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A73267 The dignitie of Gods children. Or An exposition of 1. Iohn 3. 1.2.3 Plentifully shewing the comfortable, happie, and most blessed state of all Gods children, and also on the contrarie, the base, fearefull, and most wofull condition of all other that are not the children of God. Stoughton, Thomas. 1610 (1610) STC 23315.5; ESTC S117855 406,069 519

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thereby ye haue attained to that true and vnfeined loue of the brethrē whereby ye know your selues to bee translated from death to life and that already ye are of the truth and hereafter shall before him assure your hearts 1. Ioh. 3. 14. and 18. and 19. by which things also ye haue felt vnspeakable and incomprehensible ioy and comfort then minse not the matter neither clippe ye the Lords goodnesse towards you by saying that indeede ye haue by our ministerie atteined vnto some knowledge euen to a verball knowledge so to my griefe I heare some to haue scoffingly said but whether yee haue receiued also the spirit of adoption that ye cannot tell yea some of you do vtterly deny But alas if ye haue euer felt the things before spoken of how ingratefull impietie and how impious ingratitude is this against God For what is this but for the excuse of your wauering mind to lie of the holy ghost And how much lesse sinne is this lying of the holy Ghost then that of Ananias and Sapphira of lying to the holie ghost Acts. 5. 3. I may amplifie this point by that which is written in the law against him that sinned against the Lord in denying vnto his neighbour that which was taken him to keepe or that which was put to him of trust Leuit. 6. 2. For if it be so great a sinne against the Lord for a man to deny vnto his neighbour that which was taken him to keepe or that which was put to him of trust to be restored againe to the owner without any benefit to the keeper oh then how heinous a sinne is it against the Lord to deny the free gift of God himselfe bestowed vpon wretched man neuer to be restored but to continue to euerlasting life Concerning such as are already separated from amongst you and do so continue if they haue made separation onely in zeale which is not according to knowledge without pride disdaine and contempt against all other such I wish well and seriously to consider the words and counsell of the angell which found out Hagar being fled from her mistris Sara for her hard dealing with her For as the Angell first asked her whence she came and whither she would goe and secondly vpon her answere that she fled from her dame Sara commanded her to returne to her dame and to humble her selfe vnder her hands Genes 16. 7. so and much more let the separatists among you consider the more whence they came and whither they are going as also to make the more hast of returning and humbling themselues to them whom without sufficient cause they haue for saken because their regeneration if they be regenerated receiued amongst them and wrought by some of them whom they haue for saken is a farre greater benefit then all that euer Hagar had had at the hands of her mistris Sara Touching both the that are separated and also that are not I do iointly intreat them with iudgement to consider first the speedy growth of them that decline that way like to the gourd of Iona Iona. 4. 6. not like to the graine of mustard seede whereunto the kingdome of heauen is compared Mat. 13. 31. which at the first being the least of all seedes afterward groweth not of the sudden but by degrees to be a great tree For may not this make them to suspect their course to be rather according to nature then according to grace Is it not more easie to goe downe the hill then vp the hill The rather may this sudden growth be suspected because it is more without meanes in one day or at least by small and simple meanes onely by priuate talking c. then before they did grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ in many moneths Great indeede was the suddaine successe of the sermon of Peter Acts. 2. 41. and of the preaching of Paul to the keeper of the prison Acts. 16. 33. But alas the extraordinary and strange meanes before mentioned in either place doe shew not onely the said suddaine and great successe to haue beene extraordinary but also that the like extraordinary successe requireth more extra ordinary means then in these dais we haue warrant to expect Secondly let both sorts before mentioned further consider the scoffing gibing and contemptuous spirit I speake this with griefe of most of them that are separated against all other especially not inclining towards them most of all against them that haue done them most good if euer they haue at all tasted in truth how good the Lord is 1. Pet. 2. 2. Is the spirit of God the spirit of scoffing gibing and contempt No but of sobrietie of grauitie of meekenesse and of reuerence teaching them in whom it is not to be high minded but to make themselues though of high place equall to them of the lower sort Rom. 12. 16. and in meekenes of minde to esteem other better then themselues Philip. 2. 3. Lastly let both sorts before spoken vnto further yet obserue the ignorance of many that are most prone to separation in the things of greatest moment and of most necessity and also what little conscience they make of sactifying the Lords day not only not spending the time of their absence from our asseblies in priuate exercises of religion at home but also in walking vp and downe idlely in the fields woods c and finally how they neglect their callings and misspend their time in running vp and down to talke one with another of separation and so wast that little stocke which before through the good blessing of God they had gotten whiles they did diligently follow their calling In the largenes of my loue towards you I could write much more largely of these points But beeing loth to trouble other readers and too long to de●cine them from the treatise following I do forbeare The Father of our Lord Iesus Christ of whom is named the whole familie in heauen and in earth graunt to all you to whom now I do write that ye may be strength ned by his spirit in the inner man Ephes 3. 14. c. and that none of you may euer fall away vtterly from the grace of God The same God also so print all good things in all your harts both which are in this whole booke printed in paper and also which ye do daily read in other good bookes which ye heare or may heare in the publike preaching of the word that neither the loue of the world nor any other power of hell may euer be able to race them out that so God may haue the glory of them and your selues may inioy the fruit euen righteousnes peace ioy and comfort in this life and euerlasting glory in the life to come From Much Totham Aprill 20. 1610. Your most vnfained and faithfull in the Lord Thomas Stoughton THE CONTENTS OF THE SEVERALL CHAPTERS OF THIS TREAtise of the Dignity of Gods children with a note of
as men halfe asleepe and halfe awake yea as men halfe blind and halfe seeing and as the blinde man whose eies our Sauiour had begunne to open and who said I see men walking like trees Marc. 8. 24. In this respect therefore the Apostle doth the rather heere say Behold what loue c. And because this heere spoken of is of another nature then the things of this world and of this life and because of our selues naturally we are all blinde sitting in darknesse and in the shadow of death Luc. 1. 79. Act. 26. 18. and because such of vs as haue the eies of our vnderstanding lightned haue them not so lightned but that we see only in part and as it were with spectacles thorow a glasse 1. Cor. 13. 12. so that still we had need to pray our selues and to bee praied for by other that the eies of our vnderstanding may bee further lightned Ephes 1. 18. and this weaknesse of sight in our inward man is partly by the reliques of sinne in vs and partly by the obiects of this world heere spoken of therefore wee haue the more need to be called vpon by other and also to prouoke our selues to behold what loue the Father hath giuen vnto vs to be called his children We haue hawkes eies and eagles eies to behold the glory of the world and the worldly dignities of the sonnes of men and that euen in the twilight yea in the darke night we need not be carried vp to the top of an high mountaine as our Sauiour was by the diuell Matth. 4. 8. Where note that if the Diuell Note had power ouer the outward man of Christ himselfe so without sinne to carrie him from place to place we may not think much if he haue power to vex our bodies Such things I say we can see easily enough in the lowest valley we need not be called vpon by other to behold them wee doe too much behold them of our selues But as touching this obiect of sight heere spoken of as Hagar saw not the Well of water that was hard by her till God opened her eies Genes 21. 19. and as the two Disciples that were going from Ierusalem to Emmaus walked and talked with our Sauiour Luc. 24. 16. and Mary did the like Iohn 20. 24. and yet discerned him not because their eies were holden so trulie is it not only with naturall and vnregenerated men but euen sometimes with them that are the children of God Though they be so yet for many causes heereafter to bee spoken of they doe not alwaies discerne themselues to bee so and therefore they haue need to bee spoken vnto as heere the Apostle speaketh Behold what great loue c. Yea the more necessarie is it that all men generally and euen the children of God be so spoken vnto in this behalfe because the word is the means whereby our eies should bee opened at the first to behold this and more and more afterward to behold it more cleerely For the Commandement of the Lord is pure and giueth light to the eies Psal 19. 8. as in other things so also in this Therefore our Sauiour in opening the eies of the bodily blinded men did Note not onely touch them and handle them but also spake vnto them thereby teaching that as himselfe is the Sonne of righteousnesse and the light of the world so his word is the meanes whereby the eies of our minde are to be opened Otherwise he could haue opened the bodily eies of men without any speech at all vnto them Therefore also the Apostle testifieth this to haue beene the end of his ministerie with the Gentiles euen to open their eies that they might turne from darknesse to light Act. 26. 18. But this being a part of regeneration it selfe it shall bee further manifest afterward by proofe of the whole worke of our regeneration to be by the word As it is necessary that at all times wee should be thus called vpon to consider of Gods loue in making vs his children so especially the same is most necessarie in the time of trouble and aduersitie For when haue wee more need of the comfort thereof then at such times For what greater comfort can there be then in considering the loue of God in this behalfe But because this is one speciall drift of this whole Treatise therefore I shall not need in this place particularly to enlarge it Thus much for obseruation of the first particular word in this Scripture CHAP. II. Containing obseruations of the foure next particular words in this Text the ground of the whole treatise viz. Of the word What. Of the word Loue. Of the word Father And of the word hath giuen THe second word to be considered is What or what manner Hee doth not say Behold the loue but Behold what loue or what maner of loue or how great loue This is a word commonly vsed in matters of admiration When our Sauiour by his word had pacified the windes and the seas it is said that the men that saw the said miracle maruelled saying What man is this or what manner of man is this that both the windes and the sea obey him Mat. 8. 27. In which place is the same word that is heere vsed by the Apostle So when the Angell was sent to the Virgin Mary to tell her that she should conceiue the Sonne of God in her wombe and when he had saluted her in this sort Haile Mary or Reioice Mary freely beloued c. it is said that she was troubled or maruelled at this speech and thought what manner of salutation that should be Luc. 1. 29. where also is the same word that is in this place This word therefore is an amplification of the loue of God in making vs his children heere spoken of by an adiunct or attribute that signifieth the same to be very great yea exceeding great yea so great that it is rather to be admired and wondered at then any waies fully to be expressed It signifieth as much as the word how in other places as O Lord of Hosts how amiable are thy Tabernacles Psal 84. 1. that is so amiable that they are also admirable O how loue I thy Law Psal 119. 97. that is I loue thy Law with a loue that cannot bee expressed I am euen sicke of loue towards thy Law as the Church speaketh of her loue towards Christ Cant. 2. 5. How beautifull are the feet of them that bring gladtidings of peace Rom. 10. 15. As if he should haue said so beautifull that no tongue of man can expresse the beautie of them no heart can well comprehend it And indeed we shall see by the handling of this dignitie of the children of God that it is such that as it is said of making Christ the stone which was reiected of the builders to bee the head stone of the corner This was the Lords worke and it is maruellous in our eies Psal 118. 23. so it may
only hath begotten them againe vnto himselfe and that no other can worke the worke of our regeneration so now to set foorth the same further by the first and principall cause thereof viz. by that which first mooued God so to regenerate and adopt vs vnto himselfe let vs a little more consider of the infinit loue of his towards vs in this behalfe whereof before we haue heard euen that that loue is the principall cause of our adoption and regeneration This loue of God is here to be considered two waies First as the cause of election before the foundations of the world were layd both to adoption whereof now we speake and also to the fruition of all other mercies in this life and the life to come Secondly as it was afterward in the fulnesse of time declared by the sending specially of his sonne into the world for the effecting of that our adoption Touching the first it hath been before noted that the Apostle in this very place speaking of the loue of God as of the cause of making vs his children doth not speake in the time present but in the time past by that circumstance of time signifying the said loue of God not to be a new loue or a present loue only but an ancient loue euen from the beginning The same besides the Scriptures before alledged is expresly testified by the Apostle Paul who not only saith that God hath elected vs before the foundation of the world but also touching the cause and the end of our said election hee addeth that God hath then predestinated vs to be adopted or to bee made children through Iesus Christ vnto himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will Ephes 1. 5. that is according to his meere and most free grace without respect of any worthinesse of them whom he hath chosen and the words following of the principall end of our election viz. the praise of the glory of his grace do further manifest his free grace to haue beene the principall cause of election to adoption and to the sonneship if I may so speake of God For if there were any other principall cause thereof then only Gods free grace then also the praise of the said cause should be the end of our election as well as the praise of the free grace of God As also it is said that God chose the children of Israel to be his speciall people because only he loued their fathers Deut. 4. 37. and as Samuel saith it had pleased the Lord to make them his people 1. Sam. 12. 22. insinuating by that phrase the meere pleasure of God to haue bin the cause of making them his people so and much more may be said touching our adoption to bee the children of God Yea so also it is said that God of his own will hath begotten vs againe c. that is of his meer loue Iam. 1. 18. As this loue of God afterward declared by the act it selfe of adopting vs to be his children was thus eternall without beginning so also it is eternall in respect it shal be without end Therefore it is called euerlasting loue Ierem. 31. 3. and Iohn saith that whom God loueth once he loueth to the end Iohn 13. 1. And indeed whatsoeuer is without beginning is also without end Many things haue beginning which shall haue no end as all Angels good and bad and the spirits of all men but nothing shall haue end that hath no beginning Therefore as before we heard that all that are regenerated haue beene beloued of God without beginning of his loue so Peter saith that such also are kept by the power of God vnto saluation c. 1. Pet. 1. 5. But of this before Chap. 2. Neither only is that loue of God towards the regenerated euerlasting and without end because it is without beginning but for the same reason also it is the more free and without all respect of any worthinesse in them that are without beginning beloued For how can they pretend any worthines in themselues to haue beene the cause of that loue that was more ancient then themselues yea then the world The cause must be before the effect and not the effect before the cause In this respect therefore the dignity of Gods children is so much the greater first because they are beloued of God secondly because they haue been so long beloued of God thirdly because they haue been and are freely beloued of God fourthly because the loue of God is euerlasting Concerning the first if the fauor of a king be as the dew vpon the grasse Pro. 19. 12. and if in the light of a Kings countenance be life and his fauour be like a cloud of the latter raine Pro. 16. 15. what shall we say of the fauor of God and of the light of his countenance that is king of kings The same is to be said of the antiquity of Gods loue For as it is the greater grace and honor for a subiect the longer he hath been in fauor with his Prince so likewise that all the children of God haue been so long in fauour with God and that God hath so long loued them it cannot but be the greater honor vnto them Thirdly the freenesse of Gods loue without respect of any desert in his children doth as much dignifie his said childrē as the free grace of a Prince without any desert or gifts whereby to procure the Princes fauor doth the more honor such a subiect as is in such free fauour with his Soueraigne Fourthly and principally the loue of God is the more honorable in respect that it is euerlasting because we see the grace and fauour of all Princes to be mutable Though Haman were in such grace with Ahashuerosh that hee procured him to write his royall letters for the destruction of all the Iewes yet we know what a change fell out afterward Yea how soone and vpon how light an occasion euen vpon the false report only of flattering Ziba was the great loue of Dauid qua●led towards Mephibosheth the sonne of his ancient and most faithfull friend Ionathan Sith therefore the loue of mortall Princes is so vncertaine it cannot but be the greater honor to the children of God that they are so rooted and grounded in grace and fauor with God that nothing whatsoeuer shall euer bee able to disgrace them with him so as that he shall for euer cast them off But this shall further appeare by other things afterward handled concerning their further dignity All this of the loue of God of his ancient loue and of his free loue and of his vnchangeable loue towards his children is the more honor vnto them because as it is said Iacob haue I loued and Esau haue I hated Rom. 9. 17. so it is said that the Lord hateth all the workers of iniquity Psal 5. 5. and that his face is against them that do euill to cut off their remembrance from the earth Psal 34. 16. And therefore
hatred is said to haue been more against Tamar then his loue had been towards her 2. Sam. 13. 15. Dogs loue in this manner for let their masters that doe alwaies feed them but vnawares tread a little vpon their foot and they will be ready to bite them by the leg if not to slie in their face It is far otherwise with the children of God For so many as are new borne not of mortall but of immortall seede by the word of God hauing purified their soules in obeying the truth to loue brotherly without feining doe accordingly loue with a pure heart feruently 1. Pe. 1. 23. Now although that place be vnderstood specially of brotherly loue yet he that loueth them that are begotten will much more loue him that hath begotten And indeed how can the children of God but loue him whom they know by his word to be so mighty so infinit so wise so iust and euery way so good in himselfe and so gracious so louing and so mercifull towards them whom he hath so loued as to make them his children in such manner as hitherto we haue heard and shall further heare As touching the loue of the children of God towards men especially towards such as are the children of God with themselues how can they but loue them that are his creatures and the workmanship of his hands yea and which doe resemble their heauenly father and their eldest brother and that are stamped with the same spirit wherewith themselues are stamped that are heires likewise of the same inheritance and for the loue of whom there be so many precepts to command it so many sentences to commend it so many promises to prouoke it so many examples to encourage vnto it In all these respects the said loue is very excellent and precious the more because it doth not only come from God alone but also because that thereby we know that wee are translated from death to life and that we are of the truth and shall before him assure our hearts 1. Ioh. 3. 14. The Apostle saith not that Note thereby we are translated and that thereby we are assured but only that we know our selues so to be So then this loue is a speciall part of the euidence of our saluation and of our comfortable appearance before him both in this life and also in the life to come euen in the great day when all flesh shall be gathered together and when the books of all mens actions known and secret shall be opened before him That which the Apostle in the former Chapter vers 29. had ascribed to the whole worke of regeneration is in the places before alledged ascribed to this one point thereof viz. our vnfeined loue towards other the children of God because indeed all other things are nothing without it 1. Cor. 13. 1. 2. and where that is there are all other graces either as causes working it and by it or as effects and fruits thereof comming from it and therefore as before we haue heard it is called the fulfilling of the law and the bond of perfection Our Sauiour also saith that vpon these two commandements Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy soule with all thy strength and with all thy minde and thy neighbour as thy selfe hangeth the whole law and the Prophets Mat. 22. 40 So that these two points either as they are to be performed by vs or as they Note be performed for vs by our Sauiour Christ Iesus are the text as it were of all the rest of the word of God which is so excellent that when Dauid had learned much thereof yet he praieth the Lord to open his eyes that he might see the wonders of his law Psal 119. 18. thereby nothing that the wonders of the law of God which he did see he accounted in a manner as nothing in respect of those which he did desire further to behold So also in further commendation of the excellency of the said law he saith againe Thy testimonies are wonderfull therefore doth my soule keepe them vers 129. If therefore the word of God be so excellent is not that also excellent that is the chiefe subiect matter thereof and whereunto all that is contained in the word some way or other may well be referred Notwithstanding although this loue be so excellent yet it is not as the papists blurt it out and stoutly defend it the forme of faith For then should it be a part of faith yea the chiefe part of faith and that part without which faith should haue no being at all because the forme doth giue being to that which is formed and so it should be no otherwise distinguished from faith then as a part of faith it selfe which is directly repugnant to that place which they especially plead for the magnifying of loue And now abideth faith hope and loue these three 1. Cor. 13. 13. For in this place we see the Apostle as plainly to distinguish loue from faith as he doth distinguish hope and to make these to be three How could this be if loue were a part of faith and if faith were no faith without loue Indeed there is no faith without loue but if therefore we should make loue to be the principall part of faith we should make many a mad conclusion Againe loue by the doctrine of the Papists vpon the former place is better then faith Can a part be better then the whole Then it should be better then it selfe with addition of another good thereunto Loue also is an effect of faith as before we heard out of 1. Tim. 1. 5. therefore it cannot be the forme of faith Last of al by faith we meane faith in Iesus Christ and euery mans beleeuing of the particular forgiuenesse of his own sinnes and of his own particular saluation by Iesus Christ The loue that is required of vs was in Adam before his fall in whom there was no such faith But to returne to the excellency of the loue before spoken of as we haue heard the loue of the wicked to be very variable and soone quenched yea turned oft times into extreme hatred so the loue of the children of God is most constant and abideth to the end Loue doth neuer fall away though that prophecying be abolished or the tongues cease or knowledge vanish away 1. Cor. 13. 8. The loue of the children of God being sincere without dissimulation Rom. 12. 9. well rooted and grounded Ephes 3. 18. vpon the word and in Christ Iesus it is constant without wearinesse either in affection or in action Gal. 6 9. As God loueth to the end whomsoeuer he loueth Ioh. 13. 1. so his children walke in the steps of the same loue Ephes 5. 1. 2. To conclude this point the more excellent this loue is a speciall point wherein consisteth the matter of our regeneration the more excellent also is the estate and condition of all the children of God so regenerated in whom alone it
downe that is when through weaknesse of body he could not continue the holding them vp in praier then Amaleck preuailed Ezod 17. 11 So his praiers were of greater force then all the host of Israel besides So mighty were the praiers of the said Moses afterward and such power had they with God when he praied for the Israelites hauing greatly prouoked Gods wrath by making them a golden calfe that the Lord both as it were intreated him to let him alone that his wrath might wax hot against them and also promised that if he would so let him alone that is if he would hold his peace and not sollicit God with his praiers for the Israelites he would make of him a mighty people Exod. 32. 10. c. insinuating notwithstanding thereby that if hee would for all that hold on in praying for them and would not be hired by the former great promise to hold his peace then hee could not proceed in his wrath against them as they had deserued but must needs yeeld to Moses intreating mercy for them What can bee more powerfull then to ouercome and as it were to withhold him that is of all power from doing of that which otherwise he would haue done So mighty were the praiers of Ioshua and so did he preuaile with God by them that after an imperious and commanding manner they made the Sunne and the Moone whose course is swifter then the weauers shettle or then the flight of the swallow or of the arrow to stand still in the firmament till hee and the rest of the Israelites had auenged themselues of their enemies Iosh 10. 12. 13. So the very celestiall bodies are as it were at the command of the praiers of Gods children So mighty were the praiers of Elijah that he praying earnestly that it might not raine it rained not on the earth at least in that country for three yeeres and six moneths and that praying againe for raine the heauens gaue raine and the earth gaue foorth her increase Iames 5. 17. 18. out of 1. King 17. 1. and 18. 42. c. So the children of God by their praiers can make the clouds to forbeare raine or to giue raine as shall make most to Gods glorie So mighty were the praiers of Elisha and such power had hee with God by them that they obtained of God a sonne for the Shunamite that was barren and recouered life againe for him when he was dead 2. King 4 16. and 35. and that also after that praying the Lord to smite the armie of the Aramites with blindnesse they were smitten with such blindnesse that albeit they could see other things yet they could not see to discerne their way but as men stone-blinde were led by Elisha till they were brought into the midst of Samaria and were there in the hands of their enemies 2. Kings 6. 18. c. So mighty were the praiers of Hezekiah and such power had they with God that whereas he was sicke vnto the death that is so sicke that he was vnrecouerable either by strength of his own nature or by the art and skill of any Physitian and God also by his Prophet had told him he should die and had therefore also willed him to put his house in order that is to make his last will and Testament because hee should die and not liue yet the Lord reuoked that his owne word and contrary in some sort thereunto as also aboue the strength of nature and the art of man did restore him to health and added fifteen yeers vnto his life 2. Kings 20. 2. 3. c. So mighty were the praiers of Ester Mordecai and the rest of the Iewes and such power had they with God by their praiers that the Lord turned the wrath of Ahashuerosh from them against Haman and other their enemies albeit Haman had before that so far preuailed with Ahashuerosh that he had written his letters and sealed them with his ring and sent them by his Posts into all prouinces for the destruction of the said Mordecai and all the rest of the Iewes yong and old Ester 3. 12. compared with 4. 16. and 17. and 7. 5. and 8. 1. c. So the praiers of Gods children haue had power with God for children for them that are barren for life for them that are dead for blindnesse vpon them that see for health for them that are sicke euen vnto death and past all hope and for the changing of the hearts of men from extreame wrath to exceeding loue and fauour So mighty were the praiers of the Church for Peter by Herod committed to prison and such power had they with God that the Angell of the Lord came with great power and glory into the prison and brake off Peters chaines opened the prison dores brought him out and made the yron gate open of it owne accord c. Acts 12. 7. So the praiers of Gods children are stronger then any yron So mighty were the praiers of Paul and Silas in prison that at midnight suddenly there was a great earthquake so that the foundation of the prison was shaken and by and by all the dores opened and euery mans bonds were loosed c. Act. 16. 25. 26. So though the earth be set vpon her foundation that it shall neuer moue viz. wholly out of her place Psal 10 4. 5. yet we see it to haue been shaken by the praiers of Gods children Neither are the praiers of Gods children so effectuall for other only of their own sort but also sometime for the wicked reprobate How did the Lord heare Abraham for Abimelech king of Gerar Gen. 20. 7. Moses praying often for Pharao and the Prophet praying for the restoring of the withered hand of Ieroboam 1. Kings 13. 6. Do not all these mighty effects of praier besides many other the like both old and new plainly testifie in what grace and fauour the children of God are with God Verily they doe for all the praiers before mentioned whereof we haue heard those mighty effects were not the praiers of any wicked men but only of the children of God For indeed none can pray so by praier to haue power with God but only Gods children For how shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued Rom. 10. 14. This question how shall they c. noteth it an impossible thing for them that haue not faith to call vpon God But such are all the wicked as before we haue heard therefore none of the wicked can call vpon God Therefore all the commandements of God for praier are only to the children of God and to such as are godly When the Prophet had set downe the commandement of God for calling vpon God in the day of trouble with promise of deliuerance c. Psal 50. 15. presently by way of opposition he addeth But vnto the wicked God said What hast thou to doe to declare mine ordinances and to take my couenants in thy mouth c.
better manifestation of the glorie of God by his miraculous raising againe after buriall and after death and buriall diuers daies So our Sauiour saith to his disciples before hee was dead This sicknesse is not vnto death viz. to lie or continue in death till the generall resurrection but for the glory of God that the sonne of God might be glorified thereby Ioh. 11. 4. So he said after he was dead and buried vnto Martha who obiected that he had been dead foure daies Said I not vnto thee that if thou didst beleeue thou shouldst see the glory of God vers 40. Fourthly the godly are sometimes taken away by an extraordinary kind of death not onlie to teach other the more to take heede of all such sinnes as for which they are so taken away but also to admonish men not alwaies to iudge other by their end except their life haue also been wicked but rather to hope well of them if their former life haue been godly albeit their end be somewhat vncomfortable Finally to make an end of my answer to the former obiection touching the afflictions of the children of God sith all afflictions are threatned only to the wicked as all blessings are promised only to the godly though the troubles of the righteous be great yet the Lord deliuereth him out of all Yea though they continue long yet the Lord keepeth all his bones not one of them shall be broken whereas the afflictions of the wicked shall slaie them and they that hate the righteous shall perish Psal 34. 19. 20. 21. Therefore Salomon admonisheth the wicked not to lay waite at the house of the righteous because though the iust man fall seuen times yet he riseth again that is though he haue many afflictions be now vp now presently down yet at the last the Lord deliuereth him out of all but the wicked doe fall into mischiefe or do perish and be vtterly at the last ouerthrowne in their misery Pro. 24. 15. 16. Yea though they crie yet there shall be none to saue yea though they cry vnto the Lord yet he shall not answer them Psal 18. 41. Of both these viz. of the deliuerance of the children of God out of their troubles and of the perishing of the wicked in theirs wee haue mentioned diuers examples before not needfull now to be repeated Though also the Lord do suffer the afflictions of his children to continue yet in the end he will most gratiously deliuer them by death and translate them to himselfe where they shall rest from their labor and where they shall reap the fruit of all their workes Reuel 14 13. of the which rest and other reward of their workes all the afflictions of this life are not to be accounted worthy Rom 8. 18. Yea in respect of which most excellent and eternall weight of glorie all affliction here is but exceeding light and momentany 2. Cor. 4. 17. But of this more afterward In the meane time the Lord will either mitigate the said afflictions of his children or shew his power in their weaknesse not laying more vpon them then he giueth strength to beare neither suffering them to be tempted aboue their strength 1. Cor. 10. 13. The Lord knoweth to deliuer the godly out of tentation and to reserue the vniust vnto the day of iudgment vnder punishment or to be punished 2. Pet. 2. 9. Are not these things singular priuileges Are they not excellent dignities To haue the right of all the blessings of this life and to haue the very afflictions of this life made so many waies beneficiall so that the children of God may not only say that light is sowen for the righteous and ioy for the vpright in heart Psal 97. 11. but also that vnto the righteous ariseth light in darknesse it selfe Psal 112. 4. But is this all that may be said touching the blessings of this life and the afflictions thereof in respect of the children of God No we may further adde both of such blessings and of such afflictions and also of all other things that we that are the children of God do not vncertainly hope but fully and most certainly know that all things work together for the good of them that loue God Rom. 8. 28. What all things yea all things youth as well as age weaknesse as well as strength trouble as well as peace sicknesse as well as health pouerty as well as wealth the single state as well as the married disgrace as well as credit contempt as well as honor low degree as well as high imprisonment as well as walking at large bondage as well as freedome losses as well as gaine barrennesse of the body as well as fruitfulnesse a troublesome wife as well as a comfortable wife wicked and rebellious children as well as good and dutifull death of father mother brother sister husband wife children and other friends as well as the life and long continuance of them trauelling abroad as well as keeping at home banishment as well as abiding in our owne country the hatred and displeasure of men euen of the mighty men of the world as well as their loue and friendship dangers as well as safety foule or cold weather as well as faire and hot weather to conclude death as well as life and any one thing els as well as another All this is so to be vnderstood that wee may admire the wisedome of God in turning all things to good to them that loue Note him and that we acknowledge the state and condition of such to be the more honorable and happy not that therefore we make choice of one thing as well as of another but that we direct our choice according to his reuealed will and yet to be content with whatsoeuer the Lord shall doe and to possesse our soules in patience as knowing that howsoeuer things fall out a while yet at the last the end will be good for vs. But this being a matter of good moment it shall not be lost labor to insist somewhat more vpon it and to make it more plaine that all men may the better see that all things worke indeed to the good of them that loue God that is of his children because we haue heard before that they only do loue him and that all the wicked are often said to be enemies and haters of him This therefore is manifest first because God is with al them that loue him as hath been before declared If God bee with them who can be against them Rom. 8. 31. or what skilleth it who or what is against them They may then say as Elisha said 2. Kings 6. 16. and as Hezekiah did 2. Chron. 32. 7. They that be with vs are more then they that be against vs. God is greater then all Ioh. 10. 29. viz. not only in power but also in wisedome and goodnesse as before also hath been shewed Whatsoeuer he will in heauen or in earth that he doth Psal 135. 6. He will not
must such ministers as doe so preach that word of truth that thereby men are begotten againe vnto God be acknowledged to be the ministers of God and sent by God For doth not the Apostle ioine all these together calling vpon God beleeuing hearing preaching and sending them that did preach Rom. 10. 14. 15. And doth he not thereby plainly teach that they do go all together and that none can truely call vpon God which doth not beleeue none can beleeue which doth not heare none can heare which haue no preachers none can preach except they be sent and that consequently whosoeuer do so preach that men therby are brought truely to call vpon God and truely to beleeue in God they are sent of God so to preach Is not the same point further manifest by that argument whereby the same Apostle instifieth his Apostleship and ministery to the Corinthians euen by the successe and efficacie of his preaching amongst them against such as denied his Apostleship as many in these daies doe altogether deny all the ministerie of the Church of England Am I not saith he an Apostle c. Are not ye my worke in the Lord If I be not an Apostle vnto other doubtles I am vnto you for ye are the seale of my Apostleship in the Lord. 1. Cor. 9. 1. 2. And againe Neede we as some other epistles of recommendations vnto you or of recommendation from you yee are our epistle written in our hearts which is vnderstood and read of all men in that ye are manifest to be the epistle of Christ ministred by vs and written not with inke but with the spirit of the liuing God not in tables of stone but in fleshly tables of the heart 2. Cor. 3. 1. 2. 3. What meane all these words Euen this that such had beene the successe of the ministerie of the Apostle amongst the Corinthians that both himselfe had good assurance in his owne heart of his calling vnto them and that other also might thereby euidently perceiue and vnderstand as much Doth not our Sauiour proue his sending as a Messias and to be a Messias by the workes which he did The workes that I do beare witnes of me that the father hath sent me Iohn 5. 39. As his workes beseeming a Messias and in the power of none but of the Messias proued him to bee the Messias so do not also the workes of ministers of the gospell and proper onely to such as are sent from God proue men to be such ministers Doubtlesse saith hee that being borne blinde had his sight giuen him by Christ this is a maruellous thing that ye know not whence he is and yet hee hath opened mine eies Iohn 9. 30. And againe If this man were not of God hee could haue done nothing verse 33. May it not in like maner and much more be said of the ministers of the Church of England to all them that make question of their calling Doubtles this is a maruellous thing that ye know not whence they be or deny them from whence they are and yet they open the eies of the mindes of many Yea euen of them that doe make such question of their calling and doe peremptorily deny them to be of God as those wicked Iewes to whom that poore man so spake denied Christ to be of God If such ministers were not of God they could haue done nothing in the lightning mens eies of their vnderstanding to know what the hope is of his calling and what bee the riches of his glorious inheritance in the Saints c. Ephes 1. 18. No man can make opposition to these things but hee must also oppose himselfe to the former scriptures And if the former scriptures be for the iustifying of the ministery of the Church of England as thereby the word of truth is preached to the effectuall begetting againe of men vnto God no other Scriptures can be against it for the nullifying therof because the scriptures do all most sweetely agree together without any contradiction of any one to any other As therefore when our Sauiour seeing many of his disciples to go back and to walke no more with him that is vtterly to leaue him said vnto the twelue will ye also go away Peter answered him Master to whom shall we go thou hast the words of eternall life Iohn 6. 66. 67. 68. so my good brethren though ye doe see many to withdraw themselues from them that haue preached the words of eternall life and still do preach the same and though ye also be earnestly sollicited to doe the like yet determine in your hearts and answer accordingly To whom shall wee go these haue the words of eternall life The comparison obiected by some of children begotten to men as well by adulterie and fornication as by lawfull marriage thereby to insinuate that as such children do not iustify either adulterie or fornication so in like maner such Children as before we haue said to be begotten againe vnto God by the ministery of the Church of England do not iustify the said ministery this comparison I say is so odious so beastly so detestable and abominable that a man would wonder it should come from such men as they would seeme to be that obiect the same For in an adulterous generation as there is a common worke of God so who seeth not also a plaine worke of nature Yea such a worke of nature as is in the very beasts themselues in the procreation of other of their owne kinde But the regeneration of Children vnto God is a worke aboue all nature onely and wholly of God yea of the free grace and abundant mercy of God as afterward shall further appeare Furthermore touching this comparison it might as well haue beene obiected against the former argument of the Apostle from the successe of his preaching amongst the Corinthians as it is now obiected against vs reasoning in like maner from the efficacie and fruit of our ministery Againe all children either in adulterie or infornication begotten and borne in time of the Law were forbidden to enter into the congregation of the Lord that is to bee admitted to any publike office to the tenth generation Deut. 2 3. 2. Dare any man say the like of such as are begotten againe vnto God by the present ministerie of the Church of England Yea dare any man deny any so begotten to haue right and interest into all the promises and blessings of God for this life and for the life to come as well as any other begotten vnto God by the ministery of any other Herein beloued deceiue not your selues Halt not with God neither shew your selues vnthankfull vnto him by denying his rich mercie towards you in your regeneration If ye haue good testimony thereof to your owne soules If by the ministerie of the Church of England ye haue euer felt any true vertue of Christs death to the mortifying of sinne in you and of his resurrection to the life of righteousnes If
Christ pag. 467. THE DIGNITY of Gods children AND THE BASENESSE of all other CHAPTER 1. Of the speciall reason of writing this Treatise Of the Text of Scripture generally whereupon the same is grounded Of the coherence of the said Scripture with the words going before As also of the reason of them in respect of the words following Of the Logicall analysis or resolution of the said Scripture And of the first particular word therein AMongst many other sinnes of these last daies in respect whereof the Apostle hath foretold by the spirit that the times would be the more perillous this is one not the least that as men should be louers of themselues so they should not bee louers of them that are good 2. Tim. 3. 3. Now as by wofull experience we see other sinnes mentioned by the Apostle in the former place according to his said Prophecie to abound so all men whose eies are not smitten with too great blindnesse may behold the extreme hatred of the sons of men against ●he children of God and the manifold indignities that these do daily beare at their hands that know not how worthy their state and condition is For this cause I haue taken in land this present treatise of the dignitie of God children both for their better comfort against all such indignities as daily the wicked doe offer vnto them as likewise for their better instruction how to carrie themselues towards such their aduersaries and also that these their aduersaries may the better consider what they doe mo●●●● 〈◊〉 such indignities to them whom they ought to honor that so seeing their fault in that behalfe they may if they belong to God repent thereof I am not ignorant that some things by diuers learned godly and reuerend men haue beene written pertaining to this theame Peter de La Place a noble man as it seemeth of France at least a worthy Christian and described by the name of one of the Kings Counsell and chiefe President of his Court of Aids in Paris hath written a godly Treatise in French Of the excellencie of a Christian which is also translated into English and printed 1576. In that worthy worke also of M. Rogers published about some fiue yeeres sithence there is one treatise viz. the sixt wholly of the priuileges of a Christian which argument differeth not much from this present theame Of the dignitie of Gods children Otho Casmannus likewise a very learned and godlie man hath written more lately two bookes in Latine one intituled Hominis spiritualis anatomia meditatio c. The anatomie and meditation of a spirituall man printed Anno 1605. the other intituled Christianus nomine re c. A Christian in name and in deed c. published Anno 160● In both which are many sweet points not impertinent to my present argument Notwithstanding because the first of these Peter de La Place hath written very briefly and so long sithence that his booke is worne almost out of date so easily doth this age neglect and forget things how good soeuer of neuer so little antiquitie and because also that booke is hardlie now to be had Againe because M. Rogers his treatise of the priuileges of a Christian being a part of his great booke neuer separated from his other six treatises therein contained is not therefore euery mans money besides because it goeth vnder another title and doth handle but some part of the matter of this treatise and lastly because the two workes of Casmannus are only in Latine and therfore not fit for common Englishmen ignorant of the Latine tongue and because they are written in such a method as euery one vnderstanding the Latine tongue cannot well conceiue the same therefore notwithstanding all those said workes I haue thought it worthy the labour to write more largely of the dignity of Gods children then either Peter de La Place or M. Rogers and that in our mother tongue or then Otho Casmannus hath written and in such a volume as that although it be of greater quantity and price then the first other treatise before mentioned yet it is lesse then either the booke of M. Rogers or the two last bookes of C●smannus and therefore the more easily to be purchased by any of very meane abilitie Such also as haue read the other bookes before named shall not only finde the chiefe points in this that are handled in all those but also many other not touched in any of them in respect whereof they shall not thinke their labour lost in reading of this Now forasmuch as the Scripture ought to be the only ground of all Theologicall Theames therefore for the foundation whereupon to build all my worke following I haue the rather chosen 1 Iohn 3. 1. 2. 3. because sometimes I haue preached of this Text though nothing so largely as heere I doe write thereof The words of the Apostle are these The text of all the treatise 1. IOHN 3. 1. 2. 3. Behold what loue the Father hath giuen vnto vs that we should be called the Sonnes of God for this cause the world knoweth you not because it knoweth not him Deerely beloued now are we the sonnes of God but it is not manifest what we shall be and we know that when he shall be made manifest we shal be like to him for we shal see him as he is And euery one that hath this hope in him purgeth himselfe as he is pure IN these three verses two things are conteined The first is the dignitie of Gods children The second is the dutie of them Touching the former let vs obserue first the coherence of the Apostles words concerning the dignity of Gods children with that which before he had said in the end of the former Chapter as also the reason of the said words in respect of the matter following in the rest of this Epistle Secondly let vs consider the present words of the Apostle touching the foresaid dignity c. Touching the coherence of these words with the former it is this In the 28. verse of the former Chapter the Apostle had exhorted these Christians to whom he writeth vnto constancy saying And now little children abide in him meaning Christ This exhortation he had cōfirmed by an argument taken from the end in the very same verse viz. That when hee shall appeare they might be bold This end he illustrateth by the contrary in the next words adding and not be ashamed before him at his comming In the 29. verse he had also confirmed the same end by an argument taken from an adiunct or attribute of them that abide in Christ Which also he laieth foorth not barely or nakedly but as it were cloathed with an argument from their owne knowledge or testimonie in these words If ye know that he is righteous know yee that he that doth righteously is borne of him In which argument let vs obserue that hee doth not say as Note before he that abideth in him
but that changing the words he saith he that doth righteously is borne of him Wherefore is this change of words To teach that when he had before exhorted them to abide in him his meaning was not that they should be constant only touching their sound iudgement not embracing any errours contrary to the wholsome doctrine of Christ before heard and learned by them but also that they should be constant in all holy and righteous liuing agreeable to such constancie in sound iudgement So Paul ioineth constancie in iudgement and in godlinesse of life together 1. Cor. 15. 58. Therefore my beloued brethren be stedfast and vnremooueable see heere the constancie of iudgement or minde abounding alwaies in the workes of the Lord. See heere also constancie in practise and true godlinesse Secondly let vs obserue in the former argument and in that 29. ver that the Apostle doth not say euery one that doth righteous things is borne of God but unto euery one that doth righteously For the wicked and reprobate as Saul Iudas and Horod c. doe many righteous things but the children of God and the elect doe onely righteously Thridly let vs obserue in the said verse that the Apostle saith not euery one that doth righteously is the child of God but euery one that doth righteously is borne of God Hereby he teacheth that he speaketh not of them that are the children of God by creation of their substances but of them that are the children of God by regeneration and by that new birth where of our Sauiour speaketh to Nicodemus Iohn 3. 3. Except a man be borne againe he cannot see the kingdome of God and againe Except a man bee borne of water of the spirit hee cannot enter into the kingdome of God vers 5. By creation of substance the wicked and reprobate yea the diuels themselues are the children of God but the ●lect onely are the children of God by regeneration Fourthly in that he simply saith not Euery one that doth righteously is borne of God but fortifieth the same by their 〈◊〉 testimony and knowledge hee thereby teacheth that the worke of regeneration is not a matter of doubtfull coniecture but of certaine knowledge ●ea fiftly in that hee strengthneth all this by an argument called by the Logicians a coniugatis or from the like attribute in God to that wherof he speaketh touching them that are borne of God saying If yee know that he is righteous know ye that he that doth righteously is borne of God Thereby he further teacheth the foresaid certainty of their regeneration viz. that as certainly as they know God himselfe to be righteous so certainly they might assure themselues that Euery one without exception of any that doth righteously is borne of God He teacheth moreouer that there is no other way wherby to declare our selues the children of God then by doing righteously as he himselfe is righteous No naturall child of man doth more declare himselfe to be the child of him whose child indeed he is by any similitude of person or of behauiour then they that doe righteously doe shew themselues to be children of God One man may be like another in person and in behauiour that is of no kindred to him to whom he is like But it is impossible that any should doe righteously but he that is the childe of the righteous God or that any should be the child of the righteous God but hee that doth righteously If God were your Father saith our Sauiour to the Iewes then would ye loue me Iohn 8. 48. And If yee loue me then saith he againe keepe my Commandements Iohn 14. 15. What is the keeping of his Commandements but to doe righteously From these things hitherto noted of the certaine knowledge Note of regeneration and of being borne of God followeth also another point viz. of the certaintie of the appearing of such as are so borne of God with boldnesse without all feare of any shame before him at his appearing Doe not all these things make much for that dignitie of the children of God for the writing whereof wee haue intended this present treatise But of these things more afterward In the meane time by all hitherto said wee see how the Apostle in the former Chapter hath come to the mention of our being the children of God and that this is the very last point handled in the former chapter Now because it is a point of great moment and yet for the most part too lightly regarded yea searcely so much as once looked vpon therefore in the beginning of this chapter hee insisteth vpon it and commendeth it to their further consideration as a matter very excellent and admirable and in no case to be too slenderly passed ouer but worthy all diligent obseruation and making Therefore the Apostle saith Behold what loue the Father hath giuen vnto vs that we should be called his children This is the plaine coherence of these words with the end of the former Chapter Touching the reason of them in respect of the chiefe matter following in the rest of this Epistle especially in this Chapter and in the next that is likewise plaine and euident For the Apostle being afterward to exhort these Christians to mutuall brotherly loue that is to the loue of the children of God what better foundation could hee lay for the said exhortation then a graue admonition seriously to consider the dignity of Gods children and the vnspeakable yea the admirable loue of God towards them in aduancing them to the said dignitie For so the Apostle in this preface and graue exhortation to the consideration of Gods loue in making men his children laieth two maine arguments for the better prouoking of men to the loue of Gods children one from the example of Gods loue towards them in making them his children this being farre more then all other can doe for them the other from the excellencie of them that are so made his children For ought not all to loue them whom God loueth especially whom he so loueth as to make them his children The more excellent also that any bee are they not the more worthy of the loue of all other Thus much for the coherence of these words with the former as also for the reason of them in respect of the matter following Now to come to the present words of the Apostle they are as partly we haue seene a graue exhortation to the serious consideration of the loue of God in making men his children by the worke of regeneration touched in the last verse of the former chapter For how excellent soeuer this loue of God be yet the Apostle seeing the same to bee made a matter of nothing in the world neither the children of God to be esteemed according to their excellency but rather to be despised and contemned doth therefore commend that which before he had touched to their further consideration preuenting also an obiection touching their contempt in the world and
though this phrase of shewing loue be more apt yet the other phrase of giuing loue is more naturall and agreeable to the proper signification of the wo●d heere vsed And it is not to be doubted but that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it of purpose first to exclude all merits and worthinesse of our selues for d●seruing this loue of God towards 〈◊〉 making vs his children and to shew that this loue of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a●d without any respect of any good in vs. So 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words loue and giuing l●ue are as much as the word 〈◊〉 other places which is all opposed to merits in vs in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of God 〈◊〉 is called election of grace and it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that 〈◊〉 be of grace it is no more of worke or else were g●●●e no m●●● 〈◊〉 but if it be of workes it is no more grace or 〈◊〉 were worke no more workes Rom 11. 5. 6. So in the same 〈◊〉 it i●●a●d in these me epistle before that are the children were borne viz. Ia●cob and Esau and when they had done neither good nor ●ui●l that the purpose of God might remaine according to election not by ●●●kes but by h●m that calleth it was said vnto her The elder shall s●●ue the younger Rom 9. 11. 12. And 〈◊〉 afterward he concludeth So then it is not in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercy vers 16 Can there be a more plaine and manifest opposition and contrariety then this is Verily it is so plaine and manifest that all the cauilling and quarrelling wit in the world cannot wash the same away Touching ●ustification it is said that God hath saued vs not by the workes of righteousnesse which wee had done but according to his mercy Tit. 3. 5. And againe By the workes of the Law no flesh shall be iustified Rom. 3. 20. and that we be iustified freely by his grace verse 24. Touching both our iustification and calling whereby wee are made the children of God the same Apostle also saith that God hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose and grace 2. Tim. 1. 9. In all these places and touching these points who seeth not a most euident opposition of Gods grace to our worthlnesse and that Gods grace doth exclude our worthinesle I grant sometime grace mentioned and sometime mercie and that there is some distinction betwixt grace and mercie as afterward shall be shewed yet there is also such affinity betwixt them that as two brethren being very like one another are sometimes taken one for another so also these two words in this argument especially are confounded and the one vsed for another Now let it bee noted that I said grace was opposed to our Note worthlnesse ●ot to all worthinesse When we heare that God hath freely of his owne loue made vs his children this indeed excludeth al worthinesse of vs and in vs from being any cause of making vs the children of God Notwithstanding if wee looke to Christ Iesus and to that that he hath done it is certain that God hath not either saued vs freely or freely ma●e vs his children saue in the sending or giuing his sonne freely and of his owne onely loue grace and mercy for the sauing vs and for the making vs his children that so by adoption we might be capable of saluation Otherwise if we looke to that which Christ did for vs being so freely giuen or sent in the world in our behalfe it is certaine that Christ Iesus by his passiue and actiue righteousnes that is by those things which hee suffred and by that obedience which otherwise he performed vnto God his Father for vs hath both iustified vs and also purchased this honour for vs of being the children of God Though therefore wee haue this honour freely and only of Gods free grace in respect of our selues yet it is not so free in respect of Christ his sending only of Gods free grace excepted because as we shall afterward heare more largely Christ hath most deerely bought all that wee haue and most sweetly paid for it in the satisfying the iustice of God in our behalfe Thus much for the first consideration why the Apostle vseth this phrase that God hath giuen vs this lone of calling vs his children The second consideration is for the distinguishing of vs from Christ Iesus and to teach that though wee bee the children or sonnes of God yet there is great difference betwixt Christ and vs in this behalfe Christ as hee is the second person in the Deity is the Sonne of God immediately by nature by communication of the whole essence of the Father vnto him and from all eternitie before all times so that there neuer was any time when God was not his Father c. as hath beene before said As Christ also was man he was the Sonne of God by miraculous conception of the holy Ghost and by a most wonderfull coniunction of the godhead and manhood together hypostatically in one person But we are the sonnes or children of God immediately and only by grace by gift by ad●ption in by and through Christ Iesus being incorporated and ingrafted into him that is in himselfe the naturall the eternall the only sonne of God hauing no fellowes either amongst men or amongst Angels Therefore hee is called Gods owne Sonne Rom. 8. 32. his first be gotten Sonne Heb. 1. 6. and his only be gotten Sonne Iohn 1. 14. and 3. 16. and 1. Iohn 4. 9. Now as heere it is said that God hath giuen vs this loue to be called his children so it is also said that to as many as receiued him that is Christ hee gaue prerogatiue to be the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his name Ioh. 1. 12. In which place the holy Ghost sheweth the meanes more plainly whereby we are the sonnes or children of God namely by receiuing Christ by faith and by being through faith ingrafted into Christ Howsoeuer therefore wee bee called the sonnes of God as well as Christ yet there is great difference betwixt Christ and vs in this behalfe and Christ is in a farre more excellent maner the Sonne of God then either we or the Angels can claime the same title and prerogatiue Let vs heere note one thing more viz. that the Apostle Note speaketh not in the present time saying doth giue but in the time past saying hath giuen This obseruation is not to bee vnderstood onely of the first actuall beginning of our adoption and regeneration but also of Gods eternall election of vs thereunto before the making of the world For so the same phrase in the same tense importeth elsewhere The Father that hath giuen them vnto me c. Iohn 10. 29. As thou hast giuen him power ouer all flesh that he should giue eternall life to all them that thou bast giuen him Iohn 17. 2. And againe I haue declared thy
the wicked haue no part in the foresaid loue of God but it is proper and peculiar only to the children of God And thus we see that the foresaid loue of God towards his children is not only to be considered as the principall and first mouing cause of their regeneration but also as a singular and most honourable benefit and prerogatiue Thus much for the first consideration of the loue of God in making vs his children viz. as it was the cause of our election at the first euen before all times vnto our adoption and regeneration to be made in time Touching the second consideration of Gods loue in making vs his children namely as it hath been declared particularly in giuing his sonne for the effecting of our adoption whereunto we were predestinated and elected it is said So God loued the world that he hath giuen his only begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish c. Ioh. 3. 16. If God so loued the world that he sent his sonne that men might haue euerlasting life by beleeuing in him then also in his said loue he sent his sonne to adopt them vnto God For none can beleeue but such as are adopted and haue the spirit of adoption whereby to beleeue God to be their father And adoption is one necessary step to euerlasting life and without adoption and regeneration can no man enter into the kingdome of heauen as our Sauiour teacheth Nicodemus in the same chapter Neither is it only manifest thus by consequence that God so loued the world that is the elect men in the world that he sent his sonne for their adoption but the Apostle doth also teach the same expresly When the fulnesse of time saith he was come God sent his sonne made of a woman and made vnder the law that is not only borne in the time of the law but also made subiect both to the obedience and to the curse of the law that he might redeeme them that were vnder the law that they might receiue the adoption of sonnes Galat. 4. 4. 6. By these testimonies it is manifest not only that God declared his great loue towards vs in sending his own and only sonne into the world to make vs his children but that also God the sonne was a principall agent in the work of our adoption and regeneration as well as God the father and that wee could no more haue been made the children of God without the worke of God the sonne then without the worke of God the father The same is yet further manifest by the Euangelists interpretation of the propheticall words of Caiph as spoken as hee was high Priest touching the necessity of the death of one for the people and that the whole nation should not perish For this saith the Euangelist spake hee not of himselfe but being high Priest that same yeere he prophecied that Iesus should die for that nation and not for that nation only but that he should gather together the children of God that were scattered Ioh. 11. 50. By gathering together he meaneth adopting and by the children of God he meaneth not them that were already in act the children of God but that were appointed and predestinated so to be as before we heard It is also in the said place to be obserued Note that he speaketh not passiuely but actiuely He saith not that the children of God might be gathered together but he saith that he might gather together c. So he noteth that the gathering together and adopting of the children of God is a worke of Iesus Christ as well as of God the father The same our Sauiour himselfe testifieth saying Other sheepe I haue also which are not of this fold them also must I bring Ioh. 10. 16. he saith not they shall be brought but that he himselfe must bring them Peter accordeth with both the former testimonies making this to be the end of Christs suffering once for sinnes c. not that we might be brought only to God but also that he might bring vs vnto God 1. Pet. 3. 18. As therefore we could not haue been saued without Christ so neither could we haue been adopted without him Therefore also as before we heard the dignity of Gods children to be the greater by the worke of the father so it is also the greater hereby that the father worketh herein by the sonne and the sonne worketh with the father as well in this our second creation as in the first For Christ is the same in glory and excellency with the Father Whatsoeuer is spoken of the Father according to the Deity the same may also be sayd of the sonne For I saith Christ himselfe and my Father are one Ioh. 10. 30. and the Apostle saith that hee being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equall with God Philip. 2. 6. And he is called the heire of all things by whom God the Father made the world and the brightnesse of the glory and the ingraued forme of his fathers person Heb. 1. 2. 3. Neither was Christ only so excellent as he was God but he was also very excellent in his humanity the same being conceiued in the wombe of a virgin by the immediat operation of the holy ghost and being personally vnited to the Godhead that both natures might make one person and so vnited being also altogether without sinne vnspotted vndefiled most holy and righteous In his offices also he was most honorable being the onely King Priest and Prophet of his Church yea such a King Priest and Prophet as of whom Dauid and Salomon and all their kingly posterity with the Priests of the law and the Prophets extraordinarily raised vp and sent to the ancient people of God were but types figures and shadowes The more excellent therefore that Christ is and was before his sending into the world and afterward the more hath God dignified his children in sending him so into the world to make them his children The more honorable persons that any Prince doth imploy for the good of any other the more is he dignified and graced for whose good such honourable persons are so imployed Did not Balak King of Moab much honour Balaam by sending vnto him first some of the Elders and Princes of Moab and Midian Num. 22. 5. 7. and 13. and afterward more Princes and more honorable then the former vers 15. Was it not a great honor to the Prophet Isaiah that Hezekiah sent Eliakim the steward of his house and Shebna his Chauncellor and the elders of the Priests to aske counsell of him touching Rabsheka 2. King 19. 2. May not the like be sayd of Iosiahs sending Hi●kia the Priest Ah●kan the sonne of Shaphat Achbor the sonne of Michaiah Shaphan the Chancellor and Asahia the Kings seruant to Huldah the Prophe●esse for counsell from the Lord touching the finding of the lawe● 2. King 22. 12. That the Centurion sent not one of his own seruants but the
head of Angels Therefore in this respect also the condition of Gods children is so much the more excellent Touching the seuenth and last former metaphor what heart of man can conceiue the depth the height the bredth and the length of this loue of Christ in matching and ioining himselfe to vs and vs to him that hee I say that was the heire of all things by whom the worlds were made and who was the brightnes of the glory and the engrauen forme of the person of God the father Hebrewes 1. 1. 2. and beeing in the forme of God thought it no robbery to bee equall to God Philippians 2. 6. 7. that hee I say should so cast his loue and liking vpon vs as to take vs to be his spouse and wife and that way also to make vs the daughters as it were in lawe and by marriage to God the father euen vs that not onely had no portion and were euery mothers childe of vs beggers brattes but that also were base horne creatures and had an Ammonite to our Father and an Hittite to our mother and that therefore as most base children are were in such misery as a new borne childe whose nauell is not cut neither is washed with water to soften him neither is salted with salt for the better hardning the nauell and the whole skinne for the better strengthning of all the inward parts and for the better decocting and consuming of all corrupt humors neither was swadled with clouts and whom being borne in misery there was no eie to pitie or to shew compassion so that hee lay in the open field to all contempt and altogether polluted with blood Ezekiel 16. 3. 4. 5. 6. yea who were altogether deformed and misshapen euen a crocked generation hauing neither good face nor good heart nor good eie nor any member well proportioned yea being altogether also without witte and vnderstanding of heauenly things as wee haue heard euen pure naturals as wee speake and no more able to conceiue the things of God and pertaining to our owne good then very ideots Is not this wonderfull that such an one as Christ was and is should so vnequally in many respects match himselfe with such as wee were and that by matching himselfe so with vs should make such a change in vs of crooked to make vs straight of deformed to make vs beautifull of beggerly to make vs rich of fooles to make vs wise of prophane to make vs holy of earthly to make vs heauenly and of children of the diuell to make vs the children of God his father What a preferment therefore is this Were it not a great aduancement and a matter of exceeding honor for a mighty Prince to take some vagabond woman poore naked deformed miserable c. and to marry her to himselfe and to put her presently into all costly and princely robes yea it was an honor for Ab●ga●l though the wife of a rich but a miserable yeoman such as this time hath too many like and also a wise and a vertuous woman to be taken to wife vnto Dauid was it not also an high preferment for Ester a poore maiden of another nation to be made wife and Queen to that mighty Monarch and Emperor Ahashuerosh that raigned ouer an hundred seuen and twenty Prouinces How honorable then is it for vs more poore base miserable then any rogue to bee married to the naturall and only sonne of God hei●e and Lord of all things Verily this match is so much greater preferment of vs then the former matches were either of Abigail with Dauid or of Ester with Ahashuerosh because both Dauid and Ahashuerosh had many other wiues besides those but Christ Iesus hath so matched himselfe with vs that as he had no other before vs so he desireth no other besides vs but contenteth himselfe wholly with vs and taketh as great delight in vs as if we had been his equals when he first made choice of vs and as though we had been as wise rich beautifull vertuous and euery way as glorious as either he doth make vs after his marying of vs in this life or as hee will make vs hereafter in the life to come To leaue these metaphors and similitudes whereby hitherto the communion of the children of God is so described and their dignity in such sort amplified let vs further vnderstand that our said communion is the more admirable in it selfe and honorable to vs in as much as thereby we cannot but haue communion also with the Father because Christ and the father are one Ioh. 10. 30 And the father is in the Sonne and the Sonne in the Father Ioh. 14. 10. 11. In which last place our Sauiour praieth that as he and the father are one in another so also the children of God whom God had giuen to Christ Ioh. 6. 37. and 17. 6. might be one not only amongst themselues but also in them that is in the father and in the Sonne Therefore our Sauiour likewise saith before If any man loue me he will keepe my word and my father will loue him and we will come vnto him and will dwell with him Ioh. 14. 23. Yea therefore Christ came into the world and was made one with vs that we might haue communion with the Father and be made one with him and as he was made one with vs to make vs one with the father so also he did effect that for which he did come Therefore the Apostle hauing set forth our miserable state in the world by nature viz. that amongst other things we were without God in the world Ephes 2. 12. he doth presently by way of opposition adde our contrary state in Christ and by Christ saying But in Christ Iesus ye which once were farre of are made neerer by the bloud of Christ c. vers 13. Hauing that communion with the Father and with the sonne we haue also the like with the holy ghost and therefore it is not onely said that they that are led by the spirit of God are the sonnes of God but also that they that are the sonnes of God haue receiued the spirit of God whereby they ●rie Abba father Rom. 8. 14 c. and againe that because they are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Son into their hearts which crieth Abba father Therefore also our Sauiour Ioh. 14. where he promiseth the communion of himselfe and of his father vnto his disciples promiseth also to send the holy ghost which should abide with them Therefore also the holy ghost is said to bee shed on vs abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour Tit. 3. 5. Finally as by the sonne we haue communion with the father so the holy ghost is the bond of our communion with the father and with the sonne Through him saith Paul wee haue an entrance to the father by one spirit Ephes 2. 18. and by one spirit we are all baptized into one body c. 1. Cor. 12. 13. Is
by Christ made Priests vnto God so are they kings likewise vnto God and that euen because they are sons or children of God For as sometimes all the sonnes of some Emperors which haue had their Empires by inheritance not by election are borne kings or at least haue been left kings by their Fathers or haue had such dukedomes as haue had kingly power and kingly dignities the title only of kings excepted and as in some countries at this day all the sonnes of an Earle are Earles so likewise al the sons and children of God the Emperor of all the world being especially incorporated and ingrafted to the proper and naturall sonne of God and made one with him may in that respect not vnfitly be called kings But what is the kingly power and what be the kingly dignities of the children of God Verily their power by Iesus Christ and through faith in him is very great yea farre greater then the power of any worldly king whatsoeuer For of what king in the world as he is onely a worldly King can that be said that is said by him that is truth it selfe of euery one that hath faith but as a graine of mustard seede viz. that nothing is impossible vnto him Matthew 17. 20. and againe All things are possible to him that beleeueth Mark 9. 23. What earthly King also as he is only an earthly King can say of himselfe as poore Paul saide of himselfe by that Spirit that cannot lye I am able to doe all things by the helpe of Christ which strengthneth me Philip. 4. 13. Secondly such as the power of the children of God is such also is their heart and courage namely altogether princely yea much more then princely For who but the child of God can say Though I should walke through the valley of the shadow of death I will feare no euill Psal 23. 4. and againe I will not bee afraide though ten thousand beset mee round about Psalme 3. 6. and againe Though an host pitched against mee mine heart should not be afraid Psal 27. 3. and againe I will not feare what flesh can doe vnto mee Psalme 55. 4. Thirdly according to the former princely power and magnanimitie of the children of God their effects are likewise princely and sutable to their said power and magnanimitie For to omit in this place those great mighty effects of the praiers of Gods children before mentioned whereas by nature they are seruants and bondmen to satan to their owne wicked lusts and to euery worldly vanity as well as any other after that they are partaker of the spirit of adoption they are so armed also With weapons that are not carnall but mighty through God that they cast downe all the strong holdes of sinne in them 2. Corinthians 10. 4. which are stronger then all Castles and defenced Cities whatsoeuer Yea hauing put on all the spirituall armour Whereby they wrestle not with flesh and bloud but with principalities and powers and worldly gouernors Princes of darknesse c. Ephes 6. 12. they ouercome all these they raigne ouer all and through him that loued them they are more then conquerors so that neither Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be euer able to separate them from the loue of God in Christ Iesus to deiect them from that excellent state whereunto Christ Iesus hath aduanced them Rom. 8. 37. Therefore it is not only said that by faith they ouercome the world that is the things of this visible world that do any waies hinder their saluation but satan himselfe also is so by Christ Iesus subdued vnto them and in a manner brought into such feare of them that they doe no sooner turne their face vpon him and resist him but that presently he flieth from them and as it were taketh him to his heeles as not able to abide their countenance Iames 4. 7. O noble victory O glorious conquest All the great conquerors in the world how renoumed soeuer for their worldly victories neuer got the like Yea all kings and Princes and other conquerors that are not in Christ Iesus are as very slaues to satan to the world and to all lusts of the flesh which fight against their soules 1. Pet. 2. 11. as euer was Samson to the Philistims when they put out both his eies and made him to grind in the mill Iudg. 16. 21. or as Zedekiah was when he was taken by Nebuchadnezer before whose eies they first slew all his sonnes and then put out his owne eies also and bound him in chaines and so carried him to Babel 2. Kings 25. 7. or finally as any captiue or slaue now is either in the Turks Gallies or in subiection to the Spaniard in the West Indies or els where Yea for the most part such great champions and captaines and conquerors touching flesh and bloud are of all other the most slaues most cowards and soonest ouercome by euery lust But so to ouercome such lusts and other enemies of saluation is more then in a carnall and outward manner with the arme of flesh to ouercome the whole world yea if there were many worlds yet for a man to ouercome himselfe with satan and the world is more then to ouercome them all He that ruleth his owne mind is better then he that winneth a city Pro. 16. 32. What is he then that ouercommeth himselfe and the whole power of hell Moreouer euen touching the arme of flesh and worldly enemies greater is the power oft times and courage of the children of God in resisting and ouercomming of them then of all the wicked in the world Yea in this respect the children of God haue true fortitude and magnanimity beseeming Princes For these sentences before alledged of Dauids fearelesse heart are not spoken in respect of his spirituall enemies but in respect of his outward aduersaries And what victories are comparable to the victories of Ioshua Gedeon Iephte Samson Ionathan Dauid and other such worthies mentioned in the scripture All wicked and meere naturall men are void of the spirit of true fortitude euen for withstanding and ouercomming bodily enemies how then can they haue true fortitude it selfe The foresaid more then kingly power and courage of the children of God is apparant likewise by other effects wherein they seem most cowardly euen by all the reproches contumelies wrongs and indignities which they put vp patiently at the hands of the wicked as disdaining to resist them as not being their equals As noble men disdaine and scorne to contend with base persons and such as are much their inferiors and as all men would thinke it and might thinke it a disgrace vnto them to fight with boies though neuer so much abusing them so is the mind and courage of the children of God in respect of the wicked in the world who are indeed no better to be accounted of in comparison of them then as base and
a Iew and say Wee will goe with you for wee haue heard that God is with you Zecbar 8. 23. Other Prophets also before had written to the same purpose thus It shall bee in the last daies that the mountain● of the house of the Lord shall bee prepared in the top of the mountaines and shall bee exalted aboue the hilles and all nations shall flow vnto it And many people shall goe and say Come and let vs goe vp to the mountaine of the Lord to the house of the God of Iaakob and be will teach vs his waies and we will walke in his pathes c. Isa 2. 2. Mich 4 1. Many other the like promises there are for the incouragement of all how wicked soeuer to change their state and to make haste in that behalfe before they perish in their wicked condition The examples likewise of those Act. 2. 37. of the gaoler Act. 16. 27. of Paul him-selfe of Mary Magdalen of all the heathen conuerted by the Apostles and infinit other may further encourage men vnto this hast for entring into the way of adoption If once they enter let them proceed and goe forward not halfe way but throughout and to the end Agrippa was halfe yea almost perswaded to bee a Christian Act. 26. 28. but wee read not that hee was altogether perswaded so to bee a Christian Though wee may not absolutely say that hee neuer afterward fully and wholly became a Christian yet that but almost mentioned in the Scripture and no more either there or in any other place being testified of his perfect conuersion may iustly make vs all the more to doubt of him Many in the daies of Christ were his Disciples for a time who at the last tooke such offence at his Doctrine that they went backe and walked no more with him Iohn 6. 66. After that many were followers of the Apostles who afterward forsooke them 2. Tim 4 6. Heb. 10. 25. 1. Ioh. 2. 19. It is a dangerous thing thus to enter and not to go forward No man that putteth his hand to the plough and looketh backe is apt to the Kingdome of God Luk. 9. 62. As this is true in the particular calling to the ministery so much more in the generall to Christianity If any after they haue escaped from the filthinesse of the world that is after they made profession of renouncing the filthinesse of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and of the Sauiour Iesus Christ are yet intangled therein againe and ouercome the latter end is worse with them then the beginning c. 2. Pet. 2. 20. The meanes whereby they that are wicked may be released of the bondage of their sinne and made the children of God is as wee haue heard principally the ministerie of the word So likewise the societie and fellowship of them that are the children of God already as before wee heard If notwithstanding all hitherto said they that are wicked will not forsake their wickednesse but will still remaine such as they are yet let them take heed of all wrongs and iniuries against them that are the children of God lest in the end it be to their cost and they repent as Iudas did when it is too late But of this point also before Thus much for the vses of the doctrine of the dignitie of Gods children which are proper and speciall to the wicked Touching them that are the children of God indeed let them especially first of all take heed that they fall not from their excellent state It is true indeed that they that are once truly the children of God shall euer so continue and cannot fall away Howbeit we are exhorted often to take heed to our selues in this behalfe Heb. 3. 12. and 10. 23. and 12 15. and elswhere because exhortations are the speciallest meanes for our vpholding Wee condemne all that being but base and beggarly and yet taken into some noble mans or gentlemans house and seruice where they are in the way to preferment cannot keepe themselues well whiles they are well Especially wee condemne them that hauing found such fauour with Princes as that from a low degree they are aduanced to some honourable condition as the Earle of TERONE and other cannot containe themselues but breake their lists and so bring themselues to their former basenesse How much more then may they be condemned that being translated from death to life from darkenesse to light from bondage to libertie from seruants and slaues of the Diuell to bee the sonnes and daughters of God from Hell to Heauen doe what in themlieth to returne againe to their former miserie Although indeed the true children of God can neuer bee altogether vnchilded as it were and vtterly degraded yet they in particular things so fall yea generally for a time so decline that they may seeme and often times seeme to other and to themselues neuer to haue beene the children of God All this is by negligence and securitie For as Blessed is the man that feareth alwaies Prou. 28. 14. so it is wofull euen a thing that bringeth much woe often times to the children of God to bee at any time but a little sleepie drowsie secure and watchlesse A second speciall vse for the children of God is that hauing found this loue before spoken of with God to be made his children they trust in him and depend on him not fearing but that hee that hath made them his children and will giue them a kingdome fit for such children wil also and much more giue them all things for this life Luk 12. 32. Our little children when they rise in the morning yea our seruants also take no care what they shall eat or what they shall drinke but they leaue all such care to vs their fathers and their masters and it is indeed our duty to prouide all such things for them For he that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold denieth the faith and is worse then an infi●ell 1. Tim. 5. 8. Hitherto belongeth the speech of Moses vnto God Num. 11. 12. 13. and the practise of Bathshebaes huswife Prou. 31. 15. Why then should not we much more that professe our selues the children of God cast all our care vpon our heauenlie father that careth for vs 1. Pet. 5. 7. Vnder this vse I comprehend infinite comfort of the children of God The grounds of this comfort being handled before and some of them to be touched againe in the next verse I shall not need to stand vpon them now Yea with this trust in God and comfort from God we may ioine patience both towards God and also towards men Towards God because we haue heard before that he correcteth vr onely in loue and for our great good that wee may not bee condemned with the world 1. Cor. 11. 12. Towards man because hee is but Gods hand to chastise vs and cannot goe beyond his commission and last of all shall himselfe be called
had so graced and aduanced him in his family though he were still but a seruant what conscience are we to make of all duty to God for honouring of him that being so base and vile as wee were are by him aduanced to be his children That we may thus heare and obey God it becommeth vs especially to auoid the society of the wicked before lightly touched And indeed what greater disgrace for the sonnes of a Prince and a mighty monarke then to confort with clownes and scullians and such like Much more may bee said of the disgrace of the children of God by the communion and fellowship of the wicked If we cannot auoid their company yet let vs take heed of all pollution by them Noah and his family liued amids the whole sinfull and wicked world and Lot among the filthy Sodomits yet these kept themselues vnspotted Our Sauiour saith to the Angell of the Church of Sardi Thou hast a few names yet in Sardi which haue not desiled their garments Reu. 3. 4. yet these few liued amongst a great number that had a name to be aliue and yet were dead Howsoeuer therfore we be thrust and thronged with the wicked yet such must be our care for our selues that their soily and filthy garments may not defile and pollute ours We must also take heed of too much worldlinesse lest therby we be defiled and do spot those ornaments and rich robes before spoken of we must vse the world as if we vsed it not As the moule alwaies liueth in the earth and yet keepeth her skinne as faire as cleane and as fine as the best and most curiously brushed veluet gowne in a kingdome so must we keep our adoption and all the robes thereof euen in the mids of this sinfull and therfore most dangerous age This caueat thus to looke to our selues in respect of the world is very necessary For there is nothing more dangerous to mans saluation then the world with the riches delights honors and other things therein When no tentation els could take hold of our Sauiour then the diuell set vpon him with this argument from the world viz that hauing shewed him all the kingdomes of the world he woul● giue him all these if he would fall downe and worship him Esau for the world sold his birthrigh Heb. 12. 16. Iudas for a small morsell of the world sold and betraied his Lord and master and our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Demas fo●sooke the Apostle Paul and embraced this present world 2. Tim 4. 10. The like may b● said of many other Another more speciall vse conce●neth chiefly the ministers of the word viz. that the more exc●llent they vnderstand the state of the children of God to be the more diligent they be in teaching of them and warching ouer them as also the more carefull to feed them with the purer and better diet beseeming their excellency Do not nurses to the children of kings and Queens thus at least ought they not so to do may they then whom God hath appointed to be nurses to his own children be more carelesse This briefly shall suffice for the vses of the former discourse of the dignity of Gods children yea this also shall serue for the first part of my present text viz. of the Apostles exhortation to the serious consideration of the dignity of Gods children CHAP. XXXII Of the obiection that might be made against all generally before written of the dignity of Gods children and of the first part of the Apostles answer thereunto THe former part of this text being alreadie handled it remaineth now to speake of the second viz. of the Apostles answer to an obiection that might be made against that which the Apostle had spoken and which I haue now more plentifully laid forth of the dignity of Gods children This I will but run ouer in a trice because that which I haue written was the principall point the which at the first I intended and propounded vnto my selfe That which remaineth is but an appendix of the former and therefore it needeth not so largely to be handled The obiection which might haue been made against the Apostles former commendation of Gods loue in making vs his children is this Is the loue of God so great so vnspeakable and so admirable in making vs his children And is our state and condition in being the children of God so worthy so excellent so honorable How can this be sith of all other men in the world we are least respected least regarded yea we are not so much as knowen almost in the world To this the Apostle giueth a double answer or acknowledging indeed the thing obiected viz. that we are not regarded yea not so much as known in the world he giueth a double reason why the world doth so little respect vs scarce knowing vs namely first because it knoweth not God himselfe in this verse secondly because it is not yet euident to the world what wee shall bee heereafter in the beginning of the next verse Before we come to the words themselues let vs note and only note this that whosoeuer will commend any thing to other as worthy of their consideration and obseruation they must before also thinke of that which may and will be obiected against the same as also prepare answer to the said obiection For there is nothing so holy so excellent so sound but that the wit of man hath somewhat or will haue somewhat to obiect to the disgracing abasing and peruerting thereof Therefore the Lord hath giuen vs such a word euen such a Scripture and written word as is not only profitable or sufficient to teach namely the truth but also to improoue or to couuince and confute all errours and whatsoeuer may bee obiected against the said truth neither onely to instruct in righteousnesse that is to exhort vs vnto all vertue but also to correct or to reprooue all vice and whatsoeuer may bee said against vertue that so the man of God that is the Minister of the word may be absolute being made perfect vnto all good works This might largely bee prooued by infinite examples in the Scriptures but as I promised only to note it so I wil performe my promise in that behalfe To returne therefore to the words of the Apostle let vs first see the meaning of the said words and then the matter it selfe The first word the world hath diuers significations First it signifieth the whole masse and lumpe of all Gods creatures especially visible as when it is said that God made the world Act. 17. 24. and that hee chose vs before the foundations of the world were laid Ephes 1. 4. Secondly it signifieth this inferiour part of the world with all things therein contained or thereto belonging So it is said the diuell did shew vnto Christ all the kingdomes of the world Matth. 4 8. And the field is the world Matth. 13. 38. And He was the light that ligtneth euery one that
in glorie at his appearing and of seeing him as he is must purge himselfe so also not some but euery one that hath the said hope must purge himselfe according to this patterne This therefore especially condemneth that strict sect of the Papists called Iesuites which in a kinde of extreame pride in name and in a more precise kinde of imitation of Christ as they pretend do both single themselues from all other and also aduance themselues aboue all other For doth not the Apostle in the place before alledged reprooue the Corinthians as well for holding some of Christ in a speciall maner as for holding some of Paul some of Apollos some of Cephas And doth he not also thereby teach that as albaptized into Christ are Christians alike so all if any must be also Iesuites alike Though in Cambridge Christ Colledge and Iesus Colledge be two distinct colledges yet in profession the names Christ and Iesus are not so to be distinguished To conclude this point touching this patterne according to which we are to purge our selues Let vs remember what Iacob did to haue blacke and white spotted lambs yea what he did in that behalfe not of his owne head but by direction of God himselfe as also let vs consider the successe thereof Cōcer●ing this it is said that Iacob took rods of greene poplar of hasell and of the chesnut tree and pilled white strokes in them and made the white appeare in the rods and then put the rods which hee had pilled into the gutters and wairing troughs when the sheepe came to drinke before the sheepe because they were then in heat when they came to drinke Wherefore did he all this Because before he had made a couenant with Laban to haue no other wages then the party coloured sheepe with great and little spots all that were so spotted before beeing first taken out of the flocks and committed to the other sonnes of Laban to bee kept by themselues three daies iourney from those that remained in the keeping of Iacob What was the successe of this practise It is further saide that the sheepe beeing then in heat because it was then ramming time and seeing those reds so pilled with white strokes lying before them by the impression of them but chieflie by the speciall prouidence of God brought foorth yong of partie colour and with small and great spots Genes 30. 37. c. To apply this to our present purpose as those sheepe by beholding those rods so pilled with white strokes amongst the naturall greene that was left on them through the speciall prouidence of God did bring forth yong partie coloured like to those said pilled rods in that maner laid before them so if euery one that hath that former hope in him of being at the appearing of Christ like vnto him in glorie and of seeing him as hee is for the purging of himselfe would alwaies lay before his eies this excellent patterne of Christ himselfe heere commended vnto vs and seriously marke and obserue the same it could not bee but that through the gracious working of God the sight of this pattern would make so deepe an impression in the heart of such a man that hee should purge himselfe as Christ is pure and bee made like vnto him in holinesse and righteousnesse for his better assurance of his future likenesse vnto him in glory But therefore indeede doe men continue the longer in their spirituall filthinesse and bee not transformed into the likenesse of Christ in the foresaide holinesse and righteousnesse because they doe not so behold and consider this excellent patterne as they should doe And this is a manifest argument that whatsoeuer some men speake of their knowing Christ and of seeing Christ as also of their hope of beeing made like vnto Christ at his appearing as well as any other yet indeede all these are but words because they doe not purge themselues as he is pure For if they had that hope they speake of if they did so know Christ and behold Christ as they boast they do then doubtlesse they would purge themselues as he is pure This must bee applied to particular vertues wherein Christs puritie doth speciallie consist as to walking in loue as hee hath loued vs Ephesians 5. 2. To running with patience the race that is set before vs looking vnto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith who for the ioie that was set before him endured the Crosse and despised the shame Hebrewes 12. 1. 2. and suffered for vs leauing vs an example that wee should follow his steppes c. 1. Pet. 2. 21. so likewise to humilitie that in meekenesse of minde euerie man esteeme other better then himselfe not looking onlie on his owne things that is on his owne gifts that himselfe hath receiued but also on the things of other men as hauing the same mind that was euen in Christ Iesus who being in the forme of God and thinking it no robberie to be equall to God made himselfe of no reputation but tooke on him the forme of a seruant and was made like vnto man and was found in the shape of a man and humbled himselfe and became obedient vnto the death euen the death of the Crosse c. Phil. 2. 3. c. The like may be said of other speciall vertues and particular branches of that puritie that was in Christ Iesus All these things that I haue now written of the dignitie of the children of GOD God himselfe write in the hearts of all that shall read them thus written in paper And hee that hath loued them with such admirable and incomprehensible loue as to aduance them to this vnspeakable dignitie continue this his loue in them vnto the end and so purge and transforme them into the holinesse of Christ Iesus in this world that as heereby they doe alreadie know that howsoeuer they bee heere of the world contemned and made the off-scouring and as it were the skumme of the world yet at the appearing of Christ they shall bee made like vnto him and see him as hee is so indeede they may bee so made like vnto him and so see him and his glorie and enioie the same for euer and euer Amen FINIS Faults escaped partly at the Presse partly by the default of him that copied out part of the Booke PAg. 5. l. 25. put out vnto p. 18. l. 5. after not r. only and after but r. also p. 19. l. 32. r. all p. 20. l. 21. r. alwaies p. 22. l. 19. r. mediatly p. 24. l. 3. r. euen vs. p. 29. l. 2. r. taking only p. 41 l 15. r. alone p. 64. l. 30. r. cleare p. 69. l. 6. r. to beleeue it p. 76. l. 30. r. 1. Cor. 12. 3. p. 108. l 32. r. gesture p. 129. l. 21. after abiding r. or p. 167. l. 23. r from p. 169. l. 13. r. from some p. 187. l. 3. r. Gad. p. 194. l. 4. r. giue p. 198. l. 14. r. as p. 208. l. 28. r. Ps 19. 7 p. 221. l. 14. r. inueh reading p. 223. l 5. r. Rom. 6. 3. 4 p. 236. l. 22. r. other p. 238. l. 33. r. Iames 1. 18. p. 260. l. 11. r. high Priest p. 271. l. 8. r. Psal 94. p. 306. l. 34. r. euen p. 308. l. 17. 18. r. vnspeakable p. 312. l. 10. r. meanes p. 324. l. 36. r. smack p. 325. l. 2. r. whom p. 326. l. 21. r. beheld p. 328. l. 1. r. we heard l. 10. r. oppresse l. 28. r. collowed p. 335. l. 7. r. viz p. 339. l 32. r. Ps 102. 2. p. 348. l. 33. r. Melas 34. Rhinocurura p. 368. l. 21. r. children of God p. 387. l. 29. put out one p. 408. l. 25. r. and therfore p. 412. l. 35. put out the wicked p. 436. l. 24. r. great p. 467. l. 3. read comming p. 469. l. 32. r. Now. p. 475. l. 15. r. worke p. 488. l. 30. r. so likewise