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A93131 The Quakers wilde questions objected against the ministers of the Gospel, and many sacred acts and offices of religion. With brief answers thereunto. Together with a discourse [brace] 1. Of the Holy Spirit of God, his impressions and workings on the souls of men. 2. Of divine revelation, mediate and immediate. 3. Of error, heresie, and schism: the nature, kindes, causes, reasons, and dangers thereof: with directions for avoiding the same. All very seasonable for these times. / By R. Sherlock, B D. at Borwick-Hal in Lancashire. Sherlock, R. (Richard), 1612-1689. 1655 (1655) Wing S3255; Thomason E858_1; ESTC R203556 215,435 300

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yet ordinarily and invisibly in the use of means he comes still and by his secret celestial influence visits enlightens and sanctifies the souls of men In every good thought in every good motion and pious desire of the soul in every devout sigh and sorrowful groan under the weight and burthen of sin in every striving and raising of the soul from under that weight in every elevation of the soul from the dust and rubbish of worldly vanities and aspiring towards heaven in every beam of holy truth and divine grace whether relating to piety or charity the holy Ghost descends from heaven Thus he daily comes unto us and thus he will ever come and be with his Church and people unto the end of the world according to that promise of our Lord Mat. 28.20 Mat. 28.20 And lo I am with you alway unto the end of the world He will be with us if we will be with him and not neglect the means he hath ordained to be made partakers of his ever blessed presence with us The means to fetch down this holy Spirit from heaven to sanctifie our souls by his grace here that he may exalt us to his glory in the heavens hereafter besides those natural and moral means for the attainment of spiritual gifts before remembred which are also dispensed from the Spirit of God the divine means or conveyances of the Spirit are either 1. Outward 2. Inward The outward means are no other but those three essential parts of divine worship 1. Holy Prayer 2. The holy Word 3. The holy Sacraments The most holy God commanding us nothing but what are the means and waies of our own happiness Quod homini proficit Deo servit Tert. de poen c. 2. viz. the means of grace and sanctification here as the way to our glorification hereafter For there is nothing that we poor frail mortal dust and ashes can perform that may any way add really add to the glory or happiness of the most high most glorious and ever blessed God And in that he lays his commands upon us and enjoyns us several waies of acknowledging our obedience to him 't is of his tender care and respect to us-ward even for our guidance and direction in the waies of our own felicity The Laws of God are no other then the rules of mans perfection even the sacred paths we must tread to attain that pitch of perfection whereunto we are created being instampt after the blessed image of our Maker So that the parts of Gods service commanded are to us the means of grace and salvation sincerely obeyed 1. Holy prayer in all the parts and species thereof is a means to fetch down the holy Spirit of God in his gifts and graces So saith our Lord positively and clearly Lnk. 11.13 Luk. 11.13 If ye being evill know how to give good gifts unto your children how much more shall your heavenly Father give his holy Spirit to them that ask him And that we might know what is here meant by the Spirit Mat. 7.11 St. Matthew records the words of our Lord thus How much more shall your heavenly Father give good things to them that ask him All good things being comprised under the name of the Spirit as the fountain from whence they flow And Joh. 14.14 Joh. 14.14 If ye shall ask any thing in my name I will do it and presently after he promiseth as the sum of all that they could ask for I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter even the Spirit of truth c. God is in himself the fountain of all perfection every good and every perfect gift every divine celestial soul-sanctifying grace is in God as the original prototype and grand examplar as the root from whence the sap of every grace as the Sun from whence the beam of every gift for illumination is derived unto us Jam. 1.17 from the holy heavens they must come for there is their proper seat and habitation Wisd 9. as the Wise man confesseth when he petitioned the God of heaven for the wisdome of the Spirit And the same means must we use to fetch down both wisdome and the rest of the graces of the Spirit even by prayer commanded Jam. 1.5 Prayer is the blessed mean that unites God and man brings heaven and earth together 'T is that golden chain saith Basil that ties the gracious ears of God to the hearts and tongues of men 'T is the hand which reaches from earth to heaven and takes forth every good thing out of the Lords treasury Mat. 7.7 Therefore 't is said Mat. 7.7 Ask and ye shall receive seek and ye shall finde knock and it shall be opened unto you so that 't is also the ring or hammer wherewithal we knock at the gates of heaven and beg a blessing from the great Lord that dwelleth there Nay it is the key of heaven saith Aug. which opens unto us those everlasting doors of glory 'T is the blessed engine wherewithal we storm the heavenly Jerusalem and as it were by force and violence make our entrance into the holy City which is full of wealth and never fading treasures Mat. 11.12 The Kingdome of heaven saith our Lord suffers violence and the violent take it by force fervent importunate prayers being the scaling ladders Gen. 28. represented by Jacobs ladder which being set upon the earth the top thereof reacheth to the heavens our several prayers upon all occasions wants and opportunities are as it were the several rounds of this celestial ladder whereupon the desires and affections of our souls ascend from earth to heaven and leaving these frail earthy tabernacles of clay make their way unto the most high God which sits in the heavens Or it may be represented by that fiery chariot of Elijah 2 King 2.11 wherein he was wrapt from earth to heaven for so by fervent prayers and devotions are the souls of holy and religious men they are thereby enwrapt and mount from the earth to have their conversation in heaven with God on high whence they again descend enricht with celestial blessings or with the Spirit of God This is also further proved by the example of the Apostles who after they had prayed the holy Ghost descended on them Act. 4.31 And when they had prayed the place was shaken where they assembled together and they were all filled with the holy Ghost and the spake the Word of God with boldnesse 2. The holy Word of God in general but the Gospel of Christ in special in the preaching or reading hearing and understanding thereof 2 Tim. 3.16 is an effectual means for the obtaining of the Spirit for all Scripture is given by inspiration they are the very dictates the breathings of the Spirit upon the souls of men and are therefore profitable for doctrine or to teach the truth for reproof to convince what is false and erroneous for correction of the
hath his secret workings and continual countermines opposing hereunto which evil spirit working also by the frail and deceivable spirit of man doth by many subtile wayes obscure corrupt poyson and belye the sacred qualifications of the Spirit of Truth nor doth the Devil that grand enemy of mans salvation in any kinde of way so much cousen and cheat the souls of men into ruine as by putting false glosses and counterfeit vizars on vices errors and distempers that so they may be mistaken for holy vertues and divine qualifications To instance in some particulars First It is a truth by the Spirit of God both foretold promised and performed That the actings and impressions of Gods Spirit upon the mindes of men are both more strong and frequent as also more general and common under the Gospel then they were under the Law That the gift of the Ministry it self is dilated being not limited to the single Tribe of Levi but all men of what quality soever have a title thereunto meaning Genera singulorum not singula generum that is men of all sorts and kindes not all of all kindes but hereupon to make void pull down and level with the undistinguisht multitude the high and solemn order and offices of the Priest-hood instituted by God himself both under the Law and under the Gospel for a people to snatch the Divine Oracles from the lips of the Priest and presume to teach their Teachers to invade the chair of Moses and offer incense with unhallowed censors for private persons to assume the publique administration of Ministerial Offices without a lawful Call and due Ordination thereunto though they may be otherwise qualified with knowledge and piety These are false glosses imposed upon the former truths by the Spirit of lies Tares sowed by the Enemy of mankinde amidst the purer wheat And that 1. To the high dishonour of God and profanation of all that is religious and sacred 2. To involve the Church of Christ and bury it in the rubbish of confusion and disorder 3. To take away those bounds and limits distinguishing Priest from people which all Nations Jewes and Gentiles all Ages of the Church both Ancient and Modern have kept firm and inviolable 4. To pull down heavy judgements upon the heads of all such sacrilegious Usurpers and Invaders of Divine Rites 2 Sam. 6 6,7 2 Chron. 16.16 c. 2. It is an impression of Gods Spirit upon the soul of man to wait and depend upon God for spiritual wisdome knowledge Prov. 3.5 c. and not to lean to our own understanding or trust too much to our own wit judgement reading learning Prov. 2.6 or the like as knowing full well That the Lord gives wisdome and from him cometh knowledge and understanding But hereupon either to despise or neglect those waies and means and helps which God in his merciful providence hath afforded us for to attain wisdome c. as the study of Tongues and Languages Arts and Sciences the reading and distinctly weighing the Discourses of the learned and to depend upon immediate Revelation and Infusion of such gifts from Heaven as if they should drop upon our barren hearts as did the Manna in the Wildernesse upon the Tents of Israel out of the clouds and by miracle this is a false gloss which the spirit of delusion puts upon the former truth thereby to inveigle us 1. To tempt the good Spirit of God 2. To be exposed and laid open to seducing spirits 3. To enshrine Lady Ignorance again as the Mother of Devotion which all men know but who are blinded with ignorance to be the Dam of superstitions errors and confusions 3. Rightly to beleeve in the Son of God as the mean of our justification here and ground of our hope of salvation hereafter this is an impression of Gods Spirit on the soul of man and in respect hereof we are said to have the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 2 Cor. 4.13 We having the same spirit of faith according as it is written I beleeved therefore have I spoken faith as it is doctrinal being a spiritual gift and reckoned amongst them 1 Cor. 12.9 And as it is practical 1 Cor. 12 9. Gal. 5.22 being a grace or fruit of the Spirit and reckoned amongst them also Gal. 5.22 But now to mingle and divide and as it were to cut asunder this true Evangelical Faith as it stands full and intire in all its integral parts both of doctrine and practice so as to be vainly puft up with a conceit of being ingraffed into Christ and thereby to be justified here and sure of heaven hereafter whether we live according to the rule of Faith and in obedience unto the Gospel of Christ or no to define and measure our Faith not by the sacred acts thereof commanded which is called the righteousnesse of Faith Rom 10.6 but by our own too too credulous fancies and apprehensions as if it were no more to be in Christ but presumptuously to pretend unto it and impudently without just ground to believe it This surely cannot be that true Evangelical Faith whereunto so many promises are annext but a false glosse which the spirit of Error hath put thereupon thereby 1. To puffe up the hearts of too too credulous men with spiritual pride and presumption and make them swell with the empty conceit and airy fancy of their own happy and eminent state and condition when there is no such matter And 2. To inveigle men to neglect the use and practice of Christian graces those fruits of the Spirit which are as it is already said the very life and soul of Christianity and consequently the way to heaven if ever we mean to arrive there 4. It is an impression of Gods Spirit on the soul of man To be zealous for the Lord of Hosts 1 King 19.14 that is to be exceedingly fervent and forward earnest and desirous by all possible waies and means to advance the religious worship and service of God but to be so factious and forward so fiery and furious as by any illegal extravagant and disorderly means to advance the truth it self much lesse to set up any private opinions in relation to Gods Service which have not been semper ubique ab omnibus Vincent the three rules of Catholick Doctrine and Worship to be generally and for the most part of the Primitive times at least of all persons at all times and in all places received and not now and then here and there by hereticks and schismaticks only introduc'd I say to be zealous for such pieces of Religion Doctrine and Worship and that per fas nefásque through just or unjust means by right or by wrong to endevour the advancement thereof this is not true zeal but a false gloss which the Devil puts thereupon even through the violence of this distempered heat 1. To divide separate and break men into sects factions and parties that they might so
four properties 1. 'T was Sudden 2. Vehement 3. From heaven 4. It filled the place where they were sitting All these are the properties of Gods Spirit whose motions and inspirations are First sudden and unexpected neither admitting of any delayes nor put-offs Ambr. For nescit tarda molimina Spiritus sancti gratia Secondly vehement for the conversion and quite turning over of the soul he blowes upon 2 Cor. 10.4 casting down of strong holds the fortifications of sin and Satan and bringing into subjection every thought that exalts it self Thirdly from heaven as being the Spirit of God who dwelleth in the heavens and to heaven-ward wings and raises the soul which he inspires Fourthly it filled the house where they were sitting ever tends to the good of the Church 1 Pet. 2.5 which is the houshold of faith This heavenly winde never blowes but for the good of Gods houshold therefore are his people called a spiritual house By the two first of these qualities 't will be a hard matter to distinguish a false spirit from the Spirit of truth For as it is ordinary and common to every winde to be both sudden and vehement so 't is common to every spirit also both true and false nay commonly false and faigned spirits are more violent and vehement and make a greater noise and stir in the world then the true Spirit doth and there is good reason for it for the false spirit wanting the native strength and genuine efficacy of the truth to support it flies therefore to force and violence earnest zeal and forwardness to bear up in the mindes and good opinions of the world For the tryal of spirits then according to this rule we must look upon the two other properties of this divine winde which are not ordinary and common and not natural to that winde which blowes in the air First it came from heaven Windes do not naturally come from heaven but out of the caves and hollowes of the earth or out of the middle region of the air neither do they blow desursum downwards as this winde did but laterally from one coast or climate to another but this winde came directly downwards and de coelo from heaven it self Secondly it filled the house where they were sitting and no house but that The winde naturally blowes upon all places alike within its circuit but this winde blew electively as it were and by discretion making choice of one place only to blow upon and no other so that in both these respects it is manifest it was a winde extraordinary and supernatural And by these two properties we may try and examine both the truth of our own and of the spirits of others If first those desires opinions and actions which relate to Religion be from above if the ground thereof be fetcht de coelo from heaven so that they tend to make us heavenly minded to wean our hearts from the world to elevate and raise up our affections to things above to form and frame our conversations towards heaven Col. 3.2 If secondly they keep us within the pale and limits of the Church if they tend to the general benefit edification profit and good of the houshold of faith and to the conversation of peace and love and unity amongst Christians we may then be confident it is the heavenly winde the divine breath of the Almighty the holy Spirit of God that inspires them But if otherwise these motions and opinions that seem religious be either first grounded upon earthly and worldly respects have their private aims and intentions either of ambition vain-glory and popular applause as in some or of worldly profit benefit and preferment as in others or of hatred malice revenge as in a third sort of men or if secondly they tend to divisions schisme separation debate variance malice hatred envie c. If either they smell rank of the world or taste of any fruits of the flesh recorded Gal. 5.19 Now the works of the flesh are manifest which are these adultery fornication c. Then this winde comes surely not from heaven there is nothing in it but what is either natural or worse suggested by the spirit of error 'T is either a revelation of flesh and bloud arising out of the caves and hollowes of an earthly minde or else it is inspired and blown from those regions of the air which are the habitation of unclean spirits 'T is not defluxus coeli a divine breath inspired from heaven but either exhalatio terrae a terrene exhalation drawn from the hollows of a corrupt heart or a blast from the spiritual powers of the air a suggestion of Satan And by this rule also every man may try himself whether he be truly sanctified by the Spirit of God or not He that shall find his soul possest with motions and desires weaned from all the pomps and vanities profits pleasures and cares of the world hungring and thirsting and breathing after heaven whose soul dwels more in heaven then on earth whose affections are set on things above and not on things below may be well assured of the Spirit of God dwelling in him For all such motions and desires are but sparks of that heavenly fire the flame whereof is mindful of its own original ever mounts the soul aloft works towards its own center and tends to the place from whence it comes To denote which ascending quality of the Spirit of Grace is one reason more why the holy Ghost is represented by fire Mat. 3.11 Because 't is the property of fire both flame and smoke to mount upward so 't is the property of every heavenly inspired soul to ascend both in contemplation and desires neither the more pure nor yet the more drossie part of the soul cleaves unto the dust and continually dwels below that is endued with power from above or with the Spirit of God And for the same reason amongst others also the holy Ghost is represented by water Joh. 7.38,39 because as 't is the property of water even against its own nature to ascend as high as is the place from whence it descends so even against the stream of natural corruption the soul is mounted to heaven by the influence of Gods spirit who cometh down from heaven And the wings which the holy Spirit hath for this ascension and flight are devout and fervent prayers divine and celestial meditations and desires CHAP. X. Of the means to obtain the true Spirit of God general 4 THE holy Spirit of God which in the shape of a dove the embleme of the Spirit of love descended upon Christ our Lord Mat. 3.16 and which afterward both visibly and publickly also came down from heaven Act. 2. and filled the Apostles of Christ extraordinarily and miraculously with his heavenly gifts and graces doth daily descend still upon the members of Christs mystical body though not in such a plentiful measure nor yet after such a visible miraculous manner
amongst you And the better to conceive what is meant by these schisms and contentions 't is exemplified vers 12. One saith I am of Paul another I am of Apollo another I am of Cephas and another will not depend upon any acknowledging neither Paul nor any mortal man to be his Tutor and instructer and he saith I am of Christ Thus the immaculate body of Christ is divided into parties and sects the partakers and followers of which several sects are therefore called Sectarists and Separatists viz. Such as cleave not to the whole body but follow some one part that is broken off and divided from the whole 2. Heresie and Schism in the mystical body of Christ do differ as an inward sicknesse and outward wound in the natural body of man but yet so that there are several internal aswel as external parts and branches of Schism for by how many waies and means communion is maintain'd amongst Christians by so many waies it may be broken and dissolv'd And every breach of communion is a Schism 3. Now the Communion to be maintained amongst Christians is either Internal External The internal communion hath several branches viz. 1. To beleeve and assent to all those saving truths revealed to us by Christ and his Apostles and in all ages of the Church maintained 1 Cor. 13.7 2. To be with all obedience prepared in heart to assent to the Dictates of the Church whether universal or particular that are agreeable to such revealed Truths Mat. 18.17 3. To judge charitably each of other accounting all such for our Christian brethren who profess this same Christian faith and are of this Christian minde and spirit Col. 2.16 4. To sympathize in each others affections which includes several particulars as 1. To sorrow for the sins and errors of others 2. To condole in the sufferings of others or to weep with them that weep Rom. 12.15 As also to congratulate the prosperities of others or to rejoyce with them that rejoyce which enjoynes also 3. To rejoyce as do the Angels of heaven at the conversion of a sinner or any misguided soul from the errors of his waies Luk. 15.7 5. To pray for the growth and perseverance of all holy and orthodox persons in faith and obedience and for the conversion of all profane schismatical and heretical persons and for the reunion of all such to the Church as are divided from it 1 Sam. 12.23 Psal 122.6 1 Tim. 2.1 6. To hold communion in our desires and affections with all such as are divided from us in perswasion and judgement and by all means to endevour an external communion with them according to our several powers and in our several places and offices Gal. 6.1 The external communion consists also of several branches As 1. In the oral confession of the same Creeds or Symbols of Christian Faith Rom. 10.9,10 2 Tim. 1.13 2. In the participation of the same Sacraments 1 Cor. 10.16 3. In the admission of and submission unto the same Apostolical discipline and government Heb. 13.17 4. In the use of the same Liturgies or publique forms of external divine worship 1 Cor. 1.10 Rom. 15.6 4. Hence by the rule of contraries 't wil appear plainly who is a Schismatique or in what respects the guilt of Schism is contracted 1. He is guilty of Schism who withdrawes his assent from the doctrine of Christ and his Apostles either as 't is by the Church universal professed or else as 't is exprest by the doctrine and establisht by the Lawes of that particular Church whereof he is a member whilest this particular Church opposes not the doctrine of the Church Catholique for when any particular person shall in any point of faith oppose his private opinion against the publique judgement of the Church this is not only Schism in him but such a branch of Schism also as coincident with Heresie whereof before 2. He who shall limit the Church of Christ to his own particular sect or fraternity Recepimus pro missiones de universalitate ecclesiae tote mundo diffusae si ergo angelus de coelo tibi has premissiones tenenti diceret Dimitte Christianitatem totius orbis tene partem Donati anathema esse deberet quia tea tote pracicidere in partem contrudere conaretur alienare à promissis Dei Aug. Epist 165. saying we are the Church we are the elect and people of God and all who joyn not in communion with us are cast-awaies and out of the State of salvation he is guilty of Schism in that he cuts off the main body of Christian people or rather cuts off himself and his own fraternity from the main body of Christs holy Catholick Church So the Donatists of old limited the Church of Christ to their own sect and the confines thereof to that part of Africk where they inhabited contrary to the promises of God who hath given unto Christ the heathen for his inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for his possession Psal 2.8 Gen. 22. In thee shall all the nations of the earth be blessed whereupon the Father infers since we have the promises of God concerning the universality of the Church to be diffused and spread over the face of the earth if therefore an Angel from heaven should say unto thee Forgo thy relation to the Catholick Church and be of this or that particular Church or sect which saith we and we only are the Church and people of God he ought to be accursed because he hath endevoured to cut thee off from the whole and to limit thee to a part and thereby to alienate thee from the promises of God in Christ Jesus A third branch of Schi●m necessarily depends upon and flowes from the second And this is rashly to judge and uncharitably to condemn the Churches or societies of our Christian brethren so the Montanists perswaded their followers to speak evil of the universal Church where ever spread over the face of the earth Euseb eccl hist l. 5. c. 16. and not only to deny thereunto all reverence and esteem but also in no wise to joyn with them of this kinde of Schism are all such guilty who refuse to joyn with their Christian brethren in the publique service of God under pretence of separating from the wicked of the world who with the proud Pharisee in the Gospel presumptuously justifie themselves and their own Church and faction and unjustly condemn all others Verè existimemus posse aliquid esse occultum in alio quo vobis superior sit etiam si bonum nostrum quo illo videmur superiores esse non sit occulium Aug. de verbis Apo. ser 21. Luk. 18.9 who are so pure in their own eyes as to say to others Stand by thy self come not neer to me I am holier then thou Isa 65.5 little esteeming the exhortation of the Apostle Phil. 2.3 Let nothing be done through strife or vain glory but in lowliness of minde
but the counsel of his own will for men are not wise vertuous charitable c. by necessity of Fate or by the influence of stars nor yet for any their merits or deserts but of Gods good pleasure by the influence of his holy Spirit who divideth to every man severally as he wil 1 Cor. 12.11 As he will under this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4 particulars are implied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To whom what when and where he will in all these respects the influences of Gods Spirit are free The winde bloweth where it listeth so is every one that is born of the Sporit Joh. 3.8 But yet as the winde though it blow upon all places alike within its circuit yet are not all places alike aired and filled with the winde because all places are not alike capable of it so the holy Spirit distributes to every one his measure of gifts but yet not to all alike but to some more plentifully to others with a smaller scantling and this according as he findes the hearts of men more or less soft and plyable capable and enfitted to receive his impressions Ambr. In quo quis animum intendit in eo accipit donum according to the intention and pliableness of the minde to this or that study or imployment whether divine or moral accordingly so doth the holy Ghost communicate his gifts and blessings thereupon All these several workings of the Spirit though they be so numerous as that they cannot be easily reckoned up there being more points of this heavenly winde then there is in the Compass which is set and ordered by the winde which bloweth in the air yet unto two general heads they are all reducible 1. Graces 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Gifts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There are two principal faculties of the reasonable soul the Vnderstanding and the Will Both which are naturally maimed by the fall of Adam ignorance and error invading the understanding disobedience and rebellion the will To rectifie this twofold disorder by nature the supernatural assistance of the holy Ghost is required who by his celestial Gifts illuminates and clears the understanding and by his holy Graces subdues the rebellion of the will and purifies the uncleanness of the affections The one more immediately relates to the service of God the other to the benefit of man For 1. By the Graces of Gods Spirit we are sanctified and enabled rightly to serve God And 2. By his Gifts we are qualified and enabled to edifie one another By the first we are made good Christians by the second we are made good and profitable Ministers Both of these are called Habits either because they make us habile and fit to discern and taste things divine and heavenly or 2. Because as Habits clothe and adorn the body so these divine Gifts and Graces do polish adorn and enrich the soul And these two kindes of the holy Spirits qualifications are represented unto us by those two types or figures of the Spirits descension upon the Apostles of Christ the one of the winde Act. 2.2 and the other of the fire vers 3. By the winde were represented those divine and celestial graces wherewithal the Apostles were endued and whereby the souls of men are air'd cleans'd and purified and so sanctified to the sacred service of God and by the fire was represented the gifts they were enriched withall for the enlightning of the mindes and enflaming the affections of others CHAP. III. Of the Graces of the holy Spirit THE first kinde of the holy Spirits impressions are his graces represented by the winde Joh. 3.8 The winde bloweth where it listeth and thou knowest not whence it comes nor whither it goeth so is every one that is born of the spirit As the winde being a pure sine thin subtil nature is invisible we perceive it not neither can we conceive whence it comes or whither it goes all the perception we have of the winde is by its effects and operations when it moves the air tosses the clouds shakes the trees raises the dust of the earth c. nay so active and subtil a thing is the winde that if it act not we say it is not when nothing is moved or stirred by the winde we say there is no winde so is every one that is born of the Spirit that is every one whose soul is animated and actuated by the graces of Gods Spirit For 1. the workings of the Spirit of grace within us are quick and insensible 't is unconceivable how and in what manner he works upon our hearts Only 2. we know him by his effects and workings as when he moves and enclines the soul to what is holy just and good or when he shakes the heart into contrition compunction and godly sorrow for sin or when he raiseth the minde out of the dust and rubbish of earthly vanities and mounts it upon the wings of heavenly desires and meditations c. And 3. as when we see no stirring no moving of the air but all is calm and still we say there is no winde so when there is no good motions or desires within us no inclinations to piety or charity no godly contrition for sin no rising of the minde towards heaven nor breathing after things divine and heavenly we may well say that soul is becalmed the Spirit of God is not there neither hath the heavenly winde of the Almighty breathed therein These graces of Gods Spirit represented by the winde are the very essentials the very life and being the very spirit and soul of true Christianity and are as necessary to the being of a good Christian in the life of grace as is the natural winde or breath of his Nosthrils to his being and living the life of nature therefore we are termed the Body of Christ Rom. 12.5 the soul that animates us being the grace of his Spirit and every man therefore that hath the name of Christ called upon him is but nominis Christiani extrinsecus superficies an empty outside superficial christian that is not in some measure endued with his graces To all persons it necessarily belongs to be partakers of them whether Pastor or people Lay or Clergy gifted or ungifted men whether we have the gifts of the Spirit or no we must not be destitute of his graces but upon all hearts this heavenly winde must blow to purifie and cleanse to air and dry up the superfluous naughtinesse of our natures that so our souls and bodies may be the temples of the holy Ghost 2 Cor. 6.16 even by the grace of Gods Spirit devoted and consecrated to the sacred service of his heavenly Majesty A Catalogue of these spiritual graces we have recorded Gal. 5.22 for they are the same which are there termed the fruits of the Spirit The fruit of the Spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith
immediate Inspiration then the best of men can hope for since And yet though we study to be qualified for the work of the Ministry our qualifications are still the gifts of the Spirit all our wisdome and knowledge is from above even as of Daniel and the three children it is recorded that God gave them knowledge and understanding in all learning and wisdome Dan. 1.17 Dan. 1.17.4 And yet it is said before vers the 4. that they were brought up and instructed in knowledge and that by and among the Heathen too and were taught the learning and tongue of the Caldaeans So our humane learning tongues and languages so much declaimed against by the ignorant are the Handmaids to spiritual and Divine wisdome and knowledge and both the one and the other though acquired by instruction and study in the Schools of the Prophets are yet of Gods mercifull donation they are still the gifts of the Spirit And that first because from the Spirit of God it is that we have mindes capable and mindes inclinable to use the means for the attainment of such gifts for even our natural endowments and moral qualifications are gifts of the Spirit perspicacity quickness of wit ripeness of judgement together with a studious diligent and industrious minde in the search and dexterity in the discovery of the several waies of learning and knowledge even all of them are the gifts of God for every good and perfect gift whether natural moral or divine Jam. 1.17 Joh. 3.27 cometh down from above Jam. 1.17 for a man can receive nothing except it be given from above Joh. 3.27 The very speaking of an ordinary revealed Truth is called a speaking by the Spirit for no man can say that Jesus is the Christ but by the Spirit of God because the revelation of this as of every truth is from the Spirit originally and from him also is both the power and the act of this confession Secondly our qualifications though acquired by study are yet the gifts of the Spirit because it is by Gods blessing and the influence of his good Spirit upon our studies and endevours that we do acquire these qualifications and it is generally and for the most part that God distributes his gifts and blessings according to mens inclinations aptness and endevours for the reception of his gifts Habitus infusi infunduntur per modum acquisitorum All infused or inspired gifts are infused after the manner of gifts acquired i.e. as we are more or lesse industrious to acquire the gifts of the Spirit accordingly so they are more or lesse given and communicated to us by the Spirit which is signified unto us by the parable of the hidden Treasure Mat. 13.4 The Kingdome of heaven is like unto a treasure hid in a field the which when a man hath found he hideth and for joy thereof goeth and selleth all that he hath and buyeth that field The treasure found without search denoteth Gods free and gratuitous revelation of himself unto us and the selling of all to buy that field signifies a mans utmost endevours and labours to be made partaker of these divine Revelations Thirdly because the qualifications acquired by study are by the Spirit of God himself directed to the ends of the Spirit which are to profit withall and then is Gods blessing the greater and the influence of his Spirit upon our studies the more effectual and powerful when we have in them no other aim or intention but to be thereby enfitted and enabled to become usefull instruments of Gods service and his peoples edification And both in that we do direct our studies to this end and also imploy our gifts acquired by study to this end also it is from the Spirit of God who works in us to will and to do of his own God pleasure Phil. 2.15 Phil. 2.15 And lastly all this is acknowledged that our gifts in all these respects are from the Spirit of God though studied for In that together with those means that are outward and moral we use the Divine means also viz. prayer and devotion commanded Jam. 1.15 If any man lacks wisdome let him ask it of God who giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not and it shall be given him Jam. 1.5 That the Ministers of the Gospell notwithstanding their gifts are from the Spirit are yet bound to use all means both Moral and Divine for the acquiring thereof is manifest even from Gods own example in the use of their Ministry In that God himself who is not tyed to means neither hath need of any is yet pleased to use the means and Ministry of some men for the instruction and conversion of others There is no question but he who at the first created man after his own Image could without the Ministry of man have again repaired the decayes of his blessed Image in man But yet in all ages it hath seemed good to his infinite wisdome to use the mediation and Ministry of men herein And this he doth out of his tender respect to mens infirmities considering the vast distance betwixt God and man Exod. 20.19 Deut. 5.27 18.16 Heb. 12.19 which moved the Israelites to Petition for a Minister betwixt God and them Exod. 20.19 Talk thou with us and we will hear but let not God talk with us lest we die As therefore no Minister of God may think that God useth his Ministry because he needs it so neither may the people think there is no need of Ministers because God useth them and he uses them as subordinate fellow-labourers in the whole course of mans salvation Gal. 4.19 2 Cor. 3.2 Mat. 16.19 1 Tim. 4.16 the Ministers are said to beget men unto Christ to nourish them in Christ to binde and loose their souls to open and shut heaven and in a word to save because all these things Christ doth by them they are causa conjuncta 2 Cor. 3.2,3 co-operating with and under Christ so Paul compares his Corinthians to a written Epistle the Authors whereof were himself and the Spirit the external writing was his the internal seal upon their hearts was the Spirits These two then may not be severed Neither 1. may we look for Inspirations from heaven without the Ministry of man upon earth Nor yet 2. may we imagine that the Ministry of man upon earth can be effectual without inspiration from Heaven CHAP. VII Of those operations and impressions that are opposite to the Spirit of Truth ANd because it is not enough for us to know the truth but also by that right and straight line to observe and discover what is repugnant and contrary thereunto Let us remember what by sad and lamentable experience we daily see and hear that as there is a holy and a good Spirit of God by his gifts and graces working on the mindes of men so there is also an evill and a bad spirit even the spirit of error and uncleanness the Devil who
not so sublime and piercing as by its own innate force and vertue to be raised up and enrapt with celestial knowledge Wisd 9 15. For the corruptible body presseth down the soul and the earthly tabernacle weigheth down the minde that museth upon many things and hardly do we ghesse aright at things that are upon earth and with labour do we finde the things that are before us but the things that are in heaven who hath searched out and thy counsel who hath known except thou give wisdome and send thy holy Spirit from above For so the waies of them that lived upon earth were reformed and men were taught the things that are pleasing unto thee and were saved through wisdome 3. The first and fundamental act of faith then which is to believe this or that Article of holy Religion to be a divine truth and the subject matter of our obedience depends upon Divine Revelation and command from God He hath shewed thee O man what is good Micah 6.8 What thing so ever I command thee observe to do it Holy Religion is not of an earthly but of a heavenly descent It is a beam displayed from that light of truth which is eternal and immutable her dwelling is in the holy heavens Wisd 9 10. where she waits upon the throne of glory And to earth she descends not by any natural investigation but by supernatural revelation Mirand de fid o●d cred Omnis religio supernis revelationibus nititur aut niti praesumitur All religion depends upon revelation from above Flesh and bloud hath not revealed it but my Father which is in heaven Mat. 16.17 4. That there is a general knowledge of God and some notions of that religious worship we owe unto him imprinted in the hearts of all men by nature and is legible in the book of the creatures the Apostle affirms Rom. 1.20 For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead But this sight of God being not clear enough to bring us to the beatifical vision and fruition of God which is that perfection and felicity whereunto by being enstampt after the image of God he hath created c. therefore it hath pleased him more clearly to reveal himself and the waies of his religious worship to his Church and people in all ages And this either 1. extrardinarily and immediately or 2. ordinarily and in the use of means 5. The first revelation of divine truth was immediate i. e. without the mediation or ministry of man intervening But yet so as that 1. All those holy persons to whom God immediately revealed himself by certain infallible signs did themselves know and make known to others that the revelations they recelyed were no delusions but from God himself the fountain of truth proceeding God never speaks so extraordinarily but by the same act he both makes known the things spoken and himself to be the speaker 2. That all immediate revelation was generally confirmed by miracle therefore the Jews required signs of Christ as the means to confirm every new and immediate revelation Joh. 2.18 6.30 1 Cor. 1.22 3. That not all nay nor all holy persons but only some few choice select vessels had the honour of this immediate revelation the main body of the people still received the knowledge of God by mediation i. e. from their hands in whom the office of Priesthood was in all ages enstated For the Priests lips should keep knowledge and they i. e. the people should seek the Law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of hosts Mal. 2.7 6. The truth whereof as also what we are to beleeve concerning divine revelation will appear if we do impartially consider and weigh 1. To what persons and after what manner God revealed himself from Adam unto Christ 2. That by Christ and his Apostles the whole minde of God is so fully revealed that we must not now look for the revelation of any new truths 3. That the right understanding of what is already revealed depends not upon Gods immediate inspiration or revelation from heaven but is to be acquired by Gods blessing in the use of means And that in order hereunto the knowledge of tongues and sciences is both useful and necessary 4. That to depend upon immediate revelation is not only dangerous but destructive to the truth already revealed 5. That all those texts of holy Scripture commonly alledg'd for the proof of immediate revelation are misunderstood and wrested OF DIVINE REVELATION Mediate and Immediate CHAP. I. Of divine Revelation from Adam unto Christ 1. MAn being created after the Image of God was undoubtedly at the first endued with such a perfect knowledge of divine truth as was necessary to the attainment of that felicity whereunto God created him viz. the beatifical vision and fruition of his Creator for ever For as Philosophers do affirm If it were possible that the invisible and all spiritual God could be represented under any visible or compounded shape and being His body then must needs be composed of Light and his soul of Truth So essential to the very being of God is knowledge and truth and so consequently to the being of man after the image of God 2. But this light of divine knowledge was by mans disobedience too soon eclipst and his soul involv'd in the darknesse of sinfulness ignorance and error our first parents out of a sawcy ambitious affectation to know what they ought not engulft themselves and all their posterity into a natural blindness and ignorance of what they ought to know so that ever since hoc tantum scimus quòd nihil scimus the most knowing man knowes best his own ignorance and want of knowledge For if any man think he knows any thing he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know 1 Cor. 8.2 3. But since without the knowledge of God and of his most holy will that perfection of our being whereunto God hath created us cannot be attained Joh. 17.3 therefore it pleased God to restore our first faln parents in some measure to the knowledge of himself and of his will in the waies of his worship and this he did either immediately by himself or by the mediation of intervening Angels by the voice from heaven convey'd upon the wings of the winde for so we read Gen. 3.8 And they heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool or in the winde of the day Junins in loc winde conveying his voice into their ears and thereby his into their hearts 4. By vertue of this divine Revelation or some others not recorded in holy Writ Adam received from God both the knowledge of that religious service and obedience which God then required from man and therewithall the honour of the Priesthood also being as the first man so the first Priest in the world 5.
Not that any Angel presumed to be called by the name of the Lord or to be worshipped as God but to adde the greater weight and authority to the message he brought from the Lord the messenger was called by the name of the Lord that sent him 2. By Dreams as Numb 12.6 Is there a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my self known unto him in a vision and will speak unto him in a dream and Job 33.24 c. For God speaketh in a dream in the vision of the night then he openeth the ears of men and sealeth their instruction Quia anima clausis sonsibus exteriortbus ad recipiendam revelationem magis est apta quia tunc non est per occupationem sensuum exteriorum impedita Lyr. in Mat. 1. And the reason hereof is because when the outward senses are shut the inward soul is more apt to receive the impression of divine revelation being no way then hindred by the working of the exterior senses upon outward sensible objects Thus the Lord revealed himself to Jacob Gen. 28.12 To Daniel Chap. 7.1 To Joseph Mat. 2.13,19 3. By external representations and appearances when awake as Jer. 1.11,12,13 Ezek. 1.4 c. and this was accompanied sometime with the extasie and entrancing of the person who received such visions as Dan. 10.8,9 St. Paul was in an extasie when he was caught up into the third heaven so that he knew not for that time whether his soul was cloathed with humane flesh or separated from it 2 Cor. 12.2 4. By internal inspiration of the holy Ghost without any such extasie or abolition of sense as Job David and many others were inspired and yet we read not that they were extasied or entranced as 2 Pet. 1.21 Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost There is an ordinary moving by the holy Ghost for every good motion every spark of celestial fire whether for illumination or sanctification is from him And there is an extraordinary motion of the Spirit in the Prophets of the Old and Apostles of the New Testament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they were acted or carried by the holy Ghost and spake as they were thus incited by God And those under the New Testament were also honoured with this extraordinary manner of divine revelation upon whom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the holy Ghost fell Act. 10.44 and they spake with tongues and of whom 't is said by imposition of the Apostles hands they received the holy Ghost Act. 8.17 5. By Vrim and Thummim the one signifying light and the other perfection they were two ornaments in the High-priests breast-plate but how and after what manner they gave their answer is diversly delivered The learned Jewes say that the names of Abraham Isaac and Jacob and the twelve Patriarchs with this addition All these are the Tribes of Israel In which names and words all the letters of the Alphabet are contained And by the prominency and shining of those letters the answers were received and communicated to the people 6. By a voice from heaven called by the Hebrews Bath-col the daughter of a voice or the production of thunder and this was usually conveighed into the ears of the persons that heard it upon the wings of the winde as before is remembred to Adam Gen. 3.8 So also to Elias 1 King 19.11,12 To Christ Mat. 3.17 And his Apostles received the holy Ghost in a mighty rushing winde Act. 2. These were the divers waies of more immediate revelation of old which were not ordinary and common but at sundry times and upon special and extraordinary occasions either upon some great work of Judgement or mercy from God to his people or of repentance and new obedience from the people unto God All which waies of divine revelation are long since ceased in the Church of Christ as being furnished with sufficient means of instruction in righteousness and saving knowledge without any such manners of extraordinary revelation Ecc. polit l. 1. sect 14. for as the judicious Hocker observes Since God himself hath therefore revealed his will because men could not otherwise have known so much as is necessary his surceasing to speak unto the world since the publishing of the Gospel of Jesus Christ and the delivery of the same in writing is to us a manifest token that the way of salvation is now sufficiently opened and that we need no other means for our full instruction then God hath already furnished us withal There are 3. Reasons amongst others why God was pleased in such divers manners to reveal himself of old but in these last daies to surcease the use of any such revelations 1. Because the people of God had either 1. No Scripture at all as from Adam to Moses Or 2. The written Law only as from Moses to Samuel Or 3. The Lawes and the Prophets only as from Samuel to Christ but we have both Law and Gospel Prophets and Apostles the revelations of God both new and old sully and sufficiently delivering the will of God unto us 2. Gods people of old looked unto Christ for to come and waited for that light which was yet to be revealed but we believe in Christ already come and are made partakers of that true light which displayed from Christ the Sun of righteousness does fully discover unto us the waies of Gods service and of our own salvation so that it is as needless for us now to depend upon new revelations or set up new lights as to hold candles to the sun when it shines in its fulness of splendour 3. The Jewes being curious of knowing things to come and withall prone to Idolatry that therefore they might not have recourse to soothsayers and sorcerers nor run a whoring after Idols God frequently sent them Prophets extraordinary and then they had most such Prophets sent when they were most Idolatrous But now all idol-temples are broken down and their Oracles long since ceased so that there is no such danger among Christians of other Idolatry or Image-worship as that Idolatry which is too usual and common to worship the imaginations of their own hearts whereunto those of all others are most prone who most depend upon new revelations CHAP. III. Of an extasie natural and supernatural and the difference between Divine Extasies of old and Diabolical Entrancings and Inspirations 1. AS God is the fountain of Truth which is derived unto us by revelation from him so the Devil is the father of Falshood and lies which deduce their original from his secret and subtil inspirations And herein the Devil is Gods Ape cunningly following the same waies of seduction and deceit observed by God for the conveyance of his saving Truth So that where God has his Church the Devil hath his Chappel and where God has his true Prophets the Devil hath his false Prophets also And the several waies of Divine Revelation observed by the one are imitated by the other viz. by
Dreams and Visions Extasies and Entrancings I will go forth and I will be a lying spirit in the mouthes of his Prophets 1 King 22.22 Thus the heavenly Doctrine and miracles of Christ are confronted by the devillish doctrines and lying wonders of Antichrist 2 Thess 2.9 And a departure from the true saith there ever was and ever will be in the Church whilest militant here upon earth even by giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of Devils 2 Tim. 4.1 2. Nor does this evil spirit work his deceits and inspire his damnable doctrines but by Gods permission 1. King 22.22 and therefore the evil spirit is said to be from the Lord. Because 1. He is licenc'd by the Lord. And because 2. His actings upon and by his seduced instruments are like the actings of the Spirit of the Lord upon his servants so we read 1 Sam. 18.10 An evill spirit from the Lord came upon Saul and he prophesied i. e. was entranced and demean'd himself as did the Prophets of the Lord when extraordinarily mov'd with the Spirit of Truth 3. Because therefore some persons amongst us that pretend to immediate Revelation have their trances and pretended extasies also in order hereunto 't will be pertinent here to add some notes of difference betwixt the extraordinary actings of the good Spirit and those agitations and turbulent motions of the evill spirit that the one may be the better distinguisht from the other But first 't will be necessary to understand what an Extasie is and the kindes thereof 4. And rightly to understand the nature of an Extasie we must remember that man is of a middle nature betwixt Angels and Beasts and this in respect of the two parts or regions of his soul the superior and inferior The first is cal'd the reasonable and the second the sensitive soul The first man hath in common with the Angels of heaven and the second with the Beasts of the earth now these two being combined into one soul there followes hereupon such a combination betwixt the faculties of each that the working of the one without the other is preternatural and cal'd an Extasie 4. So that from hence doth necessarily flow two general kindes of Extasies the one of the Reasonable soul when that either works or is wrought upon without the instrumental mediation of the senses being for the time enwrapt and separate from the use thereof And the other of the Sensitive soul when that either acts or is wrought upon by sensible objects without the guidance or direction of reason The first Extasie is above us as we are men for it renders us like to the Angels of heaven which act not by any organs of sense The second Extasie is below us as we are reasonable men for it renders us like unto the beasts that perish And the greater that either of these Extasies be the harder it is for the soul to return to her self or produce contrary operations to the Extasie wherein she is Hence some holy and Angelical souls have been so enwrapt with divine and heavenly contemplations that their outward senses have been for the time useless unto them whilest they have not minded any earthly thing And on the other side some sensual and carnal persons which is the far greater number are so taken up and pleas'd with their sensual and worldly lusts as if they had not an immortal soul to be cared for nor were endued with reason to be the guide of their actions 5. But withal we must know that all the former kindes or all the Extasies of the Reasonable soul are not holy heavenly and Angelical but some are natural and some supernatural 1. By natural Extasies I mean such as proceed from natural causes As 1. The serious intention of the minde which in some deep study or contemplation whether the object be good or evil true or false may be abstracted for the time from its operation by the external senses upon outward sensible objects which is no other but an ordinary natural Extasie 2. The strange Relations of Angels and Devils visions and revelations together with the indoctrinations strange demeanor gastly looks and other mystical waies of persons desirous to deceive may produce in others not only belief in them but a secret transportation besides themselves and strong fancies of having the like visions revelations c. 3. There are many bodily distempers as Feavers Epilepsies Melancholy Hypochondriacal and Religious the which as they are more or lesse violent and intense accordingly do make greater or lesse impressions in the brain and fancy and so produce either more ordinary or extraordinary conceited visions and fancied Revelations Too many of such Revelations as these have in all ages since divine Revelations are compleated been made use of by the subtilty of the Devil and cunning craftiness of men whereby they lie in wait to deceive that they may be esteemed by the vulgar for inspired persons and obtrude their distempered imaginations upon the credulous for holy and divine inspirations from above The several kindes whereof have been observed by Dr. Casaubon in his late Treatise of Enthusiasm whither I refer the Reader for further satisfaction herein 2. Supernatural Extasies are those only that are pertinent to our present discourse meaning also by supernatural not those holy divine and ravishing contemplations wherewithall all truly and fervently pious and heavenly minded men are ordinarily extasied and transported which are also undoubtedly the influences of a supernatural power but the extraordinary and supernatural actings either of the holy and good Spirit of God of old or of the false and evill spirit in all ages For both the Divine and Diabolical spirit have not only their ordinary but also their extraordinary workings and entrancings of the mindes of men which distinguishes the persons so wrought upon either into true or false Prophets 6. And the differences betwixt the one and the other will appear as in many other so in these ensuing Particulars 1. The Extasies of the Lords Prophets though their senses were bound up that the intellectual soul might more immediately receive the impression of those celestial truths which were at such times revealed yet their gestures and demeanor in such extasies were notwithstanding grave sober and modest But the entrancings of false Prophets are accompanied with wilde exotique and uncivil gestures being by the evil spirit whose delight it is to torment and vex whom he inspires and possesseth haled and tumbled tanquam furiis perciti as if they were prickt provok'd and spurr'd up by Furies swelling foming frothing at the mouth throwing themselves upon the ground rending their flesh tearing their hair wallowing sometimes like drunkards in their vomit and raving like men distracted Vid. Chrys in 1 Cor. 12. Hom. 29. as Chrysostome observes of the Pythonesse of Apollo and is observable also of many Daemoniacks in the Gospel as Luk. 9.39 A spirit taketh him and he suddenly cryeth out and it teareth him that
their Teachers St. Paul was brought up at the feet of Gamaliel Act. 22.3 Mary sate at Jesus feet and heard his werd Luk. 10.39 The Graduates or companions sate upon benches somewhat higher And the Rabbies in elevated reserved chaires which are those chief seats in the Synagogues the Scribes and Pharisees so much affected Mat. 23.6 The chief Prophets or Heads of these Colledges were not only termed Rabbies or Masters but also Fathers and the Scholars or Students the Sons and ohildren of the Prophets whereunto that saying of our Lord alludes Wisdome is justified of her children Mat. 11.19 Elisha cryed to Elijah My Father My Father 2 King 2.12 The Targum upon the place reads Rabbi Rabbi my Master my Master or my teaching Father which by the wise man are styl'd the Masters of the Assemblies Eccl. 12.11 CHAP. VI. Of being called Master 1. GReat was the pride and ambition of the Teachers of Israel in the daies of our Saviour both in affecting of the chief Seats or Doctors Chair in their Synagogues and Schools and also the title of Rabbi Master or Father which was the cause of those sharp reproofs Mat. 23.6 c. They love the uppermost rooms at Feasts and the chief seats in the Synagogues and greetings in the markets and to be called of men Rabbi Rabbi whereupon he infers these prohibitions vers 8 c. But be not ye called Rabbi for one is your Master even Christ and call no man Father upon earth for one is your Father which is in heaven and be not ye called Masters for one is your Master even Christ 2. The true meaning of which prohibitions is worthy examination because some weak and unlearned persons falsly conclude from hence that 't is unlawful to be called Master or to mount the pulpit to preach which they call the uppermost room in the Synagogue And first for the proof of the negative That 't is not unlawful nor a transgression of Christs command in this place to be called Master doth appear 1. Because then 't were unlawfull also to call any man Father for both titles are here prohibited upon the same ground 2. These titles are used by the holy Ghost in other places of Scripture both bodily Fathers Eph. 6 2.4 and ghostly Fathers also or the fathers of our souls 1 Cor. 4.15 2 Cor 12.14 Both civil Masters Eph. 6.5 and Ecclesiastical Masters Eccl. 12.11 The Disciples of John styled him Rabbi or Master Joh. 3.16 and so they styl'd Christ Joh. 1.38 And 3. 'T is not a fault either to affect the wisdome and learning of a Rabbi or Master in Israel Nor 2. is it a fault being endued with wisdome and abilities of knowledge to be apt and desirous to teach others Neither 3. is it lawfull for this end to mount the pulpit or highest place in the Church for the more convenience of being heard Nor 4. is it a fault to assume the title of Master or Doctor for the gaining of the greater credit and authority to the doctrine delivered If we go no further then this both the uppermost seat in the Synagogue or the Pulpit Si desid●retur nomen authoritas magisterii ad hoc quòd scientiâ jam habitâ aliquis melius possit uti non est malum sed bonum qua homes Doctor debet quaerere illa quae saciunt ad efficaciam doctrinae su●… Gloss ord in loc and the title of Master also are not only lawful but in these respects desirable Because 1. Every good and profitable Teacher ought to desire and seek those things which help to make his doctrine effectuall and taking 2. Magistri ex consortio veri magistri tanquam nun●ii ejus pre reverentia ejus à quꝰ mittuntur honorantur Lyr. in loc Every Minister of Christ is properly called Master ex consortio veri magistri c. as the under-master or usher unto Christ and as he is Christs messenger and accordingly to be reverenc'd and respected out of that reverence and respect we owe to that great Master and Doctor of his Church Desiderare seiontiam vel actum docendi non est malum sed desiderare nomen hoc est malum peccatum superbiae Ibid. whose minister and messenger he is But then in the second place as to the affirmative these commands of Christ are transgressed three waies 1. When out of pride and ambition the place and title of Master or Teacher is affected They love saith the text to be called of men Rabbi where not the title but the love or ambitious affectation of it is reprov'd to affect the name more then the thing the place more then the charge the title more then the duty of a Master or Teacher is one way whereby all these divine prohibitions are transgressed 2. To give up our faith and obedience to the sole will and command of any Rabbi or humane Doctor whatsoever any further then the word and doctrine of God the Father doth warrant and direct us is a breach of this particular prohibition Call no man Father upon earth for one is your Father which is in heaven 3. Now that the Messias was exhibited to look upon any other save Christ alone as the great Prophet of the Lord and Doctor of his Church is a transgression of both these particular commands Be not ye called Rabbi for one is your Master even Christ Neither be ye called Master for one is your Master even Christ All Masters of Scholars were now become learners of Christ And the Apostles themselves to whom these commands were directed though under Christ they were the greatest Masters or Teachers of all the world neverthelesse were the Disciples or Scholars of Christ and in this respect not to be called Masters i. e. not chiefly primarily and principally but secondarily and instrumentally only CHAP. VII That all Revelation is compleated in Christ and his Apostles 1. WHen amongst the Jewes their latter Prophets Haggai Zachary and Malachy were dead The holy Ghost went up say the Hebrew Doctors and departed from Israel i. e. All extraordinary waies of divine Revelation had an end save only the voice from heaven And this was a prologue or praesignification of the coming of the true voice from heaven or rather of the eternal Word himself in whom all immediate Revelations and voices from heaven were to cease as having in him their perfection and accomplishment 2. All the Law and the Prophets prophesied untill John Mat. 11.13 i. e. The Law and the Prophets spake of Christ to come The Law in types and figures the Prophets in predictions and promises And this was all the light the Church enjoyed until John came and he more clearly pointed out the Messias already come in the flesh saying This is he Joh. 1.15 and behold the Lamb of God vers 29. The types and figurative services of the Law were as so many dumb shews and the predictions of the Prophets as so many inarticulate
sounds of the word Christ But John was vox verbi the very voice of the Word that 's his style Mat. 3.3 The voice of one crying in the wilderness The Law and the Prophets were as dim glimmering tapers but John was a burning and a shining light Joh. 5.35 And this because he was nearest unto Christ the Sun of righteousness and fountain of all divine illuminations from whom all the Prophets derive their light as the Moon and the Stars do from the body of the Sun which is the fountain of light material 3. And as the light of the Moon and of the Stars Moyses Elias significant legis prophetarum oracula in Domino completa Gloss ord gives way to the light of the Sun when it arises so the light of the Law and of the Prophets gave way unto Christ when he who is the Light of the world appeared we read therefore that in the transfiguration of Christ upon the mount Moses and Elias appeared to him Mat. 17.3 Moses for the Law and Elias for the Prophets acknowledging their Oracles to be compleated in Christ which was ratified by a voice from heaven vers 5. This is my beloved Son hear him 4. Not that the Law and the Prophets are by or in Christ abolished but compleated and perfected rather Christ is the end of the Law Rom. 10.4 but 't is finis proficiens non interficiens saith the Father not the end to abolish but to finish and perfect the Law sic perficiendo confirmare Aug. and so by compleating the Law to establish it as a standing Rule of righteousness to all posterity To think therefore that Christ hath made void the Law is a great sin Christ himself having forbidden us to harbour any such thought or erroneous opinion of him Mat. 5 17. Mat. 5.17 Think not that I came to destroy the Law or the Prohets I came not to destroy but to fulfil the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to fill up and signifies not only Christs personal perfect obedience to the Law but also the filling up with his clear and full light of Revelation what was wanting or but obscurely revealed by the Law and the Prophets 5. Nor is it here unworthy observation that as that material light which is displayed from the body of the Sun ariseth by degrees and shineth more and more unto the perfect day For 1. The day breaks wherein there is more night then day 2. The day dawns when 't is not yet fully nor clearly day 3. The light is diffused through the air and the beams are spread upon the mountains but yet the Sun is under the Horizon 4. The Sun appears upon the earth and rises by degrees till it mount up to the vertical point even so hath the light of divine Truth been revealed from heaven to the Church of God 1. 'T was but a dark obscure and glimmering light in the first period of time from Adam to Moses 2. 'T was more lightsome but yet not clear and full upon the promulgation of the Law 3. It increased still upon the rising of the Prophets as so many Luminaries in the Church by whom line after line and precept after precept as so many beams of the increasing light of divine Revelation were displayed till 4. The day of the Lord came and the Sun of righteousnesse appeared upon the earth So that as time grew up so did the Revelation of Gods will and when Fulness of Time was come we received a fulness of divine revelation from him in whom all fulness dwels Col. 1.19 When fulness of time was come God sent his Son Gal. 4.4 6. So that notwithstanding all the several waies and manners of divine Revelation both mediate and immediate before remembred yet the word comparatively was still as 't were benighted with ignorance untill Christ appeared to give light to them that sate in darkeness and in the shadow of death and to guide our feet in the way of peace Luk. 1.79 Hence Christ is termed the morning Star Numb 24.17 and the day-spring from on high Luk. 1.78 And the light of his Revelations the dawning of the day and the illumination of our souls therewith the rising of the Day-star in our hearts 2 Pet. 1.20 7. The great difference betwixt the light of divine Revelation by the Law and the Prophets in the Old Testament and by the Gospel of Christ in the New Testament is in four respects observable from Heb. 1.1 God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past to our fathers hath in these last daies spoken unto us by his Son 1. God revealed himself to the Patriarchs and prophets of old at sundry times the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. in sundry parts now a piece and then a piece of divine Truth as seemed best to his divine wisdome But to us under the Gospel he hath revealed himself entirely fully and wholly by his Son For it pleased God that in him should all fulness dwell Col. 1.19 and of his fulness we all receive Joh. 1.16 in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2.3 2. God spake to them of old in divers manners By Dreams Visions Angels Voices c. but to us under the Gospel uniformly and without variation by Christ and his Ministers which is one respect amongst others why the Priesthood of Christ is said to be unchangeable and eternal and this manifests the imperfection of their light of old and the perfection of ours now as there are variety of lights for the night and these lights also are changeable in their courses but one Sun only for the light of the day which is the light too that changeth not 3. God spake to them of old by his Prophets who were but meer men but to us by his Son who is God as well as man And herein is that Prophesie accomplished Isa 54.13 And all thy children shall be taught of the Lord A text which is too much abused and wrested to patronize new Revelations and an immediate teaching from God without the ministery of man whereas the Prophesie was fulfilled in the person of Christ and by Christ himself 't is applyed to himself Joh. 6.45 So that we are all taught of God in that we have the Doctrine or Teaching of Christ who is God whose Doctrine is therefore termed a Gospel i. e. The Speech of God 4. God spake to our Fathers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of old which implies some new way of speaking to follow But to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in these last daies Calci in Heb. 1.1 to denote that this is his last way of speaking by his Son that we must not now expect any new lights or depend upon any new Revelations after this So Calvin upon the words Hereby expresly declaring that God would not now adde Prophesies to Prophesies and Revelation to Revelation but that all parts of divine Teaching were
sway with the vulgar very much but when these Sermons discourses and books come to the scanning of judicious ears and such who have the gift of discerning spirits all their preachments prove but unprofitable prattle if not profanations of Gods holy word Their discourses of Religion unreasonable and endlesse brabbles and their books fraught with impertinencies railings and lies For the sin of their mouth and the words of their lips they shall be taken in their pride for why their preaching is of cursing and lies Ps 59.12 objection 3 But do not we hear many good things come from them and many sweet truths to the great contentment and edification of the hearers answer There are many sentences and sayings in holy Scripture and other good English books which are so plain and convincing that they cannot be wrested or perverted but when these come to be formed into a Sermon or into a continued discourse by rude and illiterate persons they are generally so disorderly and confusedly delivered so maim'd and obscur'd by insignificant impertinent and erroneous expressions which like dirt or poyson intermixt with wholsome food doth choak and kill rather then nourish and edifie the souls of the hearers The word of God which is the sword of the Spirit in the mouth of an ignorant blinde zelot is like a sword in a mad mans hand wherewith he wounds both himself and others for want of judgement to use it aright or as an unskilful Physitian though he have very good books of Physick and excellent physical receits if yet he do not fully understand these books and the nature and working of these receits and the several tempers withal to whom severally they are appliable he shall more often kill then cure his Patients Even so it is with the unskilful Physitians of the soul when they understand not the holy Word of God aright nor yet how where when and to whom the several divine receits therein are appliable they convert the soul-saving Physick thereof to a soul-killing poyson And the Word which is in it self the fountain of holy truths becomes through the misunderstanding and misapplication of ignorant interpreters and deceitful workers the nursery of Haeresies and errors And as in natural things corruptio optimi est pessima The best things corrupted are of all corruptions the worst so in supernatural and divine mysteries when the word of Truth it self is corrupted and deceitfully handled by ignorant and misguided persons there is nothing more baneful to the truth of Religion nor to the souls of men whereof true Religion is the Physitian and Guide objection 4 But hath not God expresly and plainly told us in his holy Word that he makes choice of such whom you call ignorant and illiterate persons to be the instruments of his grace and salvation unto men as Mat. 11.25 I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth that thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes and 1 Cor. 1.26 Not many wise men after the flesh c. answer 1. With all thankfulness and devotion of soul we acknowledge Gods infinite goodness and wisdome in the choice of Apostles and first preachers of the Gospel Non sapientes c Ne traduxisse prudentia ne redemisse divitiis ne potentiae nobilitatísque authoritate traxisse aliquos videretur Ambr. in Luc. 6. 1. Not many wise lest any might seem to have been inveigled and seduc't to Christianity by the inticing words of mans wisdome 2. Not many Rich lest our redemption might seem to be purchased with gold or silver or that worldly gain should become the motive to godliness 3. Not many Noble lest the authority of earthly powers and dignities rather then the authority of Christ and the convincing power of his truth might seem the allurement of our conversion therefore God hath chosen the foolish even Fishermen to confound the Philosophers Publicans and sinners to reprove the most rigid Stoicks and morally vertuous poor weak and unarmed men to make conquest of all nations to dissolve the armed powers of the world and without any carnall weapons to be mighty through God for the pulling down of strong holds 2 Cor. 10.4 that so all the world might acknowledge the work of grace and salvation in Christ to be his Revelation not mans invention and that no flesh might glory in his presence presuming to ascribe to his own power wisdome wealth dignity c. what is the sole work of Gods grace and goodnesse But 2. It doth not hence follow that all vulgar and unlearned persons may understand and expound the Scriptures as well as the wise and learned for the reasons already alledged in answer to the first objection And because further under the notion of babes little ones foolish and weak things of the world Quid est parvos c. elegit i.e. non superbos elatos sed humiles mites Aug. is not meant so much the ignorant and unlearned as the meek lowly humble whom no spirit of pride and self-conceited knowledge and holiness had puffed up For it is not ignorance and want of learning but humility and self-dejection that enfits the soul for the impressions of Grace and Truth So that those unlearned persons who have so good an esteem of themselves as to prefer their own sense and judgement in spiritual things before that of the learned and of their Teachers cannot be of the number of those babes and little ones to whom the mysteries of Christ are revealed but rather to be rankt amongst those wise men after the flesh who are rejected objection 5 But against humane learning we are admonisht to take heed of it as dangerous Col. 2.8 Let no man spoyle you through Philosophy answer The best things may be and too commonly are corrupted and abused the holy Scriptures themselves which are given by divine inspiration for our guidance to eternal happiness have been and daily are by Hereticks and Schismaticks wrested to their own condemnation And so it fares with Philosophy and all the parts of humane learning 'T is confessed that many Philosophers opposed holy Christian Religion at the first as contradictory to some of their false erroneous positions and many Hereticks arose in the Church being seduced and seducing others with principles taken out of the heathenish Pythagorean Philosophy from the knowledge whereof they were called Gnosticks But true Philosophy is not therefore to be condemned because Heathen Philosophers held many false tenents no more then true Religion is to be condemned because some seduced professors thereof hold many Heretical and false opinions therein And herein the necessary use of Philosophy is apparent in that though many Heresies sprung from Philosophers Erasm in praefat ad Irenae yet by Philosophers they have been supprest and the truth maintained witness Moses skil'd in all the learning of the Egyptians against Jannes and Jambres with the rest of the Egyptian Magicians and
notwithstanding that they were conversant with Christ all the while he continued preaching the Gospel upon earth daily heard his heavenly Doctrine as it distilled from his own mouth and saw the miracles he did for the confirmation thereof and though they were endued in some measure with the gifts and graces of the Spirit before his ascension For he breathed on them c. Luk. 24.45 He opened their understandings to understand the Scriptures yet all this was not thought sufficient to preach and open the mysteries of the Gospel to the world but they were forbidden to do it till they received additional gifts of learning and knowledge from above Luk. 24.49 Tarry you at Hierusalem till you be endued with power from on high Gloss ordin in Loc. Vt exemplum sequentibus daretur c. Giving example to all posterity that no weak and illiterate persons wanting the gifts of Tongues Arts c. presume to intermeddle with preaching or unfolding the mysteries of the Gospel 'T is recorded of the great St. Basil and Nazianzen Ruffin Lib. 2. cap. 9. that after their long studies in saecular learning they continued for the space of thirteen yeers together in a monastery giving themselves to the study of holy Scriptures the sense and meaning whereof they fetcht not out of their own heads but out of the writings and authority of the ancients to whom by succession from the Apostles the rule of right understanding the Scriptures was apparently known The order of divine wisdome and providence in the dispensation of holy truths to the world is worth our observation out of 1 Cor. 12.4,5,6 There are diversities of gifts but the same Spirit there are diversities of administrations but the same Lord and there are diversities of operations but the same God that worketh all in all From hence it is easie to observe that there must be gifts before administrations i. e. 1. A man must be qualified with gifts fit for every calling before he receive administration or be ordained to that calling 2. There must be administration before operation i. e. A man must be lawfully ordained to a calling before he work or labour therein So in the great calling of the Ministry the gifts of the Spirit must precede or go before before Letters of administration be taken And 2. a lawful ordination must be taken before operation or working therein And he that either 1. assumes this high and sacred function Bish Ands. serm in 1 Cor. 12.14 c. being not qualified with gifts contemns the Spirit from whom they come Or 2. He that labours in the word and Doctrine though he be gifted being not also lawfully ordained contemns the Lord from whom all administrations come and who hath instituted and commanded ordination thereunto Or 3. He that being both gifted and lawfully ordained is not industrious in this calling contemns God the Father of all operations who worketh all in all He that thinks any of these superfluous may as well question whether some one Person of the Trinity be not superfluous also even that Person from whom comes that part of the division which he slights and contemns As it is therefore in the order of the Trinity as the Father begets the Son and from the Father and the Son proceeds the holy Ghost So in this Division the gifts of the Spirit beget the Lords Administration or calling to the Ministry and both together produce the operation or labour therein which is the work of God and as no man comes to Christ but by the holy Ghost so no man comes lawfully to the calling but by the gifts and as no man comes to the Father but by the Son so no man comes to the work but by the calling CHAP. XIII The internal and divine qualifications of the soul as to the understanding of holy Scriptures 1. T Is confessed that all the external parts of humane learning already remembred though they be the gifts and blessings of Gods Spirit and necessary helps to the opening of the Letter and right understanding of the literal and genuine sense of Gods word yet are not in themselves alone sufficient to attain a true and throughly saving knowledge thereof except our souls be enricht as with the outward gifts so with inward graces of the holy Spirit also Truth and Holiness are the two inseparable constituent parts of spiritual wisdome and to understand the truth or true meaning of the Spirit of Truth in the word the Spirit of holiness must necessarily concur And this is most eloquently expressed Job 28. where after a most high and magnificent expression of the praises great price and value of true wisdome a view is taken of all the parts of the world where it might be found gold and silver iron and brasse all useful metals and precious stones have their places though secret designed them but where shall this rich pearl where shall wisdome be found and what is the place of understandings Vers 12. It is not found in the land of the living the depth saith It is not in me and the sea saith It is not in me Vers 14. It is hid from the eyes of all living and kept close from the fowls of the air vers 21. The most Eagly sighted Philosophers and wisemen of the world who have viewed the natures properties and causes of all things not in the earth alone but in the heavens also even the courses influences and operations of the Sun Moon and Stars have not yet attained true wisdome how then shall we finde it out it followes God knoweth the place thereof and he understandeth the way thereof vers 23. And he hath said Behold the fear of the Lord that is wisdome and to depart from evil is understanding briefly describing both the place of wisdome and the way thereunto even the way of piety and obedience And of that piety which is necessarily requisite to the understanding of holy Truth there are several species or particular parts which from the example of holy Bernard may be thus reckoned up Qui ut legeret intelligendi fecit cupiditas ut intelligeret oratio impetravit ut impetraret quid nisi vitae sanctitas promeruit His earnest desire of knowledge made him studious and industrious in reading his fervent prayers obtained the understanding of what he read and his holy life made his prayers effectual for the enlightning of his understanding and thus he must desire thus study thus pray and thus live who will attain that knowledge which shall make him wise to salvation 1. The first divine qualification of the soul requisite unto knowledge is the desire thereof The beginning of wisdome is the desire of instruction Wisd 6.17 Come unto me all ye that be desirous of me and fill your selves with my fruits Ecclesiasticus 24.19 and what is more authentick If thou seekest wisdome as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasure then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord and
divine Revelations Many pious men have been deluded by this wile of the Devill Tert. de anima c. 9. and have faln into grosse errors Tertullian though he observed this and saw how grosly many of Montanus sect were cheated into foul mistakes and errors upon fancied Revelations yet notwithstanding so strongly doth the Devil work upon the fancy by the force of this inchantment that he himself was deceived also and became a Montanist being cousened hereunto especially by the pretended Revelations of a holy sister whom he much extols in his tract de Animâ whose pretended vision of the substance of a soul corporally exhibited to her view made him believe the soul to be corporeal and although for this opinion he was not condemned for haeresie neither yet was guilty of those more gross and blasphemous opinions of the Montanists which their fancied Revelations brought forth yet because more zealously then discreetly he maintained private Revelations the Church of that age seeing the many mischiefs that ensued upon that doctrine severely censured him for it which made him desert the communion of the Catholick Church and set up a congregation of his own which were called from him Tertullianists and are reckoned by S. Aug. amongst his Catalogue of Haereticks A story not much unlike this of Tertullian Jos Acost de temp noviss l. 2. c. 11. is remembred by Doctor Casaubon out of Acosta who records of a learned Doctor of Divinity and a very great zealot who was cousened into strange and blasphemous opinions first by the pretended Revelations of an ordinary woman the story is at large set down in English by the said Doctor in his 3. ch of Enthusiasm with many other remarkable stories of deluded persons under pretence of Revelations Those two great pretenders to Revelation Prisca and Priscilla Montanus his minions were so long cousened with Satanical illusions which they took for divine Revelations that at the last it was revealed unto them that they should hang themselves that they might passe from the miseries of this life to the joyes of the other Euseb eccl hist lib. 5. c. 16. And Theodotus a Montanist had a vision that he should be taken up into heaven and beleeving the spirit of error he was lifted up on high and thence let fall down to the earth again and so miserably ended his life And many of Montanus sect which were great pretenders to Revelation and had withdrawn themselves from communion with the Catholick Church at several times ended their lives in an halter being thereinto incited by the Devil that inspired them who was the father of their Revelations There were another ancient sort of Haereticks in the Church cal'd Messalians and from their assiduity in prayers more then ordinary they were also called Euchites Their tenents were that every one brought into the world with him an evil spirit wherewith they were possest until by earnest prayer the evil spirit being driven away the good Spirit of God did take possession of their souls and after this they needed no more no Sacraments no Sermons no Scripture to make them perfect for they could see the holy Trinity visibly and foretel things to come and all by immediate Revelation But by this pretence to perfection and dependence upon Revelation most of them if not all prov'd to be really possest by the Devil Theod. Hist eccl as is recorded by Theodoret in his Ecclesiastical History I might stuffe this chapter with multitudes of holy persons that have been cousened with illusive and lying Revelations Katharine a holy woman said it was revealed to her that the Virgin Mother of our Lord was conderved in sin And Briget as holy as she Joh. Franc Picus pretended a Revelation quite contrary to that of the other viz. that the holy Virgin was free from original sin venerable Bede remembers a vision saith Bellarm. Bell. de purgat l. 2. c. 7. wherein it was shewed to a certain devout person That there was a fourth place besides Heaven Hell and purgatory not unlike the Elizian fields describ'd by the heathen Poets wherein lived those souls which suffered nothing being not as yet made fit for the beatifical vision and this saith the Cardinal is not improbable since like to this Revelation Dionysius Cart. and Greg. have many others but contrary hereunto saith Suarez another Jesuite Revelationes Bedae Carthusiani c. The Revelations of Bede and Carthusianus are not to be believ'd but in a metaphorical sense Suarez Jes to 4. in Thom. disp 46. 4. Num. 9. S. Augustine in his Confessions Aug. conf l. 10. acknowledges himself to have been mercifully delivered from the curiosity of visions and miracles For it is both a sin and a judgement to be curious in affecting and depending upon such extraordinary means of divine Revelation since the ordinary is not only sufficient but more certain and infallible which is affirmed by S. Peter preferring the Word of God before immediate Revelation by voice from heaven 2 Pet. 1.18,19 And this voice which came from heaven we heard But we have a more sure word of prophesie c. the meaning is that an immediate voice from heaven revealed Christ to be the son of God But the written word of God is a more sure and infallible way of revealing Christ and what 's the reason but that voices from heaven visions and immediate Revelations may be and often are counterfeited by the devil But the holy Scriptures rightly understood are a sure and infallible guide and an unerring rule of Truth as being the Dictates and inspirarations of the Spirit of Truth himself CHAP. XVI Several texts alledged against humane Learning and against the Ministery and for immediate Bevelation explained Jer. 31.34 Heb. 8.10,11,12 THE tenor of the new covenant recorded Jer. 31.34 and remembred to be accomplisht Heb. 8.10,11,12 is the chief place alledged against the necessity of Learning or the teaching of man as containing the promise of an immediate teaching from God himself This is the covenant which I will make with the house of Israel after those daies saith the Lord I will put my Lawes into their minde and write them in their hearts And they shall not teach every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord for all shall know me from the least to the greatest for I will be merciful to their unrighteousness and their sins and iniquities will I remember no more In which Text consisting of three verses there is a threefold difference betwixt the old covenant and the new delivered 1. The old Law was written in Tables of stone but the new in the fleshly tables of mens hearts vers 10. I will put my Lawes into their mindes c. i. e. my Lawes under the new covenant shall be more agreeable to the mindes and more approve themselves to the Spirits of men to be the waies of perfection and felicity and consequently shall have a stronger
that by the guidance of this twofold light thy Word without and thy Spirit within both our outward and inward man may be directed in the waies of thy service and of our own salvation through Jesus Christ our Lord Amen A DISCOURSE OF ERROR HERESIE SCHISM The Nature Kindes Causes c. With Directions for avoiding thereof For there must be Heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you 1 Cor. 11.19 Ecce habes ecclesiam per totum mundum noli sequi falsos justificatores sed veros praecipitatores Aug. in Joh. Tract London Printed 1656. The Ground and general Heads of the ensuing Discourse 1. THere were never any times wherein that admonition of S. Peter was more necessary to be observed by all careful and conscientious Christians Be sober and vigilant for your adversary the Devil as a roaring Lion walketh about seeking whom he may devour 1 Pet. 5.8 2. There are two waies whereby the Devil working upon mens frailties and upon their extravagant lusts and passions doth devour or destroy their souls 1. By blinding their understandings whereby they become apt to be seduced to the entertainment of errors and belief of lies 2. By poysoning their affections with the false paint of worldly vanities whereby they are ininveigled into sinfulnesse and vice 3. And so nearly and entermixedly are the acts of the understanding enterwoven with those of the will and affections that the corruption of the one doth ever corrupt and vitiate the other So that as sinfulness on the one hand clouds the judgement and is ever productive of errors in the understanding so an erroneous Judgement on the other hand is ever fruitful is the production of sinful acts and habits 4. Hence it comes to passe by necessary consequence the just judgement of God concurring that the great and crying sins of our Nation have produced so many great and dangerous overspreading errors amongst us For the broaching and belief of lies as 't is in it self a sin and the fruitfull dam of many sins so 't is also by the just judgement of God a punishment for sin which is affirmed 2 Thess 2.10,11 Because they received not the love of the Truth that they might be saved For this cause God shall send them strong delusions that they should believe a lie 5. The love of the Truth is not received so as to be effectual unto salvation three waies 1. When we do not acquiesce and rest in it but fondly doat upon new Lights and new Revelations as if the truth of Christ revealed were imperfect and defective 2. When we do not practise and live according to the truth having a form of godlinesse in the doctrinal knowledge and discourse of the truth only but no power in the conscientious practise thereof 3. When we do not persevere either in the profession of the true Faith or practicall obedience thereof 6. When any of these waies the love of the truth is rejected the guilt of so great a crime most justly provokes the Almighty to permit holy Truth to be poysoned with lies and doctrines of Devils And in this respect God himself affirms him self to be the author not actively but permissively of all delusions as Ezek. 14.9 If the Prophet be deceived when he hath spoken a thing If the Lord have deceived that Prophet which God doth most justly for the sinful disobedience of the people for this is no other saith Hierome Hier. in loc but what is agreeable to that threat Luk. 26.27,28 If you will not hearken unto me but walk contrary unto me then will I walk contrary unto you in fury c. There being nothing that God inflicts more contrary to the happinesse of a people then the infatuation of their Priests and Prophets But Haeretici veris catholicis membris Christi malo suo prosunt dum Deus utitur malis bene diligentibus ewn omnia cooperantur in bonum Rom. 8. as all things work together for good to them that love God so do Heresies and errors also The which as they are for evil by the infatuation of the wicked so they are for good also in the further illumination and sanctification of the Righteous Nor would the supreme goodnesse ever suffer the evill of Heresie or any other evill to be but that he full well knows how to bring good out of evill 8. That we may then attain those good ends for the which God permits Heresies amongst us and avoid the evil of infection and infatuation thereby or according to the same Father Aug. Ut quisque sic carpet botrum ut caveat spinas ex luto aurum colligat That every one may so pluck the fruits as to avoid the thornes and gather the gold of sound doctrine out of the mire of filthy Dreams and delusions 't will be necessary seriously to weigh and consider 1. The nature of Error Heresie and Schism with the general heads hereof 2. The danger of being infected thereby 3. The ends for which God permits them 4. To observe such rules and receive such directions as may by divine assistance keep him free from infection by them OF ERROR HERESIE and SCHISM CHAP. I. Of Error in general 1. EVery man by nature is as prone to Error as to sin the understanding being as well clouded as the will and affections corrupted by the fall of Adam Our first parents out of a sawcy presumption affecting to know what they ought not involv'd themselves and all their posterity in blindness and ignorance of what they ought to know The body of man being subjected to natural corruption and mortality subjects the soul whilest 't is imprisoned therein to a spiritual corruption also through ignorance and error For the corruptible body saith the wise man presseth down the foul and the earthly tabernacle weigheth down the minde that museth upon many things and hardly do we guesse aright at things that are upon earth In nallo errore non humanitatis sed Deitatis solum est Aug. serm ad frat in erem and with labour do we finde the things that are before us and the things that are in heaven who hath searched out Wisd 9.15,16 So that not to be ignorant and not erre in the points and particulars of heavenly truth is not humane saith the Father but the sole prerogative of the divine nature 2. There is a threefold ignorance wherewith all the minds of men are naturally clouded 1. To be ignorant of what is necessary to be known 2. Not to know what is necessary and expedient for us agreeable to our persons callings breeding and the times wherein we live 3. When through a corrupt and depraved disposition of minde we mistake falshood for truth and darkness for light and this whether in bare opinion or else of set purpose and setled determination The last of these is the most sinful ignorance and that which properly and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is called Error