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

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Martialis Ignatius Irena Tertullian Origen and those of their times did not proceede further then the Trinity In the first book of Socrates his Eccless Hist. Chap. 19. we finde The Creed thus recited We beleeue in one God the Father Almighty and in the Lord Iesus Christ his Sonne begotten of him before all worldes true God by whom all things were made which are in heauen and which are in earth Who descended and was incarnate and suffered and rose againe and ascended into Heauen and from thence shall come againe to iudge the quicke and dead and in the holy Ghost in the Resurrection of the flesh in the life of the world to come in the Kingdome of Heauen and one Catholique Church reaching from one end of the earth to the other In Saint Ambrose his time the baptised was asked three questions as first dost thou beleeue in God the Father Almighty and the baptized answered I beleeue and then hee was dipped vnder the water secondly hee was asked doest thou beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and his Crosse and hee answered I beleeue and then was dipped againe thirdly hee was asked doest thou beleeue in the holy Ghost and he answered I doe beleeue and was the third time dipped Ambrose lib. 2. de Sacram. cap. 7. so that 't is probable that the Creed was not fully finished in this forme it now is till about the fourth age after Christ And thus of the Authors of the Creed To conclude therefore this point concerning the Authors of these Articles the Creed is called the Apostles Creed in two respects first to distinguish it from all other Creeds There haue bin diuers Creeds made in the seuerall ages since Christ some by particular writers some by Councells of particular writers Athanasius Creed doth most excell which is the Creed set downe in the booke of Common Prayer next before the Letany and of Councells these are the chiefe Creeds the Nicen Creed which you may finde in the booke of Common Prayer also set downe in the order of the Communion as also the Creed of the Ephesian Synod and the Creed of the Calcedonian Synod reade Am. Pol. synt Theol. lib. 2. cap. 2. Now this Creed is called the Apostles Creed to shew that the Churches did hold it to bee of greater authority then any other Creed and that other Creeds are but as it were expositions of this Creed Secondly it is called the Apostles Creed to giue it authority aboue all humane writings euen those that haue much or most excelled The confession of Nationall Churches haue been worthily had in great request so haue the Creeds of the Councells and so haue the Apocripha Scriptures but yet none of these haue attained to the honour of this Creed The translation of the Canonicall Scriptures in respect of the words are humane though in respect of the matter and order they are diuine and these of all humane writings are the best yet not without the defects of the Translators whereas the originall in both Testaments is diuine both for matter order and words also Thus of the Authors The kinde of writing followes Creede Symbolum is the word vsed in the most Christian Churches and is plainely agreeable to the originall word the Creed being first penned in the Greeke tongue If the word bee deriued of Syn and bolus then it may signifie two things first a morsell or as much as a man may well swallow at once and so the whole Scriptures containing but the diuine furnishing of Gods Table as it were the Creed containes each particular Christians morsell so much as hee may and must swallow and receiue downe into his heart without leauing any of these Articles out secondly a draught euen as much as a net can take at once The sea is the Word the fisherman is the Christian man the Net is faith the Creed is as much as the faith of the Christian can take at a draught out of the Sea of doctrine contained in the Scriptures But it is more likely the word should be deriued of Syn and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and then it may signifie all or any of these fiue things 1. A Shot it containing the reckoning which the Apostles made for the Churches being deducted or cast in out of the seuerall writings of each of the Apostles 2. A Watchword or any signe in the time of warre by which the Souldier might be distinguished from spies or strangers and so might shew to what captaine or colours hee belonged so the Creed is the Military signe by which the true Christian is distinguished from all spirituall spies and forreiners 't is Gods Watchword 3. The Motto or Poesie or word giuen in mens Armes so the Creed is the Christians Motto his word which is set in his Armes being made noble in bloud by Christ and so able to giue the Armes of his spirituall house and kindred 4. A token or Bill of Exchange by which a man is enabled to trade or receiue commodities By the Creed the Christian may trade for any spirituall commodities 5. A Passeport Christians are strangers and Pilgrims a great way from home and the gouernment of the Christian world will not let a man passe without his authenticke Passeport Now by his Creed the Christian man may passe and finde entertainement in any part of the Christian world As for the name Creed it is not easie to tell when it first came vp in our Language but it is certaine it comes of the first word which is in Latine Credo rendered I beleeue But by the way if these Articles be a Creed then they are not a Prayer nor to be said as a Prayer as the ignorant multitude doth abuse it Thus of the Title I Beleeue Marke 9. 24. IN the Creed it selfe we must consider first matter of dutie which is in the word Beleeue which is the hand or claspe that takes hold of all and euery of the Articles secondly matter of doctrine which may be cast into two Heads as it concernes God or the Church for the Lord doth not vouchsafe to comber Religion with the whole doctrine that might concerne the estate of all men out of the Church concerning God the Articles looke vpon all three persons and in the doctrine of the Father amongst his attributes singles out his Almightinesse and amongst his workes lookes vpon his making of Heauen and Earth In Christ faith lookes vpon his Person and his Office In his Person it acknowledgeth his diuine Nature as Gods onely Sonne and his humane Nature in these two words viz. conception by the holy Ghost and birth of a Virgin His Office is considered according to his estate both of Humiliation and Exaltation In his Humiliation is considered his sufferings first in body in that he suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was dead and buried and then in soule in that he descended into Hell In his Exaltation faith viewes his Resurrection Ascension and Session at the right hand of God
he keepes the court of his Maiesty Psal 84. 2. We must pray for the spirit of Reuelation to open the eyes of our vnderstanding Ephes 1. 19. 3. We must not be without an effectuall faith for if wee beleeue we shall see his glory Iohn 11. 40. 4. We must rest in these descriptions and praises of God and continue in his Word and be sure we change not his glory into that which is abhomination to him Psalme 106. 20. 5. We must be sure to repent of our sinnes and be truely turned to God 2. Cor. 3. 16 17 18. Thirdly all wicked men must needs bee in a wofull estate and that in three respects first because this glory is departed from them since the time sinne came into their hearts they haue failed of the glory of God they haue lost the glory of God in that they haue lost the Image of God Rom. 3. 23. secondly because their foolish hearts are so full of darkenesse that they cannot see the glory of God they want all that comfort and warmth ariseth from the view and contemplation of the Sunshine of Gods glory they cannot get so much as the benefit of a good conceit of God a vaile lyeth vpon their hearts 2. Cor. 3. Esay 26. 10. thirdly because the time will come when God will confound their hearts with the terror of his Iustice and the Maiesty of his glory when hee shall fight against them to destroy them Esay 2. 10. 19. Lastly this should bee a wonderfull consolation to Gods children and that in diuers respects 1. Because this God that is so blessed and full of Maiesty so adored by all creatures this God I say so glorious is their God they haue his fauour in a high degree and by couenant hath giuen himselfe to be theirs for euer 2. Because God hath called them to glory and will glorifie them with himselfe in the Kingdome of Heauen 2. Pet. 1. 3. Colos 3. 4. and in the meane time 1. God accounts his people in a manner all the glory he hath in earth Esay 46. vlt. 2. The Spirit of glory and of God resteth vpon them 1. Pet. 4. 14. 3. God accounts it a part of his glory to helpe them in all their afflictions and to forgiue them their sinnes And in these two things affliction and sinne lyeth all the discomfort of life in effect Psal 79. 9. and his glory shall be their Reareward to guard them from dangers Esay 58. 8. 4. Hee will keepe them by his power till hee present them faultlesse before the presence of his glory 1. Peter 1. 5. Iude 24. 5. He giues them such tastes of that great glory to come that it is a glory to them to thinke of and hope for that blessednesse to be reuealed vpon them Rom. 5. 2. Thus of the glory of God and so of the first sort of Attributes that is those Attributes which they call communicable which are so in God as some print or likenesse of them are in the creatures The Incommunicable Attributes follow and these are in God as they say in Schooles à Priori the other à Posteriori onely I haue handled the former first as most easie for vs to vnderstand but lest the tearmes of communicable Attributes should trouble the ignorant Reader hee must consider that when we say these Attributes are communicable wee doe not meane that they are communicable in respect of essence but in respect of Act effect or Vse As for instance the goodnesse of God is not communicated to good Angels or men but the effect of it which makes them good If God should communicate nothing there would be nothing at all and if he should communicate his owne essentialls hee should make as many Gods as hee produced things In short these Attributes are affirmed of God in the Abstract but of men or Angels in the Concret God is Goodnes Wisedome Iustice Men are onely good wise Iust The incommunicable Attributes are so in God as they can be found in no creature nor any likenesse of them And these are three viz. his infinite greatnesse his eternity and his immutability And these three as they are not found in any thing but God so are they as it were spread and powred out through all the Attributes of the first sort for God is Infinite Eternall and Immutable in Wisedome Holinesse Life and Glory And so these Proprieties are as it were the Adiuncts or proprieties of the other Attributes First then of the infinite greatnesse of God The infinite greatnesse of God is that essentiall propriety in God by which hee is signified to be of himselfe actually and simply beyond all bounds limits and measure and so his infinite greatnesse or immensiuenesse comprehends 1. His perfection of Nature 2. His Omnipresence or Vbiquity 3. His Incomprehensiblenesse For the first his perfection of Nature is such as admits no bounds nor limits nor measures because he is without composition of partes and because hee is all hee is in act not in power or possibility and because his goodnesse Iustice Wisedome c. is so great as nothing can be added to them to make them greater Iob 37. 16. Mat. 5. vlt. and the consideration heereof may 1. Informe vs and shew vs whence all good and perfect gifts come euen from this infinite greatnesse of perfection in God Iames 1. 17. 2. Humble vs what are we dust and ashes vile and loathsome creatures that wee should bee fauoured or accepted of God who is so infinite in the glory and goodnesse of his Nature euen the more perfect God is the more our imperfections might trouble vs and at the least make vs serue him with more feare and trembling 3. Teach vs we should follow the exactest patterne and none like God we should therefore bee followers of him that we may bee perfect as our heauenly Father is perfect Mat. 5. vlt. 4. Comfort vs and so especially in the hope of a better life how perfect and glorious shall we be in heauen when God shall be all in all in vs when that which is so perfect shall come into vs then all that is in part shall bee abolished 1. Cor 15. 28. For the second the Omnipresence of God is that vnmeasurablenesse of his Nature by which hee is wheresoeuer the creature is or any place is Psal 139. 8 9. Isay 66. 1. Ier. 23. 24. thus God fills all things and penetrateth into all things circumscribed or defined with no spaces of any places reaching to whatsoeuer either is or can be thought within or without the world And which is the more maruellous his whole essence is in the whole world and in euery part of it whole in this whole world and whole without the world shut in no where nor shut out any where containing all things and contained of nothing He may be truely said to be euery where and no where as he is contained of nothing Nor is hee thus present with all things onely by his
his Truth Psalme 146. 5. 6. 2. When men are in vproares and the World full of commotions and warres the consideration of Gods power ouer the raging of the sea is an incouragement and comfort vnto men that waite vpon God that hee can also still the Tumult of the people as the Prophet gathers Psal 65. 7. 3. Such men as haue callings to doe their businesse in the Sea may hence gather comfort for their safetie there for God is the confidence of them that are a farre off in the Sea as the same Prophet shewes Psal 65. 5. We may trust God for our preseruation on the sea aswell as on the drie land seeing his command is as great in the one as in the other Lastly hence the Apostle Peter gathers an vnanswerable confutation of Atheists that thinke all things will continue alike and that there will be no breaking vp of the world for the last iudgement and that things are carried meerely by a naturall course for that the Earth stands out of the waters and in the waters if there were no higher cause then nature the world would presently bee ouerflowed if God let goe his hold of the waters as manifestly appeared in the destruction of the old world 2. Pet. 3. 5. Thus of the Waters The Earth is considered of in the Scriptures either in it selfe or in the fruits of it or in the Inhabitants of it The glory of the Lord is exceeding great in respect of the Earth considered in it selfe 1. That he could make the Earth Gen. 1. 1. Psal 121. 2. 2. That he could make it so that is 1. So great and vast a creature Iob 11. 9. 2. That he could make it be only by his word 2. Pet. 3. 5. Psal 33. 9. 3. That he could make it hang in such a miraculous manner vpon nothing that is able to beare it vp founding it vpon the waters and Ayre Iob 26. ● 38. 4. 5. 6. Psalme 136. 6. 4. That he hath diuided it and set borders throughout the whole Earth diuiding it for the vse of the seuerall Nations that should inhabit it Psal 74. 17. 5. That he hath made it so vnmoueable there being nothing to fasten it Psalme 104. 5. 33. 9. 119. 90. being of such weight and hauing so many Citties and buildings vppon it and being a creature so round and therefore by nature moueable 6. That he hath made it a creature that lasts for euer and outlasts a world of other creatures Eccles 1. 4. Psalme 78. 69. The Vses are diuers for 1. Hence we may gather the maruellous glory of the Lord in his power greatnesse wisedome prouidence soueraignty and eternity Iob 12. 8. His power in being able to make so mighty a creature hee must needs haue a mighty Arme Psal 89. 11. 13. His greatnesse in that he is bigger then the Heauens and the Earth seeing they are the worke of his hands Iob 11. 9. His wisedome that hee could finde out such a secret way of founding so vast a creature Pro. 3. 19. 8. His prouidence is most manifest in that so mighty a creature can abide which it could neuer doe if it were not vpheld by the Word of his power 2. Pet. 3. 5. and his soueraignty is matchlesse he is a great King aboue all Kings for he alone is the Lord of the whole earth Neuer any King was King of the whole Earth but hee so as all the Earth and the fulnesse thereof belongs to him and he hath the highest and absolutest right ouer all things in the Earth Psalme 47. 7. Mich. 4. 13. Zach. 4. vlt. finally hence is proued the Eternity of God he made the Earth and therefore was before the foundations of it and if he could make a creature that lasts so long how euerlasting is he himselfe Psal 102. 25. 26. 2. It is not inough to know these things but wee must giue God the glory of them our hearts should alwaies say with the Psalmist Blessed bee the Lord God which onely doth wondrous things and blessed be his glorious name for euer and let the whole earth bee filled with his glory Amen Amen Psal 72. 19. 18. Psal 47. 7. and the rather because our vowes and thankesgiuing are as it were all the Rent we pay vnto the Lord of the whole Earth of whom we hold in chiefe Psal 50. 12. 3. I● should teach godly men contentation in all estates if God be the King of the whole Earth then all his children are the great Princes of the world Psal 47. 9. and can want nothing that is needfull for them because the Earth is the Lords and all the fulnesse thereof Psal 24. 1. Zach. 4. 14. which if it be seriously considered all men haue cause to say verely there is a reward for the righteous Psal 58. 12. and if wicked men breake their bonds and breake in vpon their possessions they haue a comfortable recourse to that God that set the borders of the Earth and gaue the lot to his people Psal 74. 17. 18. and if the earth can last so long then the children of his seruants shall much more endure for euer Psalme 102. 25. 26. 28. and if the Word of the Lord bee so vnmoueable that by it the earth is vpheld then wil the word of his promise to his seruants be sure to all generations Psal 119. 90. and therfore of all men Oh ye Righteous ye are blessed of the Lord which made Heauen Earth Psal 115. 13 14 15 16. and therefore also in all the occasions of our liues we should remember that our helpe commeth from the Lord which made Heauen and Earth Psal 121. 2. 134. 3. 4. It should teach vs to giue God the glory of disposing of the Kingdomes of the Earth He is the supreame Lord of the whole Earth and therefore hee may set vp and pull downe what Kings and Princes he will and if he set Sion to thresh the Nations and to take away their substance yet it is done by right seeing God is the Lord of the Earth Mich. 4. 13. Psal 47. 9. 5. The Kings of the Earth should remember to do their Homage to God and to sing of his praises and of the surpassing excellencie of his glory Psal 138. 4. Psal 72. 11. 6. Woe to wicked men for if the Earth be his and they his Subiects he hath more power to subdue and punish them as rebells then any of the Princes of the Earth and therefore can easily consume them out of the earth Psal 104. vlt. 58. 12. and if hee can make the very earth tremble if he but look vpon it Psal 104. 32. then where shall they appeare and how shall they stand before his Indignation Nahum 1. 5. 6. and if they be borne with for a time and get great estates on Earth yet must they be brought to iudgement as vsurpers because the Earth is the Lords and they neuer had a Title from him for what they hold and
is that straines at a Gnat and swallowes a Cammell that is precise and superstitious about small matters and yet makes not Conscience of grosse sinnes 3. What they charged vpon him They charged vpon him three things First seducing of the people as one that had peruerted● their Nation and stirred vp the people throughout all Iudea beginning from Galile to Hierusalem Luke 23. 2. 5. Secondly sedition as one that deceiued and forbade the paying of tribute to Caesar Luk. 23. 2. Thirdly high treason against Caesar in saying hee was a King Luke 23. 2. Ioh. 19. 12. The first of these was vaine and the two last false For the extraordinary mouing of the people is not in it selfe a fault vnlesse they be moued without cause or by ill meanes or to ill ends The other two are false for he paid tribute himselfe though as a Prince of the bloud hee was free Matth. 17. 27. And when the people would haue made him King he refused it Ioh. 6. 15. Hence we see that euen Christ himselfe hath beene liable to the same accusations and slanders are cast vpon his poore seruants which should the more comfort the godly when they are slandered and charged with Innouation Schisme Sedition or to be enemies to Princes or the like But especially hence should the godly take comfort in the hope of the forgiuenesse of all their sinnes against God how great soeuer for to this end was Christ charged with these great offences vniustly that he might make atonement for our sinnes that were guiltie euen of high treason against God Thus of his Accusation The proceeding of the Iudge followes where we may note two things First how Pilate exammed Christ Secondly what meanes he vsed to deliuer Christ For the first when the Iewes had thus accused our Sauiour Pilate went in to Christ and examined him only vpon the three points whether he were a King The first as a businesse concerned their owne Law hee would not meddle with And the second either he beleeued not or accounted it to be comprehended in the third Now to this question of P●late our Sauiour giues an answer wherein we should take notice of soure things which he thought good to testifie and auouch at his Arraignment as truths most needfull and not to be denied or controuled at any time First that hee was a King Secondly that his Kingdome was not of this world Thirdly that the end of his comming was to beare witnesse of the Truth Fourthly that his subiects were such as were of the Truth and did heare his voice Ioh. 18. 36 37. These parts of the confession of Iesus should not passe without liuely vse in our hearts For first if Iesus be King why are we discontented with our estates why liue we not out of feare and care Is there not a King in Sion Mich. 4. 9. and the rather because our King is a King vniuersall and all power is giuen vnto him in heauen and earth and besides he is a King immortall and of his kingdome there is no end and therefore we should seeke to him in all our necessities who is so able to helpe and trust in him And for the second if his kingdome be not of this world wee should not expect to haue the glory of our Religion to be liable to outward obseruations but rather pray that God would open our eyes to see wherein the true glory of Christs kingdome lies Eph. 1. 19. And withall it should teach vs to imploy our selues about spirituall things and not about earthly for the wealth of his kingdome lieth not in earthly things our trading must be about heauenly commodities Coloss 3. 1 2. And further seeing his kingdome is ouer the spirits of men wee should labour to get spirits without guile and to serue him in spirit and truth And poore men should not be discontent with their estates His kingdome is not of this world hee neuer promised great things in earthly matters to his followers they should rather reioyce that they are exalted to get the preferments of his kingdome in spirituall things Now for the third point if the end of Christs comming were to beare witnesse of the Truth we may gather diuers things from thence As first it may informe vs of the entertainment Truth findes in the world It is more villanously neglected and opposed and wronged when the Sonne of God must come from heauen to giue euidence in the behalfe of truth It imports the truth is more often questioned than error and wickednesse Againe it may intimate that Truth is great and will preuaile God will send from heauen to helpe it rather than it shall be supprest though it be opprest And besides we may gather hence that the preaching and publishing of diuine Truths is a most excellent worke in that the chiefe office of the Son of God was to beare witnesse of the Truth and so it should teach vs to receiue the word of truth with all reuerence and gladnesse and good conscience as accounting truth to be the most precious treasure God sends to men And from the practise of Christ both Ministers and People should learne with all wisdome and constancie to stand for the truth though it were to death and neuer to be ashamed to witnesse to the truth by holding out the light of the profession of it and shewing our sound obedience and subiection to it howsoeuer it be taken in the world As for the last point our Sauiour giues an excellent mark to know his subiects by They are of the Truth and heare his voice They are of the Truth not only as they take part with Truth to defend it but as men that were borne and bred by the power of truth they were regenerated and sanctified by the force of the sound of Truth and accordingly the chiefe comfort and treasure of their liues they account to be the hearing of the voice of Christ Hearing of Sermons is the Character of a true Christian But it is not all hearing but a hearing of such Sermond as haue the voice and power of Christ in them and such a hearing as placeth such felicity in the voice of Christ as they could be content as it were to doe nothing else but heare Christ still and such a hearing too as will giue glory to Christs voice in the hardest times when it is most scorned and opposed in the world and especially it is such a hearing as containes obeying and willingnesse to be ruled by the voice of Christ And this was the answer which our Sauiour made to the Gouernours question but Saint Matthew notes that when the chiefe Priests accused him he answered nothing and though Pilate said vnto him Hearest thou not how many things they witnesse against thee yet he answered not in so much that Pilate maruelled greatly Matth. 27. 12 13 14. He thus constantly forbare and refused to answer 1. Because he needed not any apologie being knowne to be innocent and thus it
Ghost yet that hinders not the truth of this assertiō for in the works ad extra all the Trinity work but yet in their order God the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost raised the dead body of Christ Secondly he rose by a way that neuer man rose and not as other men haue risen or shall rise by a way peculiar to himselfe viz. as the Lord of Life as the first borne of the Dead as the first fruits of them that sleepe Rev. 1. 5. 1 Cor. 15. 20. 23. not as a priuate person but as a publike person as our head and surety He saw no corruption in the Graue as other dead bodies doe and he rose to immortall life neuer to dye againe whereas Lazarus and others that were raised were raised but to a mortall life they were to dye againe he was the first tha● euer rose to eternall life Thirdly hee rose in the same body that was dead and buried Luk. 24. 39. which was necessary for our comfort in the discharge of our debt that the same body that was imprisoned came out of prison and doth the better assure the hope of the resurrection of our bodies Fourthly he rose inuitis custodibus whether the Keepers of the Sepulchre would or not and smote them with great amazement to shew how easie it is for him to triumph ouer his enemies when they seeme to bee surest of victory He that could conquer them when they had nothing in appearance to oppose them but a dead body can as easily defeat all his enemies that onely differ from his people only in greatnesse of earthly power If the Church were as the dead body of Christ yet it may rise againe notwithstanding all their armed Troopes Fistly hee rose with an earthquake that thereby hee might signifie First that the earth did him homage and as it were sware fealty to him as her Lord and Proprietary Secondly that as the earth trembled at his death so now as it were is exalted for ioy that shee was to render him aliue from the dead Thirdly that Christ would shake the world and the heart of man by his Gospell Heb. 12. Fourthly that Christ by his power can and will make the earth giue vp her dead at the last day Lastly the Angels ministred vnto him by rolling away the stone c. to signifie that not onely he was Lord of Angels but that God was satisfied as Iudges that send some officer to fetch the prisoner out of prison and release him Fiftly but why was it necessary that Christ should rise againe Ans First that the Scripture might bee fulfilled that had foretold it Psal 16. 10. Ioh. 20. 9. Mat. 26. 54. Secondly if the Scripture had not foretold yet such was the dignity of his person that he must needs rise for it was impossible for him to be holden downe of Death Act. 2. 24. for first he was the onely Son of God and the Father loues his Sonne and cannot suffer him to be ouercome of death Besides he was God himselfe the Author and Prince of life and therefore it had beene absurd for him to abide in death that giues all others life Thirdly hee was a iust man and innocent and had fully satisfied for our sinnes and therefore God could not keepe him in prison for nothing and where sinne is not there death cannot reigne Thus of the second reason Thirdly such was the office of him that rose againe that he could not abide in death as was shewed before hee must declare Gods name to his brethren hee must make intercession hee must reigne as a King euerlasting all which he could not doe if he abide in death Fourthly because there was a Decree for his resurrection in Gods eternall Councell Psal 2. 7. commpared with Act. 13. 32. 33. Fiftly that the types and shadowes of it might bee fulfilled Ionas was a type of the Resurrection Mat. 12. 39. So was Adam waking out of the sleepe into which hee was cast when the Woman was made out of his side 〈◊〉 was Samson that brake asunder the barres and gates and was deliuered so was Dauid that was so often oppressed and yet exalted to the kingdome Psal 86. 13. Concerning the Apparitions of Christ after his resurrection the Scripture records that our Sauiour was on earth forty daies and in that time appeared to many at seuerall times shewing himselfe aliue from the dead and giuing order concerning his Kingdome as hee was forty daies in giuing the Law to Moses on the Mount so was he forty daies in giuing order about the new Law to the Apostles and hee that began to consecrate himselfe to the office appointed him by his Father in fasting forty daies doth now take forty daies both to lay downe that office and to consecrate the Ministery of his Disciples Now concerning these Apparitions diuers things are to be considered 1. The Reasons why he appeared 2. The Persons to whom he appeared For the first our Sauiour staied a while vpon earth and appeared at seuerall times for these Reasons 1. That he might confirme the infallible truth of his Resurrection that the Christian world might bee fully assured of it that God had raised him from the dead Act. 10. 40 41. and that he was raised in the same body that was crucified and buried for our sinnes 2. That he might giue order to his Disciples concerning all things that concerned his Kingdome ouer Iewes and Gentiles and might appoint all the alterations were to bee made in the manner of gouerning the Christian world Act. 1. 3. and thus hee instituted the seuerall orders of Ministers vnder the Gospell granting full Commission to the Apostles Act. 28. 18. Eph. 4. 11. and so we haue reason to beleeue that the translation of the day for the Christian Sabbath was by appointment from him while he was on earth with other things which the Apostles ordered afterwards 3. That he might giue gifts vnto the men that were to begin the worke of erecting the Christian world Ioh. 20. 21 22 23. Eph. 4. promising to giue the holy Ghost more fully Act. 1. 4. The persons to whom hee appeared are to be considered negatiuely and affirmatiuely 1. Negatiuely he appeared not to the world not to all the people not to the chiefe Priests Rulers of the people Act. 10. 41. that therby he might shew First that his Kingdome was not of this world Iob. 18. 36. Secondly that he did not need the helpe and patronage of the greatnesse of this world in businesses of his Kingdome Thirdly that his Kingdome comes not by externall obseruation and is not obiected to the eyes of the body but to the eyes of the minde and faith Luk. 17. 20 21. Ioh. 20. 29. Fourthly that the contempt of the meanes in the ordinances of Christ shall bee scourged with a priuation of all fellowship with Christ in his glory The chiefe Priests and Rulers and other despisers of the Doctrine and Miracles of Christ in
Sometimes God is said to be at mans right hand and then it notes protection and helpe as Psal 16. 8. Sometimes the Church is said to be at the right hand of Christ as Psal 45. 10. Sometimes Christ is said to be at the right hand of God of which this Article makes mention But by the way we must note that this gesture is not attributed to Christ as a perpetuall gesture Sometimes hee is said to bee at the right hand of God as Rom. 8. 34. Sometimes to stand at the right hand of God as Act. 7. 55. But vsually the Scripture mentions his sitting at the right hand of God as that gesture which doth most fitly shadow out the eternall rest and felicity of Christ together with his Imperiall and Iudiciall power Now for the sense of the Article all together I conceiue that by the words of this Article eight things are meant as 1. That Christ after all his labours and sorrowes after his Crosse and death doth rest in heauen in vnspeakable ioy and felicity and blessednesse 2. That hee hath obtained dignity and power aboue all men and Angels as when Solomon set his mother at his right hād it was to signifie that she was to be esteemed of aboue all his subiects Thus Christ hath a name giuen him aboue euery name which is named in heauen and earth Heb. 1. 4. Eph. 1. 21. 3. That hee is partner with his Father in his Kingdome and therefore hence it is that in stead of He shall sit at Gods right hand mentioned Psal 110. 1. Saint Paul quoting the place saith Hee shall reigne teaching vs that to sit at Gods right hand is to reigne in Gods Kingdome 4. That his authority reacheth vnto all things in heauen and earth and therefore hee is said to sit at the right hand of God of God I say whose dominion is an vniuersall dominion This our Sauiour saith of himselfe Matth. 28. 18. 5. That the Father doth not cease to rule but doth administer his Kingdome by his Sonne Therefore in Psal 110. v. 1. the Father takes vpon him to subdue the enemies of Christ The Father and Sonne reigne together but yet so as the Father commits the rule and execution of all things to the Sonne vnder him as kings that admit their Sonnes to bee partners with them in their Empire and commit the trust of all to them 6. That this kingdome of Christ shall be deliuered vp vnto the Father againe 1 Cor. 15. 25. For the worke of Christ in this Kingdome is by meanes to gather and saue the Church and to subdue and ouerthrow the enemies of the Church now when there shall be no more enemies and the Church is perfectly gathered and glorified then this Kingdome shall cease But that men may not mistake the naturall kingdome of Christ which hee hath as God equall with the Father that shall neuer cease and the supreme glory that hee hath in eminence ouer man and Angels that shall not cease for so he is a King immortall and of this kingdome there is no end but after the day of iudgment he shall reigne no more that is First not in the middest of his enemies as he doth now Psal 110. 2. Secondly not by meanes or by the Word and Sacraments as he doth now but immediatly 7. That he vndertakes fully to accomplish and perform vnto all the Elect all that goodnesse and riches of grace and glory which God as a Father hath decreed or promised to his Church and therefore hee sits at the right hand of God as a Father 8. That he is furnished with all power to execute all that concernes either the subduing of the enemies of the Church or the saluation of the Elect and therefore he is said in the Creed to sit at the right hand of God as hee is Almighty and in Scripture to sit at the right hand of the power of God Luk. 22. 69. There are other things might be mentioned about the explication of this Article but they are either curious or else so difficult and perplexed and intricate in sense that they will not well agree with popular teaching and therefore I leaue them and come to the vse of this Article This Article may serue both for instruction and for consolation For instruction and so it should teach vs 1. Neuer to be ashamed of the Gospell and the profession of the seruice of Christ in this world seeing whatsoeuer worldly men thinke yet true Christians know that they serue him that sits at Gods right hand and hath all power in heauen and earth and is King of Kings and Lord of Lords Revel 19. 2. To bee willing to let him rule ouer vs and with all reuerence and conscience to submit our selues to his lawes and to acknowledge his power and soueraignety Euery knee should bow at the name of Iesus Phil. 2. 11. 10. 3. To carry our selues as the members of so great a King as hath atchieued so many conquests ouer so great enemies Wee should striue to ouer come too euen the world and sinne and Satan and then he promiseth vs that we shall fit on his throne also Revel 3. 21. 4. All our minde should be on heauenly things as the Apostle shewes Col. 3. 1. 5. In all things to liue by Faith and in nothing to bee carefull and in all estates to bee content since by Christ wee may be able to doe all things and he is able to helpe vs and will not forsake vs. For consolation this Article serues many waies 1. In the case of trouble of conscience for our sinnes and infirmities for hence we know that wee haue an Aduocate with the Father and he sits at Gods right hand to make request for vs 1 Ioh. 2. 1. 2. In the case of feare of perseuerance for Christ sits at the right hand of God the Father Almighty and therefore none can take his sheepe out of his hand Ioh. 10. 29. 3. In the case of defects and disability in gifts for from this Article S. Paul gathers that Christ will fill all in all things in all the members of the Church Eph. 1. 21. c. 4. In the case of feare of accusation by men or deuils Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect Doth not Christ sit at the right hand of God saith the Apostle Rom. 8. 34. 5. In the case of difficulty in the successe of the Ministery of the Word Christ hath the Key of Dauid hee sits on the Throne of Dauid Hee will open and no man shall shut and hee will shut and no man shall open Rev. 3. 7. 6. In the case of outward wants on earth or ill entertainment in the world wee serue him that hath all power to preferre vs we haue his promise that we shal partake of his own glory and therefore we need not be carefull but rather magnifie his mercy loue to vs in admitting vs to his seruice vpon what termes soeuer it
iust It is in vaine to plead the mercy of God and Christ to proue the saluation of the wicked for he is iust as well as mercifull and that they shall know fully at his comming In the sentence of condemnation obserue foure things First the reprobation of the wicked vers 41. Secondly the cause of this reprobation vers 42 43. Thirdly the Apologie of the wicked for themselues vers 44. Fourthly the answer to their Apologie vers 45. In the Reprobation of the wicked I note diuers things as 1. In that speaking of the Iudge his title of King is left out which was mentioned vers 34 40. I gather that wicked men euen at the Tribunall when they shall see Christ in his greatest glory yet they cannot truly loue him or ●steeme of his glory The naturall hatred of Christ will continue vpon them euen at that day 2. In that he saith Depart yee from me it shewes that it is a grieuous misery to be thrust out from Christ it were an euerlasting fearfull punishment if wicked men did suffer no more but the absence of Christ for euer to liue without that Sunne of Righteousnesse is worse than to liue without the shining of the Sunne in the firmament and herein note the iustice of Christ in that wicked men could not abide the company of Christ and true Christians in this world they shall now be paid in the same kinde they shall neuer more enioy the presence of Christ or any one true Christian Woe to Hypocrites at that day though now they seeme to be ioyned to Christ yet let them thinke what it will be when they shall be made to depart 3. In that he calls them Cursed it shewes that euery wicked man is a cursed creature and withall that to be vnder Gods curse is the quintessence of misery And therefore godly men haue little cause to enuy the prosperitie of any wicked man nor wicked man to be so drunken with the estimation of the fading glory of earthly possessions 4. In that he saith Into euerlasting fire it notes the vnspeakable horror of the paine of wicked men in Hell If a man knew he must lie in a burning fire but one day oh how would he be dismayed Oh what senselesnesse hath bewitched vngodly men that are not frighted with euerlasting burnings They are wonderfully blinded that striue to beleeue that there is only Poena Damni not Poena Sensus in Hell That there is no paine in Hell but only losse of good things as the presence of God and Christ c. 5. In that he saith Prepared for the Deuill and his Angels we obserue 1. That God neuer purposed to shew mercy to the Deuills 2. That there is one Deuill is chiefe and hath power ouer the rest 3. That from the beginning God intended to shew mercie vnto mankind though not vnto deuils 4. That the eternall companions of wicked men shall be deuils such as loue wicked company in this life may here see what companions they shall haue in Hell From the description of the cause of the Reprobation we may note 1. That it is not enough to refraine from euill but we must doe good Not bearing of fruit will be a cause of cutting downe the Tree 2. All Religion is pretended in vaine by such as are able and doe not shew mercy to the poore It is a sinne that Christ shall finde only in the wicked From the Apologie of the wicked we learne 1. That men may be very innocent in some things in their owne sight and yet be very guiltie in the sight of God They did thinke verily they neuer saw Christ naked c. and yet in his members they did 2. That it is the propertie of the wicked to remember the good they doe and forget the euill they can remember their prophecying working of miracles and eating and drinking with Christ Matth. 7. 22. but forget all their sinnes of vnmercifulnesse and the like No ma ruell if they iustifie themselues before men that shall dare to doe it before Christ himselfe From the answer to the Apologie we learne plainly that all the iniuries done to the godly yea euen to the poorest and meanest of them Christ reckons as done to himselfe and will accordingly punish them at the day of Iudgement yea not only iniuries but the neglect of honouring and succouring and relieuing of them Hitherto of the manner of the Sentence The execution followes Vnto the execution of the Sentence foure things belong 1. The deliuery of Possession of eternall glory to the godly 2. The detrusion of the wicked into Hell 3. The creation of the new Heauens and new Earth 4. The deliuering vp of the Kingdome of Christ into the hands of God the Father For the first after the sentence ended the Elect shall be all taken vp to heauen with Christ there to reigne with him in eternall blisse where they shall presently be possest of foure incomparable benefits The first is the immediate vision of God so as neuer man saw him in this world If to liue in the presence of great Princes on earth be such a preferment what is it to liue in Gods presence for euer and if to see the Monarches of the earth in their glory so much affect men what is that eternall sight when men that once were but dust and clay are now admitted to behold that infinite perfection and fountaine of all goodnesse In God wee shall behold most perfectly all those things that can be of power to stirre admiration all those beauties and praises that the nature of man can delight in The second is the perfection of their owne natures both in soule and body Then shall their countenances shine like the Sunne in the firmament then shall their very bodies be like spirits able to passe whither they will in a moment then shall they possesse health without all infirmitie or power to feele paine or defect nor sorrow sicknesse or weaknesse shall any more assaile them but greater things than those shall be bestowed vpon their soules for then shall their knowledge be made perfect Here wee know but in part there we shall know as we are knowne there we shall enioy an euerlasting day It is darke night with vs in this world in comparison of that celestiall light of knowledge Here we are groaping in the darke to finde out some parts of truth but there God who is whole truth it selfe shall fill our mindes with the shining beames of his light Then shall all the faculties of the soule be made perfectly glorious in all righteousnesse and true holinesse all impotencies being remoued God himselfe being all in all in the Elect for euer The third is the acquaintance and most glorious societie with all the Angels of Heauen and all iust men of all ages and degrees which fellowship shall be made perfectly comfortable all things that may offend being remoued from them both in their natures and workes The heart of man
and consists especially in conceiuing gloriously of God and in praising of God and in worshipping of God and in obedience and so God is wonderfull glorious in that he doth continually receiue all sorts of praise and adoration from the creatures both in heauen and earth And in respect of this true glory which is giuen vnto God God doth excell in glory all the great Kings and Potentates that euer were in the world The very Angels in heauen doe admire this glory of God on earth Esay 6. 3. and so his glory excells 1. In respect of praise and so diuers waies 1. Because from the rising of the Sunne to the going downe of the same the Lords name is to be praised Psal 113. 3. all reasonable creatures are bound to ascribe praise and thankesgiuing to him and so it cannot be true of any Potentate on earth 2. Because from all persons and actions glory comes to God whatsoeuer wee are we are to his glory Ephes 1. 12. 6. 14. and whatsoeuer we doe all must be done to his glory 1. Cor. ●0 31. 3. Because in all the glory or praise giuen to the creatures the first and chiefe glory is due to God their glory is subordinate 4. Because it indureth for euer and euer no end of his praises 2. In respect of worship for that is a glory onely due to God no creature in heauen or earth may take it or can receiue it without infinite danger 't is a glory he will not giue to another 3. In respect of Obedience and so diuers waies 1. Because the obedience due to God is from all persons in the world and such an authority neuer had any mortall man 2. Because the obedience the creature owes to God is vniuersall and vnlimited and without exception whereas the obedience Princes can haue is a limited obedience and subordinate men must obey them so as they command nothing against Gods Law 3. Because his kingdome is an euerlasting kingdome there shall be no end of obeying him whereas the time wilcome when no obedience at all shall be due to Princes and that is when Christ hath deliuered vp the kingdome to God the Father and shall no more rule men by the ministerie of men Lastly the glory of men can bee no way comparable to the glory of God because all their glory they haue receiued from him for God is said to be the God of glory Acts 7. 2. the King of glory Psal 24. 10. the Father of glory Ephesians 1. 19. The Vse should bee first for instruction and so it should chiefely teach vs to acknowledge this glory of God to giue glory vnto God and by all meanes to ascribe glory to him It is a singular wrong not to giue God his glory Now wee giue God glory three waies 1. In our hearts and so diuersly first when wee labour to fill our hearts with the knowledge of Gods glory in all the branches of it the earth should bee filled with the knowledge of the glory of God as the waters couer the seas Hab. 2. 14. secondly when our hearts stand still and wonder and admire at the glory of the Lord our hearts are not rightly affected towards God till they bee inflamed and rauished with the contemplation of his excellencie and blessednesse Ezek. 3. 12. thirdly we giue God glory when wee beleeue in him and from our hearts trust him in things that bee otherwise vnlikely to come to passe Thus Abraham Rom. 4. 20. fourthly when we mourne and sorrow for our sins for men are said to giue glory to God when they repent of their sinnes Reuelation ●6 9. fifthly when we doe from our hearts reioyce at any thing that excells in Gods Word or workes any way acccounting our selues the more happie that God is honoured or glorified any way sixthly when in all seruice done to God we conceiue of him with the highest degree of reuerence and excellency we can entertaining him into our hearts as the very King of glory Psal 24. 2. In our words and so we giue glory to God diuers waies also as first when men confesse secret wickednesse openly finding themselues sought after and pursued by God Thus Achan gaue glory to God Ioshuah 7. and thus the sinner when he feeles the rebukes or chastisements of God should humble himselfe and confesse his wickednesse before the Lord Ier. 13. 15 16. Malachie 2. 2. secondly when men giue him praise and thanks for his mercies with all possible affection see Luke 17. 18. So the Samaritane gaue glory to God when hee gaue thankes for the cure of his Leprosie and thirdly when men acknowledge the hand of God and his prouidence see Reuel 11. 13. 1. Sam. 6. 5. fourthly when in discourse men talke of the singular praises of God and so we should make his praise glorious Psal 66. 2. our mouthes should bee filled with his praise and with his honor all the day Psal 71. 8. 96. 2 3 4. fifthly when men take away praise from the creature and so from themselues and giue God onely the glory 1. Tim. 1 17. Iohn 7. 18. Reuel 4. 11. 5. 12. 1. Chron. 29. 11. 3. In our workes we giue glory to God and so first by glorifying his Sonne by acknowledging and praising and honouring of Iesus Christ and submitting our selues to his ordinances Iohn 11. 4. and so also when wee honour them that feare God and beare his Image secondly when men abound in good workes and the fruits of righteousnesse and grow in grace and knowledge and so make the Image of God more and more euident suffering themselues to be so framed by the doctrine of the Gospell as to bee changed from glory to glory by the power of the Word 2. Cor. 3. 18. Phil. 10. 11. 2. Pet. 3. 18. 4. 11. Reuel 1. 6. thirdly when men worship God in the beauty of holinesse not onely putting on their best clothes when they come to serue God but clothing themselues with their best deuotions and affections and reuerence and humble adoration 1. Chron. 16. 28 29. fourthly when men submit themselues vnto God and let him doe with them whatsoeuer he will they that ascribe dominion to him ascribe glory to him 1. Peter 5. 10. 11. Lastly when men doe all that they doe to the glory of God studying how God may bee acknowledged or praised for all they doe being in all things some way to the praise of his glory 1. Cor. 10. 31. Ephes 1. 12. 14. Thus we should learne from hence to giue God honour and glory Secondly seeing God is so wonderfull glorious we should be carefull by all meanes to get the knowledge of his glory into our hearts that we may throughout our liues be made happie in the contemplation of his glory which that we may attaine vnto we must looke to these Rules 1. We must resort to and loue his house for that is the place on earth where his glory dwells Psal 26. 8. 63. 3. there
befall a created Nature 3. In the manner of his calling to the Kingdome Hee was called and set vp immediately by God himselfe All other Kings are Anointed and called by men Psal 2. 6. 4. In the manner of getting his subiects other Kings haue their Subiects deliuered to them so soone as they are crowned or proclaimed but Christ gets all his Subiects by Conquest euery one of them is gathered out of the kingdome of darkenesse by his power in their effectuall vocation 5. In respect of his independencie and allsufficiencie Other Kings are maintained by their Subiects from whom they receiue tribute and Subsedies and the like But Christ is no way supported or maintained by his Subiects but doth support and maintaine them Esay 9. 7. 6. In the extent of his kingdome he is a King vniuersall He is King of all the Earth The greatest King that euer was was reiected by many Nations that neuer acknowledged his supremacie there were many parts of this world which Alexander and Caesar neuer saw much lesse subdued Yea he is a King ouer such creatures as neuer mortall man ruled for he is Head of principalities and powers The Angels worship him Dan. 7. 14. Phil. 2. 11. Colos 2. 9. Psal 2. 8. All other Kings hold of him as being King of Kings and Lord of Lords Reuel 19. 16. 7. He excells all other Kings in his Conquests Hee hath conquered such enemies as all the Kings of the Earth could not subdue he conquered sinne and death and the diuells of Hell he hath spoyled principalities and powers Colos 2. 15. 1. Cor. 15. 51. and accordingly hath had such a Tryumph when he ascended into Heauen and led captiuity captiue as neuer Conquerour had for neuer Conquerour rid into so glorious a place as Heauen nor shewed such captiues as the diuells were nor performed their victories by their owne power whereas hee conquered alone there was no Army nay no man to helpe him 8. He excells them in his hous keeping He entertaines all Nations Esay 25. He keepes thousands of Courts all open at once And his prouisions are far more precious then the prouisions of the Kings of the Earth He feeds his guests with the bread of Angels euen with the bread of life with such food as whosoeuer eates of it shall neuer hunger more and he hath better attendance for he is waited on by thousand thousands of Angels which are continually about his Throne 9. Hee gouernes by better lawes then the kings of Earth doe and his lawes are better in diuers respects for first they be all of his owne making they make their lawes by the Assistance of their Counsell or their Parliaments Iames 4. 12. secondly his Lawes are written by himselfe in the hearts of his Subiects wheras other Kings can write them no where but in paper or parchment or stone at the best Ier. 31. 33. thirdly his Lawes are more perfect there is no defect in them they are able to make all his Subiects absolute to euery good word and worke 1. Tim. 3. 17. 18. Psal 19. fourthly together with his Lawes he giues his spirit to make his subiects able and willing to keepe them Ezek. 36. 27. 10. In the power of his Prerogatiue for God hath giuen all things into his hands hee may dispose of the persons liues goods good names and posterities of his Subjects according to his owne will Ioh. 13. 3. which other kings without horrible tyrannie cannot doe 11. In his distributing of Iustice and so both towards his owne seruants and towards the rebellious and his enemies Towards his owne seruants hee can pardon not onely the Punishment but the offence too and can giue such rewards as earthly kings cannot giue And towards his enemies or the rebellious he can inflict punishment vpon their hearts and consciences which other kings cannot doe and he can and will iudge all offenders not such as offend in capitall crimes onely and iudgeth with more Righteousnesse then was euer found in any mortall Tribunall 12. In the Nature of his kingdome His Kingdome is not of this world but spirituall as hauing authority ouer the spirits of men which other Princes haue not and gouerning by spirituall meanes and in spirituall and eternall things the wealth of his Subjects consisting in eternall and spirituall things 13. He is a King Immortall he cannot die hee liues euer to prouide for the wealth of his Subjects and to reward his seruants which is not true of the best kings on earth who are all mortall if they were neuer so great or glorious Of his kingdome there is no end it is euerlasting 1. Tim. 1. 17. Luke 1. 33. Dan. 2. 45. 7. 14. The Vse of this may be First for Consolation All the children of Sion may reioyce in their king Psal 149. 2. and that not onely if they consider his glory in all the former praises but if they consider their owne happinesse vnder him for all the Subiects of this King may dwell safely and inioy a quiet habitation No Subiects haue so much reason to thinke themselues safe as his Subiects Isay 33. 20. 21. 25. Ier. 23. 5. 6. Ezek. 34. 25. and besides they trade for better wealth vnder his gouernement then all the Treasures of the world are worth And further there was neuer any King did loue his Subiects so affectionately as Iesus doth his people Zeph. 3. 17. and in his Kingdome poore men may get preferment aswell as rich men yea the highest dignities may be obtained by them aswell as by the greatest Mat. 5. 3. Adde to these that all his Subiects are Sonnes Rom. 9. 25. 26. and he makes them all Kings too they are Royall all the Nation of them 1. Pet. 2. 9. they are the Princes of the people euen all the people of the God of Abraham Psal 47. 9. Reuel 1. 8. 6. Rom. 5. 17. All these things should much check and reproue that discontentment is too often found in some of Gods children that fret at the wicked or are impatient at their owne estates what is there no King in Sion or is it no priuiledge to them that the first Dominion is come vnto them Micah 4. 9. Secondly for Instruction and that both to all Christians in generall and to the Kings and great men of the Earth in particular 1. All sorts of true Christians should learne from hence 1. To pray that God would open their eyes to see the glory of Christs Kingdome aswell as we discerne the prerogatiues and glory of earthly Kings and the rather because Christ doth so farre exceed them in glory Ephesians 1. 17. to the end 2. To ascribe all praise and glory to his Kingdome to talke of the praise and receiue of his greatnesse Psal 47. 6. 7. Reuel 5. 12 13 14. Psal 145. 10 11. Mat. 11. 10. 3. To pray that his Kingdome may come more and more especially now that we see that the Nations are moued and he seemes to be going about
Christ Now for the communication that passed betweene Christ and the Iewes the storie of it is recorded Ioh. 18. 4 5 6. And in the whole story I note three things First how willing Christ was to be apprehended Secondly how miraculously he shewed his diuine power vpon his enemies Thirdly how carefully he prouides for his Disciples His willingnesse to suffer appeares by those words that affirme that he knowing all things should come to him went forth and as it were offered himselfe by asking Whom seeke yee and by answering that it was He when they name him Euen the more he feared in the Garden at prayer the more he striues to shew vndauntednesse now yea to shew how great difference there is between affliction of spirit and outward distresses when the fit of the distresse of his Soule vnder Gods wrath for our sinne is for a while intermitted hee goeth out to seeke his Aduersaries that sought him as being most willing to take vp a crosse hee accounted so easie in comparison of what he had felt The demonstration of his diuine power vpon his enemies he thus shewed When he had answered that he was that Iesus of Nazareth whom they sought then all went backward and fell to the ground such amazement fell vpon the hearts of the stoutest of them They sought the Man Iesus but that God whose Name was I am out of the temple of his body giues that answer I am he with such impressions of his Diuinitie as strikes them to the ground like dead men And this he did for diuers reasons First to preserue the vndoubted testimony of his Diuinitie He that was shortly to be sacrificed as a Lambe now warres like a Lion for a season that at least the Christian world might know that it was God that did suffer for our sinnes Act. 20. 28. Secondly hereby his enemies are conuicted and left without excuse that will lay hands on him iniuriously that had first laid hands on them so iustly and made them know how able hee was to binde them ouer to eternall perdition Oh how incorrigible is the heart of a wicked man Here may a man behold men smitten to the ground by the hand of God and yet see them rise vp againe as desperately bent as before Yea here stood with these men and among them fell Iudas the Apostle the seruant of Christ and yet riseth againe still a Deuill a Traitor and a Standard-bearer of the Iewes malice who hauing the Deuill in his brest doth most impudently giue the signe of peace with his mouth Thirdly hereby he giues euident demonstration to all the world of the terror of his voice against wicked men at the last day Hee that can fright them thus when he is about to die being yet in the forme of a seruant on earth how will he be found then when he comes in his Kingdome to iudge them from heauen and shall shew himselfe in the forme of God as well as Man What tongue of man can expresse the terror of that voice at that day Goe yee cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the Deuill and his Angels And impenitent men may ghesse at this by the power they haue felt in the voice of Christ in the preaching of the Gospell Another demonstration of his diuine power may it be reckoned that such as knew him should looke vpon him and not know him when hee asked them Whom seeke yee they doe not answer thee but Iesus of Nazareth yet Iudas was amongst them Thirdly his care of the safetie of his Disciples he shewed two waies First by going out alone to meet his Aduersaries lest in the tumult his Disciples should be seazed vpon Secondly by speaking to the armed men to take him and let them depart without in●ury Now the reason why he was so carefull of them was as the Euangelist notes that the word of Iesus might be fulfilled which he spake in his prayer to his Father Of those which thou hast giuen me I haue not lost one And lost they had beene in our sense if they had not beene preserued to do the worke they were elected to viz. to be witnesses of Christs Death and Resurrection throughout the world which worke might haue beene hindered by their apprehension Againe note how our Sauiour carries himselfe towards them Hee speakes to them as their Lord and King and therefore saith Let these depart which are words of authoritie cōmanding them to let the Apostles go which thing is the more cleare because they did let them go accordingly And thus of their comming to Christ The taking of him and binding of him and leading him away followes the story of it we finde in all the Euangelists Now the reasons why he suffered these things are to be considered He that giues libertie to Captiues was taken himselfe that hee might deliuer vs from captiuity vnder Satan by whom wee were detained and that his captiuitie might comfort the Martyrs that suffer for the Testimony of Iesus and might sanctifie their restraints and so he was bound that we might be freeed from the bonds of our sins and of the Deuill and euill examples and customes of the world in which we were fettered and that he might comfort such as are in bonds for righteousnesse sake He was vnciuilly led out of the Garden that so he might lead vs into the heauenly Paradise out of which we were cast Thus of what the Iewes did to him What was done by his Disciples is briefly noted and that was that they all forsooke him and fled so as he was forsaken on all hands And he suffered this desertion for diuers reasons First that so no iot of our redemption no not the least parcell of it might be ascribed to any other than to one Iesus alone Secondly that hereby he might satisfie Gods iustice for vs that had forsaken God and fell away from him by our sins Thirdly that this example might somewhat ease and comfort such as are left and forsaken by their friends in their distresse Fourthly the Scripture was herein fulfilled Smite the shepherd and the sheepe shall be scattered and Christs words came to passe All of you this night shall be offended in mee I omit here the resistance made by the Disciples especially by Peter and the discourse and behauiour of our Sauiour vpon it because that was no part of Christs Passion though it were something that fell out in the storie Hitherto of Christs Apprehension and so of the things that went before his Arraignment The things he suffered at his Arraignment follow and these may be referred to two heads The one is the things he suffered when he was brought bound before the Iudges or Rulers in the night when things were carried tumultuously and without any order The other containes the things he suffered when they would proceed iudicially with him and that was in the day time In the night he suffered three things First he was carried vp and downe bound from
that Iudas sinned and was damned and yet was an Apostle of Christ as well as Peter 3. We may hence learne what is necessarie to true repentance viz. First to get out from the society of wicked men a man cannot repent and yet remaine still by the High-Priests fire Secondly to bewaile our sinnes by true godly sorrow in secret without mourning for sin there can be no true repentance for sinne and therefore the afflicting of our soule for our sinnes is peremptorily required Ioel 2. 12. Iam. 4. And the sacrifices of God are a broken and contrite heart Psal 51. 4. Here are diuers things worthy the marking about the meanes of a mans conuersion For first hence we may learne that the Doctrine a man heares though it doe not presently worke vpon him yet the remembrance of it in after-times may be very powerfull to turne a mans heart to God as here Peter is turned by remembring what Iesus said vnto him though when he said it Peter made no good vse of it Againe wee may gather hence that God can awaken the conscience of a man by strange operations by very simple and vnlikely meanes as here the conscience of Peter is excited by the crowing of a Cocke but especially the heart of Peter is dissolued and grownd almost to powder with the very lookes of Christ Iesus looked backe vpon him and he went out and wept bitterly 5. Here is also matter of Consolation for penitent sinners may bence gather that great offences may be forgiuen if they be truly humbled If we weepe for our sinnes as Peter did we may be receiued to fauour as Peter was Besides our Sauiour that foretold his fall annexeth two admirable consolations First that he prayeth for the godly that their faith should not faile though they fall grieuously Secondly that how far soeuer the Deuill preuailes yet all his temptations shall be but like a winnowing God can tell how to draw light out of darknesse and to waste the maine heape of corruption euen from his working vpon mens hearts through the sight of their falls into some particular corruptions Luk. 22. 31 32. Lastly the example of the falls of godly men should teach vs to vse all meanes to strengthen one another that wee may be vpheld from falling especially such as haue fallen and are recouered should striue by all meanes to warne others and to helpe by all waies they can to preserue others When thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren said our Sauiour to Peter Luk. 22. 32. Thus he was denied by Peter 3. He was ill intreated by them that kept him bound for as Saint Luke shewes chapter 22. they mocked him and smote him and when they had blindfolded him they stroke him on the face and asked him saying Prophecie vnto vs who it is that smote thee And many other things blasphemously spake they against him Here we may behold a lamentable spectacle of that disorder into which wretched men fall when they giue the reynes to their wicked malice and thinke they may doe it without punishment What wofull indignities are these these base Iewes offer to our blessed Sauiour They blindfold and buffet that face which their godly Forefathers and Prophets so longed to behold euen that face that was fairer than the children of men And what was of more authoritie than the sacred Prophecying of Iesus who spake as neuer man spake and confirmed it by miracles and yet see how this base vulgar scornes his Prophecying They that before persecuted the Prophets of the Lord now blaspheme and deride the Lord of the Prophets Thus it is still with vs in places where the wicked multitude dare oppose the Messengers of Christ with opinion they may doe it without punishment When Magistrates are wicked haters of goodnesse these things fall out amongst the multitude There are two signes of a childe of God The personall loue of the Lord Iesus 1 Pet. 1. 8. and the high estimation of the word of Christ Now on the contrary there cannot be more palpable signes of a wicked or reprobate heart than to loath Christ and despise Prophecying Againe note another madnesse and folly in these beasts They thinke they can hoodwinke Christ What can their base couering hide the eies of the Son of God that had so often made them know that he could see into their very hearts Will God be blindfolded Thus foolish are wicked men and this mad folly is not out of the hearts of such men amongst vs that thinke they haue the skill still to hoodwinke God that he should not see their hypocrisie and know their secret corruptions But some one may say it was wonder Christ would endure such meane vsage I answer we must looke higher than the wickednesse of these men Christ as our surety suffers all this that he might make expiation for our sinnes that had lost the face or image of God and that he might deliuer vs from those contumelies might iustly follow vs for our sinnes and withall might leaue vs an example of patience if we suffer meane vsage from the men of this world and the rather because we see in the Text what interpretation was made of this dealing of theirs it is reckoned as blasphemy against God And thus of the things done in the Night tumultuously Now followes the things he suffered in the Day when they proceed to Iudgement for in the morning early they bring forth Iesus to be indited and heare Iudgement and that both in the Ecclesiasticall and in the Ciuill Court But before I open the particulars our hearts should make a stand and thinke of the generall with amazement at the worke was done that day There was neuer such a dreadfull sight to be seene in any age of the world for on that day the Sonne of God the King of Heauen and Earth stood at the barre of mortall creatures was indited and condemned of sinfull men and had many grieuous things laid to his charge Oh in what Labyrinths are our dead hearts sleeping that so prodigious a thing as this cannot waken vs to vnspeakable sense and wonder But let vs consider the reasons of his Passion in this kinde in generall 1. Our Sauiour would not die in a tumult or secretly but came solemnely to his triall in both Courts that so his innocency might be fully cleared and the wicked enuie and malice of the High Priests and the Iewes might be made manifest 2. He stood there as surety for vs that were obnox ous to the sentence of the eternall Iudge and had deserued by our sinnes to bee indited and condemned to eternall perdition 3. He was indited and condemned on earth that he might free vs from the furie of Gods iudgement that we might neuer appeare before Gods Tribunall to be arraigned for our sinnes but only to heare iudgement for our absolution and entrance into the possession of that euerlasting kingdome And therefore the Vse of this should be for singular comfort to
signified and God doth acknowledge that in that houre he had made an Atonement and saued vs from our sins so that we haue Gods owne hand to acquit vs if we beleeue in Iesus 2. That God acknowledgeth him to bee that Nazarene which title importeth his condition and may be diuersly interpreted As that Iesus was the more deare to God euen in that wherein he was most despised of men It was one of the wayes by which the Iewes derided Christ to call him a Galilean or a Nazarene as intending thereby to proue he could not be a fit man to saue Israel in that hee was not a Bethlehemite and of the house of Dauid But this reproach God puts into the crowne of Iesus to signifie That he can loue and honour such as men reproach and deride It was a Nick-name giuen to true Christians as well as to Christ to be called Galileans by the Iewes Besides he was that Nazarite in as much as he was separate to God and had all those perfections of holinesse of which the Nazarites in the Law were types But chiefly I thinke by this Title is signified that Christ was that Branch foretold by the Prophets His name was the Branch which terme in the Hebrew is Netzar Isai 11. 1. And God would by this Addition tell the Christian Church that he can raise the Kingdome of his Sonne out of the dust and from small beginnings can erect a mightie frame of Soueraigntie and power to his Sonne Iesus and withall to comfort vs in our abasements that God that can lay the foundation of Christs Kingdome in such extreme abasements of Christ can glorifie his power and grace to his people euen in rescuing them from their lowest extremities 3. That God acknowledgeth Iesus not only to be a King but that King by an excellencie that the Prophecies had made such honourable mention of and that excelled all the Kings of the earth God now giues him a Name aboue euery Name that is named Phil. 2. 11. The name of a King is greatest on earth and amongst Kings Iesus is that King that excells them all and that in diuers respects as that in the preheminence of his Person and in the excellency of his gifts for gouernment and in respect of his independencie and in the extent of his Kingdome hee being a King vniuersall and other Kings being but his subiects and in the Laws by which he gouernes and in the power of his prerogatiue and in distributing of Iustice and in the nature of his kingdome and in the continuance of his kingdome as hath beene shewed in the former Article of the Creed vpon the word Christ Quest But why would God haue the Christian Churches to know that Iesus is a King and such a King and why doth he tell it them now when Iesus is in so ignominious a condition Ans 1. That they might know that his kingdome comes not by obseruation and that neither his right nor his power is lost by any outward abasements Hee can triumph vpon the Crosse and can come forth of so low a condition to conquer as a mighty King and withall that they might know for euer that tribulations shal not hinder the kingdom of Christ and that he can bring strange things to passe when all humane helpes doe faile 2. That they might know that he was able to saue them by application as he now did by merit He did like a great King pay the Ransome for all the Elect on the Crosse as he is called of God a King to let vs know that he can deliuer vs in the day of our saluation by making his sufferings effectuall for all the worke of our redemption and can grant vs better priuiledges than any of the Kings of the earth See the first vse of the word Christ before 3. That notice might hereby bee giuen to the Christian world that the redemption made in the bloud of Iesus must giue no liberty to sin for he was a King and would looke for seruice and subiection and that we should doe all that to him which subiects owe to their Soueraignes as to studie the mysteries and bowe at the Name of Iesus and stand for his honour and obserue whatsoeuer he commands fearing to displease him in any thing yeelding themselues to be gouerned by his ordinances 4. That Christians might be incouraged to seeke to Iesus in all time of distresse seeing he is so great a King and hath had such experience of sorrowes himselfe Fourthly it is to be noted that God acknowledgeth Iesus to be the King of the Iewes which imports the great glory of Christs power and soueraigntie that can raise vp a Kingdome to himselfe euen among the very Iewes that crucified him which was shortly after made manifest when so many thousands of the Iewes were conuerted to the faith of Christ of the Iewes I say not those Iewes that said they were Iewes and were not but were the Synagogue of Satan but of the spirituall Iewes Rev. 3. Fifthly this Title was written in three Languages and that was to signifie that euery tongue should confesse the glory of Iesus Phil. 3. 11. so as the Gospell should be carried into all Nations It is likely Pilate did it that so the people of all Nations that were at the Passeouer might vnderstand the Title but God did it to shew that the Gospell should be carried into the whole world These three languages were the most knowne of all the rest The Latine because of the Romane Empire and the Greeke by reason of the studies of Philosophie and the Hebrew for the antiquitie of it and being the language of the Iewes But why in three languages but to shew vs that God would haue his seruice and his will made knowne in the mother tongue of their Nation and withall to signifie that neither the superstition of the Iewes nor the wisdome of the Grecians neither power of the Romanes should hinder the conquest of Iesus in his kingdome Lastly Pilate though moued to it would not alter a letter of the Title Which should teach vs that no aduersarie power in the world can hinder the kingdome or saluation by Iesus and that God will not suffer vs to lose a iote of our right in Christ and withall such Christians as can suffer Papists or Sectaries or Arminians to alter the records of their faith and put out and deface one Article after another these Christians are not true Christians and in some respect worse to Iesus than this Heathen man was Thus of the first testimonie giuen to our Sauiour vpon the Crosse The second testimonie was giuen by the darknesse that fell out from the sixth houre to the ninth About this darknesse two things are to be inquired after First the manner of it and then what it might signifie For the manner of it It was without question miraculous for first it falling out at the time of the Passeouer which was the fifteenth day of the Moone
might haue the better assurance that God would shew mercy but this is not the case of most of our people 5. That the repentance of this Theefe had a great deale of businesse in it more than saying three words at his latter end as will appeare by opening the third point and that is how he shewed the truth of his conuersion So that for the third point we may obserue in the storie of his conuersion Luke 23. that he shewed three excellent fruits of his conuersion The one was reproofe of sinne in his fellow The other was his confession that he made both concerning himselfe and Christ The third was his petition or prayer to Christ for mercy For the first Saint Luke saith vers 40. that when the other malefactor railed on Christ he answered and rebuked him saying Dost not thou feare God seeing that thou art in the same condemnation Out of which words I obserue diuers things 1. That a true conuert cannot abide sin or that God should be dishonoured by those that they conuerse withall He that repents of his owne sinne may discerne it by his true dislike of sinne in others They are farre from true repentance that can liue in places where God is daily dishonoured and yet haue not their hearts vexed or their tongues loosed to reproue sinne 2. That he that will reproue sinne in others must be sure they haue mouing and effectuall arguments They must haue skill to admonish We see here what a stirring argument the conuerted Theefe brings Yea it is true that if the hatred of sinne be sincere in vs it will furnish vs with solid arguments to furnish reproofe 3. That the want of the feare of God is the cause of all disorder as it was of this mans rayling so it is of drunkennesse whoredome swearing stealing lying vsurie and the like if men had the feare of God before their eyes they would not doe so 4. That such as do abuse Christ by scoffing or rayling haue great cause to be afraid of God and what he will doe to them though they escape punishment amongst men Such sinnes as men will not punish God will especially these sinnes of scorning or reproching Christ and true Christians and the ordinances of Christ 5. That a true conuert doth loue Christ better than his old acquaintance as here the Theefe speakes against his old comrade and companion and for Christ though he had neuer seene him before 6. That such as will scoffe and raile at the truth haue no feare of God in them 7. That for a man not to repent when the iudgement of God is vpon him is a signe of a carelesse and gracelesse heart It is a wickednesse or stubbornnesse to be wondred at that a man being vnder the execution of condemnation as a malefactor should yet be void of the feare of God see Ier. 5. 3 4. Hee that will not thinke of paying his debts when the Arrest is serued vpon him hath no minde to pay it at all And the childe that relenteth not when he is vnder the rod is in a manner past grace So is it with men that haue hearts like Adamants when Gods speciall hand is vpon them Dost not thou feare God As if he would say though others were carelesse yet it is an infinite shame for thee that art in the same condemnation not to feare God Now for his confession that he made it stands of two parts In the one he doth penitently accuse himselfe and his fellow as suffering iustly and receiuing the due reward of their deeds and in the other he doth excuse Christ and auouch that hee hath done nothing amisse or that is absurd or out of place as the originall word doth import 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the first part of his Confession I obserue these things 1. That without confession of sinne ●here can be no true repentance Prou. 28. 13. 1 Ioh. 1. 9. 2. That a true Conuert doth from his heart acknowledge that he hath deserued all the miseries are inflicted vpon him from God or man and doth patiently submit himselfe to beare them Dan. 9. 7 8. without stomack or malice or desire of reuenge vpon such as are instruments of his punishment 3. That he that reproues sinne in others in sincerity of heart doth acknowledge sinne in himselfe if he be guilty of the same or the like offence The repenting Theefe makes this confession in his owne name as well as in the name of the railing Theefe In the second part of his Confession I obserue 1. It is a signe of true grace to haue from the heart an honourable opinion of Gods seruants though they be extremely disgraced and slandered and reuiled as in the Theefe here to beleeue Christ did nothing amisse though almost all the world accused him and put him to death as a malefactor 2. That in Religion it is not enough to be free from grosse sinnes but we must be free from the sinnes of indiscretion and rashnesse Nor is it enough to doe good duties but we must doe all things wisely and in their place so the word in the originall imports About his prayer we are to obserue both what he said and what our Sauiour answered His words were these Lord remember me when thou commest into thy kingdome vers 42. In which words of his prayer I note the wonder of his faith the truth of his deuotion and the humilitie of his Petition His faith was to be wondered at both for the things beleeued and the circumstances of beleeuing For the things beleeued hee here saith foure great things of Christ First that he was Lord and King Secondly that his Kingdome was spirituall and not of this world Thirdly that in that very abasement he was possessed of a Kingdome he saith not When thou shalt come to reigne but when thou commest reigning Fourthly that he had power to let in all penitent sinners into that Kingdome The circumstances make it more wonderfull that he should confesse all this and yet haue no Preacher to instruct him and Christ himselfe so much abased and being a man that had not seene his former Miracles that he should say thus at this time when the cuting of the sicke was ceased and the giuing sight to the blinde and the raising of the dead and that he should thus acknowledge these glories in Christ when the great Rabbies the Priests and Scribes blasphemed him and could not acknowledge him for the Messias The truth of his deuotion appeares in this that he askes not temporall but eternall life He is more carefull to pray for the saluation of his soule than for the deliuerance of his body The humility of his petition appeares in this that he askes not for a great place in heauen or to sit at his right hand or his left as the sonnes of Zebedee did nor to be preferred before others nor at all to prescribe vnto Christ but onely desires to be remembred of him for any place
buried not for himselfe but for other men and that he might shew that graues properly belong to vs which haue sinned to warne vs of our mortalitie Ioseph caused his sepulchre to be made in his garden of pleasure that he might be thereby put in minde of his mortalitie in the middest of the delights of this life The persons by whom Christ was buried are diuersly described as by their names Ioseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus and by their worldly estate they were Senators and rich men and by their profession or religion they were disciples iust men such as waited for the kingdome of God but yet all was done secretly for feare of the Iewes and by the authoritie they had to doe it viz. the consent of Pilate Matth. 27. 57. Mark 15. 45. Ioh. 19. 38 39. For the first of these it is to be obserued that God hath giuen these men an honourable name in the Storie of the Gospell so as what they haue done shall alwaies be remembred where the Gospell is preached and this honourable mention they attained not till this seruice done to the dead bodie of Christ Whereby God would teach vs that such as honour Christ God will honour and the best way to get into the Catalogue of Gods Worthies is to imploy our selues in well-doing and in the seruice of Iesus Christ and then we can doe no good worke to Christ dead or liuing in himselfe or his members but it shall be had in honour yea it may be in euerlasting remembrance For the second Christ was buried by rich men First that the Scripture might be fulfilled that said He exposed his graue to the wicked and to the rich man in his death To the wicked because he could not be buried without Pilates consent and to the rich man because hee was buried by Ioseph of Arimatheas meanes Thus he was said to be buried and raised vp according to the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15. 4. Secondly he gaue his dead bodie to rich men to signifie that amongst rich men he had his elect and that the vertue of his death should reach euen to them for though it bee impossible in respect of men that a rich man should be saued yet it is not so vnto Christ who can effect wonderfull things and so can by the vertue of his death so vntwist the gable of a rich mans heart as to make it in true humilitie like a thread to goe thorow the eye of a needle Matth. 19. 24. Iam. 1. 10. 1 Cor. 1. 26. And hence rich men should learne of Ioseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus that they ought to professe their loue of Christ and sincere Religion not only when Christ is adorned with miracles and worldly applause but euen when he fals into the hands of wicked men and is buried in ignominie they must not feare danger or reproach They must honour Christ not onely in the peaceable times of the Church but in troubled times Euen when Christ in his members is betrayed persecuted oppressed forsaken of his owne condemned either in spirituall Courts or politicall pursued by warres or any other vexations And the poore seruants of God that suffer for the testimonie of Iesus may hence take comfort God that stirred vp rich men to doe this honour to the bodie of Iesus will not forsake the afflicted members of Iesus he can stirre vp men to prouide for them and honour them euen greatmen when it pleaseth him both in their life time and at their death and after their death also Now for the third point they were disciples of Christ but yet it was secretly for feare of the Iewes Whence we may obserue the great wonder of Gods power in these men When Christ was in prosperitie they were afraid to be seene to follow him or to professe respect to him Now that Christ is in extreme disgrace and the enemies of Christ fleshed in cruelty and malice now these fearfull men proue valiant and whatsoeuer comes of it Christ shall be honoured euen the dead bodie of Christ shall not be forsaken by them Which is the more wonderfull because the best disciples of Christ were so ouercome with feare that they had all forsaken Christ Which may serue for great vse to all of vs. They that stand should take heed lest they fall Those that now go for strong Christians if euill daies come may proue faint-hearted and by their fearefulnesse dishonour the Religion they professe And on the other side weake Christians should not be dismayed God is able to make them to stand Rom. 14. 4. Such as in dayes of prosperitie were afraid of the reproach of men may proue so full of courage in the euill day as not to feare though the foundations of the earth be moued Further we may hence gather a distinction of true Christians Some are so and seeme so they make a profession before men Some are so but seeme not so as here these Counsellors were iust men and disciples and waited for the kingdome of God and yet they were not taken for disciples nor knowne to be so commonly which should restraine censure in rash Christians some of those persons they despise as prophane may be true Christians in Gods sight But yet lest wicked men should be hence emboldned obserue that how weake or fearfull soeuer these men were yet they would not consent to the death of Christ Though the weake Christians I speake of doe not so much for the truth as others doe and they should yet they will doe nothing against the truth 2 Cor. 13. 8. and therefore such persons as not onely make no profession but withall doe scoffe at and oppose sinceritie in others cannot be reckoned in the catalogue of true Christians Pilates consent was had for the buriall of Christ 1. That there might be no doubt made of his death and buriall seeing so great a person is made priuy to the ordering of it 2. That we might know that the hearts of the greatest men are in Gods hands and he can turne them which way he will euen to execute his counsell when they thinke nothing of it He can make the very enemies of the Church become friendly and louing when please him And further in that Ioseph doth not take the dead body downe and burie it without leaue of the Magistrate it serues to teach men that they should doe all things with due respect not only of the warrant of the action but of all circumstances belonging to it especially great respect should be had to authoritie that by rash zeale the power of Magistrates be not prouoked against vs. Thus of the third point The manner of the buriall containes diuers things First they did it hastily towards the euening because of the preparation of the Iowes for the Sabbath Ioh. 19. vlt. Secondly they did it openly Thirdly they did it with great cost for Ioseph brought fine linnen to wrap it in and Nicodemus brought a mixture of Mirrhe and Aloes to the quantitie
Humane Nature And whereas the Saints and Apostles are said to iudge the world Luk. 22. 30. 1 Cor. 6. it must be vnderstood thus That they iudge as members vnto that head who is Iudge Secondly as the Iudgement shall be performed before Christ and the company of the Elect Ioel 3. 2. Thirdly as they shall be Assessors and giue consent to the Iudgement being aduanced to the honour to sit as Iustices of the Peace on the Bench by the Iudge Fourthly the Apostles shall iudge because their doctrine which they haue preached shall be confirmed and auouched by the sentence of the Iudge So the word that men heare now shall iudge them at the last day Iohn 5. Fifthly the godly shall iudge the wicked because the example of their faith and repentance shall be alledged as a furtherance of the condemnation of the wicked Thus the Queene of the South and the Niniuites shall rise vp in Iudgement and condemne that generation Christ speaks of Luk. 11. 31. So that the point is cleare that Christ shall be Iudge The Vse is first for great comfort to the godly to free them from the terror of that day they need not bee afraid of the Iudge nor any hard sentence he will pronounce vpon them seeing the Iudge is their owne brother yea their owne flesh as their head it was he that was iudged for them on earth and redeemed them with his owne bloud he that hath continually made intercession for them in heauen that they might be deliuered from the wrath of God Yea he hath promised them that they shall speed well in that day Hebr. 2. 11. Eph. 5. 30. Ioh. 3. 36. and 5. 24. Secondly it is a terrible doctrine for all wicked men because this is a Iudge that cannot be corrupted but will iudge in righteousnesse as there is none higher than he to make appeale to and because also he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that knowes the heart and finally because it is he whom they haue reiected and would not let him rule ouer them but haue many waies vilified him and rebelled against him and his ordinances and persecuted him in his members Reuel 1. 7 8. The third question is whence Christ shall come when he comes to Iudgement And that is briefly exprest in the words of the Article He shall come from thence that is from Heauen where he sits at the right hand of God The reason why he comes out of Heauen to execute Iudgement is because Heauen is so pure a place as it is not fit for impure men and deuils so much as to make their appearance there And this point is not without Vse For first hereby we may clearly bee confirmed in the truth of Christs humanitie against the Vbiquitaries that say his bodie is euery where seeing he comes in his bodie out of Heauen at the last day And besides it may teach vs to send our hearts to Heauen to meet Christ and till he come from thence to looke for him Phil. 3. 20. The fourth question is about the time when the day of Iudgement shall be Now about the answer to this question there haue beene many opinions and the most of them strange and false 1. Some haue thought it should neuer be and such were those mockers mentioned 2 Pet. 3. whose argument to proue their damned opinion was twofold First that the first Fathers in the first ages of the world were dead many ages since and if there should haue beene a Iudgement it is likely it would haue beene before this time Secondly that all men see by experience that all things continued without alteration since the Creation and therefore why should men feare any alteration for the time to come To all this the Apostle answers first concerning the persons of these mockers that they are men that follow their lusts vers 3. or that they are willingly ignorant v. 5. and then concerning their reasons he saith against them three things The one that this world was made at the beginning by God both the vpper and nether world and therefore it may haue an end v. 5. The other that it is false that there haue been no alterations for the whole nether world was drowned by water which may assure men that God hates sinne and will generally iudge men for it vers 6. The third is that the continuance of the world for so many ages ought to bee no argument to proue that it is vnalterable for a thousand yeares with God are but as one day it is a small time that the world hath lasted in comparison of Gods eternitie and besides God hath vrgent reason for his so long patience in deferring the last iudgement vers 8 9. 2. Some others in the Apostles time taught that the resurrection and so by consequent the day of Iudgement was past already of this minde was Himenaeus and Philetus 2 Tim. 2. It is probable that they held there was no other resurrection than that which is of the soule spiritually rising out of sinne nor any other Iudgement than that which men passe through in repentance 3. A third sort of men that did hold a true resurrection of the bodie and a generall Iudgement of all the world did affirme before the Apostles were yet dead that the Iudgement would come vpon the world within a short time after euen in the age of them that then liued 2 Thess 2. 1 2 3. Now these false teachers are both described and confuted by the Apostle described both by the effect of their corrupt doctrine viz. that it would draw men away from their minds both for the present by making them lesse carefull of their callings and for the time to come when they should see that that day did not come as was foretold they might then grow either impatient vnder their crosse or else to fall away from religion beleeuing nothing because that they haue beleeued in this point did not come to passe and described they were by the manner of confirming their doctrine For they pretended first the Spirit that they had reuelations from the Spirit within Secondly the word that is either some speciall arguments of their owne or some words which the Apostles had vttered Thirdly Epistles either wresting the words of the Epistles of the Apostles as that 1 Thess 4. 7. or else counterfeiting Epistles and saying they were written by the Apostles The Apostle confutes them by shewing that the kingdome of Antichrist must come before the day of Iudgement The fourth sort of men are such as assigne the time of the comming of Christ to be further off from the age of the Apostles and offend in extreme curiositie in assigning the yeare or age when it should be and so mens wits haue beene ill imployed in all ages Saint Augustiae tells that in his time diuers computations were made of the end of the world and Christs comming Some said it would be 400. yeares after his Ascension some 500. yeares some
day Which should much incourage the godly against all the hardship of godlinesse in this life There are many things may be briefly noted from the particular words by which this glorious calling is exprest 1. In that the Iudge is suddenly by change of stile called a King it might haue some vse for the present respect of the Disciples that dreamed of an earthly kingdom in this world and besides a generall respect vnto the godly of all ages to informe them that though Christ entertaine his seruants in this world but in meane conditions many times and that thereby his glory seems much abased amongst men yet at that day he will speake and doe for them like a King yea a King alone when all other Kings shall lay their Crownes at his feet 2. In that he saith Come yee it notes how glad Christ will be of them at that day as of such as haue beene long from him No father can be so glad to see his children that haue beene long absent as Christ will be to see his members while he yet sits vpon the Throne of Iudgement he cannot chuse but shew his affection 3. In that he saith Yee blessed of my Father he shewes them the fountaine of all their preferment to be Gods free loue and grace to them and not their deserts And withall teacheth vs to be confident in it that no people are so blessed and happy as such as be true Christians They are the blessed of God euen such as God blesseth as a father If Israels blessing could make Iacob happy much more Gods blessings vpon those he acknowledgeth for his children It matters not though the world hate vs and curse vs if God will loue vs and blesse vs it is enough 4. In that he saith Inherit the kingdome it imports that we shall neuer haue full possession of perfect glory till the day of Iudgement We are heires now but we are as it were vnder age And besides merit of works is here againe confuted for if we hold heauen by inheritance then not by merit a mans child claimes not his land by desert but by descent And further in that he cals their glory a kingdome it giues vs a glimpse of the surpassing aduancement of euery true Christian at that day This world hath no higher estates to shadow it out by but a kingdome which is the highest greatnesse on earth and therefore we should be greatly comforted against the miseries we suffer in the daies of our banishment and pilgrimage here below 5. In that he saith Prepared we may gather from that word the great care of our heauenly Father that prouides estates for all his children long before they be ready to possesse it which should be some instruction to earthly Parents to shew care for their children in prouiding if it may be for them before hand 6. In that he saith for you it manifestly shewes that God did particularly chuse certaine men and not all men as heires of his kingdome 7. In that he saith from the foundation of the world we may againe note that Heauen is not had by our merits because it was prepared before we had done either good or euill Obserue also that our Sauiour making mention of the beginning of the world expresseth it by mentioning the foundation of the world great was the surpassing glory of Gods power and wisdome in making the world and likewise beyond all apprehension great was his power in hanging this mightie frame of all things without any thing to hold it vp saue his owne secret power and decree and will it should be so Or may not the foundation of the world be referred to the minde of God in eternitie Though this world were framed and reared in the beginning of time yet may we not say that it was founded in the minde of God from all eternitie The consideration of all these things in the calling to glory should greatly abase vs for our want of affection and admiration and strong consolation in the hope of all this glory and if it be possible it should plucke vp our hearts to a feruent loue and longing for and hasting to the appearing of Christ Iesus our hearts I say vpon whom the ends of the world are come when the day of the Lord is so neare at hand And withall it should worke in vs a perfect patience in bearing the afflictions of this life these light afflictions I say light in comparison of that eternall weight of glory Thus of their calling to glory The Reason followes vers 35. 36. And it is taken from their workes of mercy as they are signes of their faith in Christ and as markes of their Adoption not as causes of their glory and yet if it were granted they were causes of glory yet it will not follow they are meritorious causes There are many sorts of efficient causes besides causes meritorious if any aske why their workes of piety are not mentioned or workes of righteousnesse as well as mercy I answer that mercy is not absolutely better than piety but only in a sort viz. in respect of men and as mercy doth iustifie our pietie to be right Now out of all the words I obserue 1. That good workes are necessary to saluation as causes without which no saluation will be had 2. That workes of mercie are very acceptable to God Acts 10. 4. Phil. 4. 18. 3. That the best charitie is to releeue godly Christians Gal. 6. 10. From the answer of the godly we may gather something of defect and something of praise The defect seemes to be that they doe not sufficiently informe themselues of the dearenesse of relation betweene them and Christ and the great account that Christ makes of their workes As we must not be iust ouer-much to think better of our selues than there is cause so we must not be wicked ouer-much in denying Gods grace or attributing more sinne to our selues than is true Their great praise imported in these words is that they forget the good they haue done being more prone to see and acknowledge their vnworthinesse whereas wicked men can remember the good they haue done but forget their sinnes From the Reply of Christ we may obserue the neere coniunction betweene Christ and Christians Hee reckons of them as of himselfe and is affected with all that befalls them as if it did befall himselfe He is not ashamed to call them brethren yea he reckons poore Christians as a part of himselfe though they be despised in the world yet he loues them as he loues himselfe they are pretious in his eyes calling them brethren hee vouchsafeth them incredible honour which should greatly stirre vs vp to charity and if at any time we are dull set Christ before our eyes and thinke what a Sacrilege it is to deny releefe to Christ Thus of the sentence of absolution which being ended he will proceed to the sentence of condemnation Hee is not so mercifull as to forget to be
religion and were circumcised and withall religious or deuoute men that were Gentiles conuerted to the Iewish religion but were not circumcised such as were Cornelius and diuers others The speciall nature of the Church in which it differs from all other companies of men is exprest in the other wordes of the definition and so they shew vs three things 1. The efficient cause of the Church viz. her calling by the voice of Gods Cryer 2. The tearmes from which and to which she is called in the middle words of the definition 3. The fo●me of the Church which consists in her vnion with Christ and communion with her selfe among the members of that company For the first when I say she is called ordinarily by the voice of Gods Cryers I intimate diuers things thereby 1. That the Preachers of the Gospell are as publike Criers to call men to heare what God hath to say to them like those Cryers in Athens of whom I spake before Matth. 3. Esay 48. 1. 2. That I consider not of the Church as she is elect of God till shee be called because many of the Elect for a great part of their liues may lie scattered about and hidden in the heapes of the men of this world 3. That the preaching of the Gospell is the meanes to make men actually of the Church and members of Christ and so to haue right to saluation The Gospell is the power of God to saluation Rom. 1. 16. and 10. 14. 4. I adde effectually called to exclude Hypocrites and carnall men that enioy the meanes but obey it not and to include the worke of the Holy Ghost making the hearts of the Elect to answer to Gods call and obey his voice for by the Spirit God speakes also internally to their hearts 5. I adde the Word ordinarily to shew that though God is pleased to binde men to the vse of the meanes yet he himselfe is not tied but can worke without the meanes and so it may giue vs occasion to informe our selues in diuers cases as first in the case of such as liue in places where the meanes is not nor can be had It is possible that God extraordinarily may worke conuersion in some men in such places which was the case of Cornelius liuing in Caesarea Act. 10. Secondly in the case of Infants who do belong to the Church by vertue of Gods Couenant though they liue not to receiue conuersion by the preaching of the Gospell for Christ saith of Infants Theirs is the kingdome of God Thirdly in the case of such as liue in Paganish and idolatrous places as in the times of the darknesse of Popery or in the case where men are by violence carried away and brought vp in idolatrous places God may haue a remnant amongst them that belong to his election and are in time truly called as in the daies of Elias in the kingdome of the ten Tribes vnder the reigne of Ahab Fourthly in the case of such as are borne deafe or become so before they are capable of receiuing the Gospell they being borne of godly parents may belong to the Church as Infants do I say God that knowes his owne from eternitie may euen amongst them by the supply of the Spirit make members of the Church Besides seeing the Holy Ghost doth not need speciall instruments to worke withall sometimes he may worke that by the eyes of the deafe which he doth by the eares of others for by their eyes he may powre in an eternall light into their mindes Lastly the case of such as are destitute of vnderstanding by nature or disease is very hard because they want reason and so are incapable of faith and if we say that the Holy Ghost may infuse an inward light then it is cleare they cease to be fooles or mad-men In this case therefore we must religiously and charitably suspend and leaue Gods worke to himselfe The termes from which and to which the Church is called follow in these words from the prophanenesse of the world to enioy the supernaturall dignitie of the children of God The terme from which Terminus à quo is from the prophanenesse of the world in which words three things may be noted First that the true members of the Church were in their estate of Nature as prophane as the people of the world liuing in sin and being the children of wrath as well as others which shew the exceeding riches of Gods grace and Christs loue to them that could respect them being so vile and sinfull Secondly that our first parents before the fall could not properly be said to be the Church because they neither were called from an estate of corruption nor did they then need Christ nor had that faith in Christ being perfect by creation and so not wanting a Sauiour whereas the Church is properly the Spouse of Christ Thirdly by these words all men in visible Churches may trie themselues for only they that are conuerted from prophanenesse are true members of the Church and so Hypocrites are excluded and open prophane persons and such as are only changed in their opinions and not in their practise 2 Pet. 1. 4. Terminus ad quem or the terme to which they are called is to the supernaturall dignity of the sons of God which words expresse the grace of Adoption which comprehends the substance of all that felicity we haue from God in Christ after calling Eph. 1. 4. but of the priuiledges of the Church afterwards The last words of the definition describes the forme of the Church the essentiall inward forme which is that vnion with Christ by faith they are really members of the Church that are vnited to Christ as their head by faith without this faith it is impossible to please God and faith comprehends all that which essentially God requires of vs to iustification and adoption Ioh. 3. 16. I adde their vnion one with another by loue because brotherly loue is an inseparable fruit of faith for faith worketh by loue Gal. 5. 6. and is such a Characteristicall signe of a true member of the Church that the Apostle saith thereby we know we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren 1 Ioh. 3. 14. and the same Apostle seemes to make Loue a kinde of forme of the true Christian Eph. 1. 4. Thus of the definition of the Church The originall of the Church followes next to be considered and so I consider of the Church as she is the Church not as these men were in their estate of Nature for so her father was an Amorite and her mother an Hittite in as much as she was sinfully borne she was basely borne but that company that I call the Church were not the Church when they were in that estate of Nature The Church then as shee is the Spouse of Christ hath many things in her originall that are very glorious and much to be admired And that if we consider her originall in respect of decree