Selected quad for the lemma: father_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
father_n person_n son_n true_a 14,186 5 5.5218 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A25294 The substance of Christian religion, or, A plain and easie draught of the Christian catechisme in LII lectures on chosen texts of Scripture, for each Lords-day of the year, learnedly and perspicuously illustrated with doctrines, reasons, and uses / by that reverend and worthy laborer in the Lord's vineyard, William Ames ... Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1659 (1659) Wing A3003; ESTC R6622 173,739 322

There are 11 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

found in some unregenerate persons no reason admits that this knowledge should be an essential part of Faith and of the spiritual life because it is found in them that have no part of spiritual life Use. Is of Exhortation against Papists and others who know nor acknowledge no other faith but knowledge and a certain material assent which yet may may consist with greatest diffidence and most wretched desperation Use 2. Is of Direction that we may enquire of the knowledge of the truth which is necessary for us unto Faith and to Salvation and that we be wary that we rest not on any bare knowledge but then think we have true Faith onely when according to the knowledge of the truth we rely upon Christ with our whole heart for salvation to be obtayned by him alone Use 3. Is of Consolation to those who with all their heart strive to rest upon Christ and yet cannot for a time or presently and certainly perswade themselves That God is reconciled unto th●…m for such have true Faith though weak For this certainty of perswasion is the effect of a more strong and perfect Faith whereunto also in their own time such believers shall be brought A Question is here propounded By what means is such a Faith begotten and promoted in our hearts Answer This Faith is properly begotten in us by the Holy Ghost through the Ministry and Preaching of the Gospell because Faith is above nature while we believe these things that surmount all reason and are lifted up above our selves by Faith as the Apostle saith that Abraham hoped above hope that is beyond humane natural and ordinary hope so also they that truly believe believe beyond belief or above belief It is begotten in us by the Gospell because in the promises of the Gospell Christ is offered and exhibited to us and the efficacy or power of the Holy Ghost accompanieth the preaching of the holy Gospell Now from these things it followeth that such have not true Faith who either believe nothing above what is natural or in a supernaturall way or else have not their Faith from the Gospell and word of God Doct. 5. Such as truly believe in Christ may and ought to be sure of their salvation This is gathered from the connexion between the antecedent and consequent in the Text believe and thou shalt be saved For as particular men while they remain in their particular sins may be assured that for that time they are subject to the curse of God so may some believers be particularly assured that they are partakers of eternal blessing and salvation For as that other assurance of the curse comes from the Law towards impenitent sinners or breakers of it so this other assurance of the blessing comes to repenting and believing sinners through the promises of the Gospell The whole order therefore of this consolation whereby we may be certain of salvation is as followeth in such a Syllogism wherein both will and understanding have their parts whereof the proposition stands in the assent of the understanding and makes up a dogmatical Faith The assumption is not principally in the compounding understanding but in the single apprehension and will so as to make it true and of force to infer the certainty in the conclusion which the heart doth by this act of affiance that being the property of justifying Faith and thus existing in the heart The conclusion is also principally ultimately in the single apprehension and will or in the heart by the grace of hope and both it and the experimental reflexion joyn'd with it which is in the understanding and the other also by this reflexion are the effects of the experimental knowledge and reflexion of our understanding in the assumption upon the true existence of the single term in the heart or will which bears the whole burthen of the assurance Use Is of great Consolation to believers whereof they are Sacrilegiously robbed by Papists and all such who impugne this certainty of salvation The eighth Lords day Mat. 28. 19. Go ye therefore and teach all Nations baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost IN this verse is contained that principal command which Christ left to his Apostles and Ministers and it consists of two parts whereof in the first the preaching of the Word and in the other the administration of the Sacraments is commanded The chief scope of both parts is shewed in the last words to wit That men may be taught and confirmed in the true faith and obedience of the Father Son and Holy Ghost From this place was the Creed taken and framed which is called the Apostles Creed but as to the foundation of it in these words not first taught by the Apostles but to the Apostles by Christ himself at that very time when he spake those words 2. By the Apostles at the command of Christ to all Christians for a rule of Faith and a badge whereby Christians should be discovered as well fro●… Heathens as from Jews and other Sects Nor was there any other or longer Creed than this contained in the words of our Lord in the times of the Apostles and of the Church that next followed their times But afterwards diverse Heresies laid a necessity upon the Church of adding diverse articles to this Creed not that they should be new additions to the old Faith but needfull explications of the same Hence it is that all things that are now contained in the Creed are referred unto these three heads which are set down in these words viz. either unto the Father or the Sonne or the Holy Ghost Doct. 1. Though God be one in essence onely yet is he three in persons the Fathe●… the Son and the Holy Spirit Reas. 1. Because in this place Faith is presupposed and prerequired for baptising one of age whereby he believeth in the Father Son and Holy Ghost and this same Faith is as it were sealed by Baptism as with a seal and the open profession of this Faith is solemnised by this Badge or Confession and Creed that our Lord himself taught and gave in command And these things were not done for once or in a temporary way but by an unchangeable Institution and perpetual Covenant they were delivered to the Church to be observed through all ages as necessary foundations of salvation The consequence of this argument hath certainty and confirmation from thence in that divine Faith and spiritual neither ought●… nor is any where used in Scripture to be directed to any creature but to God alone Reas. 2. Because one and the self-same authority and power is attributed to the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost For when the Word is preached and Baptism administred not onely in the name of the Father but likewise also of the Son and of the Holy Ghost It is manifestly shewed that by the authority and power of this most holy Trinity Baptisme with other the like
the Father Heb. 10. 7 9. Reas. 3. Because in Christ an example is set down of that procedure which God observes in us to be brought into life and glory by him For our life and glory have their first foundation in Gods electing of us and begins at his effectual calling of us Use 1. Is of Information for the establishing of our Faith because we may certainly know that God made Christ every way fit for accomplishing our salvation Use 2. Is of Consolation against all terrours and tumults whereby either our salvation or the Church of Christ is impugned because we ought certainly to know that Christ is made Lord hath all power of restraining his enemies at his own pleasure If therefore nothing at present appear from which we may be confirmed against such tentations yet we ought to live by this Faith according to that The just shall live by Faith Doct. 3. All that by true Faith rely upon Christ are made partakers according to their measure of the dignity of Christ. This is hence collected that the Apostle so earnestly exhorts to this faith especially if we compare this conclusion with the occasion of the question as it is explicated verses 17 1●… For they are some way partakers of the fruition and dignity Prophetical as they have the Spirit of Christ as ver 17 18 is apparent by which Spirit they are taught all things 1 Ioh. 2. 27 So that in some sort they may discern all things 1 Cor. ●… 15. Secondly they are made partakers also of the function and Priestly dignity as it is granted to them to offer unto God Sacrifices and Oblations while they offer themselves to God Rom 12. 1. And while all that they can have they dedicated consecrated to God lastly while they continually cause to ascend unto the presence of God the sacrifice of praise and thanksgigiving Thirdly they are made partakers of the Kingly dignity 1 Pet. 2. 9. Apoc. 1. 6. As they have through the grace of God got the dominion over themselves nor are servants any more of this world but rather masters of it and as lastly they are heirs of heavenly glory and receive the right and first fruits of it in this life Reas. 1. Because so great is the spiritual and mystical union that beleevers have with their head that they must of necessity some way or other participate of his dignity as the members of the body partake of the dignity of the head and as the Wife participates of the dignity of her Husband Reas. 2. Because all things that Christ doth as Mediator he doth them for us and to our good in our name and in a manner in our person that is representing and standing in our stead Reas. 3. Bceause so great is the love of Christ towards his own that he would have that is his as far as can be to be communicated to others Use 1. Is of Information that we may umderstand the force reason of this name whereby we are called Christians Now believers were rather call'd Christians than Iesu●…s because as hath been said Iesus properly denotats Christ's action of ●…aving us but Christ the receiving of that offi●…e so that we are not made saviours of our selves so much as fitted receivers of this salvation from him For what he doth as our Iesus this he doth not communicate to us but only the fruit of it but what he received as our Christ therefore he received it that to us he might some way communicate it and make us fit to receive it of him Such therefore alone are truly Christians that have spiritual and effectual communion with Christ or with God in Christ. Use 2. Is of Admoni ion that we make not the divine name of Christian to be dishonoured and blasphemed by the filthiness of our life and manners The thirteenth Lords day Mat. 16. 16. Thou art Christ the Son of the living God THis is Peter's answer to the question propounded by Christ to the Apostles The question was about their judgement and faith as to the person of our Saviour In the answer there is contained the confession of the Disciples concerning Christ and together with this a description of Christ. In this description the person of our Saviour is described 1. From his office Thou art Christ. 2. From his essence which is pointed out to us by his essential relation to that principle from whence he came forth This principle is God who is illustrated by his attribute of life the living God The relation of our Saviour to God is that of a Son to a Father the Son of the living God And he is also illustrated by a tacite comparison of that unlikeness that is between this Son and others that use to get the same name also And this comparison is illustrated to us in the particle prefixt to Sonne the Sonne or that Sonne Doct. 1. Iesus Christ is the coeternal or natural Son of God He is called the Son of God because he proceeds from the Father not by way of creation but by way of generation And generation is here used by similitude or proportion that this emanation of the Son from the Father hath with that production which a child hath from its parent in the comparison of which similitude or analogy as in all others that are attributed to God the perfections onely of the denomination are to be understood to agree and all the imperfections and defects are to be removed in our thoughts Hence that which is proper to corporal generation that he who begets doth it with some transmutation and that the thing begotten is something out of the begetter these are not to be imagined in this divine mystery nor that which is found in the spiritual generation in or by a creature to wit that the thing begotten is of another essence from that of the begetter as in the production of the w●…rd of the mind in humane understanding But the perfection that is in the generation of a body to wit that the begotten be in essence and nature like unto the begetter is here to be con oyned with that perfection that is found in spiritual generation of creatures to wit that the begotten be in the begetter by the most inward and inseparable way of being so and so we come ●…ighest to apprehend that which can be conceived or apprehended of this divine generation of the Son by the Father For Christ proceeding from God the Father hath the same common nature and essence with him and is his substantial image Heb. 1. 3. Yet he remains still in the Father and the Father in him without total separation of either from other as God understanding himself is in God understood by himself and God understood by himself is in God understanding himself Use 1. Is of Consolation towards all believers because while they have communion with Christ who is the Son and heir of all the goods of the Father they may thence
Lord who gave himself to the death for them Use 3. Is of Admonition that we subject our selves wholly to this Lord and his will and do him all honour in all and every part of our life and conversation The fourteenth Lords day Mat. 1. 20. But while he thought on these things behold the Angell of the Lord appeared to him in a dream saying Joseph thou son of David fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost THese words contain a reason given by the Angell of the Lord why Ioseph should receive his wife Mary And the reason is from removing the cause for which Ioseph might have been induced to put her away Now the cause was that she appeared to be with child by another than her own husband This cause is removed by putting another unblamable cause in its place and this cause is determined by the Angell to be the Holy Ghost The effect then is placed with its causes in this enunciation The effect then is Jesus Christ as to his humane nature The causes are two to wit the Holy Ghost and the Virgin Mary Mary is the efficient cause less principal and supplier also of the material cause but the Holy Ghost is the most principal and first cause which brings the less principal efficient and the material together into acting for the production of this effect Doct. 1. Christ the Son of God took unto himself into the unity of his person the nature of man truly such together with the conditions of humane weakness This is taught in the Text. When it is said In time a man born and begotten of a woman it is but the same expressed in these words of the Creed conceived of the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin Mary c. He might have assumed the nature of another creature as of Angells he might also have assumed mans nature in its greatest perfection as Adam was made who was never in propriety of speech either conceived or born an infant But it was his pleasure to assume the nature of man truly such and in this manner of sinless imperfections and not of Angells Reas. 1. That he might do mans businesse and work that is make satisfaction for them and save them Reas. 2. He would also take this our nature in its weak and low condition First Because he would come down as farre as could be without sin into the same very place and condition out of which he intended to lift us up higher Secondly That by this means he might some way sanctify all the states and conditions of humane life least any might imagine that any such low estate separateth a man from communion with Christ. Thirdly That he might leave this to us in his own experience as a pledge of his knowledge and like sufferings and affections with us from whence he might look upon our infirmities Use 1. Is of Information for establishing our Faith on this behalf that we give no place to phantastical imaginations of Hereticks who impugne directly or indirectly and fight against the humane nature of Christ which sort of errours are some way countenanced by Papists in their Doctrine of Transubstantiation and by Ubiquitaries in theirs of Consubstantiation in as much as they attribute omnipresence and other the like divine attributes to the humane nature which is no way agreeable unto the same Use 2. Is of Exhortation to extoll and solemnly to praise the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ with all admiration and thanksgiving who not only vouchsafes to become man for us but also in the nature of man disdained not to become an infant to be conceived and born after our manner and to undergo other the like infirmities and humiliations for our sake it is that the Apostle points at Heb. 2. 16 17. Use 3. Is of Consolation that we should make no difference between an infant newly conceived or born and a perfect man or one of age or between any other conditions of the nature and life of man as to our interest in Christ as if any sinless condition of nature could make us less regardable by him 〈◊〉 exclude us from him For Christ descended to the lowest and imperfectest sinless degree and condition of the life of man in that he was 1. conceived and 2. shut up in his mothers womb the ordinary time of other births and 3. born Doct. 2. Christ assumed this humane nature from Mary as from his Mother For though he is said in the Text to be begotten in her yet elswhere he is said to be made after the flesh of the seed of a woman and a woman is said to have conceived him and to have born him as her son hence also he is called the son of Mary the son of David the son of Abraham and the like whereby that phrase is expounded and the truth of it confirmed Reas. 1. He should have been born of a woman as of his mother to the end that that first Evangelicall promise of the seed of the woman that was to tread down the serpent's head might be fulfilled Reas. 2. It was according to right that he was born of Mary that so it might be certain how he descended of the Tribe of Iudah and of the Family of David according to the promises and prophesies that went before of him Use 1. Is of Refutation against Anabaptists and such like who phantastically think that the humanity of Christ onely passed through Mary and was not assumed from her nature Of which imagination the first reason seems to have been that some simple men could not conceive how any could without sin be born of a woman after the fall But the Anabaptists afterwards though they took away this ground of their errour of denying original sin yet they adhered to this conclusion of meer wilfulness without any reason Use 2. Is of Information for directing our Faith about Christs son-ship For he is the Son of God and the son of man both yet so as he is not two sons but in a certain way twice one son in one person The first from eternity the next in time and consequently two wayes a son as both by generation eternal and by generation in time yet but one son of God and of man because but one person who according to his divine nature is the Son of God and according to his humane nature is the son of man So is every man twice a Son in essence first to father and paternal generation and then to mother and maternal generation Doct. 3. Christ was born of Mary remaining still a virgin after he was born This is gathered from the scope of the words the question being about this whether Mary were a virgin or no and the words of the Angell were to assure him that she was Reas. 1. Is that this might be a singular and miraculous signe to the whole house of Israel and this is it that is pointed
diminution in its ralative perfection There were two parts of this resurrection revivification or a quickening again of the humane nature by the renewed union of soul and body and its going out of the grave to make it manifest that it was restored This resurrection was confirmed moreover by Angells by the Scriptures by Christ himself and by the assent and eye-witness or experience of many witnesses in divers apparitions reiterated from time to time during the space of forty dayes Reas. 1. Because it was unbeseeming and impossible that the Son of God and author of life could be long detained by the power of death Acts 2. 24. Reas. 2. That by this means Christ himself might be justified in the spirit or according to the spirit of holiness that is by the power of his God-head justified to be God as well as man in one person justly and fully declared and proved to be God by his raising of himself again from the dead Rom. 1. 4. 1 Tim. 3. 16. and might shew that we were justified by him from our sins for which he died and rose also again to shew that he had overcome for us and delivered us from them Rom. 4. 25. Reas. 3. That being now alive he might powerfully apply to us what before he had purchased by his death Rom. 5 10. Reas 4. That he hereby might be the cause foundation and sign of assurance and earnest to us of our resurrection as well spiritual as bodily Rom. 1 Cor. 15. 12 13 14. Use Is of Information for the direction of our faith that believing in Christ unto justification and salvation we may so lay hold on Christ's death that we still also look upon his resurrection wherein his victory for us was shewn and his power over death and efficacy to work in us appeared and which renders his death full of comfort to us Rom. 5. 34. 1 Pet. 3 2. Doct. 6. Christ's resurrection came to pass by his own proper vertue and power It is clear in the Text I take it up again and I have power of taking it up again For this is the difference between Christ's resurrection and that of others that they rise again by the power of another to wit of Christ as many as are his But Christ by his own power as Lord of life and death and therefore hath the disposing of both as he sees good Neither doth it make any thing against this truth that it is often said that God raised him again from the dead and the Spirit of God For the works of the Trinity from without are undivided common to all the three Persons Reas. 1. Because what is thus attributed to God is therefore also attributed to the Son together with the Father and Holy Spirit and is not taken from him as is clear by our Text. Reas. 2. When Christ is said to be raised by God or the Spirit of God then properly his humane nature is considered as raised by Father Son and Holy Spirit though not alwayes all three expressed but now one now another But when he is said to have raised himself his divine nature and person is spoken of and considered as raising his assumed humane nature together with the Father and the Spirit Reas. 3. Because by the Spirit and glory of God whereby Christ is said to be raised no other vertue or power can be understood than that of the divine nature which was in Christ. Use 1. Of Information to confirm our faith about the person of Christ. For he that by his own power ●…rose from death can not be a bare man onely but must of necessity be acknowledged to have been God also For the raising of a dead body is no less divine a work than the creation of a live body He that raised himself from the dead at the same time while he was dead in one of his natures yet had life and the fountain of life in his other nature to wit the divine at his command whereby he did so great a work as to raise his other nature to life again As Christ therefore by his death proved himself to be true man so also in and by his resurrection he proved himself to be the eternal and natural Son of God and true God especially not by office onelie and that most manifestly Use 2. Of Consolation to all such as are in Christ. For they are in him who hath vertue and power to raise them again from the dead and to give them eternal life Iohn 6. 39 40 Doct. 7. Christ's resurrection was for us or to do us good This is hence gathered because in the Text the common end of laying down his life and taking it up again for all is mentioned For for such as he laid down his life for such also he took it up again Now the resurrection of Christ turnes to our good in another way than his death doth For his death hath the account of satisfying and deserving for us But his resurrection not so but it hath the place and account of a samplar and efficient cause and some way of an efficacious and powerfull applier and perfecter Reas. 1. Because Christ in his resurrection represented some way all the elect of God and by a virtuall containing had them all in himself and brought them all back from death Reas. 2. Because the same Spirit that raised Christ again from the dead by a certain sort of communicating the same resurrection quickened as well the soules as bodyes of the faithfull that they may be made conforme to the likenesse of his resurrection Rom 8. 11. Reas. 3. Because that same Spirit quickens us by the power and vertue of the resurrection of Christ. Reas. 4. Because the whole reparation of our nature will be after the image and pattern of the resurrection of Christ Rom. 6. 5. Use 1. Of Consolation because in the resurrection of Christ as brought to pass for us or for our good we have our victory over Death Devill Sin and Hell and all our Enemies ready purchased and prepared for us It is not therefore left to us to fight that we may overcome but onely in sincerity that we may mind this to lay hold on the victory already acquired by Christ for us and that in the same manner we may strive to keep it prosecute it and more and more put ourselves in perfect possession of it by faith in Christ. Use 2. Of Admonition that by no means we suffer sin to reigne in our mortal bodies but that we may spiritually imitate such as arise from the dead The eighteenth Lords day Mark 16. 19. So then after the Lord had spoken unto them he was received up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God HEre is explicated a singular act of Christ after his resurrection Where mark 1. The motion wherein the act is designed And 2. The thing brought to pass by that motion The motion is but the means The thing done by the motion was
the godly look desiring nothing more than still to apprach nearer and nearer unto God The ungodly on the contrary shunne nothing more than God and such things wherein God hath appointed to shew and impart his gracious and singular presence Reas. 2. Because man's happiness not coming of man himself is therefore to be sought from without himself and that from his union or conjunction with the greatest good and that is the cause and fountain of all good Therefore of necessity it consists in communion with God and from deprivation of this communion greatest misery must needs follow Reas. 3. Because the perfectest act of our life is that which is most closely and intimately carried towards God as all that we do well consists in this that therein we live unto God and the privation of such acting its want and absence all misery must accompany Use Of Direction that even in this life we may wholly be taken up with this to seek communion with God and shun and take heed of all separation from him Doct. 7. The certaine signes and tokens of this blessing are good workes and of this curse are evill workes This is largely and clearly laid open in the Text. Reas. 1. Because good works came from the same grace or favour of God from which the blessing it self comes upon them and evill workes joyned with obstinacy and impenitency comes from that same malice and malignancy which God hath cursed and adjudged Reas. 2. Because God of his free grace hath promised the blessing unto good workes and of his unspotted justice hath appointed the curse unto evill workes Reas. 3. Because in good works there is a certain disposal and preparation of the way to obtain the blessing and in evill workes there is not onely the proportion of a way but of deserving or a mertitorious cause even unto the curse Use Of Admonition that we have great care of our actions through every part of our life because according to them men are either condemned or saved For such as the life is such is the end The twentieth Lords day 1 Cor. 6. 19. What know you not that your body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you which ye have of God and ye are not your own IN the words of the Text are contained a most powerfull argument against Fornication and the like sinnes and it is taken from the contrary end because the end of Christian's bodies is quite opposite to this sin And that end is declared from the subject possessed and possessor and indweller of it the Holy Ghost The subject is again explained by a Metaphor of a Temple because namely our bodies are as it were houses consecrated to him And that this argument may be made the clearer and stronger the Apostle ads that so the holy Ghost is the possessor of this Temple or house that he himself also is the indweller of it And both these relations that we have to the Holy Ghost are illustrated from their efficient cause to wit that they are of God and from their consequent effect and adjunct to wit faith and certain knowledge of these relations between our bodies and the Holy Spirit in these words Know ye not brethren c. Doct 1. The Holy Ghost is true and coeternal God with the Father and eternal Son The Text doth give many reasons for this Doctrine Reas. 1. Because to have one and the same spirit with God is all one as to be glewed or joyned to God vers 17. Reas. 2. Because a Temple is not lawfully consecrated to any but to God much less could it be lawfull that a man in stead of or for a Temple should be consecrated to that which is not God But here such a Temple which is most sacred is said to be consecrated to the Holy Ghost Reas. 3. Because the Holy Ghost is so said to be in us as that we become his of right and of duty that is God's rightfull possession as the scope of the words clearly demonstrate Use 1. Of Information for directing our faith arightly not onely unto the Father and Son but also unto the Holy Ghost as the same one and true God Use 2. Of Admonition that we diligently take heed to our selves that we neither contemne nor neglect any holy thing that comes or is breathed from the Holy Spirit as the whole Scripture is said to have come from the inbreathing or inspiration of the Holy Spirit and all the motions of godliness are onely attributed to the Holy Spirit as to their Author Likewise all the gifts of grace are bred in us from and by this Spirit of grace In these all therefore we must take heed that in no wise we resist the Holy Ghost or wittingly and willingly sin against him Doct 2. The Holy Ghost himself is given unto the faithfull This appears in the Text. Reas. 1. In that our bodyes are called the Temples of the Holy Ghost Reas. 2. In that he is said to be in us Reas. 3. In that we are said to have him or to get him from God Now the Holy Ghost is said to be given unto us when he hath a singular relation unto us and that for our good that is for our sanctification salvation of our soules moreover because he powerfully works these things in us that are agreable to his most holy nature and which can no way be derived to us from flesh and blood And hence it is also that the gifts of the Holy Ghost are called the Holy Ghost also by that trope or borrowed kinde of speech whereby the cause is put for the effect which Schollers call a Metonymie Use 1. Of Exhortation as well to thanksgiving to God that gives so divine a gift as to religious prayers and calling upon God's name that he would keep unto us and more and more communicate to us this divine gift Luk 11. 13. Use 2 Of Admonition to take heed of all such things whereby the Holy Spirit is said either to be grieved or extinguished that is from the grievousness of all such sin as fights against the holiness of this divine Spirit so that he cannot delight to dwell in us but wholly or in great measure withdrawes himself from us Doct. 3. The Holy Spirit is not communicated to our soules onely but to our bodies also It is in the Text when our bodies are also called the Temples of the Spirit Reas. 1. Because as Christ redeemed not our soules onely but the whole man so also the Holy Spirit ought to bring into subjection and possession the whole man to God and to Christ. Reas. 2. Because many duties of a spiritual life must be performed by the body also and therefore the body ought to be subject to the Holy Spirit and as a vessell or instrument be wholly in his power Reas. 3. Because our bodies are made liable to sin and by sin to death from which we must be freed by the Holy Spirit dwelling
justifying faith is fruitfull of good works 2. That good works are the end and perfection of faith for faith is said to co-operate with good works because together with the command of God it furnisheth its strength and force of working for producing of good works And that works are called the perfection of faith it is not so to be understood as if they were the internal and formal perfection of faith as the form is the formal and essential perfection of every thing But in that they contain and shew the external perfection of faith in as much as they flow from it and as every effect contains in it self some perfection of its course to wit as it partakes of the force and vertue that comes from the internal perfection of the cause Doct. 1. Our good workes are no wayes the cause of our justification but the effects and fruits of a man justified It is gathered from the Text for as much as workes are the effects of faith And faith and justification according to the nature of relatives are at once or together in nature A true believer and a justified man are the same thing If therefore good works are the effects of a believer then are they the effects of one justified also And that works justify us not is apparent from four reasons Reas. 1. Because believers are not now under the Covenant of workes and therefore cannot be justified by works but are all condemned by them if we stand to them in that point because none of them come up to what the Law requires and so are sinfull and imperfect Reas. 2. Because all our good workes are debts and therefore they can never properly merit or deserve pardon Reas. 3. Because the good works we do came not from our own strength but from the grace of God Reas. 4. Because our best good works are in themselves imperfect and defiled with many uncleannesses Object 1. Our good workes are perfect as they come from the Holy Spirit whose workes are all perfect Ans. 1. If in respect of us they be imperfect they cannot as ours be of force to our justification though in some other respect they may be perfect 2. That perfection which they have in reference to the Holy Spirit doth not redound properly unto our meriting or deserving by them because the holy Ghost is no wayes united unto us into one person which is the onely ground why the works of Christ had a divine merit and worth in them namely because they were divine workes as being his that was as man personally united unto the God-head and person of the Son so as they made but one person The Holy Spirit then though he be the principal cause of our good works yet this is in its own manner as an external efficient as having no personal union with the party working Object 2. Our reward is given according to our works Ans. That reward is not of our merit but of God's free grace and favour For there is a reward of servants and a reward of sons the reward of servants lookes not to the person but to the merit or desert of the work but the reward of sons look●… at the person chiefly and so is given of grace and good will to the person of the worker more than to the merit of the work For the Father in his Sonne crownes that with reward which in it self deserves no such thing for the most part Otherwayes he were unjust not to reward it so in servants likewise Use Of Admonition that we never glory in our selves or our own workes before God but alwayes acknowledge when we have done all that we can that we are but unprofitable servants as our Lord himself teacheth us to do and that we depend wholly on the grace of God putting no trust in our own works Doct 2. Good workes by a necessary coherence follow true faith It is gathered from this that faith is to work together in and with good works and by good works to be brought to its end Now good works are necessary to a believer 1. By necessity of precept because God from that right and power he had to do so was pleased to command us them 2. By necessity of means without which we cannot attain the end And that 1. In respect of God or his glory as the end because without them we cannot attain to the enjoyment of God nor to glorify him as we should and must for that attainment 2. In respect of the Church and others without the Church whose edification without good works we cannot attain and good men are edified by good workes as by examples more and more and to others a hoping light is as it were held out whereby they may discerne their right way Let your light so shine before men c. 3. In respect of our own salvation because good works are necessary to salvation though not as meritorious causes yet as dispositions qualifications and wayes that must be had and insisted in because our election and calling is to them and by them our salvation and these other are made surer to our consciences For in them consists that way of a new obedience and Gospell thankfulnesse which onely leads unto life also as holinesse not onely internal but also external is such an inseparable disposition or qualification from such as are to be saved as that without it none shall ever see God to his comfort or happiness 3. They are necessary by necessity of the end because election redemption vocation tend and look to this end that we may live to God and to Christ in all holinesse and righteousnesse And a necessity as well of thankfulnesse as of covenant lies upon us that with all our vigour and with all our strength we endeavour to attain unto this end 4. Good works are necessary by a certain sort of natural necessity For just as good fruits come of a good tree and sweet waters come from a sweet fountain by a like manner and necessity good works come from true faith Or as our vital operations and motions do alwayes accompany natural life so also spiritual life which is from faith whereby the just man liveth puts forth it self alwayes in good works as the proper operations and acts of a spiritual life It may sometimes happen that as in one in a swound scarce any matter or operation doth appear though yet the ●…fe it self remain so also by some extraordinary ●…entation for some time the seed of faith may remain in the heart of this or that man the fruits whereof can hardly be discovered But this is 1. As much against the nature of faith and of a faithfull man as sicknesse is against health and life 2. It is an extraordinary case by which we must not judge of the ordinary operations and fruits of faith nor of its nature or the necessity of good works 3. In such a case both the degree of faith it self is deminished and the comfort of
Supper their progress and advancement Use Of Direction how we should make constant and perpetual use of our Baptisme to wit if we take occasion often to meditate on it and the graces of God sealed in it on God's part and our return of universal obedience sealed too on our part and of the favour God did us thus solemnly to receive us into Covenant with him and into his Church the true confederates of God or number of them that are saved by Christ and if from this faith and belief thus sealed and continued we more and more study to take care in all things to walk worthy of this condition and to glorify God in Christ as becomes and as he requireth of us Doct. 2. In Baptisme by washing of water our adoption ●…ustification and salvation is sealed to us This is hence collected in that our union in the forme of Baptisme is designed to be with the Father Son and Holy Ghost for sealing our communion in those benefits which flow from this union And we are properly adopted by the Father justified by the Son and sanctified by the Holy Spirit Reas. 1. Because these three are directly necessary for us that we may have true entrance into the Kingdome of God For 1. We must be accepted of as God's children that he may be our Father which is by adoption 2. We must be freed from the guilt of sin by which we are separated from God and this is done by justification 3. We must be cleansed and purged from the remainders and corruptions of sin whereby men are made unfit to injoy God and this is done by sanctification Reas. 2. Because the washing with water in Baptisme designeth and some way respecteth our cleansing as well from the guilt as corruption of sinne whereby we were made strangers to the estate of the Sons of God that thence it may appear that now by grace we are adopted justified and sanctified Neither by any other visible sign could these things so conveniently have been shadowed out as by the washing of water because both of its owne nature it hath a principal fitness to cleanse and amongst all Nations it is ea●…ie to be had at hand and then also it had been before sanctified under the Old Testament for such uses Use 1. Of Information how greatly we ought to esteem our Baptisme wherein so great benefits or blessings spiritual were first sealed unto us Use 2. Of Direction that upon occasion of seeing Baptisme administred at any time we both with all devo●…t meditation on our own Baptism lift up our mindes unto the lively apprehensions of these blessings of our adoption ●…ustification sanctification namely and withall think upon what is due to God from us for so great benefits and what we engaged in and by our baptisme to perform in all manner of holy thankfull and Christian obedience Doct. 3. Those saving blessings which are signified in Baptism do not properly depend on the washing of water as to their reall efficacies but on the operation of the Father Son and holy Spirit This is hence gathered because by these words of the institution our hearts as it were are commanded to be lifted up that we may look for all the grace and efficacy of this Sacrament out of heaven from Father Son and holy Ghost Reas. 1. Because the Sacramental signs are no causes of grace neither principal nor instrumental by any virtue or efficacy that is either inherent or adherent in themselves that is are no physical causes as the phrase is us'd receiv'd in the Schools about this point but onely moral and in a moral way put forth any vertue they have to wit in as much as they seal onely that which God the Father in the Son and by the Spirit worketh in us Reas. 2. Because our ●…ustification and adoption which consists in the remission of ●…ins and accepting of us into favour are moral effects of their own nature and not physical and therefore cannot by any meanes be otherwayes produced than morally Reas. 3. Because it can no way be conceived how these external elements of the Sacraments should physically work upon the soul to the production of spiritual effects seeing themselves are but corporal and therefore can onely work physically upon th●… body Indeed in holy Scriptures such spiritual effects use to be attributed unto such signes as well in the Old as in the New Testament but this is onely in the moral sense aforesaid and by trope or borrowed speech because of the union or relation of likeness that is between signes and things signified by them from which union or relation of likeness grounded partly on the analogy between the things themselves and partly but chiefly on the divine institution there ariseth in common manner of speaking almost such a mutual interchangeable giving or communicating of the attributes or qualities of each of these to the other as is found in Christ between his human divine nature because of the hypostatical or personal union between them Though otherwayes there be no other union here but of likeness and proportion between the signe and things signified or sealed when the signes are rightly used which performance or making present of the graces signified depend wholly on the truth of God's institution and promise and that in a moral way as was said before not properly physical though this Sacramental union was devised by School Divines or mistaken and imagined physical for maintaining their corporal presence of Christ's body in propriety of words or their monster of Transubstantiation And all forsooth because the things that are proper to the signes are sometimes attributed to the things signified and countrarily the properties of the things signified are attributed to the signes The true reasons and manner whereof we have sufficiently explained Use 1. Of Refutation against Papists who in som●… sort turn the Sacraments into Idols while not by ●…rope or borrowed speech which is usual as we have declared but in propriety of words they give unto the the signes and external elements such things as are proper unto God Use 2. Of Direction that in the use of the ●…acraments we lift up alwayes our hearts and by faith and devout desires look for and seek from God such divine blessings as are represented by the outward signes Doct. 4. All and onely such are to be baptized as are the Disciples or Schollars of Christ that is that are of his family before and as it were his housholders and th●…refore fit to be solemnly declared and enrolled for ●…uch This is hence gathered because the Apostles are here commanded first to gather Disciples or Schollars unto Christ out of all Nations and then to baptize them after they were made such Reas 1. Because the Saraments are appendices of the Word so that they are often understood under it in Scriptures to wit when the Gospell and word of the Kingdome are onely mentioned because they are appendants and connexed to it
rest that belong to the real practice of religion Use 2. Of Direction that we lean not to our own or to other mens wisdome and providence but to apply our selves alwayes to lay hold on the providence of God that we may rely on it in all things Doct. 2. The providence of God includes in it self not onely the intention but also the attainment of its end For all things are no less certainly for him than they are either by him or from him Reas. 1. Because divine providence is most perfect and therefore alwayes attains what it intends properly For that is the imperfection of mans providence that it often attains not its end but is hindered by some other causes Reas. 2. Because if God attained not his purposed end then would he suffer some change in his blessedness and happiness of condition because it is a more blessed thing to have all ones desires and purposes fulfilled than to fall beside some of them Reas. 3. Because thence also would follow diminution of Gods eternal knowledge For no wise man proposes that to himself to be attained which from the beginning he knows that he shall never attain Use 1. Is of Refutation against such that turn divine providence into a humane providence Use 2. Of Consolation to all believers to whom God hath promised that he will provide and see for them so as all things at last shall turn to their good and eternal happiness Doct. 2. This providence of God extends it self to all things This is clear in the Text. Reas. 1. It is as much extended to all in the world as a good and wise master of a family hath a care as much as in him lieth of all things that are done in his house Reas. 2. It is extended to every thing that was created of God For in the same manner providence follows upon creation as the Apostle teacheth that provision doth upon procreation and seeing to children and others in the family 1 Tim. 5. 8. For God in some sort is called the Father of all things that he created Reas. 3. He hath a care of all noble and great things because the direction of such makes evidently for his glory Reas. 4. He cares also for the least and vilest things as the haires of our head and the like Mat. 10. 29. Because his wisdome being infinite these cannot escape it As from the greatness of them his being is not helped so from the littleness of them he is not hindered to care for them Oftentimes also from least things very great things depend and from vile or base things a noble change followeth either for the better or for the worse Reas 5 This providence is extended not onely to things that of necessity are or must be but to contingents also or things voluntary because contingents they are mutable and subject to many casualties coming from the course of many causes do most of all require the government of a superior power that they may be rightly ordered left all should run into confusion And voluntary things are of a most noble operation and of a higher nature than any natural things are and therefore most of all do depend upon Gods care for them and over them And these things are so cared for of God that their nature is not thereby overthrown but established and governed For it is rightly said of divine providence that though it attains to its end with strength yet even in doing so it disposeth all things sweetly that is according to the nature of all and each that he himself put into them in the Creation and yet conserves and governs by his providence For there is nothing in Gods providence that brings a necessity upon any thing properly so called but onely a certainty which no wayes withstand the nature of contingency and liberty Reas. 6. This providence is extended not onely to things good but also to evill nor yet onely to evills of punishment but also to evils of sin because though evill was not created of God and in this respect is not properly and in it self the subject of divine providence yet because it comes from the creature of God and of its owne nature disorders the work of God and is contrary to the order that God appointed and therefore ought of necessity to be ordered and limited of God otherwise the most noble work of God if he had no care to the contrary would run into great disorder and because there is in sins the greatest confusion and disorder therefore it is mo●…t of all required here that God exercise the power of his providence in regard of whom onely evill hath some kinde of good in it to wit as far as it is ordered by him and turned to good Use 1. Is of Exhortation that we may alwayes have our affiance firm and immovable and fixed on God because If God be for us who can be against us seeing all things are directed and governed of God Use 2. Is of Admonition that we depend upon no creature but upon God alone because all things are governed of God And then that we learn to reverence and fear God in all things seeing his providence that is to be reverenced and feared hath a hand in all things The eleventh Lords day Act. 4. 12. Neither is there salvation in any other For there is no other name under heaven given amongst men whereby we must be saved IN these words is contained the reason of the answer that Peter gave to the multitude being come together to the question they made about the good work done to the impotent man verse 9. The question was How he was healed and delivered from his sickness The answer was that he was made whole by the name of Jesus Christ that is by that divine authority and power whereof Jesus Christ was the author The reason of this answer and deed is taken from the nature and power of Jesus Christ which is shown declared in this verse from its effect to wit that it brings salvation as well spiritual as corporal to men And this effect is so affirmed of this cause that is of Christ that it is denied of all others So that there are two assertions contained in these words whereof the first is that Jesus Christ offereth salvation to men The second that no other can bring salvation The reason of both assertions is given because the name that is the power and authority of saving signified by the name Iesus is given to him and to none else For by name in this place as it is referred to Christ Christ himself is understood as signified by that name of Jesus or Saviour as by the name of God God himself is oft thus understood in Scripture but withall the power and authority of Christ to save is made known in more illustrious persons titles and solemn stiles whereby is declared their quality and what they import For the signification of the name Iesus is here
taught Lastly regard is had to our Faith which properly lookes at the name of Jesus Christ and of God the Father that is Christ and God the Father as they are proposed to us and as it were named in the Gospell Doct. 1. Iesus Christ saveth us from all our sins This is it that is signified by the appellation of his name and is proper to the name containing in it self the whole summe of our Redemption and its application The end also of his incarnation humiliation and exaltation Now Christ saves us by his satisfaction merit and efficacy By satisfaction because he removes the guilt of sin and wrath of God that were the hinderances of our safety and could not be removed by us By his merit because he procures to us the favour and right to all those blessings that use to be communicated to the sonnes of God By his efficacy because by his Spirit he effects indeed works all in us that belongs to our salvation In this sort therefore doth he save us from all our sins as to the guilt to the punishment and to the andduration to the defilement Reas. 1. Because he was given of God his Father for this end that is he was for that end eternally predestinated from the beginning promised in the fulness of time exhibited for this end I say as himself professeth that he might save sinners in which speech the Apostle Paul glorieth much as in a 〈◊〉 1 Tim. ●… 5. Reas. 2. Because he was fit every way to produce this effect that is to procure this salvation which followes most certainly even from this that he was for this end sent of God For God sends none to performe any duty whom he instructs not and makes fit for the accomplishment of it Hither belongs also all that before was said of the divine and humane nature of Christ and what hereafter shall be said of the spirit resting upon him without measure and the like Reas. 3. Because willingly and of his pleasure he gave himself to the performance of all these things that were necessary for our salvation Use 1. Is of Direction that we may yeeld up and give over our selves wholly to Christ to be saved Use 2. That with all Admiration of the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ we may live to him that is as being saved by him we may yeeld him all thankfulness and strive to do him all honour and homage to his glory Doct. 2. Beside Iesus Christ there is no Saviour This is expresly enough in the Text Neither is there salvation in any other c. There are no other Saviours neither in whole nor in part nor joint with him There are no other causes of our salvation neither subordinate nor ministrating properly so called Not total Reas. 1. Because none is like or equall to Christ that could do the same that Christ did for our salvation For he is the onely begotten Son of the Father the onely Imm●…nue God with us God-man in one person the onely Medrator between God and man 1 Tim. 2. 5. Reas. 2. Because God gave and proposed none oother Saviour to us as it is in the Text. Reas. 3. Because if there were any other Saviour then such exclusive assertions could have no place as every where occur in Scripture Whosoever believeth not in Christ he shall dy The wrath of God shall abide upon him Without him we can do nothing and the like Nor yet Mediators in part Reas. 1. Because Christ perfectly saveth those that believe in him so that they need not in any sort to seek salvation in any other Heb. 7. 25. Reas. 2. Because our salvation cannot be so divided into parts that part from one and part may be sought from another for so it might come to pass that one might be partly saved and partly damned Neither yet subordinate and ministring causes Because properly he saves us by himself Heb. 1. 3. Now the Saviours that were typical and the Ministers of the Word who now also are said to save many together with the Word and Sacraments which save also all these are onely said to save because they are the adjuncts and instruments of this onely Saviour serving him in the application of salvation before purchased by himself not that they are causes together with him of his salvation and have in themselves power and vertue of saving any if we speak properly Use 1. Of Refutation against Papists who many wayes joyn other Saviours to Christ as 1. While they thrust Angells and blessed spirits upon us for Saviours to be religiously invocated 2. While they teach men to place their trust and hope in satisfactions of men and pardons or indulgences of Roman Bishops 3. While they will be saved by themselves by merit of their own workes and place in them some faith and confidence Use 2. Of Exbortation that in every great and lesse●… part of our salvation we not onely fly to Christ but depend also purely onely and wholly on him saying with the Psalmist Whom have I in heaven but thee and I delight in none on earth beside thee Psal. 73. 25. Doct. 3. All that is made known to us in Scriptures concerning our Lord Iesus Christ to be done ought most of all to be done by us as bringing salvation to our souls For in this sense it is said in the Text not simply that Iesus saves us but that the name of Jesus Christ doth it that is Jesus Christ as he is proposed to us in Scriptures to be apprehended by Faith Reas. 1. Because such is the nature of our Faith as it differs from sight which we are to have in the life to come that it is not carried simply and absolutely to Christ but onely as he is proposed to us in Gods Promises Reas. 2. Because in the word of God nothing is taught of Christ which doth not directly make for our Faith and for advancing and confirming of oursalvation Ioh. 20. 31. Reas. 3. Because that charity and thankfulnesse that we owe to Christ requires this that we make high esteem of all things that belong to him seeing otherwayes we are not worthy of him Use 1. Is of Reproof against the slowness and sluggishness of our mindes who can hear and read many things concerning Christ without any affection or lifting up of our hearts to him Use 2. Is of Direction that we may get unto our selves that knowledge of the name of Christ that may be sufficient to us in all our necessities and that we put this in practise and use it when we are pressed either with our sins or our inward corruptions or the Devills tentations or the worlds allurements or with afflictions or when we are in the midst or danger of death For thus in the name of Christ we have a Magazine or rich Well from which at all times or any occasion we may draw or take something of salvation according to that of the Prophet Isa. 12. 3. When ye have drawn
rule of our life and as of such a rule as hath no defect but is both perfect in it self and requires all perfection in us Use 2. Of Admoni●…ion that with all reverence we give heed unto this Law and beware of all neglect and contempt of it as we would shun death Doct. 2. The Moral Law is divided into diverse words or precepts It is gathered from this in that God is said to have spoken all these words They are called words because they are short and as it were spoken summarily or in one word The chief division of them is into two Tables the next into ten Precepts or Commands Reas. 1. That we might the more easily understand the will of God by parts delivered which wholly together and at once declared as it were in heaps we could not so well understand For the parts in a distribution or division make much for the declaration and illustration of any whole Reas. 2. That by this meanes our memory may be helped because naturally our memory is strengthened from the order of the parts amongst themselves Reas. 3. That in every part and act of our conversation we may have light of singular direction from some part of this Law Use Of Admonition that we neglect nor contemne no word of this Law because they are all parts of one and the same Law and have the same sanction of authority so that who so stumbles against any one is guilty of them all Iam. 2. 10. Doct. 3. Whatsoever is commanded in any part of the Law we are bound for may causes to perform the same to God This is gathered from that confirmation of the Law I am Iehovah c. Reas. 1. Because God commands us nothing he may not with very good right require from us as well by reason of his absolute power and dominion as of our dependance on him by which we require to be supplied and upheld by him in all things Reas. 2. Because he requires nothing from us the observance whereof he did not deserve at 〈◊〉 hands before as well by spiritual benefits and blessings as temporal and bodily in regard whereof out of thankfulness we owe him all obedience as is plain in the Text I brought thee out of the Land c. Reas. 3. Because God is ready to reward our obedience most abundantly in every point Use Of Direction that by often meditation of the manifold obligations whereby we are bound to performe our obedience to God we may more and more stir up our mindes to a care of observing him in all things Doct. 4. Every command of the Law requires the whole obedience of the whole man That is as well inward as outward of the heart as of the mouth and hand or worke Thou shalt have no other c. Make not unto ●…hy self c. Are formes of speaking whereby formally such an universal obedience is required Reas. 1. Because God the giver of this Law ought to be glorified with obedience of the whole man as well of soule as of body and of both these parts of man Reas. 2. Because this is the excellent perfection of the Law of God whereby it goes beyond all humane Lawes in that it subjects unto it self the heart and the reines and the most inward retirement of of men as God himself alone who is the author of this Law knowes what is in man Reas. 3. Because this Law is the rule of spiritual life and so ought to peirce even to our spirits themselves Use 1. Of Information that for the right understanding of this Law we look not onely to such things or think that they onely are contained under the Law as in express words are there contained but all such things also as belongs to such an head of obedience whether they be outward or inward For in every command as is certain by the summe of entire and whole obedience the words are to be taken not according to the bare letter but in a modification of diverse tropes or borrowed sorts of speaking as agree to the perfection of such a Law of nature The trope of Synecdoche that puts the special for the general to be understood by it is here frequent as when abstinence from some one vice by name is put for the whole obedience whereby we not onely abstain from all faults of that kind but also are bound to the performance of the contrary affirmative good and when some action is put for all of its kind and of affinity of nature with it The trope also of Me●…onymie is every where in these commands whereby all the adjuncts are understood under the name of their objects the effects in their causes and contrarily with which is complicated the trope of Metaphor some way so as all the decalogue is Metaleptick or to be understood by Transsumption And these rules must of necessity be understood in the explication of every precept as our Saviour's exposition of them and other Scriptures make clear Use 2. Of Admonition that we rest not nor please our selves in obedience of any sort done to the Law but that we may aspire to the entire and perfect observance of it and ever acknowledge just matter of our humbling in this that we are so farre from that perfection that it requires Doct. 5. The first and greatest command is that which containes our duty to God Hence is it that it is both put in the first place and hath also the expresse testimony of Christ Mat. 22. 28. Reas. 1. Because God himself being the object of this duty from him a sort of noblenesse and dignity is derived unto the duty it self Reas. 2. Because more and greater things are contained in our duty to God than either can or may be used in duties to man as is clear by that form With ●…he whole minde and the whole heart c. Reas. 3. Because this duty is the foundation and principle of all others in as much as in God and for God onely we ought to perform all other duties and so the duties of the second Table are thus virtually contained in the first Commandment Use Is of Direction that our first and chief care may be taken up in those duties that belong to God Doct. 6. The principall duty to God is that we have him onely for our God And to have God for our God is in general to give God that honour which is due unto his excellent Majesty And to this are required 1. That we seek the true knowledge of him with all care as he hath revealed himself in his word because we cannot honour him rightly whose nature and will we are ignorant of Iohn 4. 12. Rom. 10 14. 2. That from a most humble reverence we subject our selves unto him because the honour that we give to God as to our God is the honour of a Creature towards its Creator of a Son towards his Father of a Servant towards his Master and that such a Master as hath power
of life and death over us not of the body onely but of the soul or that which is eternal 3. That we believe all and rest in them by true faith which he witnesseth and proposeth unto us because otherwayes we cannot give him the glory of his omnis●…ience truth c. 4. That with certain hope we look for all that he hath promised because also we cannot give him the honour of the truth of his promises unless with belief of them we be so affected with them as to desire and hope for the accomplishment of them 5. That with greatest love we cleave to him as the chief good because as the quidditative notion of God doth its self denotate the Fountaine and Author and so the possessor of all highest and most perfect goodnesse so the honour due to God contains in it that affection that is raised up by the meditation and apprehension of the chief good which is pure and perfect love 6. That we expresse all these duties and exercise them by a devout hearing of his Word and calling upon his name with the like exercise of divine worship because we can neither powerfully be affected about the honour of God without such operations wherein such affections are put forth neither is the honour we owe to God contained within the bounds of individual disposition or affection Nor lastly can a lively affection of honouring God be cherished or kept in our minds without such means whereby it is as well begotten in us as preserved and improved Use 1. Is of Reproof against such as think they have God for their God and keep this command well enough if they deny not God with their mouths though they never rouse up themselves to give God this honour before spoken of Of which sort of men are all such as 1. deny not themselves that they may be wholy subject to God and his will 2. All such as rest in their ignorance 3. Such as endeavour not to build up themselves in true Faith Hope and Love 4. Such as contemn or neglect the exercise of Piety publick or private of all these it may truly be affirmed that while they endeavour not thus to give God his due honour they have him not really for their God Use Is of Exhortation that by such considerations we stir up our selves to a greater care of Piety unlesse we would be like such as are without God in this world and so can look for no other than to be separated from God in the world to come Doct. 7. Who so giveth this honour or any part of it to any other than God they set up a false God to themselves and so are Idolaters It is gathered from this Ye shall have no other God That is give not this honour to another that is not true God by nature or essence For against this cōmand men sin three manner of ways 1. If we give not this honour to God 2 If we give it to another that is not God 3. If we fight or dispute against God or this honour of his Who so sin against God in the first way they are prophane in the second they are Idolaters in the third they are enemies to God Use 1. Is of Refutation against Papists who give a great part of this honour to creatures Use 2. Of condemnation against such as have their minds so fastned to worldly things that it may be truly said of them that they have their affiance hope and love chiefly placed in them concerning whom the Apostle warns us that they have their belly for their god and their substance riches and the like The thirty fifth Lords dayes Exod. 20. 4 5 6. Verse 4. Thou shalt not make to thee any graven image or the likenesse of any thing that is in heaven above or in the earth beneath or that is in the water under the earth 5 Thou shalt not bow down thy self to them nor worship them nor serve them for I the Lord am a jealous God visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generation of them that hate me 6 And shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love me and keep my commandments VVE have here the second Command and the sanctification of it It concerns the means of worshipping God It is expressed by Negation and Distribution of means and description of the use that is wont to be exercised about such means The Distribution is taken from the places of the means Heaven Earth Waters The Description is from the Adjunct of Adoration or bowing down to them The Sanction consists in a threatning and promise the nature and ratifying power whereof is expounded from the nature of God I am Iehovah thy strong God This command is distinguished from the former in that there essential and natural worship of God was commanded but here accidental and of free institution And this instituted worship as to the Negative par●… is declared Synecdochically by an image because by the abuse of images this worship of God useth most to be violated Doct. 1. In such way and by such means God is onely to be worshipped as he hath commanded himself to be worshipped by his word This is gathered from this Precept in that by image is to be condemned all will worship brought in by men so that no other is approved but that which himself hath prescribed This Doctrine seems also to be clear in these words Thou shalt not make unto thy self that is at thine own pleasure and as thou likest best thou shalt bring no worship to God For although this phrase hath sometimes the sense thou shalt not make any thing so as to have it for thy self alone yet both the short and comprehensive manner of speech in the Decalogue and the matter it self that is here handled perswade us that it should be here taken in the former sense This Doctrine is expressed Exod. 23. 33. Deut. 12. last verse Reas. 1. Because God alone knows what is acceptable to him and sutable to his nature and will Reas. 2. Because the whole blessing and fruit of our worship that we owe to God depends on him and it is not for us to prescribe to God by what means he should work on us or we blesse him Reas. 3. Because worship not commanded hath not the nature of obedience in it But it is Gods will and it belongs to his honour that by obeying we worship him and by worshipping we obey him Reas. 4. Because such is the vanity and futility of mens imaginations in things divine that if it had been left to us to choose unto our selves the means of divine worship it would have been turned all into traditions and vain observations as experience witnesseth that the Devill by this way hath led away men into empty superstitio●…s almost through all the world Use 1. Is of Refutation against Papists who have defiled all parts of Divine-worship with their Will-worship traditions of mens devising and