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A89737 The orthodox evangelist. Or A treatise wherein many great evangelical truths (not a few whereof are much opposed and eclipsed in this perillous hour of the passion of the Gospel) are briefly discussed, cleared, and confirmed: as a further help, for the begeting, and establishing of the faith which is in Jesus. As also the state of the blessed, where; of the condition of their souls from the instant of their dissolution: and of their persons after their resurrection. By John Norton, teacher of the church at Ipswich in New England. Norton, John, 1606-1663. 1654 (1654) Wing N1320; Thomason E734_9; ESTC R206951 276,720 371

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sand which is by the Sea shore 1 King 4.29 yet Solomons heart compared with Adams innocency or his own Soul now in glory was but a narrow heart Between Pauls Soul in the body and in glory there is as great a disproportion as between a childe and Solomon 1 Cor. 13.11 Prop. 2. The Soul separated dependeth not upon the Body in respect of its operations It dependeth not upon the body for the knowledge either of immaterial or material objects both being present to the Soul either by the essence of things themselves or by their intelligible species or by the Divine essence supplying all species Three things are required to the operation of the understanding 1. An intelligent faculty 2. Light to illustrate the understanding 3 The presence of the object with the understanding whatsoever is understood must be united with and touch the understanding which is done either by the eminent presence of things in the Divine Essence Zanch. de operibus Dei part 3. l. 2. c. 2 so the soul understands in glory or by the formal presence of the very things so the Angels understand themselves and so we as some conceive see the Light or by the similitude or image of the thing commonly called a Species so we understand intelligible objects in this Life The soul whilst it is in the body dependeth not upon any corporcal organ phantasie inward or outward sense as an instrument whereby it understands but as an instrument to represent the object to be understood which representative faculty of the phantasie being performed and that in a more eminent manner either by the Divine Essence it self supplying those Species or by way of infusion of them at or immediately upon the instant of its separation after the manner of the concreated Species of things in Angels or by occasional abstraction of them from objects The soul separated remaineth free to its operations without the use of the body Angels understand material and immaterial objects Angeli cognoscunt materialia per hoc quod sunt in iis per suas spocies intelligibiles The par 1. q. 57. art 1. Piscat praesatin Ezech. by the SPECIES or that which answereth the species of such objects without Corporeal organs In an extasie rapture or trance of which some reckon about five thirty in the Scripture which are spiritual Visions of the soul during that space retiring as it were out of the body or at the least not making any use of the body therein so far is the soul from not understanding at all or from not understanding so well as that it then understandeth best in this life Paul is taken into the third Heaven heareth unspeakable words which it is not lawful for a man to utter all which we must needs grant might be done without corporeal organs he himself telling us once and again That whether it was in the body or out of the body he could not tell 2 Cor. 12.2 3. Conimb de de anima l. 3. c. 8. q. 8. art 2. Tollet q. 21. Immaterial Objects may be understood by the soul in the body without corporeal organs or sensible species The soul in its separation from the body undergoeth a privative not a positive change It suffereth a change in respect of its information of the body and operations by the instruments of the body It informed the body before but not now It exerciseth the same operations now that it exercised before though not in the same manner then with but now without the body In the state of glory Tho. 2.2 qu. 175. art 4. Conim de anima l. 3. c. 8. qu. 8 art 3. the soul is free to contemplate materiall objects either in themselves by intelligible and sensible species according to the use of corporeal organs glorified or according to their representation in the Divine Essence As grace doth not destroy but help so glory doth not destroy but perfect nature The soul glorified and reunited to the body at its pleasure useth but dependeth not upon the phantasie for the understanding of material objects Prop. 3. The condition of the body in the state of death prejudiceth not the blessednesse of the soul The soul may be blessed though the body be dead We look too much upon the dead carkass and too little upon the living soul Christs body in the grave interrupts not the happinesse of his soul in Paradise As the body in the grave doth neither good nor evil so it feeleth neither good nor evil It is as if it were not Joseph is not Ger. 42.36 The bodies of the Saints at death cease for ever from sin and from all suffering that is felt there is neither sin nor tear in the grave And from suffering it self at the Resurrection The body is neither sensible of the want of the soul nor doth the soul feel any misse of the body The body is neither sensible of good or evill concerning it self nor concerning the soul the soul though it be not touched with any evill yet it is affected with good concerning the body whilst it looks at it as sown 1 Cor. 15.43 As at rest Isa 57.2 As fallen a sleep 1 Cor. 15.6 As in Covenant with Christ Matth. 22.32 all which phrases are proper to the bodies of the Saints The soul hath no grievance for the absence of the body yet it hath contentation in its Rest and a glad expectation of its future meeting Such is the condition of the body in the grave which yet we must so mind as not forgetting the soul in glory The body is at rest the soul is in blessednesse that the one is at rest hindreth not the blessednesse of the other the body is asleep but the soul putteth forth its perfect operations The body is asleep in the custody of Jesus 1 Cor. 15.18 The soul beholds the face of Jesus Jacobs sleeping body troubleth not his communion with Christ and his Angels Gen. 28. Pauls soul in the third heavens misseth not his body though as may be supposed for the time soul-lesse upon earth 2 Cor. 12.2 The condition of the soul dissolved in the Lord is as it were a blessed rapture lasting from our dissolution to our resurrection though the grave be a land of darkness as darkness it self and of the shadow of death without any order where the Light is as darkness Job 10.22 yet is not that long-home of the body so dark and disorderly as the everlasting home of the soul is light and beautiful The godly soul prepared should be no more afraid of death in regard of the body than of its fall into a kindly sleep after weary labour and as glad of dissolution in respect of it self as of going to be with Christ which is far better Phil. 1.23 Prop. 4. The soul from the instant of its dissolution is freed from all imperfections of sin sorrow and infirmity God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes Rev. 7.17 The spirits of just men
clearly seen in respect of its divers created objects which as they have their being from Gods good pleasure so had he so pleased they had never been but continued for ever in their nothing himself notwithstanding eternal all blessed and all glorious Omnipotency is God able to do whatsoever his wisdom doth conceive Gen. 18.14 Matth. 19.26 Isai 46.10 All Contradictions Impossibilities and Repugnancies unto the revealed Will of God are excluded in this Proposition God is Omnipotent or God can do all things That things which imply a contradiction as namely for the same thing to be and not to be and impossibilities as namely for a man not to be a reasonable creature and the like fall not under the compass of Omnipotency is not from any defect it is indeed from the perfection of power in God but from the impossibility of the things so that concerning matters of this nature it is more convenient to say Vnde convenientius dr Ea non possunt fieri quam quod Deus ea non possit facere Tho. Part. qu. 25. art 3. that they cannot be which sheweth their non-possibility to be then that God cannot do them which seemeth to touch upon Omnipotency So likewise that God cannot sin lye or deny himself is not from defect but from the Eminency of his Power and Absolute Perfection whence he is uncapable of being touched with any imperfection Obj. God cannot destroy Sodom until Lot be gone out of it Gen. 19.22 Like speeches whereunto are used elsewhere it seems therefore God is not Omnipotent Ans The Power of God is either absolute and unlimited by it he is able to do all things that are possible though he never do them or ordinate and limited by his Decree and revealed Will according to which God having freely bounded himself changeth not being immutable These words and the like spoken elsewhere are to be understood of his limited not of his unlimited power Though God be Omnipotent yet he is not Omnivolent that is though God can do whatsoever he pleaseth yet God is not pleased to do whatsoever he can Perfection is God all-sufficient and all-excellent not having need of any thing giving sufficience unto and having in him the perfection of all things Gen. 17.1 2. Exod. 6.3 This Attribute renders God as that infinite Sea of all happiness Perfection is increated Glory that is all the Attributes in one word as Happiness is the Sum of Mans good so Glory is the Sum of all Gods Attributes The Perfection of God is Essential Independent Unlimited without increase or decrease As the Power of subordinate causes is contained in the first cause virtually and as the Authority of Under-Officers is in the Prince after a more excellent manner so the virtue of all second causes is contained in the first cause eminently The word Eminently taken in its strict and proper sence seemeth to intend the effect to be in the cause not only in a more excellent manner then in it self but also in a super-created manner Things are in God agreeable to the Nature of God in themselves according to their proper natures Eminential Continency and Virtual Continency that is for one thing to be contained in another eminently as the Excellency of the creature is in the Creator Or Virtually as all things saleable are in money Eccles 10.9 are not the same the first is proper to the Creator the second is found in the creature The Essential Perfection of God is Increated Glory Eternal alwayes the same from which nothing can be taken to which nothing can be added The acknowledgement of the manifested Perfections of God is Glorification viz. The Act of the creature done in time admitting more or less according as God is known or acknowledged CHAP. II. Of the Trinity FOr our better proceeding in searching into this Mystery of Mysteries Consider 1. The Clearness of the Truth from Scriptures 2. What a Person is 3. What it is that constitutes a Person 4. What a Personal Act is the attending whereunto helps much to clear both the Nature of a Person and the Trinity of Persons 5. The Names or Appellations ascribed to the several Persons in the Scripture 6. The Distinction between a Person the Essence 7. The Distinction between a Person and a Person 8. What terms we are to avoid in speaking of the Trinity 9. Satisfaction to some few Objections 10. The Usefulness of this Doctrine Amongst the Multitude of Scriptures The Clearness of this Truth from the Scriptures holding forth the Doctrine of the Trinity of Persons in the Divine Essence Let it at present suffice to transcribe these And God said Let us make man in our image after our likeness Gen. 1.26 And the Lord God said Behold the man is become as one of us to know good and evil Gen. 3.22 Go to Let us go down and there confound their language that they may not understand one anothers speech Gen. 11.7 But none saith Where is God my Makers so is the Hebrew who giveth Songs in the night Job 35.10 And one cried unto another and said Holy holy holy is the Lord of Hosts the whole Earth is full of his Glory Isai 6.3 And the Heavens were opened unto him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a Dove and lighting upon him and lo a voyce from Heaven saying This is my Beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Matth. 3.16 17. Go therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Matth. 28.19 But when the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father He shall testifie of me John 15.26 The Grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the Love of God and the Communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all Amen 2 Cor. 13.13 For there are three that bare record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Spirit and these three are one 1 John 5.7 A Person viz. an Increated Person is the Divine Essence subsisting in a Relative Property What a Person is The Essence with its Subsistence not the Essence alone not the Subsistence alone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Subsistentia but both the Essence and the Subsistence constitute a Person this the Greek word holds forth Heb. 1.3 which is translated a Person Subsistence adds unto substances the independing manner of their existing In reasonable Nature it giveth Created in the Divine Nature it is Increated Personality Subsistence considered in its abstract notion as distinct from Essence the manner of the Essence the manner of the Existence for Essence or Being and Existing in God are all one A Relative Property an incommunicable property are Synonima's i. e. they are divers terms and expressions signifying the same thing they give personality and distinguish one person from another The Subsistences in the Divine Nature are relative and individuating that is they are relative properties They are Relative Hae
God by one eternal-free-constant act What the Decree is absolutely determining the Futurition i. e. the infallible future being of whatsoever is besides himself unto the praise of his own Glory the cause and disposer of all things the Antecedent and disposer of all events It is God decreeing because whatsoever is in God is God Ratio actus pueri licèt per negationē a nobis explicitur formaliter consistit in positiva perfectione includente omnē perfectionē formaliter et eminenter quā sequitur talis negatio Smising tract 1. dis 2. n 32. Deus omnia simul et semel comprehendit ab illo aternitatis NVNC ex quo fuit Deus Less de perfect ● 4. c. 1. It is God Decreeing by one Act whatsoever God willeth he willeth by one single act hence God calleth himself I Am Exod. 3.14 to shew that he is without begining without end and without succession In him there is nothing past nothing to come but all is present Whatsoever he thinks he always hath thought and always doth and will think Whatsoever he willeth he always hath Willed and always doth and will Will. There can be no more a new thought a new intent or a new purpose in God then there can be a new God This is further evidenced from the Simplicity of God which is God considered as one meer and perfect Act without all composition Whence he might either not have been or may not be Of him it never could or can be said that any thing was to be in him which is not or cannot be that is A pure Act includes all perfection and removeth all imperfection It is an Eternal Act without beginning without end without all alteration or succession God comprehendeth all things and all events together and at once in the moment of Eternity Eternity is an everlasting NOW without beginning without end without succession all at once always It is a free act proceeding from God not as the Son from the Father nor as the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son by a necessity of nature but so as there is no necessary connexion between his absolut being and the being of the things that are Decreed God hath no need of the things decreed he might have been without them he had been blessed for ever though they had never been It is a constant act What God willeth he willeth always a meer and a pure act without any interruption or shadow of change By it God determineth absolutely because his Decree is the first and and universal cause it is one Act certain and independent all things and all events depending thereupon By it He determineth infallibly God being immutable infinitly wise and able to see all his will fulfilled By it He so fore-disposeth of all as serveth to the manifestation of his all-glorious perfections He made all things for himself Even the Wicked for the day of Evil Prov. 16.4 He is both Alpha and Omega the First and the Last Rev. 1.17 It is the cause and disposer of all things being the first and universal cause before all second causes which are the effects of it It is the Antecedent and disposer of all events consequently of sin The Decree is the antecedent not the cause of sin sin is the consequent not the effect of the Decree As the Decree is the antecedent so it is also the disposer of sin God is the Orderer of sin Acts 4.28 the disorder of the second cause falleth under the order of the first but he neither is nor can be the Author of sin Iam. 1.13 A Consequent Non paucos dissolvitnodos distinctio illa necessaria inter effectū et consequens Prideaux lect 1. de Absol decreto is an event infallibly following something foregoing not as an effect followeth its cause but rather as the night followeth the day of which the day foregoing is no cause according to order of divine institution Death is the Antecedent of the Resurrection but not the cause The Resurrection is the consequent but not the effect of Death The fall of the Jews was the Antecedent not the cause of the calling of the Gentiles The removing of the Romane Empire from the West was an Antecedent not a cause of the Revelation of Antichrist The calling of the Gentiles the Revelation of Antichrist were consequents not effects of these there Antecedents As the Sun had it the faculty of seeing could the whole Globe be presented at the same time halfe whereof only in regard of its figure is now in sight of it at once would with one look behold it all so God by one act comprehends all things and all events always The Decree is that everlasting womb wherein is conceived whatsoever hath been is or shall be Time and Eviternity that is the duration of the Creature upon Earth and in Heaven or Hell do but bring forth what is therein conceived according as it is conceived The Decree is all things in Gods purpose Creation and Providence are but the execution of the Decree the Decree containeth all things eminently The Decree is that one from which is all If the Prophet contemplating the Comprehensiveness of Gods Providence concerning the Waters and Heaven the dust of the Earth the Mountains and the Hills all which is but a little part of the execution of his Decree breaketh out thus Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand and meted the Heaven with a span comprehended the dust of the Earth in a measure and weighed the Mountains in Scales and the Hills in a Ballance Isai 40.12 how much more cause have we to be wrapped up with holy admiration in contemplating the Decree it self which eminently containeth all and say who is this that doth not only measure the waters mete out the Heavens comprehend the dust weigh the mountains and hills but doth also exactly and infallibly comprehend and dispose of all things all events which have been are or shall be in this world or in the world to come yea and in Hell it self in one eternal act Whatsoever can be conceived besides God himself What the object of the Decree is falleth under one of these our conditions viz. of 1. Impossibility 2. Possibility 3. Futurition i. e. the infallible after-being of things 4. Existence Impossibility is when the nature of things is such as their very being implyeth a contradiction as for a thing to be and not to be at the same time of these as was said before it is more conveniently said that they cannot be then that God cannot do them Possibility is that condition of things wherein as their is no repugnancy in the nature of such things but that they may be so neither is their any determination by God that they shall be this is founded in the sufficiency of God as for the like things to be done in Tyre and Sidon that were done unto Corazin and Bethsaida was possible but not decreed Futurition
unto the Will of the Creator 2. The Law of Nature scil The Impression of the Will of the Creator concerning the creatures stamped upon them from the beginning by virtue of those imperative effectual words Let there be and it was so Gen. 1.3.5.7.9 Hence they are said to have received a Command Job 38.12 To keep covenant with God Jer. 31.6 and 33.20.25 Knowest thou the Ordinances of the Heaven canst thou set the Dominion thereof in the Earth Job 38.23 i.e. The constant Order and Reason of the Motion of the Heavens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which their Maker hath fixed in them as a Law or Statute according to which they move and act 3. A Propensness of Nature which is a Principle to do according to that Law of Nature In things that have not life it is called an inclination The Sparks flye upward Job 5.7 The Sun knoweth his going down Psal 104.19 In things that have life it is called an instinct whereby some living creatures by instigation of nature act as if they had reason Prov. 6.6 30.24 God ordinarily governeth the creature according to the Law of Nature extraordinarily according to his good pleasure above the course of nature i. e. answerable to the Decree but not according to the Law of Nature as in case of Miracles and Monsters Gods Government of the reasonable creature is his actual ordering Angels and men according to his Decree with such relation unto the Moral Law as containeth them in the acknowledgement thereof by way of obedience or in case of disobedience subjects them unto the curse annexed thereunto The creatures reasonable and unreasonale always are ordered according to the Decree the unreasonable creature ordinarily also is ordered according to its rule man by reason of sin often erreth from his rule God prescribes unto the reasonable creature a rule having in the Creation enabled the Angels in their proper persons man in Adam to yeild obedience unto that rule rewarding obedience according to the Promise either by way of Merit as in the first or by way of Grace as in the second Covenant and punishing disobedience according to the curse Those Nations who are without the Law that is without the written Word of God owe obedience unto the Law being in Adam the root of man-kind created after the image of God Quibus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nunquam fuit revelatum tales damrabuntur non propter fidem non praestiram vel propter neglectam conditionem sed propter Legi● vel Naturae vel Scriptae violationem vel propter peccatum ac reatum quibus ab utero sunt abnoxii Spanh Ex de grat Sect. 25. N. 13. and contained in the Covenant of Works Such Nations shall be judged according to the Moral Law for their disobedience thereunto For this cause the Prophets do not only denounce judgement to those who have that Law written though unto such the greater punishment is due For he that knoweth his Lords will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes Luke 12.47 But also to the Gentiles who had not the written Law Jer. 10.25 Jeremiah causeth not only Jerusalem but every other Nation there mentioned to drink of the Wine-cup of the Fury of the Lord Jer. 15.15 Writs of Execution are given out against the Ammonites Ezek. 21.28 and Chapt. 25. ● Against Moah and Seir ver 8. Against Edom. 12. Against the Philistins 12. Against Tyrus Chap. 26 27. Against Zidon Chap. 28.20 Against Egypt Chap. 29.32 Against Assyria Chap. 31. Against Babylon Jer. 50. 51. Against Gog. Ezek. 38. Whence also it is That not only the Jews such as have heard of the written Word of God but likewise the Gentiles which have not heard of the Word of God are reserved unto the Judgement of the great Day Rom. 2.6.9 John 5.28 29. and 1 Cor. 6.2 Do you not know that the Saints shall judge the world then the World shall be judged Those that have the Law and Gospel written owe obedience to the Law and Gospel As many as have sinned in the Law shall be judged by the Law Rom. 2.12 that is Their condemnation will be aggravated because they have sinned against greater light John 15.22 Matth. 11.22 The Elect who in this life both disobey and obey the Rule are for their disobedience punished in their Surety according to the Curse annexed to the Precept and chastened in themselves God truly testifieth against sin and unto duty makes due provision for his own glory and just difference between obedience and disobedience so as the disobedient have always cause of repentance and fear the obedient of encouragement their obedience being rewarded according to the Promise annexed to the Precept So far as the Elect yeild obedience to the Rule they are ordered according to the Decree and the Rule wherin the Elect and Reprobate transgress the Rule even in those violations thereof they are contained in respective and just subjection thereunto and fulfil the Decree The reasonable creatures obeying is ordered and governed according to the Decree and the Rule The reasonable creature disobeying is ordered and governed according to the Decree The Effectual Concurse of the first Cause with the second What the Concurse of the first cause with the second is is an external transient influence of God upon the creature in time exactly answering to the Decree of God before time moving upon co-working with and assisting of the second cause to its operations It is the clearer understood by considering on Gods part the Decree which is an immanent and eternal act abiding in God and his efficiency which is an external and passing act put forth upon the creature in time For the better understanding of the Concurse Co-operation and Co-working of the first cause so far as it concerneth man which also is respectively applicable to other Subjects there are considerable two acts in respect of God viz. an immanent and transient act and two acts in respect of the soul viz. a first and a second act The immanent and as it were indwelling Act in God is his Decree eternal increated and before time The transient Act of Gods Efficiency is a created external passing Act of the Spirit of God upon the soul in time touching man The first act is an active Principle or inherent Habit in the soul The operation is the second act proceeding from that Habit. The Concurse of the first cause is unto the active principle in the second cause as the first mover is unto the inferiour Orbes as an impulse thrust or put on is unto a round body of it self propense to rowl as the Nurses lifting the child up the stairs is unto the child inclined to go up or as the leading power put forth of him that goeth before is to him that is inclined to follow after as the Midwife is unto the deliverance of her that is in travail The Necessithereof in respect of the second cause
beings themselves as appeared but now from the instance of fire and may further be seen in the example of the Sun which whilest experience witnesseth to warm and heat us upon Earth with the presence of its virtue yet Sense and Reason shews to be far absent in respect of its body being in the Heavens Yet such is the nature of the first Cause as that wheresoever it worketh it worketh immediately both with the immediation of his virtue without which there could be no effect and with the immediation of his presence because he is in every place Although the first Cause worketh immediately in respect of the immediation of its being and virtue yet in respect of those things which it acts by means of second causes whether by the mediation of the beings themselves Ames Med. lib. 1. cap. 9. or of their virtues into which things the second agents do send their influence by virtue of their proper forms I say in respect of such things it worketh mediately whence the first Cause is said to be a mediate cause in respect of the order of the second causes Vna estactio I ei creaturae respectu operis sed non respectu modi agendi 4. Determining For though as the beings so the operations of the second causes are from the first Cause efficiently yet they are from their next causes formally God causeth the burning of the fire yet we do not say God burneth but the fire burneth God worketh repentance in the Soul yet it is not a truth to say God repenteth but man repenteth God is the next efficient Cause but not the next formal Cause 4. The first Cause so concurreth as it determineth the second cause in its operation This is readily granted in natural agents in free-rational agents it is proved thus If the futurition of the operation of the second cause is determined by the Decree of God then the operation it self is determined by the Efficiency of God 1. Because the Efficiency is adequate to the Decree 2. Because there can be but one absolute Determiner 3. If the operation of the second cause were not absolutely determined by the Decree God might suffer disappointment in respect of the Decree Either the Will is determined by God in its operation or else it would follow either that there were not an essential subordination of the second cause unto the first that is of man to God which were repugnant to the nature of the second cause it being imperfect and dependent or that the first Cause were subordinate to the second which were repugnant to the nature of the first Cause being perfect and universal If as often as the Will doth not will it therefore doth not will because God hath not determined that it should will then as often as it willeth any thing it therefore willeth because God hath determined that it should will But as often as the Will doth not will it therefore doth not will because God hath not determined that it should will Therefore the Minor appeareth in two particulars 1. As often as the Will doth not will God hath not determined it to will 2. The Non-determination or Suspension of the Determination of God is the Antecedanious Cause in respect of God this cause cannot be positive A positive cause cannot be terminated in a Non-ens such as mans Non-volition i. e. Not-willing is it must therefore be suspensive The meer Suspension or withholding of the Influence of God without any positive action sufficeth to the annihilation of the creature that is Twiss lib. 2. crim 3. therefore the Suspension of the Determination of God sufficeth to the preventing of that operation of the creature which yet is not Obj. 1. If All-efficiency be from the first cause Against the All-Efficiency of God then the second cause hath no efficiency it doth nothing neither good nor evil man neither sinneth nor obeyeth no difference between good and evil the high way to confusion Thus the Libertines Ans Causes are either co-ordinate namely such as in respect of their Efficiency depend not upon their co-working cause or subordinate namely such as in respect of their efficiency depend upon their co-working cause In co-ordinate causes the Argument holds but second causes in respect of the first being subordinate and therefore as in their being so also in their working depending upon the first cause the Argument is of no force To deny the Efficiency of the second cause Tho. Part. 1. q. 105. art 5. Calvin contra libert c. 13 14 15 16 Suarez Metaph Tem. 1. disp 17. S. 1. is to deny that which experience proclaimeth namely That the Sun shineth or the fire burneth The denyal of the proper and formal efficiency or working of the second cause is repugnant to the whole Order of Nature Things that have not life it depriveth of their first qualities which are nothing else but active principles as power to heat in the fire power to cool in the water It disinables us from collecting effects from second causes or second causes from effects because it denyeth all such causes and effects It makes void all those dispositions in several creatures that tend to action Vain is the disposition in fire to ascend or in the earth to descend if there be no motion of ascent nor descent by them It takes away all perfection from those creatures as also from all other which consists in action Lastly If action be only the first cause in the presence of such a creature and not by the second cause we can no better conclude that the fire is hot from its burning nor that the water is cold from its coolness then we can conclude that the fire is cold or that the water is hot from such operations of heat and cold The reason is the first cause can as well make hot in the presence of water or make cold in the presence of fire as the contrary It takes away all difference between things that have life and things that have no life that which takes away action takes away life Take away action from the second cause and you take away the vegetative soul and its operations from living creatures You take away the sensitive soul and its operations from the sensitive creature The reasonable soul and its operations from the reasonable creature There is no difference to be found between reasonable creatures and sensible creatures between reasonable sensible and those creatures which are vegetative only having life Between reasonable sensible and vegetative and those that are lifeless in respect of their formal and most noble difference which is a principle of action with the operations thereupon ensuing There remains indeed a difference between them in respect of their outward shape but not in regard of the respect fore-mentioned It takes away the distinction between good and evil actions for that which denyeth actions simply denyeth all kind of actions whether good or evil therefore man in all
it selfe Oneness is an affection immediatly flowing from the meer being of a thing whereby it is individed in it selfe and divided from all other beings or things Union is the conjunction of two ones or more into a third being for example sake Ens unum unio take a man consisting of Body and Soul the Soul first hath a being then this singular being and not another then it is united unto the body in a third being namely the person of a man the like is true of the body In Vocation we receive our being in Union is the manner of our being In Vocation we are made Beleevers in Union is considered the order between Christ and Beleevers In Vocation is the foundation of our union in Union is the relation built upon that foundation Inter illa quae convertuntur secundum essendi consequentiam illud est prius quod habet rationem subjecti Alsted Metaph. par 1. cap. 25. In Vocation is the spirit of grace infused in Union this infused spirit is made an in-dwelling spirit Without Union there can be no Communion This necessarily pre-supposeth that things cannot act one upon another that doe not reach one the other they cannot give and take one from another that doe not some way meet together yet here we must know that the contact or mutual touch of things is not alwayes Local when their substances or Bodies doe immediatly touch one another but often-times vertual only when notwithstanding they doe not immediately touch one the other yet they reach one the other in their efficacy Instances whereof we have many in Natural causes as the Loadstone and Iron separated in place yet act one upon another that by attracting this by following In Political matters persons though distant in place one from another yet exercise civil communion in the affairs of this life In Spiritual things as namely in the Sacrament the Body and Blood of Christ is united to the Elements vertually that is by vertue of Divine institution and promise not Locally to deny that were to deny the Sacrament to be a Sacrament to say the last were to affirm Ubiquity whether Transubstantiation with the Papists or Consubstantiation with the Lutherans So here the Person of Christ who in respect of his Body is in Heaven and the persons of his Militant members who in respect both of Souls and Bodies are upon the earth are united to and doe Spiritually touch one another I am the Vine yee are the Branches he that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me yee can doe nothing Joh. 15.5 For the better discerning the order of the dependence of Communion upon Union The order of the dependence of Communion upon Union from whence it floweth we may consider in Union as is also to be done in other relations these foure particulars First The subject of the Relation the person of Christ and the person of the Beleever Secondly The foundation of it on Christs part the Divine institution absolutely considered on our part faith considered only as an infused saving quality in the Soul Thirdly A mutual reference on Christs part superadding a respect to Divine institution whereby according to the appointment of God he looks at the Beleever as his Member superadding also on the Beleevers part a respect unto faith whereby faith which in it selfe is but a quality hath now adhering to it an order to its object whence it looks at Christ as its head In relatis spectanda Subjectum Fundamentum Mutuus ordo Efficacia This mutual order between Christ and the Beleever is the relation it selfe Fourthly The efficacie of the relation The efficacie of a Relation springeth from its foundation the foundation then of this being firstly the absolute grace of God in election and thence flowing downe in the Promise according to the merit of Christ by the effectual operation of the Spirit Needs must the River of life be full ever-flowing Tametsi relatis est ens debilis entitatis tamen est magnae efficaciae and quickning that ariseth from and is mantained by such fountains the influence of the Occan into water-springs of the Sun and Heaven into inferior bodies is not to be compared thereunto Next to the increated Communion of the Trinity in the Divine Essence and the communicated influence from the Divine nature to the Man-hood is the influence of the Lord Jesus Christ unto the members of his mystical body And thou shalt make them drink of the river of thy pleasures for with thee is the fountain of Life In thy light we shall see light Psal 36.8 9. As the union between Christ and the soul The excellency of this communion flowing from union so the communion flowing from this union is mystical a glimpse of whose excellency as it readily shineth forth in this place in respect of the subject object and nature thereof so cannot but be of precious and vigorous use to the serious and spiritual Reader as he passeth along The subject thereof is the Catholick Church or body of Christ The Mystical body of Christ is a spiritual Totum The my stical body of Christ what or Whole consisting of the Person of Christ and all the persons of the Elect effectually called both Angels and Men orderly united by the Spirit unto Christ as their Head and in him one unto another after the manner of the body of a man So as from him is supplied grace suitable to their seveveral relations therein for the effectual and perfect communion both of all the members with the Head and of themselves one with another unto the increasing it self with the increase of God The Militant part of the Mystical body of Christ consisting both of Jews and Gentiles make one new man Eph. 2.15 The Mystical body Triumphant is compared to one perfect man Eph. 4.13 Christus omnia ejus membra constituunt unam personam my sticam Tho. quaest disp de gr ch art 7. ad 11. Davenan Coloss 1.24 Christ and all his members are one Mystical Person This innumerable number as they are but one mystical body so they all have but one soul viz. The Spirit of Christ whence they are united in this life sincerely in the life to come perfectly In point of judgement Eph. 4.13 Till we all come in the unity of the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God c. In point of affection 1 Cor. 12.12 Of perfect communion Joh. 17.22 23. And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them that they may be one even as we are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me Stay yet a little and look upon this spiritual and glorious body walk about Christ mystical go round about him tell the Members mark ye well the
a sinner is an undivided act done altogether not by parts it doth not receive more or lesse if there be any there is all and if not all not any either all or none Justification in respect of the price and the acceptation of the persons justified is equal thus The Person that suffered for all is one and the same the sufficiency of an infinite Person suffering was requisite for the redemption of one and in the suffering of an infinite Person there was sufficiency for the redemption of all The kinde of punishment suffered for all was the same Gods acceptation thereof was the same Christ having suffered the punishment due in kinde and degree to the greatest sinner it cost Christ no more to pardon Paul than Timothy it cost him as much to pardon Davids childe 2 Sam. 12.23 as to pardon Manasseth The punishment for kinde and degree due unto the greatest sinner being suffered by an infinite person it was as much as if all the elect had suffered an infinite person containeth eminently all persons Christ therefore being in himself an infinite person and being by Divine ordination a publick Person in his suffering he was as many persons as God willed him to stand for therein Hence when the redemption mony was brought the rich must not give more the poor must not give lesse Exod. 30.15 in the Passeover and in the Supper of the Lord the portion of all is equal the distribution of Manna was equal Exod. 16.18 A Beleever at the same time is a sinner in respect of the remaining principle of inherent disobedience and righteous in respect of the imputed obedience of Christ guilty of damnation if looked at in himself not guilty of Damnation if looked at in Christ Adam a Beleever though a sinner was more just than Adam before the Fall Adam before the Fall was without sinne and innocent but not just because he had not fulfilled the righteousnesse of the Law Adam a Beleever though a sinner is yet just because by beleeving he hath fulfilled the righteousnesse of the Law Adam innocent had no right unto eternallife Adam a beleever notwithstanding sin hath right unto eternal life The righteousnesse of one Beleever is more acceptable unto God than the righteousnesse of all Mankind in the first Covenant The Lord Jesus Christ was just inherently but a sinner imputatively the Beleever is a sinner inherently but just imputatively Mary under the Crosse was more just imputatively than Christ which was also true of every Beleever then living when Christ was under the actual imputation of sin the same righteousnesse is both anothers and ours also Anothers that is Christs subjectively yet ours that is the Beleevers imputatively The righteousnesse of a Beleever in this life is both perfect and imperfect perfect in respect of Justification imperfect in respect of Sanctification Annot on the Bible in Numb 23. God looking on beleevers through Christ seeth no more sin safely understood than he seeth in him for they are made the righteousnesse of God in him by imputation Hence followeth peace of Conscience to all Beleevers Of the peace of Conscience following upon justification by faith notwithstanding all their unrighteousnesse Rom. 5.1 so farre as we have confidence in justifying grace there remaineth no conscience of condemning sin Rom. 8.1 No bitterer warre than between the Conscience and the Curse no sweeter peace than when Mercy and the Beleever meet together when the Conscience and the Promise kisse each other that is a taste of Hel this of Heaven Peace is that Gospel-tranquillity which followeth upon the Souls certain relyance on Christ concerning its freedome from the evil of the Curse and fruition of the good of the Promise As Christ being the great sinner imputatively in the instant of his dissolution passed from a state of wrath into a state of perfect peace so doth the Beleever upon his justification by faith If Christ hath peace who was made our sin then need must the Beleever have peace who is made his righteousnesse if Adams peace had been perfect in case of his fulfilling all righteousnesse then the Beleevers peace is perfect who hath fulfilled all righteousnesse in his Surety the beleeving commanded in the Gospel hath in Christ done yea out-done the doing commanded in the Law The peace of the Beleever is as perfect as the peace of those who are in glory the righteousnesse of these being the same with theirs See the grounds hereof in respect of God and Christ God himselfe is the Author and Object of our peace therefore it is called the peace of God Phil. 4.7 peace with God Rom. 5.1 He even he it is who is the Creator of peace Isa 57.19 The Speaker of peace Psal 85.5 When he giveth quietnesse who can give trouble Job 34.29 them hee also justified What shall we say to these things if God be for us who can be against us Rom. 8.30 31. The Merit of Christ a fruit and effect whereof is justifying grace is infinite because of the eminency of the person being God-man the Law violated was but a Creature but he that was made subject to it is a Creator the holinesse of the subject exceeds the holinesse of the Law the transgressor of the Law was but a Man the satisfier is God-man See here the honour of the Law that had such a subject farre more than what could have redounded to it from the subjection of all Angels and meer men See the security of the Transgressor that hath such a satisfier our disobedience is but the disobedience of Men his obedience is the obedience of him who is God needs then must his righteousnesse exceed our unrighteousnesse and in this respect wel may justifying grace compared with sin be called abundance of grace Rom. 5.17 And God bee sayd abundandy to pardon Isa 55.7 This sweet truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 longe majus est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 postcrioris Adami quam fuit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prioris Terra instar puncti respectu caeli the sweet Psalmist of Israel sings forth in lively compatisons Psal 103.11 12 13. For as the heaven is high above the earth so great is his mercy towards them that fear him As farre as the East is from the West so farre hath he removed our transgressions from us Like as a Father pittieth his children so the Lord pittieth them that fear him Sin is exceding sinful and grace is out of measure gracious Though sin hath abounded yet grace doth much more abound Rom. 5.20 God Christ the Gospel the Law and the Beleever all gain through justification by faith The Merit of Christ being infinite hath no bounds but is excendible according to the pleasure of the disposer thereof the obedience of Christ is All-sufficient able to have saved the whole world had God so pleased and that as wel as one man From the effectual apprehension and perswasion of the Premises proceeded that triumphing speech of a Beleever
the effect in its cause or Conclusions in their principles the creature is to be seen in God in a more excellent maner than in it self thence they are said to be eminentially contained in him Could we see cleerly a building in the perfect conception of the Artificer we should see it in a more excellent manner than in the Edifice it self Yet we are to rembember that the Divine Essence is an arbitrary Exemplum ideale Speculum voluntarium Speculum arbitrarium Of the maner of the Beatifical Vision or voluntary glass manifesting more or less of his works according to his good pleasure But of that day and hour knoweth no man no not the Angels which are in heaven neither the Son but the Father Concerning the manner of the Beatifical Vision not to say any thing that exceeds sobriety and yet to say something that may help our understanding only thus As unto the act of the understanding there is required the object the species or similitude of the object or else either the eminent or formal presence thereof which supplieth it the faculty and the exercise of the faculty so unto the Beatifical Vision there is requisite the concurrence of the object the light of glory the glorified understanding and the evercise of the understanding glorified The primary object is the Divine essence it self In corporeal vision sight is united to the object by the help of the sensible species i. e. the similitudes image or likenesse of the object in intellectual Vision the understanding is united to the object by intelectual species but in the beatifical Vision the Divine essence it self supplyeth the place of intelligible species for were there any other similitude of the Divine essence it must needs be a creature but it is impossible for a thing created to represent that which is increated a material species is unable to represent an immaterial object much more is a created species unable to represent the increated object there being more distance between the light of glory or any other conceivable created similitude and the increated essence than there is between a material and immaterial creature Again there is no use of any created species for the seeing of the Divine essence by reason of its perfection and immensity whence it can sufficiently unite it self to the glorified understanding The Divine essence concurreth with the understanding both as an universal Agent and as the object of such Vision Revel 21.23 The Beatifical object applieth it self to the created understanding together with the understanding causing this blessed Vision By its eminency it hurteth not but perfecteth the understanding as is implyed in its denomination of the Beatifical Vision The light of glory is a glorious supernatural influence concurring with and inabling of the inherent principle of the glorified understanding to see God The light of glory may be so called because it accompanieth the state of glory it is a created perfection As assisting grace is unto an act of new obedience so is the light of glory unto the Beatifical Vision as that extraordinary assistance was unto Moses whereby from the top of Pisgah he was enabled at once to take a true full and clear prospect of the Land of Canaan Deut. 3.27 and as that extraordinary assistance was unto Stephen whereby whilst he was yet on earth the Heavens being opened he saw Jesus Christ at the right hand of God so is the ordinary assistance of the light of glory in the life of glory unto the blessed in order to the Beatifical Vision The School-men speak thus of it Lumen gloriae est perfectio superaddita quâ intellectus fit efficax seu confortatur ad videndum Deum Thom. p. 1. q. 12. Lumen gloriae est actualis illustratio i. e. influxus Dei supernaturalis elevans intellectum ad visionem essentiae Divinae Sententia Scoti Nominalium Lumen gloriae est ipse concursus supernaturalis Beatifici objecti quatenus per illum objectum istud se ipsum immediatè intellectu manifestat efficiendo cum intellectu Beatissimam visionem Smising Tract 2. Dis 6. N. 93. some That it is a perfection superadded to the understanding whereby the understanding is made able to see God others That it is an actual illustration that is a supernatural influx elevating the understanding unto the Vision of the Divine essence others That it is the supernatural concourse of the Beatifical object whereby the object immediatly manifests it self to the understanding together with the understanding causing a most blessed Vision The glorified understanding is an inherent Principle or habit in the Soul after the manner of a permanent disposition as light is in the Sun not after the manner of a transient passion as light is in the Air or as the gifts of Prophesie were in the Prophets elevated by the light of glory unto the Vision of God Of the effect of the Beatifical Vision Scot. lib. 4. dist 49. Beatitudo est status omnium bonorum aggregatione perfectus The effect of the Beatifical Vision is Blessednesse as glory is the Sum of all Gods perfections so Blessednesse is the sum of all mans good that he either needs or is capable of God intending to make a Creature happy giveth it a principle capable to und erstand and enjoy him and giveth himself the object of that principle to be understood and enjoyed No Creature is capable of happiness or misery but the reasonable Creature there could neither be Heaven nor Hel the joys of the one nor the pains of the other without understanding the perfect union of the highest created Principle with the increated object makes blessedness There are four Attributes of the Beatifical object Attributum Beatitudinis objectivae 1. Ultimum 2. Perfectum 3. Expellens omnem miseriam 4. Vt satiet appetitum Valent. Tom. 2. disp 1. q. 3. p. 1. Ultimateness perfection expulsion of all evil satisfaction of the desire It is the last that whereunto all things are referred but it self is referred unto nothing it is perfect having absolute and universal excellency it expelleth all evil knoweth no want it is a sufficient good it satisfieth the desire the Wil willeth no more The Latitude of all being all truth and all good the object of the Understanding and Wil is contained in it and that in most eminent manner The formal Blessedness of the glorified Soul consists in the clear vision of this object which succeedeth Faith hereby we know God In perfect fruition thereof which succeeds Hope hereby we enjoy and possess God In perfect love thereof which succeeds our charity hereby we close with are like to rest and acquiesce in God By the Understanding Will and Affection the Soul doth as it were enter into God and God into the Soul whence followeth as it were a mutual in-being of one in another and an intimate vital union between God and the Soul Either the vision fruition and love of God is Blessednesse or
there is no Blessednesse God is not God Heaven is not Heaven the Creature according to the best namely the Gospel-dispensation of God is capable of no more needs no more can have no more God in Christ doth no more for Man man needs no more from God Hereby the Soul enters into joy Mat. 25.21 23. which is the rest of the wil in its utmost and perfecting end In this Life joy enters into us the Soul here being larger than its joy in the Life to come we are said to enter into joy as into that whereby our Soul is exceeded and wherein as it were we are contained If in the state of faith the Soul is full of joy unspeakable and full of glory how much more shal it be full and running over in the state of fruition Faith is the best Rhetorick to walk so as whether present or absent we may be accepted of him is the best Elocution to admire is short of the cause a holy astonishment answereth not the object The Apostle telling us the good things laid up for the godly in this life exceed our thoughts 1 Cor. 2.9 we must needs grant that those much better things reserved for us in glory doe farre super-exceed our words The Soul separated Consid 3. The Soul separated upon the instant of its dissolution from the Body enjoyeth c. upon the instant of its dissolution from the Body enjoyeth Blessedness in the presence and sight of God and Christ before the eyes of the dead body are closed the Soul with open eyes beholds the face of Jesus Christ then viz. at death shal the dust return to the earth as it was and the Spirit shal return to God who gave it Eccles 12.7 When Christ giveth up the Ghost he commendeth his Spirit into his Fathers hand Luk. 23.46 When the body of Stephen falleth asleep the Lord Jesus receiveth his Spirit Act. 7.59 This Christ saith and that with an asseveration to the Thief upon the Crosse Luk. 23 43. Verily I say unto thee this day shalt thou be with me in Paradise If our earthly house of this Body be dissolved the Soul enters into a house not made with hands No sooner is the cloathing of Mortality put off but the cloathing which is from Heaven is put on Paul dissolved is with Christ Phil. 1.23 the Souls of those Martyrs and Confessors departing during the persecution of Antichrist who came out of great tribulation and have washed their Robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb are before the Throne of God serving him in his Temple Rev. 7.14 15. that is in his immediate presence For the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it Rev. 21.22 The Servants of God may rest assured should Antichrist prevail against them unto death their death should afford them an immediate passage unto happinesse And I heard a voyce from heaven saying unto me Write blessed are the dead which dye in the Lord from hence-forth yea saith the Spirit that they may rest from their labours and their works d●● follow them Revel 14.13 Christ is in the presence of God Heb. 9.24 Sits upon the Throne with his Father Revel 3.21 The Souls of the Saints departed are with Christ Phil. 1.23 therefore the Souls of the Saints departed are in the presence of God The Angels behold the face of God Mat. 18.10 The Souls departed are with the Angels Revel 4.8 and 5.8 7.9 Heb. 12.22.23 and like the Angels Mat. 22.30 For if their Bodies at the Resurrection are expresly said to be as the Angels we may wel inferre the same concerning their spirits much more agreeing with the nature of Angels therefore the Saints departed see the face of God They that are in the third Heaven are in the presence of God the Saints departed are in the third Heaven they are in Paradise Luk 23.43 which is the third Heaven 2 Cor. 12.2 4. therefore As the Souls of the wicked depart immediately to the place of Torment so the Souls of the Saints depart immediately to the place of Blessedness Lazarus Soul is as soon in Abrahams bosome Luk. 16.22 that is in the Kingdome of Heaven Mat. 18.11 as Dives his Soul is in Hel. Luk. 16.23 For the fuller understanding hereof Bellar. de Beat. Sanct. lib. 1. c. 2. consider these four following Propositions Prop. 1 The Soul considered in it self is a subject capable of happiness It is a subject capable either of Blessedness or Misery the Promise or the Curse Heaven or Hel. It was a good answer of him that upon the proposal of the Question What the Soul was replied I know not Man since the Fall being lesse than himself understands not himself nor wil he fully til he be fully restored to himself in glory yet as a help to our apprehension we may conceive of it after this or the like manner The Soul is a Spiritual substance created after the Image of God indued with the faculties of Understanding Wil Memory and Affections with a power of reflex acting upon it self whereby it knoweth that it knoweth according to the Latitude of the whole revealed Wil and Works of God infused into the body as the form thereof and being separated there-from subsists by it self to be re-united thereunto at the Resurrection to abide as the form thereof for ever More briefly The Soul of the Saints is a Spiritual and Immortal substance created after the Image of God and renewed after the immortal Image of God in Christ The Soul is a Spirit not a Body consisting of matter Luk. 24.39 It is a real and very being as the body is only of a higher kind the Body is of the Earth the Soul is immediately from God It should not prejudice the being of the Soul because it is not visible to our eyes we may as wel question the being of God himself or of the Angels who are invisible or our own selves to be Men for from the Soul it principally is that we are Men or Women It is a substance not depending in respect of its being upon any other Fellow-creature as accidents doe whose being is by having their in-being in another Fellow-creature as their subject It s subsistence exceeds that of the Body the Soul can subsist without the Body but the Body continueth not a Body without the Soul Hence we read of separated Souls but not of separated Bodies The Soul is compared to a large vessel Rom. 9.22 23. as high as Heaven as deep as the earth Prov. 25.3 more capacious than the world Eccles 3.11 As the capacity of a vessel may be learned by the quantity it is able to contain so the understanding of the word of command which considered alone is exceeding broad Psal 119.90 Promise and Curse together with the works of God helps us to conceive of the largeness of the Soul Solomon in respect of his exceeding much understanding is said to have largeness of heart even as the
are made perfect Heb. 12.23 The soul shall be in a better estate than it was when it first came from God being now in Christ and having attained perfection in him both in respect of Kind and Degrees Adams soul in Christ is a more excellent spirit than it either was or was capable of being under the first Covenant the Angels in Christ are more blessed than they had been in their first blessed estate without Christ The soul from the moment of its dissolution untill the Resurrection is like to the soul of Christ in Paradise whilst his body lay in the Grave The place of the Blessed is usually known by the name of the third Heaven Consider 4. Of the Adjuncts of blessednesse where first of the place The third Heaven is a simple and shining body created immediately of God to be the Throne of his special presence and of the gracious manifestation of his perfections and the habitation of the Blessed both Angels and Men. The whole Region of the Air unto the Moon is in Scripture called the first Heaven from the Moon to the highest Stats inclusively the second Heaven That which is above these the place of happiness the third Heaven 2 Cor. 12.2 This third Heaven is also called A house not made with hands 2 Cor. 5. A City whose builder and maker is God Heb. 11.10 The City of the living God Heb. 12.22 Christs Fathers house Joh. 14.2 That better and heavenly Country of the Saints Heb. 11.13 14. Paradise Luke 23.43 Heaven the Heaven of heavens 1 King 8.27 The world to come The School-men call it Empyreum from its splendor and shining brightness this third Heaven we have only from the Scripture Aristotle was ignorant therof it being invisible It s place is far above all visible Heavens Eph. 4.10 Christ ascending thereinto Caelo beatorum proprie competit nomen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia terminus est sinis ultimus supre nusque mundi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is said to be made higher than the heavens Heb. 7.25 Hence it is called the third Heaven and the Greek word turned Heaven intends such a place as is the supreme term and bounds of this present world It is probably thought to be created the first day there being no inconvenience to include the third Heaven in those Heavens mentioned Gen. 1.1 In the beginning God created the Heaven and the Earth Also because the Angels whose habitation is the third Heaven were created the first day Job 38.6 7. It was created immediately of God not of any pre-existing principle and as it is for a more excellent use so doth it consist of more excellent matter distinguished from and excelling of the matter of the other Heavens Gemmes Metals precious Stones or what ever material creature in this visible world It excelleth the quintessence of the Chymists namely that spirit which they extract from Herbs and Metals for those spirits though never so subtile yet are elementary and mixed bodies It excelleth the quintessence of the Philosophers who understand thereby a material substance diverse from the matter of the four Elements whereby all things are compounded In which sense some learned men after Aristotle will have these visible heavens to be quintessential which notwithstanding yet the third heavens are more subtile and pure than they all being not onely immixed Keck Phys● l. 2. c. 1. but invisible and having its natural place above all these bodies and not descending It is incorruptible because having no principle out of which according to order of nature it did arise there is no principle into which according to the order of nature it can be returned It is uncapable of a Physical change into any other body It is impassible by any creature and as by nature its Maker hath freed it from corruption so by a superadded act of his good pleasure he hath freed it from annihilation It is an house not maile with hands eternal in the Heavens 2 Cor. 5.1 It is clear and shining 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 totus lucidus The City hath no need of the Sun or Moon to shine in it it is all as a most glorious Sun and therefore called by the Learned as was intimated before Empyreum not from its heat but from its resplendence and most pleasant light All the lustre and shining beauty in these visible Heavens Gems Metals precious Stones c. could it be united into one object were not to be compared to it As the place of the damned is the place of the greatest and most grievous darknesse So the place of the blessed is a place of the greatest and most pleasant light It is spacious containing in it all invisible and visible creatures and consequently this visible world This is the great City of the great King He measured with the reed twelve thousand furlongs the length and the breadth and the height of it are equall Rev. 21.16 It is the Court of God and Christ wherein are habitations for innumerable company of Angels and for the spiritual seed of Abraham which are as the sand of the Sea-shore which is innumerable In my Fathers house there are many Mansions if it were not so I would have told you it Joh. 14.2 As it is said of Topheth though in a contrary sense It is large and deep for the King it is prepared So may it be said of Heaven It is large and high for the blessed it is prepared It is most pleasant free from all evil and full of all good a proportionable object to glorified eyes and a suitable place to glorified bodies The light of it is fitly compared to the light of a Jasper stone Rev. 21.11 which is not darkned by clouds neither doth hurt our eyes but the more we look on it the more it pleaseth us neither doth it leave shining when the Sun shineth nor doth the brightnesse of it go out at any time Solomons Temple was a magnificent building for which Solomons expence excepted David prepared in silver and gold seven hundred millions 1 Chron. 22.14 besides brasse iron without weight about which were occupied seventeen thousand Labourers thirteen thousand and three hundred Over-seers Solomons and Hyrams Builders 1 King 5. together with Hyram and the cunning Artificers of David and Solomon I have sent unto thee a cunning man c. skilful to work in gold and in silver in brasse and in iron in stone and in timber and purple in blew and in fine linnen and crimson also to grave any manner of graving and to find out every device which shall be put to him with thy cunning-men and with the cunning-men of my Lord David thy Father 2 Chron. 2.14 All which help notwithstanding the Temple was seven yeers in building 1 King 6.38 The house which I build is great for the house which I am about to build is wonderful great 2 Chron.
same Mystical Body or the manner of their meeting together sweetned with more affecting ingredients and circumstances than the meeting of Jacob Joseph and Benjamin together with their ability unity complacency c. and all this mixed with the immediate presence of Christ If Peter but for a smal time seeing and hearing the faces and discourse of Christ Moses and Elias breaks out It is good for us to be here much more cause is there for them so to doe being not only Spectators and Auditors but also Interlocutors with them and the residue of this ful and blessed Society and that for ever As the communion of the Sanits in this life is a great part of our comfort on earth so the communion of the Saints in glory is no little part of the joys of Heaven The duration of this Blessednesse is for ever 3. The Duration of all Duration is Either increated viz. eternity properly so called this is the duration of God Or created viz. eviternity the duration of the Blessed in glory Or time the duration of the Creature in this world Between Eternity Eviternity and Time some who have more accurately considered the natures thereof distinguish thus Eternity is without beginning without end without succession Eviternity is without end but not without beginning and though without succession in respect of the duration of their Persons yet not without succession in respect of their operations and other accidents Time hath both a beginning succession and end In Eternity all is present nothing past nor to come In Eviternity in respect of the duration of their Persons there is nothing past but in other respects there is both past and to come that is the instant that was in some respect passeth not away but alwayes remaineth but in other respects there are instants to be which are not yet come In Time there is both past present and to come Eternity is a Duration consisting of an eternal Now without beginning or ending Eviternity is a Duration having a continuing Now with a beginning but without an ending Time is a successive Duration having a beginning and ending without any remaining Now. The Body is not so miserable under the Curse Consid 5. Of the condition of the Body after the Resurrection as it is blessed in the Promise as in the state of Corruption it is abased lower than all created Bodies so in the state of glory it is exalted higher than all other Bodies Christs excepted The excellency of the glorified Body consists especially in two things 1 In that we shal see Christ as he is Man with these eyes 2 In certain inherent Caelestial qualities That we shal see Christ as he is Man with these eyes Job manifestly testifieth For I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth and though after my skin worms destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold him and not another cap. 19.25 26 27. The sight of Christ as Man is the next object unto the Beatifical Vision it self as the created grace which the Man-hood received was out of measure Joh. 3.34 yet not simply for being a creature it is bounded but respectively in regard of us we being unable to measure it so the glory of the Manhood is out of measure The Humanity of Christ in respect of its personal union farre exceeds all the glory of Angels and glorified Souls The glory of the Man-hood is as much as the Creature is capable of the glory of the Body is derived both from the Divinity and the glory of his Soul The fulness of the God-head dwelling in him bodily doth as it were radiate through his body hence there must needs arise great joy unto the beholder both from the eminency of and our interest in this object Christ in glory and Christ in glory ours as much of the Creator as is possibly visible in the nature of man wil be to be seen in Christ as much contentation as the Creature can be made partaker of by the sight of any one visible object wil be the portion of the beholders of Christ as he is Man The inherent caelestial qualities of the Body at the Resurrection are principally four viz. 1 Impassibility called Incorruption Clari Subtiles Agiles Impassibilesque omnes quadruplici pollebunt dote Beati Estius Sent. lib. 4. dist 44. Vide Scot. Richard c. in lib. 4. d. 49. 1 Cor. 15.42 43. 2 Clarity called Glory 1 Cor. 15.42 43. 3 Agility called Power 1 Cor. 15.42 43. 4 Subtilty called A Spiritual body 1 Cor. 15.42 43. Impassibilitie doth not only exclude Corruption for the bodies of the Damned cannot dye but it freeth the body from all hurtful passions Dos Impassibilitatis either of grievance or infirmity Rev. 21.4 As it was in an extraordinary manner with the bodies of the three Children in the Babylonish Furnace for a time so shall it be with the bodies of the Saints for ever the Fire hath no power upon their bodies neither can the smel of fire passe upon them neither heat nor cold can trouble them nor the Sword pierce them Darts are not counted so much as stubble they laugh at the shaking of the Speare Dos Claritates Glory is a shining brightnesse a resplendent lightsomness or a Caelestial sparkling splendor of the Body whereby it may be thought to exceed all the beauty and splendor of Gems Pearls Heavens Sun Moon and Stars yea even of the Heaven of Heavens though all were put together The third Heavens though exceeding all inferiour Creatures as we saw before are but the place of these Bodies which shall be like unto his glorious Body Philip. 3.21 The joy of the Spirit shineth in the countenance no wonder if the faces of those shine whose spirits are filled with joy by beholding the face of God the Sun radiates and shews it self thorough the Window the Fire sends forth a bright lustre thorough Chrystal Stephens Face in this life was seen as it were the face of an Angel Act. 6.15 behold how Moses his face shone upon a little speech with God in the Mount what then may be concluded from the perpetual and perfect vision of him so as Aaron and all the Children of Israel were afraid to come nigh him Exod. 34.30 but Then shall the righteous shine forth as the Sun in the Kingdome of their Father he that hath cars to hear let him hear Mat. 13.43 not that they shal not out-shine the Sun but because there is no more shining body visible to us therefore are the Bodies of the Saints in glory compared thereunto When Christ upon the Mount put on the apparition of that glory for a little time which now he wears for ever Peter and James and John were unable to bear the sight of that transfiguration and of Moses and Elias appearing with him in glory Mat.
17.2 Luk. 9.31.33 Mar. 9.6 The power of the Body containeth vigor activity strength Dos Agilitatis and aptnesse for the Soul to act by Their vigor shal always last in the flower height and excellence of it always in its most absolute and perfect efficacy that which we read of Moses Deut. 34.7 and which Joshua speaks of himself Chap. 14.11 shal be verified concerning glorified Bodies in a more excellent manner Eliah is as lively and fit for action now as at the first moment of his entring into glory Their activity and aptness to action exceeds what we can wel conceive all the Saints in Heaven are such as Pharaoh enquired after Gen. 47.6 persons of activity Much is the activeness which at times God hath been and is pleased to give to Mortal bodies Eliah the hand of God being upon him runneth and out-runneth Ahabs Charriot making haste as is likely that the rain stopt him not 1 King 18.46 Asael was as light of foot as a wild Roe 2 Sam. 2.18 They in their immortal estate shal be like the Sun in respect of its brightness why not in respect of its motion which the Learned allow to move a Million and one hundred sixty thousand miles in an hour if so swift may be the motion of Natural Bodies how swift the motion of Glorious Bodies shal be we shal know when we come to make use of it Vbivolet Spiritus ibi protinus erit corpus August Haec igitur Dos erit facultatis quod potuerunt facere se movere momento quodcunque quocunque volunt Paraeus in 1 Cor. 15 43. out of the Scripture it appears that Angels in their assumed Bodies have moved very swiftly Elias when departing out of the Disciples sight toward Heaven not by assumption that is by extrinsecal help as in fiery Chariot but by the ascension according to the inherent Principle and vertue of his glorified Body Luke 9. goeth up to the cloud easily and quickly and Christ is quickly out of their sight Act. 1.9 As is their condition so also is their strength Sampson yet in a Mortal body makes no more of Cords about his arms than of Flax burnt with fire takes the doors of the Gate of the City and the two Posts Barre and all and put them upon his shoulders and carried them up to the top of the hil Judg. 16.3 breaks the Wit hs as a thread of Towe is broken when it toucheth the fire ver 9. goeth away with the pin of the Beam and with the Web c. May we not wel conclude that the weakest in glory shal be stronger than Sampson in his great strength the Bodies subjection to the Soul is its exquisite aptness and readiness as an instrument for the Soul to operate by with all dexterity and promptness without all retarding and hinderance The distribution of the Body into Natural Dos Subtilitatis Animal and Spiritual is a distribution of the subject in respect of the Adjuncts concerning the manner of the living of the Body before and after the Resurrection and is as if you should say Here it liveth an Animal life after the manner of Sensitive Creatures maintained by Meat Drink Sleep and the like in the necessary observation whereof a great part of our little time if not neer the one half is spent and from the use whereof Adams body in innocency was not exempt but hereafter the Body shal live after the manner of Spirits having no need or use of these things Jesus said unto them You doe erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God for in the Resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage but are as the Angels of God in heaven Mat. 22.29 30. Moses though in a corruptible body liveth without bread whilst he is with God in the Mount Que. Consider 6. Whether the blessedness of the Soul shal be greater after the Resurrection than it was before Ans The blessedness of the Soul is considered either Extensively in regard of the extent thereof reaching unto the Body the glory of the Body being an addition of joy unto the Soul in which sense the Soul may be said to be more blessed after the Resurrection than before Or intensively consisting in the Vision of God Valentia To. 2. p. 1. q. 4. punct 2. which is the Essence of Blessednesse it self In this respect the blessedness of the soul is the same both before and after the Resurrection there being the same principle namely the glorified understanding with the concurrence of the light of glory The same subject viz. The blessed soul the same object viz. God and Christ Blessednesse is either essential which consists in the Beatifical Vision it self or accidental comprehending together with Essenital blessednesse those adjuncts of blessednesse which are both antecedent and consequent to the Resurrection in the latter sense the soul may be said to be more blessed after the Resurrection than before The Essential blessednesse of the soul is the same after the Resurrection with that which was before the Resurrection but the joy of the soul after the Re-union of the body and those Adjuncts of blessednesse which are consequent thereunto will be greater than it was formerly We may distinguish between the blessednesse of the person and the blessednesse of the soul the blessedness of the person which consists both of soul and body shall be greater though the Essential blessedness of the soul be the same The frequent consideration of the state of the blessed is useful many wayes Amongst others 1 To provoke us to labour to be such as may be made meet for this inheritance of the Saints that is in light 2 To endeavour to attain and retain the earnest of the Spirit whence we may alwayes be able to say We are confident and willing rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord 2 Cor. 5.8 3 To fill the soul with strong consolation against the sufferings of life and the fear of death 4 To work an answerable conversation That whether absent or present we may so walk as we may be accepted of him 5 To dispose us to a patient waiting for and longing expectation of our change which draweth on apace Here it may not be unworthy the labour to reminde the strong impression which the contemplation of immortality hath left upon the hearts of Heathen Good Authors report of some Indians so affectionately moved with the immortality of the soul separated from the body as that impatient of staying for their dissolution by a natural death they with their own hands built those piles of wood wherein their bodies were to be burned and then behold them set on fire accounting them wisest that dyed soonest The hearers of one Hegesias of Cyrene reading of his Oration touching the state of the soul after death were so taken with it that they looked at death as a thing to be desired Socrates at the point of suffering death