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A25294 The substance of Christian religion, or, A plain and easie draught of the Christian catechisme in LII lectures on chosen texts of Scripture, for each Lords-day of the year, learnedly and perspicuously illustrated with doctrines, reasons, and uses / by that reverend and worthy laborer in the Lord's vineyard, William Ames ... Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1659 (1659) Wing A3003; ESTC R6622 173,739 322

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that there is no joy nor gladness in the practice of godliness and so they shun godliness and the care of it as that which is full of sadness and melancholy But the Scriptures teach otherwayes that the godly are called to this that they may alwayes rejoyce Phil. 4. 4. and that they alwayes are as it were feasting with all gladness according to that of Solomon Prov. 15. 15. The proper cause of this errour is ignorance a depraved sense of their sins 〈◊〉 in this like unto an herd of swine who make it their greatest pleasure and delight to wallow in the 〈◊〉 Use 3. Of Consolation for the godly in that 〈◊〉 their outward condition is yet they have 〈◊〉 of more true joy than can be either felt or understood by worldly men Use 4. Of Exhortation that striving with our utmost indeavour we must labour more and more to receive and be sensible of this joy Now the mean●… which we ought chiefly to use for attaining and 〈◊〉 thereof are these 1. We must in good 〈◊〉 remove all hinderances of this joy that is that by repentance a real amendment of life we 〈◊〉 cleanse and disburthen our selves of our sins 〈◊〉 We ought to have a true care that we daily make more sure and constant to our selves our union and communion with God by diligent examination and confirmation of our faith and hope 3. That we 〈◊〉 much and often exercised in the religious meditation of Gods Promises which promise all good things to such as have God for their God 4. I●…●…duceth much to this purpose if in our selves we exercise and excite this joy in and by the daily praise of Gods name that is as well in private as publick thanksgiving coming from the bottom of our heart for all those blessings with which God hath blessed us in Christ Jesus Doct. 5. That this joy●… and this comfort brings a certain holy security to the consciences of believers This is gathered from the last verse of the Psalm And this is that security wherein the Apostle ●…oasts and glories Rom. 8. If God be for 〈◊〉 who 〈◊〉 be against us c. For I am perswaded that nothing can separate me c. And David every where in the 〈◊〉 Why do I fear God is my rock c. This security differs much from carnall security wherein men of this world lye and sleep 1. Because true and prais-worthy security is grounded upon true faith and not upon vain imagination 2. Because it is bred in us by the Word and Promises and by the preaching and knowledge of the word of God It doth not proceed from traditions or mens dreams and customes in sin as that doth 3. Because this security relies alwayes upon Gods protection as it is in the Text Thou onely makest me c. it doth not rely on outward means or on our own strength and wisdome 4. Because this security is fed cherished and advanced by diligent use of calling upon Gods name and of all other means that God hath prescribed and appointed us Reas 1. Because Gods protection secureth believers from all evill at least from the sting of it by reason whereof it is onely truly evill for God hath all things both evill and good in his own power Reas 2. Because Gods presence brings all other good things with it for God is so good in himself that in himself virtually and eminently he contains all things that can be called good Reas. 3. Because Gods goodness towards believers is unchangeable so that there can be no danger of the changing of this happiness into misery Use The use of this Doctrine is for consolation to the faithfull to wit that from this ground they 〈◊〉 and ought to depend upon God and lay aside all those anxieties whereby they may be discouraged from adhering to God with joy and gladness The second Lords day Rom. 7. vers 7. What shall we say then Is the Law sin God forbid Yea I had not known sin but by the Law For I had not 〈◊〉 that concupiscence or lust was a sin unless the Law had said Thou shalt not covet THe Apostle that he might stir up the faithfull to a new obedience had proposed to them the difference of their condition that are under the Law and of them that are under Grace to wit that such as are under the law of the flesh and sin bring forth fruits unto death but such as are under the grace of the Spirit bring forth fruits in a new obedience unto life eternall But because of this opposition between the Law and Grace some might gather that there was then a very great agreement between the Law and sin therefore in this seventh verse this objection is preoccupated by the Apostle 1. Then the Objection is proposed What shall we say Is the Law sin 2. It is rejected with a certain kinde of detestation God forbid 3. The case is plainly set down and resolved in these words I had not known sin c. Where the singular effect and use of the Law is declared to wit that by forbidding and reproving is begotten in man a sense and acknowledgement of sin as of that which is contrary to its self and therefore it cannot be the cause of sin The Explication By the Law is understood in common a way and rule of walking Now this way and rule is imposed upon reasonable creatures by divine authority and the greatest obligations that can be And this is the Law to wit of God which the Apostle heer understands especially the moral Law By sin here is not onely understood the transgression of Gods will but also all those things that follow upon such a transgression which in this Chapter is defined by the name of Death and is called sometimes misery Sin is either known confusedly and speculatively onely or more exactly and practically Now the accurate and practicall knowledge of sin is here understood whereby it is efficaciously concluded in our consciences that sin is a detestable thing and by all means to be avoided Doct. 1. Men of their own nature are so blinded that although they be altogether drowned in sin and death yet of themselves they cannot know it This is gathered from these words I had not known sin Reas. 1. Because the very mind and conscience of man which is his eye and light is corrupted after a twofold manner 1. Privitively In that it is deprived of that light whereby it might rightly judge of it self and of such things as belong unto its spiritual life a. Positively In as much as it is possessed with a certain perverse disposition whence it often calls evill good and good evill For as the eye being put quite out feeleth nothing and as the eye infected with humours and depraved by the indispositions of the organe sees all things otherwise than they are presented so is it with the eye of the soul. Reas. 2. Because the whole man is possessed with a certain
neither as to their worth nor as to their durance nor by any love-worthy quality Reas. 3. Because to this we are called that denying our selves and leaving the world we may seek the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and glory Reas. 4. Because while we believe and hope in Christ and have the eyes of our mind set upon him as our Captain and patterne of our salvation we must be changed into his likenesse and image 1 Ioh. 3. 3. 2 Cor. 3. 18. Use 1. Of Direction for discerning of our condition whether we have any such faith and hope or no. Use 2. Of Exhortation to stirre up and rouse our mindes to a more earnest and diligent study and care of all godlinesse The three and twentieth Lords day Rom. 3. 24 25. Verse 24 Bei●…g justified freely by his grace through the r●…demption that is in Iesus Christ. 25 Whom God ●…ath ●…et forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his right●…ousnesse for the r●…mission of sinnes that are past through the 〈◊〉 of God THe Apostle had before proved that all mankind was unde●… most grievous guilt of sin a●…d therefore had need of justification that they might be saved which justification also he had sh●…wn that it could not be had from any 〈◊〉 no●… from the Law which he had set down as the conclusion of his discourse●… in the 20 verse of this Chapter From then●…e he also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 further 〈◊〉 justification is of necessity to be 〈◊〉 in that way of the Gospell which is proposed in Christ Jesus The whole dispute may be summed up in this Syllogisme Men are either justified by Nature or by Law or by the Gospell But neither by Nature nor by the Law and therefore of necessity by the Gospell The Proposition is presupposed and tacitly understood as manifest in it self The Assumption is prov●…d in the first part of the Epistle unto the 21. verse of this Chapter The Conclusion is proposed and illustrated in that 21. verse to the end of that Chapter and afterwards The words in our Text set down contain a description of this Gospell-justification And it is described 1. From its principal and highest cause God Whom God appointed 2. From the manner of this cause which consists not in comm●…tative justice that gives like for like or so much for so much nor yet from distributive justice which looks at the worth of men and deales with them in a proportionable manner but in meer and pure grace or free favour in these words we are iustified freely of his free grace or free favour where a singular emphasis or force of speech is laid on this part of the description by this doubling or repetion freely and of his fr●…e favour 3. It is is described from its impulsive or meritorious cause which becomes also in some sort the formal cause of our ●…ustification to wit our redemption ma●…e by Iesus Christ. 4. From its instrumental cause which is faith by faith in his blood 5. From its final cause which is the manifestation of the justice and mercy of God for shewing of his justice c. Doct. 1. It is God that justifieth us He is said to justify us not in that he in●…useth righteousness unto us or makes us fit to do things that are just which is the errour of Papists placing justification first in the infusion of the habits of faith hope and charity and next in the good works that comes from those habits with which they mix a certain sort of remission of sinnes But therefore he is said to justify us because by his judicial sentence he absolves us from the guilt of all sin and accepts or accounts of us as fully just and righteous for eternal life by the righteousness of Christ which he giveth us This appears from hence that this justification is used in Scripture to be opposed unto a charging with crimes and unto condemnation Rom. 8. 33. And this is done of God as it were by these degrees 1. In his eternal counsell and decree because from eternity he intended to justify us 2. In our head Christ rising again from the dead we were virtually justified in some sort actually as in Adam sinning all his posterity were virtually condemned to death by the Law and in some sort actually because in some sort actual sinners 3. He justifies us fullier actually and formally in our selves and not onely in our head when by his Spirit and our faith the work of his Spirit he applies Christ unto us to our justification 4. And further yet he justifies us actually and formally to our sense and feeling when by our own reflex knowledge and examination of our estate he gives us to perceive this application of Christ made and so to have peace and ●…oy in him Reas. 1. Because ou●… sins from which we ought to be justified are done against the majesty of God 1 Sam 2. 25. And none can forgive an offence done against another or an injury done to another in a proper way of speaking Reas. 2. Because the guiit of sin depends on the obligation of the Law and of divine justice and truth And therefore cannot be taken away but by him that is above the Law and knowes what is agreeable to his own truth and meaning in the first making of it Reas. 3. Because by justification we are received into the favour of God and life eternal and God himself in some sort is given unto us all which can no otherwise be done but by God himself alone Use 1. Of Refutation against Papists who set down manners and means of justification from humane tradition and their owne authority unto ●…retched men as if it were in their power to justi●…ie men after what way they please when it is God ●…lone that justifieth and that therefore prescribes ●…he manner and means of justification onely Use 2. Of Consolation as it is set down Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to our charge it is God that justifi●…th And verse 31. If God be for us who can be against ●…s Doct. 2. This justification is meer pure and infinite grace or favour So in the Text freely his free favour The grace of God in justification appears as it were by these degrees 1. In that God pursues not his right against us and our sins according to that rigour that his Law might have been taken in and his revenging justice might have extended its self to but left place for some reconciliation 2. In that being himself the party offended yet he himself of his own good-will both invented appointed or ordered and revealed both the manner and means of this reconciliation 3. In that he spared not his onely begotten Son for procuring of this reconciliation 4. That without any merits or worth of ours he ingrafts us into his Son and our Lord Jesus Christ and so makes us partakers of that reconciliation which is in him This was altogether necessary that
rule of our life and as of such a rule as hath no defect but is both perfect in it self and requires all perfection in us Use 2. Of Admoni●…ion that with all reverence we give heed unto this Law and beware of all neglect and contempt of it as we would shun death Doct. 2. The Moral Law is divided into diverse words or precepts It is gathered from this in that God is said to have spoken all these words They are called words because they are short and as it were spoken summarily or in one word The chief division of them is into two Tables the next into ten Precepts or Commands Reas. 1. That we might the more easily understand the will of God by parts delivered which wholly together and at once declared as it were in heaps we could not so well understand For the parts in a distribution or division make much for the declaration and illustration of any whole Reas. 2. That by this meanes our memory may be helped because naturally our memory is strengthened from the order of the parts amongst themselves Reas. 3. That in every part and act of our conversation we may have light of singular direction from some part of this Law Use Of Admonition that we neglect nor contemne no word of this Law because they are all parts of one and the same Law and have the same sanction of authority so that who so stumbles against any one is guilty of them all Iam. 2. 10. Doct. 3. Whatsoever is commanded in any part of the Law we are bound for may causes to perform the same to God This is gathered from that confirmation of the Law I am Iehovah c. Reas. 1. Because God commands us nothing he may not with very good right require from us as well by reason of his absolute power and dominion as of our dependance on him by which we require to be supplied and upheld by him in all things Reas. 2. Because he requires nothing from us the observance whereof he did not deserve at 〈◊〉 hands before as well by spiritual benefits and blessings as temporal and bodily in regard whereof out of thankfulness we owe him all obedience as is plain in the Text I brought thee out of the Land c. Reas. 3. Because God is ready to reward our obedience most abundantly in every point Use Of Direction that by often meditation of the manifold obligations whereby we are bound to performe our obedience to God we may more and more stir up our mindes to a care of observing him in all things Doct. 4. Every command of the Law requires the whole obedience of the whole man That is as well inward as outward of the heart as of the mouth and hand or worke Thou shalt have no other c. Make not unto ●…hy self c. Are formes of speaking whereby formally such an universal obedience is required Reas. 1. Because God the giver of this Law ought to be glorified with obedience of the whole man as well of soule as of body and of both these parts of man Reas. 2. Because this is the excellent perfection of the Law of God whereby it goes beyond all humane Lawes in that it subjects unto it self the heart and the reines and the most inward retirement of of men as God himself alone who is the author of this Law knowes what is in man Reas. 3. Because this Law is the rule of spiritual life and so ought to peirce even to our spirits themselves Use 1. Of Information that for the right understanding of this Law we look not onely to such things or think that they onely are contained under the Law as in express words are there contained but all such things also as belongs to such an head of obedience whether they be outward or inward For in every command as is certain by the summe of entire and whole obedience the words are to be taken not according to the bare letter but in a modification of diverse tropes or borrowed sorts of speaking as agree to the perfection of such a Law of nature The trope of Synecdoche that puts the special for the general to be understood by it is here frequent as when abstinence from some one vice by name is put for the whole obedience whereby we not onely abstain from all faults of that kind but also are bound to the performance of the contrary affirmative good and when some action is put for all of its kind and of affinity of nature with it The trope also of Me●…onymie is every where in these commands whereby all the adjuncts are understood under the name of their objects the effects in their causes and contrarily with which is complicated the trope of Metaphor some way so as all the decalogue is Metaleptick or to be understood by Transsumption And these rules must of necessity be understood in the explication of every precept as our Saviour's exposition of them and other Scriptures make clear Use 2. Of Admonition that we rest not nor please our selves in obedience of any sort done to the Law but that we may aspire to the entire and perfect observance of it and ever acknowledge just matter of our humbling in this that we are so farre from that perfection that it requires Doct. 5. The first and greatest command is that which containes our duty to God Hence is it that it is both put in the first place and hath also the expresse testimony of Christ Mat. 22. 28. Reas. 1. Because God himself being the object of this duty from him a sort of noblenesse and dignity is derived unto the duty it self Reas. 2. Because more and greater things are contained in our duty to God than either can or may be used in duties to man as is clear by that form With ●…he whole minde and the whole heart c. Reas. 3. Because this duty is the foundation and principle of all others in as much as in God and for God onely we ought to perform all other duties and so the duties of the second Table are thus virtually contained in the first Commandment Use Is of Direction that our first and chief care may be taken up in those duties that belong to God Doct. 6. The principall duty to God is that we have him onely for our God And to have God for our God is in general to give God that honour which is due unto his excellent Majesty And to this are required 1. That we seek the true knowledge of him with all care as he hath revealed himself in his word because we cannot honour him rightly whose nature and will we are ignorant of Iohn 4. 12. Rom. 10 14. 2. That from a most humble reverence we subject our selves unto him because the honour that we give to God as to our God is the honour of a Creature towards its Creator of a Son towards his Father of a Servant towards his Master and that such a Master as hath power
spiritual distemper and as it were with a drunkennesse and lethargick stupidity whereby he is sensible of nothing rightly and spiritually Reas 3 Because we are so borne in sin that in a manner it becomes natural to us nor ever have had we experience of any other condition As those that are borne with deformed and crooked limbs and never saw aright and well proportioned disposition of all the members do not know that their own limbs are deformed and ill proportioned but esteem their distortion and disproportion to be the right proportion it self even so is it in this case of sin and corruption of nature Use 1. Of Admonition that for this cause we might more and more humble our selves before God seeing that we are so miserable that of our selves we can never know our own misery Use 2. Is of Direction to deny all our natural wisdome that so we may flie to God and seek wisdome from him that we may know our selves and him aright Doctr. 2. The onely way to know sin aright and the cause of our mysery is by the law of God It is gathered from these words For unlesse the law had said c. Reas. 1. Because the law of God doth in some way enlinghten the eyes of our minde Psal. 19. Reas. 2. Because the law of God is the rule of our life and is therefore the touchstone not onely of the straightness but also of all the obliquity and crookedness of it Reas. 3. Because the law of God is set before us as a glasse wherein we may clearly see our faces and quality Iames 1. 23. Now it performs this use of a glass to us by a comparison made between the perfection which the Law requires of us and the manifold defects and deformities that are found in our life Questions hence arising Quest. 1. Whether did not some wise men at least among the Heathen know sin without this Law of God I answer 1. That they were not altogether without this law of God because in part they had it written and ingraven in their hearts But yet 2. They knew not many sins which by the Law might easily have been known 3. They knew not sin under the first and most proper reason of it to wit as it was an offence against God but onely as it was repugnant to reason in man himself 4. They knew not those spiritual miseries which accompanie sin 5. They did not know sin practically and efficaciously so as to be by that knowledge driven to a spiritual humbling of themselves before God Quest. 2. In what manner doth this Law of God shew us our sin I answer 1. It sheweth us our duty or the will of God that we should do 2. It shews us our fault in transgressing of this will 3. It shewes us our guilt whereby for this guiltiness we are bound over unto punishment 4. It shewes also the punishment it self for the threatenings of the Law wherein the punishments are contained and denounced are parts of the Law and belong unto its sanctification or ratification Use 1. Of Direction that in passing judgement upon our lives we follow not either our own fancies nor the tenets and opinions of the vulgar but the law of God alone Use 2. Of Admonition that we often make trial of our life according to that law and that as well for time past for our greater humiliation as for the time to come for our caution and better direction in every part of our conversation The Third Lords Day Rom. 5. vers 12. Wherefore as by one man sin entered into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men in whom all have sinned THe Apostles purpose in this place is to illustrate that Doctrine which he had before taught concerning justification by Iesus Christ for which end he makes a comparison of the likeness between this grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the sin of Adam our first Father after the flesh And the comparison runs upon the efficacy and effects of each of them The Proposition of the Comparison is in ●… 12. and the Reddition to that is after explicated by way of Parenthesis In the Proposition Adam is set forth as the cause of a twofold effect to wit of the bringing in of sin and of the bringing in of Death And the reason of the Connexion of these effects with that cause is given in the last words of this verse to wit from the conjunction that all had with Adam in that first sin in these words In whom all men c. Doct. 1. Sin entered into the world not by Gods creation but by mans defection This is manifest in the Text by man not by God c. Reas. 1. Because God made man upright and after his own image that is not onely free from all sin which may in some sort also be said of all other Creatures but also adorned him with all those endowments and faculties whereby Gods nature might as it were in a pourtrait be expressed and represented and by help whereof in keeping of the law he might have attained unto a certain sort of divine blessedness or felicity For as there is no fault in a pourtrait so it be well drawn or made by a perfect workman unless the fault be in the Original from whence the pourtait is taken so also no fault could be in man created according to Gods Image and that by God himself unlesse some fault be attributed to God himself whose Image man is Reas. 2. Is because God did not onely prescribe a law unto man in the Creation but also engraved it upon his heart by which means it was that man had in himself a most certain Testimony of his uprightness in which and to which he was created and withall a most sufficient and ready means of living well and unblameably to God For the law of God perfectly purely written in the heart of man is as it were a solemn Testimony registred in a Table or Book that man was made fit and able to keep that Law It is as it were the voice of God sent down from Heaven whereby man was called and stirred up to observe that way of living which is taught thereby Reas. 3. Because God added thereunto a pledge and Sacrament in the Tree of Life whereby he would have that Covenant of the Law written in the heart more clearly confirmed also outwardly to wit that he would by the observation of his Law first perpetuate mans life in this world unto the solemn justification of him at his appointed time and then advance him to a further and heavenly Felicity And on the other side he threatens Death unto him in case he should depart from that Will and Law of God all which had been done to no purpose if man had been at first made by God himself in any measure or manner sinfull and perverse Reas. 4. So far was God from being the cause of sin in the first creation of
compleated in its last perfection and end because no man by it arrived to eternal happiness neither was it in its self the greatest the highest the fullest goodness of God because an higher fuller and more surpassing sort of goodness appeared in the preservation of the elect Angells and that also is far greater which is now revealed in the Gospell and brings perfect salvation to mankind that is fallen Now this was most sitting that the goodness and mercy of God should as well be perfected towards men as his justice From his wisdome God knew the best way whereby he could conveniently help miserable man and therefore it was meet that his wisdome should be made manifest in its effect And this is it which the Apostle every where teacheth that in this mystery of the Gospell there was a wisdome of God which was kept up and hidden from all the Heathen which therefore by way of excellencie he calls that wisdome of God into which the Angells themselves with desire and wonder are said to look 1 Pet. 1. 12. For such was our misery that not onely we could not rise out of it ourselves by our own power but could not so much as think upon or devise a way or means whereby we might be delivered But this was the proper work of the wisedome of God himself conjoyned with his own mercy From his power also he had the ability of helping and bringing to perfection therein what he would For so our redemption in Scripture is not onely usually adscribed to Gods grace and mercy but also to his power For the highest power and soveraignty was required to dissolve the works of the Devill and the bonds of death and the grave for raising of dead men to life again for guiding and protecting them so as they might be brought to life eternal maugre all opposition of their enemy and most of all for laying that ground-stone of the whole and uniting the second person of the Deity his own Son and the nature of man into one Person From the immutability also of his decree it was in some sort necessary for God to procure their deliverance from death whom from eternity he had chosen and appointed unto life Hence a twofold necessity of the restauration and liberation of mankind is rightly by some determined on our part the necessity of want on Gods part the necessity of his immutability Use Of Exhortation that with all admiration we behold and look into this good will of God and with all thankfulness as well in our thoughts as in our speeches all our life time we publish and praise it Doct. 2. The Law cannot deliver miserable men from their misery It is clear enough in the Text and is grounded moreover on the following reasons Reas 1. Because the Law promiseth no good to miserable sinners but onely to just persons and such as keep it Reason 2. Because in it self it hath no force of taking away sin but onely of punishing it Reas 3. Because by no sinner can it be fulfilled and that because of the weakness of the flesh or the impotency of carnall and fallen mankind as it is in the Text. Reas. 4. Because though it might be fulfilled for time to come yet by-past sins would take away all hope of receiving the reward of Life from the Law Hence is it that the Law is called a killing l●…tter and the minister of death and of condemnation Use Of Re●…utation against such as put their trust in their own workes and look for salvation from their good intentions and endeavours which is the errour of Papists Remonstrants or Arminians and Anabaptists who cry up alwayes an honest life and good works Doct. 3. No sinner can deliver himself from this misery This is thus gathered because none go above the Law For if the Law cannot for the weakness of our flesh then neither can we our selves for the same weakness of our flesh Reason 1. No debt can duly be blotted out by the debtor till payed Reas. 2. Because though any one never augmented his first debt by sinning yet should he in all this do no more but pay what he owes in so doing and so could not by that means make satisfaction for his former transgression Reas. 3. Because if man could not preserve himself nor did not do it in that integrity wherein he was created it cannot reasonably be thought that now he can recover it again Reas. 4. If he could recover his first integrity he would be as subject and easy to lose it again as our first Father was at first Use Of Direction that we put no confidence in our selves nor in our own strength but denying our selves we depend altogether on Gods grace and mercy in Jesus Christ. Doct. 4. No meer creature in heaven or in earth can deliver miserable men from sin and death It followeth from the Text because no such creature is above the Law Reason 1. Because no external thing that is a meer creature hath in it self that worth that it can be a compensation for sin to Gods justice and truth and so a price of redemption from death Mat. 16. 26. Yea not all the world For that is it that i●… hinted 1 Pet. 1. 18. where all corruptible things amongst the best whereof are gold and silver and the like are determined to be below the redeeming of man Reas. 2. Because whatsoever any meer creature whether man or Angell can do ows all that for its self and on its own behalf Reas. 3 Because if we were redeemed by a meer creature for this very cause we should become the servants of that meer creature and that of justice and gratitude as we are the servants of Christ our Redeemer because our Redeemer as is already taught But this would be an unworthy thing and would infer a kind of contradiction to it self For seeing man before his fall was not the servant of any creature but of God alone if by redemption he should become the servant of any creature he should not be redeemed and restored into that perfect liberty from which he fell and so though redeemed as we suppose yet he should not be properly redeemed that is by redemption made free Reas. 4. The evills that are to be removed from us are greater than can be taken away by any meer creature as the wrath of God infinite and eternal the guilt of sin confirmed by the force of an eternal law the command that sin and death hath over us Of these that is true which we have Luke 10. 21 22. Reas. 5. The good things to be imparted and before that to be purchased are of greater worth than that they can be communicated to us from any meer creature as namely a righteousness going beyond the righteousness of the Law and the resurrection as well corporal as spiritual the communication of the divine nature life eternal and a happiness that surmounts that of Adam in his innocency that is a Kingdome that
agents and was against Christs internal natural inclinations and in some sort natural also as it was wrought by external causes naturally producing such an effect Yet it was voluntary not onely as to the willing disposition and choice of it whereby Christ set himself to suffer it but also as he suspended his own power of hindering it and averting death and so gave way and power to the enemies inflicting it in which respect also his death may be called miraculous or wonderful because he himself who was dying ordered his owne death and willingly admitted the same So that by doing he suffered and by suffering he acted and had his owne action in it all without which he could not have suffered by any creature whatsoever Reas. 1. Because it became him to dy so that was God For since the humane nature subsisted in the f●…me person with the divine nothing could befall the humane nature either in doing or suffering but as the divine willed and ordained it Reas. 2. Because otherwise Christ in his death had not been together both Priest Sacrifice and Altar For though it be the part of a Sacrifice to be passive and to be offered up to the Father yet it is the part of the Priest by being active about it and ordering the whole to offer up the Sacrifice Use 1. Is of Information for arming our faith against tentations and scandals which use to arise hence in that Christ in whom we believe as our God was subject to death For Christ died not of weakness and coaction but by certain resolution and of his own proper will and power so that the divine nature and power of Christ appeared not onely in his resurrection but if the thing be rightly considered had as great a hand and was as evident in his death also Use 2. Is of Direction for our preparation to undergo death in whatsoever way God would have it come to pass For from these two things that were in Christ that he both willingly underwent death and then also ordered it himself the first of these lies upon us all out of duty that we be ready at such time and such manner to dy as God is pleased we should The other though it cannot be performed by us because we have not the power of laying down our lives and ordering our deaths yet by faith and holy desire to our comfort we ought to seek this of God and look for it that in Christ who ordered his own death for us he would order our death unto our salvation and unto his own glory Doct. 3. Christ underwent this death by his Fathers command It is in the Text This command I received of my Father And this command was neither any of the law of nature nor of the moral ceremonial or judicial but it was a peculiar condition of the mediatory office that was laid upon Christ by the Father and of his own free consent It was therefore a command to the Messias alone as he was our Mediator Reas. 1. Because as by disobedience of the first Adam sin and death entered into the world so by the obedience of the second Adam righteousnesse and salvation shoud be brought us and as the disobedience of Adam was the breach of the command given to him so also the obedience of Christ was to be in the keeping of that command that was given him with his office of mediatorship or whereby the office it self was also imposed upon him Reas. 2. Because in Christ we were to have such an example of obedience as was most perfect in keeping the commandments of God Use 1. Of Resutation against the superstition presumption of popish Monks who have devised a kind of perfection in obedience of councells beside and beyond that which stands in keeping of the commandments of God when yet Christ himself that hath given us the whole pourtraict and pattern of perfect obedience confesses that he went no further than to obey that which the Father cōmanded him Use 2. Of Admonition that we may set our selves to follow Christ in this point that we may even unto death it self cleave fast unto the commandements of God Doct. 4. God the Father loveth Christ for this obedience This is in the Text Therefore the Father loveth me that is is delighted with this obedience and so delighted that he commends it to be looked upon by every Christian and all such as are Christ's Reas. 1. Because by Christ's death God was most glorified by Christ Ioh. 12. 18. and 17. 4. Reas. 2. Because by that death of Christ the counsell of God was fulfilled whereby he had from eternity appointed in himself to communicate his grace and glorious good will unto men Ephes. 1. 5 6 7 9. Use 1. Of Resutation against such as use to conclude from such phrases whereby God is said to love men for this and not for that that such mens works were the first causes of Gods love For Christ was the Son of God beloved of him from all eternity and yet the Father is said to have loved him also for his obedience Use 2. Of Consolation to all such as are in Christ by Faith For as the Father loveth Christ so will he also love them that are in Christ. Use 3. Of Exhortation that with all chearfulness we stir up our selves to obey God because God loveth such as obey him The seventeenth Lords day Joh. 10. 17 18. 17 I lay down my life that I may take it up again 18. None taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have authority to lay it down and I have authority or power to take it up again This commandment received I of my Father SEeing the Text is the same that it was before the same analysis that was there may here also serve and be made use of Doct. 5. Christ rose again from the dead For this is it that is understood in the Text by taking up his life again For this taking up again is a reunion of things that were separated before And in this reunion of the soul and body there was a change or motion from an inferior condition to a superior of that which was before in a better also or superior to this from which the change is now And therefore it is properly called a reassumption or taking again and not barely a resurrection The forme then from which this change was made was from his state of humiliation and the forme to which was the state of exaltation and glory the subject of this transmutation or motion was Christs humane nature which had fallen unto the lowest and abjectest condition of his humiliation Christ's own body arose again from true death and from the grave And his soul also is said to have risen again as it was now restored and reunited unto the body and so delivered from the state and dominion of death or as delivered from the privation of its act in the body wherein there was some
the new man that is renovation of the whole man each part is illustrated by its description which are from their effects The effects of the old man are corruptions and errours verse 22. Of the new man righteousness and holiness v. 23 24. Doct. 1. There is a great unlikenesse of condition and life between men regenerated and unregenerated This is gathered from the scope of the Text and these words the old man and the new man as if a man were not the same man after regeneration that he was before Hither belong all these comparisons which through most of the Proverbs of Solomon are made between the godly and ungodly It is pointed at also every where in the New Testament and also in the Old by the difference between light and darknesse and between a quick man and a dead and between one that being defiled with all sort of uncleannesse like the Sow that wallowes in the mire and one that is washed and cleansed Reas. 1. Because they have a diverse nature believers being made partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. and unbelievers are scarcely to be said to have a mans nature in a moral consideration Hither belongs it that the Apostle every where teacheth that believers are led and governed by the Spirit of God to walk thereafter and that unbelievers are led by their own flesh Reas. 2. Because as the internal principle of operations is quite unlike so also the outward rule of all their conversation is quite contrary the regenerate ordering his whole life after the will of God revealed in his Word the unregenerate after his owne suggestions and corrupt imaginations or worldly opinions Reas. 3. Because the end to which they tend is unlike and contrary the regenerate breathing after God and Heaven as he is called to the hope of eternal life the unregenerate seeking himself and this present world Hither belongs it that the unregenerate are said to be of this world but the regenerate Citizens of Heaven it self Phil. 3. 20. and often elswhere Use 1. Of Reproof of such as will be thought and think themselves perhaps true believers and regenerate when yet in their whole conversation scarce any thing can be marked which is not common to them and unregenerate persons Use 2. Of Comfort for the godly that lead a life worthy of Christian profession but are sometimes from infirmity troubled because most with whom they live or have to do become strange to them and make it plain that they are offended some way with the strictnesse of their conversation which offence ariseth properly from this unlikenesse of conversation whereby the corrupt walking of others according to the fashions of the world are tacitly reproved Ephes. 5. Now this unlikenesse ought to be our greatest comfort as it is a sign of our regeration Use 3. Of Exhortation that by change of our life and conversation we may more and more study to shew unto others and confirme unto our selves this grace of our regeneration whereunto we are called in Christ. Doct. 2. Th●… cause of this unlikenesse of regenerate from unregen●…rate is the Doctrine of the Gospell It is in the Text clear enough Reas. 1. Because the Doctrine of the Gospell teacheth us to deny all ungodlinesse and worldlinesse and to live holily 〈◊〉 2. 12. Reas. 2. Because the mighty and powerfull operation of the Holy Spirit is present with the preaching of the Gospell for producing this change in man for which cause it is called the Ministry of the Spirit and the Law of the Spirit of life and the Arme of God Reas. 3. Because the proper power of faith is to cleanse the hearts of those that it is in Act●… 5. 9. and to make us from our hearts to harken to the Doctrine unto which we were delivered R●…m 6. 17. Use Of Admonition that we beware least by hearing in vain the preaching of the Gospell without this fruit of conversion and change of life we perniciously deceive our selves Doct. 3. One part of this conversion made by the Gospell is mortification of all our corrupt dispositions and customes It is gathered from verse 22. where by the old man all the corrupt dispositions are understood because they possessing all the parts and faculties of the man from our birth and that with dominion and power over us to keep us still under them do therefore carry the name of the old man iustly and that for these reasons 1. Because they thus possessed us from the beginning of our conception 2. Because they ought by Christians to be esteemed as things old and useless and to be put off and laid away And that Reas. 1. Because the end of Christ's death and the Gospell it self is to dissolve the workes of the Devill ●…oh 3. 8. And these inordinate dispositions and customes are amongst the first and chief works of the Devill Reas. 2 Because by these we were separated from God and the Gospell calls us and drawes us to God again and therefore to lay these aside Reas. 3. Because life and obedience cannot have place in such as these lusts and customes have power in and the Gospell calls us to a spiritual life and a new obedience Use 1. Of R●…proof of such as would have themselves thought regenerate when yet they are the servants of such carnal lusts Use 2. Of Exhortation that we manfully set our selves not onely to repress such lusts but quite also to root them out Now the old man is mortified 1. By that firme and constant purpose of changing our life which is effectually begun in our first repentance and dayly ought to be renewed and extended to all new emergencies 2. By the vertue of Christ's death applied to us by faith whence our old man is said to be crucified with Christ and it may be rightly added with the same nailes that Christ was crucified with For Christ was fastned unto the Cross partly because of the guilt of our sins partly out of the love of the Father to us that we might be saved partly out of Christ's owne love to us whereby he was willing to lay down his life for us And by the earnest meditation of these things the power of sin is most diminished in us 3. By the power of the Holy Spirit to whom we ough●… to give up our selves in the use of all the meanes ordained of God whereby he useth to put forth his powerfull working Doct. 4. The other part of this conversion is vivification or renewing of the inward man By the inward new or renewed man are understood the new dispositions that are agreeable unto the will of God They are called the man as these other dispositions were because they should be diffused over the whole man as they were And they are called the new man partly in respect to order because they follow the other partly in respect of their excellency because they are so much better than the other as new things are to old out-worn and