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A47629 A treatise of divinity consisting of three bookes : The first of which handling the Scripture or Word of God, treateth of its divine authority, the canonicall bookes, the authenticall edition, and severall versions, the end, properties, and interpretation of Scripture : The second handling God sheweth that there is a God, and what he is, in his essence and several attributes, and likewise the distinction of persons in the divine essence : The third handleth the three principall works of God, decree, creation and providence / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1646 (1646) Wing L1011; ESTC R39008 467,641 520

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Lord hath stored the world with divers kindes of foure-footed beasts which move and walk upon the face of the earth Psal. 104. 11 12. these were created on the sixth day These beasts are creatures endued not with life alone but with sense also They consist of a body and of a sensible soule besides the life of vegetation which is to be found in plants by which they grow and are nourished They have also a soul whereby they discerne divers bodily objects and can both discerne and follow that which is good for them and shunne what is evill and so preserve themselves alive by using things helpfull for them and avoiding the contrary All these beasts were made to walk upon the ground with four feete having their heads bowing down to the gronnd to seeke their diet without which they could not live and which is provided for them upon the face of the ground They were made on the sixt day before man was created Gen. 1. 24. This worke is wonderfull in respect of the divers sorts of these beasts some great and some small some of one shape nature some of another We see great variety of them in our owne Countrey and there is farre greater variety abroad in the world which wee have never seene That out of the same earth and water all these kinds should grow by a word spoken with the mouth of God let it be so is a strange and wonderfull thing By vertue of these words there were Sheep Goates Kine Horses Camels and Dromodaries Elephants Lions Beares Dogges Tygers Wolves Foxes Deere What are all these but a most artificiall mixture of earth and water put into a certaine shape or forme of members having head feete backe breast bellie braine liver heart guts and other intrailes and having power to see hear to touch smel tast to eate drinke goe generate to remember to have a kinde of thought of things within to imagine and discerne having also affections and passions They carry us feede us cloath us till the ground for us How full of tedious and toilsome paines would our lives be if we had not a horse to beare us up and downe from place to place and horses or oxen to convey all manner of things for us Wee must magnifie the name of God and frame our selves to sincere thankefulnesse unto him who hath made such a multitude of creatures inferiour to our selves and given to us the use of them O what a wonderfull skilfull workeman is hee that out of the earth could produce such a number of such creatures And how good was he to us that hee did not give reason unto them as well as sense for if they had reason to know their own strength and our weaknesse wee should never keep them under as we do Let us not abuse these creatures of God to bad purpose or use them in a cruell and inhumane manner they are our fellow creatures made of a little courser earth and since they obey us with all cheerfulnesse let us be likewise obedient to God There is no creature among all the beasts of the world which so amply demonstrates the power and wisedome of Almighty God as the Elephant both in respect of his proportion of body and disposition of spirit Hee is by the Hebrews called Behemoth by way of excellency as the Latines for the same cause call him Bellua and by Job chap. 40. vers 15. he is likewise called Behemoth in the plurall number He is wittily called by Julius Scaliger Bestiarum Heros and by Job in the same Chapter vers 19. the chiefe of the wayes of God that is the greatest strongest and most understanding of all earthly irrationall creatures as Deodate interprets it Vide Fulleri miscel Sac. l. 4. c. 10. Elephas peregrinum est apud nos animal Indis aliis notissimum obvium Johnstoni Thaumatographia certè turres olim armatorum in proelia ferebant Id ib. The Elephants were usefull in the wars they caryed Castles and armed men Aristotle lib. 9. de hist. animal cap. 47. makes mention of a memorable thing to make men flye incest The King of Scythia had a Mare of a most excellent race which brought forth most excellent colts among the rest she had one which excelled them all the King was desirous that this colt might horse his damme that so he might have an excellent race of them but the colt when he was brought to his damme would not horse her the King seeing this he caused them to cover the damme that he might not know her But he perceiving afterwards that it was his damme ran away and cast himselfe over a steep rock and brake his neck There are many things wonderfull in the Dog his sagacity docility fidelity A dog in Epyrus in a great assembly of people knowing the man that had murdered his Master flew upon him with open mouth barking and snapping at him so furiously that he was ready to take him by the throate untill he at length confessed the fact that caused the dog thus to rage and foame against him The dogs which be neare unto Nilus lap of the River running still and never stay while they are drinking for feare of the greedy Crocodiles Aegyptio canes è Nilo nunquam nisi currentes lambitant dum Crocodilis insidias cavent It happened that upon a narow thin planke that lay for a bridge one goate met another both comming from divers parts now by reason that the place was so narrow that they could not passe by nor turne about nor yet retire backwards blindly considering how long the planke was and so slender withall moreover the water that ran underneath ranne with a swift streame and threatned present death if they failed and went besides Mutianus affirmeth that hee saw one of them to lye flat downe and the other to goe over his backe In Sibaris there was a young man named Crathis which being not able to retaine lust but forsaken of God and given over to a reprobate sense committed buggery with a female Goate the which thing the Master Goate beheld and looked upon and dissembled concealing his mind and jealousie for the pollution of his female Afterward finding the said young man asleepe for he was a Shepheard he made all his force npon him and with his hornes dashed out the buggerers braiues Alexander the Great had a very strange and rare horse called Bucephalus either for his crabbed and grim looke or else of the mark or brand of a bulls head which was imprinted upon his shoulder He would suffer no man to sit him nor come upon his backe but Alexander when he had the Kings saddle on was also trapped with royall furniture for otherwise he would suffer any whomsoever When he was dead the King solemnized his funerals most sumptuously erected a Tombe for him and about it built a Citie that bare his name Bucephalia That is a lofty
signe that there is no difference betweene them but that the second is added to insinuate the perfection of the image There is a four-fold image or likenesse 1. Where there is a likenesse with an absolute agreement in the same nature and so the Son of God is called the expresse image of the Father 2. By participation of some universall common nature so a man and beast are like in the common nature of animality 3. By proportion onely as when we say the Governor of a Common-wealth and the Pilot of a ship are like 4. By agreement of order when one thing is a patterne or exemplar and the other thing is made after it now when man is said to be like God it is meant in those two last waies Christ was the essential image of God Mans was imago repraesentantis aliter imago imperatoris in nummo aliter in filio Augustine The Image of God in which man was cteated is the conformity of man unto God 1. In his soule 2. In his body for his soule 3. In the whole person for the union of both The soule of a man is conformable to God in respect of its nature faculties and habits 1. In respect of its nature essence or being as it is a spirituall and immortall substance The Scripture witnesseth 1. that the soule of man is a spirit Matth. 27. 20. Acts 7. 59 2. That it is immortall 1. Because it cannot bee destroyed by any second cause Matth. 10. 28. 2. Being served from the bodie it subsists by it selfe and goes to God Eccles. 12. 7. Luke 16. 22. 3. Because it is a simple and immateriall substance not depending on matter the minde workes the better the more it is abstracted from the body when it is asleep or dying 4. Because it transcends all terrene and mortall things and with a wonderful quicknesse searcheth after heavenly divine and eternall things There is an invincible argument for the thing secretly imprinted in the instinct and conscience of the soule it selfe Because it is every good mans hope that it shall be so and wicked mans feare 5. The foode of the soule is immortall 1 Pet. 1. 23. the evident promises of eternall life prove the soule to be immortall He that beleeveth in me hath eternall life and to day thou shalt bee with mee in Paradise Nothing can satisfie the soule but God 6. Man is capable of vertue and vice of immortall desires and affections 7. The soules of Adam and Eve were not made of any matter but came by immediate creation in whom God gave a specimen what he would perpetually doe with other men That is but a Cavill that Solomon Eccles. 12. 7. speakes only of our first Parents Children are called the fruit of their Parents body to note that that they are only fathers of their flesh they have another namely God which is Father of their Spirits Saint Paul teacheth it Heb. 12. 9. and the use of it And this checks their opinion who will have soules propagated no lesse then bodies Many collect the immortality of the soule and salvation of Jobs children because they were not doubled as the rest of his estate was 2. The soule of man is conformable to God in respect of its faculties in its understanding will and memory is like the Trinity 3. In the qualities graces and admirable endowments of it In the understanding there was 1. An exact knowledg of God and all Divine things Coloss. 3. 10. knowledg is a principall part of Gods image by reason hee was enabled to conceive of things spirituall and universall 2. A perfect knowledge of all inferiour things Adam knew Eve and imposed names on the creatures sutable to their natures He had most exquisite prudence in the practicall part of his understanding in all doubtfull cases Hee knew what was to be done 2. In the will there was holinesse Ephes. 4. 24. 3. His affections were under the power of grace From this image did necessarily follow peace with God fellowship and union He knew God to be his Creator and to love him in all good things he enjoyed God and tasted his sweetness Mans body also after a sort is an image of Divine perfection Observe 1. The Majesticall forme of it of which the Heathens tooke notice but the structure of the bodie a man should be taught to contemn the earth which his feete tread upon and to set his heart upon heaven whether his eyes naturally tend 2. Gods artifice in it Psal. 139. 15. Thou hast curiously wroug●● me and I was wonderfully made Materiam superabat opus Of the basest matter dust God made the noblest creature 3. The serviceablenesse of every part for its end and use 4. There is matter of humiliation because it was made of the dust Gen. 3 19. Job 14. 18 10. and 5 15. The Greek name makes man proud cals him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bids him aspire looke up but the Hebrew and Latine humble him bids him stoop looke downe Adams bodie was mortall conditionally if he had not eaten of the tree there could be noe outward cause of his death for Gods protection kept that off nor noe in ward cause because originall righteousnesse was in his soule and for old age and weaknesse the tree of life would have preserved him from that 3. The whole person consisting both of soule and bodie was conformable to God in respect of his felicitie and dominion over the creatures Gen. 1. 26 28. The image of God doth not principally consist in this but secondarily therefore though the man and woman were created perfectly after Gods image in other respects yet in this respect the woman had not the image of God as the Apostle sheweth The power which Adam had over the creatures was not absolute and direct that God reserved to himselfe but it was for Adams use then the stoutest and fiercest beasts would be ruled by Adam this dominion since the fal is lost for a great part of our rebellion against God the creatures rebellion should mind us of ours we may see somtimes a little child driving before him 100. oxen or kine this or that way as he pleaseth for the infusing of the soul the time when it was infused it is most probable that the body was first made as the organe or instrument and then the soule put into it as God did make heaven and earth before man was made God did not create all the soules of men at once but he creates them daily as they are infused into the bodie There are these two Questions to be resolved 1. Whether immortalitie was naturall to Adam 2. Whether originall righteousnesse was naturall to Adam For the first A thing is immortall foure wayes 1. Absolutly soe that their is no inward or outward cause of mortalitie 1. Tim. 6. soe God onely 2. when it is not soe by nature but immortalitie is a perfection voluntarily put into the
Ghost is the maker preserver and governour of all things by his wisdome power justice providence Concerning man 1 That he was made by God of a visible body and an immortall and spirituall soule both so perfect and good in their kinds● that he was perfectly able to have attained eternall life for himselfe which was provided as a reward of his obedience 2 That being thus made he yeelded to the temptations of the Devill and did voluntarily sinne against God in eating of the Tree forbidden and so became a child of wrath and heire of cursing an enemy to God and slave to the devill utterly unable to escape eternall death which was provided as a recompence of his disobedience 3 That he doth propagate this his sinfulnesse and misery to all his posterity Concerning Christ. 1 That he is perfect God and perfect man the second Person in the Trinity who tooke the nature of man from the Virgin Mary and united it to himselfe in one personall subsistence by an incomprehensible union 2 That in mans nature he did die and suffer in his life and death sufficient to satisfie Gods justice which man had offended and to deserve for mankind remission of sinnes and life everlasting and that in the same nature he rose againe from the dead and shall also raise up all men to receive judgement from him at the last day according to their deeds 3 That he is the onely sufficient and perfect Redeemer and no other merit must be added unto this either in whole or part Lastly concerning the meanes of applying the Redeemer they are three 1 That all men shall not be saved by Christ but onely those that are brought to such a sight and feeling of their owne sinfulnesse and misery that with sorrow of heart they doe bewaile their sinnes and renouncing all merits of their owne or any creature cast themselves upon the mercy of God and the onely merits of Jesus Christ which to doe is to repent and believe and in this hope live holily all the remainder of their life 2 That no man is able thus to see his sinnes by his owne power renounce himselfe and rest upon Christ but God must worke it in whom he pleaseth by the cooperation of his Spirit regenerating and renewing them 3 That for the working of this faith and repentance and direction of them in a holy life he hath left in writing by the Prophets and Apostles infallibly guided to all truth by his Spirit all things necessary to be done or believed to salvation and hath continued these writings to his people in all ages Observe those places Acts 15. 11. 1 Tim. 1. 15. Let a man hold this that there was nothing but death in the world till Christ came and that he is come to save horrible sinners John 17. 3. Secondly there is a practicall place Titus 3. 8. Let us 1. See our selves dead without Christ and wholy trust in him 2. Let us be exemplary in our lives and conversations There are other Fundamentals which are onely comparatively necessary that is expected from one man which is not expected from another and more from those that live in the Church Have these six principles of the Apostle not onely in your heads but hearts 1. That a man is dead in himselfe 2. That his remedy lies out of himselfe 3. Know the doctrine of the Sacraments 4. The Word of God 5. Have some apprehension of the life to come 1. That there is a passage from death to life 2. That there is a fixed and irrevokable estate after this life Hold the doctrine of faith so that Christ may live in you and you be delivered up into that forme of doctrine lay hold on life eternall Secondly there are some particular principles There is a naturall light and supernaturall The light of nature teacheth some principles That you must doe as you would be done by that no man hates his owne flesh that one must provide for his family that there is a God and one God that he is to be honoured and reverenced above all 2. Supernaturall Let all our actions be done 1. in love 2. in humility 3. in faith 4. in God this the Gospell teacheth Shew your selves Christians in power go beyond the Heathen in practising the good rules of nature 1. Be carefull to make a wise choice of principles one false principle admitted will let in many errors and erroneous principles will lead men into erroneous practises 2. Labour to act your principles if you captivate the light God wil put it out 3. Be sure you worke according to your principles we pitty another in an errour when he follows his principles Here is an apology for those teachers which tread in Pauls steps are carefull to lay the foundation well It was the observation of our most judicious King JAMES That the cause why so many fell to Popery and other errours was their ungroundednesse in points of Catechisme How many wanton opinions are broached in these daies I wish I might not justly call them Fundamentall errours Some deny the Scriptures some the Divinity of Christ some the immortality of the soule Errours are either contra against the foundation which subvert the Foundation as that of the Papists who deny the al-sufficiency of Christs once suffering 2. Circa about the foundation which pervert the Foundation as the Lutherans opinion of the ubiquity of Christs body 3. Citra meerly without these divert the foundation as in the controversies of Church-government whether it be Sociall or Solitary this strikes not at the Foundation Laurentius saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 3. 11 12 13 14 15. speakes not of Hereticall Teachers and those which erre in fundamentals but of those which erre in lighter matters because he saith of both that they build upon one and the same Foundation Christ. We should contend for a known Fundamentall necessary truth Jude 3. the common faith not every opinion entertained on probable grounds It is a great question in Divinity An Magistratui Christiano liceat capitales poenas de haereticis sumere Whether Heretickes are to be punished by the Christian Magistrate with death The Papists say Haeretici qua Haeretici comburendi That Hereticks for Heresie sake though they doe not trouble the State ought to be put to death Luther doth not approve of the capitall punishment of Heretickes especially for the pernicious sequell of it among the Papists against the Protestants He thinkes it better that they be banished The present Lutherans hold the same almost concerning that question Meisner doth distinguish between haereticus simplex and haereticus seditiosus ac blasphemus these last he saith may be punished with capitall punishments The Socinians being themselves the worst of Hereticks would have no outward forcible restraining of any errour though never so grosse and pernicious For the Protestants heare what Zanchy saith Omnes fere ex nostratibus hujus sunt senten●iae quod ha●retici sint
essence whatsoever is in God is God Simplenesse is the first property in God which cannot in any sort agree to any creature This is proved that God is Simple by removing from him all kinds of composition which are five 1. Of quantitative parts as a body 2. Of essentiall parts matter and forme as a man consists of Soule and body 3. Of a genus and difference as every species 4. Of subject and accidents as a learned man a white Wall 5. Of act and power as the Spirits Every creature is subject to composition and consequently to division All things which are Created are made by joyning together more things then one in one and so they consist of divers things Some have a more grosse and palpable composition of parts both essentiall and integrall as a man of soule and body and the body of flesh bloud bone and such parts The Spirits which have not so plaine a composition are yet compounded of substance and accidents sustained by that substance and inherent in it for the substance of an Angell and his faculties and qualities are different things his life is one thing his reason another his will another his power wisdome nimblenesse other things So the soule of a man and all Created things are made up of many things conjoyned in one God is absolutely Simple he is but one thing and doth not consist of any parts he hath no accidents but himselfe his essence and attributes are all one thing though by us diversly considered and understood If he did consist of parts there must be something before him to put those parts together and then he were not eternall Isay 43. 10. he is one most pure and meere act In God to be to will and to doe are the same John 15. 26. compared with John 14. 6. and 1 John 1. 7. compared with 1. of John 1. 5. where to have life and be life to be in the light and be light are the same God is therefore called in the abstract light life love truth John 14 6. 1 John 4. 8. This is one reason why God is so perfect because he is Eus Simplissimum In every kinde a thing is so much perfect by how much it is more Simple and pure Whence the same Hebrew word signifieth both Simple and perfect 2. No accidents are in God when we affirme that God is good and gracious we meane it not as when we say so of men in men they are qualities vertues in God they are his essence 1. We should be simple as Doves Matth. 10. 16. Simplicitas Columbina non asinina Carthusian Ephes. 6. 5. 2 Cor. 1. 12. It is called godly sincerity which God worketh and which is pleasing to him Simplenesse and Simplicity of heart is the maine thing in Christianity Ephes. 6. 5. Col. 3. 22. 2. Here is matter of joy and comfort to the good mercy and love are Gods essence Isay 54. 8. and of feare and terrour to the wicked because Gods anger and justice are his essence and he is unchangeable God is Living He is often called the living God in opposition to dead Idols turne from Idolls to serve the living God Gen. 16. 14. and 24. 62. and 25. 11. Deut. 5. 26. Ruth 3. 13. Judg. 8. 19. Isay 3. 10. Jer. 10. 10. Ezek. 3. 11. Dan. 4. 34. Math. 16. 76. Act. 14. 15. He is called life 1 John 5. 10. the fountaine of life Psal. 36. 9. He hath his name in Greek from life He saith often of himselfe I live as if he should say I alone doe truly live and he often addes for ever Deut. 32. 40. The oath which the Father 's used is most frequent the Lord liveth Jer. 5 2. and 12. 16. for they swore by him who truly and alwayes lives He himselfe sweares by nothing but by his life and holinesse Jud. 8. 24. Ruth 3. 3. This Oath is used 14. times in Ezekiel Zeph. 2. 9. Jer. 46. 18. 22. 24. Isay 49. 18. Deut. 32. 40. Numb 14. 21. 28. God is called the living God 1. To distinguish him from the false Gods of the Gentiles which were dead and sencelesse Stocks Act. 17. 15. 2. To represent unto us the active nature of God he is all life 3. To direct us to the Fountaine or Well of life from whom all life is derived unto the creature by a threefold streame 1. Nature God is the authour of the life of nature Gen. 2. 7. Act. 17. 28. 2. Grace he is the authour of that life John 1. 2. Ephes. 4. 18. 3. Glory he is the authour of the life of glory Rom. 2. 7. A reasonable life to which God resembleth his is a power to performe variety of regular and limited actions to a certain known end and that out of choice and councell Gods life is his power of working all things according as seemes good to himselfe after his owne Councell for his own glory to say he liveth is to say he doth perpetually worke Life in things bodily ariseth from the union of the body and the soule together and in things that be not bodies but spirits from the perfection of the matter and qualities of them Our owne life is a power by which we are able to produce lively actions Gods life is that power whereby he is fit to worke or produce all sorts of actions suitable to the perfect essence of his divine Majesty Or it is that whereby he knoweth willeth and affecteth and can doe all sort of actions beseeming his excellent nature Reasons 1. From the effects of life God understands wils loves therefore he truly lives for these are all the properties of livers therefore Aristotle often concludes from this that Because God understands all things that he lives a blessed life 2 Those things live which move and stirre themselves God doth all things by himselfe he is the first and perfectest cause of all therefore he most properly lives and that a most blessed life 3. From his name Jehovah he is Jehovah who is by himselfe and most perfectly and of whom all things are which are and live God therefore so lives that he is the Authour of all life to all livers and therefore he is called our life Deut. 30. 20. John saith of Christ in him was the Authour of life and Act. 3. ye have killed the Author of life Amongst the creatures which are subject to our sense there is a three fold kinde of life Two more imperfect the third more perfect The former is the life of vegetation or growth by which things are able to doe what is requisite for the attaining and maintaining of their full strength and nature and the propagating of their kinde according to their severall kinds The second is the life of sence whereby things are inabled to discerne things hurtfull to them and things good for them to shune the one and to seek the other These are imperfect kinds of life
hath no beginning can have no succession nor end We cannot properly say of God that he hath been or that he shall be but he is To him all things are present though in themselves they have succession He is an everlasting King everlastingly powerfull and glorious as the conclusion of the Lords Prayer sheweth He is called the King eternall 1 Tim. 5. 17. and the eternall God Rom. 16. 26. the maker of times Heb. 1. 2. He inhabiteth eternity Isay 67. 15. God onely is properly and absolutely eternall Angel and mens soules are said to be eternall à posteriori or à parte post God à priori à posteriori ex parte ante post since he hath neither beginning succession nor end The Scripture confirmes this eternity of God divers wayes 1. With a Simple and plaine asseveration Gen. 21. 33. Isay 40. 28. and 57. 15. Dan. 6. 26. Rom. 16. 26. 2. By denying to him time and succession Job 36. 26. Isay 43. 10. Psal. 90. 5. 2 Pet. 3. 8. 3. By attributing to him eternall properties and operations his mercy is said to endure for ever Psal. 103. 17. and 136. 1. Eternall councell is attributed to him Psal. 33. 11. Eternall Kingdom Exodus 15. 18. Eternall power Dan. 6. 26. eternall glory 1 Pet. 5. 10. his dominion is an everlasting dominion Dan. 7. 14. his righteousnesse is everlasting Psal. 119. 142. and his truth 4. By a metaphoricall description dayes and yeares are attributed to him but most distinct from our dayes and yeares Job 10. 5. Dan. 7. 9 22. He is called the Ancient of dayes Psal. 102. 28. thy yeares are not consumed 1 Sam. 15. 29. He is called eternity it selfe Christ is called the Father of eternity Isay 9. 6. most emphatically to signifie that he is eternity it selfe and the Author of it The French stile God in their Bibles l' Eternell because he onely is perfectly eternall Reasons 1. God is the best thing that is therefore it must needs follow that he is an eternall essence for that which is eternall is better then that which is not 2. Else he should depend on some thing else if he were not eternall and then he were not God 3. If he were not eternall he must have a beginning and then something else must give it him and so be better then he 4. God created all things even time it selfe Heb. 1. 2. He is therefore before all things and without beginning Rom. 1. 2. and whatsoever was before time must needs be eternall 5. He is the Author and giver of eternall life to those that have it therefore he must needs be eternall himselfe for whatsoever can give eternity that is eternall Ob. If God were eternall where was he before the world was and what did he before he made all things and why did he make the world no sooner then a few thousand yeares since Sol. These are curiosities but for answer as he was of himselfe so was he in and with himselfe He is that himselfe to and in himselfe which to us our being time and place are found to be 2. He injoyes himselfe and his owne happinesse 3. He made the world no sooner because it did not please him The creature is limited by the circumstance of time by which it hath its being measured out as it were by parcels past present and to come it had beginning hath succession and may have an end The most glorious Angell as well as a worme is thus limited by time once he was not then he began to be that which is past is gone and that which is to come is not yet and he hath but a little time present But Gods essence had no beginning hath no succession can have no end We cannot say of it properly it was or shall be but alone it is he hath his whole being at once not some after some by parcels one following another Gen. 21. 13. and 23. 33. Psal. 90. 2. 24. Isay 57. 15. Eternity is the continuall existence and duration of the divine essence The creatures being is a fluxe or perpetuall flowing from one moment to another God is a being above time hath not his being measured by time but is wholy eternall 1. Gods love and election are also eternall and he will give eternall life to all beleevers That which is eternall is perfect at once therefore he should be adored and obeyed his counsell followed old men are honoured for their wisedome God saith to Job where wast thou when I laid the foundation of the earth 2. Let it be a foundation of comfort to us as Psal. 102. 12. though friends dye goods be taken away God remaines for ever he failes not 3. It must incourage the people of God to serve him and do his will faithfully for he will recompence it what ever we hazard or loose he liveth for ever to requite 4. It is a terrour to the wicked he shall be ever to make them everlastingly miserable as heaven is an eternall Palace so hell is an everlasting Prison 5 We must carefully and earnestly seek him place our happinesse in him that is everlasting all other things are fleeting if we get his favour once we shall never loose it he will be an everlasting friend his truth and mercy remaines for ever 6. Every one should resolve in his own thoughts and covenant with God to spend but one halfe quarter of an houre every day in meditating of eternity renew these thoughts every day this body of mine though fraile and mortall it must live for ever and this soule of mine it must live eternally Eternall life is one of the principall Articles of our Creed 1 Tim. 1. 16. CHAP. V. GOd is in himself and in his own nature Immutable Numb 23. 19. 1 Sam. 15. 29. Immutability is that whereby any thing in its essence existence or operation is unchangeable Gods unchangeablenesse is that whereby God in his essence properties and decrees is unchangeable The Scripture proves the Immutabilitie of God both affirmatively Exod 3. 6. Psal. 102. 29. and negatively Mal. 3. 16 Jam. 1. 17. Immutability is twofold 1. Independent and absolute and that is onely in God 2 Dependent and Comparative this may belong to some creatures which they have from God but yet infinitly different 1. God is unchangeable originally and of himselfe these from him 2. In the manner God is in his essence Immutable that and his being are all one therefore he is both potentially and actually so the creatures are onely actually 3. God is so from eternity they onely from their first being All other things are subject to change and alteration they may loose what they had and attaine something which before they had not even the Immortall Spirits are thus mutable they may fall into sinne be annihilated but in God there is no change he is what he is alwayes the same voyd of all mutation
when he was pressed by Bishop Ridly and others to tolerate his Sister Masse in her owne Chapell he would not though importuned yeeld thereto saying He should dishonour God in it but being much pressed by them he burst into teares and they thence concluded that he had more divinity in his little finger then they in all their bodies O that you would study to premote Gods glory and be zealous for his truth since you have had such experience of his mercy and likewise could not but perceive the evill of those dangerous errours which were too much indulged by some of those whom you have cast out I shall now speake of the threefold Subject I handle in my Booke 1. The Scripture 2. God 3. The Workes of God It is reported of Charles the Great that he set his Crown on the Bible and Luther was so zealous to have the Scriptures read that he professed if he thought the reading of his Bookes would hinder the reading of the Scripture he would burne them all before he dyed Alphonsus King of Spaine and Naples read the Bible with Lira's glosse foureteen times over The Emperour Theodosius the second wrote the New Testament out with his owne hand many speake much of new light but the Prophet Esay saith To the Law and to the Testimony if they speake not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Take heed of too much of that new light which the world is now gazing upon so much new light is breaking forth that the old zeale is almost extinct by it saith a Minister of New England The Familists say they are above Ordinances when the body hath no need of nourishment then and not afore will the soule have no need of Ordinances we about Westminster have beene better instructed out of the 20. of Exodus 24. Some talke of Revelations and the Testimony of the Spirit But now the Scripture is compleated I must not expect any immediate Testimony of the Spirit Luther saith if any Spirit should come and speak any thing to him that he brought not Scripture for he would spit in his face The Scripture is the best Cynosure to follow it was Davids Counseller it is a perfect rule of a Perfect Reformation Secondly all Christian States and Persons should labour for an experimentall practicall knowledge of God and Christ Phil. 3. 8. 10. the vision of God in Heaven shall make us perfectly Happye Quid Deus sit ipse tantum novit what God is God himselfe doth onely perfectly know But he hath revealed himselfe to us in his word and workes That place in 34 of Exodus 6. 7. verses is as full a description of Gods Attributes as any in all the Scripture The Lord the Lord God mercifull and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodnes truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity transgression sin that will by no meanes clear the guilty visiting the iniquity of the Fathers upon the children and upon the childrens Children unto the third and fourth generation If God were more known he would be more loved honou●ed feared trusted The Heathens extolled the knowledge of a mans self but Christians must chiefely study to know God This is a Noble Subject for a Christian Parliament and a Christian Kingdome to exercise themselves in O that you would all labour to know Gods excellencies and to propagate the knowledge of him to the many darke Corners of the Land Thirdly the workes of God are to be diligently observed by a Christian State One observes that there is a five fold Declaration of the workes of God An Arthnieticall Declaration Psal. 40. 5. Secondly a Logicall Declaration of the workes of God when we shew the severall kinds of them as the workes of Creation the worke of Redemption the worke of Providence and distribute those into workes of mercy or works of Justice Thirdly an Historicall Declaration when we declare the persons acting the places the times the Counsels the mannaging of the severall actions the events and successes Fourthly a Rhetoricall Declaration Fifthly a Declaration purely Theologicall or a practicall Declaration of the works of God We should be lifted up by Gods manifold works to the Consideration of his unlimited greatnesse that is the first cause and author of them all we can turne our eyes no way but exceeding great multitudes of works wrought by God doe offer themselves to our view If we looke upward downeward on the right hand on the left into our selves and other things our minds shall be encountred with diversity of rare Workes of Almighty God These workes are all made with much wisdome Psal. 136. 5. and the serious considering of Gods workes is a great part of the sanctifying of his name Never had any Parliament more reason to magnifie Gods goodnesse for his singular mercies Oh that as many of your deliverances were got with supplication so they might be worne with thankefulnesse and as you have been a Parliament of many Prayers so may you be a Parliament of many prayses which is the earnest desire of Your Honours Devoted Servant EDW. LEIGH To the Christian Reader REader The number of bookes is without number the Presses are daily oppressed with them Yet though the world abound with unprofitable may pernicious Pamphlets there are many excellent subjects which are either not handled or not sufficiently There is a great variety in mens fancies as well as in their faces and bookes the fruit of mens brains are as various as men themselves Some books are to be tasted onely some chewed and some swallowed That saying of Stanchar the Hereticke doth exceedingly please the Papists Plus apud se valere unum Lombardum quam centum Lutheros ducentos Melancthones trecentos Bullingeros quadringentos Martyres quingentos Calvinos That one Lumbard was more esteemed by him then 100 Luthers 200 Melancthons 300 Bullingers 400 Martyrs 500 Calvins Focanus contrarily saith thus of the Schoolmen that one Austin among the Ancients and one Calvin in his Institutions of Christian Religion among the moderne Divines will afford thee more solid Divinity then all the School-Doctors of the Popish Church with all their vaine disputations jejune distinctions quodlibeticall questions and foolish speculations with which saith he Thomas Scotus Lombard Bonaventure Molina Vasquez Suarez à Soto Bellarmine and other Doctors of the Romane Church are full even ad nauseam But the Bible is indeed the Booke of Bookes it signifieth in the Greeke Tongue A Booke in generall and was sometimes taken so largely yet by an Antinomasie or excellency it is now taken for the Booke of the Holy Scripture and is all one with Gods Booke We told you before how much the Papists magnified Peter Lumbard the father of the Schoolmen calling him the Master of the sentences and preferring him before hundreds of ours The next Schoolman after him Alexander
pro generibus singulorum p. 79. l. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p 80. l. 16. Deut. 32. 11. should be l. 11. after them p. 85. l. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Maleac p. 119. l. 22. because is wanting p. 121. however should be Homer p. 124. l. 18. soules In the Margent Lib. 1. p. 27. m. end Tomo 1● p. 29. m. eos 33. m. after ubi put in Pontificis and make Pontificis after Pontificii 35. m. See M. Torshels 49 end 4 Sepher Ketubim 55 audiendam 56 exponen● 60 futura 63 later end enim p. 101. m. put out exercit l. 1. ib. m. end m. 183. perpetua 164. m. put out in absterrere Lib. 2. p. 10. m. salis 12 raise up 14 verbum Psal. 76. 8 8 82. ult Z●p●erus Lib. 3. 51 m. Judaea 73. m. non tam ad magnitudinem 79 m. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 103. m. use the fourth should be fourthly 120. m. Evangelici contra Pontificios In the Prolegomena it should be Valentinus Gentilis peccare THE FIRST BOOKE Of the Scriptures CHAP. I. Of Divinity in generall IN The Preface or introduction to divinity six things are to be considered 1. That there is Divinity 2. What Divinity is 3. How it is to be taught 4. How it may be learnt 5. Its opposites 6. The excellency of Divine knowledge 1. That there is Divinity that is a revelation of Gods will made to men is proved by these arguments 1. From the naturall light of conscience in which we being unwilling many footsteps of Heavenly knowledge and the divine will are imprinted 2. From the supernaturall light of grace for we know that all Divine truths are fully revealed in Scripture 3. From the nature of God himselfe who being the chiefest good and therefore most diffusive of himselfe must needs communicate the knowledge of himselfe to reasonable creatures for their salvation Psal. 119. 68. 4. From the end of creation for God hath therefore made reasonable creatures that he might be acknowledged and celebrated by them both in this life and that which is to come 5. From common experience for it was alwai●s acknowledged among all Nations that there was some revelation of Gods will which as their Divinity was esteemed holy and venerable whence arose their Oracles and Sacri●●ces 2. What Divinity is The ambiguity of the Word is to be distinguished Theology or Divinity is twofold either first Archetypall or Divinity in God of God himsel●e by which God by one individuall and immutable act knowes himselfe in himselfe and all other things out of himselfe by himselfe Or second Ectypall and communicated expressed in us by divine revelation after the patterne and Idea which is i● God and this is called Theologia de Deo Divinity concerning God which is after to be defined It is a question with the Schoolmen whether D●vinity be Theoreticall or Practicall Vtraque sententia suos habet autores But it seemes saith Wendeline rather to be practicall 1. Because the Scripture which is the fountaine of true Divinity exhorts rather to practice then speculation 1 Tim. 1. 5. 1 Cor. 8. 3. 13. 2. JAmes 1. 22 25. Rev. 22. 24. hence John so often exhorts to love in his first Epistle 2. Because the end of Divinity to which we are directed by practicall precepts is the glorifying of God and the eternall salvation of our soules and bodies or blessed life which are principally practicall Wen●line meanes I conceive that the blessed life in Heaven is spent practically which yet seems to be otherwise Peter du Moulin in his Oration in the praise of Divinity thus determines the matter That part of Theology which treateth of God and his Nature of his Simplicity Eternity Infinitenesse is altogether contemplative for these things fall not within compasse of action that part of it which handleth of our manners and the well ordering of our lives is meerely practique for it is wholly referred unto action Theology is more contemplative then practique se●ing contemplation is the scope of action for by good works we aspire unto the beatificall vision of God Theology amongst the Heathens did anciently signifie the doctrine touching the false worship of their Gods but since it is applied as the word importeth to signifie the doctrine revealing the true and perfect way which leadeth unto blessednesse It may briefly be defined the knowledge of the truth which is according to godlinesse teaching how we ought to know and obey God that we may attaine life everlasting and glorifie Gods Name or thus Divinity is a doctrine revealed by God in his word which teacheth man how to know and worship God so that he may live well here and happily hereafter Divinity is the true wisdome of divine things divinely revealed to us to live well and blessedly or for our eternall salvation It is disputed whether Theology be Sapience or Science The genus of it is sapience or wisdome which agreeth first with Scripture 1 Cor. 2. 6 7. Col. 1. 19. 2. 3. Prov. 2. 3. Secondly with reason for 1. Wisdome is conversant about the highest things and most remote from sences so Divinity is conversant about the sublimest mysteries of all 2. Wisdome hath a most certaine knowledge founded on most certaine principles there can be no knowledge more certaine then that of faith which is proper to Divinity The difference lurketh in the subject wisdome or prudence is either morall or religious all wisdome whether morall and ethicall politicall or oeconomicall is excluded in the definition and this wisdome is restrained to divine things or all those offices of piety in which we are obliged by God to our neighbour The third thing in the definition is the manner of knowing which in divinity is singular and different from all other arts viz. by Divine revelation The fourth and last thing in the definition is the end of Divinity which is 1. chiefest the glory of God 2. next a good and blessed life or eternall salvation begun in this life by the communion of grace and holinesse but perfected in the life to come by the fruition of glory This end hath divers names in Scripture it is called the knowledge of God John 17. 3. partaking of the Divine nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. Likenesse to God 1 John 3. 2. Eternall salvation the vision and fruition of God as the chiefest good The next end of Divinity in respect of man is eternal life or salvation of which there are two degrees 1. more imperfect begun in this life which is called consolation the chiefest joy and peace of conscience arising 1. from a confidence of the pardon of sinnes and the punishments due to sinnes 2. From the beginning of our sanctification and conformity with God with a hope and taste of future perfection in both 2. More perfect and consummate after this life arising from a full fruition of God when the
that no man can see just cause to call them into question as the doctrine of creation of all things in six daies the doctrin of the fall of our first parents the story of the delivering Israel out of Egypt of the delivering of the Law and ten Commandements the doctrine of the incarnation of Christ Jesus of the resurrection of the dead of the last judgement of the life to come and of the immortality of the soule for though this last was taught also by Philosophers yet it is so doubtfully and unperfectly handled by them in comparison of the delivering thereof in Scripture that it is apparent it was another Spirit which guided the teachers of it here then they were guided withall What Angell could ever have found out such an admirable temper and mixture of mercy and justice together as the Gospel revealeth in the reconciliation of God with man God in giving and establishing his law useth no other preface but I am the Lord Exod. 20. nor conclusion but I the Lord have spoken it upon his absolute authority without other reasons to perswade commanding what is to be done though it be contrary to our natures forbidding what is to be left undone though pleasing to us he promiseth things incomprehensible requiring faith he relateth and teacheth things strange above likelihood above mans capacity and yet will have them to be believed to be understood There is nothing in the Law against reason or common equity A Jesuit reports in his History that when his fellows came first to preach in the East-Indies the Gentiles and Indies there hearing the ten Commandements did much commend the equity of them See Sir Walter Raleighs History 2. It teacheth the nature and excellency of God and the works of God more clearly and distinctly than any other writings nay then any without God could have contrived viz. That there are three persons and one God that God is infinite omniscient omnipotent most holy that he created all things that he doth by a particular providence rule all things that he observes all mens actions and will call them to account and give every man according to his works that he alone is to be worshipped and that he must be obeyed in his word above all creatures 3. It requireth the most exact and perfect goodnesse that can be such as no man could ever have conceited in his braine and yet such as being taught and revealed the conformity of it to right reason will enforce any well considering man to acknowledge it to be most true and needfull for example that a man must love God above all and his neighbour as himselfe that he must keepe his thoughts and cogitations free from all the least taint of sinne that he must lay up his treasures in Heaven not care for this life and the things thereof but all his study and labour must be to provide well for himselfe against the future life that he must not at all trust in himselfe nor in any man but onely in God and that he must doe all he doth in Gods strength that he can deserve nothing at Gods hand but must looke for all of free favour through the merits and intercession of another 4. The end of the Scripture is Divine viz the glory of God shining in every syllable thereof and the salvation of man not temporall but eternall These writings lead a man wholy out of himselfe and out of the whole world from and above all the creatures to the Creator alone to give him the glory of all victories therefore they are from him and not from any creature for he that is the Authour of any writing will surely have most respect of himselfe in that writing The Scriptures manifest Gods glory alone Jerem. 9. 23 24. 1 Cor. 1. 31. ascribe infinitenesse of being and all perfections to him Nehem. 9. 6. The doctrines precepts prohibitions and narrations tend to the setting forth of his glory and bring solid and eternall comfort and salvation to their soules which follow their direction They make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15 23. shew the path of life Psal 16. 11. Guide our feet into the way of peace Luke 1. 79. Christ John 7. 18. proves that he came from God because he sought not his own glory but the glory of him that sent him 5. Another reason is from the difference of these writings from all other whatsoever in regard of their phrase and manner of writing All other writings use perswasive and flourishing speeches these command and condemne all other Gods all other religions all other writings and command these onely to be had in request and esteem and acknowledged as the will of God without adding or diminishing requiring every conscience to be subject to them and to prepare himself to obedience without any further objecting or gainsaying and to seeke no further then to them for direction Both the simplicity and Majesty of stile shew it to be from God the wonderfull plainnesse and yet glorious Majesty the simplicity because it is plaine in no wise deceitfull and because it describes great matters in words familiar and obvious to the capacity of the Reader the Majesty since it teacheth so perspicuously the chiefest mysteries of faith and divine revelation which are above humane capacity Whether we read David Esay or others whose stile is more sweet pleasant and rhetoricall or Amos Zachary and Jeremy whose stile is more rude everywhere● the Majesty of the Spirit is apparent There is an authority and Majesty in them above all other writings of other authors the Scriptures command all both King and people Jerem. 13. 18. 1 Sam. 12. ult and bind the heart to its good abearing Jerome could say as oft as I read Paul it se●mes to me that they are not words but thunders which I heare Junius reading the first Chapter of John was stricken with amazement by a kind of Divine and stupendious authority and so he was converted from Atheisme as himselfe saith in his life Johannes Isaac a Jew was converted by reading the 53. of Esay Our Saviour spake as one having authority not as the Scribes So this booke speaks not as men it simply affirmes all things without proofe other authors use many arguments to confirme the truth of what they say Therefore Raimundus de Sabunda hence proves that he who speaketh in the Bible is of that authority that his bare word ought to be believed without any proofe whereas Galene Atheistically urged it the other way The Socinians reject all things in Religion which they cannot comprehend by reason The Philosophers called the Christians by way of scorn credentes Julian derided the Christian beliefe because it had no other proofe then thus saith the Lord. 6. Another argument is taken from the experience of the truth of the predictions and prophesies thereof For seeing it is generally confessed that onely the Divine essence can certainly foresee
these writings come from God We should receive it with reverence believe it with confidence exercise our selves in it with diligence and delight practice it with obedience Reading the Scripture is a rehearsing out of the booke such things as are there written barely without any interpretation It is to be done publikely as it was in the Synagogues of the Jewes who had the reading of the Law and Prophets amongst them the Prophets were read in their eares every day saith Paul and after the lecture of the Law and the Prophets in another place We honour God more by a publique then a private reading of it 2. Privately the godly Jewes of Berea did search the Scriptures and the King is commanded to read in the Law Some good Divines hold that the Scriptures barely read though preaching be not joyned with it may be the instrument of regeneration since the doctrine of the Gospell is called the ministration of the Spirit Psal. 19. the law of the Lord converteth the soule it is so when not preached but the word of God is made effectuall by the Spirit more often more ordinarily to beget a new life in the preaching that is the interpreting and applying of it then in the bare reading 1 Tim. 4. 13. Matth. 28. 29. Christs custome was as we may collect out of Luke 4. where one instance is recorded to make us conceive his ordinary practice when he had read to interpret the Scripture and often to apply it Let us all learn constantly to exercise our selves in the writings of God which if we strive to doe in a right manner we shall attaine true knowledge of the way to Heaven and also grace and help to walke in that way If the Lord should deny to any man the publique helps of preaching and conference yet if that man should constantly reade the word praying to God to teach him and guide him by it and strive to follow it in his life he should finde out the truth and attaine saving grace the word would illighten and convert but if God afford publique preaching and interpretation we must use that too as a principall ordinance Let us all reade the Scripture 1. With hearty prayers to God to direct us and open the sence of it to us Psal. 119. 18. JAmes 1. 5 17. and with a resolution to put in practice that which we learne Jam. 1. 25. Matth. 7. 24. and we shall finde the word read Gods power to our edification and salvation Onely a Spirituall understanding can discerne an excellency in the Scripture Nunquam Pauli mentem intelliges nisi prius Pauli spiritum imbiberis 2. Diligently attend unto reading 1 Tim. 4. 13 15. John 5. 39. Search the Scriptures whether the Greeke word be a metaphor from hunting dogges or from diggers in mines both import diligence It was a solemne speech used in holy actions hoc age The passions of the Martyrs may be read when their anniversarie daies are celebrated Whence the name of Legends Chamier 3. Orderly that we may be better acquained with the whole body of the Scriptures We should reade on in Chronicles and Ezra and other places wherein are nothing but names and Genealogies to shew our obedience to God in reading over all his sacred word and we shall after reape profit by that we understand not for the present though it will be convenient to begin with the new Testament as more plain before we reade the old 4. With faith Heb. 4. 2. The word of God consisteth of foure parts 1. History 2. Commandements 3. Promises 4. Threats All truths taught in the History of the Scripture ought to be believed As that the world was made of nothing onely by the word of God Heb. 11. 3. and that the bodies of men howsoever they died shall rise againe at the last day Job 19. 26. 2 All precepts Genes 22. 6. Abraham went doing that commandement though strange 3 All promises as that God could give Abraham when he was 100 yeeres old a seed and posterity which should be as innumerable as the Stars in the Firmament Genes 15. 5. and that by Sarah an old and barren woman Gen. 17. 16. Abraham and Sarah believed it Rom. 4. 20 21. Heb. 11. 11. 4. Threatnings as that Gen. 6. 13. 17. though unlikely Noab believed it 2 Pet. 2. 5. because God had said it Heb. 11. 7. and that Jonah 3. 4. the people of Nineveh believed v. 5. In narrando gravitas in imperando authoritas in promittendo liberalitas in minando severitas Spanhemius or at de officio Theologi 5. Constantly Cyprian was so much delighted with the reading of Tertullian that he read something in him every day and called him his Master Da Magistrum Let Gods command the examples of the godly and our owne benefit quicken us to a frequent reading of the holy Scriptures Mr Bifield hath a Kalender shewing what number of Chapters are to be read every day that so the whole Bible may be read over in the yeere The number of Chapters while you are reading the old Testament is for the most part three a day and when you come to the new Testament it is but two sometimes where the matter is Historicall or Typicall or the Chapters short he hath set down a greater number The Martyrs would sit up all night in reading and hearing After we have read and understood the Scripture we must 1. give thanks to God for the right understanding of it and pray him to imprint the true knowledge of it in our hearts that it may not fall out 2. We must meditate in the word of God now understood and so fix it in our minds One defines meditation thus It is an action of the soule calling things to mind or remembrance and discoursing of them that they might be the better understood retained affected and possessed It is as it were every mans preaching to himselfe and is a setting ones selfe seriously to consider in his mind and apply to his owne soule some necessary truth of Gods word till the mind be informed and the heart affected as the nature thereof requires and is the wholesomest and usefullest of all exercises of piety This is to ingrast the word into ones soule to give the seed much earth this is to bind it to the Tables of our heart and to hide it in the furrows of our soules this is to digest it and make it our owne 3. We must apply to our owne use whatsoever things we reade and understand the precepts and examples of the Law to instruct our life the promises and comforts of the Gospell to confirme our faith It serves for thankfulnesse 1. that now we have the Scripture the world was a long time without it it was the more wicked because they had no canon of Scripture We are not like to erre by tradition as former ages have done 2. That we have so great a
study it The best Expositors are Mercer Brightman Ainsworth Dr Gouge This Booke which treats of that Spirituall and Heavenly fellowship the sanctified soule hath with Christ cannot be throughly understood in the true life of it but by those that are Sanctified 4. Propheticall The Greater Prophets 4. Lesser Prophets 12. Esay Jeremy Ezechiel Daniel Hosea Joel Amos Obadiah Jonah Micah Nahum Habbakuk Zephany Haggai Zachary Malachy Grotius orders them thus Hosea Joel Amos Obadiah Jona Esay Micha Nahum Habbacuc Zephany Daniel Jeremy Ezechiel Haggai Zachary Malachy They are called Propheticall Bookes because they were written by Prophets by Gods Commandement Prophets were distinguished by the Temples some were Prophetae priores those of the first Temple other Posteriores of the latter Temple Esay Is placed first not because he is more Antient then all the rest for some say that Jonah and Amos were before him in time others that Hosea was before him for Isays beginning was in the dayes of Vzziah Now Hosea was in the dayes of Jerobeam and Jeroboam was before Vzziah This Master Burrouhs saith is one reason why though he intends to goe over the whole propheticall Bookes yet he rather pitcheth upon Hosea first because indeed he was the first Prophet but Isay was rather set first for the Dignity of the Propheticall Oracles which he explaines and because his prophesie is longer then all the rest He is eloquent in his speech being a Noble man therefore the translation can hardly expresse his elegancie He brings so many and such evident Testimonies of the coming incarnation miracles preaching life passion death and resurrection of Christ that he seemes rather to write a History of things past then to prophesie of things to come and one calls him the fifth Evangelist Hence saith Senensis our Lord Jesus Christ made choice of this among all the Prophets first of all to read publikely and expound in the Synagogue of his own Country and in the new Testament he is oftner cited then all the rest of the Prophets He began to Prophesie in the yeare 3160 seven hundred yeares before Christ was borne Vzziah the King of Judah yet reigning and came to the last times of Hezekiah Isay 1. 1. and 39. 3. therefore he was almost contemporary with Hosea Ames and Micha and finished the course of his life under foure Kings of Judath viz. Vzziah Jathan Achaz and Hezehiab The Hebrewes say he was of the Bloud Royall and that he was sawed to death with a woodden Saw by Manasseth an Idolatrous King after he taught 60 yeares His Prophesie consists of 66 Chapters The best Expositors of it are Calvin Scultetus Forerius M●llerus Jeremie This Booke was alwayes esteemed as Canonicall and written by Jeremie He prophesied under Josiah Jehoahaz Joachim and Zedekiah His prophesie consists of 52. Chapters He prophesied partly in the Land of Judea and partly in the Land of Egypt In the Land of Judea he prophesied 41. yeares and afterward 4. yeares in Egypt See Jackson on Jer. 7. 16. p. 4. 5. The best expositors of it are Bullinger Polanus Lamentations It is called in Hebrew Echa 1. quomodo because it begins with this word the Septuagint translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idest lamentationes vel fletus for the Subject or matter of it It containes sad and mourning complaints of the State of the Common-wealth of Israel into which it fell after the death of Josiah it consists of five Chapters Jeremie is thought to be Author of it The best expositors of it are P. Martyr Vdall Ezechiel signifieth the strength of God or one strengthened hy God He prophesied at the same time with Jeremy Ezechiel in the City of Babylon Jeremy at Jerusalem It consists of 48. Chapters The best expositors of it are Junius Polanus and Villalpandas This Prophesie is full of Majesty obscurity and difficulty Calvin spent his last breath on this Prophet Daniel He wrote his prophesie after the Captivity Chap. 1. 21. and 10. 1. while the visions are generall and not dangerous to the Jewes Daniel writeth in the Syriacke tongue generall over the East from Chap. 1. v. 4. to the 8. Chapter But when the oppressors are named Medes and the Jewes plainly described to be the people whom God defendeth then in the 8. Chapter and all after he writeth in Hebrew and hath a Commandement to keepe close to the plaine exposition in Chapter 12. 4. Some reckon Daniel among the Prophets but the Jewes place it among the Hagiographa It consists of 12. Chapters the six first of which containe matters Historicall the six last Propheticall The best Expositors of it are Polanus Junius Willet Broughton Huit The Latines give the first place to the greater Prophets the Greekes to the lesser because there are many among them very Antient. Gratius The 12. lesser Prophets are so called because their writings are briefer then the foure first greater the Hebrewes have them all in one Booke the later Prophets spake more plainly precisely and distinctly touching the coming of the Messiah then the former Daneus Gualter Ribera Tarnovius and Drusius have done best on all the small Prophets Mercer and Livelie have done well on the five first of them The Hebrewes thus place them Hosea Amos Micha Joel Obadiah Jonah Nahum Habakkuk Zephanie Haggai Zecharie Malachi Hosea Is the first among them whose Prophesie although it consist of more Chapters then Daniel yet the other is more prolixe Hosheang noteth Salvator Saviour he is therefore so called because he published Salvation to the house of Judah and spake of the Saviour of the world and was a Type of Christ our Saviour He Prophesied before the Babylonish Captivity in the time of King Jeroboam under foure Kings of Judah Vzziah Iothan Achaz and Hezekiah and was contemporary as some say with Jonah 2 King 14. 26. Isay Is. 1. 1. Amos 1. 1. and Micha 1. 1. all which prophesied destruction to the Kingdome of Israel It consists of 14 Chapters The best Expositors of it are Zanchius Tremelius Pareus Rivet Livelie Diu vixi Osee Prophetam egit ●ut volunt Hebraei per annos 90 ita multos habuit Prophetas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut Isaiam Ioelem Amosum Abdiam Iouam Michaeam ut notat Hieronymus Joel he prophesied in the time of Hezeohia it consists of three Chapters which containe partly exhortation to repentance and partly comfort to the penitent Daneus Pareus Drusius and Livelie are the best Expositors of it Amos Of a Shepheard he was made a Prophet 1 Chap. 1. v. and 7. 14. He was contemporary to Isay and Hosea He prophesied to the Kingdome of Israel or the ten Tribes 1. 1. and 3. 1. and 4. 1. and 5. 1. He utters a few things concerning the Kingdome of Judah 2. 4. and 6. 1. It consists of nine Chapters Daneus Pareus Livelie and Drusius are the best Interpreters of it Doctor Benfield hath done well on two
both from all prophane and Sacred writings and Paul honours it with this Elogie a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation 1 Tim. 1. 15. a more sure word 2 Pet. 1. 19. the Comparative for the Superlative in which there is no doubting and uncertainty but all things firme As God is I●hovah of himself so is his word autoritative of it selfe and is true and to be obeyed whether thou think it Scripture or no. There is no higher authority for thee to appeale to it is above opinions of men conscience and therefore it must determine all controversies 2. It is true and certaine verity is affirmed of the Scriptures primarily internally and by reason of it selfe which is called the truth of the object which is an ab●olute and most perfect agreement of all things delivered in the Scripture with the first truth or divine will of which the Scripture is a symbole and lively Image so that all things are delivered in it as the Holy Ghost hath dictated whence those honourable titles are given to it the Scripture is called a sure word 2 Pet. 1. 19. Psal. 19. 7. the Scripture of truth Dan. 10. ult words of truth Eccles. 12. 10. Yea truth it self John 17. 17. having the God of truth for the Authour Christ Jesus the truth for the witnesse the Spirit of truth for the Composer of it and it worketh truth in the hearts of those which heare it 2 Pet. 2. 2. The Apostle preferres the Scripture before the Revelation made by Ang●ls Gal. 1. 8. Christ commends the certainty of it above all other sorts of Revelation 1 Pet. 1. 19. above information from the dead Luke 16. 31. The word of God is not onely true but eminently true truth it selfe prima veritas and pura veritas The Scripture hath a twofold truth 1. Of assertion it containeth no errour 2. Of promise there is no unfaithfulnesse in it The first truth referres to the matter which is signified properly called truth or verity The second referres to the intention of the Speaker which is properly called veracite or fidelity the latter is implyed Psal. 19. thy Testimonies are sure and so the sure mercies of David the former is implyed in that the word is purer then Gold 7 times refined There are two signes of truth in the Scripture 1. The particularity of it it names particulars in genealogies dolosus versatur in generalibus 2. Impartiality toward friends and their adversaries the most holy men have their faults described they give due commendation to their adversaries The truth of Scripture is 1. More then any humane truth of sense or reason 2. Above all naturall reason as the doctrine of the Trinity the incarnation of Christ justification by faith in Christ. 3. A truth which evidenceth it self 4. The standard of all truth nothing is true in doctrin or worship which is not agreeable to this 3. The Scripture is the rule of faith and manners It is termed Canonicall generally by the Fathers of the word Canon which signifieth a rule because it containes a worthy rule of religion faith and godliness● according whereunto the building of the house of God must be sitted These properties saith Suarez are required in a rule 1. That it be known and easie the Scripture is a light 2. That it be first in its kind and so the measure of all the rest 3. It must be inflexible 4. Universall 1. It is a perfect rule of faith and obedience and able to instruct us sufficiently in all points of faith or doctrinals which we are bound to beleeve and all good duties or practicals which we are bound to practise Whatsoever is needfull to beleeve or to doe to please God and save our soules is to be found here whatsoever is not here found is not needfull to beleeve and practise for felicity Christ proveth the resurrection of the dead being an article of our faith against the Sadduces Matth. 22. 32. and the use of the Sabbath being a rule of life against the Pharisees by an inference made from the Scripture Matth. 12. 7. The Heads of the Creed and Decalogue are plainely laid downe in Scripture therefore there we have a perfect rule of faith and manners It is a rule 1. For faith Jerome in his controversie with Helvidius saith Credimus quia legimus non credimus quia non legimus We beleeve because we read we doe not beleeve because we doe not read Christ often saith have ye not read is it not written what is written in the Law Luke 10. 26. faith and the word of God must run parallel This we first beleeve when we doe beleve saith Tertullian that we ought to beleeve nothing beyond Scripture When we say all matters of doctrine and faith are contained in the Scripture we understand as the Ancient Fathers did not that all things are literally and verbally contained in the Scripture but that all are either expressed therein or by necessary consequence may be drawne from thence All controversies about religion are to be decided by the Scripture Deut. 12. 32. and 4. 2. Josh. 1. 7. Franciscus de S●lis a Popish Bishop saith the Gospell was honoured so much that it was brought into the Councell and set in the midst of them and to determine matters of faith as if Christ had been there 2. It is a perfect rule for our lives and practise Psal. 19. 11. and Psal. 119. 9. In the Scriptures there are delivered remedies against all vices and meanes are there laid down for the attaining of all vertues We must follow the Scriptures exactly and not swerve to the right hand or left a metaphore taken from a way or rule saith Chamier when Linacer a learned English man heard the beginning of the 5. of Matthew read Blessed are the poore in spirit c. he broke forth into these words either these sayings are not Christs or we are not Christians It is a perfect not a partiall and insufficient rule as the Papi●●s make it as God is a perfect God so his word is a perfect word if it be but a partiall rule then it doth not perfectly direct and he that should perfectly doe the will of God revealed in Scripture should not yet be perfect Secondly if the Scripture be a partiall rule then men are bound to be wise above that which is written that is above the Law and Gospell Regula fidei debet esse adaequata fidei aut regula non erit Whitakerus 1. All addition and detraction are forbidden to be made by any man to the word Deut. 4. 2. and 12. 32. Deut. 5. 32. Gal. 1. 8. 2. The Scripture is said to be perfect to beget heavenly and saving wisdome Psal. 19. 8. 2 Tim. 3 15 16 17. 3. Men in the matter of faith and Religion are sent to the Scripture onely 2. The Scripture is an Infallible rule Luke 1. 4. of which thou hast had a full assent Regularectè definitur
2. The cause and condition of the object hated is sinne for which God abhors the delinquent creature onely the reasonable creature hath left his station and defiled himselfe with the filth of sinne all the rest of the creatures whether brute beasts or insensible creatures persist in the state of goodnesse wherein they were created although perhaps not in the same degree of perfection and excellency for mans sinne But although God cannot hate the creature unlesse as sinfull yet not every degree of sinne but a high measure of it makes the person hated It is true that God abhors the least sin yet he doth not abhor the persons of the godly in which are the reliques of sinne as he doth those of the wicked in whom sinne raignes 3. The effect of Gods hatred is to punish the person whom he hates whom when once it is rejected by God troopes of evill doe invade God both permitting and commanding and this actuall hatred or outward manner of manifesting it may not unfitly be referred to the Divine justice Hatred in God is a vertue and fruit of his justice and not a vicious passion 1. We should hate sinne for God hateth it and that with the greatest hatred even as hell it selfe Rom. 12. 9. sinne is the first principall and most immediate object of hatred Paul mentioning divers evils saith God forbid I hate vaine thoughts saith David Our affections must be conformable to Gods He hateth nothing simply but sinne and sinners for sinnes sake 2. Sinne is as most injurious to God so most hurtfull to man therefore it is in it selfe most hatefull The ground of hatred of any thing is the contrariety of it to our welfare as we hate wild fierce and raging beasts for their mischievousnesse a Toade and Serpents for their poysonfulnesse which is a strong enemy to life and health Sinne is the most mischievous and harmfull thing in the world Just hatred is generall of whole kinds as we hate all Serpents so we should all sinnes Meanes to hate ●inne 1. Pray to God that his Spirit may rule and order our affections and set the same against evill 2. Exercise our selves in meditating of the infinite torments of hell which sinne deserveth and the fearefull threats denounced against it in the Word of God of all sorts of evils 3. We should labour to get out of our naturall estate for the unregenerate man hates God Psal. 81. 15. Rom. 1. 30. Christ John 7. 7. and good men eo nomine as Cain did Abell 1 John 3. 10 12. they hate Gods waies and Ordinances 1 Prov. 22. 29. This hatred is 1. Causelesse Psal. 69. 44. 2 Intire without any mixture of love 3. Violent Psal. 55. 3. 4. Irreconcileable Gen. 3. 15. CHAP. IX OTher affections which are given to God metaphorically and by an Anthropopathy are 1. anger and its contrary complacency or gentlenesse which are improperly in God for he is neither pleased nor displeased neither can a sudden either perturbation or tranquillity agree to God but by these the actions of God are declared which are such as those of offended and pleased men are wont to be viz. God by an eternall and constant act of his will approves obedience and the purity of the creature and witnesseth that by some signe of his favour but abhorres the iniquity and sinne of the same creature and shewes the same by inflicting a punishment not lesse severe but farre more just then men are wont to doe when they are hot with anger Exod. 32. 10. Now therefore let me alone that my wrath may wa● hot against them and that I may consume them and I will make of thee a great Nation Gods Anger is an excellency of his owne essence by which it is so displeased with sinne as it is inclined to punish the sinner or a setled and unchangeable resolution to punish sinners according to their sinnes God is greatly moved to anger against all impenitent sinners especially the unjust enemies of his people Rom. 1. 18. 2. 8 9. 1 Cor. 10. 22. Ephes. 5. 6. Col. 3. 6. Deut. 32. 21. Psal. 106. 40. because such wrong God He cannot be hurt for that were a weaknesse but he may be wronged for that is no weaknesse but a fruit of excellency seeing nothing is more subject to be wronged then an excellent thing or person for wrong is any behaviour to a person not sutable to his worth And the more worthy a person is the more easie it is to carry ones selfe unseemlily Sinne wrongs God 1. In his authority when a just and righteous Governour hath made just and right Lawes then it is a wrong to his authority a denying and opposing of it to neglect dis-regard and infringe those Lawes Sinne is a transgressing of Gods Law and impenitent sinne doing it in a very wilfull manner with a kind of carelessenesse and bold disrespect of the Law-maker God should not have shewed himselfe wise just good carefull of mankinde that is to say of his owne worke if he had not made his Law for it is a rule tending to guide man to order his life most fitly for that which was the maine end of it the glory of his maker and that which was the subordinate end of it his own welfare 2. It wrongs him in his honour name and dignity it is a denying of his perfect wisdome and justice 3. In his goods abusing them 4. In his person sinne being offensive to the purity of his holy person Lastly the opposing of Gods people wrongs him in those that are neerest him The properties of Gods anger 1. It is terrible he is called Bagnall Chemath the Lord of anger Nahum 1. 5. His wrath is infinite like himselfe If we consider it 1. in regard of its intention for God is called a consuming fire Heb. 12. 29. it pierceth the soule and the inmost part of the Spirit 2. In respect of its extension it comprehends in it all kinds of evill Corporeall Spirituall in life death after death it reacheth to Kingdomes as well as to particular persons or families to the posterity as well as to the present generation 3. In respect of duration it continueth to all eternity John 3. 36. it is unquenchable fire 2. Irresistible compared to a whirlwinde God is most wise of great and perfect unsterstanding He is slow to anger never moved till there be great cause therefore he holds out in his anger Great persons inflict great punishments on those with whom they are displeased Ob. Fury is not in me Esay 27. 4. Sol. Take fury for unjust undue and excessive anger which riseth too soon worketh too strong and continueth too long so it is not in God but a discreet and well advised motion against any offender by which one is moved to punish him according to his offence anger so taken is in him Anger wrath and rage or fury are sometimes promiscuously put one for
needfull for it Mercy in God is not any passion or quality as it is in men but it is the very divine essence it selfe and therefore perpetuall and in●inite such as no tongue can expresse Mercy in God and in us differ 1. It is in him essentially in us as a quality 2. In him primarily in us secondarily Gods mercy is the cause of all mercy it is without motive or worth in us naturall free Rom. 9. 18. boundlesse extends to a mans soule body this life the next to a man and his posterity Exod. 34 6 7. it is above all his workes Psal. 145. 9. it is beyond his promise and our expectation Reasons 1. Whatsoever good and commendable thing is to be found in the creature that must needs be found eminently and excellently in the Creator from whom it is derived to the creature and who could not derive it t● the creature if he had it not more perfectly in himselfe Now mercy is to be found in all good men and it is a lovely and commendable thing in them such as begets good will and liking towards them therefore it is much more fully in God 2. He hath great mercy in him if God be mercifull at all he must needs be mercifull in great measure yea above all measure beyond all degrees in all perfection for the essence of God is infinite and his wisdome power and mercy are inf●nite There is a mercy of God which extends to all his creatures Psal. 145. 9. Luke 6. 35. God is mercifull unto all men but especially to some men whom he hath chosen unto himselfe The speciall mercy of God is offered unto all within the Church Ezech. 16. 6. Acts 13. 40. but is bestowed onely upon some viz. such as receive Christ John 1. 11 12. This life is the time of mercy wherein we obtaine pardon for sinne after this life there is no remission or place for repentance All blessings Spiritual and Corporeall are the effects of Gods mercy Common blessings of his generall mercy speciall blessings of his speciall mercy The effects of Gods speciall mercy are 1. The giving of Christ for us 2. His Word 3. Justification 4. Sanctification 5. giving his Spirit for a comforter in our griefes and afflictions I●hn 14. 16. 6. The Sacraments Mercy must accord with wisdome justice and truth therefore those that stoope to justice by acknowledging their offence and worthinesse to be punisht for it and are sorry they have so offended and ●esolve to offend so no more and earnestly also implore Gods mercy shall partake of it The Lord is plenteous in mercy to all which call upon him and the Lords delight is in them which feare him and hope in his mercy Judge your selves and you shall not be judged humble your selves under the hand of God and he will exalt you On these termes he will shew mercy universally to all which submit to him thus and seeke to him for mercy without any exception of person fault time Quest. Whether mercy and justice be equall in God and how can he be most just and most mercifull Answ. Mercy and Justice may be considered ad intra as they are essentiall properties in God and so he is equally just as well as mercifull 2. Ad extra as he puts himselfe forth into the outward exercise of mercy and punishment In this latter sence we must distinguish between this present time where mercy triumphs against judgement Jam. 2. 13. and the day of judgement that is a time of justice and retribution to the wicked and so David speaking of this present time saith All thy waies are mercy and truth Psalm 25. and that of the Schooles is true remunerat ultra condignum punit infra Gods justice and mercy are both infinite and equall in him onely in regard of man there is an inequality For God may be said to be more mercifull unto them that are saved then just to them that are damned for the just cause of damnation is in man but of salvation is wholy from God In himselfe and originally they are both equall and so are all his attributes but in respect of the exercise and expression upon his creatures and abroad in the world there is some difference Mr Bolton on Prov. 18. 14. 1. We should believe this point labour to be fully perswaded in our hearts that Gods mercies are great and many he hath preventing mercies how many sinnes hath he preserved thee from 2. sparing mercies Lam. 3. 22. behold Gods severity towards others and mercy toward thee 3. renewing mercies 4. pardoning mercies He is willing and ready to helpe us out of misery Therefore we should praise him for this attribute how excellent and desirable a thing is mercy therefore give him the glory of his mercy 2. It is full of comfort to a child of God he need not be dismayed with any thing not his imperfections since the divell himselfe cannot hurt him for God is more mercifull to help him then the divell can be malicious to hurt him 3. We should be encouraged to seeke to him for mercy seeing there is so great store of it in him There is an infinitnesse of mercy in God so that what ever my sinnes have been if now I will turne he will accept me if I strive to turne he will enable me Therefore I will now runne to him for mercy I will fall down before the Throne of justice and confesse I have deserved wrath and nothing but wrath but will cry to him for mercy 4. Those that have and doe seeke should give him the glory of his mercy and take comfort themselves in the confident hope of finding mercy Praise him for his mercy to others and he will give thee some comfortable hope of finding it thy selfe 5. We should be mercifull like God to our selves and brethren their soules and bodies imitate his mercy be you mercifull to the afflicted and distressed shew mercy freely and constantly and then we shall obtaine mercy Matth. 5. 7. 6. We should labour to be qualified for mercy 1. Confesse our sinnes and forsake them Prov. 28. 13. 2. Feare God his mercy is on them that feare him Luke 1. 50. Psal. 103. 11 17 18. 3. Love God He shewes mercy to them that love him Exod. 20. 6. 4. Trust in God then mercy shall compasse us Psal. 32. 10. 5. Thinke on good things then we shall have mercy Prov. 14. 22. 6. Keepe close to the rule of Gods Word Gal. 6 16. CHAP. XII AThird vertue in God is Justice by which God in all things wils that which is just or it is the Attribute whereby God is just in and of himselfe and exerciseth justice toward all creatures and giveth every one his due Esay 45. 21. Psal. 11. 7. Gen. 18. 25. Zeph. 3. 5. Rom. 2. 6 7. 1 Pet. 1. 17. 2 Thess. 1. 6 7. 2 Tim. 4. 8. 1 John
King of glory Psalm 24 8. Father of glory Ephes. 1. 17. 2 Efficaciously when it affirmeth that all the earth is full of the glory of God Esay 6. 3. and propounds the glorious and wonderfull workes of God to be considered by us Exod. 32. 18. He meanes he will shew him so much of his glory as it is possible for a creature to behold and live we can not behold the fulnesse of it God is glorious in his nature 1 Cor. 11. 7. his glory obscureth all other glory Esay 6. 2. Gen. 18. 17. 1 King 10. 13. His glory is manifested 1 Extraordinarily in the cloud in apparitions and visions 2 Ordinarily in his word and workes The Law sets forth the glory of his justice and the Gospell that of his mercy 2 Cor. 3. 8. it is called his glorious Gospel Luke 2. 14. All his workes set forth his glory both those of creation and preservation or providence Psalm 19. the whole creation must needs shew forth his glorious power and wisdome the souud is said to goe over all the world that is al● creatures must needs gather that if the Heavens be such glorious Heavens the Sunne so glorious a Sunne how much more must that God be a glorious God who is the authour and worker of them God is glorious in all his workes upon the hearts of believers he puts a glory upon them so that in this sence he is effectually glorious Ephes. 5. a glorious Church and Psalm 43. The Kings daughter is all glorious within this glory is grace when God makes one holy heavenly-minded meeke zealous hereafter we shall have glorious bodies and soules God made all things for his glory for of him and to him are all things Rom. 11. All the unreasonable creatures are for Gods glory 1 In that they are serviceable to man for herein God is glorified in that they can accomplish those ends for which they were made and that is for man Gen. 1. the Sunne and Starres are for him as well as creeping things these creatures are for a twofold use 1 To give him habitation and to be meanes of his corporeal life 2 To be continuall quickners of him to praise Gods glorious power and wisdome God is said Acts 4. not to leave himselfe without witnesse the reasonable creatures are made chiefly for his glory because they know and love him That God is Glorious appeares 1 God hath made many of his creatures glorious Dan. 10. 8. so there is one glory of the Sunne another of the Moone the King clad with gorgeous attire and being arrayed with the Ensignes of his Soveraignty is glorious so Salomon 2 This glory shall continue for ever because God hath it from himselfe and derived it not from another He is a perfect being independent all things are under him the inferiour can not worke without the superiour There is a double glory in things 1 Inherent in themselves which is partly visible as that of the Sunne partly intelligible an excellency in a thing which affects the understanding 2 From without given by others so there is a kinde of glory and excellency in some precious stones which affect a man with a kind of wondering so in an Angell a great shining as in that which appeared to Zachary so in the vision that Paul saw and when God appeared to Moses There is an inward glory standing in being worthy of highest esteeme and an outward glory standing in being highly accounted of God is worthy to be esteemed above all and is so by the holy The chiefest and highest cause of any benefit shewd to us is not our selves but the name of God even his glory and the cleare declaration of his owne excellencies Ezek. 20 9. 14. 22. Psalm 25. 1. Ezek. 36. 22. Reas. 1 The thing which induced God to make all things must needs be the cause of all other benefits bestowed after the creation now he made all things for himselfe and his owne name for neither had they any being nor could they have any before and therefore could not be any moving cause to their owne creation therefore neither to doe any other thing 2 All creatures are nothing and lesse then nothing in comparison of God therefore he could not by them be moved to worke any thing but doth it for his owne names sake Things meane and triflng are not fit to be the highest end of an excellent worke God is most high and glorious and all creatures are lesse then nothing before him therefore himselfe must be moved by himselfe not by them chiefly to doe any thing for them For as God hath no efficient materiall or formall cause at all but is to himselfe instead of all these because he is of himselfe so neither can he have any finall cause but himselfe For if he have any other end then himselfe that is his own glory he were some way dependent upon some other thing which is impossible If it be objected how is it said then that God doth this or that for Abraham Isaac and Jacobs sake as often Moses presseth him in his prayers The answer is he lookes upon them still in subordination to his owne name so that they are motives but in reference to his name and no otherwise He glorifieth himselfe and aimeth at his own glory in keeping covenant and promise with them Gods glory is the end of predestination both reprobation Prov. 16. 1. and election Ephes. 1. 5 6. of the creation and administration of all things Rom. 11. 36. of all benefits obtained in Christ 2 Cor. 1. 20. and should be of all our actions 1 Cor 10. 35. Quest. Whether the infinite glory which God hath as God be communicated to Christs humane nature Answ. That being a creature can not have that glory which is due to the Creator It is true Christ is infinitely to be glorified because he is God and man but not therefore his humane nature Our Divines distinguish between a glory meerely divine and a Mediators glory which is next to divine far above all creatures Ob. Christ prayed for the glory which he had before the beginning Sol. Christ had it in decree and predestination and that was not Gods essentiall glory which is a property for he requires he may have it now which could not be if he had it from eternity We glorifie God not by putting any excellency into him but by taking notice of his excellency and esteeming him accordingly and making manifest this our high esteem of him There is a twofold glory 1 Essentiall infinite everlasting this is called gloria it receives neither addition nor diminution by any created power 2 Accidentall finite temporary called glorificatio this ebs or flowes shines or is overshadowed as goodnesse or gracelesnesse prevailes in the world It serves 1 To shew the vilenesse and basenesse of all wicked men which oppose Gods glory and strive to obscure it dishonour this glorious God setting light by him in their
hearts and blaspheming him with their tongues a sinner in sinning lifts up himselfe above God preferring his own wisdome before Gods and his will before his therefore David worthily concludes the 104 Psalme with an imprecation against sinners God will gaine glory of them in despight of their hearts by magnifying his justice 2 We should labour to partake of Gods Image that we might be partakers of his glory we must earnestly desire that Gods glory may be communicated to us that he would send forth his Spirit of glory to rest upon us by which meanes we shall commend our selves to God Christ the Angels and Saints and our owne consciences 3 We must learne to contemplate the glory of God with admiration by this one principally differs from a beast He hath not a capacity to behold the excellency of God the Saints in Heaven are even taken up and filled with beholding Gods glory set your eyes round about to behold Gods workes and his glory in them so as you may admire God this will make your soules to enjoy God Paul saith In the mystery of the Gospell we behold as in a glasse the glory of God be much in this exercise 4 We must long to goe out of this world to behold Gods glory fully Jobn 17. 24. raise up your hearts to heavenly desires wish earnestly to be in Heaven Every one would be willing to goe to Heaven when he dieth but we must desire to leave this life to goe thither 5 This should comfort us 1 Against reproaches and contempt in the world if God be glorified we must sacrifice our names as well as our lives to him 2 Against death then we shall no more dishonour God 3 The day of judgement should be longed for because it is Gods glorious day 2 Thess. 1. 10. we run to glorious sights on earth as the Queen of Sheba 6 We should ascribe all glory to God the fountaine of glory 1 Chron. 29. 11 12. Psalm 115. 1. God challengeth this from men Give unto the Lord glory and strength give unto the Lord the glory due to his name He is very jealous of his glory and will not suffer the least part of it to be given to the creature 7 Take heed of those Tenets which oppose Gods glory as 1 The lawfulnesse of giving religious honour to images the Popish Doctors have wearied themselves and wracked their braines to coine distinctions how divine worship may be given to Images but the second Commandement forbids Image-worshipping and God acknowledgeth himselfe a jealous God and saith he will not give his glory to another 2 Attributing too much to our free-will or setting up our merits this is robbing God likewise of his glory Let us first live to his glory and doe all for his glory 1. Because he intended it 2. He hath joyned our happinesse and his glory together 3. It is infinitely more worth then all the world 4. It is his condescending that he will take this for glory 5. He will have glory of us against our wils 6. The Creatures glorifie God in their way 7. How much glory doe we give to things of an inferiour nature 8. God will hereby give us glory We should doe all we doe for him and to him even to shew forth our apprehension of his name Doing whatsoever good we doe and leaving whatsoever evill we leave that we may declare our high esteem of him and make it appeare that we doe judge and repute him most wise good just excellent worthy all the service that we can doe and more too And whatsoever is not thus done with reference to the name of God as the motive and end of it doth want so much of goodnesse as it wants of this reference Nothing is good farther then it hath reference to God the chiefe good If we aime onely or chiefly and be moved onely or chiefly by temporall benefits and respects of this kind looking to our selves our deeds are hollow and seemingly good alone not reall If we looke to our selves alone even in respect of eternall benefits and not above our selves to him and to his name that also is but hypocrisie But this is truth to make our ends and motives the same with Gods and to have an eye still above and beyond our selves even to Gods name that we may cause it to appeare to him and our selves and others that we know and confesse his great name Omnibus operibus nostris coelestis intentio adjungi debet Aquinas God glorified himselfe John 12. 28. Christ glorified him his whole life was nothing but a seeking of his Fathers glory John 17. 4 the Saints and Angels spend eternity in setting forth his glory Esay 6 23. Reu. 4. 10 11. 7. 9 10. all the creatures doe glorifie God in their kind Psalm 145. 10. 148. the worme is not exempted therefore that man saith Chrysostome which doth not glorifie God is baser then the basest worme This is all the first table of the Decalogue and above halfe of the Lords prayer The three first Petitions concerne Gods glory and the conclusion likewise hath reference to it We should glorifie God in all conditions in adversity as well as in prosperity Psalm 50. 15. in all the parts of our bodies in our hearts 1 Pet. 3. 15. with our mouthes Rom. 15 6. in our lives 1 Cor. 6. ult Matth. 5. 16. Let us often thinke of the personall glory and excellency which the Saints shall enjoy when they come to Heaven 1 In Body 2 In Soule The bodies of the Saints in Heaven shall be 1 Perfect free from all blemishes and every way fit for the soules use 2 Incorruptible not liable to sicknesse weaknesse mortality 3 Spirituall 1 In regard of state and condition because they shall be upheld by the Spirit of God without the use of meat drinke and sleepe 2 In regard of quality and operation active and agile as a Spirit they shall move swiftly upward downward any way at the command of the soule 4 Glorious the bodies of the Saints shall then shine as the Sun and be like the glorious body of Christ. The soule shall 1. be totally freed from all Spirituall evils all reliques of sinne and all possibility of sinne the corruption of the understanding will affections conscience shall be quite taken away 2 From all apprehensions of wrath and eternall death 2 It shall perfectly enjoy all Spirituall good 1 The Image of God shall be absolutely perfect in every one of the glorified Saints Every faculty of the soule shall have all grace that faculty is capable of and that in the highest degree The mind shall have all intellectuall vertues the will and affections all morall vertues and that in the highest degree they are capable of 1 Cor. 13. 10. The understanding uno intiuitu shall know omne seibile the will shall be fully satisfied with God the conscience filled with peace the
must needs be at least 160. times 60. miles every houre that is almost 16000. miles every houre that is 166. miles every minute The celerity of this motion b is incredible it goes beyond the thoughts of a man to conceive distinctly of the passage through every place if a man should divide the circumference of the circle of the Sunne into certaine parts he could not so soone have thought of them as the Sun runs through them God doth this great work it is thought to be caused by the turning round of the highest Sphere or the Firmament which pulling along with it selfe the inferiour Orbes makes them to move according to its course but who can give a reaso● why that Spheare it selfe should goe so swiftly even much more swiftly then the Sun because it is far higher then the Sun as much as that is higher then the earth but the immediate power of God who doth move all in moving this one But that God should make the Sun fulfill such a daily race to make day and night it highly commends the work Againe the usefulnesse of it is great for if it should be in any place alwayes night what could they doe how should they live How would any thing grow seeing the nights are cold light and heate being companions and cold and darknesse being companions If no light had beene in the world the world would not have beene a place fit for living things But if one halfe only of the world should have had light with it alwayes it would have caused excessive heate and so would have burnt up and consumed all things beene no lesse harmfull then the defect of heat but now the succession of one of these to the other viz. light and heate to darknesse and cold doth so temper them by a kind of mixture that it is in such proportion in every place as is necessary to bring forth all sorts of living things especially the fruites of the earth So God hath assigned such a way and race to the Sunne which by his presence makes day and by his absence night as was fit only fit for the quickning enlivening and comfort of every kind of living creature so that upon this course the wel-being yea the very being almost of all things doth depend Wee should lament and bewaile our exceeding great blindnesse that live day after day and night after night and yet busie not our selves about this worke not see God in it though it be so constant as it was never stopped but twice since the beginning of the Creation viz. in Hezekiah's time by going backe of the Sunne and in Joshuah's time by stopping of the Sun for a certaine time by the immediate power of God We have the profit of the day and of the night but neither in one nor other do we mark the wisedome goodnesse and power of God In the night men rest and refresh their bodies with sleepe wilde beasts then wake and hunt for their prey In the day men and tame creatures make and dispatch their businesse and eate and drinke and wilde beasts then rest in their dens God is still working for us our thoughts are still idle towards him this is a proofe of our Atheisme and estrangement from him this is the blindenesse of our mindes a not being able to discern of things by discourse of reason the power of understanding for the conceiving of which just and plain reasons are offered unto us There is a natural blindnesse of the eye when it is unable to discerne things by the light of the Sun this is felt and complained of but spirituall blindnesse of mind is when it is unable to discerne supernaturall truths which concerne the soule and another and better life by the use of reason and helpe of those principles which are as light unto it this is not felt nor lamented but it is therefore not felt because it is so naturall to us and because we brought it into the world The beginning of the cure of spirituall blindnesse is to see it let us see it therefore and be troubled at it why do not I see Gods great worke in making night and day to succeed each other Let us looke up to God in this worke and meditate on it at fit times in the morning so soone as we are awake and begin to see the darknesse vanquished and the light conquering and that the Sun is raised above our Horizon and is come to visite our parts againe it were a fruitfull thing to think thus How great a journey hath the Sunne gone in this little time wherein I have been asleep and could observe nothing and now returned againe as it were to call me up say Lord thou hast made night I have the benefit of it and now light visits me Oh that I could honour thee and magnifie thy power and the greatnesse of thy hand and use the light of the day to do the services that are required at my hand in my place Againe in the evening a little before we sleepe we should think of the great work of making day for these many houres the Sun hath beene within our sight and shewed its beames and light unto us and hath run a long race for our good bringing with it lightsome cheerfulnesse the companion of the day Now it is gone to the other part of the world to visite them that God might shew his goodnesse to one place as well as to another Where a multitude of things concur to one effect with which none of them in particular is acquainted there we cannot but know that one common wisedome ruleth them all and so it is in the working of the Sun Moone and Stars to make the Seasons of the day and night and of Summer and Winter therefore some common wisedome must over-rule all of them There is a spirituall light in our Horizon whereas Judaisme and Turcisme is darknesse and Popery a glimering light We should pray to God to give us spirituall light and be thankfull for it He makes day and night also in respect of prosperity and adversity weeping may continue for a night this vici●litude keepes the soule in growth in good temper as the other is profitable for the body pray to God to send Christ to them which sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death and vouchsafe to make it day with them as well as with us Hee hath said in his word that hee will discover the glory of his Sonne and all the earth shall see it together CHAP. IIII. BY the name of Clouds and Waters above the Firmament Gen. 1. We may understand all meteores both watery and fiery which were then created in their causes and so by clouds and windes Psal. 104. 3. must be understood all the meteors the great works of God by which he sheweth himselfe worketh in this lower Heaven They are called Meteors because they are most of them generated
Good and Omniscient as hee wherefore they must bee made by some Maker because they cannot bee Eternall and if made then either by themselves or some other thing besides themselves not by themselves because that implies and absolute contradiction if by some other thing then by a better or worse thing not by a more meane for the lesse perfect cannot give being to a more perfect thing for then it should communicate more to the effect then it hath in it selfe any way which is impossible that any efficient cause should doe not by any better thing then themselves for excepting the Divine Majestie which is the first and best there is no better thing then the Angels save the humanity of our Lord Jesus Christ which could not bee the Maker of them because they were created some thousands of yeares before the humanity was formed in the Virgins womb or united to the second person in Trinity Wee are not able to conceive of their Essence they are simple incorporeall Spirituall substances therefore incorruptible An Angell is a Spirituall Created compleat substance indued with an understanding and will and excellent power of working An Angel is a substance 1. Spirituall that is void of all corporeall and sensible matter whence in Scripture Angels are called Spirits Psal. 104. 4. Heb. 1. 14. Therefore the bodies in which either good or evill Angels appeared were not naturall to them but only assumed for a time and laid by when they pleased as a man doth his garments not substentiall but aeriall bodies they were not Essentially or personally but only locally united to them so that the body was moved but not quickned by them 2. Created by which name hee is distinguished from the Creator 3. Compleate by which an Angel is distinguished from the reasonable soule of man which also is a spirituall substance but incompleate because it is the essentiall part of man 4. Indued with 1. an understanding by which an Angel knoweth God and his works 2. a will by which he desires or refuseth the things understood 3. An excellent power of working by which hee effects what the will commands this is great in them Psalm 103. 20. See 2 Kings 19. 35. The Angels are most excellent creatures when the highest praise is given of any thing it is taken from the excellencie of Angels Psal. 78. 25. 1 Cor. 13. 1. They are called holy Angels Luke 9. 26. Marke 8. 36. therefore they are cloathed with linnen Dan. 11. 4. to signifie their purity and are called Angels of light 2 Cor. 12. 14. to note the purity wherein they were created All the Individuall Angels were made at once and as God made Adam perfect at the first so they were made of a perfect constitution They have all our faculties save such as be badges of our weakenesse they have no body therefore not the faculties of generation nut●ition augmentation They have reason conscience will can understand as much as we doe and better too they have a will whereby they can refuse evill and chuse good a conscience reasonable affections though not such as depend upon the bodie They are endowed with excellent abilities know more of God themselves us and other things then we doe love God themselves and men are obedient to God The good Angels obey God 1. Universally in all things Psalme 103. 20. 2. Freely and readily make hast to doe what hee would have done therefore they are said to have Harps Revel 15. 2. as a signe of their chearfull mind 3. With all their might they serve God with diligence sedulity therefore they are said to have wings to flie 4. Constantly Rev. 7. 15. and 14. 4. They have incredible strength and therefore by an excellencie they are called strong in strength Psal. 103. 20. Angels of the power of the Lord Jesus 2 Thess. 1. 7. Powers Rom. 1. 38. One Angel is able to destroy all the men beasts birds and fishes and all the creatures in the world and to overturne the whole course of nature if God should permit it to drowne the earth againe and make the waters overflow it to pull the Sunne Moone and Starres out of their places and make all a Chaos therefore we reade of wonderfull things done by them they stopt the mouths of Lions that they could not touch Daniel they quencht the violence of the fire that it could not touch so much as a haire of the three Childrens heads nor a threed of their garments they made Peters chaines in an instant fall from his hands and feet they can move and stir the earth say the Schoolemen as appears Matth. 28. 2. The Angels shooke the foundation of the Prison where Paul and Silas lay and caused the doores to flie open and every mans bands to fal from him They destroyed the first borne of Aegypt Sodome and Gomorrah One Angel slew in one night in the host of Senacherib and hundred fourscore and 5000. men Reas. Their nature in respect of bodily things is wholy active not passive they are of a spirituall nature what great things can a whirl-wind or flash of lightning doe They are swift and of great agility they have no bodies therefore fill not up any place neither is there any resistance to them they move with a most quick motion they can be where they will they move like the winde irresistibly aud easily without molestation and in an unperceivable time they move more swiftly then the Sun can dispatch that space in as few minuts which the Sun doth in 24. hours They have admirable wisedome 1 Sam. 18. 14. and 14. 20. the knowledge of the good Angels is increased since their Creation for besides their natural knowledg they know many things by revelation Dan. 9. 22 23. Matth. 1. 20. Luke 1. 30. either immediately from God or from his Word Ephes. 3. 9 10. 1 Pet. 1. 12. Luke 15. 18. by experience and conjecture How an Angel doth understand is much disputed their understanding is not infinite they know not all things Mar. 13. of that day the Angells know not againe they cannot know future contingent things any farther then God reveales these things to them neither can they know the secrets of mans heart 1 Kings 8. 39. Psal. 7. 10. for that is proper to the Lord alone They are said indeed to rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner but that is no further then their inward conversion puts it selfe forth into outward actions They do not know the number of the Elect nor the nature of spirituall desertions the manner of mortifying sin unlesse by the Church and Ministry of the word So againe for the manner of their knowledge that of the Schooles about their morning and evening knowledge is vaine but it is plain they know discursivè as well as intuitivè though some say they are creaturae intelligentes but not ratiocinantes There are three degrees of their knowledg say the Schoolmen
16. 8 9 10. Both in the curtaines of the Tabernacle Exo. 26. 1. and the wall of the Temple Cherubims were painted up and downe to signifie as judicious Divines thinke what protection the people of God have in serving him 4. They comfort them in distresse heavinesse and distraction Gen. 20. 17 18. 32. 1 2. Esay 6. 6. Luke 1. 30. and 2. 10. Matth. 28. 5. Acts 10. 4. 27. 23 24. Judges 6. 12. 13. 10. Dan. 10. 12. Matth. 1. 20. 2. 12 13. 5. They suggest holy thoughts into their hearts as the Devill doth evill and uncleane thoughts resist Satan as in Jude 6. They carry the souls of the elect into heaven at the end of this life Luke 16. 22. and at the day of judgment they shall gather the elect from the four winds separate between the elect reprobate Matth. 24. 31. 13. 27. 3. Their services against the wicked and all the enemies of the Church They are ready to execute vengeance upon the enemies of Gods people Esay 37. 36. An Angel smote bloody persecuting Herod Acts 12. At the last day the Angels shall hurrie the wicked to Christs Tribunall and cast the reprobate into hell Matth. 13. 40. 41. 42. 49 50. 8. The speech of Angels Angels and Devils communicate with God and one with another not by speeches for language requires bodily instruments which these Spirits want but as they apprehend every object without senses so they expresse it without language in a secret way We come now to some profitable questions about the Angels The first is this if the Angels be so beneficiall to us whether may they not bee prayed unto The ground and cause which brought in praying to Angels is laid down Col. 2. 13. where you have a generall prohibition of religious worshipping of Angels with the cause of it There are three causes why they attempted this 1. They entred into things which they did not know as the Papists how can they tell whether the Angels pray for us whether they know our wants 2. They follow their carnall mind because they see in the world that to great Magistrates we use Mediators and Intercessors they dare not goe of themselves so here 3. Humility for this they talk as Papists do now wee are unworthy to goe directly to God and therefore we need the help of Angels but this is vaine for Christ is nearer to us then Angels are Ephes. 3. 12. Tutius jucundius loquar ad Jesum quam ad aliquem sanctorum We say that all lawfull and moderate reverence is to be given to Angels which consists in these particulars 1. We acknowledge the great gifts of God in them and praise God for them We confesse it is his mercie that hee hath made such noble creatures to bee serviceable to us and then for themselves in our judgments 1. We honour them and judge them more noble creatures then man they have greater wisdome holinesse and power then man hath 2. For our will and affections we loue them because they love us and delight in our good being ready to helpe us every where 3. We should be carefull of our carriage because of their presence we should not sinne because of the Angels 4. Wee desire to make them examples of our lives that we may doe Gods will as they do 5. If Angels should appeare visibly to us wee should honour them as more excellent creatures but yet stll keep within the bounds of civill or fraternall honour as to our fellow servants but yet above us and not honour them with religious worship The Papists say a religious worship is due unto them but yet that wee may doe them no wrong not indeed such as is due to God but secondary yet stil religious and so they say they intercede for us not as Christ but in an inferiour way and in this sense they hold they may be worshipped and prayed unto Now we will refute their arguments and then confirme the truth with strong reasons For the first all lawful reverence is commanded by the first Table and that is religious or else by the second and that is civill but that manner and degree of their worship is neither therefore it is meerly invented 2. By generall consent religious worship is that whereby we doe acknowledge God to be the primum principium the ultimum finem and summum bonum now this is but one and we may as wel say there is a summum bonum secundariò as there is a secondary religious worship 3. There is the same reason of a religious worship as there is of a divine act of faith love and hope but if a man should say we may with a divine faith beleeve in God primarily and Angels secondarily it were ridiculous therefore here if religious worship were due because of supernaturall excellencies then every godly man were religiously to bee worshipped Our arguments in generall against this are these 1. Matth. 4. 10. Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God him only shalt thou serve Heb. 1. it is applyed to Christ. 2. The promise is to those onely which call upon him 51 Psal. 15. call upon mee 3. It cannot bee of faith for how shall I know whether they hear me whether they be present 4. Coloss. 2. 9. It is condemned for will-worshi● so that Idolatrie is here committed that kind of it quando divinè colitur id quod non est verus Deus John was reproved for this Rev. 19. 10. and 22. 9. Now John might have distinguished I doe not worship you religiously as God but in the second place The second question is whether every man hath his peculiar Angel This is not a question of faith but yet the more to be suspected because it was generally held among the Heathens who did ascribe to every man born a bad angel to afflict and a good one to defend him a good ill Genius as they called thē Becanus brings places of Scripture to prove it but there is altogether silence in the Scripture concerning it for when the Angels are charged to have care over us it implyeth that it is all their care The chiefest place which most seems to favour that opinion is Acts 12. 15. where they said that it was his Angell Now to this some answer that the men spake according to the opinion of men then generally received not according to the truth as we may give an instance concerning the blind man when they asked whether he or his parents had sinned that he should be borne blinde how could hee sin before he was borne but some answer that there was an opinion generally received which all the Platonists held so Origen and many of the Ancients that the soule was created before it was put into the bodie and as it did good or il it was put into a well tempered or a maimed bodie especially they thought these
evill hee should practically feele what he had lost and what evill he had plunged himselfe into Some have thought that those words Gen. 3. 24. should not be understood Historically but allegorically that is that God gave him noe hopes of coming into this place againe but the text contradicts that some have understood by Cherubims some species and images of terrible creatures as wee call Scarecrowes but that is simple to thinke that Adam was so childish to be afraid of those others interpret it of the fire of Purgatory The more probable Interpretation is that by Cherubims are meant Angels who did after a visible manner shake up and downe this fiery sword Moses doth therfore call them Cherubims because the Jewes knew what he meant having such formes over the Arke Therefore it is taken for Angels not simply but as they appeared in some shape It is a curiositie to enquire how long they staid there although it is certaine they ceased when Paradise was destroyed which was by the floud Therefore this serves 1. For information to instruct us 1. That everyman and woman hath a soule there is a bodie and a spirit which enlivens acts the bodie for all performances of the Compositum we must glorifie God in both 1. Cor. 6. 20. 2. It is immortall by Gods appointing but in it selfe endable because it hath a begining that it may be capable of everlasting weale or woe 3. It is soe immortall that it admits of no cessation or intermission the Anabaptists say it is asleep when it parts frō the bodie as soone as it leaves the bodie it goes either to Abrahams bosome or a place of torment 4. At the last day it shall be united with the bodie and the bodie raised up for it and both be happie or miserable for ever 2. Be thankfull to God that hath given us our soules and redeemed them by the bloud of his Son propter hanc Deus facit mundum propter hanc filius Dei venit in mundum Chrysost. blesse him especially for sovle-mercies Ephes. 1. 3. 3. John 2 4. and let the soule praise him Psal. 103. and 104. first and last Wee should love our selves Psal. 22. 26. David calleth his soule his darling it is the immediate worke of God CHAP. IX Of Gods Providence TWo things are to be discussed abovt it 1. That there is a Providence wh●reby the world is governed 2. What it is 1. That there is a Providence which governeth the world and that nothing is done in the world without the certaine and determinate counsell of God is thus proved 1. Faith which leanes and rests on testimonies of holy writ Psal. 14. 2. and 33. 13. the 104. Psal. wholly and 91. Psal. 8 9 10 11. Act. 17. 25. 28. Ephes. 1. 11. At the feast of Tabernacles the Jewes were wont to reade the Booke of Ecclesiastes principally because it speakes so much of the workes of Gods providence 2. Certaine demostrative reasons taken 1. From the causes viz. the Attributes and nature of God 1. There is a God therefore providence because he is a most powerfull and wise King 2. The omnipotent will of God whereby all things are done without which nothing can come to passe 3. His infinite wisedome whereby he can be present with all things which are done in his kingdome 4. His justice in distributing rewards and punishments and goodnesse whereby he communicateth himselfe to the creatures 5. His foreknowledge of all things ● unchangeably depending on the counsell and decree of God 6. He regards the ends of things therefore also the meanes to those ends 7. Hee is the first cause therefore on him depend the second causes 2. From tbe effects the works of God 1. The most wise order of things both naturall and politicke which could not be setled much lesse preserved by blind nature chance or fortune 2. Naturall notions or the law of nature in the difference of honest and dishonest things 3. Peace or torment of conscience from keeping or violating the Law 4. Punishments rewards agreeable to mens deeds which prove there is some Judge of the world and revenger of sins whose severity we cannot shun 5. Heroicke motions vertues and singular gifts given by God to Princes Magistrates Inventers of Arts Artificers others for the common benefit of mankind Lastly by the same reasons it is proved that there is both a God and Providence 2. what providence is It is an externall and temporall action of God whereby he preserveth governeth and disposeth all and singular things which are and are done both the creatures and the faculties and actions of the creatures and directeth them both to the mediate ends and to the last end of all after a set determinate manner according to the most free Decree Counsell of his owne will that himselfe in all things may bee glorified 1. The matter or object of Gods providence is the whole world and whatsoever is b in it for God cares for and governs all things Substances Accidents things great and little necessary and contingent good and evill Hebr. 1. 3. Nehem. 9. 6. The care of God for the bruite beasts living creatures all Meteors is described Psal. 135. Job 37. 2. and ch 38. Matth. 6. 26. Also concerning voluntary things and actions of men good and bad as Prov. 26. 1. 9. Jer. 10. 23. Psalm 139. 1. Psalm 33. 13. 15. concerning things that are contingent Exod. 21. 13. Prov. 16. 33. Matth. 10. 29 30. The least and smallest things are by the God of heaven ordered disposed of according to his owne pleasure and wisdome for very good purpose not so much as a sparrow falls to the ground without Gods providence he saith the hairs of our head are all numbred therefore Cicero was out when he said Dij magna cu●ant parva negligunt and the Poet Non vacat exiquis rebus adesse Iovi The reasons of this are these 1. God is infinite in all excellencies infinite in wisedome there may as much wisdome be seen in little as in great things all things in the world yea even all things which might have beene as well as those that have fallen out are subject to his wisedome and power nothing so small but it is a fit subject of knowing and ordering 2. There is a necessary connexion and mutuall dependance betweene great and small things the one supporting upholding the other so that it is not possible to conceive how any thing should be ordered by God if all things were not the little things being like the pins of a house which hold the building together or the hinges of a great gate upon which the whole is moved Object These things are so small as it is an abasement to the Divine Majesty to intermeddle with them Sol. It is his highest commendation to be infinite so that nothing can bee hid from his knowledge the Lords manner of working in
Paul cals it the riches of Gods goodnesse Rom. ● 4. and maketh this use of it that it should lead us to repentance to consider 1. What we were originally good the Creator being so the creature must needs be and ● what we are now unlike him Esay 5. 25. Luke 6. 36. Gods bounty God is like a most liberall housholder which takes order that nothing in his house or about it shall want that which is necessary further then the fault is in it selfe He gives more then we aske and before we aske Vb●rior gratia quam precatio 2 Chron. ●0 7. Esay 41 8 James 2. 23. * Gratia est qua Deus in seipso est ama●il●s sua●que creaturae favet benefacit unde hoc respectu gratia Dei est favor quo creaturas suas inprimis hemi●●es prosequitur Wendelinus * Dr. Jackson of Gods Attributes l. 1. c. 14. Consectaries of Gods graciousnesse Psalm 103. 8 9. 1 Pet. 5. 16. Nehe. 9. 17 31. Rom. 5. 20 21. Ephes. 2. 9. 2 Tim. l. 9. B●na mea 〈◊〉 Aug. l. 10. confess c. 4. Every one is born with a Pope in his belly men had rather be saved by something of their own then be beholding to Christ for salvation Ignorant people say they hope to be ●aved by their good deeds and meaning * Dr. Twisse in a Manuscript In Johannem tract 81. Exod. 33. 19. 34. 6. Psalm 103. ● Exod. 22. 22. Esay 30. 18. Lament 3. 22. Titus 3. 5. Exod. 34. 6 7. Ephes. 2. 4. Rom. 4. 19. 11. 30 31. * Misericordia est qua propensus est Deus ad succurrendum su●● creaturis in aliqua miseria constitutis iisque re ipsa succurrit Wendelinus The Scripture hath three notable words to expresse the fulnesse of Gods mercy in Christ Ephes. 2. 7. Rom. 5. 20. 1 Tim. 1. 14. 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put upon Gods mercy Luke 1. 50. 54. Psalm 48. 2 3. 89. 28. * Ephes. ● 4. 1 Pet. 1. 3. Mercy and compassion d●ffer onely in the ex●rinsecall denominations taken from different objects Compassion is good will toward othe●s provoked from notice of their misery mercy is an excesse of bounty not estranged from ill deserves in distresse That God hath mercy in h●m He is ready to forgive more sinnes th●n we can imagine Luke 6. 11. * Exod. 20. 6. The mercy of God which reacheth to the pardon of sin is peculiar to the Catholick Church Esay 33. 24. Luk● 16. 24 ●5 Titus 3. 5. Luke 1. 77 78. Lament 3. 2● On what terms God will shew mercy 2 To whom he will shew mercie E●si omnes h●m●nes Deus damnaret un● excepto tame● adhuc major esset misericordia quam judicium nimirum quia nullum 〈◊〉 judicii divini effectum ●isi propter merita eorum qui damnantu● at miseric●rdia nulla invenit merita Chamier 〈◊〉 3. lib. 7. c. 8. Misericordia justitia Dei in se quatenu● in Deo sunt pares sunt respectu effect●rum objectorum major est miseri●ordia Wendelinus Matth. 18. 30. * The Papists s●ek● to the Virgin Mary and other Saints Maria mater gra●iae mater miserioo●diae Tu nos ab hoste protege horâ mortis suscipe Psalm 106. 3. Luke 1. 46 50. Luke 6. 36. * Justiti● est ●ua De●● in se justus est extra se constanti voluntate suum cuique ●ribuit Wen●●linus Genes 18. 25. Justitia disp●nens qua Deu● univ●rsa ●ingula jus●●o ordine disp●●it gu●ernat Deut. 32. 4. Psalm 11. 7. 48. 11. 145. 17. 1 Pet. 1. 17. Rom. 2. from th● 6. to the 12. 2 Cor. 5. 10. Col. 3. 25. Rev. 22. 12. Justitia Distribuens est gratiae v●l irae illa ●st 〈◊〉 v●●untas praestandi promiss●s is●a volunt●● implendi comminati●nes Wendelinus Matth. 19. 29. God assigns fit rewards for wel and evill doing Rom. 1. 18. * Gods justice is not a quality or accident in him but his very natu●e essentiall to him A man may be a man and yet be unjust but God can not be God and be unjust Ge●h loc com●un * The righteou●nesse of God is taken divers wa●es in Scripture sometimes for the essentiall Attribute of G●d sometimes for the righteousnesse of faith which is called the righteousn●sse of God because it is such a righteousnesse as God doth app●ove of and with which we may appeale boldly in his presence againe righteousnesse is taken for his truth and faithfulnesse in promises David praies God to do good to him for his righteousnesse he means his faithfulnesse in his promises See Mr Bu●●howes on Matth. 5. 6. Consectaries from Gods justice ● Chron. 2. 5. Nehem. 9. 33. Psal. 119. 137. Dan. 9. 7. Rom. 3. 16. Rev. 19. 1. John 14. 6. God is aet●rna veritas vera aetern●as If God said one were to be corporeall he would have light for his body and truth for his soule Truth is originally from God the first Ide● rule or standard of truth is Gods will which is veritas Dei Whereby he is what he is essentially simply immutably by which he wils all things to be what indeed they are and knows them to be such as they are most certainly Veritas rei entitatis whereby things are such as God would have them to be and so are true and good An Idoll is nothing in the world Matth 24. 35. John 17. 17. Which truth of God in his promises may be referred to justice because it is just to performe what thou hast promised 2 Tim. 4. 8. * If I speake falshood out of errour and mistake I am weake if wilfully I am wicked If I keep not promise it is either because I cannot and then I am weake or will not then I am wicked therefore God cannot possibly lie 1 Kings 22. 23. Ezek. 14. 9. Consectaries from Gods truth Ephes. 4. 25. Heb. 20. 23. Consectaries from Gods faithfulnesse Heb. ● 15. Heb. 3. 5. What faithfulnesse is Nahum 1. 3. Esay 30. 18. * Patientia est qua ita iram suam moderatu● Deus erga creaturas ut vel poenas differat vel iram un●●●mento non effundat Wendelinus * God is sensible of the wrong offered to him and provoked to wrath thereby 2 Pet. 3. 13. he not onely restraines his anger but gives them time to repent A lea●ned Divine saith if but any tender hearted man should sit one hou●e in the Throne of God Almighty and looke down upon the earth as God doth continually and see what abominations are done in that houre he would undoubtedly in the next set all the world on fire Mr. Bol●●n Matth. 26. 39. This is in eff●ct the same with Patience Num. 14. 18. Nehem. 9. 17. 2 Pet. 3. 9. 15 20. Longan●mity is toward them of whom we can patience toward them of whom we can not be revenged Consectaries from Gods patience and long suffering Posse noll● nobile What patience is It is a
potentiam quam instatu peccati Tunc subjectio animalium erga hominem fuisset perfecta quae nunc diffioilis est non obtinetur nisi adhibita cura maxima assiduo labore sunt n● quaedam animalia fera indomitv quae nunquam cicurantur See Gen. 2. 7. Affirmatiuam tuentur ci Evāgeli Pontificios contra Rivetus exercitat 6. in Cap. 1. Genes See Sir Walter Raleigh in the History of the world page 1. Multi quia locum à Mose hic descriptum reperire nusquam potuerunt hortum arbores flumina aquas omnia haec in allegorias transformarunt quod rect August refellit quamvis ipse se idem sensisse fateatur Alij eodem decepti errore Paradisum finxerunt proximè sphaeram Lunae in aere suspensum Pareus in loc Mihi dubium non est terram Canaan fuisse delicias totius orbis terrarum itaque facile illis accedo qui eo in loco fuisse ante diluvium Paradisum putant Solus ille locus est in q●o postea Deus voluit Ecclesiā populum suum esse Lutherus in decimum caput Genes Paradise was a little modell of heaven and a sign of the great heaven assuring Adam that if he continued in obedience to God he should be translated in to heaven to enjoy God supernaturally as there he did enjoy him naturally for the Law saying Doe this and live means it of ever lasting life So Mr. Wheately held but Mr. Ball seemes to differ from him in his booke of the Covenant Pareus in capu● secundum Gen. ● 7. a The Poets from the tree of life tooke their Nectar and Ambrosia Nectar signifieth making young and Ambrosia Immortality therefore they are said to bee the meate and drinke of the Gods Pareus Pareus Corrrollaties from Gods goodnesse to man in his Creation 1. It serves to blame mankind for his wonderfull naughtiness in striving against God who hath bestowed so great and undeserved benefits upon him 2. Let us seriously consider of our selves and of our making that we may come to a due knowledge of God of our selves One saith the soule is not altogether immateriall for what hath accidents hath matter nothing but that is the subject of accidents 2. what is finite is materiall seeing finitenesse is the attribute of matter by which it is contained within its own limits but it subsists lives and workes being separated from the body it is immateriall Moses affirmeth Gen. 2. that God rested frō all the workes which hee had made that is from Creating new species but he creates individua daily and both governs preserves them and the species or kindes of things already made Joh. 5. 17 God by his Prophet infallibly foretold suture Contingents God observeth all our particular speeches actions seeme they never so small trifling God therefore pleaseth of purpose to put into writing things that seeme not otherwise worthy the registring See Psal. 104. 147. God is maximus in minimis Mat. 10. 29 30. See Psa. 147. 8. God is an understanding essence present in all places at all times with all persons therefore hee must needs observe and know all their motions 2. All things are spoken and done by an influence of power derived from him He is the most principall worker of every action without a speciall and immediate operation of whose might the secondary cause would be dead and powerlesse 3. God hath given us a law to order men in all their words and carriages little and great 4. Hee is the Judge of all the world he must judge certainly infallibly and perfectly Qui ordinat ad finem ordinat ad media To shew that hee is not tyed to second causes Gal. 1. 1. Nehem. 9. 6. Heb. 1. 3. Acts 17. 28. Tres sunt gradus divinae pro videntiae 1 Conservatio actio Dei qua essentias Creaturarū quod species vel individua continuat eorumque agendi vires conservat 2. Gubernatio actio qua prae summa sua autoritate potentia sapientia de rebus omnibus disponit easque pro arbitrio suo regit 3. Ordinatio qua Deus pro admiranda sua sapientia potentia omnia in ordinem redigit fines certos bonos constituendo med●o ad fines disponendo disposita regendo Wendelinus God turnes the misery of the godly to their speciall good and the prosperous estate of the wicked is an occasion of their woe Consectaries from Gods providence Gods providence is like a well-drawn picture which eyeth each in the roome O tu bone Omnipotens qui sic curas Vnum quemque nostrū tanquam solum cures sic omnestanquam singulos August Confess lib. 3. cap 11. Eliz. Young * I trust God which hitherto hath preserved and led me by the hand will not now of his goodness suffer me to go alone Queen Elizab. Stow Chron. Psal. 106. 2. Psal. 92. 4 5. Psal. 107. ult Psal. 48. 8. Gods providence is most conspicuous in the managing of waters for contingences are no where more ticklish then in warre therefore hee is often stiled the Lord of Hosts