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A36185 The nature of the two testaments, or, The disposition of the will and estate of God to mankind for holiness and happiness by Jesus Christ ... in two volumes : the first volume, of the will of God : the second volume, of the estate of God / by Robert Dixon. Dixon, Robert, d. 1688. 1676 (1676) Wing D1748; ESTC R12215 658,778 672

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not often know what is right 2. Because men when they know will not do that which is right 3. Because men take away each others rights SECT XXIII Therefore there is great need of a day of Universal Judgment When God the Righteous Judge shall appear to declare what is right and what is wrong and to give to every one his due Day of Judgment according to what he hath done in the Flesh whether it be good or evil O therefore Wise and Honest are they and only they that study to know what is right and what is wrong and to whom those rights do belong and to help men to come by them and maintain them in them that no body may take them away from them O therefore Fools and Wicked are they and only they that never regard to know what is right or wrong nor to whom those rights do appertain and if they do instead of helping them to attain them and defending them in the enjoyment of them do either blind their judgments from understanding their due and so privately cheat them or else openly tear them away from them and devour them O Blessed are they that maintain innocency and do the thing that is right against them shall there be no Law nor Conscience nor Accusation of God or Man SECT XXIV Shame O Cursed are they that hurt and invade and spoil against all right and reason against these men all Law all Conscience all Shame all Curses and Condemnations shall arise from God and Man And it had been better for them that they had never been born or been like the untimely fruit of a Woman that never saw the Sun Mercy therefore and Grace creates Justice and Judgment distributes all Rights to the Sons of men They that love Grace and accept of Merciful Distributions from God and Men and carefully maintain keep and improve them to themselves and others are Righteous and Good Men. These give God and Men their Dues and by them the World is kept in peace and these shall enter into Peace But those that deny God and Men their dues by them the world is distracted into Wars and Tumults and these shall never enter into peace The Subject being right or just I shall yet farther enlarge upon it thus What it is 1. To be right 2. To create or make right 3. To bestow or give right 4. To enjoy or have right 5. To perform or do right SECT XXV To be Right 1. To be right God only is right it is his Nature i. e. 1. The rectitude of his Essence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Heathen in his prayer called God O thou Being of Beings help me God is the Author of all Beings Absolute in himself When Moses desired to know what name he should use in his Embassy when it should be asked him whose Embassadour he was or from whom he came with his Message he was bidden to say I Am hath sent me unto you The Eternal Being that is and was and is to come semper idem always the same the only God I am God and there is none beside me I know not any He that is all in all in whom we live and move and have our being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are all his off-spring the Rock from whence we are all hew'd the hole of the Pit from whence we are all dug the Fountain from whence we all spring 2. The rectitude of his Holiness Reasons 1. Because he is one only Oneness in himself and from himself in his nature and essence 2. Because he is true only truth it self and cannot lie 3. Because he is good only goodness it self There is none good but God SECT XXVI To make right 2. To create and make right i. e. The Rectitude of his power By him all things were made and without him nothing was made that was made He spake the word only and the world appeared And behold all that was made was very right and very good 1. Natural Right and good in the essence of every creature nothing could be better than it is and all things are necessary and serve for the beauty of the whole world 2. Moral Right and good in the rectitude of qualities in every creature all genuine and proper for them according to the wisdom of him that made them 3. Jural Right and good in the propriety and dues that belong to every creature by right of God's immediate donation or their own just acquisition Reasons 1. Because goodness is communicative though sufficient in God yet spreads to the works of his hands 2. Because Goodness is upheld by the power of him that made it SECT XXVII To bestow right 3. To bestow and give right i. e. The rectitude of his Love He is the Father of Lights from whom every good and perfect gift doth proceed The great Benefactour that openeth his hand wide and filleth every living creature most plentifully with his Blessings So God said to Abraham Fear not for I will be thy exceeding great Reward And they that come to God must believe that he is and that he is the rewarder of all such as diligently seek him 1. Because God is Just to give every one his due Reasons 2. Because he is Gracious to make more dues ex abundante and to give them ex uberiori gratiâ more plentiful 3. Because his Mercy is above all his Works That all may come to God for a supply of all their wants and for a recompence of all their labours and for an encouragement over and above for all their service SECT XXVIII 4. To enjoy or have Right To have right this is The rectitude of his plenty To have and to hold all rights which in God is Allodium or absolute and in us Feudum or conditional and dependant Because it is a tenure and dependance of the Creature upon the Creator who hath reserved some rights which he hath given us to pay unto him as a token of our subjection to him and an assurance of our protection from him 1. That no man might trust in any thing but God 2. That man should not honour himself nor any thing but God 3. That God may receive all the thanks and praise 4. That God may have all the duty and service SECT XXIX To perform or do right To do right This is The rectitude of his Justice 1. Inanimate creatures do right in their kind 2. Sensitive creatures do right in their kind 3. Rational creatures do right in their kind as 1. Rights of Nature and Essence 2. Rights of Law and Justice 3. Rights of Price and Purchase 4. Rights of Grace and Favour 1. Because Justice gives right and due and does right and due Reasons 3. Because Super-justice gives more than is right or due and does more than is right or due SECT XXX 1. Therefore we are to be right and good in our nature Collections and to our nature
were in Egypt the house of Bondage their service was hereditary arbitrary and unprofitable at pleasure of their Task-masters and no wages but a charge to find straw and be beaten for not performing their daily tasks The CONTENTS The Soul Spirit 's free TITLE IX Of the Seat of Slavery THE seat of Slavery is the Spirit The Soul A bondage on the Soul and her faculties The bondage of the Body is a grievous burthen but it is not the true slavery For a man's Body may be moved to and fro and set on work to dig or draw or tug at an Oar or any other beastly works according to the will and command of a Tyrant but the Will all this while is free to act according to the mind and reason of a Man So a vertuous ingenuous Man is spiritually and truly free inwardly in his mind to know and do better things though outwardly in his Body he be a slave at the will of another as if he had no will of his own because he cannot use it to the guidance of his Corporal actions but he hath a will free to the actions of his Soul Thus Joseph was a bodily Bondslave to his Mistress to do her lawful commands but was spiritually free and refused to be subdued to her Lust He was more free than she He only a slave Corporal to her bodily power she a slave spiritual to her own base and filthy desires Joseph endures not so base a bondage chuses rather to lye fast bound in the dungeon and let the Iron enter into his Soul Thus the Israelites were slaves in Egypt under the Iron yoke of Pharaoh but free in the service of God to wait for his Promises So in the Babylonish Captivity they were slaves in body yet free to serve the Lord and would not sing the songs of Sion in a strange Land Give me any slavery but the slavery of the Soul I had rather they should bind me in Chains and load me with bolts and fetters of Iron make me tug at an Oar dig in a Mine or draw in a Wagon than take away the free use of that little Understanding which God hath given me I value the liberty of my Body to go when and whither I please and to do what and how I have a mind to but I value the liberty of my Soul at a far higher rate to judge and resolve according to the best of my skill and understanding As Mammon is the false Riches of Unrighteousness not the true and right riches but Wisdom is the true riches of the Spirit so bondage or Corporeal slavery is the false slavery of Unrighteousness but the true slavery is of the Soul and Spirit If therefore the Spirit be enthralled as it should not be how great is that thraldom and if the Spirit be free as it should be how great is that freedom Reason Because all Spirits are naturally free for they properly do force but are not forced they lead and are not led they bind and are not bound Spirit 's free The Spirit of God is absolutely free The will of his Spirit is supremely free to himself for he doth whatsoever he will The presence of his Spirit who is the Father of Spirits brings freedom to others Spirits 2 Cor. 3.17 For where the Spirit of God is there is liberty The conduct of the Spirit of freedom is the great freedom of the spirit The Leader makes the Follower free As many as are led by the Spirit of God Ro. 8.14 they are the Sons of God Gods Free-men The Will is naturally free by its first creation but now it comes to be supernaturally free by its New creation So the Will draws nearer and nearer to God in Liberty till it comes to the measure of the fulness of the stature of Christ till it comes to will nothing but good and can do no otherwise Thus the Spirits of Just men are made perfectly free Necessary willing of Good without haesitancy from within or coaction from without is the greatest freedom Gods necessary doing of all good and impossibility of doing of any evil is his perfection Necessary willing of Evil without haesitancy from within or coaction from without is the greatest slavery Satans necessity of all evil and impossibility of doing any good is his imperfection Gods Spirit is perfect and absolute Freedom that makes the spirits of Just men and Angels perfectly and absolutely free Satans spirit is perfect and absolute bondage that makes the spirits of Unjust men and Angels perfectly and absolutely slavish For The Spirits of Angels and Men though naturally they be free yet accidentally they may be bound as in divers cases Satan himself and his Crue are all Spirit yet every Wizard pretends to bind them Jud. 6. But God doth indeed bind him and them reserving them in chains of Darkness unto the Judgment of the great day The Spirit of Man is free yet may it be religiously bound by a Vow or Oath Numb 30.2 and is shamefully bound by lust of Flesh the pride of World and the Temptations of the Devil and too often led captive by him according to his will Now the bondage of the Spirit is the true right and perfect slavery because the Spirit is naturally free and the more free a thing is naturally the more slavish is the bondage thereof for therein is the greater violence and the greater violence makes the greater slavery The CONTENTS Restraint from proper End Restraint from proper Guide Restraint from proper Act. Restraint from proper Rule Restraint from proper State Restraint from proper Right Constraint to base Actions TITLE X. Of the Cases of Slavery The Cases of true Slavery TRue Slavery is a thing so large and indefinite as that it cannot well be defined therefore it will be best by shewing the Cases thereof to design it As because Felony and Treason are Crimes indefinite therefore wise Lawyers do not define them but shew the Cases to design them Cases designing true Slavery I. A Restraint of Man from his proper End is slavery Restraint from proper end The proper End of Man is Happiness which consists in the knowledge and fruition of God For this is life eternal to know God c. other Ends are improper alien and forreign as Honour Wealth c. for these are neither his proper end nor yet the proper means to it they are neither happiness nor holiness For a man then to be restrained from true happiness that he cannot or may not be happy that he cannot or may not know or enjoy God this is true slavery For the disability to true happiness to be made uncapable of it is true misery and true misery is true slavery Hence Bastardy is a misery which bars the Child from all Inheritance and makes him uncapable of succession to his natural Father's Estate And Infamy is a misery which bars a man from all Offices and makes him uncapable of all Honour
man's work abide which he hath built thereupon he shall receive a reward If any man's work shall be burnt he shall suffer loss but he himself shall be saved yet so as by fire Let the Clergy take heed what they speak and the Laity take heed what they hear Gal. 1.8 and if you or an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel than what is already preached let him be accursed Be instant in season and out of season whether the people hear or whether they forbear Look to your selves and to those that hear you shewing both in your lives and in your doctrines uncorruptness gravity and sincerity rightly dividing the word of truth like workmen that need not to be ashamed Let your lips preserve knowledg that the people may enquire the Law at your mouths that ye may be as Scribes throughly furnished for the kingdom of Heaven producing out of your Treasuries things new and old For God hath made us able Ministers of the New Testament not of the Letter but of the Spirit for the Letter killeth but the Spirit giveth Life The CONTENTS Joy Fear Decrees Gospel Dispensations Worship Spiritual Ceremonies Difference of Mosaick and Christian Rites Church of Rome Perfection of Christianity Spiritual Perfection Ritual Worship abolished No other Rites to be superinduced No Rites ever pleased God Greater Perfections in the Christian Religion Prayer and other Duties are Relativi Juris TITLE VIII Of the Genius of the Gospel Joy AND let Clergy and Laity learn to know the Genius of the Gospel better and the providence of God under it Ye have been taught so far inwardly because of your sins and temptations and God's wrath though you repent and believe and live up to the Gospel as near as possibly you can and overmuch Religion hath made you mad Fear Ye have been taught to fear outwardly Plagues Wars Famines Robbings Imprisonments Prodigies of Comets Blazing stars Witchcrafts Thunders Lightnings Storms Tempests fears and fears and nothing but fears all your life long as if there were no Comforter Ye have been taught out of the Old Testament more than the New out of the Fathers and Schoolmen Summists Casuists Postillers Orators Poets Wits and Flashes of Eloquence more than sound Doctrine But you are to learn the peace and tranquillity of the Gospel to eat your bread with joy and singleness of heart not to imagine a sword of Vengeance always hanging over your heads to make your hearts fail within you and your Countenances pale as if God stood over you continually with his sword drawn in his hand that you can never lead a quiet life Is this the Providence of God to fright you in all his Creatures Cur hanc tibi rector Olympi Sollicitis visum Mortalibus addere Curam Noscant venturas ut dira per omina Clades Christian Religion is to preserve men from a constant pedagogy to so many base and servile fears that make men dread to come near it as an Enemy to generousness and universal freedom and comfort of spirit because of such pale and feminine fears and amazements or make men grow weary of it as of a yoke ever galling and pressing down men's spirits and conclude themselves gainers if they can purchase manhood with Atheism and profaneness Fear binds in the powers of the Soul Religion is aimable Decrees till it comes to those horrid representations of God's decreeing of inevitable torments both here and hereafter to his poor creatures before they were or could do good or evil which makes them fear him but they cannot love him nor do any hearty service unto him wishing rather that he had never given them a being than to make them eternally miserable without any cause or fault of them at all only to shew the glory of his power that is how uncontroulably he can tyrannize over them The Devils indeed are in this condition of trembling because they know they are reserved in chains of darkness unto the judgment of the great day Therefore when they saw Christ they were afraid saying What have we to do with thee thou Jesus the Son of the Most High God art thou come to torment us before the time And surely the Devil would bring men into the same condition by frightning them from the service of God to his Altars as he did the Gentiles Surely other thoughts of God would better become men than the Devils have who nevertheless in this one thing are far better than some men for they know and confess the Justice of God upon them for their Apostasie but these blaspheme God for cruelty and unjustice It being the common principle of Nature in all men both wise and unwise whatsoever other sentiments and different opinions they had that God was Summum Bonum the most bountiful and gracious Being the greater wonder it is to me that so many Doctrines amongst the Heathens and Christians too should be received so contrary to God's goodness and Philanthropy 'T is very strange that the minds of men should be leavened with this sowr conceit and delight to hear of such terrors against themselves and to have God represented to be of that cruel nature to his Creatures which they would be loth to be of to their Children These Jealousies of God cannot stand with a belief of God's goodness for they imagine him to be good to a few of mankind of which number they are a part but for all the rest he looks upon them as dross and cast-aways and therefore he is always contriving new plagues and destructions for this so hated a people that they shall not so much as have the least refreshments of health or peace in this little pitiful span of life and after this painful and short life ended will hurle them into everlasting torments Did ever a more pestilentious vapour breathe from the bottomless Pit to the seizing upon the very vitals of Religion in the Soul's first notions and conceptions of a God to turn off their desires and loves from him whom they were made to love and serve I have often mused with my self about the vulgar conceptions of God's Judgments as if the Divine Goodness studied nothing else like the Heathen Jupiter but to throw his Thunderbolts and Plagues upon every single person for their particular aberrations and upon all Nations for their several corruptions for their conversion or else for their confusion That great and fearful calamities have fallen upon the world especially that of the Flood and the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah and the whole Nation of the Jews c. mentioned in Divine Writ is most evident Together with the Aegyptian Assyrian Persian Grecian and Roman Empires c. cannot be denied together with many particular examples of wicked men signally suffering the Divine Vengeance But that from hence every idle Fancy should dare to specifie the Reasons of God's workings upon those nations and persons I could never yet understand after that fashion My thoughts
drowning himself under the water a sign of dying unto sin being buried with Christ and rising again out of the water a sign of rising with Christ unto newness of Life So that if thy Faith oblige thee to the duty of a Son it will oblige God to the Blessings of a Father and he will not only by Nature and Grace adopt thee to be his Son but by Covenant and Pact institute thee to be his Heir and if thy faith oblige thee not to the duty of a Son it will disoblige God from the Blessings of a Father and he may disinherit thee having broken the Covenant for thy treachery and rebellion The Faithful have a promise I will be to thee a Father 2 Cor. 6.18 and thou shalt be to me a Son So they believing and accepting God for their Father he accounts their Faith to them for their right to be his Sons and gives them the Spirit of his Son to cry Abba Father imputing a present right to a future inheritance of Sons and Heirs and Joynt-heirs with Christ Ro. 8.17 Gal. 3.29 Gal. 4.7 Hebr. 1.14 Heb. 6.17 James 1.5 Heirs of God according to the promise Heirs of God through Christ Heirs of salvation Heirs of promise Heirs of the Kingdom which God hath promised to those that love him Now an Heir is a Person justified to a future Estate so that to be justified by Faith and to be made an Heir of God are things either all one in effect or the later is but the property or consequent of the former as the Apostle saith That being justified by his Grace we should be made Heirs according to the hope of Eternal Life SECT III. The Faith we have hitherto described to be Faith in God or of God Faith in Christ Mar. 11.22 Acts 3.16 John 14.1 is also Faith in Christ or of Christ Have Faith in God or of God through Faith in his Name or of his Name i. e. Christ Ye believe in God believe also in me Ye have been taught to believe in God as the Creator and Conservator of the World Psal 78.7 so do ye also believe in me the Son of God the Author and preserver of the Church 29. Joh. 6.27 the Prince of Life whom God the Father hath sealed This is the work of God that we believe in him whom he hath sent 1. Faith in God is an high esteem of God's Existence Goodness and Greatness and an acceptation of his will and kindness So 2. Faith in Christ is an high esteem of Christ's Person the Son of God and the Son of Man the Mediator between God and Man and an acceptation of his promises Hebr. 9.15 For this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament that they which are called might receive the promise of his eternal inheritance The Devils have an Estimatory Faith Thou art the Holy one of God Mar. 3.11 Mar. 1.20 22. A Preceptory Faith also to obey Christ as when he cast them out of the herd of Swine and at other times A Judicatory Faith Math. 8.29 that Christ is their Judg Art thou come to torment us before the time Luc. 8.28 But they have no Promissary Faith in God or in Christ Not that they want a will but they have no Promises but altogether threatnings and instead of being justified to a present right to a future Blessing they are condemned to a present right to a future curse which is everlasting fire Math. 25.14 prepared for the Devil and his angels Reserved in everlasting chains of darkness Jude 6. unto the judgment of the great day For to Mankind only are the promises made by God in Christ by the Will of God to be justified by Faith because Christ only took upon him our Nature and not the Nature of Angels Faith in the Patriarks was immediate in God Faith in the Jews was mediate by Moses Faith in Christians is mediate by Christ called therefore the Faith of Jesus Christ SECT IV. Christ the conveyer of Faith 1. Because Christ is the Conveyer of it through whom we believe in God For that our Faith may meet with God aright it must pass unto him the same way whereby his promises are conveyed unto us Now his promises are conveyed unto us 1. immediately and so our Faith passes immediatly unto God 2. mediately in Christ therefore our Faith must pass by Christ unto God Thus God did immediatly declare his promises to Noah for the saving of himself and others in the Ark. Gen. 6.18 Gen. 15.4 And to Abraham for a Son and Heir of his own Body Thus God did mediatly declare his promises to the Israelites by Moses for their deliverance out of Egypt Exod. 3.16 2 Sam. 7.4 Jer. 29.10 As also to David by Nathan for the everlasting establishment of his Kingdom to his Seed As to the Jews by Jeremiah for their return out of Captivity As to Zacharias by Gabriel That his Wife Elizabeth should have a Son Luc. 1.13 And as all God's promises in the Gospel are by Jesus Christ whose Ministery is most excellent therefore by him our Faith must pass unto God Hebr. 1.1 Heb. 8.6 Who in these last daies hath spoken unto us by his Son who is the Mediator of a better Covenant established upon better promises Therefore as God's promises arrive at us immediatly or mediatly so our Faith arriveth at God immediatly or mediatly Joh. 13.20 For Faith in God's Messenger is Faith in God who sent him He that receiveth whosoever I send receiveth me and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me i. e. believeth And on the contrary He that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me i. e. diffideth So God punished the Jews for not believing by the means of a Messenger with the Sword and Famine because they did not hearken to his words Jer. 29.18 which he spake unto them by his Servants the Prophets rising up early and sending them but they would not hear So Zacharias was stricken dumb for not believing the Angel Gabriel that came to him from God Such a mediate Faith had the Israelites who believed in Moses but their faith terminated in God Loe I come to thee in a thick cloud that the People may hear when I speak unto them Ex. 19.9 and believe thee for ever In the Original it is Believe in thee Christ said the Israelites trusted in Moses yet God was the ultimate end where their Faith rested and Moses the means through whom it passed Faith mediates in Christ Joh. 5.45 but terminates in God The trust we have to God-ward is through Christ 2 Cor. 3.4 Through him both Jews and Gentiles have an access by one Spirit unto the Father By Christ we do believe in God Eph. 2.18 1 Pet. 1.21 that our Faith and Hope in Christ might be Faith and Hope in God Christ saith He that believeth
act from an inward Principle 34. Every one by Nature is obliged to a Sociable Life 35. Parties in a Covenant must know themselves to be Parties and must know each other and understand what they covenant about 36. God is the Lord Paramount of all Fees 37. A Fee is a Benefice and Grace 38. Angels have and hold in Fee 39. Men have and hold in Fee 40. Grace in Feudo is defeisable 41. Glory in Feudo is indefeisable 42. Christ shall deliver up the Kingdom to God the Father 43. God shall be all in all 44. Church hath no Legislative Power it is Christs Prerogative 45. If the things be done that are to be done then the things are to be had that are to be had But if the things be not done that are to be done then the things are not had that are to be had 46. Unusquisque potest cedere Jure suo Every one may depart from his own Right It seemeth therefore absurd that these Principles and such as these and what may rationally flow from them should not be certainly known by men the practise whereof in life and conversation is enjoyned by the Authority of God as well as those the practise whereof in life and conversation is forbidden by the Authority of God If we may and do know some things certainly which may be left unknown by us without damage Why should we not as certainly know some things which are better which are commanded to be known and if they be not known we incurr a penalty for not knowing them And if we cannot know them how can we do them and if we cannot know the contrary how can we avoid them The World of wise men have been too careless in the understanding of Moral Truths upon a false opinion and supposition received that there can be no firm or infallible Certainty in them but only a flexible and fallible Probability And this hath been the cause of their sloath in not setting their excellent wits to work upon the search of them as they might have done because they found others before them groping in the dark in great doubts and they were afraid to look out further or tread harder upon such sinking Sands when as the light was hard by and the ground firm under them if they had but dared to venture and few or none did encourage them nay others autoritatively bound them up and charged them not to advance upon the pain and punishment of Heresie and Rebellion that should fall thereon But God hath not dealt so with us but hath bid us try all things and hold fast that which is good and bids us aspire to perfection and shews unto us a more excellent way Aristotle a man rarely learned Aristotle hath done a great deal of mischief in this kind to learned men that have tied themselves up too close to his Oracles because of his mighty Name for a portentous Wit above all men which Estimation by a kind of Fatal Errour he hath had for many ages cast upon him And that proud Emblem which he hath fixed upon the Frontispiece of his Book of Morals hath frightned most men from all hopes of ever obtaining any more than a Probability Indeed and in Truth if we rightly consider things Demonstrations The Subject of a Demonstration is the Proposition to be demonstrated that is in which the necessary Connexion of the Predicate with the Subject is to be manifested by some Principle or more general Effatum which must contain the Reason of that so necessary Connexion So that it sufficeth to make a Demonstration if any Thing or Action hath an Attribute or Predicate whose necessary connexion with the Subject may by some comprehensive Axiom of undoubted Truth be mediately or immediately demonstrated whether that Action or Thing of its self depends upon necessary Causes or not If therefore searching Wits would be more free and bold not without modesty and fear to exert their Faculties they might worthily advance the Commonwealth of Learning in using their great Judgments to the finding out of higher Truths from the plain and prime Principles of Natural and Supernatural Light obvious to them that have skill and want only courage to use them For my own part I acknowledg my own weakness to do any great matters I have attempted to build upon these golden Foundations such matter as may be suitable and durable in my poor Judgment and I wish the stupendious Wits of this Age would help me in these Essayes and vent their famous thoughts more clearly and largely upon these so stately Subjects These and the like Prime Principles here and elsewhere scattered in these volumes are as so many Veins and Arteries Nerves and Fibres from the heart and brain of the Scriptures insinuating themselves and creeping into all the Parts and Members of this Body to enliven and strengthen the same If there be withal a Symmetry and due proportion therein it is the chiefest Beauty it hath or could have as for the Colour or outward Ornaments to set it off to please the Curiosity of the outward view it hath few or none nor did I intend it should or if I had I should according to my Genius industriously wave all tedious wordings or dawbing fucus upon such Notions as to the Judicious Reader will appear more lovely I am sure more useful without them I know full well I might have shortened these Books and Titles very much That others may do for themselves that are more knowing The Authors Apology but the less skilful perhaps would not understand my meaning For to them dum brevis esse laboro obscurus fio if I should be short I should be dark And so as I have contrived by the help of God I go on with my Work In which I protest to determine nothing magisterially but to submit my Judgment humbly to the Scriptures and to the judgment of the wisest freest and most moderate opinions from them which is all in effect that can be said or done to the Worlds end always resting satisfied with the substance of all when all is said that can be said or done that can be done namely Faith and a good Conscience which are all in all Compendiums Lastly I do not say that all these Principles are alike uncontrolable or that because of their number some of them may interfere The Candidly Judicious will pardon in long Tractats what is not strictly and severely Logical in ●ood and Figure and will give some fair allowances to the expatiations of Rhetorick when they do no harm If I had gone contractedly to work to give Hints only by Definitions Aphorisms and Observations I might have tied my self closer to exact Rules which are now implicitely couched in Larger Titles and may easily be reduced into closer Compendiums I cannot tell what the matter is but before I go any further I must needs tell the Reader what troubles me I cannot be rid of some
are more false Reasons than true True Knowledge We have no True knowledge it is reserved for another World where we shall understand things exactly as they are and know as we are known Things are in their own nature alwaies the very same Things are here known according to the capacities of our Conceptions which are as various as Temperaments and Faces What another conceives I cannot though upon the same evidence and there is no great hold to what my self conceives for what I believ'd yesterday I may doubt of to day and to morrow be quite deceived The means to discern Truth from Error are but two Means to discern Truth Reason and Experience both these are Cheaters and shew each others cheats An hundred Reasons for one subject may be all false The Rules to ●oderate my Reason and Experience Rules are Principles or Axioms And they are the great Instruments of Deceit for they are so large pliable and stretching that they may be fitted for all Biasses squared and shaped to all forms All Principles are Quodlibets I may hold them which way I will Principles Weather-cocks that may turn to any wind Glasses that represent all faces Almanacks calculated indifferently for divers Climates The contrary Principles to what we now maintain have been in credit with our Fore-fathers as much as ours are now with us and as we have reversed theirs so may an After-age reverse ours What a case then are poor Mortals in Principles are like Common-wealths they have their Revolutions and Periods are altered as Plants removed to different soyls The best warrant for Principles and the surest Quietus est for Deceit Authority is the authority of some Supreme Power and this in the case of Laws is the surest course that can be taken to avoid Contention For some body must determine what is best to be said or done and although their Arrests and Decrees be not always the best yet they are the best that they can make and therefore they are for our practice for Uniformity and Peace but if we add conformity of Judgment because of their Authority we may quickly be deceived And so for the authority and esteem that we have of the Ancients singly or in counsel with others of great Piety and Learning if without enquiry I resolve to think speak or do as they would have me to live and die and all upon their score I am fairly deceived upon good authority But of all Authorities that of Infallibility deceives me most of all Infallibility As to believe that the Pope in nothing can erre that Luther or Calvin in nothing were or that I in my private Spirit in nothing am deceived This even this doth deceive the greatest part of Christendom Christ told his Disciples of the Leaven of the Scribes and Pharisees Matt. 16.6 and they reasoned strongly from their Snap-sacks And when he spake of Meat that he had to eat which they knew not of they little thought Joh. 4 32. that his Meat and Drink was to do the Will of his Father which sent him All their hopes were of a Temporal kingdom and of their Honours under him and after his death all their hopes were dead and buried with him We thought this had been he that should have restored the Kingdom to Israel It was given out that John should not die but he did die Peter halts between Jew and Gentile Who is it that is not deceived In most things we offend all Will. If then the Understanding be so erroneons how can the Will chuse but err Sins of Ignorance reach not the Will they are Sins of Infirmity as Sins are by Passion But Sins of Stubbornness and Malice are grounded on the Will My Lust The direct efficient Cause of Deceit is Lust I complain not of the Truth that there is none nor of the Means of coming to the Truth that they deceive me but I do justly complain where there is cause of my self The Essence of a Mistake is a firm Assent to some falshood under colour of some Truth The Modus is freely or confidently without fear or wit Understanding I trust my Understanding and she cheats me with Appearances for Truths Imagination for Judgment a Dream for Revelation Example for Law Illustration for Proof Probability for Demonstration it may be for it must be Quaintness for strength a Clinch a Crotchet must resolve me I set sail by the Wind of my Lusts I will and I will not at last I know not what I will Sometimes I am ready to curse God and dye will not give a Penny to a Disciple but offer half my Kingdom to my young Mistress From single Thefts I am led to Sacriledg from malice to revenge and murder Magnum est pati Ludibrium à suis my Lust in my bosome mocks me my Enemies are those of my own house Physical Agents and Moral Physical Agents have no Deceits if violent they force if necessary I assent not Moral Agents are but perswasive and dispositive Sensible Objects contain but God's bounty they are Baits but that I bite it is my inordinate Appetite Rational Agents as Satan and Men are remote and partial Causes must first win my Lust to be their Agent and Factor before they can overcome me unless these Philistins plough with my heifer they cannot work upon me They tempt and invite but my Lust deceives me like an Ignis fatuus they disturb my Phantasms and so my Intellect but not my Will no external created Agent can determine that I am principal in the Sin they are accessory in the Deceit Will The least Resistance of my Will would foil a moral Thrust from Man or Devils Christ is tempted as the Son of God Satan is repelled as from the Son of Man he had no Sin in him to second Satan's Assault no Conspirator to betray the Fort beleaguered from without The first Adam might have done as much as the second if he would and so might I still did not my Sin deceive me But God neither deceiveth nor is deceived God is all Truth therefore cannot deceive God is Omnipotent and needs not by means to deceive Deceit argues Impotency the Divel was never so Devilish as to change God with Deceit Say what I will still I am deceived If I say I have no Sin Jam. 1.14 I deceive my self If I confess it my Sin deceives me Every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own Lust and entised My Lust deceives me Four ways 1. By my apprehensive Faculty my outward and inward Senses 2. By a Real Alteration by Passion of Mind or Distemper of Body 3. By vain and vulgar opinions as that the Sun dances on Easter-day that Cocks crow most against Christmas c. By Poets and Legends and Romances 4. By the Law it self A Casual Cause of Sin Law Casual Cause of Sin Law Sin 's work is to deceive it must
Heirs for ever 2. Arbitrary Pro libitu Domini so is Liberty Pro libitu sui ipsius A man is lord of himself 3. Unprofitable no Reward of slavery but pain all Profits redound to the Lord. Whatsoever Slaves acquire they accrue to their Lord because they themselves and their Wives and Children are their Lord's Goods and Possessions therefore whatsoever they get by their Labours is their Lord's for they have no Rights at all but are dead in Law to all intents and purposes But Liberty redounds to a Man 's own self Thus contrary things have contrary forms as Gluttony is a vice Temperance a vertue II. The second Reason is from the affinity which Liberty hath with Reas 2 Largeness A Prisoner when free is set at large Largeness being before confined to a narrow space Thou hast enlarged me when I was in trouble Psal 4.1 Thou hast set my feet in a large room When a man is free he may walk abroad at large whither he pleaseth Psal 18.19 otherwise he is confined to the Will of another The CONTENTS Soul TITLE IX Of the Seat of Liberty THE Seat of Liberty is the Spirit The Soul and her Faculties That of the Body is a counterfeit and bastard Liberty Soul this of the Soul is Liberty indeed David though a King wanted this liberty while he was under Murther and Adultery therefore he prays that God would bring his Soul out of Prison and stablish him with a free Spirit As Mammon is not the true Riches so the Liberty of the Body is not a true Liberty What greater bondage than that of the Mind when the Judgment is captivated to believe the Magisterial dictates of the Pope or perhaps an ignorant Confessor It is to be wondered that brave men otherwise Wise and of great Perfections should suffer themselves to be such slaves and fools as to be imposed upon in their Judgments and not suffered nor suffer themselves to use their own Reasons nor question any thing but do like fools all manner of absurd and intollerable Commands to the macerating and hurting of their Bodies by Whippings Pilgrimages Sackcloths and other Ridiculous fopperies Reas 1 1. The first Reason is from the Contrariety of slavery Slavery is in the Spirit therefore Liberty is in the Spirit Because things contrary reside in the same seat not concurrently but successively As because the Eye is the seat of Blindness therefore it is also the seat of Seeing The Ear is the seat of Deafness therefore of Hearing So because the Spirit is the seat of Slavery it must needs be the seat of Liberty Reas 2 2. The second Reason is from the Nature of the Spirir which is naturally Free GOD the Father of Spirits is supremely Free therefore Angels and spirits of Men must be free under him The Soul is not properly united to the Body but the Body to the Soul Death is a separation but the Body departs not from the Soul but the Soul from the Body There is no man hath power over the Spirit Eccles 8.8 to retain the Spirit neither hath he power in the day of death The CONTENTS Recess from Evil. Access to Good TITLE X. Of the Terms of Liberty THE Terms of Liberty are Good and Evil. Liberty is a loosness from Evil to Good held by no Evil and withheld from no Good I. Recess from Evil i. e. from the World the Flesh and the Devil Recess from Evil. which three are Evils Remission of sins is true Liberty from the bonds of Death Hell and Satan II. Access to Good Access to Good Good is the proper and principal object of Liberty the end and scope it aims at When we are hindred from no good but capable of all then are we free indeed As when all Egypt lay open to Joseph when all Canaan lay open to the Israelites When the Throne of Grace stands wide open for all that have need to fly thereunto for Grace sufficient to help them in the time of all their need The first is a Vulgar Liberty such as the Poor and Strangers have the second is a Royal Liberty for Children and free Denizens The Reason is from the affinity it hath with Repentance Reason Liberty is a preparative to Repentance Till the Soul be loose from Evil it cannot turn unto God As Repentance is a turning from sin to God so Liberty is a turning from Evil to Good As in Repentance the Right turning is from Evil to Good or else it is Apostacy so in Liberty the Right turning is from Evil to Good or else it is Licentiousness So loosness from the Law is slavery To be free from Righteousness is to be the Servant of sin The CONTENTS Loosness to proper End Loosness to proper Guide Loosness to proper Act. Loosness to proper Rule Loosness to proper State Loosness to proper Right TITLE XI Of the Cases of Liberty The Cases of Liberty Loosness to proper End I. A Loosness of Man to his proper End is Liberty The proper End of Man is Happiness Restraint from that makes slavery or true Misery When we are free from Worldly ends of Honour c. and clearly loose to heaven and heavenly things then are we free indeed As Bastardy bars from a temporal Inheritance As Infamy bars from temporal Honour so Liberty admits to Eternal Felicity As Capacity of Temporal Honours makes a Freeman so much more Capacity to Eternal Honours Loosness to proper Guide II. A Loosness of Man to his Proper Guide is Liberty A Man 's Proper Guide is a Right Spirit As a Restraint from that is slavery so a Loosness to that is Liberty All other Guides as Satan World Passions of flesh are Troublers rather than Leaders but when we are free from all these then are we free indeed Philo. 2 Cor. 3. pen. Revera liber est qui solum Deum sequitur He is free indeed that follows God only Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is Liberty Hence that great Question ☞ how Free-will can consist with God's Grace is easily decided for where God's Grace works upon the Will the more it works upon the Will to draw it and the more the Will conforms to God's Grace to follow it the more Free the Will is Grace then doth not destroy nor abolish Liberty but beget and nourish it for the more God's Grace doth loose the Will from evil and lead it on to good the more it frees the Will And as till then the Will is not free so then it is most free III. A Loosness of Man to his Proper Act is Liberty Loosness to proper Act. The Proper Act of Man is his Will And as a Restraint from that is Slavery so a Loosness to that is Liberty The Stoicks say Liber est qui vivit ut vult which thou may'st not construe as a School-boy but as a Christian He is free that can act his own Will i. e. after Resolution
Gospel are chiefly for Eternals The Children of the Law know darkly and understand Spiritual and Eternal things afar off The Children of the Gospel know clearly and understand Spiritual and Eternal things as near at hand Faith being the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen The Children of the Law are in their Minority not only in their Father's Gal. 4.1 c. but in their Servants power under Tutors and Governours as Servants though they be Lords of all But the Children of the Gospel are in their Majority Adult and Manumitted They that are under the Law are as a Wife under the Dominion and Power of her Husband But they that are under the Gospel are as a Wife whose Husband is dead Ro. 7.1 c. and therefore loose from the hard Law of a severe Husband and is now married to another more gentle and generous Husband under whom she enjoys a noble Freedom The Law is the Mother of the Jewish Nation and all that observe that Rule but the Gospel is the Mother of all Nations for Grace Mercy and Peace to them and to the Israel of God Isaac's Posterity was double to Ismael's The first Covenant of the Law lasted but for a time but the second Covenant of the Gospel endures for ever Ismael Persecuted Isaac He that was born after the Flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit The Jew Persecuted and still the Carnal Jewish Christian persecutes the Spiritual Christian indeed But as the Son of the Bond-woman was cast out with his Mother because he should not inherit with the Son of the Free-woman so the Son of the freedom is kept in and abides in the house of God for ever with his Mother to inherit the Kingdom of the Father unto which they of the Law cannot be justified by their works but they of the Law by Faith only So then we that are of Faith are not the Children of the Bond-woman but of the Free and consequently are not under the Law but under Grace SECTION IV. By all this we are taught the Excellent state of Christian Liberty State of Christian Liberty by which 1. The Jews are redeemed from the Ordinances of Policy and Ceremony which was a bondage such as neither they nor their Fore-fathers were able to bear 2. The Gentiles are redeemed from Idolatry under the kingdom of Satan to Christ's Kingdom The Jews were Children and Servants in their Minority The Gentiles were Aliens and Strangers from God Both are made the Sons of God adoptive by Grace Great Mistakes there are in the World about this Liberty 1. Papists have quite lost it They have no liberty to use their own Judgments but are captivated in all things By the Infallibility and Supremacy of the Pope By an absolute Dictatorship of every Casuist or Confessor though never so ignorant to impose upon them that have more Learning and Judgment than themselves if they would dare to use it The slavery of the Soul is the greatest of all others I do not wonder at the Ignorant People because they never knew better things but I wonder at wise men that might know better and doubtless do 2. Papists have no Liberty of Practice No Liberty to read the Scriptures No Liberty to understand their own Prayers No Liberty to eat or drink Clergy Monks and Nuns no Liberty to marry Laity no Liberty to the Cup. No Liberty to go to God directly but must go first to Saints and Angels No Liberty for Time of Feasts and Fasts No Liberty of Estates Church must have all No Liberty of Speaking scarce of Thinking I had rather be chained at an Oar and tug in a Gally or dig in a Mine or draw in a Wagon like a Horse and be free in my Soul than to be a Lord and a slave in my Will to the wills of others more ignorant and wicked than my self A Pope or Councel or perhaps an Ignorant Frier shall domineer over my Conscience and impose upon my Faith or make me go bare-foot or bare-leg or Whip my self or kiss a rotten Relique of a dead man's Bone or an Old-shoe Kings have been trod upon or made to hold Stirrups or kiss the feet of Popes 2. Fanaticks have quite lost it and turn Licentious Are allowed all due Christian Liberty but abuse it to Licentiousness Are allowed Liberty of Judgments and Liberty of Practice in safe things They have the Scriptures to use They have Prayers in a known Tongue They have Liberty to eat and drink The Clergy may marry All have Liberty to go to God directly not to Saints or Angels at all They have Liberty of the Sacrament They have Liberty for Time They have Liberty of Estate They have Liberty to speak and confer and ask counsel O happy we of the Reformation if we did but know our happiness and make good use of it 1. We are therefore justly to be rebuked for the Ignorance of our condition under the Gospel 1. For the Purity of Doctrine teaching to be pure in heart poor in spirit to hunger and thirst after Righteousness to mourn to be peace-makers to suffer for Righteousness sake to love our Enemies c. 2. For the Purity of Discipline and Spiritual worship in decency and order 3. For the Pretious Promises of Grace and of the Spirit of Resurrection and Eternal Life 4. For the greatest assistances and Assurances 5. For Christian Liberty 2. We deserve rebuke for our Ignorance of the Dignity of Christian Churches and Gospel Dispensations therein A Purer Priesthood than Aaron's was A Purer Altar A Purer Sacrifice A more honourable Maintenance A Purer Law O that we were wise that we would consider these things and remember our Latter end that we might not do amiss The CONTENTS Fulness of Time Jews a childish People Time of Minority Redemption Adoption Plenage Gentiles exempted from Minority Popery Administration of both Testaments Idolatry Remedy against Idolatry TITLE XIV Of the Minority and Majority of the Church BY the Bondage and Slavery under the Law and the Liberty and Freedom under the Gospel is understood the Minority of the Church under the same Law and the Majority thereof under the Gospel SECTION I. This is called the Fulness of time Fulness of Time But when the Fulness of Time was come God sent forth his Son made of a Woman made under the Law to redeem them that were under the Law that we might receive the Adoption of Sons 1. There is a Time of Pupillage in Persons till twelve and fourteen and of Tutorage till twenty one and twenty five Princes are priviledged sooner as Josiah 2 Chr. 34.3 who in the twelfth year of his Age began to act as King And others for the pregnancy of their Wit have the pardon of their years by favour allowed them 2. There is a Time of Minority in States Kingdoms and Common-wealths for Wealth Arms and Laws And also a Time of Majority for
had shewed them his last Sign of Rising from the dead and had given power to his Apostles to work Wonders when they left the World he sent no more Angels nor Prophets nor did no more Signs or Wonders nor left no more Oracles but the Scriptures and minds of the Faithful enlightned by his Spirit to lead them into all Truth and to be with them to the end of the World Therefore we may not expect any Angel or Prophet nor any Thundrings or Lightnings Sword Famine or Pestilence Peace Plenty Health or Prosperity particular or general Judgments or signal Deliverances upon any such account as formerly to manifest thereby God's special favour or wrath to particular Persons or Nations in general as to their Spiritual or Eternal condition For God goes another way to work more free easie natural and rational to the Souls of men and made sweetly convincing and attracting to a more sublime and holy Worship suitable and pleasing to the Majesty of Heaven and therefore we are not to be frighted by Judgments nor allured by Prosperities into Religion as Children but informed convinced and perswaded like men by sound reason and understanding through any good or bad condition in this life unto the hopes of a glorious and blessed Immortality It becometh not Christians adult that know their Fathers Will to be in fear and bondage all their life long because of temporal Plagues nor to be ravished with temporal Joys but to live above them all by faith and not by sight as Pilgrims and Strangers here declaring by their Conversation that they have no abiding City below but that they seek one that is above whose builder and maker is God Eternal in the Heavens The Fifth BOOK OF A MEDIATOR The CONTENTS Transition Mediator Reconciliation Moses TITLE I. Of the Name and Thing THE Dispositions of the Will and Estate in God's Testament are to pass through the hands of the Mediators or Executors of them both Transition who are Moses and Christ The word MEDIATOR is rarely Mediator if at all found in any Heathen Author being proper to the Holy Scriptures only Philo the Jew uses it whose form of writing resembles the Old Testament so familiar to that Nation The said Philo calls the High Priest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Jews had a High-Priest as a Mediator between two that by some middle Person they might appease God God dispenses his Graces to Men using as it were the Ministery and Subserviency of some certain Person Reconciliation CHRIST first obtained of God that to Mankind fallen into heinous Sins God would neither shut up the door of Repentance nor refuse to grant pardon to the Penitent which is that first Conciliation that was procured for all Mankind Rom 5.10 When we were Enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son All things are of God who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 5.18 19. and hath given to us the Ministery of Reconciliation to wit that God was in Christ reconciling the World unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them c. So Job was a Mediator to God for his two Friends My Servant Job shall pray for you for him will I accept Job 42.8 The great Benefits that accrue to the World by Christ are not only obtained by his Prayers but by his vast obedience unto death who gave himself a Ransom for all Eph. 1.10 11. to be testified in due time That in the Dispensation of the fulness of time he might gather together in one all things in Christ In whom also we have obtained an Inheritance being predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will A Mediator therefore is an Arbiter Herald or Messenger that intervenes between two Persons to relate their mutual minds and meanings to each other and to propound Articles of peace and agreement between them that are at variance or to propose and declare Rules and Laws for both Parties to consent unto Moses Moses was the Mediator or Intercessor between God and the Israelites to make and finish up a Covenant between them and this Covenant was the Law Gal. 3.19 20. Ordained by Angels in the hand of this Mediator Now a Mediator is not a Mediator of one but God is one Note that though the Law was ordained by Angels yet it was not immediately delivered by them to the People but by the intervention or means of the Mediator Moses who passed between the Angels and the People God gave the inheritance of Canaan to Abraham immediately by Promise but the Law that was added because of Transgressions four hundred and thirty years after till the Seed should come to whom the Promise was made was delivered by the ordination of Angels and the Mediation of Moses 1. Because Law was a Terror but the Inheritance was a matter of Grace As is the manner of great Princes to bestow their Graces and Favours by themselves but to execute matter of Law and Justice by their Officers and Judges Moses was the Receiver of the Law from the Angels and the Repeater of it to the People three daies together for the Commandments thereof but the Judgments were published by Moses only upon the Peoples request because of the terror of the Angels voice who first wrote them in a Book and afterward read them openly to all the Congregation So for the Ceremonies Moses had a Pattern delivered unto him in the Mount Exod. 22. Exod. 25.9 Deut. 5 5. Act. 6.11 called therefore the Law of Moses and Moses We have heard blasphemous words against Moses ye have one that accuseth you even Moses in whom ye trust So the Archangel was the Minister of God to the People not the Mediator 2. Because the Archangel sustained the very Person and Majesty of God and therefore spake not as an Embassador or Messenger for every Embassadour distinguisheth his own Person from the Person of his Master that sent him and speaketh not in his own name but in the name of the Prince or State that imployed him whom he also represents But the Archangel spake as if God himself were present without other Angels to attend him Whereas it is said that the Commandments were delivered by the hand of Moses it is as much as to say by his Ministery because the Hand is the greatest Instrument of working Exod. 32.15 and 34.29 So the two Tables are said to be written by the Finger of God and were delivered into Moses's hand But the Judgments and Ceremonies which made up the greater bulk of the Law so passed through Moses's hand as that he wrote them in a Book The hand writing of Ordinances which was against us Exod. 24.4 Heb. 9.19 Deut. 31.9 10. Col. 2.14 and contrary unto us was nailed to the Cross of Christ So they were written by Moses the Mediator of the first Testament and cancelled by
prove that Testament so far as by his Death he is both a Mediator and Testator of that Testament so that a Mediator and Testator in respect of the same Testament are not functions inconsistent and incompatible but may easily though not usually concur in the same Person But this of Christ his Confirmation of his Father's Testament is an act extraordinary as may be amongst some men by Priviledge because of his Substitution to die in God's stead that could not die to Confirm that Testament of God whereof he was Mediator and Heir and therein to confirm God's League or Covenant with Mankind whereof he was the Agitator and Mediator also Christ therefore may be called the Testator though he was not the Author of the New Testament because he was the main Instrument and VVitness to spread it in his Father's Name who appointed him to die in his stead For we commonly attribute the same Action both to the Agent who is the pure Cause of it and to the Instrument who is the Means of it But really and truly what is done by the order and appointment of another is done by him that appointed him as in Acts of Proxies Deputies Vicegerents and Procurators or Attorneys of all sorts as to Marriages Livery and Seisin Instalments Inductions c. For it is a most true Rule in Law Quod quis facit per alium videtur facere per se VVhat a man does by another it is his own Act and Deed. So God is the Testator and Christ is in God's stead as his Deputy and Vicegerent in the place of his Father in that sense is the Testator also The CONTENTS Christ's Offering One God to Mediate to One Man to Mediate for One God and Man to Mediate One Ransom to Mediate by Christ a Man Christ the greatest and truest High-Priest Christ offered Self TITLE IV. Of Christ's Priesthood CHRIST Mediates the Business of Man's Salvation not only by Dying for God which may be done for a Man for even for a Righteous man some would even dare to die for the Confirmation of his Testament But also Christ's Offering By offering up himself in the same Death as an High-Priest to be a Sacrifice for the sins of the VVorld and to bring his own Blood into the Holie of Holies in heaven as an High-Priest to offer it unto God and thereby to make way for us to the Mercy-Seat through the Veil of his Flesh by that new and living way for access unto God by him for Grace sufficient to help us in the time of all our need And also as an High-Priest continually to make Intercession for us at the Right hand of his Father In this Great Subject therefore of Christ's Mediatorship for further illustration and proof I consider these four Points 1. One God to Mediate to 2. One Man to Mediate for 3. One God and Man to Mediate 4. One Ransom to Mediate by One God to Mediate to I. Because though many are called Gods and Lords many yet there is but one Most High God blessed for evermore One Prime Cause of all Causes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 One Being of all Beings 2. Because one God is offended by all 3. Because one God is able to punish 4. Because one God able to forgive 5. Because one God able to reward II. One Man to Mediate for i. e. One Mankind One Man to mediate for Heb. 2.16 made after God's likeness Male and Female all of one Flesh Verily he took not upon him the Nature of Angels but the Seed of Abraham So only Man is capable of Reconciliation with God III. One God and Man to Mediate One God and Man to mediate Many Mediators and Intercessors there are and may be but there is but one Mediator and Intercessor between God and Man 1. Because it is most requisite for a mixt Person that is both God and Man to interpose betwixt God and Man 2. Because in Christ only God is absolutely well pleased and therefore whatsoever he doth or suffereth it is absolutely satisfactory And there is no other Name under heaven by which we can be saved but only by the Name of JESUS I am the Way and the Truth and the Life Act. 4.12 Joh. 14.6 Joh. 10.7 9. and no man cometh to the Father but by me and he that entreth in any other way is a Thief and a Robber I am the door of the Sheep c. If Christ were like God only he should be too far from Man Aug. if like Man only he should be too far from God Therefore no Saints nor Angels must come into this work IV. One Ransom to Mediate by One Ransom to mediate by Because one Sacrifice once offered was All-sufficient for ever and no other could be accepted Socinus ventures hardly upon this Rock which shivers him in pieces degrading the dignity of Christ's Mediatorship in making him 1. Only a Teacher of the Perfect rules of Righteousness 2. Only a Guide and Example of Holiness and Sufferings But the Scriptures teach that Christ's Mediation consists in these Particulars 1. In consenting to accept of this great Office 2. In actually taking our Nature upon him for that purpose 3. In fulfilling the Law 4. In Suffering to Death 5. In Preaching Repentance 6. In Rising from the Dead 7. In Ascending into Heaven 8. In entring into the True Sanctuary 9. In offering himself there unto God 10. In sending his Holy Spirit 11. In the Ministry of Reconciliation 12. In Intercession at God's Right hand 13. In coming to Judgment Thus Christ expiates and propitiates for Sin by one offering up of himself once offered he perfecteth for ever them that are sanctified being the Captain and finisher of their Salvation through Sufferings Christ a Man This Great Captain High-Priest and Bishop of our Souls that he might more aptly mediate on our behalf was made a little Lower as we are than the Angels and as our Brother took part of our Flesh and Blood that through his Death he might destroy Death and Sin and the Devil that had the Power of Death to keep us under it by the Law and deliver them who through fear of Death were all their life time subject unto Bondage Heb. 2.17 18. Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his Brethren that he might be a Merciful and Faithful High-Priest to make reconciliation for the Sins of the People For in that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted A Man therefore Christ must be that must die for Man and not an Angel Heb. 5.1 2 3 4 5. For every High-Priest is taken from among Men and ordained for Men in things pertaining unto God that he might offer both gifts and sacrifices for Sins Who can have compassion on the ignorant and on them that are out of the way for that he himself is compassed with Infirmity and by reason hereof he ought
him Melchisedec a Type of Christ 1. Because he blessed so Great a Man as Abraham was the Prince of God the Father of the Faithful one to whom the Promises were made 2. Because he tithed Abraham and Levi himself that tithed others paid Tithes to Melchisedec in Abraham's Loyns 3. Because he was a Singular Priest neither was there any more of that Order nor shall be for ever 4. Because he was a perpetual High-priest 5. Because he was of the Tribe of Judah Heb. 7.14 of which Moses spake nothing concerning the Priesthood 6. Because he was made by an Oath Heb. 7.20 And inasmuch as not without an Oath he was made Priest For those Priests were made without an Oath but this with an Oath by him that said unto him The Lord sware and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec 7. Because he is a Royal Priest as was Melchisedec King of Salem Heb. 7.1 and having offered his Blood as a Priest he sits at the Right hand of God as King ruling over his Church 1 Cor. 15.24 till he have put all his Enemies under his feet and shall deliver up the Kingdom to God the Father when he shall have put down all rule and all authority and power SECTION V. Christ offereth Himself he offered himself without spot to God Of the Offering of Christ Heb. 9.14 Heb. 7.27 Heb. 9.26 1 Tim. 2.6 Gal. 1.4 Gal. 2.20 for this he did once when he offered up himself he hath appeared to put away Sins by the Sacrifice of himself he gave himself a Ransom for all who gave himself for our Sins who loved me and gave himself for me 1. Because he only was worthy to give and to be given to God Reason 1 2. Because in him only God was well-pleased for so God testified Reason 2 from Heaven This is my Well-beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased Christ offered through the Spirit Through the Spirit Heb. 9.14 1 Pet. 3.18 Ro. 1.3 4. who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself unto God being put to death in the Flesh but quickned by the Spirit Who was made of the Seed of David according to the Flesh and declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit of holiness by the Resurrection from the dead The last Adam was made a quickning Spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 Heb. 10.20 Heb. 7.15 16. By a New and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the Veil that is to say his Flesh After the similitude of Melchisedec there ariseth another Priest who is made not after the Law of a carnal Commandment but after the power of an endless life Christ therefore is a Living Sacrifice and so are they that are Christ's that present their Bodies a living Sacrifice Rom. 12.1 holy and acceptable to God which is their reasonable Sacrifice So Christ is the Living bread which came down from heaven Joh. 6 51. Heb. 7.8 25. and went up to heaven here men that die receive Tithes but here he receiveth them of whom it is testified that he liveth Wherefore he is able to save them to the utmost that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them Reason 1 1. Because the Flesh was weak and died and no dead thing can offer it self or any thing else Reason 2 2. Because the Spirit is strong and liveth to offer the Flesh quickned thereby and to be offered in the Person of God and Man to be a Living Sacrifice Such a Sacrifice was Christ first slain and then quickned by the Spirit and offered by the Spirit unto God the Father of the Spirits Without Spot Heb. 9.14 1 Pet. 1.19 Christ offered without Spot he offered himself to God without Spot i. e. of all sin or infirmity when immortal redeemed with the precious Blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot so we are found in him without spot and blameless so is the Spouse of Christ cleansed and adorned 2 Pet. 3.14 without spot or wrinkle or any such thing holy and blameless Reason 1 1. Because Christ was so conceived by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary therefore that Holy Thing which was born of her was called the Son of God Thou art the Holy One of God Thou wilt not suffer thy Holy One to see corruption Reason 2 2. Because he purged away all our Sins that were laid upon him which though they were as Scarlet yet shall be as white as Snow and though they be red like Crimson Is 1.18 yet they shall be as Wool Once Heb. 9.25 c. Christ offered Once only Not that he should offer himself often as the High-Priest entreth into the Holy Place every year with Blood of others for then he must often have suffered since the foundation of the World but now once in the end of the World hath he appeared to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself And as it is appointed unto all men once to die ond after death cometh Judgment So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many and unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without spot unto Salvation Heb. 10.1 2 c. For the Law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the Things can never with those Sacrifices which they offered year by year continually make the Comers thereunto perfect for then would they not have ceased to be offered i. e. they would have ceased to be offered because that the Worshipers once purged should have had no more Conscience of sin But in those Sacrifices there is a Remembrance again made of sins every year For it is impossible that the blood of Bulls and of Goats should take away sins Wherefore when he cometh into the World he saith Sacrifice and Offering and Burnt-offering and Offering for Sin thou wouldst not but a Body hast thou prepared me In burnt-offerings and Sacrifices for Sins thou hast had no pleasure Then said I lo I come in the Volume of the Book it is written of me to do thy Will O God By the which Will we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all And every Priest standeth daily ministring and offering the same Sacrifices which can never take away Sins But this man after he had offered one Sacrifice for sins for ever sate down on the right hand of God from henceforth expecting till his Enemies be made his Footstool For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Whereof the Holy Ghost is a witness This is the Covenant that I will make with them in those days I will put my Laws into their hearts and in their minds will I write them and their Sins and their Iniquities will I remember no more Now where Remission of these is there is no more offering
case and fit a Law for them before they come to pass Justice knows no bounds Many things of great justice and charity are extra publicas Tabulas are besides the publick Tables of the Law and contrary to them sometimes that is to the Letter of them Dolum malum facit qui verbis Legis adhaerens contra legis nititur voluntatem The mind of the Laws equity Honesty is more agreable to Nature than profit or pleasure and profit and honesty are not to be divided Sen. Ista duo facimus ex vno and pleasure comes into the bargain and the contrary is against Nature Besides Honesty is a virtue without variety Eadem est utilitas omnium singulorum The profit and pleasure of honesty is common to all If one member suffer 1. Cor. 12.26 all the members suffer with it and if one member thrive all the rest thrive with it If there were no positive Law an honest Man would do righteous things Aug. Si quod absit spes felicitatis nulla c. If which God forbid there were no hope of Heaven yet an honest Man would act justly for Justice sake if we were in the dark never so we are bound as much to do right as if the light shone round about us for every eye to stare upon us Cic. Si omnes deos hominesque celari possem justus essem If it were possible to lye undiscover'd from God and Man yet we are bound to be just Necessity lyes upon us not to go about to obscure the Dictates of Nature and woe be unto us if we go about it Further yet it is reason that what we do should have its cause Now what cause to move us to do wrong to desire or take that which is another Mans Omnino hominem de homine tollunt They that do such things do unman themselves Take not that which thou laydst not down What thou findest return to the right owner If thou sell declare the fault Pestilentem domum vendo say thou sellest an infectious or rotten house if it be so The Aedils or Clarks of the Market looked to the Market price and took care none should be cheated Hence the Romans provided restitution in integrum to those that were wronged and the Actio redhibitoria relieved the Buyer that was cheated in his Bargain Upon this account of Justice they sacrificed Deo termino to the God Bounds that every one might keep his own land Matth. 7.12 The general rule that takes in all equity is that of Christ Whatsoever ye would that others should do unto you even so do ye unto them for this is the Law and the Prophets This is the Doctrine of Athens and Rome as well as of Jerusalem Severus had it by the end This Law of Nature brought forth Regulus Sen. Cato Socrates Fabricius Seneca c. Angusta est innocentia ad Legem esse bonum And it is but a small business to act no farther than the Letter of a positive Law requires Humanity and conscience bind us where other Lawes are silent The hand of the Law is short and cannot reach to very many Cases but equity and conscience bind to every good thing SECT XXXVI Therefore there may be Tricks in the Law against Law Collect. 4. Tricks in Law In fraudem Legis ex Lege Multitude of Laws Antiquity of Laws find work for Lawyers to do against the righteousness of Law To work iniquity by a Law To make things good in conscience and equity not good in Law So comes Justice to fall in the street and Righteousness cannot enter in So Justice is turned into gall and wormwood So Justice cannot run down like water nor Judgment like a mighty stream So Justice lyes fair for us in the Law and a Judge ready to execute it but for the rugged thorny steepy Labyrinth of the practice and forms of Laws we can by no means come at it without greater wrongs by bribery to remove all obstacles than the cause can do us right when we have obtained it He is counted a good Lawyer that can find something in fraudem Legis something out of the Law to elude the Law and send the Client empty and sad and hopeless away If Equity be shut out from the Law Iniquity will have a fair passage A Man may be and is accounted an honest Man in Law that is no detected knave because the Law hath nothing against him although he be really and truly a knave But idem est non esse non apparere is a fine come off for him it is all one not to be as not to appear so to be But this will never do a Man's business so Unusquisque praesumitur esse honestus donec probetur in contrarium Every Man is presumed to be an honest Man till it be proved to the contrary for who can charge him or say Black is his eye but he may charge himself and God will charge him So the Law uncharitably sayes For there is no mercy in strict Law Qui semel malus est semper praesumitur esse malus He that is once wicked is alwaies presumed to be wicked or as we say Once a knave and ever a knave But God forbid it is not so neither should it be so but by the Law it must be so And so an offender is for ever infamous amongst Men of Law But Christians and Men of conscience both think and speak and do otherwise by the example and rule of God and of his Saints who because God giveth pardon freely and upbraideth no Man and rejoyceth over one sinner that repenteth more than over ninety and nine persons that need no repentance therefore they receive such as are fallen and restore them with the spirit of meekness considering their own weakness and quickly strive to raise them up lest they should be overwhelmed with overmuch sorrow and Satan should tempt such poor Souls to despair for they are not ignorant of his devices SECT XXXVII Therefore the Church was too hard in antient times Collect. 5. Severity of old in the Church so as the Novatians never to receive such as fell away after Baptism others to hold off the poor lapsed Souls that for fear of death prescription or confiscation threw a little Incense upon the Idols Altar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 full sore against their wills God knows or those Libellatici that brought Tickets to certify they had sacrificed when they had not I say it was too hard of all conscience that these poor Creatures should be deny'd Communion with the rest of the Church though they sought it with tears and that they should never be reconciled till the last article of their death This was very hard dealing and if God should deal so with Men as they deal one with another our case would be very desperate But God be thanked it is far otherwise and God's waies are not like Man's waies but they are of
Deified made one with God and he one with them 2 Pet. 1.4 God hath given unto us exceeding Grace and precious promises that by these ye might be partakers of the Divine Nature They that hear the word of God and do it are my Brother Mat. 12. ult and Sister and Mother SECT VIII 2. A right to things in future 1. A right of Resurrection The wicked shall rise again but theirs is not of Right but to wrath Resurrection a curse as malefactors have right to Execution But the Justified have a right to the Resurrection as a mercy which God hath promised them for a farther right to Immortality and Glory Whoso eateth my Flesh and drinketh my Blood hath Eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day Joh. 6.54 Man's promise gives a right to the Benefit promised much more doth God's Joh. 11.15 I am the Resurrection and the Life he that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live c. SECT IX 2. A right of Jurisdiction or Judicature Jurisdiction to sit as Judges at the day of Judgment There the wicked shall be condemned and the Justified shall judg them 1. By assisting Christ in the Judgment 2. By approving the justice of it 3. By testifying against the wicked and for the Godly Make you Friends of the unrighteous Mammon Luc. 16.9 that when ye fail they may receive you into everlasting Habitations Make the Godly poor thy Friends for at the Great Judgment they shall be thy Judges and if thy cause go hard there they shall testifie of thy charity and so thou shalt be received St. Paul forbids the Justified to go to Law before unjustified Judges 1 Cor. 6.2 but rather before the Saints Because they have a right of Judicature at the day of Judgment Know you not that the Saints shall judg the World The Queen of the South and Men of Nineveh shall rise up in judgment against the Generation of the Jews and shall condemn them SECT X. Glory 3. A right of Glory or Inheritance of God's Kingdom That is an Universal right to all God's Estate to all his Kingdoms and Blessedness which he himself enjoyes As the only Son and Heir hath a right to his Father's whole Estate For if God do justifie thee and incorporate thee into himself he doth thereby estate thee in all that he hath And God hath given thee Christ and his Spirit as an Earnest and Seal of this Inheritance And Christ himself as Executor of God's Will shall admit thee and put thee in possession at the last day who is gone before to prepare a place for us that where he is there we might also be Fear not little flock for it is your Father's pleasure to give you a Kingdom Come ye Blessed Children of my Father Mat. 25.34 receive the Kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the World 4. A right to the Righteousness of Christ i. e. to have all the benefit of it imputed to them For as by their Generation they have the burden of Adam's sin i. e. the guilt and pain of it cast upon them so by their Regeneration or Justification they have a right to Christ's Righteousness and the benefit and reward of it accrues to them i. e. All his active Righteousness whereby he suffered the Law and all his passive Righteousness whereby he suffered death is theirs done for them and in their stead to as full effect as if they had fulfilled all the Law in their own persons and had died for their own sins SECT XI Rights of Christ 5. A Right to all the Rights of Christ And they are so many and so great that neither eye hath seen nor ear hath heard neither can it enter into the heart of Man to conceive them We may touch one or two Hath Christ the right of a Son so hath a Christian to be the Son of God he by Generation thou by Adoption Christ thy Elder Brother the First born among many Brethren Hath Christ the right of a King is the Kingdom of Heaven his and doth he reign there Thou hast also the right of a King the Kingdom of Heaven is thine Math. 5. 2 Tim. 2.12 and thou also shalt reign there Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven If we suffer with him we shall also reign with him Col. 3.4 Hath Christ the right of Glory so hast thou When Christ who is our life shall appear then shall we appear with him in Glory He shall change our vile Bodies Phil. 3. ult and make them like to his glorious Body And all because we are the Sons of God and if Sons then Heirs Heirs of God and Joynt-heirs with Christ And all Joynt-heirs have equal Rights 1 Joh. 3.2 Is Christ like God we are not so yet but we shall be like him When he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is He a partaker of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 so we not yet but shall be Like a Fee-feminine where all the Daughters are Co-heirs Like Land in Gavel-kind where all the Sons are Co-heirs SECT XII 3. The Degrees of Rights to these things The right of the Righteous is not equal all alike at all times but gradual SECT XIII 1. A right of Expectation of future things Expectation Acts 7.5 as Abraham had a right to Canaan Yet he had not so much in possession as to set his foot on no inheritance in it yet God promised that he would give it to him for a possession and to his Seed after him when as yet he had no Child This possession was to be four hundred and thirty years after So the Heir in his Minority hath right but he must stay for the possession till the time appointed of his Father This is our Hope that through the Spirit we wait for the hope of Righteousness by Faith Gal. 5.5 Job 14.14 All the daies of mine appointed time will I wait till my change come SECT XIV 2. A right of Supplication for future things Supplication for seeing these rights come not to us by Law but only by Grace we have no right of Petition to sue for them and claim them by Law because matters of Grace are not sued for and pleaded for as Dues of Law but pray'd for and stay'd for as Rights of Grace due only upon Grace So the Israelites after four hundred years were expired supplicated for their right to Canaan sighed cryed and groaned and God heard and remembred his Covenant with Abraham Ex. 223. So Students in Arts after the expiration of the time appointed and Exercises performed do humbly supplicate for Grace to obtain their Degrees The whole Creation groaneth and travelleth for their redemption from bondage and we also our selves that have the first fruits of the Spirit Rom. 8.22 even we our selves groan
thereunto that is temporal 10. The rewards of a Spiritual Life are adequate and homogeneal thereunto that is Eternal SECT I. Thus there are two Minds or Understandings Transition Mind and Will of Flesh and Spirit that I may so speak and two Wills or Appetites in Man The first is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Mind of the Flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Will of the Flesh the other is the Mind of the Spirit and the Will of the Spirit Or which is all one there is in every Man Sense and Reason and the Sensitive and Rational appetite a part Terrestrial and a part Celestial a Brute and an Angel According to these Principles and essential parts constituting the Persons of Men so they do and must live both the Life of sense and of reason But if the sensitive powers are predominate then the Rational faculties lye still and the life is just like the life of a Beast and no more purely sensual But if the Rational faculties prevail then the sensitive powers are kept in compass and the life is the true life of a Man and no more purely Rational But if the Spirit of Faith come upon the Soul it advanceth the Judgment and directs the Will to the greater mortification of the Flesh and suppression of the unjust desires thereof and the life is the true exact life of a Christian purely Spiritual So there is a threefold life in Man of sense of Reason and of Faith Life in Man threefold Natural Animal Spiritual 1. The Life of Sense is unregenerate for that which is born of the Flesh is Flesh and no more as it came from its principles So the Flesh acteth and satisfies it self in Hearing Seeing Tasting Feeling and Smelling as do the Brutes 2. The Life of Reason is the Embryo tending to Regeneration and almost Christian for that which is the off spring of Reason is Reason and no more as it came from its principles So the Soul acteth and satisfies it self in understanding willing and choosing and reflecting as do Angels and Men with themselves and with one another 3. The Life of the Spirit by Faith is the consummation of Regeneration and a new Creation and altogether Christian for that which is the off-spring of the Spirit is Spirit and all true Sense and Reason as it flow'd from its principles So the Soul acteth and satisfies it self in more sublime Judgment Love and Choice and rare Recognitions and Contemplations as do Saints and Blessed Spirits with God and their own Souls So there is the Life of Natural Sense the Life of Natural Reason the Life of Supernatural Faith and Reason 1. The Life of Nature is good quà Nature or Sense till it exceed the bounds of Natural Reason and positive Law for sin is only a transgression of Law 2. The Life of Reason is better till it opposes unreasonably the Reason of Grace and Faith 3. The Life of Grace is best of all which regulates the Sense and Reason and perfects both SECT II. The Soul hath her Spiritual Senses of Seing Hearing Tasting c. as well as the Body Spiritual Senses and Passions The Soul hath her Spiritual Food and Raiment as well as the Body meat and drink indeed and clothing indeed which the Body knows not of nourishing and cherishing and adorning her unto everlasting Life The Soul hath her Passions of Love Joy Hope c. which reason and Faith and the Spirit of God moderate and refine into perfect Holiness and Sanctification till it arrives unto Glory The Soul hath joy indeed when she rejoyces in the Lord and is ravished and sick of love labouring to know and feel the height and the length and the bredth and depth of the Love of God which passeth all knowledg to enjoy the Peace of God and a good Conscience which passeth all understanding to have fellowship and communion with God to relish Heaven and to taste of the powers of the World to come There are Riches for the Soul as well as for the Body which are the true Riches the treasure layd up in Heaven where neither rust nor moth doth corrupt and where thieves do not break through nor steal There are Honours for the Soul as well as for the Body to be the Servant and Friend of God the Spouse of Christ the Son and Heir of God and Co-heir with Christ There is the Wisedom of the Soul as well as of the Body to be wise to Salvation to know God and Jesus Christ whom he hath sent The fear of the Lord is true wisedom all other wisedom is but foolishness Scientia contristans scientia sine capite A sorrowful and imperfect knowledg and altogether unsatisfactory See a most lively description of a Carnal Life in the second chapter of Wisedom Life of Faith You have seen the Life of Sense and Reason but oh the life of Faith how sublime and lofty is the state thereof above them both 1. It is above all Prosperity whatsoever it knows how to use this World as though it used it not is treads the Moon under her feet and counts all things but loss and dung to gain Christ it is not ravished nor transported by letting out the stream of affections upon the World even the stupidity and madness but looks higher and hath an eye to the recompense of the Reward and to the price of the High Calling is the more humble and thankful and fruitful in good works in an advanced Estate abounding therein in all piety and love 2. It is above all Adversity whatsoever it knows how to want as well as to abound in the midst of apparent dangers it stands still to see the Salvation of God not knowing when nor how Believes above hope and contrary unto hope retains her integrity when tempted to curse God and die Though he kill that Soul yet will she put her trust in him though she stick fast in the deep mire and clay though she be gone down to the sides of the works and to the roots of the everlasting Mountains and the weeds of despair be wrapped about the dying head in the Judgment of weak Flesh and Bloud yet will she look up once more toward the Holy Temple of God and never leave hoping and trusting in him who she knows will never leave nor forsake her This Ship can tell how to live in all storms amongst all rocks and quick-sands this House can stand all the blustering winds and roaring waves because it is built upon a Rock In a word the Life that the Soul lives she lives by the Faith of the Son of God and her life is hid with Christ in God who is all in all unto her abundantly above all that she is ever able to ask or think and she can do and suffer any thing through Christ that strengtheneth her SECT III. 1. Thus the Life of the Flesh is a poor obscure Corollaries low and inconsiderable Life 2. The Life of
future consummation of it In the New Testament God hath promised unto us the inheritance of Heavenly Blessedness whereto by Faith we have a present right but because we have not a present possession of that inheritance Therefore God gives us his earnest to assure our future possession of that inheritance And the earnest which he gives us is his Holy Spirit 2 Cor. 5.5 whereby he worketh us for the possession thereof Now he that hath wrought us for the self same thing is God who also hath given us the earnest of the Spirit 2 Cor. 122. And that very Spirit which is a Seal to our Spirit is also an Earnest in our Hearts Who hath also sealed us and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts And that possession for which the Holy Spirit is both a Seal and an Earnest is the Inheritance of Blessedness Eph. 1.13 In whom also after ye believed ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise which is the earnest of our Inheritance And of that Inheritance the Spirit is the Earnest until the possession be delivered unto us for unto the words last cited thus immediately followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. unto the delivery of the possession or as a Common Lawyer would read it until the livery of seizon Which being done the Spirit shall cease being an Earnest seeing the use of it shall be then extinguished Thus the Spirit is an Assurance for Blessedness because it is an ability to perform the condition of it a Seal for our present Right to it and an Earnest for our future possession of it The CONTENTS Names Species TITLE III. Of the Kinds of Assurances IN Scripture the Names importing the nature and kinds of Assurance Names are these 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith is the substance of things hoped for Hebr. 11.1 Hebr. 3.14 We are made partakers of Christ if we hold fast the beginning of our confidence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto the end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in fundamento 2 Cor. 2.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this confident boasting 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Evidence Proof Judgment Conviction Heb. 11.1 The evidence of things not seen 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3.12 1 Tim. 3.13 In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the Faith of him We have great boldness by the Faith which is in Christ Jesus 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If we hold fast the confidence Hebr. 3.6 Heb. 4.16 1 Joh. 3.21 and the rejoicing of the Hope firm unto the end Let us come boldly to the Throne of Grace Beloved if our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God Seeing we have such hope we use great plainness of Speech 2 Cor 3.12 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In power and in the Holy Ghost and in much assurance 1 Thes 1.5 Shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end Heb. 6.11 Heb. 10.12 Bas Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of Faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith draws the heart to stricter communion with God than all other rational acts can do 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 1.14 The Spirit is the Earnest of our Inheritance until the Redemption of the purchased possession 2 Cor. 1.22 He hath given us the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts Who hath also given unto us the earnest of the Spirit 2 Cor. 5.5 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God Eph. 4.30 whereby ye are sealed unto the day of your Redemption Who hath sealed us 2 Cor. 1.22 and given us the earnest of his Holy Spirit In whom after ye believed Eph. 1.13 ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise SECTION I crave leave to rank together all the Species of Assurances that I can think of As Species 1. Natural in matter of Being the truth of Entity and Existence in rerum naturâ in the world for things present as that there is a state of Nature and a state of Grace A Temporal a Spiritual and an Eternal condition a Generation and a Regeneration an Old Man and a New an Old Creation and a New Creation 2. Historical in matter of Faith in story by relation of Authors worthy to be believed Tradition universal from Age to Age Records and Monuments the beginning of all certitude for things past 3. Prophetical in matter of Word by inspiration for things to come confirmed by Miracles creating thereby a good Assurance 4. Legal in matter of Right in Law by Statutes positive and Rules Divine or Humane to have and to hold things temporal or eternal to which we may safely lay claim and challenge as dues by Sacred Constitution from Supreme powers which cannot be denied 5. Donative in matter of Grace in Love Bounty and Equity to which also a just claim may be made because offered by Free Grace upon the meer good will and spontaneous motion of the Donor to the Donatary 6. Testimonial in matter of Witness in credit by the hand and seal of the Testator or other Donor and by the hands and seales of the Witnesses Free-Men and worthy to be believed 7. Real in matter of Pledg in pawn deposition sequestration caution or other security direct or collateral personal or real in full satisfaction and satisdation Thus God hath given us Christ and with him all things Thus all things are ours and we are Christ's and Christ is God's And God hath given us the Spirit of Christ to be our Comforter and Assurance 8. Logical in matter of Reason in proof by Discourse inference conclusion from necessary propositions which no Man in his wits can deny making Faith by demonstration 9. Fiducial in matter of Hope in trust confidence and relyance upon the Power Continuance Fidelity and Love of a Benefactor 10. Federal in matter of Covenant Promise Agreement Oath or Contract in claim challenge and demand to and with and from a private or publick person or persons aggregated in one communion which are accounted Quasi-immortal unchangeable and Omnipotent 11. Vital in matter of action in labour and working by such a conversation and practice as is a means proper and effectual to bring assuredly unto such correspondent ends as a direct way leading to such a City or Country which if follow'd must necessarily bring the traveller thereunto Every one of these kinds of assurances in one degree or other at one time or other joyntly or severally sensibly or insensibly have their several existences or operations in the heart of a Christian creating a certitude or evidence of a higher more certain and lasting Nature than any other evidence whatsoever that is attainable in this life and can be inferior to none but the fruition it self of the Beatifical vision Nemo negat salutem vitae Patriae mutuò se inferre ad se invicem
by the Scriptures and by the Spirit of God in them If there be other Traditions without writing they also for the main agree with the Traditions written but some circumstances may differ and some must needs be lost in both But still the Traditions in Writing must needs be the surest and most lasting wherefore God himself wrote the two Tables with his own hand and commanded Moses to write the rest for a perpetual Record As for Traditions without writing they must needs be more hazardous because of the shortness of mens lives the weakness and varieties of mens apprehensions and memories the Interest of parties c. Nor are Writings impregnable but in the changes of times if they escape the fire and other ruines they cannot escape the ignorance and perversness of Scribes But God hath hitherto among both Jews and Christians secured the main Oracles written and unwritten and will secure them for ever SECT III. As for an exact Representation of the holy Catholick Church it cannot easily be imagined either in the Head thereof which is Christ Representative Church there being no express warrant for such a Representative Head or in the Members for such a Representative Body For who can represent the mind of Christ but the Spirit of Christ which is in him or who can represent the mind of Christians but the Spirit of Christians which is in them For Christ will not needs not come in Person to declare his will because he hath sufficiently done it already and Christians cannot meet all together to declare their will because there are most in Heaven from whence it is impossible for them to come and the rest are in all parts of the World from whence it is little less than impossible they should gather together and if they should they would all agree most certainly in the same Faith and Holiness but in Forms and Circumstances they could not And besides there would be Hypocrites among them do what they can for all that Profess have not faith And moreover men as men have various conceptions apprehensions and reasonings and languages and humors and interests And words are too few for things and are ambiguous and Idioms are diverse and there will be mistakes and there is no help for it and few have the true Arts of right reasoning therefore in these cases they must be contented to bear one with another and keep the peace well enough We may thank God that he hath left us the Scriptures and they are sufficient for salvation and be contented and judge as well as we can So men are fain to do in Civil Laws with some helps of Judges because mens Laws are not so plain as they should be but Gods are and they must rest satisfied with what they know till God shall come in into them by farther discoveries upon their honest search and endeavours after saving truth But still where scruples are some body must determine Some body must determine because of practice and because of peace I mean in matters of Discipline and so people must be contented though not satisfied but in Faith and a good Conscience every one knows sufficiently and every one is satisfied So in a Ship the Pilot must steer as well as he can though he may fail and some body else may know better For every one hath liberty to judge for himself but not altogether to act for himself much less for others That 's left to Governours who are as Gods yet they may erre as men it being Gods Prerogative only to know all good and evil and yet under God we must be guided by them who with reverence and godly fear do determine hard cases as the Turkish Mufti who when consulted to give his Judgment sets it down in writing and subscribes modestly This is my Judgment but God knows better And now what would the World have or what can they have more than they have and why will they not be contented with what they have and God thinks fit for them to have Why call they for a Judg when God is their Judge as the Israelites called for a King when God was their King This is to reject the Judgment and Government of God and trust to the judgment and government of Men and to have greater assurance than God thinks fit to allow them Pride There is an itch of Power in all this in the Clergy that are forbidden by their Master to seek after Greatness and leave the care and government of the Church and Commonwealth to Kings and Princes to whom it is committed to be Nursing Fathers and Nursing Mothers of Gods People Let every Soul be subject to the higher Powers Let them give their Advice to Kings humbly and teach their People truly and give them good Examples and they have done their duty God is not will not be wanting to his People for soul or body for this life or for a better But still the noise of an Earthly Judg rings in mine ears and I cannot be quiet for it And the sound thereof takes with the Vulgar and they are too willing to be cheated and some body thereby gets no small advantage O good God when shall we be at peace A Faction a stream of Worldly-mindedness and glory runs high The true Spirit of Christianity is lowly and lovely and quiet and looks up to God in the midst of all distractions What should poor Souls do but trust to their good God and be silent acquaint themselves with him and be at peace Calumnies They tell us we have no Church we are without a Head we have no Shepherd no Guide no Assurance we are utterly lost and out of the bosom of the Church c. Soft and fair Are we not Men have we not our reason and senses about us have we not Faith and a good Conscience within us What should we have more They that have ears to hear let them hear We will speak for our selves once more O ye that call your selves the Darlings of God the only True Church give us leave to own the same God and Faith with you and God will own us we doubt not whether you will own us or no. We are men and Christians still for all you our Senses and Judgments and Wills are our own still for all you There is Grace sufficient for us and you notwithstanding all your Anathema's and Curses against us Though you curse yet we bless All the Evidences cannot be on your side we have something to say for our Religion as well as you Scriptures The Scriptures of God we say under God are our Judges We go to the Law and to the Testament of God These you say are not Evident they are dead letters they cannot speak We say that the mind of God in them is a living letter and the Spirit speaks in them and is to be trusted to when the Spirits of men fail and are not to be trusted We understand
and Piety and ought to be tolerated till they may be amended 5. Who separate for corruptions not directly impious contrary to the express word of God but only by way of consequence which consequence the party defendant doth not acknowledg but if they could perceive it would be ready to forsake them 6. Who separate for matters in themselves indifferent and no waies determined by any word or Law of God either for the affirmative or negative but either are orders instituted by the Church or Customs insinuated by tacit consent 7. Who in a Synod super-determine Doctrines of Faith by a major part and expel the minor for dissenting for though matters of Manners Order and Policy may and ought to be determined by a major part yet matters of Doctrine seem to require an universal concurrence and joint-consent of the whole Synod or else with more safety are left undetermined Now if they seem hereticks or Sectaries who desert or expect those whose opinions and manners are but somewhat corrupt much more they are so who desert or expel those who in their Tenets and manners are the sounder party for these of all sorts of Hereticks are the most carnal and sinful It may appear therefore from what been said upon Heresy and the Name and Thing That no error in fundamentals is or can be meant thereby but only a separation for some Grand corruptions real or pretended in Doctrine or Manners The Name of Heretick is now become odious and a Nick-name to all that differ in opinions styl'd fundamentals which whether they be so or no is yet undetermined and God knows but that they shall ever so remain And those that hold these contrary opinions each party being alike confident of the Truth on their side do persecute one another not only to Excommunication but to confiscation imprisonment banishment and death But what course ought to be taken indeed with such Men SECT IV. Concerning those turbulent Persons that were amongst the Galatians How Hereticks are to be dealt with Gal. 5.12 who would subvert their state of Christian Liberty The wish of St. Paul was that they might be cut off i. e. not castrated for that is barbarous nor excommunicated for then he might have commanded it but destroy'd by the immediate hand of God Yet in this wish of the Apostle this must necessarily be supposed that he wished not positively the execution of it unless those persons continued incorrigible For who can possibly doubt but that S. Paul's velle went with a malle to have them rather reform'd than destroy'd And again if they would not be reform'd who sees not but that St. Paul might lawfully wish that some few turbulent deceivers should rather be cut off by the hand of God than that by them the whole Church of the Galatians should be seduced and their state of Christian Liberty subverted This fact of St. Paul in wishing the death of these impostors must not by us be drawn into example as if to us it were therefore lawful to wish a curse upon those whom we account Hereticks and troublers of the Church For 1. Christ hath given us a precept to the contrary That we should bless and not curse yea bless them that curse us and pray for them that persecute us Matth. 5.44 And our Rule is to practise by precept and not by any example from Men or an Angel from heaven Unless the precept admit exceptions and the cases of those exceptions be as manifest to us as to those Divine Persons who made use of them against the generality of the Precept 2. Where among us shall we find the Man in whom there resides that measure of wisdom which was in Paul who by help of the Spirit wherewith he abounded was a true discerner of Spirits and could exactly know who was a spreader of Error who a troubler of the Church who was refractory herein and whose repentance was either to be expected or to be despair'd 3. Where among us is the Man whose Soul is qualified with the affection of Paul to be led to the like wish with the like mind For without all doubt all the motive Paul had was a sincere zeal to God's glory and a true love to Man's Salvation But we in the like case what ever words we may pretend can hardly say We have purged our Souls from the leven of malice and hatred 4. Paul as we have seen wished not their death simply and absolutely but with a potiority of their repentance that they might rather be reclaimed and therefore he referres the issue wholly to the pleasure of God leaving his wish to depend on God's will If it be therefore unlawful it be to wish the death of one whom we call Heretick in that meaning we put upon it much less is it lawful to put him to death Nay this latter is unlawful though the former were supposed lawful For he that wisheth another Man's death doth commit the act ot the will of God as it shall stand with the pleasure of God that he live or die but he that attempts another's death by Mans hand hath already determined what is to be done without any farther discuss of the matter And it is lawful to wish many a thing were done which notwithstanding to do we have no lawful Power Although then to Paul it were lawful to wish the death of Hereticks yet it follows not therefore that it is lawful for the Magistrate to put them to death For hath God granted to the Magistrate power over the conscience or given him the Sword with such a large commission that thereby he must needs be armed not only against offending Hereticks but also against all true and innocent Christians which equally lye open to the stroke of his sword seeing the less Christian any Man is the more prone he is to condemn another for an heretick and the more carnal he is the more violent he grows to maintain an humane tradition against a Divine Verity because this latter suiteth less with his carnal waies and many Men in Authority do not embrace the sincerity of Religion but use it rather as an instrument for their worldly policy Or hath God given to the Magistrate the Judgment of the conscience or the discerning of Spirits to determine truly between the true and the false Seeing Men of Rule and power whose entrance into the Kingdom of Heaven is a thing of great difficulty and who are commonly imploy'd in other affairs than the care of Religion are not alwaies competent Judges in these cases especially seeing many such Persons are not studied in the cases of Heresy neither are their cases laid out by any Law either of God or Man How then can the Magistrate judge of that wherein by his calling he hath no judgment And for him to commit a matter of that moment to the arbitrement of another is hard adventure seeing he can with no safety execute the sentence but alwaies with danger of
spoiled his great trade of oracles and lying Wonders and shall our easiness and vanity encourage him to drive this more secret and little trade of Prodigies and Prophecies Id. p. 96. It were heartily to be wish't that men had that largeness of heart as not to think heaven and earth concern'd in the standing or falling of their little interests and perswasions That they would leave off that worse kind of enclosure the entailing salvation solely upon their own Party and not go about to hedge in the holy Dove by appropriating the graces and influences thereof to themselves For then men could not be so prone to believe God's Judgments design no higher than the service of their little passions and ammosities and that he is as little able to forbear and make allowance for the mistakes and infirmities of men as themselves P. 98. All Gods Judgments upon others came forth upon purposes of Grace and are intended but as the cutting and lancing of one member to draw away the corrupt humours from the rest Pag. 99. Besides the unchurching or unpeopling of a Nation his greater Judgments are waies which under this Spiritual Oeconomy the Divine Justice seldom walks in Jewish Nation a Pattern for others God indeed heretofore when the World in the greener years thereof was under the conduct of its lower Faculties and most apt to be drawn or driven by rewards or punishments temporal singled out the Jewish Nation in whose outward state of prosperity or adversity to read visible lectures of Divinity and Obedience to the Nations round about And that the Nations might take the fairer view of their state God tells them Ez. 5.56 c. that he had placed Jerusalem in the midst of the Nations round about and that they might call the eyes of the world more upon them their plagues were such as scarce admitted their parallel instances But God chooseth now generally to punish the incorrigibleness under temporal by spiritual Judgments He sometimes delivers a people like Sampson to blindness and stupidity who having been often bound by the cords of their Delilah sins as Solomon speaks would never take warning A true Son of Wisdom doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heartily kiss and embrace all the issues of the Divine wisdom and goodness Votum pro Pace CHristian Religion is the purest Law that ever was made Christian Religion for the obtaining of the greatest Blessedness that ever was propounded The Precepts and Rewards whereof are most agreeable to the Nature of God to give and man to receive The Eternal Immanation of Gods Eternal Being within himself Immanation of God was from Eternity to beget a Son like himself God the Natural Son of God The first Emanation of Gods Eternal Being without himself Emanations of God was in the Beginning to create a Son like himself Man the Natural Son of God The second Emanation of Gods Eternal Being without himself was in the Fulness of time to incarnate a Son like himself God the Supernatural Son of Man The third Emanation of Gods Eternal Being without himself was to Adopt a Son like himself Man the Adopted Son of God The first Appetite of Man created Appetites of Man was to be as he was made like unto God Man the Son of God The second Appetite of Man created was to beget one like unto himself Man the Son of Man The third Appetite of Man created was to love his Neighbour like himself because he was like himself The fourth Appetite of Man was to be renewed in the likeness of God which was defaced by him Man Regenerate and born again the Son of God The End of all Gods Emanations was that Man should be happy Happiness and therefore fitted with sufficient means to attain to that End and so he might if he would for he was a free Agent to choose or to refuse There was the Justice of a great God Mans Regular Appetites led him to choose Happiness but his Irregular Appetites caused him to refuse Happiness So did some Angels There was the Injustice of a poor Creature Wherefore God designed by New Proposals of greater Rewards Recovery to confine his irregular appetites for the Recovery of his lost Happiness and to raise him to a more glorious Estate when he might have let him lye as he was utterly lost for evermore A Mercy unconceivable not to lose such a noble Creature newly made A Mystery which the Angels desired to look into but never could yet fathom why or how this should be Therefore God gave him a law of Grace to love him worship him and trust him in his Son After sin therefore and enmity with God this way was opened by the free grace of God to satisfie his Justice and glorifie his mercy above all by the Mediation of the Son of God and to take away Sin and the Curse and to bring in Righteousness and Salvation to all them that would freely choose the grace so purchased for them by Faith and true Repentance in walking after the Spiritual Rule of the Gospel This is all that God requires of us to accept and take this Grace Mercy and Peace proclaimed by Christ himself and his Ambassadours the Apostles and their Successors the Ministers of this Reconciliation This is the Second Covenant and Testament of God in which all the faithful people are instituted to be the Sons and Heirs of God and Coheirs with Jesus Christ Doctrines troubled This is the plain Way which God hath revealed in the Gospel which not only ignorant and perverse men but knowing and intelligent persons have wilfully puzled and perplexed by various and doubtful disputations concerning Faith Election Justification Free-will c. and thereby hindred many poor Souls from the comforts they might have received but not from the Grace it self provided they be honest and sincere in their desires and well meanings towards God The chief Troublers of this business have been Pelagius Socinus the Dominican Papists and Calvinian Protestants whose unhappy Glosses ought to be laid aside and the Scriptures of God and Writings of the Primitive Fathers adhered to in their general scope and tendency to the Justice and Mercy of God and not in their particular expressions warped and wrested to senses contrary to the main purpose and intention of the good will of God Vulgar Errors The Vulgar Errors therefore that have been long imbibed concerning absolute Election and Reprobation slavish Will Infused habits Personal Righteousness imputed Original sin as they state it Justification by works Over-confessions and unjust accusations of general guilt of all sins Complaints of a hard heart after the work of Regeneration and a New Creature fancies of a Direful and Revenging God fitting Judgments for every sin studying Plagues and preparing Thunderbolts against his poor Creatures and the like fictions of men stamped with the mind of God I say these and the like vulgar Errors so anciently and largely insinuated and propagated by the proud covetous and domineering Clergy