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

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History or to maintain discourse not to be edified in faith or to have their sins mortified 5. Such who in searching out the true sense of Scripture trust to their own skill wit and understanding and neglect the preaching or Ministery of the Word 6. Such who do all they can to be expert in Gods Word but with a trayterous minde to fight against the truth thereof as Hereticks and such like Three points to be observed in interpreting of the Scripture 1. That the phrase be considered and the proper sense of the words found out 2. That the order and coherence of the members or parts of the Doctrine which is contained in the Text of Scripture be declared 3. That the Doctrine be applyed to the use of the Church which it hath in confirming true opinions or refuting errors in knowing of God our selves in exhorting in comforting in directing our life The way how to decide doubtful places of Scripture 1. To respect the Analogy of Faith that is to receive no Exposition which is against the ground of Doctrine that is against any Article of Faith or Commandment of the Decalogue or against any plain Testimony of Scripture 2. To examine the Antecedent and Consequent matter of that place which is in question 3. To resort to such places of Scripture as teach the same more clearly 4. To confer like places together where though the same words be not spoken of the same thing yet the like words and form of speaking are used of the like things 5. When the Controversie is thus judged we may lawfully also descend to the consent of the Church 6. An ardent and daily invocating of God that we may be guided and taught by his holy Spirit The two proper effects of the Scriptures are 1. To teach Doctrine 2 Tim. 3.16 By 1. Laying out of Truth 2. Confuting of Errors 2. To exhort out of it 1 Tim. 6.2 By 1. Stirring up to God 2. Turning back from evil The chief Graces which are obtained by the Scriptures 1. Vocation we are called by the Spirit inwardly and by the Word outwardly 2 Thess 2.14 2. Justification which is an action of God imputing the righteousness of Christ to us which is apprehended by Faith which cometh by hearing the word Rom. 10. 3. Sanctification for we are sanctified by the word of God Joh. 15.3 4. Knowledge which is by the word 1 Joh. 4.6 5. Faith which comes by hearing the word preached Rom. 10.17 6. Repentance Peter preached the word and converted three thousand Acts 2.38 41. 7. Hope for by patience and comfort of the Scriptures we have hope Rom. 15.4 8. Love for it cometh of God by his Word and Spirit 1 Joh. 4.7 The consideration of the Scriptures Author being God presents us with a fourfold use 1. That they want not nor stand in need of the confirmation and approbation of the Church or of men 2. That God himself who is the inspirer of them is the best interpreter of them and the sole and soveraign Judge thereof 2 Pet. 1.20 1 Cor. 2.10 11. 3. That the Minister must preach unto the people not the invention of his own brain not the conceits of his own wit not the excellency of words not the inticing speech of mans wisdom but in the plain evidence of the Spirit and of power 1 Cor. 11.23 1 Pet. 4.11 4. That it belongeth as a special duty to the people of God to receive reade study reverence obey and keep the Doctrines delivered in them forasmuch as they proceed from such an Author Heb. 2.2 3. All our words actions must be directed by this precious Word of God in the holy Scriptures which is also of a fourfold use much resembling the former 1. To teach us the perfection and All-sufficiency of the word of God not needing the rags of Popish Traditions to be patched unto it 2. To direct and inform the Ministers what to teach the people the people what to believe wherein to rest whereupon to build their Faith and to settle their Conscience 3. To reprove those that desperately rush on in the course of their life not caring what they do never consulting with God or resolving as from God or his Will 4. To admonish us to be careful how we reade the Scriptures to take profit by reading them that so we may have direction in all our ways and learn how to please God and to abstain from all things that do displease him The manifold use of the Scriptures appears by the admirable benefit of well using it there being no Error in judgement but may be refuted no Corruption in life but may be redressed not any true sound Doctrine but may be proved and maintained not any Vertue or Duty but may be warranted and the practical performance thereof directed hereby 2 Tim. 3.16 yea it is a light to the blinde a guide to the wanderer a comfort to the distressed a counsellor to the doubtful Ps 119. and a teacher to the unlearned Prov. 1.4 Lastly our Savior Christ the Prophets and Apostles all by the Spirit of God have here revealed unto us more then all the wise men of the world did ever know whence we have just reason to magnifie the Books of Scripture far above all humane writings the choycest whereof compared with this holy Writ are but waste Paper for these sacred Books fully set out unto us the nature and estate of true felicity when the profoundest Tract of humane works could never yet reach to the shadow thereof Let us therefore in reading hearing expounding conversing practising in every action that concerns this sacred Word always account of it as the Word of the Ever-living God and with the joynt powers and faculties both of soul and body maintain it against all devilish Atheists that in word or life deny it seducing Hereticks that corrupt it and all enemies that oppose it or rebelliously rise against the Scepter of it Lo here the sacred Oracle of God The just man's Anchor and the sinners Rod The lame man's Crutch the blinde man's Eye the Tree Of Life or Type of Immortality A Well of living Waters Drink of this And thou shalt thirst no more but after Bliss The depth whereof the Natural man ne're saw Pray then thou mayst have wherewithal to draw Heav'ns Library Gods Spirit th' Author Take heed Tempted Man with what Spirit thou dost read §. 3. The Law and Gospel THe Law of God is a Doctrine delivered of God at the Creation written in Adams heart published by the Ministery either of Angels or of men and afterward repeated and renewed of him by Moses and the Prophets teaching what we ought to do and what not to do binding reasonable Creatures always promising to perfect performers of obedience eternal life condemning eternally them who perform not this obedience except Remission be granted for the Mediators sake Before the Fall this Law was possible to all men as to Angels and if now it be
aright The duties following upon our faith in the Holy Ghost 1. To keep our bodies holy and pure as the Temples of the Holy Ghost and not to defile them by uncleanness 2. To believe without doubting whatsoever is contained in the holy Scripture because that all were given by inspiration of the Holy Ghost and were set forth by holy men not of any private motion but as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Tim. 3.16 2 Pet. 1.21 3. To use all our gifts to the honor of God for it is the holy Spirit of God from whom we receive them all 4. To submit our selves in all things to the government of Gods Spirit and not follow the sway of our own Natures for he is our guide and will lead us into the way of all Truth Eternal Breath O let thy blessed ayr Imbreathe us with new life or else repair The ruines of our Souls Blow and refresh Our dim-burning Zeal but blow out the Flesh New-mould us fit for Mercy and make good The Charter Christ hath seal'd us with his Blood Vnscale our Vnderstandings make us see The Crown of Hope ' yond hope Faith's Mystery Inflame our Souls with holy fire and then Our Souls thy fire shall flame thee back agen §. 9. The Holy Catholique Church Concerning the holy and Catholique Church of Christ we believe That the Son of God doth from the beginning of the world Joh. 10.11 Gen. 26.4 to the end thereof Rom. 8.29 gather defend and preserve unto himself by his Spirit Isa 59.21 and Word Acts 2.46 out of whole Mankinde Mat. 16.18 Joh. 10.28 a company chosen to everlasting life 1 Joh. 3.21 and agreeing in true faith And that we are lively Members of that Company 1 Joh. 2.19 and so shall remain for ever 1 Cor. 18.9 To believe in which holy Catholique Church is to believe the Doctrine thereof wherein she followeth Christ the Prophets and Apostles the onely sure ground and pillar of Truth and that in this visible Company and Society are some true Repentants and truly converted and my self to be a lively Member of the invisible and visible Church So that to believe and confess the Doctrine of Salvation taught and delivered by the Prophets and Apostles is an infallible and inseperable note of a true Church of God for Gods Church is nothing else but a company of Gods people called by the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles unto the state of Salvation so that out of the Church there is no Salvation ordinarily In which regard Noahs Ark was a true Type of the Church none being saved from drowning that were out of it And none but such who are of Christs body shall partake of the benefits of his Office for himself saith He prays not for the world Joh. 17.9 In which respect also out of the Church no Salvation for the body being the true Catholique Invisible Church he that is not a member of this body is out of the Church and so hath not Christ to be his Head and Savior Yea the Church is also Christs Spouse the many espousal Titles which in Scripture are given to Christ and the Church in mutual relation of one to another evidently declareth as much He is stiled a Bridegroom she a Bride Joh. 3.29 He Well-beloved she Love Cant. 1.13 15. He an Husband she a Wise 2 Cor. 11.2 He an Head she the Body both one flesh Eph. 5.23 31. Thus the Church being the Communion of Saints sanctified in Christ Jesus confessing him the Son of the living God in every place knit in one Church as the Body and every Member unto Christ as unto one Head it is most evident that no man can be saved out of the Church for whomsoever God hath chosen and elected to the end which is eternal life them he hath chosen to the means which is the inward and outward calling But here note That Infants born in the Church are in charity to be reputed of the Church till at their mature Age their life notoriously express the contrary The Church is called Catholique or Vniversal because it is not now tyed to any certain place or people as it was under the Law before the coming of Christ Now the Doctrine of the true Church consisteth in the Sentences and Decrees which we are bound by the Commandment of God to believe and obey and no Doctrine is to be proposed to the Church that is repugnant to the holy Scripture or not contained therein And the Church hath Authority to judge and determine in Controversies of Faith according to Scripture to interpret and expound the Word of God with respect to the Analogy of faith Rom. 12.6 And though she be the Witness and Keeper of Gods written Word yet may not inforce any thing to be believed as necessary to Salvation that is either contrary or beside the Word of God The visible Church is a company among men imbracing and professing the true and uncorrupt Doctrine of the Law and the Gospel and using the Sacraments aright according to Christs Institution and professing Obedience unto the Doctrine in which company are many ungenerate or hypocrites consenting notwithstanding to the Doctrine The invisible Church is a company of those which are Elected to eternal life in whom a new life is begun here by the Holy Ghost and is perfected in the world to come They which are in this invisible Church never perish neither are any hypocrites therein And it is called Invisible not that the men are invisible but because their Faith is so that we cannot certainly discern the godly from the hypocrites And although this Universal invisible Church is that Militant Church which remaineth as yet in the field and is fighting on Earth yet it is and lieth hid in the visible Church so that in this respect there is as it were no more difference between them then between a whole and a part Now those visible Churches which refuse to be governed by Christs Word but are by Humane Traditions playing the Adulteresses by committing Idolatry are not of this Catholique Church which is subject to Christ neither are Infidels that defie Christ Hereticks that deny him Ignorant persons that know not his Will Prophane persons that despise Worldlings that lightly esteem him nor any that persecute or scorn him in his Members Thus many have a Name of being of the Church who indeed are not And as for the Church of Rome they are departed from the Truth they have denyed the Faith they have defiled themselves with Idols they will not have Christs Righteousness imputed to them they set up their own Works and seek Justification by them they will not receive Christ to be their onely King and Priest they will merit Salvation for themselves and therefore they are not a true but a false Church The word Church signifieth an Assembly called together which calling is twofold viz. 1. Outward which is common to all that make profession of the Gospel in this respect
THE HOLY ARBOR CONTAINING A Body of Divinity Or the Sum and Substance OF Christian Religion Collected from many Orthodox Laborers in the LORDS VINEYARD For the Benefit and Delight of such as Thirst after RIGHTEOUSNESS First Methodically and Plainly Treated of Then Annalized and Applied at large By John Godolphin J.C.D. VVherein also are fully Resolved the Questions of whatsoever Points of Moment have been or are now Controverted in DIVINITY Together with a large and full Alphabetical Table of such Matters as are therein contained or occasionally handled Either by way of Exposition Controversie or Reconciliation LONDON Printed by John Field for Edmund Paxton neer Doctors Commons And William Royhould at the Sign of the Vnicorn in S. Pauls Church-yard neer the West-end 1651. The Curtain drawn OR The Front-Door of this HOLY ARBOR Unlock'd and laid wide open A Laughing Horizon a smiling Skie The rightside-Prospect of the Lefthand-eye First lights thee Reader to discover more Then Janus could had he four eyes before Though Lynceus wore a pair of eyes behinde Without this Spectacle he 'd be but blinde Here Wisdom's Monarch in his Marble chair By his acuteness can divide a hair Of the profoundest Notions and contain The world within the nutshel of his Brain Whose tow'ring Eagle-eye can never want The strength or cunning of the Elephant On this hand stands a Gospel-Prophet such As doth not care for Circumcising much Thy Praedial Fruits The world I hear him say But one Nights lodging by not in the way To heaven is The other side holds out A studious Artist musing he no doubt Is sounding What the depth of Humane things And findes them all but well-tun'd Fiddle-strings These hold forth Knowledge to the life then be Perswaded to become One of the Three Let fall thine eye one glance and thou shalt see The Church her Motto or Epitomy The staming Bush not burnt the Church indeed Is heart-whole though her Members ever bleed Truth 's Emblem in her HOLY ARBOR stands The Light of Sun and Scripture in her hands Tramp'ling on all the Harnesse of War ' Yond Archimedes reach a Virgin-star She lives lives chaste and from pollution free Maugre Romes Murder and Adultery The world her Pedestral in flames because It will no Loyalist be unto her Laws Idolater Iew Turk Insidel turn Any thing rather then a Martyr burn Hence flames the World indeed whose Fate that read Shall finde her in her ashes buried ' Cause from her Non-age to her riper youth Thence to her dotage she despis'd the Truth When Shilo's Scepter now breaks forth the Skies High time the Saints all pray Let God arise Thence downward cast thy fight exactly there Observe and then tell me if ever were More true Devotion in a Womans breast Then to the life is there by her express'd See how she prostrates all her self o' th ground As if she meant the Earth should down resound To sad Souls below what a Savior they Lost by their worship to a god of clay Her breast kisses the dust her heart the Skies Faith is compounded most of wings and eyes A Lowring Horizon a dismal Skie The leftside-Prospect of the Righthand-eye Hell-black night all over enough to fright An Eagle blinde or blinde men to their sight Ravens Batts Owls Shrich-owls what not that can Paint the Darkness of an unknowing man A Man-monster whose hollow head may pass For like but not so wise as Balaams Ass Claws that can wound corrode and scratch the best Yet hath not wit to feather his own nest That when his Claws are blunt rather then fail He can make use of the Scorpions tayl Scarce a Creature who when his tongue is loose Doth staulk and hiss and gaggle like a Goose That knows no more then Tom then he no more Whose brain leaks all out at his nose before Swear by his vast estate who onely can That sure he was intended for a Man He 's now become so to both Sexes knit An Epidemical Hermophrodite Old Superstitions blear-eyed Mother Schism's Error 's Heresie's Foster-brother A Demi-Signpost guilt or an empty Cask A Woodcocks brain that 's troubled with the Lask A man would think him something that were made For money to draw Custom to the Trade Of Ginns and Roadnets Scan this and great chance If all together spel not Ignorance Convey thine eye a little lower see The ghastly Draught of Hell's Epitomy Disgorging Error Heaven doth engage A branded sword lest it infect this Page Her twilights both are vayl'd she cannot see She 's so besmeard with foul Hypocrisie A pair of Spectacles in this hand goes For eyes which better would become her nose In that a Mole though Blinde can undermine Deep-laid Foundation then look well to thine She 's snar'd she that so much Liberty taught T'others is now her self in Engines caught May the snare prove strong may 't ne e be broken Till her mouth be stopt or her eyes be open Lastly Observe a Superstitious Ape Cas'd in a Fryars Frock without a Cape Which when his Zeal grows cold serves as a Charm To re-inflame 't and keep his Worship warm If this new Father were but at the Court Of Rome doubtless 't would make most exe'lent sport Are there not many such why not an Ape Like him as well as he i' th others shape Reader this Holy Arbor's door th' hast seen Wide op'n Be serious now and enter in The Holy Arbour Contayning the whole Body of Divinity or A Cluster of Spirituall Grapes gathered from the Vines of certaine Moderne Orthodox Laborers in the Lords Viniard Pressd For the Spirituall delight and benefit of all such as thirst after Righteousness By Jo Godolphin I. C.D Exumat Deus Ema nuoll Ad te Domine Ad te mi Jesu ● dissipentur inimici Printed by John Feild for Edmund Paxton neere Doctors Commons and William TO THE TRULY HONORABLE THE POOR in SPIRIT Right Humble THe mighty Nazarites Riddle Out of the Eater came Meat and out of the Strong came Sweetness Judg. 14.14 was the second Course served in at his Marriage-Feast which by way of Allusion may not unaptly be applied to you Came not the Spirit of God upon you at the Conquest of that devouring Lyon in the fierce Assaults of his ingenious Temptations At your return from which Spiritual Combat began you not to feed on the Peace of Good Consciences when the Word of the Lord became as Honey in your mouthes Is not this a Riddle to the Vncircumcised of the World In Congratulation of which no common Victory is this Address no less properly then humbly prostrated to you onely as the most faithful Guardians of this Holy Arbor whose unfenced Ambulage when spiced at your approach by the fragrancy of your Innocency craves the Subterfuge of your Prayers As for those extravagant Weeds which grow so far beside the Alley of your Conversation they are left to the Euroclydons of the Air But for the Errata's onely of the
same is both Man and Father but he is Man absolutely or in himself or according to his own Nature and Father in respect of another viz. his Son So it is one thing to be God another thing to be the Father's Son or the Holy Ghost and yet one and the same is both God and Father God in respect of himself or his own Nature Father in respect of the Son Now though this be alike in God and Man that both do communicate to another not his Person but his Essence yet is there an exceeding dissimilitude in the maner whereby the Divine Essence being infinite and the Humane being created and finite is communicated to another For in Men in the Father and the Son the Essence is as distinct as the Persons themselves the Father and the Son being not onely two persons but also two men distinct in Essences so that the Father is not that man which is the Son but in God the Persons are so distinct that yet the Essence remaineth common one and the same and therefore there are not three Gods but the Son is the same God in number which is the Father and the Holy Ghost Again in Persons Created he that begetteth doth not communicate his whole Essence to him that is begotten for then he should cease to be a man but onely a part but in uncreated Persons he that begetteth or inspireth communicateth his whole Essence to him that is begotten or proceedeth yet so that he who communicateth doth retain the same Essence and that whole And the Reason of both Differences is Because the Essence of Man is finite and divisible but the Essence of God infinite and indivisible and therefore the Deity may being the same and whole or intire be together both communicated and retained whereby the Persons are not any thing separated from the Essence but each of them are the very self-same whole Essence of the Divinity wherefore God or the Divine Essence is the Father is the Son is the Holy Ghost Thus the three Persons in the Trinity are all one one in Nature and Essence one in Will and Consent one in Vertue and Power what the one doth the other doth also the difference is onely in the maner of working This Mystery of the Trinity and Unity was taught from the beginning of the world howbeit the fuller revelation of it was reserved to the times of the Gospel when the light of this Truth outshined the Sun at noon Matth. 28.19 1 John 5.7 The Doctrine of the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Godhead must be held retained for these Reasons viz. 1. Because by it we may distinguish the True God from all false gods and idols 2. Because among all other points of Religion this is one of the chiefest being the very foundation thereof For it is not sufficient for us to know God as we can conceive of him in our own imaginations but we must know him as he hath revealed himself in his Word and it is not sufficient to Salvation to believe in God confusedly but we must believe in one God distinct in three Persons 3. This Doctrine directs us in the worshipping of God aright For Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity is to be worshipped one God must be worshipped in the Father in the Son and in the Holy Ghost And if we worship God the Father without the Son and the Holy Ghost or the Son without the Father the Holy Ghost or the Holy Ghost without the Father and the Son we worship nothing but an Idol Again if we worship the three Persons not as one God but as three Gods then likewise we make three Idols The difference of Essence Person is to be observed and held for these Reasons 1. Lest the Unity of the true God be distracted 2. Lest the Distinction of Persons be taken away 3. Lest another thing be understood by the name of Person then the truth of Gods Word declareth That in one Divine Essence are subsisting three Persons the Father Son and Holy Ghost each of which is one and the same true God or that one true God is three Persons truly distinct and those three Persons are one onely true God is proved thus viz. 1. By Testimonies of Scripture partly out of the Old Testament as Gen. 1.2 Isa 61.1 partly out of the New Mat. 28.19 Joh. 14.26 15.26 2 Cor. 13.13 1 Joh. 5.3 Tit. 5.3 Eph. 2.18 Gal. 4.6 2. By those places of Scripture which give unto those three the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost the Name of Jehovah and true God for those places wherein those things which are spoken of Jehovah in the old Testament are in the new referred expresly most plainly to the Son the Holy Ghost 3. By those places which attribute the same whole Divine Essence to the three Persons and shew that the Son is the proper Son of the Father most truly begotten of him and that the Holy Ghost is the Spirit of the Father and the Son the Son therefore and the Holy Ghost have the same and that whole Essence of the Deity which the Father hath the Son hath it communicated of the Father by being from everlasting born of him and the Holy Ghost of the Father and the Son by proceeding from them 4. By the places which give unto the three the same Attributes or Properties and perfections of the Divine Nature as Eternity Immensity Omnipotency c. 5. By those places which attribute to the three the same effects or works proper unto the Deity as Creation Preservation Government of the World also Miracles and the Salvation of the Church 6. By those places which yield to the three equal honor and worship and such as agreeth to the true God alone The three in the Trinity are called Persons Because they have proper things to distinguish them in regard either 1. Of themselves as 1. Father to beget and to be of himself Joh. 5.26 1.14 1 Joh. 5.1 2. Son to be begotten and to be the second Person Joh. 1.14 18. 3. Holy Ghost to proceed both from the Father and the Son Mat. 3.16 2. Of the Creatures as 1. The Father worketh through the Son by the Holy Ghost Eph. 2.10 Rom. 11.36 2. The Son worketh from the Father by the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 8.6 Joh. 1.3 3. The Holy Ghost worketh from the Father and the Son Gen. 1.2 Joh 33.4 The things wherein they communicate with themselvs are these viz. 1. One is in another and possesseth another as the Father is in the Son and the Son in the Father and the Holy Ghost in them both Joh. 10.30 38. 14.10 11. 2. They have glory one of another Joh. 17.4 5 22 24 26. 3. They delight one in another as the Son is a delight to the Father and the Father to the Son and the Holy Ghost to them both Mat. 3.17 Joh. 5.20 The order of working in the Three Persons of the Trinity
Will Eph. 1.9 3. The End which is Gods Glory Eph. 3.10 4. The Efficacy which is Gods Power Rom. 1.16 Touching the Scriptures we are principally to consider these 4 things 1. Who is the Author of them that is as hath been shewed God himself Gal. 1.11 12. 2. Who are the instrumental Causes they are as hath been likewise shewed the Prophets and Apostles 2 Pet. 1.21 3. To whom they belong even to all sorts and degrees of men and women Psal 111.2 119.9 4. What is the property thereof viz. All-sufficiency without any patching of mens Decrees or Inventions to teach the true knowledge of God 2 Pet. 1.16 1 Cor. 1.17 〈◊〉 the Scripture is the Word of God and 〈◊〉 Doctrine of infallible Truth and certainty may be firmly proved from these unanswerable Arguments drawn from Scriptur●it self 1. From the Causes thereof wherein consider 1. That the first and principal is the Author thereof even God himself to him do the Scriptures refer themselves and also shew how God is their Author Now nothing is falsly ascribed to God but God in time will bring the same to nought and therefore if the Scripture had not been Gods Word it would long ago have vanished 2. The cause Conservant for the Devil by wicked men and Hereticks hath labored to take away Gods Word from mens hearts and hands but yet it is still preserved in the Church which argues that it is kept by a greater power then is in all men and all Angels that is by the power of God 3. The causes Instrumental they were holy men of God Prophets and Apostles who for vertue und piety exceeded other Writers far beyond all comparison and if they had been meer Polititians their writings would have shewed it for the Penmen of holy Scripture have herein faithfully registred their own faults which no politick person would have done 2. From the Matter therof which stands 1. In doctrine which is The Law set forth in most excellent purity nothing being therein against it or common Equity The Law is perfect Reason the Gospel above Reason yet not contrary to Reason The Gospel wherein is set down Doctrine altogether above mans Reason touching Christs Incarnation and mans Redemption by his death and although these things be above Nature yet we finde them true wholesom and good in experience of conscience which also proveth that they are the Word of God Men may devise strange things above Nature but they can never be wholesom to the conscience 2. In stile the phrase is plain and familiar and yet in any one speech there is more majesty then in all the writings of men 3. From the End thereof for it sets up Gods Worship and mans Salvation and yet gives nothing to Men or Angels but all to the glory of God but for the writings of men they do either directly or by insinuation ascribe something to the writers thereof 4. From the Effects thereof For 1. Though it is against our corrupt Nature crossing and condemning the same yet it winneth men to the love thereof and to obedience thereto which could not be unless it were the Truth of God for we abhor and detest the words of men that be against our Nature 2. It serves notably to comfort a man in all distresses whatsoever even in the pangs of death when no word of any man can do him the least good but onely his word that is the Lord of our soul and the God of our life 5. From the two properties of Scripture 1. Antiquity Among humane writings we have none of certainty in things they record that go so high as the Creation but the Scripture sets down things done from the beginning 2. Mutual Consent for though the Books of Scripture were written by divers men in sundry Ages and Times yet all agree within themselves there is no contradiction in Scripture but the writings of men have not this consent no not in the same Author whom commonly we shall finde contradicting himself 6. From the signs and true miracles thereof as the parting of the Sea the staying of the Sun and Moon and many others yea the Incarnation of the Son of God the Miracle of miracles 7. From the Contraries Contrary to the word of God is the will of the Devil and mans corrupt Nature the Devil hates Scripture and mans corrupt Nature repines thereat when it is checked and controlled thereby Now that which is contrary to these two must needs be holy and true and that is the word of God 8. From Testimonies whereof there be 2 kindes 1. Of holy Martyrs who in all ages have sealed the truth thereof preferring the word of God before their own lives whence it is truly said Sanguis Martyrum semen Ecclesiae And though Hereticks have dyed for falshood yet there is great difference in their ends the true Martyrs have unspeakable joy in the Spirit in their torments but Hereticks have no such joy but a natural sensless blockishness whereby they undergo these torments 2. Of Gods Spirit which is the principal testimony for when men begin to learn and obey the word of God then the Spirit of God settles their Conscience in the perswasion of the truth of Scripture which is infallibility it self The Testimony of the Holy Ghost touching Gods Word is obtained and discerned from the Testimony of man by doing these two things 1. By resigning our selves to become truly obedient to the Doctrine taught John 7.17 2. By praying unto God for his Spirit to certifie our Consciences that the Doctrine revealed is the very Doctrine of God Mat. 7.7 8. Luke 11.13 Jam. 1.7 The Majesty of the Scriptures consisteth chiefly in these three excellencies 1. In the Majesty of the Spirit of God which shineth in them 2. In the Consent of all the parts among themselves 3. In the Fulfilling all the Prophesies delivered long before yet accomplished precisely each of them in their proper place The Authority of the Scripture doth not as the Papists affirm depend on the Church for these Reasons 1. The reproach of God by making the Testimony of mans voyce greater then the voyce of God 2. Our Comfort for Faith is grounded on approved witness therefore not on man 3. The truth of God is plainly exposed to the mocks and scoffs of the wicked if we affirm that our Religion is from God onely because our selves say so 4. Because the Authority of the Church depends on the Scripture 5. The Scripture it self is in many places against this opinion John 5. 1 Cor. 2. 1 John 5. The Popish twofold Scripture 1. Inward Scripture or a consent of Doctrine written by the Holy Ghost in the hearts of all Catholicks and this say they is right Scripture Unparalleld Blasphemy 2. Outward Scripture which is written in Paper or Parchment which hath no certain sense as they falsly affirm but as the present Church determines thereof but this is a devilish Doctrine abolishing the true Word of God
it is said Many are called but few are chosen Mat. 20.16 2. Inward which is proper to the Elect none but they and all they in their time shall both outwardly be called by the Word to a profession of Christ and also inwardly and effectually to believe in Christ and obey the Gospel These make that Church whereof Christ is properly the Head and they the Body and that in these respects 1. They are under Christ as a Body under a Head 2. They receive Spiritual life and grace from Christ as a body natural receiveth sense and vigor from the head 3. Christ governeth them as a Head the Body 4. They are subject to Christ as a Body to the Head This Metaphor of a Body implieth two things viz. 1. A mystical Union with Christ by vertue whereof they who are of Christs Body 1. Receive Grace and life from him Ephes 4.15 16. 2. Are guided and governed according to his Will 3. Seek to honor him in all things they do 4. Are offended and grieved when he is dishonored by others 2. A Spiritual communion with the Saints being fellow-Members by reason whereof 1. They love the Brethern 1 Joh. 4.11 2. They are ready to succor such as are in distress 3. They will edifie one another Eph. 4.16 4. They retain a mutual sympathy rejoycing and mourning one with another 1 Cor. 12.26 Again Christ is Head of the Church in two respects 1. In regard of his Dignity and Dominion over the Church Col. 1.18 The causes whereof are 1. The good pleasure of God his Father 2. The Dignity of his person being God-Man 3. The Merit of his Sacrifice whereby he hath redeemed and purchased his Church unto himself 4. The Omnipotency of his power whereby he is able to protect 5. The All-sufficiency of Spirit whereby he is able to give to every member all needful grace 2. In regard of the near union betwixt him and the Church All things requisite to joyn husband and wife together do fitly concur betwixt Christ and the Church 1. They are persons fit to be joyned Though Christ be God yet for this end he became man Joh. 17.19 And though the Church were impure yet for this end is she cleansed and sanctified 2. They have their Parents consent for God is the common Father of both Joh. 20.17 And God hath given Christ to the Church Rom. 8.32 and the Church to Christ Joh. 6.39 3. They have given their mutual consent each to other Cant. 2.16 4. He beareth an husband-like affection to her and she is willing to yield a wife-like subjection to him Eph. 5.23 24. 5. He hath given her many favors and gifts as pledges of his love Eph. 4.8 And she in testimony of her faithfulness was under the Law circumcised and is under the Gospel baptized 6. He hath prepared a place of habitation for them both together Joh. 14.3 and she earnestly desireth to be with him Rev. 22.17 20. 7. He will assuredly perform all the offices of a kinde husband as to love her bear with her provide for her and the like Let the Spouse endeavor therefore by all good means to maintain the honor of her place despising the world preserving her chastity and yielding all love reverence and obedience to this blessed Bridegroom who bought her with his Blood to endow her with immortality The Priviledges of Christs Spouse the Church the Saints his faithful ones viz. 1. Christ is made a yoke-follow with his Church he puts his hand under all her burthens to make them the more easie yea the great burthen of Gods wrath hath he wholly taken on himself 2. Christ is 1. As her Champion to answer all challenges sent unto her 2. As her Advocate to plead and answer all complaints made against her 3. As her Surety to discharge all her debts even all in all for her and to her 3. All his honors goods and priviledges are hers she hath a right to them and a part in them she is a co-heir with him Rom. 8.17 The marks to know the true Church by viz. 1. The profession of the true uncorrupt and rightly understood Doctrine of the Law and Gospel 2. Her Badges and Signs which are the two Sacraments truly administred 3. Obedience towards God and his Doctrine both in Life and Maners The Titles which Paul gives the Church viz. 1. The House of God who dwelleth therein defending and guiding it by his holy Spirit 2. The Pillar of Truth because by the Ministery thereof God preserveth and keepeth Truth in the world 3. The Mother of all the faithful because God therein hath begotten us with the incorruptible seed of the Word and hath put us over unto it to be guided and brought up in faith For what Reasons the Church is called Holy 1. Because as Paul saith It is sanctified after that he hath cleansed it by the washing of water through the word that is made clean from all sin by the precious Blood of Christ daily presented to us both in the Word and Sacraments 2. For that the Members of it being Regenerated by the Holy Ghost and sanctified do apply themselves diligently to holiness of life 3. Because all true Christians are Spiritual Priests by an holy Unction 4. Because the holy Trinity dwelleth in it Christ will send the Comforter 5. Because it is sanctified by Invocation The Church is 1. One onely because as it doth acknowledge one onely High Priest Jesus Christ so one onely Religion in Faith Hope and Love which Unity one Spirit conserveth by the Word and Sacraments 2. Holy purged by the blood of Christ 1 Joh. 1. 3. Catholique in respect 1. Of Place not tyed to Rome but spread through the whole world 2. Of Men not tyed to the children of Abraham after the flesh 3. Of Time for it hath and shall be for ever Christ is with it to the end of the world 4. Inconquerable Lifted up even as Mount Sion impregnable so as the gates of hell shall not prevail against it Though the Church be onely one which is the Spouse and Mystical Body of Christ yet in regard of man it is considered in a double respect viz. 1. Visible which is that company of the faithful gathered together in the Name of Christ to be instructed and confirmed in his Faith by the sincere preaching of the Word as also the true use of the Sacraments which is called the Militant Church because it warreth with the Devil the World and the Flesh 2 Invisible being all the Elect which may be divided into three parts 1. They which are already received into heaven called thence the Triumphant 2. They which do yet live on the earth called Invisible because their faith and conscience to Godward is not perfectly known unto men 3. They that are yet unborn The Reasons for which the true Church ought to be discerned from all other Churches viz. 1. Because of the Commandment of God 1 Joh. 5.39 2. For the glory of
viz. 1. The Father Createth but immediately by the Son and the Holy Ghost the Son from the Father and the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son 2. The Father and the Holy Ghost Redeem us but mediately by the Son but the Son immediately from the Father by the Holy Ghost 3. The Father and the Son Sanctifie us but mediately by the Holy Ghost but the Holy Ghost immediately from the Father and the Son In this deep Mystery of our Religion we must be guided wholly by Faith and endeavor to believe this Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity though we are not able to reason the truth thereof by Natural demonstrations Behold the sacred Riddle of Divinity One Godhead in a holy Trinity Of Persons or three Persons all in one Most undivided Deity alone Distinct in Persons not in Essence no The Godhead's not divided think not so For it 's not subject to division Nor admits of any Composition But distinction without seperation As is most evident by Mans Creation Gen. 1.26 §. 2. Gods Word THe Word of God is the Wisdom of God James 3.17 concerning the truth which is according to godliness being given by inspiration of God 2 Tim. 3.16 the original being from heaven not earth Joh. 3.27 and the Author thereof being God not man 1 Cor. 2.10 by which Word God alone doth onely binde the Conscience by causing it in every action to excuse for well-doing and accuse for sin Now this Word of God is the holy Scripture in which name are to be understood all and onely those Canonical Books of the Old and New Testament of whose Authority was never any doubt in the Church which we receive as Canonical not so much because that the Church doth so receive and allow them as for that the holy Spirit in our hearts doth testifie that they are from God Touching which this is a Truth must be held of us That no part of the Canonical Scripture inspired of God such as was committed as the Lords Treasure to the Church for the perpetual instruction thereof in Faith and Obedience is lost and perished nor can be lost or perish so that no one Oracle or Sentence of God can fall away Indeed these sacred Books may be despitefully abused by men many ways but they can never be finally lost and wholly extinguished for the works of God remain for ever and ever And as for any sandy Supposition contrary to this Truth let the vain Supposer answer What Error more can be convinced what Comfort more can be received what Vice more can be corrected what Truth more can be published what Grace more can be commended to the Church out of those Books which he so fondly supposeth to be lost Beware therefore of doubting of Gods Providence herein shaking thereby the Faith of the Church Whosoever thus goes about to strike at the foundation thereof the least dust that falls from the Building will crush the presumptuous Underminer into bottomless destruction The Scripture is a Doctrine inspired by God to make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 16. Rom. 1.16 and containeth all things necessary to be known and believed for the salvation of man Joh. 20.31 2 Tim. 3.16 17. the whole being as it were compendiously comprised in the Decalogue the sum of the Law and in the Creed the sum of the Gospel As for all the fundamental Points of Christian Religion necessary to salvation they notwithstanding the darkness of some Mysteries herein contained are clearly and plainly set down so as the humble and obedient heart may distinctly without wavering and gainsaying conceive and believe them Thus not unfitly is the Scripture compared in regard of the perspicuity thereof to a Foord over which a Lamb may wade and in regard of the difficulty thereof to a Sea wherein an Elephant may swim Now though all things necessary to be known are herein contained yet are not all literally expressed as the Baptism of Infants and Original Sin which notwithstanding are distinctly and demonstratively inferred thence and so are all things that belong to Faith and Obedience whatsoever we are to believe or to practice So that the letter of the Scripture may be alledged and yet the word of God missed as by all Hereticks and a man may swerve from the letter yet alledge the true word of God therefore it is nothing less then necessary that we be diligently familiar and well acquainted with this word of God Josephus tells us The Jews knew the Scriptures as well as their own names many of us may tell the Jews We scarce know the names of the Scriptures Most inexcuseable Ignorance sad and lamentable for we are bound to know the Scriptures themselves that by them we may come to knowledge by knowledge to faith by faith to obedience and by obedience to salvation Touching the Apocryphal Books to which the Imps of Rome as to their own Traditions give power equal to the Canonical Scriptures they were not penned by the Prophets the Lords Secretaries as the Scriptures were nor ever committed of trust to the Israelites They contain certain things disagreeing from the true Scriptures of God and no proof that they were penned by the Spirit of God therefore there is no warrant for the equalling them in Credit or Authority with the Scriptures Besides one main property of the Books of the Old Testament is That every one of them was written either by Moses or some other of the Prophets in the Hebrew tongue the native language of the Jews but the Apocryphal Books were penned by some other in the Greek tongue which was not the language of the old Prophets so that they are no part of the Law or of the Prophets And yet as the presumptuous Papists make the Apocryphal Books of equal Authority with the Canonical so others have more blasphemously long since obtruded for Canonical the fatherless brood of other Books unto these as The third and fourth of Esdras An Appendix of Job A Preface to the Lamentation The third and fourth of the Maccabees a Book called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Book of Enoch The Gospel of Thomas and of Matthias The Acts of Peter and in the year 1120 a certain new Gospel called Evangelium Aeternum was found out being full of Blasphemies All which and the like are damnable presumptions plainly forbidden by the Lord Deut. 4.2 and most fearfully threatned Rev. 22.18 19. So then to withstand the Devils suggestion against the Divine Authority of the true sacred Seriptures it is very necessary to have our judgements well informed therein to pray for the Spirit of Revelation or Inspiration which may inwardly testifie to our Spirits That God is the Author of the Scriptures which Principle we must hold undeniable and give no place to doubting about these uncontradictable Truths The Scripture is said to be the Word of God in regard of 1. The Author who is God himself 2 Tim. 3.16 2. The Matter which is Gods
giveth unto him the Spirit of revelation Eph. 1.17 4. In regard of the maner of searching them for if men cursorily carelesly reade the Scripture no marvel if they understand little or nothing thereof The Reasons why the Scripture is in some respects difficult 1. To declare unto man his natural blindeness and to suppress all self-conceit for by the Mystery of the Word the wisdom of man is found to be foolishness 2. To keep holy things from dogs and so to make a difference betwixt the childe of the kingdom and the wicked 3. To maintain the divine Ordinance of Preaching and Expounding the Scriptures 4. To raise up in us an appetite after the Word and an high esteem of it and to keep us from loathing it By the perspicuity of it we are kept from starving and by the difficulty of it from loathing it 5. To stir us up diligently to study and search the Scriptures and carefully to use the means whereby we may finde out the hidden treasure in it 6. To make us to call upon him who is the Author of the Scripture to give us the Spirit of Revelation and not to reade or hear the Word without faithful and earnest prayer For our help in the finding out of the true sense of the Scripture there are divers profitable means As 1. Understanding of the Original Tongues because divers Errors and Heresies have been drawn from Translations and every language hath some kindes of speech proper to it self 2. Skill in the Arts whereby proper and figurative speeches and phrases may be discerned and distinguished and the true construction of words with the just consequents of arguments may be discern'd 3. Knowledge of the Analogy of Faith that is of the fundamental points of our Christian Religion that no sense be made contrary to any of them 4. Observation of the scope of that place which is interpreted and of the circumstances going before and following after 5. Comparing one place with another as the obscure places with the perspicuous Thus the meaning of many Types and Prophesies in the Old Testament may be understood by the application of them in the New 6. Prayer for thereby the Spirit of Revelation is obtained Eph. 1.17 7. Faith and obedience in to Gods word so far as it is made known The four graces needful to use the Scriptures aright 1. Knowledge whereby in all things that we do we may be able to judge what is the good will of God what is pleasing and acceptable to him Rom. 12.2 Eph. 5.17 This knowledge is attained by diligent reading of the word by meditation on what we reade by a reverend conferring thereof and by a careful humble attention to the preaching thereof 2. Wisdom which teacheth us rightly to apply the word and that both in the true sense and meaning of that particular place which we alledge and also according to the present matter for which it is alledged otherwise we pervert the Scripture to our own destruction 2 Pet. 3.16 3. Faith whereto the power of the Scriptures is restrained for the Word is the power of God to every one that believeth Rom. 1.16 without this all knowledge all wisdom is in vain 4. Obedience for in Religion a man knoweth no more then he practiseth Happy onely which so know as to do what they know John 13.17 by neither carelesly neglecting that which is commanded nor by preposterously doing that which is forbidden The Scripture contains matter concerning all sorts of persons things which may be reduced to these 5 Heads 1. Touching Religion and the right worship of God they teach how to serve him and what to believe of God or Man 1. Touching God that he is one in Essence and three in persons 2. Touching our selves 1. That by Creation we were made good holy and righteous 2. That by our Fall we are become wretched by reason of sin and not able of our selves to think one good thought or to stir one foot forward toward the Kingdom of heaven 3. That by Regeneration we are born again and made the Sons of God by Adoption and by faith we lay hold on Christ our Wisdom our Sanctification our Righteousness our Redemption 3. Touching the Church That it is the company of the Faithful that have been from the beginning By them also are we led to know the two Sacraments and what to believe of the general Judgement that shall be of the godly and ungodly 2. Touching Kingdoms and Commonwealths and touching the Duties of Magistrates and Subjects they inform us how the one ought to rule and the other to obey and neither the one nor the other do their duties for conscience till the Word inform them 3. Touching Families and Houshold-affairs in which are Husband and Wife Parents and Children Masters and Servants no duty required of them is omitted but all contained herein 4. Touching the private life of every particular person how to behave our selves in the whole course of our life 5. Touching the common life of all men we learn in them how to lead our lives in every estate whether we be rich or poor whether we be high or low we can be in no estate but we shall finde sufficient store of heavenly precepts and examples to teach us the way wherein we should walk The way to profit by the Scriptures 1. We must have recourse by prayer to God the Author of the Scriptures he onely is able to unlock them and so to bring us into the secret chamber of his presence 2. We must keep such order in the reading of them as may stand with our Calling and state of life and take all opportunity to do it redeeming this day what we omitted the last 3. We must understand to what ends uses they were written as 1. To teach that we may learn the Truth 2. To improve that we may be kept from error 3. To correct that we may be driven from vice 4. To instruct that we may be setled in the way of well-doing 5. To comfort that in trouble we may be confirmed in patience and hope of an happy issue 4. We are to remember that the Scriptures contain matter concerning all sorts of persons and things 5. We must have the Doctrine of the Scriptures plentifully dwelling in us not in the mouth but seated in the heart that we may be able to rise up being fallen to stand in the truth to continue unto the end The several kindes of neglecters of the Scriptures and consequently self-enemies to their own souls 1. Such as care not to reade it or hear it at all of all Books they least respect the Bible 2. Such as seldom reade it having fair bound Bibles onely to keep them company at Church 3. Such as reade much but do onely reade never search the Scripture to finde out the true sense and meaning thereof 4. Such as reade and seek out the true sense also but onely to understand the truth of the
not doing will continue as it hath brought already many fearful Judgements upon us unless by timely true Repentance it be cut off yea this very Word which God hath graciously ordained as the ordinary means of our Salvation if now heard unpractised will one day prove the savor of death to our eternal Condemnation Consider this therefore thou that centrest Religion in Formality consider it seriously as thou expectest Heaven or fearest Hell for being now premonished this very subject thou now readest stands on Record against thee to the great and terrible Day of Judgement To the profitable hearing of Gods word three things are required 1. A preparation before we hear which consists 1. In removing all impediments 2. In using all good helps and means to further us 2. A right disposition in hearing 3. The duties to be practised after hearing Rules of direction to be observed in preparation before hearing 1. We must be swift to hear James 1.19 by disburthening our selves of all impediments 2. We must lift up our hearts to God in Prayer that he would give us the hearing ear 3. The hearer must in hearing set himself as in the presence of God The lets and impediments hindring the effectual hearing of the Word which are to be removed and avoided before we come to the hearing of the same 1. Presumption when the hearer presumes of his own parts able to teach his Teachers And in this may be included Prejudication for we must take heed of all sinister affection to the Ministers person Luke 10.16 2. Troubled affections specially rash anger either against his Teacher or others for we must take special heed of corrupt affections as envy hatred malice guile anger and the like 1 Pet. 2.1 2. 3. The immoderate desire of riches and all worldly cares Mat. 13.22 4. Overcharging our selves with too much eating and drinking 5. Itching ears 2 Tim. 4.3 See the place 6. We must put off our shoes from off our feet that is the dirty and filthy affections of our souls Exod. 3.5 7. We must shake off the sin of Unblelief being fully perswaded that it is the Word of Truth 8. All carelesness and carnal security and come with thirsting souls 1 Pet. 2.2 9. We must take heed of dissentions and diversity of opinions about the Truth 1 Cor. 11.17 18. 10. Hardness of heart whereby the word is made as a dead letter effectual onely to our condemnation This is a fearful sin The helps and means to be used before the hearing of the Word 1. Godly meditation seriously to consider as we go and to meditate whither we are going 2. To meditate of the Corruptions we are most addicted to and of the Graces we most want 3. To consider to what end we go to hear to the word of God 4. Before we go we must resolve to suffer our selves to be reproved as well as instructed 5. We must use earnest and fervent Prayer 1. For the Minister that God would give him the door of utterance 2. For our selves that God would bless his word unto us 3. For others that God would bless his word unto them also Rules of direction to a right disposition the several duties required in the time of hearing 1. When the Word of God is in delivering every hearer must hear with judgement that is His own private judgement The judgment of the Minister The judgement of the Holy Ghost 2. Every hearer must have care that the Word of God be rooted and grounded in his heart like good seed in good ground 3. We must set our selves as in the sight and presence of God who seeth our very thoughts 1 Chron. 28.9 4. To hear with fear and trembling because it is not the word of any mortal man but of the ever-living God 5. With reverence not looking so much on the person of the Minister as on God speaking in him 6. With alacrity chearfulness and willingness 1 Chron. 28.9 Mat. 13. 7. With meekness and submission to whatsoever is delivered Jam. 1.21 8. With attention restraining our hearts from wandring from the delivered word Luke 19.48 9. We must fit and accommodate our selves to every part of the Sermon properly applying the same to our selves 10. We must hear with faith believing the word preached to be the truth of God himself Heb. 4.2 11. With constancy without tediousness not thinking the time long For the rooting of the word of God in our hearts there are four things specially required 1. A true and right understanding thereof 2. It must be mingled with faith Heb. 4.1 that is General to believe it Special to apply it 3. We must labor to be affected with the word 2 Chron. 34.27 4. The word of God must dwell plenteously in us Col. 3.16 The means to remove hard-heartedness in hearing of the Word 1. They must labor to be touched in heart with the sense and feeling of their Spiritual poverty and want of Gods favor in the pardon of their sins 2. To hear the word of God with an honest heart joyned with a constant purpose of not sinning 3. To be as careful to bring good affections as a good understanding The frequent and most common impediments that hinder the effectual and saving hearing of the word 1. Straying and wandring thoughts thereby making our selves but Idol-hearers 2. Undecent and unsavory gestures as a wandring eye gazing and gaping after every occurrent and occasion that offereth it self 3. Removing of the body not onely shifting and stirring it up and down but arising out of our places and removing to place other or beckening with our hands or nodding with our heads 4. Unreverent talking and uncivil laughing as if the place of Gods publike Worship were a Theatre for Sights or a place of Mart and Exchange where every one might single out Companions 5. A secure and sensless sleeping when we have drowsie ears and hearts 6. A careless coming and a shameless departing out of the Church and a seperating of our selves from the Congregation before it be dismissed and dissolved The duties required after hearing the word 1. It must be treasured up in our hearts and practised in our lives Psal 119.11 2. Serious meditation examination and application of what we have heard we must meditate on the Word with lifting up of the heart unto God 3. We must have experience of the Word of God in our selves Psal 34.8 4. Beside our Self-examination after we have heard the Word Psal 119.59 we must be obedient unto it and testifie our obedience Jam. 1.22 5. Godly conference touching the particulars of the Sermon This confirms the memory and helps very much to further knowledge and edification 6. We must use prayer unto Almighty God as well private as publike for a blessing on what we have heard 7. Above all we must constantly endeavor to practice what we have heard for onely they receive the blessing Luke 11.28 The causes of not profiting after hearing the word are chiefly of these
further our Sanctification The four degrees of Temptation by which it proceedeth till it bring a man to destruction unless it be cut off Jam. 1.14 15. 1. Suggestion when the minde conceiveth a wicked thought put in by Satan or arising from natural corruption 2. Delight when the evil thought conceived and for a time retained in the minde descendeth to the heart and there pleaseth the will and delighteth the affections 3. Consent when the will yields to the evil motion and the heart resolves to practice it 4. Perfection when a Sin is often committed and by custom becomes as it were ripe whereupon follows destruction Now a man is led into temptation when he is left of God to an evil motion suggested into his minde so as he gives consent unto it and goes on to the practice of it To be led into Temptation is to be possessed and held by the Temptation after it hath assaulted us For in every Temptation there be two actions viz. 1. One of God whereby in his just Judgement he leaves a man to himself or to the malice of Satan 2. Another of man himself whereby being left of God he enters into the midst of the Temptation as it were plunging himself into it How the Lord is said to lead into Temptation 1. By withdrawing his Grace without which every man falleth and is not able to stand in the day of Temptation Psal 119.8 2. By leaving a man to his own lusts by which as by a violent Torrent he is carried quite away Rom. 1.24 3. By delivering over unto Satan for the punishment of former notorious Sins to be hardned as in Pharaoh and Saul The Reasons for which the godly may be led into temptation 1. To keep them under that they be not proud of Gods Grace 2 Cor. 12.7 2. To winnow the chaff of Sin from Gods Corn Luke 22.31 3. That Gods power may appear in mans weakness 2 Cor. 12.9 4. That his mercy may be seen in keeping them from a final fall Luke 22.32 5. That they may be like Christ their Head Rom. 8.17 6. That they may acknowledge that all strength is from God 2 Cor. 3.5 7. That by this they may know themselves to be Gods children who alone are so tempted that they recover in Temptation Psal 37.24 How many ways God is said to tempt man 1. By afflictions as he did the Israelites Deut. 9.3 2. By Commandment as he did Abraham Gen. 22.1 3. By prosperity as he did David 2 Sam. 12. 4. By offering objects as he did Eve Gen. 3. The Graces to be desired of God which are helpful against Temptation viz. 1. Spiritual heed and watchfulness to prevent Temptations and to avoid the occasions thereof 2. Grace to pray in the time of Temptation that God would lessen and moderate the violence and force thereof 3. That in Temptation God would be so far from withdrawing his Grace from us that he would then adde Grace to Grace even new Grace unto the former 4. That in continuance of Temptation when it abideth long upon us God would strengthen us to hold out 5. That he would give us patience to bear the irksomness the trouble of it 6. That in the end of it God would give a comfortable issue for his glory and our own good The Christian Armor against Temptation 1. Truth or verity whereby a man professeth true Religion and endeavoreth himself in the practice of all the duties of Religion in sincerity his speeches and his actions are suitable proceeding from an honest heart that truly meaneth whatsoever the tongue uttereth or himself practiseth 2. Justice or Righteousness when a man leads his life unblameably and uprightly 3. The preparation of the Gospel of Peace that is when we finde our affections so cleave unto Christ that by way of thankfulness for the glad tidings of Salvation by Christ revealed in the Gospel which promiseth pardon of Sin and life everlasting by Christ we can deny our selves take up our Cross and follow him 4. The shield of Faith by which a man lays hold on the Mercy of God in Christ for his salvation and under it shrowds himself against the fiery darts of Satan 5. Hope by which we wait for that salvation which we apprehend by Faith Remedies against Temptation to Covetousness 1. We must meditate That God hath taken upon him to be our careful Protector Psal 23.1 2. That this Sin is the root of all Evil and that every covetous man is an Idolater Col. 3.5 3. That our life stands not in abundance Luke 12.16 and that Christ and his Disciples were poor Mat. 8.2 4. That we shall carry nothing with us Job 1.21 and that we must give account of our getting Luke 16.2 5. That it will hinder us in the service of God Luke 14.18 19. and make us unwilling to dye Eccles. 41.1 6. That our riches may suddenly be taken away from us Prov. 23.5 or we from them 7. That rich men come hardly to heaven Luke 18.24 and many woes denounced against them Amos 6.1 Remedies against Temptations to Pride 1. We must meditate That we must not be proud because we have all things of gift 1 Cor. 4.7 2. That God resisteth the proud 1 Pet. 5.5 and that we are but dust and ashes Gen. 18.27 3. That pride hindreth a greater largess of Grace Luke 18.24 and that it cast Angels out of Heaven into Hell 2 Pet. 2.4 4. That if it be in Apparel I have more need to be humbled for my shameful nakedness Gen. 2.25 5. That Christ left me an example of humility Mat. 11.29 but pride argues me a Son of the Devil for it is Signum Reproborum Hieron 6. That pride is the causer of contentions Prov. 13.10 and that by it we make others to contemn us Esth 3.2 Remedies against Temptations to Adultery 1. We must meditate That God sees us Prov. 5.21 and will punish us Gen. 20.3 2. That we are members of Christ 1 Cor. 6.15 and our bodies the Temples of the Holy Ghost 3. That Adulterers shall not inherit heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 they seldom repent Prov. 7.26 27. 4. That for the whorish woman a man is brought to a morsel of bread Prov. 6.26 5. That we wrong the Church and Commonwealth by obtruding on both a bastardly generation for neither without evidence know their true children 6. That as thereby we endanger our souls so we decay our bodies and when we are dead our memory is more rotten above ground then our carcases under it leaving behinde an inexpungeable blot Prov. 6.32 33. Remedies against Temptations to Gluttony and Drunkenness 1. We must meditate That Solomon commands us at great Tables to put our knives to our throats Prov. 23.1 That we thereby abuse our own bodies Luke 21.34 The good creatures of God Eph. 5.18 and that which might do good to the poor Mat. 14.4 5. 2. That by them we are made unfit for Gods service 1 Cor. 10.7 and that these sins
the Father because he is the Fountain as of the Divinity of the Son and of the Holy Ghost so also of those Divine operations which he worketh and performeth by the Son and the Holy Ghost Now that God is we know many ways but chiefly by our own Consciences accusing us for secret sins which cannot be but unto an infinite wisdom that knows the most secret thoughts of the heart such as is or can be neither Man Devil nor Angel but God onely All the Doctrine concerning God is either 1. Of his Nature which is taught in the Law and Gospel 2. Of his Will which is seen and made manifest in His Commandments His Threatnings His Promises 3. Of his Works which are The Benefits The Judgements of his Will which are to be beheld in the Creation Fall Restoring of Man The devils believe there is a God and tremble if any Atheist hath less faith then they and doubt the truth thereof he may believe it from these Reasons though as he is not worthy any so the truth hereof is above all 1. The beautiful and goodly order of Nature beheld in the Creatures and frame of the great body of the world Rom. 1.20 2. The preservation and government of the world created Acts 14.17 3. The Nature and excellency of mans minde the soul of man endewed with excellent gifts of Understanding and Reason 4. From the notions of general Rules and Principles naturally engendred in the minde of man yea the natural notion of this Principle That God is 1. Because every one hath experience hereof in himself 2. All wise men confess it 3. All Nations consent in it 5. From the terrors of Conscience which are stricken in the mindes of the wicked after that they have sinned 6. The punishments of the wicked which they suffer besides the torments of Conscience 7. From Bodies Politick which are wisely ordered and regulated by Laws 8. From the order and nature of efficient causes and from the final causes of all things 9. From certain and evident foretellings and clear significations of future Events 10. From heroical and noble instincts of minde For what Reasons the voice of Nature concerning God is not wholly to be rejected or contemned by reason of the insufficiency thereof 1. God will also out of the Church bridle the lewd and dissolute by the testimonies which their Conscience and punishments give of his will Anger and Judgement and according to them also will he have the maners of men regulated 2. He will have mans Corruption and his own Justice made more perspicuous and clear in punishing them who stubbornly withstand the known truth 3. He will by natural testimonies mens Consciences shewing the imperfection thereof have men stirred up to seek the true God in the Church Acts 17.26 27. 4. He will have also them who are converted to him to be more confirmed by the consent of Nature and the Word as the often alleaging of Natural testimonies in the Scripture declareth 5. He will the imperfection of Natural knowledge being considered have mens ignorance concerning God acknowledged and his mercy magnified who discovereth and openeth himself in his Word There is nor can be but one God for these Reasons 1. The sufficient testimonies of Miracles and Prophesies and other works 2. His own Authority and Majesty which admitteth no fellows 3. That which is greatest perfection can be but one for the whole is perfecter then any part thereof 4. There can be but one chief God but one Omnipotent but one Infinite 5. There can be but one chief Cause and more Gods would be unperfect or superfluous How God doth describe himself in Exod. 34.6 viz. 1. He is Jehovah that is he is a constant friend to whomsoever he is a friend he is alway the same that is I am that I am that is whatsoever the Lord was from eternity the same he is to eternity there is no change in him 2. He is strong that is Almighty that is he hath all Excellency in him and that in the highest degree 3. He is Merciful exceeding pitiful exceeding ready to forgive though our sins be many and exceeding great None so ready to forgive as God for if he were as man if he were not God could he bear with us as he doth Jer. 3.2 4. He is Gracious that is though there be no worth found in us yet he is ready to do us good Now to be gracious is to do things freely when there is no motive for Grace is nothing but freeness 5. He is Long-suffering that is though we provoke him out of measure he continues patient we cannot weary him out 〈◊〉 his mercy endures for ever though our sins are often repeated yet he as often repeats his Mercies 6. He is abundant in Kindeness that is though he be so great a God as he is yet he is exceeding ready to bear with us he is not harsh but ready to grant what we ask according to his will 7. He is abundant in Truth that is we shall finde him as good as his word he is engaged we have many Promises he hath made us nay abundant in Truth that is his performances exceed they run-over he will be better then his word whatsoever he hath said he will more then do it 8. He is a God reserving mercy for Thousands that is when any of us do him faithful service he cannot content himself to do good to our own persons but to our Children and to our Generation So Davids love extended not to Barzillai and Jonathan onely but to their posterity also 9. He is a God forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin Those three words are put in that we may know he forgives sins of all sorts and signifie That he is still and still forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin God is said to be 1. An Essence that is a thing which 1. Hath his Being from none but from himself 2. Is preserved or sustained of none but subsisteth by himself 3. Is necessarily 4. Is the onely Cause unto all other things of their Being 2. Spiritual 1. Because he is Incorporeal as being Infinite and Indivisible 2. Because he is Insensible as experience sufficiently manifesteth 3. Because both himself liveth and is the Author of all life both Corporal and Spiritual 3. Intelligent 1. Because he is the cause both of the minde of man and of the notions shining in it and also of the order which is in the nature of things and Common-weals 2. Because all intelligence or understanding of the Creature cometh from him both in respect of the faculty as in respect of the operation 4. E●ternal without beginning or end of Being Psal 90.2 and is so to us that we may oppose the certain hope of eternal blessings grounded upon his Eternity against the shortness of mortal life and against the frailty of mans condition 5. Other from all his Creatures which we must hold 1. Against Philosophers who will have the World or Nature
it self to be God 2. Against those who imagine the Creatures either all or some to spring from the very Essence or Nature of God deriving it self as they speak into others by propagation 3. That all prophane unworthy and idolatrous cogitations of God may be excluded 4. Because there can neither be nor be imagined any similitude between a finite and an Infinite Nature 6. Incomprehensible or Immense for 1. He cannot be comprehended in the cogitation of any creature 2. The Deity cannot be comprehended or circumscribed in place in space or any limits that is his Essence is Immense neither to be extended nor divided nor multiplied Therefore it is all every where one and the same 7. Most perfect in himself 1. Because he onely hath all things which may be desired to perfect felicity and glory 2. Because he receiveth no part of this most absolute felicity from any other but hath all things in himself and of himself and is alone sufficient to himself for all things 3. Because he is not for himself onely but also for the creating preserving guiding and furnishing of all and every Creature so sufficiently that he alone doth give to all of them all good things meet and necessary for them as well eternal and heavenly as terrene and temporal neither yet doth depart from any part of his power or his happiness 8. Unchangeable 1. His Essence and whatsoever is proper thereto cannot be augmented or diminished 2. His Nature and Will cannot be changed 3. Himself hath no need to transport himself from place 9. Omnipotent 1. That whatsoever he will or whatsoever not impairing his Nature or Majesty he is able to will he is also able to perform 2. That he is able to perform all those things without any difficulty or labor even with his onely beck and will 3. That all the force and power of working and effecting any thing is so in God onely that there is not the least ability or efficacy of any Creature but what he continually imparteth and preserveth at his pleasure The five Properties of God which ought to stir us up to obey him contained in the Exhortation to obedience annexed to the second Commandment 1. He calleth himself our God that is our Maker and Savior and the Author of all good things hereby advertising us what execrable unthankfulness it is to revolt from the true worshipping of him unto Idolatry 2. Mighty that is in power as well to punish the obstinate as to reward the obedient 3. A jealous God that is a most sharp defender of his own Honor wonderfully displeased with such a revolt from him or violate and impair his Worship and Honor. 4. He calleth himself A God which visiteth the sins c. whereby he encreaseth his anger to take vengeance of the Ancestors sins in their Posterity even to the fourth degree and descent if they partake with the sins of their Ancestors 5. He saith that He is a God which sheweth mercy unto Thousands c. here he extendeth his punishments unto the fourth Generation but his mercy unto Thousands thereby to signifie That he had rather shew Mercy then Anger and so by this means to allure us the more to love him and worthily excluded is that man who abuseth such Infinite Mercy The use we are to make of the description of God 1. As God is a Spirit let us worship him in Spirit and abhor Images and Idols 2. As he is a Spirit let us not be offended or stumble at this That we never see him calling it therefore into question whether he be or not when we are Spiritual we shall see him as he is Joh. 3.4 3. Let us acknowledge from whence we have our being and life Acts 17.28 4. As he is Infinite let us in no place adventure to sin on any vain conceit because it is secret for wheresoever we be God is present 5. As he is most Holy let us prefer Holiness as the greatest excellency without which no man shall see God 6. As he is onely wise let no man use his wit secretly and closely to contrive evil against his brother or by any unlawful policy to circumvent him 7. As he is most Just let no man presume to go on in sin hoping for mercy without repentance 8. As he is most Merciful let no man that is cast down for his sins despair 9. As he is Almighty let us fear him and put our whole trust in him in all times of danger and distress 10. As of whose days there is no beginning nor ending let us be humbled in the Consideration of Gods Eternity seeing our selves are so momentary The Attributes of God are the main Supporters of our faith as thus 1. His Holiness makes the believer approach before him in an utter abnegation of himself and in the mediation of Christ knowing that in himself he is all over polluted and defiled with sin 2. His Wisdom makes the Believer subject to God in all estates of prosperity and adversity even against his own sense and natural Reason knowing that God is wisest and best knoweth what estate is fittest for him 3. His Truth makes the Believer judge him who hath promised that which he believeth to be faithful and true he that believeth hath sealed that God is true Joh. 3.33 4. His Power makes the Believer assent to the possibility of performance of those Promises which God hath made to his children of things which seem impossible 5. His Mercy makes the Believer believe the pardon of his sins being fully perswaded that he is infinite rich in mercy otherwise he could not believe the pardon of his sins When we read in Scripture of eyes ears mouth face hands heart head arms and feet ascribed to God we must not imagine that God is like unto us or hath a bodily shape whereas he is a Spirit or that these parts are ascribed to him properly but only for our better capacity and understanding signifying unto us his gracious Attributes as by his eyes his Omnipresence by his mouth his Word by his hands his Providence by his arms his Power and by his face 1. The invisible Nature and Essence of God Exod. 33.23 which no mortal man can see and live 2. The Favor of God as also all his Benefits Deliverances and Graces Dan. 9.17 Psal 80.3 3. Revenge and Punishment and the signs of his Anger Lev. 20.3 4. The place of Gods Worship where his face and favor is perceived through delivery of the Doctrine of Godliness From this was Cain banished Genesis 4.14 Hereof David complains 2 Sam. 26.49 Now to believe in God Almighty is to be believe in such a one 1. Who is able to do whatsoever he will 2. Who doth all things even with his beck and word onely without any difficulty 3. Who alone hath power to work all things and is Author of that power which is in all his Creatures 4. Who is also unto me Almighty and both can and will
ceremonial Worship had a respect and were referred unto Christ as the Sacrifices Immolations Altars Temple yea the Kingdom also and the Kings were a Type of the Kingdom of Christ Christ our Mediator is said to be man perfectly just fulfilling the Law four ways 1. By his own Righteousness performing such perfect obedience as the Law required 2. By paying sufficient punishment for our sins 3. By fulfilling the Law in us by his Spirit when he regenerateth us by it 4. By teaching it and by purging it of errors and corruptions Why Intercession for us to the Father is proper onely to the Son 1. Because himself living on earth in the time of his flesh was made a Suppliant and a Sacrifice for us unto the Father 2. Because he earnestly will according to both Natures that the Father for his Sacrifice once accomplished on the Cross remit unto us our sins and restore unto us righteousness and life 3. That the Father looking upon the Sacrifice and will of his onely begotten Son receiveth all Believers into his grace and favor Christ our Mediator is a Reconciler of God and men Now to Reconcile signifieth 1. To make Intercession or intreaty for him who offendeth unto him who is offended 2. To make Satisfaction for the injury offered 3. To promise and to bring to pass that the party who hath offended offend no more for except this be brought to pass and effectuated the fruit of the Intercession is lost 4. To bring them to an Atonement and Agreement who were before at enmity The Office of a Mediator being to deal with both parties both the offended the offender with God the party offended our Mediator had necessarily to do these things viz. 1. To make Intercession for us and to crave pardon of him for our faults 2. To offer himself for to satisfie 3. To satisfie indeed the Justice of God by suffering for our sins punishment sufficient though Temporal 4. To crave and obtain of God that he would accept of this satisfaction as a price of sufficient worthiness for which he would account us children pardoning our sins 5. To be our Surety that at length we will leave off to offend him by our sins without this Suretiship Intercession findeth no place with men much less with God With us the parties offending our Mediator doth these things 1. He is the Messenger or Ambassador of God the Father to us to shew or open this Decree of the Father That he doth present himself to make satisfaction for us and that God will for this satisfaction pardon us and receive us into favor 2. He doth perform this satisfaction by pouring out of his own blood 3. He doth impute and apply that satisfaction unto us 4. He doth cause us by giving his holy Spirit unto us to acknowledge this so great a benefit and to embrace and not reject it 5. He doth by the same Spirit cause us to leave off to sin and begin to be conformable to Gods Law that is he doth regenerate us and restore the lost Image of God in us 6. He preserves maintains and shields us in this Reconcilement against the Devil and all our Enemies yea against our own selves lest we revolt again 7. He glorifies us being risen again from the dead and so perfects our Salvation It was necessary that our Mediator should be true Man for these Reasons 1. Because it was Man that sinned 2. That he might suffer death 3. That he might help and relieve our infirmities 4. That he might be our Brother and our Head and we his Members Heb. 2.14 5. Because of Gods Justice and Truth It was requisite that our Mediator should be true God for these Reasons 1. That he might be able to sustain the infinite wrath of God or grievousness of punishment which should be temporal yet equivalent to eternal pains 2. That his punishment might be a sufficient and full worthy Merit and Ransom for the purging of the sins even of the whole world and for the repairing of that righteousness and glory which they had lost 3. That he may restore by his forcible operation and power the Image of God in us 4. That he should make known unto us the Secret Will of God concerning the receiving of Mankinde again into favor Job 1.18 5. That he might give the Holy Ghost by whom he might bestow on us maintain and perfect in us the Benefits purchased by his death as Remission of Sins Righteousness New-obedience and life everlasting Joh. 15.26 Meer man or any creatures could not have wrought out our delivery for these Reasons 1. Because the Justice of God doth not punish in other creatures that which man hath committed 2. No creature could sustain temporal punishment equivalent to eternal 3. He who is himself defiled with sin cannot satisfie for others 4. Because the punishment of a meer creature would not be a price of sufficient worthiness and value for our delivery 5. Because the delivery of man is wrought after a sort also by Regeneration The Benefits of the Mediator viz. 1. Our wisdom 1. Because he is the matter or subject of our wisdom 1 Cor. 2.2 2. Because he is the Cause or Author of it and that three ways 1. Because he hath brought out of the Bosom of the Father the Doctrine of our Redemption 2. Because he hath ordained and doth preserve the Ministery of the Word 3. Because he is forcible and effectual in the hearts of the chosen making them yield their assent to the Word or Doctrine 2. Our Righteousness that is our Justifier for in him our Righteousness is as in the subject 3. Our Sanctification because he doth Regenerate us by his holy Spirit 4. Our Redemption because he finally delivereth us The Theanthropeity of Jesus is of this fourfold use viz. 1. That as often as this Name comes in our mindes we may think our selves without Jesus to be a people utterly lost 2. That we may be admonished to seek Salvation from him alone for Jesus is the onely Son of God 3. That we may oppose this Name to Despair to the greatness of sin to our own unworthiness and to the power of the Devil 4. That we may know that in this Name is compendiously contained the whole Gospel The duties to be performed by us to shew our faith in Jesus Christ 1. A thankful admiration of this unspeakable favor of God in giving Christ unto us 2. An humbling of our selves to seek the good one of another as Christ did for ours 3. To be lifted up in heart to heaven where our Nature sits at the right hand of God 4. To yield all due reverence to this Lord and gracious Jesus of ours There is but one Mediator 1 Tim. 2.6 and the Reason is Because the Son onely is Mediator and can perform the Office of the Mediator and there is but one onely natural Son of God therefore the Papists will one day sadly finde themselves mistaken And this Christ
our Mediator is a Pacifier and Reconciler of God and Men as well by merit and desert as also by efficacy and forcible operation that is a middle person between God offended and angry with and for sin and mankinde offending and subject to the wrath of God To reconcile men unto God restoring them into favor causing men to love God and God men and that by making intreaty and satisfaction to Gods Justice for them and applying forcibly and effectually unto them his Satisfaction or Merit Regenerating them that they may cease from sinning and hearing their groans and petitions when they call upon him And it was necessary that our Mediator and Deliverer should be such a one as was very Man and that perfectly just too because the Justice of God requireth that the same Humane Nature which hath sinned do it self likewise make recompence for sin and because he that is himself a sinner cannot make recompence for others 1 Pet. 3.18 And that he should be also very God that he might by the power of his Godhead sustain in his flesh the burthen of Gods wrath Isa 53.3 and might recover and restore unto us that Righteousness and life which we lost 1 Joh. 1.2 You that Believe in Merits of your own And Sacrifice unto the God Vnknown That think a Pardon sent from Rome can make A Sin no Sin even for Saint Peters sake That do believe in Antichrist and hope To finde or make a Savior of the Pope Fall down before your Dagon But let all That profess one Faith Apostolical Believe in God and by one Faith accord In Jesus Christ his onely Son our Lord. § 4. Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost Born of the Virgin Mary CHrists flesh was conceived by the Holy Ghost not that he transfused or passed his substance into the flesh begotten but because in miraculous sort he formed in the Virgins womb of her substance the body of Christ so that it should not be contaminated or polluted with Original sin for he could not be conceived in such sort by the Holy Ghost that his flesh should issue from the Spirits substance And this blessed Virgin descended of the Linage of David to answer to the Divine Oracles as also for that our Faith might be the mor● confirmed to believe he was the very Messias promised to descend from the loyns of Abraham and David And in that this hapned in the Reign of Augustus very observable is the completion of the Divine Oracles and justly to be condemned the blindeness of the Jews Nor less deceived are they which hold the Virgin Mary to have been conceived without Original sin contrary to the tenor of the Scriptures and her own confession who acknowledged her self to have needed a Savior Luke 1.47 for she was born after the common course of the Nature of man and what need was there that Christ Jesus should be conceived by the Holy Ghost if he might have a pure conception free from Original sin without it Neither is it necessary to Salvation to believe it as an Article of Faith That Mary the Mother of Christ lived always a Virgin In the Humanity of Christ six things are principally considerable viz. 1. His Conception and Nativity 2. His Death and Passion 3. His Burial and Descension into Hell 4. His Resurrection 5. His Ascension into Heaven and his sitting there at the right hand of the Father 6. His coming again to Judgement Touching the conception or Nativity of Christ these six things are to be observed 1. That the News thereof was brought by an Angel 2. That he was conceived by the Holy Ghost that is by the power and vertue of it 3. That he was Born of a Virgin 4. That the Mother of our Lord was espoused to a man 5. That the blessed Virgin was of the Linage of David 6. That he was born in the time of the Reign of Augustus In the Angels Annunciation observe these three things 1. The Salutation which declared the free love of God to the Virgin 2. The delivery of the Message That of her should be born the Son of God 3. That she should be overshadowed by the Divine Power of the Holy Ghost Christs conception by the Holy Ghost signifieth three things viz. 1. That the mass of his Humane Nature was created or formed in the womb of the Virgin miraculously and beside the order of things disposed of God in Nature by the immediate operation of the Holy Ghost without the substance of man 2. That the Holy Ghost did in the same moment and by the same operation cleanse this mass and from the very point of the conception sanctifie it that is he caused that Original sin should not issue into it 3. The Union of the Humane Nature with the Word or the uniting of his flesh unto his Godhead Christ was conceived by the holy Ghost for these Reasons 1. Lest being born of flesh he should not be clean 2. That he might be a pure Sacrifice and sufficient Ransom for our Redemption 2 Cor. 5.12 3. That being pure and holy he might purifie us of all sin that he might also sanctifie us by his sanctity and holiness 4. That we may know he spake the very will of his Father that whatsoever this Son speaketh is the will of God and the Truth Christ was born of the Virgins substance chiefly for these Reasons 1. That we may know Christ our Mediator to be the true seed of David 2. That the Prophesies might be fulfilled Gen. 3. 49. Isa 7. That it may certainly appear unto us That this Jesus born of the Virgin is that Messias promised to the Fathers 3. That this Christs birth of a Virgin might be a Testimony that he is pure and without sin sanctified in the womb of the Virgin by the vertue of the Holy Ghost 4. That it might be a sign or figure of our Spiritual Regeneration which is not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Joh. 1.13 For what Reasons the Mother of our Lord was espoused to a man 1. That hence the honor of marriage might be commended unto us 2. That the chastity and good name of the Virgin might be provided for 3. That Joseph might be as a Guardian to the Virgin as a Foster-father to the childe 4. Lest the blasphemous enemies should say That the Christ of the Christians was unlawfully born To believe in the Son of God conceived by the Holy Ghost is to believe 1. That he was made man after a marvellous maner and that he was made one Christ of a Divine and Humane Nature 2. That he being so holily conceived and born doth purchase for us the right and power to be the Sons of God In this Article of the Creed we believe 1. That there be two Natures in Christ our Mediator that in one and the same Christ are Properties diverse and contrary Divine and Humane Finite and Infinite Passible
not be too many The duties to be performed by us in believing the holy Catholique Church 1. To renounce and abandon all wicked Societies because we profess fellowship with Saints betwixt whom and these there is no agreement 2. To be companions of Saints viz. of such as be of an holy life and not to think it a disgrace to be holy and pure and to be of a good and pious life separate from the prophane multitude 3. To walk in the light of Gods holy Word by vertuous living because of our fellowship with Christ and through him with God the Father for God is light 1 Joh. 1.7 4. To do good unto all but especially to those of the houshold of faith in being like-affected towards them not onely in distributing our temporal but spiritual goods 5. To be comfortable in all our Sufferings because our Head is not without a sympathy and feeling of our miseries and will not suffer us to be tempted beyond what we are able 6. To have heavenliness within us by leading an heavenly life whilest we live upon earth because there is a communion betwixt us and the Saints in heaven When Tyrants Storms of Persecution raise And when Religion blows too many ways When Rome 's Euroclydon does roar like Hell And that Whores Cup doth to a Deluge swell This is that Ark which when the Floods abate Doth land the Faithful on Mount Arrarat Truths Pillar wreath'd with Innocence and Love Whose Stems below and Basis is above Christ's black yet comely and beloved Spouse His own true Vine thrice happy are the Boughs §. 10. The Communion of Saints THe Communion of Saints is that holy and sweet fellowship which all the Members of Christs Church have with their Head Christ Jesus and one with another whether they are Believers here or departed Nor is this the least of Christs benefits bestowed on the Church by the Holy Ghost For herein all the Saints have the same Reconciliation the same Redemption the same Righteousness the same Sanctification the same Salvation by and for Christ All the Saints have the same benefits common which are necessary to Salvation Eph. 4.4 And all the like special gifts though not all a like measure but are so distributed to every Member as that some excel others in gifts and graces in the Church for the gifts of the Holy Ghost are diverse and to every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ Eph. 4.7 The chief part of the Communion of Saints is the union or coherence of all the Saints that is of the whole body of the Church with Christ the Head and of his Members among themselves which is wrought by the Holy Ghost even by the same Spirit who dwelleth in Christ the Head and in all his Members So that to believe the Communion of Saints is to believe That the Saints of which number I must needs certainly be assured my self to be one are united by the Spirit unto Christ their Head and that from the Head gifts are poured down unto them both those which are the same in all necessary to Salvation as also those which being diverse and diversly bestowed upon every one are requisite for the edification of the Church And that they are by the same Spirit likewise united among themselves The mystical union between Christ and every true Believer is not onely in regard of soul but of body also which being once knit shall never be dissolved but is eternal whereupon the dying dead rotten and consumed body remaineth still a Member of Christ abideth within the Covenant and is and shall be ever a Temple of the Holy Ghost Touching which union in regard of the soul Christ dwelleth therein or in the heart of every true Believer as the soul in the body and acts the soul as the soul acts the body without whom the soul is dead to all goodness So that if thou finde that thou art no more able to pray nor no more able to do any duty then thou wast before that thou livest in thy lusts as much as ever thou didst that thou hast not that new heart that new Spirit that new affection which the Scriptures speak of then be sure that Christ dwelleth not in thy heart thou hast no communion with him or his Saints The Union of Christ and the Church is a great Mystery Eph. 5.32 not to be measured with the line of our own Reason which can never fathom the depth thereof a Secret that could not be opened but by Divine Revelation nor being opened can be conceived but by the illumination of the Spirit Thus though it be above our capacity yet being revealed we must believe it as we do the mystery of the Trinity of Christs Eternal generation of the Personal Union of his two Natures of the Proceeding of the Holy Ghost and the like So that in our Meditation of this Mystery we must conceive no carnal no earthly thing of it because it is a Mystery it is altogether Spiritual and heavenly From the natural Union of our head and body and from the Matrimonial Union of man and wife we may by way of resemblance but help our understanding in the Union of Christ and his Church but notwithstanding the comparisons we may not draw the Mystery it self to any carnal matter for it is onely and wholly Spiritual This plainly discovereth the strange folly of the Papists who make our Union with Christ meerly carnal conceiving it to consist in a corporal commixion of Christs flesh with ours in which conceit there is a great deal of gross absurdity no great Mystery Now the maner of our Union with Christ is not by being united onely to his Humane Nature but by being united to Christs Person God-Man For as his Divine Nature in and by it self is incommunicable so the Humane Nature simply considered in and by it self is unprofitable for the Deity is the Fountain of Life and Grace which through the Humanity of Christ is conveyed unto us And though he be in heaven and we on earth yet this Union being supernatural and Spiritual there needeth no local presence for the making of it the Spirit of Christ being conveyed into every of the Saints as the soul into every part of the body makes the Members one Mystical Body their Head What the communion of Saints signifies 1. The Union of the Church with Christ and of his Members among themselves 2. The communion or participation of all Christs benefits 3. The distribution of special gifts bestowed on some Members for the good of the whole body 4. An obliging or binding of all the Members to imploy and refer all their gifts to the glory of Christ their Head and to the Salvation of the whole Body and of every Member mutually The faithful are called Saints in three respects 1. Imputatively that is in respect that Christs sanctity and holiness is imputed unto them 2. Inchoatively that is in respect that
4. Justifying this is the true faith and this saves Historical Faith being an Assent of heart to the Truth of Gods Word is twofold 1. Infused which is wrought in us by the illightning Spirit of God and staying it self upon his Authority immediately relying thereon 2. Acquired which is produced by the light of Reason Discourse and created Testimony This is that which may be found in Devils Again Faith is twofold viz. 1. Legal when we believe the Promises or more specially the Threatnings of the Law which we are bound to believe 2. Evangelical when we believe the Promise of the Gospel applying it to our selves For the right understanding of Faith what it is these things are chiefly requisite to be known and seriously to be considered viz. 1. The principal Efficient Cause thereof which is the Holy Ghost Eph. 2.8 2. The Instrumental Cause that is the Preaching of the Word and use of the Sacraments 3. The Formal Cause that is a certain Knowledge and a sure and full Considence in Christ 4. The Object of it that is whole Christ and his Benefits promised in the Word 5. The Subject wherein it remaineth of Place where it is which is the Understanding the Minde and Will 6. The Maner how it Justifies viz. As an Instrument 7. The Actions of it which are these principally viz. To Reconcile or Justifie To Pacifie the heart To Purifie or Sanctifie 8. The Final Cause thereof which is 1. The Glory of God 2. Our Salvation Saving Faith comprehendeth these three things viz. 1. Knowledge or the right conceiving of the necessary Doctrines of true Religion especially of those which concern Christ our Redeemer 2. Assent when a man knowing this Doctrine doth further approve of the same as wholesom Doctrine and the Truth of God directing us aright unto Salvation 3. Application when we conceive in our hearts a true perswasion of Gods Mercy towards us particularly in the free pardon of all our sins and for the Salvation of our Souls Or thus In Justifying Faith these six things are necessarily required viz. 1. A true understanding of Gods Word so far as is necessary to Salvation Rom. 10.14 2. An Inward Assent and Consent unto the Word Joh. 17.17 Rom. 7.16 Isa 1.19 3. A Profession of the Word and true Religion not for any sinister respect Rom. 10.9 10. 4. An Approbation Joy Delight Love and affecting of this Word 5. A true and sound Application of Christ to our own particular selves Heb. 10.22 6. A continual Declaration of our Faith by the continual practice of good works Jam. 2.26 The order which God useth in working Faith viz. 1. He worketh on the understanding enlightning it by his Word as in all Fundamental necessary Points of Christian Religion so in these two especially 1. In the Misery of a natural man which the Law discovereth 2. In the Remedy thereof which the Gospel revealeth 2. He worketh on the Will and thereon also two especial Works viz. 1. In regard of mans Misery as to be pricked in heart grieved in soul for sin and wounded in conscience 2. In regard of the Remedy to desire above all things in the world one drop of the infinite Mercy of God and to give all to have Christ How the Holy Ghost worketh Faith viz. 1. By enlightning the minde that it may understand the Word 2. By moving the Will that it may assent unto the Word once understood 3. By putting an efficacy in the Law for though the Law be fit to humble a man yet is it no worker of Sanctification 4. By shewing the excellency and riches of Christ 5. By assuring us that these things are ours As in Faith there must be 1. The Understanding to apprehend Christ 2. The Will to accept and lay hold on him So therein are these things required 1. To know the Promises of Righteosness and Life Eternal by Christ 2. To apply the Promise with the thing promised which is Christ unto our selves How to apply Christ truly to our selves 1. Lay a Foundation of this Action that is in the Word and in the Ministery of the Word 2. Practice upon this Foundation that is to give our selves to the exercise of Faith and Repentance which stands in Meditation of the Word and Prayer for Pardon when this is done God gives the sense and encrease of his Grace When we resolve to Take Christ God gives us power and ability thereto but the rejecting of Christ is the greatest sin and none shall be so much laid to our charge at the Day of Judgement Let these Considerations move us to Take Christ 1. The Danger in not taking him 2. The Benefit in taking him 3. The Certainty of having him The things which must concur in the Will to receive take Christ viz. 1. There must not be Error Personae this excludes ignorant men that take not Christ indeed but in their own fancy 2. There must be the right Form of taking him as a renouncing of all things else This must be observed Christ must be taken onely and alone 3. There must be a compleat Will concurring to this Action which excludes all wishers and woulders 4. There must be a deliberate Will which excludes those that onely in a good mood would take Christ 5. The Will must be true and free excluding servile Fear in perillous Necessities or at times of Death c. It is the Righteousness of Faith by which alone men can be saved now in the time of the Gospel which Position may be opened by the Answers made to these six Questions viz. 1. How this Righteousness of God saves Ans As Adams Unrighteousness condemns 2. How it is offered to us Ans By free gift as the Father gives his Land 3. To whom it is offered Ans To all that will accept it 4. Vpon what Qualifications Ans None as proexistent 5. How it is made ours Ans By Faith applying it to our selves 6. What is required of us when we have it Ans 1. To love Christ 2. To Repent 3. To part with all for him 4. To suffer for him 5. To do for him The reasons why the Righteousness of God is ours by Gift viz. 1. That no man might boast in himself but he that rejoyceth may rejoyce in the Lord. 2. That men may learn to depend upon God for it who will have no man challenge it as due for it is a meer Grace Rom. 4.16 3. That it might be sure to all the Seed even to Gentile as well as to Jew There is a double consideration to be had of Faith viz. 1. As it works As a Quality and so it hath nothing to do with Justification 2. As it Receives As an Instrument So it justifies and that not by altering the nature of sin that is by making sin to be no sin but by taking away the efficacy of sin that it doth not condemn us Daniels Lyons were Lyons still though God at that time took their fierceness from them
and so was it with Pauls Viper Faiths double Act 1. The Direct Act of Faith by which we apprehend and take Christ 2. The Reflect Act by which we know and are assured that we have apprehended and taken Christ Faith hath also this double Quality 1. To lay hold of Christ offered 2. To empty a man of all things else whatsoever especially 1. Of all opinion of Righteousness in himself 2. Of all opinion of strength and ability to help himself Faith admits Degrees in four respects viz. 1. In Perswasion That Christ is offered that he is ours that he is given by God the Father 2. In regard of the difficulty and hardness of the things to be believed 3. In regard of the Extent of it when there are more things revealed to us 4. In regard of the Proof and here as the Evidence of Sanctification is more so is the Assurance Opinion is but an Assent to the Truth with a fear lest the contrary may be true So that Faith and Opinion differ in these three things 1. In the Object which is something in its own nature uncertain but Faith pitcheth upon the Word of God which is in its own nature infallible and cannot deceive 2. In the working Opinion being a matter of Speculation and no more Faith a matter of Practice but that is not all 3. In overcoming Doubts for Opinion goeth no farther but stays in a Doubt but Faith proceeds to full Assurance To be rooted and grounded in Faith is To have the first ground right and so to proceed from one to another As thus 1. Stedfastly to believe the Scriptures in general 2. All the Promises therein contained in particular 3. To apply and appropriate them to our selves justly and upon good ground No man knoweth what Justifying Faith is but he that hath it whose true Properties are these 1. He being convicted thereof in his Conscience knoweth that whatsoever things are spoken in the Scriptures are true and Divine 2. He findeth himself bound to believe them 3. He is certain That through Christs Satisfaction he is received of God into favor and is endowed with the Holy Ghost and is by him regenerated and directed 4. He applyeth to himself all those things concluding that they belong unto him 5. He rejoyceth in the present Blessings which he hath but most of all in the certain and perfect Salvation to come And this is that peace of Conscience which passeth all Understanding 6. He hath a Will to obey the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles without any exception in doing or suffering whatsoever is therein commanded 7. He is certain that his Faith though it be in this life imperfect and languishing and often very much eclipsed yet being builded upon the Promise of God which is unchangeable doth never altogether fail or dye Faith is said to work four ways viz. Towards 1. God by a quiet and peaceable Conscience grounded on Gods love Rom. 5.1 2. Our Neighbor by mutual concord especially in matters of Religion Acts 1.14 3. Our selves by Patience with joy and thankfulness in Afflictions Rom. 5.3 4. 4. The Devil and the World by victory over their Assaults and Temptations 2 Joh. 5.4 5. 1 Pet. 5.8 9. The work of Faith towards God 1. Peace in Conscience from our Reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 2. Love towards God and Christ Luke 7.47 3. Hope of the Glory of the Sons of God in the world to come and joy in troubles Rom. 5.3 4. Boldness to speak unto God grounded on a sure confidence in him Eph. 3.12 5. A Confession of the Truth 2 Cor. 4.13 Rom. 10.10 6. Obedience to God Rom. 1.5 for which Abraham is chronicled as the Father of the Faithful 7. A Perseverance and Constancy in the Truth of Christ Joh. 6.68 And a commending of our Souls to God Acts 7.59 The work of Faith towards our neighbors 1. A knitting of the mindes of men one towards another Acts 1.14 2. It extendeth Brotherly love even to our Enemies 1 Tim. 1.6 The work of Faith towards our selves viz. 1. It makes us entertain with joy and thankfulness Gods loving Chastisements Rom. 5.3 4. 2. A Resting upon his Providence and Promises for Blessings Temporal and Spiritual Mat. 6.25 3. It affects our hearts with comfort strengthning them against all troubles Joh. 14.1 4. It worketh in us a hatred of sin and of our former ways with shame and grief Joh. 12.46 A thing may be said not to be done of Faith three ways viz. 1. Conscientia Dubitante when a thing is done with a doubting or unresolved Conscience as in those that are weak in knowledge 2. Conscientia Errante thus the Mass-Priest sinneth in saying Mass though in his Conscience he think it the Ordinance of God 3. Conscientia Repugnante though upon Error and false judgement of the Conscience it is in the doer a sin Thus an Anabaptist that holds it unlawful to Swear sinneth if he take an Oath In what sense Faith is called Effectual 1. When it does its proper Office or Function namely To Take Christ 2. When it is true real and substantial when it is opposed to vain Faith 3. When it is an operative lively stirring and a fruitful Faith 4. When it goes thorough with the work in hand that is when it Sanctifieth the heart throughout in respect of parts and throughout in regard of time when it brings a man to the end of his Salvation when it carries a man through all impediments when it leaps over all difficulties a growing pervailing overcoming Faith Wherein the Effectualness of Faith consists viz. 1. In being well built that is when the preparation is sound and full by Humiliation 2. When a man believes the Promises on sure infallible grounds and sees them distinctly 3. When the Will takes Christ out of love to him not his not out of fear nor out of mistake 4. When it turns not onely the Will but all the Affections when it turns the whole man when it shoots it self into life and practice The Causes of Uneffectual Faith viz. 1. The Taking of Christ upon misinformation without due consideration 2. The Taking Christ out of fear not out of true love to him as men in sickness 3. The taking Christ for the love of the good things by him not of his person 4. Want of Humiliation that should go before it 5. Because Faith is not grounded aright when men falsly take to themselves a perswasion of the Remission of their sins upon an uncertain and wrong ground The Reasons why God accepts no Faith but such as is Effectual 1. Because otherwise it is not Faith for it is dead 2. Other Faith hath no Love which condition is required 3. Other Faith the Devils have for they believe and tremble 4. Else it works no Mortification for we must deny our selves 5. Else Christ should lose the end of his coming into the world 6. Because good Works are the way to Salvation The usual means that
the order of Justice on the person guilty of sin And this is proper unto the Reprobate because it is inflicted on them to this end That Gods Justice may be satisfied for the Law bindeth all men either to Obedience or to Punishment Now the wicked despairing of the Mercy of God murmure at his Justice and are even mad with impatience when his inflicting Scourge is on them but the godly kiss his Rod and in patience possess their Souls resting on the Promises of God This is that which sets them at liberty in the dungeon makes them run the paths of Gods Commandments even when Irons manacle them makes them go chearfully to the Faggot and embrace the Flame makes them smile at the frowns of their Persecutors and in an holy patience makes them as it were anticipate Death by dying to all impatience that when it comes indeed they may be said rather to be changed then dye And indeed this one Consideration How that those that persecute the Saints here would undoubtedly persecute Christ himself were he now upon Earth is sufficient of it self to support the Spirits of any that now are or may be under Persecution beside the consideration that God will as undoubtedly deliver his to his glory and their advantage as he permits Persecution to befal them We have need of Patience for these two Reasons 1. Because there are so many Mockers and Scoffers at our Profession Luke 21.17 2. Because the Object of our Hope is of things invisible Rom. 8.25 The Signs or Properties of Patience 1. A heart resolved to abide whatsoever is laid upon us whether it be for sin or for tryal 2. When we suffering and suffering much do yet never cease to love the Lord who striketh us 3. Humility and humbling our selves under his blows and strokes laid upon us 4. Chearfulness and Joy in Suffering when we are so far from murmuring under it that we rejoyce in it Patience must have her perfect work James 1.4 which work is said to be perfect in these three respects viz. 1. In respect of the Condition it must be true hearty and sound not feigned and counterfeit Luke 21.19 2. In respect of the Extent it must reach to all maner of Crosses heavy and light inward and outward at home and abroad whether they come from the Devil or any of his wicked Instruments or from God himself and his own hand of what kinde quality quantity soever they be 2 Cor. 6.4 3. In respect of the Continuance it must endure unto the end not onely unto the end of that Affliction which lieth upon us but also to the end of our life so as we must both patiently bear the present and also prepare our selves for future Crosses Mat. 10.22 Necessary it is that Patience have this perfect work in us and that for these Reasons viz. 1. The Crosses whereunto we are subject are not troubles in shew and appearance onely but such as pierce both Body and Soul Therefore counterfeit Patience will stand us in no stead 2. The Number of Tryals whereunto we may be brought is uncertain one calamity upon another as Waves may fall upon us therefore the extent of our Patience need be very great 3. It is Uncertain how long we shall be subject to Tryals because the continuance of our life is uncertain therefore there is a Necessity in it that our Patience continue unto the end for while we are in this world the field of the Lords Battel the Enemy will assault us The good which God aymeth at and effecteth by those Troubles he inflicteth on his children which should incite us to Patience 1. The Preventing of some great Mischief and Evil 2 Cor. 12.7 2. The Purging out of some festering poysonsom sin 2 Chron. 33.12 3. The Upholding and keeping us safe and stedfast in the right way Heb. 12.10 11. 4. The Proof and Tryal of such Gifts and Graces as he hath bestowed on us 1 Pet. 4.12 The Saints must possess their Souls in Patience from the consideration of those Ends which God hath in afflicting them As 1. His own Glory Joh. 9.3 2 Cor. 12.9 2. The Edification of others Eph. 3.1 3. Their own good 1. By preventing 2 Cor. 12.7 or curing some dangerous disease Psal 119.67 2. To manifest the Grace of God bestowed on them Job 1.12 3. To draw them nearer to God Hos 5.15 4. To make them long the more for heaven 2 Cor. 5.2 5. To lead them by this Correction as it were by the hand to Repentance 6. To try and exercise their Faith Invocation of Gods Name Patience c. 7. To breed in them a loathing of worldly and a love of heavenly things 8. To shake off their over-much carefulness for outward things 9. To suppress and amend the viciousness ingrafted in their Nature 10. To save them from being condemned with the world So likewise doth God suffer his Church to be under the Cross and afflicted for these special Reasons 1. The more to manifest his Pity Power Providence and Truth in keeping promise 2. That the Members thereof by their Afflictions may be acquainted with their own wants and infirmities which they would not much regard were they freed from the Cross 3. That by Affliction they may be kept from many grievous sins into which they might otherwise fall 4. That others seeing the Correction of the Church for sin may learn thereby to hate and avoid sin 5. To wean them the better from the world Much prosperity makes us resemble the fool spoken of Luke 12.19 6. To make Heaven the more longed for while we are on earth and the more acceptable when we come to possess it like Victory after a tedious and dangerous Combat 7. That the Church may glorifie God in a constant and couragious maintenance of the Truth unto death for even in persecution is Gods Truth preserved against the Reason of mans Wisdom The Reasons of the worlds Hatred to Gods Church may be these 1. The Church of God in the Ministery of the Gospel seeks the ruine of the Devils Kingdom who is the Prince of the World the Devil therefore rageth and inflames the hearts of his Instruments with malice against Gods Church that they may quite destroy it if it were possible 2. Gods Church is a peculiar people severed from the world in their Profession Doctrine and Conversation and therefore the world hates them Joh. 15.16 and this the world will do to the end thereof The Cross is the Affliction of the godly but not properly a punishment and is of four sorts viz. 1. The Chastisements for the remnants of sin in them and oftentimes for peculiar sins committed by them that they may see their uncleanness and repent 2. The Proofs and Tryals of their Faith Hope Invocation Fear of God and Patience 3. Martyrdoms which are Testifications concerning their Doctrine delivered others 4. The Cross is their Ransome even the obedience of Christ alone The causes of the Affliction of
Scripture 1. For the thing hoped for Tit. 2.13 Eph. 1.18 2. It signifies the person we hope in Psal 46.1 3. It is taken for the Object of our hope which is onely good things to come Col. 1.5 4. For the certainty of future glory Rom. 5.4 5. 5. It is taken for a Theological vertue by which we hope 1 Cor. 13.13 Hope is twofold 1. Counterfeit as 1. Such as Papists have grounded upon their own Merits not on God 2. Deceitful such as ignorant Christians on their Death-beds presume to have 3. Of those who put their hope in men wealth c. or partly in these partly in God 2. True sound and saving which is the gift of God wrought in our hearts by his Spirit that we being perswaded by Faith of Gods Goodness Truth Fidelity and Power do wait with patience for the fulfilling of his Promises especially that main Promise of Salvation in the life to come The grounds of Hope are the full perswasion of 1. The goodness of God which is 1. General to all to just and unjust Psal 145.9 1. Special whereby in a more special maner he is good to the faithful which is 1. Unchangeable Rom. 11.29 2. Invincible the Devil nor his Instruments cannot hinder it 3. Everlasting because it never fadeth but endureth for ever 2. The Truth of God which is considered 1. In God himself 3 ways 1. In his Essence by which he is truly Existent 2. In Quality by which all spoken of him in Scripture is most true 3. In Operation by which all his works are agreeable to his Nature most truly good void of all falshood Rev. 15.3 Psal 111.7 2. In his Word which is most pure and holy as himself it is Truth it self Joh. 17.17 For it is 1. The Word of God who is Truth it self 2. It containeth no falshood onely that which is true 3. It is a special means to bring us to the knowledge of the Truth 3. The fidelity and faithfulness of God Psal 89.34.28 Tit. 1.9 4. The Power and Omnipotency of God being able to perform his Promise Rom. 4.21 To the right maner of the exercise of Hope is required 1. Patience towards God and man Luke 21.19 Heb. 10.36 2. Assurance it is Faith and Hope's nature to be certain we must hope assuredly for the Promise Thus Abraham Rom. 4.20.21 3. Earnestness which is a fervent desire of the Soul looking and earnestly expecting the day of Christ and the accomplishment of the Promise 4. Chearfulness which is an inward rejoycing in the heart proceeding from the perswasion of participation of Celestial glory in the world to come 5. Continuance and perseverance even in the midst of the most dangerous and comfortless Afflictions Isa 26.4 Our Hope must be stedfast immoveable and continual for these Reasons 1. Because the Malice of the Wicked the Temptations of Satan the Scoffs in the World and the Corruption of our Nature are continually seeking our destruction 1 Pet. 5.8 9. 2. Because the Lord hath given us the Victory over Sin Death and Hell through our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 15.17 18. 3. Because the Promise is made to none but those that endure and hold out unto the end Mat. 24.13 4. Because unless our hope be constant we are none of Gods children none of his Spiritual Temple neither doth God dwell in our hearts by his Spirit Heb. 3.6 Hope is the Helmet of Salvation 1 Thess 5.8 which is thus applied to Hope for these Reasons 1. Because Salvation is the main end of our Hope that which above all other things we wait for when we come to the possession of it then hath Hope her end and period 2. Because it is a special means of attaining to Salvation we are saved by Hope Rom. 2.24 This is that Cord whereby we hold fast to all Gods Promises which will not be let go until we enjoy Salvation 3. Because it herein differs from the Hope of Worldlings which reacheth no further then to the things of this life therefore when they dye their hope perisheth Prov. 11.17 The two special and principal Properties of Hope viz. 1. Assurance in regard whereof Hope maketh not ashamed Rom. 5.5 Disappointeth not therefore it is worthily termed The Anchor of the Soul both sure and stedfast Heb. 6.19 2. Patience for if we hope for that we see not we do with patience wait for the accomplishment of it Rom. 8.25 1 Thess 1.3 Some men have neither Faith Hope nor Fear as 1. Atheists that have some vain Hope but no Fear 2. Devils and desperate men that have some Fear but no Hope 3. Presumptuous men who have but a shadow of Faith How Hope is gotten preserv'd and well used 1. It is gotten by the same means that Faith is for it is the Daughter of Faith The means which beget Faith do immediately hereupon beget Hope 2. It is preserv'd 1. By a due consideration and full perswasion of Gods Promises As 1. His Free-grace 2. His Infinite Power 3. His Infallible Truth 4. His Unsearchable Wisdom 2. By a faithful Remembrance of Gods former dealings specially with our selves whereof we have two notable Examples one of Jacob Gen. 32.10 the other of David 1 Sam. 17.37 3. It is well used 1. By casting the Anchor of Hope on a sure ground Heb. 6.19 which is Gods Promise revealed in his Word 2. By fast fixing it on that sure ground that is when his Promises are stedfastly believed 3. By often setting and fixing it anew by oft renewing the hold that is by meditating again and again in those Promises which we have known and believed and oft calling to minde Gods former benefits and performance of his Promises Hope is very necessary in these four respects 1. In regard of the time which God hath set down for the accomplishment of his Promises which time is oft both unknown and long dated though the time be of God certainly determined so as it cannot be prevented Joh. 7.30 nor shall be over-passed Heb. 2.3 yet it is not always made known unto us Mat. 13.32 Acts 1.7 2. In regard of those many troubles and perplexities which do fall out betwixt the making and accomplishing of Gods Promises Israel may be a sad witness hereof ere they enjoyed the promised Canaan 3. In regard of the Scoffs and Reproaches of the wicked as when the accomplishment of the Promises is deferred 2 Pet. 3.4 also in time of Affliction Psal 42.10 and in the extremity of Affliction Psa 3.2 4. In regard of our own weakness for we are very prone by Nature to think That God remembers not his Promises especially if he delay their accomplishment or bring us to any straights and seem to hide his face God draweth the Will to Take Christ and so the Mind to Hope in the Promises by these 3 means viz. 1. By being perswaded what the miserable condition of man is that is not yet come to Christ that is not yet in him nor partaker of
his Benefits 2. By the good that we shall get by it 3. That he shall not lose his labor if he do attempt it Now Faith onely applies the Promises with boldness but we are not affected with Spiritual Priviledges because we look on them with a general eye as matters of fancy and speculation because we see no such thing we have no feeling of them And the Promises of God are always to be understood with an Exception of the Cross of the godly and of the punishments and chastisements of such as depart from God and Sin or with a condition of perseverance in Faith and godliness When thou seest that thou hast put thy Seal to the Truth that thou believest the Promises and hopest in them then consider whether God hath put his Seal to thee Now we must know that there is a double Seal 1. Secret that is the Secret Witness that God gives to every mans heart as a Privy-Seal that God sets on it 2. A more Open one in life and conversation whereby he enables us to depart from iniquity 2 Tim. 2.29 Hope and Faith differ 1. In their Order Faith is first for it bringeth forth Hope Faith is the ground of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 2. In the kinde of Object Faith is of things past Heb. 11.3 and present Joh. 20.19 Hope onely of things to come 3. In their Nature Faith believeth the very Truth of Gods Promises and sealeth that God is true Hope waiteth till God manifest and accomplish his Truth In like maner Hope and Presumption differ Now Presumption may be these four ways 1. When men live in their sins without Faith and Repentance presuming of the Mercy of God and because God is merciful they take occasion to sin more freely 2. When men perswade themselves they hope in God when indeed they do not perswading themselves upon no ground That they live in expectation of the life to come being destitute of saving Knowledge Faith and Repentance 3. When men live in sin thinking afterwards to convert themselves when they list 4. When men presuming too much on their own power and strength even after Conversion think they stand so fast they cannot fall The Signs of found Hope 1. A purging of our selves to resemble God in purity 1 Joh. 3.3 2. True filial fear of God Psal 147.11 3. A weaning our selves from the most desireable outward things of this life and that for these Reasons viz. 1. They cannot possibly fill the unlimited desire of the Soul 2. They cannot secure the Conscience distressed with the apprehension of the Wrath of God or prevent his Judgements 3. They cannot stretch themselves unto Eternity 4. A Rejoycing for the Salvation in the last day and in this Joy a Delight in the means as the Word and Sacraments Prayer good and godly men c. Motives to labor for true Hope viz. 1. The Commandment of God and the Admonition to Hope so frequently multiplied in the holy Scripture Psal 42.5 43.5 37.34 7. 27.14 2. The Excellency of Hope for God himself is called The God of Hope Rom. 15.13 it is also called Blessed Hope Tit. 2.13 3. The Profit of this Grace of Hope as Piety 1 Joh. 3.3 Comfort in affliction Phil. 1.21 23. Blessedness Psal 146.5 4. The Necessity of it for without it we Christians were of all men the most miserable 1 Cor. 15.19 The means to attain unto Hope viz. 1. Diligent and fervent prayer to God Eph. 1.18 2. We must labor for a full perswasion of the Goodness Truth Fidelity and Power of God towards us Rom. 15.13 3. We must labor to have a true experience of Gods love and favor towards us 1 Sam. 17.31 unto 51. 4. We must put upon us the whole Armor of God Eph. 6.11 12 c. 5. We must be often conversant in Reading Hearing Conferring and Meditating on the Scripture Rom. 5.4 The Vices repugnant to Hope and forbidden in this Commandment viz. 1. Despair which is to esteem our sins to be greater then the merit of the Son of God and to refuse the Mercy of God offered in his Son the Mediator and therefore not to look for those Blessings which are promised unto the godly but to be tormented with an horrible sense and feeling of Gods wrath and with a fear of being hereafter cast away into everlasting pains and to stand in horror of God and to hate him as if he were cruel 2. A Doubting of the Blessings to come which are expressed in the Word as of everlasting life and of final perseverance This Doubtfulness neither stedfastly assenteth to the Doctrine of God nor altogether gainsays it but being floating and wavering hath a weak inclination now to one part and now to another 3. Carnal Security which is To live without thinking of God or his Will or of our own infirmity and dangers and without acknowledging or bewailing of our sins and without the fear of God and yet to promise unto our selves an indempnity from the anger of God and from punishment without Faith or Repentance Suppose the World a Sea on whose uneven Tempestuous Waves sails Man that 's bound for Heaven Whose Vnderstanding at the Rudder stands To dictate to the Will what she commands Th' Affections who Vsurper-like do sway Command and Rule that Power they should obay Whereby the Vessel oft miscarries and The Fraught of Graces swallowed in the sand When Romes Euroclidons from Hell are sent Faith's shipwrack'd ' less Hopes Anchor doth prevent §. 6. Of Love THe Love of God is a most upright affection of the Minde by which God is loved for himself and our Neighbor for God which Love is grounded on Gods love to us 1 Joh. 4.19 Indeed Love is nothing else but a disposition of the Will whereby it cleaves or makes forward to some good that is agreeable to it self yea all the Affections are nothing else but the diverse motions and turnings of the Will Now Love is that act of the Will whereby it turns it self to a thing as Hatred is that whereby it turns it self from a thing And the object of Love is somewhat that is good not that is True or that is Beautiful for this is onely the object of the intuitive understanding So that to love the Lord is not onely required That we be perswaded that he is well-affected to us That he is willing to receive us but also that we look on him as one that is suitable and agreeable to us And indeed that is the main the other will follow easily Hence men may have a perswasion of their sins forgiveness and yet want true Faith for that which begets not Love is not Faith Now a man may have that perswasion of Christ yet not love Christ as a Prisoner may of the Judge yet not love the Judge for love comes from some suitableness some agreeableness between the parties but when a man is humbled and looks on Christ and again is perswaded that Christ looks
20.6 or the holy Names therein to Conjuration 10. By teaching falsly in the Name of the Lord as the false Prophets did saying Thus saith the Lord. 11. By ascribing Power Greatness c. to our selves as Nebuchadnezzar Herod and the Princes of Tyre did Dan. 4. Acts 12. Jer. 27. 7. Vain Protestations and Asseverations that is the needless use of them when some earnest occasion doth not urge hereunto Against those as against Swearing doth Christ direct his speech Mat. 5.37 That our Swearing may be lawful it is required 1. That we Swear onely to such a Truth as we know to be so for although it be a Truth to which we Swear yet if we know it not so to be we are perjured because we Swear contrary to our Conscience 2. That we Swear according to the known intent of him unto whom or before whom we Swear for if we Swear in doubtful words having another meaning then we know him to have before whom we Swear we abuse the Ordinance of God 3. This being a part of Gods Worship we must do it with great fear and reverence 4. We must Swear onely things lawful and possible otherwise we but mock God who cannot be mocked 5. If we Swear for the performance of any lawful thing by the Assistance of God we must be careful our Oath be not frustrated The Vertue of this Commandment consisteth in the right and honorable usage of Gods Name the parts whereof were formerly named but here explained viz. 1. The Propagation and spreading abroad of Gods true Doctrine not that onely by the publike Ministery of the Word but that instituting and instructing which appertaineth to every one privately in his place being bound to bring others to the knowledge and Worship of God Deut. 4.9 2. The Celebration lauding and magnifying of God which is a commemoration and recounting of Gods Works and Properties joyned with a love and admiration of them 3. The Confession of the Truth which we know concerning God which is the shewing of our judgement and opinion concerning God and his Will certainly known out of his Word Rom. 10.10 4. The Zeal of God which is an ardent love of God and a grief for any reproach or contempt which is done to God and an endeavor to put away that reproach from the Name of God and to avoid sins our selves and to banish them from others 5. Invocation which is Prayer whereby we crave of the true God none other blessings then God hath commanded us to ask of him onely made in true Conversion by Faith and in a full perswasion of Gods Promises for the Mediators sake Psal 105.1 6. Thanksgiving which is to acknowledge what and how great Blessings we have received of God and to yield unfeigned Obedience unto him to the utmost of our power Col. 3.17 1 Thess 5.18 7. Right and lawful Swearing the maner whereof hath been already touch'd and yet remains to be further opened Again Gods Name is honored 1. By our deeds of Piety Praying Reading Hearing Preaching c. also of Charity 2 Cor. 8.19 And when we confess and defend it as the Martyrs did Now that our deeds may be good these Properties are required 1. They must be frequent and often 2. They must be done in sincerity and truth that is from the very heart with an aim at this onely end That God may have glory 3. In Faith that is by persons believing and in assurance of being accepted in all our devotion Heb. 11.6 4. The Doer must be separate from sin that is not live impenitently in or make a trade of any sin 2. By our speech as herein we are priviledged beyond all other earthly Creatures And this is the right use of the tongue as 1. When our talk is not corrupt but tending to the edification of others 2. When we speak Reverently of the Name of God Phil. 2.10 3. When in all things we make Conscience of speaking the Truth Josh 7.19 4. When an Oath is rightly taken or a Vow rightly made for this is a special part of Gods Service Deut. 6.13 Jer. 4.1 5. When we speak of the Word of God to edification Psal 37.3 Deut. 6.7 6. When we speak affectionately and thankfully of the Works of God to others Psal 107.8 yea of his Judgements upon our selves Job 1.11 3. In the Thoughts and Desires of our hearts which is when even here we are enslamed with a love and reverence of his holy Name and do burn with a desire of his glory above all things Without this the outward reverence is nothing at all in Gods acceptation 4. When we labor to bring others to the glorifying of Gods Name Matth. 5.16 extending our care to others by all means possible and lawful to win them to the praise and glory of God Christian Confession of the Truth being also a special vertue of this Commandment as whereby Gods Name is highly honored is twofold 1. Open when a man boldly confesseth the Truth or his Faith before the Adversary even to the death This is the highest degree of Confession 2. Implicite when a man to keep his Religion is content to forsake his Countrey Friends and Goods This is a lower degree thereof yet acceptable to God Two special Times in which Confession of our Faith is to be made 1. When we are examined touching our Religion by them that are in Authority 2. When in the want thereof Gods glory is directly impeached the Salvation of men hindred the Truth obscured Error enboldned and our Neighbor offended Unto the Confession of the truth and consequently to this Commandment is repugnant 1. Denial which is 1. An universal and general Defection from true Religion This Denyal is proper only to Reprobates and Hypocrites 2. Special and Particular committed through error not voluntary neither purposed through fear and humane frailty This may happen to a childe of God as in Peter When a man is forced to deny his Religion his offence in deed and in truth is voluntary though some otherwise think it to be a mixed action for compulsion doth not reach to the Will but to the outward man and serves to draw forth a consent and when consent is yielded he denies his Religion voluntarily for voluntas non potest cogi 2. Dissimulation or Dissembling and hiding of the Truth when as Gods glory and our Neighbors safety requireth a Confession thereof Hereof are they guilty who out of novelty curiosity or for fashions sake dare be present at Idolatrous Service for it is not lawful for any man being urged to go to Idol-Service and hear Mass though he keep his heart unto God The Corinths might not go into the Temple of Idols though not partaking with Idolaters in their Worship 1 Cor. 8. Chap. 10. 3. The abusing of Christian liberty or giving offence in things indifferent to confirm errors in the mindes of the Adversaries or of the weak to alienate them from true Religion Rom. 14.15 4. All Scandals and
Offences given in Maners when as they which profess true Religion lead lewd and wicked lives and thereby deny what they profess Rom. 2.24 5. Unlawful Christian slight in time of Persecution for though in some cases it may be lawful yet is Subjection simply to be yielded to the punishment of Magistrates for the better witnessing of the Truth though we do not alway tender obedience to their Commands Now to a lawful Christian flight in time of Persecution by a Minister of Gods Word or any other man whatsoever are required these eight Conditions that Gods Name may not be dishonored nor this Commandment broken viz. 1. When there is no hope of doing good by his abode in that place where the Persecution is but otherwise he may fly 2. If the Persecution be personal that is directed against his person particularly then he may use his liberty Publike Persecution is directed against the whole Church 3. If there be in the Pastor a moderation of minde for he must neither be overcome with excessive fear nor through over-much confidence 4. That the Pastor withdraw himself onely for a time not utterly forsake his Charge unless his person be chiefly aymed at in the Persecution 5. If after due tryal and examination he finde not himself sufficiently armed with strength to resist the Extremity 6. If he be expelled or banished by the Magistrate though the Cause be unjust 7. If God offer a lawful way or means of escape and does as it were open a door and give just opportunity to fly 8. If the Danger be not onely suspected surmised and seen afar off but certain and present That we may the better know how to avoid the dishonoring of Gods name by our unlawful flight take notice of the principal signs thereof 1. When God puts into a mans heart the Spirit of Courage and Fortitude whereby he is resolved to abide and stand out against the force of all enemies 2. When a man is apprehended and under the custody of the Magistrate 3. When a man is bound by his Calling or Ministery so as in it he may glorifie God and do good to his Church then he may not fly 4. When God in his Providence cuts off all lawful means and ways of escape he doth then as it were bid that man stay and abide Gods Name is most commonly abused by Swearing we will therefore now speak of Oathes and in the first place know that they are of two sorts 1. Of things past for the discovery of Truth 2. Of things to come for binding a Promise which if made unto God is called a Vow This will be touch'd in the close of this Commandment In an Oath which is of things past three circumstances are required without which the Oath is sinful and vain 1. That the thing whereupon we are about to Swear be not onely true but also that the Truth thereof be certainly known unto us 2. That the thing be of some weight as well to the glory of God as to the love of our Neighbor 3. That the Truth of that thing by any other means cannot be brought to light for otherwise the very Name of God is contemptuously used In an Oath respecting things to come are these five things to be observed 1. That the thing be of some importance for the reverence we have of God 2. That it be just and lawful that we call not God to witness what is contrary to himself 3. That it be in our power else we swear madly or hypocritically 4. That it be of things certain lest we swear with an evil conscience 5. That in time we perform it indeed though it should be never so much to our loss and hindrance There are four distinct things in every Oath 1. An Asseveration of the Truth 2. A Confession of the Omnipotent Presence Wisdom Justice and Truth of God 3. Invocation on God to give Testimony to the Conscience of the Swearer that he speaks but Truth 4. Imprecation whereby man bindes himself to punishment if he swears falsly That we may be careful as it is our duty to use an Oath aright we must consider these six particulars therein viz. 1. What an Oath is It is a solemn Appealing to God whereby we testifie that we speak Truth 2. Who is the Author of it That is God himself by whom alone we are to Swear 3. The parts of an Oath whereof it consisteth viz. 1. Confirmation of a Truth that cannot else be known but by our Oath 2. Invocation of Gods Name who is witness of the Truth and a Judge to be avenged of us if we lye 3. Confession that God punisheth Perjury either expressed or implied openly or secretly which Confession is threefold 1. A man confesses that which he swears is true in his Conscience 2. That God is a witness not onely of his outward action and speech but also of his particular Conscience 3. That God is an Omnipotent Judge of all and of him that sweareth able to justifie him if he swear truly or to condemn him eternally if otherwise 4. An Obligation binding us to the punishment if we perform not the Condition 5. Imprecation or Prayer to God for these two things 1. That God would be a witness with him that sweareth to testifie that he sweareth truly and according to his Conscience So did Paul Rom. 9.1 2. That God would become a Judge to curse him with eternal death if he sweareth falsly 2 Cor. 1.23 4. The form or maner that is to be observed in our Swearing that is 1. In Truth lest we make God a lyar which respecteth two things 1. The matter whereto we swear for God may not be called to be a witness to a lye 2. The minde of him that sweareth for his Oath must be according to his minde without fraud or deceit with intent to perform his Promises 2. In Justice or Righteousness lest we commit impiety which also respecteth two things 1. The thing sworn to which must be just and lawful and according to Gods Word 2. The Conscience of the Swearer for a man must not swear for a Trifle though the thing be true but either by the Authority of the Magistrate or upon some necessary occurrent of his lawful Calling for light matters are not a just cause of an Oath 3. In Judgement lest he be rash and heady even in so weighty a matter I say in Judgement 1. Of the Oath to know the nature of an Oath and to be able to judge of the matter whereabout he sweareth and also to discern rightly of the persons before whom of time place and other circumstances 2. Of his own Person to see in his Conscience whether he be fit to take an Oath and thereby to worship and glorifie God for the Fear of God and Swearing by his Name are joyned together Deut. 10.20 So that a prophane man that hath not the fear of God in his heart ought not to Swear 5. The Ends of an oath
5. It is against the Rule of Charity To do unto others as we would be done unto And this Rule is the best Remedy against it 6. It is the Badge and Cognizance of the Devil 7. It renders us unfit for the performance of holy Duties 8. It lays us open to the envy and hatred of other men 9. Because it impairs the constitution of our natural strength for although it ever levels the dart of mischief against others yet it still wounds it self even the very heart Remedies to keep us from envying the good of others viz. 1. Let us labor for Christian Charity and deck our selves with lowliness of minde that we may banish Pride and Self-love Phil. 2.3 Charity and Humility tempered well together makes an excellent Preservative against this fretting Malady 2. Be well contented with Gods Administration of Temporal Blessings Spiritual and Temporal that we do not any way charge him with folly who is Wisdom it self or with partiality who respecteth no mans person 3. To cast our eyes upon the troubles as well as the comforts our Brethren enjoy that the consideration of the one may with-hold us from grudging at the sight of the other 4. To mark that the Gifts of others are for our benefit as the good of one member of the body serveth for the use of another then we are enemies to our selves to repine at that which others have 5. To pray to God for the obtaining of his Graces where we see them wanting and for the encrease of them where they are obtained and for the continuance of them where they are encreased 6. To love the Graces of God wheresoever we see them yea even in our enemies Godly men may lawfully go to war without the guilt of Murther or breach of this Commandment and that for these Reasons viz. 1. God commands it Deut. 7.2 therefore does allow it as just and lawful for he doth not will things because they are just but they are just because he willeth them 2. As God gave Commandment expresly so the people going forth to Battel were to call upon him for a Blessing and to sanctifie the work by Prayer and in so doing have been heard 1 Chron. 5.19 therefore War and true Religion may well stand together 3. God himself takes order to have a muster taken of all such as are able to bear Arms Numb 1.2 3. Therefore the Anabaptists are not infallible As the godly may lawfully go to War so they must be careful to observe such conditions as make it lawful and allowable As 1. It must be Proclaimed by the chief Magistrate and such as have Authority otherwise it is private Revenge not publike Justice 2. Conditions of Peace are to be offered and such as yield thereto are to be received to mercy Deut. 20.10 11 12 13 14. 3. Keep all lawful Promises even to the Enemy being a sign of an upright heart Joh. 6.22 4. The Ends of our Wars must be Holy and Religious not Tyranny not Vain-glory but to maintain the honor and glory of God to defend the Church and Commonwealth from violence and invasion and to Establish Truth Peace and Concord in our Borders 5. We must not suffer lewd and wicked persons incorrigible and unreformable to remain in the Host of God who may endanger the whole Host and bring the curse of God upon them Deut. 23.9 10. Joh. 7.11 12. 22.20 6. It behoveth us to put our Trust in God alone to depend upon him to pray unto him and to look for safety and help from him Jer. 17.5 7. No man should go to War but with grief of minde and sorrow of heart for though the War be lawful yet when the Enemies are slain in Battel it is a defiling of mens hands and a defacing of Gods Image Gen. 9.6 1 Chron. 22.8 8. The Army is to be ordered in such Military Discipline as that it break not out to endamage or destroy those whom they ought above all to protect and defend He breaks this Commandment 1. That thinks but a thought in his heart tending to the hurt of his Neighbors life 2. That bears malice to another 1 Joh. 3.15 or is given to hastiness Mat. 5.22 3. That useth inward fretting and grudging Jam. 3.14 or is froward of nature hard to please Rom. 1.30 4. That is full of rancor or bitterness Eph. 4.31 or derides and scorns others Gen. 21.9 Gal. 4.29 5. That useth bitterwords and railings Prov. 12.18 or contending by words or deeds Gal. 5.20 6. That is a fighter Jam. 4.1 and hurts or maims his Neighbors body Exod. 21.24 7. That will not forgive an offence Mat. 5.23 or that seeks private Revenge 8. That doth fare well himself but gives not Alms to relieve the Poor Luke 16.19 9. That useth cruelty in punishing Malefactors Deut. 22.26 10. That denies the Servants or Laborers Wages Jam. 5.4 or that holds back the Pledge Ezek. 18.7 11. That sells by divers weights and measures or that removes the Land-mark Prov. 22.28 12. That moves contention and debate Rom. 1.29 or that by his looseness of life occasions others to sin 13. That being a Minister Teacheth erroneously or slackly Jer. 48.10 or that Teacheth not at all 1 Tim. 3.2 or that hinders mens Salvation any way Mat. 23.13 14. That gives his goods upon Usury which is simply to binde a man to return both the Principal and the Encrease onely for the Loan Ezek 18.18 Thou seest how many ways a man may be Guilty hereof and how in each degree How Thoughts of Hatred may prevail so far T' ensnare the Heart to be a Murtheree How stern and austere Looks which strangely fly Like Arrows shot speak Murther in the Eye And how the Tongue that sharp-edg'd member may The harmless Innocent untimely slay How that Injustice and Revenge both give A mortal Wound Then let thy Brother live The Seventh Commandment Thou shalt not commit Adultery IN this Commandment God forbiddeth all Vices repugnant to Chastity and such as are of near affinity unto them likewise their causes occasions effects antecedents consequents And on the contrary he commandeth all things tending to the preservation of Chastity We are here commanded to behave our selves rightly in the principal outward comfort that belongs to our Neighbor which is his Wife Thus under one kinde of Uncleanness all kindes of it are forbidden for being commanded to live in temperance chastity and soberness we are to keep our Bodies holy and pure as Temples of the Holy Ghost So that the Sin here forbidden is not onely the act of Adultery but whatsoever is any way against chastity or soberness either in deed word or thought directly or indirectly as a means of sinning Mat. 5.28 where to commit Adultery signifieth as much as to do any thing what way soever whereby the chastity of our selves or our Neighbors may be stained Chastity is the purity of Soul and Body as much as belongeth to generation the Minde is chaste when it
not the defamation or hurt of any man 6. We must always use moderation of minde in going to Law which chiefly stands in these three particulars viz. 1. In seeking after Peace to the utmost Rom. 12.18 2. In love with our Enemies with whom we are at controversie in Law 3. In neither using nor shewing extremity in our proceedings Mat. 18.28 7. We must not be given to Strife and Contention and in an humor seek occasions to begin and breed quarrels 1 Cor. 3.3 Phil. 2.2 8. In all Suits of Law we must be mindeful of the Law of Charity and not so much endeavor to maintain our own Right as to recal our brother which erreth into the right way 8. Commutative Justice which keeps equality in the common Trade of life according to just Laws under which are comprehended all Contracts as Buying and Selling Loan Commodation Donation Exchange Letting to hire Pledging or gaging Committing on Trust Partnership and the like 9. Fidelity which is a vertue that heedeth another mans harms and endeavoreth to avert them gladly and diligently performing all the parts of his Calling in doing his duty to this end that God may be honored and we enabled to succor our selves ours and others for he that undergoeth not those labors that he is able and ought to undergo committeth Theft 10. Liberality which is a vertue giving to others that want our own goods according to the Rule of Right Reason not by any due Bond or Obligation but according to the Law of God and Nature with a free heart according to our own Ability and the Necessity of others know where when to whom and how to give observing a mediocrity and mean between base Niggardliness and riotous Prodigality 11. Hospitality which is one kinde of Liberality even Bountifulness towards Travellers and Strangers especially towards those that are of the houshold of Faith or exiled for the Profession of the Gospel entertaining them with all duties of discreet Bountifulness commendable Hospitality and Christian Charity He breaks this Commandment 1. That thinks but a thought tending to the least hinderance of his Neighbors welfare 2. That lives in no Calling 2 Thess 3.11 or neglects his Calling Jer. 48.10 3. That spends his Wealth in Ryot and provides not for his Family 1 Tim. 5.8 4. That useth powdering starching blowing dark shops to make ill wares more saleable 5. That conceals the faults of his wares or that useth false Weights and Measures Lev. 9.35 6. That useth words of deceit Prov. 20.14 or takes more for his wares then the just price Mat. 7.12 7. That oppresseth his Tenants by racking his Rents Hab. 2.11 8. That useth ingrossing of wares or that raiseth the price onely in consideration of a day of payment 9. That either gives or takes Bribes Isa 1.13 or writes Letters of Affection in wrong Suits 10. That holds back things borrowed Ezek. 18.7 or things found or pawn'd Lev. 6.3 11. That being lusty lives by begging or that relieveth such 2 Thess 3.10 12. That for Gain defends bad Causes and delays Suits in Law 13. That laye Burthens on the people without measure Isa 1.23 Ezek. 22.27 14. That makes Merchandize of Gods Word and Sacraments Mic. 3.11 2 Cor. 2. ult 15. That gets his living by casting of Figures and by Plays Eph. 4.28 16. That is rash in Suretiship Prov. 11.15 or keeps back goods given to any man 17. That steals mens Children to dispose of them in Marriage 1 Tim. 1.10 or otherwise 18. That restores not things evil gotten Ezek. 33.15 19. That is a Receiver of things stoln and gives consent to the fact any way Rom. 1.31 20. That waits for a Dearth to sell his things the dearer Amos 8.5 21. That takes by stealth but the least Pin though it be for the best end Rules of Obedience to this Comandment 1. We must be in a lawful Estate and Calling according to the Precept 1 Cor. 7.20 and we must be diligent therein Gen. 3.17 Prov. 22.5 2. We must be content with our present Estate whatever it be which with godliness is great gain 1 Tim. 6.6 3. We must be frugal and thrifty to save that wherewith the Lord hath blessed us not spending it unnecessarily upon vanity nor losing it by neglect 4. We must be constant to perform all our lawful Promises Psal 15.4 and faithful in all our dealings Live in some Calling be not Prodigal Vse no Deceit to set false Wares to sale Vse no unlawful Weights give just measure Rob not the Nation or the Churches Treasure Give God and Cesar both their due and fly The Cankerworm of Biting-Vsury Oppress not Bribe not Lye not nor Ingross Restore things lent found pawn'd Revenge no loss Steal not in heart word deed Do this and be From any Breach of this Commandment free The Ninth Commandment Thou shalt not bear False Witness against thy Neighbor THou shalt not bear that is Answer when thou art asked before a Judge Deut. 19.17 18. False Witness by a figure signifieth every word whereby the credit and estimation of our Neighbor is either impaired or diminished By the word Neighbor any other man is to be understood as Luke 10.29 Gen. 11.3 Esth 1.19 Prov. 18.17 for we are all of one blood Acts 7.26 The Sum of this Commandment recommendeth unto us the care of our Neighbors good-name in all respects to preserve as much as in us lyeth his and our own good-name stopping our ears against false Reports suppressing them and alway speaking the Truth So that the drift of this Commandment is the maintenance of the Truth among men wherein not onely the bearing of false witness but also all those things which are of near affinity with it the general whereof is Lying are forbidden So the bearing of true witness is commanded The name of Truth is here taken for Trueness or Truth-speaking that is for the agreement or correspondency of our knowledge and speech with the thing whereof our speech is for it is then true when the speech in all agrees with the thing This Commandment hath two parts viz. 1. False witness is forbidden which is 1. In Judgement which becomes Perjury Theft or Murther 2. Out of Judgement 2. True witness is commanded There are two kindes of false Testimonies in Judgement viz. 1. Altogether false 2. False onely in part which is a Cavil or crafty Accusation when something is either taken from the Truth or put to it or changed False testimonies out of Judgement are principally three 1. Backbiting or Slandring which hurteth three at once The Slanderer the Hearer and the Slandred Of this kinde are Whisperers and Tale-bearers 2. Flattery which is a smooth fostering of other mens Vices Isa 5.20 3. Lying which is of diverse sorts Psal 5.6 There are chiefly these five kindes of Lyes viz. 1. Some proceed of Covetousness and are very dangerous being pernicious to our Neighbor 2. Others be of infirmity or fear Gen. 12.13 3. Others be of lightness for
worse sense 24. To defend an evil Cause and impugn the contrary 25. To write or spread abroad infamous Libels 26. To raze Deeds or any Testimonial Evidences 27. To counterfeit another mans hand or to forge any thing 28. To suppress the Truth whether by fraud violence favor or by any other means 29. By delivering our judgement of any person or thing in words of a double sense 30. To refuse to give Testimony when we can and ought being lawfully thereto required by the Magistrate 31. To deny to give an account of our Faith when Error stands in competition with Truth 32. To lye though it be for never so good an end Zech. 13.3 The Vertues required in this Commandment viz. 1. A Rejoycing for the Credit and good Estimation of our Neighbor Gal. 5.22 2. Willingly to acknowledge that goodness we see in any man whatsoever and onely to speak of the same Tit. 3.2 Moreover we must withal desire receive and believe Reports of our Neighbors good Acts 16.1 2 3. Notwithstanding this must be so performed by us that in no wise we approve or allow of the vices and faults of men 2 Chron. 25.2 27.2 3. Fairness of Minde being a vertue taking well things well or doubtfully spoken or done and interpreting them in the better part as far as there are any reasonable causes to induce thereto and doth not easily conceive suspitions neither sticketh upon suspitions though they be such as are just and have reasonable causes nor determineth ought by them unless the Honor of God be interested therein yea to interpret a doubtful evil to the better part 1 Cor. 13.5 7. Gen. 37.31 32 33. 4. Not to believe an evil Report running abroad amongst the Common People by the whispering of Talebearers as it were by Conduit-pipes Psal 15.3 Jer. 40.14 16. Prov. 25.23 5. Taciturnity or Silentness which withholdeth in silence things secret and unnecessary to be spoken where when and as far as is needful and avoiding overmuch babling and talkativeness to keep secret the offence of our Neighbor except it must of necessity be revealed Prov. 10.12 Mat 1.19 18.16 Contrary hereto is prating and foolish pratling also Peevishness and Morosity 6. To get a good Name and Estimation among men and to keep the same when we have gotten it Phil. 4.8 Now a good Name is gotten thus viz. 1. If we seek the Kingdom of God before all things repenting us of our sins and with an earnest desire embrace and follow after Righteousness Prov. 10.7 Mark 14.9 2. We must have a care both to judge and speak well of others Mat. 7.2 Eccl. 7.13 3. We must abstain from all kinde of wickedness for one onely vice or sin doth obscure and darken a mans good Name Eccl. 10.1 4. We must in all things earnestly seek for the Glory of God onely and not our own Mat. 6.5 6. 7. Truth which is a firm Election in the Will whereby we constantly embrace true Sentences and Opinions speak that which is true keep Covenants and Promises and avoid all deceitful dissembling both in speech and outward gesture and all to the Glory of God and the Safety of our Neighbor Repugnant to this vertue are all Lyes as well Lyes of courtesie called Officious Lyes as others also vanity or levity and the like 8. Simplicity which is open Truth without wrinkles or circumlocutions a vertue which doth properly and plainly speak and do such things as are true right and honest with a single heart To this is repugnant Doubleness in Maners and Conversation 9. Constancy being a vertue not departing from the known Truth neither altering purpose without good and necessary causes but constantly speaking and doing such things as are True Just and Necessary Contrary whereto is Lightness and Pertinacy 10. Affability or Readiness of speaking which is a vertue gladly and with signification of good will hearing answering speaking where need is upon a necessary cause Rash Censure of men being a high breach of this Commandment may be committed these many ways viz. 1. When things are well done to carp and cavil at them without cause that is just 2. When actions and speeches indifferent are taken in the worse sense 3. When upon light occasion and uncertain Reports we suspect and surmise evil of our Neighbor 4. When we see any want in our Neighbors speech or behavior to make it worse then it was or indeed it is 5. When we spread abroad and publish the wants of men to defame them which might better be concealed and in Conscience and Charity ought so to be 6. When we speak nothing but the Truth of another yet withal do insinuate thereby some evil of the party in the hearts of the hearers This is a pestilent practice and too much used 7. When in hearing the Word Preached and sins reproved in the Congregation some misapply the same with spight against the Ministers person or his Ministery Reasons against Rash Judgement viz. 1. The practice of it cannot stand with Christian Charity for Charity bindes us to walk in Love and Love suspecteth not evil but thinks the best always 2. When thou seest a man erre consider thy self art or may be guilty of the like or worse 3. Consider That God the Father hath committed all Judgement unto his Son who now judgeth by his Ministers 4. Consider That thou art unable to judge aright of other mens actions being ignorant of many circumstances thereof for thou knowest not haply with what minde or to what end the action was done nor the cause why he did it nor the state of his person nor the maner of his temptation thereto 5. He that gives rash Judgement of another is worse then a Thief that steals away a mans goods for he robs him of his good Name which Solomon saith is to be chosen above great riches Prov. 22.1 Three things Required in judging of others aright viz. 1. We must have recourse to the cause of our Judgement for if the Cause be insufficient then our Judgement is Rash and unlawful 2. We must have Authority and Warrant by lawful calling to give Judgement or else some thing which is answerable thereto though the Judgement be private for private men in private Judgement though they want this Authority by a lawful calling yet if they have that which is answerable thereto that is the Affection of Christian Love then they may judge 3. We must alway have a good end of our Judgement that is the Reformation and amendment not the defarning of our Brother Since Truth is the chief and principal thing required in this Commandment consider in the last place that there is a fourfold Truth viz. 1. Of Judgement when a mans Judgement agreeth with Gods Word which is the Touchstone of Truth So as the Principles of that Religion which he professeth and his opinion concerning the same are ground thereon and may be warranted thereby This is the ground of all the rest to which must
truth of heart be added and where truth of heart is there will be Truth of speech and action for sincerity in the heart will keep the Tongue from lying and the carriage of a man from dissimulation and deceit This Truth of Judgement is directly opposed to Error 2. Of Heart which is the singleness and sincerity thereof whereby a man seeketh to approve himself to God the Searcher of all hearts and to be accepted of him This is opposed to Hypocrisie whether open or secret 3. Of Speech which is an Agreement of the words of a mans mouth both with his minde and also with the matter which he uttereth Eph. 4.25 This is opposed to lying when a man speaketh against his Minde and Conscience and to Falshood when a man speaketh contrary to the thing it self 4. Of Action which is a plain faithful and honest dealing in all things whether we have to do with God or Man when men neither make shew of doing that which indeed they do not or of doing it otherwise then they do This was it Christ commended honest Nathaniel for Joh. 1.47 and is opposed to Dissimulation and Deceit Motives to stir up in us a desire of Truth viz. 1. The Excellency of it it maketh us like God himself for he is the Lord God of Truth Psal 31.5 his Son is Truth Joh. 14.6 17. his Holy Ghost the Spirit of Truth Jam. 1.18 his Word the Word of Truth Psal 19.9 and his Promises Commandments Judgements Ways and Works all Truth Psal 119. 2. The Necessity thereof for without it no Grace can be of any use therefore the Scripture commendeth Faith unfeigned 2 Tim. 1.5 Love without Dissimulation Rom. 12.9 and Wisdom without Hypocrisie Jam. 3.17 3. The Benefit of Truth for the least measure of Grace seasoned with it is acceptable to God and in that respect very profitable to us There is no greater Ornament or Beauty to Religion then Soundness and Evidence of Truth This is the very Glory and Crown thereof as for Antiquity Universality Unity Uniformity Succession Consent Multitude Pomp Revenues and the like being separated from Truth are but vain glosses or so many Pearls in a blinde eye to make it so much the more deformed This is it made the Martyrs so valiant David a man after Gods own heart Nathaniel so gracious in Christs eyes Job so couragious patient and constant and Paul so unconquerable Truth is a comeliness in every thing God is the God of Truth no Lye can stand Vnpunish'd by his All-Revenging hand Who calls God Witness to what is not true Stile him we may The Crucifying Jew And does what in him lies to make thereby The God of Truth the Author of a Lye We say the Lye deserves the Stab Are men So tender of their Credit much more then Jealous is God of his who will not take The Lye of Creatures for his Honors sake The Tenth Commandment Thou shalt not Covet thy Neighbors House thou shalt not Covet thy Neighbors Wife nor his Servant nor his Maid nor his Ox nor his Ass nor any thing that thy Neighbor hath TO Covet is to think inwardly and also to desire any thing whereby our Neighbor may be hindred albeit there ensue no assent of the Will to commit that evil And by Coveting here is to be understood That not onely evil actually committed is sin but harboring in the heart although it never cometh into act So that this Commandment is as it were added for the explaining of the former because the more ignorant people seeing no punishments inflicted for evil affections would not otherwise have thought them to be sins And it might be added to convince every man of Sin for we all bear in us Lust the tinder of Vice And this coveting what is anothers doth always argue a minde either lustful or not contented which is against all true Piety By the words House Wife Maid Ox c. the Commandment is illustrated as by an Argument drawn from the distribution of the Objects of Concupiscence Whence it is apparent That onely evil concupiscence is condemned in this place Gol. 3.5 for there is a good concupiscence or desire as of Meat and Drink and that of the Spirit Gal. 5.17 So then here are rehearsed the Objects of all Lusts for the most part whereby we are stirred up to the transgressing of any Commandment of the latter Table In the other Commandments not onely wicked deeds but also counsels and deliberate consent of the Will is forbidden but in this is required somewhat more namely that we be not tickled with any kinde of Lust although our Will consent not yea also though it be against it For here are forbidden all first motions of the Minde unto sin springing from Original Sin though no consent be yielded unto them and we are here commanded to keep our very hearts and mindes free from evil motions and thoughts against any of the Commandments of God and to be well contented with our own Thus the motions unto sin forbidden in this Commandment spring from Original Sin or the flesh in us other evil motions we are subject unto that are suggested by the Devil which are not our sins unless by consenting we make them so And the Duty here commanded is our thorough Sanctification not onely in deed but even in heart and thought also as in 1 Thess 5.23 the parts whereof are Mortification the putting off the Old Man which is corrupt through deceiveable lusts Eph. 4.24 and Vivification the putting on of the New Man which after God is created in Righteousness and true Holiness Joh. 3.5 otherwise called Regeneration or a New-birth The Sum of this Commandment forbiddeth all sins before consent and resolution all sins without us as Adams sin and all sins within us as the effect of the former The Scope and end of this Commandment is a Rightness and Inward Obedience of all our affections towards God and our Neighbor This Commandment is added to be a Declaration of the former and that Universal because this is spoken of the whole in general and is added to be as a Rule or Level according to which we must take and measure the inward Obedience of all the other Commandments Hereby not onely corrupt inclinations are sins but the thinking of evil is sin Unto this Commandment is Original sin or Concupiscence repugnant which is an inordinate appetite and a corrupt inclination and proneness in the Minde Will and Heart contrary to God and desiring those things that God forbiddeth in his Law which ensued upon the Fall of our first Parents Every Breach of this Commandment may be termed Covetousness Now covetous men the more they devour the more they covet like the Grave or the Barren Womb Prov. 30.14 15. like Dropsie men or Pharaohs lean Kine Thus Ahab that had a Kingdom at command covets a petty Vineyard which costs poor Naboth his Life and Living but withal covetous Ahab purchased more then he coveted the
no farther Such is the Secret Vertue Divine Power and inexpressible Efficacy of Christ that works by his Spirit on the hearts of the Regenerate being made New Creatures 2 Cor. 5.17 The will and ability to do a work pleasing and acceptable to God is no mo●e in the unregenerates power then their Creation Now by our Regeneration we are assured of our Justification not as by the cause of the Effect but as by the effect of the Cause and though Regeneration be not perfect in this life yet if it be indeed begun it sufficeth for the confirmation and proving of the Truth of our Faith And though the Faithful fail in the measure of those Graces they have yet is it not such as can justly impeach the Truth of Grace It is true though it may be weak and their Sanctification is sound though imperfect the Perfecting is not a work so powerful as the Beginning of it for the very New-Birth and first act of Conversion is the most powerful work of Gods Spirit for then a Sinner is anew created of nothing in regard of Spiritual Being he is made something of a man dead in sin he is quickned and hath Spiritual life put into him As a Childe born of a Woman hath all the parts of Soul and Body so he that is born again of God hath all the parts of a New-man All the Faithful have all such Graces as are absolutely necessary to Salvation actually wrought in them no Saint wanteth any Grace that may hinder his Salvation though he should instantly dye the perfection of Sanctification is but the highest degree of that which was begun before and without Regeneration there is no attaining to this perfection Except a man be born again by Water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Joh. 3.5 Hereby a man of a limb of the Devil is made a member of Christ and of a childe of Satan the childe of God Now the work of Regeneration in man is a proper and immediate work of the Godhead for to regenerate is to create and man in that he is regenerated is created again Nothing then can actively regenerate but God though Sacraments are said to regenerate as Moral Instruments because when they are rightly used God himself confers Grace by them We receive not new and Spiritual life from the Son but by the means of his Flesh apprehended by our Faith yet the power and efficacy of quickning or reviving is not in the Flesh as in a proper subject but in the Godhead And we are not in this Regeneration perfectly sanctified but onely in part not perfectly till death whence it is that a regenerate man restored by Grace is not by his Regeneration enabled to fulfil the Law perfectly yet of a meer natural man is made a new man in regard of Gods Image restored and renewed by Christ Eph. 4.24 This is the restoring of that new quality of Righteousness and Holiness lost in Adam which is as it were a new Soul for in a regenerate man there is a Body-Soul and besides the Spirit which is the Grace of Sanctification opposed to Flesh and Corruption of Nature Rom. 8.10 This is as it were the Soul of a Soul renewed without which we cannot see the Kingdom of God Joh. 3.5 And lastly he that is indeed regenerate hath this priviledge That the Corruption of Nature is no part of him neither doth it belong to his person in respect of Divine Imputation Rom. 7.17 In the work of our Regeneration these three Graces be required viz. 1. The Preventing Grace which is when God of his Mercy sets and imprints in the Minde a new light in the Will a new quality or inclination in the Heart new affections 2. The Working Grace which is when God gives to the Will the act of well-willing namely the will to Believe the will to Repent the will to Obey God in his Word 3. The Co-working Grace when God giveth the Deed to the Will that is the exercise and practice of Faith and Repentance The first of these gives the power of doing good the second the Will the third the Deed and all three together make up the work of Regeneration The Regerate man cannot do the evil he would for these Reasons viz. 1. Because he cannot commit sin at what time soever he would 1 Joh. 3.9 Thus was it with Joseph when he was assaulted by Potiphars wife to Adultery and with Lot when his righteous Soul was so vexed with the abominations of the Sodomites 2. Because the man regenerate cannot sin in that maner he would whereof there be two Reasons viz. 1. He cannot sin with full consent of Will or with all his heart because the Will so far forth as it is regenerate resisteth and dreweth back It is a Rule That sin doth not reign in the Regenerate for how much Grace is wrought in the Minde Will and Affections so much is abated proportionably of the strength of the Flesh 2. Though he fall into any sin yet he doth not lie long in it but speedily recovers himself by reason of Grace in his heart Two contrary Grounds or Beginnings of actions in man after his Regeneration 1. Natural Corruption of the Minde Will and Affections to that which is against the Law called the Flesh 2. A created Quality of Holiness wrought in the said faculties by the Holy Ghost called the Spirit These two are not severed but joyned and mingled together in all the faculties of the Soul Why the Wills of the Regenerate are enclined not onely to good but to evil also viz. 1. In this life the renewing of our Nature is not perfect neither as concerning our knowledge of God or our inclinations to obey him Rom. 7.18 2. The Regenerate be not always ruled by the Spirit but sometimes are for a time as it were left to themselves as if they were forsaken of God either for to try or to chastise or to humble them but yet are called to Repentance that they perish not Isa 63.17 for as the beginning so the continuance of our Conversion dependeth on God The work of our Regeneration is distinctly attributed in Scripture to each person in the Trinity To the Father 1 Pet. 1.3 To the Son Jam. 1.18 To the Holy Ghost Joh. 3.5 It is also attributed to the Ministery of the Word As thus 1. The Father as it were the Beginner of this work of his own will begat he us for this end he sent his Son into the world 2. The Son put in execution the Will of his Father Joh. 6.13 he took flesh upon him that we might be of his flesh being born anew Christ is not onely the Author but the Matter also of our New-Birth the new Spiritual Being which the Saints have encreaseth with the encrease of God Col. 2.19 Eph. 1.3 This cometh to pass by his Incarnation Zech. 13.1 Joh. 1.16 3. The Spirit applieth unto us the vertue and efficacy of Christs slesh
God Levit. 18.24 Ezek. 20.18 Matth 15.19 20. Jam. 1.21 Zeph. 3.1 Rev. 21.27 It is compared to an unclean cloth Isa 64.6 to the Blood of pollution Ezek. 16.6 Levit. 15.19 It polluteth and prophaneth the actions of greatest Devotion in the Service of God Hag. 2.13 It defileth the Land and places where sinners are conversant Lev. 18.24 25. And as the Dropsie man the more he drinks the dryer he is and the more he still desires to drink So a sinner the more he sins the apter he is to sin and the more desirous to keep still in a course of wickedness Custom in sinning breeds hardness of heart Hardness of heart brings Impenitency and Impenitency Condemnation that men of years living in the Church are not simply condemned for their particular sins but their continuance and residence in them and though every sin be mortal yet are not all equally mortal but some more some less nor do sins committed utterly take away Grace but rather sometimes do make it the more to shine and shew it self Thus can God turn every thing to the best to those that are his yea so as we may say we gained by Adams Fall whence descended unto us that Original Sin which the Papists say is not Sin properly so called but onely because this Original Corruption in all men at their conception is an occasion or cause of Sin but as for the Sin it self which was in this corruption of Nature they say it was taken away by Christ Rom. 5.18 And herein the Anabaptists agree with the Papists for they also hold that Original Sin was taken away by Christ yet David as righteous man as any Anabaptist or Papist confessed that he was conceived in sin and born in iniquity Psal 51.5 For Christ taketh not Sin away but as he saveth viz. from all such as truly believe in him to whom it is no more imputed Nor is God as some blasphemously imagine the Author of Adams Fall for the unchangeable Decree and Will of God takes not away the liberty of mans Will or of Second Causes but onely enclineth and ordereth the same as the first and highest Cause So that Gods Decree went before Adams Fall onely as an Antecedent not as a Cause thereof and though Adam fell not without Gods general permissive Will yet without his special approving Will and he having full power and liberty to stand God can no way be said to be the Author of his Fall nor consequently of Sin And now when man is punished for Sin other Creatures suffer with him though had not man faln it had been otherwise but now as Instruments of evil man oftentimes doth horribly abuse them to the dishonor of the Creator therefore do the Creatures groan as weary of wicked men and yet to this ungrateful Creature Man doth the Goodness and Mercy of God appear infinite like himself in that the Air doth still yield man breath and not poyson him in that the Water so variously accommodates him and not drowns him that the Fire comforts and not consumes him that the Earth bears and sustains him and not through drought prove barren parch up and cleave asunder to swallow him that his Food doth nourish and not choak him that Death doth spare and not strike yea that Hell is conquered for him O the depth the depth the depth of the Goodness of God to this faln restored yet ungrateful Creature Man yea there had not been any such thing at all as Death had not man disobeyed for God made not Death in the beginning nor should it have been except of our selves for it ensued on the voluntary Sin of man God forcibly inflicting it as a most just Punishment and the present Punishments of this life are but the beginning of Everlasting because they are not sufficient here to satisfie Gods Justice and though God doth not so punish the sins of the godly yet is not his Justice impeached thereby because he punished them in Christ with a punishment Temporal yet equivalent to Everlasting which equability doth the Gospel adde unto the rigor and severity of the Law Now the Judgements of God are not onely Punishments to the Sufferers and Offenders but also Documents and Instructions to all others that behold them know them and hear them they are as Sermons to Repentance for this very end and purpose he worketh them and therefore they must be Instructions to us to avoid the occasion of them which is Sin The Sin against the Holy Ghost is when any after that he hath by the Holy Ghost been lightned with the knowledge of the Truth of the Gospel doth stand against that Truth not for fear or through infirmity but on wilful Malice for this Sin is a spightful resistance of the Gospel against the knowledge and light of Conscience after the Spirit hath perswaded the heart of the Truth and Benefit thereof and when a man sinneth out of malice and spight against God himself and Christ Jesus which is not every sin of Presumption or against Knowledge and Conscience but such a kinde of presumptuous Offence in which true Religion is renounced and that of set purpose and resolved malice against the very Majesty of God himself and Christ Heb. 10.29 This Sin against the Holy Ghost is said to be unpardonable not that it exceedeth or surmounteth the greatness of the Merit of Christ but because he that commits it is punished with a final Blindeness and without Repentance there is granted no Remission of Sins neither is it unpardonable because it is greater then Gods Mercy or as Cain thought Greater then can be pardoned Gen. 4.13 but because the heart of him who committeth it is uncapable of Mercy As if a ventless Vessel be cast into the Sea it cannot take in one drop of water not because there is not water enough in the Sea to fill it but because it had never a vent to receive water In every Sin these four things are to be considered viz. 1. The Fault whereby God is offended in the Action which is the Root of all the rest 2. The Guilt whereby the Conscience is bound over unto Punishment 3. The Punishment it self which is eternal Death the wages of Sin 4. A certain Stain or Blot which it imprints and leaves in the offender The Seat of Sin in man is threefold viz. 1. Reason whereof Some are of Knowledge Others of Ignorance 2. The Will whereof Some are from the Will immediately Others are somewhat beside the Will Some are mixed partly with the Will partly against it 3. Affection whereof Some are of Infirmity Others of Presumption In respect of the Law Sin is twofold viz. 1. Of Commission but if we carry a constant purpose not to sin and endeavor to resist all Temptations our Concupiscence will not be imputed to us 2. Of Omission which obliges us to Punishment as much as Sin of Commission Again Sins are either 1. Immediately against God as all the Breaches of the First
excellency of Gods Gifts 7. If our Works should merit Christ should not be a perfect Savior nor Heaven purchased for us by his Blood onely which now to affirm is To Crucifie him worse then the Jews did Good Works cannot justifie us for these Reasons viz. 1. Because our best works yea the works of the Saints are not perfectly good and pure and that for these Reasons viz. 1. We do many things we should not and omit many things we should do 2. We mingle evil with the good we should do or we do good but we do it ill The thing done may be good but not the maner of doing it 3. The Saints which do good works do many things which are sins in themselves and so deserve to be outed of Gods favor Deut. 27.26 4. Because there is not that degree of Goodness in these good works that proceed from the Saints which ought to be or as God requireth 2. Though they were perfect yet are they due and debt so that we cannot satisfie by them 3. They are Temporary and bear not proportion with Eternal Blessings 4. They are Effects of Justification therefore no Cause thereof 5. They are excluded that we might not have whereof to glory 6. If they were part of our Justification our Consciences should be destitute of stable and certain Comfort 7. Christ should have dyed in vain and have risen in vain not to our Justification if we could have been justified by Works That justifying Faith which is required in every good work hath a double use in the causing thereof 1. It gives the beginning to a good work renewing the Minde Will and Affections of the worker whence the work proceedeth as pure water from a cleansed Fountain 2. It covereth the wants that be in good works for the best work done by man in this life is imperfect but hereby both the person of the worker is accepted and the imperfection of his work covered in the sight of God All these are excluded from being good works viz. 1. Which are sins in themselves and repugnant to Gods Law and his VVill revealed in his most sacred VVord 2. VVhich are not repugnant to the Law neither in themselves good or evil but which may yet by an accident be made good or evil 3. VVhich are good in themselves and commanded by God but yet are made sins by an accident in that they are unlawfully done or not as they ought to be How the works of the Regenerate and Unregenerate differ viz. 1. The works of the Unregenerate proceed not from Faith as those of the Regenerate do 2. The works of the Unregenerate are not joyned with an inward Obedience and therefore are done dissemblingly and are meer Hypocrisie but it is far otherwise with the Regenerate 3. As the works of the Unregenerate proceed not from the right cause so are they not referred to the chief end which is Gods Glory but in both these the works of the Regenerate are rightly and truly qualified Though the works of the most Regenerate yea his best works are good onely in part not perfectly because he is not wholly Spirit and no Flesh yet God approves of them And therefore we must again consider Good VVorks two ways viz. 1. In themselves as they are compared with the Law and the rigor thereof and so they are sins because they answer not to that perfection which the Law requireth for there be two degrees of Sin viz. 1. Rebellions which are Actions flatly against the Law 2. Defects when a man doth those things the Law commandeth but faileth in the maner of doing and so mans best works are sins 2. As they are done by a person Regenerate and reconciled to God in Christ and so God accepts of them for in Christ the wants of them are covered The Benefit of putting and keeping on the Holy Spiritual Brest-plate of Righteousness which is Good VVorks viz. 1. It keepeth us from being mortally wounded for so long as we retain a true purpose and faithful endeavor answerable thereto we shall never give our selves over to commit sin and iniquity 2. It bringeth great Assurance of our Effectual Calling and Spiritual Union with Christ yea even of our Election and Salvation Eph. 1.4 1 Joh. 2.29 3. It procureth us a good name in Gods Church while we live 2 Cor. 8.18 and a blessed Memory after we are dead Prov. 10.7 4. It confirmeth the Truth of Religion and so it may be a means to win such as are without 1 Pet. 3.1 to strengthen those that stand 1 Thess 1.6 7. and to stir up all to an holy emulation 2 Cor. 9.2 5. It doth highly honor God and occasion others to glorifie him Mat. 5.16 That we may be moved to the doing of Good Works and to live righteously observe here the blessed fruit and issue thereof as it is declared in Scripture viz. 1. Generally that the Lord loveth Righteousness Psal 11.7 that verily there is a Reward for the Righteous Psal 58.11 that Blessings are on the head of the Righteous c. Prov. 10.6 2. Particularly for the Righteous person himself viz. 1. In this Life the eyes of the Lord are upon the Righteous Psal 34.15 God will grant their desire Prov. 10.24 he delivereth them out of all trouble Psal 34.19 they shall never be forsaken Psal 37.25 they shall flourish like a Palm-tree Psal 92.12 c. 2. At their Death when they have hope Prov. 14.32 and are taken from the evil to come Isa 57.1 3. After Death their Memorial shall be blessed Prov. 10.7 in everlasting remembrance Psal 112.6 4. At the Resurrection they shall go into Life Eternal Mat. 25.46 They shall shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of their Father Matth. 11.43 5. For their Posterity The Generation of the Righteous shall be blessed Psal 112.2 Their seed shall not beg their bread c. Psa 37.25 XIII REpentance is a constant turning from all sin unto God or an inward sorrowing and continually mourning for sin joyned with Faith and Humiliation and both inward and outward amendment It is an aversion or turning from all a mans sins and a reversion or turning again unto God with all our Hearts Or Repentance is an unfained sorrow for and hatred of sin with an earnest Love of Righteousness by the which we are continually stirred up to abhor our Vices and are moved to do good Works not for fear of punishment or hope of reward but for that love we bear towards God that with a joyful heart we are moved to his Obedience and with grief go astray from his Commandments A Godly sorrow whereby a man is grieved for his sins because they are sins is the beginning of Repentance and indeed for substance it is Repentance it self So a desire to repent and believe in a touched Heart and Conscience is Faith and Repentance it self though not in Nature yet in Gods acceptation for in them that have Grace God accepteth the will for the
deed Also he that is grieved truly and unfainedly from his heart for one sin shall proportionably be grieved for all the sins that he knoweth to be in himself for in the most Regenerate there remain some unknown sins of which he cannot have a particular Repentance and yet they are not imputed when there is Repentance for known sins Thus David repented of his Murther and Adultery and yet afterward erring in judgement by reason of the corruption of the times lived to his death in the sin of Poligamy without any particular Repentance that we hear of so the Patriarchs but God in mercy received a general Repentance for the same provided we endeavor to finde out particular sins Now though Godly sorrow be the beginning of Repentance yet Repentance it self doth chiefly consist in a change of Life upon this Sorrow and this standeth in a constant purpose of the Minde and resolution of the Heart not to sin but in every thing to do the Will of God In this purpose stands the very nature of Repentance nor must it be several from Humiliation and Faith We cannot so much as think of our sins aright without grief of heart neither ought we to be grieved for this grief 2 Cor. 7.8 This Sorrow pleaseth God greatly and maketh glad the Angels in Heaven Luke 15.10 And bringeth the Mourners unto infinite joy and peace of Conscience Some there are that repent of their Repentance are sorry they have sorrowed for those sins they yet delight in This is the height of Impiety and that which filled the hardness of Pharaohs heart to the full nor were the Israelites themselves free there-from when their murmuring appetites lusted after the Flesh-pots of Egypt But he that indeed repents mourns that he hath not mourned repents that he hath not repented humbles himself because he hath not been humbled This is that which a man must do before he can truly repent of any particular sin whatsoever And such think it nay they know it to be impossible for them to repent enough Such are our Offences against the Eternal and Infinite Majesty of God as no man is so humbled for them as that he can say He need be humbled no more for them So that this is an undeniable Truth a general Rule without exception That whosoever is come to this pass to think he hath repented enough he is not in the account of Gods Word a true Convert or Penitent Could our life in length equal Methuselahs and our Repentance in an undiscontinued practice thereof equal our Life all this compared to the Infinity of the Majesty offended would come short to entitle it Long-lived An unintermitted Watchfulness fed and supported by a daily constant revolution of faithful Prayers is the pith of Repentance which is likely to prove so much the sounder by how much the more free and voluntary the performance thereof is for extorted and inforced Repentance though it often proves sound and good no doubt yet may not be always so the instrumental cause thereof hapning to be removed the Work may not go on Repent therefore for except we repent we shall all perish Luke 13.3 But if we judge our selves we shall not be judged of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.31 Not as the custom is a seeming sad Confession of sin out of Formality not Conscience of Passion without remorse or of fear without change like Judas who confessed he had sinned in betraying innocent blood This is not to repent nor can we be said to be truly penitent when the Judgements upon us for sin grieve us more then the sins themselves And although whensoever an unrighteous man truly repenteth he shall be pardoned yet he cannot truly repent whensoever he will Beware therefore of deferring Repentance He that refuses to turn when God calleth him provokes God to refuse to turn to him when he calls upon God yea to give him over to the hardness of his heart and to assign him Belshazzers or the rich Fools death There are two parts of Repentance viz. 1. The Mortification of the Old man that is Of the Corruption which by reason of sin sticketh in us 2. The Resurrection of the New So there is a twofold consideration of Repentance 1. In respect of the beginning of Repentance as Contrition This is before Faith 2. In respect of the Act of it now the Act of Repentance followeth Faith The exercise of Repentance viz. 1. A constant turning from all sin unto God which hath two parts viz. 1. A purpose of heart and resolution never to sin more 2. A holy endeavor of performing the said resolution 2. A humble Confession 1. Of our sins not in word onely 2. Of our desert of punishment due for them 2. A continual inward grief and sorrow of heart for our sins not a worldly but a godly sorrow which consisteth of two parts 1. To be displeased with our selves for our sins 2. To have a bodily moving of the heart which often causeth crying and tears The former of these is necessary the latter is not simply necessary though it be commendable in whomsoever it is if it be in truth 4. A true inward Humiliation of the heart joyned with a true inward shame of all our sins whatsoever 5. An earnest begging of God in the Name and Mediation of Jesus Christ pardon for all our sins Grief of heart causing Repentance ariseth 1. From the Word of God whereby sin and Gods wrath for the same is discovered Acts 2.37 2. From Despair of all help in our selves or any other Creature Acts 16.30 3. From our wretchedness and vileness by reason of sin whereby God is offended and his wrath provoked as well as from our cursedness by reason of the punishment and fearful issue of sin Luke 15.18 What the grief is which is in the godly when they repent viz. 1. A grief both for sin past and present which is called Sorrow and also for sin to come which is called Fear 2. An hatred of sin committed both of present sin and sin to come 3. An averting from sin committed to Godliness 4. A flying from sin to come So the grief is in the heart the flying is in the will the averting is in the heart and will and it is an averting from evil unto good The effects of true spiritual grief viz. 1. Shame for evil which hath been done Jer. 31.19 Rom. 6.21 2. A true and thorow Resolution to enter into a new course of life 3. A renuing of grief so oft as occasion is offered True spiritual grief is never clean dried up because sin the cause of it is never quite taken away The true properties of sound repentance viz. 1. We must begin with our hearts to purge them of all corruptions and filthy lusts Ezek. 18.31 2. As we must turn unto God with the heart so with the whole and all the heart with all our soul Deut. 30.2 3. We must shake off all our sins as well one sin as another
God who as he will not be coupled with Idols so will he have his Truth severed from lyes 3. For our own Salvation that the faithful may know which to joyn themselves to and of what Kingdom they are 4. For the better confirmation of our faith and comfort when as we see that to be rightly in our Church which is wanting in others 5. Lest we being deceived should embrace the Doctrine of some other Church or Sect for true Religion 6. Lest we be partakers of the punishments which are to come on such men Rev. 18.4 7. That the wicked may be left unexcusable Why God oftentimes suffereth for a while his Enemies to prevail over his Church 1. Because his own people sin against him and therefore he is even compelled to correct and chasten them howbeit in mercy not in fury for their instruction not for their destruction that they may not be condemned with the world For as the Bush which Moses saw in the Wilderness though in the midst of a fire yet not consumed so is the Church on Earth in the midst of Persecution yet not overcome 2. That his children may learn to rest in God alone and not on themselves or upon the Arm of flesh rather then upon the living God Thus profited Manasseh more in the Prison at Babylon then on his Throne 2 Chron. 33.11 12. 3. To harden the hearts of the Enemies that they may run forward to their own confusion and fill up the measure of their iniquity The difference between the Church before the coming of Christ and now since is fourfold viz. 1. The Church before Christ did set him forth his Death and Resurrection but darkly by certain outward ceremonies as Sacrifices Lights Washings and the like 2. This consisteth in Reformation of life for as the knowledge of Christ is now greater so also the efficacy and working of the Holy Ghost is far greater which mortifieth our flesh so as we do more earnestly obey his Commandments according to the Promises declared by the Prophets some special gifts granted to some special men as Moses Elias and others who went far beyond us onely excepted 3. In that everlasting life was but obscurely and darkly offered to the Israelites wrapped or folded up onely in earthly Promises 4. The Church under the Law was as it were bounded with the borders of Judea or shut up within that countrey but now it is dispersed and scattered throughout the whole world neither is it tyed to any one place time or people The difference of the true doctrine from others viz. 1. This Doctrine was delivered from God other Sects are sprung from men and have been invented by Devils 2. True Religion hath firm Testimonies both Divine and Humane such as quiet Consciences and convince all other Sects of Error 3. In the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles is rightly delivered the whole Law of God and both the Tables of the Law are perfectly kept other Sects cast away the principal parts of Gods Law the Doctrine concerning the true knowledge and Worship of God contained in the first Table and reject the inward obedience of the second Table 4. The whole Gospel of Christ rightly understood is in the true Church alone taught and in this true Doctrine alone contained other Sects are either quite ignorant of it or do patch some little part of it out of the Doctrine of the Apostles unto their own Errors True Christian Religion consisteth especially in five principal points distinguished thereby from all other counterfeit Religions 1. It maketh all the chief Points of the Doctrine thereof to agree with the nature of the true God in the knowledge of whom it strengthneth and keepeth the godly 2. That it establisheth the glory of God in the Salvation of men and so the godly are more and more confirmed in the certainty of their Salvation 3. That it joyneth good Works with our Salvation by a most near band although it be no way grounded upon them so that the faithful cannot take any matter of boasting in them 4. That it openeth a way for us unto God to crave of him all things necessary for soul or body for this life or that to come 5. That it yieldeth to the godly matter of patience and joy in adversity yea also Assurance in the greatest dangers and not without much circumspection care and watchfulness in the most prosperous condition The difference between the Church and Commonweals viz. 1. Commonweals are distinct in divers places and times the Church is alway one and the same 2. The States of the World have many Heads the Church but one and that in Heaven 3. Kingdoms are governed by mens Laws the Church by the Holy Ghost and Gods Word 4. The civil State requireth outward obedience onely the Church both inward and outward 5. States give Power to Civil Magistrates to alter and make new Laws the Church is so tyed to the Word of God as she may not adde to or detract ought from it 6. The civil State hath Corporal Power but the Church punisheth by denouncing Gods Wrath out of the Word of God 7. In the Church are always some Elect and holy but not always in the Commonwealth The Office and Authority of the Church as concerning the Scriptures 1. It is as the Keeper of the sacred Rolls and Records to preserve them not to authorize them 2. It is as a Touchstone to distinguish them from counterfeit Scriptures not to make that Scripture which is no Scripture 3. It is as the voyce of a Cryer to preach publish promulgate and teach the Truth but cannot adde to or take from it nor authorize nor alter or change it 4. It is as an Interpreter and Expounder of the Scriptures according to the Scriptures How the Church may be said not to erre 1. The whole doth not erre though some Members do 2. It doth not erre universally though in some points of Doctrine it may 3. It erreth not in the Foundation As the Church may ordain ceremonies tending to order decency unity and edification so hath it no power to appoint what she please For she may not decree any Rites or ceremonies that are 1. Idle or unprofitable but must all tend to edifying 2. For their nature impious like the Ordinances Maners and Idols of our Forefathers Ezek. 30.18 Teachers of vanity Jer. 10.8 and of lyes Heb. 3.10 3. For use Superstitious like the Brazen-Serpent Hezekiah brake 2 Kings 18. 4. For their worthiness in the eyes of the ordainers either of equal price or of more account then the very Ordinances of God so as for the performance of them the Laws of God must be left undone Mark 7.8 13. 5. Against the liberty of Christians to the intangling of them again with the yoke of servile bondage Gal. 5.1 6. For their weight over-heavy and grievous to be born Luke 11.46 7. Any way contrary to the Commandments Will and Word of God Mat. 15.13 8. They must