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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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vnto Christ Iesus by adoption and incorporation into him Furthermore concerning these children of God let vs remember that before said touching their regeneration by God himselfe It is the worke of God only to make a child of God in this maner In the time of the law to speake according to the phrase of those times men might beget children to other and raise vp seed vnto other For we know that a man after mariage dying without issue Note the next of that kindred not maried before was bound to take the wife of him deceased and so to raise seed vnto him and this seed so raised was accounted the seed of the dead not of the liuing Deut. 25. 5. 6. By adultery also in these daies the children of some are accounted the children of other But certainly to raise vp such children to God as here I intreate of is the worke only of God himselfe Men and Angels cannot beget such a sonne or daughter vnto God This hath been proued by testimonies of Scripture before Notwithstanding I will now further prooue the same by the greatnesse of the sayd worke of regeneration For indeed it is the greatest of all other the personall vnion of the diuine and humane nature in the person of Christ only excepted because it containeth almost all miracles mentioned in the Gospell to haue been wrought vpon men What be those miracles The giuing sight to the blind hearing to the deafe speech to the dumb health to the sicke strength to the lame cleannesse to the leapers life to the dead and release and liberty to them that were possessed of diuels All these are wrought at once in the worke of our regeneration Wheras we were by nature spiritually blind the eyes of our mind are lightned to see the great things of God and the deepe secrets of his kingdome Whereas by nature we are spiritually deafe our hearts are opened that our eares do attend to the word of God Whereas by nature we are spiritually dumb not able to speake a good word our lips are so opened that our mouth doth shew foorth the praise of God and is able to speak of righteousnesse Whereas by nature we were spiritually sicke heart sicke sicke vnto death we are in regeneration restored to spirituall health in part and certainly assured of perfect recouery of all our spirituall infirmities at the last Whereas by nature we were spiritually lame and impotent not able to stirre hand or foot toward any thing that good is we are in regeneration made strong in time to walke about and to doe the workes of God in some measure Whereas by nature we were wholly defiled from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foot with a most noysome spirituall leprosie ten thousand times more infectious and dangerous then any bodily leprosie we are in regeneration clensed thereof and made as whole as we say as a roch yea wheras by nature we were dead in our sinnes we are in regeneration raised vp to the life of God Finally whereas by nature wee were possessed spiritually of the diuell yea touching both our soules and bodies in his thraldome not able to doe any thing but what he would haue vs to doe and doing that with all delight we are in regeneration released of this bondage and made the freemen of God himselfe Are not all these great things How did men admire the least such miracle wrought vpon the bodies of men Since the world began saith the blind man restored to bodily sight it was not heard that any man opened the eyes of one that was borne blind Ioh. 9. 32. How great then and how wonderfull is the worke of all the former miracles at one instant wrought Verily farre greater vpon the inner man and being spiritually wrought then all the former outwardly wrought vpon the outward man yea all the former are the greater because by working of them in our regeneration we are in a moment aduanced from hell to heauen it selfe The disciples which Iohn sent vnto Christ to know whether he were the Messias or no or whether they should looke for another were returned by Christ to Iohn with this message Goe and shew Iohn what things ye heare and see The blind receiue sight the halt doe goe and the leapers are cleansed and the deafe heare the dead are raised vp and lastly he addeth as the greatest of all the poore receiue the Gospell Mat. 11. 4. 5. How did the poore receiue the Gospell viz. to their regeneration of being the children of God And that the meaning of our Sauiour by setting this in the last place was to commend it as the greatest it appeareth because in the place next before that he had mentioned the greatest of all the former For who will deny the raising vp of the dead to be greater then making the blind to see the halt to goe the leapers to be cleane or the deafe to heare The proofe of all these particular miracles to be wrought in our regeneration wee shall heare afterward In the meane time hereby it is most euident that the worke of our regeneration is the worke only of God For God only worketh all miracles Blessed be the Lord God euen the God of Israel which only doth wondrous things Psal 72. 18. Thou artgreat and dost wondrous things thou art God alone Psa 86. 10. So the Prophet proueth God to be God alone by the effect of doing wondrous things Praise ye the Lord of Lords for his mercy endureth for euer which only doth great wonders Psal 136. 3. 4. Darius an Heathen could acknowledge the working of signes and wonders in heauen and in earth as a thing belonging to God only Dan. 6. 27. And indeed if the working of miracles did not belong to God only it had beene no good argument of our Sauiour to returne the messengers of Iohn with report of his miracles for demonstration of himselfe to be the Messias which should come and no other to be looked for If any that is learned desire further handling of this generall point I referre him to Beza against Holderus in pages 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. c. To returne to the former matter the worke of our regeneration is not only a miracle and the greatest miracle of all other except only before excepted but it is also as great as the creation of man at the first For therefore it is called by the very name of a creation If any man be in Christ let him bee a new creature 2. Cor. 5. 17. In Christ Iesus neither circumcision auaileth any thing nor vncircumcision but a new creature Galat. 6. 15. We are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus Ephes 2. 10. Our new man also is said to be created in Christ Iesus Ephes 4. 24. Neither is our regeneration as great only as the first creation of man but also greater yea then the first creation of all things This is manifest by these reasons 1. Because
here speaketh of those that already had this hope in them and which were therfore already sanctified and in whom Christ did dwell by faith In this respect therfore he might the better say that euery one that had that hope in him did purge himselfe as Christ himselfe is pure because such an one being vnited to Christ Christ being made one with him and he with Christ whatsoeuer Christ doth in him the same by the communion betwixt Christ and him is attributed as well to him as to Christ As by the communion betwixt the two natures in Christ the diuine and the humane that is often attributed to the one that belongeth to the other and that is said of the whole person that is proper to one nature viz. that to the diuine nature which belongeth to the humane Acts 20. 28. 1. Cor. 2. 8. 1. Iohn 1 1. and that to the humane which is proper to the diuine Iohn 3. 13. and that of whole Christ which is proper either to the humanity only Mark 13. 32. Luk. 2 52. and 24. 39. Iohn 6 38. and 8. 50. and 14. 10. or to the diuinity only Iohn 8. 58. and 17. 5. Coloss 1. 15 as I say it is thus in Christ by the communion betwixt his two natures so by that communion that is betwixt Christ and euery such child of God as before I haue spoken of that is sometime attributed to the child of God himselfe that is proper only to Christ and which is the only worke of Christ and that which belongeth to the children of God is spoken of Christ and attributed vnto Christ c. As Christ himselfe is said to suffer persecution when the children of God are persecuted Acts 94. Coloss 1. 24. because they are his members although Christ in his owne person being now in heauen suffereth nothing but is out of all danger of persecution Rom. 69. so euery child of God that hath that hope in him before spoken of is said to purge himselfe although this worke of purging or clensing or sanctifying be only the worke of Christ himselfe As the Apostle speaking of himselfe as he was regenerated and of sinne remaining in him saith that it was no more he that did euill viz. as he was a regenerate man according to that of the Apostle Iohn He that is borne of God sinneth not but that it was sinne that dwelled in him Rom. 9. 17. and 20. so he speaking of his labouring for the purging of other which was also one particular point of the purging himselfe he saith that he labored more abundantly then they all but presently he addeth this correction yet not I saith he but the grace of God which is with me 1. Cor. 15. 10. In like manner though the Apostle here speaking of the children of God by regeneration saith that euery one of them purgeth himselfe yet if he should speake of such as they are still in part naturall men and vnregenerate or at least vnsanctified hee would say that such doe not purge themselues but that it is Christ which dwelleth in them that doth purge them or the grace of God that is with them Thirdly for further answer of the former question and for a morefull opening of the Apostles meaning of these words as Iob is said to haue sanctified his children as before we heard because he exhorted them to sanctification praied and offered other sacrifices according to those times for their sanctification and vsed all other meanes that they might be sanctified so the Apostle saith here that euery one that hath this hope in him purgeth himselfe because euery one that hath this hope will and doth vse all meanes for the purging of himselfe What are these meanes Surely hearing of the word read preached with reading and meditation therof priuately Iob. 17. 17. 1. Thess 5. 19. 20. 1. Pet. 1. 23. and 2. 1. 2. Iohn 5. 39. Listning to priuate exhortations Prou 10. 8. and 11. 32. and 15. 31. 32. Hebr. 3. 12. c. and 10. 25. Praying in the holy Ghost Iude 20. 1. Thess 5. 23. crauing also the praiers of other in that behalfe 1. Thessa 5. 25. Hebrewes 13. 18. vsing the company of the godly by whose words and example they may be the more prouoked as hath been before often shewed to more godlinesse Prouerb 13. 20. auoiding also all euill company and all other meanes of the contrary namely of defiling themselues Prou. 1. 10. c. and 4. 14. and 22. 24. 25. Canti● 1. 8. 1. Cor. 5. 6. and 11. and Chap 15. 30. so likewise the turning awaie their eies that they behold not vanity Psal 119. 37. Yea making a couenant with their eies not to behold any obiect of vncleannesse Iob 31. 1. because by this meanes many haue beene ouertaken and defiled with diuers sinnes As Ahaz with idolatry by seeing the altar of Damascus 2. Kings 16. 10. Achan with couetousnesse and taking of the excommunicate things of Iericho By seeing among the spoile a goodlie Babylonish garment and two hundred she●els of siluer and a wedge of gold c. Iosh 7. 21. Dauid with adulterie by seeing a woman washing her selfe 2. Sam. 11. 2. and diuers other with other sinnes And lastly taking heede to all their waies that they doe not offend with their tongue Psal 39. 1. Because I say euery one that hath that hope in him will and doth vse all those foresaid meanes of sanctification and shunne and auoide all meanes of pollution and of being defiled therefore also doth the Apostle say in this place that euery such one doth purge himselfe Now that euery one that hath this hope doth thus purge himselfe it is euident because hope can not be separated from faith Where there is hope there also is faith where by the heart is purified Acts 15. 9. as by which Christ himselfe dwelleth in our hearts as we haue heard who hath his fanne in his hand to pu●ge his floore Mat. 3. 12. and to make cleane his wheat not only from chaffe without it that is to separate the elect from the reprobate that may defile them but also from all drosse within it and from all corruption cleauing vnto it that is from all filthinesse of the flesh and of the spirit 2. Cor. 7. 1. Christ also being the head and they that haue the former hope being the members as the naturall head communicateth vertue to euery naturall member so it cannot be but that Christ will communicate his vertue of purging to euery member of his mysticall body The like is to be said of him as he is the root and they that haue the foresaid hope are boughs and branches comming out of the said root For if the root be holy the branches also are holy Rom. 11. 16. This purging must not bee only of one part neither of the body only nor of the soule only nor of one power of the soule nor of one member of the body but of both and of all of soule
moued vpon the waters or sate vpon the waters and vpon the whole matter of all things before created euen as a bird sitteth vpon her egs to bring the said first matter into forme and fashion and so did immediatly execute that in the first creation which God the father had decreed and which God the sonne had spoken concerning the said creation so in our second creation and adoption God the father and God the sonne work not immediatly but by God the holy ghost The same holy ghost also is he by whom the comming of Christ into the world his death and other things he suffered euen the whole price which hee gaue of his actiue and passiue obedience for vs is applied vnto vs. Our Sauiour likewise attributeth our regeneration to the spirit as well as it is elsewhere ascribed to the father Except a man be borne of water and of the spirit c. That which is borne of the flesh is flesh and that that is borne of the spirit is spirit c. and againe The wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it commeth nor whither it goeth so is euery man that is borne of the spirit Ioh. 3. 5. 6. 7. 8. Yea the spirit of God seemeth to be that very immortall seed of our new birth whereof Peter speaketh 1. Pet. 1. 23. I know that other doe interpret the word to be that immortall seed there spoken of because it is said not of mortall but of immortall seede by the word Notwithstanding to me it seemeth otherwise because the Apostle changeth the first preposition of vsed in the first place into another viz. into by vsed in the second place in speaking of the word And therefore I doe rather thinke the word there to be noted as the instrument onely whereby that immortall seed of our new birth before spoken of is conueied into vs. This I say I doe the rather thinke because of the change of prepositions the Apostle not saving being borne anew not of mortall but immortall seed of the word but saying in this last clause by the word Yea I am and shall be the more fully perswaded of this interpretation to be the right till I shall heare or see better reason then I haue done for the former because of the places before alleged to proue our regeneration to be of the spirit of God as well as of the father and of the sonne and because the preposition of first vsed in that place of Peter is so constantly vsed in all the former places concerning the spirit viz. Ioh. 1. 13. and 3. vers 5. 6. and 8. I acknowledge the word to be called seed in respect of the fruits of righteousnesse Luk. 8. 11. but for the reasons before alleged I cannot yet thinke it to be there vnderstood for the seed of our regeneration any otherwise then it is the instrument of conueying the spirit of God into vs. Moreouer the spirit is called the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba father that is whereby we call God our father and whereby we are called the children of God Yea it is further said that the same spirit beareth witnesse to our spirits that we are the children of God Rom. 8. 15. 16. So then the holy ghost doth both immediatly beget vs to God and is also a witnesse of that our begetting again to God and of our being the children of God But I will stay no longer in this point To conclude therefore all the former arguments hitherto vsed for the dignity of Gods children sith they haue so honourable a father and sith their adoption is thus honored with the worke of all the three persons in the Deity and sith the originall cause of the said adoption is both the free loue of God the father in sending his owne and onely sonne and of the sonne in comming so willingly and submitting himselfe so cheerfully to so base a condition for the effecting of the said adoption and sith also he gaue so great a price for it it cannot be but the worke it selfe is very honorable Thus we see that they that be againe so regenerated of him and by him by whom they were at the first made haue obtained a new state and condition and are not as they were of the world worldly of the earth earthly and of flesh fleshly but of heauen heauenly of God the father of whom the whole family in heauen and in earth is named Ephes 3. 15. called his children of Christ denominated Christians Acts 19. 26. and of the spirit said to be spirituall 1. Cor. 2. 15. So they are not only humane by the humane nature but also diuine by participation of the diuine nature 2. Pet. 1. 4. not touching their substance but touching diuine qualities and operations Such therefore and only such may truly speake of nobility For only they may most truly say they are borne of God as we haue seen before chap. 2. 29. and as the Apostle speaketh afterward chap. 4. 7. And they onely may most truly also say further that they are the generation of God Acts 17. 28. and that in such maner as that thereby they are citizens of heauen and inhabitants together with the glorious Angels as afterward we shall heare more at large In respect of this nobility and without this all other nobility is nothing in Gods sight Yea that which our Sauior speaketh of the Iewes particularly may be said generally of al that are not the children of God They do the works of their father the diuell and the lusts of their father they will doe Iohn 8. 41. 44. Not much vnlike also is that description of the King that is the sonne of nobles that eat in time for strength and not for drunkennesse Eccles 10. 17. For what doth Salomon by this description teach els but that such kings are most renowned and noble which doe adorne their kingly descent with true piety and sobriety And though Salomon speake but of eating in time for strength and not for drunkennesse yet by this one vertue hee meaneth all other And of this vertue he maketh choice aboue other because it is in a manner the rarest of all other especially in kings It is hard to find any man that hath abundance to be sober and moderate in the vse of meats drinke and to eat both only in time and also for strength not for excesse and pleasure I may also apply to this purpose that which is said by the Prophet which confoundeth them that are excellent or noble in the earth with the Saints and the Saints with them Psal 16. 3. thereby teaching that the Saints onely haue the best excellency and nobility and that none may rightly be called excellent or noble but such as are Saints And indeed seeing all that are not sanctified cannot but be of the diuell as doing his works what greater basenesse vilenesse and ignobility can there be then to be such Seeing
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
Cor. 5. 17. Galat. 6. 5. and to be created in Christ Iesus Ephes 2. 10. and 4. 24. So farforth therefore as we are in Christ we are the children of God And so many as are not thus incorporated into Christ are not in truth neither ought to be called the children of God Such perhaps may be so accounted by other yea peraduenture they may so account themselues But as those that are begotten in adultery by an adulterer may be reputed the children of the lawfull husband to the adulteresse and yet are indeed bastards and for the most part may be discerned so to be by their bastardly conditions so is it with them that liuing in the Church of God doe professe them selues to be the children of God and be so reputed by other and yet haue no communion with Christ Though they be reputed to be the children of God yet they are no better then bastards and bastards they bewray themselues to be by their bastardly minds and conuersation Although therefore in one respect we reckoned Christ before amongst the efficient causes of our regeneration and that therfore in respect of his excellēcy our regeneration also is to be accounted the more excellent yet in another respect he may also be accounted the materiall cause of our regeneration euen as naturall parents are both the efficient causes of our naturall birth and doe likewise communicate the matter of their bodies vnto ours And so the more excellent that before we heard Christ to be the more we may againe conclude the dignity of Gods children to be by his being the chiefe materiall cause as well as the efficient cause of their regeneration For as that that is made of siluer or gold or any other such like pretious matter is it selfe more pretious then other things made of brasse tinne lead yron Copper or any other such vile and base matter the quantity of things being alike otherwise a great vessell of copper may be better then a very small cup of siluer so the more excellent that Christ himselfe is who is the chiefe matter of Gods children and of whom they be called Christians as that that is made of gold is called golden and the children of God the more excellent needs must be their state and condition CHAP. IX More largely shewing other things concerning the matter of regeneration especially the renewing of the life of God in vs all that are new borne which before were vtterly void of the said life BVT leauing that point till afterward let vs in the next place looke into the excellent gifts and graces which by the former incorporation into Christ the children of God doe receiue and in respect whereof we are said to be partaker of the diuine nature and the which likewise may be esteemed as parts as it were of that matter whereof they do consist These things let vs consider by opposition of that vnto them that men are since the fall of Adam as naturally descending from Adam and being as it were boughs and branches of him In Adam and by Adam since his fall all men Christ himselfe onely excepted haue vtterly lost that excellent and glorious image wherein Adam and Eue at the first were both created Genes 1. 26. 27. This losse of that excellent and glorious image is described by this phrase of dying the death Genes 2. 17. This death was not a naturall death but it was a spirituall death It was not the separation of the soule and the body but it was the separation of God and man as touching that gratious familiarity which before had beene betwixt them As the soule is the life of the body so is God the spirituall life of the whole man For man is not said to be aliue vnto God any longer then he is in grace and fauour with God so that to die the death in that place was to be vtterly depriued of the inherent grace and fauour of God which before they were created in From that time therefore that our first parents had eaten of the forbidden fruit and thereby had defaced the image of God in them they were drowned ouer head and eares in all sinne and so now also in the state of condemnation and were no more able of themselues to haue gotten out of the same then a man drowned and dead in the bottom of a great riuer or pond is able of himselfe to get out And this is that dying the death before spoken of euen a spirituall death ten thousand times worse then any naturall death I meane then any separation of the soule and body though the same be by neuer so violent meanes For it is the beginning and first step vnto that euerlasting death of body and soule whereof afterward we shall speake more at large and from the which neither wee could haue freed our selues neither could any other creatures or all creatures if God himselfe had not sent his owne sonne as before hath been shewed And that spirituall life which is contrary to the said death and which is also the first effect of Christ in vs after that once wee are ingrafted and incorporated into him is the next point of the matter of our regeneration and being the children of God That we may the better see what this life of God is in vs let vs first more largely consider what the former death is and how all men are by nature wholly possessed thereof That therefore which the Apostle saith of the Ephesians is to be vnderstood of all men by nature viz. that they are dead in sinnes and trespasses Ephes 2. 1. without God and without Christ in the world verse 12. as not beleeuing in God or Christ and therefore being condemned already as before we heard our Sauiour to say Ioh. 3. 18. and the rather were they so indeed dead in their sinnes because they were the children of him that had the power of death that is of the diuell Heb. 2. 14. compared with Ioh. 8. 44. For Sathan hauing once put out the light and the life of God in Adam whereby he was the child of God like vnto God did make him a sonne to himselfe so that as before hee did beare the image of God so for euer afterward hee and all his Christ onely excepted did beare the image of the diuell in which respect it is saide generally that hee that committeth sinne is of the diuell 1. Iohn 3. 8. Thus we see that our naturall state is not as the Papists plead it to be by allegorizing vpon him that our Sauiour saith did fall into the hands of theeues and was by them wounded and left halfe dead Luk 10. 30. but farre worse not halfe miserable but altogether miserable not wounded and yet aliue though halfe dead but so wounded that we are altogether dead We haue a vegetatiue and an animall life as all liuing and brutish creatures haue we haue a reasonable life to talke and reason and discourse and determine and conclude of
vpon him that he though he were God and man was in such an agony that his sweat was like drops of bloud yet doe all men remaining in their naturall state and not being born againe go vnder their own inherent sinnes originall and actuall how long so euer they haue continued in them and howsoeuer they haue multiplied and aggrauated them they goe vnder them I say as lightly without any sense or feeling of the waight and burden of them as though indeed they had none at all Is not this an euident argument of extreme deadnesse For what do they that are once dead feele whatsoeuer is laid vpon them To speake all in a word and not to stand any longer vpon particulars the Apostle from other scriptures doth not only say that we are dead vnto all goodnesse but also that in euery part member of our whole man we are aliue vnto all euill For thus he describeth the naturall state of all men There is none righteous no not one There is none that doth vnderstand there is none that seeketh God They haue all gone out of the way they haue been made altogether vnprofitable there is none that doth good no not one their throat is an open sepulchre they haue vsed their tongues to deceit the poison of Aspes is vnder their lips Their mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse Their feet are swift to shed bloud c. Rom. 3. 10. By these things we see that though naturall men do liue yet as it is said of the widdow that liueth in pleasures that she is dead whiles she liueth 1. Tim. 5. 6. so it may be said of all naturall men liuing in the pleasures of sinne that they are dead whiles they so liue This our liuing vnto sinne and in sinne being dead to all goodnesse may in some sort be called a spirituall life not as spirituall is opposed to carnall but in two other respects first because it is from that vncleane spirit Mark 1. 23. 7. 25. 26 who is not only the father of lies Ioh. 8. 44. but also of all other euill secondly because all the workes of a sinfull life are performed to the same vncleane spirit Therefore the Apostle saith not only that we are naturally dead in trespasses but also that wee walked in them after the Prince that ruleth in the aire that is according to his commaundement and prescription Ephes 2. 2 Our Sauiour also saith that such sinnes are the workes and lusts of the diuell Ioh. 8. 41. 44. And as Idolaters are said to sacrifice to diuels 1. Cor. 10. 20. so all wicked men may be said to do all that they doe vnto diuels Thus we see in part the miserable and wofull state of all naturall men For what is more fearefull then death when Saul did but heare only by the father of lyes in the likenesse of Samuel and therefore the rather speaking the truth that he might the more confirme Saul in his error touching the raising of Samuel when I say Saul did but heare that the next day hee should be deliuered into the hands of the Philistines and bee slaine how did it affect him How did it strike him with feare verily so that he fell straightway all along vpon the earth and there was no strength in him yea so that neither the woman the witch that had raised vp the diuell in the likenesse of Samuel nor any of his own seruants with him could scarce fasten any comfort vpon him 1. Sam. 28. 20. c. If the very tidings of this naturall death be so fearefull how much more fearefull is that spirituall death before spoken of Hauing thus in part shewed our naturall misery by these things spoken of our spirituall deadnesse let vs now see the change that is made in vs by our incorporation into Christ in our adoption and regeneration Let vs therefore vnderstand that in our said regeneration and new birth by Iesus Christ we are deliuered from that our foresaid miserable state As before we did beare the image of the earthly man so now we beare the image of him that is from heauen heauenly that is of the Lord Christ As Christ in his diuine essence is the brightnesse of the glory of the father and the ingraued forme of his person Heb. 1. 3. so we in quality being made partaker of the diuine nature and being in Christ made new creatures and being also the workmanship of God in Christ Iesus created vnto good workes that wee should walke in them as hath been before shewed by seuerall scriptures we are by this meanes made like to Christ Iesus and consequently also to God himselfe As therefore the Apostle saith that naturally we are dead in sinnes and trespasses so hee saith in the same place that God which is rich in mercy through his great loue wherewith he loued vs euen when we were so dead by sinnes or in sinnes hath quickned vs or made vs aliue in Christ Ephe. 2. 4. 5. Where let it be obserued that the word quickned is only expressed originally in that Note fift verse and that although it be interposed by translators in the first verse for perspicuities sake as they thought yet it is rather there to be omitted and that that first verse is rather to be read with the last verse of the first chapter of Christs filling all things in all things or with all things that is with all gifts fit for euery one so that the verb filled is rather to be vnderstood in the first verse then the verb quickned and that first verse to be vnderstood as an amplification of the generall handled in the end of the former Chapter by the particular instance of the Ephesians as if he should haue said As Christ hath generally filled all things giuen vnto him by the father with all gifts fit for them so particularly he hath filled you that were by nature dead in your trespasses and sinnes and so he describeth by that occasion their naturall state vers 1. 2. 3. and then he describeth our new and spirituall state in the 4. and 5. verses by Iesus Christ But to leaue this place and to returne to the former point of Christs freeing vs from spirituall death and quickning vs and making vs aliue againe Paul saith further that Christ hath abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the Gospell 2. Tim. 1. 10. which Gospell is therefore called the word of life Ioh. 6. 68. Philip. 2. 16. Our Sauiour likewise saith Verely verely I say vnto you the houre shall come and now is when the dead shall heare the voice of the sonne of God and they that heare it shall liue For as the father hath life in himselfe so likewise hath he giuen to the sonne to haue life in himselfe Ioh. 5. 25. 26. viz. to bestow life vpon all that the father hath giuen vnto him Ioh. 10. 28. 29. Euery where saith Paul againe we beare about in our bodies the
is to be obserued viz. that he saith not but one foole destroieth Note much good but that he saith but one sinner destroieth much good so he sheweth his meaning by wisedome to be such wisedome as whereby men take heed of sinne and that according to my former writing all sinners are fooles whereunto it accordeth that Dauid saith not The wicked man or the sinner but The foole hath said in his heart there is no God Psal 14. 1. and 53. 1. by the foole meaning the sinner and the wicked man Againe what was it that first deceiued our first mother Eue was it not a false hope of further knowledge doth not this therefore shew that knowledge is a thing much to be desired and that true knowledge is highly to be esteemed Doth not Paul professe that he accounted all things losse yea as very dung euen a● the dung that is in the inwards of beasts so the word signifieth in respect of the excellent knowledge of Christ his Lord Philip. 3. 78. All these things doe plainly shew the great dignity of the children of God in respect of the said knowledge and wisedome as wherein as well as in other things consisteth the very matter as it were of their so being the children of God CHAP. XI Of some other branches of the former life of God in all new borne viz. of holinesse and righteousnesse both generally and also in someparticulars LET vs now proceede to some other points both of the life of God before mentioned and also consequently of the further matter of our regeneration and new birth that is of other things wherein our said new birth and regeneration doth consist and that according to our former method in this point viz. of opposition of contraries Here therefore let vs remember that before said namely that euen when men are dead in their sinnes and vtterly voide of the life of God before handled then they are aliue vnto sinne Being so aliue vnto sinne they are likewise seruants not only thereunto but also to satan himselfe For to whomsoeuer we giue our selues as seruants to obey his seruants we are Rom. 6. 16. Iob. 8. 34. 2. Pet. 2. 19. This seruice is the greatest slauery and bondage of all other far greater then the bondage of the Israelites in the house of bondage in the land of Egypt because that was with such feeling that it wrought great heauinesse in them and many praiers and earnest desires to be released thereof But this bondage is such by the meanes of spirituall death that there is no sense at all either of the heauinesse of sinne as hath been before shewed or of the bitternesse thereof yea though for bitternesse no wormewood nor gall be comparable to it yet they thinke it as sweet as hony and the hony combe yea such delight and pleasure doe they take therein that they commit the same with greedinesse Eph. 4. 19. Therefore being offered liberty with most gracious conditions they will by no meanes accept thereof Fearefull therefore in this behalfe is the estate and condition of all men by nature yea hereby also doth that the better appeare which before I handled concerning the naturall foolishnesse and madnesse of men For who but fooles and mad men could beare such burdens as sinnes are without sense and feeling As therefore the very Philosophers accounted such sottish and senselesse persons for seruants by nature so this seruile and slauish condition of all men by nature is the more fitly handled in this place next to that before of the foolishnesse and madnesse of all naturall men because it is an effect or at least a consequent thereof But what is the state of men by Iesus Christ in their regeneration Truly a most sweet and gratious liberty and freedome For as Christ is made wisedome and righteousnesse so also is he made redemption vnto vs. 1. Cor. 1. 30. and often doe we read that Christ hath redeemed vs. Tit. 2. 14. Galat. 3. 13. 1. Pet. 1. 19. and often elsewhere Our Sauiour himselfe saith that If men did continue in his word then they should shew themselues to be his disciples indeed and they should know the truth and the truth should make them free Ioh. 8. 32. and againe If the sonne shall make you free you shall be free indeed vers 36. He meaneth in this place freedome from the yoke bondage and extreme slauery of sinne When Peter had answered our Sauiour that Princes tooke toll or custome of strangers our Sauiour replieth then are the children free Mat. 17. 26. That which our Sauiour speaketh in that case may be much more vnderstood in this whereof now we speake because we speake of the children of God What Prince of power to deliuer will suffer his subiects especially his children to be in bondage and captiuity How then can it be that God being of all power should suffer his children to be in bondage especially so great a bondage as the bondage of sinne Notwithstanding being freed from the seruitude of sinne we are made the seruants of righteousnesse Rom. 6. 18. But this seruice is perfect freedome When any child especially the sonne of a Prince hauing been in captiuity to some enemies is freed from the said captiuity doth he account it any bondage to serue his Father and soueraigne No it is his liberty and great honor that he may serue him When men therefore are freed from the bondage of sinne and Satan how great is their liberty how vnspeakable is their honour to serue their heauenly father the king of kings It is not possible to serue God in holinesse and righteousnesse till first we be deliuered from our enemies Luk. 1. 74. 75. As a man loaden with many fetters and irons cannot in any thing serue his Prince till his said fetters and irons be knocked off so no man can serue God except first he be discharged from the bolts and fetters of sinne ten thousand times more heauy then any irons Therefore Paul saith in the place before alledged that Christ gaue himselfe for vs first that he might redeeme vs from all iniquity secondly that he might purge vs and thirdly to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe zealous of good workes T it 2. 14. We cannot therefore be zealous of good works except first we be redeemed from the guilt of all iniquity and purged from the blemish and freed from the bondage thereof This our freedome likewise and liberty is signified by that which before was alleged that he that is borne of God sinneth not neither can sinne because the seed of God abideth in him 1. Ioh. 3. 8. that is sinne hath not dominion ouer him as before it had neither can haue because being once freed he shall neuer returne into the bondage thereof neither doth hee sinne with delight therein so far foorth as hee is regenerated and borne of God That sinne wherewith at any time he is ouertaken is but a suddain passion of the old man remaining in
him suffered by God himselfe to preuaile in some things as for some reasons before mentioned so also for some afterward to be spoken of By denying also the new borne of God to sinne the Apostle insinuateth that seruing of God in holinesse and righteousnesse which was before touched and so the word not to sinne is taken by our Sauiour when he saith to the man restored to his limbs Sinne no more lest a worse thing happen vnto thee Ioh. 5. 14. He meaneth not onely that he should abstaine from the euils forbidden but that also he should performe the things required in the law of God For the law of God saying not only Eschew euill but also Doe good Psal 34. 14. he must be a transgressor of the law not only that doth commit the euill forbidden but also that neglecteth or omitteth the good commanded So the distinction of sinnes of commission and of sinnes of omission is as sound and true as it is ancient and common As God himselfe is not only free from all euill but infinit also in all goodnesse so his law is like himselfe and doth as well command that which is holy and iust as it forbiddeth all vnholinesse and vnrighteousnesse According to this law men shall be condemned and that most iustly as well for leauing vndone good duties as for perpetrating acting of those things that are euill It is not said That euery tree that bringeth forth euill fruit but which bringeth not forth good fruit shal be bewen down or stubbed vp by the roots and cast into the fire Mat. 3. 10. And our Sauiour pronounceth sentence of condemnation for not visiting the sicke entertaining the strangers feeding the hungry clothing the naked c. Mat. 25. 41 c. By condemning notwithstanding them that haue not done good he teacheth that much more they shal be condemned that do commit that which is euill Mat. 12. 36. 37. 1. Cor. 6. 9. Reuel 21. 8. and 22. 15. So then this freedome of Gods children is not only a release from the most grieuous seruitude of sinne but also a participation of holinesse and righteousnesse Without this holinesse and righteousnesse our life before spoken of were no life neither were our freedome any freedome at least not worth the hauing The soule of man may be as well without motion in the body as the life of God without the fruits of righteousnesse That which is spoken of faith Iames 2. 20. is true also of the life of God What freedome also of any city is without commodities belonging thereunto But of this anon This also touching the fruits of righteousnesse is to be vnderstood in respect of the knowledge and wisedome before handled For how can a man be accounted a man of knowledge and wisedome that sheweth not the same by his workes of knowledge and wisedome And indeed we haue heard before that our knowledge and wisedome consisteth in the feare of God and keeping of his commandements And the Apostle Paul describeth that excellent knowledge of Christ before spoken of to be not the knowledge of his natures and person onely as they are things in Christ himselfe but as they are effectuall in other both to iustification and also to sanctification by the power of his death and the vertue of his resurrection of the one to our release from that bondage of sinne before handled and of the other to the quickning of vs to newnesse of life Philip. 3. 8. 9. 10. Therefore also Christ in the place before diuers times alledged is said to be made vnto vs not only wisedome righteousnesse and redemption but also sanctification 1. Cor. 1. 30. Therefore without Christ no more sanctification then wisedome righteousnesse or redemption In this respect Christ is not only said to haue giuen himselfe for vs that we might be pure or purged and holy or sanctified these things I say are not spoken in the nowne or in the verbe passiue as if either we or some other might purge and sanctifie vs but in the actiue verb that he might purge vs c. Note Tit. 2. 14. and that he might sanctifie his Church c. Epo 5. 26. to teach that the purging and sanctifying of vs is the worke only of Christ as well as the redeeming sauing and iustifying of vs. The same is yet further taught by our Sauiour himselfe As the branch cannot beare fruit of it selfe except it abide in the vine no more can ye except ye abide in me and againe without me ye can doe nothing viz. that good is Iohn 15. 3. 4. 5. and Paul accordingly saith that the fruits of righteousnesse are by Iesus Christ Phil. 1. 11. All this is to be vnderstood of Christ not as God only but as God and man the mediator betwixt God and man and as in that respect he is the head of the Church and so communicateth his vertue to all in regeneration incorporated into him and in whom he dwelleth by faith euen as the naturall head of a naturall body communicateth the vertue thereof to all the members of all the said naturall body So that also is to bee vnderstood that of his fulnesse we doe all receiue grace for grace or grace vpon grace or grace after grace Iohn 1. 16. All hitherto spoken of our life of our knowledge and wisedome of our redemption freedome and liberty and of our sanctification and holinesse and righteousnesse as the matter of our regeneration and things wherein the Note same doth consist must be vnderstood to be by Iesus Christ in a double respect first in that he hath purchased them for vs by the same price which hee gaue for our selues and for our saluation Secondly by working them in vs himselfe being apprehended by a true and liuely faith as hath been shewed before by the similitude of the vine and the branches and of the head and the members Moreouer touching this holinesse and righteousnesse now in hand we must vnderstand that it must not only be inward but also outward not in heart alone but also in our outward man and in our outward behauiour For Let your light so shine before men saith our Sauiour that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father which is in heauen Mat. 5. 16. Clense your selues saith the Apostle from all filthinesse of the flesh and of the spirit that ye may grow vp to full holinesse 2. Cor. 7. 1. he speaketh not only of filthinesse of the flesh but also of the spirit and therefore the holinesse there commended and opposed to the former filthinesse must be answerable thereuno viz. of the flesh that is of the body as well as of the spirit and heart Peter exhorteth them to whom he did write not only as strangers and pilgrims to abstaine from fleshly lusts because they fight against their soules but also to haue their conuersation namely their outward conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which did speake euill of them as of euill doers
more therefore are we forbidden the worship of dead and helplesse images Thirdly because there should be some resemblance betwixt that that putteth vs in mind of another thing and the thing it selfe whereof it putteth vs in mind But there is not so much similitude betwixt God and images as there is according to our common speech betwixt an apple and an oyster For both these are the good creatures of God they are both meat for man either of both are beyond the power of man to make But there is no agreement at all betwixt God and idols or images What fellowship hath righteousnesse with vnrighteousnesse and what communion hath light with darknes c. 2. Cor. 6. 14. c. Images haue mouthes and speake not eies and see not eares and heare not hands and handle not feet and walke not as before we heard Deut. 4. 28. Psal 15. 5. c. But God hath no eies and yet seeth all things no eares and yet heareth all things no mouth and yet speaketh vnto vs by his word no hands and yet doth and ruleth all things he hath no feet and yet is euery where Last of all for images to put vs in mind of God is derogatory to the Sacraments especially to the supper of the Lord which Christ himselfe instituted chiefly in remembrance of him That which I haue said of some of the chiefe heresies of Popery I might shew of the rest so likewise of other heresies To deale in like manner with all would be too large for this place By these things but thus briefly written other may be vnderstood And thus we see what an excellent priuiledge the children of God haue by the word of God being such an armor of proofe as we haue heard it to be for defence of themselues against all sinnes both of practise and also of iudgement Yea this priuiledge is the greater because all the wicked and meer naturall men being without this word are therfore in a wofull state altogether vnarmed naked lying open to the enemy of their soules yea being indeed in his posession as before we haue often heard For although the Apostle doe describe other parts of the christian armor yet none can haue any of those other parts except he haue the word The word is the most principall of all the rest as being the meanes as before hath been shewed of all the rest Thus much for the second consideration of the word in this place viz. as it is a speciall part of our spirituall armor to defend our selues against the enemies of our saluation CHAP. XX. Of the word as it is giuen for consolation and comfort of the children of God in their afflictions and also of the Sacraments THe third consideration of the word before mentioned yet remaining is as it is the speciallest consolation and comfort of the children of God in their afflictions This I haue reserued for this last place because it ariseth from the two former For if the word of God be so perfect as before wee heard then it must needs be a word of comfort If also it be such a speciall part of our christian armor for our defence as before also we haue seen it to be then it cannot but minister likewise great comfort vnto vs. For where a man hath many and mighty enemies there cannot but be great feare where there is great feare there cannot but be great heauinesse also Yea what almost is feare but the heauinesse of heart from the expectation of some euill So far therefore as the word doth arme vs against our enemies whom we haue most cause to feare so far it cannot but be a great comfort vnto vs. This that I speake of the comfort of the children of God by the word of God Dauid testifieth Psal 19. both saying that the statutes of the Lord are right and reioice the heart verse 8. and also adding that they are sweeter then the hony and the hony combe vers 10. But we are there to obserue these commendations to bee placed after some other attributes and effects for which in the same Psalme he had before commended the word viz. after the perfection of it and the conuersion of the soule thereby after the faithfulnesse or surenesse of it and the giuing wisedome vnto the simple c. Thereby the Prophet giueth vs to vnderstand that the word of God doth reioice and comfort the heart only of those whom first it hath inwardly conuerted or restored whom first it hath made wise vnto saluation c. Therfore also he saith againe This is my comfort in my trouble that thy promise or thy word doth quicken me Psal 119. 50. that whereas by nature I am dead in sinnes and trespasses thy word hath awakened me and restored me to life and so giuen me much comfort and againe This is my comfort that I keep thy commandement verse 56. and againe Except thy lawes had been my delight or my comfort I had long sithence perished in mine afflictions verse 92 Paul also doth not obscurely signifie the word of God to be the word of comfort when he saith that whatsoeuer things are written afore time are written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might haue hope Rom. 15. 4. Do we not here plainly see true comfort to be called the comfort of the scriptures Another Apostle also setteth down the word for one of the two immutable things whereby we might haue strong consolation c. Heb. 6. 18. But what shall I need to stand long vpon this point For as afterward in the vses of this dignity of Gods children we shall heare this whole treatise is as well for comfort as for instruction And how shall we know that God hath so loued vs as to make vs his children but by the word How are we made the children of God but by the word How doe we vnderstand any thing else either before or after in this treatise concerning the dignitie of Gods children but by the word Yea and that all true comfort is to be had by the word our Sauiour seemeth to insinuate because his disciples being in great feare partly by a great tempest vpon the sea partly and more specially because seeing him come towards them walking vpon the sea they imagined him to be a spirit though our sauiour by his bodily eies seeing their trouble by the tempest and by his diuine nature vnderstanding their imagination of him could secretly by his said diuine nature and power haue taken all feare from them and comforted them yet he did rather comfort them by his word and speech Note saying vnto them Be of good comfort it is I bee not afraid Matth. 14. 27. Wherefore did hee thus rather then otherwise comfort them Euen the better to sanctifie and commend the word for the word of comfort for euer to his disciples and to all other in any feare or heauinesse that so all might alwaies seek comfort at
mother of Iames and Iohn petitioned to our Sauiour for her said two sonnes that one might sit at his right hand the other at his left hand in his kingdome that is because shee dreamed Christs kingdome to be an earthly kingdome that they might bee the two second persons next to himselfe in his kingdome one as it were the Lord Chancellor and the other Lord Treasurer our Sauiour answered after some questions had with them that to sit at his right hand and at his left hand was not his to giue but should be giuen to them for whom it was prepared of his father Matth. 20. 20. c. What meant our Sauiour by this answere Euen this not only that he came to be an example and patterne of humilitie and therefore not to take vpon him the bestowing of earthly offices and dignities neither onely that to conferre or bestowe these preferments of sitting at his right hand and at his left hand in his kingdome in heauen was not in him as hee was onely man in which respect he denieth himselfe to knowe the day and houre of his second comming Mar. 13. 32. and in which respect onely it seemed that this woman with her two sonnes came vnto Christ scarce so much as dreaming of his diuine nature and of his kingdome in heauen but he also meaneth that the distinction Note and degrees of honour in the kingdome of heauen beeing already disposed by his Father viz. before all worlds when he made his generall decree of election vnto saluation it was not now in his power to alter or change the same This I say seemeth plainely to haue beene the meaning of Christ by the opposition which he maketh betwixt the deniall thereof to be in his hands and the acknowledgement of the giuing thereof to them for whom it was prepared of his Father For so he signifieth that the counsell of God touching the sitting at the right hand or at the left hand of Christ should stand could no more be altered by Christ himselfe than the general decree of God of election and reprobation If then Christ cannot alter the decree of God touching the particular place of any in the kingdome of God by giuing that degree of honour to one that the Father had prepared for another how much lesse can hee giue the inheritance of his kingdome generally to any for whom God hath not prepared the same To speake yet more of this inheritance of the children of God as it is said of Absalom in respect of his beauty that there was none in all Israel to be so much praised for beauty as Absalom and that from the sole of the foote to the crowne of the head there was no blemish in him 2. Sam. 14. 25. so it may be said of this inheritance touching the perfection thereof that amongst all the inheritances of the world there is none so much to be praised as this inheritance wherof now we speak of the children of God because from one end to another and from one side to another there is no blemish in it That which Dauid speaketh of his portion as he was one of Gods children may all and euery one of Gods children say of this inheritance The lines are fallen vnto me in pleasant places yea I haue a faire heritage Psal 16. 6. All this is manifest by those foure attributes whereby Peter describeth and commendeth this inheritance calling it immortall vndefiled not withering reserued in heauen 1. Pet. 1. 4. Of what inheritance of what kingdome in all the world can all these things or any of these things be truly spoken Neither is this inheritance thus commended in respect of it selfe only but also in respect of all things therein For are not all things in this inheritance immortall vndefiled not withering and heauenly To speake particularly and briefly of the former commendations First it is called immortall because it is euerlasting and without end as before we heard the condemnation of the wicked to be Though it haue a beginning yet it shall continue for euer How long soeuer any shall be in possession thereof yet the time still remaining shall be more then the time past What an excellent commendation this is may without further amplification appeare by that before spoken of condemnation in respect of the same circumstance In earthly benefits as here this commendation for time is set first so we do first enquire how long any thing will last Euery thing is accounted the better the more durable the same is Of euils the longer is more feared and shunned of good things the longer is more desired and laboured for In question of leases other things being like the longer is more worth Lands in fee simple to a man and his heires are more esteemed then leases or other chattels As this inheritance is immortall in it selfe so it shall be to the children of God for whom it is prepared and that are borne vnto it because they also shall be made immortall as well in their bodies as they are already in their soules that so they may enioy it for euer in their own persons for their bodies and for their soules and not in the person of any heires or successors as it is in the inheritances of this world But of this more afterward vpon the second verse The second attribute vndefiled signifieth that there is no spot or blemish in it Yea as the originall word being substantiuely taken as somtimes it is signifieth a certaine gemme or pretious stone that is vncapable of any pollution and that being cast into the fire will neither be corrupted nor wasted so may it be said of this inheritance Yea it is so pure that as it is said of Ireland that it will not suffer any toad snake adder or any other venemous thing in it so this inheritance will not admit or entertaine any thing that is polluted or defiled This I say brethren saith Paul that flesh and bloud cannot inherit the kingdome of God neither doth corruption inherit incorruption 1. Cor. 15. 50. This attribute seemeth to be a reason of the former For as any thing is pure and vndefiled so it is also durable And that which is altogether pure and vndefiled is also altogether durable that is immortall and euerlasting This word also being vnderstood of this inheritance not only in it selfe but in respect of the heires that shall enioy it importeth that when once they shall come to the full possession thereof they shall be altogether freed from sorrow and labor whereto here they were subiect so long as themselues were defiled and so long as they liued here where all things by them are polluted and defiled This is manifest by the answer of one of the Elders vnto Iohn touching them which he had seen arraied in long white robes These are they saith the Elder which came out of great tribulation and haue washed their long robes and haue made their long robes white in the bloud
made knowen by the Church the manifold wisdome of God Ephes 3. 9. 10. By this place we plainly see that the Angels haue the benefit of more knowledge then before they had Of the fellowship of the foresaid mysterie and that by the Church What is the Church but the companie of Gods children This is the more manifest by that that there is said of that mysterie to haue beene before hidden in God himselfe and not so to haue beene opened to the sonnes of men in other ages as now it is vers 5. and to haue beene kept secret since the world began Rom. 16. 25. For doe not these phrases intimate that the said mysterie had beene hidden so in God himselfe from the beginning of the world that the very Angels themselues did not fully vnderstand it till it was made knowen by the Church The same is to bee thought of many mysteries contained in the Reuelation because it is said of the booke in the right hand of him that sate vpon the throne written within and on the backe side sealed with many seales whereby the Chapters in the Reuelation following seeme especially to be vnderstood because I say it is said of that booke that none in heauen nor in earth nor vnder the earth was able to open the booke or to looke thereon but only the Lion of the tribe of Iuda that is Christ Iesus Reu. 5. 2. This Lion of the tribe of Iuda doth not only vnderstand the same booke himselfe but also by his spirit maketh it knowen to the Church by whom also the Angels attending thereupon in all assemblies thereof seeme likewise to come to know it and not by any immediate reuelation thereof vnto them in heauen neither as some doe weakly imagine by contemplation of God himselfe in whom all things past present and to come are as it were ingrauen For so they should know the secrets of mens hearts and the day of iudgement which none knowes but God himselfe For are not all those things ingrauen in God as well as others I grant the Angels to know much more of their owne nature and of the nature of God himselfe then the Church knoweth yea then perhaps is reuealed in the written word yet this letteth not but that the Angels may bee ignorant of the meaning of some things contained in the word concerning Gods pleasure towards the Church till the same by the spirit of Christ be reuealed to the Church I will not so inlarge this point in this place as Isee it handled in some late printed bookes but I will content my selfe with this thus generally spoken thereof Another benefit of the Angels by the children of God is that they haue great iov of their conuersion and repentance This our Sauiour teacheth plainly by a double parable Luk. 15. 3. c. one of the lost sheepe the other of the lost groat for the finding whereof there was great ioy the application of b●th which parables is thus made by our Sauiour hin selfe I say vnto you that likewise ioy shall bee in heauen ouer one sinner that repenteth c. and againe I say vnto you there is ioy in the presence of the Angels of God for one sinner that conuerteth 7. and 10. And indeed there is a great reason of this their ioy for doe men reicice in earth for the birth of a sinner and shall not the Angels in heauen reioice for the regeneration of a christian Doe men reioice for the birth of one of Gods enemies and shall not the Angels reioice for the birth of one of Gods children Doe the true subjects of an earthly prince reioice and declare their ioy by some testimony at the birth of a child to such an earthly Prince how much more should the Angels in heauen Gods perfectest subjects reioice at the birth of a child to God himselfe the king of heauen and earth euen of one that shall it selfe be and is as soone as it is borne not only a Priest but also a king as before we heard Is there ioy in earth for the birth of one that shall die againe and perhaps a miserable death how then should the Angels not reioice in the birth of one that shall neuer die more but shall liue for euer a life of grace here till the time of translation from hence do come and then a life of glory with themselves yea with Christ Iesus Did the Angels reioice when Christ was borne a man vpon earth and shall they not reioice when men are borne partaker of the diuine nature from heauen and for heauen yea wherefore did the Angels so reioice at the birth of Christ was it not because by his birth in the world many should afterward be borne vnto God As soone as euer Christ had taken the book before spoken of out of the hands of his Father to open the same to the Church how did the Angels reioice and sing for ioy as wel as the 24. Elders Reu. 5. 8. 9. Did they so reioice at the taking of the book to be opened to the Church how much more cause haue they to reioice and sing when by the opening of mysteries in the same book contained men shall be enlightned with true sauing knowledge of God and of his Sonne Iesus Christ and be also new borne children vnto God As the Angels doe thus reioice in the first regeneration of the children of God that is when men first begin to be the children of God so it is not to be doubted but that their ioy is increased as such graces are increased in men whereby they are the more declared both to men and Angels to be so regenerated and new borne vnto God I might amplifie this point much more but hauing been large in other things it shall be sufficient thus briefly to haue spoken of this matter So we see what great benefits both men and other creatures the inferior creatures of this inferior world and the superior creatures euen the blessed Angels in heauen haue by the children of God Is not this therefore a great increase of their dignity Is it not an high commendation of their state and condition That the wicked are hurtfull to all and beneficiall to none doth make their estate the more base and vile abiect and contemptible Therefore that the children of God are hurtfull to none and so beneficiall and helpfull to many it must needs make their condition more honorable and noble CHAP. XXIX Of diuers similitudes and comparisons setting foorth the dignity of Gods children TO omit diuers other arguments whereby the dignity of Gods children might bee furthered enlarged and illustrated let vs now come to certaine comparisons Herein I will a little transgresse the order of Logicians as I haue not hitherto been curious therein and therefore I will begin with some similitudes whereby the holy ghost in respect of some things before handled doth set forth the excellency of the children of God From these similitudes I will
beauty their skill in musick or in some other such thing for their policie and for such like as before in handling the maine exhortation we haue shewed Secondly it is by the ouerruling hand and spirit of God to shew that he hath the hearts of all men in his hand and that he can as well draw loue or at least kindnesse from the heart that naturally is possessed with hatred as he can fetch water out of the rocke and make the rauenous rauens to be nursing mothers as it were to his children and as he can restraine the fire from burning so much as an haire of his children being cast into the mids thereof or the woollie nappe of their garments But howsoeuer the Lord doe this sometimes yet there is in all the wicked such a secret hatred against all the children of God and against God himselfe that except God do restraine them or force them to worke against their nature they cannot but break foorth into contempt and into all wrongs and indignities against the children of God and God himselfe And so they bewray that albeit they haue some generall and speculatiue knowledge of God himselfe by his works and word and of his children by those graces of God in them wherby they doe resemble him and shew themselues to be his children yet they haue no true knowledge either of God or of his children because they doe not persorme those duties to God and to his children which do belong vnto them And this is a common phrase amongst vs to say that a man knoweth not another when hee performeth not that dutie which belongeth to his place Many times we passe by great nobles and other of high calling without any reuerence vnto them because indeed we know them not If also wee be brought before them and yet do not respect and honor them according to their places and authority we are and may be iustly charged that we do not know them yea oft times we are and may be iustly threatned to be taught to know them before we goe And indeed if men knew Gods iustice against sinne his mercy towards them that loue feare and obey him his reckoning that he maketh of all his children his large promises before spoken of made to all that doe shew any kindnesse to any of them his contrary threatnings to them that doe the contrary vnto them his power and might to performe both all his promises and also all his threatnings and lastly his faithfulnesse in performing of them to the full if I say the wicked knew these things of God then certainly it could not be but that they would more respect his children then they doe For as much therefore as they doe not respect them but are as strange towards them as if they had neuer knowen or seen them and deale as hardly with them as if they were their enemies by whom notwithstanding they do daily enioy many great benefits as hath been before declared therefore we may well conclude with the Apostle that they know them not and that the cause why they know them not is because they know not God himselfe Though they know him so that they be able to speake of him and to preach the knowledge of him to other yet they know him not in truth truly and so as that themselues shall be any whit the better by their knowledge Yea the more they know him without honoring of him according to their knowledge with the more stripes they shall be beaten the greater shall be their condemnation and therefore indeed they were better in respect of themselues to be altogether ignorant of him then so only to know him The wicked know the children of God as they are men as they are of this or that fauor stature and complexion as they are rich or poore as they haue some place and authority in the world but yet they know them not neither regard them as they are the children of God and that because they know not God himselfe They knew them before they were the children of God they loued them and respected them whiles they were as themselues naturall men vnregenerated men wicked men but as soone as there is a change made in them and that they do receiue the spirit of adoption presently they are also changed As it is with many that whiles they were yong and in their youth liued together and were well acquainted one with another but afterward by long absence and many yeers being both changed growen to be men hauing haire on their faces yea perhaps being gray-headed they meet one another in the face and yet salute not one another neither speake one to another because indeed they haue forgotten one another and do not know one another so is it betwixt the wicked and the children of God being once taken from out of the wicked and adopted to bee the children of God In one day there is a greater change made in the heart then there is in the face and in the stature by many yeeres Greater I say because this change by grace is meerly contrary but the other change before spoken of in nature is only diuers Touching the cause of the change of the affections of the wicked towards the children of God viz. because they know not God himselfe it may be fitly illustrated by the like amongst men For as it often falleth out that the children of great persons in the world trauelling or liuing in places where their parents are not knowen do meet with the harder measure and are the more roughly vsed and receiue the more wrongs and indignities because such as do so vse them or rather abuse them do not know their parents so is it with the children of God in respect of the wicked They liue in this world as strangers and pilgrims 1. Pet. 2. 11. and so they are indeed their country being aboue in heauen and by this means they receiue much wrong and many iniuries from the wicked amongst whom they liue euen because those that doe them these wrongs and iniuries doe not know God himselfe the father of the godly It was through ignorance of Pauls being a Roman that he was bound to be scourged and therefore when he reuealed himselfe to be a Roman he escaped the whip and they that before had giuen commandement for the whipping of him began to feare and to reuoke their said commandement Acts 22. 25. In like manner therefore it is not to bee maruelled that they which know not God himselfe doe deale the more hardly with his children according to that which our Sauiour expresly saith in this case Ioh. 16. 2. 3. as before was alledged From this obiection and first answer therunto we learn two points First that whosoeuer will be the children of God must prepare and arme themselues for the hatred of the world euen to be contemned despised reproued and persecuted in the world and of the men of the world If we will be glorified with
commend them to be and for further testifying of their rarenesse and excellency were honoured with so rare and extraordinary a translation out of this world and yet are not in their bodies glorified neither shall be till all the rest of Gods children shall bee glorified and made like vnto Christ at his second comming in all pomp and maiesty doth not the Lord thereby testify vnto all the world that all his children are in so high regard account with him that he will not haue the first and the greatest as it were to be aduanced to the perfection of happines till the whole number be accomplished and till the last and the meanest be borne and made fit for the like perfection and happines that all and euery one may receiue their crownes together If a King or some other great person make a great feast and inuite many thereunto and some come betimes some that dwell further of tary somewhat longer and the master of the feast will not haue them that first come to sit downe till all the rest be come is it not a great gracing and countenancing of all the guests so to prolong the time of sitting downe till the rest be come Though some may thinke that the first are somewhat disgraced and wronged by staying for the last yet the matter well weighed they may consider that euen so the Lord of the feast would haue stayed the rest for them if the rest had come first and the first had tarried to be last Yea all men may well see the said Lord of the feast to be well perswaded of their loue and patience in staying them for the comming of them that remaine It is the chiefe honour of any guest inuited by one much greater then himselfe to be openly graced with testimony of the good opinion of the Lord of such a feast For so all men may see that the Lord of such a feast hath good regard as well of them that come late as of them that came first and of them that came first as of them that come after By all hitherto spoken of this time when we shall be made like vnto Christ let vs learne first to be patient till that time come Secondly the longer it is ere it do come the more earnestly to pray for that day of Christs comming the oftner in all zeale to say Come Lord Iesus come quickly I doe but briefly note or rather name things leauing the larger discourse of them to other and euer to the meditation of the godly reader Thus much of our similitude and likenes vnto Christ of our certaintie thereof and of the time when we shall enioy it The confirmation of our said similitude or likenesse vnto Christ followeth which is that we shall see him as he is Heere let vs first obserue the causall coniunction whereby this reason is ●oined with the former proposition This is commonly translated for but it is in the originall because It is the same word that is vsed Luk. 7. 47. I say vnto thee Many sinnes are forgiuen her for say our English translations but because saith the originall she loued much This I doe the rather note because the Rhemists and other Papists in that place of Luke doe vrge the originall word signifying because as there noting the loue of the woman to haue beene the cause of the forgiuenesse of our sinnes whereas our Sauiour reasoneth not from the cause to the effect but from the effect to the cause assuring her and other then and there present not for that loue which before shee had shewed but by that loue which then she did shew so abundantly towards him that many sinnes were forgiuen her As the same viz. that much loue of man towards God and Christ are not the cause but an effect of the forgiuenesse of many sinnes and doe not goe before but follow the forgiuenesse of sinnes As this I say is plaine by the parable of two debtors before in that Chapter mentioned to one of which were forgiuen but 50. pence and to the other 500. and concerning whom our Sauiour had asked the Pharisee with whom he then dined not which had loued but which would loue the Creditor most so it is the more plaine by this place where the same coniunction is taken for a note of an effect not of a cause of our former similitude and likenes vnto Christ It is so also taken Ioh. 8. 44. where our Sauiour saith of the diuell He abode not in the truth because there is no truth in him Heere the same word because is a note of an effect For Christ prooueth the diuell not to haue abidden in the truth not because before his fall there had beene no truth in him for hee was created an Angell of light as well as other but because now there is no truth in him So Ioh. 15. 15. I haue called you my friends for or because all things that I haue heard of my father I haue made knowen vnto you Heere the same word also noteth an effect not a cause Thus then the Apostle prooueth that wee shall bee made like vnto Christ at his appearing by an effect of this likenesse that is because wee shall see him as hee is This to see Christ as hee is is not the cause of our being like vnto him but our being like vnto him shall bee the cause of our seeing him as he is For wee cannot see him as he is except first wee be made like vnto him The effect is not before the cause but the cause before the effect By seeing here he meaneth seeing with our bodily eies and by seeing him as he is the seeing of him plainely not obscurely fully not in part face to face not on his back parts as Moses is said to haue seene God Exod. 33. 23. not as a mightie God alone but also as a Sauiour and therefore not in his diuine nature alone but vnder the veile as it were of this humanity and yet also in so great glory as no flesh liuing did euer see the like This seeing of him in this maner is opposed to seeing him through a glasse darkely and to knowing of him in part 1. Cor. 13. 12. Where these two words seeing and knowing seeme to import that there we shall both see him more plainely with our bodily eies and also know him more perfectly in our vnderstanding then here we do or can doe For here wee see him but by pictures and images I meane not by dead pictures images made by men but by the liuing pictures and images of our selues and of other Gods children representing him in holinesse and righteousnesse and made onely as before wee heard by God himselfe as also we see him by outward signes and elements with the actions belonging vnto them that is the sacraments ordeined by him selfe And here wee know him by his word euen by hearing such things of him as therin hee hath reuealed but then wee shall see