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

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calleth them Iohn 8. 44. he is the Seed of the woman to bruise and tread downe their head in perpetuall enmitie and defiance with them not a friend to dye and suffer for them being that wherein he doth so much l Rom. 5. 8. commend his loue Christ indeed gaue an infinite merit to all his Actions to the end whereunto he purposed them and suffered in waight and measure a proportionable punishment for the Redemption of all Gods people But the Scripture speaketh euidently that m Gal. 2. 21. Christ dyed not he suffered nothing in vaine nor more then was of necessity for the sauing of his Church And when Prayers and Intercession which hee offered not for all are one part of his Priesthood and consequently of that sufficiencie which it was requisite hee should performe to God-ward for vs it is manifest that in the Ordinance and Decree of God his death without the same had not beene thorowly sufficient for the sauing of the Elect themselues much lesse of all the World And why should we imagine a halfe sufficiencie wrought for them in his death and sufferings when the other part of his Prayers and Intercession without which there is no complete nor perfect sufficiency at all cannot be drawne vnto them No better is the Dreame of vniuersall Grace in Christ offered vnto all and that for the vnbeliefe which God fore-saw would be in some hee hath decreed to reiect them which beside the Word of God common sense and experience doth controll since it is plaine and stands prooued before at large that all men are not called no not without an outward call Sixtly The end of all is the setting forth of his Glorie to set forth in them the prayse of his Mercie specially in Election to shew the riches of his Mercie in Reprobation the seueritie of his Iustice as the Wiseman saith n Pro. 16. 4. God hath made all for himselfe that is for his Glorie sake euen the wicked vnto the day of euill The end therefore of these Decrees is not simply the sauing of the one and the destroying of the other but a farther and a farre more excellent and precious end to manifest the Glorie of God in them both His Wisedome Power Truth Lenitie Patience Long sufferance Hatred of sinne loue of Righteousnesse and other Vertues as hath appeared before out of the ninth to the Romanes But especially his Mercie and Iustice heere shine foorth and carrie away the prayse His wonderfull and seuere Iustice in punishing transgression and inflicting wrath which end the Apostle teacheth Rom. 9. 22. What if God willing to shew wrath c The riches of his Mercie and Goodnesse in helping out of miserie in and of and by for himselfe poore silly and wretched man whom otherwise saluation it selfe had not beene able for to saue This end the Apostle there teacheth plainely That o Rom. 9. 23. he might make knowne the riches of his Glorie vpon the vessels of mercie which he hath before prepared vnto glorie And Ephes 1. 5 6. He that predestinated vs to be his adopted sonnes through Iesus Christ to the praise of the glorie of his grace That so no flesh p 1. Cor. 1. 29. might reioyce before him but euerie q Phil. 2. 11. tongue might confesse that Iesus Christ is the Lord to the praise of God the Father To returne to the Couenant mediated by Christ Because This Couenant is called the Couenant of Grace the same commeth from the onely mercie and fauour of God in his Sonne it is called the Couenant of Grace Here therefore is another Couenant that God hath made with man ouer beside the Couenant of Works which he made before A Couenant of another and a quite differing nature for First it is grounded vpon the free mercie of God in Christ otherwise it is in the Couenant of Works where Christ or the Grace of God in Christ was no part at all of the Couenant for there needed then no Mediator because in the beginning God and man were not at oddes Secondly the conditions of these two Couenants differ the Law or Couenant of Workes offereth saluation vnder condition of perfect obedience The Gospell or Couenant of Grace vnder the condition of faith that is to say if we beleeue in Christ who hath done it for vs. Of both these Couenants the Couenant of Workes and the Couenant of Grace Ieremie r Ier. 31. 31. speaketh in his one and thirtieth Chapter and Paul to the ſ Gal. 4. 24. Galatians sheweth how they were shadowed by two women as by two types that is to say by Hagar the bond and Sara the free-woman for these women saith hee are the two Couenants You may see further touching them both t Phil. 3 9. That I might be found in him that is not hauing mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through Christ Phil. 3. u Rom. 9. 30 31 32. What shal we say then that the Gentiles which followed not righteousnesse haue attained vnto righteousnesse euen the righteousnesse which is of faith Put Israel which followed the Law of righteousnes could not attain vnto the Law of Righteousnesse Wherefore because they sought it not by faith but as it were by the workes of the Law Rom. 9. x Rom. 10. 3 ● 5 6 7. For they beeing ignorant of the righteousnesse of God and going about to establish thei owne righteousnesse haue not submitted themselues to the righteousnesse of God for Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse to euerie one that beleeueth for Moses thus describeth the righteousnesse which is of the Law that the man which doth these thinks shall liue thereby But the righteousnesse which is of faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart Who shall ascend into Heauen That is to bring Christ from aboue Or Who shall goe downe into the deepe That is to bring vp Christ from the dead Rom. 10. y Gal. 3. 11 12. That no man is iustified by the Law in the sight of God it is euident for the iust shall liue by faith Now the Law is not of faith but the man that doth these things shall liue by them Gal. 3. And these two being the onely meanes whereby true happinesse may bee attained are so contrarie one vnto another that where the one is the other cannot bee neyther can saluation come in part by the one and in part by the other Whereupon the Apostle vseth to dispute that we are iustified by workes onely or by faith alone This is the summe of his whole Argument in the three first Chapters of the Epistle to the Romans Eyther we are iustified by Workes or by Faith But not by workes neyther of the Law of Nature nor of the morall Law neyther Gentile which is without the Law written nor Iew which hath it
with hands euerlasting in the Heauens k 1. Ioh. 3. 4. We know that wee are translated from death vnto life because we loue the brethren l Matth. 9. 2. Sonne be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee m 1. Tim. 1. 15. Christ Iesus came into the world to saue sinners of whom I am chiefe As if he should say One and a speciall one Giuing to vnderstand that he himselfe was one of those whom Christ came into the world to saue Lastly This is proued by both the Sacraments the seales of the Couenant of grace which are giuen and offered to euery particular man Therefore the n Eph. 3 17. Apostle assigneth it as a fruit of faith that thereby Christ dwelleth in our hearts which without a particular application cannot be From this part Faith is termed a speciall confidence o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 affiance or trust for the nature of Faith is chiefly seene in it when the will and heart is not so much in expectation and hope as it doth in present apprehend some good and dependeth thereupon and reioyceth as if it had it which affiance is of the nature of Faith both deriued from one p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8. 38. Phil. 1. 6. 2. Cor. 5. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word that signifieth to perswade Another kind of confidence there is which is but a consequence and a fruit of faith whereof we shal speake hereafter Touching the subiect or persons to whom it is appropriate Faith is the proper and peculiar gift of Gods Elect which onely differenceth them from the rest of the World for all other graces be they neuer so bright or shining are common with the Reprobate but faith with the fruits thereof is proper to the godly Wherevpon Tit. 1. 1. it is called The faith of Gods Elect for onely they and of them all and euerie one are in their time by vertue of Gods Couenant brought to beleeue Ioh. 6. 37. Euerie one that the Father giueth mee commeth vnto mee Else in what better case are wee now then when the couenant of Workes did hold vs seeing it is as impossible of our selues and by our own strength to repent and belieue the Gospel which is the condition of the Couenant of Grace as it was to fulfill the Law Wherefore we must vnderstand that God to speake properly doth not require the same as a mutuall res●ipulation of our part as it was in the former Couenant where nothing is imposed which mans nature could not weild But here it is rather a declaration of his pleasure what he would haue vs doe and whereunto he will enable vs not a condition to endanger the Couenant but an assurance that he will giue vs strength to keepe it So as the whole Couenant properly and in truth riseth of his part and lyeth vpon him Like his other Couenant q Ier. 31. 35 36. brought to confirme this with the Sun and Moone and Starres whom otherwise vnable of themselues he maketh to runne their course But howsoeuer r Ier. 32. 39. Ezech. 36. 26 27. all come from his onely grace and vertue yet to vs that are not stockes and stones but endued with a reasonable 2. Cor. 5. 17 18. soule vnderstanding will and other faculties this Couenant is wont to bee expressed sometimes by words ſ Rom. 10. 9. Rom. 8 13. conditionall sometimes in t Ezech. 18. 31. commanding wise that the greatnesse of the perill and the difficultie of the precept might make vs to bestirre our selues to vse with care and conscience the meanes that he appointeth for the attayning of that precious gift and to worke together with God when we are once wrought vpon by his Spirit And herein lieth one other maine difference between the Law and the Gospel or the couenant of Works and this couenant of Grace The Law onely commandeth obedience but giueth no power to obey and therefore is called u 2. Cor. 3. 3 6 8 9. The dead Letter written with Inke and in Tables of Stone readie indeed to be read and seene but hauing no life in it to change the heart which remayneth as stonie as before The Gospel not onely commandeth but giueth faith and newnesse of life and is therefore said to be written in our hearts and called The ministration of the Spirit because it giueth the Spirit of Christ and righteousnesse through him The Law therefore pronouncing nothing but Iudgement and condemnation against vs as that which commandeth things impossible by reason of our weakenesse terrifieth and amazeth the conscience In which respect it is called x 2. Cor. 3. 7 9. The ministerie of death and condemnation Contrariwise the Gospel bringing glad tidings of peace and reconciliation quieteth appeaseth the conscience Rom. 5. 1. Being iustified by faith wee haue peace with God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Both parts of this difference are found Rom. 10. 5 6 7 8. For MOSES thus describeth the righteousnesse which is of the Law that the man which doth these things shall liue thereby But the righteousnesse which is of faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart Who shall ascend into heauen That is to bring Christ from aboue Or Who shall descend into the deepe That is to bring Christ againe from the dead But what saith it The Word is neere thee euen in thy mouth and in thine heart This is the Word of Faith which wee preach But if God bestow faith vpon all and euery of his Elect what shall wee then say of Infants that dye in the Mothers Wombe or assoone as they are borne who cannot as it seemeth properly bee said to haue faith and yet neuerthelesse we cannot deny but the x Mat. 19. 14. Kingdome of God doth appertayne vnto them If it bee cleere that Infants haue no faith then wee must needes say the Spirit of God in some other vnspeakeable manner vniteth them vnto Christ But yeelding all due respect to other mens opinions I should thinke that were rather a quaere then a ruled case for First As they haue knowledge and other faculties of the minde without which no reasonable soule consisteth so I doe not see but they may haue supernaturall Grace some seedes of the habit of faith for the apprehending of Christ that are of the nature of faith and faith it selfe in a kind which how small soeuer sufficeth to saluation doth the weaknesse of the Organ of the bodie make it impossible for God to worke supernaturally in their soule and to giue to little children whome his purpose is to saue at the least so much illumination of the minde more then is ordinarie for that age as may bee fit to receiue the Grace of Christ Those whom in a moment and at an instant as soone as they are taken vp into Heauen hee filleth with a whole Sea of Knowledge and Vnderstanding of Christ more then all the Prophets and Apostles had
certaine promise or the faith and credit of the Promise-Maker may bee called in question But that hope which the Scripture speaketh of and which here wee deale with respecting celestiall Happinesse and eternall Glorie in Heauen which i Titus 1. 2 3. God that cannot lye hath promised in his Word apprehendeth the same most certainly without all exception and therfore is said k Rom. 5. 5. not to make ashamed being a Noble and a Royall Vertue and of a Diuine Ofspring the Daughter of Faith and Mother of Patience Daughter and inseparable Companion of Faith for what is Faith else but l Heb. 11. 1. the ground-worke or foundation and subsistence of things hoped for Againe it is the Mother of Patience as wee heard euen now out of the Epistle to the Romanes If m Rom. ● 25. wee hope for that we see not wee doe wait for it with patience Therfore the Apostle elegantly termeth it n Heb. 6. 19. The Anchor of our soules to stay vs in the middest of the stormes and troubles of this life til we ariue at the hauē of all our rest Faith and Hope do thus differ Faith imbraceth Christ as present and in him all Happinesse in generall Hope looketh at one certaine Happinesse to come which is the inioying of the glorious presence of God of CHRIST and of the holy Angels in Heauen CHAP. VIII Of Regeneration THE fruit and glorious effect of Faith that The fruit of an effectuall calling is that destroying of the old world that is our sinfull cursed estate by the power of his death and sufferings he maketh is of Christ by Faith apprehended of Gods Elect is this that destroying in them the old World that is our sinfull and cursed estate by the power of his death and sufferings as the Apostle teacheth Gal. 6. 14. and in other places hee maketh of the true Church a new a heauenly World giuing his Sonne vnto them and Righteousnesse Holinesse and life euerlasting in and through him Many points of great waight and singular vse arise from hence seriously to be attended First Here is the reall and royall performance of the Couenant which God that cannot lye not onely offereth vnto all to whose eares the sound of the Word doth come and striketh hands with such as by Faith make it theirs but giueth and performeth the very truth thereof when they are once entred into the societie of the Couenant wherefore it is called o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The exhibiting of the Couenant a putting into possession as it were by liuerie and seisin Ezech. 20. 37. and Paul saith Gal. 3. 23. The promise by the Faith of Iesus Christ is giuen to those that beleeue So wee finde recorded Ier. 31. 34 34. This is the Couenant which I will make with the House of Israel I will put my Law in their minde and write it in their heart and will bee their God and they shall bee my people I will bee fauourable to their iniquities and their sinnes will I remember no more And againe Ezech. 36. 25 26 27. I will powre vpon you cleane waters and yee shall be cleane from your pollutions and from all your abominations will I clense you and I will giue vnto you a new heart and a new Spirit will I put in the midst of you and I will take away the heart of stone out of your flesh and will giue vnto you a hart of flesh and my Spirit will I put in the midst of you and make that yee shall walke in mine Ordinances my Iudgements ye shal obserue doe Secondly This Couenant is exhibited but to a few of the true Church Ier. 31. 33. the House of Israel Gods faithfull people whereas all mankind was partaker of the former Couenant for in Adam all were made righteous Wherefore Faith is the onely meanes and instrument whereby God in this life giueth his Sonne or Christ giueth himselfe vnto vs and is made ours by spirituall Regeneration as the Apostle witnesseth q 1. Ioh. 5. 1. Euerie one that beleeueth that Iesus is that Christ is borne of God And againe r Ioh. 1. 12. As many as receyued him he gaue vnto them this dignitie to become the sonnes of God euen to those that beleeue in his name who are not borne of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God ſ Gal. 3. 26. All yee saith the Apostle to the Galatians are the sonnes of God through faith in Christ Iesus This alone putteth vs in possession of Christ and of all the good things we haue from him for t Eph. 3. 17. he dwelleth in our hearts by faith and there is u Ioh. 6. 35. no way to feed vpon him but by beleeuing in him no way to life but by feeding on him Otherwise wee cannot haue his Spirit which x Gal. 3. 14. wee receiue by faith onely nor y Act. 26. 18. haue our sinnes forgiuen vs or Christs righteousnesse imputed to vs which is euery where called z Rom. 4. 11 13. The righteousnesse of faith a Rom. 9. 13. 10. 6. The righteousnesse by faith b Rom. 3. 22. The righteousnesse of God by faith c Rom. 4. 5 9. Faith imputed for righteousnesse And Faith said to be that whereby we d Abacuc 2. 4. Rom. 1. 17. Gal. 3. 11. Heb. 10. 38. are righteous whereby we e Rom. 3. 26 28. 5. 1. Gal. 2. 16. 3. 8 24. are iustified not for any inherent qualitie that is in Faith more than in Loue Hope or other vertues but because it apprehendeth Christ and maketh him ours who is our onely righteousnesse our hearts cannot else be purified for f Act. 15. 9. that Faith doth alone Else can we not be partakers of the promised bessednesse g Gal. 3. 9. which is giuen to the faithfull onely So wonderfull is the worke of Faith Thirdly Here is the verie life and power of the Kingdome a new of Christ and that wherein his glorie shineth incomparably most of all in that he frameth and fashioneth vs from aboue to be new Creatures of naturall men spirituall heauenly men of carnall h Psal 102. 19. So Eph. 2. 10. a people created againe as the Psalmist speaketh whereby he maketh a new face of things and as it were another world i Esay 65. 17. I make new heauens and a new earth k 2. Cor. 5. 17. If any man be in Christ he is a new creature old things are passed away behold all things are become new The Author to the Hebrewes termeth this excellent condition and estate l Heb. 2. 5. The world to come in opposition to this present world wherof the Apostle saith that m Gal. 1. 4. Christ hath deliuered vs out of this present euill world Wherefore by the world to come is not meant as in our common speech it is
our affections stirred vp to seeke him To this end hee giueth vs his Word and Sacraments confirmeth the same by couenants promises othes and miracles pulleth vs vnto him by chastisements and corrections censures and admonitions To conclude hee spareth nothing that may serue for our good And when all this preuayleth not when none of his disciplines and instructions is able to bow our stony hearts nor to make them fleshle and soft that needes hee must proceede to Iudgement t Abac. 3. 2. yet both in his wrath he remembreth mercy And where mens obstinacie makes that there is no place for mercy hee punisheth as it were vnwillingly and u Lam. 3. 33. against his heart x Ezech. 18. 23 delighting in no mans destruction nor taking pleasure in the death of a This is the holinesse of God and his righteousnesse comming from it Blessednesse is his all-sufficiency of things that make one happy Sinner but rather that hee may returne from his wayes and liue for I speake not yet of that which is peculiar to his Church and chosen Children towardes whom his Loue doth without all comparison infinitely excell but whatsoeuer commeth that way to vs from the fauour of GOD reconciled in his Sonne is to be handled in another place The Blessednesse of God is his all-sufficiency of things that make one happy wanting nothing that is good hauing nothing that is euill for y 1. Iohn 1. 5. he is light and darknesse in him there is none at all And standeth in Kingdome and Power or Glory Kingdome is his soueraignty of commanding whatsoeuer he will It standeth in three z Iohn in the Reuelation Reuel 1. 6. and Peter in his first Epistle 1. Pet. 4 11. and 5. 11. reduceth them to two 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnder which they comprehend Soueraignty and Power the word signifying both and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 glory things which our Sauiour in the conclusion of the Lords Prayer attributeth vnto God to magnifie and set forth his most absolute and perfect blessednesse First Kingdome which is his soueraignty of commanding whatsoeuer he wil a 1. Tim. 6. 15. Power his ablenesse to doe whatsoeuer he commandeth Being the King of Kings and Lord of Lords Secondly Power to doe what hee commands where if there were no more but that he is called Almightie it were sufficient to declare the Infinitenesse of his power but there lacke not also cleere and expresse testimonies As where it is said b Psalme 145. 3. His greatnesse cannot bee sounded that is none can reach the bottome of it And in c Luke 1. 37. LVKE Nothing is impossible with God That also of our Sauiour Christ d Matth. 20. 26. With men this is impossible but with God all things are possible For hee that can worke any Miracle eyther in the height or in the Deepe in Heauen aboue or in the Earth beneath or wheresoeuer else as to conuince Achas infidelitie hee willeth him e Esay 7. 11. which of these wayes hee would to aske a signe how can any thing be impossible vnto him or how is not his power endlesse Therefore it is possible for him he is able to doe infinitely aboue that hee doth or will doe Matthew 3. 9. I say vnto you God is able of these stones to raise vp children to ABRAHAM Marke 14. 36. Abba Father all things are possible with thee But here wee must take heed lest ascribing in words power vnto GOD wee take indeede his true power from him as they doe which in stead of power attribute to him things of weaknesse and infirmitie and in stead of omnipotency things of impotency Such are all those which are contrary to his nature and perfection for f Titus 1. 2. hee cannot lye as the Apostle saith Hee g 2. Tim. 2. 13. cannot deny himselfe h Iam. 1. 13. he cannot be tempted of euill i Ier. 10. 7. IEREMY speaking of his mighty power which maketh all Nations to stoope and doe him reuerence saith that the same resteth in him Whereby he doth not obscurely giue to vnderstand that this is proper vnto God which the k 1. Tim. 6. 15. Apostle more plainly vttereth calling him the onely Potentate Therefore the Psalmist l Psal 89. 14. saith Thine is an Arme with strength Appropriating it to him And m Psal 18. 32. againe Who is Goa but IEHOVAH and there is no Rocke but onely thou And the Lord in n Esay 44. 3. ESAY Is there any God besides me Verily there is no Rocke I know not any Thirdly Glory that comprehendeth all the excellencies Glory comprehendeth all the excellencies of his nature As Wisedome and other graces of the minde of his nature As First Wisedome and all the graces of the minde both knowledge for the sound vnderstanding of things and counsell whereby rightly to iudge of them as the Prophet o Psal 136. 5. saith Iehouah made the Heauens by vnderstanding p Ier. 51. 15. IEREMY also in like manner He established the inhabited World by his Wisedome and by his vnderstanding stretched out the Heauens And q Iob. 28. 25. IOB He sitted the Ayre by waight and ballanced the Water by measure that is hee ordered all his Creatures in weight and measure most wisely And both these hee not onely hath and that in an infinite measure but the same are also proper and peculiar vnto him So it is in the Prouerbes r Prou. 8. 14. Mine is counsell and wisedome is mine And in ſ Iob. 12. 13. IOB With him is wisedome his is counsell and vnderstanding The t Rom. 11. 33. Apostle to the Romanes notably setteth forth the Infinitenesse of them both O the depth of the riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God how vnsearchable are his Iudgements and his wayes past finding out DAVID u Psal 147. 5. also in the Psalmes There is no number or measure of his vnderstanding And when all things past present and to come when the most inward and hidden corners of mens secret affections are knowne vnto him and as it were numbred before him x Heb. 4 13. When there is nothing created which is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and open to his eyes must it not needes follow that this knowledge of God is infinite and as it is infinite so none but he can challenge it For he onely is y Rom. 16. 27. 1. Tim. ● 17. Iude verse 25. wise z 1. Ki● ●8 9. onely knoweth the hearts of the sonnes of men Hee alone hath the honour of fore-knowing things to come whereby as by a most certaine and infallible note hee setteth forth himselfe to be discerned from all false gods Esay 44. 1 2 3. I am the first and the last and besides me there is no God For who as I declareth and vttereth this before or ordereth this vnto mee since I
come aswell as others which hee declareth afore hand vnto his Church As the same y 1. Pet. 1. 16. Apostle saith The fore-witnessing Spirit of Christ declared the things that were to befall vnto him and the glory that was to follow And by this Argument is his God-head manifestly prooued z Esay 42. 22 23 26. Esay 41. where God prouoking all false gods and their worshippers to bring their proofes and to vse their strongest arguments hee saith Let them vtter and declare vnto vs the things that shall fall out The former things what they were declare that we may set our minde vnto them and know the end of them or the things to come declare vnto vs nay saith hee declare but the signes of the things hereafter that wee may know you to be gods At the length hee concludeth There is none that can declare there is none that can fore-tell there is none that can heare your wordes A chiefe man in Sion in whom behold behold these things and to Ierusalem a Publisher of glad tydings I will giue The summe is none can declare things immediately nor at the length to come to passe nor giue any incling or signification of future things but all this glory God taketh to himselfe in Christ yea so infinite is this his Knowledge that euen the secrets of all hearts which God onely discerneth are knowne vnto him for that is it which the Euangestlist Iohn a Iob. 2. 24 25. expresly noteth Hee committed not himselfe into the hands of the Iewes which after a sort beleeued in him because hee knew all men and had no need that any should testifie of man for himselfe knew what was in man In another b Matth. 9. 4. place hee is said to haue seene their thoughts and Reuel 2. 14 to search the hearts and the reines Neyther doth this knowledge rest here but it soundeth the bottomlesse counsels of God his Father vnsearchable of all his Creatures Reuelation 5. The Booke with seuen Seales in the right hand of him that sate vpon the Throne which none in Heauen nor vpon the Earth nor vnder the Earth was able to open nor so much as to looke vpon it this Lyon of the Tribe of Iudah the root of Dauid by his owne Power preuayled to open Hereof it is that in the Prophet c Dan. 8. 13. Daniel wee find him set forth by the name of PALMONI Then I heard saith he a certaine Saint speaking for the Saint said vnto PALMONI the speaker that is to Christ the Interpreter of his Fathers will How long shall this Vision be PALMONI is a compound word and signifieth as much as to haue all hidden and secret things ready told and as wee vse to speake at ones fingers ends most absolutely and perfectly knowne which is the proper Epithete of our Sauiour Christ in whom are hidden all the treasures of Wisedome and Vnderstanding and who is said to bee in the Bosome of the Father yea who is the very Wisdome of God as manifestly appeareth by conference of the two Euangelists Matthew and Luke for that which Christ saith in MATTHEW d Matth. 23. 24 Behold I send among you Prophets and Wise-men and Scribes c. LVKE c Luke 21. 49. hath it Therefore also the Wisedome of God saith I will send among you Prophets and Apostles c. Last of all hee is called Eternall Psalm 93. 2. Thy Throne is established from before then meaning any time whereof a man may say then thou art from euerlasting And that this Psalme is spoken of Christ appeareth in the very first beginning Iehouah raigueth Salomon in his Prouerbs f Prou. 8. 22. doth notably inforce the same IEHOVAH possessed mee in the beginning of his way before his workes before then Before the World was I anoynted before the beginning before the first things of the Earth when yet there were no deepes was I brought forth when there were no Fountaines heauy with water when yet Mountaines were not fastened before the Hils was I brought forth yet he had not made the Earth nor streets no not the beginning nor dusts of the inhabited World When hee fitted the Heauens there was I when he appointed the circuit vpon the face of the Deepe when he fortified the Cloudes aboue when he strengthned the Fountaines of the Deepe when he laid his Decree vpon the Sea that the waters should not passe the commandement of his mouth when hee appointed the foundations of the Earth And hereunto serueth that to the Col●ssi●●s g Col. 1. 15. Begotten before all Creation or before any thing was ●reated and therefore from euerlasting Agreeable whereunto is that whereby he calleth himselfe in the h Reuel 18. Reuelation Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end which was and which is and which is to come And in IOHN i Iohn 8. 5 8. before ABRAHAM was made I am Againe k Iohn 17. 15. Glorifie mee O Father with the glory which I had before the World was with thee That also to the l Heb. 9. 14. Heb. 1. 2. Hebrewes where hee is said to haue offered vp himselfe by his euerlasting Spirit is verie pregnant to prooue his Eternall Deitie And when by him God made all Ages the times and courses of all things must not he the Maker and Beginner of Time be himselfe before all Time But that of all other is most emphaticall where he is called m Esay 9. 5. The Father of Eternity not onely eternall but Eternity it selfe and the Author of it Thirdly being the Sonne and begotten as before appeared hee must needes bee vnderstood to bee of his Fathers Essence For he that begetteth and they that are begotten are all of one nature especially he that hath not the like but the same very Essence and whole God-head in him As he is therefore Consubstantiall so is he coequall with his Father A sonne is inferiour to his father because his father is more excellent then hee in priority of Time in priority of Dignity For his Wisedome and other parts which the sonne by instruction receiueth from him Againe because hee bestoweth freely this benefit vpon his sonne to beget him for fleshly Parents in gender voluntary of their free will and election not by nature These things set aside a sonne who hath not the same but the like nature with his father were equall with him How much more therefore is this true in the Sonne of God who is not of the like but of the selfe-same nature and Essence with his Father and in whom none of the things before alleaged can take place Priority of Times there is none for all are Coeternall nothing vnperfect for what is the God-head but perfection it selfe Neyther doth the heauenly Father like vnto fleshly Parents beget his Sonne voluntarily so as he might haue begotten him or left him vnbegotten or may beget moe but hee begetteth him by nature and therefore him alone
Fourthly Hee sendeth forth the Holy Ghost out of his owne substance and therefore is indeede and truth God if as shall bee prooued anon the Holy Ghost himselfe be God Fiftly The workes which only belong to God Christ doth the same and that in the same manner as hee saith in o John 5. 19. IOHH Whatsoeuer the Father doth the same the Sonne doth likewise And p Iohn 5. 18. againe My Father worketh hitherto and I worke Whereupon truely and rightly the Iewes concluded that hee made himselfe equall with God It were long to goe thorow all but to select the chiefe and principall among all the workes of God none is more neere and inward to the Sacred Maiesty then the Eternall Election which is within himselfe and knowne onely to himselfe and whereof he alone doth keepe the Booke This is attributed vnto Christ Iohn 15. You haue not chosen mee but I haue chosen you that you might bring forth fruit and that your fruit may remaine which properly ment of the dignity and office of Apostle-ship whereunto Christ had chosen them giueth them withall this comfort that as they had this honour to be the Arch-Masons and Master-Builders of the Church which is the House of the liuing God so themselues were liuely stones of that spirituall Building and to haue part in the fruite which by their Ministery they should reach forth for the euerlasting good of many in q 2. Tim. 4. 6. sauing of themselues as well as others without which their ioy had not beene full And aptly doth this follow as the Root and Fountaine of that most Honourable Title to bee his friends which hee had vouchsafed to giue vnto them immediately before But more manifest is that Iohn 13. 18. I speake not of you all I know whom I haue chosen But it behooueth that the Scripture should bee fulfilled He that eateth bread with mee hath lift vp his heele against mee The circumstance of exempting one of the Apostles out of the number of the blessed making his Election the cause of this their difference referring the same to his owne secret knowledge and finally opposing to the Chosen him that should betray him the r Iohn 17. 12. sonne of destruction as afterwards he calleth him who yet in familiaritie of conuersation was a choice and speciall friend eating bread continually at his Table shew plainly that hee speaketh of Election vnto life As other Å¿ Mat. 24. 31. where hee doth when speaking of his second Comming vnto Iudgement hee saith The Sonne of man shall send his Angels with a great sound of a Trumpet Who shall gather together his Elect from the foure winds c. And no maruell though hee call them his Elect for since hee hath power and authority to t Reuel 3. 5. blot mens names out of the Booke of Life it cannot bee chosen but hee must haue interest to write them in for of contraries there is one and the same respect in nature Therefore to shut vp this point and to leaue it without question the Booke of Life in the u Reuel 13. 8. Reuelation is expresly called The Lambes Booke of Life Come to that which is more glorious in the World And first vnto the Creation the proper marke of the true God As the x Psal 124. 8. Psalmist teacheth Our helpe is in the Name of IEHOVAH that hath made both Heauen and Earth And y Ier. 10. 11. IEREMY The gods that made not Heauen and Earth let them perish from the Earth and from vnder the Heauen He it is that wrought with the Father in the creating of all things Iohn 1. 13. All things were made by him and without him was nothing that was made not a iot of any thing So saith Paul to the z Col. 1. 16. Colossians By him were created all things both in Heauen and vpon the Earth things visible and inuisible whether Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers all things were created by him and for him Therefore he is called The a Reuel 3. 14. beginning of the Creation of God or the first and prime cause from whence the Creatures take their beginning being all made and formed by him And notable is that of the 102. Psalme which the Apostle to the Hebrewes b Heb. 1. 10. applyeth vnto Christ Thou Lord in the beginning laydst the foundation of the Earth and the Heauens are the worke of thy hands And By him saith the same c Heb. 1. 2. Apostle God made the Ages that is Time and the course and succession of all things with this glory of Creation is coupled another not inferior of the cherishing and preseruing of the things created So Prou. 8. 30. he saith that he is with God his Father nourishing and gladding them continually Hither belong those Diuine Workes and Miracles manifestly pointing out his God-head He rebuked the Winds and they obeyed him raysed vp the dead opened the eyes of them that were blind cast out Deuils had power to send them into Hell to their fearefull place of torment for d Luke 8. 31. they besought him not to doe it And all this he did not as the Prophets and Apostles but by his owne Soueraigne Power As the Euangelist e Luke 5. 36. noteth that hereupon feare came on all the people maruelling what this might be For euen say they with Authority and Power he commandeth the vncleane spirits and they come out And how must not this Power needes be his owne when hee taketh vpon him to giue it to others The f Matth. 10. 8. Euangelist recording that hee gaue power vnto the twelue Apostles to clense Lepers to rayse the dead to cast out Deuils c. which authority they like faithfull Seruants did so pursue as it might easily appeare they deriued their whole vertue from him alone Hence is that of g Acts 3. 6. PETER In the Name of Christ arise and walke and h Acts 9. 34. AENEAS Iesus Christ doth heale thee I stand not heere to presse those glorious workes whereby his God-head shineth most cleerely in the Church in subduing the proud enemies thereof and generally all the Reprobates hardening their hearts and deliuering them vp vnto their owne damnation For so the i Iohn 12. 39 40. 41. Euangelist when hee had shewed that the Iewes could not beleeue because ESAY had said He hath blinded their eyes and hardened their hearts lest they should see with their eyes and vnderstand with their heart and I should heale them immediately addeth These things said ISAIAH when hee saw his glory and spake of him Contrariwise he bestoweth vpon his Children all good graces Therefore the Apostle continually prayeth for Grace and Peace from him He sendeth the Holy Spirit vnto them The k Iohn 15. 16. Comforter whom I will send And Iohn 20. 22. He breathed vpon them and said Receiue the Holy Ghost He giueth Faith as appeareth by that Prayer
Of the will the Apostle saith It is d Phil. 2. 13. God that worketh to will in you our e Heb. 13. 18. will is in all things to conuerse honestly the flesh f Gal. 4. 27. hindereth from doing the things ye would The contrary whereof is the will of g Ephes 2. 3. the flesh and of our owne thoughts called h 1. Pet. 4. 3. else-where The will of the Gentiles The last thing to be considered in the qualities of the soule are the affections of it to bee good and holy Thou i Deut. 6. 5. shalt loue IEHOVAH thy God with all thy soule The contrary whereof are those dishonourable and foule affections which the Apostle mentioneth Rom. 1. 26. Therefore God gaue them ouer to dishonourable affections Againe k Rom. 7. 5. When we were in the flesh the sinfull affections wrought in our members c. They l Gal. 5. 24. that are Christs haue crucified the flesh with the affections thereof The particular affections which the Scripture aboue the rest doth recommend vnto vs as Bellowes to blow vp and increase spirituall Graces and to carry vs forward to a high degree of Holinesse are these that follow First Loue and liking of that which is good hatred and detestation of that which is euill as the Psalmist ioyneth them together Thou louest m Psal 45. 8. righteousnesse and hatest iniquitie Loue is the habit as it were and perfection of the whole Law both of the first and second Table Thou n Mat. 22. 37 38 39 40. shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy minde This is the first and great Commandement and the second is like it Thou shalt loue thy Neighbour as thy selfe On these two Commandements hang the whole Law and the Prophets And of the second Table Paul saith o Gal. 4 13 14. Serue one another through loue for all the Law meaning the whole second Table is fulfilled in one word in this Thou shalt loue thy Neighbour as thy selfe Againe p Rom. 13. 8 9. He that loueth another fulfilleth the Law for this Thou shalt not commit adulterie Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not stoale Thou shalt not beare false witnesse Thou shalt not couet and if there be any other Commandement it is summed vp in this word euen in this Thou shalt loue thy Neighbour as thy selfe Generally 1. Tim. 1. 5. hee saith the end or perfection of the whole Law is loue c. And Coloss 3. 14. hee calleth loue The bond of perfection because it knitteth and bindeth together all the offices we owe to God or one vnto another So as what dutie soeuer we performe bee it neuer so glittering and shining in the World if it be not done in loue it is nothing at all worth As wee are taught 1. Cor. 13. yea our loue in this behalfe ought to extend it selfe not to our friends onely and them that loue vs againe but vnto all men to our q Mat. 5. 44. enemies and them that hate vs. The contrary hereof is hatred of God our Brethren and of good things Of God because wee see him iust to punish mens offences A fault so monstrous that one would thinke impossible it should fall vpon any Creature to hate and abhorre the Creator but that the Apostle hath noted our nature to be tainted with it Haters r Rom. 1. 30. of God and the ſ Psal 37. 20. 21. 9 c. 81. 16. 139. 21. Enemies or haters of IEHOVAH are oftentimes spoken of in the Psalmes and t 2. Sam. 12. 14. 2. Chron. 19. 2. else-where Of the hatred of our Brethren the Apostle saith He n 1. Ioh. 2. 9. 11 that hateth his Brother is in darknesse And againe He x 1. Ioh. 3. 15. that hateth his Brother is a Man-slayer Bloudie y Prou. 29. 10. men saith SALOMON hate him that is vpright And 1. Kings 22. 9. it is the voyce of wicked Ahab that hee hated the Prophet of the Lord because he neuer spake good vnto him With loue is coupled a liking and allowance of that which is good after the example of God himselfe of whom it is said that be z 1. Chro. 19. 17 delighteth in the things that are right Of this the Wiseman speaketh in the Prouerbs a Prou. 16. 13. Let the lips of the Righteous be acceptable vnto Kings The contrary whereof is an approbation of euill in other though it were so that we our selues did abstaine from it This fault the Apostle noteth to the b Rom. 1. 32. Romanes Who not onely doe so but are fautors and appro●uers of these that die it And Dauid in the Psalmes c Psal 50. 18. When thou seest a Thiefe thou takest pleasure in him The next is hatred and detestation of euill both euill persons and things whereof the Psalmist saith O d Psal ●7 10. yee the louers of IEHOVAH hate the thing that is euill And of himselfe hee professeth I e Psal 26. 5. hate the congregation of euill doers I f Psal 31. 7. hate them that obserue vaine vanities O g Ps 139 21 22. IEHOVAH doe I not hate them that hate thee I hate them with a perfect hatred they are in stead of enemies vnto mee I h Ps 119. 104. hate euery euill way I * Ps 119. 161. hate lyes and abhorre them SALOMON also in his Prouerbs i Pro. 8. 13. ioyneth together the feare of IEHOVAH and the hatred of euil as special parts of the heauenly wisdome wherof he there treateth The contrary whereof is the loue of euill things when our k Psal 141. 4. heart which the Psalmist prayeth to be deliuered from is inclined to them This DAVID l Psal 52. 5 6. vpbraydeth vnto DOEG Thou louest euill rather then good lying rather then to speake Righteousnesse thou louest it wonderfully thou louest all pernicious words O deceitfull tongue In the m Psal 4. 3. fourth Psalme he cryeth out Yee sonnes of men how long will you loue vanitie seeke lyes c And Salomon in his n Prou. 1. 22. Prouerbes How long O yee Fooles will ye loue foolishnesse and Scorners long after scorning A second affection is Cheerefulnesse and ioy in that which is good sorrow and griefe of heart and an holy anger when we see men to doe euill Of cheerefulnesse and ioy in good things Dauid speaketh in the Psalmes I o Psal 119. 14. reioyce in the way of thy Testimonies as being aboue all substance Thy p Vers 110. Testimonies are the ioyes of my heart I reioyce q Vers 110. 4. in thy words as one that findeth a great bootie So is it said 1. Chron. 29. 9. The people were glad offering freely or cheerefully And Verse 17. I with a right heart freely haue offered all those things and thy people also that are heere
present doe I see with cheerfulnes freely offering vnto thee By this argument the r 2. Cor. 9. 7. Apostle exhorting to liberalitie willeth euery one to doe as he purposeth in his heart that is freely and of his owne accord determineth with himselfe For saith hee God loueth a cheerefull giuer And thereupon the Children of God are euery-where called A Å¿ Psal 110. 3. Cant. 6. 9. free-hearted people Whereunto the same Apostle there maketh griefe and necessitie to be contrarie Griefe when wee performe good duties heauily and with grudging not of a franke and readie minde Necessitie when wee doe them indeed but against our will onely because wee must needs doe so to saue our credit and reputation among men whereas otherwise wee would not doe them And so doth Peter also oppose these two 1. Pet. 5. 2. Of the other vertue we haue a notable Example in our Sauiour t Marke 3. 5. Christ who was angry and sorrie withall at the hardnesse of the Iewes hearts The contrarie whereof is vnaduised anger such as the Apostle speaketh of Iam. 1. 20. The wrath of man worketh not the Righteousnesse of God or that which God prescribeth For this Ionas is reproued of God Ionas 4. 9. And Ahab u 1. King 21. 4. taxed that he was discontented and angry because NABOTH would not let him haue his Vineyard The third affection is feare of offending in any thing which Salomon maketh the Badge of Gods Children Blessed x Pro. 28. 14. is the man that feareth alwayes And y 1. Pet. 1. 17. Peter doth exhort vs If yee call him Father which without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans worke passe the time of your dwelling heere in feare The contrary is carnall securitie when a man runneth on in the hardnesse of his heart without Repentance for so Salomen doth there oppose it But he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into euill Thou saith z Rom. 2. 5. PAVL after thine hardnesse and heart that cannot repent heapest to thy selfe wrath against the Day of Wrath. And a Deut. 19. 19. Moses in Deuteronomie Take heed that there be not any among you that when he heareth the words of this curse blesse himselfe in his minde saying Peace shall be vnto me though I walke after the fantasie of mine owne heart So adding a drunken soule to a thirstie one Lastly our whole bodie and all the members of it ought holily to expresse the inward holinesse of our mind soule Ye are b 1. Cor. 6. 20. bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirits which are Gods present c Rom. 12. 1. your bodies a liuing Sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto God Giue your d Rom. 6. 19. members seruants vnto Righteousnesse in Holinesse The vnmarryed e 1. Cor. 7. 34. woman careth for the things of the Lord that she may bee holy both in body and in spirit And the Apostle f Heb. 10. 22. speaketh not onely of the sprinkling of our hearts from an euill conscience but of the washing of the body by the bloud of Christ with cleane water For this cause our Sauiour g Heb. 10. 5. Christ comming into the World saith Sacrifice and Oblation thou wouldest none of but a body thou hast fitted for me wherein to yeeld your absolute and perfect obedience that is better then all Sacrifice The contrary whereof is the dishonouring or defiling of our owne bodies wherof the Apostle speaketh Rom. 1. 24. And the giuing of our Members seruants vnto vncleannesse and to iniquitie to commit iniquitie Rom. 6 19. which is there opposed to the former of giuing themselues vnto Righteousnesse in Holinesse In this part of the Members of our bodie the senses first are to be acquainted with good things especially the sight and hearing Incline h Pro. 4. 20. thine eares vnto my words Blessed i Mat. 13. 16. are your eyes for they see and your eares for they heare The contrarie whereof is the abusing of them as our first k Gen. 3. Parents did Next is the Tongue for by it as the Apostle l Iam. 3. 9. saith blesse we God Of this it is said m Rom. 14. 11. Euery tongue shall giue thankes vnto God that euery n Phil. 2. 11. tongue may confesse that Iesus Christ is Lord vnto the glory of God the Father The contrary whereof is when the mouth speaketh vaine things as it is Psal 144. 8. To the tongue belongeth open profession of God and of all good duties Be readie o 1. Pet. 3. 15. alwayes to make profession to euery one that asketh of you an account of the faith which is in you p Rom. 10. 10. for with the mouth men make confession to saluation Ye q Exod 23. 13. shall make no mention of the names of other gods neither shall they be heard out of thy mouth Their r Psal 16. 4. sorrowes shall be multiplyed that endow another god I will not powre their burnt Offerings of bloud nor take their names in my lips And hither are to be referred all outward markes of this profession as in Gods seruice The calling vpon of his Name Bowing and kneeling Lifting vp of hands eyes c. as the people did Nehem. 8. 16. answering all Amen Amen with the lifting vp of their hands and stooped and bowed downe to IEHOVAH with their face to the ground ward In doing reuerence to Superiours Å¿ Leuit. 9. 32. vncouering our head and rising vp before them c. The contrary whereof is Open profession of wickednesse when a man need not to digge to finde out their sinnes as the Prophet speaketh Ier. 2. 34. they are so plaine and manifest vnto all or as it is in t Ezech. 24. 7. EZECHIEL When they set their sinne vpon the cliffe of the Rocke in the open face and view of the World and do not powre the same vpon the earth to couer it with dust loth it should be seene Such is that Esay 3. 10. The obstinacie of their face testifieth against them and they doe not conceale but vtter their sinne openly shamelesly and obstinately as Sodom whose impudencie of sinning was such and so audacious that the u Ier. 20. 16. Prophet saith of them God heard a cry in the morning and a shooting at noone day And IEREMIE x Ier. 2. 25. When I said Keepe thy foot from being vnshod and thy throte from being athirst thou saidst desperately No for I loue strange gods and them will I follow Againe y Ier. 18. 12. They say desperately We wil go after our own thoughts and euery one do after the fancie of our own wicked heart And hither Their errour which hold it lawfull to bee present at Idolatrous seruice keeping a mans Conscience to himselfe And where such beare themselues bold vpon the example of Naaman the Syrian 2. King 5. 17 18 let
we were made framed to the perfectiō of it yet retayn some notions therof in this our corrupt estate Secondly The Image of this Righteousnesse being in manner quite defaced and done away by the Fall of Adam the same is by the mercifull prouidence of GOD for a more certaine direction of our wayes and to humble vs in seeing how short we come of the performance of it againe renewed and the summe of all compendiously abridged in ten Words Sentences or Commandements written z Exod. 34. 28. by the finger of GOD in two Tables Thirdly The same are expounded and handled more at large in the whole Volume of the Scripture where all this Doctrine is fully and absolutely taught Of both thse Lawes the Law of Nature and the written Law the Apostle speaketh Rom. 2. 14 15. For when the Gentiles which haue not a law doe by nature the things of the Law these hauing not a law are a law vnto themselues as those which declare the worke of the Law written in their heart their conscience bearing record vnto themselues and their thoughts accusing or excusing them c. For the vnderstanding of those ten Commandements and the better to discerne the large spread of Righteousnesse which they contayne take these few Rules that hold in euery one First They are vttered by a figuratiue speech of a part for the whole vnder one and that commonly the greatest comprehending not onely euery particular dutie whatsoeuer may fall into the life of man of the same nature with that which is there commanded or forbidden but the whole manner of performance that it bee with all the powers of ones minde soule and bodie which belonging to euery Commandement is once for all explayned in the definition I gaue of Righteousnesse Secondly Commanding one thing they forbid the contrarie forbidding one thing they command the contrarie Lastly this withall is to be remembred that all the things before spoken of in the definition I gaue Holinesse and Righteousnesse pertayne and haue their place in euery Commandement the corruption of nature and desire being as I thinke forbidden in euery one not alone in the tenth And that for these Reasons First From the nature of God that gaue the Law who being a a Iohn 4. 24. Spirit therfore piercing b Heb. 4. 12 13 into the most secret thoughts and intents of the heart euery Commandement of his not onely the ten Commandements layd together must needes bee c Rom. 7. 14. spirituall to binde the whole strength of nature and all the thoughts and desires which the Scripture is wont to call the spirit of our minde as before was noted Secondly Since it cannot bee denyed but that this is so in the duties of the first Table the same reason and proportion carrieth it to those of the second also Thirdly our Sauiour Christs interpretation of the seuenth Commandement is a sufficient warrant extending it to all kinde of Lust Math. 5. 28. As for the tenth it hath another sense as shall be seene when we come vnto it And that which Paul saith Rom. 7. 7. I had not knowne lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not lust I take vnder reformation of better iudgement to be meant not of the tenth Commandement onely but of the whole puritie that way which the Law of God thorowout requireth and that as well in the duties to God as to our brethren which the Apostle soundly gathereth to be commanded in the Law because the Law is spirituall Neither doth it follow because he saith Except the Law had said Thou shalt not lust that therefore he must needs point out the very words of one Commandement or because he saith many times that Commandement that therefore he meaneth a particular Commandement one of the tenne for the Law may as well be said to say Thou shalt not lust because in the generall doctrine thereof it forbiddeth all kind of lust as in the like case the same Apostle d Ephes 5. 14. writeth that God saith in the Scripture Arise thou that sleepest and Christ shall shine vnto thee Which notwithstanding are not the precize words of any one place of Scripture but the generall summe and doctrine of the Gospell The name also of Commandement comprehending the scope and substance of many Commandements you haue so vsed 1. Iohn 2. 7 8. And albeit Paul Rom. 13. 9. doe aptly truly render the meaning of the tenth Commandement by the same very words which heere he vseth that hindereth not but that in this place it may haue another sence the word seruing indifferently for e So is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taken Luke 22. 15. Matth. 22. 17. and 1. Pet. 1. 12. for a longing and earnest desire coueting or for lusting and the diuersity of the Argument inforcing a diuers interpretation of these two places The Tenne Commandements which summarily conteine the whole doctrine of Righteousnesse whatsoeuer the Law or Prophets speake of our Sauiour Christ in his The doing whereof is tearmed Righteousnesse and hath two parts Pietio and Iustice infinite wisedome hath contriued into two The loue of God and of our brethren When vnto the Lawyer asking him which is the great Commandement in the Law he answereth f Math. 22. 37. Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy might This is the first and great Commandement and the second is like vnto it Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe on these two commandements hang the whole Law and the Prophets PAVL vseth the very termes of Pietie and Iustice Rom. 1. 18. For the wrath of God is manifest from heauen against all impiety and iniustice of men So he saith Tit. 2. 12. that the Grace of God manifested by the Gospell instructeth vs that wee should liue soberly and iustly and godly in this present world Where before Iustice and Piety which are the parts he putteth Sobriety or Soundnesse of minde as the forme that is to hold in both 1. Tim. 1 2. he deuideth it into Piety or Godlines and Honesty Sometimes in stead of Piety you shall finde the terme of Holinesse which is all one g Luke 1. 75. That being deliuered out of the hands of our enemies wee might serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse Put on h Ephes 4. 24. the new man which according to God is created in true righteousnesse and holinesse but i Acts 3. 14. yee haue denyed that holy and lust one HEROD k Marc. 6. 20. did reuerence IOHN knowing he was a iust and a holy man Yee l 1. Thess ● 10. are witnesses and God how holily and iustly and vnblameably wee were conuersant among you that beleeue Hee m Reuel 22. 11. that is iust let him become more iust hee that is holy let him become yet more holy According to this diuision of our Sauiour Christ wee commonly call these two The
our Sauiour saith y Mat. 5. 28. He that looketh vpon a woman to lust after her hath alreadie committed adulterie with her in his heart or with wanton Pictures Lasciuious representations of Loue-matters in Playes and Comedies c. for all which the Rule of the Apostle is generall Abstayne z 1. Thess 5. 21. from euery euill shew Thirdly Our eares to delight to heare honest things The contrarie whereof is when they delight in that which is filthie and vncleane Fourthly Our hands and all our parts to bee instruments of holinesse The contrarie whereof is the reaching of them forth to any filthy and vnseemely Act as in that mentioned Deut. 25. 11 12. Fiftly Our whole gesture to be sober and good Contrarie Gesture whereunto is wanton dancing and all other effeminate gesture and behauiour which wantonnesse Paul a Gal. 5. 19. maketh a worke of the flesh The b Esay 3. 16. Prophet Esay in his third Chapter doth notably expresse this sinne Because the Daughters of Sion are lostie and walke with a stretched out Necke twinkling with their eyes continually mincing it as they goe and keeping pace with their feet therefore the Lord will make bald c. Sixthly Our Apparell to be sober and comely such c Tit. 2. 3. as Apparell becommeth Saints The contrarie whereof is too curious trimming and decking of our selues forbidden euen vnto women who yet it may bee thought for the pleasing of their Husbands might of all other best vse it Therefore the Apostle d 1. Pet. 3. 3. saith Whose trimming let it not be that outward trimminig of frizzling of haire putting of golden things about them or putting on of apparell but the hidden man c. Likewise e 1. Tim. 2 9 10. also women let them adorne themselues in modest garments with shamefastnesse and sobrietie not with frizzling siluer things or gold or pearles or costly apparell But which beseemeth women professing godlinesse with good workes Secondly Whorish riotous and lasciuious apparell such as the Prophet taxeth Esay 3. 18. By this note Salomon f Pro. 7. 11. in his Prouerbs painteth out an Harlot A woman came forth to meete him in whorish attyre The comelinesse to be obserued in apparell standeth in these foure things First That it bee according to our sexe where g Deut. 22. 5. the man wearing womans apparell or the woman mans is condemned as being both an abomination to the Lord. Secondly That it bee fitting to our Age for which cause the Apostle h Titus 2. 3. willeth the elder women to goe in long garments Titus 2. 3. and 1. Sam. 13. 18. the Holy Ghost noteth that young Virgins the Kings Daughters were wont to goe in a Gowne of diuers colours Such a one Iacob made for Ioseph being a childe of seuenteene yeeres of age Gen. 37. 31. Thirdly That it bee agreeable to the custome of the place where we liue Contrarie whereunto is new-fangled apparell against which Zophanie the Prophet thundereth I i Sophon 1. 18. will visit the Princes and the Kings sonnes and all that clothe themselues with strange garments after the manner of forraine Countries and Nations Fourthly That it be according to our place and calling They k Math. 11. 8. and other things that weare soft rayment are in Kings houses Some other point of modestie may be noted as to haue a regard of shamefastnes euen in that case which the Law of God prouideth for Deut. 23. 12 13. But that and whatsoeuer else may not vnfitly be reduced vnder some of the former heads Temperance is a moderate and a sober vse of lawfull Temperance which is a moderate and sober vse of lawfull Pleasures especially in meates and drinkes pleasures especially in Meates and Drinks and in marriage matters In meates and drinks First By abstinence and fasting oftentimes whereunto the Apostle by his example doth inuite vs 1. Cor. 9. 27. But I beate downe my Body and bring it into subiection lest by any meanes after that I haue preached to others I my selfe should be reprooued The contrary whereof is to fill the gorge euery day as the rich l Luk. 16. 19. man did in the Gospell Secondly By a moderate and sober diet so as the body may receiue strength and be more fresh and liuely to performe the actions of godlines Take m Luk. 21. 34. heede to your selues lest at any time your hearts bee oppressed with surfeting and drunkennesse and cares of this life and lest that day c●me on you vnawares n Prou. 23. 29. 30. To whom is woe c Euen to them that tarrie long at the Wine to them that goe seeke mixt wine o Prou. 25. 16 If thou haue found hony eate that is sufficient for thee lest thou be ouerfull vomit it It p Prou. 31. 4. is not for Kings O LEMVEL it is not for Kings to drinke wine nor for Princes to drinke strong drinke The contrary whereof is first Gluttonie and Fulnes of bread one of the Sinnes of Sodome q Ezech. 16. 49. whereof the Apostle hath a commandement Rom. 13. 13. Walke honestly as in the day not in Gluttony and Drunkennesse c. Secondly Too much daintinesse for the quality and varietie of fare especially of those meates and drinks which prouoke most vnto the Sinne of vncleannesse This the same rich man is taxed with That he r Luk. 16. 19. was clothed in Purple and fine Linnen and fared well and diliciously euery day Salomon ſ Prou. 23. 1 2 3 in his wisdome giueth vs a rule to bridle our vntemperate desires this way When thou sittest to eate with a Ruler consider diligently what is before thee and put thy knife to thy throte if thou be a man giuen to the appetite Be not desirous of his dainty meates for it is a deceiueable meate Howbeit this is not so strictly to be taken but that eyther for the wel-comming of a friend or for our owne refreshing we may and it is sometimes lawfull to furnish our Table with store and variety of dishes as t Gen. 21. 8. Abraham made a great feast that day Isack was weaned and in the vse of marriage so did Leui u Luk. 5. 29. to our Sauiour Christ inuiting withall for his better entertainement a great number of guests to beare him companie The x Psal 104. 15. Psalmist also noteth that Forbidding to marry and commanding to abstain from meats which God hath created to be receiued with giuing thanks of them which beleeue and know the Truth For euery creature of God is good and nothing ought to he refused if the receiued with thanksgiuing God of his bountie giueth vs not onely bread or meate that strengtheneth the heart of man but wine to cheere it vp and to make his face shine more then with oyle Wherefore Marie at the Supper was made vnto Christ in Bethania is y Ioh.
Thessalonians comprehendeth both for when hee incourageth them by this Argument that God had not appointed them for wrath but to the purchasing of saluation through IESVS CHRIST he manifestly noteth some ordayned to Saluation other to destruction as many as come not to haue their part in Christ But that to the o Rom. 9. 21 ●2 Romanes is more manifest Hath not the Potter power ouer the clay of the same lumpe to make one Vessell for Honour and another to dishonour And what if God willing to shew forth his wrath and to make knowne his power hath borne with much long suffering the vessels of wrath framed for destruction and that he might make knowne the riches of his Glorie vpon the vessels of Mercie which he hath before ordayned vnto Glorie Behold how he calleth them heere the one Vessels to Honour Vessels of Mercie prepared vnto Glorie the other vessels to dishonour vessels of wrath framed for destruction which selfe-same phrase Vessels to Honour and to shame or dishonour he keepeth also in the Epistle to p 2. Tim. 2. 20. TIMOTHIE Now in a great house there are not onely Vessels of Gold and Vessels of Siluer but of Wood also and of Earth and some verily for Honour some for dishonour This shall yet further appeare if we cast our eye vnto those meanes whereby this predestinate Decree of God is brought vnto effect for sith it is manifest that some beleeue the Gospell and testifie the same by the fruits of their conuersation other are obstinate and stubborne and giuen vp to their lusts blinded with infidelitie and hardnesse of heart thereof we may conclude that some are ordained vnto life other vnto destruction Notable also to this purpose is that vnto the q 2. Thes 2. 9. Thessalonians The comming of Antichrist shall bee with all power to them that are to perish but wee ought alwayes to giue thankes to God who hath chosen vs to Saluation and called vs by the preaching of the Gospell where these two sorts are manifestly distinguished as also Iohn 17. 19. I pray not for the World but for those whom thou hast giuen me out of the World The very scope of the Apostles disputation Rom. 9. 22. driueth heere unto in the person of Ismael and of Isack children one of the flesh the other of the promise And againe in Isacks two sonnes one loued the other hated to set before vs the generall state of all Mankinde yea God hath not onely predestinated men to ioy or to paine but to the measure of it more or lesse according as there be degrees both of glorie and of punishment Mat. 20. 23. vpon the request of the Sonnes of Zebedy our Sauiour Christ granting a difference of Glorie saith It shall be theirs for whom it is prepared of his Father And of the Reprobate the place in IVDE r Iude v. 4. is manifest Which long agoe were appointed to this damnation In saying this he noteth not a common but a rare and as it were an extraordinary Damnation for so I refer the word Damnation to the end aswell as to the meanes to the iudgement it selfe as to the sinne and disobedience which was the cause of it The truth heere of is euident in Iudas the Traitor of whom ſ Acts 1. 25. Peter saith that he turned aside from the lot of his Ministerie whereunto Christ had called him to goe vnto his owne place In the words his owne hee noteth his proper degree of punishment and calling it his place sheweth that it was reserued for him and allotted from Eternitie Secondly Euery particular person is thus predestinate So as both the number how many and the persons who they bee are before all Eternitie most certainly knowne to God Therefore our t Luke 10. 20. Sauiour saith Their names are written in Heauen And in u Iohn 10. 3. IOHN A good Shepheard calleth his sheep by Name And hither belongeth that in x 2. Tim. 2. 19. TIMOTHIE The foundation remayneth firme hauing this seale God knoweth who are his Agreeably whereunto our Sauiour Christ saith I y Iohn 13. 18. know whom I haue chosen This number of Gods Elect in comparison of the Reprobate is but small for z Mat. 20. 16. Many are called but few are chosen If but few euen of those that haue an outward calling how much more few if you consider the rest of the World beside And this may teach vs the rather to admire Gods goodnesse to our selues as nature and reason doe instruct vs to set more by that which is common but with a few Thirdly The cause of this difference is the The Papists teach that those who God foresaw would willingly beleeue the Gospel do good works them hee chose though not by reason of their workes but freely of his Grace yet so as hee had respect to the good things would bee in them Wherby they make Gods free election in some sort to haue his cause in man and in his goodnesse which in truth is but an effect comming from that Election free-will and pleasure of God without any motiue to it but in and of himselfe Which the name of Predestination speaketh that the Will and Decree of GOD not in time onely but in the very order and nature of causes is first and before all other things And the Apostle a Ephes 1. 11. saith plainly Hee worketh all things after the counsell of his Will God therefore notwithstanding any thing that hath beene ●●id is no respecter of persons nor mooued by any qualit● that is in man but by his owne free-will No fore-knowledge of faith or infidelitie good or euill workes were the cause of this Decree for they are but b Ephes 1. 4. Titus 2. 12. consequences that follow and depend vpon it but all here is free the roote it selfe and all the branches Election free therefore the Apostle calleth it c Rom. 11. 5. The election of Grace d 2. Tim. 1. 9. Calling free e Phil. 1. 29. We beleeue freely through Grace Are f Rom. 3. 24. freely iustified through Faith Our g Ezech. 36. 37 Sanctification free and h Titus 3. 5. eternall life the free gift of God through Iesus Christ Election therefore commeth from the onely will and pleasure of God for aboue this or out of this it is impietie Rom. 6. 13. Luke 12 32. for to goe Therefore the Apostle wrappeth vp all in sinne He i Ephes 1. 6. chose vs in himselfe according to the free pleasure of his will And the sole and onely cause both of Election and Reprobation of one rather then another is his own good wil and pleasure for causes vnknown to vs but yet most holy and iust and righteous in themselues So he saith to the Romans Whom k Rom. 9. ●8 he will he pittieth whom he will he hardeneth Exemplifying both the parts of this diuision by two most singular and
of their torments and looseth them out of those chaines and fetters of darkenesse wherewith they are held fast Hence it is that Luke 8. 32. they besought this Iesus not to charge them to depart into the Deepe And this benefit the Deuils themselues haue from Christ for the good of his Church and the working of his glorie Thirdly He restrayneth and bridleth them that notwithstanding all their rage and malice they cannot exceed the bounds that hee hath set and when they haue done all they can they bring to passe but his good will and pleasure So Mat. 8. 31. The Deuils could not so much as take their pleasure of the poore Herd of Swine before they had begged leaue of Christ Fourthly The subduing and conquering of them for t 1. Co. 15. 24 25 hee shall abolish all Principalitie and all Dignitie and Might being to raigne till hee haue put all enemies vnder his feet As u Psal 110. 1. Dauid had said long before and as the x Gen. 3. 15. promise was in Paradise The seed of the woman shall breake the Head of the Serpent and of his seed Fiftly The iudging of them in the latter Day which the vncleane spirits themselues acknowledge and confesse when they expostulate the matter with him Art thou come to torment vs before the time Mat. 8. 29. Touching his Gouernment ouer Man-kind this is and men corrupted common that he bestoweth vpon them all the light of Reason and those seedes and ornaments of GODS Image which they carrie yet about Iohn 1. 9. This is hee that lighteneth euery man that commeth into the World Specially towards the Reprobate is the same in all points that is to Satan their head that is to say First A perpetuall obduration and hardening of their hearts vnto finall vnrepentance for so the y Iohn 12. 39 40 41. Euangelist Iohn when hee had shewed that the Iewes could not beleeue because Esay had said He hath blinded their eyes and hardened their heart lest they should see with their eyes and vnderstand with their heart and I should heale them Immediately hee addeth These things said ESAIAS when he saw his glorie and spake of him Secondly The restrayning and bridling of them that notwithstanding all their rage and furie they cannot go beyond his appointed Lists as wee see in z Acts 9. 1. c. Saul who breathing out threatning and slaughter after the death of Stephen went with full swindge to Damascus to cast into Prison all that called vpon the Name of Iesus but hee in the verie way meeting with him restrayneth his malice and changeth his heart to professe the Truth which before hee persecuted And this is it the a Psal 76. 11. Psalmist saith The rage of men shall turne vnto his glorie Thirdly His conquering and suduing of them Psal 2. 9. Thou shalt crush them with a Scepter of Iron and breake them in pieces like a Potters Vessell Luke 19. 31. Those mine enemies that would not I should raigne ouer them bring hither and slay them before me Fourthly That he is to iudge them in the latter Day for this b Acts 10. 43. is he that is appointed of God the Iudge both of the liuing and the dead And as Paul saith Acts 17. 31. God hath set a Day wherein he will iudge the World by the man whom he hath appointed To the rest of the Creatures this belongeth In the rest of the World peruerted First That now hee keepeth them from running and falling vnto nothing Secondly That hereafter he will renew them into an excellent and glorious condition Both c Psal 96. 10 11 12. which are the worke of Christ and that for his Elects sake CHAP. IIII. Of the Propheticall Office of Christ and of the outward Church WE haue done with CHRISTS Office of a The other which is vnto his Church a companie of men culled out of the World who beleeue or professe to beleeue in him This latter part contayneth his Propheticall Office and that which the Scripture by excellencie termeth The Kingdome Iudge in the generall gouernment of the World The second Arme or Branch of his Kingdome is the Propheticall Office A part I make it of his Kingdome not of his Priest-hood First For that all his Priestly Functions are betweene God and Him as the Apostle defineth them to be in matters to Godwards Heb. 5. 1. But these of his Propheticall Office as the rest of his Kingdome are vnto his Church Secondly Because those wherein the Propheticall Office Propheticall Office is thought to consist Teaching Preaching Ministring of the Sacraments Discipline and such like whervnto Miracles come also to bee annexed are matters of Authoritie and of Power deriued from his Kingly Office and his Word is called The e Mat. 13. 19. Word of the Kingdome yea the preaching of the Gospell and the outward Church collected and gathered by the same hath the name of f Mat. 13. 24 47 52. the Kingdome of Heauen Thirdly Since the Ministerie of Christ hath alwayes going with it an effectuall and liuely working of his Spirit as one speciall part of this Propheticall Office his Ministerie must needes bee a Noble and a Royall Dignity that is accompayned with so great a force and power Fourthly It is by vertue of his Kingly Office that he sendeth forth Prophets and Apostles and all other Ministers prooued Ephes 4. 8 11 12. where Paul describing the Royaltie of his Kingdome that hee led captiuitie captiue and gaue gifts vnto men immediatly addeth He therefore gaue some to be Apostles some to bee Euangelists some Prophets some Pasters and Teachers for the knitting together of the Saints for the worke of the Ministerie for the building vp of the Body of Christ But this all must grant that he doth as the Head of the Prophets Therefore the Propheticall Office is one part of his Kingly bountie And albeit Teaching may seeme a part of the Priestly Function by that which is written Deut. 33. 10. They teach IACOB thy Iudgements and Israel thy Law yet the essentiall point of the Priests Office which stood in Sacrifices and Oblations must bee distinguished from that common to the whole Tribe of Leui as in that very place the words following doe distinguish them They put Incense before thy face and Sacrifice wholy to bee consumed vpon thine Altar for as Priests they went no further then to doe and to be types of those things which before were assigned vnto the Priest-hood of Christ Their Office of teaching and instructing the people they had another calling for common with the Tribe of Leui which the Prophets else who were not of the same Tribe yet tooke vpon them being raysed vp extraordinarily for that purpose from whom this part of Christs Office tooke the name and not from the Priestly Function though they were also called of GOD vnto it The Propheticall Office of Christ respecteth a Church Which is
required to the receiuing of them both to vnderstand what we doe through a true knowledge of our owne wretchednesse and of the Couenant of Grace in Christ to feele the fruit and the comfort which they bring and to desire and affect to be made partakers of it Great reuerence and attention in the receiuing of them by comparing the Signes and Spirituall things together Great thankefulnesse after to God for his mercies offered vnto vs in them All which being necessarie in the hearing of the Word is by so much the more necessarie here as God by them doth offer a greater grace and commeth more neere vnto vs wherefore the l 1. Co. 11. 28 29 Apostle saith Let a man examine himselfe and so eate of this Bread and drinke of this Cup for he that eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh condemnation to himselfe not making a difference of the Lords Body Fiftly Those that come vnto them not onely to the Lords Table but if they be of riper yeeres to the Sacrament of Baptisme are publikely to testifie their Faith and Repentance So we reade Mat. 3. 5. Then came forth to him Ierusalem and all Iudea and all the Countrie round about Iorden and were baptized of him in Iorden after they had confessed their sinnes And Acts 8. 36 37. As they went by the way they came to a certaine water and the EVNVCH said Lo here is water what hindereth that I should not bee baptized And PHILIP said If thou beleeuest with thy whole heart thou mayst Then hee answered I beleeue that Iesus Christ is that Sonne of God Then hee baptized him And this is the generall rule giuen concerning the Passeouer which was as the Supper of the Lord with vs. If m Exod. 12. 48. any Stranger soiourne among you that would celebrate the Passeouer of IEHOVAH let euerie Male of them be circumcised whereby he may testifie his consent in the same Faith and Religion with you and so let him come to celebrate it None vncircumcised shall eate thereof Sacraments differ from Sacrifices besides other differences maynly in nature for First Sacrifices were giuen offered and presented vnto God Sacraments are taken and receiued of God by the hand of the Ministers of his Word Secondly Sacrifices were Signes and Figures of good things n Heb. 10. 1. to come Thirdly Sacraments are Signes and Remembrances of good things alreadie come The next head is a holy Ministerie which Christ hath It followeth to speake of Ministeries and Graces Ministeries are publike Functions in the Church giuen to his Church o Ephes 4. 12. for the perfecting of his Saints for the building vp of his body for this power is deriued from Christ as from the Head and Lord of the Prophets as we reade Mat. 23. 34. Therefore behold I Christ p Luke 11. 49. the Wisdome of God as Luke hath it send vnto you Prophets and Wisemen Ephes 4. 11. Hee therefore himselfe Christ gaue some to be Apostles c. Mat. 16. 19. I will giue vnto thee the keyes of the Kingdome of Heauen And from him haue all the Ministers euery one since the World was fetched their authoritie By his Spirit it was that they spake as wee heard before out of q 1. Pet. 1. 11. Peter Wherefore Reuel 22. 6. hee is called The Lord God of the holy Prophets as may appeare if you compare that place with Reuel 1. 1● The difference betweene his Ministerie and theirs standeth in these two things First That hee their Head and Lord executed all the parts of his Ministerie in another sort and with greater authoritie and power then any Minister before or after him Mat. 7. 28 29. and Marke 1. 22. They were astonied at his teaching for he taught them as one that had authority and not as the Scribes Secondly The Prophets and the Ministers whom hee sent spake from him and in his Name But hee speaketh from himselfe and in his owne name r Mat. 5. 2● 28 32 34 39. I say vnto you Of these Ministeries many things might be spoken full Specially for preaching of great varietie and of deepe and difficult questions concerning their Calling Election Ordination The keyes of the Church committed into their hands Their power of binding and loosing and the whole Order and Gouernment of Gods House But I will leaue them all and hold me onely to that of Preaching and Administring of the Sacraments Preaching therefore is the worke of the Ministerie and of those whom God hath lawfully called to execute that publike Function in the Church for ſ Rom. 10. 15. How can they preach except they be sent So that the handling of the Word by any other that hath no calling for it how well soeuer hee handle the same and how truely soeuer hee expound it is not that preaching which Christ hath ordayned to bring men vnto saluation by Not that it is vnlawfull for priuate men to deale with the holy Scriptures and to open and expound the same so euery one keepe him within the bounds and lists of his Calling and looke what is fit for him according to the gifts and graces he hath receiued but that is of the Master in his Family and within his priuate walls This which we speake of is publike in the Congregation and in the Church of God The dutie of Preaching carryeth with it and hath as which includeth the dutie of offering the Churches Prayers it were inclosed in the nature and bowels thereof another dutie of offering the Churches Prayers which can neuer be separated from the dutie of Teaching Samuel ioyneth them together 1. Sam. 12. 23. Moreouer touching me God forbid that I should sinne against IEHOVAH in ceasing to pray for you yea I will instruct you in the good and right way And the whole Colledge of the Apostles Acts 6. 4. But we will alwayes continue in Prayer and in ministration of the Word Publike Prayer is for the Minister to offer vnto God the Prayers and Supplications of the Church that as in Preaching hee is the Mouth of God vnto his people so in Prayer hee is the peoples mouth vnto God for the Church or Congregation is the place of publike Prayer and if one list to doe it by himselfe hee hath his house to pray in but in the Church all are to attend the Minister which is in CHRISTS place vnto them And that which he one man doth offer well appeareth to be the Prayers of the Church by the peoples giuing of consent to that hee prayeth and saying Amen vnto it which appeareth to haue beene the laudable vse of the old Church Nehem. 8. 7. Where EZRA blessing IEHOVAH the great God all the people answered Amen Amen with lifting vp their hands and stooped and bowed downe themselues to IEHOVAH with their faces to the ground-ward The Primitiue Church in the Apostles time did retayne the same as appeareth 1. Cor. 14. 14 15 16 17. in that
I write it Answerable hereunto is that of z Ezech. 36. 26 27. 1. Iohn 2. 8. EZECHIEL I will giue you a new heart and a new Spirit I will set in the middest of you and I will take away the heart of stone out of your flesh and I will giue vnto you a heart of flesh and my Spirit will I put in the middest of you and make that yee shall walke in mine Ordinances and obserue and doe my iudgements whereby this Holinesse is distinguished from imputed Righteousnes which is without vs and in another that is to say in Christ And from both these ariseth the third and last consideration of the Law of God as it is qualified and corrected and hath another nature set vpon it by Christ our Sauiour turned now into a 1. Iohn 2. 8. a new Commandement as the Apostle speaketh or a Law Euangelized and of another temper seruing no more for death and condemnation to those that are his but for helpe and direction for b Psal 119. 106 a Lanterne vnto our feet and a light vnto our steps to teach vs how to walke when we are in Christ Therefore c Luke 1. 6. Zacharie and Elizabeth are both commended as righteous before God because they went in all the Commandements of the Lord. d Iam. 1. 25. IAMES also calleth vs hither He that stoopeth downe into the perfect Law of Libertie and abideth in that hee not being a forgetfull hearer but a doer of workes shall be blessed by his doing And our Sauiour Matth. 5. 17. biddeth vs not to thinke that hee came to dissolue the Law and the Prophets I came not to dissolue them but to fulfill them for which cause also the right vnderstanding of the Law is needfull for vnlesse wee know our Masters will how shall we frame our selues to doe it Fourthly The new life put into vs which wee call Viuification or Quickning commeth from the power of Christs Spirit which rayseth vs vp from the sleepe and death of sinne to awake to liue righteously that e Rom. 4. 5. as Christ was raysed from the dead by the glorie of his Father so we might walke in newnesse of life for if wee bee ingraffed into the likenesse of his death verily so shall we also bee vnto the likenesse of his Resurrection Wherefore the f Coloss 3. 1 2. Apostle saith If yee bee risen together with Christ seeke the things which are aboue not the things which are vpon the earth Teaching that it is by the power of his rising that wee are renewed vnto righteousnesse as by his death we obtaine power to mortifie sinne Fiftly Touching the manner of the The Papists say that in Freewill there is a libertie or strength to receiue or reiect the grace that should quicken it which they call Preuenting Grace and so part the slakes betweene Grace and mans Freewill working there is a difference betweene the grace it selfe of Sanctification and the fruits that come from it In the grace it selfe as in the worke of our new birth man standeth meere passiue before God hauing no power or vertue in him to worke with Gods Spirit or to helpe the worke of Grace yet hee is not in this first renewing of his soule as a trunke or a dead stock for that he hath both reason and faculties or powers fit to receiue the Grace of God when his Spirit doth worke vpon them But in the fruits of Sanctification The Papists make not the Holie Ghost but their owne Free-will the principal agent in this second grace which Free-will they say goeth before and disposeth and prepareth vs to a Iustifying Grace in belieuing in hoping in repenting c. the principal Agent is indeed the verie Spirit of Christ who after the first grace and new Creation abideth and dwelleth in vs not idlely but euer working some good in vs and by vs as it is said Rom. 8. 26. The holy Ghost maketh intercession for vs with sighs which cannot be expressed But a second Agent working with Gods holy Spirit is the verie soule of man or rather the new man or new creature in the soule and all the faculties thereof So that in this second Grace which is the action or worke of faith wee stand not as meere passiue but beeing moued by the holie Ghost wee worke our selues by his Spirit working in vs. Whereupon we are called g 1. Cor. 3. 9. The fellow-workers with God 1. Cor. 3. Touching the distinct degrees of Sanctification In wherein there is no more now required but that sinne beare not the rule in vs and our workes of Righteousnesse though all mingled with sinne the estate we now are in there is a difference betweene it and legall Righteousnesse in that perfection is there required without fayling in any iote eyther in matter or manner Whereas our Sanctification in this life is euermore imperfect fayling much and hath alwaies sin mixed with it not as Chaffe or Darnell is mixed with Whear but as water is mingled with wine that there is no drop of wine but it is water also and that is by reason our new birth is imperfect So that Donatists and Nouatians and those heretikes that were wont to bee called Catharises or Puritanes dreame of puritie and perfection in this life albeit by the grace of Regeneration we desire in all things to liue righteously and well yet still we labour vnder the infirmitie of the flesh h Gal. 5. 17. that we cannot doe the things wee would Whereof the Apostle Paul one more then after an ordinarie sort regenerate giueth in his owne person a noble example Rom. 7. 15 c. I approue not that I worke for I doe not that I would but what I hate that doe I for I am delighted with the Law of God as touching the inner man but I see another Law in my members c. and in the end concludeth Therfore I my selfe in the Spirit indeed serue the Law of God but in my flesh the Law of sinne Wherefore in this estate it is enough if sinne i Rom. 6. 12. raigne not in our mortall bodies it is not required which is impossible that it should not at all dwell in vs. And where the Scripture in many places doth call vs perfect as when it saith k Matth. 5. 48. Yee shall therefore be perfect as your Father which is in Heauen is perfect l 1. Cor. 2. 6. We speake wisdome among those that are perfect m 1. Cor. 14. 20. In vnderstanding bee yee perfect n Eph. 4. 13. till wee come to a perfect man o Phil. 3. 12. As many therefore as be perfect let vs bee thus minded p 1. Iohn 2. 5. Whosoeuer keepeth his Word of a truth in him the loue of God is perfected q 1. Ioh. 4. 12. If we loue one another God abideth in vs and his loue is perfited in vs. r 1. Ioh. 4.
to doe all things through Christ that strengtheneth mee Thirteenth Wee haue innumerable Angels that attend to helpe vs Psal 34. 7 8. The Angell of IEHOVAH pitcheth his Tents round about them that feare him 2. Kings 6. 16 17. Feare not there be more with vs then that are with them Then praying to IEHOVAH hee opened the eyes of his seruant who looking saw that behold the Mountaine was full of Horses and Chariots of fire that is of holy Angels round about ELISHA Fourteenth There is no cause why wee should ●aint vnder this burden seeing Prayer ministreth abundant comfort to vs which comming from Gods Spirit with so much the greater vehemencie sighes and grones as the troubles that lye vpon vs are more pressing and weightie must needes bee effectuall for the working of some good blessing To which purpose the Apostle inforceth this Argument Rom. 8. 26 27. Fifteenth Howsoeuer it bee no affliction can debase vs or make vs poore for hauing Christ who is t Heb. 1. 2. Heire of all things and Lord of Heauen and Earth wee cannot but bee rich in him By this Argument the Apostle u Rom. 8. 31. there mollifieth the bitternesse of afflictions He that hath not spared his owne Sonne but for vs all hath giuen him vp to death how shall he not together with him giue vs all good things I haue beene too long in these The rest of the markes that follow to shut them vp shortly are First Humilitie Micah 6. 8. He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth IEHOVAH require of thee but to doe right and to loue kindnesse and to walke humbly with thy God Secondly Loue of the Brethren because they are Brethren and Children of the same Father 1. Iohn 3. 14. We know we are passed from death to life because we loue the Brethren The practice of this one dutie to the members of Christ for Christs sake casteth such a shining Light in the eyes of God and Man that our Sauiour Mat. 25. 35 36. by it our Faith and consequently the righteous iudgement of God in the sauing of our Soules shall be made manifest to all the World in the latter Day Thirdly To loue our Enemies and to forgiue them their offences Mat. 5. 44 45. Loue your enemies blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them that molest you and persecute you that you may bee the children of your Father which is in Heauen c. Ephes 4. 32. Forgiue one another as God in Christ hath forgiuen you Fourthly Open profession of Christ and of the Gospell Rom. 10. 10. With the heart men beleeue vnto righteousnesse and with the mouth confession is made vnto saluatition Fiftly Humble confession of our sinnes Prouerbs 25. 13. Hee that confesseth his sinne and forsaketh it shall obtayne Mercie Sixtly The vsing of good meanes to clense vs from them Psal 19. 1● His ignorance who vnderstandeth O cl●nse me from my secret sinnes Seuenthly Holily religiously to sanctifie the Sabbath Day for this binding vs to the good abearing from following our owne pleasures and profits and the things that are so sweete vnto the flesh cannot rightly bee performed but of those that indeed make a conscience of their wayes wherefore the x Esay 58. 13 14 Prophet setteth it as a speciall marke vpon the Childe of God If thou wilt keepe backe thy foot on the Sabbath from doing thine owne pleasure in my holy Day and shalt call the Sabbath delight holy to IEHOVAH glorious and shalt honour it not to doe thine owne wayes nor to find out thy pleasure nor to speake a word then shalt thou delight thy selfe in IEHOVAH and I will make thee to ride vpon the high places of the Land and make thee to eate the Inheritance of thy Father IACOB So y Ier. 17. 14 c Ieremie 17. many sweet and gracious promises are made to those that keepe the Sabbath and sharpe and to the end of the Chapter seuere Iudgements threatened to the contrarie And seeing it pleaseth God to set such a speciall Memento vpon this Commandement aboue the rest Remember thou keepe holy the Sabbath Day it should teach vs what a deepe Roote the same ought to haue in our heart and how it should affect vs. Of this that our Sanctification is here imperfect two things doe follow a Christian Warfare and Repentance Christian Warfare is a Warre proclaymed of GOD himselfe for men to try all their strength and valour in when hee saith I z Gen. 3. 15. will set enmity betweene thee and the woman and betweene thy seed and betweene her seed Meant principally of Christ the Seed of the Virgin but withall comprehending all his members Therefore heere is a Flag of defiance set vp and a perpetuall and endlesse Warre denounced wherein we may take no truce nor euer be weary of it Of this it is written in the a Reuel 12. 7. Reuelation that a great signe was seene in Heauen MICHAEL and his Angels meaning specially the Saints vpon Earth fighting with the Deuill and his angels And to this spirituall Combate the Scripture euery-where doth incite vs b 1. Tim. 1. 18. Fight that good fight Let c Heb. 12. 1. vs runne with patience the strife that is set before vs and such like Whereupon the Church of God in this life is called The militant Church and all Christians d 2. Tim. 2. 3. Souldiers though principally the same be giuen to the Ministers whose part it is to goe before the people in this spirituall Conflict So PAVL Phil. 2. 25. maketh mention of EPAPHRODITVS his fellow-Souldier And so doth hee and Timothy call Archippus in the e Verse 2. Epistle to Philemon being a Phrase of speech borrowed from the Law where the Ministery of the Priests and Leuites is called a Souldiership or f Num. 4. 3. 8. 24 25. Warfare In this spirituall Battaile I consider fiue things First The Enemies we are to fight with Satan and all his brood the name of Satan comprehending all impure spirits of whom he is the Head being not onely our g Mat. 13. 39. enemy that hateth vs and h 1. Pet. 5. 8. goeth about as a roring Lyon seeking whom hee may deuoure but withall our i Reuel 12. 10. accuser that accuseth vs before our God day and night and the k 1. Pet. 5. 8. pleader against vs. This the Apostle notably describeth Ephes 6. Put on the whole Armour of God that ye may be able to stand against the assaults of the Deuill for we wrestle not against flesh and bloud but against Principalities against Powers and against the worldly Gouernors the Princes of the darknesse of this World against most wicked spirits which are in the high places Satans brood I call the World and the Flesh By World meaning First The malignant Church the companie of the wicked and vngodly The sonnes of that
naughtie one as they are termed Mat. 13. 38. For l Iohn 15. 19. and 17. 14. because wee are not of the World but GOD hath chosen vs out of the World therefore doth the World hate vs which is the perpetuall state of Gods Church from the beginning and was figured in m Ge. 25. 22 23 Rebecca a Type of the Church in whose wombe were two Nations deuided that stroue and fought together And our Sauiour doth fore-warne vs not to looke for better In n Iohn 16. 33. the World yee shall haue affliction Secondly Whatsoeuer is vnregenerate in the Children of God themselues whereby it many times falleth out that none are greater instruments vnto vs of offending God then they By the flesh I meane our naturall corruption and all the lusts and workes of it an enemie which we alwayes carrie about vs not onely in our bosome but in our very bowels So that heere is the battell between the flesh the Spirit wherof the o Gal. 5. 17. Apostle saith that the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh And these saith he are opposite one to another Rom. 22. 23. It is elegantly described I finde therefore this Law for mee when I would doe well that euill lyeth readie for me to slay and seize on mee as the Lord speaketh of sinne Genes 4. 6. For I am delighted in the Law of God as touching the inner man but I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind leading me captiue to the law of sin that is in my members p 1. Pet. ● 11. PETER in like sort willeth vs to abstaine from fleshly lusts that war against the soule And heereof are the exhortations so common in the Scripture q Gal. 5. 16. Walke in the Spirit and fulfill not the lusts of the flesh Wee r Rom. 8. 12. are debtors not to the flesh to liue after the flesh but to the Spirit to be led by it Take ſ Rom. 13. 14. no care of the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof Christ t 1. Pet. 4. 1. therefore hauing suffered for vs in the flesh Put you on also the same minde that he which suffereth in the flesh hath ceased from sinne Secondly In this conflict are to be considered the two Generals of these Battels The Captaine vnder whome wee fight IESVS the u Heb. 12. 2. Prince and perfiter of our Faith in x Gen. 3. 15. Genesis pointed out by the seed of the woman to note his Manhood in the y Reuel 12. 7. Reuelation by Michael equall with the mightie God to set forth his God-head you shall find him royally described Reuel 19. 11 12 13 14 15 16. The head and generall lifted vp against him is the Dragon the old Serpent Satan or the Deuill as wee heard before Thirdly The weapons of this Warfare both those which our Aduersaries the Flesh the World and the Deuill fight withall and those whereby wee doe resist them The weapon of sinne or of the flesh is Lust as it is said Rom. 7. 8. Sinne taking occasion by the Law wrought in me all manner of lust Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit The weapons of the World are First Outward Afflictions and Persecutions Reproches Slanders c. to draw vs from Christ Iohn 16. 33. In the World ye shall haue afflictions Secondly Ease Credit Pleasure Profit Honour c. Thirdly Euill Examples Satans weapons are outward or inward Outward First The World for wicked men are the Hel-hounds of Satan the Champions and Souldiers which hee fights withall whose head and generall hee is and therefore called the z Iohn 14. 30. and 16. 11. prince of this World which name is giuen to all a Ephes 6. 12. vncleane spirits The b 2. Cor. 4. 4. god of this World And the afflictions of the World as they proceed from him are called The c 2. Co. 12. 7. buffetings of Satan Secondly The obiects of sinne to our eyes our eares and other sences which Satan setteth before vs to draw vs to a loue and in loue to a committing of it as hee did to our first Parents in Paradise and to our d Mat. 4. Sauiour Christ in the Wildernesse and as hee ceaseth not continually to doe to vs. Inward ones are First His kindling of the fire of our owne concupiscence blowing as it were the bellowes and gathering together matter for it to worke vpon Secondly Temptations or Illusions which he casteth into hearts as Venome or Poyson for to infect vs. Our weapons whereby wee doe resist them what they are the Apostle notably declareth 2. Cor. 10. 4. not carnall but mightie and valiant to the throwing downe of all the strong holds of sinne Where though he speake specially of the Ministers yet the like is to bee said in their degree and place of all other Christians Generally it is the Word of God as appeareth 2. Thess 2. 8. Whom God will consume with the breath of his mouth But more particularly they may be reduced vnto two heads Faith and the fruits of Sanctification that come from it for so e 1. Tim. 1. 18. Paul to Timothy vnder these two comprehendeth all willing him to fight that good Fight hauing faith and a good conscience And 1. Thess 5. 8. Put on the Brest-plate of Faith and Loue and for a Helmet the hope of Saluation And 1. Cor. 16. 13 14. Watch stand in the Faith Let all your things bee done in loue In the f Reuel 12. 11. Reuelation they are reckoned these three which come all vnder the other two Faith in the bloud of the Lambe as the Shield the Sword of the Word of God and confession of Christ vnto the death Of Faith the Apostle speaketh 1. Pe. 5. 9. Whom that is the Deuill resist stedfast in Faith And 1. Iohn 5. 4 5 This is the victorie that ouercommeth the World euen your Faith And this as our chiefe and principall weapon the Apostle biddeth vs aboue all to take vnto vs by it hauing Christ himselfe and his Spirit to bee ours And therefore being that g Ephes 6. 16. whereby we are able to quench the fiery darts of the Deuill The fruits of Sanctification are all the Christian Vertues and Qualities which the Word of God requireth The Apostle Ephes 6. reckoneth them vp in this order First Truth or a sound and sincere heart wrought by the Gospell which is the Word of Truth as a belt to gird vs in Secondly Righteousnes both Piety and Iustice in a Holines towards God Innocencie towards our Neighbours for a Brest-plate the habit and perfection wherof being Loue h 1. Tim. 1. 5. out of Faith vnfained The Apostle therfore 1. Thess 5. 8. calleth it The Brest-plate of Faith and Loue. Thirdly Preparation or readinesse of minde which is as it were the shooing of our feet to make them light and nimble