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

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on the contrary hunger as much after the bread of God that lasteth to eternall life and thirst after the water of life which whosoeuer drinketh of he shall neuer thirst againe and if we shall as new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word that we may grow thereby 1. Pet. 2. 2. this shall be a further assurance to our own hearts that we our selues are borne of God The like is to be said of other spirituall actions so also of our spirituall growth and increase For as the naturall child new borne doth daily wax and increase in stature and in strength till it be able to goe and to doe other things answerable to the growth thereof as digesting of stronger meats bearing of burdens speaking like a man c so is it with all that are new borne not of mortall but of immortall seed by the word of God They will be able to digest high points of doctrine and not say of some things as some said of Christs doctrine touching his flesh to bee meat in deed and his bloud to be drinke indeed This is an hard saying who can heare it and so take occasion to leaue Christ and to walke no more with him Ioh. 6. 60. and 66. They will be able to walke strongly vp and downe not stumbling at euery straw They will bee able to beare Gods chastisements without murmuring wrongs at the hands of men without seeking reuenge c. They will be able to do the works of God both belonging to all Christians and also which are more sutable to their speciall callings These things I say and such like will all borne againe grow to doe and by these things they shall discerne their spirituall birth and the life of God to be in them Notwithstanding these things are not alike in all that are new borne no not in all of the same spirituall age For as it is amongst naturall men touching naturall strength some are of a low stature some of a taller some are strong men some are weaklings yea sometimes the yonger are taller and stronger then their elders by many yeeres so is it amongst spirituall men touching this spirituall life and this spirituall birth wherof now we speake But these things shall be more manifest by other things after to be spoken This life of God is the more excellent because it is euerlasting Being once begun it shall neuer haue end being once giuen it shall neuer be taken away Our naturall life shall haue an end I meane the life of the body and soule together begun and continued by naturall meanes and no man knoweth how soone But the life of God shall continue as God himselfe abideth for euer and as the seed whereby men are begotten to this life is not mortall but immortall But of this also more afterward In the meane time by that which hath been said it may appeare that this benefit of our spirituall life is a matter well worthy of all good account and reckoning This present life which our bodies doe liue in this world by their communion with the soule is greatly to be esteemed yea more then all other things appertaining thereunto Satan himselfe could say vnto God Skin for skinne and all that euer a man hath will he giue for his life Iob 2. 4. Amongst the benefits for which wisedome is commended about siluer and gold and pearles and all things that can be desired length of daies is not only one but also the first and placed in the right hand of wisedome whereas riches and glory are in the second place and said to be in the left hand Pro. 3. 16. Our Sauiour saith Is not the life more worth then meat Mat. 6. 25. What then is to be compared vnto it what benefit shall a man haue by any other thing yea by all other things if he haue not meat The Prophet saith that none of those that trust in their goods and beast themselues in the multitude of their riches can redeeme his brother viz. appointed by God to dye or giue a ransome for him that is no man can by any mony prolong the daies of his friend or buy out his death so precious is the redemption of their soules c. that he may liue for euer Psal 49. 6. 7. 8. 9. Is this naturall life so precious which yet as I said shall haue an end and no man knoweth either how soon or in what place or in what manner How excellent then is that spirituall life the life of God and the life that is eternall The more excellent therefore that this life is being a part of that matter wherein consisteth our new birth next to Christ himselfe and comming by Christ the more excellent also is the new birth it selfe of the children of God and their state and condition thereby Thus much for the life of God which all the children of God haue in their regeneration by Iesus Christ CHAP. X. Of some other things further concerning the matter of the regeneration of the children of God and of their very being the children of God viz. of their knowledge of God and of their true wisedome declared by the opposition thereunto of the ignorance foolishnesse and madnesse of all meere naturall wicked and vnregenerate men TO proceed further in declaration of other things concerning the very matter and being of the children of God the next point to be considered is the true knowledge vnderstanding and wisedome wherewith all the children of God are indued and enlightned And these things are to bee taken as some particular degrees of the life of God generally before spoken of as also as parts of the new man and of the image of God repaired and restored in our regeneration yea finally as parts also of our said regeneration it selfe Of these things I will speake as before I haue done generally of the life of God viz. by opposing vnto them the naturall ignorance foolishnesse and madnesse of all naturall men not regenerated that so by this opposition of their contraries the said true knowledge vnderstanding and wisedome may be made manifest to be the more excellent things and the more to set foorth the dignity of our regeneration Now as these things I meane this our naturall ignorance foolishnesse and madnesse be contrary to true knowledge vnderstanding and wisedome so the contrary may be said of these euils that hath been said of those vertues viz. that as those vertues are degrees and parts of the life of God of the new man and of the image of God newly created in all that are regenerated so these euils are also to be accounted as degrees and parts of that death of that old man and of that image of Satan in all the vnregenerate before generally touched Touching both these contraries they are expressed first by certaine metaphors the better to set forth their nature These metaphors are light and darknesse sight and blindnesse and such other phrases as are sutable to the
naturall things and of things pertaining to this life whereby we differ from beasts but as touching the spirituall life whereby to thinke of any thing to affect any thing to approue of any thing to speake of any thing or to doe any thing towards eternall saluation of body and soule and as touching that life of God that is that life that is acceptable to God as the worke of God Ioh. 6. 29. and the workes of the Lord 1. Cor 15. 5. 8. are such as are acceptable to God as touching this life I say which is the first degree and the very beginning of eternal life to be afterward enioyed with God and his holy Angels in heauen all the whole posterity of Adam Christ only still excepted is altogether void of For as the root and stocke of a tree being altogether dead without any sparke of naturall life therin it is not possible that any of the boughs or branches can be aliue and as it is not possible for those men and women that are altogether naturally dead their soules and bodies being separated one from another to bring forth liuing children so it is not possible that our first parents beeing altogether dead vnto God and without the life of God before spoken of we or any other of their posterity should be aliue vnto God They may seeme to haue this spirituall life and this life of God because after a naturall manner they can conceiue and doe conceiue some things thereof yea sometimes the greatest mysteries thereof either after a meere carnall sort or by the speciall wisedom of God reuealing the same vnto them for the furthering of the saluation of other and for the making of themselues the more inexcusable and so for the increasing of their own condemnation but in truth and deed they are altogether destitute of it In this case it is with them as it is with many a woman that hauing a Tympany by the abundance of water or of some other matter of the said Tympany or other such like disease feeling some little stirring in her body like the mouing of a yong infant doth therefore thinke her selfe with child and yet in the end she is deceiued being not with child with any other thing then of a disease vnto death so I say many naturall and wicked men hauing some similitude and like actions of the life of God in them and feeling as it were some little motions of such life as it were little flashes suddenly wrought and suddenly vanishing like lightning do therfore thinke themselues with child of Christ and to haue conceiued him in the womb of their hearts but in the end they are deceiued and find themselues only with child of a spirituall sicknesse vnto death that is of hypocrisie and of a bare resemblance of the life of God in them and not to haue that life it selfe This is not only euident by the former testimony of the Apostle but also by another afterward in the same Epistle where he describeth our naturall state and condition to be that we had our vnderstanding darkned and were strangers from the life of God through the ignorance that was in vs because of the hardnesse of our hearts Ephes 4. 18. Thus I say in that place the Apostle describeth the state of all men naturally The same namely that we are all void of that life of God is manifest by other reasons To omit that before insinuated viz. that as the body is dead without the communion of the soule so man cannot be aliue vnto God that hath lost his communion with God and that indeed naturally men are without God in the world and that because they are without Christ Ephes 2. 12. by whom alone there is communion betwixt God and man and in whom alone is that life so that he that hath the sonne hath life and he that hath not the sonne hath not that life 1. Ioh. 5. 11. 12. although after a common manner effectiuely we all liue moue and haue our being in God Acts 17. 18. To omit I say this reason the same is further manifest because all meer naturall men are also without the immortall seed of God in them whereby they should be borne againe the children of God This immortall seed is the spirit of God as before we haue heard Meer naturall men therfore being without this seed how can they haue the life of God in them Againe if naturally we haue this life of God in vs it must be in our soules or in our bodies It is neither in our soules nor in our bodies therefore not at all Touching our soules what life of God can be in them when as we cannot so much as thinke a good thought of our selues 2. Cor. 3. 5. but al the imaginations of our heart are continually euill Genes 6. 5. and when as we cannot so much as will any thing that is good of our selues but it is God that worketh the will as well as the worke Philip. 2. 13. Where there is any life there will be some hunger and thirst after meat and drinke for preseruing of life or at least some desire of other meanes of life But alasse so farre are we from all hunger and thirst after either bread or water of life that we do vtterly refuse them and reiect them offered vnto vs. Yea that which is more we lay foorth our siluer for that which is not bread and we labour and take great paines for that which will not satisfie vs Isai 55. 2. Those things therfore being as it were the very breath of the life of God if we haue them not how can we haue that life of God it selfe For what life can there be without breath If our soules be thus dead what life of God can be in our bodies As our Sauiour saith If the light that is in vs be darknesse how great is that darknesse Matth. 6. 23. so may I say If the life that is in vs be deadnesse how great is that deadnesse Our eares cannot attend to the word of God therefore also not to any other goodnesse except God open our hearts Acts 16. 14. we cannot so much as turne our eyes from any vanity except the Lord do turn them Ps 119. 36. we cannot open our lips that our mouth may shew forth the praise of God except God do open them Psal 51. 15. neither can we so much as say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy ghost 1. Cor. 12. 5. Moreouer this our spirituall death doth appeare by our bearing all spirituall burthens though neuer so heauy without any sense and feeling of them What is heauier then sand yet all the sand ●n the whole world yea the whole earth with all the minerals of siluer gold lead yron tynne and pewter with all the quarries of stones with all the buildings and all other creatures thereupon is not so heauy as sinne Did not the imputation only of other mens sinnes vnto Christ lie so heauy
mother of Iames and Iohn petitioned to our Sauiour for her said two sonnes that one might sit at his right hand the other at his left hand in his kingdome that is because shee dreamed Christs kingdome to be an earthly kingdome that they might bee the two second persons next to himselfe in his kingdome one as it were the Lord Chancellor and the other Lord Treasurer our Sauiour answered after some questions had with them that to sit at his right hand and at his left hand was not his to giue but should be giuen to them for whom it was prepared of his father Matth. 20. 20. c. What meant our Sauiour by this answere Euen this not only that he came to be an example and patterne of humilitie and therefore not to take vpon him the bestowing of earthly offices and dignities neither onely that to conferre or bestowe these preferments of sitting at his right hand and at his left hand in his kingdome in heauen was not in him as hee was onely man in which respect he denieth himselfe to knowe the day and houre of his second comming Mar. 13. 32. and in which respect onely it seemed that this woman with her two sonnes came vnto Christ scarce so much as dreaming of his diuine nature and of his kingdome in heauen but he also meaneth that the distinction Note and degrees of honour in the kingdome of heauen beeing already disposed by his Father viz. before all worlds when he made his generall decree of election vnto saluation it was not now in his power to alter or change the same This I say seemeth plainely to haue beene the meaning of Christ by the opposition which he maketh betwixt the deniall thereof to be in his hands and the acknowledgement of the giuing thereof to them for whom it was prepared of his Father For so he signifieth that the counsell of God touching the sitting at the right hand or at the left hand of Christ should stand could no more be altered by Christ himselfe than the general decree of God of election and reprobation If then Christ cannot alter the decree of God touching the particular place of any in the kingdome of God by giuing that degree of honour to one that the Father had prepared for another how much lesse can hee giue the inheritance of his kingdome generally to any for whom God hath not prepared the same To speake yet more of this inheritance of the children of God as it is said of Absalom in respect of his beauty that there was none in all Israel to be so much praised for beauty as Absalom and that from the sole of the foote to the crowne of the head there was no blemish in him 2. Sam. 14. 25. so it may be said of this inheritance touching the perfection thereof that amongst all the inheritances of the world there is none so much to be praised as this inheritance wherof now we speak of the children of God because from one end to another and from one side to another there is no blemish in it That which Dauid speaketh of his portion as he was one of Gods children may all and euery one of Gods children say of this inheritance The lines are fallen vnto me in pleasant places yea I haue a faire heritage Psal 16. 6. All this is manifest by those foure attributes whereby Peter describeth and commendeth this inheritance calling it immortall vndefiled not withering reserued in heauen 1. Pet. 1. 4. Of what inheritance of what kingdome in all the world can all these things or any of these things be truly spoken Neither is this inheritance thus commended in respect of it selfe only but also in respect of all things therein For are not all things in this inheritance immortall vndefiled not withering and heauenly To speake particularly and briefly of the former commendations First it is called immortall because it is euerlasting and without end as before we heard the condemnation of the wicked to be Though it haue a beginning yet it shall continue for euer How long soeuer any shall be in possession thereof yet the time still remaining shall be more then the time past What an excellent commendation this is may without further amplification appeare by that before spoken of condemnation in respect of the same circumstance In earthly benefits as here this commendation for time is set first so we do first enquire how long any thing will last Euery thing is accounted the better the more durable the same is Of euils the longer is more feared and shunned of good things the longer is more desired and laboured for In question of leases other things being like the longer is more worth Lands in fee simple to a man and his heires are more esteemed then leases or other chattels As this inheritance is immortall in it selfe so it shall be to the children of God for whom it is prepared and that are borne vnto it because they also shall be made immortall as well in their bodies as they are already in their soules that so they may enioy it for euer in their own persons for their bodies and for their soules and not in the person of any heires or successors as it is in the inheritances of this world But of this more afterward vpon the second verse The second attribute vndefiled signifieth that there is no spot or blemish in it Yea as the originall word being substantiuely taken as somtimes it is signifieth a certaine gemme or pretious stone that is vncapable of any pollution and that being cast into the fire will neither be corrupted nor wasted so may it be said of this inheritance Yea it is so pure that as it is said of Ireland that it will not suffer any toad snake adder or any other venemous thing in it so this inheritance will not admit or entertaine any thing that is polluted or defiled This I say brethren saith Paul that flesh and bloud cannot inherit the kingdome of God neither doth corruption inherit incorruption 1. Cor. 15. 50. This attribute seemeth to be a reason of the former For as any thing is pure and vndefiled so it is also durable And that which is altogether pure and vndefiled is also altogether durable that is immortall and euerlasting This word also being vnderstood of this inheritance not only in it selfe but in respect of the heires that shall enioy it importeth that when once they shall come to the full possession thereof they shall be altogether freed from sorrow and labor whereto here they were subiect so long as themselues were defiled and so long as they liued here where all things by them are polluted and defiled This is manifest by the answer of one of the Elders vnto Iohn touching them which he had seen arraied in long white robes These are they saith the Elder which came out of great tribulation and haue washed their long robes and haue made their long robes white in the bloud
eldest brother and of the second brethren so of a king and his subiects so of the chiefe corner stone and of the other stones in the building As for other reasons of this our similitude and likenes vnto Christ they are also many Christ is the first fruits we the other Should not the first fruits and the other fruits be like Christ is the vine we are the branches Are not the branches like to the vine Christ is our husband we are his spouse and wife Is it not fit that the spouse and wife should be somewhat sutable and answerable to her husband Otherwise certainly they will not draw well together in one yoke Moreouer as Christ was made like vnto vs in all things sinne only excepted so is it meet we should in some things be made like vnto him As Christ was made base by taking vpon him the forme of a seruant for vs and in this respect was made like vnto vs in our basenesse so it is meet that wee should bee made by him like vnto him in glorie yea this is iust and righteous because Christ by his basenesse and by those things which he did and suffred for vs in his basenesse did purchase this our likenesse to himselfe in dignity and glory If hee therefore haue purchased it for vs and giuen the full price therof in our behalfe how can it be denied vnto vs As in this world wee are made like vnto Christ in ignominies reproches and suffring of other indignities so in the world to come we shall be made like vnto him in glory Rom. 8. 17. 2. Tim. 2. 12. This similitude and likenesse is in soule and in body In soule first in the perfection of the knowledge of God in the three persons Father Sonne and holy Ghost secondly in the perfection of holinesse and righteousnesse Notwithstanding this holinesse and righteousnesse is not only of the soule and inner man but also of the body and outward man as afterward wee shall heare in the next verse yea as wee haue heard before Of this similitude of soule touching knowledge the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 13. viz. first of it in this life verse 9. We know in part and we prophecie in part and secondly both of that and of the other which shall be in the life to come Now we see thorow a glasse darkly but then wee shall see face to face Now I know in part but then shall I know euen as I am knowen By the same place also may be gathered our similitude to Christ inwardly in holinesse and righteousnesse inasmuch as by distinguishing in that place loue which is the perfection of the law from faith and hope hee seemeth to insinuate that our faith and hope shall in the resurrection haue an end but that our loue shall continue and that therefore in this respect our loue is greater then either faith or hope Of our inward similitude and likenesse vnto Christ or rather both of our inward outward likenes in all holines and righteousnesse the Apostle speaketh saying If wee be grafted with him to the similitude of his death euen so wee shall be to the similitude of his resurrection Rom. 6. 5. Of our likenesse vnto Christ in our bodies the Apostle speaketh briefly Philip 3. 21. where he saith that Christ shall change our vile bodies vile here by sinne by the naturall frailty thereof and by the manifold calamities whereto it is subiect by sinne and make it like to his glorious body c. and more largely he speaketh of it 1. Cor. 15. 42. where most excellently he laieth it forth by comparing the seuerall points of the likenes of our bodies to the body of Christ by opposition of the contrary properties of our bodies in this life therunto It is sowen saith he in corruption it is raised in incorruption It is sowen in dishonor it is raised in glory It is sowen in weaknesse it is raised in power It is sowen a naturall body it is raised a spirituall body Afterward he proceedeth by similitude saying The first man is of the earth earthly the second man is the Lord from heauen As is the earthly such are they that are earthly as is the heauenly such are they that are heauenly verse 47. 48. Then he concludeth this point As we haue borne the image of the earthly so shall we beare the image of the heauenly verse 49. And afterward againe This corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortall must put on immortalitie verse 53. So then this is the likenesse of our body hereafter to the body of Christ that as Christs body is now incorruptible glorious powerfull spirituall heauenly and immortall so our bodies shal be like incorruptible glorious powerfull spirituall heauenly and immortall Of our likenes vnto Christ both in our bodies and in our soules Christ seemeth to speak iointly when he saith The glory that thou gauest me I haue giuen them that they may be one as wee are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in me c. Ioh. 17. 22 23. Although this place of the Apostle touching our future similitude to Christ may be vnderstood of our through perfect likenes both in soule and in body yet it seemeth the Apostle Note speaketh especially of our likenes vnto Christ in our bodies because that especially is most hidden from the world of that especially it may be said that it doth not appeare what we shall be For our future likenes in soule and in our inner man touching the perfect knowledge of God and touching our holinesse and righteousnesse begun here and to be made absolute and complete like to the knowledge and holinesse of Christ himselfe in the resurrection is here much more eminent perspicuous and manifest then the foresaid future likenes of our bodies vnto the body of Christ For that our likenes of knowledge and holines and righteousnes is apparantly begun in this life so is not our likenes in body touching the properties before mentioned incorruptible glorious powerfull spirituall heauenly and immortall For our bodies seem no more qualified touching these things after regeneration then before yea rather the regenerate by yeeres and sicknesses c. seem to be and do indeed grow daily more base more weake and impotent bodies as well as the vnregenerate Againe that the Apostle here especially intendeth the similitude of Gods children in body to the body of Christ seemeth to be insinuated also by the proofe following from the effect viz. that we shall see him as he is For this being spoken chiefly of the bodily sight it followeth likewise that our likenesse vnto Christ confirmed thereby doth signifie chiefly our bodily likenes vnto him This our future likenes vnto Christ Christ in part shewed in the mountaine when not only himselfe was transfigured before Peter Iames and Iohn his face shining as the Sunne and his clothes being as bright as the light Mat. 17. 2. and as white as
and body and of euery power of the one and of euery member of the other All is comprehended in the word himselfe Hither belong the places before alledged 2. Cor. 7. 1. 1. Thess 4. 23. Heb. 10. 22. Iames 4. 8. and many other Neither must this purging be of some things onely but of euery euill 2. Cor. 7. 1. Tit. 2. 12. Iames. 1. 21. 1. Pet. 2. 1. The like may be said of conforming our selues to euery good worke and to all that God requireth of euery one either as he is a Christian or is of any speciall calling God wil not haue some sinnes onely purged but all God wil not haue some good dueties performed but all These things are common and haue beene partly handled before Therefore I doe but name them This also as hath beene noted before must be a daily work 1. Because there is alwaies some sinne remaining of the old store which needeth daily purging 2. Because as the nailes of our hands though neuer so well clensed one day doe yet gather such new filth that they haue neede of new clensing the next day so it is with vs we daily so gather corruption that we haue need daily to purge ourselues Our whole hands and face also need daily washing yea the more they are vsed in any busines the oftener they neede to be washed So is it with our linnen for often washing and with our woollen apparell for often brushing according to our often wearing of one or of the other Our houses likewise must be the oftner swept not in the weeke only but also euery day the more that they are vsed The like is to bee said of any vessell that wee occupy touching scouring and other clensing thereof As it is with these things so is it with vs touching the cleansing and purging of our whole man from spirituall vncleannesse As also our bodies for the better preseruation of our bodily health need the oftener to be purged the corrupter the aire is where we doe liue likewise our soules and whole man for the better preseruing of spirituall health are the oftner to be purged because generally the aire of this neather world where we do liue is very corrupt and infectious sithence the first fall of mankind whereby not onely the breath as it were of all men is putrified and made infectious but also all other creatures likewise are in some sort defiled and made the more dangerous and pernicious vnto vs. The more likewise that men liue with sicke persons sicke especially of some infectious and contagious disease the more needfull it is for them not onely to take daily preseruatiues but also some daily purge mithridate or such like to expell whatsoeuer noisome breath they haue receiued from them with whom they do liue The like is necessary in this worke of purging for all men according to the company with who they haue to deale namely that the more they conuerse with the wicked the more carefull they bee not onely to carry about them continually the better preseruatiues against all spirituall infections viz. the more knowledge of the word which as a precious sauour they may often smell vnto and the more watchfull eie ouer all their behauiour and alwaies be the more in all priuate meditation and in priuate praier c but also to take daily some spirituall purge by examining their daily conuersation by the word by praying both forgiuenesse and also reformation of whatsoeuer where with they haue beene ouertaken contrary to the word that so they may the better expell whatsoeuer spirituall infection they haue any waies taken This world generally is like a flax-dressers shop or some other such house where it cannot be but any man shall receiue some soile In this respect therefore the children of God need daily the more carefully to brush as it were the garments of their Christian profession the more that they are conuersant in the world and deale with worldly affaires Though I spake briefly before of this point in my fourth obseruation vpon this verse viz. vpon the word purgeth especially vpon the present tence thereof yet considering the great necessity of this matter in this secure and carelesse age I thought it not amisse to take occasion to adde thus much for the better application of it But let the Christian reader with patience giue me lcaue to returne a little more backe To that therefore that euery one that hath this hope in him pu●geth himselfe that onely doth not belong that before we heard out of Paul to Titus chap. 2. 11. 12. 13. but a●so diuers other scriptures The Apostle hauing commended the goodnes of God 2. Cor. 6. in promising to dwell with men and to be their God and their father and to make them his people and his sonnes and daughters he beginneth the seuenth Chapter with an exhortation to this purging of our selues saying Seing then we haue these promises deerly beloued let vs clense our selues from all filthnesse of the flesh and of the spirit and finish our saluation in the feare of God So he teacheth all that hope for the performance of the former promises with the appurtenances of them to purge themselues in that manner euen from all filthinesse of the flesh and of the spirit c. To the Philippians also he ioineth these two together viz. to haue our conuersation in heauen that is to purge our selues as here the Apostle speaketh from all earthly corruption and to liue after an heauenly manner and from heauen to looke likewise for the Sauiour euen our Lord Iesus Christ Philip. 3. 20. 21. So he teacheth vs that whosoeuer doe looke for the Lord Iesus Christ from heauen to change their vile body and to make it like to his glorious body according to that which our Apostle hath before written do also behaue themselues here in earth after the foresaid heauenly manner To the Colossians likewise hauing said when Christ which is our life shall appeare then shall wee also appeare with him in glory here is the hope in this pla●● mentioned presently he inferreth an exhortation of mortifying therefore our earthly members c. that is of purging our selues Must not all therefore that haue that hope in them so purge themselues and mortifie their earthly members The Apostle Peter also vpon the like premises maketh the like conclusion Wherefore beloued saith he seeing that yee look● for such things be diligent that yee may be found of him in peace without spot and blamelesse 2. Pet. 3. 14. What is that to looke for such things but to haue this hope that heere the Apostle speaketh of what is this to be found in peace without spot and blamelesse but to purge our selues in that sort that here the Apostle commendeth yea the same Apostle in the same place and in the verses immediatly before had ioined holy conuersation and godlinesse with looking for and hasting vnto the comming of that day of God c. Iude. like wise
immediately make our soules how then c●me we stained with originall sinne it may receiue a double answer First that they come by sinne at their entrance into the body as in old time men might get the leprosie by entring into an house only infected with the leprosie and as men may now get the plague by going to the house lately visited therewith though no man dwell in the said house as also by putting on a garment comming from one that had the plague For the body is an house or garment of the soule comming from our polluted and defiled parents Secondly touching the said great obiection it is altogether curious to inquire of the manner when the thing is manifest For a man may as well inquire of Note them that were raised from death to life by the Prophets and by our Sauiour and his Apostles especially of the faithfull so raised Lazarus Dorcas c. how after their said restoring to life againe they became sinners againe and so subiect to death againe For being dead and their soules and bodies in death separated it cannot be denied but that during that time they were free from sinne both in body and in soule If therefore this bee a curious question how they became againe def●led with sinne and to need to pray for forgiuenesse of their trespasses then also is the former For there is the like reason of the one and of the other To returne to our former speech of adoption although God haue such a Sonne of his owne in whom he is well pleased yea many other sonnes likewise by creation keeping still that glorious image wherein they were created viz. al the blessed Angels yet because Adam had transgressed and that through his fal he had no children amongst the sons of men therefore it pleased him also to adopt vs vnto himselfe This then is one difference betwixt the adoption of God and the adoption of men that men only adopt children when they haue none of their owne but God adopteth vs though he haue one of his owne by nature and many by creation like vnto himselfe Another difference is that when men doe adopt there is Note not neither can be any second generation of him that is adopted whereby to make him like to him that doth adopt him being before vnlike vnto him For to make one like to another passeth the worke of any man But in our adoption to God there is not onely an acceptation of vs for his children but there is also an actuall regeneration and second birth wrought in vs by Gods spirit therefore called the spirit of adoption whereby we are made like to our Father that doth adopt vs. Secondly men hauing no children of their owne cannot adopt other in any or by any but God hauing a Sonne of his owne as we said doth in him and by him and through him as it were by marying of vs vnto him and incorporating vs into him adopt vs for his children Moreouer touching adoption the whole number of children adopted to God considered iointly together are accounted as one viz. as a daughter so made by marriage to the only Sonne of God Psal 45. 10. Hos 2. 9. in which respect the whole Catholike Church comprehending all the elect and children of God and no other is often called by the name of a Spouse and of one spouse vnto Christ Cantic 4. 8. 9. 10. and 5. 1. Iohn 3. 29. Reu 21. 2. and 9. and as of one wife Ierem. 3. 1. c. and the Church is said to be but one euen one alone and the only daughter of her mother Cantic 6. 8. and one body in Christ Rom. 12. 5. 1. Cor. 12. 12. Ephes 4. 4. But the children of God being seuerally considered according to the seuerall sex of euery one they are called the sonnes and daughters of God as before we heard Thus much of the eighth particular word in this text In the last place the Apostle doth rather repeat the name of 〈◊〉 God God then vse the relatiue his saying that we should be called the children of God rather then his children the more to keepe them to whom he wrote in a serious consideration of this their dignity whereof he speaketh and to make them the more to lift vp their eies and their minds and whole hearts to him whose children they are Thus much as breefly as I well could for the consideration of the particular words of this exhortation to the beholding of the great loue of God in making vs his children CHAP. IIII. Of the dignity of Gods children from the excellency of God himselfe who is their Father the rather because it is further prooued by the difficulty and greatnesse of the worke of regeneration that the sayd worke is altogether and only the worke of God NOW according to my method and order first propounded to my selfe I will more amply lay forth the mayne point of the dignity of Gods childrē viz. How great how admirable how incomprehensible this loue of God is in making declaring vs to be the childrē of God in such fort as hath been before touched For it cannot be but of very great excellency sith the Apostle hath made such a graue exhortatiō to the beholding thereof cuery word wherof is so emphatical significant as we haue heard And indeed so excellēt is it that as M. Rogers saith Chap. 3. of his sixt treatise so I may also say that when I haue said what I can of their state I must confesse that I haue said but a little NOtwithstanding I hope that this little shall be somwhat for the helping of them that considered not so much before and for the prouoking like wise of other to enter into further meditation of this argument and perhaps to write more largely there of then I haue done or could do For it is well worthy of the best meditation and largest writing that may be for the better comfort of such weake ones as whose hearts are almost broken with the manifold indiguities that dayly they meete with in the world and for the prouoking of all aduanced thereunto to more thankful ●es to him that hath so aduanced them and to make such other vses as after the point it selfe more largely handled shall be breefely noted To come therefore to the matter touching this dignity of the children of God let vs first of all consider the same by the excellency of him whose children they are h●●e sayd to bee For he is described to be high and excellent to inhabite the eternity to be called by the name of The holy one and to dwelin the high and holy place Isai 57. 15. He is called The God of Gods and Lord of Lords A great God mighty and terrible Deut. 10. 17. Hens●d to haue 〈◊〉 his hands the deep places of the earth the height of the mountains the sea c. Psalm 95. 5. and to haue greatnesse and power and gl●ry and victory
our foresaid miserable state and condition I might speake in this place of the mercy of God in forgiuing our sinnes but because I shall speake afterward of the forgiuenesse of sinnes amongst the benefits belonging to the children of God by their communion with God therefore I will spare all speech thereof here In the meane time that God hath shewed such mercy vnto men as to make them his children it cannot but adde somthing to their dignity For as it is a great preferment to be beloued of God he being the King of kings so it is no lesse matter for such miserable yea rebellious and traiterous creatures as we were to find such mercy with God as not only to be pardoned of all our sinnes but also to be made his children yea this is the greater matter because it is a speciall testimony of the loue of God before handled For if he had not loued vs full dearely he would neuer haue shewed such compassion vpon vs. CHAP. VI. Of Christ Iesus being one of the principall causes of and agent in our adoption of the great price hee hath giuen for it of the worke also of the holy ghost therein and of the true nobility of all Gods children by the ioynt working of all the three persons in their adoption TO returne a little backe and to consider a little more of Christ Iesus as one of the principallest agents in our regeneration all before spoken of the fathers sending of him is so much the more because himselfe also came voluntarily and of his owne accord euen freely offering himselfe to be so sent because he saw that no burnt offrings or other sacrifices would be sufficient for our saluation or adoption and regeneration Psalm 40. 5. 6. 7. When Christ also was come in the flesh and saw and felt what it was that the Father had sent him for and he was come for did he any waies shrinke or shew that hee repented of his former forwardnes Nothing so but he did most willingly proceed and go through with that which the Father had decreed he should performe and which himselfe had taken vpon him to doe in our behalfe viz. not only to accomplish and fulfill all righteousnesse Mat. 3. 15. which actiuely was to be accomplished and fulfilled by him but also to suffer both pouerty reproch contempt and all other indignities wrongs and iniuries with men and euen the wrath of God his father the torments of hell and the sorrowes of the life to come in his soule as well as in his body and in his body as well as in soule we hauing deserued all these things euen such paines and pangs as would haue broken the backe and very heart strings of all the Angels in heauen Notwithstanding all that he suffered onely whiles he liued in the earth long before his last passion Ioh. 12. ●7 and the very night before his said passion in the garden when he praied thrice that if it were possible that cup might passe from him and when his sweat was like drops of blood trickling downe to the ground Luk 22. 41. c. and in his last passion it selfe crying with a strong cry and bitter as it is said of Mordecai Ester 4. 1. My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Matth. 27. 46. Yea so willing did Christ suffer all before spoken and ten times more then can be spoken that albeit till his time appointed was come he did sometime auoid the rage and fury of his enemies yet for all that he did often sharply reprooue his very friends that either gaue him any counsell to the contrarie Mar. 8. 33. Ioh. 11. 8. 9. or that did any thing for to haue rescued him against his enemies that put him to death Mat. 26. 53. His threefold praier before mentioned in shew to the contrary was not so indeed because it was but conditionall and shewed the greater extremity of his passion For after the said Note praier he did not only rebuke Peter for going about to rescue him as was said by smiting off the high Priests seruants eare neither did he onely heale him whom Peter had so maimed the better to shew that he neither had pleasure in Peters rashnesse neither had any spleen against the said high Priests seruant that had come out with other to apprehend him but he did further also tell him that if he would he could by his prayer to his father haue obtained more then twelue legions of Angels to take him from them Who then had laid their hands vpon him Mat. 26. 53. Doth not this most plainly testifie that he did all most willingly Doubtlesse it doth For otherwise he could as easily haue auoided yea and confounded all the company though comming foorth with swords and stanes to take him as by telling them that he was the man they sought for he made them to goe backward and to fall to the ground Ioh. 18. 6. By these things therfore that God so loued vs that to make vs his children he sent his owne sonne and that in forme of a seruant yea and worse then a seruant vnto wretched men not for doing any thing as Paul for biddeth vs to be the seruants of men 1 Cor. 7. 23. but for suffering any thing at their hands And that the sonne himselfe did also this most willingly and cheerfully without any constraint doth it not manifestly appeare that the adoption of the children is much graced and honored Yea certainly the more is that their adoption to be the children of God graced and honored by all things before spoken of because as Christ was therefore sent and did therefore come and being come did also willingly vndergoe and suffer all so also he did effect that which was so the end of his sending comming and suffering For so it is said of him not of the father that as many as receiued him to them he gaue prerogatiue to be the sonnes of God or to be the children of God euen to them that beleeued in his name Ioh. 1. 12. And so although it be said in one respect that he is not ashamed to call vs brethren Heb. 2. 11. yet both in the same place vers 10. in another respect he is insinuated also to be our father in that it is said that he brought many children vnto glory and also he is expresly intituled by the name of Euerlasting father Isa● 9. 6. Moreouer by these things thus written it is most apparant that Christ hath not onely made vs the children of God but also that he hath paid full deerely for our said adoption Therefore it is said that we are bought with a price 1. Cor. 6. 20. and 7. 23. and this price was not any corruptible thing as siluer or go●d but his owne most pretious blood 1. Pet. 1. 18. 19. and by the blood of Christ are ment all those his dreadfull sufferings before mentioned If God had sent all the Angels of heauen and they had taken our nature vpon
Cor. 5. 17. Galat. 6. 5. and to be created in Christ Iesus Ephes 2. 10. and 4. 24. So farforth therefore as we are in Christ we are the children of God And so many as are not thus incorporated into Christ are not in truth neither ought to be called the children of God Such perhaps may be so accounted by other yea peraduenture they may so account themselues But as those that are begotten in adultery by an adulterer may be reputed the children of the lawfull husband to the adulteresse and yet are indeed bastards and for the most part may be discerned so to be by their bastardly conditions so is it with them that liuing in the Church of God doe professe them selues to be the children of God and be so reputed by other and yet haue no communion with Christ Though they be reputed to be the children of God yet they are no better then bastards and bastards they bewray themselues to be by their bastardly minds and conuersation Although therefore in one respect we reckoned Christ before amongst the efficient causes of our regeneration and that therfore in respect of his excellēcy our regeneration also is to be accounted the more excellent yet in another respect he may also be accounted the materiall cause of our regeneration euen as naturall parents are both the efficient causes of our naturall birth and doe likewise communicate the matter of their bodies vnto ours And so the more excellent that before we heard Christ to be the more we may againe conclude the dignity of Gods children to be by his being the chiefe materiall cause as well as the efficient cause of their regeneration For as that that is made of siluer or gold or any other such like pretious matter is it selfe more pretious then other things made of brasse tinne lead yron Copper or any other such vile and base matter the quantity of things being alike otherwise a great vessell of copper may be better then a very small cup of siluer so the more excellent that Christ himselfe is who is the chiefe matter of Gods children and of whom they be called Christians as that that is made of gold is called golden and the children of God the more excellent needs must be their state and condition CHAP. IX More largely shewing other things concerning the matter of regeneration especially the renewing of the life of God in vs all that are new borne which before were vtterly void of the said life BVT leauing that point till afterward let vs in the next place looke into the excellent gifts and graces which by the former incorporation into Christ the children of God doe receiue and in respect whereof we are said to be partaker of the diuine nature and the which likewise may be esteemed as parts as it were of that matter whereof they do consist These things let vs consider by opposition of that vnto them that men are since the fall of Adam as naturally descending from Adam and being as it were boughs and branches of him In Adam and by Adam since his fall all men Christ himselfe onely excepted haue vtterly lost that excellent and glorious image wherein Adam and Eue at the first were both created Genes 1. 26. 27. This losse of that excellent and glorious image is described by this phrase of dying the death Genes 2. 17. This death was not a naturall death but it was a spirituall death It was not the separation of the soule and the body but it was the separation of God and man as touching that gratious familiarity which before had beene betwixt them As the soule is the life of the body so is God the spirituall life of the whole man For man is not said to be aliue vnto God any longer then he is in grace and fauour with God so that to die the death in that place was to be vtterly depriued of the inherent grace and fauour of God which before they were created in From that time therefore that our first parents had eaten of the forbidden fruit and thereby had defaced the image of God in them they were drowned ouer head and eares in all sinne and so now also in the state of condemnation and were no more able of themselues to haue gotten out of the same then a man drowned and dead in the bottom of a great riuer or pond is able of himselfe to get out And this is that dying the death before spoken of euen a spirituall death ten thousand times worse then any naturall death I meane then any separation of the soule and body though the same be by neuer so violent meanes For it is the beginning and first step vnto that euerlasting death of body and soule whereof afterward we shall speake more at large and from the which neither wee could haue freed our selues neither could any other creatures or all creatures if God himselfe had not sent his owne sonne as before hath been shewed And that spirituall life which is contrary to the said death and which is also the first effect of Christ in vs after that once wee are ingrafted and incorporated into him is the next point of the matter of our regeneration and being the children of God That we may the better see what this life of God is in vs let vs first more largely consider what the former death is and how all men are by nature wholly possessed thereof That therefore which the Apostle saith of the Ephesians is to be vnderstood of all men by nature viz. that they are dead in sinnes and trespasses Ephes 2. 1. without God and without Christ in the world verse 12. as not beleeuing in God or Christ and therefore being condemned already as before we heard our Sauiour to say Ioh. 3. 18. and the rather were they so indeed dead in their sinnes because they were the children of him that had the power of death that is of the diuell Heb. 2. 14. compared with Ioh. 8. 44. For Sathan hauing once put out the light and the life of God in Adam whereby he was the child of God like vnto God did make him a sonne to himselfe so that as before hee did beare the image of God so for euer afterward hee and all his Christ onely excepted did beare the image of the diuell in which respect it is saide generally that hee that committeth sinne is of the diuell 1. Iohn 3. 8. Thus we see that our naturall state is not as the Papists plead it to be by allegorizing vpon him that our Sauiour saith did fall into the hands of theeues and was by them wounded and left halfe dead Luk 10. 30. but farre worse not halfe miserable but altogether miserable not wounded and yet aliue though halfe dead but so wounded that we are altogether dead We haue a vegetatiue and an animall life as all liuing and brutish creatures haue we haue a reasonable life to talke and reason and discourse and determine and conclude of
so continue For I doubt not but that the very deere children of God regenerated by the spirit and beleeuing in Iesus Christ are subiect to that outward calamity as well as other and as well as themselues are subiect to other diseases arising of naturall causes and yet The foundation of God remaineth firme touching them The Lord knoweth who are his 2. Tim. 2. 19. That it is so that is that naturall men whiles they be such are no better in their said naturall state then mad men yea and that they are possest with a spirituall phrensie or that at least they are no better then such as we call idiots or naturals I make plaine by these furtherreasons 1. When the prodigall child began to consider of his waies and to bethinke himselfe of returning to his father then he is said to haue come to himselfe Luk. 15. 17. The prodigall sonne therefore representing the state of all vnregenerate men therby is signified that as before his returne and submission to his Father he was no better then as a man beside himselfe and out of his wits so all are the like before regeneration 2. All that make more account of bels and bables of counters and rattles and of such other triffles then they doe of siluer and gold c. are no better then mad men or at least then naturall fooles 3. All that refuse meat drinke and apparell especially of the best sort for their bodies and for this life are no better then mad men or at least then naturall fooles 4. All that do continually hurt and wound themselues and that seeke by all meanes to destroy themselues are no better then mad men or at least then naturall fooles 5. All that put no difference betwixt any men but account all alike and that especially regard the meanest more then the greatest and their enemies more then their friends and that will be aduised rather by fooles then by wise men are no better themselues then mad men or at least then naturall fooles 6. All that wilfully transgresse the lawfull commandements of Kings and so sinne against their owne soules are no better then mad men or at least then naturall fooles 7. All that will not be kept within any bounds but breake off all bonds are no better then mad men at least then naturall fooles Such are all naturall and wicked men so long as they continue in that state and condition 2. They make more account of the riches honours delights and pleasures of this world then they doe of the most pretious word of God and of the things that belong to the life to come in respect whereof all things in this world are no better then trash and dung 3. They refuse Christ Iesus and all other things pertaining to their saluation in him offered vnto them in the word as meat and drinke and apparell for their soules of farre more worth then all meat and drinke and apparell for their bodies 4. They doe daily hurt and wound their owne soules and seeke by all meanes euerlastingly to destroy themselues euen by so many sinnes as they doe daily commit 5. They account no better of one man then of another at least they account best of them that are the most vile They doe more regard and feare simple silly weake and mortall men then they doe the most wise mighty fearefull and immortall God and haue the enemies of their saluation which sooth them vp in sinne and prouoke them daily thereunto by words and by example in more estimation and they are rather aduised by flattering worldlings such as sauor only the things of the world not the things of God then they doe regard their most true hearted friends that vnfeinedly wish and by all meanes admonition counsell reprehension conference and praier doe seeke and endeauour their saluation or then they will be aduised by such as are wise in the Lord. 6. They doe euery day wilfully transgresse the most holy and iust commandements of the most holy and righteous God and so doe more and more prouoke his indignation against themselues that is the king of kings 7. They will not be kept within any compasse they will not be directed in the way that leadeth to eternall life but breake ouer hedge and ditch out of that way and they speake as the heathen did of whom the Prophet writeth saying Let vs breake their bonds and cast their cords from vs. Psal 2. 3. Therfore I may well conclude them all to be no better then mad men or at least then naturall fooles They indeed doe so account of the most excellent seruants of God For so was the Prophet termed that annointed Iehu to be king of Israel 2. Kings 9. 11. So did Festus call Paul when he spake most excellently of heauenly things Acts 26. 24. and so naturall and worldly men doe daily cast this reprochfull name vpon the best children of God esteeming them no better then a company of fooles and mad men but the truth is that this belongeth to themselues and they specially are the fooles and mad men of the world as the former arguments do demonstrate Let no man so wrest my words as to vnderstand me to condemne naturall wit and vnderstanding or policy and learning c. I doe not condemne them but acknowledge them in themselues to be the good gifts of God Notwithstanding such is the corruption of nature before and without regeneration that meere naturall men not knowing how to vse them doe therefore abuse them the more to the dishonour of God and to the encrease of their own condemnation euen as men reaued of their naturall wits hauing a sword put into their hands or any other thing good in it selfe committed vnto them do rather abuse all to the hurt of themselues and other then do any good at all therewith In respect of all these things hitherto handled as it is said of images that they are laid ouer with gold and siluer and there is no breath in them Hab. 2. 19. so it may besaid of meer naturall men touching the life of God that how trim and gay soeuer they be in the world and how great and glorious soeuer they appeare by their wit or learning or policie c. yet indeed they haue no breath at all of that life in them neither any sparke of true wisedome How base therefore is their state and condition yea how fearfull and lamentable For who doth not pity the state of mad men and of such as by any meanes haue lost their wits Many carnall men I grant doe carnally make a sport of mad men and naturall fooles they make themselues merry with such as the Philistims abused the blindnesse of Sampson and vsed him therefore to play before them and to make them pastime in their great meeting and in their sacrifice to Dagon their God Iudg. 16. 25 Many I say doe euen so abuse the simplicity and lamentable madnesse of other to make themselues merry but
him suffered by God himselfe to preuaile in some things as for some reasons before mentioned so also for some afterward to be spoken of By denying also the new borne of God to sinne the Apostle insinuateth that seruing of God in holinesse and righteousnesse which was before touched and so the word not to sinne is taken by our Sauiour when he saith to the man restored to his limbs Sinne no more lest a worse thing happen vnto thee Ioh. 5. 14. He meaneth not onely that he should abstaine from the euils forbidden but that also he should performe the things required in the law of God For the law of God saying not only Eschew euill but also Doe good Psal 34. 14. he must be a transgressor of the law not only that doth commit the euill forbidden but also that neglecteth or omitteth the good commanded So the distinction of sinnes of commission and of sinnes of omission is as sound and true as it is ancient and common As God himselfe is not only free from all euill but infinit also in all goodnesse so his law is like himselfe and doth as well command that which is holy and iust as it forbiddeth all vnholinesse and vnrighteousnesse According to this law men shall be condemned and that most iustly as well for leauing vndone good duties as for perpetrating acting of those things that are euill It is not said That euery tree that bringeth forth euill fruit but which bringeth not forth good fruit shal be bewen down or stubbed vp by the roots and cast into the fire Mat. 3. 10. And our Sauiour pronounceth sentence of condemnation for not visiting the sicke entertaining the strangers feeding the hungry clothing the naked c. Mat. 25. 41 c. By condemning notwithstanding them that haue not done good he teacheth that much more they shal be condemned that do commit that which is euill Mat. 12. 36. 37. 1. Cor. 6. 9. Reuel 21. 8. and 22. 15. So then this freedome of Gods children is not only a release from the most grieuous seruitude of sinne but also a participation of holinesse and righteousnesse Without this holinesse and righteousnesse our life before spoken of were no life neither were our freedome any freedome at least not worth the hauing The soule of man may be as well without motion in the body as the life of God without the fruits of righteousnesse That which is spoken of faith Iames 2. 20. is true also of the life of God What freedome also of any city is without commodities belonging thereunto But of this anon This also touching the fruits of righteousnesse is to be vnderstood in respect of the knowledge and wisedome before handled For how can a man be accounted a man of knowledge and wisedome that sheweth not the same by his workes of knowledge and wisedome And indeed we haue heard before that our knowledge and wisedome consisteth in the feare of God and keeping of his commandements And the Apostle Paul describeth that excellent knowledge of Christ before spoken of to be not the knowledge of his natures and person onely as they are things in Christ himselfe but as they are effectuall in other both to iustification and also to sanctification by the power of his death and the vertue of his resurrection of the one to our release from that bondage of sinne before handled and of the other to the quickning of vs to newnesse of life Philip. 3. 8. 9. 10. Therefore also Christ in the place before diuers times alledged is said to be made vnto vs not only wisedome righteousnesse and redemption but also sanctification 1. Cor. 1. 30. Therefore without Christ no more sanctification then wisedome righteousnesse or redemption In this respect Christ is not only said to haue giuen himselfe for vs that we might be pure or purged and holy or sanctified these things I say are not spoken in the nowne or in the verbe passiue as if either we or some other might purge and sanctifie vs but in the actiue verb that he might purge vs c. Note Tit. 2. 14. and that he might sanctifie his Church c. Epo 5. 26. to teach that the purging and sanctifying of vs is the worke only of Christ as well as the redeeming sauing and iustifying of vs. The same is yet further taught by our Sauiour himselfe As the branch cannot beare fruit of it selfe except it abide in the vine no more can ye except ye abide in me and againe without me ye can doe nothing viz. that good is Iohn 15. 3. 4. 5. and Paul accordingly saith that the fruits of righteousnesse are by Iesus Christ Phil. 1. 11. All this is to be vnderstood of Christ not as God only but as God and man the mediator betwixt God and man and as in that respect he is the head of the Church and so communicateth his vertue to all in regeneration incorporated into him and in whom he dwelleth by faith euen as the naturall head of a naturall body communicateth the vertue thereof to all the members of all the said naturall body So that also is to bee vnderstood that of his fulnesse we doe all receiue grace for grace or grace vpon grace or grace after grace Iohn 1. 16. All hitherto spoken of our life of our knowledge and wisedome of our redemption freedome and liberty and of our sanctification and holinesse and righteousnesse as the matter of our regeneration and things wherein the Note same doth consist must be vnderstood to be by Iesus Christ in a double respect first in that he hath purchased them for vs by the same price which hee gaue for our selues and for our saluation Secondly by working them in vs himselfe being apprehended by a true and liuely faith as hath been shewed before by the similitude of the vine and the branches and of the head and the members Moreouer touching this holinesse and righteousnesse now in hand we must vnderstand that it must not only be inward but also outward not in heart alone but also in our outward man and in our outward behauiour For Let your light so shine before men saith our Sauiour that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father which is in heauen Mat. 5. 16. Clense your selues saith the Apostle from all filthinesse of the flesh and of the spirit that ye may grow vp to full holinesse 2. Cor. 7. 1. he speaketh not only of filthinesse of the flesh but also of the spirit and therefore the holinesse there commended and opposed to the former filthinesse must be answerable thereuno viz. of the flesh that is of the body as well as of the spirit and heart Peter exhorteth them to whom he did write not only as strangers and pilgrims to abstaine from fleshly lusts because they fight against their soules but also to haue their conuersation namely their outward conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which did speake euill of them as of euill doers
his right hand bold them from escaping If they should say the darknes shall hide vs the night should be light round about them Psal 139. 1. c. Therefore if God he thus from them touching his grace and only present in his wrath power iustice against them what alas shall it boote them to haue any of his creatures with them Truly nothing at all They were as good be alone If Salomon say Wo vnto him that is alone for hee falleth and there is no asecond to to helpe himvp Eccles 4. 10. how much more wocfull is the state of the wicked that are altogether destitute of the gracious presence of God For if he withdraw himselfe from them who dareth accompany them for any good By these things we see how great the prerogatiue of the children of God is by their communion with God But this is not all For this communion with Christ Iesus and so consequently with the other two persons in the deity is the more excellent not onely in respect of the excellency of the persons with whom our base nature is vnited neither in other respects before spoken but also because being once made it is indissoluble and vnteparable All the vnions before mentioned whereunto this vnion metaphorically and by way of similitude is resembled may be dissolued For the garment put on is also put off The most of our meat and drinke touching the matter thereof is eiected and cast out The vine and the branches as also any other tree and the boughs may be diuided by the axe or some other toole So may the corner stone and the rest of the building therewith coupled The inhabitant or tenant is oft times turned out of his house yea sometime the lawfull owner is cast out of his owne free-hold The naturall head and the naturall body yea the body and the soule of man are for a time separated by death Finally by the same meanes there is a separation betwixt the man and the wife But nothing whatsoeuer can euer dissolue the vnion betwixt the children of God and God himselfe Father Sonne and holy Ghost As the personall vnion betwixt the two natures in Christ the Godhead and the manhood could not be dissolued euen when the humanity it selfe touching the parts thereof was by death for a time dissolued the soule being in heauen with the father and the body lying in the graue but the knot once knit did continue in death it selfe and shall continue for euer so also is the vnion betwixt God and the children of God an euerlasting vnion As therefore the misery of man is in the separation of man from God who is blessed for euer and blessednesse it selfe so the happinesse of man is in his vnion and communion with God especially in the continuance thereof for euer As all the wicked and vngodly are most miserable by their being without God in the world as before wee haue heard euen so long as they so continue because all that while they are as farre from heauen as earth yea as hell it selfe and remaine in darknesse and in the power of satan Acts 26. 18. oh wofull condition so all the children of God hauing in their adoption this communion with God are happy and ten times happy because the benefit and comfort thereof hath no end CHAP. XVII Of the benefits of the children of God by their fore said communion with Christ and with the whole Deity and first of the forgiuenesse of sinnes TO proceed a little further into the foresaid communion of the children of God with Christ Iesus and by Christ Jesus with the father and with the holy ghost let vs somewhat more behold the excellency thereof by such benefits as the children of God doe thereby enioy wherein all wicked and naturall men so continuing haue no part or portion Here let vs first consider the great benefit of forgiuenesse of sinnes It is indeed a principall point as hath been before obserued of that mercy of God which was one of the principall motiues of God to worke the worke of our regeneration And of that mercy of God I haue spoken a little generally before Notwith standing this particular point thereof touching the forgiuenesse of sinnes is a little more largely here to be handled because this place in some respects is fitter for that purpose then the former the rather because it is not onely to be considered as a cause of regeneration but also as an effect and fruit of our foresaid communion with God Touching this benefit therefore that it is by our communion with Christ Iesus it is manifest because he is said to be the reconciliation for our sinnes and not only for our sinnes but also for the sinnes of the whole world 1. Ioh. 2. 2. By reconciliation for our sinnes and for the sinnes of the whole world the Apostle meaneth the sinnes both of all already regenerated and new borne and also of other the elect of God in the world remaining yet in their naturall and vnregenerate state Paul also saith that Christ gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquity c. Tit. 2. 19. What is it to redeem vs from all iniquity but to purchase a free and absolute pardon for vs of all our sinnes Moreouer he saith that in Christ we haue redemption through his bloud the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace Ephes 1. 7. Coloss 1. 14. In both which places let this be obserued Note that the Apostle interpreteth the redemption of the elect to be the forgiuenesse of sinnes Why shall we so obserue this interpretation of the word redemption Because thereby the Apostle insinuateth a twofold or double redemption wrought by Iesus Christ one proper onely to the elect consisting in the forgiuenesse of sinnes and other things depending thereupon the other common to all as well to the reprobate as to the elect But what is this so common a redemption viz. It is a release from the bondage and obedience of the ancient ceremoniall law touching the going diuers times of the yeere to Ierusalem and performing there diuers rites and ceremonies in the worship of God namely the paiment of tithes and of first fruits the bringing of diuers oblations and sacrifices as also touching diuers kinds of washings and clensing men of the leprosie of pollution by handling the dead by any issue c. and concerning likewise abstinence from diuers kinds both of fish and flesh and many other the like things The redemption I say of men from obedience of these things is common to the reprobate and not peculiar to the elect For Christ Iesus hath so nailed the whole law of ceremonies and ordinances to his crosse that although Christ were taken down from the said crosse that although Christ were taken down from the said crosse yet they shall as it were so remaine fast fixed thereunto that they shall neuer come downe or be in force with men by anv authoritv from
where there is no fruit and whereof after recouery of health and true knowledge wee are ashamed Rom. 6. 21. As sicknesse continued and not recouered causeth death at the last so sinne when it is finished and as it were thoroughly ripened bringeth forth death Iames 1. 15. Sinne is likewise compared to an heauy and intolerable burden Come vnto me all ye that are weary and heauy laden viz. with your sinnes and I will refresh you Mat. 11. 28. Therefore Cain complained that his sinne was greater then hee could beare Genes 4. 13. And alas so heauy was the burden of sinne vpon Iudas that to ease himselfe of that burden hee did not onely cast away or deliuer againe to the cheefe Priests and Elders the thirty peeces of siluer which he had taken as wages of vnrighteousnesse to betray the innocent bloud of Christ but that also departing afterward in most dolefull sort he went and most desperately hanged himselfe Mat. 27. 3. The like fearefull euent of the heauy burden of sinne we do too often see by too many examples Wee heard also before that the very imputation onely of our sinnes to Christ Iesus the sonne of God God himselfe made him not only exceedingly to feare and in his feare to offer vp praiers and supplications with strong crying teares vnto God Heb 5. 7. but also to sweat water and bloud Luk. 22. 44. and lastly to cry out most bitterly vpon the crosse vnder the burden of our sinnes My God my God why hast thou forsaken me ' Mat. 27. 46. That some men feele not the sicknes and waight of sinne it is because of another comparison also of sinne viz. vnto death itselfe O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee out of this body of death Rom. 7. 24. And you that were dead in trespasses and sinnes c. Ephes 2. 1. As men therefore that are dead though they died with an hundred plague-sores about them not healed or hauing the waight of a great Church vpon them doe feele nothing either of such sores or of such waight euen so is to bee sayd of them that feele not either the sicknesse or the heauinesse of sinne namely that it is because they are dead in their sinne By these things we see that all whose sinnes are forgiuen are rid and healed of so many diseases Psal 103. 3. and released of so many burdens as they haue sinnes and finally that they are translated from death to life 1. Ioh. 3. 14. Is not then the forgiuenes of sinnes a singular benefit Moreouer the greatnes of this benefit doth further appeare by another comparison of sinne viz. vnto debt Mat. 18. 24. c. In which respect Christ teacheth vs to pray Forgiue vs our debts Mat. 6. 12. Yea he whose sinne is least is more in Gods debt then he is able any way to discharge Therefore in the parable of two debters he that owed but fifty pence is sayd to haue beene as vnable to pay as he that owed siue hundred pence Luke 7. 41. 42. Is it not a great misery yea a kind of hell tormenting a man to be in greater debt then he is able to fatissie Indeed some men are so desperate that they bid their creditors take care how to come by that that is owing vnto them for they will take no care to pay any man therefore they borrow of euery man and pay almost no man so that it is half a wonder what becommeth of all the mony they doe borrow But though some be thus leaudly minded yet most men haue so much ciuill honesty at the least by the light of nature that they finde it very greeuous and troublesome continually to their minds to owe more the they can pay Al debt also aboue ability to pay is the more grecuous the greater and mightier the creditor is to whom the same is owing How great then is the debt of man vnto God by sinnelyea by the least sin The danger of the least sinne much more of many and great sins is the curse of God and euerlasting condemnation of body soule euen an infinit punishment according to the infinit maiesty of God that is by sin offended Who the can expresse the greatnes of the benefit of forgiuenes of sinnes It is a great benefit to be out of debt with men so that a man may walke go any where securely without danger much more then is the benefite of the discharge of all our debt with God Last of al sinne against God is compared vnto treason and rebellion against a prince 1. Sam. 15. 23. Lamon 3. 42. Dan. 5. 9. As therefore it is a great benefit for a traitour and rebell to bee pardoned by his Soueraigne so is it not so much the more to be pardoned by God himselfe of all our treasons and rebellions against him by how much hee is greater then all earthlie princes Verily this is not only more then any tongue of man can expresse but also then any heart of man or wisedome of Angels can comprehend The same benefit of forgiuenes of sinnes is yet the greater because to whom God remitteth one sinne to him hee remitteth all and whose sinnes he doth once forgiue his sinnes hee doth forgiue for euer whom once he doth acquit discharge and iustifie them hee wil neuer condemne or cal to account By all sinnes I meane al the sinnes of Gods children both originall and actuall before baptisme and after baptism before conuersion and after conuersion of knowledge and of ignorance and once or often yea as wel deliberately as vnaduisedly committed Therefore Dauid in the place before vsed Psal 32. 1. 2. speaketh of sinne indefinitely without exception of any and in the other place praiseth God expressely for forgiuing al his sins The Apostle saith that Christ hath not redeemed vs from sin but from all iniquity Tit. 2. 14. So likewise in the other places before mentioned the Apostles speake of sinnes indefinitely c. Ephes 1. 7. Colos 1. 14. not of sinnes before or after baptisme or conuersion c. If by Christ wee haue forgiuenesse onely of originall sinne or of sinnes before baptisme and that wee or some other must make satisfaction for our actuall sinnes or for sinnes after baptisme as the Papists teach then hath Christ satisfied onely for the lesse and left the greater to vs. For who knoweth not actuall sinnes to be greater then originall and sinnes after baptisme to bee more at least for most part then sinnes before baptisme But of the vniuersality of the forgiuenesse of sinnes I hope to speak more to the further comfort of such as are heauy loaden with theyr sinnes in another treatise The second point that whose sinnes are once remitted they are remitted for euer is as certaine as the former Because the couenant of the Lord is an euerlasting couenant and his mercies are the sure mercies of Dauid Isa 55. 3. As high as the heauen is aboue the earth so great is
of a kingdom furnished with the knowledge of all former lawes of the same kingdom and well instructed likewise in the word of God doe meet together to make new lawes for that kingdome yet after consultation one with another and after many daies conferring their readings and iudgements one with another the lawes that they make will not be so perfect but that either something might haue been added or something might haue been left out But the word of God is so absolute and complete that as nothing therein is superfluous so nothing is wanting vnto it What a singular priuledge then haue the children of God that haue the benefit of this law To lay forth the perfection of Gods word yet a little more fully and to make the same somwhat more euideut let vs vnderstand it to be so perfect for matters of faith and knowledge vnto saluation that whatsoeuer is not agreeable thereunto is to be held as erroneous Touching manners life and conuersation it teacheth all duties to God and men euen to all sorts of men superiors inferiors equals friends and foes and in euery state and condition viz. what to doe for them or to them in sicknesse or health in pouerty or wealth in liberty or in prison being ioyfull or mourning dwelling far off or nigh vnto vs being of the same nation or of another kinsfolk or strangers friends or aduersaries within our family or without widowes or fatherlesse or in any other state whatsoeuer As it directeth vs how to carry ourselues towards al of what condition soeuer and in what state soeuer they be so it prescribeth our behauiour at all times and in all places in the day and in the night when we eat when we drink when we labour when we rest when we walke when we lye when wee sleepe in the winter and in the summer publikely and priuately at home and abroad in our secret chambers and when wee are with company in the time of peace and in the time of warre It hath rules likewise for our selues in respect of our selues what to do in prosperity in aduersitie when wee are children when we are men and when we are old touching meate drinke apparell sleepe and the vse of all other things indifferent or not indifferent for this life and for the life to come Whereas also the lawes of men reach only to the outward man to restrain the same from euill and to bind it to the performance of good the lawes of God are giuen for the gouernment not onely of the outward man but also of the inward not onely of the body but also of the soule euen of our mind vnderstanding memorie thoughts and all affections There is likewise no member of the body but that in the word of God there is direction for it for the eye to see for the eare to heare for the nostrell to smell c. But of these things before in Chap. 11. where for further sight of these things I referred the learned reader to the Treatise of Otho Casmannus in his anatomy of a spirituall man By these things thus pointed at touching the perfection of the word of God we may the better see the priuiledge of the children of God to bee such by the word of God that they need neuer to bee to seeke further for direction in anything concerning saluation then only to the word This briefly shall suffice for the perfection of the word of God Touching the perpetuity of the word it is testified in many places of the Scripture The feare of the Lord that is the word which teacheth and worketh the feare of the Lord is cleane and endureth for euer Psal 19. 9. and againe O Lord thy word endureth for euer in the heauens Psal 119. 89. Another prophet saith The grasse withereth and the flower fadeth but the word of God shall stand for euer Isai 40. 8. Our Sauiour saith Heauen and earth shall passe away but my words shall not passe Mat. 24. 35. Luk. 16. 17. Luk 21. 33. This is manifest by experience For whereas the word of God hath continually had both more aduersaries in number as also greater for power as some Emperors and for malice as the hereticks especially the Papists then all other bookes whatsoeuer the one sort of such enimies seeking vtterly to extinguish the word and the other endeauouring to corrupt the very text it selfe yet al other writings haue beene mangled and some bookes haue vtterly perished but the Lord hath alwaies preserued the Scriptures from destruction on the one side and from corruption on the other side As the souldiers that brake the bones of the two theeues that were crucified with our Sauiour had no power for all that to breake any bones of our Sauiour himselfe so they that haue either consumed or corrupted other bookes haue neuer had the power either to destroy or corrupt the scripture touching the originall text thereof The Lord hath alwaies most mightily preserued some copies both inuiolate and also vndefiled Yea the papists that at their pleasure haue mangled clipt defaced and corrupted all the writings and bookes of the ancient fathers taking out of them what they haue thought in them preiudiciall to their damnable heresies as appeareth in Index expurgatorius their dealing in that behalfe may be called Ignis expurgatorius haue notwithstanding neuer had power to laye such violent hand vpon the originall text of the Scripture This perpetuity of the Scripture is not onely to be vnderstood of the very letter and word thereof but also of the sense and meaning Euery sentence of the scripture is not onely the same in letters and words that was at the first but also in sense Note and meaning No scripture no sentence of scripture hath any other meaning now then it had at the first giuing thereof by inspiration from God As God himselfe is immutable so likewise the will of God reuealed in his word is vnchangeable Therefore the word is one of the two immutable things wherby we may haue strong consolation Heb. 6. 16. As no man may adde any thing to the words themselues nor take ought from them so no man may alter or change any thing touching the sense meaning of them The letters and words of the scriptures are but as the bodie thereof the sense and meaning are as the life and soule of it If therefore no man may encrease or diminish any thing of the former much lesse may any alter or change any thing in the latter The Lord that hath forbidden the maiming of a man in any limme hath much more forbidden the hurt of him in his life The like is to be sayd of the word of God This then is a great difference of the word of God from the lawes of men For though the lawes of men doe remaine the same touching the letter of them yet oft times the sense and meaning of them is changed as times and Iudges are chāged And therefore it is a
no other fountaine then at the word of God By the same meanes from time to time hath the Lord comforted his children Abraham Isack Iacob Dauid Hezekiah Paul and other in their afflictions euen by his word and by speaking vnto them When Iohn also wept much because no man was found worthy to open to read and to looke on the booke which before he had seen in the right hand of him that sate vpon the throne c. how was he comforted Not inwardly only by Gods spirit but outwardly also by one of the elders speaking vnto him and saying Weep not behold that Lyon which is of the tribe of Iuda that roote of Dauid hath obtained to open the booke and to open the seuen seales thereof Reuel 5. 5. Here is a double argument to proue the word of God to be the word of comfort First because Iohn in his heauinesse is comforted by the speech of one of the elders vnto him Secondly in respect of the matter of the said speech viz. that there was one found to open the booke and the seuen seales thereof For thereby the holy ghost signifieth that without opening of the book before shewed to Iohn there was nothing to haue comforted him Whatsoeuer benefits therfore whatsoeuer friends whatsoeuer outward delights whatsoeuer learning or other thing men haue yet nothing will soundly comfort them that are heauy hearted or exercised with feares but the word The woman in the Gospell healed of her bloudy issue for healing whereof she had spent all that she had vpon the physitians and was nothing the better doth sufficiently iustifie this For when our Sauiour hauing so healed her for nothing euen so perfectly healed her that she sensibly felt her selfe to be healed when I say our Sauiour hauing thus healed her did but aske who had touched him because he had felt vertue to goe from him she had no more comfort then before but for all the benefit Note of health so miraculously wrought in her she was possessed with great feare and trembling till she came to our Sauiour and till he spake vnto her saying Daughter be of good comfort thy faith hath saued thee Luk 8. 47. 48. So then the former benefit did not comfort her though she had long desired it yea it seemeth she had more feare then before but the word that our sauiour spake was it that tooke away the feare and which did comfort her I might here also speake of Belshazar in what case he was Dan. 5. hauing no comfort in the word but of him and other like more afterward In the meane time let vs vnderstand that the word hath comforts of all sorts and for all afflictions of this life and of the life to come for body and for soule Is any of Gods children poore he can comfort himselfe with the word saying Feare the Lord yee his Saints for no good thing wanteth to them that feare him c. Psal 34. 9. So with those manifold comforts Mat. 6. 25. c. Luk. 12. 32. c. So also with the examples of Iacob Gen. 32. 10. of Elija of the widow of Zarepta and of the other widdow of one of the sonnes of the Prophets before mentioned and with Gods mighty prouidence towards the Israelites in the wildernesse in feeding them with Manna and quailes and in giuing them water out of the rocke Is any child of God in disgrace or in base condition he can comfort himselfe with 1. Pet. 5. 5. and 6. and with the examples of Ioseph Dauid Ester and Mordecai whom the Lord raised vp from the dust and made to sit with Princes yea and some of them to be Princes Is any of them in prison He can comfort himselfe with the examples of Ioseph Ieremiah Peter and Paul who were not only in prison but whom also the Lord most mightily deliuered out of prison Hath any many and great aduersaries He can consider that If God be with him he need not feare who is against him Rom. 8. 29. and that The Lord is alwaies at hand Philip. 4. 6. And how the Lord deliuered Iacob from Esau and from the Sechemites and Dauid from many mighty enemies Is any sicke and sicke vnto death He can call to mind how Hezekiah being so and told also by the word of God that he should die was vpon his praier miraculously restored to health and had his life drawn out for fifteen yeeres more 2. Chron. 32. 24. c. He can also remember that Dauids soule was deliuered from the graue Psal 103. 4. and that Epaphroditus being sicke and neere vnto death God had mercy on him Phil. 2. 27. Hath any man lost all his goods in one day yea children also c. He can comfort himselfe with Psal 24. 1. and with the example of Iob who hauing lost goods and children did not only say The Lord hath giuen and the Lord hath taken Blessed be the name of the Lord Iob. 1. 21. but who also had all and more then all restored vnto him at the last Iob. 42. 10. Is any man heauy loaden with his sinnes doth he feare the wrath of God and euerlasting condemnation and doth he not find or feele any comfort yea doth he feele the terrors of death Oh how may he comfort himselfe with the doctrine of Gods mercy Psal 103. 9. c. before handled with the end of Christs comming to heale them that are sicke not the whole to call sinners not the righteous to repentance Mat. 9. 12. 13. to seeke and to saue that which was lost Luk. 19. 10. that euery one that beleeueth in him might not perish but haue euerlasting life Iohn 3. 6. with the words also of the Prophet Ho euery one that thirsteth c. Isai 5. 5. 1. with the words of our Sauiour Come vnto me all ye that are weary and laden and I will refresh you Mat. 11. 28. And lastly with the examples of such as haue found comfort in such an heauy condition and against great and many sins viz. of Dauid of Salomon of Manasses of Peter of Mary Magdalen of Zacheus of Paul and of diuers other Seing then the word of God hath such excellent and such sweet comforts for euery malady for euery affliction for euery heauinesse who can sufficiently expresse the dignity and prerogatiue of the children of God thereby For they only can receiue comfort by it The childrens bread doth not belong to whelpes Mat. 15. 26. Neither do the holy things of God belong to dogs neither doe such pearles become swine Mat. 7. 6. All this hitherto said of the word is the more both in respect of the writing thereof and also of the preaching thereof In both these respects I say the prerogatiue of the children of God by the word is the greater For as touching the writing thereof howsoeuer the Papists would perswade that it was written onely by the voluntary accord of man not by any expresse commandement of God 〈◊〉 and that therefore it
in making vs his children For how doth it stand with any reason or iustice that such as God loueth and hath made his children shall be condemned Againe if by faith we are saued as hath been shewed how can we be condemned The like may be said hereof in respect of our incorporation into Christ For the Apostle saith that there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus Rom 8. 1. so also in respect of other points of that matter wherein we shewed the being of the children of God to consist therefore in the former place they that are in Christ Iesus are described immediatly in this manner according to those things before spoken of the matter as it were of Gods children viz that they walke not after the flesh but after the spirit So Iohn saith of them that loue the brethren one principall point of the said matter of the children of God Hereby we know that we are translated from death to life if we loue the brethren 1. Ioh. 3. 14. The same is also manifest by the ende of Christs comming before spoken of For therefore did he come into the world that whosoeuer doth belieue in him should not perish c. Ioh. 3. 16. and that he might deliuer all them which for feare of death were all their life time subiect to bondage Heb. 2. 15. This also followeth from the forgiuenesse of sinnes before likewise handled For sinnes being that whereby we deserue condemnation it must needs follow that they being taken away condemnation is also taken away Being discharged of the offence wee cannot but be released of the punishment Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen It is God that iustifieth who shall condemne It is Christ which is dead c. Rom. 8. 33. 34. So these three are ioined together No man to accuse where God iustifieth no condemnation to them for whom Christ died The Papists indeed doe boldly affirme that the fault remitted the punishment is often retained But as this is contrary to the former and to diuers other scriptures so in common reason it is foolish absurd and grosse For what a thing is this to say that a man hath his treason pardoned but yet he shall be hanged drawn and quartered Were not a man as good haue no pardon of his treason as haue such a pardon If the Papists haue no better pardon of their sinnes as indeed they shall not without great repentance and renouncing of their damnable errours they shall be in a wofull case Touching the truth of this point that the children of God are freed from condemnation I shall not need to say any more Neither shall I need largely to prooue that this freedome from condemnation is onely proper to the children of God sith they onely are elect to saluation they onely are beloued of God they only beleeue in Christ and by faith are made his members they onely may say they haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare they onely walke according to the spirit they onely haue forgiuenesse of sinnes c. The chiefe thing that I doe here propound to my selfe to shewe is how great a benefit and priuiledge this is That wee may therefore see this let vs consider a little as wee may what condemnation is Briefly and in one word Condemnation is the whole curse of God in the world to come first vpon the soule onely till the day of iudgement then vpon soule and body after the resurrection for euer and euer But let vs yet see the degrees of it more particularly The first degree therefore is the angry wrathfull and fearfull countenance rebuke sentence of the Lord Iesus Christ the Iudge of all the world against them that are before appointed or ordained to condemnation viz. against all the vngodly which before had turned the grace of God into wantonnesse and denied God the onely Lord and our Lord Iesus Christ Iude 4. when they shall be all gathered before him For then shall the Lord Iesus Christ that great Iudge of all the world speake vnto such in this manner Depart from mee ye cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the deuill and his angels Matthew 25. 32. and 41. The wrath of a King saith Salomon is like the roaring of a lyon he that prouoketh him to anger sinneth against his owne soule Pro. 19. 12. and 20. 2. Is the wrath of a mortall king whose breath is in his nostrels so fearefull How fearefull alas then is the wrath of the immortall King of Kings that setteth vp and casteth down 1. Sam. 2. 8. and by whom all Kings reigne and Princes decree iustice c. Pro. 8. 15. The rebuke of a King is the more heauy the more publike it is How heauy then shall that rebuke of the King of kings be which shall be giuen in the presence of all the world not only before all men but also before all the Angels both good and bad The second degree of condemnation is in the former sentence viz. the separation from the gratious and comfortable presence of God For our Sauiour saith depart from me ye cursed c. When he saith depart from me he meaneth the banishment of them not only from himself the second person in the Deity but also from the father and holy ghost For as they that haue communion with Christ haue also communion with the Father and the holy ghost as before hath been shewed so they that are depriued of Christs company are likewise depriued of the company of the Father and of the holy Ghost To be without God in this world as we haue heard before is one principal point of our misery by nature before our calling Yet there they that are so without God haue often times many friends great friends which for a while seem much to allay their misery as it were to still them like little children in their absence from God If it be such a thing to be heere without God where we haue many other friends with whom a little to while away the time what alasse will it be to be without God in the world to come where we shall haue no friends at all with whom to passe away the time or by whom to haue any comfort Amongst men when subiects begin to be suspected of treason or otherwise to be in disgrace with their soueraigns this is no small degree to further punishment afterward viz. to be banished from the court of such princes or to be commanded to keep out of their presence After that Absalom for the murder of his brother Amnon had fled from Dauid as fearing his displeasure had bin absent as a banished mā for three yeers together yet after that was so reconciled to his father that he might returne into the kingdome but notwithstanding was commanded to goe to his owne house and not to see the kings face 2. Sam. 14. 24. in which state he continued for two yeers more how
did Absalom take this Truly as bad as he was yet he took it so heauily that he neglected no meanes vsuall with carnall men for the recouering againe of the Kings fauour that he might see the Kings face as he had done And therefore when he had sent diuers times for Ioab to intreat him to be a mediator for him to the King his father in that behalfe as he had before for bringing him againe into the kingdome and that yet Ioab would not come at him then he caused his men to set Ioabs corne on fire vpon which occasion Ioab came to him and then Absalom vsed him for recouery of Dauids fauor that he might see his face vers 29. Doth not all this argue that Absalom though a wicked man tooke it as a great punishment so to be banished from his Princes court and from his fathers house Yea it is a great punishment for any child to be banished from his Fathers house though his father be far inferior to a Prince Was it not much for Hagar with her sonne Ishmael to be thrown out of the house of Abraham and to be sent into the wide world they could not tell whither to shift for themselues they knew not where nor how Genes 21. 14. How great a thing this was their misery afterward doth declare For as the prodigall sonne said How many hired seruants at my Fathers house haue bread enough and I die for hunger Luk 15. 17. to note that in the house and presence of God there is plenty enough for the meanest person therein but out of the Note house of God there is all want and extreme misery so whereas Hagar and Ishmael had sufficient of all things in Abrahams house which then was the house and Church of God being cast out of the same they were in a short time ready to dy for want of water Gen. 21. 15. If then it be so great a matter for a subiect to be banished from his Prince-Court and presence and for a child to be thrust out of his earthly fathers house to see his face no more oh how great a thing is it to be excluded from the Court of God and from the most comfortable light of his countenance in heauen It is an heauy thing to be banished from the house and presence of God as he reuealeth himselfe in his word vpon the earth Before the law it was the greatest punishment almost that could be in this world Gen 3. 23. and 4. 14. and 17. 14. and euen vpon the giuing of the law Exod. 12. 15. 19. and after the giuing of the law Exod. 30. 33. and 38. as also in the time of the Gospell 2. Thess 3. 14. 1. Cor. 5 3. c. 1. Tim 1. 20. In which two last places the heauinesse of this thing I meane to be shut out from or throwen out of the house and presence of God here vpon the earth is much aggrauated by this phrase of deliuering ouer or giuing vp to satan For doe we not therby plainly see that they that are so cut off from the house and shut out of the presence of God are immediatly in the hands of satan himselfe and so doe continue whiles they continue in that separation from God and from his house For this cause Dauid by the tyranny of Saul and by the malice of his other enemies being banished out of the land and forced to be absent from the tabernacle of God took nothing so grieuously as that He neuer lamenteth his absence from his country from his friends from his other commodities which before he had enioied at home but oft times doth he most heauily bewaile the other It is the whole argument of the 84. Psalme wherein he lamenteth his misery in that behalfe by consideration of the beauty of Gods tabernacles by laying forth his vehement desire thereunto by preferring the condition of the sparrowes and swallowes before his owne because they might sing and build their nests neerer to Gods altar then he could come and by laying forth the happinesse of them that had daily accesse thereunto though it were with much labor much charge and much wearinesse So it is a good part of the 143. Psalme where he professeth that his soule did as much thirst after the Lord meaning his presence by his word and Sacraments and other meanes in his tabernacle as thirsty lands did in summer gape as it w●●e for showres of rain vers 6. In the two and fortie Psalme he vseth he same metaphor of thirsting but with comparison of himselfe therein vnto the Harrs desire of water being chased with hounds in summer verse 1. c. yea he professeth in the next verse that in regard of the reproches of the wicked which vpbraided him with his banishment from the tabernacle as though he had trusted in God in vain and therfore in scornefull manner had said vnto him where is thy God as the Iewes did the like to Christ Mat. 27. 43 he professeth I say that in regard of these reproches his heart was so filled with sorrow that his teares had been his meat day and night yea so abundant and vehement was his grief in that behalfe that he found his soule euen to melt and as it were to swoone within him in which respect he was faine to comfort the same as it were with aqua composita and to say therunto twice in that Psalme Why art thou cast down my soule why art thou so disquieted within me Is it so heauy a matter to be separated here from Gods presence in his house and Church vpon the earth How heauy then will it be to be separated from his presence and dwelling place in the heauens and from all communion with the triumphant Church in the heauenly places Did Dauid find such sorrow such griefe such wo and such pangs in his soule by his absence from Gods earthly tabernacle Alas then what shal be the woe the gripes of griefe and the howling of those that shal be or are already separated from heauen it selfe in the world to come Thus much for the second degree of condemnation wherby the better appeareth how great the priuilege of Gods children is in their freedome and discharge from the same The third degree of condemnation is that the wicked are not banished only from the comfortable presence of God but also from al other good cōpany yea from euery thing that is good A subiect that is banished from the court and presence of his Prince and a son that is banished from the house and presence of his louing Father may notwithstanding haue some comfort either at home in his own house or in any other place whither he is banished or within which he is cōfined either by some other good company or by the vse of some other commodities for the better vpholding supporting of himselfe But if besides banishment from his Princes Court and presence or from his fathers house and countenance a man be
the second death Reuel 2. 11. And this second death is tenne thousand times worse then the first death I meane then the separation only of the soule and the body yea it were better ten thousand times that the soule and the body of the wicked should die and vtterly perish and come to nothing as the life and body of beasts doe then that they should bee tormented as they shall be Therfore it is called by the name both of the second death and also of fire euen of the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone Reu. 19. 20. and 20. 10. It is likewise called a worme and a fire Marc. 9. 44. c. where in verse 43. the word hell and sire are ioined together How intolerable also the paines and torment of hell bee it appeareth by that of the rich mans soule in hell Luk. 16. 23. 24. where it is said that he being touching his soule in hell and seeing Lazarus a farre off in Abrahams bosome marke this word afarre off against the Papists that will haue Abrahams bosome to be neere vnto hell and a part of hell it selfe he cried out to Abraham that Lazarus to whom before he had denied all comfort and to whom his dogs had shewed more mercy then himselfe he cried I say that Lazarus might be sent to dip the top of his finger in water for the cooling of his tongue Why so Because said he I am tormented in this flame Such then were his paines and torments that if he might haue had but a little ease for one member he would haue accounted it an exceeding fauour Such also shall be the torments of all other the wicked that shall be condemned And although the torments of condemnation be thus described by these fearfull things in this life yet the truth is that no fearefull thing in this world can sufficiently expresse the torments of the wicked in the world to come The most exquisite torments that euer haue been deuised by any mercilesse cruell and sauage tyrants for the bodies of men hanging burning either all at once or by piece-meales renting in pieces with wild horses pinching the flesh off with hot irons boyling in lead sawing broiling vpon gridyrons and such like all these I say are but sports pastimes delights and pleasures in respect of the torments to come in an other world All these degrees of condemnation hitherto spoken of are the more because the said condemnation so described shall be euerlasting without end without any mitigation that is signified by the worme that dieth not and by the fire that neuer goeth out Mark 9. 44. c. as also by the answer before spoken of of Abraham to the rich man tormented in hell therefore also we heard it before called euerlasting fire and euerlasting paine Mat. 25. 46. and euerlasting perdition 2. Thes 1. 9. Yea so farre is the condemnation of the wicked from all end and mitigation that when all other things shall haue a kind of end and when the soules of the wicked shall be ioyned to their bodies in the day of iudgment then likewise shal their torments be increased This much amplifieth all the former It is much to haue the frowning countenance and wrathfull sentence of God to be banished from his gratious presence and to be depriued of all good company and of all other good things to bee made a companion of diuels and to be cast into the place of vtter darkenesse where is weeping and gnashing of teeth and there to be tormented with a worme gnawing and a fire burning all these things I say are very much though they should be but for a time but neuer to haue God to looke cheerefully vpon them or to speake comfortably vnto them to bee banished from his gratious presence for euer neuer to haue any good company nor any other comfortable thing to be alwayes companion with the diuels and to be throwne into the place of darkenesse from whence there is no hope of any redemption and to be tormented vnspeakably for euer without any mitigation to haue a worme alwaies gnawing within and neuer dying and a fire euer burning without and neuer consuming or wasting alas alas what eare doth not tingle to heare what heart doth not quake and ake tremble and shiuer to thinke vpon it Yea who quaketh not who in euery member and ioynt trembleth not to consider of it though himselfe be assured of freedome and discharge from it How then shall they quake quiuer and tremble that shall indeed bee so condemned All miserie and punishments here are somewhat mitigated to him that suffereth them by hope of an end at the last if not before yet at least in the houre of death The hardest apprentiship that euer was with the most cruel merciles master after the longest time serued had some cōfort by thinking the time thereof to come to bee shorter than that that was past The like may besaid of any other bondage But in the condemnation of the wicked the longest time is alwaies behind A beginning there is but no ending An hundred yeers past a thousand follow and so million after million O dolefull ô wofull ô fearfull condition When Saul heard of the losse of this life the day following not by the spirit of truth but by the father of lies satan himselfe not transformed into an Angell of light but only appearing in the habit of a Prophet He fell straightway all along vpon the earth and was sore afraid because of those words so that there was no strength in him neither could any body almost comfort him 1. Sam. 28. 17. Belshazzars countenance was changed and his thoughts troubled him at the sight of the hand writing vpon the wall writing indeed his present ouerthrow yet not to his vnderstanding till Daniel did read and interpret the said writing that the ioints of his loines were loosed and his knees smote one against the other Dan. 5. 6. His bones as we say did rattle in his skin because from the guiltinesse of his conscience he feared the worst though as yet hee knew nothing How then think we was he perplexed when the sentence of God therein contained was executed vpon him Felix trembled to heare Paul but dispute or preach of righteousnesse temperance and the iudgement to come Acts 24 25. Alas then how do al those tremble and gnash their teeth that do already feele the execution of the sentence of condemnation in their soules And how shall they and all other the wicked quake and tremble in the day of iudgement when they shall receiue the full sentence of condemnation against their soules and bodies for euer and euer without reuocation without mitigation The more fearfull that thus it appeareth and is manifest shal bee the condemnation of the wicked that die in their sinnes the greater priuiledge prerogatiue and dignity it shall be to the children of God to be freed and discharged from the same I might haue illustrated all before
spoken of condemnation especially of the extreme punishment of the wicked with the perpetuity thereof by the extremity of diuers bodily paines here in this life euen in some one member and but for a time as of extreme tooth-ache of the strangullion of the stone in the bladder or in the kidneys of the gout of the collick and such like For if these things but in one part of the body and but for a time be so intollerable what alas shall we thinke of the euerlasting torments of euery member of the body and soule and the whole man for euer and euer But it shall be sufficient thus only to haue pointed at these things Thus much for the first benefit of the children of God in the life to come viz. for their freedome from condemnation CHAP. XXVI Of the inheritance of the children of God in the life to come THe second benefit of the children of God in the life to come is that they shall be all heires and haue a great inheritance So saith the Apostle If we be children wee are also heires euen heires of God and heires annexed with Christ Rom. 8. 17. and againe If thou be a sonne thou art also an heire of God through Christ Galat. 4. 7. So Peter ioineth together the worke of our regeneration and the hope of an inheritance 1. Pet. 1. 4. Touching this inheritance as before we noted certaine degrees of that condemnation from which wee heard the children of God to be freed the better to set forth their dignity in that their deliuerance so let vs now also obserue certaine circumstances pertaining to this inheritance for the better illustration of the dignity of the children of God in respect of the said inheritance Although therefore we did not before note the placing of the reprobate at the left hand of Christ as any degree of their condemnation because it is not alwaies a dishonor to be placed at the left hand of Princes in which respect Iames and Iohn desired to be placed the one at the right hand the other at the left hand of Christ yet to be placed at the right hand of Christ Iesus when he shall come to iudge the quick and the dead may well be accounted for a principall honor of them that shall be so placed So great an honor is it to be placed at the right hand of mortal Princes that by a metaphor taken from the same the whole exaltation and glorification of Christ Iesus is often described and expressed by sitting at the right hand of his Father Is it not then a great honour for all the elect at the day of iudgement to be placed at the right hand of Iesus Christ when hee shall come in the glory of his Father with the holy Angels The second circumstance of the inheritance of Gods children is contrary to the first degree before mentioned of the condemnation of the wicked viz. that Christ Iesus shall grace them with a most amiable countenance and most gratiously speake vnto them Come ye blessed of my Father c. The fauour of a King is like the dewe vpon the grasse Prou. 19. 12. How great then is the fauour of God Dauid opposeth the light of Gods countenance to all worldly prosperitie desired by the greatest sort of men and professeth that he had or should haue more ioy of heart thereby than the men of the world haue in the day of their haruest and when their corne and wine doe encrease Psal 4. 6 7. Both these circumstances are the more because Christ himselfe shall so place them at his right hand and so speake vnto them publikely in the presence of his Father and before all men and angels good and bad euen before all their aduersaries The more publikely and in the greater company that the Lord Cromwell did grace his old benefactor Francis Frescobald the Italian merchant first in the open street in London dismounting from his horse embracing him most familiarly speaking most kindly vnto him and inuiting him the same day to dinner before all the Lords and other attendants vpon him and afterward at his comming to dine with him embracing him againe and speaking also most kindly as before and declaring to the Lord Admirall and other nobles with him what the said Frescobald had done for him and at dinner placing him next to himselfe The more publikely I say and before the more company that the said Lord Cromwell did so grace that poore decaied merchant the greater honour it was to the said merchant to be so graced How great then shall the honour of all Gods children bee to be placed at the right hand of Iesus Christ and to bee so gratiously spoken vnto by Iesus Christ himselfe in the presence of all the world before all kings and princes as well as before all other the meaner sort of men as likewise before his owne Father before all his holy angels and before the diuels themselues the whole army of hell The third circumstance concerning the inheritance of the children of God is that they shall haue a more neere communion with God and with Christ Iesus himselfe than euer before they had viz. not only spirituall but also locall beeing there where himselfe is in all glory and maiestie This is signified by the words of our Sauiour before alleadged Come yee blessed of my father c. The same is likewise plaine by the praier of our Sauiour for all Gods children Father I will that they which thou hast giuen me bee with mee euen where I am that they may behold my glory c. Ioh. 17. 24. It is a great honour for a subiect to be imployed in any seruice of his prince but it is much more to be alwaies neere vnto him in his chamber of Presence and in his Priuie chamber Who therfore can expresse the honor of Gods children to be in heauen it selfe Gods Priuie chamber and alwaies to behold his glory and excellency But of this further communion of Gods children with God and Christ Iesus and so consequently also with the holy angels more shall be spoken afterward In the meane time this shall suffice to haue beene spoken of these circumstances of the inheritance of Gods children Now to speake more largely of the said inheritance it selfe and so to come euen to the more ample declaration of their foresaid communion with God let vs vnderstand the said inheritance to be the greater honour because it is called the inheritance of God and men therby in the two first places before alleadged are called the heires of God The greater that any man is in the world the greater thing it is to bee heire vnto him how great a thing then is it to be the heire of God Herein the children of God differ from the children of men and of great men in the world euen from the sonnes of the mightie as they are called Psal 29. 1. For there is no man so great or mightie but that hauing many
of apparell to couer his nakednesse as of meat to nourish him so ●n the resurrection the children of God shall liue without either of both without meat and without apparell As concerning mariage it is said that In the resurrection they neither marry wiues nor wiues are bestowed in mariage but that they shal be as the Angels of God in heauen Mat. 22. 30. so shall it be for meat and apparell The children of God shall liue foreuer without both There shall be neither cold nor hunger nor thirst Their bodies that are sowen naturall bodies shal be raised spirituall bodies They shall stil be bodies the same bodies in substance that they were before otherwise how could it be said that they are raised againe but touching their qualities as they shall be changed many other waies so also this way that they shall be spirituall bodies that is such as shall not liue by naturall meats as vpon the earth they did but altogether by the immediat vertue of the spirit euen as the Angels do now liue in heauen This then in the life to come shall be the perfection of the children of God that they shall need no outward meanes for their euerlasting maintenance and preseruation as here they did for their maintenance and preseruation for a time yea for a short time which for the shortnesse thereof is not worthy to be called halfe a time So hauing nothing they shall be ten thousand times more happy then they were here hauing many things Men are not so happy here by hauing many things as they shall be in the world to come by needing nothing I meane no such outward things as without which before they could not liue To illustrate this by a familiar similitude As a man being in poore state and in a meane calling here in this world as a shoemaker a tailer a husbandman or such like cānot liue without such things as appertain to such trades as the shoemaker cannot liue without his last cutting-knife awle the tailer without his sheers and pressing yron the husbandman without his spade mattock flaile plough hedging bill c. but yet the same man being aduanced to welth higher calling amongst men hath none of the former things and yet is not the worse but the better because he needeth no such things now as without which before he could not liue so the children of God in the life to come being in full possession of their inheritance shall be neuer a whit the worse because they shall haue no meat nor apparell nor any other such outward thing for maintenance and preseruation of their state as here they had but they shall be so much the more happy and blessed because they shall need no such thing Besides all hitherto spoken of the happy and blessed inheritance of the children of God in the world and life to come whereas here they had the company of men yea oft times of wretched wicked men such as of whom they might cry out as we heare Dauid did Woe is to vs that we haue them in our company Our soules haue too long dwelt with them in the life to come in stead of such company they shall haue the society fellowship of the blessed Angels the least wherof is more glorious then euer was Salomon in al his roialty or then are al the kings Princes in the world when they shew themselues most in al their kingly and princely robes glory yea then as before we heard they shall haue perfect communion with God himselfe Father Son and holy ghost and they shall see Christ Iesus God and man in all his glory be also themselues in their own persons partaker therof as we shal hear more at large vpon the second verse following they shal I say see Christ Iesus in al his glory be themselues partaker therof according to the praier of Christ himself for them in that behalfe Ioh. 17. 22. 23 24. How sweet happy comfortable a thing is this when Peter Iames and Iohn saw Christ but a little transfigured in the mountain and Moses Elias in some glory talking with him how were they affected how were they rauished How did Peter say in the name of the rest Master it is good for vs to be here If thou wilt let vs make here three tabernacles c Mat. 17. 4. were they thus affected were they so rauished did they so desire stil to dwell in the mountain and to enioy the sight only of Christ and of two of his Saints themselues being yet clogged with their sins and cloathed with corruption mortality Oh how happy then shall that day be when the children of God shall see Christ Iesus in his perfect glory accompanied and attended vpon with millions and many millions of most glorious Angels and when themselues also shall haue put on incorruption and immortality and according to their degree and measure be also crowned with a crowne of the same glory The Prophet amongst diuers other arguments wherby he prouoketh all the seruants of the Lord to praise the name of the Lord setteth downe this for one that The Lord raiseth the needy out of the dust and lifteth vp the poore out of the dung that hee may set him with the Princes euen with the princes of the people Psal 113. 1. c. Was it and is it so great a dignity so great an honour so great an aduancement to make poore men to sit with Princes in this world What then is the dignity honor and aduancement of the children of God to sit with God and with Christ Iesus and with all the holy Angels in the heauens It is here also to be considered that this inheritance is so ample and so excellent that how few soeuer shall enioy the same they shall haue neuer a whit the more and how many soeuer Note shall be admitted thereunto none shall haue any whit the lesse In all earthly inheritances it is far otherwise yea cleane contrary The fewer they are amongst whom any inheritance is diuided the greater is the portion of euery one And the more the heires of any inheritance are how ample soeuer the same be the lesse is the portion of euery one All hitherto said or which can be said yea more then any tongue can speake or then any heart can conceiue is the more in respect of the certainty thereof Nothing in this world though it be in present possession is so certaine as all spoken before of this inheritance For the certainty of faith is much greater then the certainty of sense and humane reason This certainty of this inheritance and of the things before spoken thereof doth not only depend vpon that before written of the safety both of the inheritance it selfe and of the children of God to whom the same inheritance belongeth but also vpon diuers expresse scriptures and vpon diuers other reasons Touching scriptures consider these that follow and many other the
to depart and forsake them yet they do answer such as shall so perswade them as Ruth did Naomi Intreat vs not to leaue you nor to depart from you for whither ye goe we will goe where ye dwell we will dwell c. Yea verily the more stedfast should all be in holding fast the communion and fellowship of Gods children in respect of those benefits which before we haue heard in Chap. 28. to accrue and grow to all especially by mariage matched and liuing with the godly yea not only to themselues but also to theirs I write not this to incourage the children of God to match with the wicked a thing much condemned as we haue heard but to represse the pride of the wicked in disdaining the company of the godly at least all mariages with them especially if there be any imparity on their part to the godly in respect of nobility worship or portion yea not so only but also to teach them notwithstanding to match themselues and their children with Gods children if by any meanes they may attaine therunto in respect of the dignity excellency of them as also of those benefits that may be expected by them Now although these vses hitherto mentioned be common both to the wicked and also to the children of God yet they are to be acknowledged principally to belong to the children of God themselues They principally are to honour them according to their dignities and to vse them kindly according to their necessities They principally are reuerently to regard the Ministers of the word whom God hath ordained as instrumentall fathers to beget children to himselfe They principally are to take delight both generally in the societie of the children of God and also more particularly in matching and making mariages with them Yea they that are most noble and wealthy are not to disdaine them that in worldly respects are base and poore Who may for nobility and riches bee preferred before Dauid by God himselfe aduanced to a kingdome Yet he generally of the company of the children of God saith that all his delight was in them that were excellent in the earth Psalm 16. 3. And againe I am a companion not of some as of some of the noblest and wealthiest but of all them that feare thee and keepe thy precepts viz. how base or poore soeuer they be Psal 119. 63. Therefore touching the wicked hee doth not onely say I haue not haunted with vaine persons neither kept companie with the dissemblers I haue bated the assembly of the euill and haue not companied with the wicked Psal 26. 4. 5. neither I haue hated them that giue themselues to deceitfull vanities Psalm 31. 6. neither againe Doe not I hate them O Lord that hate thee and doe not I earnestly contend with them that rise vp against thee I hate them with an vnfained hatred as they were mine enemies Psal 139. 21. 22. Dauid I say doth not only say thus touching the wicked but to shew his detestation of them the more hee saith with great vemency Away from me or auant yee wicked for I will keepe or that I may keepe the commandements of my God Psal 119. 115. so nothing that no man can keepe the commandements of God except with great detestation he reiect and renounce the company of the wicked As Dauid spake thus generally of the society of the godly and therefore contrarily of the fellowship of the wicked to note that none can delight in the godly that abhorreth not the vngodly so for mariage though hee were the anointed heire apparant of the Crowne and Kingdome of Israel as also a Prophet that had composed diuers Psalmes before yet hee disdained not to match with the widow of the churle and perfect country clowne Nabal because by her wisdome shee had shewed her selfe to be one of the daughters of God 1. Sam. 25. 39. Thus much for those vses of the former doctrine of the dignity of Gods children which are common to all Now follow those which are more speciall These are twofold viz. either concerning the wicked and such as are in their naturall state not regenerated or belonging and proper to the children of God new borne that haue receiued the spirit of adoption whereby they call God their father Touching the wicked as they may heereby see their owne wofull and fearefull state and condition the same hauing been in the former arguments shewed to bee in all things or most things contrary to the state and condition of the children of God so let them learne to abhorre the same and in such manner to dislike of themselues as they are vnregenerated that they may make the more haste to change their copie as wee vse to speake and to come out from among them that are of their ownesort and to ioine themselues with the children of God and to be one of them The wicked and vnregenerated thinke themselues the only happie men of the world But alas how they are deceiued may appeare by the premises Not onely is the poorest the meanest the weakest and the sickest the basest the most destitute and forlorne childe of God destitute I meane of all worldly helpe and comfort in farre better state then the greatest Monarke in the world that is not by regeneration the childe of God but such an vnregenerated man is also in farre worse state and condition then any worme any toad or any other creature whatsoeuer and that both for this life and for the life to come For this life because euery other creature hath all things Note necessary for the kinde thereof without any care and without any griefe or sorrow What mighty Monarke had euer so For the life to come because all other things perish with their life but the wicked remaine in their soules and are committed to Hell there to bee reserued in chaines and vnspeakable torments till the last iudgement day when their bodies also shall be raised againe and ioined to their owne soules and so both in soule and bodie they shall bee cast againe into hell fire prepared for the Diuell and his Angels thence neuer to bee deliuered but there to be tormented for euermore as before hath beene shewed Should not this make them to make all haste to forsake this state and to ioine themselues to the children of God Neither let them feare so to doe whatsoeuer their former sinnes haue beene For if once they see and dislike their vnregenerated state then are they in the way to adoption and regeneration Such came Christ to heale and to call to repentance Matth. 9. 12. 13. Luke 19. 10. Such Christ hath promised to comfort and to ease of the heauie burden of their sinnes Matth. 11. 28. Such haue the better warrant so to doe because it is written by the Prophet Zecharie that the Lord of bosts had said that in these last daies ten men out of all languages of the nations should take hold of the skirt of him that is
fift rib that hee shed his bowels to the ground 2. Sam. 20. 10. and as Iudas with his lippes saluted our Sauiour saying Haile Master and kissed him and yet at the same instant betraied him to the Iewes Mat. 26. 49. We must not I say thinke that the Apostles had much loue in their mouthes and none in their hearts as many now haue but that their tongues spake and their pennes did write from the abundance of loue in their hearts The more also we exhort other to loue the more must we our selues shew our loue towards them and vse such words and phrases as may be most sutable to such exhortations for the better enforcing of them But these things being common and not so proper to this present theame of the dignity of Gods children it shall be sufficient thus only to haue touched them To returne to the matter as before the Apostle had answered the former obiection touching the small account the world maketh of the children of God by their like account of God himselfe yea by their ignorance of God so now he doth further answer it by their like ignorance of the future state of the children of God As these two things are the cause why the sonnes of great men in the world in strange countries meete often times with much hard measure being perhaps disgraced ●ailed on set in the stockes and such like viz First because the parents of such great men are not knowen Secondly because it is not known what inheritances themselues shall haue nor what manner of men of how great authority and power they shall be for if they amongst whom they are strangers knew these things they would offer no indignity vnto them but would rather honor them according to their parents and according to that state that themselues should afterward be of so is it with the children of God They are the more disgraced contemned and euery way most vnworthily dealt with in the world and by the world as first because the world knoweth not God himselfe their Father as hath been shewed so secondly because they know not neither see what the children of God shall bee afterward viz. how great how honourable and how excellent with God and with his holy Angels If they did see this doubtlesse as our Sauiour saith that if the great workes that were done in Chorazin and Bethsaida had beene done in Tyrus and Sidon they had repented long agone in sackcloth and ashes Mat 12. 21. so may I say that the world would more regard the children of God then they doe Now touching this answer let vs vnderstand that the Apostle speaketh not of that state that the children of God shall haue in this life but of that which they shall haue in the life to come as appeareth by the amplification thereof in the words following from the contrary in the children of God amplified by the circumstance of time viz. at the appearing of Iesus Christ The meaning therefore is Deerely beloued now that is in this life and whiles wee are heere in this world it doth not appeare what we shall be that is in the world to come when hee shall appeare that is when God himselfe in the second person inuested with the manhood shall come in the glorie of his father to iudge the quicke and the dead True indeed sometime the children of God are the lesse regarded and the more hardly dealt withall by the world yea sometimes by them that are not of the world because it doth not appeare vnto the world and to some other not of the world what the children of God shall bee euen in this world and in this life For if it had indeed appeared to the Egyptians what the Israelites should haue beene would they haue dealt so hardly with them If Saul and his Courtiers had fully knowen that Dauid should haue beene king notwithstanding all that they could haue done to hinder him would they so haue persecuted him If the accusers of Shadrach Meshach and Abedneg● as also of Daniel had indeed knowen how the Lord would haue deliuered the first three from the fire and Daniel from the Lions denne would they haue pursued them so eagerly as they did The like may be said of Hamans malice against Mordecai and for Mordecaies sake against all the Iewes and of diuers other So also if the brethren of Ioseph had certainly knowen that his dreames had beene diuine touching his aduancement and that he should haue beene so great a man as afterward he was would they haue done vnto him as they did Yea the like may be said of our late most noble and blessed Queene For if in Queene Maries time it had appeared indeed and beene cleerely man●fest that she should haue beene Queene afterward would diuers haue abused her as they did I might proceed further but I leaue that to the consideration of the wise and Christian Reader By these things wee see it euident that sometimes it doth not appeare vnto other what the children of God shall bee euen in this world and in this life and that therefore they receiue the harder measure from those other from whom their future state in this life is so hidden Notwithstanding the opposition following of Gods childrens knowledge of their similitude and likenesse vnto Christ at his appearing and last comming to iudgement doth manifestly shew that the Apostle doth not heere speake of their condition to come in this life which is for the most part but of a few but of that which shall be in the world to come which is a thing common to all the children of God whatsoeuer To proceed further when hee saith it doth not appeare hee meaneth not to the children of God themselues but to the world and to the men of the world This is also manifest by the opposition following spoken in the first person and in the person of Gods children But we know c. These things being thus opened let vs now see the reasons why it appeareth not vnto the world and why the world seeth not what the children of God shall be viz. how worthy how honourable how excellent and how glorious in the world to come These reasons are many but I will briefly and plainly lay them downe The first is this because there is the same substance by creation Reasons why it doth not appeare what the children of God shall bee of the godly that there is of the wicked Howsoeuer by regeneration there is a change made and an alteration in qualities both inward and outward yet still they remaine men as before they did and that not touching their bodies only but also touching their soules Some indeed haue dreamed that the very essence and substance of the soule in regeneration is taken away and that a new soule is created in stead thereof But this is a most grosse errour for so that soule that had at the first sinned should not be glorified and so the heretikes that
denie the resurrection and say that we shall not haue the same bodies in the resurrection that heere we haue but other newly created in their stead may bee thought to speake also reason It is therfore as certain that the same soules do remaine in the children of God after regeneration as well as the same bodies Yea the wicked doe also see the godly to retaine the same shape the same fashion the same outward forme and the same countenance that they had before regeneration and whiles they were vngodly as well as others It may bee indeed that after regeneration of the heart there is also some change in the countenance and outward behauiour and so verily it ought to be in men and in women For Wisdome is in the face of him that hath vnderstanding but the eies of a foole are in the corners of the world Prou. 17. 24. And those men that before regeneration had light countenances wanton and adulterous eies and did either weare long haire contrary to the decencie of nature 1. Cor. 11. 14. or that otherwise did disfigure themselues by setting vp a foretop starching their beards and such like after regeneration doe frame countenance haire and all things to manly and Christian modesty and grauity So likewise women that before did paint their faces as lezabel or that did lay foorth or set vp their haire top and top gallant or wreath it in most vncomely sort that did likewise lay forth their naked brests in most lasciuious manner that did weare mans apparell doublets and ierkins as mine owne eies haue lately seene directly contrary to the word of God as hath beene before shewed and that did euery way conforme themselues to those wanton wenches who are by the Prophet described to walke with streched out necks and with wandring eies walking and mineing as they went and making a tinkling with their feet and whose ornaments the Lord doth threaten to take away c. Isa 3. 16. c. Such women I say being new borne and made daughters to God doe change their countenance attire and gate co●tenting themselues with that natural beautie which God hath giuen them and which will not fall off with the steame of hot broth yea which need not daily bee renued and arraying themselues in comely apparell with shamefastnesse and modesti● and with good workes 1. Tim. 2. 9 10 But howsoeuer there bee a change in these things yet the wicked seeing the godly still to be of the same complexion and naturall countenance that they were of they are therfore the blinder in seeing that great and glorious change that afterward shall be in them and whereof afterward we are to speake Secondly forasmuch as they see the godly to be subiect to the same sicknesses and to the same other outward calamities that themselues are subiect vnto yea that many times the afflictions of the righteous are greater then of other men Io● 21. 6. Psal 34. 19. as before wee haue declared with the differences notwithstanding betwixt the afflictions of the wicked and of the children of God therefore also they can the lesse see and they are the more hardly perswaded that there is any difference betwixt the future state of them and of other men Yea this maketh the children of God themselues many times to doubt of their future state and to say yea in a maner to conclude with themselues in their owne hearts for a time till they goe into the Sanctuarie of God and consult with God himselfe and with his word that certainly they haue cleansed their hearts in vaine and washed their hands in innocencie sith they are daily punished and chastened euery morning Dauid himselfe had these thoughts Psalm 73. 13. 14. long after his regeneration No maruell therefore though the wicked bee so blinded that it doth not appeare vnto them what the children of God shall be in the life to come Thirdly they doe not onely see the children of God for a time to bee thus subiect to the same outward afflictions that other are subiect vnto but also sometime that such afflictions doe continue all the daies that the children of God doe liue heere yea that at the last also they die oft times the common death of men yea that they are taken away also in the same manner and doe perish in the same sort that the wicked themselues doe perish viz. touching their outward man and touching outward appearance yea that sometimes as touching still their outward man they perish somwhat extraordinarily and are taken away somewhat suddenly and strangely as well as the wicked As rebellious Hophni and Phinebas were slaine in one day by the Philistins according to the word of the Lord in that behalfe 1. Sam. 2. 34. so their good father El● himselfe also when he heard thereof and of the taking of the Arke of God fell backward from his seat and brake his neck● 1 Sam. 4. 18. As wicked Saul was hit and sore wounded by the Archers of the said vncircumcised Philistins and therefore fell vpon his owne sword and thereby hastned his owne death so good and vertuous Ionathan also was slaine in the same battle 1. Sam. 31. 2. c. The Prophet that being deceiued by another old Prophet did contrary to the word of God before spoken vnto him in his returne homeward was killed by a Lion 1. King 13. 24. That most worthy King Iosiah who hath this high commendation by the spirit of God that cannot lie Like vnto him there was no King before him that turned to the Lord with all his heart and with all his soule and with all his might according to all the Law of Moses neither after him arose there any like him 2. King 23. 25. euen this most worthy King was slaine by Pharao Necho King of Egypt verse 29. that is he was so wounded that hee was carried away sicke out of the battle and died of that wound 2. Chron. 35. 23. c. and that because hee would fight against the said Pharao Necho though by him hee were aduised to the contrarie So for some abuse in the Supper of the Lord it is said not only that many in the Church of Corinth were weake and sicke but that also many were asleepe 1. Cor. 11. 30. that is that the Lord had taken many of them away by death These things being so as well with the children of God as with the wicked is it any maruell though it doe not appeare vnto the wicked what the children of God shall be heereafter Fourthly the children of God are neuer freed heere from sinne Sinne indeed doth not raigne in them They are freed from the bondage of it yet still they are subiect to sinne of infirmitie as before we haue heard yea they sometimes fall into one and the same sinne often yea they doe sometimes commit very great sins euen such as whereby they doe greatlie scandalize and offend other and cause the glorious name of God to be euill
all maiestie accompanied with his holy Angels and comming to iudge the quicke and the dead as at his former comming in the forme of a seruant he came to be iudged and not to iudge This is called his appearing because as the Gospell or grace of God which bringeth saluation vnto all men is said now to haue appeared Tit. 2. 11. in respect it had beene kept secret before since the world began and had not beene so opened as it is now reuealed vnto the sonnes of men c. Rom. 16. 25. Ephes 3. 5. so Christ Iesus being ascended into heauen and there sitting at the right hand of his father is not now so manifested at least to the bodily sight as hee shall manifest himselfe at his second comming This time of this his appearing is his mariage day whereas all time before is but as it were the time of his and our betrothing and of the preparing of vs for that mariage day to be the fitter spouse for him All this sentence of our certainty and knowledge of our being Note made like vnto Christ at his appearing is not to bee taken as spoken in the person of the Apostle onely and of them to whom he did write but of all other the children of God whatsoeuer None must looke for this perfection and likenesse vnto Christ before this time of his appearing What then will some man aske doe you say of Enoch and Elias Of the one it is said that he walked with God and was no more seene for God tooke him away Genes 5. 24. And againe that By faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death neither was he found for God had translated him Heb. 11. 5. Of the other of Elias that he went vp by a whirlewinde into Heauen 2. King 2. 11. Concerning therefore the two former examples of whom the question is mooued whatsoeuer men haue thought or doe thinke and whatsoeuer the former words may seeme to insinuate which their insinuated sense shall be opened afterward this I thinke that they are not yet bodily in heauen Enoch and Elias not bodily yet in heauen neither shall be till the resurrection of all flesh when all the rest of Gods elect shall receiue their consummation and perfect blisse My reasons for this opinion are briefly these First Heb. 11. 13. after the mention as well of Enoch as of 1. Reason Noah Abraham and Sara it is expresly said All these died in faith It were absurd to restraine the generall word all onely to the three last and not to extend it also vnto Enoch and Abel Therefore it is manifest that these two died as well as the other three If it be obiected that it is said before that Enoch was translated that he might not see death and that therefore if here this verbe died bee as well vnderstood of him as of the rest then there shall be contrarieties in one and the same place I answer that the reconciliation of this doubt is very easie namely by interpreting the former phrase that hee might not see death of not feeling death after the common painfull manner of men And so the word to see for to feele or to discerne or by experience to perceiue is often taken in the Scripture The waters saw thee O God the waters saw thee c. that is they did as it were feele and by experience perceiued thy power Psal 77. 16. So the Apostle saith I see another Law in my members c. that is I feele Rom. 7. 23. There might bee many other the like places alleged but these are sufficient That also of being translated signifieth nothing els but he was taken away in an extraordinary manner not seen of men but so secretly that no man knew or by any outward thing could iudge otherwise of him but as if God tooke him immediatly into heauen And so would God in that euill and sinfull age take him away so gently and extraordinarily dissoluing the soule and the body that men might thinke him to goe body and soule into heauen for the better honoring that holy life which he then liued the rather because all other liued so wickedly To any but very meanly exercised in the Scripture it is well knowen that many things are spoken according to the opinion of men according to that which they seemed vnto men So Samuel is said to haue been raised after death by the witch and to haue spoken vnto Saul 1. Sam 28. 11. c. Not that it was Samuel For they that die in the Lord rest from their labors Reu. 14. 13. and are not therefore at the call or command of witches but onely because he appeared in the likenesse of Samuel as Satan can change himselfe into the likenesse of an Angell of light 2. Cor. 11. 14 and because Saul and his company tooke him so to be My second reason is out of the same Chapter For of all the former and of diuers other examples afterward mentioned it is written thus All these through faith obtained good report and receiued not the promise God prouiding a better thing for vs that they without vs should not be made perfect verse 39. 40. If Enoch had beene taken vp in body into heauen then had hee beene made perfect without vs. My third reason is out of the same Epistle also Chapt. 9. 8. where the Apostle by the entrance or going once yee●ely of the high Priest alone into Sanctum Sanctorum into the most holy place doth teach that vnder the Law and whiles the first Tabernacle was standing the way into the holiest of all was not yet opened What meaneth the Apostle by the holiest of all but heauen especially for the bodies of men to enter thereinto For howsoeuer God had prepared heauen to be the common receptacle of the soules of the righteous after death yet Christ was the first that entred in body And this seemeth to bee the stronger argument because in the description of heauen in the same epistle afterward Chap. 12. 23. it is called the city of the liuing God the celestial Ierusalem which hath the company of innumerable Angels the assembly of the congregation of the first borne which are written in heauen and God the iudge of all and the spirits of iust and perfect men and Iesus the Mediator of the new Testament Heere therefore is mention of Angels of God of the spirits of iust men and of Iesus the Mediator heere is no mention at all of any bodies or of any men altogether in heauen If any will reply that this is a description of the whole Church in heauen and in earth both gouernours children and seruants I answer that then the words the congregation of the first borne must comprehend the Church militant in earth and so there will bee none found in heauen but God Iesus Christ the spirits of iust and perfect men and the Angels So all bodies beside the body of Christ are yet excluded Fourthly
in the description of the resurrection 1. Cor. 15. 52. there is no other sort mentioned but the dead to bee raised and the liuing at that time vpon the earth to be changed The trumpet shall blow and the dead shall be raised vp incorruptible and we viz all which at that day shall be liuing shal be changed The like is 1. Thess 4. 15. 16. 17. This say we vnto you by the word of the Lord that we which liue and are remaining in the comming of the Lord shall not preuent them which sleepe for the Lord himselfe shall descend downe from heauen with a shout and with the voice of an Archangell and with the trumpet of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first Then shall wee which liue and remaine be caught vp with them also in the clouds c. In neither of both these places is there any mention of any but of the dead and of the liuing and remaining here vpon the earth Enoch therfore and Elias must be reckned with the dead accounted as dead though they died in an extraordinary maner neither violent or painfull to themselues or discerned by other Fifthly all the elect being compared to a body and it being contrary to the nature of a body that any one member should bee perfected till the body haue all the members belonging thereunto how can it bee that one or two of the members of Christs body should be perfected and wholly glorified in heauen Christ wanting many members and not being compleat in his said body till the very last age of the world and till the last point of the said age For who can deny but that there are many of the elect yet vnborne When also they shall bee all borne who can deny but that they shall be called one after another Till all be borne and all be called Christs body is not perfect Sixthly who can deny the Ministers of the Gospell to bee more excellent especially the Apostles and Euangelists who first planted the Churches among the Gentiles who I say can deny these to bee more honorable then any Ministers vnder the Law Much more then any before the Law This hath beene shewed before therefore I doe not now stand vpon it This only I adde that it is said of the Apostles as an honourable thing and as a dignity and prerogatiue of them aboue all other namely that they should sit vpon twelue seats or thrones and iudge the twelue tribes of Israel Matth. 19. 28. It is likewise to be acknowledged that as the calling was more honourable then the calling of any of the Prophets so also they had more excellent graces not only speciall for discharge of their speciall places but also generally of sanctification Is this so How vnlikely then is it that any especially vnder the Law or before the Law should haue any degree of glory and be perfectly glorified before them Seuenthly there were some as wicked in their time before their time and after their time and daily are as they now in question were godly yea former times and these last times doe affoord many much more wicked then they then were or any other are godly Such was Ieroboam that made Israel to sinne Ahab and many other of the kings of Israel So Iudas that betraied our Sauiour the Pharisees that sinned against the holy Ghost the man of sinne called likewise the sonne of perdition the aduersarie that exalteth himselfe against all that is called God c. and many other contemners of the Gospell Yet none of these doe goe bodily into the place of all the damned till the day of iudgement Why then should wee thinke that they before named Enoch and Elias went bodily into heauen the place of the blessed This that I haue hitherto written of Enoch and Elias is the iudgement of diuers other that must bee acknowledged to haue beene glorious lights and worthy of much praise in the Churches Caluin indeed writeth heerein somewhat obseurely and I confesse somewhat aboue my reach and capacitie for first thus hee writeth vpon Genes 5. 24. euen word for word the Latine turned into English In summe saith hee speaking of Enochs taking away such a rapture or taking away was but a gentle and ioifull passage out of this world Yet he was not receiued into the heauens to glorie but was onely released of the miseries of this present life vntill Christ the first fruits of them that rise again s●ould come And sith bee was one of the members of the Church it was necessarie that hee should wait till all the members together should come foorth to meet Christ that the whole body might bee vnited to the head Notwithstanding in the very next words he doth much obscure that which before hee had written adding If any shall obiect that of the Apostle It is appointed all men to die once the solution is easie namely that death doth not alwaies make a diuorce of the soule and body but they are said to die which put off the corruptible nature in which manner they shall die whom the last day shall finde remaining These last words I confesse I cannot conceiue namely how any may be said to die whose soules and bodies are not separated and how they that shall be liuing at the last day may be said to die whom the Apostle expresly saith shall not die but only be changed Peter Martyr according to his manner writeth very largelie and somewhat I confesse different from something before written by me namely in his Commentarie vpon 2. King 2. 11. Notwithstanding in another place he commeth neerer vnto me and agreeth more with me In the former place first he writeth that it is not probable or Consent●●eum like that these two Enoch and Elias should be taken to the places of blessednesse before Christ himselfe which is the first fruits of all had aduanced himselfe thither The words also of our Lord may seeme to perswade this who in Iohn saith No man hath ascended into heauen but the sonne of man that descended from heauen He therefore denieth any man to haue ascended into heauen before himselfe c. Yet afterward hee saith that they went bodie and soule into Abrahams bosome and he maketh Abrahams bosome a place aboue yet distinct from the glorious place where Christ and all his Saints departed this life are How sound this is I leaue to other of sound iudgement For my part I know no such distinction as he there maketh After this he proceedeth further denying them to haue died opposing himselfe to them that said as I haue written viz. that they died but yet an extraordinary kinde of death neither by any defect or decay of nature nor by any force and violence but after some other sort with ease and delight c. Notwithstanding in the other place before insinuated he differeth from that which himselfe had before written and agreeth with me For writing of the Eucharist against Steuen Gardiner
here speaketh of those that already had this hope in them and which were therfore already sanctified and in whom Christ did dwell by faith In this respect therfore he might the better say that euery one that had that hope in him did purge himselfe as Christ himselfe is pure because such an one being vnited to Christ Christ being made one with him and he with Christ whatsoeuer Christ doth in him the same by the communion betwixt Christ and him is attributed as well to him as to Christ As by the communion betwixt the two natures in Christ the diuine and the humane that is often attributed to the one that belongeth to the other and that is said of the whole person that is proper to one nature viz. that to the diuine nature which belongeth to the humane Acts 20. 28. 1. Cor. 2. 8. 1. Iohn 1 1. and that to the humane which is proper to the diuine Iohn 3. 13. and that of whole Christ which is proper either to the humanity only Mark 13. 32. Luk. 2 52. and 24. 39. Iohn 6 38. and 8. 50. and 14. 10. or to the diuinity only Iohn 8. 58. and 17. 5. Coloss 1. 15 as I say it is thus in Christ by the communion betwixt his two natures so by that communion that is betwixt Christ and euery such child of God as before I haue spoken of that is sometime attributed to the child of God himselfe that is proper only to Christ and which is the only worke of Christ and that which belongeth to the children of God is spoken of Christ and attributed vnto Christ c. As Christ himselfe is said to suffer persecution when the children of God are persecuted Acts 94. Coloss 1. 24. because they are his members although Christ in his owne person being now in heauen suffereth nothing but is out of all danger of persecution Rom. 69. so euery child of God that hath that hope in him before spoken of is said to purge himselfe although this worke of purging or clensing or sanctifying be only the worke of Christ himselfe As the Apostle speaking of himselfe as he was regenerated and of sinne remaining in him saith that it was no more he that did euill viz. as he was a regenerate man according to that of the Apostle Iohn He that is borne of God sinneth not but that it was sinne that dwelled in him Rom. 9. 17. and 20. so he speaking of his labouring for the purging of other which was also one particular point of the purging himselfe he saith that he labored more abundantly then they all but presently he addeth this correction yet not I saith he but the grace of God which is with me 1. Cor. 15. 10. In like manner though the Apostle here speaking of the children of God by regeneration saith that euery one of them purgeth himselfe yet if he should speake of such as they are still in part naturall men and vnregenerate or at least vnsanctified hee would say that such doe not purge themselues but that it is Christ which dwelleth in them that doth purge them or the grace of God that is with them Thirdly for further answer of the former question and for a morefull opening of the Apostles meaning of these words as Iob is said to haue sanctified his children as before we heard because he exhorted them to sanctification praied and offered other sacrifices according to those times for their sanctification and vsed all other meanes that they might be sanctified so the Apostle saith here that euery one that hath this hope in him purgeth himselfe because euery one that hath this hope will and doth vse all meanes for the purging of himselfe What are these meanes Surely hearing of the word read preached with reading and meditation therof priuately Iob. 17. 17. 1. Thess 5. 19. 20. 1. Pet. 1. 23. and 2. 1. 2. Iohn 5. 39. Listning to priuate exhortations Prou 10. 8. and 11. 32. and 15. 31. 32. Hebr. 3. 12. c. and 10. 25. Praying in the holy Ghost Iude 20. 1. Thess 5. 23. crauing also the praiers of other in that behalfe 1. Thessa 5. 25. Hebrewes 13. 18. vsing the company of the godly by whose words and example they may be the more prouoked as hath been before often shewed to more godlinesse Prouerb 13. 20. auoiding also all euill company and all other meanes of the contrary namely of defiling themselues Prou. 1. 10. c. and 4. 14. and 22. 24. 25. Canti● 1. 8. 1. Cor. 5. 6. and 11. and Chap 15. 30. so likewise the turning awaie their eies that they behold not vanity Psal 119. 37. Yea making a couenant with their eies not to behold any obiect of vncleannesse Iob 31. 1. because by this meanes many haue beene ouertaken and defiled with diuers sinnes As Ahaz with idolatry by seeing the altar of Damascus 2. Kings 16. 10. Achan with couetousnesse and taking of the excommunicate things of Iericho By seeing among the spoile a goodlie Babylonish garment and two hundred she●els of siluer and a wedge of gold c. Iosh 7. 21. Dauid with adulterie by seeing a woman washing her selfe 2. Sam. 11. 2. and diuers other with other sinnes And lastly taking heede to all their waies that they doe not offend with their tongue Psal 39. 1. Because I say euery one that hath that hope in him will and doth vse all those foresaid meanes of sanctification and shunne and auoide all meanes of pollution and of being defiled therefore also doth the Apostle say in this place that euery such one doth purge himselfe Now that euery one that hath this hope doth thus purge himselfe it is euident because hope can not be separated from faith Where there is hope there also is faith where by the heart is purified Acts 15. 9. as by which Christ himselfe dwelleth in our hearts as we haue heard who hath his fanne in his hand to pu●ge his floore Mat. 3. 12. and to make cleane his wheat not only from chaffe without it that is to separate the elect from the reprobate that may defile them but also from all drosse within it and from all corruption cleauing vnto it that is from all filthinesse of the flesh and of the spirit 2. Cor. 7. 1. Christ also being the head and they that haue the former hope being the members as the naturall head communicateth vertue to euery naturall member so it cannot be but that Christ will communicate his vertue of purging to euery member of his mysticall body The like is to be said of him as he is the root and they that haue the foresaid hope are boughs and branches comming out of the said root For if the root be holy the branches also are holy Rom. 11. 16. This purging must not bee only of one part neither of the body only nor of the soule only nor of one power of the soule nor of one member of the body but of both and of all of soule
hauing none by nature and to whom to leaue their inheritances or their Crownes yet for some considerations they will not haue this to be known But it is otherwise with God He hath so loued vs that he doth not only make vs his children but that also hee doth declare and publish and proclaime vs so to be 3 From the former reason ariseth another viz. that the Apostle vseth this phrase to teach vs that if he be not ashamed that such as we are should bee called his children then much lesse should we our selues be ashamed of this honourable title If a great king be not ashamed that the sonne of a poore begger should bee called his sonne is there any cause why the said sonne of such a poore begger should be ashamed to bee called the sonne of such a great King In like manner if God the king of kings be nor ashamed that we poore beggers brats should be called his children is there any reason why wee should bee ashamed of so honourable a title I could much amplify this point But for further amplification therof I do only wish that if any for feare of the disgrace of the world to be spoken of in the obiection following be ashamed to call himselfe the child of God and to carry himselfe accordingly such an one do wel remember what our Sauiour saith of them that are ashamed of him of his words before such an adulterous sinfull generation viz. as this last age of the world is where in we now liue to wit that he also will be ashamed of him when he shall come in the glory of his Father with the holy Angels Mark 8. 38. For certainely in like manner will God the Father bee ashamed of all such and wil vtterly deny them to be his children in the world to come that were ashamed to bee called his children and to liue as his children in this life Yea this is the more certaine because there is infinitely more cause why God should bee ashamed of vs then why wee should be ashamed of him Thus much of the seuenth particular word in this text The eighth word is the children of God Some read the sonnes of God but the originall is the children of God comprehending sonnes and daughters men and women and so the same word is vsed Iohn 1. 12. and 11. 52. and Rom. 8. 16. 17. and in many other places This is to be obserued for the comfort as well of women as of men and for the instruction as afterward wee shall heare of one sex as well as of the other And therefore the Apostle allegeth the words of the Prophet in the name of God himselfe speaking in this manner I will be a Father vnto you and ye shall be my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord Almightie 2. Cor. 6. 18. Heere wee see expresse mention as well of daughters as of sonnes This is to be the rather noted because some in the brauery of their wit or rather in the rage of their madnesse doe not sticke to deny women to haue any part in the matters of saluation although the Scripture doe both expreslie say that there is no exception of male or female with God but that all are one in Christ Iesus Galat. 3. 28. and although it doe also record vnto vs example as well of beleeuing women as of beleeuing men But what doth the Apostle heere meane by children For the vnderstanding of this besides diuers other waies how men may be and are called the children of God let vs know that in a more strict sense this title the children of God is taken two waies First for all the members of the visible Church so long as they continue such members and that because of the outward couenant of God made with the whole body of the visible Church In this sense it is said The sonnes of God saw the daughters of men that they were faire c. Genes 6. 2. Heere the sonnes of God doe signifie such as professed themselues the sonnes of God and so were of the visible Church In the same sense also our Sauiour himselfe calleth the Iewes euen in his time generally by the name of children saying It is not meet to take the childrens bread and to cast it to ●helpes Matt. 15. 26. Secondly this title the children of God is taken for them that haue receiued the spirit of adoption and that are regenerated by the immortall seed of the spirit and by the word of God So it is taken in the place before alleged Rom. 8. 16. 17. and often elsewhere and so only not in the former sense is it taken in this place For the Apostle speaketh of them that worke righteously and are borne of God as wee haue heard in the end of the former chapter and of them that know that when Christ shall appeare they shall be like him as appeareth in the next verse But none worke righteously c. neither doe any know they sha●l be like vnto Christ at his appearing but onely they that are by the spirit of God regenerated and therefore the Apostle speaketh o●ly of such in this place To speake a little more of adoption and regeneration for Note the making thereof the plainer and more perspicuous wee must vnderstand that the adoption of God differeth much from the adoption of men For the ciuill Lawyers that write of 〈◊〉 say that adoption must be of the yoonger by the 〈◊〉 that he that adopteth a childe must bee elder then the person adopted neither doe they onely distingui●h thus betwixt adoption and arrogation that arrogation is the taking of one to bee a childe which is already of age and at libertie and as we say at his owne hand and his owne man but adoption is of one vnder age and of one that is in tuition gouernment and gardianship of another the ciuill Lawyers I say doe not onely write thus of adoption but they also say that adoption properly is when one that hath no children of his owne doth adopt the childe of some other to be called by his name or at least to be brought vp by him and to bee his heire God doth not so adopt vs for hee hath a Sonne of his owne yea more properly his owne then any man can say of any childe in the world because Christ is the proper Sonne of God from euerlasting by communication as wee haue heard of the whole essence of his Father vnto him But the children of men are their children long after them and therefore they are yoonger then their fathers They are also children by taking some part of their parents nature and that of their bodily substance only for their soules are immediately from God who therefore by opposition to the fathers of our bodies is called the Father of spirits Heb. 12. 9. and is said to forme the spirit of man Zechar. 12. 1. As for the great obiection that doth most trouble men viz. if Note God
head of Angels Therefore in this respect also the condition of Gods children is so much the more excellent Touching the seuenth and last former metaphor what heart of man can conceiue the depth the height the bredth and the length of this loue of Christ in matching and ioining himselfe to vs and vs to him that hee I say that was the heire of all things by whom the worlds were made and who was the brightnes of the glory and the engrauen forme of the person of God the father Hebrewes 1. 1. 2. and beeing in the forme of God thought it no robbery to bee equall to God Philippians 2. 6. 7. that hee I say should so cast his loue and liking vpon vs as to take vs to be his spouse and wife and that way also to make vs the daughters as it were in lawe and by marriage to God the father euen vs that not onely had no portion and were euery mothers childe of vs beggers brattes but that also were base horne creatures and had an Ammonite to our Father and an Hittite to our mother and that therefore as most base children are were in such misery as a new borne childe whose nauell is not cut neither is washed with water to soften him neither is salted with salt for the better hardning the nauell and the whole skinne for the better strengthning of all the inward parts and for the better decocting and consuming of all corrupt humors neither was swadled with clouts and whom being borne in misery there was no eie to pitie or to shew compassion so that hee lay in the open field to all contempt and altogether polluted with blood Ezekiel 16. 3. 4. 5. 6. yea who were altogether deformed and misshapen euen a crocked generation hauing neither good face nor good heart nor good eie nor any member well proportioned yea being altogether also without witte and vnderstanding of heauenly things as wee haue heard euen pure naturals as wee speake and no more able to conceiue the things of God and pertaining to our owne good then very ideots Is not this wonderfull that such an one as Christ was and is should so vnequally in many respects match himselfe with such as wee were and that by matching himselfe so with vs should make such a change in vs of crooked to make vs straight of deformed to make vs beautifull of beggerly to make vs rich of fooles to make vs wise of prophane to make vs holy of earthly to make vs heauenly and of children of the diuell to make vs the children of God his father What a preferment therefore is this Were it not a great aduancement and a matter of exceeding honor for a mighty Prince to take some vagabond woman poore naked deformed miserable c. and to marry her to himselfe and to put her presently into all costly and princely robes yea it was an honor for Ab●ga●l though the wife of a rich but a miserable yeoman such as this time hath too many like and also a wise and a vertuous woman to be taken to wife vnto Dauid was it not also an high preferment for Ester a poore maiden of another nation to be made wife and Queen to that mighty Monarch and Emperor Ahashuerosh that raigned ouer an hundred seuen and twenty Prouinces How honorable then is it for vs more poore base miserable then any rogue to bee married to the naturall and only sonne of God hei●e and Lord of all things Verily this match is so much greater preferment of vs then the former matches were either of Abigail with Dauid or of Ester with Ahashuerosh because both Dauid and Ahashuerosh had many other wiues besides those but Christ Iesus hath so matched himselfe with vs that as he had no other before vs so he desireth no other besides vs but contenteth himselfe wholly with vs and taketh as great delight in vs as if we had been his equals when he first made choice of vs and as though we had been as wise rich beautifull vertuous and euery way as glorious as either he doth make vs after his marying of vs in this life or as hee will make vs hereafter in the life to come To leaue these metaphors and similitudes whereby hitherto the communion of the children of God is so described and their dignity in such sort amplified let vs further vnderstand that our said communion is the more admirable in it selfe and honorable to vs in as much as thereby we cannot but haue communion also with the Father because Christ and the father are one Ioh. 10. 30 And the father is in the Sonne and the Sonne in the Father Ioh. 14. 10. 11. In which last place our Sauiour praieth that as he and the father are one in another so also the children of God whom God had giuen to Christ Ioh. 6. 37. and 17. 6. might be one not only amongst themselues but also in them that is in the father and in the Sonne Therefore our Sauiour likewise saith before If any man loue me he will keepe my word and my father will loue him and we will come vnto him and will dwell with him Ioh. 14. 23. Yea therefore Christ came into the world and was made one with vs that we might haue communion with the Father and be made one with him and as he was made one with vs to make vs one with the father so also he did effect that for which he did come Therefore the Apostle hauing set forth our miserable state in the world by nature viz. that amongst other things we were without God in the world Ephes 2. 12. he doth presently by way of opposition adde our contrary state in Christ and by Christ saying But in Christ Iesus ye which once were farre of are made neerer by the bloud of Christ c. vers 13. Hauing that communion with the Father and with the sonne we haue also the like with the holy ghost and therefore it is not onely said that they that are led by the spirit of God are the sonnes of God but also that they that are the sonnes of God haue receiued the spirit of God whereby they ●rie Abba father Rom. 8. 14 c. and againe that because they are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Son into their hearts which crieth Abba father Therefore also our Sauiour Ioh. 14. where he promiseth the communion of himselfe and of his father vnto his disciples promiseth also to send the holy ghost which should abide with them Therefore also the holy ghost is said to bee shed on vs abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour Tit. 3. 5. Finally as by the sonne we haue communion with the father so the holy ghost is the bond of our communion with the father and with the sonne Through him saith Paul wee haue an entrance to the father by one spirit Ephes 2. 18. and by one spirit we are all baptized into one body c. 1. Cor. 12. 13. Is
not this then a great dignity For this is one of the specialest promises that God hath made vnto his people namely that he will set his tabernacle among them and that his soule shall not loath them that also he will walke among them c. Leuit. 26. 11. 12. So then they with whom God hath such communion as to set his tabernacle among them and dwell with them may assure themselues that God will neuer loath them nor leaue them Yea we doe thereby further see that he promiseth not only his presence but also his gratious presence by his power to vphold them by his grace to direct them and by his goodnesse to giue them euery good thing For hee is greater then all Ioh. 10. 29. both in power and wisedome Who therefore can destroy or hurt them whom he will preserue In a strange country and in places of danger oh how great a comfort is it to haue some companie In such a place the truth of that is most apparant that Two are better then one because if they fall the one will lift vp his fellow Eccles 4. 9. 10. But alas what is all the company of man in respect of the society of God They that haue God so with them may truly say If God be with vs who can be or what skilleth it who be against vs God is light and in him is no darknesse 1. Ioh. 1. 5. If therefore we haue him alwaies with vs we shall be sure of light whereby so to see our waies that we may not erre Yea God is the father of lights from whom commeth euery good and perfect gift Iames 1. 17. Therefore they that haue him their shepheard may assure themselues they shall want nothing but that he will make them to rest in green pastures and lead them by the still waters of life restoring their soules and guiding them into the paths of righteousnesse Psal 23. 1. c. Yea they that haue thus God their shepheard shall be sure not only of green pastures and water but also that he will giue them that wine and milke and bread c. whereby their soules may liue and be made fat to eternall life Isai 55. 1. 2. What a priuiledge is this It is a great prerogatiue of the children of God to be garded by an Angel as afterward wee shall heare But alas smal cōfort is there in the presence of an Angel if God himselfe be not with vs. When the Israelites had so offended God and prouoked his wrath against them by making a molten calfe that he denied to go himselfe with them vnto the land which he had promised them and yet at the praier of Moses was content to send an Angell before them to cast out the Canaanites the Amerites the Hittites c. How I pray you did they take this It is said that when they heard this tidings they sorrowed and no man put on his best raiment Exod. 33. 1. c. There is therefore no comfort in the presence of any creature whatsoeuer if God himselfe be not graciously present with the eies of his fauour to behold them and their slate with the eares of his grace to heare their crie Psal 34. 15. and with the right hand of his power to support them Psal 144. 7. and to fill them with good things Psal 104. 28. and 145 16. Therefore Moses himselfe in the three and thirtith of Exodus before alledged vpon Gods deniall of his going in person with the Israelites offering notwithstanding to send an Angell before them Moses himselfe I say reasoneth the case with God in these words saying Wherein shall it be knowen that I and thy people haue found fauour in thy sight Shall it not be when thou goest with vs So I and thy people shall haue preheminence before all the people that are vpon the earth vers 16. As the former sorrowing of the people in the beginning of the Chapter sheweth how heauy a thing it is to want Gods companie though we haue the company of Angels so what can be more plainly spoken then these words of Moses to shew how great preheminence there is in that gratious presence of God wherof now we speake This priuiledge is the more because as all the points before handled so this is both common to all the children of God and also peculiar to them only For it is apropriated to them that are elected called instified and which shall be glorified Rom. 8. 31. and therefore before our calling as wee haue heard we are said to be without God in the world Ephes 2. 12. and it is before obserued that the promise of Gods dwelling with men and making them his tabernacles and temple is ioined with another of making them also his sonnes and his daughters 2. Cor. 6. 18. as noting that it is both common to them all and also proper to them only Therefore the wicked haue no more part in this priuiledge then in the former As the children of God may say that when they are alone they are not alone because God euen the fafather sonne and holy ghost is alwaies with them so whatsoeuer company else the wicked haue yet they may truly say they are alone because God euen the father Sonne and holy Ghost is absent from them As God is infinit and filleth all places so he cannot but be wheresoeuer the wicked are But cold is the comfort of this his presence only For if their eies were opened to see him they should see him no otherwise then Dauid saw the Angell of the Lord between the earth and the heauen with his sword drawen in his hand and stretched out toward Ierusalem 1. Chron. 21. 16. What to do had the Angell of the Lord his hand so stretched out toward Ierusalem euen to destroy it 2. Sam. 24. 16. Neither any otherwise should the wicked see the Lord to be present if their eies were opened then Balaams Asse saw also the same or another Angell of the Lord stand in the way and a sword drawn in his hand at the sight whereof the Asse being stricken with feare flung the first time out of the way into the field and the second time dasnt her masters foot against the wall and the third time lay down vnder him not daring to go in the way Numb 22. 23. Thus I say and no otherwise should the wicked see the Lord present with them not to do them any good but to be reuenged of them for all their wickednesse Thereby they should be so filled and possessed with feare that they should be ready to fly if it were possible and to run away from his presence But whither should they flie from his presence If they should ascend into heauen be is there If they should goe down into hell or make their bed in the graue hee is there If they should take the wings of the morning and dwell in the vttermost parts of the sea yet thither should his hand follow them and