 3. Love with a separating from others in which comparative manner there is contained a certaine virtuall intention of love Rom. 9. 13. Iohn 17. 6. 1. Cor. 1. 27. 28. 23. The third act of election is a purpose or intention of preparing and directing those meanes by which men elected are certainely lead through to salvation as to an end But these meanes are properly redemption and application of redemption Ionh 6. 37. 2 Thess. 2. 13. 24. This third act in a speciall respect is called predestination which is sometime in the Scriptures distinguished from election even as it respects the elect above Rom. 8. 29. Eph. 1. 4. 5. Whom he did foreknow those he also predestinated As he hath chosen us Who hath predestinated us Although otherwise by a synecdoche it is used in the same sence with election 25. Hence Predestination is sometime said to be
be saved And 13. 48. As many as were ordained to life believed Rom. 8. 30. Whom he predestinated them also he called Tit. 3. 5. Not by works of righteousnesse but of his own mercy Iane●… 1. 18. Of his owne will begat he us by the word of truth 7. The parts of Calling are two The offer of Christ and the receiving of him Iohn 1. 11. He came to his own and his own received him not But to as many as receive him he gave to them c. 8. The offer is an objective propounding of Christ as of a meanes sufficient and necessary to salvation 1. Cor. 1. 23. 24. We preach Christ the Power of God and the wisdome of God Heb. 7. 25. He is able perfectly to save those that come to God by him Acts 4. 12. Neither is there any other name under Heaven which is given among men by which we must be saved 9. But there is nothing propounded nor ought to be propounded of Christ in the Calling of men to be believed as true which is not simply and absolutely true For this is both against the nature of a testimony as it is an object of that Faith which is in the understanding the formall reason whereof is truth and also is against the nature of the Gospell it selfe which by an excellency is called the word of truth Eph. 1. 13. 10. The offer of Christ is outward or inward 11. The outward is a propounding or preaching of the Gospell or of the promises of Christ. Acts. 9. 15. That he may beare my name in the sight of the Gentiles 12. Yet that man be prepared to receive the promises the application of the Law doth ordinarily goe before to the discovery of sin and inexcusablenesse and humiliation of the sinner Rom. 7. 7. I knew not sinne but by the Law 13. Those promises as touching the outward promulgation are propounded to all without difference together with a command to believe them but as touching the propriety of the things promised which depends upon the intention of him that promiseth they belong only to the elect who are therefore called the sonnes and heires of the promise Rom. 9. 8. 14. The inward offer is a spirituall enlightning whereby those promises are propounded to the hearts of men as it were by an inward word Iohn 6. 45. Whosoever hath heard of the Father and hath learned commeth to me Eph. 1. 17. That he might give unto you the spirit of wisdome and revelation the eyes of your mind being enlightened that ye may know what is that hope of your calling 15. This also is sometime and in a certaine manner granted to those that are not elected Hebrewes 6. 4. 10. 29. Mat. 13. 20. 16. If any one oppose himselfe out of malice to this illumination he commits a sin against the Holy Ghost which is called unpardonable or unto death Hebr. 6. 6. 10. 29. 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mat. 12. 32. 17. The receiving of Christ is that whereby Christ being offered is joyned to man and man unto Christ. Iohn 6. 56. He abides in me and I him 18. In respect of this conjunction we say that we are in Christ 2 Cor. 5. 17. And to put on Christ. Gal. 3. 27. To be dwelled in by Christ. Eph. 3. 17. The house of Christ. Hebr. 3. 6. the Temple of Christ 2 Cor. 6. 16. To be espoused to Christ. Eph. 5. 23. Branches of Christ Iohn 15. 5. Members of Christ 1 Cor. 12. 12. And the Name of Christ is a certaine manner communicated to us 1 Cor. 12. 12. So also is Christ. 19. By reason of this receiving Calling is called conversion Acts 26. 20. Because all they who obey the call of God are wholly converted from sin to grace from the world to follow God in Christ It is also called regeneration as by that word the very beginning of a new life of a new Creation of a new Creature is often set forth in the Scriptures Iohn 1. 13. 3. 6. 1 Iohn 3. 9. 1 Pet. 1. 23. 22. As in respect of the offer it is properly called Calling as God doth effectually invite and draw men to Christ. Iohn 6. 44. 20. Receiving in respect of man is either passive or active Philippians 3. 12. That I may apprehend I was apprehended 21. Passive receiving of Christ is that whereby a spirituall principle of grace is begotten in the will of man Eph. 2. 5. He hath quickned 22. For this grace is the foundation of that revelation whereby a man is united with Christ Iohn 3. 3. Except a man bee borne againe hee cannot see the Kingdome of God 23. But the will is the most proper and prime subject of this grace because the conversion of the will is an effectuall principle of the conversion of the whole man Phil. 2. 17. It is God that worketh in you both to will and to doe of his own good pleasure 24. The enlightning of the mind is not sufficient to produce this effect because it doth not take away that corruption which is in the will neither doth it communicate unto it any new supernaturall principle by vertue whereof it may convert it selfe 25. Yet the will in respect of this first receiving hath not the consideration either of a free agent or a naturall patient but only of obedientiall subjection 2 Cor. 4. 6. Because God who hath said that light should shine out of darkenesse he it is who hath shined in our hearts 26. Active receiving is Actus olicitus an act of Faith drawn forth whereby he that is called doth now wholly leane upon Christ as his Saviour and by Christ upon God Iohn 3. 15. 16. Whosoever believes in him 1 Pet. 1. 21. Through him believing in God 27. This act of Faith doth depend partly upon a principle or habit of grace ingenerated and partly upon the operation of God moving before and stirring up Iohn 6. 44. None can come to me unlesse the Father draw him 28. It is indeed drawen out and exercised by man freely but certainly unavoydably and unchangeably Iohn 6. 37. Whatsoever my Father giveth mee shall come unto mee 29. With this Faith wherewith the will is turned to the having of the true good there is alwayes joyned repentance by which the same will is turned also to the doing of the true good with an aversnesse and hatred of the contrary evill or sinne Acts 19. 4. Marc. 1. 15. Repent and believe the Gospell 30. Repentance hath the same causes and principles with Faith for they are both the free gifts of God Eph. 2. 8. Faith is the gift of God 2 Tim. 2. 25. Whether God will at any time give them repentance They have the same subject because both have their seat in the heart or will of man Rom. 10. 9. 1 Kings 8. 48. With the heart man believeth They shall returne with all their heart They are also begotten at the same time But first they have divers objects for Faith is properly
the righteousnesse of Faith Iohn 1. 12. 6. But although Adoption follow upon Faith yet it doth not so immediatly follow but justification comes betweene for Adoption of its owne nature doth fore-require and presuppose that reconciliation which is found in Iustification 7. Hence all the faithfull doe expect Heaven as it were by a double title namely by the title of redemption which they have by justification and by the title as it were of Son-ship which they have by Adoption 8. Which yet ought so to be understood that the title of redemption is a foundation of this right and Adoption doth ad a certaine manner of excellency and dignity 9. Hence ariseth the first difference betweene Divine Adoption and humane for humane Adoption is of a person that is a stranger which hath no right to the inheritance but by force of Adoption but the faithfull although by naturall generation they have no right to the inheritance of life yet by vertue of regeneration Faith and justification they have it adjudged to them 10. Hence also the second difference followeth that humane adoption is only an extrinsecall denomination and a communication of those things which are externall but Divine adoption is a relation so reall that it is also founded in an intrinsecall action and in the communicating of a new inward life 11. This Adoption is made for Christs sake because Christ did not only deserve it as Redeemer Gal. 4. 5. That he might redeeme them to receive the adoption of Sons But also as being already applied by Faith he is the bond of this Union Rom. 8. 17. 29. Heires of God coheires with Christ. To be conformed to the Image of his Son 12. For as Christ in justification is applied as a garment to cover our sins so in Adoption he is applied as a brother and Prince of our salvation Hebr. 2. 10 11 12 13. Many Sons The Prince of salvation He that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one He is not ashamed to call them Brethren Behold I and the children which God hath given mee 13. This application and conjunction is so neere that although Christ is properly the only naturall So●… of God and much more the first begotten of God yet by this grace of Adoption and communion with Christ all the faithfull also are said to be the first begotten of God Heb. 12. 23. Yee are come to the universall assembly and meeting of the first borne who are written in Heaven 14. Whence also it appeares that believers are in a far different manner the Sons of God then Adam was in the first Creation for although Adam by reason of that dependance which hee had of God together with that similitude and Image to which he was created might be called metaphorically the Son of God yet he was not the Son of God by this mystical conjunction and communion with Christ who is the naturall Son of God 15. Hence ariseth the third difference betweene humane adoption and divine for humane adoption was brought in upon want of a naturall Son but the divine Adoption is not from any want but out ●…f aboundant goodnesse whereby a likenesse of a naturall Son and a mysticall conjunction with him is communicated to the adopted Sons 16. That dignity which this Adoption brings with it doth not onely far exceed that common relation whereby God is said to be the Father of every Creature but that also which we had before the fall because that was weake but this by reason of the band doth remaine for ever Iohn 8. 32. The servant abideth not in the house for ever but the Son abideth for ever 17. Hence the Name of God and of Christ is named upon the faithfull by a speciall right and reason 1 Iohn 3. 1. As Iacob taking the sons of Ioseph into adoption would have them called by his name Gen. 48. 5. 18. Hence also the faithfull are taken as it were into Gods Family and are of his houshold Gal. 6. 10. That is that they may be alwayes under the fatherly tuition of God depending upon him for nourishment education and perpetuall conservation as in old time among the Hebrewes adoption of tentimes was no otherwise testified then by the nurturing and education of their next kindred in blood Hest. 2. 7. 19. Together with the dignity of sons there is joyned also the condition of heires Rom. 8. 17. If sons then also heires But this inheritance to which the faithfull are adopted is blessednesse eternall whence adoption doth sometimes in Scripture comprehend all that glory which is prepared for the faithfull and is expected by them in Heaven Rom. 8. 23. Looking for our adoption the redemption of our bodies 20. Therefore eternall blessednesse pertaines to the faithfull and is communicated to them not of justice for their deserts but from that grace whereby they are taken into the number of sons Gal. 3. 29. If yee are Christs then are yee Abrahams seed and heires by promise 21. Hence ariseth a certaine fourth difference betweene humane adoption and divine for humane adoption is ordained for that that the Son might succeed the Father in the inheritance but divine adoption is not ordained for succession but for participation of the inheritance assigned because both the Father and his first begotten Son liveth for ever and so admitteth no succession 22. A proper adjunct of this adoption is the testimony of the spirit which is given to the faithfull whereby this dignity is sealed together with the inheritance which is to be expected from it and it is called the spirit of Adoption Rom. 8. 15 16 23. Gal. 4. 5 6 7. 23. But the Spirit is said to be communicated to the faithfull not because Faith goeth before all operation of the Spirit as some unskilfully gather for the very first regeneration and conversion is plainly attributed to the holy Spirit by Christ. Iohn 7. 5. 6 8. Borne of the spirit but because believers onely after they have already believed doe receive this operation of the holy Spirit whereby they are sealed as with an earnest of their inheritance Eph. 1. 13 14. 4. 30. Gal. 3. 14. 24. And hence also it doth sufficiently appeare that assurance of salvation is not properly justifying Faith but a fruit of that Faith because the Apostle expresly faith After yee believed ye were sealed Eph. 1. 13. 25. The first fruit of adoption is that Christian liberty Whereby all believers are as set at liberty by a manumission as it were from the bondage of the Law sin and the world Iohn 8. 32 36. If the Son shal set you free ye shal be free indeed Rom. 8. 22. Being freed from sin we are made servants unto God Gal. 4. Ierusalem which is above is free which is the mother of us all Hebr. 2. 15. That he might set at liberty those who for feare of death were all their life time subject to bondage 26. The second fruit is that the faithfull partaking of
●…1 Phil. 3. 12. Because in the life to come the motion and progresse of sanctification ceaseth there is onely found rest and perfection so that in this life we are more properly said to have sanctification then holinesse and in the life to come holinesse only and not sanctification 17. Sanctification therefore hath two parts one in respect of the terme from which is called mortification and the other in respect of the terme to which is called vivification and resurrection Rom. 8. 5. 6. 18. Mortification is the first part of sanctification whereby sin is wasted Col. 3. 3. 5. Ye are dead mortifie therefore your earthly members 19. The meritorious and exemplary cause of it is the Death of Christ. Rom. 6. 5. 6. Being grafted into the likenesse of his death knowing this that our old manis crucified with him 20. The cause principally working is that spirit of God who communicates to the faithfull the efficacy of his death Rom. 8. 13. If by the spirit yee mortifie the deeds of the body yee shall live 21. The administring cause is Faith it selfe Rom. 6. 17. From the heart yee have obeyed that forme of doctrine unto which yee were delivered 22. From this mortification there followes in all that are sanctified a deniall of themselves and the World Luc. 9. 23. Gal. 6. 14. 23. Hence ariseth that inward difference which is betweene sin which remaines in the faithfull from that which remaines in others In others sin is raigning prevailing and predominating in the faithfull it is broken subdued and mortified 24. Vivification is the second part of sanctification wherby the Image or life of God is restored in man Col. 3. 10. Eph. 4. 24. Rev. 12. 2. Having put on the new man be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind 25. The exemplary cause of it is the Resursection of Christ. Col. 3. 1. 2. Ye are risen with Christ. 26. The cause principally working is the Spirit of God which raised Christ from the dead Rom. 8. 11. If the Spirit of him that raised Iesus from the dead dwelleth in you 27. The administring cause is Faith Gal. 2. 20. The life which I now live in the flesh I live by the Faith of the Son of GOD. 28. From this vivification there ariseth a strong tye in those who are sanctified of themselves to be addicted wholy to God and to Christ. 2. Cor. 8. 5. They give themselves to the Lord. 29. Because this sanctification is imperfect whilest we live here as infants therefore all the faithful lare informed as it were with a double forme sin and grace for the perfection of sanctification not found in this life unlesse in the dreames of some fantastick persons 1 Iohn 1. 8. If wee say we have no sin we deceive our selves and there is no truth in us Yet all that are truly sanctified doe tend unto perfection Mat. 5. 48. 1. Cor. 13. 11. 2 Pet. 3. 18. 30. Sinne or the corrupted part which remaines in those that are sanctified is called in Scriptures The old man the outward man the members and the body of sinne Grace or the renowed part is called the new man the spirit the mind c. 31. Hereupon there followes two things 1. A spirituall war which is made continually betweene these parties Gal. 5. 17. For the flesh lusts against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and these are contrary one to the other 2. A dayly renewing of repentance 32. That flesh which remaines in the regenerate is not only in the vegetative and sensitive appetite but also in the will and reason it selfe 1 Thess. 5. 23. 33. The flesh or this concupiscence hath the true and proper reason of sinne in the regenerate themselves Rom. 7. 34. With this corruption even the best workes of the Saints are infected so as they have need of some remission 35. Yet the good works of the regenerate are not to be called sins but defiled with sin 36. That defilement of good workes by reason of Iustification doth not hinder but they may be accepted of God to be rewarded 37. That fight which is found in wicked men betweene conscience and the will is not the striving of the spirit against the flesh but of the flesh fearing against the flesh desiring CHAPTER XXX Of Glorification In the former disputation we spake of sanctification which is one part of the alteration of qualities which did respect that good that is just and honest the other part followes namely Glorification which respects that good that is profitable and honorable 1. GLorification is a reall transmutation of a man from misery or the punishment of sinne unto happinesse eternall Rom. 8. 30. And whom hee justified those hee glorified 2. It is called a reall transmutation that it may be distinguished from that blessednesse which is either virtuall onely in Election Calling Iustification and Adoption or declarative in holy workes Rom. 4. 6. David declares that man to be blessed to whom God imputeth righteousnesse c. Psal. 65. 5. Blessed is hee whom thou chusest and bringest to dwell in thy Courts Matthew 5. Blessed are the poore in spirit c. 3. In respect of the terme from which viz. misery or the punishment of sin it is called a redemption 1 Cor. 1. 30. Eph. 1. 14. Gal. 3. 13. Heb. 2. 14 15. 4. This redemption is a reall delivering from the evills of punishment which is nothing else in very deed but the execution of the sentence of Iustification for in Iustification as wee are judged to be just so we are judged to have life Now Glorification makes that life that was judged and pronounced ours by reall communication to be ours actually and by possession 5. It is said to be reall that it may be distinguished from that redemption which is in the paiment of the price of redemption and in application of the same to justification whereof mention is made Eph. 1. 7. Col. 1. 14. 6. In the Scriptures also it is wont to be called deliverance and preservation from the wrath of God from death and from the kingdome of darkenesse 7. In respect of the terme to which it is called beatification blessing life eternall glory Glorification the kingdome of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ and an immortall inheritance Eph. 1. 3. Iohn 3. 36. 6. 47. 2 Pet. 1. 3 11. 1 Pet. 1. 4. 5. 10. 8. The first degree of this Glorification begun is the apprehension and sence of the love of God shining forth in Christ upon the communion which the faithfull have with him Rom. 5. 5. The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy spirit which is given to us 9. Hence there ariseth a certaine friendship betweene God Christ and the faithfull Iohn 15. 15. I have called you friends because all that I have heard of my Father have I made known unto you Iames 2. 23. Abraham was called the friend of God 10. The second degree is undoubted hope
equally it is therefore to be committed to execution with the consent of the Church and that not onely the Church permitting but also approving and appointing 27. Yet the Elders have the chiefe parts in the acting and exercise of it And that not onely in directing the publick action and pronouncing sentence but also in admonitions foregoing in which they must make up that which they see was neglected by private persons 28. The usuall censures of the Popes of pontificall Bishops and their officers doe themselves deserve a grievous censure for they are prophanations of the Name of God props of an injust government and snares to catch other mens money not spirituall remedies of such sins 29. Indulgences Commutations and humane transactions in those things unto which Christ hath ordained the Discipline of the Church are wages of the great Whore CHAPTER XXXVIII Of the administration of the Covenant of grace before the comming of Christ. 1. ALthough the free and saving Covenant of God hath beene onely one from the beginning yet the manner of the application of Christ or of administring this new Covenant hath not alwayes beene one and the same but divers according to the ages in which the Church hath been gathered 2. In this variety here hath beene alwayes a progresse from the more imperfect to the more perfect 3. First therefore the mystery of the Gospel was manifested generally and more darkly and then more specially and more cleerly 4. This manner of administring is double one of Christ to be exhibited and the other of Christ exhibited 5. For the old and New Testament are reduced to these two primary heads the old ●…miseth Christ to come the New testifieth that he is come 6. Whilest Christ was to be exhibited all things were more outward and carnall afterward more inward and spirituall Iohn 1. 17. The Law was delivered by Moses grace and truth came by Christ. 7. Yet at that time there was a double consideration of the Church 1. As an heire and 2. as it was an infant Galatians 4. 1. and following So long as the heire is an infant hee nothing differs from a servant though hee bee Lord of all 8. As an heire it was free as an infant it was in a certaine manner servile Ther●… 9. As an heire it was spirituall as an infant carnall and earthly Heb. 9. 10. Rom. 9. 7. 10. As an heire it had the spirit of adoption as an infant the spirit of feare and bondage Rom. 8. 15. Yee have not received the spirit of bondage againe to feare but yee have received the spirit of Adoption 11. The manner of administration which respects Christ to be exhibited was one before Moses and another from Moses to Christ. 12. Before Moses the polity of the Church was rude and loose as being in infancy there were so many visible Churches as there were Families of godly persons the Ministery was almost alwayes extraordinary by Prophets the masters of Families and first borne had right to administer some holy things as ordinary Ministers according to that direction which they receaved from the Prophets 13. Yet there were some difference of the dispensation from Adam to Abraham and from that which was after Abraham untill Moses 14. From Adam to Abraham First Redemption by Christ and the application of him was promised in generall to be performed by a seed of the Woman to loose the workes of the Devill that is sin and death Gen. 3. 15. Rom. 1●…●…0 1 Iohn 3. 8. The seed of the Woman shall breake the Serpents head The God of peace shall tread Satan under your feet shortly The Son of God was manifested to dissolve the works of the Devill 15. 2. Calling was exercised in that distinction which was between the seed of the Woman and the seed of the Devill between the sons of God and the sons of men Gen. 6. 2. 3. The way of justification was set forth by expiatory sacrifices offered and accepted for sins Eph. 5. 2. Christ hath loved us and given himselfe for us an offring and sacrifice to God for a swee●… smelling savour 16. 4. Adoption was declared both by the title of sons at that time common to all the faithfull and by the translation of Enoch into the Heavenly inheritance Gen. 5. 24. Hebr. 11. 5. 17. 5. Sanctification was both expresly inculcated by the Prophets and typically shadowed out by oblations and rites of sacrifices Iud. 14. Rom. 12. 1. 18. 6. Glorification was publickly sealed both by the example of Enoch and conversation of Noach with his family from the flood 1 Pet. 3. 20. 21. 19. In this period of time the building and conserving of the Arke in the flood was an extraordinary Sacrament Heb. 11. Vers. 7. 1 Pet. 3. 20. 21. There was no ordinary Sacrament but that in many sacrifices here was something that had the respect of a Sacrament for in that those that did sacrifice for the most part were made partakers of their sacrifices in an holy banquet in an holy place with joy before God Exod. 18. 12. This did seale to them in some sort that grace of the Covenant which is exhibited in the Sacraments 20. From the time of Abraham the Church did chiefly consist in his family and posterity 21. In that period of time all the benefits of the new Covenant were more cleerly and distinctly set forth then before 22. 1. Election was represented in the persons of Isaac and Iacob beloved before Ismael and Esau. Romans 9. 11. 12. 13. 23. 2. Redemption together with the application of it was most excellently exhibited in the person and blessing of Melchisedeck also in the promise and covenant of blessing to come to all Nations by the seed of Abraham 24. 3. Calling was exercised by leading forth Abraham out of Vr of the Caldees to a certaine new and heavenly Countrey Heb. 11. 8. 9. 10. 25. 4. Iustification was illustrated by the expresse testimony of God that Fa●…th was imputed to Abraham for righteousnesse as the Father and patterne of all that should believe and by the Sacrament of circumcision which was a seale of the same righteousnesse 26. 5. Adoption was set forth by calling of the Name of God upon Abraham and all the sons of the promise and by assigning of the inheritance to the sons of the promises begotten of the free Woman through grace Galatians 4. 26. 28. 31. 27. 6. Sanctification was figured by circumcision which did set forth the taking away and abolishing of the corruption of sin of the old man that a new Creature might be settled in its place Col. 2. 11. Deut. 30. 6. 28. 7. Glorification was shewed in the blessing promised and in the Land of Canaan which was a type of the Heavenly Country 29. From the time of Moses unto Christ all these same were further shadowed by meanes both extraordinary and also ordinary 30. Redemption and the application hereof was extraordinarily signified 1. By the deliverance out of Egypt
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
16. But his wel-pleasednesse is in those good things which are communicated by him to us but our wel-pleasednesse is in that goodnesse and Divine perfection which in no sort depends upon us 13. Love of good will is that affection whereby we yield our selves wholy to God and we wil and endeavour that all things be given to him which pertaine to his glory Revel 4. 10 11. They fell downe and cast their crownes before the throne saying Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour and power 1 Cor. 10. 31. Doe all to the glory of God 14. God in bearing us good will doth make us good by conferring that good which he willeth but we cannot properly bestow any good upon him but only acknowledge with the heart publish by words and declare in some measure by deeds that goodnesse which he hath 15. That mutuall Charity which is between God and the faithfull hath in it selfe some respect of friendship Iohn 15. 15. I have called you friends because I have made knowen all things which I have heard from my Father 16. In this friendship although there is not found that equality which is among men that are friends yet that equality which is possible doth appeare in a certaine inward communion which is exercised betweene God and the faithfull in which respect God is said to reveale his secrets to the faithfull Psalm 25 14. Iohn 15. 15. And to be as it were familiarly conversant with them Revel 3. 26. If any shall heare my voyce and shall open the doore I will goe in to him and sup with him and hee with me Iohn 14. 23. If any love me hee will keepe my Word And my Father will love him and we will come to him and dwell with him 17. Charity doth implicitly containe in it the keeping and fulfilling of all the Commandements of God Rom. l 13. 10. 1 Iohn 2 5. and 3. 18. For he cannot truly love God who doth not study to please him in all things and to be like him 1 Iohn 4. 17. Herein is our Charity made perfect that as he is such also are we 18. The manner of our Charity towards God is that it becaried to him as to that which is simply the highest good and end so that neither God nor the love of God is principally and lastly to be referred to any thing else because such love should be mercenary Iohn 6. 26. Ye seeke me because yee ate of the loaves and were filled 19. Yet wee may love God as our reward Genesis 15. 2. And with respect of other good things as of a reward Gen. 17. 2. 20. The degree of Charity towards God ought to be the highest first in respect of the object or as they say objectively that is willing a greater good to him then to any 2. In regard of esteeme or as some speake appretiatively that is preferring him and his will before all other things even our own life Matt. 10. 37. Luc. 14. 26. So that we rather choose to die then to transgresse even the least of his Commandements 3. Intensively that is in respect of the vehement indeavour in the application of all the faculties to the loving of God Deut. 6. 5. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy mind and with all thy strength 21. According to this description of Charity it is rightly said of some Divines that God is only to be loved that is simply by it selfe and according to all the parts of Charity namely with affection of good will desire of Union and wel-pleasednesse of enjoying in the highest degree although our neighbour also is to be beloved in a certaine respect for another thing in part and in a lower degree 22. To this Charity is opposed that feare which hath torment by the presence of God and feare of punishment to be in-flicted by him 1 Iohn 4. 18. Perfect love casteth out feare because feare hath torment 23. Hence Charity being perfected casteth out feare Ibid. Because that feare is an horror arising from the apprehension of evill by reason of the presence of God and so is opposed to Charity which is caried unto God as unto that which is absolutly good 24. Secondly there is opposed to it an enstranging from God which is called by some hatred of abomination Psalm 14. 3. Iohn 3. 20. They are all gone out of the way He hates the light for as Charity consists in affection of union so this enstranging is in disjunction But that hatred of God is most contrary to the love of God which is called hatred of enmity Iohn 13. 23 24 25. They have hated both me and my Father For as the love of Charity is in good will so this enmity against God is in that that ungodly men doe desire and will ill to him if it might be that he were not or at least that he were not such an one as he is 25. For although if God be apprehended so as he is in himselfe he cannot be the object of hatred yet as he is apprehended as one that taketh vengeance on sinners so far forth he is often hated of the same sinners because in that respect he is most contrary to them Ioh. 3. 20. Whosoever evill doth hateth the light neither commeth to the light least his deeds be reproved For as the love of God is in the godly the cause that they hate impiety contrary to God so the love of iniquity in the ungodly causeth that they hate God as contrary to their iniquity 26. But the degrees by which men ascend to this height of ungodlinesse are these 1. Sinners love themselves inordinatly 2. They will that which pleaseth themselves although it be contrary to the Law of God 3. They hate the Law because it is contrary to this desire 4. They hate God himselfe who is the giver and author of such a Law 27. The love of this world also is opposed to the Charity towards God 1 Iohn 2. 15. Because this world agreeth not with God his will There Verse 16. If any love the world the love of the Father is not in him Because whatsoever is in the world is not of the Father 28. For as the perfection of Charity is in this that the mind doth rest in God so it must needs be against Charity that the minde doth rest in that which is contrary to God 29. Charity is no more the forme of other vertues then any vertue commanding or ordering the acts of another is the forme of it but because those acts which in their nature doe not respect God are referred to him by Charity and in him such acts are perfected therefore by a metaphor it is not amisse called the forme of those acts and of the vertues also from which they come 30. But Charity cannot be the intrinse call forme of Faith because in its nature it followes Faith as an effect followes the cause it doth not goe before as
essence of Prayer doth consist secondly that he is omnipotent who can doe what he will in fulfilling our desires thirdly that he is the author and giver of every good thing Fourthly that he doth allow and accept our Prayer through Christ. 5. Hence all our Prayers are to be offered to God in the name and mediation of Christ by the power of a justifying Faith Iohn 14. 13. 14. 16. 23. Whatsoever ye shall aske of the Father in my name 6. It ariseth also from that hope whereby we expect the fruit desired from our prayers from God Rom. 8. 23. 26. We groane expecting the adoption The spirit maketh request for us with groanes that cannot be expressed 7. Lastly it ariseth from Charity whereby we desire both to partake of and celebrate the goodnesse of God Psalme 34 4. 9. Magnifie the Lord with me and let us extoll his name together Tast and see that the Lord is good blessed is the man that trusts in him 8. Hence Charity to our neighbour also is necessarily required that Prayer be accepted of God The fift petition of the Lords Prayer 9. Prayer differs from hearing the word in that hearing is conversant about the will of God but Prayer about our will in hearing the word we receive the Will of God but in Prayer we offer our will to God that it may be received by him 10. But it is not a simple will or desire but a representation of the will or the will exhibited and represented before God For it is not sufficient to prayer that we desire to have something for so prophane men because they doe most desire to have should pray most but there is required also a desire to obtaine that of God and a wil to seeke the same of him and then a representing or insinuating of this desire before God 11. But this representation is done first and essentially in the will it selfe as it being converted to God doth as it were by an act stretched forth represent unto him its inclination and desire 12. Hence the Prayers of the godly are called in the Scriptures desires Psal. 10. 17. And unspeakeable groanes Rom. 8. 26. 13. In the second place and by way of signe this representation is made in the understanding as it conceiving an inward word doth expresse the affections of the will before God 14. Hence the prayers of the faithfull are also called words and speeches whereby they speake to God not first and chiefly outwardly but inwardly Hos. 14. 2. Take unto you words and turne unto the Lord. Say unto him pardon c. 15. Prayer therefore is formally an act of the will yet withall there is required to it both an antecedent act of the mind whereby we understand what of whom for what and how we must pray and a consequent act whereby we conceive and expresse with a certaine word of the mind prayer it selfe 16. Hence together with intention or the act of the will there is also required attention in Prayer both to God to whom we pray and to the thing whereof we pray and also to the Prayer it selfe for we must not only pray with the Spirit but with understanding also 1 Corinthians 14. 15. I will pray with the spirit I but will pray with understanding also 17. This representation must be submisse and humble for otherwise it would not be a religious praying directed from a subject Creature to the highest God and Creator but either a command of a superior to an inferior or a familiar conference as it were such as is among equalls Gen. 18. 27. Behold now I would speake unto the Lord although I am dust and ashes Psalme 95. 6. Come let us bow and fall downe and bend the knees before the Lord that made us 18. The generall end of Prayer is that we may as it were affect or move GOD whence it is that the faithfull are said by their prayers as it were mightily to prevaile with God Genesis 32. 28. Hos. 12. 4 5. And as it were to strike Rom. 15. 30. 19. For although that difference is true which some put between those prayers which are directed to men and those which are made to God that they that pray to men doe affect those to whom they pray and in some measure dispose them to that which they desire but those who pray to God doe not so much affect God as themselves and dispose themselves to those things they desire yet God is pleased so to commend the force and efficacy of Prayer to us that he declares himselfe to be affected and as it were moved with it And that because our prayer is the meanes by the interceding of which and no otherwise God will Communicate many things unto us whence also they who aske some thing of GOD are said to affoord helpe to effect it 2. Cor. 2. 11. 20. For we doe not therefore pray to God that we may make knowne our desires to him not knowing them who understands alwayes a far off Psal. 139. 2. That is when as yet they are not in our minds neither that we may move him to our mind who was unwilling with whom there is no change or shadow of turning Iames 1. 17. But that we may by our prayer obtaine that of him which we believe he is willing to 1. Iohn 5. 14. This is our confidence which we have towards God that if we aske him any thing according to his will he heareth us 21. Hence the firmenesse and unchangeablenesse of Gods providence doth not take away but establish the prayers of the faithfull and the most sure apprehension of it by Faith doth not make the true believers slothfull but doth more stir them up to pray 1. Chr. 17. 25 26 27. Thou O my God hast revealed to the eare of thy servant that thou wilt build him an house Therefore hath thy servant been bold to pray before thee c. 22. Hence also we must pray instantly and continually instantly because our prayer is a necessary meanes for Gods glory and our good Continually because such a disposition of will is never to be cast off and the act of it also is daily to be exercised as occasion is offered to us 23. The adjuncts of Prayer are confession and a promise made to God for these two are alwayes either expresly or implicitly used in every acceptable Prayer to God and in every part of it 24. For because we doe by Prayer fly unto the mercy of God as to the fountaine of all good either communicated or to be communicated to us in so doing we confesse that we are miserable in our selves and destitute of all good because also we endeavour as it were to affect and move God by our desires therefore also we professe that our minds are sutably affected about the same things and doe promise them to be so affected for time to come neither can such like affections be absent from our prayers without a certaine mocking of GOD. 25.
for seeing the institution of dayes by this opinion is only commanded immediatly and it is not in the power of private men to ordaine these or those dayes for publick worship by this meanes nothing at all should be commanded but at their will who are in publick office neither should any thing be commanded them in speciall but only in generall that they doe according to their wisdome in setting apart dayes to publicke worship so that if it seeme good to them to appoint one day of twenty or thirty to this use they cannot be reproved of any sin in this respect as if they broke this Commandement 17. If there were ever any thing ceremoniall in the Sabbath in respect of the very observation of the day that is to be accounted for a thing added to it or a constitution comming extrinsecally beyond the nature of the Sabbath and the first institution of it and so it nothing hinders but the institution of the seventh day was simply morall for so there was a ceremoniall respect of some type added to some other Commandements as in the authority of Fathers and the first borne of Families which pertaine to the first Commandement there was a certaine adumbration of Christ who is the first begotten among the Sons of God 18. Neither yet doth it certainly appeare in the Scriptures that there was any ceremony properly so called or type in the observation of the seventh day for whereas Heb. 4. 9. there is mention made of a spirituall Sabbatisme prefigured before by a type it is under the respect of a type referred only to the rest promised in the Land of Cannaan and by comparison of things like to the rest of God but in no sort or in the least signification is it referred to the rest commanded in the fourth Commandement as unto a type or shaddow 19. But whereas in Exod. 31. 13. 17. And Ezech. 20. 20. The Sabbath is called a signe betweene God and his people it cannot thence be made a type or representation of any future grace Because 1. A signe doth often note the same that an argument or instruction as also the most learned interpreters doe note upon Exodus 31. It is a signe between me c. that is an instruction So our mutuall love is a signe that we are the Disciples of Christ. Iohn 13. 35. But it is not a type 2. The Sabbath in those places is not said to be a signe of some thing to come but present as every visible concomitant adjunct is a signe of the subject being present For in the observation of the Sabbath there is a common and publike profession of that communion which is between God and us as therefore all solemn profession is a signe of that thing whereof it is a profession so also the Sabbath is in that common respect called a signe 20. And this is the most proper reason why the observation of the Sabbath is so much urged and the breaking of it so severely punished in the old Testament namely because there was in the Sabbath a common and publike profession of all Religion for this Commandement as it is a close of the first Table of the Law doth thus summarily containe the whole worship of God whilest it commands a certaine day for all the exercises thereof Esay 56. 2. 21. There were many ceremonies ordained about the observation of the Sabbath but the observation of the Sabbath was no more made ceremoniall by them then it was judiciall or politicall because of those judiciall Lawes whereby it was then provided that it should be celebrated most religiously Exod. 31. 14. 22. That accommodation of the fourth Commandement unto the speciall state of the Iewes which was in the observation of the seventh day from the beginning of the Creation doth no more make the precept it selfe ceremoniall then the promise of the Land of Canaan made to the people of Israel That thou mayst live long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee makes the fift Commandement ceremoniall or more then that Preface I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the Land of Egypt makes all the Commandements ceremoniall 23. It may indeed be granted that a more strict observation of the Sabbath was commanded in those dayes applied to the time of Pedagogy and bondage which is not of force in all ages yet this hinders not but the observation it selfe is plainly morall and common to all ages 24. Yet there can be nothing brought out of the Scriptures which was at any time commanded about the strict observation of the Sabbath to the Iewes which by the same reason doth not partaine to all Christians except the kindling of fires and preparing their ordinary food Exod. 35. 3. 16. 14. And those precepts seeme to have been speciall and given upon particular occasion for there is nothing said about the kindling of fire but in the building of the Tabernacle which God would declare was not so holy a worke but it might and ought to be intermitted on the Sabbath day Neither is there any mention of the preparing of victualls but when Manna was by a miracle sent from Heaven which was also by a miracle preserved on the Sabbath day And by the History of Christ it appeares very likely that he did approve of preparing victualls done by kindling of a fire upon the Sabbath day For being invited by the Iewes to a feast which was had on the Sabbath day he refused not to be present Luc. 14. 1. c. 25. Whereas the reason of the Sabbath doth sometime seem to be referred to the delivering of the people of Israel out of the captivity of Egypt it doth not turne the Sabbath into a ceremony For 1. All the Commandements are in some sort referred to the same deliverance as appeares by the Preface of the decalogue 2. It doth not appeare that the Sabbath it selfe had any singular relation to this deliverance but that there is mention made of the deliverance out of Egypt Deut. 5. 15. For that reason onely that seeing the Israelites had been servants before in Egypt they ought the more readily and willingly grant this time of rest to their servants 26. Whereas the last day of the weeke was of old observed this was anciently ordained by God from the time of the first Creation because God did that day cease from the workes of Creation 27. Whereas the last day of the weeke is now changed into the first day this was not done by humane but Divine authority For he only can change the day of the Sabbath who is Lord of the Sabbath that is Christ. Marc. 12. 8. Whence also that first day which succeeded is properly called the Lords Day 28. If this Lords Day be granted to have been of Apostolicall institution yet that authority which it is Built upon is neverthelesse divine because the Apostles were no lesse guided by the spirit in holy institutions then in propounding the doctrine