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A69028 The rule of faith, or, An exposition of the Apostles Creed so handled as it affordeth both milke for babes, and strong meat for such as are at full age / by ... Nicholas Bifield ; ... now published ... by his sonne, Adoniram Bifield. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Byfield, Adoniram, d. 1660. 1626 (1626) STC 4233.3; ESTC S113882 419,023 572

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and consists especially in conceiuing gloriously of God and in praising of God and in worshipping of God and in obedience and so God is wonderfull glorious in that he doth continually receiue all sorts of praise and adoration from the creatures both in heauen and earth And in respect of this true glory which is giuen vnto God God doth excell in glory all the great Kings and Potentates that euer were in the world The very Angels in heauen doe admire this glory of God on earth Esay 6. 3. and so his glory excells 1. In respect of praise and so diuers waies 1. Because from the rising of the Sunne to the going downe of the same the Lords name is to be praised Psal 113. 3. all reasonable creatures are bound to ascribe praise and thankesgiuing to him and so it cannot be true of any Potentate on earth 2. Because from all persons and actions glory comes to God whatsoeuer wee are we are to his glory Ephes 1. 12. 6. 14. and whatsoeuer we doe all must be done to his glory 1. Cor. ●0 31. 3. Because in all the glory or praise giuen to the creatures the first and chiefe glory is due to God their glory is subordinate 4. Because it indureth for euer and euer no end of his praises 2. In respect of worship for that is a glory onely due to God no creature in heauen or earth may take it or can receiue it without infinite danger 't is a glory he will not giue to another 3. In respect of Obedience and so diuers waies 1. Because the obedience due to God is from all persons in the world and such an authority neuer had any mortall man 2. Because the obedience the creature owes to God is vniuersall and vnlimited and without exception whereas the obedience Princes can haue is a limited obedience and subordinate men must obey them so as they command nothing against Gods Law 3. Because his kingdome is an euerlasting kingdome there shall be no end of obeying him whereas the time wilcome when no obedience at all shall be due to Princes and that is when Christ hath deliuered vp the kingdome to God the Father and shall no more rule men by the ministerie of men Lastly the glory of men can bee no way comparable to the glory of God because all their glory they haue receiued from him for God is said to be the God of glory Acts 7. 2. the King of glory Psal 24. 10. the Father of glory Ephesians 1. 19. The Vse should bee first for instruction and so it should chiefely teach vs to acknowledge this glory of God to giue glory vnto God and by all meanes to ascribe glory to him It is a singular wrong not to giue God his glory Now wee giue God glory three waies 1. In our hearts and so diuersly first when wee labour to fill our hearts with the knowledge of Gods glory in all the branches of it the earth should bee filled with the knowledge of the glory of God as the waters couer the seas Hab. 2. 14. secondly when our hearts stand still and wonder and admire at the glory of the Lord our hearts are not rightly affected towards God till they bee inflamed and rauished with the contemplation of his excellencie and blessednesse Ezek. 3. 12. thirdly we giue God glory when wee beleeue in him and from our hearts trust him in things that bee otherwise vnlikely to come to passe Thus Abraham Rom. 4. 20. fourthly when we mourne and sorrow for our sins for men are said to giue glory to God when they repent of their sinnes Reuelation ●6 9. fifthly when we doe from our hearts reioyce at any thing that excells in Gods Word or workes any way acccounting our selues the more happie that God is honoured or glorified any way sixthly when in all seruice done to God we conceiue of him with the highest degree of reuerence and excellency we can entertaining him into our hearts as the very King of glory Psal 24. 2. In our words and so we giue glory to God diuers waies also as first when men confesse secret wickednesse openly finding themselues sought after and pursued by God Thus Achan gaue glory to God Ioshuah 7. and thus the sinner when he feeles the rebukes or chastisements of God should humble himselfe and confesse his wickednesse before the Lord Ier. 13. 15 16. Malachie 2. 2. secondly when men giue him praise and thanks for his mercies with all possible affection see Luke 17. 18. So the Samaritane gaue glory to God when hee gaue thankes for the cure of his Leprosie and thirdly when men acknowledge the hand of God and his prouidence see Reuel 11. 13. 1. Sam. 6. 5. fourthly when in discourse men talke of the singular praises of God and so we should make his praise glorious Psal 66. 2. our mouthes should bee filled with his praise and with his honor all the day Psal 71. 8. 96. 2 3 4. fifthly when men take away praise from the creature and so from themselues and giue God onely the glory 1. Tim. 1 17. Iohn 7. 18. Reuel 4. 11. 5. 12. 1. Chron. 29. 11. 3. In our workes we giue glory to God and so first by glorifying his Sonne by acknowledging and praising and honouring of Iesus Christ and submitting our selues to his ordinances Iohn 11. 4. and so also when wee honour them that feare God and beare his Image secondly when men abound in good workes and the fruits of righteousnesse and grow in grace and knowledge and so make the Image of God more and more euident suffering themselues to be so framed by the doctrine of the Gospell as to bee changed from glory to glory by the power of the Word 2. Cor. 3. 18. Phil. 10. 11. 2. Pet. 3. 18. 4. 11. Reuel 1. 6. thirdly when men worship God in the beauty of holinesse not onely putting on their best clothes when they come to serue God but clothing themselues with their best deuotions and affections and reuerence and humble adoration 1. Chron. 16. 28 29. fourthly when men submit themselues vnto God and let him doe with them whatsoeuer he will they that ascribe dominion to him ascribe glory to him 1. Peter 5. 10. 11. Lastly when men doe all that they doe to the glory of God studying how God may bee acknowledged or praised for all they doe being in all things some way to the praise of his glory 1. Cor. 10. 31. Ephes 1. 12. 14. Thus we should learne from hence to giue God honour and glory Secondly seeing God is so wonderfull glorious we should be carefull by all meanes to get the knowledge of his glory into our hearts that we may throughout our liues be made happie in the contemplation of his glory which that we may attaine vnto we must looke to these Rules 1. We must resort to and loue his house for that is the place on earth where his glory dwells Psal 26. 8. 63. 3. there
3. Yea thirdly this glory of God should swallow vp all the glory of men this very work of making Heauen and Earth should check vs for admiring and esteeming so much of the creature whatsoeuer since we haue such a perpetuall and surpassing cause of admiration of the Creator Acts 14. 16. 4. Since God made all things we should submit our selues to him and let him dispose of vs and all his creatures as he will he hath iust power in Heauen and earth to giue or take away or dispose at his owne pleasure Ier. 27. 5. 45. 3 4 5 6. 5. It should teach vs not to set our hearts too much vpon the world for that God that set vp this mighty frame of nothing can and will pull it all downe againe 6. It should breed in vs the feare of God and care of seruing him and obeying him that hath not onely supreame right vnto vs being his workemanship but soueraignty ouer all things Psal 119. 73. Psal 33. 8 9. 95. 6. all creatures else doe his will 7. It should teach vs in all straights and neede to flie to God for helpe as Dauid shewes our helpe standeth in the Name of the Lord which hath made Heauen and Earth Psal 121. 2. 124. 8. 8. We should learne hence not to abuse the Creatures of God to ill ends seeing God hath assigned his Creatures to their right ends for his owne glory It is abominable to fight against God with his owne weapons Thirdly the Doctrine of the Creation of the World ought to be terrible to wicked men because God by his workes hath reuealed so much of his glory as they will be left without excuse Rom. 1. and besides hauing appointed them to certaine ends in which they haue corrupted themselues hee will destroy them as a Potter that sees his vessell will not be made fit dasheth it to peeces And besides hence they may know that God can want no meanes to destroy them seeing he hath such Armies of his owne creatures in Heauen and Earth which are all as his mighty ones and sanctified ones for his anger against them There is no way for them but one which is to meete the Lord betimes by Faith and true Repentance Amos 4. 13. Lastly this is very comfortable doctrine for the godly for from the Creation of the world they may gather 1. That God will not cast them off because they are the worke of his hands Iob 10. 3. 2. That all aduersaries shall be defeated whatsoeuer is prouided against them shall not prosper because God made the Smith that blowe●h in the Coales and he will suffer no creature of his to be turned against them Esay 54. 17. 3. That God is able to prouide for vs seeing the earth and heauens are his and all that is therein Psalme 146. 5. 6 24. 1. 4. That all the spirituall worke that belongs to our soules may bee effected hee that created the world and made vs good at the first can create the fruit of the lippes to bee peace and can create cleane hearts in vs Esay 57. 19. Psalme 51. 8. 5. That our bodies shall rise againe that God that could make all things of nothing can restore them out of the dust of the earth Thus of Creation in generall Now wee are in particular to consider what was made viz. Heauen and Earth Heauen By Heauen is ment all that part of the world which is aboue the Earth and so it is taken Genesis 2. 1. 24. 5. And so Heauen consists of three parts and euery parte beares the name of Heauen The first part next to vs is the Ayre and all that is betweene vs and the Moone so foules of the Ayre are called the foules of Heauen Gen. 1. 26. The second part is the Firmament in which are the Starres Sun and Moon Psal 19. 7. The third part is the Habitation of God and Angels the seate of the glory of God and his blessed one where the body of Christ now liues Marke 16. 19. and is called the third heauens 1 Cor. 12. 2. and this is the Heauen especially meant Gen. 11. for when there he saith God Created heauen and earth and the earth was without forme c. he notes that God vsed a twofold way of Creation some things he made immediately of nothing as the Heauen of the blessed some things he made of matter which was first made of nothing for out of that Chaos mentioned Gen. 2. did the Lord extract and forme all this visible world both the firmament and light and the elements and all creatures only spirits and the Heauen of the blessed hee made of no praeexi●●ing matter and that honour haue the soules of men which are immediately created of nothing First then we are to intreate of that Heauen where God in his glory Christ in his glorious body are and seeing by Heauen is meant al that is contained in it by Creation we are there to consider of the Angels too and both that Heauen and the Angels belong to the inuisible world and the rest to the visible Concerning that blessed Heauen wee are to wonder at the glory of the Lord in creating it if we consider 1. The names giuen to it It is called the Heauen of Heauens Deut. 10. 14. 1 King 8. 27. Psal 11● 16. The Temple of God Psal 11. 4. ●8 7. Paradise Luke 23. 42. The heauenly Ierusalem or Ierusalem that is aboue Gal. 4. 26. Heb. 12. 22. and in the same place Mount Sion The most holy place Hebrewes 10.9 Our fathers house Iohn 4. 2. The place of the Habitation of God and his holinesse Deut. 26. 15. Psal 33. 14. Abrahams bosome Luke 16. 22. The Citie of the Liuing God Heb. 12. 22. a Cittie hauing foundation whose Maker and builder is God Heb. 11. 10. our Countrie Heb. 11. 13. 14. 2. The substance of it which is conceiued to be of a marueilous excellent nature farre more perfect and subtile then the substance not onely of the Elements but of those visible heauens which diuers gather thus As any creature is higher then the earth so is the substance of it lesse grosse and materiall As the waters are thinner then the earth and the Ayre then the waters and the Element of fire according to the common opinion of Diuines and Philosophers purer then the Ayre and the Essence of the mighty Firmament yet more pure then the foure Elements as consisting of a fift Essence as they say in Schooles and accordingly we see creatures fitted to each of these places Fishes that cannot liue in the bowells of the earth liue in the waters and foules of a more spirituall being flie in the Ayre Now when we are ascended so high as the highest visible heauens then do our minds conceiue of that glorious place of the blessed made of a more pure Essence then any of these And though Diuines say that the sustance of these heauens must needs be corporeall and
2. What are the offices of Angels or what vses did God make them for Answ Angels serue for many vses They are Apparitors or seruants about God ready to receiue Commandements from him and they worship God by lauding and praising him in Heauen Psal 104. 4. 148. 2. Esay 6. 3. Luke 2. 14. Reuel 4. 8 9. 5. 13. and they are appointed as speciall attendants about CHRIST as the MESSIAH Mat. 4. 11. and they serue also as ministring spirits to keepe and attend vpon the Elect men Heb. 1. 14. and manifold are the seruices which Angels doe for men both in life and death In life they defend and keepe them as a strong guard about them Psal 34. 91. and plague their enemies 2 King 19. 35. besides the vnknowne seruice they doe about the soules of the godly by counselling or comforting them And in death they are about them and carry their soules to Heauen as they did Lazarus his soule and in the end of the world they will gather all the Elect from the foure winds of Heauen and bring them to Christ Quest 3. But why doe you not intreat of Deuills here also Answ There were no Deuills by creation GOD made them not as Deuills and therefore it belongs not to the Doctrine of Creation to speake of the euill angels because that belongs to the Doctrine of the fall of the reasonable Creatures Quest 4. But hath euery particular man a good Angell and a bad Answ It is probable that euery Elect man hath a good Angell as may be gathered Mat. 18. 10. Acts 12. 15. but yet God is not so tyed but that he sends them extraordinarily more Angels many times to helpe or attend vpon it may be one man Psal 34. 8. As for euill angels we reade that sometimes one Angell hath vexed one man Iob. 1. 12. sometimes one Angell hath haunted diuers men 2 Chron. 18. 21. sometimes many Angels haue haunted one man Luke 8. 30. But that euery man should haue a bad angell assigned him of God is no where to be found in Scripture The consideration of this Doctrine of the making of the Angels in such a nature and for such ends as before should serue for diuers vses 1 It should informe vs concerning the wonderfull loue of God to vs that hath made such excellent creatures to do vs such admirable seruice as to attend vpon vs and keepe vs Heb. 1. 14. 2 It should breed in vs a great longing after the world to come where wee shall not onely enioy the knowledge of and fellowship with such glorious Creatures but shall be made our selues in glory as the Angels in Heauen 3 It should teach vs diuers things as first not to worship Angels for they were all created by God God made the Angels and therefore worship is due to him and not to them that are but our fellow seruants Colos 1. 16. Reuel 19. Secondly we should therfore carry our selues orderly in all places especially in the Church because of the Angels who are about vs and marke what we doe 1 Cor. 11. 10. Thirdly we should therefore be patient and of good hope and full of faith in all afflictions arising from the oppositions of men or temptations of Satan as being satisfied with this comfort that they are more that are with vs then can be against vs and if our eyes were opened wee might see so much as was shewed to the seruant of Elisha 2 Kings 6. 16. Hitherto of the Heauen of the blessed and the Hoste thereof the Angels and so of the world that is now inuisible to vs we next come downe to consider of this visible world this world I say which is in our view or may bee seene and before I come to speake of the other two Heauens I would briefly consider of Gods glory in the generall in the making of this visible world not so much for the matter of the creatures or their naturall formes or properties or their next causes which belongs properly to the Philosophers but for such things as concerne their first cause which is God or their end which is Gods glory or their vse which is rather spirituall then corporall in demonstrating vnto the soule of man the praises of God The maker of this visible world was GOD as well as of that inuisible world as is manifestly proued Genesis 1. at large The end of making a world of bodies as well as of spirits was not the punishment of spirituall substances for their sinning against God as Origen dreamed but the setting out of Gods glory in shewing his wisdome goodnesse and power Psal 19. Rom. 1. and the furnishing of man for his happy being That our hearts may be affected with wondering at this great world which God hath made we may profitably consider of it either by thinking what it is like or by serious pondering what it is indeed This great world is like a great Garden throughly furnished euery creature being as a pleasant flower exquisitely ranked in most comely order the onely weedes that grow in this Garden are wicked men as it may be likened to a great Booke in which God hath written glorious things that concerne the praise of his goodnesse wisdome and power Euery creature is as it were a distinct lease of that Booke and the properties and vses of these creatures are as it were the seuerall lines and letters of that leafe and the more admirable because it is a Booke the writing whereof is indelible and the vses whereof are vniuersall the Booke so opened that all men in all parts of the world may see and read Againe this visible world may be likened to a great and faire house most exquisitely buil and contriued into seuerall roomes and euery roome richly furnished the Heauens are the Roofe the Earth the floore and the Elements the seuerall roomes and the hosts of creatures in each of them the rich furniture and this house is the more admirable for vs because it is a house that euery man dwels in out of this house no man can be put it is kept at the charge of the Land-lord and the Tenants pay no rent But to leaue similitudes there are in the generall consideration of this visible world diuers things may bee briefly touched which we ought to wonder at and to glorifie God for his making of things so as 1 The apt disposition of euery creature in his owne place which place is so fit as a fitter cannot bee inuented if the Starres were fixed in the Earth or the Trees in Heauen how disproportionable and vncomely would it be 2 The exactnesse of the Cteatures in their working in keeping their times and seasons how punctually doth the Sunne dispatch his race in 24. houres and so the Moone in her seasons the Plants keepe their seasons of the yeere for bearing fruit and the Starres for shining as they haue receiued commandement and order from their great Commander
society that is in heauen that is to that family of adoption which is the house of our Father in heauen of which family and society Christ is the head Sixtly the witnesses were first Angels Act. 1. and that for diuers reasons for it was very fit to make vse of their testimony now that he was to shew the greatest worke of his diuine Maiesty seeing he had vsed them and their testimony and seruice at his Conception Natiuity Tentation Death and Resurrection and beside their testimony is vsed to appease the griefe of the Disciples for their separation from so meeke and louing a Lord and Master And further to reach them that though he be absent in body yet would protect his by his Spirit and by the ministery of his Angels The other sort of witnesses were the Disciples themselues This Article containing one great part of the mystery of godlinesse 1 Tim. 3. 16. it pleased our Sauiour to giue them first teachers of it assurance of it by the testimony of their senses that with the more liberty power they might vrge faith in their hearers seeing they brought them what they had not onely heard but seene and felt 1 Ioh. 1. 2. If any aske Why our Sauiour would not ascend in the sight of the whole Nation of the Iewes as well as in the sight of the Disciples I answer they were not worthy so much as once to see the Lord in his glory that had made no vse of his doctrine and miracles when he was amongst them in his estate of abasement And besides here by all the world is warned to take notice of it that the ordinary meanes to breed faith and saue their soules is the hearing of the Word and therefore doth our Sauiour of purpose withhold from men other waies of information The end of his Ascension were diuers 1. To fulfill the Type The high Priest once a yeare was to goe into the most holy place The most holy place was a type of heauen and the high Priest of Christ and his going into the most holy place shadowed out Christs Ascension and going into heauen Heb. 7. 26. and 6. 20. and 8. 4. 2. To shew that all things were fulfilled and accomplished by him which were written of him and that he had perfectly performed all that concord our reconciliation and the victory ouer our enemies and therefore his Ascension was a most glorious manifestation of his triumph and spirituall and heauenly glory after his most absolute victory and conquest 3. That hauing ouercome death hee might now enter vpon that glory which was prepared for him before the foundation of the world Ioh. 17. 5. for then was the singular glory of Christ made manifest when as Homo-deus or God-man hee entred into heauen which was a sight the Angels had neuer seene before whither may belong that of the Psalme Psal 24. 7. Open ye Princes your gates that the King of glory may enter in 4. That he might lead Captiuity captiue and before God and Angels exercise a perfect triumph ouer the spirits in the Aire that had assaulted him and whom hee had spoiled and now made to attend the Chariot of his triumph 5. That thereby he might shew that Angels and powers in heauen were also subiect to him 1 Pet. 3. 22. 6. That in heauen he might make intercession for vs with the Father Heb. 9. 24. 1 Ioh. 2. 1. Rom. 8. 34. which was shadowed out in the Law The high Priest went into the holy place alone and caried vpon his shoulders and brest the names of the Tribes in pretious stones but the people stood a great way off shut out in the vtter court of the Temple making their praiers there which were caried in by the high Priest sprinkled with blood So it is with vs wee are here in this world a great way off shut out of heauen here we make our moane and prayers with hearts lift vp to that heauenly Sanctuary and there doth Iesus cary our names on his breast and shoulders and presents himselfe for vs sprinkled with his owne blood to couer and make propitiation for our sinnes and imperfections 7. That he might open heauen for vs and make a way into the most holy place for vs which sinne had shut vp Heb. 10. 19. 20. Ezech. 44. 1 2 3. and so he saith he ascended that he might prepare a place for vs Ioh. 14. 2. 3. and 20. 20. 17. for by lifting vp our flesh into heauen therby as by a certaine pledge he being our head and wee his members we might haue assurance to ascend thither also in due time Eph. 2. 6. 8. That from thence he might send the holy Ghost the Comforter as a most diuine token of his loue to his Spouse the Church and by him might fill vs with vnutterable assistance and qualifie vs with diuers gifts Ioh. 16. 7. Psal 68. 19. Eph. 4. 10 11. 9. That our affections might not be misplaced on earth or on his bodily presence but might be drawne vp to heauen and the minding of heauenly things Col. 3. 1. The Vses follow and are 1 For information and so we should striue to be affected with the great glory of Christs triumph in ascending from earth to that glorious heauen in so glorious a manner But perhaps some one will say Elias ascended vp to heauen before and therefore it seemes this ascension of our Sauiour was no singular thing Answ There was great difference betweene the Ascension of Elias and this of our Sauiour for first he ascended by vertue of the merit of Christ which had couenanted with God to make satisfaction and so did open heauen from the beginning of the world But Christ ascended without the helpe of the merits of any other Secondly Elias went to heauen hauing not first tasted of death but Christ died and was buried and rose againe before his Ascension Thirdly Elias ascended by the helpe of Angels being not able to ascend by his owne power but Christ ascended by his owne power Fourthly Elias ascended into heauen but as a Citizen of heauen but Christ as Lord of heauen hauing a name aboue euery name Fiftly Elias went into heauen onely for himselfe Christ opened heauen for vs also 2 For consolation and so this Article ought to bee a fountaine of great consolation to vs if we consider especially the fruit and profit comes to vs by it which may bee partly gathered by that which hath beene declared before for first wee get heauen open for vs by it since the sinne of the first Adam heauen was shut against vs which was shadowed out by the Angell with a flaming Sword stopping the way into Paradise which was a type of heauen The first Adam shut heauen and the second opened it opened it I say for vs for Christ entred into heauen in our person to take possession for vs so as we doe actually possesse heauen in that our flesh is there and our head is there God
hath made vs to sit in heauenly places in Christ Iesus Eph. 1. 6. for as he left vs the earnest of his Spirit so he tooke from vs the earnest of the flesh and caried it into heauen as a pawne to assure that the whole should be brought after him So that his ascension into heauen works our ascension into heauen and so a threefold ascension For first heauen is opened for a spirituall ascension of our minds while our bodies are on earth our hearts taking vnspeakable comfort by faith in our vnion with Christ and so with God whereas otherwise without Christ our very thoughts are shut out of heauen our hearts hauing no cause of comfort but rather of sorrow to thinke of our losse of Gods fauour and so glorious a place Secondly heauen is opened for our soules to enter in when we dye our soules being to bee caried by the Angells into heauen that before in Adam kept vs out of heauen Thirdly heauen is opened for both soule and body at the last day 1 Thes 4. 14. 17. Ioh. 17. 24. Thus of the first benefit Another benefit comes to vs by the ascension of Christ and that is the leading of our enemies captiue for his triumph ouer them when he led captiuity captiue Psal 89. 19. extends to vs. That we may vnderstand this the better wee must know that Christs victory ouer his enemies had fiue degrees First it is the ordination of it and so he conquered from eternity Secondly the prediction of it and so his conquest was a foot in all the ages of the old Testament and began at the promise in Paradise after the fall and was plainly renewed in that place of the Psalmes quoted before Thirdly the operation of it in his owne person and so he conquered on the Crosse and triumphed in his Ascension Fourthly the application of it and so he conquereth and hath in all ages conquered in his Members making them able to ouercome Sinne and Sathan and the World but this is but in part and in the beginnings of it Fiftly the consummation and full accomplishment of the victory and so the Deuils and the Graue and Death and Sinne and the World shall be for euer vanquished at the last day when Christ shall appeare in glory and wee be made like vnto him in an euerlasting freedome from all misery The third benefit is the daily helpe wee haue from the intercession of Christ in heauen that perfectly remembers vs and appeares before God for vs to make our persons and praiers and workes still accepted before God as hath beene shewed before The last benefit is the sending of the holy Ghost to be with the Church to the end of the world in a speciall manner to qualifie vs with all needfull gifts and to be our Comforter as hath likewise beene shewed before Thirdly this Article serues for confuration of diuers sorts of men as 1. Of those that say the very body of Christ is present to the bodies of men in the Sacrament of the Supper whereas the Article is plaine he is in body ascended into heauen 2. Of the Papists about merit of workes They say Christ merited our Iustification but wee must merit our place in heauen Whereas our Sauiour saith He went to heauen to prouide and prepare a place for vs. 3. Of such as say they must giue way to an insufficient ministery because able men cannot bee had Whereas Christ ascended to giue gifts vnto men and therefore if all lawfull meanes were vsed able men would bee found by his blessing 4. Of such as thinke because they were not brought vp to learning or haue liued long in ignorance therefore knowledge must not bee required of them nor can they attaine to it whereas if they had honest hearts and would conscionably vse the meanes they might bee led into all truth by the Comforter which Christ hath sent 5. Of such as say they may liue in some sinnes and they can neuer bee seduced in this life which is a varne excuse for their negligence and wilfull indulgence ouer their corruptions for Christ ascended to lead captiuity captiue 6. Of all worldlings that professe they are Christs and yet minde nothing but earthly things whereas if they were true Christians their hearts would haue ascended with Christ by seeking those things that are aboue Col. 3. 1. A fourth sort of vses are for instruction and so 1. This Article should make vs willing to dye seeing it is the highest point of our preferment to ascend to heauen and seeing to dye is but to ascend to heauen and goe to our Father and that Christ ascended to take possession for vs. 2. It should teach vs not to mourne immoderately for the losse of our dearest friends seeing they are ascended to heauen and wee can neuer lose so much as the Disciples did when such a Master and Sauiour was parted from them and went to heauen 3. It should stirre vs vp to all possible care of an holy and contented life it should seeme to vs a monstrous base thing to serue sinne or the deuill or the world that are such shamefull captiues to be a slaue to a slaue is a matchlesse basenesse and yet this is the condition of the most and which makes it more wofull man likes it and desires to continue so still Lastly it should worke vpon vs a strong impression of desire to carry our selues as strangers here and pilgrims and to haue our conuersation in heauen where Christ is and ●●om whence wee looke for him to come and vnite vs to himselfe when he shall change vs and make vs like himselfe in glory Hitherto of the Ascension of Christ The third degree of his exaltation is his Session at the right hand of God The first words of this Article are ambiguous because they are not taken in their proper sense for properly God hath no right hand as being a Spirit and Christ may not be thought to vse no other gesture in heauen but sitting and therefore we must enquire of the Scripture for the sense as it is figuratiue and so first what sitting may signifie then what the right hand of God signifies and then what it is to sit at the right hand of God For the first Sitting in a figuratiue sense in Scripture is vsed two waies First to note habitation abiding or resting as when the Apostles were willed to sit in that City till they were endued with power from on high Luk. 24. 49 Secondly to note Soueraignty and Iudiciarie power and when Solomon is said to sit vpon the Throne of his Father 1 King 1. 30. so Prou. 20. 8. Isa 16. 5. The right hand of God when it is spoken of about earthly things notes his power and helpe as Psal 44. 3. and when it is spoken of as in heauen it notes supreme glory and Maiestie and authority Now to be at the right hand when it is spoken of men it signifies to helpe as Psal 142. 5.
power but by his essence for it must needs be a childish thing to imagine an infinite power to proceede from a finite essence The cause then of his vbiquitie is the vnmeasurablenesse of Gods essence God is such a sphere whose Center is euery where and whose circumference is no where Ob. God is said to dwell in heauen Ergo hee is not euery where Psal 115. 3. Sol. God is euery where in respect of his essence and said to be in heauen or dwell there onely in respect of the larger manifestation of his glory and grace Ob. God is not with wicked men Numb 14. 42. Ergo not euery where Sol. God is with wicked men in respect of his essence but not with them in respect of his grace and fauour Ob. God is said to depart from men and to returne to men Psal 10. 1. 6. 5. thus God departed from Saul Ergo hee is not euery where Sol. God doth depart from or returne to men not by stirring his essence or changing his place but in respect of the declaration of his mercy or Iustice and so hee departs either from wicked men or godly men from wicked men he departs when he hath not mercy on them or when hee takes away the meanes of grace and le ts them fall into hardnesse of heart and so into perdition or when he takes away the blessings he had giuen them He departs from godly men either when he withdrawes the sense of his grace and fauour from their sinnes or seemes to deny them helpe or deliuerance in their distresses He returnes to the godly both inwardly and outwardly Inwardly when he restores the sense of his fauour and the ioy of his Saluation and when he goeth on to worke Faith and Repentance in them Outwardly when he declares his presence by outward effects as by deliuerance or vnexpected blessings The consideration of Gods Omnipresence and Vbiquity may serue 1. For information and so to shew how much we are bound vnto God that will dwell amongst vs and keepe house in the Sanctuarie He wants not a place to be in that fills all places and cannot bee contained in the Heauen of Heauens 1. Kings 8. 17. 2. Chron. 2. 6. Esay 66. 1. 2. For instruction and so it should teach vs diuers things as 1. Not to abuse Gods presence in his house so as to thinke that place or any other doth containe him or to commit that Idolatry as to worship a God that can be compassed about with a Church wall Acts 17. 24. 2. Chron. 6. 18. 2. To take heede of sinning though it bee in secret because God is in euery place Ier. 23. 23. 24. Yea to auoid the very Hypocrisie of the heart because he is a discerner of the thoughts and sees and stands by euery offence committed Hebrewes 4. 12. and sees and heares all wee say and doe 3. To striue to bring our selues to a continuall remembrance of Gods presence and accordingly to walke before him in all vprightnesse Psal 16. 8. Gen. 17. 1. 3. It serues to shew the miserle and folly of wicked men they can neuer escape or flie from the wrathfull hand of GOD whithersoeuer they runne GOD is there nor can any of their faults be hid from him Amos 9. 1. 2. 3. 4. Psal 139. 7. c. 4. It shewes the folly of the Papists that direct to either hee or shee Saint to bring vs or our suits to God God is not farre from vs but alwaies present with vs and therefore wee neede none of them to bring vs to God Lastly it serues for great consolation to the godly in all their troubles and dangers and against all the practizes and deuises of their aduersaries nothing can befall them but what God sees and they neede not feare because God is alwaies by them to helpe them Ioshuah 1. 9. Esay 4● 1. 2. Psalme 118. 6. 7. though all friends were absent yet God is with vs. Thus of the omnipresence of God His incomprehensiblenesse is that dreadfull transcendencie of the nature of God whereby it passeth our vnderstanding so as his essence cannot bee fully conceiued of by vs so as neither corporeall places nor spirituall vnderstanding can containe God His omnipresence makes him bigger then all places and his incomprehensiblenesse bigger then any created minde Psal 145. 3. 1. Tim. 6. 16. The incomprehensiblenesse of God is not without vse for it may serue 1. To confute the makers and worshippers of Images seeing God is aboue all that which any minde can conceiue and therefore much more then any picture can expresse They sinne fearefully therefore in offering to vs a God that can be set out by so poore a resemblance Images therefore are worthily called by the Prophet teachers of Lies 2. To teach vs to worship God with all our mindes and all our hearts and all our might striuing to admire and adore and daily to blesse his vnsearchable greatnesse Psalme 145. 2 3. And for our direction in the right conceiuing of God we should therefore wholy rest vpon that way and those descriptions he hath made of himselfe in his word seeing else our vnderstandings would erre altogether in ghessing at that which it cannot take in Thus of Gods infinite greatnesse his eternity followes If God be considered in himselfe he is infinite if in respect of our vnderstanding he is incomprehensible if in respect of our senses he is inuisible if in respect of our words he is ineffable if in respect of place he is incircumscriptible and if in respect of duration or continuance he is eternall Some things haue both beginning and end as the vegetables and bruit beasts and these are said to bee temporall Some things haue beginning and no end as men and Angels and these are said to bee perpetuall One thing hath neither beginning nor end which is GOD and he is said to bee eternall A thing is said to be eternall either improperly or properly improperly and so two waies First when a thing is said to last a long while and so the ceremonies of Moses and circumcision were said to endure for euer Gen. 17. Numb 18. Secondly when a thing hath no end which yet had a beginning and so Angels diuels the soules of men Heauen and Hell are eternall But properly God onely is eternall because he hath neither beginning nor end or is the beginning without beginning and the end without end Or this difference in the continuance of things may be fitly exprest by the description of eternity made by Boetius Eternity is the interminable totall perfect and together pleasant possession of life for in this description each word makes a difference betweene things in their duration for first some things so continue that they haue both beginning and end as the bruit beasts these are barred out by the word interminable Againe some things are interminable in respect of essence but haue no life as the heauen
bodily which they proue by infallible reasons yet are they such a body as wee may call as it were spirituall next in purity to the substance of Angels and mens soules 3. If we consider the qualities admirable is the glory of that heauen of heauens whether we thinke of it Philosophically or Theologically Philosophically considered it is a place void of all decay alteration and motion A place that suffers not from without it selfe any thing of naturall grieuance or violence or annoyance A place aboue all places large and ample as containing in the bowells and circumference of it all this visible world But if wee inquire after it as considered Theologically we may see it in a Mirror but yet it is but darkely no tongue of man can vtter the glory of it noe Paul himselfe that was there yet could not declare what he saw nor can it enter into the mortall heart of man to think what it is what is reuealed in Scripture in praise of it is inough to rauish our hearts with desire after it if we were such as we should be It is a place most lightsome for God is said to dwell in light vnapproachable vnapproachable I say to vs mortall cr●atures It is light aboue al that light the Sun or Moone can giue to this lower world for there is no need of Sun nor Moon which shine in respect of that light as a candle doth to the light of the Sun with vs There is no night there and it is a light of a farre more excellent and transcendent kinde then this light we haue from the Starres or Sunne or Moone and that is the reason why it doth not penetrate to vs as being farre aboue the capacity of our eyes as they are now to see it The Apostle saith of this light it was like vnto a stone most precious euen like a Iasper stone cleare as Christall that is alwaies flourishing and shining without any clouds or darkenesse and how can it be otherwise seeing God himselfe and the Lambe is the light of it there floweth from God being the place of his speciall glory a created light from God himselfe I say by which it is after an vnspeakeable manner inlightned Reuel 21. 11. 23. Whence it followes that it is a place full of all vnspeakeable refreshing pleasure and delight If the light of the Sunne at some seasons of the yeere can so please how much more doth this light of the glory of God What shall I say It is a place that hath nothing in it of euill and abounds in all that may content the glorified nature of the Creatures And how can it be otherwise seeing there is no sinne nor no vncleane person there and it is a place that hath the glory of the Lord vpon it Reuel 21. 11. which is as much as if he should say that the glory of heauen doth differ from all the glory of any place on earth as God differs from the Kings and Potentates of the Earth and therefore his chiefe house of Residence must needs almost infinitely excell theirs And the more is the glory of heauen because it is eternall it cannot fade or euer cease to bee which is signified by those golden and pretious foundations Reuel 21. Other Citties wil decay because they are builded by man and of corruptible matter but this Cittie can neuer decay because God was the builder of it immediately and made it incorruptible To conclude it must needs bee a place of surpassing glory seeing all the Treasures of this world are searched out and they can serue but to giue a litle glimpse of the meanest part of the praises of heauen as the twentie one Chapter of the Reuelations shewes Before I come to the Vses some questions would be briefely resolued Quest. 1. Whether this Heauen was created or no or was it eternall with God Answ It was created by God is as said expressely Heb. 11. 10. that God was the builder and Maker of it It being not the Creator It must needs be a creature Quest. 2. Where is this Heauen Answ It is aboue all these visible heauens Ephes 4. 8. Acts 7. 55 56. their opinion is vaine that thinke it is euery where for then Hell should be in Heauen Quest 3. Why did God build and make this Heauen Answ Not to be a place for himselfe to dwell in for hee needs no such place being Immense and these Heauens cannot containe him he being in his Essence without and beyond all Heauens 1. Kings 8. 27. but he made it that it might bee a a place wherein he might manifest his glory in speciall manner but especially that in that place hee might giue entertainement vnto such as by grace he had chosen to bee his children and therefore is called the Fathers house The consideration of the Doctrine of this Heauen of Heauens should make violent impression vpon our hearts and that in three respects 1. It should wonderfully abase vs to thinke how wee haue neglected the knowledge and care and desire after this glorious place It should make vs hate our selues for our senselessnes and madnesse that preferre an earthly mudde-wall cottage before such a princely or rather diuine Pallace that are in loue with this earthly place that is full of sinne sorrow disgrace darkenesse and death and yet haue no heart after a place so wonderfully free from all euill and so replenished with all good Oh wretches that wee are that labour care day and night to repaire these glassie or mud-walled Tabernacles of our bodies and haue no more minde to prouide for that matchlesse triumphing place of spirits 2. It should wonderfully fire our hearts to the loue of God that hath prouided for vs such a place of glorious inheritance of his mercy loue and grace so happy so lasting so amiable yea what thankes can wee euer giue him for the very comfort with which he hath refreshed vs in telling vs of Heauen that were such as in our selues had bin so farre from hauing it as we had neuer knowne of it by the light of Nature 3. It should exceedingly transforme our hearts into the earnest care and endeauour to carrie our selues so as might become the desire and assurance of so blessed a place wee should shew that we vnderstand what a place Heauen is 1. By auoiding euery thing that is abhominable euen all those sinnes that are threatned with the want or losse of heauen as remembring that that is no place for vncleane persons to liue in Reuel 21. 8. 2. By earnest endeauour to get the righteousnesse that may make vs fit for that kingdome Mat. 6. 33. 3. By studying the the assurance of Heauen aboue all other assurances whatsoeuer 4. By a conuersation in heauen directing our thoughts and affections after heauen remembring it aboue all delights our mindes daily running vpon it and imploying our selues in such dueties as might shew that our hearts were in Heauen though our
Spider Of the Ant we should learne diligence and prouidence in times of plenty to prouide for dearth especially in spirituall things Of the Mountaine Rats we should learne vpon the experience of our owne weaknesse to prouide by Faith so as we may rest in the Rock of Gods Almighty protection Of the Locusts we should learne to doe our duties though we be not compelled and to be carefull to keepe our fellowship with the Saints Of the Spider that workes euen in Kings Palaces we should learne to hold forth the light of the Truth by either Doctrine or good example in all places and not to be daunted for the presence of any or the example of the multitude that are otherwise imployed Hitherto hath beene intreated of the Creatures of all sorts some of them being onely spirituall Creatures as the Angels some of them onely bodily creatures as all the rest in Heauen and earth Now followeth that we consider of man who is a creature both spirituall in respect of his soule and corporall in respect of the outward matter of which he consists A creature into whom enters the composition of all the world Nature as it is spirituall and bodily meeting in man for man is the Epitomie of all Gods works and a patterne of the great Vniuerse He is the world abridged or the little world into whose being enters the nature of euery thing without him being a creature partly terrestriall partly celestiall partly mortall partly immortall so as what God made a part in other creatures he makes perfect and ioyntly together in man He had made spirits by themselues and bodies by themselues and then he makes a Creature that should consist of spirit and body ioyned together and therefore as wee haue read in the great Booke of nature which is the world so now we must learne to read in the little Booke of Nature which is man else it will be a shame for vs to know other things and not know our selues He were a sencelesse man that did know curiously all the roomes in other mens Palaces and yet knowes not so much as a corner of his owne dwelling The excellency of Gods workmanship in creating man appeares if we consider his body apart or his soule apart or his body and soule iointly About the body of man God hath done many things more then he did to any other bodily creatures for 1 Whereas all other bodies were created only by saying let them be they were so God did take more special regard of mans body and therefore doth forme it as it were with his owne hands out of the dust of the earth Gen. 2. 7. 2 The body of man now since the Creation is not propagated by the Parents without the wonderfull workmanship of God and therefore all our bodies are said to bee made and fashioned by God as well as Adams Iob 10. 8. Yea it was the Spirit of the strong God that made vs and the breath of the Almighty that put life into vs Iob 33. 4. We are creatures now as well as Adam Marke 16. 15. and Dauid saith He was fearefully and wonderfully made it was a maruellous worke and he was curiously wrought in the wombe Psal 139. 14 15 16. Yea he saith there that God did it by the Booke hauing written it downe from eternity how all his members should be fashioned Euery part of our bodies if wee knew the forming of them would shew a speciall glory of working in God our bones would say Lord who is like to the● Psal 35. 10. And as we know not what is the way of the Spirit so we know not how the bones doe grow in the wombe of her that is with childe and so we may say of the rest we know not the workes of God who maketh all Eccles 11. 5. the hearing eare and the seeing eye the Lord hath made euen both of them Prou. 20. 12. It was God onely that clothed vs with skinne and fenced vs with bones and sinewes Iob 10. 11. and so it was God onely that formed the inward parts of mans body hee formed the heart Psalme 33. 15. and the workemanship within mans body was so great that he reserues it as a glory onely to himselfe to know and search the heart and reines of a man and this is the more admirable if we consider that no part of the body is superfluous or idle but euery part hath his function and some excellent worke to doe which function it exerciseth by it selfe for the good of the whole body without medling with the office of the other members which is the more wonderfull if we consider the innumerable parts and parcels of the body of a man Not the least threed or veine in a mans body but it doth some excellent office 1 Cor. 12. 3 God made the body of man in beauty and fairenesse excelling all other visible creatures for both his countenance is lifted vp to Heauen and the parts of his body are with more comlinesse proportioned and his colour is full of sweetnesse and louelinesse Thus it was with man in his Creation and thus and much better it shall bee with his body when hee shall shine as the Starres in the Firmament 4 The body of man had at the first no disposition to wearinesse or sicknesse or death which the bodies of all other liuing Creatures were subiect to This priuiledge mans body had not by nature but by the gift of GOD GOD hauing infused into the body a soule that did her worke in the body perfectly and allowing him such foode as was most effectuall for vegetation and giuing man skill and care to looke to himselfe and if the body in time would haue declined God would haue preuented that by tranflating man to Heauen without sicknesse and death 5. Language is an admirable indowment of the body of man onely who is able to expresse himselfe with infinite variety and distinctions of sound whence flowes all conuersation and delightfull or profitable society But the excellencie of Gods power and glory in the Creation of mans soule who can perfectly recount God hath done wonderfully for man in respect of his soule aboue all other visible creatures for 1. The soule was breathed into the body of man by God himself by speciall inspiration and singular Creation Gen. 2. and neuer was a soule in the body of man but was made of God by his speciall power our bodies may haue earthly fathers but our spirits haue no Father but God Heb. 12. It is God onely that creates and frames the spirit of man within him Zacharie 12. 1. and so man is the generation of God Acts 17. 2. The soule is indued with the light of reason and can discerne things by reasoning and inward discourse seeing things by a light that is Immateriall and with great variety contemplating of things that the senses cannot reach to and finding out strange things euen in those things are presented by the senses
as the sailes are in the ship nor by affectiō as two friends are one nor in respect of ioynt worship as if onely the humane nature had the honour to be worshipped with the diuine nor in respect of Harmonie or consent as if onely the diuine and humane will of Christ did agree nor in respect of Title only as if the flesh of Christ had no more but the honour to be called by the same Title his Diuinity is as the Sonne of God or Christ or the like nor by mingling the humane nature with the diuine to make a certaine third thing but the humane nature is fastened to the diuine nature in the vnity of person after an vnconceiueable manner so as the diuine nature is not changed nor either nature altered nor separated by distance one from another The eight point is the effects of this personall vnion of the diuine and humane nature in this worke of Incarnation The effects I meane in Christ not in vs. Now many things flow from this vnion as 1. The communication of proprieties and that is the attributing of such things as are proper to either nature vnto the person of Christ because that these natures doe subsist in that person so as that is truely said of Christ which yet is to be vnderstood with a respect to that nature vnto which that property doth belong Thus the Sonne of Man is said to haue power to forgiue sinnes on earth which is the propriety of the diuine nature Mat. 9. 6. and to bee called the Sonne of the most High Luke 1. 32. Thus the Sonne of Man is said to ascend where hee was before Now he was not in heauen in his humane nature before Ioh. 6. 62. and so he saith hee was before Abraham was Ioh. 8. 58. and his bloud is called the bloud of God Acts 20. 28. The like speeches are found in other Scriptures as Colos 1. 17. Heb. 1. 2 c. 2. The pouring out of gifts vpon the humane nature which were as great as could be receiued by a created nature and these were giuen both to the body and soule of Christ His body obtained the highest degree of perfection could be fall a body which glory for our saluation was with-held from his body during his abode on earth in respect of his office and so his body was subiect to infirmities passions of diuers sorts and death and buriall but that worke being finished which he vndertooke for vs in his body it now shineth in Heauen in greater glory then any bodily creatures doe or shall attaine vnto Vpon the soule of Christ by vertue of this vnion with the diuine Nature were powred out gifts aboue the glory of the gifts which are in men or Angels and to make this a little better to appeare I will instance in his knowledge and in his Charity There were diuers kinds of knowledge in Christ Hee had an eternall and vncreated knowledge and wisdome which did belong onely vnto his diuine Nature but it is the created knowledge belongs to this place and that vnderstanding and knowledge is either from experience or from reuelation or from vision 1 There was in our Sauiour an experimentall knowledge by which our Sauiour knew all things could be knowne by the light of Nature and though hee had not expeperience of all things yet by reasoning from the like or the contrary or from the causes or effects he perceiued things hee had not experience of As by the infirmities he felt and by the things he suffered he knowes all the things we suffer in the full nature of them Heb. 2. 18. 4. 15. and in this kinde of wisdome it is that hee was said to grow vp in or profit and increase in and in this kinde of wisdome he was able to discerne more then any man in the world 2 There was in our Sauiour a knowledge infused which they call the knowledge of Reuelation by which heauenly things are vnderstood by a light they call the light of grace And by this knowledge our Sauiour did discerne in his soule spirituall things more exactly then euer man or Angell did of this is spoken Esay 11. 12. 3 The third kinde of knowledge in Christ is the knowledge by vision which is called the knowledge of the blessed in Heauen by which God is seene face to face and in this Christ excells all men and Angels for it is hee that brings all iust men to this happinesse of seeing God in Heauen Heb. 2. 10. And besides this personall vision his soule is neerer vnto God then men or Angels can bee and therefore sees GOD more cleerely then they can doe As a man that hath a good sight doth see a thing that is hard by him more exactly then another man that is farther off from it Yea this knowledge in the soule of Christ doth not fully comprehend God for that which is infinite cannot be comprehended by that which is finite he seeth God whole that is all t●at i● in God but not wholly that is not by an absolute comprehension of it And in as much as all iudgement is committed vnto Christ as the Sonne of man it is most probable that as man hee doth see the thoughts of all men that are to be iudged by him as man though not by any naturall efficacy in his vnderstanding as man yet by a supernaturall infusion of light from his diuine nature Ioh. 5. 27. Thus of the gift of knowledge Charity and loue was powred out vpon the soule of CHRIST aboue all the measures of Charity in men or Angels Iohn 13. 1. Romans 5. 6 7. Thus of the gifts were powred out vpon the humane nature of Christ Yet by the way it is not amisse to note that certaine gifts were not powred out vpon CHRIST or not till his glorification as faith and hope were not in CHRIST at all for in as much as the obiect of faith is things not seene faith it selfe could not be in CHRIST who did inioy the vision of GOD by vertue of the personall vnion with the diuine nature euen from the beginning of his Incarnation by that kind of knowledge which I called before his knowledge of vision or the knowledge of the blessed yet to want faith did not argue imperfection in CHRIST but rather remoued imperfection as hee that wants Spectacles when he needeth them not is no whit inferiour to him that vseth Spectacles because of the weaknesse of his sight The like is to bee said of hope for as Faith beholds things that are not seene so hope lookes to things which are not yet had or possessed Rom. 8. 24. and the cheife obiect of both is the chiefe good which is GOD now CHRIST enioyed GOD yea euen in the very instant of his death but if we looke to secondary obiects and by hope vnderstand an expectation of some kinde of helpe promised by GOD then such a kinde of hope may be granted to haue beene in
the Maiestie vncreated the Maiestie created which is in Christ the one belongs to the Diuine nature the other to the humane The good that comes to vs by his exaltation is threefold the first is the confirmation of our faith and hope for his exaltation shewes plainly that hee hath fully satisfied for our sinnes and conquered all our enemies Sinne the Law Death the Deuill the Graue and Hell and that hee hath purchased Gods fauour and all that concernes our eternall saluation 1 Pet. 1. The second is the perpetuation of his office both as the Prophet and Apostle of our confession Psal 22. 23. Ioh. 17. vlt. as our Priest to make intercession for vs Psal 110. 4. Rom. 8. 33. and as our eternall King Psal 45. 4. 5. and 89. 36. Dan. 7. 27. Luk. 1. 33. Rom. 14. 9. and in all these by his glorification hee hath procured a larger donation and effusion of the Holy Ghost which makes the times vnder Christ more happy than those before Ioh. 7. 39. In all his gifts he giues now as he that is exalted aboue euery name that is named in heauen and earth The third is our owne exaltation he was therefore exalted that he might exalt vs to the glory of heauen Eph. 2. 6. 7. The consideration of the exaltation of Christ may serue greatly for our comfort for besides the former benefits it may raise vp in vs an assurance of hope of preferment by him seeing our Brother is so highly preferred and withall it may greatly encourage vs in all our suits to God seeing wee haue Christ with him that is so high in his fauour and further in all the straits and distresses of the Church here on earth this may ioy our hearts that Christ is so highly preferred that he is able to preserue and deliuer the Church when pleaseth him But yet we must remember two things if wee would haue benefit by Christs exaltation the one is that wee be true Christians for else his preferment will not reach to vs onely such as are bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh haue part in his glory and such are none but true beleeuers The other is that if wee will reigne with Christ wee must suffer with him wee see here how it was with him first he was abased and then exalted so it must be with vs Luk. 24. 26. Heb. 2. 9. 2 Tim. 2. 12. Thus of his exaltation in generall The first degree of his exaltation was his Resurrection from the dead Concerning the Resurrection of Christ diuers things are to be considered of 1. That he did rise from the dead 2. What of him did rise 3. When he rose 4. How he rose 5. Why he rose from the dead 6. His Apparitions after his Resurrection 7. What good comes to vs by his Resurrection That Christ did rise from the dead we beleeue against all Iewes Turkes and prophane Mockers and are enduced so to doe by testimony both diuine and humane The diuine testimonies are three first the Spirit of God which testifiech two waies first by the Apostles and Euangelists in the Euangelicall Story which wee ought to beleeue if the Apostles had neuer beene eye-witnesses for if the witnesse of men be receiued the witnesse of God is greater Secondly in the heart of euery beleeuer that relyes vpon the Gospell Ioh. 15. 26. The second testimony is the witnesse of Angels who were sent from heauen of purpose to signifie so much Luk. 24. 5. as by Angels the conception and birth of Christ was testified from heauen so was his resurrection The third was the Apparition of Christ shewing himselfe many times aliue from the dead The Humane testimonies were three first was the testimony of Mary Magdalen and the other women that came to annoint the body of Iesus Ioh. 20. 1. as a woman was the first that brought from the Deuill the tidings of sinne vnto the first Adam so a woman is the first that from the good Angels brings the tidings of the Resurrection of the second Adam by whom we are iustified from our sinnes The second was the testimony of the Apostles and fifty Disciples and S. Paul who all saw Christ after hee was risen 1 Cor. 15. 6. The third was the testimonies of the Souldiers that watched the Sepulchre wherein obserue the great prouidence of God that makes the high Priests against their wils from these men to know that Christ was risen from the dead who were set of purpose to hinder the report of the Resurrection by watching the Sepulchre lest his Disciples should steale away his body by night The second point is quickly opened If any aske What of Christ did rise The answer is That the body of Christ onely did rise his Deity could not and the sould did not For the time of the Resurrection Christ did rise the third day after the end of the Sabbath on the first day of the weeke about Sunne rising and concerning this answer diuers things are to be considered of First it was necessary Christ should not rise from the dead sooner or later than the third day from his death and buriall for so it was foretold Hos 6. 2. He shall restore vs to life after two daies viz. the Messiah shall doe it and the third day hee shall raise vs vp viz. in his owne person which was a pledge of our Resurrection and wee shall liue in his sight It is thought S. Paul had respect vnto this place when he said He rose againe the third day according to the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15. 4. and besides this was prefigured by the type Ionas the Prophet as our Sauiour himselfe shewed in his life time Mat. 12. 40. Thirdly he could haue risen as soone as hee was buried but he would not lest the truth of his death should haue beene questioned and beyond the third day hee would not tarry lest the faith of his Disciples should faile and lest any should haue cause to thinke that he brought not the same body was dead but some other Further obserue that as Christ died the same day Adam was created so he liued againe the same day the world began to be the same day God made heauen and earth the same day he filled the earth with the grace and heauen with the ioy of the Resurrection of Christ and therefore this day was called the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. Thirdly hee rose at the rising of the Sunne to shew that he was the true Sunne of righteousnesse that was now rising to enlighten the new and Christian world after the long night of darknesse and legall shadowes and that hee had brought life and immortality to light 2 Tim. 1. 10. For the fourth point to wit how Christ rose diuers things are to be answered first that he rose by his own power He raised himselfe vp from the dead Ioh. 2. 19. and 10. 18. and 5. 25. for though other Scriptures attribute resurrection to God the Father the Holy
iust It is in vaine to plead the mercy of God and Christ to proue the saluation of the wicked for he is iust as well as mercifull and that they shall know fully at his comming In the sentence of condemnation obserue foure things First the reprobation of the wicked vers 41. Secondly the cause of this reprobation vers 42 43. Thirdly the Apologie of the wicked for themselues vers 44. Fourthly the answer to their Apologie vers 45. In the Reprobation of the wicked I note diuers things as 1. In that speaking of the Iudge his title of King is left out which was mentioned vers 34 40. I gather that wicked men euen at the Tribunall when they shall see Christ in his greatest glory yet they cannot truly loue him or ●steeme of his glory The naturall hatred of Christ will continue vpon them euen at that day 2. In that he saith Depart yee from me it shewes that it is a grieuous misery to be thrust out from Christ it were an euerlasting fearfull punishment if wicked men did suffer no more but the absence of Christ for euer to liue without that Sunne of Righteousnesse is worse than to liue without the shining of the Sunne in the firmament and herein note the iustice of Christ in that wicked men could not abide the company of Christ and true Christians in this world they shall now be paid in the same kinde they shall neuer more enioy the presence of Christ or any one true Christian Woe to Hypocrites at that day though now they seeme to be ioyned to Christ yet let them thinke what it will be when they shall be made to depart 3. In that he calls them Cursed it shewes that euery wicked man is a cursed creature and withall that to be vnder Gods curse is the quintessence of misery And therefore godly men haue little cause to enuy the prosperitie of any wicked man nor wicked man to be so drunken with the estimation of the fading glory of earthly possessions 4. In that he saith Into euerlasting fire it notes the vnspeakable horror of the paine of wicked men in Hell If a man knew he must lie in a burning fire but one day oh how would he be dismayed Oh what senselesnesse hath bewitched vngodly men that are not frighted with euerlasting burnings They are wonderfully blinded that striue to beleeue that there is only Poena Damni not Poena Sensus in Hell That there is no paine in Hell but only losse of good things as the presence of God and Christ c. 5. In that he saith Prepared for the Deuill and his Angels we obserue 1. That God neuer purposed to shew mercy to the Deuills 2. That there is one Deuill is chiefe and hath power ouer the rest 3. That from the beginning God intended to shew mercie vnto mankind though not vnto deuils 4. That the eternall companions of wicked men shall be deuils such as loue wicked company in this life may here see what companions they shall haue in Hell From the description of the cause of the Reprobation we may note 1. That it is not enough to refraine from euill but we must doe good Not bearing of fruit will be a cause of cutting downe the Tree 2. All Religion is pretended in vaine by such as are able and doe not shew mercy to the poore It is a sinne that Christ shall finde only in the wicked From the Apologie of the wicked we learne 1. That men may be very innocent in some things in their owne sight and yet be very guiltie in the sight of God They did thinke verily they neuer saw Christ naked c. and yet in his members they did 2. That it is the propertie of the wicked to remember the good they doe and forget the euill they can remember their prophecying working of miracles and eating and drinking with Christ Matth. 7. 22. but forget all their sinnes of vnmercifulnesse and the like No ma ruell if they iustifie themselues before men that shall dare to doe it before Christ himselfe From the answer to the Apologie we learne plainly that all the iniuries done to the godly yea euen to the poorest and meanest of them Christ reckons as done to himselfe and will accordingly punish them at the day of Iudgement yea not only iniuries but the neglect of honouring and succouring and relieuing of them Hitherto of the manner of the Sentence The execution followes Vnto the execution of the Sentence foure things belong 1. The deliuery of Possession of eternall glory to the godly 2. The detrusion of the wicked into Hell 3. The creation of the new Heauens and new Earth 4. The deliuering vp of the Kingdome of Christ into the hands of God the Father For the first after the sentence ended the Elect shall be all taken vp to heauen with Christ there to reigne with him in eternall blisse where they shall presently be possest of foure incomparable benefits The first is the immediate vision of God so as neuer man saw him in this world If to liue in the presence of great Princes on earth be such a preferment what is it to liue in Gods presence for euer and if to see the Monarches of the earth in their glory so much affect men what is that eternall sight when men that once were but dust and clay are now admitted to behold that infinite perfection and fountaine of all goodnesse In God wee shall behold most perfectly all those things that can be of power to stirre admiration all those beauties and praises that the nature of man can delight in The second is the perfection of their owne natures both in soule and body Then shall their countenances shine like the Sunne in the firmament then shall their very bodies be like spirits able to passe whither they will in a moment then shall they possesse health without all infirmitie or power to feele paine or defect nor sorrow sicknesse or weaknesse shall any more assaile them but greater things than those shall be bestowed vpon their soules for then shall their knowledge be made perfect Here wee know but in part there we shall know as we are knowne there we shall enioy an euerlasting day It is darke night with vs in this world in comparison of that celestiall light of knowledge Here we are groaping in the darke to finde out some parts of truth but there God who is whole truth it selfe shall fill our mindes with the shining beames of his light Then shall all the faculties of the soule be made perfectly glorious in all righteousnesse and true holinesse all impotencies being remoued God himselfe being all in all in the Elect for euer The third is the acquaintance and most glorious societie with all the Angels of Heauen and all iust men of all ages and degrees which fellowship shall be made perfectly comfortable all things that may offend being remoued from them both in their natures and workes The heart of man
there are many things should inflame the hearts of Christians to a great desire after the doctrine concerning God and his nature as 1. It is the most glorious subiect of all others in the world no doctrine can tell vs of such marueilous things as the doctrine of God doth 2. It is the end of our Creation all other things though made by God yet they haue no discerning of him Now God made man and gaue him a reasonable soule that hee might see God and the great workes he had done els in the Visible world there had bin none to know or praise God Nothing therefore can be more contrary to the end of our Creation then if wee spend our time and do not labour to know and praise God 3. The whole doctrine of Religion is called Theologie which word in the originall taken a funder is a speech or doctrine concerning God to signifie that without the true knowledge of God there can be no true Religion or right vnderstanding of any thing God is the principall Subiect of all Religious doctrine 4. Of all doctrines this is most profitable for vs for the doctrines that concerne God haue the most power ouer our liues to reforme them and to make vs carefull of good workes Colos 1. 10 euen the more we know of God the nearer we come to the perfectiō of our natures Besides these doctrine doe fill the heart more then any other truthes Yea it is eternall life to know God and Christ It is Heauen vpon Earth It is the very beginning of the glory of Heauen which consists in the Vision of God Ioh. 17. 3. 5. To want the knowledge of God is extreamely base and vncomely for a Christian It is a poore thing to bee pleased with the knowledge of other things and bee ignorant of God and the rather because what we loue or admire in other things that are good are most perfectly in God and no where else besides shall we bee ignorant of him from whom we receiue al good things and from whom al things might make vs happie are to be expected Is not he liberty life glory sufficiencie blessednesse perfect and holy pleasure and the Rest of spirits as a Father saith Further shall not we know him that is euery where Can we goe no whither from his presence and shall we in all places bee be still without God who yet fills Heauen and Earth It is a true Theorem in Diuinity that God onely hath a being other things cannot be said to be Men are the best of visible creatures and the Prophet saith all Nations before him are nothing If men are nothing not worthy to bee reckoned as things that haue being much lesse other Creatures These things are scarce worthy to be said to be of which it may bee said either it was not or it will not bee then it will follow that the knowledge men get in other things is to know nothing then wee know something when wee know God finally a necessity lieth vpon vs to bee rightly enformed concerning God if to speake or thinke vilely of men bee an offence what is it to conceiue or thinke erroniously or meanely or basely concerning God The consideration of these and such like motiues should stir vp in vs a great willingnesse to be taught concerning God but before I breake open the particular assertions concerning the Nature of our most glorious God there are certaine generall considerations that must take vp some Roome in our hearts and it is profitable for vs to approach vnto the contemplation of God by degrees and therefore by way of Preface I conceiue these things are needfull to be thought on 1. How hard a thing it is to attaine the knowledge of God 2. By what meanes the darke heart of man is guided to the vnderstanding of God 3. How farre forth God may be knowne 4. What Rules must of necessity be obserued by all such as can haue any hope to know God For the first of all knowledges it is the hardest to attaine the true knowledge of God and there are many things that hinder and hide God from vs as 1. The transcendent glory of Gods nature the brightnesse of which is such that the eyes of our mindes are not able to look vpon it much lesse can any senses of our bodies attaine him Gen. 32. 29. Iudges 13. 18. God is inuisible wee cannot see him he is ineffable no words can tell vs what hee is we may reckon a thousand things and yet none of them is God whether we looke about the earth seas ayre or heauens God is that thing which no opinion can reach Hee is more then words can tell or thoughts can thinke God is such a thing as when we name him hee cannot bee named when we goe about to estimate him he cannot bee estimated when we goe about to compare him hee cannot bee compared when we would define him hee increaseth bigger then any definition He is greater then all words then all senses it is peculiar to God to exceede knowledge wee may admire by silence but cannot expresse him by words and the Reason is that which is finite can hold no proportion with that which is infinite And therefore hee that would define God had neede to haue Gods Logick for no mans Logick can reach to it for though nothing be more present euery where then God yet nothing is more incomprehensible God is immense and therefore who can tell as one saith the length of his Eternity or the breadth of his Loue or the height of his Maiesty or the depth of his Wisedom And though it bee true that there are diuers names giuen to God yet those names do not explicate what God is but onely so much of him as of vs can bee conceiued for that which is said of God is not God because hee is ineffable The Heathen man could say that it is a hard labour to finde out the Father of the world but hauing found him it was impossible to describe him with fit words especially to make the vulgar sort to conceiue of him And therfore he is fitly styled a light inaccessible 2. The defect of measures hinders vs. All the things by which we trie and measure other things are of no vse in describing God for he is good without quality great without quantity euery where whole without place euerlasting without time he makes all sorts of mutable things without mutation in himselfe or suffering any thing hee needs not a body to make him to be nor a place to make him to be heere nor time to make him to be now or hereafter or heretofore he needs no subiect in which he should subsist or to which he should adhere He is mercifull without passion and Lord of all things without addition of any thing to his wealth 3. Wee want the benefit of similitudes for Gods nature differs infinitely
sort of Attributes are the easiest and by reason of their either effects daily amongst vs or likenesse to some thing in vs may be profitably first studied And so the Nature of God excells in foure dreadfull and matchlesse prayses or there be foure things in Gods Nature we should euer thinke on with admiration and adore with all Reuerence and Deuotion and studie to conceiue of as fully as we can from the singular Vse they haue in the course of our liues First of the Life of God Life in GOD is admirable and to bee adored in these respects 1. Because the life of all liuing creatures in generall is in him and so God is the life and light of the world Iohn 1. 4. as he giueth being and life to all things The whole world had bin a Chaos of darknesse if God had not giuen it life which hee planted in seuerall creatures by his admirable working 2. Because in particular hee is after a wonderfull manner the life of vs men Whether we respect our life naturall or spirituall for our naturall life it is hee that inlightens euery man that comes into the world and gaue senses motion and reason to all men Acts 17. 28. and for our spirituall life t is he that quickens all the members of Christ by the speciall mouings of the holy Ghost in their hearts begetting them againe after a strange manner by ioyning his spirit to their spirits and thus Christ liues in vs Hence this life is called the life of God Ephes 4. 17. and the life of Iesus 2. Cor. 4. 11. Gal. 2. 20. 3. Because that life by which hee liues in himselfe hee inioyes after a most matchlesse manner who can describe the glory and shining of that life in respect of which God is said by an excellencie to be the liuing God Daniel 6. 26. 1. Thes 1. vlt. Reuel 4. 9. and as a doctrine of singular glory the Lord is pleased to sweare by his life Ezeck 33. 11. Some of the glories of this life of God we may in some measure distinctly conceiue of with admiration And so we should adore that God whose life is 1. Independent God hath life in himselfe He receiued it not from any other Iohn 5. 26. 2. It is Eternall he liues from Eternity to Eternity Dan. 4. 34. He is immortall he cannot die 1. Tim. 1. 17. 3. It is not seated as in a part of God as life is in vs but it is the whole essence is not onely in it but is the essence it selfe 4. It is most perfect in blessednesse and glory hee wants no means to nourish it nor helpes to content it or make it happie but is God blessed for euer Rom 11. There is Vse of this Knowledge of God for 1. It shewes the Vanitie of Idolaters that serue Gods that haue no life Ieremie 10. 9 10. 14. 2. Woe be to wicked men that sinne securely as if God was not or had no life It is a horrible thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God If he liue they must die Heb. 10. 31. Ier. 23. 36. 3. Let all men bee afraid and take heede of sinning and remember his presence for God is a liuing God Daniel 6. 26. 4. Since GOD is all Life wee must bee as liuely as is possible in his seruice our consciences must bee purged from dead workes seeing we serue a liuing God Hebrewes 9. 14. 5. Wee are bound in swearing especially to remember the Life of God Thou shalt sweare the Lord liueth Ieremie 4. 2. 6. Wee must not greedily couet after the riches of this world seeing our God liueth to reward such as serue him and trust in him 1. Tim. 6. 17. Heb. 12. 22. 7. Vnto him we should goe for all succour support strength and preseruation both of naturall and spirituall life for with him is the well spring of Life Psal 36. Psal 42. 3. Deut. 30. 19 20. and it should comfort vs against all the desperate miseries of this life It is inough for Iob if his Redeemer liue for he knowes he will deliuer him c. Iob 19. 25 26. Iohn 14. 19. Lastly the through Meditation of the glorious life of God should breed in vs a desire to adore and admire him and praise him while we liue as they did Reuel 4. 9. for this very Reason Who would not wonder at that Father that had a 100. or a 1000. children to whom he had bin an instrument of Life Oh then why worship we not him that is Father of spirits and Fountaine of all the life is in all the creatures in the world and besides liues in himselfe a life full of infinite shining and perfection Thus of the Life of God His Knowledge followes The Knowledge of God is to bee admired and adored as wonderfull and matchlesse in many respects 1. Because God is a seipso sapiens wise of himselfe he hath not his knowledge infused into him or any way giuen him nor gets he it by the instruction of others or by the benefit or experience or obseruation This glory of his knowledge he pleades Esay 40. 13. Rom. 11. 34. 2. Because he is the Author of all that vnderstanding skill or wisedome is found in any of the creatures As the Sunne is the Fountaine of all the Light is in any of the Corporall creatures so God is the Fountaine of all that Light is in all vnderstandings of men or Angels It is God that furnished Christ man with al those treasures of Wisedome and Knowledge Esay 11. 2. 'T is from his Light that the Angels and Saints in Heauen see Light as the Father of Lightes and all the spirituall knowledge godly men haue is from aboue Iames 3. 17. Iohn 6. 45. Yea all the skill any men haue in their callings is taught them of God as the Prophet Esay shewes in the verie case of Husbandmen Esay 28. 6 26. 3 Because all his workes are done with matchlesse skill and wisedome none can doe like him nor is his knowledge onely Theoricall Psal 104. 24. Esay 40 28. Euen those things that seeme to vs to be done so as we cannot conceiue a reason of them or seeme contrary to vs and our rules yet haue wonderfull depth of shining glory and Iustice and wisedome in them Rom. 11. 33 34. 4. Because his knowledge is infinite Iob 11. 7 8 9. Psal 147. 5. He is omniscient he knowes all things his vnderstanding penetrateth into all things Hee knowes himselfe one person each other exactly Mat. 11. 27. 1. Cor. 2. 10. and knowes all things without himselfe Heb. 4. 13. 1. Iohn 3. 20. Iohn 21. 17. All the creatures that were are or euer shall be he knowes them Acts 15. 18. Esay 40. 26. Mat. 10. 26. 30. He knowes all that is said or done in the whole world Psal 139. 1. c. He knowes things to come aswell as things past or present Esay 41. 22 23. 26. Hee knowes the very thoughts of the hearts
Romanes 8. 32. 3. In their Sanctification both in respect of the matter of grace as also in respect of the meanes of it he hath dealt bountifully in the matter of sauing grace because hee is the God of all grace 1 Pet. 5. 10. and euery good gift proceedeth from him as the Father of Lights Iames 1. 17. and so doth his bounty shine in the meanes of grace 1. In the word giuing gifts to men sometime extraordinary as Apostles Prophets and Euangetists and ordinary Pastors and Teachers sent abroad to preach the Gospel to euery creature Ephes 4. Mat. 28. 2. In the Sacraments adding to his word and oath his seales to assure his Immutablenesse Heb. 12. and in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper feeding his people with the flesh and bloud of his owne Sonne A foode better then the bread of Angels Iohn 6. 3. In Prayer promising to grant whatsoeuer shall be asked of him in the name of Christ Marke 11. 24. Iames 1. 5. 4. In their Saluation prouiding for them an inheritance immortall incorruptible and that in the most glorious place of the whole world the Heauen of Heauens when they shall liue in his presence for euermore enioying Riuers of pleasure at his right hand 1. Pet. 1. 3. Psal 17. Tit. 2. 12. The last thing that she weth the goodnesse of Gods nature is his Patience and his Patience is admirable 1. If we consider the prouocations to moue him to implacable displeasure and these arise either from the consideration of the persons that prouoke him or from the things by which he is prouoked there are foure things that might irritate extreamely if wee looke vpon the persons prouoking The first is their Number worlds of men by their sinnes daily transgresse and offend against God if he looke downe from heauen he may see what to loath in the works of all men scarce one of a Cittie or two of a Tribe that haue any care to please God The second is their enmity God is prouoked by men that are his professed enemies and therefore might conceiue iust furie against them there being no reason why he should pittie or spare them Thirdly it adds to the prouocation that they are his creatures the worke of his owne hands they rebell against him that were made by him and therfore the indignity of the offence is the greater Fourthly their impotencie he needs not feare them he might blow them away at once as a little dust of the Ballance he could destroy them with frogges and lice and flies and for the euills by which he is prouoked what man or Angell can describe the haynousnesse of them what heart of man can conceiue the horror of the sinnes of the whole world All the Commandements of God being broken by euery man many of their sinnes committed with an high hand crying to heauen for vengeance Treasons daily and euery where and these committed before the very face of God no place so sacred but wretched men dare offend there the frame of transgression beginning from the womb and holding on to the graue and the offendors relapsing by breaking their vowes and couenants from time to time and to make vp all that Trayterous man should yeeld himselfe to bee wholly gouerned and led forth against God by the diuell the Arch-enimy of God 2. If we consider who God is that endures all this hee is infinite in Holinesse and Iustice infinitely hating sin and conceiuing wrath against sinners and whose Office it is to bee the Iudge of the world and hath power to Plague all oftenders at his will Nahum 1. 2. 3. 3. If we consider the manner how hee exerciseth his patience where obserue 1. That hee is slow to anger hee is not easily prouoked Psal 103. 8. 2. That he can suffer exceeding long Exod. 34. 6. as in the case of the Israelites they had tempted him more then tenne times before he Plagued them Numbers 14. 12. 18. 19. 20. 22. 3. That where hee doth enter into iudgement hee doth not poure out his whole displeasure but proceeds by degrees 4. That hee sent a Sauiour as a remedie for their sinnes and punisheth those persons but not till they haue reiected the Saluation offered Iohn 3. 16 17. 5. That hee sends to his very enemies before they seeke to him and sets vp his ordinances amongst them as meanes to reclaime them and with great importunity and continuance vrgeth men to saue themselues from so great destruction 2. Cor. 5. 19. 20. 2. Chron. 36. 15. Esay 65. 2. c. 42. 14. 6. It appeareth that he is infini●ely patient that puts off the day of Iudgement to so long a day 2. Pet. 3. 9. and thus of the manner of his Patience 4. If we consider the effects of his patience or the ends Hee is patient that men may repent and be saued 2. Pet. 3. 9. Yea thousands of men are saued by Gods forbearance that had else bin damned if God had called for their accounts sooner ● Pet. 3. 15. Lastly if we consider the cause of his patience Some Iudges spare to punish some offendors but it is because they are Alyed to them or because they giue bribes to be freed or because they are great persons c. but Gods Patience and forbearance is not wrought by any of these meanes but it ariseth meerely from the goodnesse of his owne Nature hee doth it for his owne sake not for any thing in them Thus of the Doctrine of Gods Goodnesse The Vses follow and so the knowledge of Gods maruellous goodnesse of Nature may both informe vs and teach vs and comfort vs in diuers things As it serues for information so it should compell vpon vs a most setled and resolute iudgement especially in foure things for since there is such a transcendent glory of good nature in God whatsoeuer can be said or obiected or whatsoeuer God doth we should vnmoueablie bee established in full assurance 1. That God can doe nothing that is ill or vniust He cannot be the Author of any thing that is euill so good a Nature cannot decree or effect any thing that is cruell bloudy or tyrannicall Iames 1. 13. 17. 2. That in afflicting punishment vpon offenders hee takes no delight in the death of the very wicked Ezek 18. 3. That no men can bee saued by their merits That great Saluation hee prouides for men is meerely out of his owne bounty and not from their merits Romanes 6. vlt. 1● 6. 4. That there can be no goodnesse in any creature comparable to the goonesse of God all the goodnesse loue bountie mercy clemency Patience or grace that can bee found in Princes Parents Husbands Wiues or Friends is nothing in comparison of Gods goodnesse which appeares if wee remember what was before taught 1. Because all their goodnesse was receiued from God they had it not of themselues 2. Because it is not so great as Gods goodnesse which is immense they may bee said to bee louing
all this heate of Anger flie to Christ Iesus and neuer cease begging of mercy from him to thy soule The wrath of God is such a fire as all the water in the Sea cannot quench It is a fire can bee quenched onely with bloud and teares No bloud will doe it but the bloud of Christ and no teares but the teares of the offender himselfe And let men take heede of Procrastination for euen the longer men stay in sinne the fiercer will his fire grow GOD heapes vp wrath as men heap vp sinne It may come to that at length that Gods anger may come to that degree as to be expressed by these words to be called Ira furoris sui magni the anger of his great fury Ira indignationis the furie of his Indignation Deut. 29. 24. Psal 78. 49. then God may sweare they shall neuer enter into his rest Let men therefore take heede how they abuse Gods patience and mercy any more Godly men also from the consideration of the fearefull Iustice of GOD towards wicked men may learne foure things 1. To get out from amongst them and euery one deliuer his owne soule from the fierce anger of the Lord which will fall vpon the wicked Ier. 51. 45. 2. Neuer to fre●●● their prosperity seeing so fearefull things abide them 3. When they see Gods hand vpon the wicked they should sanctifie and exalt the God of Iudgement Esay 5. 16. 4. Euer the more terrible the wrath of God is towards the wicked the more heartily they should kisse the Sonne and make much of Christ by whom they are deliuered from so great wrath Psal 2. vlt. Hitherto of the Iustice of God The Glory of God followes The Glory of God is his wonderfull excellencie aboue all things and so his Glory is either absolute or Relatiue The absolute Glory of God is that in which hee is glorious in himselfe without relation to any other and so he is glorious foure waies 1. In the Excellencie of his Nature 2. In his Blessednesse 3. In his Liberty 4. In his Maiesty 1. The Glory of his Nature is nothing else but his surpassing Excellenc●● 〈◊〉 all the praises belonging to his Nature and so he is glo●●●s in knowledge goodnesse Iustice greatnes omnipotencie c. And this glory of God is described in the doctrine of his Attributes and was the glory shewed to Moses Exod. 33. 18 c. 2. His Blessednesse is his essentiall glory whereby he is after a matchlesse manner most happie in himselfe 1. Tim. 1. 11. and his happinesse is to be adored 1. Because he abounds with all that can be possibly good to him any way and is seated in such felicitie that no euill can come neere him 1. Tim. 6. 15. 1. Ioh. 1. 6. 2. Because he perfectly knows all his happinesse and so hath infinite liking and ioy in his condition 3. Because he is sufficient to himselfe and from himselfe so as he needs not any good thing from vs or any thing without himselfe Psal 16. 2. 50. 7. 14. 3. He is glorious in his liberty and so he excells in a threefold liberty as he is free from compulsion from seruitude and from miserie He is free from compulsion because he is not tyed to second causes nor maistered by any higher cause but is and doth whatsoeuer he will without the Coaction of any necessity without himselfe Psal 115. 3. Esay 40. 13. Daniel 4. 35. He is also free from seruitude he is bound to none indebted to none subiect to none Rom. 11. 35. 36. He is also free from the burthen of miserie hee alone being such by nature that no kinde of miserie either of fault or punishment can befall him 4. He is glorious in his essentiall Maiesty which is an vnconceiueable splendor or beauty and shining brightnesse beyond all that Maiesty can befall any creature Thus God is said to be light and to dwell in the light which no man can approach vnto 1. Tim. 6. 16. and thus hee is the King of all Kings And in this absolute Glory God doth excell all the Kings of the earth 1. Because his Glory is aboue all praise and blessing so is not theirs Nehemiah 9. 5. Psal 145. 3. 2. Because the Kings of the earth doe giue him glory and praise him owe their Homage to his glory Psal 138. 4 5. God exceedes them in Glory more then they exceede their meanest subiects Daniel 4. 35. and no wonder seeing the glorified creatures in heauen throw downe their crownes before him as acknowledging him onely worthy to receiue honour c. Reuel 4. 10. 11. 3. Because their Glory is mortall but God is a King immortall and his Glory endureth for euer Psal 104. 31. 1. Tim. 1. 17. 4. Because hee hath it in himselfe and from himselfe as was shewed before Thus of his absolute Glory The Glory of God as it is in relation is either internall or externall The internall Glory of God as it is in relation is the personall Glory and so is the Glory either that is proper to each Person in the Trinity or else that peculiar Glory of the second Person in the Trinity as he is called the brightnesse of his Fathers Glory Heb. 1. 3. The externall Glory is that which comes vnto God from the creatures as hee stands in relation to them and so his Glory shines 1. In his workes which are therefore called his Glory and so both his works of Creation Psal 19. 1. and his workes of Iustice vpon the wicked Exod. 15. 6. 7. and his workes of Mercy in deliuering and sauing his people Psal 85. 9. 102 15. 16. 108. 5. Zach. 2. 5. and workes of omnipotencie and wonder Rom. 6. 4. 2. In the signes of his presence such as he gaue extraordinarily on earth as the cloud and pillar of fire Exod. 16. 8. 11. or that likenesse of consuming fire on the toppe of the Mount Exod. 24. 17. the cloude that filled the Temple 1. Kings 8. 10. 11. or the formes mentioned in Ezek. Chap 1. 28. 3. 23. 10. 4. 18. 11. 22 23. or else such as hee giues in heauen in the presence of his Glory to the Saints and this was that Glory of God which Stephen saw Acts 7. 55. 3. In his word especially the Gospel which is the doctrine of the Glory of the blessed God 1. Tim. 1. 11. 2. Cor. 4. 4. 4. In his children Israel he calls them his Glory Esay 46. 13. and so are the godly called because they resemble God and in that respect excell all other people All other men haue therefore failed of Gods Glory because they haue failed of his Image Rom. 3. 23. And in these foure waies of relation God is glorious but it is with a glory which himselfe hath printed and stamped vpon these things There is another way of glory which is in a speciall manner also called Gods glory and that is the glory which the reasonable creature giues vnto God
he keepes the court of his Maiesty Psal 84. 2. We must pray for the spirit of Reuelation to open the eyes of our vnderstanding Ephes 1. 19. 3. We must not be without an effectuall faith for if wee beleeue we shall see his glory Iohn 11. 40. 4. We must rest in these descriptions and praises of God and continue in his Word and be sure we change not his glory into that which is abhomination to him Psalme 106. 20. 5. We must be sure to repent of our sinnes and be truely turned to God 2. Cor. 3. 16 17 18. Thirdly all wicked men must needs bee in a wofull estate and that in three respects first because this glory is departed from them since the time sinne came into their hearts they haue failed of the glory of God they haue lost the glory of God in that they haue lost the Image of God Rom. 3. 23. secondly because their foolish hearts are so full of darkenesse that they cannot see the glory of God they want all that comfort and warmth ariseth from the view and contemplation of the Sunshine of Gods glory they cannot get so much as the benefit of a good conceit of God a vaile lyeth vpon their hearts 2. Cor. 3. Esay 26. 10. thirdly because the time will come when God will confound their hearts with the terror of his Iustice and the Maiesty of his glory when hee shall fight against them to destroy them Esay 2. 10. 19. Lastly this should bee a wonderfull consolation to Gods children and that in diuers respects 1. Because this God that is so blessed and full of Maiesty so adored by all creatures this God I say so glorious is their God they haue his fauour in a high degree and by couenant hath giuen himselfe to be theirs for euer 2. Because God hath called them to glory and will glorifie them with himselfe in the Kingdome of Heauen 2. Pet. 1. 3. Colos 3. 4. and in the meane time 1. God accounts his people in a manner all the glory he hath in earth Esay 46. vlt. 2. The Spirit of glory and of God resteth vpon them 1. Pet. 4. 14. 3. God accounts it a part of his glory to helpe them in all their afflictions and to forgiue them their sinnes And in these two things affliction and sinne lyeth all the discomfort of life in effect Psal 79. 9. and his glory shall be their Reareward to guard them from dangers Esay 58. 8. 4. Hee will keepe them by his power till hee present them faultlesse before the presence of his glory 1. Peter 1. 5. Iude 24. 5. He giues them such tastes of that great glory to come that it is a glory to them to thinke of and hope for that blessednesse to be reuealed vpon them Rom. 5. 2. Thus of the glory of God and so of the first sort of Attributes that is those Attributes which they call communicable which are so in God as some print or likenesse of them are in the creatures The Incommunicable Attributes follow and these are in God as they say in Schooles à Priori the other à Posteriori onely I haue handled the former first as most easie for vs to vnderstand but lest the tearmes of communicable Attributes should trouble the ignorant Reader hee must consider that when we say these Attributes are communicable wee doe not meane that they are communicable in respect of essence but in respect of Act effect or Vse As for instance the goodnesse of God is not communicated to good Angels or men but the effect of it which makes them good If God should communicate nothing there would be nothing at all and if he should communicate his owne essentialls hee should make as many Gods as hee produced things In short these Attributes are affirmed of God in the Abstract but of men or Angels in the Concret God is Goodnes Wisedome Iustice Men are onely good wise Iust The incommunicable Attributes are so in God as they can be found in no creature nor any likenesse of them And these are three viz. his infinite greatnesse his eternity and his immutability And these three as they are not found in any thing but God so are they as it were spread and powred out through all the Attributes of the first sort for God is Infinite Eternall and Immutable in Wisedome Holinesse Life and Glory And so these Proprieties are as it were the Adiuncts or proprieties of the other Attributes First then of the infinite greatnesse of God The infinite greatnesse of God is that essentiall propriety in God by which hee is signified to be of himselfe actually and simply beyond all bounds limits and measure and so his infinite greatnesse or immensiuenesse comprehends 1. His perfection of Nature 2. His Omnipresence or Vbiquity 3. His Incomprehensiblenesse For the first his perfection of Nature is such as admits no bounds nor limits nor measures because he is without composition of partes and because hee is all hee is in act not in power or possibility and because his goodnesse Iustice Wisedome c. is so great as nothing can be added to them to make them greater Iob 37. 16. Mat. 5. vlt. and the consideration heereof may 1. Informe vs and shew vs whence all good and perfect gifts come euen from this infinite greatnesse of perfection in God Iames 1. 17. 2. Humble vs what are we dust and ashes vile and loathsome creatures that wee should bee fauoured or accepted of God who is so infinite in the glory and goodnesse of his Nature euen the more perfect God is the more our imperfections might trouble vs and at the least make vs serue him with more feare and trembling 3. Teach vs we should follow the exactest patterne and none like God we should therefore bee followers of him that we may bee perfect as our heauenly Father is perfect Mat. 5. vlt. 4. Comfort vs and so especially in the hope of a better life how perfect and glorious shall we be in heauen when God shall be all in all in vs when that which is so perfect shall come into vs then all that is in part shall bee abolished 1. Cor 15. 28. For the second the Omnipresence of God is that vnmeasurablenesse of his Nature by which hee is wheresoeuer the creature is or any place is Psal 139. 8 9. Isay 66. 1. Ier. 23. 24. thus God fills all things and penetrateth into all things circumscribed or defined with no spaces of any places reaching to whatsoeuer either is or can be thought within or without the world And which is the more maruellous his whole essence is in the whole world and in euery part of it whole in this whole world and whole without the world shut in no where nor shut out any where containing all things and contained of nothing He may be truely said to be euery where and no where as he is contained of nothing Nor is hee thus present with all things onely by his
legall threatnings had in perpetuall doctrine of them the condi●ion of repentance annexed The condition therefore being performed by the Niniuites God destroyes them not yet without change in his will it being but a conditionall will And for Hezekiah he must die if we respect second causes yet in respect of Gods eternall purpose fifteene yeeres must bee added Now this Threatning of death being a Threatning of Tryall and containing true grounds of it in Naturall causes shewes neither dissimulation nor mutation in God Thus it is manifested that God is Immutable That he onely is Immutable is easily proued for that place Psal 102. 27. saith of the creatures that they all perish and wax old as a garment God remaining the same and that some Angels and men shall haue Immutable Natures after the day of Iudgement is not by nature but by grace as was said before The Vses follow and so Gods immutability may serue 1. For Humiliation and so first to Image-mongers that will needs haue God resembled by pictures what doe they lesse then change the glory of the Immutable God into the likenesse of a mutable creature Rom. 1. 23. secondly for all men it should humble the best of vs that thinke how glorious God is for Immutability and yet we so mutable as nothing can satisfie vs which mutability as it fearefully appeared in our first Parents so doth it breake out in the disposition of all sorts of men what fearefull change doe many men make in Religion Reade of the Iewes Isa 1. 21 22. Of the Christians Galat. 1. 6. 3. 1. Thirdly this is a terrible doctrine for wicked men for all that he hath willed and threatned shall certainly come vpon them God cannot change Hee is not as a man that he should repent as Samuel told Saul 2. For Instruction and so it should teach vs three things First Patience in all the changes of this life God only is immutable wee must looke for it to be subiect to many alterations Secondly the Celebration of Gods glorie here Wee should praise him for euer that is only Eternall Immortall and Immutable 1. Timoth. 1. 17. Thirdly the Imitation of his vnchangeablenesse in things we know to be true and good we should be vnmoueable such as cannot be altered whatsoeuer befalls vs 2. Tim. 3. 14. 1. Cor. 15. 58. Such and so we should be in our faith hope charitie promises and good workes 3. For Consolation and so this doctrine should much refresh all godly Christians It should giue them strong Consolations as the Apostle sayth and so in diuers respects 1. Because all Gods promises shall certainly bee accomplished as these places expresly shew Num. 23. 19. Heb. 6. 17. 18. Wherein God willing more aboundantly to shew vnto the Heires of promise the immutability of his Counsell confirmed it by an oath That by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might haue a strong Consolation who haue fledde for refuge to lay hold vpon the hope set before vs. 2. Because hereby they know they shall neuer faile of saluation or fall from grace for the gifts and calling of God are without Repentance Rom. 11. 3. Because hereby God himself would assure his people that they shall not be destroied with temporall miseries though they be afflicted for a time as the Lord reasoneth Mal. 3. 6. For I am the Lord I change not and yee sonnes of Iacob are not consumed 4. Because when wee come to Heauen we shall by grace be made immutable too for then the Image of God shall be perfect in vs. Hitherto of the Immutability of God and so of the attributes of both sorts It remaines that we inquire after the Substance or essence of God vnto which all these glories are attributed and so two things are to be considered about the Essence of God 1. That it is spirituall 2. That it is One. First that it is Spirituall some essences haue being only and not life as the Heauens Earth Seas c. and amongst these wee must not looke for God Some essences haue life but it is onely bodily life as trees beasts foules and among these gods Essence is not Some things haue a mixt life partly bodily and partly spirituall and such is the essence of all men who consist and liue both in body and soule but to find out God we must looke for him only amongst minds There are essences that are onely mentall and immateriall but yet compounded though not of parts yet of power and act as the Angells For they are neuer in act that which they are in power they are in possibility still for diuers things may befall their Natures and their possibilities are finite too God is then higher then these God then is a minde or Spirit aboue all Spirits humane or Angelicall vnto which essence of his if we adde the former attributes we doe fullie difference him from all Creatures Thus God is an eternall minde infinite immutable in life knowledge holinesse and glory Is God a Spirit then these Vses will follow 1. That we should conceiue nothing bodily or terrene concerning God when wee thinke of God wee must not imagine of him any bodily forme for that is to make an Idoll 2. Wee must hence learne to checke and curbe that naturall desire in our corrupt hearts to haue God visible we should be ashamed of that secret rebellion of our hearts that are often after a close manner vnquiet and discontented because we doe not see our God we serue for God being a spirituall substance must needs be inuisible and altogether imperceptible by any senses hee could not bee a true GOD if senses might perceiue him 3. Since it is Gods glory to bee a Spirit wee should heartily praise him for our glory which is our soules for that hee hath made vs mindes also and so of more excellent essence then meere bodies be 4. We should therefore learne to serue God in Spirit and Truth It is the seruice of Spirits that agrees best to Gods Nature Iohn 4. 24. Lastly we should therefore most seeke such things as serue for the vse of Spirits The treasures that are spirituall are farre more excellent then bodily and earthly things can be euen for this reason because they bring vs neerer to God and more properly commend vs to him The second thing wee are to know about Gods essence is that it is one and but one The Nicen Creed and Athanasius haue it thus I beleeue in one God which the Apostles Creed doth affirme too though not so expresly for we say Wee beleeue in God not in Gods importing thereby that there is but one God Nor is God one by aggregation or consent or kinde or sort but he is one in number By aggregation a whole heard of cattell is said to be one by consent many friends are one by kinde men and beasts are one for they are liuing creatures By sort all men are one because
appellation of God 2. By liuing without care and therein being like little Children and this we do when we commit our soules and bodies and liues and children and states and all our waies vnto God 2. Tim. 1. 12. Psal 37. 3. When in Aduersitie wee runne to him for refuge and so make our moane to him that wee rest with patience and good perswasion that God will cause all to worke for the best to vs. It should much trouble vs if in soundnesse of practice we haue not learned this first lesson of belieuing in God Wee should be much displeased with our selues if our hearts be vnquiet and any way vnapt to rest and waite vpon God Psal 42. 12. and we should often beseech the Lord to helpe our vnbeliefe Hitherto of the Nature of God and of beleeuing in God The next thing Faith takes notice of is the Relations in the God-head and so God is the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost for this terme God is to bee applied not onely to the Father which is the next word but to the Sonne and holy Ghost as followeth after in the Creed and therefore wee must reade with a Comma after this word God thus I beleeue in God the Father to reade without a Comma that is Hereticall for if we reade thus I beleeue in God the Father it would sound as if the Creed should say that the Father were God only not leauing the terme God to be carried to the Son and holy Ghost Before then I come to speake of the Father I must entreate of God as he is three Persons both Father Sonne and holy Ghost And this is one of the deepest and dreadfullest Mysteries in all Religion where I must proceed in this order first to proue the Trinity by Scriptures secondly to explicate the doctrine And thirdly to answer certaine obiections might arise in mens mindes about it Because these things about the Trinity are most wonderfull and aboue the reach of the creatures we must seeke testimonies to ground our consciences in the beliefe of them such as may be firme and euident It is a difficult thing to bring the heart of men solidly to assent to such secrets as these as are not onely beyond the sight but aboue the reason of men and the minde may easily vanish into wilde speculations if we be not well grounded with sure Euidence nor can wee haue light from the booke of Nature to informe vs for what any Heathen man hath spoken of an Eternall mind word and spirit they spake by tradition from the Hebrewes and vttered it perhaps in a false and corrupt sense T is the booke of Scripture must only informe our faith herein The proofes for the Trinity are gathered both out of the Old and New Testament and so they either prooue there were more Persons then One or else expresly that there were Three Persons That there are more Persons then One is prooued by the terme ELOHIM which is vttered in the plurall number as if it should sound Gods as Gen. 1. 1. In the beginning Gods or ELOHIM created Heauen and Earth Created is in the singular number to shew the vnitie of the Essence and ELOHIM in the plurall to shewe the Trinitie of the Persons so Gen. 1. 26. Let vs make man in our Likenesse Let vs shewes more Persons and likenes being in the singular number shewes vnitie of Essence And verse 2. besides the Lord there is mentioned the Spirit of the Lord sitting vpon the waters Iosh vlt. 19. Ye cannot serue the Lord because he is ELOHIM sancti holy Gods And Ieremy 10. 10. The Lord is the liuing Gods or ELOHIM and King euerlasting Hos 1. 7. I will saue them in the Lord their God Gen. 19. 24. The Lord reigned from the Lord fire and brimstone Exod. 23. 20. 21. The The Lord sends his Angell whose name is IEHOVAH Dan. 9. 19. Heare oh Lord our God for the Lords sake Psa 110. 1. The Lord said to my Lord sit thou at my right hand Ier. 32. 5. 9. 33. 15 16. The Lord shall raise vp a Branch whose name is THE LORD Now that there are three Persons and no more nor fewer is proued by places more obscure or more expresse The Trinitie hath beene obserued in such places as these Esay 6. 3. where the Angells say thrice Holy and so where IEHOVAH is three times repeated Numbers 6. 23. Esay 33. 22. But the most expresse places are in the New Testament A manifest reuelation of the Trinitie was in the Baptisme of Christ The Father speaking from heauen the Sonne standing in the Riuer the Holy Ghost descending like a Doue Matth. 3. 16. 17. and so in the Institution of Baptisme we are to be baptized in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost And Ioh. 14. 16. 17. I will aske the Father and he shall giue you another Comforter the Spirit of truth and the 1. Ioh. 5. 9. There are three in Heauen the Father the Word and the Spirit And the like euidence is in these places 2. Cor. 13. 13. Tit. 3. 5. 6. Eph. 2. 18. In the Explication of the doctrine of the Trinitie we must be wise to sobriety because it is wholly secret rather to be belieued then to be demonstrated or described It is a doctrine may be apprehended but neuer comprehended no not by the light of grace nor fully and wholly by the light of glorie as being aboue the reach not onely of men but of Angells A mystery to be adored by humble faith and piety not to be searched without curious yea furious temerity For it is so admirable as Reason cannot expresse it and so singular that example cannot declare it to vs for the Images or Similitudes borrowed out of the booke of Nature may rather shew that the doctrine of the Trinitie doth not destroy Nature then giue vs any pattern which can sample out the thing it selfe and besides to erre here is the most dangerous of all errors For as nothing is sought with more difficulty or found with more profit so nothing can bee mistaken with more perill And therefore as a Father sayd well seeing wee cannot finde out what God is wee must take heed that wee thinke not that of him which he is not yet must wee not wholly neglect the doctrine because a necessitie lyes vpon vs to belieue and therefore though men and Angels haue cause to stand and wonder at this secret that God should beget a Sonne and that from that Father and Sonne should proceed that Spirit the Sanctifier yet because God will bee so acknowledged of vs wee must make vse of our faith to belieue what our reason cannot describe to vs. Three things then for our capacities are to be thought vppon The first concernes the Matter of this Mysterie The second the termes by which it is exprest and the third the answere of certaine Obiections might arise in our mindes For the first
from him 2. God renewes our natures and begets them to bee like his Nature for being regenerated we partake of the diuine nature being made to liue Gods nature in holines and righteousnes and he may well be called a Father that begets that which is like to himselfe besides by Faith we put on Iesus Christ Gal. 3. 26. 27. 3. God giues vs the right and priuiledge of Sons and therefore is fitly called our Father for first hee findes vs foode and rayment Mat. 6. and teaching Esay 54. 13. and attendance not onely setting his Angels to looke to vs Psal 34. Heb. 1. but himself also carrying and bearing vs in his armes when any thing ayleth vs Esay 63. 9. 46. 4. Secondly he layes vp for vs as Fathers do for their children Psal 89. 28. 31. 19. and appoints vs the inheritance of Sons to be inioyed when we be of full yeeres Rom 8. 16. Before I passe from this point one thing must be added and that is that howsoeuer God be the Father of all men in respect of the Creation of their soules yet Faith lookes vpon him as a Father in Christ and so by Adoption and regeneration and therefore wee must diligently examine our selues whether we be sons and daughters to God by grace in Christ or no for all such as are by grace truely the Children of God haue in themselues such signes as these 1. They were borne by promise the preaching of the Gospell did mightily work vpon them to the renewing of their natures and infusing spirituall life into their soules Gal. 4. 29. Rom. 9. 8. 2. They are all beleeuers they come to Christ for happinesse and rely vpon him and so haue power to be the Sons of God Iohn 1. 12. 3. They lay hold vpon Gods couenant and consecrate themselues to his seruice and loue his name and to be his seruants and in particular are carefull to keepe his Sabboths Esay 56. 4. 5. 7. 4. They are children that will not lie they are noe Hypocrites they desire to be as good as they seeme to bee they abhorre counterfeiting and dissimulation their spirits are without guile Esay 63. 8. 5. They are led by the spirit and mortifie the deeds of the flesh Rom. 8. 13. 14. 6. They cry Abba Father they haue the spirit of prayer they can call vpon God in secret with affection and confidence esteeming nothing more then the Loue and fauour of God And thus how God is a Father and to whom The Vses follow and so In the first place this should teach Gods children many lessons as 1. To giue this glory to God to acknowledge him as a Father and daily so to call him from their hearts The first thing a childe speakes in nature vsually is the name of his parents and so the first thing in Religion should bee to call God Father we can doe nothing in Religion till we can call vpon God as vpon a Father this is the very foundation of the Church because all effectuall Religion is built vpon this principle that God is our Father 2. Thes 1. 1. Rom. 8. 15. 2. We should liue without care as our Sauiour shewes Mat. 6. for we haue a Father to care for vs and hee is a heauenly Father and therefore both knowes what wee need and is fully able to helpe vs and besides he daily feedes the foules of the ayre and yet he is not a Father to them how therfore can hee neglect vs whom hee hath begotten as children to himselfe ver 26. 32. 3. If God be our Father then we must honour him for wee are bound to honour our father and mother all our care should be to obey him and honour him and please him and doe our worke so as others might glorifie our Father which is in heauen Mal. 1. 6. Mat. 5. 16. liuin● 〈◊〉 ●as we shame not our fathers house 4. If God be our Father we must stri●●●● be like him and to imitate his nature and carriage and so we are vrged to follow and imitate him in mercie Mat. 5. 45. 48. in Loue Ephes 5. 1. 2. and in holines 1. Pet. 1. 14 15. 5. If God be our Father wee should be quickned vnto prayer wee should runne to him to make our moane in all our wants But withall it imports two things we should looke to in prayer first that we auoide vaine bablings and repetitions and affectation of length of prayer and the like for wee pray to a Father that needs not vaine and tedious discourses The words of a childe should bee humble and earnest and direct to the point but not tedious as our Sauiour shewes Mat. 6. 7. 8. secondly that wee pray in faith and not wauer because wee aske of a father If earthly fathers can giue good gifts to their children what will the heauenly father denie to his children Mat. 7. 7. 16. Yea if God himselfe should fight against vs with his terrors yet we must in prayer stick fast to this that he is our father and alwaies keepe this in our pleadings to wrestle with God by this Argument as the Church did in those straites mentioned Esay 64. 8. 4. 6. If God bee our father wee must then patiently beare his corrections seeing we indure correction at the hands of the fathers of our bodies who many times correct vs for their owne pleasure therefore much more should we submit our selues to the father of spirits who neuer corrects vs but for our profit And to desire to be without correction is to be in the condition of bastards and not of sonnes if we would haue God to loue vs we must be willing to let him correct vs Heb. 12. 4. to the 10. 7. If God be our father then nothing should more grieue vs then that wee haue offended him by our sinnes Ier. 31 18. Luke 15. 18. 8. If God be our father then wee must sort our selues with his children and auoid all needlesse societies and vnequall yoaking with the wicked of this world who are as like the diuell as euer childe was like his father Iohn 8. 2. Cor 6. 14 18. 9. We should in all welldoing rest in his praise as being our father that seeth in secret A childe seekes no more then to be accepted of his father Mat. 6. 1. 4. 10. We need not therefore the helpe of Saints or Angels to bring vs to God He is our father wee may goe to him our selues Esay 63. 16. 11. Therefore we should call no man father vpon earth hauing so great and gratious a father in heauen Mat. 23. 9. 12. Therfore also we should liue in peace one with another seeing we haue all one heauenly father Ephes 4. 4 6. Thus for instruction Secondly many consolations arise from hence if we beleeue that God is our father for then 1. He will spare vs as a father doth his son that serueth him he will beare with our infirmities Mal. 3. 17. 2. Though hee should correct vs yet hee
in six dayes and that for diuers reasons for God would haue the creation of the first matter of Nothing to be manifest and distinct from the framing and fashioning of bodies out of that matter besides thereby he shewed his power and freedome in producing the creatures making them to be before any naturall cause of them was as to make light before the Sunne and Moone was and further thereby hee shewed his goodnesse and care for the principall creatures prouiding foode before hee brings in the beasts and furnishing the whole world sets man to liue in it and finally hee warnes vs not to slip ouer the meditation of his workes suddenly but with long and continuall deliberation Hee created the world in many dayes to intimate that wee should not thinke a little time enough to wonder at so great glory Seuenthly he made all things without himselfe for though all things are in God as in their cause and Author in whom they liue moue and haue their being yet are they out of God in that they are no parts in God nor the very diuine Essence but haue a nature distinct from the Nature of God they are not separate from God in place as if they could be any where where God is not but are other things then God is and are not in God as a subiect to which they inhere or are fastened Thus of the manner how they were made Thirdly the end why the world was made was the glory of God Prou. 16. ●4 that is that the world might bee a Glasse or Theatre of diuine vertues and a Temple in which God would set forth and teach and make knowne to man his power wisdome and goodnesse Rom. 1. not that God by the Creation doth get to himselfe any glory seeing he abounds in glory himselfe so vnmeasurably as nothing can bee added to it or taken from it but onely hereby he communicates his glory to the Creature and gaue the creatures occasion to admire and commend his glory for by the Creation God makes himselfe visible as it were to the Creatures that are reasonable for though the Essence of God be inuisible yet by the Creation his power or Attributes are set out to be seene and read in that great Booke of nature and if any men see little of God in this mighty Frame of his Workes it is not because God hath declared himselfe therein but obscurely but because we are peruerse and blockish and full of natiue darkenesse by reason of sinne and the effects of sinne in vs. Now though infinite praises of God may be collected from the consideration of the whole world yet especially his power wisdome and goodnesse doe shine in his workes His power we may gather two waies both in that he could make all things of nothing and that he could make such great things as well and as easily as the smallest things and things so many and diuerse 1 Cor. 15. 41. Psal 89. 10. The goodnes of God appeares both in this that he made all things so good and in that he hath shewed means so fit and conuenient powerfull to preserue life and being in euery creature Psal 104. prouiding for creatures of diuers natures appetites diuers food remedies and Armour to preserue and defend them But especially who can expresse the goodnes of God shewed to men Ephes 3. 18. Acts 14. 17. As for Diuels Serpents or venemous Creatures or hurtfull they were not so by Creation but by defection and sinne or as punishments for sinne The wisdome of God is admirably discouered in the Creation in that hee hath made all things in such beautifull order and hath appointed to euery thing such peculiar vses and ends which they obserue men only excepted and that he gouernes them in such a constant certaine and perpetuall course euery thing hauing not onely his fit and proper place in the Frame but indewed also with such variety of vses and seruices Fourthly for the time when the world was made we must know that the world and time were made together so as all things were created in the beginning of time and the computation of the dayes or yeeres since the beginning of the world hath beene kept carefully in the Church the reckoning being made by Moses and the Prophets in the old Testament and since kept by the Christian Churches so as now the world is aboue 5600. yeeres old Before this time there was nothing but God himselfe and if any will needes aske What God did before the world was I may not answer as the Iewes wickedly did That he was making many little worlds which he destroied againe and neuer liked any till this Frame was vp but our answer must be That secret things belong vnto the Lord and reueiled things to vs Deut. 29. 29. or else that of Augustine That God was making Hell for the curious or else That the Frame of all things was in the minde of God from all eternity and so the world was as present to him then as now First we may hence be informed and confirmed that God is onely the true God because he is Creatour of Heauen and Earth Esay 45. 6 7. if any pleade that he is God the answer is at hand let him make such a Heauen and Earth and we will belieue in him else not Secondly the Creation of the World should teach vs many duties 1. To meditate of Gods works and studie the glory of God reuealed in this great booke of Nature all are required to learne to read here and if men will not take it well if their skill shewed in any cunning piece of work be not acknowledged or regarded how much more cause hath the Lord to be displeased with vs for neglecting such a curious and glorious frame so full of admirable variety and skill Wh●t account shall we make at the last day we I say that are so naturally bent to delight in shewes that are either sinfull or vaine or imperfect such as are pla●es or rare sights as we call them or Page●nts or Maskes or the like and yet haue no heart or will to goe out to see and wonder at the m●tchlesse shewes that God sets out before vs in his works Eccles 7. 15 Psal 111. 2 3. 2. Nor is it inough to meditate of his workes but wee must giue him the glory of them by praising his power and wisedome and goodnesse shewed in them we must striue to get a Language to that end and so bewaile our barrennesse of heart and words as withall to beseech him that requires vs to learne his praises to teach vs also to profit and to giue larger hearts and better Language Reuel 4 11. Thus haue the Worthies of the Lord done Iob and Dauid and Moses who haue set themselues in speciall manner to celebrate the praises of God in his workes and of them wee should learne to praise him at least make our selues skilfull in their formes of praise Psal 136. 5. 6.
bodies bee here our prayers and all the parts of Gods worship should sauour of this knowledge Phil. ● 20. Colos 3. 1. 2. 5. By a voluntary forsaking or contemning of the profits and pleasures of this world being content to finde here but the entertainement of Pilgrims and strangers euen such as are farre from their owne home Heb. 11. 13 14. 6. By inuincible Patience in bearing all the assaults of life here not wearied with afflictions considering this eternall weight of glory in heauen not dismayed with any terror of Sathan nor perplexed with any scornes of the world seeing the time will shortly come wee shall bee deliuered from all these things and possesse an inheritance that is vndefiled and immortall in heauen and the lesse should we be troubled about the dissolution of our bodies or rather wee should desire to get out of this earthly Tabernacle that wee might come to dwell in that heauenly building 2. Corinthians 5 1. 2. 7. By our diligent labour to carry our Treasures to lay them vp in heauen that is our best house and the onely s●fe place where neither Rust no Moth can corrupt nor theeues breake through and steale What we haue in heauen is safe kept by the power of God What we haue on earth is vncertaine and therefore our greatest care should be to send as many prayers and good workes to heauen as accounting it the best treasure and the wisest course so to imploy our selues Mat 6. 20. Thus of the Heauen of Heauens Before we leaue that inuisible world we must intreat of the Angels which are the Hoste of the Lord in that vpper world That the Lord did a most glorious worke when hee made the Angels may appeare many waies 1. By the names and Titles giuen them They are called spirits Starres of the Morning Sonnes of God Principalities and Powers Thrones and Dominions Seraphim and Cherubim yea Gods all which shew they were wonderfully made and of great excellencie 2. By the substance he made them to be for the substance of Angels is not corporeall and therefore purer then any bodies in Heauen and Earth and so pure as no senses can discerne them for though God onely be simply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Immateriall yet Angels are Immateriall in respect of any Physicall composition for they consist not of matter and forme as other Creatures doe but haue onely that kinde of composition which they call Metaphysicall for they are compounded of essence or act and power 3 By the place where he sets them when he had made them for he seated them in heauenly places Ephes 3. 10. hee made them to liue about himselfe in the Chamber of his presence alwaies before his face They were Creatures made of purpose to liue in the Court of the King of Kings 4 By the numbers he made of them Daniel said hee saw thousand thousands of Angels and an hundred times ten thousand thousand Daniel 7. 10. Heb. 12. 22. It is said there is an innumerable company of Angels Hee meanes they are more then man can number not more then God can number and the number is the more to bee admired because the Angels doe not marry and so are not increased by propagation 5 By the manner of their being and working in respect of time and place for Angels are in place definitiuely not circumscriptiuely as they say in Schooles that is they are so in place that wholly they are there they cannot bee said to be in another place but yet while they are there it cannot be told by any creature what roome they take vp or how much place they fill for length bredth or height or depth and so for time they doe not worke in a moment as God doth but yet in respect of vs they worke strange things in an vnperceiueable time and to shadow that out they are described to haue wings not that they haue but by way of signification or resemblance 6 By the gifts with which God endowed them when hee made them I will instance in their knowledge and power for knowledge it must needes be great in Angels for besides the knowledge they had naturally by Creation they know strange things by reuelation from God and by experience gather many things from the course of things in the world or their causes in nature and the manifold wisdome of God is made knowne to Angels by the preaching of the Gospell which they see into with wonderfull ability though men be so dull and blockish in hearing 1 Cor. 11. 10. Ephes 5. 10. Iohn 8. 44. Daniel 8. 16. 9. 22. adde to all these wayes their supernaturall knowledge of God by which they are inabled to stand for euer without falling from God Great also is the power of Angels especially in working vpon bodily creatures One Angell could kill almost all Senacheribs Army in a night by an Angell was Peter fetched out of prison Acts 12. 7 8. and Philip carried from place to place Acts 8. 39. and the Sodomits smitten blinde Gen. 19. and the Host of the Syrians frighted with a noise they made 2 Kings 6. 28. and without doubt they can doe strange things about the soules of men They haue appeared to men in their dreames and as euill angels can tempt men internally so may good Angels incourage and counsell godly men though they discerne not who raiseth those comforts or counsels onely Miracles of themselues they cannot doe nor can they know the thoughts of the heart of man of themselues 7 By the language in which God hath made them able to treat one with another or with man or God for it is cleare they vse not any fleshly or corporall language in as much as they haue not bodies and so no tongues but they speake one to another by a spirituall and heauenly language without any audible sound or vocall speech or noife I say after an vnutterable manner angellically they insinuate instill and communicate one to another or to the vnderstanding of men what they will The deliuering of the sense of the minde by voice is an inferiour kinde of meanes because it agrees onely to bodies such Spirits as are onely mindes and haue no bodies can conuerse one with another without sound of words in their owne vnderstandings as in a most cleere Looking-glasse shewing what they will one to another Before I come to the vse of this part certaine questions men might aske about Angels are to be resolued as Quest 1. When were Angels created Answ It cannot be certainly gathered but it is probable they were created the first day when the Heauen of Heauens was created and thence are called the Angels of Heauen Moses speakes nothing of the Creation of Angels because that is not a knowledge that properly belongs to vs for if the Theology for Angels were written we should neede another Bible The Creation and gouernment of Angels conteining as great variety of matter as doth the Religion of mankinde Quest
which is God 3 That euery creature serues for some vse and many of the creatures dispatch exceeding much worke in the vses vnto which the Creator hath appointed them and euery creature hath a kinde of exactnesse and perfectnesse in his nature and being 4 The strange variety of creatures set in this visible world with their most various proprieties take any roome of this house who can count the number of plants trees beasts or men vpon earth Who can reckon the number of Seas Riuers Ponds Springs or creatures in them or count the number of Foules or Flyes in the Ayre or Starres in Heauen And this variety is the more wond●rfull if wee straightly consider that our God made them all and that they are all still preserued in their kindes to this day and that they are made all in such different formes and portraitures not onely one kinde from another but one singular creature from another in the same kinde 5 The maruellous order and relation of the creatures in their kindes and respect one to another in regard whereof the Psalmist magnifies the wisdom of God Psal 136. 5. and this order is admirable if we consider the different degrees of creatures seruing one to another in their kinds as some things God made to haue being only as the Heauens Elements Meteors and Minerals Some things haue being and life also as the herbes and trees some things hauing being life and sense also as the beasts fowles some things haue being sense life reason also as men and these degrees so connexed that the latter includes alwaies the former the inferior degrees serue the higher as the Heauens and Elements adorne feed the Plants the Plants feed the Beasts the Beasts feede and serue men and men serue God Againe the order is wonderfull in the placing of these bodies so as with vnspeakable neerenesse each creature fils his place so as there is no vacuum or emptinesse betweene and besides are so set as though they be diuers of them directly contrary one to another yet are so set as they destroy not one another but preserue the whole Frame I omit many other things for breuities sake Out of these generall considerations of this visible world we may raise many vses for our selues as 1 We haue cause to admire and wonder at the glory of God that made such a huge and strong building wonder I say at him that giues place for all these things to be in yet himselfe conteined in no place that moues all these things and yet is himselfe vnmoueable that made all these creatures being himselfe vncreated and that shewed such skill in the least things as is beyond the art of all men to doe the like 2 We should bee afraid to displease him that is Lord of such Hosts that commands so many great armies and can by them at his pleasure suddenly fight against vs and destroy vs. 3 Man hath great cause of Humiliation when he lookes vpon this Frame both when he feeles his ignorance that can see so little into the glory of these works of God scarce discerning those things of them which their outward formes manifestly off●r to his vnderstanding especially to think of it how all other creatures haue kept their first perfection and still keepe their places and workes and doe their worke constantly in their seasons obeying their Creator and doing his will and he only that was best prouided for and made Lord of all to be out of order not to keepe his rancke to liue vnprofitably and neglect the worke inioyned him to be I say the only creature in Gods garden that deserues the name of a weed fit to be rooted out and the rather because by his fault he hath brought much hurt vpon the whole Frame and is the cause of that vanity or misery which any of the creatures suffer 4 We should heartily pray vnto God to teach vs to reade in this booke of nature since he hath furnished vs with such a great and glorious Library to be pleased to teach vs the skill to read and vnderstand and the rather because he will iudge vs by the contents of this booke of nature as well as by the booke of Scripture Rom. 1. 5 Poore men and men opprest and pursued in the world should not repine at their distresses what if thou want house or harbour so long as thou hast liberty to dwell in this faire house where thou hast the Heauens for a roofe and the Starres for windowes and the earth for a foundation though hard Land-lords oppresse thee in thy artficiall dwellings yet thou art Tenant to such a Land-lord for the vse of his great house of the world as while thou liuest will not put thee out of possession of his house Yea such as haue great houses to dwell in made by the Art of man should yet take more pleasure in their liberty to dwell in this house made by God because it excels theirs more then a Princes Palace can doe a Cottage 6 God himselfe hath giuen vs certaine Caueats by way of preuention which we must looke to when we reade in this great Booke The one is that we take heede we liken not God to any of the creatures which are but the worke of his hands Deut. 4. 19. Esay 40. 22 25. The other is that wee reserue all worship to God and not worship any of the Hoste of Heauen or Earth and therefore wee must not so much as sweare by Heauen or Earth or any thing that is not God Mat. 5. Ier. 5. Lastly hence we may gather a confutation of Idols and false Gods If the Pagans would haue vs beleeue that their Idols are true Gods let their Gods make vs such Heauens and such an earth and we will beleeue them Ier. 10. 11. In the meane time this mighty frame will assure vs that IEHOVAH is onely God And thus in generall I returne now to the second Heauen which is the highest part of this visible World called in Scripture the Firmament and concerning it we may wonder at these things 1. The maker of these Heauens and so the Scriptures doe magnifie the praises of God for diuers distinct things as first that he did spread out these heauens like a curtaine and stretched them out as a Tent to dwell in Esay 40. 22. It was a great glory that he could make such vast and mighty creatures secondly that hee could make them alone without any helpe Esay 44. 24. 45. 12. thirdly that he made them onely by his word Psal 33. 6. fourthly that he hath made them in such Wisedome as surpasseth the vttermost of our vnderstanding to reach the full knowledge of these things In these things it was truely said long since that we cannot order our speech because of darkenesse Iob 37. 38. 39. Instance in the light of Heauen where is the Way where light dwelleth and as for darkenesse where is the place thereof that thou
shouldest know the path to the house thereof or by what way is the light parted and scattered through the world Iob 38. 19. 20. 24. fifthly that hee hath established them with such vnderstanding and power as they continue notwithstanding their maruellous motions and yet haue nothing to hold them vp no mighty Beames from North to South to beare them vp no rafters to fasten them to or the like but are vpheld meerely by the Word of his power Pro. 3. 19. Heb. 13. 2. In Scripture we shall finde obserued concerning the Heauens their strange constitution and Nature and that for diuers things as first for their vast greatnesse Esay 40. 12. secondly their shining brightnesse being like a molten looking-glasse Iob 37. 18. thirdly their singular durablenesse and lastingnesse Deut. 11. 21. to which I might adde their vnconceauable swiftnesse in Motion the Sunne running his Race swifter then any Gyant on earth or Foule in the Ayre or ought that can bee found here below Psalme 19. 3. The end why those mighty heauens were made which is chiefly to preach the glory of the Lord to all the ends of the Earth Psal 19. 1. which glory of God in making them is so great that the glory of the Lord is said to couer the heauens Hab. 3. 3. 4. The ordinances of heauen or the Lawes which God hath giuen to these mighty creatures or the couenant hee hath made with them binding them to doe his will granting them dominion ouer the earth by their influences which cannot bee resisted or restrained Iob 38. 33. 31. And couenanting with them to preserue them in their course Ier. 33. 25. and binding them to keepe their seasons and to doe the worke appointed them as the Sunne to lighten the world by day and the Moone and Starres by night so as the Moone must know her seasons and the Sunne his going downe Psal 136. 9. 104. 19. 5. The Hostes or Armies of creatures that people the heauens and these are praised first for their comelinesse and hence it is said that the Spirit of the Lord garnished the heauens Iob 26. 13. secondly for their Number in respect of which it is accounted an infinite vnderstanding in God to number the Starres and call them all by their names Psal 147. 4. 5. thirdly for their subiection to God in that they all are his seruants and obey his wil Psal 103. 21. so as God doth whatsoeuer he will in heauen aswell as earth Daniel 4. 35. fourthly for their vses for besides the sweet influences of the Starres what comfort should we haue in this visible world if wee had not the light of the Sunne How would the glory of all Gods workes lie buried in the darke that now by the benefit of the light appeare to vs and serue for our vses The consideration of the making of these mighty heauens should serue for diuers vses as 1. Our soules should blesse God and giue him thankes because he is very great and hath shewed his great wisedome in making the heauens and his mighty power in stretching them out like a curtaine and all this through his great mercie to man which endureth for euer Psalme 104. 1. 2. 136. 5. 2. Woe to wicked men that by their sinnes prouoke God they cannot escape his wrath God hath compassed them in with the heauens and can make the very Starres of Heauen fig●t against them Iudg. 5. 20. and these Heauens will declare their wicke●nesse Iob 16. 27. Nor can any thing they doe be hid from him for the light and darkenesse are his creatures and therefore no darknesse can hide from him Iob 22. 12 13 14. 3. When I consider saith Dauid thy heauens the worke of thy fingers the Moone and the Starres which thou hast ordained what is man that thou art mindefull of him or the Sonne of Man that thou visitest him Psal 8. 3. 4. 4. Godly men may be much comforted with the knowledge of this that God made the Heauens the Sunne and Moone and Starres and that in diuers respects For first they need not feare the signes of Heauen nor the Constellations of the Starres nor the diuinations of Inchaunters for as God can restraine the Constellation of the Starres Esay 13 10. so there can be no diuination against God Esay 44. 25 47. 1● secondly because God hath hereby shewed that he is able to prouide for them and protect them yea hee pleadeth the greatnesse of his power in making the heauens thereby to ass●re them that there shall be nothing too hard for him to doe that may concerne their good Zach. 12. 1. 2. 3. Esay 42. 5. 6 45. 11. 13. 18. 19. thirdly because God hath professed to make so great account of the Church that hee can take no delight in the workes of his hands in planting the Heauens if Sion be not planted and her children as the Starres in Heauen Isay 51. 10. fourthly because God hath promised to them better Heauens when themselues shall shine as the Starres in the Firmament and they shall need no Sun nor Moone to light them but God himselfe will be their euerlasting Light Dan. 12. ● Reuel 21. 2● 22. 5. Thus of the Starry skie or the second part of Heauen The third part followes and that is the Ayre This is the lowest and worst roome of Heauen and yet excellent things are written of it for our profit in the Scriptures Of the Nature properties parts and naturall vses of the Ayre the Scripture takes little or no notice but leaues that to Philosophie the Furniture of this Roome is especially commended in Scripture and so the holy Ghost singles out diuers Considerations First about the Foules of the Ayre Secondly about the Meteors in the Ayre About the Foules of the Ayre we shall finde such things as these obserued in Scripture and so offered to our considerations 1. The Maker of them which was God Gen. 1. 2. The matter out of which they were made viz. out of the ground Gen. 2. 19. 3. The Originall of their names for it was Adam that gaue the names to the Foules Gen. 2. 19. 4. Their inferiority to man both in that wisedome is not in them Iob 28. 21. and in that God hath planted in the Foules a natural feare of man more then any other creature Gen. 9. 2. 5. The care that God hath for the very Foules for first hee knowes all the Foules in the Mountaine Psal 50. 11. secondly he prouides foode for them without their owne industry Mat. 6. Psal 147. 9. thirdly he hath taught them skill to build them Nests to dwell in Mat. 8. 20. fourthly he hath prouided euen for their delight for they haue their habitation by the springes and sing among the branches Psal 104. 12. fifthly God hath prouided for their passage in the Ayre and that so wonderfully that it is reckoned among the foure things too hard for vs to know to tell the way of an Eagle in the Ayre
his Truth Psalme 146. 5. 6. 2. When men are in vproares and the World full of commotions and warres the consideration of Gods power ouer the raging of the sea is an incouragement and comfort vnto men that waite vpon God that hee can also still the Tumult of the people as the Prophet gathers Psal 65. 7. 3. Such men as haue callings to doe their businesse in the Sea may hence gather comfort for their safetie there for God is the confidence of them that are a farre off in the Sea as the same Prophet shewes Psal 65. 5. We may trust God for our preseruation on the sea aswell as on the drie land seeing his command is as great in the one as in the other Lastly hence the Apostle Peter gathers an vnanswerable confutation of Atheists that thinke all things will continue alike and that there will be no breaking vp of the world for the last iudgement and that things are carried meerely by a naturall course for that the Earth stands out of the waters and in the waters if there were no higher cause then nature the world would presently bee ouerflowed if God let goe his hold of the waters as manifestly appeared in the destruction of the old world 2. Pet. 3. 5. Thus of the Waters The Earth is considered of in the Scriptures either in it selfe or in the fruits of it or in the Inhabitants of it The glory of the Lord is exceeding great in respect of the Earth considered in it selfe 1. That he could make the Earth Gen. 1. 1. Psal 121. 2. 2. That he could make it so that is 1. So great and vast a creature Iob 11. 9. 2. That he could make it be only by his word 2. Pet. 3. 5. Psal 33. 9. 3. That he could make it hang in such a miraculous manner vpon nothing that is able to beare it vp founding it vpon the waters and Ayre Iob 26. ● 38. 4. 5. 6. Psalme 136. 6. 4. That he hath diuided it and set borders throughout the whole Earth diuiding it for the vse of the seuerall Nations that should inhabit it Psal 74. 17. 5. That he hath made it so vnmoueable there being nothing to fasten it Psalme 104. 5. 33. 9. 119. 90. being of such weight and hauing so many Citties and buildings vppon it and being a creature so round and therefore by nature moueable 6. That he hath made it a creature that lasts for euer and outlasts a world of other creatures Eccles 1. 4. Psalme 78. 69. The Vses are diuers for 1. Hence we may gather the maruellous glory of the Lord in his power greatnesse wisedome prouidence soueraignty and eternity Iob 12. 8. His power in being able to make so mighty a creature hee must needs haue a mighty Arme Psal 89. 11. 13. His greatnesse in that he is bigger then the Heauens and the Earth seeing they are the worke of his hands Iob 11. 9. His wisedome that hee could finde out such a secret way of founding so vast a creature Pro. 3. 19. 8. His prouidence is most manifest in that so mighty a creature can abide which it could neuer doe if it were not vpheld by the Word of his power 2. Pet. 3. 5. and his soueraignty is matchlesse he is a great King aboue all Kings for he alone is the Lord of the whole earth Neuer any King was King of the whole Earth but hee so as all the Earth and the fulnesse thereof belongs to him and he hath the highest and absolutest right ouer all things in the Earth Psalme 47. 7. Mich. 4. 13. Zach. 4. vlt. finally hence is proued the Eternity of God he made the Earth and therefore was before the foundations of it and if he could make a creature that lasts so long how euerlasting is he himselfe Psal 102. 25. 26. 2. It is not inough to know these things but wee must giue God the glory of them our hearts should alwaies say with the Psalmist Blessed bee the Lord God which onely doth wondrous things and blessed be his glorious name for euer and let the whole earth bee filled with his glory Amen Amen Psal 72. 19. 18. Psal 47. 7. and the rather because our vowes and thankesgiuing are as it were all the Rent we pay vnto the Lord of the whole Earth of whom we hold in chiefe Psal 50. 12. 3. I● should teach godly men contentation in all estates if God be the King of the whole Earth then all his children are the great Princes of the world Psal 47. 9. and can want nothing that is needfull for them because the Earth is the Lords and all the fulnesse thereof Psal 24. 1. Zach. 4. 14. which if it be seriously considered all men haue cause to say verely there is a reward for the righteous Psal 58. 12. and if wicked men breake their bonds and breake in vpon their possessions they haue a comfortable recourse to that God that set the borders of the Earth and gaue the lot to his people Psal 74. 17. 18. and if the earth can last so long then the children of his seruants shall much more endure for euer Psalme 102. 25. 26. 28. and if the Word of the Lord bee so vnmoueable that by it the earth is vpheld then wil the word of his promise to his seruants be sure to all generations Psal 119. 90. and therfore of all men Oh ye Righteous ye are blessed of the Lord which made Heauen Earth Psal 115. 13 14 15 16. and therefore also in all the occasions of our liues we should remember that our helpe commeth from the Lord which made Heauen and Earth Psal 121. 2. 134. 3. 4. It should teach vs to giue God the glory of disposing of the Kingdomes of the Earth He is the supreame Lord of the whole Earth and therefore hee may set vp and pull downe what Kings and Princes he will and if he set Sion to thresh the Nations and to take away their substance yet it is done by right seeing God is the Lord of the Earth Mich. 4. 13. Psal 47. 9. 5. The Kings of the Earth should remember to do their Homage to God and to sing of his praises and of the surpassing excellencie of his glory Psal 138. 4. Psal 72. 11. 6. Woe to wicked men for if the Earth be his and they his Subiects he hath more power to subdue and punish them as rebells then any of the Princes of the Earth and therefore can easily consume them out of the earth Psal 104. vlt. 58. 12. and if hee can make the very earth tremble if he but look vpon it Psal 104. 32. then where shall they appeare and how shall they stand before his Indignation Nahum 1. 5. 6. and if they be borne with for a time and get great estates on Earth yet must they be brought to iudgement as vsurpers because the Earth is the Lords and they neuer had a Title from him for what they hold and
which no other creature can doe and this discerning would be in the minde if there were no Sun in the firmament and aboue all things that the soule can know it is most excellent in that it can know God himselfe Man onely of all visible creatures can see God and his workes and acknowledge his workemanship which none of the other creatures can doe 3. The soule of man was made in the Image of God in other things the footsteps of God doe appeare but in man onely in this visible world did the similitude of God appeare Gen. 1. 26. Man was not made like the Sun in the firmament or like some Angell in Heauen but like God himselfe and so especially in his soule for the soule of man is a spirit as God is himselfe and it is inuisible and immateriall like God and as in the substance of the soule we resemble God so in certaine qualities or vertues printed in the soule which resemble the Attributes of God such as are goodnesse loue knowledge mercy Iustice patience and the like Ephes 4 Colos 3. 10. The nature of no creature being capable of vertue or the lawes of vertuous liuing but onely man 4. The soule is immortall it is a thing within vs that will neuer be at an end when worlds of other things bee dissolued round about it and this is an vnspeakeable indowment if we could seriously thinke of it that God should let vs last as long as himselfe and all other liuing things die and expire and come to nothing A mans soule will bee aliue after a thousand times tenne thousand yeeres All the diuells in Hell or Tyrants on earth cannot kill our soule 5. The soule of a man workes within strange things euen in his very body It carries the body about being a thing without body it selfe and giues diuers gifts to diuers parts of the body It workes sight in the eyes hearing in the eares feeling in all the body tasting in the Pallate smelling in the Nostrills breathing in the Lungs concoction in the Stomach operation in the hands ambulation in the feete and motion in the whole bodie yea it so workes by the senses of the body that it takes in by them all other things to it selfe in the species of them 6. As it is wonderfull for the things it worketh vpon the body so it is admirable for the worke it can doe when the body lyeth a sleepe and stirres not The soule then resembles God in the Creation It creates worlds of shapes within it selfe with strange furniture and variety which inward Creation of infinite frames of things would be like this world which God made but that the soule cannot giue them continuance life c. It was a great gift of God to giue the soule power to make these things within 7. The soule doth excell in quicknesse of motion working other creatures are swift some in running some in flying but what can be among them comparable to the soule which can in thought in an instant suruey the ends of the Earth In these and many other things the soule of man doth wonderfully excell being set in the body of a man as it were the God of the body as a little God in the little world as IEHOVAH is the great God in the great world The whole person of man considered as consisting both of soule and body did and doth enioy many singular prerogatiues aboue all other creatures in this visible world as 1. Man had the honour to be brought into the world when all other things were made and the world furnished ready for his vse Gen. 1. 2. God did man a great honour in the manner of making him for hee made man with consultation but all other things were made by saying the word onely let them be Gen. 1. 3. The soule and body of a man is knit together with such a bond as is beyond the reach of mortall creatures to expresse the manner of the Vnion 4. Because God conuerseth with man onely of all the creatures in the world our parents did see God in Paradise and he reuealeth himselfe still to the blessed ones in heauen Since the fall this is for the most part lost saue that with the godly the Lord conuerseth by many signes of familiarity in the vse of his ordinances 5. Because God made such prouision for man as hee did for no other creature as in the first Creation hee set man in Eden the garden of vnutterable pleasure and when man dies now if he be redeemed by Christ hee hath prouided that heauen of heauens for him 6. Because God hath made man Lord ouer the other creatures and bestowed vpon him dominion ouer the beastes of the field and foules of the Ayre and fishes of the sea yet the vastest creature aboue or below doth minister vnto man and God hath planted a naturall feare of man in other creatures Psal 8. ● Gen. 1. 9. 2. 7. Because the body and soule of a man is the Temple of the holy Ghost to dwell in so it was with the first man and so it is still in some men euen in this world 2. Cor. 6. 16. God dwells in man and walkes in him 8. Yea God hath done that honour to the nature of man that he hath not done to the nature of Angels and that is that he hath ioyned it inseparably to his diuine nature in the person of his Son Christ Iesus so as man is now as neere to God as the body is to the soule Heb. 2. 16. The consideration of this Glory of God in the Creation of man may serue for Instruction Humiliation and Consolation By way of Instruction it should teach vs many duties as 1. We should giue glory to God and acknowledge that it is he onely that made vs and not we our selues our parents are but instruments of the propagation of our bodies it is God that is the principall efficient Psal 100. 3. especially we should with all gladnesse acknowledge Gods goodnesse to vs that made vs such creatures so excellent aboue other workes of his hands he might haue made vs vile Vermine or poysonfull creatures Toads and Serpents Psalme 149. 2. 2. We should learne hence submission to God in all things concerning our life or death hee hath made vs and therefore hath absolute power ouer vs as the worke of his hands to doe with vs whatsoeuer pleaseth him and to call for the spirit backe againe and leaue vs to returne to our dust at his pleasure Ier. 45. 4. Psal 90 3. 3. Seeing all men are the worke of Gods hands and that our God made them it should teach Superiours to shew due respect to their Inferiours in gifts estate age or the like for he that made the rich made the poore also hee that made the Master made the Seruant also and therefore Inferiours are not to be despised Iob 31. 13. 15. Pro. 14. 31. All mankind made of one bloud Acts 17. 26. 4. We
by some Diuines That Iesus is his proper name is manifest but whether Christ be his Syrname as some think may iustly bee doubted because it seemes rather a Title of Office as King Duke or Earle are amongst men which are no Syrnames And in Iesus COncerning this Title of Iesus diuers things are to bee considered 1. The Etymologie of it It comes of an Hebrew roote and signifies a Sauiour and is the same name with Ioshuah and Iehoshuah and it may well be that he had an Hebrew name to signifie that he was a Sauiour of the Iewes and hee had a Greeke name Christ to signifie the interest the Grecians or Gentiles had in him 2. Who gaue him this Name Hee did not assume it to himselfe though knowing the end of his comming and the fulnesse of his sufficiencie he might haue done it neither was it put vpon him by men who giue names either casually without respect of signification or else when they giue good significant names there is a contradiction betweene their names and their liues but an Angell was sent from Heauen with great solemnity to appoint and impose his Name before he was borne Luke 1. 26. and hee talketh with the Virgin about it as an euill Angell talked with the woman about our perdition so heere a good Angell talkes with the Virgin about our Saluation 3. Why was he called Iesus Answer this Name Iesus or a Sauiour agrees to m●ntso fitly as to Christ hee onely deserues to be so called 1. Because his worke is to saue his people Matthew 1. 21. 2. Because there is no other Sauiour but he hee alone saueth them there is no other Name in Heauen and Earth by which we can be saued Acts 4. 12. Rom. 5. 17. 3. Because he saues from sinnes which no man can doe to deliuer from diseases of the body Physitians may or from thraldome and outward seruitude great Princes or commanders may but to saue the soule and from sinne none but Christ can Mat. 1. 21. And to saue from sinne is the greater worke because it cannot bee done vnlesse Gods Iustice be satisfied and mans nature recouered and the diuels conquered and the world ouercome c. 4. Because he can ransome and redeeme dead men Rom. 8. 2. 11. 5. Because he saues by such a price he redeemes by dying by shedding his owne bloud who also is more then man to saue vs he destroyes himselfe Gal. 3. 13. Heb. 2. 9 10. 13. 12. 6. Because he is a perfect Sauiour he will by degrees deliuer his people from the guilt of sinne and the power of it and the effects of it so as at the last they shall be freed from all sinne and miserie for euer He makes Attonement for all sinnes 1. Iohn 1. 7. not for one onely and vndertakes to pay all our debts and to heale all our diseases and at the last day will free vs from all sorrowes sicknesse sin death and all misery whatsoeuer 7. Because he is an eternall Sauiour hee doth not saue such as liued in one age onely but hee saueth all that come to him in euery Age Heb. 7. 25. 13. 8. 8. Because he is a generall Sauiour not of Iewes onely but of Gentiles also Rom. 3. 25. Hee is the Lambe of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Iohn 1. 9. Because hee doth all this worke of Saluation by one offering of himselfe hee did it at once for all Ages Heb. 10. 14. 10. Because his Redeemed ones shall neuer bee in bondage againe 11. Because he giues such preferment to all his Redeemed ones as neuer Conquerour did or was able to giue Hee makes them all Sonnes of God Heires coheires with himselfe and giues them all eternall life which will best appeare at the last day Colos 3. 3. 4. Rom. 5. 17. 6. 23. Reuel 19. 10. The Vse should be especially for instruction and so in many things 1. This should be tidings of great Ioy that there is a Iesus a Sauiour such a Sauiour This word Iesus is a short Gospell euen the substance of all good newes Acts 8. 35. our hearts should reioyce and our tongues should be glad Acts 2. 26. 22. Yea our whole liues should bee filled with gladnes and thankefulnesse that haue such a Sauiour that saues not from the Turke but from the diuell that pacifies not the wrath of a mortall man but of the Immortall God that payes all our debts that ouercomes all our enemies that saues not our bodies onely from sicknesse but our soules also from sinne 2. We should especially looke to it that we faile not of Saluation by Iesus but labour to be such as he may be Iesus to vs and so three things are necessarie 1. That we should seeke vnto him for our ransome and healing and Saluation and desire to know nothing but the Lord Iesus onely 1. Cor. 2. 2. 2. That wee beleeue in his Name this is Gods preceptorie Commandement or wee shall haue no part in Iesus 1. Iohn 3. 23. 3. That if we would haue him saue vs from our sinnes that they damne vs not we must then repent and conuert from our sinnes if we would haue God to blesse vs in Iesus Acts 2. 19. 13. 23. 24. Gal. 5. 6. Ephesians 4. 21. 2. Thes 3. 6. Iude 4. 3. Wee should shew that wee are saued by Iesus by liuing so as may become this Doctrine and so wee should shew it 1. By acknowledging his supremacie and sufficiencie against all the Popes Papists and diuells in the world wee should magnifie his Name aboue all Names Acts 19. 17. 1. Cor. 12. 3. 2. By louing the Lord Iesus aboue all things accounting all things but losse and dung in comparison of the knowledge of him 1. Pet. 1. 9. Phil. 3. 8. longing for his appearing and praying daily that the Lord Iesus would come Reuel 22. 1. Thes 1. 10. 3. By liuing to him spending our daies in his seruice and as may become the honour of such a Sauiour 1. Thes 4. 1. doing all things in his name Colos 3. 17. and seeking his glory more then our owne things Phil. 3. 20. we should set him alwaies before vs Acts 2. 22. 25. 4. By hauing no confidence in the flesh but placing all our ioy and trust in Iesus Phil. 3. 3. 5. By willing suffering any thing for Iesus sake Yea our liues should not bee deare to vs to confirme the testimonie of Iesus Acts 5. 41. 20. 24. 21. 13. 2. Cor. 4. 11. Reu. 12. 6. By liuing louingly and with vnity amongst our selues Paul beseecheth them by this Name Iesus that there should be no diuisions amongst them especially in matters of Religion for Iesus is a Sauiour alone and hee cannot bee diuided 1. Cor. 1. 10. 7. By shewing all Faith and Hope in the expectation of the Resurrection of our bodies and Saluation of our soules Finally this explication of the Name of Iesus may shew diuers sorts of men know not
4. The parts of his Priest-hood are Sacrifice and Intercession by Sacrifice he prayes for the sinnes of the Elect to this end to reconcile them to God and to deliuer them from the power of the diuell and this Sacrifice of our Sauiour excells all the Ceremoniall Sacrifices for they were but Types this was the substance They prepared the bodies of beasts or other things he prepared his owne body yea his very soule was made a sacrifice for sinne as hee offered vp himselfe as a Sacrifice for many sinnes they needed many sacrifices but he by one sacrifice of himselfe makes Attonement for all the sinnes of the Elect and that Sacrifice but once offered whereas theirs were offered successiuely and their sacrifices could not cleanse the conscience from sinne properly nor pacifie God as many Scriptures testifie whereas Christs Sacrifice of his owne body and bloud doth fully pacifie God and doth effectually purge the conscience from dead workes Their sacrifices did not make the worshippers more holy Heb. 9. 13. 14. With the bloud of these sacrifices the very high Priest in the greatest solemnity could onely enter within the vaile of the Temple but Christ by his bloud opens heauen and that not onely once a yeare but keepes it alwaies open nor did Christ enter within the Vaile onely for himselfe but hath left the way for vs euen a liuing and lasting way for vs to get to heauen by vertue of his bloud Heb. 10. 19. The second worke of our high-Priest is Intercession or to offer prayers and so he made a threefold Intercession for vs. The one a little before his Atachment recorded Iohn 17. The other in the very time of the Sacrifice while it was hanged vp of which is mention made Luke 23. 34. The third in the heauenly Sanctuary as he sits at Gods right hand to make request for vs Heb. 9. 24. The Vse should be first for consolation and that in diuers respects 1. Because God hath giuen vs such an excellent high Priest 2. Because by his Priest-hood we obtaine such excellent benefits as the Scriptures shew viz. from his sacrifice Reconciliation with God 1. Pet. 3. 18. Rom. 8. 10. The opening of the very Fountaine of grace Zach. 13. 1. Forgiuenesse of all our sinnes Rom 3. 25. Iustification by his righteousnesse Dan. 9 24. The taking away of all malediction and condemnation and the merit of eternall life Heb. 10. 19. and from his intercession we receiue the obtaining of our prayers and suits at Gods hands Reuel 8. 3. 4. and the pouring out vpon vs the spirit of intercession teaching vs and helping vs to pray Zach. 12. 12. Rom. 8. 26. and the perfuming of all our workes making them acceptable to God the non-suiting of all the Accusations of Sathan or euil men brought against vs Romanes 8. 33. Iohn 17. 14. 15. 3. Because he hath made vs Priests also vnto God by pouring out vpon vs of the Oyle of his Grace Reuel 1. Secondly the consideration of the Sacrifice and intercession of Christ should teach vs 1. To take heed that wee dishonor not God through vnbeliefe and dispaire 2. That we liue as may become the glory of him that hath bought vs at such a price abhorring all filthinesse both of flesh and spirit 1. Cor. 6. 20. 3. Seeing we are Priests wee must offer those Sacrifices are inioyned vs which are 1. The Teares of contrition or a broken heart Psal 51. 19. 2. Prayers and Thankesgiuing vnto God Psal 141. 2. Reuel 5. 8. Heb. 13. 15. 3. Almes to the Poore or Contribution to the distressed Phil. 4. 18. 4. The giuing of our selues to our Teachers to be wholy ruled by them our soules so subiected are the sacrifice and they offer them vp to God when they pray and giue thanks for vs Rom. 15. 16. 5. Good workes for these are sacrifices of righteousnesse euery good worke is a Sacrifice Psal 4. 5. But especially to giue our selues soule and body to God to let him doe with vs whatsoeuer he will is the chiefe of Sacrifices euen a whole burnt offering when wee yeeld to obey God in all things without reseruing any thing to our selues Rom. 12. 1. Thus of his Anointing to the Priest hood His Anointing to the Kingdome followes where these things may bee distinctly obserued 1. That the Church of God is not without a King though he be not so visible to vs as the Kings of the Earth are Ier. 23. 5. Psal 2. 6. 2. That Iesus of Nazareth is that King Mat 28. 18. Acts 2. 30. ●3 36. 1. Cor. 15. 25. 3. I● what things it may appeare that Christ is a King 1. He hath the ●●●es of a King Yea King of Kings Reuel 19. 16. 2. He liues in the Maiesty and Glory of a King he sits in the Throne of Glory Psal 45. He hath his Court in diuers places of the Earth where he is pleased to keepe house The Sanctuarie is his Court. Hee is attended on as a King hee hath thousands of Angels that waite about his Throne 3. He hath the power of a King All Power is giuen him in Heauen and Earth Mat. 28. 18. 4. He giues Lawes like a King He is the onely Lawgiuer of the Church Iames 4. 12. 5. He Conquers like a King who can recount the greatnes of his conquests in the conuersion of the Gentiles And so he conquers daily in gathering men by his Word and Spirit out of the kingdome of darkenesse into the kingdome of his grace here 6. He gouernes like a King prouiding for the welfare of the godly in all Ages ruling all things by his owne power and making them to worke together for the best to them that loue God 7. He hath power of life and death as a King and is appointed of God a Iudge both of quick and dead Act. 10. 42. 2 Tim. 4. 1. Ier. 23. 5. Fourthly the excellencie of Christ the King aboue all other Kings and so he excells 1. In the preheminence of his Person Other Kings are the sonnes of men hee is the Sonne of God Hee is better borne then any King Whether we respect his Generation as God or his Incarnation as man for he was conceiued of the holy Ghost and so had no sinne and borne of a Virgin not by the way of propagation as other Kings are borne Hee had neither Father nor Mother no Father as man no Mother as God Psal 2. Luke 1. Heb. 7. 2. In the excellence of his gifts for gouernement Neuer King so qualified he is fairer then the children of men and Anointed with the Oyle of grace and gifts aboue his fellowes Psal 45. He is the mighty God an euerlasting Father he is wonderfull for Wisedome and Counfell a Prince of Peace that knowes how to keepe the gouernment vpon his owne shoulders Esay 9. 6. and being now glorified in Heauen hath laid downe all humane infirmities and is glorified in his humane Nature with all degrees of heauenly gifts can
to inlarge his Dominions and to pull downe the Kingdome of Antichrist 4. To endeuour to carrie themselues as may become their Relation to Christ either as his Subiects or as made Kings by him as his Subiects they should consider that it behoues them 1. To study the Mysteries of his Kingdome Mat. 13. 11. 2. To send their Lambe to the Ruler of the whole earth Esay 16. 1. to doe their Homage and to acknowledge their King 3. To bow at the Name of Iesus Phil. 2. 11. making of legges will not serue the turne they must bee subiect with all feare and reuerence and submit themselues to his will 4. To shew themselues sensible of his dishonor and not bee silent or carelesse when they heare their King abused 5. To shew all meekenesse and patience for their King though he be a great King yet is meeke and humble Mat. 21. 5. 6. To obserue whatsoeuer he commands Mat. 28. vlt. prouing themselues to be his subiects by fearing to displease him in any thing Hosea 3. 5. 7. To seeke to him in all our necessities seeing hee is so highly exalted and able to helpe vs and delights to receiue petitions from his Subiects And in asmuch as we partake of his holy Oyle also and are by him made Kings vnto God wee should shew our selues to the world as spirituall Kings and that first by subduing our owne passions lusts inordinate desires carnall reason maintaining continuall warre against the remainders of corruption in our natures He is a King indeed that can rule ouer his owne perturbations secondly by shewing our selues resolute not to bee brought in bondage by the diuell or the world by the Baits of profit or pleasure or by the inforcements of scorne threatning or punishment we should let the world know they should assoone conquer the kings of the earth as win vs from our sincerity and fidelity to Iesus Christ thirdly by our conuersation in heauen wee should alwaies order our liues as if wee were presently to bee Crowned in Heauen Lastly such as are Kings Rulers or Gouernors ouer others should hence learne with feare and trembling to confesse the glory of Christ and acknowledge that they haue their Scepters and Authority from Iesus Christ and accordingly reckon their kingdomes on earth to be but as places of seruice in which they doe the worke which Iesus requireth of them Psal 2. 11. IOHN 1. 14. And we beheld his glory as the glory of the onely begotten of the Father His onely Sonne HItherto of the Titles Iesus and Christ now followes the third Title and so our Redeemer is called Gods onely Sonne About which ground of Faith wee haue these things to consider 1. The Proofes that Iesus Christ is the Sonne of God for to beleeue God hath a Sonne is not inough we must beleeue that Iesus Christ is that Sonne of God Psal 2. 7. compared with Heb. 1. 5. Ioh. 10. 36. Mat. 16. 16. Rom. 1. 3. Iohn 9. 35. 2. What kinde of Sonne Christ is to God God hath many Sonnes some by Grace and one by Nature The sorts of sonnes which God hath by Grace see in the explication of the terme Father in the first Article of the Creed But Christ is his naturall Sonne because God the Father did communicate to him his owne nature so as he is by nature the Son of God he is the begotten Sonne of God because he receiued his Fathers Nature by Generation He is the first begotten Sonne of God so called in Scripture because hee hath the right of the first-borne ouer his brethren and was begotten before the world was he is the onely begotten Son of God because by Generation God hath no other Sonnes but he 3. In what Nature Christ is the onely Sonne of God It may be conceiued that he is so in respect of his humane Nature for no other Sonnes of God were conceiued of the holy Ghost or borne of a Virgin but hee onely but wee must vnderstand that Christ in his Incarnation hath the same Nature with vs it differs onely in the manner of receiuing it Now he is called the onely Son from the nature which hee receiues from the Father and he onely and so he is the onely Sonne of God as he is the second Person in the Trinity and in respect of the manner of receiuing his diuine Nature This is mightily opposed by the antient and moderne Arians who striue vehemently to carrie it that hee is called in Scripture the Sonne of God onely as he is man and that God hath no Son that was before Iesus was borne or conceiued Now to establish our Faith against their Heresie we should often thinke of these Scriptures where mention is made of a Sonne of God before Iesus was borne or was greater then man could be as Iohn 3. 16. God sent his Sonne into the world and God had a Sonne by whom he made the world Heb. 1. 2. Colos 1. 16. God had a Sonne of whom it was said that hee onely reuealed the Father Mat. 11. 27. now either he was before he was incarnate or else the Church in the Old Testament knew not God the Father and vnto the Sonne he saith Thy Throne O God is for euer and euer then he had a Sonne was God as well as man Heb. 1. 8. besides it is cleare he had many brethren as man Heb. 2. 12. and therefore as man could not bee the onely Sonne 4. How he was begotten To this question a perfect answer cannot bee giuen by vs in this mortality Pro. 30. 4. It is a Mystery exceeds all mortall capacity Yet the Lord is pleased to let fall certaine similitudes in Scriptures that giue vs some glimpse of it as when Christ is called the Wisedome or Word of his Father Pro. 8. Iohn 1. thereby we gather that as the soule begets reason or the word that is afterwards to be vttered beget I say within it selfe without ioyning with any other creature so doth God as an eternall minde beget his Sonne in himselfe so when Christ is called the brightnesse of his Fathers glory it imports that as shining is begotten of the Sun so is Christ of the Father Heb. 1. 3. So when Christ is called the Character or Image of his Fathers person is imported that as the print of the seale is set vpon waxe and doth resemble it perfectly without loosing any part of the seale so doth God communicate his whole Nature to his Sonne without loosing any thing from himselfe Heb. 1. 3. And as the minde of man begets an Image of what it conceiues so God that eternall minde when hee conceiued of himself he begat that Image of himself which we call the Sonne of God perfectly resembling the Father See in the Notes vpon that word Father in the first Article of the Creed seauen things wherein this eternall geneneration of Gods Son is vnlike to our generation by earthly parents 5. Why our Redeemer needed to be the Son of God
aswell as the Son of Man It was requisite he should be the Son of God for diuers reasons first because there must be a proportion betweene the sinne of man and the punishment due to his sinne and the satisfaction made to God for the sinne and punishment due Now mans sinne being infinite as in other respects so because it was committed against God who is infinite his punishment must be infinite also Now no finite creature can performe an infinite satisfaction in a finite time and therefore it was requisite hee should be infinite in person that suffered which as man he was not secondly the benefits necessarie for vs require that the Mediator should be God for to deliuer man from spirituall enemies sinne and Sathan and to restore to man the Image of God lost to performe by one a Righteousnesse able to iustifie many could not bee done by any one meere man Nor can any one mans righteousnesse deserue the opening of the Kingdome of Heauen for many men thirdly he that must mediate betweene God and man had need to be God to treat with God in things that concerne him and man to treat with man in the things that concerne man And as it was a way most necessary so was it most comely who fitter to make vs sonnes of God by Adoption then he that was the Sonne of God by Nature and who fitter to restore the Image of God in vs then hee that was the substantiall Image of his Father The Vses follow and so First we should make conscience of it to receiue this doctrine with our whole hearts with all life of affections for hereby wee shall improue wee are Christians and not Iewes They could beleeue Iesus was a man but could not indure it that he should call himselfe the Sonne of God Iohn 10. and the diuell hath mightily also laboured to make the Diuinity of Christ suspected As when he came into the world by making men think of a worldly kingdome then stirring vp the Priests and Pharisees to seeke to kill him as a blasphemer in saying he was the Sonne of God And in the beginning of the Christian Churches he raised vp pernitious Heretickes to denie his Diuinity and at this day hath raised many in other countries that write and teach most dangerously in this point And therefore we must hold fast this Truth against all the power of hell This confession is the Rocke vpon which the Christian Church is built Mat. 16. 16. 17. If we acknowledge the Son we haue the Father 1. Ioh. 2. 23. Secondly it should wonderfully quicken and establish our Faith in relying vpon him for Saluation and all happinesse vpon him I say that hath vndertaken for vs and is so full of merit and power his Satisfaction and Righteousnesse must needs be perfect and sufficient that is the Sonne of God Ier. 23. 6. God cannot but bee infinitely well pleased in his satisfaction and hath signified so much Mat. 3. 17. and therefore wee should settle our consciences in all peace and ioy in beleeuing in him Yea in all passages of our liues wee should make vse of our Faith in the Sonne of God whatsoeuer we want for soule or body or the preseruation of our liues we may with much confidence goe to him for out of his fulnesse wee may receiue grace for grace Ioh. 1. 14. 18. And seeing God hath giuen vs his Sonne how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Rom. 8. 32. Yea it should much establish our Faith against the feare of our falling away before wee come to possesse eternall life for he is stronger then all and no man nor diuell can take vs out of his hand and therefore we shall not perish Iohn 10. 29. 30. Thirdly it should much inflame vs to the Loue of God that hath had such mercy to such miserable creatures as wee were as to send his owne Son to redeeme vs Ioh. 3. 16. Oh it should make vs to loue God aboue all things and to esteeme of his loue as better then any thing else in our liues Fourthly God the Father himselfe from Heauen taught vs a maine vse of this point when hee proclaimed him to bee his Sonne for then he charged vs to heare him None abler to instruct vs for the Son hath his knowledge out of the bosome of the Father Mat. 11. 27. and none hath better right to rule vs because he is the first-borne and therefore ought to rule ouer his brethren It should therefore bee our conscionable care all our daies to attend to his voice and to do whatsoeuer he commands vs Mat. 17. 5. Fifthly we must hence also learne to ioyne Christ with the Father in all religious seruice for when God brought forth his first-begotten Sonne into the world he said let all the Angels of Heauen worship him and therfore much more we must doe it Heb. 1. 6. Ioh. 5. 23. Againe from hence we may gather the wofull estate of all vnbeleeuers that weare out their time and do not lay hold vpon the way of Saluation by Iesus Christ for this increaseth their condemnation because they doe not beleeue now that GOD hath sent his owne Sonne to bee the Sauiour Iohn 3. 36. Finally two things about the Diuinity of our Sauiour are here implyed first that he is God for if he be the Sonne of God then he hath the Nature of his Father and so is God which though the Creed doe not expressely mention yet the Scripture doth acknowledging him for God equall with the Father Rom. 9. 5. 1. Iohn 5. 20. Phil. 2. 6. but because the Creed doth not expresse this I forbeare the explication of it resting satisfied to haue treated of that which the Creed mentions Another thing implyed is that hee is a person distinct from the Father for if he be the Son of God then he differs in person from the Father ACTS 2. 36. Let all the House of Israel know assuredly that God hath made Iesus both Christ and Lord. Our Lord. HItherto of the three former Titles the Last Title of our Sauiour is that which is here exprest viz. Our Lord and concerning this Title diuers things are to be considered 1. That it is a thing that God chargeth vpon our Faith to beleeue distinctly that Iesus is our Lord. Thus Dauid in spirit called him Lord and this all the House of Israel must know Act. 2. 35. 36. and Luke 2. 11. he is stiled Christ the Lord and Act. 10. 36. he is proclaimed Lord of all yea it is a Title so proper to Christ as sometimes hee hath no other name giuen him but the Lord as 1 Cor. 6. 14. GOD hath raised vp the Lord meaning Christ And 1 Cor. 12. 3. It is accounted a worke of the Holy Ghost in any man to professe this point That he beleeueth that Iesus is the Lord. 2 How Iesus comes to be our Lord by what right and title and so he is our Lord by a fiuefold
Christ Psalme 31. Now there were certaine gifts which our Sauiour had not till he went to Heauen as impassibility and immortality on Earth hee might and did suffer and dye but now in Heauen hee can neither suffer nor dye any more Romans 6. 10. Thus of the second effect of the personall vnion in the Incarnation The third effect belongs to both natures and is the grace of office for from this vnion ariseth a fit Mediatour and head of the Church for in both natures considered as vnited is Christ our Mediatour so as all things belonging to our reconciliation and saluation were done by Christ in both natures yet were not the Actions of the diuine and humane nature so confounded but that each nature did that which belonged to that nature onely to speake distinctly in euery thing done for our saluation wee must consider First the Worker and that is the Person of Christ or Christ considered in his Person Secondly the things by which he workes and that is his Natures Diuine and Humane Thirdly the working it selfe and that followes that Nature that doth worke Fourthly the worke or the thing outwardly done which they call in another language 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now this outward worke was done by the diuers workings of each Nature concurring to dispatch the worke as to sacrifice for mans sinne is one worke yet to this worke concurre the workings of both Natures the Humane Nature is offered as the gift and the Diuine Nature doth inable and sanctifie the gift c. As in Chirurgery when a limbe of a man is to bee cut off and burnt or seared vp all at once this is done by a Sword or other Instrument made red hot yet there we see in that fired sword that it is still but one sword and yet there is two Natures in it fire and yron and these two Natures haue different forces the one to cut and the other to burne and there is two workings diuers the yron cuts and the fire or heat burnes and yet the outward worke is but one worke done at once which is the searing of the Member by cutting The last effect of this vniting of the diuine nature to the humane is the grace of honour and worship giuen to the humane nature for the humane nature that in it selfe were not to be worshipped being a creature doth partake of the honour to receiue diuine worship in as much as worship is directed to that person that is both God and man Thus of the last point in the explication which is the effects of the personall vnion in the worke of the Incarnation The Vses follow and are for information and instruction and consolation From the Doctrine of Christs Incarnation wee may be informed of diuers things as 1 Concerning the wonder of the person of our Sauiour for here mortality and immortality meet together in the same person It is truly affirmed that hee is created and vncreated without beginning and yet did beginne in time a Iew according to the flesh and yet GOD blessed ouer all for euer GOD before all ages and yet man liuing amongst vs God before the flesh God in flesh and God with flesh By his Miracles shewing his Diuinity and by his Sufferings shewing his Humanity Hauing one generation without beginning and another generation without example In the one hee makes man and in the other hee deliuers man The one was before man and the other aboue man Gods Sonne becomes mans Sonne and yet not changed from what he was but assuming what he was not The taking of our low estate did not diminish the Maiesty of his high estate for he so tooke what was ours as he lost not what was his owne ioyning both natures in such a bond as neither Maiesty consumed the inferiour nor assumption diminished the superiour in man changing the condition of other men and yet in himselfe remaining vnchangeable The manner of this vnion in the Incarnation being a mystery to bee beleeued not discussed That the Word was made flesh I know but how he was made so I know not nor doe any creature know The mystery hid from ages was reueiled in this last age reueiled I say that there was such a thing done but not reueiled how it was done 2 Concerning the glory of God shining in this worke and that especially in two things The one is in the way of communicating of himselfe to the creature The other is in contriuing the forme of our redemption For the first God being the chiefe good it seemed good to him to communicate himselfe to the creature that he hath done three waies First by communicating nature to the creature that highest being granting nature being with Nature with great diuersities of proprieties in that being 2. By communicating grace to the creature which is the prerogatiue of certaine creatures that by Gods gift hauing powred out vpon them a similitude likenesse of God himselfe whether on Earth or in Heauen Now the third way is aboue the former to be adored and admired for euer and that is a way by which God doth not giue any created gifts either of nature or grace but he that is the Creator and Lord of glory doth giue himselfe to the creature to make one person with the creature The first way God is communicated to all creatures the second way to the reasonable creature the third way to Christ man And yet obserue and wonder for God in Christ hath communicated himselfe to all creatures for in as much as the nature of man comprehends in an Epitome or by way of repetition the substance of all that is in all other creatures and therefore is called a little world when God assumes the Nature of man into personall vnion with himselfe hee doth after a sort exalt euery creature and reduce it to himselfe Now for the other point the glory of God in contriuing a way for the saluation of mankinde lost doth greatly appeare in this work of the Incarnation for the debt of the first man was so great that none ought to pay it but man none could pay it but God and therefore God assumes man into the vnity of his person that so man that in nature ought to pay and could not in person might make full discharge Againe all mankind it lieth vnder sinne the Iustice of God will haue all damned the Mercy of God will haue all saued now the wisdome of God moderateth betweene his Iustice and Mercy and by this way satisfies both His Iustice is pleased in giuing a surety so as the offence being infinite in respect of the obiect which is God it was exhausted by an infinite power in respect of the subiect or the surety satisfying Secondly the Doctrine of Christs Incarnation should worke in vs by way of Instruction and so it should teach vs in some things that respect Christ and in some things that respect Christians In respect of Christ it should inflame in vs
a vehement desire to bee made like vnto his nature If he come so neere to vs to take our nature wee should desire to approach to him to take his nature If he were made like vnto vs in infirmities we should striue to be made like vnto him in grace and holinesse shall hee descend to vs and shall not we ascend to him If he abase himselfe to t●ke the proprieties of our Nature how should we striue to be exalted in taking to vs the vertues of his nature and for our respect to other Christians the Apostle from this Doctrine tels the Philippians in what things they should be like-minded to Christ They should learne of him to be humble and to shew their loue to their brethren though it were to deny themselues and their owne profit or seeking the good of others and not their owne good which you may reade there vrged at large Phil 2. 6 7. Thirdly the Doctrine of the Incarnation might be very comfortable to all the godly and so in diuers respects First in that he did take our Nature into vnion with his diuine Nature we should ioy in it for is it not an admirable priuiledge that the nature of man is taken into such a society with the holy Trinity being a part of Christ who is the second person in Trinity who can sufficiently admire the honour done to our nature that it should now be one with the blessed Trinity Secondly if wee consider what he assumed He tooke my whole Nature that I might be wholly saued he left nothing of man which hee tooke not to himselfe Thirdly to comfort vs in all infirmities and distresses hee made himselfe like vnto vs He was poore with Lazarus wept with Mary thirsted with the woman of Samaria was an hungry in the wildernesse to satisfie for our eating in the Garden he was in bonds with Paul he was tempted that hee might succour vs that are tempted in all things he became like to vs that we might not sinke vnder the burthen of our infirmities or sufferings Fourthly it must it needes be a great deale of comfort to vs to haue such assurance giuen vs of his loue to vs that for our sakes would ioyne his Maiesty to our vilenesse his power to our weaknesse his immortality to our mortality that being in the for me of God would for vs vouchsafe to be in the for me of a seruant Fifthly it comforts vs in that it may wonderfully settle our faith in beleeuing in him we may safely rest vpon him that wants not power to saue vs seeing he is God nor will to saue vs seeing he is one of vs a true man that hath had experience of our miseries Sixthly it should greatly encourage our hearts in all our suits to God seeing our owne flesh and bloud sits at the right hand of God what can wee aske the Father in his Name that will be denyed He that was made like to vs in suffering will neuer bee strange to vs in praying He that became our brother by Incarnation will not shew himselfe a stranger in the businesse of Intercession Lastly in the hope of our glorification in Heauen we receiue hence great comfort for therefore did the Sonne of God become the Sonne of man on earth that the Sonnes of men might become the Sonnes of God in Heauen Lastly this Doctrine also is not without terrour to wicked men that will not receiue him whom GOD hath sent amongst them that God which hath beene so wonderfull in sending his Sonne to liue amongst vs in our nature if we will not beleeue in him and striue to be like to him will make himselfe wonderfull in our destruction This will be the condemnation of the world that so great a light came into the world and the world receiued it not Hitherto of the Incarnation in generall Now we come to consider of the parts of his Incarnation viz. his conception by the Holy Ghost and his birth of the Virgin Mary One thing is common to both these parts viz. the anunciation of them by an Angell God sent an Angell from Heauen to signifie both these wonders in the Incarnation of our Sauiour and the Ministery of an Angell is vsed in the beginning of our redemption by the Incarnation of our Sauiour partly because as in our perdition an euill angell came to the woman in the Serpent so would God haue a good Angell come to the woman to treat with her about our Redemption and partly because good Angels were in some respects witnesses in the worke of our Redemption for thereby the places amongst the Angels made void by the fall of diuels are by the Redeemer to be supplyed by holy men and withall the Angels receiuing their confirmation in goodnesse from Christ are now actually to subiect themselues together with Elect men vnder that one Head Christ Iesus Now concerning the Conception which is the first part of Incarnation these things are to be considered 1. The proofes that there was such a conception 2. Who was so conceiued 3. Of whom hee was so conceiued 4. What was done by the Holy Ghost in this conception 5. How it was done 6. When it was done 7. The effects of this conception in respect of vs. 8. Why it was necessary hee should bee thus conceiued 9. Where the Body of CHRIST was when it was thus conceiued 10. A question about the Virgin Mary and lastly the Vses of all For the first that our Sauiour was conceiued of the Holy Ghost is proued by this Text Luke 1. 35. as also Mat. 1. 18 20. and Rom. 1. 3 4. For the second if wee respect the matter conceiued then Christ man was conceiued but if we respect the person conceiued the second Person in the Trinity was conceiued in the wombe of the Virgin for so it is said in this Text that it was the Son of the most High and the Prophet Esay saith it was Emmanuel God with vs for though the Virgin did not giue the diuine Nature to Christ yet the person that receiues the humane Nature in her wombe was the Sonne of God Ob. Then it seemes the whole diuine Essence was conceiued for the whole diuine Essence was in the second Person in the Trinity Answ This Incarnation was not according to his Essence but according to his person the person onely assumed our nature in this Conception Luk. 1. 31. 32. 35. Rom. 9. 5. 1. Tim. 3. 16. and therfore to speake properly we may not say that in this conception the humane nature began to be for that hath no subsistence in it selfe but the Person began to bee then in the humane nature Tylen For the third he was conceiued of the holy Ghost as the former proofes shew He was not conceiued as other men be by propagation or by generation in the coniunction of man and woman but without man by the working of the holy Ghost Ob. If he were conceiued of the holy Ghost then the holy Ghost
Scripture acknowledgeth no other propitiation than the passion of Christ nor can there be need of any other seeing it is the passion of him that is God Secondly hence we may be confirmed against the scandal of the Crosse of Christ though Iewes and Gentiles declaime against Christ for that very cause because he was so vile and contemptible in the eyes of the world yet we see there was great reason for it he should be so abased for else our sinnes had not beene satisfied for nor heauen purchased Thirdly hence we may see the difference betweene Christs sufferings and the sufferings of the Martyrs For first the sufferings of the Martyrs were not punishments for sinnes but only trials or chastisements whereas Christs sufferings were maledictions and punishments laid vpon him for our sins Againe the sufferings of the Martyrs were not meritorious they deserued nothing for others because they are considered but as priuate men but Christs sufferings were meritorious because he vndertooke them as our suretie and was sustained vnder them by the immediate assistance of the Diuine Nature in respect of which they were the sufferings of God Fourthly hence we may take occasion to be grieued at heart for our sinnes for our sinnes were the cause of the sufferings of Christ and brought vpon him all the miseries he endured when we see Christ crucified we see him who was so pierced for our sinnes Fifthly seeing we are bought with such a price as the sufferings and bloud-shedding of Iesus Christ we should therefore not be the seruants of men seeing Christ paid so deare for vs we should be ashamed to applie our selues to the humours and lusts and vanities of the men of this world as if we were still their seruants He knowes not Christ or the price of his redemption that for base and corrupt respects will leaue the sinceritie of Christs seruice to humour or please men 1 Cor. 7. 23. Sixthly seeing Christ laid downe this price to redeeme and saue his people from their sinnes wee should goe away resolued to sinne no more and to walke worthy of so great redemption Shall wee againe crucifie the Sonne of God by returning with the dogge to our vomit or the swine to the wallowing in the mire Seuenthly how should we admire the loue of Christ to vs that hath washed vs from our sinnes by his owne bloud Oh glorious medicine Oh how vnspeakable was that loue What tongue can vtter it What heart can conceiue of it Reuel 1. 5. But the especiall vse is for consolation for these ends of Christs sufferings doe manifestly import the fruits and benefit of his suffering to vs which is so great as we should euer exult and glory in the Crosse of Christ aboue althings and desire no better a way of liuing than to liue by the faith of the Sonne of God that gaue himselfe for vs Galat. 2. 20. and 6. 14. For since Christ did suffer for those reasons before specified it will manifestly from thence follow 1. That the hand-writing that was against vs is cancelled our bond which we forfeited cannot now be sued against vs Col. 2. 15. 2. That God is pacified and well pleased with vs Mat. 17. 5. 1 Ioh. 2. 12. 3. That death and damnation is now swallowed vp into victory that we need not liue in such feare of them Ro. 8. 1. 1 Cor. 15. Heb. 2. 14 15. 4. That the deuill being but Gods Sergeant or Iaylor hath now no power ouer vs Heb. 2. 14. 5. That we are absolued and discharged from the guilt of all our sinnes and may by faith lay hold vpon all the promises of grace and pardon in the Scripture 6. That sinne shall haue no more dominion ouer vs for the bloud of Iesus Christ cleanseth vs from all our sinnes as well in respect of vertue as in respect of merit and against the power of it as well as against the guilt of it Rom. 6. 7. That we shall be sure of heauen when we die And in generall the passion and bloud-shedding of Christ doth ratifie and assure to vs all the good things of the new Couenant or Testament Heb. 9. 16. c. and for matters may be needfull for vs in this life how can we doubt for if God haue giuen vs his Sonne how shall he not with him giue vs all things Romanes 8. 32. Thus of the fourth point The fifth point is what he suffered for vs and this will be large in the explication of it For though his sufferings vnder Pontius Pilate be mentioned and his suffering of what fell out at the end of his life be called the Passion by an excellencie yet in as much as Christ suffered nothing casually or for himselfe but for vs therefore we must reckon all the parts of his sufferings as parts of his Passion for vs and so remouing the Synecdoche which is in the words of the Creed and considering at large of Christs sufferings euen those parts which are not men●ioned in the Creed as well as those that are the whole Systeme or Method of the doctrine of Christs Passion may be disposed as followeth The Passion of Christ is both Priuatiue and Positiue His Priuatiue Passion did consist in this that he wanted that glory ioy and felicitie which he might and ought to haue had if he had not voluntarily for the redemption of man depriued himselfe of such glory and felicitie and this kinde of Passion did extend it selfe to both Natures For first his Diuine Nature suffered as it were an eclipse of glory all the time of our Sauiours dwelling on earth it was hidden as it were behinde the veile for if his Diuinitie had shone out in the brightnesse of the glory of it when he came to dwell amongst vs Iohn ●● 14. it would haue beene as wonderfull on earth amongst men as it was and is in heauen amongst Angels And besides though the glory of Christs Diuinitie be so infinite as nothing can be added to it or taken from it in it selfe yet is it said to be glorified or obscured according to the conceptions of it in the minds of men and so he suffered a priuation of glory or rather a defect of it in that light came into the world and the darknesse of mens hearts was such as they did not comp●ehend it Yea it was a great Passion that the Diuinitie of Christ should be so slowly and by so few acknowledged al the dayes of Christs being in the flesh on earth And as for his humane Nature there was due to it all abundance of glory and happinesse and ioyfull life in as much as he was a iust man and did perfectly fulfill the whole Law of God for he that doth that should liue the meaning is he should liue a most pleasant and happy life for euer But this glory also for our sakes he was contented to want for a time to his very humane Nature Of this kinde of Passion is spoken Ioh. 17. 5. Phil.
27. and this priuation of glory he suffered that wee might be brought to perfect glory in heauen and that wee may see how hatefull the clouds of our sinnes were that could darken and hide from shining the beames of such glory and to teach vs to be content though our liues be also hid with Christ as his was when he liued in this world expecting the reuealing of our glory when he appeares in glory Col. 3. 3 4. Thus of his priuatiue Passion His Passion considered positiuely comprehends both the euill was imputed to him and the euill was inflicted vpon him His suffering by way of Imputation was very grieuous for the Lord Iesus standing before the Iustice of God as our Suretie all our sinnes were charged vpon him as if he had committed them himselfe and this was a most fearfull kinde of Passion which the Scripture takes expresse notice of Saint Paul saith he that knew no sinne was made sinne for vs 2 Cor. 5. 21. and the Apostle Peter saith hee bare our sinnes in his owne body on the trce 1 Pet. 2. 24. and this is a consideration of great necessitie and vse for hereby the hearts of the godly may be wonderfully setled in cōsolation so as to liue out of the feare of Gods wrath for our sins All our sinnes are charged already vpon Christ and therefore God in iustice cannot charge them vpon vs and it is an increase of comfort to know that therefore our sinnes were imputed to him that his righteousnesse might be imputed to vs 2 Cor. 5. 21. And withall we should hence learne seeing all our sinnes are taken off our shoulders and laid vpon him therefore to spend our daies in righteousnesse and holinesse of life 1 Pet. 2. 24. And thus also of his imputatiue Passion Concerning the Euill he endured for vs which was inflicted vpon him it is true that the Scripture doth most frequently mention his death and bloud-shedding but yet that must be vnderstood Synecdochically for into the Doctrine of the Passion ought to be taken all the things he suffered from his Conception to his Resurrection and that for these two Reasons First It is most manifest he suffered nothing for himselfe but for vs and if all he suffered were for vs then all his sufferings must be reckoned as concurring to the price of our Redemption Secondly Hee was to suffer the Curses and malediction of the Law which was due to vs for our sinnes Now by our breach of the Law wee deserued not only death but a miserable life also and though it is true that such punishments as are inflicted vpon men considered in their particular persons and not common to the Nature of man he was not bound to suffer as hee was not bound to suffer the paines of the stone or gout or other like diseases which are not the maledictions which belong to the whole Nature of Man but speciall iudgements God inflicts vpon some men yet the common Miseries of mans life which may stand with the Libertie and freedome of the execution of his office in the chiefe sorts of them he did sustaine to increase the merit of his Passion in some things he extends his sufferings further as will appeare afterwards Now the contemplation of the Miseries our blessed Sauiour suffered which were positiuely inflicted vpon him may bee diuided into these parts viz. 1. The Humiliation of his Incarnation 2. His abasement from his Birth to his Baptisme 3. His sufferings from his Baptisme to his last Supper 4. His Araignment 5. The miseries he endured after his araignment which are comprehended in the words of the Creed Crucified dead c. First for the Humility of his Incarnation He did not only take the Nature of Man but he tooke vpon him the forme of a seruant and was borne in a most meane and contemptible condition of a poore Mother not allowed the common entertainment of an lnne but thrust out to be borne in a stable amongst the beasts and laid in a very manger not looked after or regarded either by his own or by strangers Phil. 2. Luke 2. And thus he was abased for diuers reasons For first hereby the second Adam paies for the extreme arr●gancie of the first Adam The second Adam is thrust downe below the ordinary condition of a man because the first Adam affected a condition aboue the Angels euen to be like to God himself Secondly he thus hides the glorie of his eternall Natiuity in a meane and temporary birth that he might purchase for vs an heauenly and eternall birth Our Lord takes vpon him the forme of a seruant that we might enioy the states of sonnes Thirdly he refuseth the glory of greatnesse and pompe of entertainment at his birth to reach the great ones of the world not to be proud of their births in Nature but to seeke after the heauenly new birth as the only true glory And the poore of the world may be comforted against the meannesse of their prouisions for themselues and their children by remembring that the Sauiour of the world had not so good entertainment as vsually the poorest of their children haue For the second to wit his Abasement from his Birth to his Baptisme two things are to be reckoned as parts of his Passion namely his exile and his contemptible condition A little after the birth of our Sauiour wee reade that Ioseph and Mary were forced to flie out of Iury into Aegypt and in this suffering he beares the similitude of the first Adam As the first Adam shortly after he was created in Paradise was banished out from thence So Christ the second Adam shortly after he was borne in Iudaea is driuen out to goe into Aegypt And this also he suffered that the prophecie might be fulfilled that said long before Out of Aegypt haue I called my Sonne Hosea 11. And this part of his suffering had also comfort in it for he therefore lost his liberty in his owne Countrey that he might purchase for vs the right and libertie of our heauenly Countrey and that such godly men as suffer banishmēt might comfort themselues in his example Now for the other Branch we may obserue that for thirty yeares which was the greatest part of our Sauiours life on earth he liued in a most obscure condition reckoned euen in Israel but as the Carpenters sonne and made subiect to the authoritie of that poore man Ioseph In all which time no man regarded him or once acknowledged his glory either as the Sonne of God or King of the Iewes or Sauiour of the world and in this time was the old prophecie fulfilled He was as a Root growing vp out of a drie ground he hath no forme or comlinesse and when we shall see him there is no beautie that we should desire him he is despised and reiected of men and we hide our faces from him he was despised and we esteemed him not Esay 53. 2 3. And hence godly men may learne to
Christ verse 23. 6. That God would in his due time bring them all to him in heauen that they may for euer behold his glory there verse 24. These are maruellous things and should wonderfully affect vs and comfort vs. 5. By what arguments our Sauiour vrgeth these pe●itions for his very reasons doe shew what care he had of vs and how he pities vs and that he stands vpon our right And so we shall finde that hee vsed foure Reasons why God should grant all he asked for them The first was because we are Gods thine they are vers 9 10. and therefore God should defend vs in that we are his owne and belong to his charge and care The second was because the world hates vs vers 14. we are likely to be so ill vsed in the world that God must needs looke to vs to protect and prouide for vs. The third was because our Sauiour himselfe should be now no more in this world to looke to vs in his owne person and therefore hee praies God to looke to vs vers 11. The last was because hee had sanctified himselfe for our sakes and therefore pleads his owne merits for vs vers 19. Lastly it is profitable for vs to marke the intimation our Sauiour giues all along his prayer by which he lets fall a description of what we must be if we would haue our part in his Intercession For in the 20. verse wee may see it plaine we must be beleeuers and verses 6 7 8. with 26. We may see further that we must be such as will receiue the words which God gaue to Christ to deliuer to vs by them will know Gods name and such as will keepe the word as the greatest treasure in the world They that heare not Christs preaching on Earth shall not haue benefit by Christs praying in Heauen Nor will hearing serue turne but there must be knowledge and beleeuing and keeping of the word as a treasure and for practise Thus of the prayers our Sauiour made for the Church The prayers he made for himselfe concerne either his Glory in Heauen or his Passion on Earth His prayer for his Glory in Heauen is recorded Iohn 17. v. 1. to 6. and in that prayer our Sauiour first layes downe the substance of his request vers 1. Secondly hee vrgeth it with arguments vers 1 2 3 4. Thirdly hee explaines his meaning for the manner how he would haue his petitions granted The substance of his suit is that God would glorifie his Sonne The Reasons are First because God is his Father and he his Sonne vers 1. Secondly because if God glorifie him hee will glorifie God againe verse 1. Thirdly because God had giuen him power before to bestow glory vpon others and therefore much more he should haue it himselfe verse 2 3. Fourthly because hee had glorified God on earth and should within a little time finish all his hard taske verse 4. Now the manner how hee would be glorified was by receiuing the same glory againe which hee had with the Father before the world was which referred to his humane Nature must be vnderstood of his exaltation aboue all things that are made in heauen or earth and so to be worshipped with the diuine Nature And as it is referred to the diuine Nature it must bee vnderstood of manifestation to the world that as alwaies he as second Person had glory equall with the Father so that God would let it be knowne to be so through the world which was accomplished after his resurrection when the Diuinitie of Christ was published to all Nations Thus of his prayer for his Glorification The prayer that concernes his Passion was made in the Garden a little before his enemies came to apprehend him And concerning that prayer diuers things may be obserued 1. The company was with him or neere to him at the time of his prayer and so the Text notes that he singled out of all the Disciples three of them whom he loued most viz. Peter and Iohn and Iames. Now this company hee tooke for two Reasons First that they might bee witnesses of this part of his Passion Secondly he chose them to be by him as such as to whom he could more freely discouer himselfe and in this our Sauiour did expresse that which is setled in the natures almost of all men and so of all godly men in the businesses of religion There be some persons before whom a man would more willingly pray or preach or doe any dutie and yet others haue no iust cause to take exceptions as if they were neglected or it was partialitie for we see here Christ himselfe did single out these men and leaue the rest of the Disciples further off Matth. 26. 36 37. and withall from hence we may learne that the very presence of such as we loue doth vs good when we are in distresse though they should say nothing to vs as here our Sauiour giues these Disciples a great charge to tarry by him and yet they say not a word to him no not when he makes his moane that his heart was heauy to the very death yea it seemes our Sauiour was not willing to be without them though they slept by him and seemed to take little notice of his distresse Further these three were they that had seene his Transfiguration on the Mount and therefore are now the fittest to behold this great abasement without wauering in the faith of his Diuinitie because they had seene him glorious whom now they are to behold so infirme 2. The gesture he vsed in prayer viz. He felt on his face and praied Euen the more grieuous the distresse was vpon him the more humbly did he demeane himselfe towards God When his heart was so heauy nothing but praying to God would helpe him for he had made his moane to the Disciples and that eased him not Nor doth hee rest in that simply to pray but his Agonie being great hee applies himselfe to that gesture might best fit the greatnesse of his distresse to teach vs what we should doe when our hearts are heauy and how we should striue to inlarge our affections and suit our whole behauiour in Gods presence according to his hand vpon vs or the great need we haue of his helpe 3. What befell him when he went to pray viz. a most grieuous Agonie in soule which with such speed increased vpon him that he cried out to his Disciples that his soule was euery way compassed about with sorrow euen vnto the death and he sweat in that Anguish very bloud as is noted by the Euangelist and he was maruellously amazed and afraid Now if any aske what made our Sauiour fall into this perplexitie I answer that wee must not thinke that it was the feare of bodily death that thus affrighted our Sauiour seeing we know that the Martyrs that were infirme men did yet embrace death without these Agonies though by the way we must remember that
him or bee quickly remoued if it were possible and might stand with Gods will there was no necessity that his Agonie should abide still vpon him Secondly if it be vnderstood of his death yet all that might bee without sinne because they are the words of Christ now astonished and amazed his vnderstanding and memory by the violence of the paine being interrupted in their working for a short time As a Clocke may be perfect and yet stand by reason of some outward cause as a mans hand or the weather or the like so the frame of our Sauiours affections and desires was most perfect though by the violence of the hand of God vpon him for a time his nature remembred only the preseruation of her selfe From this frailty of our Sauiour shewed in the matter of his petition weake Christians may gather much comfort and perswasion that their weaknesse and frailties in prayer shall be passed by of God and Christ 3. The clauses limiting his petition are two Frst if it bee possible Secondly not my will but thy will be done which as they shewed the holinesse of Christ in desiring to auoid the requesting of absurd contrary things and to submit himselfe his desires to Gods will notwithstanding the tormēt he was in so it is a notable example to teach vs what to do in all distresses yea the bitterest crosses can befall vs euen to striue vehemently to beare Gods sharpest stroakes with all humble submission to his good will and pleasure Thus of the fourth point in his prayer The fift point is the issue and euent of his prayer and that is reported partly by the Euangelist and partly by the Apostle to the Hebrewes The Euangelist saith that an Angell came from heauen and comforted him in his Agonie Luk. 22. 43. which may teach vs to know that when God will not presently deliuer vs from the crosse yet he is able to comfort vs vnder the crosse and if ordinary meanes faile he can supplywith extraordinary If men on earth will not pitty vs he can send his Angels from heauen to releeue vs. The Apostle to the Hebrewes further tels vs euen that this prayer was heard of God as he reports Heb. 5. 7. Now from hence ariseth another great scruple and that is how it can be said this prayer was heard seeing hee was not deliuered but did suffer death I answer if you vnderstand his prayer only of the speedy taking off of Gods hand then there is no difficultie or doubt and if it bee vnderstood of death wee must fly to a distinction which is thus God heareth prayer two wayes the one when he directly grants what we expresly aske the other when he giues vs so much of our suit as is good for vs and what he denies recompenceth in some other thing which is answerable thereunto and more profitable for vs. So he dealt with Christ here though he did not free him from death yet he did free him from the hurt of death so as he was able to beare it and was deliuered from it in due time which was all that which the nature of Christ in distresse in effect sought viz. the preseruation of it selfe and this may bee very vsefull for vs to obserue God may seeme to deny vs many things which yet he grants and our weakest prayers may get vs some blessing though wee feele it not for the present and if God change with vs and giue vs that which is better for vs than that which we aske he doth vs no wrong In hearing prayer God considers not so much the pleasing of our wills as the furthering of our Saluation And therefore wee must take heed we grow not froward or discouraged and iudge that God heareth vs not because he lets vs pray often and yet according to the letter of our praier we see not that we are heard let this example of Christ that prayed thrice and the like of Paul praying thrice against the temptation of the Deuill stay our heart and teach vs as to get skill and resolution to pray so to seeke the skill of Gods different manner of hearing of prayer Thus of what Christ did now followes to consider what was done to him and that both by the Iewes and by his owne Disciples Concerning the behauiour of the Iewes in the apprehension of Christ I obserue two things First how they came to Christ and met him Secondly how they laid hands vpon him and bound him and led him away About their comming to Christ three things would be noted 1. Who came 2. How they came furnished 3. What communication passed betweene Christ and them when they were come For the first The persons that came to Christ were the Iewes and Iudas souldiers and feruants all sent from the High Priests and Pharisies and Elders of the people Matt. 26. 47. Iohn 18. 3. And they were a great multitude of them So naturall is the hatred that the men of the world beare to Christ that it is easie to get men enow to beare armes against Christ or to doe hurt to Religion or religious persons but wee see in our times what a wonderfull hard thing it is to get men or money to doe any seruice against Antichrist For the second Iudas and the Iewes came thus furnished They first get a band of men which being not in the power of the Priests they must needs haue them as borrowed from Pilate And with this Band they send their owne officers and all were furnished with weapons swords and staues and the Text notes that they were a great multitude of them Now what was all this to doe It was to take Christ Christ I say that was knowne to be so peaceable a Man and so quiet as no man came neere him for meekenesse and lowlinesse and besides he was vsually in the Temple and so easie to be taken at any time or in any place if they will needs lay violent hands vpon him But obserue two memorable things First the effect of an ill conscience in Iudas and the Priests they knowing the cause to be so naught suffer such a conflict with an armie of feares in their owne hearts that fearing lest both God and men should be against them they raise an armie of men for the effecting of their wicked purpose Oh the force of conscience What a fearefull basenesse is it to be wicked or to set vpon wicked purposes It is a very troublesome and chargeable thing to be engaged for the effecting of mischieuous deuices Secondly note how iust God is these sinfull men haue drawne their swords and bent their bowes against the Iust one How deseruedly therefore afterwards did God make the sword enter into their owne brests These men that entertaine but one Band of Romans against their Lord and King euen Christ shall afterwards receiue into their owne bowels and bosomes the swords of the whole armie of the Romans to reuenge their rebellion not against them but against
became the Christ the Lords annointed King to carry himselfe Kings need not seeke protection or defence for themselues by words against the false accusations of their subiects 2. Hereby hee shewes his magnanimitie in contemning death If he had answered hee might seeme to doe it to preuent the sentence of death He that seekes not life feares not death He that saues all men betrayes his owne safetie that he might purchase our saluation 3. By his Silence hee satisfies Gods iustice for the sinnes of our words 4. He is silent on earth that he might merit to speake for vs in heauen by making intercession freely for vs at the right hand of God and that we might haue free accesse to God for our prayers in pleading for our liues through his merit 5. Hee hath thereby left vs an example to teach vs to beare false accusations patiently and imports that our innocencie shall not need defence when wicked men are vnreasonable He may well be silent that needs not defence Let them be eager to make Apologies that feare to be found guiltie the cause is the better that is not defended and yet is proued 6. Hereby he proues himselfe to be the Messias promised because he was as a sheepe dumbe before his Shearers according to the prophecie Esay 53. 7. And as he was silent in these accusations that touched his life so afterwards when they accused him for making himselfe the Sonne of God Ioh. 19. 7. he would giue no answer to Pilate that being much afraid asked him whence he was vers 8 9. both because Pilate was vncapable of the doctrine of the Trinitie and because there was no time to reueale his Deitie but rather to suffer and die according to his Humanitie Thus of our Sauiours examination Now follow the courses the Iudge tooke to auoid putting of him to death and so to saue his life and so in the story we shall finde that Pilate vsed foure policies to saue Christ or at least to put off the businesse from himselfe The first was that he perswades the Iewes to take him themselues and iudge him by their owne law Ioh. 18. 31. but this policie succeeds not and that for two Reasons First the Iewes plead they had not power to put any man to death because the Romans had taken that iurisdiction into their owne hands In which answer of theirs we see their horrible wickednesse and impudencie that professe to haue resolued vpon his death and to tell the Iudge so before the cause be opened and yet the prouidence of God was in this thing God had sent him to die for the people and by the people his death is called for with importunitie Secondly the Text saith That this was done that the saying of Iesus might be fulfilled signifying what death he should die for he had said that he should be deliuered vp into the hands of the Gentiles to be crucified and therefore this policie must be disappointed whence we may note that the Counsell and word of God concerning the sufferings of his people cannot be altered It shall not be with vs according to the will of men but Gods Counsell shall stand which should make vs with the more patience to beare what may befall vs seeing if God doe it it will be good for vs and no aduersaries can haue their wills of vs further than their plots and practises doe serue to accomplish Gods secret will The second policie vsed by Pilate was that he took occasion from the report that Christ was a Galilean to send him to Herod to be tried before him Luke 23. 6 7 c. This Herod was he that cut off Iohn Baptists head and was called to distinguish him from other Herods Herod Antipas Pilate though he dealt herein politickly yet he deales vniustly for he ought to haue defended the innocencie of our Sauiour and deliuered him from the hands of his violent and vnreasonable aduersaries and not send him to another In the Story of Christs appearing before Herod obserue 1. The disposition of Herod and how he stood affected towards our Sauiour the Text saith He was glad of his comming and had long desired to see him and hoped to see him work some miracle before him Luke 23. 8. There is a great difference betweene godly men and wicked men though they both meet in this that they desire Christ or to see Christ A wicked man desires more the miracles of Christ than his word A godly man especially desires to heare the voice of Christ My sheepe heare my voice saith our Sauiour Herod had beene so searched by the ministery of Iohn that he durst not aduenture to heare any effectuall ministerie afterwards He hath no desire to haue Christ to instruct him in the great mysteries of the kingdome of Heauen or to shew him how he might saue his soule To desire Christ for carnall ends as pleasure glory profit or the like is but an vnregenerat humour To desire Christ for his owne sake or for his word sake or for the holinesse we desire to get from him is proper only to the godly 2. The behauiour of our Sauiour who would not yeeld to worke any miracle before Herod because he knew Herod would abuse the power of God to make sport of such great works to feed his owne vanitie and besides our Sauiour constantly applies himselfe to the businesse he came about He knew then that was not a time of exercising his power but of suffering Secondly though Herod questioned with him in many words yet he answered him nothing Which he did first to abate the pride and vanity of Herod thereby intimating how little he esteemed his worldly greatnesse and how much he contemned his leuitie and vanitie of minde Secondly he would not cast Pearle before Swine He knew he should doe no good by talking to him that was a man giuen to so much viciousnesse of life and voluptuousnesse Thirdly because he knew that he must receiue his sentence not from Herod a Iew but from Pilate a Romane and Gen●●ie and be condemned and put to death after the Romane manner viz. by crucifying 3. The things our Sauiour suffered and so first from the Iewes then from Herod The Iewes viz. the chiefe Priests and Scribes stood and vehemently accused him which our Sauiour endured and came to passe by Gods prouidence that so thereby the innocencie of Christ might be the more manifest which was easily discerned by Herod obseruing the violent and tumultuous proceedings of the Priests and it may be gathered from Pilats speech that Herod did finde no fault in him Luk. 23. 15. From Herod our Sauiour suffred two things First he was extremely mocked by Herod and his men of warre and then hee was sent backe to Pilate arraied in a gorgeous robe For the first we see how great men that are giuen to pleasure and worldly pompe entertaine Christ and religion It is no strange thing that religion should be scorned by voluptuous
in heauen We must all learne of him and that diuers points out of his prayer The one is to flie to Christ only and to rely vpon him alone for saluation Another is to deale particularly for ourselues and euery one to say as he did Lord remember me Thirdly he may teach all the Christians in the world how to exercise their faith euen to beleeue though it be against all sense and aboue reason for this Theefe beleeues these great things of Christ when there was no outward appearance of any of them but rather of the contrary It is the greatest praise of our faith to beleeue when we haue no sense or feeling And the practise of the Theefe in this point doth greatly condemne a number of Christians now adaies The Theefe worships him and honours him beleeues and repents when Christ was on the Crosse in extreme ignominie What shall become of them then that will not worship him now especially such as blaspheme him and dishonour him now that he sits at the right hand of God Here is consolation also for if this be all the suit to Christ that he would remember vs when he comes into his kingdome this we may be sure of if we be truly godly for he hath now an infinite memory and he loues vs with an vnspeakable loue and he must needs remember vs for it is his office to be our Remembrancer before God and he being our High-Priest hath all our names written on his Brest-plate so as he cannot chuse but be still looking vpon vs besides he hath bought vs at such a price that hee hath good cause to remember vs and therefore howsoeuer it goes with vs here and though all the world forgets vs yet we may be sure that Iesus Christ remembers vs in heauen and if wee would haue our faith confirmed in this point we were best to doe as the Theefe doth viz. put him in minde of vs in particular and pray him to remember vs and withall it will much helpe if we remember him here on earth to confesse him before men and to stand for his honour and glory desiring to know and remember nothing more than Iesus Christ setting our affections on things aboue where he sits at the right hand of God But on the other side if men be workers of iniquitie and will not repent and be such as loue not the Lord Iesus and can spend daies weekes months and yeares without Christ in the world he will not remember them He cannot think of them in heauen if they forget him on earth Yea if they had beene acquainted with Christ on earth and eaten and drunken with him and beene of in his company as Matth. 7. 22. yea if they had died with him at the same time and the same kinde of death which was the case of the other Theefe when Christ shall come from heauen againe he will let them vnderstand that hee did not remember any such thing he knew them not all such naked relations vanish out of his minde if they had repented of their sinnes he would neuer haue forgotten them The answer of our Sauiour is Verily I say vnto thee this day shalt thou be with mee in Paradise In which answer we may obserue diuers things concerning prayer as also diuers things concerning heauen 1. That the prayer of penitent sinners gets great suits here is a Kingdome giuen for asking 2. That poore men may speed in great suits as well as great men A poore Theefe here speeds as well as if hee had beene a Patriarch or a King What could Abraham or Dauid haue had more than is granted to this Theefe 3. That poore sinners obtaine speedy Audiences they are not put to long suits when they seeke the greatest things This day thou shalt be with me If we speed not presently with God it is long of our selues or God delayes for some respect of vs Esay 65. 24. Dan. 9. 21 23. 4. That Christ stands not vpon the length or eloquence of our prayers he will heare a short prayer as well as a long he loues a plaine heart if wee speake the words of our hearts and aske according to Gods will in the name of Christ we shall speed Now concerning heauen it is described by the terme of Paradise The Scripture makes mention of a two-fold Paradise The Terrestriall where the first Adam was placed and the Celestiall into which the second Adam was now about to enter And that by Paradise is meant the Heauen of the blessed or rather the blessednesse of glorified soules is plaine because it is the kingdome mentioned by the Theefe and Saint Paul shewes that when he was caught vp into Paradise he was in the third heauen 2 Cor. 12. But here are two questions Quest 1. How could the Theefe vnderstand what our Sauiour meant by Paradise seeing no place of the old Testament did speake of heauen by that name of Paradise Answ The earthly Paradise was a Type and shadow of the heauenly or of the glorie of heauen and it seemes that by Tradition that was so commonly knowne among the Iewes that our Sauiour is assured he shall be vnderstood in the Terme Quest 2. But why doth our Sauiour call heauen Paradise at this time why Paradise and why at this time Ans He calls heauen Paradise because it was that which was shadowed out by the earthly Paradise In the earthly Paradise was a Tree of life in the middest thereof in the heauenly Paradise is Iesus Christ the true Tree of life by whose vertue and grace we shall liue for euer The great pleasures in that first Garden the Trees of all sorts did shadow out the vnspeakable variety of heauenly delights in the kingdome of Christ In the earthly Paradise was a Riuer that diuided it selfe into foure heads and so runne euen without the Garden What is this Riuer but the abundance of holinesse flowing from the Holy Ghost for the qualification of the Elect gathered from all the foure parts of the world the streames of which Ocean runne in the hearts of the godly in this life euen on the outside of Paradise And at this time did our Sauiour fitly vse this Metaphor for thereby he signified that though this world were but a place of banishment yet in death Gods banished should returne After all the labours and trauells and sorrowes they haue felt in this cursed world they should in death come to a place of pleasure and eternall rest and that as by the first Adams meanes all were cast ou● of the first Paradise so Christ was the second Adam that hauing at that time satisfied Gods wrath for the sinne of the first Adam would let all the godly into the celestiall Paradise and that hee had now driuen away the Angell with the flaming sword and so the passage into Paradise was open Yea fitly doth Christ talke of Paradise now because now was the very time in which the second Creation was beginning to be
had power to estate blessing vpon his Disciples and all true Christians for euer This blessing was the fruit of his Passion and Resurrection and belongs to all the godly to the worlds end and therefore he leaues his blessing on earth being now to ascend to heauen Vnto this blessed Father and Sauiour should we daily flie and seeke his blessing which is able to doe vs more good than all the blessings of men or Angels Thirdly that hee ascended visibly in the sight of his Disciples Act. 1. 9. and therefore he did not vanish and become inuisible in himselfe as the Vbiquitaries dreame Fourthly he made vse of the seruice of a cloud which receiued him as he departed and caried him vp as it were a Chariot and at length hid him from the eyes of his Disciples and thus he did to proue that it was he of whom it had been long before said Hee maketh his Clouds his Chariot Psal 104. 3. and withall to restraine curiosity he doth as it were draw a curtaine betweene his body and their eyes and betweene this mystery and our mindes that we should rest satisfied in beleeuing that hee did ascend and not busie our heads about vnprofitable and curious questions in things not reuealed And further it may be thereby was shadowed out the manner of our meeting with our Sauiour at the last day that as a cloud tooke him away so in the clouds should we meet him againe 1 Thes 4. 17. Thus of the second point The third question is When hee ascended and to that the answer is short viz. forty dayes after his resurrection why hee staied forty daies before he ascended was shewed before viz. that hee might instruct his Disciples about his Kingdome and withall to shew that the doctrine of the Gospell was not inferiour to the doctrine of the Law which Moses was in receiuing from the mouth of God forty daies in the Mount and as he was forty daies in the wildernesse meditating of his worke before he began to preach so is hee forty daies in preparing his Disciples before hee send them forth about that great Worke of the conuersion of the Nations The fourth question is From what place hee ascended and that is noted by the Euangelist S. Luk. Chap. 24. 50 Act. 1. 12. viz. that he went vp into heauen from off some part of the mount of Oliues that was neere the Towne of Bethania Now it is coniectured by Diuines that hee chose this place of purpose First that in the same place he might shew the proofe of his Diuinity and Glory in which before he had shewed the extreme proofe of his frailty and infirmity when in that place hee sweat blood strugling vnder the brunt of Gods fierce wrath and in that place hee began the declaration of his greatest glory where not long before hee had begun to feele suffer his greatest ignominie and paine Secondly this mountainish place serued somewhat to awake the affections of the godly to teach them to get as high as they can aboue the world and worldly occasions hasting after their blessed Sauiour that is gone vp to heauen before them Thirdly Bethania signifies the house of affliction and so by his ascending to the glory of heauen from that place he might leaue vs an assurance that a passage may be had yea vnto all the godly shall bee prepared to attaine vnto the ioyes of heauen euen through many tribulations we may ascend out of the house of sorrow bed of sicknesse vale of teares the land of captiuity vnto heauen as well as from Ierusalem a place of peace Yea such afflicted ones may much comfort themselues in the hope that Christ will take them to heauen out of these places of sorrow in his due time The fift question is Whither he ascended and the answer to that is in the Creed and the Scriptures before quoted into Heauen and Christ himselfe saith Hee went to his Father in heauen Ioh. 14. 12. and 20. 16. Heb. 9. 20. Now this heauen doth not signifie God himselfe or a heauenly conuersation or heauenly glory but by heauen is meant that place of eternall blessednesse which is without the corruptible world which is aboue all these moueable worldly heauens and to vs now liuing on earth is inuisible It is that place that Christ calls The house of his heauenly Father in which are many Mansions Ioh. 14. 12. and Solomon calls the place of Gods habitation the heauens Chron. 6. ●1 and the habitation of his holinesse in heauen 1 King 8. 31. Christ therefore is now in that highest heauen which must contain him til the times of the restoring of all things It is obiected that Christ ascended aboue all heauens Eph. 4. Answer It is true aboue all these visible heauens aboue the Aire and the coelestiall Orbes in which are the Sunne Moone and Starres and so went into that heauen called the third heauen which is the seat of the blessed It is further obiected if Christ ascended aboue all those worldly heauens then his body is in no place because Aristotle proues in his first booke of heauen that aboue all heauens is no place Answer It is false that aboue all heauens is no place for though there bee not such a place as Aristotle describes Physically yet there is a place for where there is a body there must needs be a space in which that body is contained according to that knowne saying Take away spaces from bodies they will be no where and if no where then they are not This space the Scripture calls a place But against Aristotle we oppose the expresse authority of Christ himselfe who affirmeth there are places in heauen Ioh. 14. 2 3. Now God would haue vs to know whither Christ ascended for three Reasons First that we might be certaine he remained still a true man euen in his glory in heauen Secondly that wee might know whither to conuert our thoughts and desires and where our hearts might finde Christ as Paul saith If yee be risen with Christ seeke those things that are aboue where Christ sits at the right hand of God Col. 3. 1. wee cannot find Christ on earth wee must looke him in heauen Thirdly that we might know where wee shall dwell and reigne when wee dye Ioh. 14. 2. and 17. 24. Now in heauen Christ ascended to his Father as he saith Ioh. 14. 12. and 20. 17. not that hee could not finde his Father any where but in heauen for he is euery where but because God the Father doth in a singular manner manifest his glory and loue in the heauen of the blessed and in that heauen doth collect his f●mily and houshold that shall for euer abide with him And for this cause doth our Sauiour teach vs to pray Our Father which art in heauen not which art euery where though that be true that we might thereby be admonished that we doe not belong to the society of this world but vnto that
Sometimes God is said to be at mans right hand and then it notes protection and helpe as Psal 16. 8. Sometimes the Church is said to be at the right hand of Christ as Psal 45. 10. Sometimes Christ is said to be at the right hand of God of which this Article makes mention But by the way we must note that this gesture is not attributed to Christ as a perpetuall gesture Sometimes hee is said to bee at the right hand of God as Rom. 8. 34. Sometimes to stand at the right hand of God as Act. 7. 55. But vsually the Scripture mentions his sitting at the right hand of God as that gesture which doth most fitly shadow out the eternall rest and felicity of Christ together with his Imperiall and Iudiciall power Now for the sense of the Article all together I conceiue that by the words of this Article eight things are meant as 1. That Christ after all his labours and sorrowes after his Crosse and death doth rest in heauen in vnspeakable ioy and felicity and blessednesse 2. That hee hath obtained dignity and power aboue all men and Angels as when Solomon set his mother at his right hād it was to signifie that she was to be esteemed of aboue all his subiects Thus Christ hath a name giuen him aboue euery name which is named in heauen and earth Heb. 1. 4. Eph. 1. 21. 3. That hee is partner with his Father in his Kingdome and therefore hence it is that in stead of He shall sit at Gods right hand mentioned Psal 110. 1. Saint Paul quoting the place saith Hee shall reigne teaching vs that to sit at Gods right hand is to reigne in Gods Kingdome 4. That his authority reacheth vnto all things in heauen and earth and therefore hee is said to sit at the right hand of God of God I say whose dominion is an vniuersall dominion This our Sauiour saith of himselfe Matth. 28. 18. 5. That the Father doth not cease to rule but doth administer his Kingdome by his Sonne Therefore in Psal 110. v. 1. the Father takes vpon him to subdue the enemies of Christ The Father and Sonne reigne together but yet so as the Father commits the rule and execution of all things to the Sonne vnder him as kings that admit their Sonnes to bee partners with them in their Empire and commit the trust of all to them 6. That this kingdome of Christ shall be deliuered vp vnto the Father againe 1 Cor. 15. 25. For the worke of Christ in this Kingdome is by meanes to gather and saue the Church and to subdue and ouerthrow the enemies of the Church now when there shall be no more enemies and the Church is perfectly gathered and glorified then this Kingdome shall cease But that men may not mistake the naturall kingdome of Christ which hee hath as God equall with the Father that shall neuer cease and the supreme glory that hee hath in eminence ouer man and Angels that shall not cease for so he is a King immortall and of this kingdome there is no end but after the day of iudgment he shall reigne no more that is First not in the middest of his enemies as he doth now Psal 110. 2. Secondly not by meanes or by the Word and Sacraments as he doth now but immediatly 7. That he vndertakes fully to accomplish and perform vnto all the Elect all that goodnesse and riches of grace and glory which God as a Father hath decreed or promised to his Church and therefore hee sits at the right hand of God as a Father 8. That he is furnished with all power to execute all that concernes either the subduing of the enemies of the Church or the saluation of the Elect and therefore he is said in the Creed to sit at the right hand of God as hee is Almighty and in Scripture to sit at the right hand of the power of God Luk. 22. 69. There are other things might be mentioned about the explication of this Article but they are either curious or else so difficult and perplexed and intricate in sense that they will not well agree with popular teaching and therefore I leaue them and come to the vse of this Article This Article may serue both for instruction and for consolation For instruction and so it should teach vs 1. Neuer to be ashamed of the Gospell and the profession of the seruice of Christ in this world seeing whatsoeuer worldly men thinke yet true Christians know that they serue him that sits at Gods right hand and hath all power in heauen and earth and is King of Kings and Lord of Lords Revel 19. 2. To bee willing to let him rule ouer vs and with all reuerence and conscience to submit our selues to his lawes and to acknowledge his power and soueraignety Euery knee should bow at the name of Iesus Phil. 2. 11. 10. 3. To carry our selues as the members of so great a King as hath atchieued so many conquests ouer so great enemies Wee should striue to ouer come too euen the world and sinne and Satan and then he promiseth vs that we shall fit on his throne also Revel 3. 21. 4. All our minde should be on heauenly things as the Apostle shewes Col. 3. 1. 5. In all things to liue by Faith and in nothing to bee carefull and in all estates to bee content since by Christ wee may be able to doe all things and he is able to helpe vs and will not forsake vs. For consolation this Article serues many waies 1. In the case of trouble of conscience for our sinnes and infirmities for hence we know that wee haue an Aduocate with the Father and he sits at Gods right hand to make request for vs 1 Ioh. 2. 1. 2. In the case of feare of perseuerance for Christ sits at the right hand of God the Father Almighty and therefore none can take his sheepe out of his hand Ioh. 10. 29. 3. In the case of defects and disability in gifts for from this Article S. Paul gathers that Christ will fill all in all things in all the members of the Church Eph. 1. 21. c. 4. In the case of feare of accusation by men or deuils Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect Doth not Christ sit at the right hand of God saith the Apostle Rom. 8. 34. 5. In the case of difficulty in the successe of the Ministery of the Word Christ hath the Key of Dauid hee sits on the Throne of Dauid Hee will open and no man shall shut and hee will shut and no man shall open Rev. 3. 7. 6. In the case of outward wants on earth or ill entertainment in the world wee serue him that hath all power to preferre vs we haue his promise that we shal partake of his own glory and therefore we need not be carefull but rather magnifie his mercy loue to vs in admitting vs to his seruice vpon what termes soeuer it
be in this world 7. In the case of publike dangers and distresses vpon the Churches of Christ and the seeming prosperity of his enemies for from this Article we may gather and must beleeue that all the enemies of Christ and his Church shall come to confusion and that the Church shall be deliuered as these and many other Scriptures shew Eph. 1. 20. c. Psal 110. 1 2. 1 Cor. 15. 25 26 27. Dan. 2. 44. and 7. 14. The seuenth Article From thence he shall come to iudge both quicke and dead ACTS 10. 42. And he commanded vs to preach vnto the people and to testifie that it is hee that is ordained of God a judge of quicke and dead HItherto of the three degrees of the exaltation of Christ Some haue thought that this Article containes a fourth degree of his glory but I am rather of their minds that take it to be a declaration of the former especially of his Session at the right hand of God as shewing one point of his greatnesse aboue men and Angels that hee is appointed Iudge of all the world and so of all men and Angels Some diuide these foure Articles thus One tells of what he did on earth viz. Rose from the dead The second tells how he went from the earth the third tells of his estate in heauen and the fourth of his returne to the earth againe There is great need of teaching and explicating of this Article both because it is a thing so much vrged in so many places both of the old and new Testament and because it was made one of the most fundamentall principles of the Apostles Catechisme Heb. 6. 2. Act. 10. 42. and especially because it is a doctrine of all others most effectuall to awaken the carnall secure hearts of men Act. 24. 26. and if it may be to bring them to repentance Act. 17. 31. and the more proper for vs vpon whō the ends of the world are come not only because it is now at hand but because men are in so high a degree forgetful of it yea because there are so many scoffers against it according as S. Peter foretold 2 Pet. 3. 3. Concerning this iudgement I intend to shew by way of explication 1. What kinde of iudgement it will be 2. Who shall be the Iudge 3. Whence he shall come to iudge 4. When the day of iudgement shall be 5. Where the place will be 6. Who shall be iudged 7. The signes of this Iudgement 8. The forme or manner how it shall be performed For the first what kinde of Iudgement this shall be may appeare by the properties of it and the properties are seuen First it is certaine It is such a Iudgement as will certainly come vpon men There must needs be a Iudgement in the end of the world First because so many Scriptures haue foretold it it hath beene proclaimed and men warned and summoned from the beginning of the world Henoch gaue notice of it Iude 15. so did Moses Deut. 32. and Dauid Psal 50. and Salomon Eccles 11. 9 and Daniel ch 7. 13. and Ioel ch 3. and Malachi ch 4. so did Christ himselfe Matt. 24. and Paul 2 Thess 1. and Peter 2 Pet. 3. Iohn Reu. 20. and Iude v. 6. here is a cloud of witnesses Secondly because we see that in this world full Iudgement is not executed and therefore it stands vp ō Gods iustice that there should be a generall Iudgment for in this world many times godly men be in great affliction as Lazarus wicked men be in great prosperity as Diues Now if God be iust he wil render to euery man according to his works which because it is not done in this world it remains that we are yet to expect such a iudgement as will giue euery man his due If iudgement begin at Gods house in this world then certainly will God finde a time to auenge himselfe on Satans family Thirdly there must needs be a iudgement in the end of the world for the declaration of Gods iustice which is now in many things hid Rom. 2. 5. Many things we see not the reason of and many things are hid in darknesse which then shall be brought to light Mens hearts now boile against many things they heare in Gods word or obserue in Gods workes now the Lord will ouercome in iudgement Psal 50. And therefore he hath appointed a time wherein he will cleare himselfe before all men and Angels Fourthly Gods workes of iudgement done already shew that he conceiues such an infinite wrath against sin as he must needs finde a time to be reuenged on the sins of all men Such as are the drowning of the old world the burning of Sodom the destruction of Ierusalem the tormenting of mankind with a world of diseases and miseries the sweeping away of many thousands together by Pestilence or sword the irreuocable sentence of death vpon all men shews that God will take an account of mens waies and will not put vp the transgressions of his Lawes Besides euery mans conscience naturally feares a supreme Iudge and therefore since there shall be a iudgement men should liue so as to prouide that it may goe well with them in that day 2. It is immediate God himselfe shall iudge There is a iudgement in this world which is called Gods iudgement but that is a mediate iudgement when God iudgeth by man as Deut. 1. 17. Psal 72. 1. Psal 50. 3. It is the last iudgement men haue receiued their doomes sometimes from men sometimes from God either iudging them by his word or afflicting them by his particular iudgements but these are all the first things but this is the last iudgement after which there shall be no more triall or sentence or execution and therefore the more terrible for wicked men because there can be no reuersing of this sentence as in this life vpon repentance there may be of other iudgements Ier. 18. 7 8 9 10. And for this sentence there will be no appeale 4. It is a generall and vniuersall iudgement 2 Cor. 5. 10. all must appeare both quicke and dead as will be more distinctly shewed afterwards God hath his particular iudgement vpon man in this world both in life iudging both the righteous and the wicked euery day Psal 7. 12. and in death when he passeth a particular sentence vpon euery man but this is iudgement of all men together 5. It is an open and manifest iudgement where all things shal be brought to light euen the secret and hidden things of all men euen the hidden things of darknesse God hath his secret iudgements vpon wicked men in this world when he consumes them like a moth Esay 51. 8. and plagues them in their soules or bodies or states in the things the world obserues not But at this day of iudgement all shall be done and opened before all men and Angels Which serues for exceeding terrour to impenitent sinners Is it such a shame to doe
not in the substance but in the qualities of their bodies corruption putting on incorruption and mortality putting on immortality 1 Cor. 15. 53. 3. The collection of all the world of men and euill Angels for the Angels of Christ shall gather together into one place from all the foure winds of heauen euen from all the parts of the world all them that were raised or changed euen all both elect and reprobate Matth. 24. 31. and 25. 32. 4. The separation of the good from the bad which shall be performed by Christ himselfe which knowes the hearts of all men before the tryall euen then when they are brought in by the Angels and before hee proceed to the tryall of all mens causes Matth. 25. 32. Where by the way diuers things may be noted as first that wicked men to their terrour shal then haue that done by Christ which now in their malice and iolity they so much striue to doe themselues Now they shunne the godly and thinke the Townes the worse to liue in where they are setled especially if they be any number of them at that day as their grieuous punishment they shal haue the godly taken from them neuer more to liue amongst them Secondly wee gather hence that there shall neuer be a perfect separation no not in the best Churches on earth of the good from the bad onely at the day of Iudgement it shall bee perfectly made This is shewed by the Parables of the Tares and good corne and of the Draw-net that catcheth both bad and good fish Thirdly note the titles giuen to both sorts of people Christ calls the good Sheepe and the bad Goats to giue men before hand an intimation of their estates if they will try themselues by these similitudes they may know now how it shall goe with them then Goats are knowne to be creatures that though they be turned into the same pasture with sheepe yet will not be kept within any bounds but are vnruly and besides are creatures of very ill smell these resemble all such vngodly men as liuing within the compasse of the visible Church and enioying the meanes of saluation with the godly proue vnruly and rebellious and will not bee kept within the compasse of the rules and directions giuen by the word of God nor follow the example of the godly but in many things against their knowledge sinne wilfully and presumptuously and they also shadow out that prophannesse by which vngodly men discouer themselues by their words and deeds in euery place they come in so as they leaue an ill sent behinde them the very place is the worse for them Now Sheepe resemble true Christians and so true Christians are like sheepe in foure things First in teachablenes Christs sheepe heare his voice and follow him Ioh. 10. A sudden whistle startles sheepe so as they come in and are driuen whither the Shepherd will whereas Goats and Swine will not bee driuen without much toile and labour Secondly in sociablenesse sheepe will sort with sheepe and not with swine and will not easily liue but in the company of sheepe so is it with the godly their life is vncomfortable if either they be forced to dwell where the wicked are or where they may not enioy the society of the godly Thirdly in profitablenesse a sheepe is profitable in all things about him and therein resembles the good workes of all the godly in whom euery thing is profitable their praiers their practise their examples their workes of mercy their piety yea their very afflictions are profitable not onely to themselues but to others also Fourthly in their patience they are quiet in aduersity like a sheepe dumb before the shearer so are godly men when they fall into the hands of vnreasonable men that afflict them persecute them and oppresse defraud them Now by these things must men try themselues Thus of the preparation to the Iudggment The manner of the triall follows where three things must be inquired into 1. About what the triall shall be 2. By what law men shall receiue their triall 3. By what euidence they shall be tried For the first it is cleare by Scripture that the triall shall be about the workes of all men They shall be examined about their workes and the proceding shall be according to their workes as these and other Scriptures shew 2 Cor. 5. 10. Rom. 2. 6. If any say that then it seemes faith shall not bee enquired after I answer that it shall as is plaine 1 Pet. 1. 7. for by their works their faith shall be prooued to the world and faith it selfe is one of the highest workes of a true Christian Ioh. 6. 29. If any say further that hereby is imported that the godly shall then be iustified by their workes and be saued for their workes sake I answer that they shall be iudged then according to their workes not for their workes God of his free grace will giue reward according to their workes but not for their workes nor will their works then iustifie them otherwise then as they declare them to be iustified by Christ and truly righteous in themselues It may be further obiected that this may discourage poore Christains and all such as haue not power to doe good workes I answer that it is an error to thinke that there are no good works but giuing of almes There are good works in the obedience of euery one of Gods commandements Works of piety and the works of our particular callings are good works as well as works of mercy and the works of spirituall mercy a poore man may doe as well as a rich man About the triall of wicked men also diuers things may be obiected As first they shall be iudged for originall sinne being borne children of wrath Eph. 2. 3 and yet that is no worke I answer that originall sinne is a worke as it was wrought by Adam and imputed to them and as it is the cause and root of their actuall sinnes secondly it may be said that they may be punished for other mens workes and so be iudged for more works than their owne works To this I answer that the punishment of their Parents sinnes may reach to their children Commandement 2. but that is to be vnderstood of temporall punishments in this world and not of the sentence at that day only children may then be iudged for their Parents sins and others for other mens sins but that is only as other mens euill works become theirs either by consent or partaking or imitation Matth. 23. 35. There is another case that concernes both good and bad in that day and that is the case of Infants either elect or reprobate how shall they be iudged that haue done neither good nor euill in actuall works dying before they come to yeares of discretion To this I answer that the proceedings of God about Infants is not clearly reuealed vnto vs in this world and therefore we must leaue that as a
day Which should much incourage the godly against all the hardship of godlinesse in this life There are many things may be briefly noted from the particular words by which this glorious calling is exprest 1. In that the Iudge is suddenly by change of stile called a King it might haue some vse for the present respect of the Disciples that dreamed of an earthly kingdom in this world and besides a generall respect vnto the godly of all ages to informe them that though Christ entertaine his seruants in this world but in meane conditions many times and that thereby his glory seems much abased amongst men yet at that day he will speake and doe for them like a King yea a King alone when all other Kings shall lay their Crownes at his feet 2. In that he saith Come yee it notes how glad Christ will be of them at that day as of such as haue beene long from him No father can be so glad to see his children that haue beene long absent as Christ will be to see his members while he yet sits vpon the Throne of Iudgement he cannot chuse but shew his affection 3. In that he saith Yee blessed of my Father he shewes them the fountaine of all their preferment to be Gods free loue and grace to them and not their deserts And withall teacheth vs to be confident in it that no people are so blessed and happy as such as be true Christians They are the blessed of God euen such as God blesseth as a father If Israels blessing could make Iacob happy much more Gods blessings vpon those he acknowledgeth for his children It matters not though the world hate vs and curse vs if God will loue vs and blesse vs it is enough 4. In that he saith Inherit the kingdome it imports that we shall neuer haue full possession of perfect glory till the day of Iudgement We are heires now but we are as it were vnder age And besides merit of works is here againe confuted for if we hold heauen by inheritance then not by merit a mans child claimes not his land by desert but by descent And further in that he cals their glory a kingdome it giues vs a glimpse of the surpassing aduancement of euery true Christian at that day This world hath no higher estates to shadow it out by but a kingdome which is the highest greatnesse on earth and therefore we should be greatly comforted against the miseries we suffer in the daies of our banishment and pilgrimage here below 5. In that he saith Prepared we may gather from that word the great care of our heauenly Father that prouides estates for all his children long before they be ready to possesse it which should be some instruction to earthly Parents to shew care for their children in prouiding if it may be for them before hand 6. In that he saith for you it manifestly shewes that God did particularly chuse certaine men and not all men as heires of his kingdome 7. In that he saith from the foundation of the world we may againe note that Heauen is not had by our merits because it was prepared before we had done either good or euill Obserue also that our Sauiour making mention of the beginning of the world expresseth it by mentioning the foundation of the world great was the surpassing glory of Gods power and wisdome in making the world and likewise beyond all apprehension great was his power in hanging this mightie frame of all things without any thing to hold it vp saue his owne secret power and decree and will it should be so Or may not the foundation of the world be referred to the minde of God in eternitie Though this world were framed and reared in the beginning of time yet may we not say that it was founded in the minde of God from all eternitie The consideration of all these things in the calling to glory should greatly abase vs for our want of affection and admiration and strong consolation in the hope of all this glory and if it be possible it should plucke vp our hearts to a feruent loue and longing for and hasting to the appearing of Christ Iesus our hearts I say vpon whom the ends of the world are come when the day of the Lord is so neare at hand And withall it should worke in vs a perfect patience in bearing the afflictions of this life these light afflictions I say light in comparison of that eternall weight of glory Thus of their calling to glory The Reason followes vers 35. 36. And it is taken from their workes of mercy as they are signes of their faith in Christ and as markes of their Adoption not as causes of their glory and yet if it were granted they were causes of glory yet it will not follow they are meritorious causes There are many sorts of efficient causes besides causes meritorious if any aske why their workes of piety are not mentioned or workes of righteousnesse as well as mercy I answer that mercy is not absolutely better than piety but only in a sort viz. in respect of men and as mercy doth iustifie our pietie to be right Now out of all the words I obserue 1. That good workes are necessary to saluation as causes without which no saluation will be had 2. That workes of mercie are very acceptable to God Acts 10. 4. Phil. 4. 18. 3. That the best charitie is to releeue godly Christians Gal. 6. 10. From the answer of the godly we may gather something of defect and something of praise The defect seemes to be that they doe not sufficiently informe themselues of the dearenesse of relation betweene them and Christ and the great account that Christ makes of their workes As we must not be iust ouer-much to think better of our selues than there is cause so we must not be wicked ouer-much in denying Gods grace or attributing more sinne to our selues than is true Their great praise imported in these words is that they forget the good they haue done being more prone to see and acknowledge their vnworthinesse whereas wicked men can remember the good they haue done but forget their sinnes From the Reply of Christ we may obserue the neere coniunction betweene Christ and Christians Hee reckons of them as of himselfe and is affected with all that befalls them as if it did befall himselfe He is not ashamed to call them brethren yea he reckons poore Christians as a part of himselfe though they be despised in the world yet he loues them as he loues himselfe they are pretious in his eyes calling them brethren hee vouchsafeth them incredible honour which should greatly stirre vs vp to charity and if at any time we are dull set Christ before our eyes and thinke what a Sacrilege it is to deny releefe to Christ Thus of the sentence of absolution which being ended he will proceed to the sentence of condemnation Hee is not so mercifull as to forget to be
cannot imagine any true praise of friendship that can be there wanting to any of that society The fourth is the actuall donation of power ouer all things euen the kingdome of the whole world God will then suffer them to enioy what their hearts can wish in heauen or earth they receiue then as their own all that euer God made Now from the possession of all these ariseth ioy vnspeakable and delight aboue imagination not only the heart of man but all his senses being taken vp with perpetuall admiration and refreshing being as it were continually in●●riated with those riuers of pleasures that are at the right hand of God The second part of the Execution containes the thrusting of all the wicked with the Diuell and his Angels into Hell where all the damned must suffer first abiection from the face of God and depriuation of the very sight of all that might comfort in heauen or earth Secondly the gnawing of conscience vpon the eternall remembrance of all their sinnes Thirdly vnutterable torments in fire vnquenchable Fourthly the horrid presence of the Deuill and his Angels all which are made more grieuous by the impossibilitie to find either ease or end The life they loath they must liue and the death they desire they shall neuer finde Oh that men could be warned in time to prouide that they neuer come into that place That message Diues would haue sent to his brethren is brought vnto men now by the Gospell and therefore let them awake to liue righteously that they perish not in this great damnation where shall be the Chaos of darknesse the horror of tribulation the feare of confusion the griefe of fearfull visions the voice of men lamenting the biting of wormes gnawing cold intollerable fire vnquenchable stinch intollerable darknesse palpable and an absolute despaire of all that is good The third thing is the creation of new heauens and new earth according to these Scriptures Esay 65. 17. and 66. 22. Reu. 21. 1. 2 Pet. 3. 13. Now about this Creation we are to consider of two things 1. The firing of the world 2. The libertie of the creatures For the first of these it is manifest that the world that it may be made new shall be cast into the fire as into a furnace The heauens and the earth are reserued vnto fire the heauens shall perish and shall all wax old as a garment and as a vesture God shall fold them vp and they shall be changed the heauens being on fire shall passe away and be dissolued with a noise and the elements shall melt with heat and the earth with the workes thereof shall be burnt vp Psal 102. 27 28. 2. Pet. 3. 5 7 10 11 12. The substance of the heauens and the earth shall not be annihilated but the qualities only shall be altered that is bettered The figure of this world shall passe away not the nature 1 Cor. 7. 31. For the second of these all things shall be so made new as all creatures that were brought into bondage shall then be set at libertie and receiue restitution as is manifest Acts 3. 21. Rom. 8. 23. That this point may be the more clearely vnderstood I must consider of two things First how the creatures are in bondage now and then how they shall be at liberty then The creatures be now in bondage many wayes First as any of them are corruptible so in bondage to corruption Secondly as they are subiect to mutations and confusions as in the case of the Aire and Seas Thirdly as they are forced to serue the turnes of wicked men and their vses Fourthly as they are teachers of the world and men will not learne the creatures are Gods great booke and it is a bondage to teach and lose their labour Fifthly as any of them are either the instrument or the subiect of mans punishment Sixthly as since the fall they haue lost their vigorous instincts as they are dulled and distempered in them Now for the second point they shall then be freed from all that vanitie or paine or misery or mutabilitie fell vpon them since the fall of man and withall they shall be restored into a glorious estate when the Elect are glorified and so they partake of the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God But this restitution shal not be made to each particular creature that hath beene but to each sort of creatures shall be then found aliue at the last day But what shall be their glorie or how long they shall continue cannot be determined without curiositie and rashnesse The fourth effect or consequent of the Iudgement is the deliuering of the kingdome of Christ into the hands of God the Father 1 Cor. 15. 24. which is to be vnderstood not of the glorious estate of Christ but of his temporall gouernment ouer the world and the Church as he ruled by means in this world for this kingdome ends when hee hath fully subdued the deuils and death and wicked men and hath fully deliuered the Elect from all sinne and misery Then there shall be no need to gouerne men by Magistrates or Preachers or Sacraments or discipline or of any of the helps of naturall or spirituall life Thus of the explication of this Article The vse that may be made of this Article in generall followes and so first it may extremely affright all men that lies in their sins without repentance for there are many things in this doctrine terrible as 1. That God hath set them a day wherein he will certainly bring them to account 2. That this day is most certaine and God will not alter his minde Act. 17. 31. Heb. 9. 27. 3. That this day will be a day of wrath to them and not of mercy The date of mercy vnto impenitent sinners will then be out Rom. 2. 5. 4. That all his sins shall then be discouered euen all his secret sins and none can be forgotten in as much as the euidence shall bee giuen out of so many bookes where all things are written as it were with a pen of iron and the point of a Diamond 1 Cor. 4. 5. Reuel 20. Ier. 17. 1. 5. That euen the longer hee liues the more hee heapes vp wrath against that day Rom. 2. 5. 6. That no meanes will then be auaileable to deliuer them Riches will not helpe them Iob 36. 18 19. nor multitude cannot shelter them Iude 15. 7. That though thou hast excelled in many gifts and done much good in the world yet if thou die in sinne without repentance thou shalt not escape Gods vengeance 1 Cor. 13. 3. 8. That it is but a little while thither 1 Pet. 4. 7. Iam. 5. 8. The signes of Christs comming are the most of them run out and we see that diuers of the last signes run together as if the Lord made haste to make an end of all things and if generall iudgement were yet further off yet death is at hand which giues a particular iudgement vpon thee
It teacheth vs diuers things page 62 It is comfortable to the godly page 63 God is good in himselfe two wayes page 63 Gods goodnesse shewed to man fiue wayes page 64 GOD vnited to man foure wayes Ibid. God delights in his people page 65 He procures all good for them Ibid. Gods loue fiue properties of it Ibid. Gods m●rcy six praises of it 66 Effects of his mercy Ibid. God visits from on high three wayes Ibid. Gods graciousnesse page 67 Gods bounty shewed to all though in a different manner page 68 Gods bounty in offering the meanes of grace which are three page 69 Gods patience admirable in foure respects Ibid. Gods patience in great prouocations Ibid. Aggrauations of Gods prouocations from the person prouoking page 70 God prouoked by great euils Ibid. Manner of Gods exercising his patience Ibid. Ends of Gods patience page 71 Causes of Gods patience Ibid. Knowledge of Gods goodnesse informes vs of foure things Ibid. No goodnesse comparable to Gods for fiue reasons page 72 Gods goodnesse should compell vs to seuen duties Ibid. Gods goodnesse praysed foure waies page 73 Gods goodnesse set out in fiue things page 36 Gods goodnesse must force vs vnto Repentance diuers wayes Ibid. Gods goodnesse must make vs loue him page 74 Esteeme of Gods loue Ibid. Striue to imitate Gods goodnesse page 75 Gods goodnesse comfortable against our sinnes Ibid. And in case of affliction 4. waies page 76 It may humble 4. sorts of men Ibid. God is truth in himselfe three wayes page 77 God is true towards the creatures in his workes Ibid. And in his words foure wayes Ib. Gods truth manifested in two things page 78 Gods truth teacheth vs seuen duties Ibid. It comforts the godly page 79 It informes vs of 3. things page 80 Gods righteousnes magnified 6. waies Ibid. Iustice of Gods grace shewed in seuen things page 82 Gods Iustice to the godly teacheth them three things Ibid. God is iust to the wicked in two things page 83 God most terrible to the wicked proued by six arguments page 84 Examples of Gods Iustice Ibid. Gods Iustice vnauoidable page 85 86. Obiections of the wicked against Gods Iustice answered page 86 Gods Iustice must humble wicked men page 88 Yet they must not despaire Ibid. Nothing will quench Gods wrath but the Bloud of Christ Ibid. Gods Iustice vpon wicked men teacheth the godly foure things page 89 Gods glory Ibid. Gods happinesse to be adored for three reasons page 90 Gods glory excels the glory of Kings in foure things page 92 Excellency of Gods praise set out foure wayes Ibid. Gods glory excels in respect of obedience three wayes page 92 Man giues glory to God three waies page 93 We giue glory to God in our hearts six waies Ibid. In our words fiue waits Ibid. In our workes fiue waies page 94 Fiue rules for the attaining to the knowledge of Gods glory page 95 Gods glory comfortable in diuers things page 96 Gods infinite greatnesse what it is page 97 What it comprehends Ibid. Perfection of Gods nature Ibid. This serues for diuers vses Ibid. Gods Omni-presence page 98 Obiections against it answered page 99 How God returnes to the godly Ibid. Gods Omni-presence serues for diuers vses page 99 Gods immutability page 105 How God is immutable Ibid. In what respects he is immutable Ibid. Obiections against Gods immutability answered page 106 Gods immutabilty may serue to humble men page 108 It teacheth three things page 109 It is comfortable in foure respects Ibid. God is a Spirit it teacheth fiue things page 110 God is one Ibid. How he is one page 111 Six vses of Gods vnity page 112 Gods promises must be relyed vpon for six reasons page 113 What things God cannot doe page 140 Gods omnipotency teacheth vs ten duties page 140 God rested vpon in all dangers page 141 We sinne against Gods power six waies page 142 Mistery of godlinesse page 483 Six priuiledges of the godly page 337 Golgotha why so called page 683 Christ suffered here for three reasons Ibid. Ghost what it signifies page 536 A full possession of glory at the last day page 524 A signe of grace to thinke honourably of Gods Seruants page 408 Graues open page 432 Christ in the Graue till the third day page 441 Why three daies page 442 H. OVr Hearts must be clensed page 551 Hades what it signifies page 446 Wicked hate the godly for their goodnesse page 394 Heare Christ page 224 239 Heauen not had for merits page 413 525 Elect in Heauen possessed of foure incomparable benefits page 529 Our conuersation must be in Heauen page 488 What is meant by Heauen page 151 It consists of two parts Ibid. Of that Heauen where God is The names giuen vnto it page 152 Substance of it Ibid. Glory of Heauen admirable page 153 Three questions about this Heauen answered page 154 Consideration of this Heauen should worke in vs three things page 155 Manifest our desire after Heauen by seuen things Ibid. Second Heauen called the Firmament God the maker of them page 165 His praise magnified for this in fiue things Ibid. Strange constitution and nature of those Heauens Ibid. End why they were made page 166 Hosts that people the Heauens praised for foure things Ibid. This teacheth vs 4. things Ibid It is comfortable in diuers respects page 167 Christs soule went not locally to Hell page 413 Descension into Hell page 444 These words not in the most ancient Creeds Ibid. Yet haue beene receiued for many ages Ibid. Diuers acceptions of the word Hell in the Originall page 445 How Christ may be said to descend into Hell Ibid. He may be said to descend in respect of the whole man in foure respects page 445 Christ descention an Epitome of all his ●assion page 448 Christ in his body descended into Hell or the graue Ibid. He bore hellish sorrowes page 449 Christ would not work myracles before Herod why page 366 Herod clothes Christ in a white Robe what it signifies page 370 Heretiques called Patri Passiani page 305 Disciples receiue the Holy Ghost page 463 What it is to beleeue in the Holy Ghost page 537 Holy Ghost is God Ibid. Holy Ghost his nature page 538 Operations of the Holy Ghost Ibid. 7. Operations common to all men page 539 Operations of the Holy Ghost in the Elect page 541 Infusion of diuine gifts a worke of the Holy Ghost page 542 Holy Ghost makes a man resemble God page 543 Holy Ghost our Comforter page 544 Men sinne against the Holy Ghost diuers wayes page 545 The sinne against the Holy Ghost described page 546 How it is vnpardonable page 547 Fore-runners of this sinne page 549 Signes of the inhabitation of the Holy Ghost page 550 Fruits of the Holy Ghost page 552 Inhabitation of the Holy Ghost comfortable page 553 Care of a Holy life page 488 Christs Humanity glorified not deified page 463 An ill Husband may make others suffer for their faults page 376 It is hatefull to
from the natures of all other things and therfore nothing can be found to liken God to it without singular iniurie Esay 40. 17. 4. God doth not now appeare to vs as hee did to the Fathers in the first Ages of the World 5. We are destitute of the helpe of Demonstration à priori as they call it in Schooles There was no essence before him nor any thing that might leaue the name or nature of a cause of his being 6. We are in and of our selues much more vnable to conceiue of God then we were at the first in our Creation by reason of our fall from God into sinne The light we had being put ou● and nothing left but sparkles these sparkles left breed more smoake in our mindes then either heate or light for 1. There is in vs naturally a world of Atheisticall conceits strange opinions about God as appeares not onely by the variety of strange Religions but also by that naturall Atheisme which euery man by occasion feeles in himselfe when he either doubts of God and thinkes things that bee altogether disagreeing and disproportionall to the Nature of God 2. A singular debility and impotencie to take in the doctrine of God especially with affection into our hearts 3. A slippery kinde of Leuity in our mindes that what we do receiue we loose and forget or else change into other conceites 4. An vnspeakeable kinde of sluggishnesse and vnwillingnesse to be at paines to study this doctrine 5. What knowledge of God doth come into our mindes for the most part we staine it miserably with villanous and filthy thoughts and desires 6. God hath reuealed to vs but onely his backe parts in this life wee cannot see him face to face Exod. 33. 7. The diuells vse all their methods to keepe men without the knowledge of God 8. The world distracts vs and deuoures vsually the time should be spent about the studie of God 9. God himselfe that he may be reuenged on the ingratitude of many men doth hide himselfe out of the way from them And it is necessary wee should take notice of this difficulty of the knowledge of God both to humble vs and to quicken vs to the more diligence and to make vs more thankefull if God be pleased in any measure to reueale himselfe to vs. For the third though it be thus extreame difficult to know God yet we must not dispaire of it as of a thing impossible for though the creature of it selfe cannot conceiue God yet God can reueale himselfe to the creature according to the the creatures capacity God that dwelt in the secrets of Eternity onely knowne and seene to himselfe since the Creation hath bin pleased to come out of his secret seate and by certaine meanes or degrees to make himselfe knowne to men as 1. By planting in the minde of man certaine naturall and common Notions and generall principles concerning God These were and are in euery man like little sparkles of light and fire fastened in mens mindes and such as by glimpse shew some little conceptions of God 2. By Apparition God was pleased in the first Ages of the world to appea●e vnto men and by some certaine visible signes of his presence to acquaint himselfe with man 3. By the booke of the creature for by vnfolding before man in an open and ●●sting shew the various formes and shapes of things which he made he by them did augment the light of the naturall sparkles and euidently confirme and proue his Diuinity Wisedome Power and Goodnesse to man Rom. 1. 4. When none of these were sufficient to bring man to a perfect knowledge of God nor to so much as might saue his soule and bring him into happy fellowship with God God was pleased in the book of Scripture to extract out of the infinite depths of knowledges which were in his eternall minde a frame of descriptions and testimonies concerning himselfe and his will and this in his due time by degrees he gaue vnto the Church and is contained in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles 5. To make all these helpes more effectuall vnto the eternall blessednesse of the Elect he sent his owne Sonne who was the ingrauen forme of his Person and his perfect Image to take mans nature and to come and dwell amongst vs and through his humanity to make God as it were after a most glorious sort visible The God-head shining through his flesh as the Candle through the Lanthorne Ioh. 1. 14. 9. and in that nature hee did himselfe teach and instruct man co●cerning God Heb. 1. 1. 6. Hee hath made himselfe further knowne vnto certaine choice men by inspiration that is by a speciall inlightning and breathing of the holy Gho●● 7. He is daily discouered vnto his children by effects especially by his blessings and benefits and long-suffering and manifold goodnesse Exodus 34. and among these by the entertainement hee giues to the soules of his people in his house and by the ●oyes in his presence Yea so farre is the Lord pleased to reueale himselfe this way to his people that they are said not onely to see God but to behold his beautie Psal 27. 4. 63. 2. It is true the vnquiet heart of man is vexed because God is not visible to his eyes as if the knowing of God by colours were the only pleasing way of seeing him Thy bodily eyes cannot see God what then If thy eyes cannot discerne God is it any greater thing then that thy hands or feete cannot discerne other thing God is discerned by such Instruments as are capable of him But thou wilt say not onely thy eyes but thy reason cannot reach God so as to ease or please thy minde I answer that some things are infra rationem below reason and so are all things discernable by sense onely Some things are iuxta rationem agreeable and discernable by reason and so are a multitude of things in nature Some things are supra rationem aboue Reason and so are diuers things in the doctrine of God especially the Mysterie of the Trinity and the like Now though Reason will not reach heere yet God hath not left his children destitute but hath giuen them an instrument from heauen which is capable of these things and that is Faith And yet God hath not altogether abandoned the vse of senses in his children for the knowledge of him for they know God by sight in his creatures and by hearing in the word and by trusting in his blessings 1. Pet. 2. 3. That this point may bee yet more clearely vnderstood wee must consider the different waies how God is knowne by seuerall things first himselfe knowes himselfe with infinite perfection of absolute knowledge and so hee is knowne onely to himselfe secondly Christ man knowes him by vnion that is by vertue of his vnion with the diuine nature hee doth after a way vnspeakeable and vnimitable see and vnderstand the God-head thirdly the Angels and
Saints in heauen know him by vision they see God face to face that is they haue a perfect knowledge of Gods Nature according to their condition in heauen and doe behold him in some most glorious representation of his presence fourthly to men on earth hee is knowne by reuelation and so after a different manner to diuers men As to some holy men by Inspiration to all godly men by Christ to all men in the Church by the Scriptures and to all men in the world by the creatures and Reason The fourth point it remaines to consider how farre forth God may be knowne by these all or any of them I answer first more generally and then more particularly In generall if we thinke of the full knowledge of God the Trinity is then onely knowne to God himselfe and Christ man God hath a Name that is secret and wonderfull this can bee knowne by no creature by his Name reuealed he may be knowne so as we remember that in this world he appeares to whom he will and as he will and not as he is The most men conceiue wonderfull little of Gods Nature The diuers formes of things in the world are beames as it were of the diuinity but yet they shew rather that he is then what he is or whence they are rather then what he is Distinctly to consider of it we must note that God is knowne in this life 1. But in his backe parts 2. But according to our modell or capacity God hath extracted so much out of the Ocean of the infinite knowledge which concernes his nature as may bee taken in by our vnderstandings 3. This that may be attained to for that part which is set out by words is exprest not by words that tell what God is directly but by such words as being in vse amongst men might leade vs to some happie manner of discerning concerning God 4. The neerest knowledge wee haue is by effect as it is either described in Scripture or wrought in prouidence and so what God is in himselfe himselfe onely knowes but what hee is to vs that in some measure hee makes vs know his glorious Nature is onely knowne to himselfe Wee see the Sunne not as it is in it selfe but as it inlightneth we look not vp vpon the body of the Sunne but vpon the beames of it that shine vpon the hill or vpon the wall or the like so is it in the knowledge of God our natures cannot looke vpon his nature but we discerne him by the shining of his working and by the beames of his presence The difference also of the descriptions that haue bin of God are to be thought on for there hath bin a Philosophicall consideration of God and a Theologicall The Philosophicall was had among the Gentiles by the wisest of them The Theologicall hath onely bin had in the Church The one looked vpon God onely by the light of Nature and experience and the other lookes vpon God by the light of Scripture and Faith But that Philosophicall Light was extreamely deficient and farre short of the Ecclesiasticall Light for besides that the wisest of the Philosophers had much adoe to seperate the true GOD from the many Gods worshipped by the Nations they were altogether blinde in the Mysterie of the Trinity and ignorant altogether of the highest praises of God viz. his mercies vnto man in Iesus Christ yea there was scarce any Attribute of God that was rightly knowne with any life without the Pale of the Church Now that knowledge that is to be had of God may be gathered three waies by Negation Eminencie or Causation By Negation when wee denie vnto God whatsoeuer is of imperfection in the Creature and so wee denie death measure Mutation c. and say that God is Immortall immense immutable c. By eminencie when we giue vnto God in the highest degree what we finde to bee good in the creature and so wee say he is most holy most wise most iust c. By Causation we may finde out God by reasoning from the things hee hath done The last thing to be considered of is the Rules to be obserued by vs for the attaining of the knowledge of God for All meanes will be ineffectuall to vs if we be not rightly prepared and disposed we neede a Religious minde in all knowledges that concerne our happinesse but especially when any thing is spoken or thought concerning God because all words are insufficient to tell vs easily and fully what God is Commandement 3. Hee therfore that would reach to the comprehending of the knowledge of God must bee sure to keepe these Rules 1. Hee must cleanse and purge and scoure his heart from the filth and drosse of false opinions and strange and Atheisticall conceits concerning God yea hee must wholly empty himselfe of all opinion concerning his owne sufficiencie to conceiue of God of himselfe for if it bee true of other knowledges in Religion that a man must become a foole that he may be wise 1 Cor. 3. 18. it is much more true in this doctrine concerning God 2. He must then addresse himselfe to Gods Word and resolue to learne from thence how to conceiue of God God is not to be accounted of by others assertions but to be measured by his owne words We shall neuer learne what hee is by asking what others say of him but must heere what hee saith of himselfe for God is not knowne without God as one saith Of God wee must learne whatsoeuer of God wee would vnderstand 3. He must resolue to spare no paines that is requisite for this studie hee must imploy himselfe with great diligence to drinke in his knowledge for God will appeare onely to studious mindes 4. A heart full of desires is requisite to these conceptions The desire of the soule must be after God Esay 26. 8 9. He must be sought with a mans whole heart Psal 119. 10. else the minde will wander extreamely And because wee want that admiration and delight wee should haue in this doctrine therefore wee must iudge our selues for our deserts and labour by prayer to forme these desires in vs Especially when in hearing or reading any thing concerning God we finde our hearts begin to be affected we must striue to nourish and inflame these desires or delights or Rauishments for then God is neere for vsually a fire goeth before him as the Psalmist speaketh aswell when hee comes into our hearts as when he comes into the world 5. He must be a godly man for the pure in heart onely see God Mat. 5. 7. and without Holinesse it is impossible to see God Heb. 12. 14. This knowledge requires holinesse else of all doctrines it proues the dullest discourse and disputation doth not comprehend God but holinesse as one saith and the Reason is because there must bee some assimilation or likenesse betweene our mindes and the knowledge of God for as no parte of the bodie receiues the light but