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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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Will Eph. 1.9 3. The End which is Gods Glory Eph. 3.10 4. The Efficacy which is Gods Power Rom. 1.16 Touching the Scriptures we are principally to consider these 4 things 1. Who is the Author of them that is as hath been shewed God himself Gal. 1.11 12. 2. Who are the instrumental Causes they are as hath been likewise shewed the Prophets and Apostles 2 Pet. 1.21 3. To whom they belong even to all sorts and degrees of men and women Psal 111.2 119.9 4. What is the property thereof viz. All-sufficiency without any patching of mens Decrees or Inventions to teach the true knowledge of God 2 Pet. 1.16 1 Cor. 1.17 〈◊〉 the Scripture is the Word of God and 〈◊〉 Doctrine of infallible Truth and certainty may be firmly proved from these unanswerable Arguments drawn from Scriptur●it self 1. From the Causes thereof wherein consider 1. That the first and principal is the Author thereof even God himself to him do the Scriptures refer themselves and also shew how God is their Author Now nothing is falsly ascribed to God but God in time will bring the same to nought and therefore if the Scripture had not been Gods Word it would long ago have vanished 2. The cause Conservant for the Devil by wicked men and Hereticks hath labored to take away Gods Word from mens hearts and hands but yet it is still preserved in the Church which argues that it is kept by a greater power then is in all men and all Angels that is by the power of God 3. The causes Instrumental they were holy men of God Prophets and Apostles who for vertue und piety exceeded other Writers far beyond all comparison and if they had been meer Polititians their writings would have shewed it for the Penmen of holy Scripture have herein faithfully registred their own faults which no politick person would have done 2. From the Matter therof which stands 1. In doctrine which is The Law set forth in most excellent purity nothing being therein against it or common Equity The Law is perfect Reason the Gospel above Reason yet not contrary to Reason The Gospel wherein is set down Doctrine altogether above mans Reason touching Christs Incarnation and mans Redemption by his death and although these things be above Nature yet we finde them true wholesom and good in experience of conscience which also proveth that they are the Word of God Men may devise strange things above Nature but they can never be wholesom to the conscience 2. In stile the phrase is plain and familiar and yet in any one speech there is more majesty then in all the writings of men 3. From the End thereof for it sets up Gods Worship and mans Salvation and yet gives nothing to Men or Angels but all to the glory of God but for the writings of men they do either directly or by insinuation ascribe something to the writers thereof 4. From the Effects thereof For 1. Though it is against our corrupt Nature crossing and condemning the same yet it winneth men to the love thereof and to obedience thereto which could not be unless it were the Truth of God for we abhor and detest the words of men that be against our Nature 2. It serves notably to comfort a man in all distresses whatsoever even in the pangs of death when no word of any man can do him the least good but onely his word that is the Lord of our soul and the God of our life 5. From the two properties of Scripture 1. Antiquity Among humane writings we have none of certainty in things they record that go so high as the Creation but the Scripture sets down things done from the beginning 2. Mutual Consent for though the Books of Scripture were written by divers men in sundry Ages and Times yet all agree within themselves there is no contradiction in Scripture but the writings of men have not this consent no not in the same Author whom commonly we shall finde contradicting himself 6. From the signs and true miracles thereof as the parting of the Sea the staying of the Sun and Moon and many others yea the Incarnation of the Son of God the Miracle of miracles 7. From the Contraries Contrary to the word of God is the will of the Devil and mans corrupt Nature the Devil hates Scripture and mans corrupt Nature repines thereat when it is checked and controlled thereby Now that which is contrary to these two must needs be holy and true and that is the word of God 8. From Testimonies whereof there be 2 kindes 1. Of holy Martyrs who in all ages have sealed the truth thereof preferring the word of God before their own lives whence it is truly said Sanguis Martyrum semen Ecclesiae And though Hereticks have dyed for falshood yet there is great difference in their ends the true Martyrs have unspeakable joy in the Spirit in their torments but Hereticks have no such joy but a natural sensless blockishness whereby they undergo these torments 2. Of Gods Spirit which is the principal testimony for when men begin to learn and obey the word of God then the Spirit of God settles their Conscience in the perswasion of the truth of Scripture which is infallibility it self The Testimony of the Holy Ghost touching Gods Word is obtained and discerned from the Testimony of man by doing these two things 1. By resigning our selves to become truly obedient to the Doctrine taught John 7.17 2. By praying unto God for his Spirit to certifie our Consciences that the Doctrine revealed is the very Doctrine of God Mat. 7.7 8. Luke 11.13 Jam. 1.7 The Majesty of the Scriptures consisteth chiefly in these three excellencies 1. In the Majesty of the Spirit of God which shineth in them 2. In the Consent of all the parts among themselves 3. In the Fulfilling all the Prophesies delivered long before yet accomplished precisely each of them in their proper place The Authority of the Scripture doth not as the Papists affirm depend on the Church for these Reasons 1. The reproach of God by making the Testimony of mans voyce greater then the voyce of God 2. Our Comfort for Faith is grounded on approved witness therefore not on man 3. The truth of God is plainly exposed to the mocks and scoffs of the wicked if we affirm that our Religion is from God onely because our selves say so 4. Because the Authority of the Church depends on the Scripture 5. The Scripture it self is in many places against this opinion John 5. 1 Cor. 2. 1 John 5. The Popish twofold Scripture 1. Inward Scripture or a consent of Doctrine written by the Holy Ghost in the hearts of all Catholicks and this say they is right Scripture Unparalleld Blasphemy 2. Outward Scripture which is written in Paper or Parchment which hath no certain sense as they falsly affirm but as the present Church determines thereof but this is a devilish Doctrine abolishing the true Word of God
History or to maintain discourse not to be edified in faith or to have their sins mortified 5. Such who in searching out the true sense of Scripture trust to their own skill wit and understanding and neglect the preaching or Ministery of the Word 6. Such who do all they can to be expert in Gods Word but with a trayterous minde to fight against the truth thereof as Hereticks and such like Three points to be observed in interpreting of the Scripture 1. That the phrase be considered and the proper sense of the words found out 2. That the order and coherence of the members or parts of the Doctrine which is contained in the Text of Scripture be declared 3. That the Doctrine be applyed to the use of the Church which it hath in confirming true opinions or refuting errors in knowing of God our selves in exhorting in comforting in directing our life The way how to decide doubtful places of Scripture 1. To respect the Analogy of Faith that is to receive no Exposition which is against the ground of Doctrine that is against any Article of Faith or Commandment of the Decalogue or against any plain Testimony of Scripture 2. To examine the Antecedent and Consequent matter of that place which is in question 3. To resort to such places of Scripture as teach the same more clearly 4. To confer like places together where though the same words be not spoken of the same thing yet the like words and form of speaking are used of the like things 5. When the Controversie is thus judged we may lawfully also descend to the consent of the Church 6. An ardent and daily invocating of God that we may be guided and taught by his holy Spirit The two proper effects of the Scriptures are 1. To teach Doctrine 2 Tim. 3.16 By 1. Laying out of Truth 2. Confuting of Errors 2. To exhort out of it 1 Tim. 6.2 By 1. Stirring up to God 2. Turning back from evil The chief Graces which are obtained by the Scriptures 1. Vocation we are called by the Spirit inwardly and by the Word outwardly 2 Thess 2.14 2. Justification which is an action of God imputing the righteousness of Christ to us which is apprehended by Faith which cometh by hearing the word Rom. 10. 3. Sanctification for we are sanctified by the word of God Joh. 15.3 4. Knowledge which is by the word 1 Joh. 4.6 5. Faith which comes by hearing the word preached Rom. 10.17 6. Repentance Peter preached the word and converted three thousand Acts 2.38 41. 7. Hope for by patience and comfort of the Scriptures we have hope Rom. 15.4 8. Love for it cometh of God by his Word and Spirit 1 Joh. 4.7 The consideration of the Scriptures Author being God presents us with a fourfold use 1. That they want not nor stand in need of the confirmation and approbation of the Church or of men 2. That God himself who is the inspirer of them is the best interpreter of them and the sole and soveraign Judge thereof 2 Pet. 1.20 1 Cor. 2.10 11. 3. That the Minister must preach unto the people not the invention of his own brain not the conceits of his own wit not the excellency of words not the inticing speech of mans wisdom but in the plain evidence of the Spirit and of power 1 Cor. 11.23 1 Pet. 4.11 4. That it belongeth as a special duty to the people of God to receive reade study reverence obey and keep the Doctrines delivered in them forasmuch as they proceed from such an Author Heb. 2.2 3. All our words actions must be directed by this precious Word of God in the holy Scriptures which is also of a fourfold use much resembling the former 1. To teach us the perfection and All-sufficiency of the word of God not needing the rags of Popish Traditions to be patched unto it 2. To direct and inform the Ministers what to teach the people the people what to believe wherein to rest whereupon to build their Faith and to settle their Conscience 3. To reprove those that desperately rush on in the course of their life not caring what they do never consulting with God or resolving as from God or his Will 4. To admonish us to be careful how we reade the Scriptures to take profit by reading them that so we may have direction in all our ways and learn how to please God and to abstain from all things that do displease him The manifold use of the Scriptures appears by the admirable benefit of well using it there being no Error in judgement but may be refuted no Corruption in life but may be redressed not any true sound Doctrine but may be proved and maintained not any Vertue or Duty but may be warranted and the practical performance thereof directed hereby 2 Tim. 3.16 yea it is a light to the blinde a guide to the wanderer a comfort to the distressed a counsellor to the doubtful Ps 119. and a teacher to the unlearned Prov. 1.4 Lastly our Savior Christ the Prophets and Apostles all by the Spirit of God have here revealed unto us more then all the wise men of the world did ever know whence we have just reason to magnifie the Books of Scripture far above all humane writings the choycest whereof compared with this holy Writ are but waste Paper for these sacred Books fully set out unto us the nature and estate of true felicity when the profoundest Tract of humane works could never yet reach to the shadow thereof Let us therefore in reading hearing expounding conversing practising in every action that concerns this sacred Word always account of it as the Word of the Ever-living God and with the joynt powers and faculties both of soul and body maintain it against all devilish Atheists that in word or life deny it seducing Hereticks that corrupt it and all enemies that oppose it or rebelliously rise against the Scepter of it Lo here the sacred Oracle of God The just man's Anchor and the sinners Rod The lame man's Crutch the blinde man's Eye the Tree Of Life or Type of Immortality A Well of living Waters Drink of this And thou shalt thirst no more but after Bliss The depth whereof the Natural man ne're saw Pray then thou mayst have wherewithal to draw Heav'ns Library Gods Spirit th' Author Take heed Tempted Man with what Spirit thou dost read §. 3. The Law and Gospel THe Law of God is a Doctrine delivered of God at the Creation written in Adams heart published by the Ministery either of Angels or of men and afterward repeated and renewed of him by Moses and the Prophets teaching what we ought to do and what not to do binding reasonable Creatures always promising to perfect performers of obedience eternal life condemning eternally them who perform not this obedience except Remission be granted for the Mediators sake Before the Fall this Law was possible to all men as to Angels and if now it be
Gods love towards us That we shall be heard for Christ the Mediators sake And it hath the chief place among Good Works yielding us the greatest testimony of our Salvation by enabling us to perform other good Duties Or thus Prayer is a Petition joyned with an ardent and earnest desire whether uttered in words or not uttered whereby we ask of the true God revealed in his Word those things which he hath commanded to be asked of him proceeding from an acknowledgement of our necessity and misery with humility repentance and confession of our own unworthiness made in true conversion unto God and in a confidence and sure trust in Gods Promises for Christs sake our Mediator For the right understanding of which Promises this Rule must be remembred That the Promises of God are not made directly to the work of Prayer but to the person that prayeth and yet not to him simply as he doth this good action of Prayer but as he is in Christ for whose Merits sake the Promise is accomplished whereby it is most evident That our Prayer is not the cause of the blessings we receive from God but onely a way and instrument in and by which God conveyeth his blessings unto his children in whom is required in Prayer a special particular faith to apply to themselves the Promise of God concerning that thing which they ask in Prayer which special faith we can never bring with us in Prayer unless we have a special saving faith whereby we believe our reconciliation with God in Christ So that the unfained desire of a touched heart is a Prayer in acceptance before God though knowledge memory and utterance to frame and conceive a form of Prayer in words be wanting Psal 10.17 for Prayer is not a work of the memory or a work of the wit but the work of a sanctified heart it is the work of Gods Spirit the very essence whereof consisteth in making known the inward desires 1 Sam. 1.15 Psal 62.8 always in the mediation of Christ by reason of the infinite Majesty of God and sinfulness of the creature with awful fear and inward reverence manifested with seemly words if it be oral Prayer befitting our matter not over-curious nor careless with reverent Psal 95.2 6. and humble gesture Ezra 9.5 6. to express which kneeling is most proper Paul useth it Eph. 3.14 Acts 2.30 if we cannot conveniently kneel then stand so did the poor humble Publican when he prayed Luke 18.13 other gestures when no necessity requireth argue little reverence less humility we must also come in assurance of faith to be heard and accepted Heb. 10.22 Jam. 1.6 which is strengthned by meditation on the Promises concerning such things as we pray for 2 Sam. 7.27 28. which full assurance as a lusty gale of wind carrieth our Prayers with full fail to heaven the desired Haven wavering and doubting like opposite uncertain winds carry them to some other place and so they return without speeding The supplicant must also be lowly in minde and holy in life Isa 1.15 the blinde man knew God heard not impenitents Joh. 9.31 he must have a true understanding sense and earnest desire of what he prays for in sincerity of heart and fervency of spirit Jam. 5.16 for Prayer ascends no higher then faith and fervor of Spirit carry it Yet notwithstanding which earnestness and fervency in Prayer it may be no true Prayer as the wicked mans prayer made in his extremity which is termed but howling Hosea 7.14 So a thief is earnest with a Judge to spare him but this is but carnal earnestness Thus God takes our prayers by weight not by number not by labor not by earnestness which is a thing that may come from the flesh but if it come from his Spirit he accepts it and then though we may have a secret answer to our prayers yet may we wait long before the thing it self be given us but then God continues a secret strength to us that we may wait and hold out yea though we never have any request in this world granted yet we must think this sufficient that we can and do pray unto God for by whose Grace have we alway continued in prayer but by the gift and Grace of God God indeed answers some sooner some later some he answers quickly and some he defers longer but importunity will prevail with him so as thou shalt have Christ and after thou hast him thou must look to the Priviledges thou hast by him onely remembring as the priviledges thou hast by him so the condition of after-obedience For Prayer is the means which God hath sanctified to unlock the closet of his Graces and he being the Fountain of all Blessings if we use not Prayer aright it may be truly said to us as the woman of Samaria spoke Joh. 4.11 Thou hast nothing to draw with and the well is deep from whence therefore canst thou have that living water yea what the Lord did miraculously to Stephen when he opened the heavens and shewed himself to the outward view that he doth ordinarily to the Saints in prayer he shews himself to their mindes and inward affections Touching the time of Prayer if it be the secret and lifting up of the heart to God called Ejaculation then pray continually pray without ceasing Eph. 6. but if it be a set and solemn prayer either in private or in the Congregation the Word of God appoints no precise hour for this kinde because now there is no difference between time and time in regard of Conscience for performing the worship of God and the duties of Religion the Lords-day onely excepted In the New Testament the distinction of days and hours is taken away Paul was afraid of the Galatians because they made difference of days times moneths and years in respect of holiness and Religion Gal. 4. And as touching the place of Prayer in regard of Conscience Holiness and Religion all places are equal and alike in the New Testament since the coming of Christ the house or field is holy as the Church and if we pray in either of them as we ought our prayer is as acceptable to God as that which is made in the Church for now the days are come foretold by the Prophet Mal. 1.11 which Paul expounds 1 Tim. 2.8 yet nevertheless for order decency and quietness sake publike prayer is to be made in publike places as Churches and Chappels appointed for that use But undenyable it is that all places are alike in respect of Gods presence and of his hearing for he is Omnipresent wheresoever a man hath occasion to pray there God is which concerns them to consider who make the Church a more holy place for prayer then other-where and therefore reserve all or most of their prayers till they come thither forgetting that wheresover two or three of the faithful are gathered together there God is in the midst of them for now difference of place in respect of Gods presence is
and setting up the Opinions of their own hearts The three Heads whereby the Scriptures distinguish the true God from all false and feigned gods 1. That God is a Spiritual Essence Eternal of infinite power wisdom and goodness 2. That God did not onely make all things in six days of nothing but also that they are still preserved and governed by his wisdom and providence nothing coming to pass by Chance or Fortune 3. That God is perfectly just and perfectly merciful The whole Scripture may be divided into the Law and the Gospel somtimes called the Old and New Covenant both which make but one in substance though they are two in circumstances or administration So that the New agreeth with the Old in respect of God in these particulars 1. The same is the Author of both Covenants 2. The same parties are joyned in both Covenants that is God Man 3. The same is the Mediator of both Moses indeed is called the Mediator of the Old Testament but as a Type onely of the true Mediator Christ So that there is but one mean of reconcilement one faith one way of the salvation of all who have been or shall be saved even from the beginning of the world unto the end Heb. 13.8 4. The principal Conditions whereby we are bound unto God and which are called the substance of the Covenant are both before and after Christ all the same for in both God promises remission of sins to believing and repentant sinners in both men are bound to repent and believe Thus the Promise of Grace is in both the same that is Remission of sins the giving of the Holy Ghost or regeneration and life everlasting to be given by and for Christ the Mediator to those onely who believe understand it not in particular of the circumstances of grace but in general of grace it self which was promised How the old new Covenant differ in respect of God 1. In the Promises of Corporal benefits for in the Old they were special certain and definite in the New they are onely general 2. In a circumstance of the Promise of Grace for in the Old they were reconciled to God and for the Messias sake who should come or be exhibited we in the New are saved for him being come and exhibited 3. In the signs or symboles of the Promises in the Old were many and divers signs and Sacraments in the New few and plain even Baptism and the Supper of the Lord. 4. In the old Covenant were types and figures of good things to come and so all things were the more obscure and dark in the new is an accomplishment and exhibiting of these things and so all things more clear 5. In the Old the pouring out and effusion of the gifts of the Holy Ghost is more narrow and sparing in the New more large and plentiful 6. The Old was but for a time during until the coming of the Messias the New is for ever How the old and new Covenant differ in respect of men 1. In the Old the Church stood bound to the obedience of the whole Mosaical Law Moral Ceremonial Civil or Judicial in the New we are bound onely to the Spiritual or Moral worship and the use of the Sacraments 2. The Old was made and tyed to one certain Nation the people of Israel but the New belongeth to all Nations the Church is Catholick and Universal Such things as may rightly be gathered from the Scriptures are even as if they were written therein For in the Scriptures 1. Some things are not indeed and yet are said to be as that God sitteth that he hath eyes ears hands mouth and such like 2. Some things are indeed and yet are not said to be expresly so that though the same words be not there yet the Doctrine is as that the holy Ghost is God that he proceedeth equally from the Father the Son That there are two Sacraments That Christ is God of himself Consubstantial with the Father and yet indeed these are there plainly enough expressed though not in the self-same and just so many words 3. Some things neither are neither are said to be as that an Image and an Idol are things different in themselves 4. Some things are and are said to be as that there is one God and one Mediator between God and Man As the Scripture is the pure word of God so this word is onely properly and truly the right sense and meaning of the Scripture For except that be warily observed and carefully found out there may seem in some words to be matter 1. Of Falshood as when it is said That the Son knoweth not the day of Judgement Mat. 13.32 that is as he is Man 2. Of Heresie as that the Father is greater then the Son Joh. 14.28 Christ being taken again in the same sense 3. Of Contradiction as betwixt that which Christ said My Father is greater then I and that which the Apostle said that Christ Jesus thought it no robbery to be equal with God Phil. 2.6 in all which senses respect must be had to Christ either as he is Man or as he is God Hereticks and other wicked men falsifie the word of God four ways 1. By leaving out something of moment out of the Text. 2. By adding somewhat of their own which may make for them 3. By perverting it which they do two ways 1. By taking that literally which is meant figuratively 2. By taking that allegorically which was spoken properly 4. By misapplying or turning the places which they alledge to another thing then was intended by the Holy Ghost All sorts of men are bound to have knowledge in the Scripture for these Reasons 1. Because God hath appointed such as are Governors over others to be Teachers of them that belong to their charge therefore none ought to be without knowledge Eph. 6.4 Gen. 18.19 2. Ignorance is the cause of all error because the natural man perceiveth not the things that are of God 3. The want of knowledge is the cause of sundry fearful Judgements spiritual temporal Hos 4.4 6. both inward outward Is 1.3 7. The Scripture is difficult in four respects 1. In regard of the matter Many profound and deep mysteries are contained therein as the Trinity of persons in the Unity of the Deity and the Hypostatical Union of the two Natures of Christ in one person yet so plainly opened in Scripture as we may well believe these things to be so though we cannot fully conceive how they should be so 2. In regard of the maner of writing Many abstruse phrases are therein as divers Hebraisms Metaphors Allegories and other Tropes and Figures which by diligent study of the Scriptures and careful use of the means may be found out 3. In regard of the persons who reade them Natural men are not capable of the things of the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2.14 he that is Spiritual discerneth all things 1 Cor. 2.15 for God
giveth unto him the Spirit of revelation Eph. 1.17 4. In regard of the maner of searching them for if men cursorily carelesly reade the Scripture no marvel if they understand little or nothing thereof The Reasons why the Scripture is in some respects difficult 1. To declare unto man his natural blindeness and to suppress all self-conceit for by the Mystery of the Word the wisdom of man is found to be foolishness 2. To keep holy things from dogs and so to make a difference betwixt the childe of the kingdom and the wicked 3. To maintain the divine Ordinance of Preaching and Expounding the Scriptures 4. To raise up in us an appetite after the Word and an high esteem of it and to keep us from loathing it By the perspicuity of it we are kept from starving and by the difficulty of it from loathing it 5. To stir us up diligently to study and search the Scriptures and carefully to use the means whereby we may finde out the hidden treasure in it 6. To make us to call upon him who is the Author of the Scripture to give us the Spirit of Revelation and not to reade or hear the Word without faithful and earnest prayer For our help in the finding out of the true sense of the Scripture there are divers profitable means As 1. Understanding of the Original Tongues because divers Errors and Heresies have been drawn from Translations and every language hath some kindes of speech proper to it self 2. Skill in the Arts whereby proper and figurative speeches and phrases may be discerned and distinguished and the true construction of words with the just consequents of arguments may be discern'd 3. Knowledge of the Analogy of Faith that is of the fundamental points of our Christian Religion that no sense be made contrary to any of them 4. Observation of the scope of that place which is interpreted and of the circumstances going before and following after 5. Comparing one place with another as the obscure places with the perspicuous Thus the meaning of many Types and Prophesies in the Old Testament may be understood by the application of them in the New 6. Prayer for thereby the Spirit of Revelation is obtained Eph. 1.17 7. Faith and obedience in to Gods word so far as it is made known The four graces needful to use the Scriptures aright 1. Knowledge whereby in all things that we do we may be able to judge what is the good will of God what is pleasing and acceptable to him Rom. 12.2 Eph. 5.17 This knowledge is attained by diligent reading of the word by meditation on what we reade by a reverend conferring thereof and by a careful humble attention to the preaching thereof 2. Wisdom which teacheth us rightly to apply the word and that both in the true sense and meaning of that particular place which we alledge and also according to the present matter for which it is alledged otherwise we pervert the Scripture to our own destruction 2 Pet. 3.16 3. Faith whereto the power of the Scriptures is restrained for the Word is the power of God to every one that believeth Rom. 1.16 without this all knowledge all wisdom is in vain 4. Obedience for in Religion a man knoweth no more then he practiseth Happy onely which so know as to do what they know John 13.17 by neither carelesly neglecting that which is commanded nor by preposterously doing that which is forbidden The Scripture contains matter concerning all sorts of persons things which may be reduced to these 5 Heads 1. Touching Religion and the right worship of God they teach how to serve him and what to believe of God or Man 1. Touching God that he is one in Essence and three in persons 2. Touching our selves 1. That by Creation we were made good holy and righteous 2. That by our Fall we are become wretched by reason of sin and not able of our selves to think one good thought or to stir one foot forward toward the Kingdom of heaven 3. That by Regeneration we are born again and made the Sons of God by Adoption and by faith we lay hold on Christ our Wisdom our Sanctification our Righteousness our Redemption 3. Touching the Church That it is the company of the Faithful that have been from the beginning By them also are we led to know the two Sacraments and what to believe of the general Judgement that shall be of the godly and ungodly 2. Touching Kingdoms and Commonwealths and touching the Duties of Magistrates and Subjects they inform us how the one ought to rule and the other to obey and neither the one nor the other do their duties for conscience till the Word inform them 3. Touching Families and Houshold-affairs in which are Husband and Wife Parents and Children Masters and Servants no duty required of them is omitted but all contained herein 4. Touching the private life of every particular person how to behave our selves in the whole course of our life 5. Touching the common life of all men we learn in them how to lead our lives in every estate whether we be rich or poor whether we be high or low we can be in no estate but we shall finde sufficient store of heavenly precepts and examples to teach us the way wherein we should walk The way to profit by the Scriptures 1. We must have recourse by prayer to God the Author of the Scriptures he onely is able to unlock them and so to bring us into the secret chamber of his presence 2. We must keep such order in the reading of them as may stand with our Calling and state of life and take all opportunity to do it redeeming this day what we omitted the last 3. We must understand to what ends uses they were written as 1. To teach that we may learn the Truth 2. To improve that we may be kept from error 3. To correct that we may be driven from vice 4. To instruct that we may be setled in the way of well-doing 5. To comfort that in trouble we may be confirmed in patience and hope of an happy issue 4. We are to remember that the Scriptures contain matter concerning all sorts of persons and things 5. We must have the Doctrine of the Scriptures plentifully dwelling in us not in the mouth but seated in the heart that we may be able to rise up being fallen to stand in the truth to continue unto the end The several kindes of neglecters of the Scriptures and consequently self-enemies to their own souls 1. Such as care not to reade it or hear it at all of all Books they least respect the Bible 2. Such as seldom reade it having fair bound Bibles onely to keep them company at Church 3. Such as reade much but do onely reade never search the Scripture to finde out the true sense and meaning thereof 4. Such as reade and seek out the true sense also but onely to understand the truth of the
God 5. A true ardent desire of those things which are to be asked else we are hypocrites 6. A thorough sense and feeling of our own wants else we pray not at all 7. Lowliness of minde self-denyal impartially weighing our own baseness Humiliation that is true Repentance 1. Because God oweth us nothing 2. We are his enemies before our conversion 8. A considence and full perswasion of being heard for the Mediators sake Heb. 10.22 To this purpose meditate on the Promises 9. In fear before prayer meditating on the excellency and glory of God in prayer holding our hearts close with God that they wander not 10. With seemly words befitting the matter not strained nor careless 11. With reverent submiss and humble gesture 12. In holiness of life for the prayer of a righteous man availeth much Jam. 5.6 yea the prayer of a faithful man is more forcible then the power of a whole Army witness Moses against Amalek Exo. 17.11 13. In sincerity of heart and with fervency of Spirit even an hungring thirsting and longing desire Other conditions in an acceptable Prayer to be observed viz. 1. We must ask while the time of Grace and Mercy remaineth for if the day of Grace be once passed we shall be excluded with the foolish Virgins Mat. 25.8 9. Now the time whilest God offers mercy to us in his Word is the acceptable time this is the day of Grace 2. We must not ask as seemeth good unto our selves but according to Gods will and as his word alloweth lest we be denyed with the sons of Zebedee for asking we know not what Mat. 20.22 3. We must not doubt of Gods granting us those things which we ask according to his will for the wavering minded man shall receive nothing of God Jam. 1.5 6. 4. We must refer the time and maner of Gods accomplishing our requests to his good pleasure lest with the Israelites we seem to limit the Holy One of Israel Rules to be observed that we may conceive aright of God in Prayer 1. We must not conceive him in the form of any earthly or heavenly bodily or Spiritual creature whatsoever for thus not to conceive him is a degree of conceiving him aright We must not frame in our mindes any Image of God at all as that he should be like unto man or any other creature but we must conceive of him both in his works as our Creator Governor and Preserver and also in his properties as most wise most just most holy merciful c. Thus we may better conceive of him by his Works and Attributes then by his Nature 2. We must conceive that God is one in Substance and three in Persons We must not confound the Persons nor divide the Substance but conceive of one God in three Persons and three Persons in one and the same Godhead so he must not be conceived absolutely that is out of the Trinity but as he subsisteth in the Person of the Father Son and Holy Ghost 3. When we direct our prayers or any worship to any one Person of the Trinity we must include the rest in the same worship yea further we must retain in minde the distinction and order of all the three Persons without severing or sundring them The whole Trinity hath a work in this holy exercise of Prayer For The Holy Ghost frameth our Requests Rom. 8.26 The Son offereth them up unto the Father Rev. 8.3 The Father accepteth them thus framed and offered Rom. 8.27 The helps of preparation to Prayer viz. 1. Meditation 1. Of the Majesty of God to whom we pray 2. Of the matter of our prayers which are for Temporal things Spiritual things Eternal things 3. Of our own corruption and want of Grace 2. A stedfast belief to perswade our selves that there is a God one in Essence three in Persons rewarding those that call upon him and whereby we lay hold on Christ assuring our selves of the power goodness mercy and bounty of God Heb. 11.6 Before Prayer these things are necessary 1. Repentance and after sins committed a still renewed repentance 2. Reconciliation if need require to our brother 3. Preparation in heart and minde as one that is to speak familiarly with God in which preparation these things are required 1. The minde is to be emptied of all carnal and worldly thoughts 2. A consideration of the things to be asked 3. A lifting up of the heart to God 4. The heart must be touched with a reverence of the Majesty of God The impediments to be removed before we can pray 1. Pride for God abhors the proud Prov. 16.5 he hears them not Job 35.12 2. An absenting our selves from the word a careless and negligent hearing the same a deriding scorning and contempt of it Prov. 28.9 Zech. 7.13 3. Cruelty oppression and unmercifulness towards the poor Pro. 21.13 4. All corrupt affections as anger malice hatred discord wrath envy 1 Pet. 3.5 6 7. 5. A delight in sin taking pleasure in it and making a sport of wickedness Psal 66.16 Special Duties required in the act of Prayer 1. Our prayer must be the speech of the soul and heart not of the tongue onely Psal 25.1 2. In the minde the right understanding of what we ask Mat. 20.22 3. In the heart 1. Reverence in regard of Gods Majesty Mal. 1.6 2. Humility in regard of our own unworthines Gē 18.27 Ps 51.17 4. Every Petition must proceed from a lively sense of our poverty specially in Spiritual matters with an earnest desire to have them supplied Acts 237. 5. Every Petition must proceed from a saving and a justifying faith being fully perswaded in our hearts that God both can and will grant our requests Jam. 1.6 7. 6. Every Petition must be grounded on Gods word and not framed to the carnal conceit and fancy of mans brain and be onely for good things 1 Joh. 5.14 7. Our Prayer must in the name merit and mediation of Christ alone be presented to God alone not to Saints Angels the Virgin Mary or any other creature 8. We must pray by the help of the Spirit it must be the voyce of Gods Spirit speaking in our Spirit Rom. 8.26 9. We must pray for our brethren as well as for our selves for our enemies as well as our friends Mat. 5.44 10. Our Prayers must be without vain repetitions much babling and wandring thoughts 11. Every Petition must be made in obedience that is we must have a Commandment enjoyning us to ask the thing we pray for and a Promise to assure us that it shall be granted and yet here this Caveat must be remembred That we leave both the time and the maner of accomplishing our requests to the good pleasure and wisdom of God 12. There must be instancy in the act of Prayer and perseverance till the thing asked be granted 13. Every true Prayer must have in it some thanksgiving unto God for his benefits received It appears from what hath been said That in Prayer these
five things are necessarily to be looked into 1. The affection of him that prayeth viz. he must be sensible of his wants and sins 2. The causes of Invocation whereof Gods Command is the chiefest 3. Who is to be prayed unto viz. God onely not Saints nor Angels 4. In and through whose name and mediation we are to pray that is in the name and mediation of Christ onely 5. What we are to pray for viz. Blessings Temporal Spiritual Eternal To the affection of him that prayeth is required 1. That he divest himself of all vain thoughts of his own worth 2. That by a stedfast faith his soul be inflamed as it were all afire to pray 3. That he be truly sensible of his own wants 4. That he prostrate himself before the Lord in true penitence 5. That his prayer be serious and persevering The causes of Invocation are 1. The Command of God who hath required this service from us 2. The Promise of God for the hearing of the prayers of such as cry unto him 3. The sense of our own misery and wants with the distress of the whole Church 4. Our victory over temptations 5. That our heart by the use of prayer may be inflamed after the true worship of God 6. The example of Christ and all the Saints whose greatest care was to call upon God God onely is the true object of prayer and is alone to be prayed unto for these Reasons 1. He onely knoweth Jer. 17.10 whether our desires come from the heart or onely from the teeth outward and so knoweth whether it be true prayer or no. 2. He onely is every where present Jer. 23.23 in all places to hear the suits of all persons 3. He onely is Almighty Jer. 32.27 able to grant what suit soever we shall ask God onely not Angel Saint nor any other Creature is to be prayed unto and that for these Reasons viz. 1. We must pray to none but to whom we say Our Father Mat. 6.9 2. In whom alone we must believe to him alone must we pray Rom. 10.14 3. To whom alone and onely we can ascribe Omnipresence Omnipotency Omnisciency and the like to him alone must we pray 1 Tim. 2.8 4. It is the Commandment of God himself that we should serve and worship him alone Mat. 4.10 5. No creature can be helpful to any other further then God suffereth and enableth it 6. It is no sufficient ground to move us to call upon a creature because it may be helpful for then any unreasonable creatures might be prayed unto which is a most unreasonable thing for any reasonable man to do 7. Difference must be made between Civil and Divine religious prayer which is made to God alone with assurance of faith and perswasion of Divine Attributes in him together with religious Adoration which is proper to the Divine Majesty Rev. 19.10 and to be performed to no creature neither Angel Rev. 22.9 nor Man Acts 10.26 But Civil prayer is that which is made onely in civil respects requesting that of man which we are perswaded he is able to help us in This is not properly Prayer Christ must be prayed unto in a double respect 1. As God the giver of all good things together with the Father and the Holy Ghost 2. As a Mediator and Intercessor that in and through him we may be heard that he would pray the Father for us and that he would prefer unto him all our sighs and petitions For he is a Priest for ever Psal 110. The things to be asked in Prayer are 1. Spiritual which we are to pray for without any exception or condition 2. Temporal with this condition If it be Gods will and pleasure so also in things Spiritual less necessary to Salvation as Hope Joy in the feeling of Gods mercy in distress c. Though corporal and other things not simply necessary to Salvation are not simply to be prayed for yet conditionally for these Reasons 1. That the desire of corporal things may be an exercise of our faith and confirm our trust and confidence of obtaining things Spiritual and available to Salvation 2. That we may consider and confess the providence of God that nothing befals us by chance or fortune The Reasons why God would have us obtain by Prayer what he hath determined to give 1. That we may be kept in some fear reverence of him 2. That he may the more declare his love by hearing our complaints 3. That we may be the better acquainted with his excellent majesty 4. That we may give him the acknowledgement of all good things God useth to grant our Prayers two ways 1. By giving the very thing it self we ask 2. By giving something answerable thereto when not the thing it self God never grants some mens requests for these Reasons viz. 1. Because they make their prayers but not according to his will either failing in the time as did the foolish virgins Mat. 25.11 12. or in the thing they ask as did the sons of Zebedee Mat. 20.22 2. Because they doubt and waver in prayer for such shall receive nothing of the Lord Jam. 1.6 7. 3. Because they ask it for wrong ends as not so much to promote Gods honor thereby as to consume it on their own lusts Jam. 4.5 So God sometimes defers his answer for these Reasons 1. When we ask amiss which may be done though the heart be right as out of mistake or out of want of judgement though it may be the intention be good 2. When we are not fitted for mercies yet God then tenders us in the case we are in 3. To make us pray the more fervently and to make us prize his blessings the higher 4. When it crosseth some other secret passage of Gods providence 5. To keep us in humility and prevent Spiritual pride thus Paul was denyed the removing of the buffeting of Satan Though God knows our wants before we pray yet ought we to pray for we pray not to inform the Lord of our wants but for other causes as 1. To stir up our hearts to seek unto Gods presence and favor 2. To exercise our faith in the meditation of Gods Promises 3. To ease our woful hearts by pouring them out unto the Lord. 4. To testifie our obedience unto Gods Commandments and our trust in his Providence for the receiving every good thing we desire Our reverence in prayer must shew it self 1. In the holy disposition of the heart and affections toward the Lord when the minde is not carried away with by thoughts but applieth it self wholly and onely to the present service it hath in hand 2. In the comely gesture of the body beseeming so holy an action done to so high a Majesty 3. In the humble and reverent uttering of our requests having before-hand well considered the things we are to utter before God It is necessary that the Spirit should pray and so we pray in the Spirit for these Reasons 1. In regard of
Pet. 1.12 much more doth it concern us to be diligent searchers out of this mystery in the Gospel 2. The Angels are maintainers of true Religion and of the worship of God for the Law was given by Angels Gal. 3.19 they brought the Apostles out of prison to preach the Gospel they are enemies to Idolatry Rev. 19.10 Herein also let us be their followers 3. The Angels were always nigh unto Christ at his Nativity Luke 2.9 10. in his temptation Mat. 4.11 in his Agony Luke 22.43 in his Resurrection Mat. 28.2 and Ascension Acts 1.10 And so should we perform unto Christ all the service we can 4. They are alway praising and lauding the Name of God so should we labor to have our hearts enlarged for his glory and our mouthes filled with his praises 5. They be serviceable for our good if we be Gods children though they be far better then we are Heb. 1.14 So must we imploy our selves in soul body calling credit and all we have for the good of men 6. They are joyful when sinners are converted from sin unto God Luke 15.10 and are grieved when men by sin dishonor God the like affections should be in us for in the world to come we shall be like the Angels in heaven in glory Mat. 22.30 This patern of Angelical obedience here propounded for our imitation must teach us 1. To acknowledge and bewail the natural hardness deadness and untowardness of our hearts in yielding obedience to the will of God 2. To bewail the want of sincerity and faithfulness in doing Gods will our maimed and defective obedience shews how far we come short of this Angelical example Many content themselves with the outward service of the body and never regard the inward worship of the heart and others have respect to outward duties of piety that concern God but for uprightness and mercy towards men they little regard This the Angels do not This Angelical example informs our judgement what honor we are to give to the blessed Angels namely the honor of imitation and not of any divine worship for when John would have worshipped the Angel he forbade him saying See thou do it not worship God Rev. 19.10 From all which let us be perswaded to begin our heaven upon earth by resembling though not equalling the Angels in obedience that so with them and all the Host of Heaven we may sincerely say Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven How many say Gods will be done and yet The Idol of their own Will-worship set In stead thereof How many vainly say In Prayer what they practice to unpray Or with the words conclude the work as though The will of God were done by saying so Help Lord for of our selves we proudly draw Back from thy Will and make our own a Law Assist us by the Spirit of thy Son To keep thy Law then shall Thy will be done §. 8. Give us this day our daily bread UNder the name of Bread by that usual figure Synecdoche our Savior Christ compriseth not onely all corporal blessings and such as are necessary for this life but also the profitable use of them Give us that is Bestow bless and sanctifie all temporal necessary good things unto us Sanctifie all outward comforts unto us which by reason of sin stand accursed that they may not be a destruction to us in the use of them as we deserve Bestow uphold continue and maintain that which thou hast given us Bless make prosperous and wholesom our meats and drinks for the strengthning of our bodies and refreshing our Spirits so as we may be enabled in the strength of thy blessing to serve thee in our Callings as thou hast commanded This day that is we desire not such abundance for so long a time as whereby our dependance upon thee should be cut off but to be content with things necessary for the present and to wait upon thee for the future from day to day Daily bread that is Bread for our substance such as Nature doth require to uphold it no dainties or costly feastings but onely necessary food and cloathing whereby the substance of our bodies may be continued and not pine away Our daily bread that is not the bread the clothes the substance of another but such things honestly gotten by our labor through Gods blessing upon us according to the Apostle 2 Thess 3.2 And the wealthiest in the world may not think himself too rich to beg this daily bread for he knows not ere the day pass to what extremity with Job he may be brought This Petition followeth immediately Thy will be done because to have things necessary for our maintenance is a stay and help unto us the more chearfully to do the will of God and keeps us from unlawful enterprizes and because the Rule of seeking things temporal must not be our own but the will of God So likewise this Petition in order is placed before this Forgive us our Trespasses not for that the things of this life are to be sought before those that concern the life to come for this is forbidden Joh. 6.27 but to provide against our infirmities whereby we distrust God for food raiment and worldly deliverances when we profess that we believe in him for the remission of sin and deliverance from damnation and to provide for the strengthning of our faith touching things eternal by ascending from these his gifts below wherein we taste of his goodness daily By which order we are taught to consider the corruption of mans Nature which ought in the first place to seek things Spiritual but because we live rather by Sense then by Faith we do principally desire things corporal Again hereby appears Christs mercy unto man in that by this order he descendeth to our infirmity who rather depend on him for the pardon of our sins then trust him for our provision in this life which argues we are but of little faith Matth. 9.5 Lastly by this order we are taught to depend upon him for the forgiveness of our sins for when we see that he is here so careful for our bodies he will doubtless be more careful to provide for the good of our souls Rom. 8.32 The Reasons why in this Petition Christ addeth This day 1. To meet with our distrustfulness and covetousness and to reclaim us from both these vices 2. That we should depend on him onely as yesterday so this day as this day so to morrow and for ever 3. That the exercise of faith and prayer may be always continued in us The Reasons why Christ calleth it Daily bread 1. Because he will have us daily to desire as much as may for every day suffice us 2. Because he will bridle our raging and endless lusts and desires for we are not to be inordinately careful for any thing but to depend upon Gods Providence 3. Because he will have us to know That as we expect daily our supportance from God
it self to be God 2. Against those who imagine the Creatures either all or some to spring from the very Essence or Nature of God deriving it self as they speak into others by propagation 3. That all prophane unworthy and idolatrous cogitations of God may be excluded 4. Because there can neither be nor be imagined any similitude between a finite and an Infinite Nature 6. Incomprehensible or Immense for 1. He cannot be comprehended in the cogitation of any creature 2. The Deity cannot be comprehended or circumscribed in place in space or any limits that is his Essence is Immense neither to be extended nor divided nor multiplied Therefore it is all every where one and the same 7. Most perfect in himself 1. Because he onely hath all things which may be desired to perfect felicity and glory 2. Because he receiveth no part of this most absolute felicity from any other but hath all things in himself and of himself and is alone sufficient to himself for all things 3. Because he is not for himself onely but also for the creating preserving guiding and furnishing of all and every Creature so sufficiently that he alone doth give to all of them all good things meet and necessary for them as well eternal and heavenly as terrene and temporal neither yet doth depart from any part of his power or his happiness 8. Unchangeable 1. His Essence and whatsoever is proper thereto cannot be augmented or diminished 2. His Nature and Will cannot be changed 3. Himself hath no need to transport himself from place 9. Omnipotent 1. That whatsoever he will or whatsoever not impairing his Nature or Majesty he is able to will he is also able to perform 2. That he is able to perform all those things without any difficulty or labor even with his onely beck and will 3. That all the force and power of working and effecting any thing is so in God onely that there is not the least ability or efficacy of any Creature but what he continually imparteth and preserveth at his pleasure The five Properties of God which ought to stir us up to obey him contained in the Exhortation to obedience annexed to the second Commandment 1. He calleth himself our God that is our Maker and Savior and the Author of all good things hereby advertising us what execrable unthankfulness it is to revolt from the true worshipping of him unto Idolatry 2. Mighty that is in power as well to punish the obstinate as to reward the obedient 3. A jealous God that is a most sharp defender of his own Honor wonderfully displeased with such a revolt from him or violate and impair his Worship and Honor. 4. He calleth himself A God which visiteth the sins c. whereby he encreaseth his anger to take vengeance of the Ancestors sins in their Posterity even to the fourth degree and descent if they partake with the sins of their Ancestors 5. He saith that He is a God which sheweth mercy unto Thousands c. here he extendeth his punishments unto the fourth Generation but his mercy unto Thousands thereby to signifie That he had rather shew Mercy then Anger and so by this means to allure us the more to love him and worthily excluded is that man who abuseth such Infinite Mercy The use we are to make of the description of God 1. As God is a Spirit let us worship him in Spirit and abhor Images and Idols 2. As he is a Spirit let us not be offended or stumble at this That we never see him calling it therefore into question whether he be or not when we are Spiritual we shall see him as he is Joh. 3.4 3. Let us acknowledge from whence we have our being and life Acts 17.28 4. As he is Infinite let us in no place adventure to sin on any vain conceit because it is secret for wheresoever we be God is present 5. As he is most Holy let us prefer Holiness as the greatest excellency without which no man shall see God 6. As he is onely wise let no man use his wit secretly and closely to contrive evil against his brother or by any unlawful policy to circumvent him 7. As he is most Just let no man presume to go on in sin hoping for mercy without repentance 8. As he is most Merciful let no man that is cast down for his sins despair 9. As he is Almighty let us fear him and put our whole trust in him in all times of danger and distress 10. As of whose days there is no beginning nor ending let us be humbled in the Consideration of Gods Eternity seeing our selves are so momentary The Attributes of God are the main Supporters of our faith as thus 1. His Holiness makes the believer approach before him in an utter abnegation of himself and in the mediation of Christ knowing that in himself he is all over polluted and defiled with sin 2. His Wisdom makes the Believer subject to God in all estates of prosperity and adversity even against his own sense and natural Reason knowing that God is wisest and best knoweth what estate is fittest for him 3. His Truth makes the Believer judge him who hath promised that which he believeth to be faithful and true he that believeth hath sealed that God is true Joh. 3.33 4. His Power makes the Believer assent to the possibility of performance of those Promises which God hath made to his children of things which seem impossible 5. His Mercy makes the Believer believe the pardon of his sins being fully perswaded that he is infinite rich in mercy otherwise he could not believe the pardon of his sins When we read in Scripture of eyes ears mouth face hands heart head arms and feet ascribed to God we must not imagine that God is like unto us or hath a bodily shape whereas he is a Spirit or that these parts are ascribed to him properly but only for our better capacity and understanding signifying unto us his gracious Attributes as by his eyes his Omnipresence by his mouth his Word by his hands his Providence by his arms his Power and by his face 1. The invisible Nature and Essence of God Exod. 33.23 which no mortal man can see and live 2. The Favor of God as also all his Benefits Deliverances and Graces Dan. 9.17 Psal 80.3 3. Revenge and Punishment and the signs of his Anger Lev. 20.3 4. The place of Gods Worship where his face and favor is perceived through delivery of the Doctrine of Godliness From this was Cain banished Genesis 4.14 Hereof David complains 2 Sam. 26.49 Now to believe in God Almighty is to be believe in such a one 1. Who is able to do whatsoever he will 2. Who doth all things even with his beck and word onely without any difficulty 3. Who alone hath power to work all things and is Author of that power which is in all his Creatures 4. Who is also unto me Almighty and both can and will
consent as were to be wished For the dissent of Opinions touching the same they may be all comprised in these viz. 1. Some hold the words He descended into Hell meerly literally that is into the place of the damned or some lower place thereabout They which understand it of the place of the damned say That he went thither to triumph over all the damned ghosts and devils as a most glorious Conqueror both of Death and Hell the most powerful Enemies or that as God onely and not Man he descended powerfully and effectually but not personally into Hell and that the Deity exhibited it self as it were present in the infernal parts to the terror of the Devil and other damned Spirits They which understand it of some place thereabout say That he went thither and that by a local descension as the Papists assirm to deliver the Fathers and Patriarchs that were detained as they dream for their Original sin in Limbo The grounds pretended for both are alleaged out of Eph. 4.9 1 Pet. 3.19 Psal 16.10 Acts 2.25 But they that stand for Limbo alleage Heb. 9.8 11.39 2. Others hold them literally but expound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Grave saying That he dyed and was buried that is anointed to the Burial and descended into the Sepulchre 3. Others interpreting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Grave make the descent figurative thus He descended into Hell that is remained in the grave until the third day these suppose he descended into Hell as Man onely and that as some think in Body onely as when death as it were prevailed over him lying in the grave as others deem in Soul onely when he went unto the place of the Reprobate to the encreasing of their torments 4. Others interpret it as an Idiom or phrase peculiar to the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He descended into Hell that is was in the state of the dead for thus the Greeks were wont to speak of a man departed whether good or bad This Opinion takes best 5. Others hold it to be meerly figuratively spoken That Christ descended into Hell as God and Man in one person That in Body and Soul he went as it were into Hell when upon the Cross and elswhere he suffered the terrors and torments prophesied of Isa 5.3 6 10. Psal 116.2 and mentioned Mat. 26.38 or 27.46 Luke 22.42 when he suffered the torments of Hell viz. The anger of God against the sins of all the Elect poured forth upon his Soul driving him into that bloody Agony in the Garden and making him on the Cross cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me This Opinion takes with many Now of all these that which stands for Limbo must not remain unexpunged as by reason of sundry positive Reasons of Scripture to the contrary so also in regard of the impertinency of the places alleaged How Christs temporal punishment is said to be equivalent to eternal 1. In respect of the worthiness of the person for it was the onely begotten natural Son of God that did suffer 2. For the grievousness of the punishment because he sustained the torments and sense of the wrath of God and the horror of death for the whole world Psal 118.5 Hence it was that Christ so trembled at his death when many Martyrs have entertained an ordinary death without it The use of this Doctrine of Christs Passion teacheth us That sin is most of all to be eschewed by us which could not be expiated but by the death of the Son of God That we ought to be thankful for this his so great a benefit of unspeakable grace and favor bestowed on us and that all our sins how many how great and how grievous soever they be are expiated and done away by the death alone of Christ Yet know That whereas it is frequently affirmed in Scripture That Christ dyed for all it is not meant generally for every particular person but restrictively for all sorts of people that is for Believers of all sorts both of Jews and Gentiles Behold the Son of God come from the Womb Vnto the Cross to drop into the Tomb He that is Life Eternal the Most High And Mighty Lord of Life vouchsafes to dye He that fills Heaven and Earth is pleas'd to have His lodging in a Cradle and a Grave Blinde Jews before your Day was turn'd to Night At Noon ye could not see for too much light Gentiles believe or know this for no news Your Sins will prove new Crucifying Jews §. 6. The third day he rose again from the Dead He ascended into Heaven and there he sitteth at the right hand of God TO believe in Christ risen from the dead is to believe that he shook off death from himself quickned his dead body reunited his body unto his soul restored unto himself a blessed celestial and glorious life and that by his own proper power And I also believe That he therefore rose again from the dead that he might make us partakers of his Righteousness Sanctification and Glorification which he hath purchased for us by his merit This is that Holy One of whom David prophesied that He should not see corruption Psal 16.10 who but a little before his death told his Disciples himself that The third day he would rise again Mark 9.31 10.34 The accomplishment of which Truth stands on sacred Record both by his appearing after that he was risen from death to life to Mary Magdalen Joh. 20.14 to divers women Mat. 28.9 to two Luke 24.13 15. to ten Joh. 20.19 to all the Disciples to more then five hundred at once 1 Cor. 15.6 to sundry persons by the space of forty days together Acts 1.3 and by the testimony also of the Apostles Peter Acts 1.22 and Paul Acts 17.2 3. So that whoever is a perverse Sadduce to this Truth strikes at the very Root of the Christian Religion He ascended into Heaven that is he being revived from the dead his soul coming again into his body walking here a while upon the Earth for the space of forty days eating and drinking sometimes with his Disciples not for any need of sustenance but for the more assurance of his Resurrection and offering his body to be felt and handled comforting and instructing them and then in the open sight of them all he went up body and soul into the Heavens they looking and marvelling at it This was foretold by David Psal 68.18 and by Christ himself John 14.2 20.17 was prefigured in Enoch Gen. 5.24 and in Elias 2 Kings 2. and witnessed Acts 1.22 Eph. 4.10 so that Christs Ascension is a local true real and visible Ascension Translation or removing of Christs body from Earth into Heaven which is above all visible Heavens to Gods right hand where he now is and whence he shall come to Judgement Acts 1.11 This his Ascension must be understood of his Humanity onely for his Divinity was always in Heaven And there he sitteth at Gods right hand
yet be a sound true and saving Faith it is not the difference of degrees and measure that takes away the nature of it For Faith in regard of the extent of it admits degrees not because the Habit is encreased but because the Revelations and Objects are more and therefore those poor Christians that are yet ignorant may have a true habit and as true a Grace in the heart And though a man be more conversant in the Scripture knows more then they hath more Revelations and in that sense though he hath a greater Faith then the other yet the other hath a like precious Faith with him in regard of that Grace Nor do Infirmities break the Covenant betwixt God and those that have once taken Christ and have true Faith though in the least degree Now in Taking Christ the stronger the Will is by how much stronger Assent the Minde and Understanding gives to those Truths which concern Justification delivered in the Scripture And we must labor to believe hard things like Abraham or easie things propounded with slender Arguments like Nathaniel for if we believe in difficult cases God will make us with facility to believe them another time We must labor for the extent of Faith for the multitude of Revelations to be filled full of Faith as Barnabas is said to be and this is by studying the Word much for therein will God reveal this This Faith is the Mother of all Sanctifying Graces for by it we are ingrafted into Christ and so live the life of Faith the life of God the fruits of Faith are almost infinite for all the several and distinct branches of Piety and Charity if they be rightly performed are fruits of Faith And where there is a true Faith there is a secret perswasion wrought in the heart whereby God assures us that he is ours and we are his for we may know and be assured that Christ dyed for us and Redeemed us in particular if we can finde in our selves that we have true Faith in Christ and true Repentance for all sins And we may be assured of our Vocation if through the Mystery of the Word seconded and made powerful by Gods Spirit we are quite altered and changed from our former evil lives and have attained unto Faith and Repentance And we may be further assured That we are Redeemed and are the children of God if we finde that we have the Spirit of God dwelling in us which if we want we are none of Gods which if we have it will appear by the fruits of the Spirit in us for as Exercise begets Health and we are made fit by Health for Exercise or as Acts beget Habits and Habits are means to exercise those Acts so Assurance grounded upon the Promise enableth enlargeth and encreaseth Sanctification and Sanctification encreaseth Assurance but first see Faith and then the other as fruits of it Now Faith is wrought in us thus The Spirit comes and shews Christ to us and not onely the profit we have by him but the beauty and excellency of him it shews us what Grace is and makes us love it and then shews us Mercy Out of this we come to long after Christ and to say I would I had him Now to this work he addes a second Christ comes and tells a man I will have thee he comes and shews himself discovers himself and speaks plainly to him I am willing to marry thee Now the longing Soul hearing those glad tidings embraces the motion and the work is done We may know whether this Faith be wrought in us by reflecting upon our own hearts and considering what actions have passed through it for the works of Faith are manifest And we must use Faith in comforting our selves for whatsoever Christ hath by Nature we have it by Grace when we have Faith if he be a Son we are Sons if he be an Heir we are Heirs c. yea Faith makes a man regardless of all earthly things Those that have Faith are able to use it of themselves but many have it that do not use it and though God doth work in us all the work of Faith as it is received yet know He doth not work in us onely but by us he makes us Instruments yea we shall be called to an account for the Talent of Faith if we have it and use it not and if we use it not we shall have little enough o● it for the using of it is that which strengthneth Faith and makes it effectual Now that we are saved by Faith appears from these places of Scripture Joh. 3.16 Rom. 1.16 3.28 Eph. 2.8 Mark 16.16 Rev. 21.8 2 Thess 2.11 12. Gal. 3.7 9. Luke 7.50 Yet know That a man is not saved by Faith simply as it is Faith for it doth not in its own nature merit Salvation but it is said to save us in respect of its Object which is Christ not as it is a gift quality or property but as it is an Instrument to apprehend and apply this Object so that we are saved by Faith as an Instrument not for Faith as a Cause So Faith alone is said to justifie us but that Faith which is alone without other Graces doth not justifie us neither were ever any justified by Faith without Works For Faith is not onely a Perswasion that our sins are forgiven but also a thorough Repenting that our sins may be forgiven not onely a Perswasion that the Promises are true but a Holiness of living that we may have a share in those Promises not onely a Perswasion that the Scripture is true but an Obedience to Gods Will revealed therein not onely a Perswasion that Christ dyed for my sins but also such an uprightness of walking as that I crucifie him not again by my Lusts for Faith doth not onely work a good meaning in us but it doth work power in us to do good and to mortifie our affections for where Christ dwells indeed he gives power against sin and that by his Spirit and where the Understanding is fully convinced the Will and Affections follow Faith and the Desire of satisfying Lusts cannot stand together and he that trusts not God for Earthly things cannot trust him for matters of Salvation for if we have Faith in the main we will have it in particular cases We are said to Believe three maner of ways viz. 1. We believe one God that is we believe that there is a God 2. We believe God that is that God is true touching his Promises These two ways Infidels yea the Devils believe and tremble 3. We believe in God that is according to those Promises to put our whole trust and hope in God In the Doctrine of the Church mention is made of four sorts of Faith 1. Historical when men believe the Bibles History This saves not James 2.19 2. Temporary when men believe onely for a time neither doth this save 3. Miraculous proceeding from special Revelation which is now out of use
and so was it with Pauls Viper Faiths double Act 1. The Direct Act of Faith by which we apprehend and take Christ 2. The Reflect Act by which we know and are assured that we have apprehended and taken Christ Faith hath also this double Quality 1. To lay hold of Christ offered 2. To empty a man of all things else whatsoever especially 1. Of all opinion of Righteousness in himself 2. Of all opinion of strength and ability to help himself Faith admits Degrees in four respects viz. 1. In Perswasion That Christ is offered that he is ours that he is given by God the Father 2. In regard of the difficulty and hardness of the things to be believed 3. In regard of the Extent of it when there are more things revealed to us 4. In regard of the Proof and here as the Evidence of Sanctification is more so is the Assurance Opinion is but an Assent to the Truth with a fear lest the contrary may be true So that Faith and Opinion differ in these three things 1. In the Object which is something in its own nature uncertain but Faith pitcheth upon the Word of God which is in its own nature infallible and cannot deceive 2. In the working Opinion being a matter of Speculation and no more Faith a matter of Practice but that is not all 3. In overcoming Doubts for Opinion goeth no farther but stays in a Doubt but Faith proceeds to full Assurance To be rooted and grounded in Faith is To have the first ground right and so to proceed from one to another As thus 1. Stedfastly to believe the Scriptures in general 2. All the Promises therein contained in particular 3. To apply and appropriate them to our selves justly and upon good ground No man knoweth what Justifying Faith is but he that hath it whose true Properties are these 1. He being convicted thereof in his Conscience knoweth that whatsoever things are spoken in the Scriptures are true and Divine 2. He findeth himself bound to believe them 3. He is certain That through Christs Satisfaction he is received of God into favor and is endowed with the Holy Ghost and is by him regenerated and directed 4. He applyeth to himself all those things concluding that they belong unto him 5. He rejoyceth in the present Blessings which he hath but most of all in the certain and perfect Salvation to come And this is that peace of Conscience which passeth all Understanding 6. He hath a Will to obey the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles without any exception in doing or suffering whatsoever is therein commanded 7. He is certain that his Faith though it be in this life imperfect and languishing and often very much eclipsed yet being builded upon the Promise of God which is unchangeable doth never altogether fail or dye Faith is said to work four ways viz. Towards 1. God by a quiet and peaceable Conscience grounded on Gods love Rom. 5.1 2. Our Neighbor by mutual concord especially in matters of Religion Acts 1.14 3. Our selves by Patience with joy and thankfulness in Afflictions Rom. 5.3 4. 4. The Devil and the World by victory over their Assaults and Temptations 2 Joh. 5.4 5. 1 Pet. 5.8 9. The work of Faith towards God 1. Peace in Conscience from our Reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 2. Love towards God and Christ Luke 7.47 3. Hope of the Glory of the Sons of God in the world to come and joy in troubles Rom. 5.3 4. Boldness to speak unto God grounded on a sure confidence in him Eph. 3.12 5. A Confession of the Truth 2 Cor. 4.13 Rom. 10.10 6. Obedience to God Rom. 1.5 for which Abraham is chronicled as the Father of the Faithful 7. A Perseverance and Constancy in the Truth of Christ Joh. 6.68 And a commending of our Souls to God Acts 7.59 The work of Faith towards our neighbors 1. A knitting of the mindes of men one towards another Acts 1.14 2. It extendeth Brotherly love even to our Enemies 1 Tim. 1.6 The work of Faith towards our selves viz. 1. It makes us entertain with joy and thankfulness Gods loving Chastisements Rom. 5.3 4. 2. A Resting upon his Providence and Promises for Blessings Temporal and Spiritual Mat. 6.25 3. It affects our hearts with comfort strengthning them against all troubles Joh. 14.1 4. It worketh in us a hatred of sin and of our former ways with shame and grief Joh. 12.46 A thing may be said not to be done of Faith three ways viz. 1. Conscientia Dubitante when a thing is done with a doubting or unresolved Conscience as in those that are weak in knowledge 2. Conscientia Errante thus the Mass-Priest sinneth in saying Mass though in his Conscience he think it the Ordinance of God 3. Conscientia Repugnante though upon Error and false judgement of the Conscience it is in the doer a sin Thus an Anabaptist that holds it unlawful to Swear sinneth if he take an Oath In what sense Faith is called Effectual 1. When it does its proper Office or Function namely To Take Christ 2. When it is true real and substantial when it is opposed to vain Faith 3. When it is an operative lively stirring and a fruitful Faith 4. When it goes thorough with the work in hand that is when it Sanctifieth the heart throughout in respect of parts and throughout in regard of time when it brings a man to the end of his Salvation when it carries a man through all impediments when it leaps over all difficulties a growing pervailing overcoming Faith Wherein the Effectualness of Faith consists viz. 1. In being well built that is when the preparation is sound and full by Humiliation 2. When a man believes the Promises on sure infallible grounds and sees them distinctly 3. When the Will takes Christ out of love to him not his not out of fear nor out of mistake 4. When it turns not onely the Will but all the Affections when it turns the whole man when it shoots it self into life and practice The Causes of Uneffectual Faith viz. 1. The Taking of Christ upon misinformation without due consideration 2. The Taking Christ out of fear not out of true love to him as men in sickness 3. The taking Christ for the love of the good things by him not of his person 4. Want of Humiliation that should go before it 5. Because Faith is not grounded aright when men falsly take to themselves a perswasion of the Remission of their sins upon an uncertain and wrong ground The Reasons why God accepts no Faith but such as is Effectual 1. Because otherwise it is not Faith for it is dead 2. Other Faith hath no Love which condition is required 3. Other Faith the Devils have for they believe and tremble 4. Else it works no Mortification for we must deny our selves 5. Else Christ should lose the end of his coming into the world 6. Because good Works are the way to Salvation The usual means that
which are 1. In respect of God his own glory 2. In respect of Men to confirm some truth or decide some controversie so that the particular Ends of all lawful oaths may be these four viz. 1. Allegiance and Obedience to Princes so the Elders of Gilead swore to Jephthah Judg. 10.11 So Jehoida the Priest made the guard of King Joash to swear 2 King 2.11 4. 2. To confirm a lawful League and establish a Covenant between men Thus did Abraham with Abimelech and he with Isaac Gen. 21.23 24. 26.28 29 31. Thus did Jacob and Laban Gen. 31.53 so did David and Jonathan 1 Sam. 18.3 20.8 23.18 3. For the deciding of Controversies between party and party which otherwise cannot be determined 4. To justifie our Religion and to binde our selves thereby to the true Worship of God Thus was it in the days of Asa 2 Chron. 15.12 13 14. 34.31 32. 6. The Properties of an Oath for as every Oath is not unlawful so every Oath is not lawful as when contrary to Gods Word Now it is the property of a lawful Oath to be undertaken of such things as are true certainly known possible godly necessary profitable weighty worthy so great a Confirmation and no way disagreeing with Gods Word no way prejudicial to his Honor or the Love we owe unto our Neighbor Again before at the taking of every Oath there must be consideration had of these particulars viz. 1. Of the thing in question that is to be confirmed 2. Of the nature of the Oath that is taken 3. Of the minde and true meaning of him that sweareth 4. Of the particular circumstances of time place and persons before whom we swear as if before the Magistrate remember these three Caveats viz. 1. That the Oath be administred lawfully not against Piety or Charity 2. That the Oath must be taken in the Magistrates meaning not in our own private sense 3. Not ambiguously but our words must be agreeable to what we conceive in heart 5. Of the just occasions of an oath which are chiefly these four viz. 1. When it may further Gods glory and Worship 2. When it may tend to the Preservation of our Neighbors life goods and good-name or to the furtherance of Brotherly love 3. When it lawfully serveth to relieve a mans own private necessity 4. When the Magistrate doth exact it by order of Justice 6. Of the event and issue of the Oath 7. Whether the party we are to deal with doubteth of the thing we are to speak of or not 8. If we doubt whether then it may not be passed with Truly and Verily or by doubling our Asseveration as Christ did 9. Whether there be not any other fit means to try out the matter before that we come to an Oath 10. When the matter is of importance and there is no other Tryal but by an Oath we must consider before whom we swear as the Judge or Magistrate Jer. 4.2 And by whom or what as by the Lord Lev. 19.12 In every lawful oath there is a double Bond 1. It bindes one man to another for the performing of the thing he sweareth to do 2. It bindes a man unto God for he that sweareth invocates God as a witness and a Judge of the Truth of his Assertion and he stands bound unto God till the thing sworn unto be performed if it be lawful and possible That a Christian may take a right and lawful oath is confirm'd by these Reasons drawn 1. From the end of an Oath for an Oath is a confirmation of Faith and Truth a deciding of Debates a Bond of Civil order and giveth and ascribeth the praise and maintenance of the Truth to God 2. From the nature of an Oath which is a Testification of the Truth and an invocation of God whereby we desire of him such things as are agreeable unto his Nature and Will manifested in his Word even that he will bear Record of the Truth 3. From Gods own Commandment Deut. 6.13 10.20 Isa 65.16 4. From the Examples and Practice of the Saints whose Oathes are in Scripture approved and such places of Scripture as forbid Oathes forbid onely rash Oathes and such as have not the lawful causes and conditions of an Oath There are two Times and cases wherein a man may lawfully Swear viz. 1. When the Magistrate ministreth an Oath unto a man upon a just occasion for he hath power in this case and therefore when he justly requires it of a man then may he lawfully swear Let no man therefore vainly imagine from the words of our Savior Swear not at all Matth. 5.34 that it is not lawful to take an Oath being thereto lawfully called by a Magistrate for Swearing is commanded as a part of Gods Worship Deut. 10.20 And Christs meaning in that place was not to forbid all Swearing simply but all Swearing after the Jewish maner and custom that is in common talk and communication as is plain in ver 37. For this is a Rule to be observed in the Interpretation of Scripture Things generally spoken must be particularly understood according to the circumstances of the present matter in hand as when Paul saith He became all things to all men 1 Cor. 9.22 if this should be taken generally we might say That with Blasphemers he became a Blasphemer c. But as that speech of Pauls must be restrained to things indifferent so this here of our Saviors is restrained to the Jewish Custom 2. When a man 's own Calling general or particular necessarily requireth an Oath And this is in four cases viz. 1. When the taking of an Oath serveth to maintain procure or win unto God any part of his glory or to preserve the same from disgrace In this regard Paul moved with a godly zeal useth an Oath in sundry of his Epistles 2. When his Oath serveth to maintain or further his own or others Salvation or preservation in Soul or Body 2 Cor. 1.23 Psal 119.106 3. When the Oath serves to confirm and stablish Peace and Society between party and party Kingdom and Kingdom Thus Abraham and Abimelech Jacob and Laban Gen. 21. 31. 4. When a man by Oath and not otherwise may free himself from temporal losses in which regard a man may lawfully by Oath purge himself from infamy and slander An Oath is to be used onely in case of necessity and that for these Reasons 1. Because God will not hold him guiltless that taketh his Name in vain which is done one way by using it negligently and unnecessarily 2. Because the end of practising an Oath is to decide Strifes and determine Controversies which disturb Peace and hinder Christian Charity Heb. 6.16 3. The Name of God is most fearful in Praises glorious in Holiness great in Might and doing Wonders therefore it ought not commonly to run in our mouthes without weighty and necessary cause An Oath doth not binde in these six cases 1. When it is against