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

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when he was pressed by Bishop Ridly and others to tolerate his Sister Masse in her owne Chapell he would not though importuned yeeld thereto saying He should dishonour God in it but being much pressed by them he burst into teares and they thence concluded that he had more divinity in his little finger then they in all their bodies O that you would study to premote Gods glory and be zealous for his truth since you have had such experience of his mercy and likewise could not but perceive the evill of those dangerous errours which were too much indulged by some of those whom you have cast out I shall now speake of the threefold Subject I handle in my Booke 1. The Scripture 2. God 3. The Workes of God It is reported of Charles the Great that he set his Crown on the Bible and Luther was so zealous to have the Scriptures read that he professed if he thought the reading of his Bookes would hinder the reading of the Scripture he would burne them all before he dyed Alphonsus King of Spaine and Naples read the Bible with Lira's glosse foureteen times over The Emperour Theodosius the second wrote the New Testament out with his owne hand many speake much of new light but the Prophet Esay saith To the Law and to the Testimony if they speake not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Take heed of too much of that new light which the world is now gazing upon so much new light is breaking forth that the old zeale is almost extinct by it saith a Minister of New England The Familists say they are above Ordinances when the body hath no need of nourishment then and not afore will the soule have no need of Ordinances we about Westminster have beene better instructed out of the 20. of Exodus 24. Some talke of Revelations and the Testimony of the Spirit But now the Scripture is compleated I must not expect any immediate Testimony of the Spirit Luther saith if any Spirit should come and speak any thing to him that he brought not Scripture for he would spit in his face The Scripture is the best Cynosure to follow it was Davids Counseller it is a perfect rule of a Perfect Reformation Secondly all Christian States and Persons should labour for an experimentall practicall knowledge of God and Christ Phil. 3. 8. 10. the vision of God in Heaven shall make us perfectly Happye Quid Deus sit ipse tantum novit what God is God himselfe doth onely perfectly know But he hath revealed himselfe to us in his word and workes That place in 34 of Exodus 6. 7. verses is as full a description of Gods Attributes as any in all the Scripture The Lord the Lord God mercifull and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodnes truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity transgression sin that will by no meanes clear the guilty visiting the iniquity of the Fathers upon the children and upon the childrens Children unto the third and fourth generation If God were more known he would be more loved honou●ed feared trusted The Heathens extolled the knowledge of a mans self but Christians must chiefely study to know God This is a Noble Subject for a Christian Parliament and a Christian Kingdome to exercise themselves in O that you would all labour to know Gods excellencies and to propagate the knowledge of him to the many darke Corners of the Land Thirdly the workes of God are to be diligently observed by a Christian State One observes that there is a five fold Declaration of the workes of God An Arthnieticall Declaration Psal. 40. 5. Secondly a Logicall Declaration of the workes of God when we shew the severall kinds of them as the workes of Creation the worke of Redemption the worke of Providence and distribute those into workes of mercy or works of Justice Thirdly an Historicall Declaration when we declare the persons acting the places the times the Counsels the mannaging of the severall actions the events and successes Fourthly a Rhetoricall Declaration Fifthly a Declaration purely Theologicall or a practicall Declaration of the works of God We should be lifted up by Gods manifold works to the Consideration of his unlimited greatnesse that is the first cause and author of them all we can turne our eyes no way but exceeding great multitudes of works wrought by God doe offer themselves to our view If we looke upward downeward on the right hand on the left into our selves and other things our minds shall be encountred with diversity of rare Workes of Almighty God These workes are all made with much wisdome Psal. 136. 5. and the serious considering of Gods workes is a great part of the sanctifying of his name Never had any Parliament more reason to magnifie Gods goodnesse for his singular mercies Oh that as many of your deliverances were got with supplication so they might be worne with thankefulnesse and as you have been a Parliament of many Prayers so may you be a Parliament of many prayses which is the earnest desire of Your Honours Devoted Servant EDW. LEIGH To the Christian Reader REader The number of bookes is without number the Presses are daily oppressed with them Yet though the world abound with unprofitable may pernicious Pamphlets there are many excellent subjects which are either not handled or not sufficiently There is a great variety in mens fancies as well as in their faces and bookes the fruit of mens brains are as various as men themselves Some books are to be tasted onely some chewed and some swallowed That saying of Stanchar the Hereticke doth exceedingly please the Papists Plus apud se valere unum Lombardum quam centum Lutheros ducentos Melancthones trecentos Bullingeros quadringentos Martyres quingentos Calvinos That one Lumbard was more esteemed by him then 100 Luthers 200 Melancthons 300 Bullingers 400 Martyrs 500 Calvins Focanus contrarily saith thus of the Schoolmen that one Austin among the Ancients and one Calvin in his Institutions of Christian Religion among the moderne Divines will afford thee more solid Divinity then all the School-Doctors of the Popish Church with all their vaine disputations jejune distinctions quodlibeticall questions and foolish speculations with which saith he Thomas Scotus Lombard Bonaventure Molina Vasquez Suarez à Soto Bellarmine and other Doctors of the Romane Church are full even ad nauseam But the Bible is indeed the Booke of Bookes it signifieth in the Greeke Tongue A Booke in generall and was sometimes taken so largely yet by an Antinomasie or excellency it is now taken for the Booke of the Holy Scripture and is all one with Gods Booke We told you before how much the Papists magnified Peter Lumbard the father of the Schoolmen calling him the Master of the sentences and preferring him before hundreds of ours The next Schoolman after him Alexander
essence whatsoever is in God is God Simplenesse is the first property in God which cannot in any sort agree to any creature This is proved that God is Simple by removing from him all kinds of composition which are five 1. Of quantitative parts as a body 2. Of essentiall parts matter and forme as a man consists of Soule and body 3. Of a genus and difference as every species 4. Of subject and accidents as a learned man a white Wall 5. Of act and power as the Spirits Every creature is subject to composition and consequently to division All things which are Created are made by joyning together more things then one in one and so they consist of divers things Some have a more grosse and palpable composition of parts both essentiall and integrall as a man of soule and body and the body of flesh bloud bone and such parts The Spirits which have not so plaine a composition are yet compounded of substance and accidents sustained by that substance and inherent in it for the substance of an Angell and his faculties and qualities are different things his life is one thing his reason another his will another his power wisdome nimblenesse other things So the soule of a man and all Created things are made up of many things conjoyned in one God is absolutely Simple he is but one thing and doth not consist of any parts he hath no accidents but himselfe his essence and attributes are all one thing though by us diversly considered and understood If he did consist of parts there must be something before him to put those parts together and then he were not eternall Isay 43. 10. he is one most pure and meere act In God to be to will and to doe are the same John 15. 26. compared with John 14. 6. and 1 John 1. 7. compared with 1. of John 1. 5. where to have life and be life to be in the light and be light are the same God is therefore called in the abstract light life love truth John 14 6. 1 John 4. 8. This is one reason why God is so perfect because he is Eus Simplissimum In every kinde a thing is so much perfect by how much it is more Simple and pure Whence the same Hebrew word signifieth both Simple and perfect 2. No accidents are in God when we affirme that God is good and gracious we meane it not as when we say so of men in men they are qualities vertues in God they are his essence 1. We should be simple as Doves Matth. 10. 16. Simplicitas Columbina non asinina Carthusian Ephes. 6. 5. 2 Cor. 1. 12. It is called godly sincerity which God worketh and which is pleasing to him Simplenesse and Simplicity of heart is the maine thing in Christianity Ephes. 6. 5. Col. 3. 22. 2. Here is matter of joy and comfort to the good mercy and love are Gods essence Isay 54. 8. and of feare and terrour to the wicked because Gods anger and justice are his essence and he is unchangeable God is Living He is often called the living God in opposition to dead Idols turne from Idolls to serve the living God Gen. 16. 14. and 24. 62. and 25. 11. Deut. 5. 26. Ruth 3. 13. Judg. 8. 19. Isay 3. 10. Jer. 10. 10. Ezek. 3. 11. Dan. 4. 34. Math. 16. 76. Act. 14. 15. He is called life 1 John 5. 10. the fountaine of life Psal. 36. 9. He hath his name in Greek from life He saith often of himselfe I live as if he should say I alone doe truly live and he often addes for ever Deut. 32. 40. The oath which the Father 's used is most frequent the Lord liveth Jer. 5 2. and 12. 16. for they swore by him who truly and alwayes lives He himselfe sweares by nothing but by his life and holinesse Jud. 8. 24. Ruth 3. 3. This Oath is used 14. times in Ezekiel Zeph. 2. 9. Jer. 46. 18. 22. 24. Isay 49. 18. Deut. 32. 40. Numb 14. 21. 28. God is called the living God 1. To distinguish him from the false Gods of the Gentiles which were dead and sencelesse Stocks Act. 17. 15. 2. To represent unto us the active nature of God he is all life 3. To direct us to the Fountaine or Well of life from whom all life is derived unto the creature by a threefold streame 1. Nature God is the authour of the life of nature Gen. 2. 7. Act. 17. 28. 2. Grace he is the authour of that life John 1. 2. Ephes. 4. 18. 3. Glory he is the authour of the life of glory Rom. 2. 7. A reasonable life to which God resembleth his is a power to performe variety of regular and limited actions to a certain known end and that out of choice and councell Gods life is his power of working all things according as seemes good to himselfe after his owne Councell for his own glory to say he liveth is to say he doth perpetually worke Life in things bodily ariseth from the union of the body and the soule together and in things that be not bodies but spirits from the perfection of the matter and qualities of them Our owne life is a power by which we are able to produce lively actions Gods life is that power whereby he is fit to worke or produce all sorts of actions suitable to the perfect essence of his divine Majesty Or it is that whereby he knoweth willeth and affecteth and can doe all sort of actions beseeming his excellent nature Reasons 1. From the effects of life God understands wils loves therefore he truly lives for these are all the properties of livers therefore Aristotle often concludes from this that Because God understands all things that he lives a blessed life 2 Those things live which move and stirre themselves God doth all things by himselfe he is the first and perfectest cause of all therefore he most properly lives and that a most blessed life 3. From his name Jehovah he is Jehovah who is by himselfe and most perfectly and of whom all things are which are and live God therefore so lives that he is the Authour of all life to all livers and therefore he is called our life Deut. 30. 20. John saith of Christ in him was the Authour of life and Act. 3. ye have killed the Author of life Amongst the creatures which are subject to our sense there is a three fold kinde of life Two more imperfect the third more perfect The former is the life of vegetation or growth by which things are able to doe what is requisite for the attaining and maintaining of their full strength and nature and the propagating of their kinde according to their severall kinds The second is the life of sence whereby things are inabled to discerne things hurtfull to them and things good for them to shune the one and to seek the other These are imperfect kinds of life
hearts and blaspheming him with their tongues a sinner in sinning lifts up himselfe above God preferring his own wisdome before Gods and his will before his therefore David worthily concludes the 104 Psalme with an imprecation against sinners God will gaine glory of them in despight of their hearts by magnifying his justice 2 We should labour to partake of Gods Image that we might be partakers of his glory we must earnestly desire that Gods glory may be communicated to us that he would send forth his Spirit of glory to rest upon us by which meanes we shall commend our selves to God Christ the Angels and Saints and our owne consciences 3 We must learne to contemplate the glory of God with admiration by this one principally differs from a beast He hath not a capacity to behold the excellency of God the Saints in Heaven are even taken up and filled with beholding Gods glory set your eyes round about to behold Gods workes and his glory in them so as you may admire God this will make your soules to enjoy God Paul saith In the mystery of the Gospell we behold as in a glasse the glory of God be much in this exercise 4 We must long to goe out of this world to behold Gods glory fully Jobn 17. 24. raise up your hearts to heavenly desires wish earnestly to be in Heaven Every one would be willing to goe to Heaven when he dieth but we must desire to leave this life to goe thither 5 This should comfort us 1 Against reproaches and contempt in the world if God be glorified we must sacrifice our names as well as our lives to him 2 Against death then we shall no more dishonour God 3 The day of judgement should be longed for because it is Gods glorious day 2 Thess. 1. 10. we run to glorious sights on earth as the Queen of Sheba 6 We should ascribe all glory to God the fountaine of glory 1 Chron. 29. 11 12. Psalm 115. 1. God challengeth this from men Give unto the Lord glory and strength give unto the Lord the glory due to his name He is very jealous of his glory and will not suffer the least part of it to be given to the creature 7 Take heed of those Tenets which oppose Gods glory as 1 The lawfulnesse of giving religious honour to images the Popish Doctors have wearied themselves and wracked their braines to coine distinctions how divine worship may be given to Images but the second Commandement forbids Image-worshipping and God acknowledgeth himselfe a jealous God and saith he will not give his glory to another 2 Attributing too much to our free-will or setting up our merits this is robbing God likewise of his glory Let us first live to his glory and doe all for his glory 1. Because he intended it 2. He hath joyned our happinesse and his glory together 3. It is infinitely more worth then all the world 4. It is his condescending that he will take this for glory 5. He will have glory of us against our wils 6. The Creatures glorifie God in their way 7. How much glory doe we give to things of an inferiour nature 8. God will hereby give us glory We should doe all we doe for him and to him even to shew forth our apprehension of his name Doing whatsoever good we doe and leaving whatsoever evill we leave that we may declare our high esteem of him and make it appeare that we doe judge and repute him most wise good just excellent worthy all the service that we can doe and more too And whatsoever is not thus done with reference to the name of God as the motive and end of it doth want so much of goodnesse as it wants of this reference Nothing is good farther then it hath reference to God the chiefe good If we aime onely or chiefly and be moved onely or chiefly by temporall benefits and respects of this kind looking to our selves our deeds are hollow and seemingly good alone not reall If we looke to our selves alone even in respect of eternall benefits and not above our selves to him and to his name that also is but hypocrisie But this is truth to make our ends and motives the same with Gods and to have an eye still above and beyond our selves even to Gods name that we may cause it to appeare to him and our selves and others that we know and confesse his great name Omnibus operibus nostris coelestis intentio adjungi debet Aquinas God glorified himselfe John 12. 28. Christ glorified him his whole life was nothing but a seeking of his Fathers glory John 17. 4 the Saints and Angels spend eternity in setting forth his glory Esay 6 23. Reu. 4. 10 11. 7. 9 10. all the creatures doe glorifie God in their kind Psalm 145. 10. 148. the worme is not exempted therefore that man saith Chrysostome which doth not glorifie God is baser then the basest worme This is all the first table of the Decalogue and above halfe of the Lords prayer The three first Petitions concerne Gods glory and the conclusion likewise hath reference to it We should glorifie God in all conditions in adversity as well as in prosperity Psalm 50. 15. in all the parts of our bodies in our hearts 1 Pet. 3. 15. with our mouthes Rom. 15 6. in our lives 1 Cor. 6. ult Matth. 5. 16. Let us often thinke of the personall glory and excellency which the Saints shall enjoy when they come to Heaven 1 In Body 2 In Soule The bodies of the Saints in Heaven shall be 1 Perfect free from all blemishes and every way fit for the soules use 2 Incorruptible not liable to sicknesse weaknesse mortality 3 Spirituall 1 In regard of state and condition because they shall be upheld by the Spirit of God without the use of meat drinke and sleepe 2 In regard of quality and operation active and agile as a Spirit they shall move swiftly upward downward any way at the command of the soule 4 Glorious the bodies of the Saints shall then shine as the Sun and be like the glorious body of Christ. The soule shall 1. be totally freed from all Spirituall evils all reliques of sinne and all possibility of sinne the corruption of the understanding will affections conscience shall be quite taken away 2 From all apprehensions of wrath and eternall death 2 It shall perfectly enjoy all Spirituall good 1 The Image of God shall be absolutely perfect in every one of the glorified Saints Every faculty of the soule shall have all grace that faculty is capable of and that in the highest degree The mind shall have all intellectuall vertues the will and affections all morall vertues and that in the highest degree they are capable of 1 Cor. 13. 10. The understanding uno intiuitu shall know omne seibile the will shall be fully satisfied with God the conscience filled with peace the
evill hee should practically feele what he had lost and what evill he had plunged himselfe into Some have thought that those words Gen. 3. 24. should not be understood Historically but allegorically that is that God gave him noe hopes of coming into this place againe but the text contradicts that some have understood by Cherubims some species and images of terrible creatures as wee call Scarecrowes but that is simple to thinke that Adam was so childish to be afraid of those others interpret it of the fire of Purgatory The more probable Interpretation is that by Cherubims are meant Angels who did after a visible manner shake up and downe this fiery sword Moses doth therfore call them Cherubims because the Jewes knew what he meant having such formes over the Arke Therefore it is taken for Angels not simply but as they appeared in some shape It is a curiositie to enquire how long they staid there although it is certaine they ceased when Paradise was destroyed which was by the floud Therefore this serves 1. For information to instruct us 1. That everyman and woman hath a soule there is a bodie and a spirit which enlivens acts the bodie for all performances of the Compositum we must glorifie God in both 1. Cor. 6. 20. 2. It is immortall by Gods appointing but in it selfe endable because it hath a begining that it may be capable of everlasting weale or woe 3. It is soe immortall that it admits of no cessation or intermission the Anabaptists say it is asleep when it parts frō the bodie as soone as it leaves the bodie it goes either to Abrahams bosome or a place of torment 4. At the last day it shall be united with the bodie and the bodie raised up for it and both be happie or miserable for ever 2. Be thankfull to God that hath given us our soules and redeemed them by the bloud of his Son propter hanc Deus facit mundum propter hanc filius Dei venit in mundum Chrysost. blesse him especially for sovle-mercies Ephes. 1. 3. 3. John 2 4. and let the soule praise him Psal. 103. and 104. first and last Wee should love our selves Psal. 22. 26. David calleth his soule his darling it is the immediate worke of God CHAP. IX Of Gods Providence TWo things are to be discussed abovt it 1. That there is a Providence wh●reby the world is governed 2. What it is 1. That there is a Providence which governeth the world and that nothing is done in the world without the certaine and determinate counsell of God is thus proved 1. Faith which leanes and rests on testimonies of holy writ Psal. 14. 2. and 33. 13. the 104. Psal. wholly and 91. Psal. 8 9 10 11. Act. 17. 25. 28. Ephes. 1. 11. At the feast of Tabernacles the Jewes were wont to reade the Booke of Ecclesiastes principally because it speakes so much of the workes of Gods providence 2. Certaine demostrative reasons taken 1. From the causes viz. the Attributes and nature of God 1. There is a God therefore providence because he is a most powerfull and wise King 2. The omnipotent will of God whereby all things are done without which nothing can come to passe 3. His infinite wisedome whereby he can be present with all things which are done in his kingdome 4. His justice in distributing rewards and punishments and goodnesse whereby he communicateth himselfe to the creatures 5. His foreknowledge of all things ● unchangeably depending on the counsell and decree of God 6. He regards the ends of things therefore also the meanes to those ends 7. Hee is the first cause therefore on him depend the second causes 2. From tbe effects the works of God 1. The most wise order of things both naturall and politicke which could not be setled much lesse preserved by blind nature chance or fortune 2. Naturall notions or the law of nature in the difference of honest and dishonest things 3. Peace or torment of conscience from keeping or violating the Law 4. Punishments rewards agreeable to mens deeds which prove there is some Judge of the world and revenger of sins whose severity we cannot shun 5. Heroicke motions vertues and singular gifts given by God to Princes Magistrates Inventers of Arts Artificers others for the common benefit of mankind Lastly by the same reasons it is proved that there is both a God and Providence 2. what providence is It is an externall and temporall action of God whereby he preserveth governeth and disposeth all and singular things which are and are done both the creatures and the faculties and actions of the creatures and directeth them both to the mediate ends and to the last end of all after a set determinate manner according to the most free Decree Counsell of his owne will that himselfe in all things may bee glorified 1. The matter or object of Gods providence is the whole world and whatsoever is b in it for God cares for and governs all things Substances Accidents things great and little necessary and contingent good and evill Hebr. 1. 3. Nehem. 9. 6. The care of God for the bruite beasts living creatures all Meteors is described Psal. 135. Job 37. 2. and ch 38. Matth. 6. 26. Also concerning voluntary things and actions of men good and bad as Prov. 26. 1. 9. Jer. 10. 23. Psalm 139. 1. Psalm 33. 13. 15. concerning things that are contingent Exod. 21. 13. Prov. 16. 33. Matth. 10. 29 30. The least and smallest things are by the God of heaven ordered disposed of according to his owne pleasure and wisdome for very good purpose not so much as a sparrow falls to the ground without Gods providence he saith the hairs of our head are all numbred therefore Cicero was out when he said Dij magna cu●ant parva negligunt and the Poet Non vacat exiquis rebus adesse Iovi The reasons of this are these 1. God is infinite in all excellencies infinite in wisedome there may as much wisdome be seen in little as in great things all things in the world yea even all things which might have beene as well as those that have fallen out are subject to his wisedome and power nothing so small but it is a fit subject of knowing and ordering 2. There is a necessary connexion and mutuall dependance betweene great and small things the one supporting upholding the other so that it is not possible to conceive how any thing should be ordered by God if all things were not the little things being like the pins of a house which hold the building together or the hinges of a great gate upon which the whole is moved Object These things are so small as it is an abasement to the Divine Majesty to intermeddle with them Sol. It is his highest commendation to be infinite so that nothing can bee hid from his knowledge the Lords manner of working in
9. Foure thines are to be considered in this argument 1. The number which suffered for the same is numberlesse many millions that none can imagine it to arise from pride weaknesse or discontent More Christians were slaine as hath been observed under the ten bloody persecutions then Pas●hall Lambs were offered up under the State of the old Testament 2. The quality and condition of them which suffered noble and base learned and unlearned rich poore old yong men women children those which were tender and dainty all these could not suffer out of vain-glory that stubbornly they might defend the opinion which they had taken up 3. The torments used were usuall unusuall speedy slow some hewed in pieces burnt with slow fire cast in to Lyons given to be devoured by the teeth of wild beasts some beheaded some drowned some stoned with stones 4. All this they endured constantly patiently with great joy even a chearful heart merry countenance singing Psalms in the midst of the fire so that the madnesse of the enemy was overcome by the patience of them which did suffer Luther reports of the Martyr St. Agatha as she went to prisons and tortures she said she went to banquets and nuptials That martyr Hawkes lift up his hands above his head and clapt them together when he was in the fire as if he had been in a triumph So that their testimony was not onely humane God enabling them so stoutly to die for the truth Phil. 1. 29. Maytyrs of other sects differ from the martyrs of the true Church 1. They were fewer 2. They suffered not with joy of conscience which the godly martyrs did 3. They were punished for their errours discovered the martyrs were burned for having any part of the Bible and the Bible sometime with them where the Inquisition raignes it is death to have any part of the Bible in the vulgar tongue The Gentiles also which were out of the pale of the Church did give testimony to sundry stories and examples in the Bible Suetonius and Tacitus speakes of the miracles of Christ Pliny of the miracles of Moses and of the wise mens Star Macrobius of the slaughtering of the Infants Josepbus of the death of Herod the Poets of the flood Plutarke of the Dove which Noah sent out Josephus a Jew saith in his time there was a monument of the pillar of Salt into which Lots wife was turned Of Sodomes destruction speaketh Strabo Diodorus Siculus Galene in his booke of simples Pliny Solinus Polyst hist. Tacitus lib. ult Mela acknowledging that the remainders of Gods wrath are still to be seen there as the dead lake the fruite faire to the eye but falling to cinders and smoake in the hand The Oracles of the Sybillae were in greatest account among the Heathen and held as true of all men and if those be they which we have there is nothing which can more plainly set forth the birth of Christ his life and death Causabon makes it apparent that those prophesies of Sybil were counterfeited pieces and at first entertained by such as delighted in seeing the Christian Religion strengthned with forreine proofes Heretickes also prove the Scripture to be divine for they quote that and therefore Luther cals the Bible Librum Hereticorum Experience teacheth that all heresies either began or increased from the misunderstanding of Scripture Thirdly the Scripture it selfe doth give testimony to it selfe that it is divine it is called a light Psal. 119. 105. because it discovers it selfe the testimony and the testimony of the Lord because it beares witnesse to it selfe The Prophets give testimony of Moses Mal. 4. 4. the new Testament of the Old 2 Pet. 1. 19 20. Peter gives testimony of Pauls Epistles 2 Pet. 3. 15. and Paul witnesseth that all Scripture was given of God 2 Tim. 3. 16. which must be meant of all Scripture even of the new Testament that being the last Epistle which Paul wrote as appeares Chap. 4. v. 16. Fourthly none of all these arguments can undoubtedly perswade the heart certitudine fidei that the holy Scripture or any doctrine contained in it is the word of God till we be taught it of God till the holy Spirit of God have inwardly certified and assured us of it This is called the Sealing of the Spirit of God Ephes. 1. 13. by this the Scripture is imprinted in our hearts as the signe of the Seale in the Wax Other arguments may convince but this is absolutely necessary this is alsufficient to perswade certainly Matth. 11. 25. The Holy Ghost is the authour of light by which we understand the Scripture and the perswader of the heart by which we believe the things therein to be truly divine 1 John 5. 6. It is the Spirit that beareth witnesse because the Spirit i. metonymically the doctrine delivered by the Spirit is truth So to prove that there is a God reasons may be brought from nature and the testimony of the Church but no man can believe it savingly but by the Holy Ghost It is hard to carry the matter even between the Socinians reason and the Famalists spirit Socinians wil have nothing but reason no infused habits so they destroy the testimony of the spirit the Familists wil have nothing but Spirit they rest wholy in an immediate private spirit There are three that bear witnesse in earth blood that is justification by the blood of Christ water i. Sanctification by his grace and the Spirit say some witnesseth in these But ye have an unction from the holy one and ye know all things That is ye have received from Christ the Holy Ghost the Comforter and he hath taught and instructed you in all things which are necessary to the salvation of your soules for you to know and be instructed in see V. 27. The testimony is made up by arguing whosoever believeth and is sanctified shall be saved So the antiquity efficacy and Majesty of the Scripture the fidelity of the Penmen and its wonderfull preservation prove it to be the word of God The Spirit of God witnesseth that this word which hath these remarkable advantages above all other writings is the word of God The Spirit doth neither witnesse concerning my salvation nor that the Scripture is the word of God immediately but ultimately Because I am a believer and my faith is sound it assureth me that I am in the state of salvation and so he maketh use of the excellencies in the word to irradiate my understanding We are commanded to trie the Spirits true joy is first heard out of the word before it be fealt Psal. 51. 8. Spirituall joy is an affection proper to spirituall life that life is by faith and faith commeth by hearing Job 33. 22. See John 16. 14. Some question whether every part and parcell of the Scripture be divinely inspired as those places Touch him and he will curse thee
the Reformed Church with one consent admit this Epistle for Canonicall Vide Polani Syntagma I light upon an old Dutch Testament of Luthers Translation saith W●itaker against Raynolds with his preface wherein he writeth that JAmes his Epistle is not so worthy as are the Epistles of St Peter and Paul but in respect of them a strawen Epistle his censure I mislike and himselfe I thinke afterwards seeing these words in a latter edition are left out It is nowhere found in Luthers workes that he called the Epistle of JAmes inanem stramineam Edmund Campian was convicted of falshood about that in England where when he had objected that he could finde no such thing at any time in the Bookes he produced Some in the preface of the German edition say that Luther wrote that it cannot contend in dignity with the Epistles of Paul and Peter but is strawie if it be compared with them Which judgement of Luther we approve not of and it is hence manifest that it was disliked by him because these words are found in no other edition from the yeere 1526. Luthers disciples now hold that it is Canonicall and Apostolicall and they answer the arguments of those that are opposite thereto as we may see in the exposition of that Article concerning the Scripture by that most learned and diligent man John Gerard. Gravitatem ac zelum Apostolicum per omnia prae se fert saith Walther We may reply against the Papists who often object this opinion of Luthers that Cajetan their Cardinall denieth the Epistle to the Hebrews to be Canonicall yea which is far worse he affirmeth that the Authour thereof hath erred not onely in words but in the sence and meaning of the Scriptures Nay Cajetan saith Whitaker rejected JAmes second of Peter and second and third of John and Jude It consists of five Chapters Pareus and Laurentius have done best on it First of Peter This Epistle is called in the Title Catholicall because it is not written to any one person as that of Paul to Timothy Titus and Philemon nor to any one particular Church as those of Paul to the Romans Corint●s but to the converted of the Jewes dispersed here and there as appeares by the inscription It consists of five Chapters Gerhard Laurentius Gomarus and Dr Ames have expounded both these Epistles Bifield hath interpreted part of the first Epistle Second of Peter Some in the Primitive Church doubted of its authority and the Syriack hath it not but the Church generally allowed it and many reasons may perswade that it is Apostolicall and was written by Peter 1. Because the Authour of It expresly calleth himselfe Simon Peter the Apostle of Jesus Christ. He wrote it in his old age to confirme them in the doctrine which before he had taught them 2. It s inscription is to the same Jewes that the former viz. dispersed by the Romane Empire and converted to Christ whose Apostle Peter was 3. It shewes an Apostolicall spirit 4. It s stile and composition is agreeable to the former Epistle 5. The Authour of this Epistle witnesseth that he was a Spectator of the transfiguration in the mount Chap. 1. v. 16. now Peter together with JAmes and John were present with Christ. 6. He makes mention of the Former Epistle Chap. 3. v. 1. 7. He cals Paul his deare brother Chap. 3. v. 15. It consists of three Chapters First of John consists of five Chapters Second and third of John They were also in times past doubted of by some as Erasmus Cajetan but there are good reasons to prove them Canonicall 1. Their Authour cals himselfe an Elder so doth Peter 1 Pet. 5. 1. by which name an Ecclesiasticall office is often signified but here age rather now it is manifest that John came to a greater age then the rest of the Apostles 2. The salutation is plainly Apostolicall Grace mercy and peace 3. In sentences and words they agree with the first Epistle 4. The Fathers alledge them for Johns and reckon them among the Canonicall bookes Each of these Epistles is but a Chapter Jude This Epistle also in times past was questioned by some but that it is Apostolicall first the inscription shews the Author expresly cals him a servant of Christ and brother of JAmes 2. The matter it agreeth both for words and sentences with the second of Peter of which it containes as it were a briefe sum and recapitulation That the writer of the Epistle doth not call himselfe an Apostle is of no moment to infringe the authority thereof for the judgement of the writer is free in that case that Title was specially used by Paul and Peter JAmes and John quit the same Title yea Paul in his Epstles to the Philippians Thessalonians and Philemon doth not call himselfe an Apostle and yet those Epistles were never doubted of It is but one Chapter Willet and Mr Perkins have done well upon it Revelation It is called according to the Greeke Apocalyps and according to the Latine Revelation that is a discovery or manifestation of things which before were hidden and secret for the common good of the Church Eusebius l. 3. c. 17. saith Domitian cast John the Evangelist into a fornace of scalding Oyle but when he saw he came forth unhurt he banished him into the Isle Pathmos where he writ this Revelation This booke describeth the state of the Church from the time of John the last of the Apostles untill Christs comming againe and especially the proceedings pride and fall of Babylon the great whore with all the Kingdomes of Antichrist The holy Ghost therefore foreseeing what labour Satan and his instruments would take to weaken and impaire the credit and authority of this above all other Bookes wherein he prevailed so far as some true Churches called the truth and authority of it into question hath backed it with a number of confirmations more then are in any other Booke of Scripture First the Authour of it is set in the forefront or face of it the Revelation of Jesus Christ Chap. 1. vers 1. who professeth himselfe to be the first and the last vers 11. so in the severall Epistles to the Churchs in severall stiles he challengeth them to be his Thus saith he 1. that holdeth the seven starres in his right hand 2. He which is first and last which was dead and is alive 3. Which hath the sharpe two edged Sword 4. Which hath eyes like a flame of fire and his feete like brasse 5. Which hath the seven Spirits of God and the seven starres 6. He who is holy and true who hath the key of David 7. He who is Amen the faithfull and true witnesse the beginning of the creatures of God Secondly the instrument or pen-man his servant John the Evangelist the Apostle the Divine who for the farther and more full authority of it repeateth his
make us deligent both in Prayer to him to open to us the meaning of the Scriptures and likewise in Reading Meditating Searching and Comparing the Scriptures 2. To remove disdaine from us we quickly slight those things that are easily 3. That we might more prize Heavenly truths gotten with much labour 4. To tame our arrogance and reprove our ignorance John 16. 12. 5. God would not have the holy Mysteries of his Word prostituted to Dogs and Swine therefore many a simple godly man understands more here then the great Rabbies 6. That order might be kept in the Church some to be Hearers some Teachers and Expounders by whose diligent search and travell the harder places may be opened to the people Heare the Lamb may wade and the Elephant may swim saith Gregory The Scriptures have hoth milk for Babes and strong meate for men saith Austin It is a note of a learned Interpreter that the benefit of knowing the prophecies concerning the Church Christ before hee was slain had it not so as Hee had after his death it was the purchase of the Blood of Christ to have those things opened We doe no● therefore hold that the Scripture is every where so plaine and evident that it needs no interpration as our adversaries do slander us and here they fight with their own shadow We confesse that the Lord in the Scriptures hath tempered hard and easie things together But this we affirm against the Papists first that all points of Faith necessary to salvation and weigh●y matters p●rtaining to Religion are plainely set forth in the Scriptures 2. That the Scriptures may with great profit and to good edification be read of the simple and unlearned notwithstanding the hardnesse of some places which in time also using the meanes they may come to the understanding of Therefore I migh save that labour in answering the Arguments of our adversaries since they are of no force against us not indeed touch our cause proving only that some places in the Scripture are difficult which we deny not But I shall first take off their answers whereby they would evade the strength of our reasons for the perspicuity of the Scripture and then refute their own Objections First when we urge divers places to prove the Scripture to be a light the use of which is to dispell darknesse which it would not if it selfe were obscure Bellarmine answereth that those places are not to be understood of all the Scripture but only of the Commandements and that these also are called a light not because they are easily understood although that be true but because being understood and known they direct a man in working 2. If it be understood of all the Scriptures they are called light not because they are easily understood but because they illustrate the minde when they are understood But the Apostle Peter speakes not only of the precepts of the Decalogue but of all the Scripture of the old Testament which if it be light much more shall the Scripture of the new Testament and therefore the whole body of Scriptures which the Christians now have shall be light Secondly that place 119. Psal. 130 doth not speake of the precepts alone of thy words by which is signified the whole Scripture in the 19 Psalme David speaketh of the word of God in generall which he ador●eth with many titles the Law or Doctrine of the Lord the Testimony of the Lord the Statutes of the Lord the Precepts of the Lord the Feare of the Lord it is so called metonymically because it teacheth us the Feare and Reverence of the Lord hee saith this Doctrine is perfect converts the soule and makes wise the simple therefore he understands the whole Scripture the mistresse of true and perfect wisdome Secondly it is called a light because it hath light i● it selfe and because it il●ightneth others unlesse they be quite blind or willingly turn away their eyes from this light Thirdly if the Commandements bee easy the rest of the Scriptures is likewise as the Prophets and Historicall Books being but commentaries and expositions of the Decalogue That evasion of the Papists will not serve their turnes that the Scripture is a light in it selfe but not quoad nos as if the Scripture were a light under the bushell for that the Scripture is light effective as well as formaliter appeares by the addition giving understanding to the simple It was a smart answer which a witty and learned Minister of the reformed Church of Paris gave to a Lady of suspected chastity and now revolted when she pretended the hardnesse of the Scripture why said he Madam what can be more plaine then Thou shall not commit adultery The Scriptures and reasons answered which the Papists being for the obscurity of the Scripture 2 Pet. 3. 16. Peter saith there that in the Epistles of Paul there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some things hard to be understood which they that are unlearned and unstable wrest as they doe also the other Scriptures unto their own destruction First Peter re●traineth the difficulty of Pauls writings to that point himselfe presently wrote of touching the end of the World therefore it is unreasonable that for one hard point in the Epistles the people should be debarred the reading of all the rest Secondly even in that point he affirmeth that some things only are hard and not all Thirdly the understanding of the Scriptures d●pendeth not principally on the sharpenesse of mens wits or their learning but on the Spirit of God which is given to the simple that humbly seek it by Prayer therefore though the whole Scripture were hard to be understood yet that is no good cause to bereave the people of God from reading of his word Fourthly Peter assigning the true cause of errour and abuse of the Scripture to be the unstability and unlearnednesse of such as deale with them cannot thereby be understood to speake that of the body of the Church and of the people Laurentius in his Book intitled S. Apostolus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hoc est explieatio locorum difficilium in Epistolis Paulinis reckons up 40 hard places in Pauls Epistles Rom. 1. 19. 20. 28. and 2. 12. 13 14 15. and 4 5. and 5 6. 12 13 14 15. 20. and 7. 9. 14. and 8. 3. 4. 19 20 21 22. and 9. 3. 11. 12. 13. 18. and 11. 25 26. 1 Cor. 2. 15. 1 Cor. 3. 11 12 13 14 15. 1 Cor. 4. 9. and 5. 11. and 6. 2 3. 1 Cor. 7. 1. 7. 10 11 12 13 14 15. 1 Cor. 11. 7. 10. and 15. 29. 51. 2 Cor. 2. 15 16. and 3. 6. 15 16. Galat. 1. 8. and 2. 14. and 3. 10. 1 Thess. 4. 15 16 17. 1 Tim. 1. 9. Heb. 6. 4 5 6. and 10. 26. They say the Scriptures are difficult also in the manner of writing as well as in the matter for which they alleage Psal. 119. 18.
foure Evangelists the Popes authority as Papists say being above the authority of the Councels it followeth that his authority is greater then the Evangelists then which what can be more blasphemously spoken We say the true interpretation of Scripture is not to be sought from generall Councels 1. Because even universall Councels have erred the Chalcedonian Councell one of the 4 so much magnified by Pope Gregory in rashly preferring the Constantinopolitane Church before that of Alexandria and Antioch Those that condemned Christ were then the universall visible Church Matth 26. 65. John 11. 47. See Act. 4. 18. 2. Generall councels have beene opposite one to another that of Constance to the other of Basill whereof one setteth downe that Councels could erre and so also the Pope and that a Councell was above the Pope the other affirmeth the quite contrary 3. There were no Generall Councels after the Apostles for 300 yeares till the first Councell of Nice when yet the Church had the true sence of the Scriptures 4. The generall Councels interpreted Scripture by Scripture as Athanasius and Ambrose teach concerning the first Councell of Nice 5. Because they cannot be so easily celebrated to declare any doubtfull sense of Scripture They have expounded but few places of Scripture neither is it likely the Pope will assemble them to expound the rest The Papists say that the Scripture ought to be expounded by the rule of faith and therefore not by Scripture onely But the rule of faith and Scripture is all one As the Scriptures are not of man but of the Spirit so their interpretation is not by man but of the Spirit likewise Let Councels Fathers Churches give their sense of the Scripture it 's private if it be not the sense and interpretation of the Spirit Let a private man give the true sense of the Scripture it 's not private because it 's Divine the sense of the Holy Ghost and private in 2 Pet. 1. 20. is not opposed to publike but to Divine and the words are to be read no Scripture is of a mans own interpretation that is private contrary to Divine The word is interpreted aright by declaring 1. The order 2. The summne or scope 3. The sense of the words which is done by framing a Rhetoricall and Logicall Analysis of the Text. In giving the sense three Rules are of principall use and necessity to be observed 1. The literall and largest sense of any words in Scripture must not be imbraced farther when our cleaving thereunto would breed some dis-agreement and contrariety between the present Scripture and some other Text or place else shall we change the Scripture into a Nose of wax 2. In case of such appearing dis-agreement the Holy Ghost leads us by the hand to seek out some distinction restriction limitation or figure for the reconcilement thereof and one of these will always fit the purpose for Gods word must alwayes bring perfect truth it cannot fight against it selfe 3. Such figurative sense limitation restriction or distinction must be sought out as the word of God affordeth either in the present place or some other and chiefely those that seeme to differ with the present Text being duly compared together The end of the first Booke THE SECOND BOOKE CHAPTER 1. OF GOD. HAving handled the Scripture which is principium Cognoscendi in Divinity I now proceed to Treate of God who is principium essendi or thus the Scripture is the rule of Divinity God and his workes are the matter or parts of Divinity This Doctrine is 1. Necessary 1. Because man was made for that end that he might rightly acknowledge and worship God love and honour him 2. It is the end of all divine Revelation John 5. 39. 3. To be Ignorant of God is a great misery being alienated from the life of God through the Ignorance that is in them 2. Profitable Our welfare and happinesse consists in the knowledge of God Jer. 9. 23. John 17. 3. the knowledge of God in the life to come is called the Beatificall vision 3. Difficult God being infinite and our understanding finite betwixt which two there is no proportion who knowes the things of God save the spirit of God A created understanding can no more comprehend God then a Viall-glasse can containe the waters of the Sea His wisdome is unsearchable Rom. 11. Job 11. 7. and 26. 13. Euclide answered very fitly to one asking many things concerning the Gods Coetera quidem nescio illud scio quod odêre curiosos Simonides being injoyned by Hiero to tell him what was God required a dayes time to be given him before he answered and at the end of that two when they were expired foure still doubling his time for inquiry till at the last being by Hiero asked a reason of his delayes he told him plainely that by how much the more he thought of God by so much the more he apprehended the impossibility of declaring what he was We know God per viam eminentiae negationis causationis 1. All perfections which we apprehend must be ascribed unto God and that after a more excellent manner then can be apprehended as that he is in himselfe by himselfe and of himselfe that he is one true good and holy 2. We must remove from him all imperfections whatsoever he is Simple Eternall Infinite Unchangeable 3. He is the Supream cause of all There is a threefold knowledge of God 1. An implanted knowledge which is in every mans conscience a naturall ingraffed principle about God O anima naturaliter Christiana said Tertullian 2. An acquired knowledge by the Creatures Psal. 19. 1. That is the great Booke in evey page whereof we may behold the Diety Praesentemque refert quaelibet herba Deum 3. Revealed knowledge of faith spoken of Heb. 11. 6. and this is onely sufficient to Salvation The Heathens had the knowledge of God in a confused manner Rom. 1. 19. 21. and 2. 14. a practicall knowledge 15. v. which shew the worke of the Law written in their hearts not the gracious writing promised in the Covenant the light of nature is not sufficient to bring man to Salvation onely in Judah is God known 76. Psal. 1. 2. and 147. 19. See I●hn 14. 6. and 11. 27. Ephes. 2. 11. 12. The Heathen might know Gods nature and attributes that he was the Creator of the world that by his providence he did preserve and rule all things but they could not by the most industrious use of all natures helpes attaine unto any the least knowledge of God as he is mans Redeemer in Christ they knew not the truth as it is Jesus Ephes. 4. 21. In God we will consider 1. His Nature 2. His workes In his nature two things are considerable 1. That he is 2. What he is That God is is the most manifest cleare evident ungainsayable truth in the world It is the first verity
good Those two kind of properties which are said to be in God differ from those properties which are given to men and Angels In God they are infinite unchangeable and perfect even the Divine essence it selfe and therefore indeed all one and the same but in men and Angels they are finite changeable and imperfect meere qualities divers they receiving them by participation onely not being such of themselves by nature It is hard to observe an accurate methode in the enumeration of the Attributes Zanchie Doctor Preston and Mr. Storke have handled some few of them none that I know hath written fully of them all CHAP. III. GOd in respect of his nature is a Spirit that is a substance or essence altogether incorporeall This the Scripture expressely witnesseth John 4. 24. 2 Cor. 3. 17. An understanding Spirit is either created or uncreated Created Spirit as the soule of man or an Angell Psal. 104. 4. 1 Cor. 6. ult uncreated God Whatsoever is affirmed of God which is also communicable to the creatures the same must be understood by a kinde of excellencie and singularity above the rest Angels are Spirits the soules of men are spirits but God is a spirit by a kind of excellency or singularity above all spirits the God of spirits Num 16 22. the Father of spirits Heb. 12. 9. the Authour of spirits and indeed the spirit of spirits The word spirit in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Hebrew Ruach is used chiefely of God and secondarily of the creatures when it is used of God it is used either properly or metonymically properly and so first essentially then it signifieth the Godhead absolutely as I●hn 4. 24. or more restrictively the divine nature of Christ Heb. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 3. 18. secondly personally for the third person in the Trinity commonly called the Holy spirit or Ghost 1 Cor. 2. 11. I● the word be taken metonymically it signifieth sometimes the effects of grace either the common graces of Gods spirit propheticall 1 Sam. 10. 6. 10. miraculous or the sanctifying graces Ephes. 5. 13. Reasons 1. God is a spirit because a spirit is the best highest and purest nature God being the most excellent and highest nature must needs be a spirit too 2. God is a most simple and noble being therefore must needs be incorporeall Angels and Souls have a composition in them their essence and faculties are distinguished they are compounded of Subject and Accidents their nature and qualities or graces but Gods holinesse is his nature 3 God is insensible therefore a Spirit Spirits are not subject to senses John 1. 18. This confutes 1. Tertullian who held God to be Corporeall then he should consist of matter and forme 2. The Anthropomorphites who ascribed to God the parts and members of a man they alleage that place Gen. 1. 27. But some thinke the soule is the onely subject and seat in which the Image of God is placed grant that it was in the body likewise it being capable of immortality yet a man was not said to be made after the Image of God in respect of his corporall figure but in respect of knowledge righteousnesse and holinesse Ephes. 4. 23. Col. 3. 10. not in respect of his substance but qualities Ob. God is said to have members face hands eyes in some places of Scripture and yet in others he is said not to be a body but a Spirit and consequently to have no hands nor eyes Sol. The word hand and eye is taken figuratively for the power of seeing and working which are actions that men performe with the hand and eye as an instrument and so it is attributed to God because he hath an ability of discerning and doing infinitely more excellent then can be found in man Sometimes againe those words are taken properly for members of the body of some such forme fashion making so they are not to be attributed unto God who because he hath no body cannot have an hand an eye A body is taken three wayes 1. For every thing which is opposite to a fancy and notion and so what ever hath a being may be called a body in this sence Tertullian attributes a body to God 2. For that thing which hath some composition or change so God onely is incorporeall 3. More strictly for that which consists of matter and forme so Angels are incorporeall 3. This shewes the unlawfulnesse then of painting the Godhead Cajetane disliked it Bellarmine argues thus Man is the Image of God but man may be pictured therefore the Image of God may be pictured Man is not the Image of God but in the faculties of his soule which cannot be pictured therefore the Image of God cannot be pictured Although the whole man may be said Synecdochically to be pictured yet is not man called the Image of God in his whole but in a part which is his reasonable and invisible soule which cannot be pictured 1. We must call upon God and worship him with the Spirit our Saviour Christ te●cheth us this practicall use John 4. 24. Blesse the Lord O my soule Psal. 103. whom I serve in the Spirit saith Paul The very Heathen made this inference Si Deus est animus sit pura mente colendus 2. God though invisible in himselfe may be knowne by things visible He that seeth the Sonne hath seene the Father John 14. 9. We should praise God as for other excellencies so for his invisibility 1 Tim. 1. 17. 2. Learn to walk by faith as seeing him who is invisible Heb. 11. 27. 3. Labour for pure hearts that we may see God hereafter 4. Here is comfort against invisible Enemies we have the invisible God and invisible Angels to help us 3. God hath immediate power over thy Spirit to humble and terrifie thee He is the Father of Spirits he cannot onely make thee poor sick but make thy conscience roare for sinne it was God put that horrour into Cain Judas Spira's spirits He is a Spirit and so can deale with the Spirit 2. Take heed of the sinnes of the heart and spirit pride unbeleefe insincerity 2 Cor. 7. 1. 1 Thess. 5. 23. such as not onely arise from but are terminated in the spirit These are first most abhorred by God He is a Spirit and as he loveth spirituall performances so he hates spirituall iniquities 6 Gen. He punisht the old world because all the imaginations of the thoughts of their hearts were evill 2. Most contrary to the Law of God which is chiefely Spirituall 3. Sinne is strongest in the spirit as all evill in the fountaine Matth. 15. 19. 4. Spirituall evill make us most like the Devils who are Spirituall wickednesses All sinne is from Satan per modum servitutis these per modum imaginis God is most Simple Ens Simplicissimum Simplicity is a property of God whereby he is voide of all composition mixtion and division being all
He revealeth himselfe to his creature such a one as indeed he is Reall truth or the truth of things is a property of them by which they are the same indeed which they seem It is an agreement betwixt the being and appearance of things It is double 1. Essentiall or of the very substance of things 2. Accidentall of the qualities and actions of things and this as it is referred to the reasonable creature for such truth can be no where but in it is inward and outward according as the actions are Inward truth of understanding is an agreement betwixt its conceite of things and the things themselves contrary whereto is errour or misjudging and of the will contrary to hypocrisie and dissimulation Outward 1. of word which is Logicall when I speake as the thing is morall when I speake as I conceive the thing to be and also in the matter of promises when I mean as I say and hold still that meaning till I have actually made good my words 2 Of deeds when they are such in the intention and meaning of my mind as in the outward pretence and are agreeable to the promises I have made God is true in all these respects 1. His essence is reall and true he is a God indeed not in imagination alone the Scripture calls God the true God to know thee saith our Saviour Christ the onely true God and whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ. He is the true God not a bare conceit of our own head or fiction He hath not an imaginary and counterfeit but a very reall being he is indeed such he saith he is for that which gives being to other things must needs it selfe be in very deed The other supposed Gods alone in name and in fancy of the worshippers ●ut he is 2 He hath a true not an erroneous conceite of things lie knows all things most exactly he is indeed a willer of true goodnesse 3 He speaks nothing but as the thing is and as he doth conceive it He meanes what he promiseth and doth what he meanes the Lord dissembleth not with men He is true in his Word and his whole Word whether narrations promises threats visions or predictions what he telleth it is as he telleth it what he promiseth or threatneth to doe he intendeth and will performe Psalm 89. 33 34. Deut. 7. 9. 2. Cor. 1. 20. Promissa tua sunt suis falli timeat cum promittit veritas Aug. Confes● l. 12. c. 1. 4 God is true in his workes they are not done counterfeitly as those of the Devill but truely Psalm 145. 17. Revel 15. 3. The Scripture proves the truth of God 1. essentially when it affirmes God to be true in his workes Deut. 32. 4. Psalm 25. 10. Revel 15. 3. 16. 7. 2 In his words which is proved both affirmatively John 17. 17. 2 Sam. 7. 28. and negatively Num. 23. 19. 1 Sam. 15. 29. Heb. 6. 18. Reas. 1. All lying and fashood ariseth from weaknesse and imperfection or wickednesse neither of which is in God seeing to be God is to be perfect and absolute He is the Lord God of truth Psalm 34. 5. his sonne is truth John 14. 6. his holy Spirit the Spirit of truth John 17. 6. the Gospell is the word of truth Col. 1. 5. God is the chiefe and first truth the Authour of truth truth is in him essentially and immutably Psalm 100. 5. onely true Rom. 3. 4. This distinguisheth him from false Gods 2 Chron. 15. 3. John 17. 3. God is worthy to be trusted honoured and esteemed ergo most true Where it is said God seduced the Prophets it is not so understood as if God inspired a false prophesie and an errour but that he delivered them to the divell to be seduced 1. It serves to reprove the wicked who believe not threats and the weake Christians who in temptations and desertions doubt of promises 2 It exhorts us to desire the manifesting of this truth Psalm 43. 3. we should be true like God Zach 8. 16. in our words and deeds keepe our vowes with God and promises with men God loves truth as in himselfe so in his creatures but abhors dissimulation and hypocrisie Prov. 12. 22. The true Church is the pillar of truth Gods Word the word of truth Psalm 19. 9. We should therefore believe Gods Word and depend upon his promise seem it never so unlikely or impossible give him the glory of his truth he that believeth setteth to his Seale that God is true he that believeth not maketh God a lyar Will you receive the testimony of men and will you not much more receive the testimony of God He that believeth Gods promises will surely doe the things to which the Lord by promises encourageth him He that believes the threats will forbeare the thing which God by his threats seekes to deter him from This is matter of solid comfort for all the true children of God if he be faithfull they must be happy Truth is that vertue of the wil by which it is moved to goodnesse for Gods sake when the thing moving us to be good is Gods Commandement and the end whereat we aime is the glorifying and pleasing of God then we serve God in truth 5. God is Faithfull 1 Cor. 19. 18. Rev. 19. 11. First in himselfe by an uncreated faithfulnesse Secondly in his decrees Esay 14. 24 27. Thirdly in all his waies and workes Psal. 145. 17. 1 Of creation 1 Pet. 4. ult 2 Of Redemption Heb. 2. 17. 3 Of Justification John 1. 19. 4 Of protection and preservation of his Church Rev. 19. 11. Fourthly in all his words and speeches 1 His Commandements are the rule of truth and faithfulnesse to us Psal. 19. 9. 2 His predictions are all faithfully accomplished many thousand yeeres after as Christs incarnation in the fulnesse of time so Gen. 49. 10. 3 His menaces are most faithfull 4 His promises Exod. 12. 41. Heb. 10. 23. There is a difference between faithfulnesse in the Creator and in the creature 1 This is the ocean and full fountaine from whence all faithfulnesse and truth in men and Angels issue 2 This is the rule and measure of that and the neerer it comes to this the more compleat it is 3 It is unchangeable in him the Angels that fell were faithfull but soon changed so Adam 4 It is in God in most high perfection Reasons 1 Because of his most just and righteous nature whose most righteous will is the rule of all his waies Psal. 145. 17. 2 He is most perfect and unchangeable in perfection 3 Because of his most pure and holy affection 4 There is no imperfection in him to hinder his faithfulnesse Gods faithfulnesse is the ground of all true Religion 1 We must ground all the doctrine of faith all the Articles of faith all our judgement and opinion in matters of faith upon this faithfulnesse of God and this by holding
or uttered which hath revealed the councels of God to men especially the elect that we may know the Father by the Sonne as it were by an Image John 1. 18. so also he is the externall wisdome instructing us us concerning the will and wisdome of the Father to salvation 1 Cor. 1. 21. and v. 30. 3 The Property of the Sonne in respect of the Holy Ghost is to send him out I●hn 15 26. Hence arose the Schisme between the Westerne and the Easterne Churches they affirming the procession from the Father and the Sonne these from the Father alone To deny the procession of the holy Ghost from the Sonne is a grievous errour in Divinity and would have grated the foundation if the Greeke Church had so denied the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Sonne as that they they had made an inequality between the Persons But since their forme of speech is that the Holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father by the Sonne and is the Spirit of the Sonne without making any difference in the consubstantiality of the Persons it is a true though an erroneous Church in this particular divers learned men thinke that à Filio per Filium in the sense of the Greeke Church was but a question in modo loquendi in manner of speech and not fundamentall 3 The personall propriety of the holy Ghost is called procession or emanation John 15. 26. neither hath the word defined nor the Church known a formall difference between this procession and generation The third internall difference among the Persons is in the number for they are three subsisting truly distinctly and per se distinguished by their relations and properties for they are internall workes and different and incommunicably proper to every person There follows an externall distinction in respect of effects and operations which the persons exercise about externall objects namely the creatures for though the outward works are undivided in respect of the Essence yet in respect of the manner and determination all the persons in their manner and order concur to such workes As the manner is of existing so of working in the persons The Father is the originall and principle of action works from himselfe by the Sonne as by his Image and wisdome and by the holy Ghost But he is said to worke by his Sonne not as an instrumentall but as a principall cause distinguished in a certaine manner from himselfe as the Artificer workes by an Image of his worke framed in his mind which Image or Idea is not in the instrumentall cause of the worke but his hand To the Sonne is given the dispensation and administration of the action from the Father by the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 8. 6. John 1. 3. 5. 19. To the holy Ghost is given the consummation of the action which he effects from the Father and the Sonne Job 26. 13. 1 Cor. 12. 11. The effects or workes which are distinctly given to the Persons are Creation ascribed to the Father Redemption to the Sonne Sanctification to the holy Ghost all which things are done by the Persons equally and inseparably in respect of the effect it selfe but distinctly in respect of the manner of working The equality of the Persons may be proved 1. by the worke of Creation joyntly Psalm 33. 6. severally for the Father those places prove it 1 Cor. 8. 6. Heb. 1. 2. the Sonne John 1. 3 10. Col. 1. 16. the holy Ghost Job 33. 4. 2 By the worke of Redemption the Father sends and gives the Son the Son is sent and given by him the holy Ghost perfects the worke of conception and incarnation Luke 1. 35. 3 By the worke of Sanctification the Father sanctifieth John 17. 17. Jude v. 1. the Son Ephes. 5. 26. the holy Ghost 2 Thess. 2. 13. 1 Pet. 1. 2. 4 By the worship of religious adoration The Father is religiously adored often in the Scripture Ephes. 1. 17. the Sonne Acts 7. 59. Heb. 1. 6. the holy Ghost Acts 28. 25 26. Rom. 9. 1. This is a wonderfull mystery rather to be adored and admired then inquired into yet every one is bound to know it with an apprehensive knowledge though not with a comprehensive No man can be saved without the knowledge of the Father he hath not the Father who denieth the Sonne and he receives not the Holy Ghost who knowes him not John 14. 17. 2 We must worship the Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity as it is in Athanasius Creed We must worship God as one in substance and three in Persons as if Thomas John and Matthew had one singular soule and body common to them all and entirely possessed of every one we were baptized in the Name of Father Sonne and Holy Ghost 3 We should praise God for revealing this mystery to us in his word and be assured that what he promiseth or threatens shall be accomplished being confirmed by three witnesses The end of the Second Booke A Treatise of Divinitie The third Booke CHAP. I. Of Gods Workes HAving spoken of the Scripture and God the Workes of God in the next place are to bee handled which some make two the Decree and the Execution of the Decree others three Decree Creation Providence The Works of God whereby he moves himselfe to his Creatures are three Decree Creation Providence not three individually for so they are innumerable but in the species and kindes of things The Workes of God are 1. Before time or eternall his Decree 2. In time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Gubernation and Suste●tation Government and Preservation Or thus Gods Workes are 1. Internall which are in the very will of God from eternity and they are called the Decrees of God by which God determined from eternitie what he would doe in time We follow the received Phrase of Divines when we call the Decrees the works of God and speake of God after our capacity Therefore we call Decrees of God his Works because the Decrees of man are Works or Actions from man and really distinct from his understanding and will by which we conceive the Decrees of God or rather God decreeing 2. Externall Creation and Providence 1. Of Gods Decree Decree is a speech taken from the affaires of men especially Princes in the determination of causes between parties at variance whose sentence is called a Decree or secondly it is a resolution of things consulted of either negatively or affirmatively according to the latter use of the Phrase it is applyed to God Esay 46. 10. Decretum in the Latine is indifferent to signifie either in the Abstract Gods Decree or in the Concrete a thing decreed Gods Absolute Decree is that whereby the Lord according to the Counsell of his owne Will hath determined with himselfe what he will doe command or forbid permit or hinder together with the circumstances of the same Acts 2. 23. and 4. 28. Luke 22. 22. John 7. 30. Or
Lord hath stored the world with divers kindes of foure-footed beasts which move and walk upon the face of the earth Psal. 104. 11 12. these were created on the sixth day These beasts are creatures endued not with life alone but with sense also They consist of a body and of a sensible soule besides the life of vegetation which is to be found in plants by which they grow and are nourished They have also a soul whereby they discerne divers bodily objects and can both discerne and follow that which is good for them and shunne what is evill and so preserve themselves alive by using things helpfull for them and avoiding the contrary All these beasts were made to walk upon the ground with four feete having their heads bowing down to the gronnd to seeke their diet without which they could not live and which is provided for them upon the face of the ground They were made on the sixt day before man was created Gen. 1. 24. This worke is wonderfull in respect of the divers sorts of these beasts some great and some small some of one shape nature some of another We see great variety of them in our owne Countrey and there is farre greater variety abroad in the world which wee have never seene That out of the same earth and water all these kinds should grow by a word spoken with the mouth of God let it be so is a strange and wonderfull thing By vertue of these words there were Sheep Goates Kine Horses Camels and Dromodaries Elephants Lions Beares Dogges Tygers Wolves Foxes Deere What are all these but a most artificiall mixture of earth and water put into a certaine shape or forme of members having head feete backe breast bellie braine liver heart guts and other intrailes and having power to see hear to touch smel tast to eate drinke goe generate to remember to have a kinde of thought of things within to imagine and discerne having also affections and passions They carry us feede us cloath us till the ground for us How full of tedious and toilsome paines would our lives be if we had not a horse to beare us up and downe from place to place and horses or oxen to convey all manner of things for us Wee must magnifie the name of God and frame our selves to sincere thankefulnesse unto him who hath made such a multitude of creatures inferiour to our selves and given to us the use of them O what a wonderfull skilfull workeman is hee that out of the earth could produce such a number of such creatures And how good was he to us that hee did not give reason unto them as well as sense for if they had reason to know their own strength and our weaknesse wee should never keep them under as we do Let us not abuse these creatures of God to bad purpose or use them in a cruell and inhumane manner they are our fellow creatures made of a little courser earth and since they obey us with all cheerfulnesse let us be likewise obedient to God There is no creature among all the beasts of the world which so amply demonstrates the power and wisedome of Almighty God as the Elephant both in respect of his proportion of body and disposition of spirit Hee is by the Hebrews called Behemoth by way of excellency as the Latines for the same cause call him Bellua and by Job chap. 40. vers 15. he is likewise called Behemoth in the plurall number He is wittily called by Julius Scaliger Bestiarum Heros and by Job in the same Chapter vers 19. the chiefe of the wayes of God that is the greatest strongest and most understanding of all earthly irrationall creatures as Deodate interprets it Vide Fulleri miscel Sac. l. 4. c. 10. Elephas peregrinum est apud nos animal Indis aliis notissimum obvium Johnstoni Thaumatographia certè turres olim armatorum in proelia ferebant Id ib. The Elephants were usefull in the wars they caryed Castles and armed men Aristotle lib. 9. de hist. animal cap. 47. makes mention of a memorable thing to make men flye incest The King of Scythia had a Mare of a most excellent race which brought forth most excellent colts among the rest she had one which excelled them all the King was desirous that this colt might horse his damme that so he might have an excellent race of them but the colt when he was brought to his damme would not horse her the King seeing this he caused them to cover the damme that he might not know her But he perceiving afterwards that it was his damme ran away and cast himselfe over a steep rock and brake his neck There are many things wonderfull in the Dog his sagacity docility fidelity A dog in Epyrus in a great assembly of people knowing the man that had murdered his Master flew upon him with open mouth barking and snapping at him so furiously that he was ready to take him by the throate untill he at length confessed the fact that caused the dog thus to rage and foame against him The dogs which be neare unto Nilus lap of the River running still and never stay while they are drinking for feare of the greedy Crocodiles Aegyptio canes è Nilo nunquam nisi currentes lambitant dum Crocodilis insidias cavent It happened that upon a narow thin planke that lay for a bridge one goate met another both comming from divers parts now by reason that the place was so narrow that they could not passe by nor turne about nor yet retire backwards blindly considering how long the planke was and so slender withall moreover the water that ran underneath ranne with a swift streame and threatned present death if they failed and went besides Mutianus affirmeth that hee saw one of them to lye flat downe and the other to goe over his backe In Sibaris there was a young man named Crathis which being not able to retaine lust but forsaken of God and given over to a reprobate sense committed buggery with a female Goate the which thing the Master Goate beheld and looked upon and dissembled concealing his mind and jealousie for the pollution of his female Afterward finding the said young man asleepe for he was a Shepheard he made all his force npon him and with his hornes dashed out the buggerers braiues Alexander the Great had a very strange and rare horse called Bucephalus either for his crabbed and grim looke or else of the mark or brand of a bulls head which was imprinted upon his shoulder He would suffer no man to sit him nor come upon his backe but Alexander when he had the Kings saddle on was also trapped with royall furniture for otherwise he would suffer any whomsoever When he was dead the King solemnized his funerals most sumptuously erected a Tombe for him and about it built a Citie that bare his name Bucephalia That is a lofty
of peace yet they needed such a one as consists in the continuance of that peace which they had before The Lord hath now so fully reaveled himselfe and his excellencies vnto them and his love and favour the necessitie of their being obedient that they cannot but continue to obey and serve him they were not so farre inlightened and sanctified at the first creation but that thē in respect of themselves there was a possibilitie of sinning as well as of theirs that did sinne but now they are so confirmed by the cleare sight they have of God that they cannot be willing to sinne against him The Angels which abode in the truth are called good Angels not onely in respect of the righteousnesse which God bestowed upon them at their creation but also in respect of the obedience which they performed and their confirmation in that good estate The causes why they abode still in the truth are the firme and unchangeable decree of God 1. Tim. 5 21. his free grace Phil. 2 13. wherewith they were holpen and their owne free choise of will cleaving firmely unto God The ninth and last question concerning Angels is How can they be happy in enjoying Gods face and yet be on the earth Matth. 18 10. By heaven there is not meant the place but their heavenly estate and condition now though thy goe up and downe doing service yet this hinders not their happinesse for they doe not this with distraction and these things are appointed as meanes for the end viz. enjoying of God and as the soule is not hindred in its happinesse by desiring the bodie againe so it is here 1. Wee should imitate the Angels 2. It shewes us how much wee are beholding to Christ no Angels could love us if it were not for him How much are we to love God who hath provided helps for man especially Christ who tooke our nature upon him not that of Angels Gods Angels are our Angels to defend and keep us God hath committed the care of us to these ministring Spirits 3. It shewes the wofull condition of the impenitent when Christ shall come with all these Angels when those great shoutes shall bee come thou swearer drunkard how terrible will this be The more potent God is in himselfe and in his ministers the more wretched are they and the surer is their destruction 4. This confutes the Papists in three errours 1. In that they hold nine orders of Angels They are distinguished ratione objectorum et officiorum in respect of the object and massage they goe about 2. They would have them worshiped but the Angell forbad John 3. They say every one hath his good Angell to keep him so Bucan thinkes in his common places 2. The Saduces who said there was neither Angell nor Spirit Acts. 24 8. but held good Angels onely to bee good thoughts and evill Angels to be evill lusts and affections There names offices actions apparitions shew plainely that they are not bare qualities but true substances It serves for instruction 1. To see the blindnesse erroneousnes of mankind in that a great number of men of learning and wit and parts good enough and that such as lived in the Church and acnowledged the five bookes of Moses to be divine should yet make a shift to winke so hard as to mainaine that there were no Angels What falsehood may not the Devill make a man entertaine and defend and yet seeme not to denie the Authoritie of Scripture If a man confessing Moses writings to be true will yet denie that there be either Spirits or Angels which are things so plainely revealed by Moses that a man would account it impossible to receive his writings and not confesse them But if God leave man to the Deuill his owne witte he wil make him the verier foole because of his wit he will erre so much the more palpably by how much he seems better armed against errour euen as a mans owne weapon beaten to his head by a farr stronger arme will make a deepe wound in him Se wee our aptnesse to run into and maintaine false opinions and let us not trust in our owne wittes but suspect our selves and seeke to God for direction Secondly Let us learne humilitie from this and by comparing our selves with these excellent Spirits learne to know how meane we be that we may be also meane in our owne esteeme So long as a man compares himselfe with those things and persons which are baser then himselfe he is prone to lift up himselfe in his owne conceit and to thinke highly of himselfe but when he doth weigh himselfe in the ballance with his betters he begins to know his owne lightnesse The Lord hath set us men in the midst as it were betwixt the bruite beasts and the celestiall Spirits we doe so farr exceed them as the Angels exceede us as for bodily gifts the beasts in many things goe beyond us some are more strong swift have more excellent sight smell then wee but in few things doe we equall the Angels They are swifter and stronger then we and their excellēt reason goes beyond ours in a manner as the understanding which is in us excelleth the fancie of the beasts they know a thousand things more then we doe or can know One Angell can doe more then all men can speake more languages repeate more histories in a word can performe all acts of invention and judgement and memorie farre beyond us Thirdly Since God hath made Angels to serve and attend him should not we that are farre Inferiour to them be content also to serve him yea exceeding glad and thankfull that he will vouchsafe to admit us into his service Doth he need our service that is served with such ministers and messengers Let us frame our selves to obedience and doe Gods will on earth with all readinesse and cherefulnesse seeing there is soe great store of more worthy persons in heaven that doe it An Angell will not esteeme any worke too difficult or base why should wee Fourthly The Angels which waite about the throne of God are glorious therefore the Lord himselfe must needs excell in glorie Esa. 6 1 2. Ezek. 1 28. Of the Devils or evill Angells The Angels which persisted in the truth are called good Angels Luke 9 26. but those which revolted and kept not the law were called evill Angels or evill Spirits Angels of darknesse Luke 8 20. and 19 42. and Angels absolutely 1 Cor. 6. because they were so created of the Lord. In respect of their nature they are called Spirits 1. King 22 21. Matth. 18 16. Luke 10 20. In respect of their fall they are called evill Spirits 1. Sam. 18 10. Luke 8 2. uncleane Spirits Matth. 10 1. Zach. 13 2. not so much because of their instigation to lust as because their natures are defiled with sinne lying Spirits 1. King 22 22. John 8 44. Devils Levit. 17
signe that there is no difference betweene them but that the second is added to insinuate the perfection of the image There is a four-fold image or likenesse 1. Where there is a likenesse with an absolute agreement in the same nature and so the Son of God is called the expresse image of the Father 2. By participation of some universall common nature so a man and beast are like in the common nature of animality 3. By proportion onely as when we say the Governor of a Common-wealth and the Pilot of a ship are like 4. By agreement of order when one thing is a patterne or exemplar and the other thing is made after it now when man is said to be like God it is meant in those two last waies Christ was the essential image of God Mans was imago repraesentantis aliter imago imperatoris in nummo aliter in filio Augustine The Image of God in which man was cteated is the conformity of man unto God 1. In his soule 2. In his body for his soule 3. In the whole person for the union of both The soule of a man is conformable to God in respect of its nature faculties and habits 1. In respect of its nature essence or being as it is a spirituall and immortall substance The Scripture witnesseth 1. that the soule of man is a spirit Matth. 27. 20. Acts 7. 59 2. That it is immortall 1. Because it cannot bee destroyed by any second cause Matth. 10. 28. 2. Being served from the bodie it subsists by it selfe and goes to God Eccles. 12. 7. Luke 16. 22. 3. Because it is a simple and immateriall substance not depending on matter the minde workes the better the more it is abstracted from the body when it is asleep or dying 4. Because it transcends all terrene and mortall things and with a wonderful quicknesse searcheth after heavenly divine and eternall things There is an invincible argument for the thing secretly imprinted in the instinct and conscience of the soule it selfe Because it is every good mans hope that it shall be so and wicked mans feare 5. The foode of the soule is immortall 1 Pet. 1. 23. the evident promises of eternall life prove the soule to be immortall He that beleeveth in me hath eternall life and to day thou shalt bee with mee in Paradise Nothing can satisfie the soule but God 6. Man is capable of vertue and vice of immortall desires and affections 7. The soules of Adam and Eve were not made of any matter but came by immediate creation in whom God gave a specimen what he would perpetually doe with other men That is but a Cavill that Solomon Eccles. 12. 7. speakes only of our first Parents Children are called the fruit of their Parents body to note that that they are only fathers of their flesh they have another namely God which is Father of their Spirits Saint Paul teacheth it Heb. 12. 9. and the use of it And this checks their opinion who will have soules propagated no lesse then bodies Many collect the immortality of the soule and salvation of Jobs children because they were not doubled as the rest of his estate was 2. The soule of man is conformable to God in respect of its faculties in its understanding will and memory is like the Trinity 3. In the qualities graces and admirable endowments of it In the understanding there was 1. An exact knowledg of God and all Divine things Coloss. 3. 10. knowledg is a principall part of Gods image by reason hee was enabled to conceive of things spirituall and universall 2. A perfect knowledge of all inferiour things Adam knew Eve and imposed names on the creatures sutable to their natures He had most exquisite prudence in the practicall part of his understanding in all doubtfull cases Hee knew what was to be done 2. In the will there was holinesse Ephes. 4. 24. 3. His affections were under the power of grace From this image did necessarily follow peace with God fellowship and union He knew God to be his Creator and to love him in all good things he enjoyed God and tasted his sweetness Mans body also after a sort is an image of Divine perfection Observe 1. The Majesticall forme of it of which the Heathens tooke notice but the structure of the bodie a man should be taught to contemn the earth which his feete tread upon and to set his heart upon heaven whether his eyes naturally tend 2. Gods artifice in it Psal. 139. 15. Thou hast curiously wroug●● me and I was wonderfully made Materiam superabat opus Of the basest matter dust God made the noblest creature 3. The serviceablenesse of every part for its end and use 4. There is matter of humiliation because it was made of the dust Gen. 3 19. Job 14. 18 10. and 5 15. The Greek name makes man proud cals him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bids him aspire looke up but the Hebrew and Latine humble him bids him stoop looke downe Adams bodie was mortall conditionally if he had not eaten of the tree there could be noe outward cause of his death for Gods protection kept that off nor noe in ward cause because originall righteousnesse was in his soule and for old age and weaknesse the tree of life would have preserved him from that 3. The whole person consisting both of soule and bodie was conformable to God in respect of his felicitie and dominion over the creatures Gen. 1. 26 28. The image of God doth not principally consist in this but secondarily therefore though the man and woman were created perfectly after Gods image in other respects yet in this respect the woman had not the image of God as the Apostle sheweth The power which Adam had over the creatures was not absolute and direct that God reserved to himselfe but it was for Adams use then the stoutest and fiercest beasts would be ruled by Adam this dominion since the fal is lost for a great part of our rebellion against God the creatures rebellion should mind us of ours we may see somtimes a little child driving before him 100. oxen or kine this or that way as he pleaseth for the infusing of the soul the time when it was infused it is most probable that the body was first made as the organe or instrument and then the soule put into it as God did make heaven and earth before man was made God did not create all the soules of men at once but he creates them daily as they are infused into the bodie There are these two Questions to be resolved 1. Whether immortalitie was naturall to Adam 2. Whether originall righteousnesse was naturall to Adam For the first A thing is immortall foure wayes 1. Absolutly soe that their is no inward or outward cause of mortalitie 1. Tim. 6. soe God onely 2. when it is not soe by nature but immortalitie is a perfection voluntarily put into the
making Minerva the daughter of Jupiter and to have had her generation in his Divine braine As God the Son is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so Grammer Logicke Rhetoricke carry upon them the same name There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verbam that is Grammer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ratio that is Logick 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 oratio and that is Rhetoricke All second causes depend on the first and we cannot proceed in Infinitū Quicquid movetur ab alio movetur Some derive Deus from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 feare because the feare of him is planted in the very natures and consciences of all reasonable Creatures others a dando in English God quasi Good his daily mercies and blessings shew that there is a God Act. 14 17 The Heathens lift up their eyes and hands to Heaven in any suddaine distresse Psal. 9. 16. The pure Atheist according to the propriety of that name is hee which generally and constantly denyeth all Deity and beleeveth as he saith The stou●est Atheist that ever lived can not resolutely and constantly believe there is no God a Diagorus made a very eloquent Oration that there was no God but the people comming to him applauded him saying that in his Oration he had almost perswaded them but he did so ●l●quently that they thought hee was the God b Morn●eus cap. 1. de verit Relig. p. 16. c When he wanted fire he tooke one of Hercules wooden Images and made a fire of it saying go to Hercules thou shalt now go through thy thirteenth labour Psal. 14. 1. 53. 15. So Genebrard and Muis expound that 14. Ps. of indirect Atheists who deny Gods Providence Heb. 11. 6. It is not only innatum sed etiam in animo insculptum esse Deos Cic l. 2. de natura Deorum No Atheists almost can be named neither in the holy Scriptures nor in Ecclesi●stical Histori●s nor in Heathen writings which came not unto some fearfull end See Atheomastix l. 1. chap. 15. d So Domitian Dominus Deus noster sic fieri jubet Suetonius edictam Domini Deique nostri Martiall More Caligula Dominum se Deumque vocarit coegit Aurelius Victor e Psal. 48. 14. f Esay 40. 5. 8. Quid su 〈◊〉 Job 11. 7 8. 26. 14. In the Epistle to my Hebrew Critica Sacra and in the Booke it selfe judaei in legendis et scribedi● n●mi nibus Dei ●ppidò quam superstitiosi sunt interpretantur tert●● praeceptum nomen lehovae non esse prenunciandum librum in quo integrè scriptum est nudis manibus non esse contrectandum Of those two Greeke names See my Greeke Critica Sacra As * Jehovab Jah Ehich Exod. 13. 19. * Vocantur Attributa quia ea sibi attribait Deus nostra causâ Zanchius de Attributis l. 2. c. 11. Attributum est Divinae simplicissimae essentiae pro diversa agendi ratione diversa vera habitudo conceptio nobis expressa M. Stock on Gods Attributes * Proprietates Divinae naturae seu essentiae sunt Attributa Dei essentialia quibus essentiae Divinae veritas ac Majestas nobis innot●scit abaliis distinguiturs Wendelinus These Attributes differ not among themselves nor from the Divine essence Esay 43. 25. For my selfe not for my Mercy to teach us that his Mercy is himselfe and not different from his Essence as it is with us God is so light that in him there is no darknesse at all 1 John 1. 5. John 8. 12. 1 John 1. 5. 4. 16. Psal. 105. 8. Jam. 1. 17. Psal. 136. 1. and 100. 5. Psal. 117. 2. Num. 23. 10. Proprietates Dei sunt primi vel secundi generis Primi generis proprietates sunt quae ita Deo competunt ut earum contrariae omni in sint creaturae Cujus●odi sunt independentia simplicitas immutabilitas immensitas aeternitas Secundi generis sunt quae ita Deo competunt ut earum expressae imagines in creaturis reperiantur Wendelinus Christian. Theol. l. 1. C. 1. God is called a Spirit 1. Negatively because he is not a body 2. Analogically or by a certaine likenesse because there are many perfections in Spiritu●Il subst●nces which doe more shadow forth the Divine nature then any bodily ●●ng can Doctor Ammes Theol. God is of a pure and spirituall nature To be a spirit implies 1. Invisibility 2. Efficacie and activity Ezek. 1. 20. 3. Simplicitie God is invisible 14. Luke 39. Col. 1. 15 John 1. 18. Consectaries a lib. adver Prax. de anima Rom. 1. 23. Anthropomorphites a sort of Hereticks so called because they misconceived that God had a bodily shape like man Psal. 34. 16. Zach. 4. 10. Quod de Deo dicitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intelligi debet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dextra Dei significat potentiam majestatem Dei oculi aures Omniscientiam The Scripture referring eyes to God by them intends 1. His knowledge and notice of things Prov. 15. 3. 2. His care Psal. 34. 15. 3. His direction Psal. 42. 8. L. 2. de Imag. Sanct. C. 8. Consectaries from Gods being a spirit and invisible Rom. 1. 9. Rom. 1. 20. a Matth. 5. 8 b Invisibile aliquid dicitur dupliciter inquit Cham. primò per se ipsa sui natur●● ut Deus ut Spiritus sunt invisibiles Secundi per accidens ●um quid in se tale est quidem ut possitvideri sed al qua externa superveniente causa fit invisibile ijs à quibus vel alias potuit vel etiam debuit videri quo modo ijs qui sunt ad Septentrionem invisibiles sunt stellae ad Austrum quo modo stellae quaedam minutissimae sunt invisibiles The Divine essence is simple and altogether uncompounded Simplex proprie dicitur quod compositum ex diversis non est 2 Cor. 12. 3. The Gospell and the wayes of it are not Simple as Simplicity is opposed to the depth of wisedome for therein is made knowne the manifold wisedome of God Ephes. 3. 10. But as Simplicity is opposed to mixture Every thing the more simple in this sence the more excellent In Deo idem est esse essentia vivens vita quia Deus non vivit per aliud essentiae superadditum sed vitam habet inscipso est ipsa vita vivit à scipso per scipsum * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Consectaries of God simplenesse Simplex quasi sine plicis Sincerus sine cera See prov 11. 20. * A great French paire is called Le bon Chr●stien the good Christian because they say it never rots at the core 22. Matth. Christ opposeth a single eye and corrupt one an Israelite in whom is no guile is worth an ecc● a rare man M●s. Elizabeth Juxton said she had nothing to comfort her but poore syncerity 1 John 5. 20. 21. 115. Psal. 4. 5. Psal. 42. 2. Rom. 9. 26. Graeci Deum vocant 〈◊〉 â vivendo quoniam solus verè vivit