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

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vs in diuers things page 192 Wicked men likened to Beasts page 193 Gods seruants must learne of Beasts page 194 Beast hurt without the Campe fore signified Isra●l page 382 How Christ is Begotten page 237 How the Father did Beget the Sonne shewed by way of negation in seuen things page 129 Gods Begetting of Christ informes vs of two things page 130 A threefold manner of Being of things page 120 A two fold Beginning page 103 I Beleeue the Christians answer all his life page 17 Truely to Beleeue the Articles hath in it six things page 18 Beleeue aboue reason page 409 Beleeue in Christ page 209 Right Beleeuing in Christ casts out six things page 309 It hath in it foure things Ibid. Beliefe of our saluation in Christ hath in it six things Ibid. How we must Beleeue in Christ. page 210 Foure Rules for the attaining this right Beliefe page 211 Foure motiues to this duty Ibid. Eight benefits that come to vs by Beleeuing in Christ page 212 What it is to beleeue in God page 113 Three sorts of men doe not Beleeue in God page 114 Tenne things in the manner of Beleeuing these Articles page 19 Christian simplicity in Beleeuing must haue two things in it page 21 Questions about Beleeuing answered page 38 Christ Betrayed many waies page 333 Christ abased at his Birth for three Reasons ●18 Bishops of Rome oppose Christs Kingdome page 358 What it is to Blesse page 479 Christs Bloud shed vpon the Crosse for seuen reasons page 391 Body of man excells all other Bodily creatures in fiue things page 195 Gods Workemanship to make a Body Ibid. Christs Body needes no embalming page 441 Why it did not putrifie page 442 Fiue Books opened at the last day page 521 Not a Bone of Christ broken page 428 Creatures in Bondage how page 531 Christs Buriall He was Buried for seuen reasons page 434 Place where he was Buried page 435 Christ Buried by whom page 436 By rich men why Ibid. Manner of Christs Buriall page 439 He was wrapped in fine linnen page 440 C. TWo signes of a Childe of God page 356 Christ the signification of it page 218 Christ doth two things for vs. page 320 Christ carried from Annas to Caiphas page 351 The indignities the Iewes offer to Christ page 355 Christ indited and condemned for three reasons page 357 Christ charged with three things page 364 Christ falsely accused Ibid. Christ a King page 365 Christ stripped of his clothes why page 381 Christ slaine from the beginning in seuen respects page 426 Christ a sweet Sauiour page 440 Christ suffered strange indignities and scornes for two reasons page 380 Christ lifted vp vpon the Crosse for three reasons page 391 Why Christ did not saue himselfe from the Crosse page 394 Christ first humbled then exalted page 302 Christ did absolutely fulfill the whole Law for three reasons page 103 Christs conception declared by an Angel why page 259 Christ conceiued of the holy Ghost page 260 An Obiection answered Ibid. Two things done by the holy Ghost in this conception page 261 Christ conceiued without sinne page 262 Diuers Obiections answered Ibid. How Nature proceeds in the conception page 263 The manner of Christs conception page 265 Why Christ was so conceiued page 266 When the Virgin conceiued Ibid. Effects of Christs conception Ibid. Christs conception a medicine against originall sinne page 269 Christ Crucified The place where he was Crucified page 382 Crucified without Ierusalem for foure reasons page 382 Christ Carried his Crosse for two reasons page 384 Christ Crucified for foure reasons page 387 Christ Crucified becomes a sacrifice page 388 Christ crucified with his hands spred abroad for two reasons page 391 Christ lifted vp vpon the Crosse for three reasons Ibid. Christ crucified in the midst of theeues for foure reasons page 392 Christ tooke a true body page 267 Christs call at the last day page 533 Difference of being in Christ page 267 Christians like Ezekiels bones page 477 Christians resemble sheepe in foure things page 518 Distinction of true Christians page 438 Coniunction betweene Christ Christians page 526 Christians highly to be esteemed page 553 Church The originall of the Church page 429. 561 Church diuersly taken in scripture page 556 Definition of it page 557 The generall nature of it Ibid. How the Church from the beginning is called Catholike page 558 From what the Church is called page 560 To what it is called page 561 Members of the Church written in the Booke of life page 562 Church borne of God Ibid. Christ the Head of the Church Ibid. Churchmen most malicious against Christ page 358 Computation of the Romans page 440 God communicates himselfe vnto the creature three waies page 257 Christ condemned that we might bee saued page 378 A true Conuert cannot abide sin page 406 A true Conuert loues Christ better then his old acquaintance page 407 Euil Conscience what it doth page 347 377 Cost in Christs seruice page 439 Couetousnesse the cause of Iudas sinne aggrauated page 328 Beware of Couetousnesse page 331 Couetousnesse defined Ibid. Couetous heart not without the Diuell in it Ibid. Couetousnesse foure signes of it page 332 Couetous care vaine in diuers respects Ibid. Couetousnesse 4. vile effects of it page 333 Counsell of God cannot be altered page 368 Testimony of Counsels no infallible markes of truth page 359 Counsels against Christ as well as for him page 226 Sentence of condemnation at the last day page 527 Creation Creatiō a work of the whole trinity page 145 How all-things were created page 169 Created in six dayes why page 146 Creation the end of it Gods glory page 147 Gods power manifested in the Creation Ibid. Gods goodnesse appeares in the Creation page 148 Gods wisdom appears in the Creatiō Ib. A curious question about the Creation answered Ibid. Creation teacheth eight things page 149. Giue God the glory of our Creation page 200. Wee should answer the end of our Creation page 201 Doctrine of the Creation terrible to wicked men page 150 Comfortable to the godly page 150,202 Creation of new Heauens page 531 Creatures set at liberty at the last day page 532 Creatures how they discerne things page 59 How God knowes them page 60 Creed The Analysis of the whole Creed page 16 What the Creed is page 3 Why the Creed is called a patterne page 5 Creed called a little Bible Ibid. What respect wee should haue to this Creed page 6 Twelue reasons for it Ibid. Doctrine of the Creed Catholike page 7 No Science hath such a subiect as the Creed page 6 Creed food for all sorts of Christians page 9 Creed the character of the Church Ib. Creed a touchstone to try all religions by Ibid. How called the Apostles Creed page 11 Creed not collected by the Apostles Ib. Gathered out of Apostoticall writings page 12 Creed came not in all at once page 13 When it was finished page 14 Why called the Apostles Creed Ibid. Diuers
infallible for besides that we beleeue nothing heere but what hath bin in all Ages receiued except it bee in that point of Christ descending into Hell so all those Articles are grounded vpon expresse Scripture except before excepted that there can bee no doubt of the truth of them if we will beleeue the Scripture and therefore we should with the more willingnesse attend to these Doctrines seeing they are not in the number of those truthes that seeme to bee opposed not onely by the iudgements of learned men but by the Word of God the meaning of Gods Word appearing not so clearely to vs in those things 6. From the sufficiencie of the Doctrine of the Creed It containes all things necessary to be belieued to saluation All things I say necessary for babes in the proposition and for strong men in the exposition 7. From the necessitie of knowing and beleeuing these things these Articles must be beleeued or we cannot be saued Yea all these Articles must be beleeued of necessity to faile in any is desperately dangerous 8. From the Permanencie of these truthes Heere is that said that will abide in a Christian and is indelible 9. From the consideration of the condition of many hearers some are but new beginners and others though for the time they might haue bin teachers yet neede to bee taught these principles Yea neede to be taught them againe being such as those Heb. 5. 12 13. It is in these things also that the better sort of hearers complaine of their ignorance 10. We were tyed in our Baptisme vnto the doctrine contained in this Creed and so we stand bound before God and the Angels to learne it and keepe it as a great Treasure 11. From the consideration of the manner of propounding these Articles they are set dnwne in the Creed plainely and so they cleare our iudgements and withall briefely so as wee neede not feare our memories it is short in words but great in mysteries 12. Lastly because of the singular vse may be made of these doctrines there is great vse of the whole and great vse of euery part of it other Sciences for the most part add nothing to vs but to our knowledge onely or little to our practise especially so as to aduance our happines now there are many commodities arise from the knowledge keeping of these truthes as 1. Contemplatiue delight Men are delighted with the smell of flowers and the sight of colours how much more may and ought our mindes to be delighted in the obseruation meditation of such glorious truthes as these for these Articles doe exhibit to the beleeuing soule the glory of God to be veiwed in the things of greatest excellencie euen the choisest things wherein God hath made knowne the wonder of his goodnes vnto man And therefore these things are good for meditation all the daies of our liues if we had once but the skill to open the glories are heere contained Many Christians are much distressed about meditation They complaine they cannot tell what to thinke of profitablie In the Creed is cōtained the abridgement of these shining doctrines vpon which we may and ought alwaies to look wonder 2. The restoring of the Image of God in our mindes for by bringing in these knowledges wee set vp againe the frame of the Image of God in our mindes which lieth vtterly defaced in vs till the light of these doctrines begin to shine in our vnderstanding wee are purblinde yea wee are starke blinde so long as we are ignorant in these groundes 3. The nourishment of the whole soule The soule of man takes not foode further then it layes hold vpon these and such like truthes and when these are thought on and applied soundly al things in the soule wil thriue and prosper and the more is this to bee regarded because in these Articles is contained foode for all sorts of Christians for heere is milke for little ones in the proposition of these Articles and meate for strong men in the exposition of these all wholsome foode 4. The Creed containes the substance of those Articles of agreement made betweene God and vs so as we may easily and daily thence take notice of the maine points that are treated of betweene God and vs The condition of the couenant on our parte concerning either faith or practice all that is required of vs in effect in respect of faith is heere set downe 5. By the dexterous vse of these doctrines we may try all Religions in the world for heere is the roote of faith the touchstone to try things that are to bee belieued the square by which they are to be measured 't is that little Iudge in matters of quarrell about Religion for whatsoeuer doctrine is contrary to the Analogie of faith in these things may bee safely reiected and must be 6. It is the very Charecter of the Church and serues to distinguish vs from all other professions of men in the world as first from meere naturalists that beleeue no more cōcerning God religion then they can see by the light of nature as it is now corrupted and so it distinguisheth vs from the Philosophers and therfore much more from the common sort of Gentiles that entertained opinions monstrous and against the very light of Nature secondly from the Turkes who though they receiue some truthes from the light of Scripture yet reiecting most of these fundamental truthes entertaining a multitude of blasphemies of their owne against the Christian faith are worthily condemned as men without the pale of the Church thirdly from the Iewes because they denie all the Articles concerning Christ fourthly from all sorts of Heretickes that haue erred from this faith in some of the Articles concerning Christ such as are the Arrians and Papists at this day fifthly from such as haue but a wandering opinion concerning God in any of these Articles so as they onely know them by coniecture or hearesay and haue not entertained them with distinct assurance into their hearts and such are multitudes of people of all sorts euen in the Visible Church To conclude euery word almost of the Creed doth pierce the sides of some or other hereticall or blasphemous men As we beleeue one God against the Gentiles the Father Sonne and holy Ghost against the Antitrinitans Creator of Heauen and Earth against Carpocrates Cerinthus and the Ebionits we beleeue that Christ is the Lord against Valentinus who acknowledged him to bee a Sauiour not a Lord and that he is our Lord against those in Origens time that said hee was the Lord of God and that hee is the onely begotten Son against the Arrians conceiued by the holy Ghost against Apollinaris Valentinus and Eutiches that he was dead against Basilides rose againe against Cerinthus and sitteth at the right hand of God against Praxeus and we beleeue one Catholique Church
Martialis Ignatius Irena Tertullian Origen and those of their times did not proceede further then the Trinity In the first book of Socrates his Eccless Hist. Chap. 19. we finde The Creed thus recited We beleeue in one God the Father Almighty and in the Lord Iesus Christ his Sonne begotten of him before all worldes true God by whom all things were made which are in heauen and which are in earth Who descended and was incarnate and suffered and rose againe and ascended into Heauen and from thence shall come againe to iudge the quicke and dead and in the holy Ghost in the Resurrection of the flesh in the life of the world to come in the Kingdome of Heauen and one Catholique Church reaching from one end of the earth to the other In Saint Ambrose his time the baptised was asked three questions as first dost thou beleeue in God the Father Almighty and the baptized answered I beleeue and then hee was dipped vnder the water secondly hee was asked doest thou beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and his Crosse and hee answered I beleeue and then was dipped againe thirdly hee was asked doest thou beleeue in the holy Ghost and he answered I doe beleeue and was the third time dipped Ambrose lib. 2. de Sacram. cap. 7. so that 't is probable that the Creed was not fully finished in this forme it now is till about the fourth age after Christ And thus of the Authors of the Creed To conclude therefore this point concerning the Authors of these Articles the Creed is called the Apostles Creed in two respects first to distinguish it from all other Creeds There haue bin diuers Creeds made in the seuerall ages since Christ some by particular writers some by Councells of particular writers Athanasius Creed doth most excell which is the Creed set downe in the booke of Common Prayer next before the Letany and of Councells these are the chiefe Creeds the Nicen Creed which you may finde in the booke of Common Prayer also set downe in the order of the Communion as also the Creed of the Ephesian Synod and the Creed of the Calcedonian Synod reade Am. Pol. synt Theol. lib. 2. cap. 2. Now this Creed is called the Apostles Creed to shew that the Churches did hold it to bee of greater authority then any other Creed and that other Creeds are but as it were expositions of this Creed Secondly it is called the Apostles Creed to giue it authority aboue all humane writings euen those that haue much or most excelled The confession of Nationall Churches haue been worthily had in great request so haue the Creeds of the Councells and so haue the Apocripha Scriptures but yet none of these haue attained to the honour of this Creed The translation of the Canonicall Scriptures in respect of the words are humane though in respect of the matter and order they are diuine and these of all humane writings are the best yet not without the defects of the Translators whereas the originall in both Testaments is diuine both for matter order and words also Thus of the Authors The kinde of writing followes Creede Symbolum is the word vsed in the most Christian Churches and is plainely agreeable to the originall word the Creed being first penned in the Greeke tongue If the word bee deriued of Syn and bolus then it may signifie two things first a morsell or as much as a man may well swallow at once and so the whole Scriptures containing but the diuine furnishing of Gods Table as it were the Creed containes each particular Christians morsell so much as hee may and must swallow and receiue downe into his heart without leauing any of these Articles out secondly a draught euen as much as a net can take at once The sea is the Word the fisherman is the Christian man the Net is faith the Creed is as much as the faith of the Christian can take at a draught out of the Sea of doctrine contained in the Scriptures But it is more likely the word should be deriued of Syn and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and then it may signifie all or any of these fiue things 1. A Shot it containing the reckoning which the Apostles made for the Churches being deducted or cast in out of the seuerall writings of each of the Apostles 2. A Watchword or any signe in the time of warre by which the Souldier might be distinguished from spies or strangers and so might shew to what captaine or colours hee belonged so the Creed is the Military signe by which the true Christian is distinguished from all spirituall spies and forreiners 't is Gods Watchword 3. The Motto or Poesie or word giuen in mens Armes so the Creed is the Christians Motto his word which is set in his Armes being made noble in bloud by Christ and so able to giue the Armes of his spirituall house and kindred 4. A token or Bill of Exchange by which a man is enabled to trade or receiue commodities By the Creed the Christian may trade for any spirituall commodities 5. A Passeport Christians are strangers and Pilgrims a great way from home and the gouernment of the Christian world will not let a man passe without his authenticke Passeport Now by his Creed the Christian man may passe and finde entertainement in any part of the Christian world As for the name Creed it is not easie to tell when it first came vp in our Language but it is certaine it comes of the first word which is in Latine Credo rendered I beleeue But by the way if these Articles be a Creed then they are not a Prayer nor to be said as a Prayer as the ignorant multitude doth abuse it Thus of the Title I Beleeue Marke 9. 24. IN the Creed it selfe we must consider first matter of dutie which is in the word Beleeue which is the hand or claspe that takes hold of all and euery of the Articles secondly matter of doctrine which may be cast into two Heads as it concernes God or the Church for the Lord doth not vouchsafe to comber Religion with the whole doctrine that might concerne the estate of all men out of the Church concerning God the Articles looke vpon all three persons and in the doctrine of the Father amongst his attributes singles out his Almightinesse and amongst his workes lookes vpon his making of Heauen and Earth In Christ faith lookes vpon his Person and his Office In his Person it acknowledgeth his diuine Nature as Gods onely Sonne and his humane Nature in these two words viz. conception by the holy Ghost and birth of a Virgin His Office is considered according to his estate both of Humiliation and Exaltation In his Humiliation is considered his sufferings first in body in that he suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was dead and buried and then in soule in that he descended into Hell In his Exaltation faith viewes his Resurrection Ascension and Session at the right hand of God
Treatise called the Rule of Faith which you may easily finde out by the vse of the Index These things I thought good to acquaint thee withall for thy helpe and benefit as also to shew that by the diuine prouidence good supply euen out of the Authors owne workes may be made of that defect which by his immature death may be thought to be in this Rule of Faith That which is required on thy part is diligence and care to treasure vp in thy heart these wholsome and sound words contained in this Treatise that so thou maist walke according to this Rule knowing that as many of you as walke according to this Rule peace shall be vpon them and vpon the Israel of God Thine in the Lord ADONIRAM BIFIELD THE CREEDE OF THE CREED IN GENERALL Text 2. Timothie 1. 13. Hold fast the forme or Patterne of Sound words THere haue bin in all Ages of the Church since the giuing of the Scriptures two wayes by which the Ministers of the Church haue taught men the knowledge that is necessary to Saluation The one was to make choice of some Text of Scripture and to expound it to the people and thence to make vse of it Thus they did in Ezra his time Nehemiah 8. 4. 7. 8. and thus did our Sauiour Christ at Nazareth Luke 4. 16. 17 c. and it is noted in that place that it was our Sauiours custome so to doe Thus did Philip Acts 8. 30. 35. The other was without being tyed to any particular Text to handle the ma●ne body of Doctrine as was most necessary for the people that were to be instructed Thus the Sermons of the Prophets were not the exposition of any particular Text but a solid and compleate collection of all that matter which at that time were needfull for the people And this course also did the Apostles hold in their Epistles and Sermons to the Churches choosing out so much matter out of the reuealed Will of God as was most behoouefull for the Christians to whom they writt or preached onely confirming what they taught by the Scripture Both these courses haue bin followed in the Christian Churches to this day onely amongst vs with this difference That the instruction out of a Text is vsed in Churches and the instruction without a Text in Schooles But that both these courses may bee held in popular teaching is manifest by the proofes before and it is manifest that if Diuines for the profit of their hearers would vndertake solidly to set before the people the whole body of Theologie and shew them at once all the choice things they are to beleeue concerning God or Christ or the Creation or the like it cannot but in some respects be much more profitable then to cleaue onely to the exposition of whole bookes of Scripture or particular portions because by the former course the people may see altogether that which by the other way they should heare but by peece and at seuerall times onely as the Texts will giue occasion I obserue not this to disgrace the godly course of preaching by Texts but rather to shew that both are needfull and as I conceiue it were much to be desired That Diuines euery where would teach the people the whole frame and body of the Doctrine of godlinesse The Apostle Paul in this place shewes that besides their course of instructing the Churches in particular Doctrines according to occasion they did extract into one body the Heads of all Religion which they did in all places carefully vnfolde and preach vpon vnto the people and these Heads thus gathered together as the principall things handled in all the Scriptures the Apostle calles heere the patterne of wholesome words and were diuided into two generall Heads or Titles Faith and Loue. Now there are also two waies of handling these heads of Religion the one more plainly and briefly by way of Catechizing the other more largely and exactly by way of Methodicall Doctrine The one is necessarie for young beginners in Religion and the other needfull to build vp a people in the knowledge begun in them Hauing therefore by Gods gracious assistance heretofore handled the bodie of Diuinity after the first sorte in the extract of principles and Doctrine of foundation onely with some explication of them I now intend by the like gracious assistance of God to goe ouer all the body of sacred Theologie in a more exact manner adding those Doctrines that may serue to build you vp in the larger knowledge of those glorious Mysteries of true Religion And long dilating with my selfe vpon what Foundation to raise this new frame I at length resolued vpon the Apostles Creed where I finde all the Doctrine of Faith collected into one faire body ready to my hands And in discourseing of these glorious Truthes I intende to obserue a mixt course of Teaching that both sorts of hearers may finde matter of profit Heere will be plaine things for the simple and more higher Contemplations for the more Iudicious Two things I especially intend in handling these Articles of Faith the one is the apparelling of each Article with the glorious furniture I finde made fit for it in any parte of the Scripture and this is by way of Exposition The other is the discouerie of the many and singular vses we may put such glorious truths to in the whole course of our liues and this by way of vse Now then for an Introduction in generall this Text giues vs occasion to consider of two things 1. What the Creed is 2. What we are bound to doe with the Creed For the first the Apostles owne words doe tell vs what such sound abridgements of the chiefest Mysteries of Religion are they are Patternes formes or frames of wholesome words where two things are said 1. That they are wholesome words 2. That they are Patternes They are wholesome words both by way of opposition to doctrines that poyson and corrupt the mindes of men and by way of difference from such truthes as for the present and in some respects are not wholsome to the hearers though in themselues they be wholesome We may obserue by diuerse passages in the Epistles of the Apostle what kinde of Doctrine hee accounts to be in it selfe vnwholesome as all false Doctrine contrary to the Gospell of Iesus Christ such as was Iustification by workes the forbidding of marriage and meates the denyall of the Resurrection and the like and this he calles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to teach other Doctrine Such corrupt stuffe the Apostles also accounted all the vaine ianglings of men with pride and peruersenesse wrangling about wordes or disputing of needlesse things and those he calles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 1. Tim. 1. 3. 6. 4 5. ●0 Further vnwholesome words the Apostle accounts all their curiosities and vaine speculations in Philosophie
in stonie places where there is a little earth mingled withall whereas he that beleeues aright and so will hold out hath the naturall stoninesse of his heart dissolued by the word and is so affected with it for the present that he receiues it so as it tarrieth in him and growes in him and he brings forth the sound fruit of Reformation of life and his seede abideth in him it cannot vtterly be destroyed but Faith in him is like the tree of life that will euery yeere bring new fruit Whereas in Nature the corne that is sowne after one haruest is destroyed in respect of that particular graine that was sowen Nor may any say that he cannot know whether he shall hereafter keepe his Faith he can iudge of his Faith what it is now for if he get a sound Faith it will keepe and besides he beleeues with perseuerance that doth resolue for euer to rest in that Faith simply for the euidence worth and vse of the doctrine beleeued for he that hath but a temporary faith as he doth receiue doctrine but for certaine aduantages or carnall ends so can he not get his heart at that very time to a resolution to cleaue eternally to that doctrine of Gods grace 9. It is not yet innough to resolue to keepe the faith and to preserue the doctrine but we must looke to it that we lay it vp in a cleane place which is a pure Conscience 1 Tim. 3. 9. and that we keepe it there cleane from the mixtures of mens deuises being curious in the businesses of our faith to let in no priuate interpretations but to resolue to beleeue onely as Gods word doth bid vs beleeue we must take heede and not admit carelesly any interpretations of the Articles of our faith that any sort of men will bring to vs but we must still haue an eye to Gods word to see all expounded by the word 2 Pet. 1. 20. 19. 16. we must receiue nothing here no not in the least part of the apparrelling of these truths which is not agreeable to some patterne in the booke of God Lastly we must beleeue these Articles but not all with one kinde of faith for some of these things we beleeue in that is place our trust and confidence and all hope of happinesse in them so we beleeue in God and in Iesus Christ and in the holy Ghost but other things wee doe not beleeue in but beleeue as the properties and priuiledges of the Church as wee may discerne by the difference of speaking in the Creed Wee say I beleeue in God but doe not say I beleeue in the holy Church c. The vse may be first for information we may hence gather that there are but few sound Christians in any place there are but few that beleeue their Creed obseruing all the duties and conditions required in beliefe and consequently but few that receiue the benefit of the Gospell or that shall be saued This will appeare if a Tryall could bee made euen in the places that are most populous and abound most with Christians in name For if all the sorts of men bee cast out that haue not a faith agreeable to this doctrine there will bee but a few left as for instance 1. Cast out all such worldly minded people as haue not at all regarded their Creed or the Doctrine contained in it vndoubtedly some such there are who scarce learned their Creed at all and liue so without God in the world as they neuer regarded Religion at all with their hearts 2. Cast out all such as vnderstand not their Creed many can say the words who yet neuer were instructed concerning the meaning and haue not any competent measure of knowledge concerning the sense of the Articles Now it is impossible these should be true beleeuers 3. Cast out such as know perhaps the meaning but assent not to the doctrine They cannot tell whether these things bee true or no nor how to approue them and is there not in all places diuers men that are of this humour are there not men that will be of any Religion That are temporizers 4. Cast out such as beleeue that all the doctrines be true but it is by such a saith as the diuells haue for the diuells beleeue the doctrines to be true but so as they hate it and the teaching of it and all such as thriue in knowledge and profession of it Are there not multitudes of people with vs that discouer this kinde of diuellish quality doe they not from their hearts loath preaching doe they not from their hearts hate such as are the best beleeuers doe they not readily and spitefully speake euill of such as feare God in euery place these cannot be right that beleeue loathing 5. Cast out such as beleeue with a dead faith that is such as finde no manner of feare nor vertue nor operation in these doctrines but can take in a great deale of the literall knowledge of these truthes and yet it hath no power to worke vpon their hearts These haue not so much faith as the diuells haue for they beleeue and tremble that is they are afrighted and extreamely amazed at the thought of the fulfilling and accomplishment of these truthes considering their owne misery Whereas multitudes of Christians heare of beliefe and talke of these things and are not a whit moued either with feare or sorrowe 6. Cast out such as haue but a temporarie faith And in them consider first what they haue in their faith and then by what things it may be manifest that their faith is insufficient for the first these men are not altogether without faith they haue knowledge of the meaning of the doctrine of the Gospell they assent to it and are assured it is the truth and can proue it and they hate not the doctrine but rather like it and loue it And besides their beliefe of these things worketh much vpon them for they heare the Word with Ioy Mat. 13. yea and are moued and perswaded to reforme their liues and by it escape much filthinesse which is in others and was in themselues 2. Pet. 2. 20. and they do ioyne themselues to and keepe company openly with such as feare God as Iudas and Demas did with the Apostles and doe spend much time in reading the Scriptures and good books and may be forward to reproue or punish vice and wickednesse in other men as Iehu was and yet all this notwithstanding their faith is vaine which will appeare to their consciences if they consider these things in them 1. That they beleeue not with application to themselues They lay not hold on these things by a particular faith They place not their happinesse in the perswasion of their interest in these truthes 2. That they are not reformed in the● beloued or gainefull sinnes there bee some sinnes they know by themselues which they desire not to leaue and therefore neuer repented of them Iudas would not leaue his couetousnesse
nor Herod his lust nor Iehu his Idols c. 3. That they are apt to fall away from the liking they haue of Religion which they may finde in themselues when they are at the best if they examine themselues in these questions Whether for these things they would loose the fauour of their carnall friends and their credit in the world whether they would suffer for these things if times of persecution should come whether if they might haue their hearts desire in worldly or sinfull things they would not aband on the care of these things And they may finde it by this that if they fall out with any that are the chiefe for Religion in the places where they liue they meditate not onely a forsaking of such as they are fallen out withall but euen a relin quishing of their forwardnesse or care for profession of religion it selfe those that finde such corruption in their hearts had neede to take heede to their standing least they fall for though a timely reconciliation with men restore them to their former course of profession againe yet this tryall of their hearts may tell them that at length for such or the like occasions they will fall cleane away if they get not better footing in the Kingdome of God 4. That all this profession is vndertaken for carnall and corrupt ends as either to get credit with religious persons or to auoid the penall Lawes of Princes or to couer some vices they are prone to or guilty of or to aduantage their estates in worldly things or out of desire to excell others in gifts or the like 5. That the ioy which they feele is but a false ioy and vnsound which appeares both by the causes of it and by the effects By the causes for they ioy in hearing the Word for these or the like reasons because the doctrine is new or because it is handled with vnexpected learning or wit or because it fits their humors or affections or because it is doctrine that is generally comfortable and sets out the happinesse of such as are of their Religion or because the things spoken of are admirable in themselues or because the doctrine makes against such and such as he likes not And such as are the causes such are the effects For this ioy makes them more proude and carelesse and conceited and contemptuous many times of others Whereas the true ioy ariseth from the solid application of the things heard to himselfe and from the perswasion of his right vnto these comforts by and through Iesus Christ. And withall this ioy doth soften the heart as the dew from Heauen doth the ground and makes the true Christian more humble and mortified and more desirous to be rid of sinne and more to loue God and goodnes and godly men Now if all these sorts bee cast out it is easie to coniecture that few will remaine to bee reckoned for true beleeuers Secondly this doctrine of beleeuing should moue all sorts of men in the Visible Church to try and examine themselues whether they be in the faith or no 2. Cor. 13. 5. And to this end euery Christian may profitably imploy himselfe if in his examination he looke to foure things 1. He must be sure that he be not guilty of any of the things that be repugnant to faith There are some things so contrary to faith that where they are faith is not Such as are 1. Naturall infidelity whereby the heart is not onely void of the knowledge and beliefe of God and true Religion but also when the meanes of knowledge is offered hath habituall struglings and desires that there were neither God nor any bond of Religion 2. Carnall security when the soule is at rest and securely contemnes Gods Iustice in the threatnings against his sins 3. Resisting of the truth when men that daily heare the Word doe with hatred of the truth either oppose it outwardly or reiect it inwardly 4. Presumption and confidence in our owne strength works merits righteousnesse or worthinesse 5. A professed resolution against the assurance of faith when men bring in an Academicall doubting and perswade themselues that no man ordinarily can know or be assured of his Saluation 6. Notorious wickednes and prophanesse when men drowne themselues in lewd courses and follow their lusts without care or remorse 7. Apostacie when men fall away from the Religion they haue professed with a Totall disregarde of the knowne truth 8. A generall kinde of wauering in the doctrine of faith and continuall vnsetlednesse both of iudgement and affection 9. Desperation when a man rageth and is tormented with the horror of Gods Iustice without respect of Gods Glory or any hope or desire or prayer for Gods Mercie in Christ He therefore that would try whether hee haue a true beliefe or no must in the first place try whether none of these contraries of faith possesse not his soule for if they doe it is certaine he hath not faith 2. He must carefully separate and distinguish faith from such things as haue some kinde of likenesse or agreement with it and yet are not faith In his Tryall hee must take heede that he take not some other thing for faith such as are rash Credulity Hypocriticall profession Presumption opinion humane Knowledge experience or Hope For the first there is a light kinde of assent which men giue vnto doctrines in Religion without any knowledge of the warrant and proofe of them from Scripture whatsoeuer effects this Credulity haue yet is it not faith because that is euer grounded vpon the Word of God Nor may hee mistake an outward hypocriticall profession of the true Religion for faith Profession of Religion when it is destitute of the loue of God hatred of sinne trust in Christs merits charity to men and patience in afflictions doe no way commend a man to God much lesse is it true faith Thirdly many Christians entertaine Presumption insteede of faith They are resolued vpon it that God is their Father and Christ died for them and they are the children of God and true Christians and all this without any word of God rightly applyed Fourthly Opinion in matters of Religion may bee taken by some for faith but yet it is not for Opinion is naturall faith supernaturall and giuen of God Opinion is founded vpon humane testimonie faith vpon diuine Opinion is doubtfull and wauering faith is firme and certaine Fifthly nor may humane Knowledge be taken for faith for though they agree in this that they are both imployed about things true and such things as sense cannot reach to yet they differ manifestly faith is Gods gift and a light supernaturall but knowledge is a habit gotten by vs through the helpe of the sparkles of the light of nature and exercise and teaching for the comprehending of the things of faith there is daily neede of the inspiration and illumination and quickning of Gods spirit But the
there are many things should inflame the hearts of Christians to a great desire after the doctrine concerning God and his nature as 1. It is the most glorious subiect of all others in the world no doctrine can tell vs of such marueilous things as the doctrine of God doth 2. It is the end of our Creation all other things though made by God yet they haue no discerning of him Now God made man and gaue him a reasonable soule that hee might see God and the great workes he had done els in the Visible world there had bin none to know or praise God Nothing therefore can be more contrary to the end of our Creation then if wee spend our time and do not labour to know and praise God 3. The whole doctrine of Religion is called Theologie which word in the originall taken a funder is a speech or doctrine concerning God to signifie that without the true knowledge of God there can be no true Religion or right vnderstanding of any thing God is the principall Subiect of all Religious doctrine 4. Of all doctrines this is most profitable for vs for the doctrines that concerne God haue the most power ouer our liues to reforme them and to make vs carefull of good workes Colos 1. 10 euen the more we know of God the nearer we come to the perfectiō of our natures Besides these doctrine doe fill the heart more then any other truthes Yea it is eternall life to know God and Christ It is Heauen vpon Earth It is the very beginning of the glory of Heauen which consists in the Vision of God Ioh. 17. 3. 5. To want the knowledge of God is extreamely base and vncomely for a Christian It is a poore thing to bee pleased with the knowledge of other things and bee ignorant of God and the rather because what we loue or admire in other things that are good are most perfectly in God and no where else besides shall we bee ignorant of him from whom we receiue al good things and from whom al things might make vs happie are to be expected Is not he liberty life glory sufficiencie blessednesse perfect and holy pleasure and the Rest of spirits as a Father saith Further shall not we know him that is euery where Can we goe no whither from his presence and shall we in all places bee be still without God who yet fills Heauen and Earth It is a true Theorem in Diuinity that God onely hath a being other things cannot be said to be Men are the best of visible creatures and the Prophet saith all Nations before him are nothing If men are nothing not worthy to bee reckoned as things that haue being much lesse other Creatures These things are scarce worthy to be said to be of which it may bee said either it was not or it will not bee then it will follow that the knowledge men get in other things is to know nothing then wee know something when wee know God finally a necessity lieth vpon vs to bee rightly enformed concerning God if to speake or thinke vilely of men bee an offence what is it to conceiue or thinke erroniously or meanely or basely concerning God The consideration of these and such like motiues should stir vp in vs a great willingnesse to be taught concerning God but before I breake open the particular assertions concerning the Nature of our most glorious God there are certaine generall considerations that must take vp some Roome in our hearts and it is profitable for vs to approach vnto the contemplation of God by degrees and therefore by way of Preface I conceiue these things are needfull to be thought on 1. How hard a thing it is to attaine the knowledge of God 2. By what meanes the darke heart of man is guided to the vnderstanding of God 3. How farre forth God may be knowne 4. What Rules must of necessity be obserued by all such as can haue any hope to know God For the first of all knowledges it is the hardest to attaine the true knowledge of God and there are many things that hinder and hide God from vs as 1. The transcendent glory of Gods nature the brightnesse of which is such that the eyes of our mindes are not able to look vpon it much lesse can any senses of our bodies attaine him Gen. 32. 29. Iudges 13. 18. God is inuisible wee cannot see him he is ineffable no words can tell vs what hee is we may reckon a thousand things and yet none of them is God whether we looke about the earth seas ayre or heauens God is that thing which no opinion can reach Hee is more then words can tell or thoughts can thinke God is such a thing as when we name him hee cannot bee named when we goe about to estimate him he cannot bee estimated when we goe about to compare him hee cannot bee compared when we would define him hee increaseth bigger then any definition He is greater then all words then all senses it is peculiar to God to exceede knowledge wee may admire by silence but cannot expresse him by words and the Reason is that which is finite can hold no proportion with that which is infinite And therefore hee that would define God had neede to haue Gods Logick for no mans Logick can reach to it for though nothing be more present euery where then God yet nothing is more incomprehensible God is immense and therefore who can tell as one saith the length of his Eternity or the breadth of his Loue or the height of his Maiesty or the depth of his Wisedom And though it bee true that there are diuers names giuen to God yet those names do not explicate what God is but onely so much of him as of vs can bee conceiued for that which is said of God is not God because hee is ineffable The Heathen man could say that it is a hard labour to finde out the Father of the world but hauing found him it was impossible to describe him with fit words especially to make the vulgar sort to conceiue of him And therfore he is fitly styled a light inaccessible 2. The defect of measures hinders vs. All the things by which we trie and measure other things are of no vse in describing God for he is good without quality great without quantity euery where whole without place euerlasting without time he makes all sorts of mutable things without mutation in himselfe or suffering any thing hee needs not a body to make him to be nor a place to make him to be heere nor time to make him to be now or hereafter or heretofore he needs no subiect in which he should subsist or to which he should adhere He is mercifull without passion and Lord of all things without addition of any thing to his wealth 3. Wee want the benefit of similitudes for Gods nature differs infinitely
from the natures of all other things and therfore nothing can be found to liken God to it without singular iniurie Esay 40. 17. 4. God doth not now appeare to vs as hee did to the Fathers in the first Ages of the World 5. We are destitute of the helpe of Demonstration à priori as they call it in Schooles There was no essence before him nor any thing that might leaue the name or nature of a cause of his being 6. We are in and of our selues much more vnable to conceiue of God then we were at the first in our Creation by reason of our fall from God into sinne The light we had being put ou● and nothing left but sparkles these sparkles left breed more smoake in our mindes then either heate or light for 1. There is in vs naturally a world of Atheisticall conceits strange opinions about God as appeares not onely by the variety of strange Religions but also by that naturall Atheisme which euery man by occasion feeles in himselfe when he either doubts of God and thinkes things that bee altogether disagreeing and disproportionall to the Nature of God 2. A singular debility and impotencie to take in the doctrine of God especially with affection into our hearts 3. A slippery kinde of Leuity in our mindes that what we do receiue we loose and forget or else change into other conceites 4. An vnspeakeable kinde of sluggishnesse and vnwillingnesse to be at paines to study this doctrine 5. What knowledge of God doth come into our mindes for the most part we staine it miserably with villanous and filthy thoughts and desires 6. God hath reuealed to vs but onely his backe parts in this life wee cannot see him face to face Exod. 33. 7. The diuells vse all their methods to keepe men without the knowledge of God 8. The world distracts vs and deuoures vsually the time should be spent about the studie of God 9. God himselfe that he may be reuenged on the ingratitude of many men doth hide himselfe out of the way from them And it is necessary wee should take notice of this difficulty of the knowledge of God both to humble vs and to quicken vs to the more diligence and to make vs more thankefull if God be pleased in any measure to reueale himselfe to vs. For the third though it be thus extreame difficult to know God yet we must not dispaire of it as of a thing impossible for though the creature of it selfe cannot conceiue God yet God can reueale himselfe to the creature according to the the creatures capacity God that dwelt in the secrets of Eternity onely knowne and seene to himselfe since the Creation hath bin pleased to come out of his secret seate and by certaine meanes or degrees to make himselfe knowne to men as 1. By planting in the minde of man certaine naturall and common Notions and generall principles concerning God These were and are in euery man like little sparkles of light and fire fastened in mens mindes and such as by glimpse shew some little conceptions of God 2. By Apparition God was pleased in the first Ages of the world to appea●e vnto men and by some certaine visible signes of his presence to acquaint himselfe with man 3. By the booke of the creature for by vnfolding before man in an open and ●●sting shew the various formes and shapes of things which he made he by them did augment the light of the naturall sparkles and euidently confirme and proue his Diuinity Wisedome Power and Goodnesse to man Rom. 1. 4. When none of these were sufficient to bring man to a perfect knowledge of God nor to so much as might saue his soule and bring him into happy fellowship with God God was pleased in the book of Scripture to extract out of the infinite depths of knowledges which were in his eternall minde a frame of descriptions and testimonies concerning himselfe and his will and this in his due time by degrees he gaue vnto the Church and is contained in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles 5. To make all these helpes more effectuall vnto the eternall blessednesse of the Elect he sent his owne Sonne who was the ingrauen forme of his Person and his perfect Image to take mans nature and to come and dwell amongst vs and through his humanity to make God as it were after a most glorious sort visible The God-head shining through his flesh as the Candle through the Lanthorne Ioh. 1. 14. 9. and in that nature hee did himselfe teach and instruct man co●cerning God Heb. 1. 1. 6. Hee hath made himselfe further knowne vnto certaine choice men by inspiration that is by a speciall inlightning and breathing of the holy Gho●● 7. He is daily discouered vnto his children by effects especially by his blessings and benefits and long-suffering and manifold goodnesse Exodus 34. and among these by the entertainement hee giues to the soules of his people in his house and by the ●oyes in his presence Yea so farre is the Lord pleased to reueale himselfe this way to his people that they are said not onely to see God but to behold his beautie Psal 27. 4. 63. 2. It is true the vnquiet heart of man is vexed because God is not visible to his eyes as if the knowing of God by colours were the only pleasing way of seeing him Thy bodily eyes cannot see God what then If thy eyes cannot discerne God is it any greater thing then that thy hands or feete cannot discerne other thing God is discerned by such Instruments as are capable of him But thou wilt say not onely thy eyes but thy reason cannot reach God so as to ease or please thy minde I answer that some things are infra rationem below reason and so are all things discernable by sense onely Some things are iuxta rationem agreeable and discernable by reason and so are a multitude of things in nature Some things are supra rationem aboue Reason and so are diuers things in the doctrine of God especially the Mysterie of the Trinity and the like Now though Reason will not reach heere yet God hath not left his children destitute but hath giuen them an instrument from heauen which is capable of these things and that is Faith And yet God hath not altogether abandoned the vse of senses in his children for the knowledge of him for they know God by sight in his creatures and by hearing in the word and by trusting in his blessings 1. Pet. 2. 3. That this point may bee yet more clearely vnderstood wee must consider the different waies how God is knowne by seuerall things first himselfe knowes himselfe with infinite perfection of absolute knowledge and so hee is knowne onely to himselfe secondly Christ man knowes him by vnion that is by vertue of his vnion with the diuine nature hee doth after a way vnspeakeable and vnimitable see and vnderstand the God-head thirdly the Angels and
Saints in heauen know him by vision they see God face to face that is they haue a perfect knowledge of Gods Nature according to their condition in heauen and doe behold him in some most glorious representation of his presence fourthly to men on earth hee is knowne by reuelation and so after a different manner to diuers men As to some holy men by Inspiration to all godly men by Christ to all men in the Church by the Scriptures and to all men in the world by the creatures and Reason The fourth point it remaines to consider how farre forth God may be knowne by these all or any of them I answer first more generally and then more particularly In generall if we thinke of the full knowledge of God the Trinity is then onely knowne to God himselfe and Christ man God hath a Name that is secret and wonderfull this can bee knowne by no creature by his Name reuealed he may be knowne so as we remember that in this world he appeares to whom he will and as he will and not as he is The most men conceiue wonderfull little of Gods Nature The diuers formes of things in the world are beames as it were of the diuinity but yet they shew rather that he is then what he is or whence they are rather then what he is Distinctly to consider of it we must note that God is knowne in this life 1. But in his backe parts 2. But according to our modell or capacity God hath extracted so much out of the Ocean of the infinite knowledge which concernes his nature as may bee taken in by our vnderstandings 3. This that may be attained to for that part which is set out by words is exprest not by words that tell what God is directly but by such words as being in vse amongst men might leade vs to some happie manner of discerning concerning God 4. The neerest knowledge wee haue is by effect as it is either described in Scripture or wrought in prouidence and so what God is in himselfe himselfe onely knowes but what hee is to vs that in some measure hee makes vs know his glorious Nature is onely knowne to himselfe Wee see the Sunne not as it is in it selfe but as it inlightneth we look not vp vpon the body of the Sunne but vpon the beames of it that shine vpon the hill or vpon the wall or the like so is it in the knowledge of God our natures cannot looke vpon his nature but we discerne him by the shining of his working and by the beames of his presence The difference also of the descriptions that haue bin of God are to be thought on for there hath bin a Philosophicall consideration of God and a Theologicall The Philosophicall was had among the Gentiles by the wisest of them The Theologicall hath onely bin had in the Church The one looked vpon God onely by the light of Nature and experience and the other lookes vpon God by the light of Scripture and Faith But that Philosophicall Light was extreamely deficient and farre short of the Ecclesiasticall Light for besides that the wisest of the Philosophers had much adoe to seperate the true GOD from the many Gods worshipped by the Nations they were altogether blinde in the Mysterie of the Trinity and ignorant altogether of the highest praises of God viz. his mercies vnto man in Iesus Christ yea there was scarce any Attribute of God that was rightly knowne with any life without the Pale of the Church Now that knowledge that is to be had of God may be gathered three waies by Negation Eminencie or Causation By Negation when wee denie vnto God whatsoeuer is of imperfection in the Creature and so wee denie death measure Mutation c. and say that God is Immortall immense immutable c. By eminencie when we giue vnto God in the highest degree what we finde to bee good in the creature and so wee say he is most holy most wise most iust c. By Causation we may finde out God by reasoning from the things hee hath done The last thing to be considered of is the Rules to be obserued by vs for the attaining of the knowledge of God for All meanes will be ineffectuall to vs if we be not rightly prepared and disposed we neede a Religious minde in all knowledges that concerne our happinesse but especially when any thing is spoken or thought concerning God because all words are insufficient to tell vs easily and fully what God is Commandement 3. Hee therfore that would reach to the comprehending of the knowledge of God must bee sure to keepe these Rules 1. Hee must cleanse and purge and scoure his heart from the filth and drosse of false opinions and strange and Atheisticall conceits concerning God yea hee must wholly empty himselfe of all opinion concerning his owne sufficiencie to conceiue of God of himselfe for if it bee true of other knowledges in Religion that a man must become a foole that he may be wise 1 Cor. 3. 18. it is much more true in this doctrine concerning God 2. He must then addresse himselfe to Gods Word and resolue to learne from thence how to conceiue of God God is not to be accounted of by others assertions but to be measured by his owne words We shall neuer learne what hee is by asking what others say of him but must heere what hee saith of himselfe for God is not knowne without God as one saith Of God wee must learne whatsoeuer of God wee would vnderstand 3. He must resolue to spare no paines that is requisite for this studie hee must imploy himselfe with great diligence to drinke in his knowledge for God will appeare onely to studious mindes 4. A heart full of desires is requisite to these conceptions The desire of the soule must be after God Esay 26. 8 9. He must be sought with a mans whole heart Psal 119. 10. else the minde will wander extreamely And because wee want that admiration and delight wee should haue in this doctrine therefore wee must iudge our selues for our deserts and labour by prayer to forme these desires in vs Especially when in hearing or reading any thing concerning God we finde our hearts begin to be affected we must striue to nourish and inflame these desires or delights or Rauishments for then God is neere for vsually a fire goeth before him as the Psalmist speaketh aswell when hee comes into our hearts as when he comes into the world 5. He must be a godly man for the pure in heart onely see God Mat. 5. 7. and without Holinesse it is impossible to see God Heb. 12. 14. This knowledge requires holinesse else of all doctrines it proues the dullest discourse and disputation doth not comprehend God but holinesse as one saith and the Reason is because there must bee some assimilation or likenesse betweene our mindes and the knowledge of God for as no parte of the bodie receiues the light but
the eye and the eye receiues it not but as it is like to the light so it is with the minde of man and the knowledge of God 6. Aboue all other knowledges in Religion in the doctrine of God he must remember the Apostles Rule to bee wise to Sobriety and take heede of curiosity and that in two respects first that he deuoutly beleeue what he findes said of God in Scripture without prying or sifting of things by the iudgement of his owne Reason God would be beleeued on not iudged or examined secondly that he inquire not after things which are not reuealed but rest in the descriptions of God made in his Word The Sunne must bee seene as it can be seene and so much light must bee taken as can bee had with looking downewards lest if wee looke for more light by gazing on the body of the Sunne our eyes bee not onely dazeled but our sight swallowed vp and lost so is it in the knowledge of God It strengthens and increaseth the sight of the minde if we looke vpon the beames of the euerlasting Sunne as they shine in his word or workes but if we will needs be searching higher after his Maiesty take heede lest wee be swallowed vp of his glory Prouerbs 25. 27. 7. And lastly hee must looke to it that his head bee not distracted with worldly cares this knowledge requires a minde seperated from the world at least from the intruding and violent and distresfull cares about the world and things thereof 1. Cor. 7. 31 32 35. Hitherto of the excellencie difficultie meanes and measure of the knowledge of God together with the Rules to bee obserued for the attaining of the Knowledge of God Three things remaine to be opened and throughly considered of 1. What God is or the praises of Gods Nature 2. What it is to beleeue in God 3. The Vses of all For the right conceiuing of the glorious frame of the praises of God we may safely and must carefully proceede in this order 1. Wee must cast out of our mindes all likenesses of any creature in heauen or earth God hath flatly prohibited all Images of God and all terestriall likenesses to be set vp of him in our Churches houses or hearts Commandement 2. Wee must not therefore conceiue that God is like any thing that sense can set before vs in heauen or earth 2. We must in the next place take heede that we be not insnared by the misconceiuing of certaine relatiue attributes giuen to God in the Scriptures Many things are said of God in Scripture by way of signe not by way of Image or likenesse which wee must so thinke of as to vnderstand what they signifie but not to fashion in our hearts the resemblances which the words import for instance 1. Some things are attributed to God Ironically not properly as when the Prophet ascribes deceit vnto God Ier. 4. 10. He speaketh the words of the false Prophets ironically not his owne words with indignation alledging what they said which if it were true God should deceiue the people 2. Some things are giuen to God Metonimically as when God is said to be our strength and fortitude Psal 18. 2. Our strength and valour is not God but he is said to bee so by effect because he worketh it in vs so hee is said to bee our song because he is the subiect of our song Exodus 15. 2. He is called the hope of Israel because it is hee in whom Israel ought to hope Ier. 14. 8. so he is called our life Deut. 30. 19 20. because he giues preserues and prolonges our life 3. Some things are giuen to God Metaphorically when the things spoken of are onely found in the creature and giuen to God by way of signification only or some kinde of comparison some of these Metaphores are borrowed from men some from other creatures 1. From men as when the parts members senses affections actions or adiuncts of man are ascribed to God as for instance God is said to haue a soule Esay 1 14. which onely notes his nature in a speciall manner of Conception so members are giuen to God as his face to signifie his fauour eyes to signifie his obseruing of things Eares to note his regarde of the prayers of his people Hands to note his particular prouidence or working Armes to note his power c. so senses are giuen to him as memorie forgetfulnesse seeing hearing c. which are onely spoken for our capacity so are the affections of Ioy Anger Hatred Sorrow Repentance Ielousie c. which onely signifie after an high manner some glory of Gods nature which but by such comparisons is inexplicable to vs so are the Actions of Numbering speaking hiding his face tempting lifting vp his hands descending going vp on high walking with men striking arising laughing visiting c. so are the Adiuncts of greatnesse time clothing bookes charrets c. which things are not in God in the letter but in the sense and signification 2. From other Creatures as when wings are attributed to him as he is said to be the Sunne Light a Horne of our Saluation Buckler consuming fire 4. Some things are giuen to God Synechdochically as when the Sonne is called the Father of Eternity Esay 9. 6. the Father and holy Ghost are not excluded When the holy Ghost is called seauen spirits being but one spirit onely to note the variety and perfection of his working Reuel 1. 4. Thus of the two Rules for the distinct and safe informing of our selues concerning God 3. Wee must take heede also that wee bee not deceiued about the formes in which God appeared in the Old or New Testament for these formes were sanctified for the present to the vse of the beholders to assure the presence of God or for signification but when they were withdrawne they were no longer to be thought on as any formes of conceiuing of God and therefore he forbids all likenesses These things being auoided we must then approach with feare and reuerence to consider of such things as are attributed to God in Scripture properly For the cleere vnderstanding of the doctrine of Gods Nature as it is properly described in Scripture wee must consider both of the properties of his Nature and of the substance of it First of the Properties because these are next vnto vs as I may say or are easiest to be discerned The glorious properties of God may bee cast into two rankes or heads for some of them are such properties as are some way in the creatures by way of Resemblance certaine sparkles or dropps are in vs vpon which is printed a kinde of Image or likenesse of God in those things such are the life knowledg holinesse and glory of God some of them are such properties in God as are not so much as by any likenesse to bee found in any creature in heauen or earth such are his infinite greatnesse eternitie Immutabilitie and allsufficiencie The first
legall threatnings had in perpetuall doctrine of them the condi●ion of repentance annexed The condition therefore being performed by the Niniuites God destroyes them not yet without change in his will it being but a conditionall will And for Hezekiah he must die if we respect second causes yet in respect of Gods eternall purpose fifteene yeeres must bee added Now this Threatning of death being a Threatning of Tryall and containing true grounds of it in Naturall causes shewes neither dissimulation nor mutation in God Thus it is manifested that God is Immutable That he onely is Immutable is easily proued for that place Psal 102. 27. saith of the creatures that they all perish and wax old as a garment God remaining the same and that some Angels and men shall haue Immutable Natures after the day of Iudgement is not by nature but by grace as was said before The Vses follow and so Gods immutability may serue 1. For Humiliation and so first to Image-mongers that will needs haue God resembled by pictures what doe they lesse then change the glory of the Immutable God into the likenesse of a mutable creature Rom. 1. 23. secondly for all men it should humble the best of vs that thinke how glorious God is for Immutability and yet we so mutable as nothing can satisfie vs which mutability as it fearefully appeared in our first Parents so doth it breake out in the disposition of all sorts of men what fearefull change doe many men make in Religion Reade of the Iewes Isa 1. 21 22. Of the Christians Galat. 1. 6. 3. 1. Thirdly this is a terrible doctrine for wicked men for all that he hath willed and threatned shall certainly come vpon them God cannot change Hee is not as a man that he should repent as Samuel told Saul 2. For Instruction and so it should teach vs three things First Patience in all the changes of this life God only is immutable wee must looke for it to be subiect to many alterations Secondly the Celebration of Gods glorie here Wee should praise him for euer that is only Eternall Immortall and Immutable 1. Timoth. 1. 17. Thirdly the Imitation of his vnchangeablenesse in things we know to be true and good we should be vnmoueable such as cannot be altered whatsoeuer befalls vs 2. Tim. 3. 14. 1. Cor. 15. 58. Such and so we should be in our faith hope charitie promises and good workes 3. For Consolation and so this doctrine should much refresh all godly Christians It should giue them strong Consolations as the Apostle sayth and so in diuers respects 1. Because all Gods promises shall certainly bee accomplished as these places expresly shew Num. 23. 19. Heb. 6. 17. 18. Wherein God willing more aboundantly to shew vnto the Heires of promise the immutability of his Counsell confirmed it by an oath That by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might haue a strong Consolation who haue fledde for refuge to lay hold vpon the hope set before vs. 2. Because hereby they know they shall neuer faile of saluation or fall from grace for the gifts and calling of God are without Repentance Rom. 11. 3. Because hereby God himself would assure his people that they shall not be destroied with temporall miseries though they be afflicted for a time as the Lord reasoneth Mal. 3. 6. For I am the Lord I change not and yee sonnes of Iacob are not consumed 4. Because when wee come to Heauen we shall by grace be made immutable too for then the Image of God shall be perfect in vs. Hitherto of the Immutability of God and so of the attributes of both sorts It remaines that we inquire after the Substance or essence of God vnto which all these glories are attributed and so two things are to be considered about the Essence of God 1. That it is spirituall 2. That it is One. First that it is Spirituall some essences haue being only and not life as the Heauens Earth Seas c. and amongst these wee must not looke for God Some essences haue life but it is onely bodily life as trees beasts foules and among these gods Essence is not Some things haue a mixt life partly bodily and partly spirituall and such is the essence of all men who consist and liue both in body and soule but to find out God we must looke for him only amongst minds There are essences that are onely mentall and immateriall but yet compounded though not of parts yet of power and act as the Angells For they are neuer in act that which they are in power they are in possibility still for diuers things may befall their Natures and their possibilities are finite too God is then higher then these God then is a minde or Spirit aboue all Spirits humane or Angelicall vnto which essence of his if we adde the former attributes we doe fullie difference him from all Creatures Thus God is an eternall minde infinite immutable in life knowledge holinesse and glory Is God a Spirit then these Vses will follow 1. That we should conceiue nothing bodily or terrene concerning God when wee thinke of God wee must not imagine of him any bodily forme for that is to make an Idoll 2. Wee must hence learne to checke and curbe that naturall desire in our corrupt hearts to haue God visible we should be ashamed of that secret rebellion of our hearts that are often after a close manner vnquiet and discontented because we doe not see our God we serue for God being a spirituall substance must needs be inuisible and altogether imperceptible by any senses hee could not bee a true GOD if senses might perceiue him 3. Since it is Gods glory to bee a Spirit wee should heartily praise him for our glory which is our soules for that hee hath made vs mindes also and so of more excellent essence then meere bodies be 4. We should therefore learne to serue God in Spirit and Truth It is the seruice of Spirits that agrees best to Gods Nature Iohn 4. 24. Lastly we should therefore most seeke such things as serue for the vse of Spirits The treasures that are spirituall are farre more excellent then bodily and earthly things can be euen for this reason because they bring vs neerer to God and more properly commend vs to him The second thing wee are to know about Gods essence is that it is one and but one The Nicen Creed and Athanasius haue it thus I beleeue in one God which the Apostles Creed doth affirme too though not so expresly for we say Wee beleeue in God not in Gods importing thereby that there is but one God Nor is God one by aggregation or consent or kinde or sort but he is one in number By aggregation a whole heard of cattell is said to be one by consent many friends are one by kinde men and beasts are one for they are liuing creatures By sort all men are one because
appellation of God 2. By liuing without care and therein being like little Children and this we do when we commit our soules and bodies and liues and children and states and all our waies vnto God 2. Tim. 1. 12. Psal 37. 3. When in Aduersitie wee runne to him for refuge and so make our moane to him that wee rest with patience and good perswasion that God will cause all to worke for the best to vs. It should much trouble vs if in soundnesse of practice we haue not learned this first lesson of belieuing in God Wee should be much displeased with our selues if our hearts be vnquiet and any way vnapt to rest and waite vpon God Psal 42. 12. and we should often beseech the Lord to helpe our vnbeliefe Hitherto of the Nature of God and of beleeuing in God The next thing Faith takes notice of is the Relations in the God-head and so God is the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost for this terme God is to bee applied not onely to the Father which is the next word but to the Sonne and holy Ghost as followeth after in the Creed and therefore wee must reade with a Comma after this word God thus I beleeue in God the Father to reade without a Comma that is Hereticall for if we reade thus I beleeue in God the Father it would sound as if the Creed should say that the Father were God only not leauing the terme God to be carried to the Son and holy Ghost Before then I come to speake of the Father I must entreate of God as he is three Persons both Father Sonne and holy Ghost And this is one of the deepest and dreadfullest Mysteries in all Religion where I must proceed in this order first to proue the Trinity by Scriptures secondly to explicate the doctrine And thirdly to answer certaine obiections might arise in mens mindes about it Because these things about the Trinity are most wonderfull and aboue the reach of the creatures we must seeke testimonies to ground our consciences in the beliefe of them such as may be firme and euident It is a difficult thing to bring the heart of men solidly to assent to such secrets as these as are not onely beyond the sight but aboue the reason of men and the minde may easily vanish into wilde speculations if we be not well grounded with sure Euidence nor can wee haue light from the booke of Nature to informe vs for what any Heathen man hath spoken of an Eternall mind word and spirit they spake by tradition from the Hebrewes and vttered it perhaps in a false and corrupt sense T is the booke of Scripture must only informe our faith herein The proofes for the Trinity are gathered both out of the Old and New Testament and so they either prooue there were more Persons then One or else expresly that there were Three Persons That there are more Persons then One is prooued by the terme ELOHIM which is vttered in the plurall number as if it should sound Gods as Gen. 1. 1. In the beginning Gods or ELOHIM created Heauen and Earth Created is in the singular number to shew the vnitie of the Essence and ELOHIM in the plurall to shewe the Trinitie of the Persons so Gen. 1. 26. Let vs make man in our Likenesse Let vs shewes more Persons and likenes being in the singular number shewes vnitie of Essence And verse 2. besides the Lord there is mentioned the Spirit of the Lord sitting vpon the waters Iosh vlt. 19. Ye cannot serue the Lord because he is ELOHIM sancti holy Gods And Ieremy 10. 10. The Lord is the liuing Gods or ELOHIM and King euerlasting Hos 1. 7. I will saue them in the Lord their God Gen. 19. 24. The Lord reigned from the Lord fire and brimstone Exod. 23. 20. 21. The The Lord sends his Angell whose name is IEHOVAH Dan. 9. 19. Heare oh Lord our God for the Lords sake Psa 110. 1. The Lord said to my Lord sit thou at my right hand Ier. 32. 5. 9. 33. 15 16. The Lord shall raise vp a Branch whose name is THE LORD Now that there are three Persons and no more nor fewer is proued by places more obscure or more expresse The Trinitie hath beene obserued in such places as these Esay 6. 3. where the Angells say thrice Holy and so where IEHOVAH is three times repeated Numbers 6. 23. Esay 33. 22. But the most expresse places are in the New Testament A manifest reuelation of the Trinitie was in the Baptisme of Christ The Father speaking from heauen the Sonne standing in the Riuer the Holy Ghost descending like a Doue Matth. 3. 16. 17. and so in the Institution of Baptisme we are to be baptized in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost And Ioh. 14. 16. 17. I will aske the Father and he shall giue you another Comforter the Spirit of truth and the 1. Ioh. 5. 9. There are three in Heauen the Father the Word and the Spirit And the like euidence is in these places 2. Cor. 13. 13. Tit. 3. 5. 6. Eph. 2. 18. In the Explication of the doctrine of the Trinitie we must be wise to sobriety because it is wholly secret rather to be belieued then to be demonstrated or described It is a doctrine may be apprehended but neuer comprehended no not by the light of grace nor fully and wholly by the light of glorie as being aboue the reach not onely of men but of Angells A mystery to be adored by humble faith and piety not to be searched without curious yea furious temerity For it is so admirable as Reason cannot expresse it and so singular that example cannot declare it to vs for the Images or Similitudes borrowed out of the booke of Nature may rather shew that the doctrine of the Trinitie doth not destroy Nature then giue vs any pattern which can sample out the thing it selfe and besides to erre here is the most dangerous of all errors For as nothing is sought with more difficulty or found with more profit so nothing can bee mistaken with more perill And therefore as a Father sayd well seeing wee cannot finde out what God is wee must take heed that wee thinke not that of him which he is not yet must wee not wholly neglect the doctrine because a necessitie lyes vpon vs to belieue and therefore though men and Angels haue cause to stand and wonder at this secret that God should beget a Sonne and that from that Father and Sonne should proceed that Spirit the Sanctifier yet because God will bee so acknowledged of vs wee must make vse of our faith to belieue what our reason cannot describe to vs. Three things then for our capacities are to be thought vppon The first concernes the Matter of this Mysterie The second the termes by which it is exprest and the third the answere of certaine Obiections might arise in our mindes For the first
we may hence take occasion to wonder at Gods skill and wisdome in ordering businesses What a confused heape is here of vile Instruments and yet what a glorious worke doth God doe without disorder nothing being done but according to his Determinate Councell Act. 2. 23. Secondly we may see how easily all sorts of men are drawne to practise against holinesse and sincere religion what doctrine was euer more powerfull than the doctrine of Christ and what man euer liued so harmelessely so profitably and yet how quickly is all the world raised vp against Christ and true Religion taught and profest by him What power hath the Deuill in the hearts of all sorts of men Who though he neuer require any worke but what is base and dangerous yet quickly gets Instruments to effect any thing he requires Oh how is miserable man sunke deepe into rebellion that since the fall of our first Parents had rather follow the Serpent than the Sauiour of the world who would euer care for the opinions or examples of any sort of worldly men Thirdly wee see here a naughtie nature will infect any Calling the Priesthood will not continue alwayes good nor Magistracie nor the retired life of the vulgar sinne infects any calling For the third Point for whom he suffered that is answered in diuers Scriptures he suffered not for himselfe but for vs 1 Pet. 2. 19. Now that this may be distinctly vnderstood it must be considered both Negatiuely and Affirmatiuely Negatiuely and so he did not suffer for all the men and women in the world vniuersally as the Arminians and Lutherans affirme and that we may gather by many sentences of Scripture as Matth. 26. 28. He saith his bloud was shed for many which imports it was not shed for all And Matth. 7. 23. Christ saith to somemen I know you not which imports strongly that he did not suffer for them and Ioh. 17. our Sauiour still limits his petitions in his pleading viz. for such as God the Father had giuen him and said he praied not for the world and Iohn 13. 1. it is said he loued his owne which were in the world and therefore all were not his owne and Iohn 10. 15. He layed downe his life for his Sheepe and therefore not for Goats and Swine and Ephes 5. 25. He gaue himselfe for the Church not for all the world and Reuel 14. 3 4. they that are bought out of the earth are distinguished from other men to shew all are not redeemed and Heb. 9. 15 16. The benefit of his Mediation and Bloud-shedding is extended only to such as are called Thus of the proofe of the Negatiue Now for the affirmatiue it is most cleare in Scripture that Christ suffered for beleeuers and for all of them not only for vs but for all of vs Rom. 8. 32. not only for Iewes but for all the world that is for the Gentiles of all Nations 1 Iohn 2. 1. His-righteousnesse extends vnto all and vpon all that beleeue Rom. 3. 22. The Vse may be first for the confutation of the opinion of those that hold that Christ suffered and died for all men in the world vniuersally we grant his sufferings were sufficient to redeeme all the world but not efficient and that their opinion is very grossely erroneous appeares by the former places of Scripture and many more might bee alledged Secondly seeing Christ did not suffer for all men vniuersally we should looke to it that we be such as may haue comfort that he died for vs. Now if we would know who they are in all the world that haue their part and portion in the redemption made in the sufferings of the Sonne of God we must vnderstand that they are such as are described in the signes that follow First they are beleeuers such as with the eye of faith can looke vpon and must to the promise of God made concerning saluation by Christ Ioh. 3 16. as is there shewed by the type of the brazen Serpent in the coherence Secondly they are such as turne from transgression in Iaoob Esay 59. 20. Thirdly they are such as will heare the voice of Christ and be ruled by him they are his sheepe Iohn 10. 15. Fourthly they are such as are made like to Christ in sufferings they beare his image in suffering affliction and yet for all their crosses they loue God Rom. 8. 28 29. 1 Per. 4. 1. Fiftly they are such as doe consecrate their liues and seruices to Christ they liue to him that died for them 2 Cor. 5. 15. Thirdly did Christ suffer for vs what patterne was there euer of such leue Consider what we were in our selues by nature First we were vniust 1 Pet. 3. 18. the Iust here suffers for the vniust one will scarce die for a righteous man but who euer was willing to die for the vnrighteous Rom. 5. 7 8. Naboath Zacharias the sonne of Iehoiada and Iohn Baptist were iust men and yet none would die for them and yet perhaps for some righteous man one durst die as it may be Ionathan durst haue died for Dauid but yet this is without president which here Christ doth he suffers for the vnrighteous Secondly we were not only vniust but his enemies also Rom. 5. 10. yea we were such as neuer sought to him for redemption as the Scriptures and experience shew What hearts haue we that cannot be more affected with this wonderfull loue of Christ Behold here is Piety scourged for the impious mans sake Wisdome is derided for the fooles sake Truth is denied for the lyars sake Iustice is condemned for the vniusts sake Mercy is afflicted for the cruell mans sake Life dies for the dead mans sake as said an ancient Father What a suffering is this when the Iust suffers for the vniust and with the vniust and vpon vniust causes and vnder vniust Iudges and by vniust punishments Fourthly hath Christ suffered for vs why then from his example we should learne to be willing and ready to suffer one for another 1 Iohn 3. 16. Fifthly we should comfort our hearts with this Doctrine seeing Christ did not suffer for himselfe but for vs wee should apply his sufferings to our selues and plead them before God against our sins and the temptations of the Deuill and seeing hee hath paid so deare a price to reconcile vs to God wee should make no question of it but that hee will now saue vs being reconciled and finish his owne worke Rom. 5. 10. Lastly seeing the Sonne of God is the Passeouer yea our Passeouer and Sacrifice for vs we should therefore purge out the old Leauen that we may be a new lumpe and should therefore keepe the feast not with old leauen neither with the leauen of malice and wickednesse but with the vnleauened bread of sinceritie and truth if Christ suffered for vs then our life should be a continuall feast yea in as much as he was offered vp as an immaculate Lambe and is tendered to vs as
doctrine but saith nothing of his Disciples and yet he might haue answered that one of them betrayed him and another denied him and the rest ranne away from him To teach vs that no extremity befalling our selues should make vs discouer the weaknesses of others to the Enemies of Religion when it may any way doe hurt to the honour of the profession of Religion And againe we may learne to be patient vnder the aspersion of Schisme not to be vnquiet at it Our Sauiour was examined about his Disciples vpon pretence that he had made a Schisme in the Church by admitting so many followers and such concourse of people to heare him with intimation that he might intend sedition in the State Now to all this he giues no answer but rests satisfied as knowing that the consciences of his aduersaries were perswaded otherwise of him 2. When he answers about his doctrine it is in generall and sparingly to teach vs wisdome in euil times and to learne how to bridle our tongues when we speake before men in authority especially if they be enemies to Religion 3. From his answer about his doctrine the Hearers of godly Teachers may learne one profitable lesson namely to marke the doctrine of their Teachers and to grow so cunning in it that they may be able to defend their Teachers and the Truth Christ referred himselfe to his Hearers Iohn 18. 19 20. 4. What admirable patience was that in Iesus Christ when he was smitten by the High Priests seruant to speake to him so coolely saying If I haue euill spoken beare witnesse of the euill but if I haue well spoken why smitest thou me Iohn 18. 23. He deales like a wise and patient Physitian if he haue a patient that is madde he doth not rage if his madde patient should strike at him but rather quietly will striue to pacifie the fury of the madde man or else binde him So doth our sweet Physitian of our soules they are spiritually madde that will strike Iesus their spirituall Physitian or offer indignities to such as come in his name Let vs all learne patience of our blessed Sauiour 5. We should from the consideration of all this vniust proceeding with our Sauiour be stirred vp from our hearts to praise God for the publique peace wee enioy in preaching and hearing the Gospell We little know what we should suffer if we should fall into the hands of vnreasonable men whether in the Ecclesiastical or Ciuil Courts but if at any time without our fault we should haue experience of corruption and enuious and malitious proceedings against vs for our consciences sake wee should comfort our selues by the remembrance of these things that befell our blessed Sauiour Before I leaue this part of his Passion one question may be asked and that is why our Sauiour held his peace when the false witnesses gaue euidence against him yea he held his peace though the High Priest vrged him to speak to the accusation of the witnesses Now for answer to this question we may conceiue that our Sauiour was silent for these Reasons 1. Because he knew that he came thither to suffer not to defend himself as being sent thither to suffer by God himself 2. Because he knew he should be condemned though he did cleare himselfe of their accusation 3. That by his patience and silence he might intimate the vanitie of their accusation and the falsenesse of it 4. That the Scripture might be fulfilled that said He was as asheepe dumbe before his shearer Esay 53. 7. 5. That so he might pay for our shiftings and excuses 6. That he might thereby acknowledge our sin-guiltinesse as suretie he stood there for men that were iustly accused of God and therefore as one confessing a fault he forbears to defend or excuse himselfe 7. That hee might by his example teach vs to bee silent in euill times when truth will not take place Thus of the Arraignment of our Sauiour in the Ecclesiasticall Court Now followes the things he suffered in the Ciuill Court before Pontius Pilate And here first in generall we may consider the reasons why Christ would be iudged in the Politicall Court of Iustice and he did it 1. That his innocence might be made more publike which fell out as appeares by the story in many things 2. That so he might be sentēced to die by the ordinary Iudge for the Iewes had not power to put any man to death 3. That so it might appeare that the Gentiles had interest in his death as well as the Iewes and therefore the Gentiles lay their hands vpon the head of this Sacrifice 4. That the crueltie and vnequall dealing of the Chiefe Priests and their counsell might be more manifest when it should appeare that the Politicall Iudge shall vse Christ with more respect than they did And thus it often comes to passe still in the case of his Ministers and seruants Quest But why must he be iudged by Pilate a Gentile a Deputie of the Roman Caesar Answ Euen that was not without speciall cause For first Christ seemes to say himselfe that God had giuen that power to Pilate to put Christ to death Ioh. 19. 10 11. Secondly it hath beene noted before that by this circumstance it appeared that the Scepter was now departed from Iudah and therefore Iesus was that Shiloh that should come And here by the way they of the Church of Rome might learne that Church-men must abide the iudgement of Lay Iudges yea though they be of a false religion Christ yeelded himselfe to be iudged by Pilate and therefore it is a tricke of Antichrist to refuse it Now in the Arraignment of our Sauiour before Pilate we are to consider two things 1. His Accusation 2. The proceedings of the Iudge About his Accusation three things may be noted 1. By whom he was accused viz. By the Chiefe Priests and Elders and Scribes and Pharisies They that were erewhile his Iudges are now become his accusers Saint Matthew notes they did it of enuy Matth. 27. 18. Surely enuy is very cruell and very base It is a cruell thing to pursue a man to the death for no other cause but because he is better beloued of God or man than themselues And it was most base for these great men to turne accusers at the Barre of the Ciuill Iudge and to doe it in their owne persons 2. Where he was accused viz. at the doore of the Common Hall Iohn 18. 28. These wretched men that made no conscience of pursuing an innocent man to the death yet are very strict about Ceremonies They would not enter into the Common Hall lest they should be defiled and so be made vnfit to celebrate the Passeouer And why would the Hall defile them but because it was the seat of a Gentile Oh vile hypocrisie will the house defile them and yet the presence of the man do them no hurt It is a most hateful thing to be an Hypocrite and an Hypocrite he
Humane Nature And whereas the Saints and Apostles are said to iudge the world Luk. 22. 30. 1 Cor. 6. it must be vnderstood thus That they iudge as members vnto that head who is Iudge Secondly as the Iudgement shall be performed before Christ and the company of the Elect Ioel 3. 2. Thirdly as they shall be Assessors and giue consent to the Iudgement being aduanced to the honour to sit as Iustices of the Peace on the Bench by the Iudge Fourthly the Apostles shall iudge because their doctrine which they haue preached shall be confirmed and auouched by the sentence of the Iudge So the word that men heare now shall iudge them at the last day Iohn 5. Fifthly the godly shall iudge the wicked because the example of their faith and repentance shall be alledged as a furtherance of the condemnation of the wicked Thus the Queene of the South and the Niniuites shall rise vp in Iudgement and condemne that generation Christ speaks of Luk. 11. 31. So that the point is cleare that Christ shall be Iudge The Vse is first for great comfort to the godly to free them from the terror of that day they need not bee afraid of the Iudge nor any hard sentence he will pronounce vpon them seeing the Iudge is their owne brother yea their owne flesh as their head it was he that was iudged for them on earth and redeemed them with his owne bloud he that hath continually made intercession for them in heauen that they might be deliuered from the wrath of God Yea he hath promised them that they shall speed well in that day Hebr. 2. 11. Eph. 5. 30. Ioh. 3. 36. and 5. 24. Secondly it is a terrible doctrine for all wicked men because this is a Iudge that cannot be corrupted but will iudge in righteousnesse as there is none higher than he to make appeale to and because also he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that knowes the heart and finally because it is he whom they haue reiected and would not let him rule ouer them but haue many waies vilified him and rebelled against him and his ordinances and persecuted him in his members Reuel 1. 7 8. The third question is whence Christ shall come when he comes to Iudgement And that is briefly exprest in the words of the Article He shall come from thence that is from Heauen where he sits at the right hand of God The reason why he comes out of Heauen to execute Iudgement is because Heauen is so pure a place as it is not fit for impure men and deuils so much as to make their appearance there And this point is not without Vse For first hereby we may clearly bee confirmed in the truth of Christs humanitie against the Vbiquitaries that say his bodie is euery where seeing he comes in his bodie out of Heauen at the last day And besides it may teach vs to send our hearts to Heauen to meet Christ and till he come from thence to looke for him Phil. 3. 20. The fourth question is about the time when the day of Iudgement shall be Now about the answer to this question there haue beene many opinions and the most of them strange and false 1. Some haue thought it should neuer be and such were those mockers mentioned 2 Pet. 3. whose argument to proue their damned opinion was twofold First that the first Fathers in the first ages of the world were dead many ages since and if there should haue beene a Iudgement it is likely it would haue beene before this time Secondly that all men see by experience that all things continued without alteration since the Creation and therefore why should men feare any alteration for the time to come To all this the Apostle answers first concerning the persons of these mockers that they are men that follow their lusts vers 3. or that they are willingly ignorant v. 5. and then concerning their reasons he saith against them three things The one that this world was made at the beginning by God both the vpper and nether world and therefore it may haue an end v. 5. The other that it is false that there haue been no alterations for the whole nether world was drowned by water which may assure men that God hates sinne and will generally iudge men for it vers 6. The third is that the continuance of the world for so many ages ought to bee no argument to proue that it is vnalterable for a thousand yeares with God are but as one day it is a small time that the world hath lasted in comparison of Gods eternitie and besides God hath vrgent reason for his so long patience in deferring the last iudgement vers 8 9. 2. Some others in the Apostles time taught that the resurrection and so by consequent the day of Iudgement was past already of this minde was Himenaeus and Philetus 2 Tim. 2. It is probable that they held there was no other resurrection than that which is of the soule spiritually rising out of sinne nor any other Iudgement than that which men passe through in repentance 3. A third sort of men that did hold a true resurrection of the bodie and a generall Iudgement of all the world did affirme before the Apostles were yet dead that the Iudgement would come vpon the world within a short time after euen in the age of them that then liued 2 Thess 2. 1 2 3. Now these false teachers are both described and confuted by the Apostle described both by the effect of their corrupt doctrine viz. that it would draw men away from their minds both for the present by making them lesse carefull of their callings and for the time to come when they should see that that day did not come as was foretold they might then grow either impatient vnder their crosse or else to fall away from religion beleeuing nothing because that they haue beleeued in this point did not come to passe and described they were by the manner of confirming their doctrine For they pretended first the Spirit that they had reuelations from the Spirit within Secondly the word that is either some speciall arguments of their owne or some words which the Apostles had vttered Thirdly Epistles either wresting the words of the Epistles of the Apostles as that 1 Thess 4. 7. or else counterfeiting Epistles and saying they were written by the Apostles The Apostle confutes them by shewing that the kingdome of Antichrist must come before the day of Iudgement The fourth sort of men are such as assigne the time of the comming of Christ to be further off from the age of the Apostles and offend in extreme curiositie in assigning the yeare or age when it should be and so mens wits haue beene ill imployed in all ages Saint Augustiae tells that in his time diuers computations were made of the end of the world and Christs comming Some said it would be 400. yeares after his Ascension some 500. yeares some
22. 15. 20. All ciuill honest men that rest only in being free from outward grosse crimes these shall come to iudgement for their want of the power of Religion Matth. 5. 19. and for all their idle words Matth. 12. and for all their euill thoughts for God will trie the heart and reines Lastly all the godly must come to iudgement too but not to the iudgement of condemnation as was shewed before wee must all appeare wee as well as other men 2 Cor. 5. 10. This point should greatly terrifie all impenitent sinners seeing no man can escape the iudgement of God multitude will not helpe them nor can there be any help from worldly meanes God hath his booke in which are written the names of all to whom he gaue life and therefore none shall be forgotten and therefore this should be a warning to inforce euery man to repent in time lest God surprize him at vnawares and carry him away in an houre he thinks not of and then as Death leaues him Iudgement will finde him And besides this very point should greatly stirre vp the desire of all that loue the appearing of Christ to wait for and long for this great Assise Men generally long to be at such Assises where many persons are to be tried and where they shall haue great causes examined and iudged especially if there be any great man to be arraigned How them should we desire that day when all men shall be iudged and the causes of so many great men of the earth shall then be openly heard c. Thus of the Sixth point The Seuenth Question concernes the signes of the comming of Christ and these are of two sorts for they are either signes that goe before and prognosticate and foretell of his comming or else are such as are ioyned with the instant of his comming Before I reckon the Signes that goe before I must giue the Reader warning of certaine euents that are by some Diuines reckoned for signes which I take vnder correction of the better learned to bee no signes at all of the last Iudgment it is easie for vs when wee take things vpon trust somtimes to mistake As first some make the preaching of the Gospell to all Nations to be a signe and such a one as is yet to be performed whereas it is cleare by that of the Apostle Col. 1. 6. that that promise was accomplished in the Apostles daies For all Nations in that text Matth. 24. 14. stand opposed to the countrey of the Iewes that whereas in former times and then the Gospell was onely preached to Iewes the time should come and that shortly that it should be preached all the world ouer that is in many other Countryes There is no necessity to vnderstand it so that euery particular Nation in the world should haue the Gospell preached to them or if it were it must not be meant of any one time but successiuely at one time or other Againe some make the security of the world which our Sauiour likens to the security of the old world Matth. 24. to be a signe whereas that is spoken of by way of complaint of the carelesnesse of men that would not awaken no not when his comming was neer at hand for otherwaies the world is alwaies secure and wicked men are alwaies so minded and therefore it cannot bee a signe that hath no distinction in it Againe some make that a signe that when Christ comes he shall not finde faith vpon earth Luk. 18. which place is not meant of his second comming but of his comming to auenge the quarrell of his Elect that suffer in all ages And the want of faith he complaines of is not to be vnderstood simply but in that respect which hee intends in the Parable before and so his meaning is that th●●e are few of the very elect themselues that haue so much faith as to persist in praier to resolue to ouercome God by importunity and not to be discouraged though God seeme not to heare their praiers and put off a great while before he deliuer them Againe some make the persecutions mentioned Mat. 24. 9. and the warres and other plagues mentioned vers 6. and the decay of loue in many vers 12. and the rising of false Prophets and false Christs vers 24. to bee all seuerall signes whereas these were accomplished before or about the time of the finall destruction of Ierusalem as is plaine in the text for hee speakes not of the signes of his comming till the 29 vers and besides it is said they shall be accomplished before that generation passe vers 34. The signes which do properly prognosticate and giue warning to the world of the comming of Christ are so described in Scripture as they serue successiuely one after another to giue warning in euery age of the Church and therefore the signes began to discouer themselues in the very age of the Apostles and so downwards and will so be ordered as euery age yet to come shall haue their speciall warnings to prouide for that day and so I take the proper signes to be in number eight The first is the signes of certaine Antichrists that is speciall false and hereticall teachers professing the Christian religion which should teach doctrine that depriued the soules of men of the benefit of redemption by Christ and these Antichrists were but fore-runners of the great Antichrist This Saint Iohn makes a signe and this signe was accomplished or began to be so while yet S. Iohn was aliue 1 Ioh. 2. 18. The second signe is giuen by S. Paul 2 Thes 2. 3 4. and that is a generall Apostasie of men in the visible Church from the soundnesse of religion and this was accomplished vnder Arrius and the many ages of the Papacy The third signe is the reuealing and discouering of Antichrist and the making of it knowne who was that great Antichrist 2 Thes 2. 4. and this was done by Gods two witnesses that is by a few choise Instruments that God raised vp in the very times of this Apostasie to preach and teach that the Pope was Antichrist and this was done in seuerall ages of that Apostasie The fourth signe is the preaching againe of the euerlasting Gospel and the publike profession of reformed religion Rev. 14. 6. 7. and 15. 1 2 3. and this began in the age next before vs that now liue in the ministery of Luther Zwinglius and diuers other The fift signe is the fall of Babylon not onely in respect of the consumption of the body of it which hath been a doing by the word of Gods seruants now this 100. yeares but also in respect of the destruction of the seat of that Whore of Babylon the Pope and the dissoluing of his visible gouernment 2 Thes 2. Rev. 18. and 14. 8. This in the latter part of it is yet to come and will bee accomplished at a time appointed in the day that is called The day of the great Battell