Christ and his Church: or, Christianity explained, under seven evangelical and ecclesiastical heads; viz. Christ I. Welcomed in his nativity. II. Admired in his Passion. III. Adored in his Resurrection. IV. Glorified in his Ascension. V. Communicated in the coming of the Holy Ghost. VI. Received in the state of true Christianity. VII. Reteined in the true Christian communion. With a justification of the Church of England according to the true principles of Christian religion, and of Christian communion. By Ed. Hyde, Dr. of Divinity, sometimes fellow of Trinity Colledge in Cambridge, and late rector resident at Brightwell in Berks.
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- Christ and his Church: or, Christianity explained, under seven evangelical and ecclesiastical heads; viz. Christ I. Welcomed in his nativity. II. Admired in his Passion. III. Adored in his Resurrection. IV. Glorified in his Ascension. V. Communicated in the coming of the Holy Ghost. VI. Received in the state of true Christianity. VII. Reteined in the true Christian communion. With a justification of the Church of England according to the true principles of Christian religion, and of Christian communion. By Ed. Hyde, Dr. of Divinity, sometimes fellow of Trinity Colledge in Cambridge, and late rector resident at Brightwell in Berks.
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- Hyde, Edward, 1607-1659.
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- 1658.
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"Christ and his Church: or, Christianity explained, under seven evangelical and ecclesiastical heads; viz. Christ I. Welcomed in his nativity. II. Admired in his Passion. III. Adored in his Resurrection. IV. Glorified in his Ascension. V. Communicated in the coming of the Holy Ghost. VI. Received in the state of true Christianity. VII. Reteined in the true Christian communion. With a justification of the Church of England according to the true principles of Christian religion, and of Christian communion. By Ed. Hyde, Dr. of Divinity, sometimes fellow of Trinity Colledge in Cambridge, and late rector resident at Brightwell in Berks." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/a86946.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed April 25, 2025.
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Christ wellcomed in his Nativity.
CAP. I. The Motives of Christs welcome from God, and from his Church, both Triumphant and Militant.
IN the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, one God everlast∣ing. Blessed be the Holy and undivided Tri∣nity world without end, Amen.
I had once the image of God the Father in my creation, and I soon lost it; wherefore I now desire to have the image of God the Son in my Redemption, which I may never lose. O thou eter∣nal Spirit proceeding from the Father and the Son, vouchsafe to breath in my soul this breath of life, that I may live eternally; O thou who didst form the eternal Son of God in the womb of a pure Virgin, be pleased also to form him in my impure and
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sinful heart; That Christ being formed in me, I may not be an Abortive to the life and light of righteousness. Thy holy Apo∣stle travelled as in birth till Christ was formed in the Galatians; so doth thy holy Church travail as in birth til Christ be formed in me; Oh then let the end of her travail be the beginning of my rest, that my Saviour being formed in me, I may be fitted and prepared for his salvation: He once condescended to be made man for me; Oh that he will now give me the benefit of that condescention, and be made man in me: That I may put on the Lord Jesus Christ, even as he hath put on me: That as he dwell∣eth in my flesh by a personal union, so he may also dwell in my Spirit by a powerful Communion: That as by dwelling in my flesh he emptied himself, so by dwelling in my Spirit he may fill me: For Christs emptiness is the Christians fulness: He that filled Heaven and Earth from the beginning of the Creation, did in the declining Age of Time Empty himself, that he might fill us: Them he filled with his Majesty, but us with his Mercy; And if his emptiness was our fulness, what is his fulness but our glory? If his fall was our rising, what is his resurrection but our salvation? If the humiliation of Christ was the riches of the world, how much more his exaltation? If he enriched us by his Poverty, how much more will he enrich us by his Glory? The Apostle can mention nothing but fulness, when he treats of Christ emptiness, Gal. 4. 4, 5.
BƲT when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son made of a woman, made under the Law, To redeem them that were under the Law, that we might receive the adoption of sons. The words do plainly set forth our Saviour Christs em∣ptiness, but they carry with them a threefold fulness. First a ful∣ness of Time, when the fulness of the time was come. Secondly a fulness of Love, God sent forth his Son made of a woman, made under the Law. Thtrdly a fulness of joy, To redeem them that were under the Law, that we might receive the Adoption of sons. All
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which considerations are so fit to welcom Christ at his Nativity, That I will conform to them the three Chapters of my ensuing discourse. For though time be little or nothing in its continu∣ance (an instant only) but is all in its succession; yet the ful∣ness of time which the Apostle mentions, may be to us as a look∣ing-glass wherein to behold and to contemplate, if not the na∣ture and duration, yet sure the work and the consultation of eternity.
THE Hebrews call the perfection of every thing its fulness; so Cant. 5. 12. The Church speaking of Christ saith, His eyes were fitly set, but it is in the Hebrew, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 manentes juxta plenitudinum, sitting or set in fulness, that is, In all manner of perfection; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 saith Aben Ezra, set so exactly as those precious stones that are inlayed and set by measure.
And Saint Matthews 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, is not only ut Impleretur, but also, ut Perficeretur, not only, That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Prophet, but also that it might be Per∣fected; To wit, That it might be perfected and consummated in the Anti-type, which had been only begun or initiated in the Type; All the former Prophesies of the Old Testament, recei∣ving in Christ not only their fulness, but also their Perfection. So then, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, in the Apostles meaning (Gal. 4. 4.) represents unto us two things, Plenitudo Temporis, and Perfe∣ctio Temporis, the fulness of Time, and the perfection of Time: And both these were joyned together in that particular Time which the eternal Son of God was pleased not only to honour, but also to sanctifie by his coming into the world; for it was a full Time, and it was a perfect Time.
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AS God observes a time for every Gift, so he observes a fulness of time for a full Gift: To endue our souls with a fulness of Patience and with a fulness of Thankfulness; with a fulness of Patience whiles the full gift is yet coming; and with a fulness of thankfulness when it is at last come: This twofold fulness must be in every Christian soul to entertain our Saviour Christ, or it will have an emptiness of Christianity: They are both together in the Prophets Hymn of Thanksgiving, Isa. 25. 9. Lo this is our God, we have waited for him, and he will save us; This is the Lord, we have waited for him; we will be glad and re∣joyce in his salvation: We have waited for him, there's the ful∣ness of Patience; we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation, there's the fulness of Thankfulness.
First, God requires in all Christian souls a fulness of Patience; Hence it was that though he promised Christ in the first begin∣ning of the world, (Gen. 3. 15.) yet he did not send him till towards the latter end of it; surely to make us the more sensible of our own misery, and by it, the more capable of his mercy; And to endear his everlasting love unto our souls, whiles we profess by our waiting his leisure, That we cannot pretend De∣sert, where we are bound to Patience; and consequently what we cannot expect with too much Patience, we may not receive with too little thankfulness: But there is also another reason of our Patience, that as Christ was long expected in his first, so he may also be long expected in his second coming: For as we waited for the Saviour, so also must we wait for the salvation: God waits to give it; much more must man wait to receive it; so saith the Prophet, Isa, 30. 18. And therefore will the Lord wait that he maybe gracious unto you; there's the first, God wait∣ing to give grace; Blessed are all they that wait for him, there's the second, man waiting to receive Grace: And he waits not in vain; for he is blessed in and for his waiting, and much more
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after it; So saith the Apostle, Rom, 8. 24. By hope ye are saved; Our salvation though it is unseen, for it is by hope, yet it is not unsure, for we are saved; we must seek it with diligence that we may find it, for it is unseen; and we must seek it with Patience; because we shall find it by seeking, for it is not unsure; If there be diligence in seeking, there will be joy in finding, according to that of the Psalmist, Psal. 71. 12. As for me, I will patiently abide alway and praise thee more and more; with the increase of Patience is the increase of Piety; the more Patiently he abides, the more Piously he praises; till at last from a fulness of Pati∣ence, he comes to a fulness of Piety, that is to say, a fulness of Devotion and of thankfulness.
LEss then a fulness of time would not serve God to give his Son: Less then a fulness of time may not serve us to ac∣knowledge that gift: So that we have a sufficient warrant for a long and a solemn Festival to celebrate the coming of Christ into the world. God himself observing a time and a fulness of time to send forth his Son to come to us, is warrant enough for us to observe a time and a fulness of time to give thanks and to rejoyce for his coming▪ Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ, was the Apostles irresistible argument for the Corin∣thians obedience, 1 Cor. 11. 1. And it may still be the Argu∣ment of every National Church, (which is the Grand Apostle of its own Nation, and must be, till the worlds end) you are bound to be followers of me when and where I do follow Christ, though no further may you obey me, nor may I challenge your Obedience, then that we may both together follow our blessed Saviour. The Authority of the Apostle is under the Auhority of Christ; The Authority of the Church, under the Authority
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of Scripture, the word of Christ: But where the Apostle doth indeed follow Christ, there to run away from the Apostle, is in effect to run away from Christ; even as to follow him, is indeed to follow Christ: The like must be said of the Authority of the Church, which succeeds the Authority of the Apostles, unless we will suppose all the promises of Christ to his Apostles, and all the Precepts of the Apostles to the People, to have been meer∣ly momentary and temporal, and not to have been written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come, 1 Cor. 10. 11. A supposition so far from true godliness, that you see it is directly against the express Word of God: Wherefore we may not doubt to follow the Church in those things wherein the Church follows Christ; And the Church follows Christ in all those things, for which she can alledge either Precept or Pre∣cedent from the Word of Christ, or can give a reason agreeable with his Word; And we cannot deny but that in this case the Church hath both Precedent, and Precept, and Reason, drawn from the Word of Christ; The Precedent is in general from the Jews appointing the Feast of Dedication without any peculiar command of the Old, yet not without the approbation of the New Testament, John 10. 22. In special from the Angels of God, who most zealously kept this Festival: The Precept is from the general equity of the Levitical Law, which still ob∣ligeth Christians, as it is subservient to Moral and Religious, though not to Typical and Ceremonious worship, and that plainly calls for Annual Festivals in honour of Christ, unless we will say that less honour is due to him since he is come in the flesh, then was due to him before his coming: The Reason is clearly from the very institution of the Church; for God gave Pastors and Teachers for the edifying of the body of Christ, Ephes. 4. 12. but the right way of edifying, is to lay the foundation upon the chief corner-stone: And doubtless this was the reason why the Church first appointed an Advent Sunday (which must needs be very antient, or else all the Order of the service could not depend upon it) because she observed that all the Docu∣ments of the Old Testament, did aim only at this, To fit and prepare men for the coming of Christ, and therefore was desi∣rous That we might so prepare our selves to receive Christ at his first coming to save us, that we might not tremble at his second
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coming to Judge us: Accordingly the Greek Church began their preparatory Feast for the Nativity of Christ, on the 20. of December, (that is five compleat daies before the Feast it self) as appears by their Chronologie, where the 20. of Decem. is called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: the beginning of the Preparatory feasts of the In∣carnation of our blessed Saviour. Lord, make me so to celebrate thy coming to us in our flesh, that I may daily find and feel thy coming to me in my soul: God observed a time; so may we, in that he teacheth us by his example: God observed a time for his Son; so will we, if he doth also teach us by his Commu∣nion. Saint Peter intimates both kinds of Gods teaching man, 1 Pet. 1. 15, 16. But as he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation, because it is written, Be ye ho∣ly, for I am holy: As if he had said, ye ought to be holy not on∣ly for the example, but also from the Communion of my Holi∣ness: It is not for Christians to be guilty of prophaness, when Christ by his communion calleth them to holiness.
GOD observed not time for it self, but for his Son; so must we observe no Festival for it self, but only for our Savi∣our; no day for it self, but for the Lord.
Were Christmas-Day (for that word is no more Popishly superstitious to me, then the spirit of Python, Acts 16. 16. or the signs of Castor and Pollux, Acts 28. 11. were Paganly su∣perstitious to Saint Luke) I say, were Christmas-Day to be ob∣served for it self, as the 25. Day of December, we had need to go not only to the Roman Archives for a moral assurance, but also to the Christian Archives, (the word of God) for a Theo∣logical assurance, That Christ was born on that very Day, or we could not Religiously observe it in the assurance of Faith;
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But since Christmas-Day is to be observed for its Duty, which is to give God thanks for the blessed Nativity of his eternal Son, who took our nature upon him and was born of a pure Virgin to Redeem us from Sin, Death and the Devil, a moral assurance is more then enough for the Day, (which indeed is the best as∣surance we can have of any day) since we have a full Theologi∣cal assurance for the Duty. And here I cannot but say in zeal to my Saviour, and to the salvation of their souls, of whom Saint Peter prophesied when he said, That there shall come in the last daies scoffers, walking after their own lusts, 2 Pet. 3. 3. what Saint Paul once said to the Iews at Antioch, Acts 13. 40, 41. Be∣ware therefore least that come upon you which is spoken of in the Prophets, Behold ye Despisers and wonder and perish: yea behold that ye may wonder, and wonder that ye may not perish in your despisings of God and of his Church; For whosoever shall scoff and mock at the keeping of Christmas-day, in relation to the 25. Day of December, is guilty of Ignorance, Immodesty, and Indiscretion, because he mocks at the Practice of millions of men much wiser then himself; But he that shall mock at keep∣ing it in relation to the Duty, must also be guilty of Impiety, Infidelity and Irreligion, because he mocks at the profession of an Article of the Christian Faith, and of that Article which is indeed the Ground and Foundation of all the Rest; For if Christ had not been born, he could not have suffered, nor have risen again; So that upon this one Article of Christs Nativity, are indeed grounded all the other Articles of our Christian Faith; So nearly doth it concern us to maintain our publick profession of this Article, least we should be thought to have forgotten or to have forsaken all the rest.
And this is reason enough why amongst other daies we should still observe this day of Christs Nativity, not for it self (for so happily it may not be safe to observe any day) but for the Lord; so shall we not impeach our Christian liberty, and we shall im∣prove our Christian Piety,
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THE Apostle establishing our Christian liberty, doth much more establish our Christian Piety, Rom. 14.
He establisheth our liberty, ver. 6. placing daies and meats in the same rank of indifferency; neither of them in it self ought to be reputed a matter of Religion: But withal he doth much more establish our Christian Piety, ver. 7. & 8. That both daies and meats; daies wherein, and meats whereby we live, are to be observed or not observed, as shall most conduce to his Glory by whom we do, and to whom we should all live.
He overthrows a legal or Iewish observation of daies for themselves, because that was a typical worship; But he esta∣blisheth an evangelical or Christian observation of daies for du∣ties, because that is a real and moral part of Gods service: For he that so regardeth a day, regardeth not it, but the Lord: And he that so regardeth it not, being thereunto called by that authority which God hath set over him, were best take heed lest it be thought that he regardeth not the Lord; He was best take heed, lest he give occasion of scandal or spiritual ruine to his brother, whilst he gives him occasion to think that God is not worth the regarding, or that those are given to superstition who do most zealously regard him: For he that doth this, may chance have the milstone in his heart to harden him, but sure he must have the milstone about his neck to drown him.
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PER scandalum laeditur proximus in mente, ut per homicidium in corpore, per furtum in possessione, saith the School-man, (Alensis par. 2. qu. ibi. m. 1.) Scandal wrongs my neighbour in his mind, as murder wrongs him in his body, and theft wrongs him in his possession▪ and therefore I have great reason to take heed of being scandalous, as to take heed of being a murderer, or a thief. And truly I cannot see, but that our Saviours deter∣mination concerning scandal reacheth this very case, Mat. 18. 6. Whoso shall offend one of these little ones, which believe in me, it were better a mill-stone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the Sea. For tell me, do they not believe in Christ who set apart a time of purpose to make Profession of their Belief in him? And if they do believe in him, how will you answer your scandalizing and offending them, whiles they are professing or rather indeed practising that their belief; or your scandalizing others, whiles you keep them from the same Christian Practice and Profession? Wherefore it can hardly be denyed but this is really a scandal or an offence to Christians, be∣cause it is a way to cause some of them to forget, or to forsake our Saviour Christ; But surely it is a down-right stumbling∣block to the Jews, to keep them from embracing the Christian Religion: For the main thing needful to their conversion, is, to prove the Messiah is already come in the flesh, which the Jews will take for granted is denyed if not disproved by them, who will not allow themselves nor others to celebrate the memorial of his coming: for the whole course of their Religion taught them to acknowledge the receipt of far lesser blessings, with much more solemn memorials; as the receipt of the Law with the celebration of Pentecost: So that whatsoever may be urged for serving God in Spirit & in Truth, to make Christians become sincere worshippers, yet we had need keep up an outward so∣lemn
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service and worship of Christ to make Jews become Chri∣stians; For it is not imaginable they should leave the outward decency and order that they are bound to use in their own Sy∣nagogues according to the whole purport of their own Law, to come to the slovenliness and Indecency that may be found in some Christian Churches, under the pretence of the purity of our Gospel.
IT is much to be lamented that Christians who are bound to do what is in them to convert the Jews▪ should so far scanda∣lize them, (either by Idolatry or by Profaness) as to hinder their conversion; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith the Jew in his Disputation with the Christian; (in the second Nicen Council in the sift Action;) I am scanda∣lized at you O ye Christians, that you worship Images: And is it not as great a scandal if they shall be able to say, I am scan∣dalized at you O ye Christians, that you do not worship God, or at least do not worship him with fear and reverence, as God? Or, That you refuse to worship Christ, whom you would have me believe to be the Son of God? For is it not an act of Reli∣gious worship in Moses his Law, to dedicate daies to the worship of God? If then we deny the Dedication of daies to the wor∣ship of Christ, How shall we perswade the Jews that we do in∣deed worship him as our God? It is to be feared, if we shall do so, they will rather think us turning Jews, then that them∣selves will think of turning Christians.
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SInce it is the ground of our Christian Religion, That all Gods gifts and mercies to mankind do concenter together in Christ, it is scarce possible those Christians should be thought truly religious, who make it their work to oppose the publick worship of Christ on that very day, wherein, as Christ, he was first capable of being publickly worshipped: They that are Jews, may think well of this, for they denying him to be the Son of God, will easily deny that he is to be worshipped: But sure good Christians cannot think well of it, who are taught to glorifie God in Christ, and much more for Christ: To glorifie God in Christ is our Religion; To glorifie God for Christ, is our salvation. Religio est motus creaturae rationalis ad Deum, ut ad primum principium & ultimum finem; Christus autem ut Homo, est via per quam fit hic motus, saith Aquinas, (22••. qu. 81.) Religion is a motion of the reasonable creature to God, as to its first beginning, and to its last end But Christ, as man, is the way whe••ein the reasonable creature thus moveth, so that once forget Christ as man, and you shall soon forget all religion; Saint Bernard tells us of a threefold coming of Christ; the first was in the infirmity of his flesh to redeem us: the second in the power of his spirit to sanctifie us: the third in the glory of his majesty to judge us: I will thankfully receive him as my Re∣deemer, that I may securely behold him as my Judge; For if I be ashamed of him in his infirmity, how shall he not be ashamed of me in his glory? Therefore I dare not be ashamed of this day, least I should seem to be ashamed of him also; no nor of his prayer, least I should seem to be ashamed of his words, since himself hath said, Whosoever shall be ashamed of me, and of my words, in this adulterous and sinful generation, of him also shall the Son ef man be ashamed when ••e cometh in the glory of his Fa∣ther, with the Holy Angel., Mar. 8. 38.
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IN keeping of Christmas the Church militant follows the ex∣ample of the Church Triumphant; for the First Christmas-Day that was ever kept on Earth, was kept by the Holy Angels that came of purpose from Heaven to keep it; Luk. 2. 13, 14 And suddenly there was with the Angel A multitude of the Heavenly Host, Praising God and saying, Glory to God in the Highest, and on Earth Peace, good will towards men: Shall that be accounted Superstition in men, which was undoubted Religion in the An∣gels? or can we be called will-worshippers for doing no more then they did, unless you will first call them so? Let will-wor∣ship go in Epiphanius his language for 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, for wilful and for superfluous worship: for what it hath of mans will or wilfulness, it cannot but have of superfluity: But let us take heed of calling that will-worship for which there is a Precedent in the Text, and so great a reason for that Precedent; for it is most certain that the blessed Angels in Heaven had great reason to joy for the incarnation of Christ, since he was the Repairer of their ruine in their fellows, and the confirmer of their ••••ay or standing in themselves: whence Alensis tels us plainly, that the Angels joy and bliss was greater after the incarnation of Christ then it had been before. For though the substantial Joy of the Angels consist in the contemplation of the Divinity, yet their accidental joy consists in the contemplation of the Humanity of our blessed Saviour, as it is united to his Divinity; Accrevit igitur gaudium Angelorum, licet non quod substantiam, tamen quantum ad multitudinem, quia pluribus modis habent modò gaudium in beatitudine quàm ante Incarnationem; (Par. 3. q. 12.) Therefore the Joy of the Angels is increased by the Nativity of Christ, though not in its substance, yet in its Va∣riety, for that now they rejoyce more several wayes then be∣fore;
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for whereas before the Incarnation they rejoyced to see God in God, now since it, They rejoyce to see God in man; And we find that they did sing and triumph that they might express their joy; surely not to teach us Christians (who in that we are men, have much greater cause of joy from thence, then the Angels could have) I say surely not to teach us men a lesson of silence and of fullenss; But if we will not regard Precedent, yet we must regard Precept; And the Angels seem to have a Pre∣cept, to worship our Saviour Christ at his Nativity; For the Apostles words seem to look towards a Precept, Heb. 1. 6. When he bringeth in the first begotten into the world, He saith, And let all the Angels of God worship him: I know this Text chiefly aims at the Proof of Christs Divinity: but if the Holy Spirit thought he had sufficiently proved the first-begotten of the Father though brought into the world in the form of a ser∣vant, to be no less then God, when he had said, And let all the Angels of God worship him; It is evident they do what is in them to invalidate this Proof, who at the very time that he was thus brought into the world, do cry out as loud as they can, let not the the sons of men worship him: But where doth the Holy Ghost say this? Epiphanius in his Ancorate plainly cites Mo∣ses's song for this Text, which is in Deut. 32. where v. 42. The Greek interpretation hath these words, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Let all the Angels of God worship him; but with some various lections, to make the Interpretation dispu∣table at least, if not questionable. However, since no such thing is to be found in the Hebrew, and we are not assured that the Holy Ghost spake in Greek by the Septuagint, (supposing their Translation hath been preserved incorruptible) we may not ascribe this Greek Translation to the saying of the Holy Ghost; we must therefore appeal to the Hebrew Original, which we are sure came immediately from Gods holy Spirit, and then we shall find this Injunction, Worship him all ye Angels of God, in Psal. 97. 7. And indeed the whole Argument of that Psalm is no∣thing else but a Prophecy of the Kingdom of Christ, and an exhortation both to Angels and men Joyfully to celebrate the magnificence, and thankfully to acknowledge the power of his Kingdom; For the Kingdom of Christ may be considered, ei∣ther as he is Creator, Eternal God with the Father and the Ho∣ly
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Ghost; and so the Jews themselves will not deny him to be their King▪ or As Redeemer, God and man in one Person, and and so the Jews do stiffly deny his Kingdom, and we Christians had need beware least we may seem to encourage or at least to confirm and Harden them in that Denial.
THe best course I know to prevent the hardening either of our own or of others Hearts, is, to take all the opportuni∣ties that are offered us, of glorifying our blessed Saviour; for he that is willing to neglect an opportunity, can scarce be zea∣lously inclined to lay hold of another time: he that will not Honour Christ on his own Day, will scarce pick out another Day to honour him, though he may pretend to keep Christ∣mass all the year; or if he be indeed zealously inclined to ho∣nour Christ, yet other Christians cannot be easily inclined to think him so: and Jews must necessarily think him not so: And though we ought not to judge them also that are without, 1 Cor. 5. 12. yet we ought not to offend them, (and much less them that are within) for this is the way to cause God to judge us: we will therefore take that for granted, which cannot be denied, that we have all great need to imploy very much, (and cannot imploy too much) of our time in those Christian Duties and Devotions which tend immediatly to the Honour of our Saviour Christ, that so we may not be de∣fective either in our preparation before them, or in our Af∣fections in them, or in our Thanksgivings after them.
First, That we be not defective in our preparation before our Christian devotions, for this is a main cause of our great shame
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and greater sin, that we have been hitherto so bad Christi∣ans, in so good a state of Christianity: that whereas Christ hath been so long and so powerfully applyed unto us both in Prayers and Word and Sacraments. (yet we have been so little benefited by that Application, as scarce to perceive the loss of it, or at least scarce to grieve for that loss: A shrewd sign of Edomites rather then of Israelites, to be con∣tent to lose our Prayers, our true spiritual Birth-right, that we might keep our Pottage, our Temporal interests) of which we may now truly say, as he did, Gen. 25. 30. Feed me with that Red, with that Red, for the just vengeance of God hath lately made it so with our own Blood: or at least a shrewd sign of Ephraimites if not of Edomites; for they being armed and car∣rying bows, turned back in the day of battle, Psalm 78. 9. The reason is given in the verse before; they were a generation that prepared not their heart, and whose spirit was not stedfast with God: They did not set their heart right, by preparation, and therefore could not keep their spirit stedfast by perseverance; and it is to be feared this is our case: For it had scarce been possible for so admirable a form of publike Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments (which had in it the most pithy Devotions both of Greek and Latine Churches, and the superstitions of nei∣ther) to have been so long amongst us to so little advantage of our souls, had there been good things found in us, and had we prepared our hearts to seek our God, as that good King did, 2 Chron. 19. 3. and hath left his example as a mandate for us so to do, since no Scripture is of private Interpretation, and much less of private Jurisdiction: The old Testament in all pre∣cepts and precedents of morality no less commanding the Chri∣stian then it did the Jew: but if any be contentious touching the Old Testament, though we have no such custome nor the Churches of God; yet we have both a Precept and a Precedent in the New Testament, to reprove and to reproach his conten∣tion, and the fittest that can be alledged for this Argument, even that of Saint John Baptist the forerunner of Christ: For he came preaching, saith the Text, and his Sermon consisted so much of this doctrine of Preparation, that he was chiefly to be known by this character, The Voice of one crying in the wilder∣ness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, Mat. 3.
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Secondly, We need imploy our time readily and carefully in those Christian duties which immediately concern the honour of Christ, that we be not defective in our Affections whiles we are at our Christian Devotions, actually conversing with our blessed Saviour; For our Affections have been so long standing on the lees and dregs of the earth, that they are not to be refined, and much less to be elevated and lifted up to Heaven, without multiplied Essays of most holy meditations: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith the Priest to the people in the Greek Litur∣gie: And they answer him, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: Let us lift up our hearts; we lift them up unto the Lord: so we in our Litur∣gy, from theirs: But it is observable that neither Greek Church nor ours used these words, till after many prayers were past, in which the Communicants had poured out their souls before God, to be sanctified by his Grace; And so likewise the Apo∣stle requiring us to seek those things which are above, doth as it were pass through all the Creed, to the Article of the Re∣surrection, before he hopes throughly to raise our Affections, Col. 3. 1, 2. If ye be then risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right Hand of God: set your Affection on things above, &c. He doth not only say, Christ is risen, but also if ye be risen with Christ; he is fain to presuppose and as it were to antedate the day of the Resur∣rection of the bodies, that so he may perswade them to a Resur∣rection of their souls. O God work in us this great miracle of thy Grace to raise our souls, that we may all rejoyce in that great miracle of thy power which thou wilt at the last day work on us, in the raising of our bodies.
Thirdly and lastly, we need imploy our time readily and carefully in those Christian Duties which immediately concern the honour of Christ, that we be not defective in our thankful∣ness after our Devotions, after we have had the honour and the happiness to converse with our blessed Saviour. For if I may not give mine alms without a full purpose of my heart, 2 Cor. 9. 7. Shall I think that I may give my self without it? or doth God indeed love a cheerful giver of the hand, and not much rather a cheerful giver of the Heart? To what pur∣pose is ihis wast? Mat. 26. 8, 9. seems in it self a question of Pi∣ety, and in its reason, For this ointment might have been sold for
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much, and given to the poor; a question of charity; yet St. John brands him that made it, That for his Piety, he was a Traytor ready to betray Christ; And for his Charity, he was a Thief, not ready to relieve, but to pillage his poor members, John 12. 4, 6. so dangerous a thing is it for men to begrutch any expence either of Time or of Pains, or of Patrimony, that is bestowed upon Christ, and much more to disturb the woman, the Church that bestoweth it; For wheresoever this Gospel (of the great condescention and greater goodness of the Son of God,) shall be Preached in the whole world, there also shall this be told for a memorial of her Duty that wrought the good work upon her Savi∣our, but of their undutifulness who opposed her in working it, Mat. 26. 10, 13. Gods mercies in our Saviour Christ are too many and great to come all Ex tempore to us; so should our Devotions be, to thank him for their coming, since it is every jot as good Divinity for our Prayers and Sermons, (which we offer up for the parts of Gods publick worship) as it was for Davids sacrifice, Neither will I offer burnt-offerings unto the Lord my God, of that which doth cost me nothing, 2 Sam. 24. 24. For what can I profess by the unworthiness of my offering, but either That I have a less worthy esteem of God, then David had, to whom I offer that which he would not offer, or that I have a more worthy esteem of my self then he had, as if forsooth God would at my hands accept of any offering?
THE Church had a new song put into her mouth meerly for the knowledge of the great mercy of her Saviours Nativity; How much more then for the enjoyment of it? He hath put a new song in my mouth, saith the Psalmist, even a Thanks∣giving to our God, Psalm 40. 3. And Saint Paul tells us where∣fore this new song was put into his mouth, in that he applyes
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this very Psalm to the coming of our Saviour Christ, Heb. 10. 5, &c. Wherefore when he cometh into the world he saith, Sacrifice and offering thou wouldst not, but a body hast thou prepared me: which words are quoted out of this same very Psalm, and point as directly at Christs coming into the flesh, as that finger of the Baptist did point at him after he was come, when he said, Behold the Lamb of God; which finger for that very cause (as some would perswade us) could not be burnt with the rest of his body. Gentiles ossa collegerant & cumbusserant: sed digitus ille quo Dominum ad Jordanum venientem monstravit, dicens, ecce agnus Dei—non potuit comburi. Durandus in rationali lib. 7. de decollatione S. Johannis.
This was indeed a sufficient cause why a New song should be put in the mouth even of the sweet singer of Israel, To shew that great was his Thanksgiving, yet greater his Thankfulness for this inestimable and undeserved mercy: as it appears, Psalm 40. 6, 7. O Lord my God, great are thy wonderous works which thou hast done, like as be also thy thoughts which are to us-ward: If I would declare them, and speak of them, they should be more then I am able to express: And all these wonderous works and thoughts are summed up together by the Apostle in this say∣ing, when he cometh into the world, as indeed they were consum∣mated and compleated by Christ himself in his coming, [when he cometh into the world, he saith:] And yet the words were said above five hundred years before he came: It seems God the Son was so long before observing the time of his own com∣ing into the world; surely not that the sons of men should la∣bour to forget, and resolve not to observe it.
And God the Father did the like. Heb. 1. 6. When he bring∣eth in the first begotten into the world, he saith, And let all the An∣gels of God worship him: Pointing as it were at the very day of Christs Nativity, or coming into the world; yet some men perswade themselves they do enough if they believe his going out of the world, and think only upon his Death and Passion: And God the Holy Ghost did the same, as being the Pen-man and Interpreter of these Texts, and the Applyer of them to our blessed Saviour: For he it was that spake both by the Prophets and by the Apostles. God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost did look and point very punctually at Christs
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coming into the world, Telling the Angels of it, that they might worship him; and the Angels accordingly sing a most heavenly Hymn of Thanksgiving at his Birth, not only in hea∣ven for their own Joy and Exultation, (for which they are al∣waies singing to him there,) but also on the earth, (or at least very near it, so near as that the Shepherds did both hear and see them singing) for our comfort and imitation: And there∣fore it cannot justly be accounted a Piece of Reformation, to teach men to look away as far as they can from that time, wherein the Church doth celebrate the memorial of Christs coming, as if God who had bid the Angels worship him, had bid men not worship him; which is surely a strain of very bad Logick, and of far worse Divinity.
THE Psalmist teacheth us a Lesson of everlasting Thank∣fulness for this everlasting Mercy, as appears Psalm 72. The chief argument of the Psalm is Christ, as is proved in the 8. and 9. verses, from the extent of his Dominion, far beyond Solomons, even to the worlds end; and much more in the 10. and 11. verses from the excellency of his Person, That All Kings should fall down before him, And particularly, That the Kings of Arabia and Saba should bring him gifts (which was literally fulfilled in the Presents of the wise men, Mat. 2. who by the Antients were both called and reputed Kings;) And the Conclusion that is inferred from these Premises, is Thanksgiving. The argument of the Psalm is everlasting mercy, even the mer∣cy of God to man in Christ; and the Conclusion of it is ever∣lasting Thankfulness; for so it follows, ver. 18. & 19. Blessed be the Lord God, even the God of Israel, which only doth wonder∣ous things, (and this wonderous thing above all the rest, That the Son of God was made the Son of man, that we who were by nature the children of wrath, might be made the Sons of God) there's the Thankfulness; And blessed be the
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name of his Majesty for ever, and all the earth shall be filled with his Majesty, Amen, Amen. There's the everlasting Thankfulness. Heaven was from the first instant of its creation filled with his Majesty; but now the earth was also filled with it; And if hea∣ven and earth are both filled with his Majesty, what shall we say if our sinful souls be empty? For if we be not filled with his Majesty, How shall we come to be filled with his Mercy?
GOD accounted that only the Perfection of Time, where∣in he wrought the work of our Redemption; as if all that had passed before that, from the beginning of the Creation, had been but an imperfect Time: He had no rest in the Creation, till he made man: He had no rest after it, till he Redeemed him: Divinely Saint Ambrose in his Hexameron, (and not the less Divinely because he took it out of Saint Basil, for the Latine Fathers borrowed of the Greek-Fathers, as later Divines have since borrowed from them,) Fecit Deus coelum, non lego quod requieverit: fecit solem, lunam stellas, nec ibi lego quod requieve∣rit; sed lego quod fecerit Hominem, & tunc requieverit, habens c••i Peccata dimitteret: God made Heaven, and I do not read that he did rest: He made the Earth, and I do not read that he did rest: He made the Sun, Moon and Stars, nor do I read there that he did rest; But I read that when he had made man he did rest, because ••e then had one to whom he could forgive sins: God was not at rest till he had made man, to whom he might forgive sins; And after he had made him, he was not at rest till he had forgiven him: O my soul, how canst thou be at rest till thou hast asked and obtained forgiveness?
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God accounts the Perfection of Time not from his Power, whereby he created the world, but from his mercy, whereby he redeemed it; as if the creation of the whole world had been imperfect without man, and the creation of man had been im∣perfect without his Redemption; and all other Time not worth the notice, save only that which Christ honoured with his coming, for whose only sake Time it self deserved to be continued and not to be Untimed, after men had corrupted it; For as no satisfactory reason can be given why God destroyed not the whole people of the Jews in their so many Idolatries, Rebellions and Apostasies, but only that Christ was to come of their Nation; So neither, why Time it self should not have been destroyed long before Christs coming, for the outragious sins and villanies which were acted by men, but only that Christ was promised to come in it; And so likewise for the same reason is Time still continued, notwithstanding all the defections of wicked men from God, and their defiances against God, because Christ may not lose the end of his coming, which was to save Repentant sinners; so saith Saint Peter, The Lord is not slack concerning his Promise, but is long suffering to us-ward, not wil∣ling That any should perish, but that all should come to repentance, 2 Pet. 3. 9. His will is, That since his Son hath been pleased to take upon him the nature of man, both sinful man should come to Repentance, and Repentant sinners should come to salvation.
Thus, in Gods account, That is only the Perfection of Time wherein he gives Christ: and why not also in ours, that where∣in we receive him? For in truth all the Time of our life is but an imperfect Time, till we have gained Christ; There may be the Perfection of the natural man before, but not of the spiri∣tual man, till he come to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ, Eph. 4. 13. All the Time of our life, though we live to Methuselah's Age, is but imperfection of Time, till with good old Simeon, we come by the Spirit into the Temple, and there see and embrace the Lord Christ, Luke 2. 27, 28. And then our life, though never so short, will immediately be so compleat and perfect, that we may pray for a nunc dimittis, and say, Lord now, at this very instant, without any longer stay, Lord new lettest thou thy servant depart in peace.
Saint Paul tells the Galathians plainly, that though never so
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aged in themselves, yet they were but meer children in his ac∣count till Christ was formed in them. Gal. 4. 19. My little chil∣dren of whom I travail in birth again, until Christ be formed in you. Did we truly believe this, and seriously reflect upon our own belief, we would look much less after the man, and much more after the Christian; Less after our selves, more after our Saviour; Less after our Interests, more after our Devotions: Since that only is to be accounted a perfect Time, which Christ by his presence did once make so in the world, and still is pleased to make so in our hearts. Nor is it any disparagement to those heavenly Spheres, by whose revo∣lution Philosophy hath taught us to measure the duration of earthly things, to say, That though Time do borrow its conti∣nuance from heaven, yet it borrows its Perfection only from the God of Heaven: The continuance of Time leads to death, but the perfection of Time leads to everlasting life: This mo∣ment in it self is not a part of fleeting Time, but in its good employment, it is no less then a blessed eternity: The motion of the first mover is exceeding glorious in the heavens, but it is much more glorious in our hearts; I will admire that motion because it produceth Time, but I will rejoyce and acquiesce in this motion, because it produceth eternity: For this is the mo∣tion which alone affords rest unto my soul, whiles I consider my blessed Saviour humbling himself, but exalting and raising me. O thou blessed moneth of December, wherein the earth gives us nothing, but heaven hath given us all things, having given us him who is All in All!
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CAP. II. Containing the Reasons of Christs welcome; the infinite love of God the Father, and of God the Son and Holy Ghost in our Redemption.
WE have passed through the Porch called Beautiful (Acts 3. 2.) wherein all mankind lame from their mothers womb had a long time laid expecting alms of the Son of God, when he should please to enter into the Temple of his body; Let us now go into the Sanctuary, and there contemplate and consider the infi∣nite Love of God which caused him to send his only Son for our Redemption, and we shall never want Thankful hearts to bid him welcome, nor Pious Hearts to make a right and conscionable use of his coming: That as he came at first for our Redemption, so he may come at last for our salva∣tion.
And this Part of Christian Divinity hath been taught us by Christ himself, not only by his Spirit (as all the rest) but also with his own mouth, Saint John 3. 16. For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him, should not perish but have everlasting life; Where it is evident, That the cause why Christ was given to man, was no other but only the love of God: And consequently, the grand
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Reason of our joyfully receiving this gift, must be this, That it proceeded from Gods infinite and undeserved love towards us: For Gods first gift to man was his love in his Son; His se∣cond gift, was his Son in our nature; So saith Saint Paul, 2 Tim. 1. 9. According to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began. Gods first gift was grace given us in Christ; his second gift, was Christ given us in our flesh: And the Master of Scholastical subtilties makes this a rule of sound Reason, as well as of sound Religion, Inter omnia do∣na dantis, primum donum quod dat, & quisquis dare potest, est Amor ejus quem primo dat amato, quia est ratio cujuscunque alteri∣us doni; nihil enim habet rationem doni, nisi in quantum cadit sub actu Amoris. Scotus in 1. lib. sent. dist. 18. The first gift which every one gives to him whom he loves, is his love; which is indeed the only reason of all his other gifts; for nothing can have the na∣ture of a gift, but as it proceeds from love. And therefore God first gives us his love, before he gives us any thing else: and he gives nothing as a blessing, but what he gives in love; as for example, Government is the best temporal gift to any Nation, yet given in anger, is no blessing, and consequently no gift: so saith the Prophet, Dedi Regem iratus eis, Hos. 13. 11. I gave them a King in mine anger; This was 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, A gift that was no gift, because not given in love: And as it is in Regal, so also in Popular Government; as appears from the 94. Psalm, the 20. ver. For whether we read, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, with the Septuagint, A Throne of wickedness, when Kings and Princes sit thereon; or sedes iniquitatis, with the Vulgar Latine, a seat or stool of wickedness, when mean People are got up to it, it is still a curse, not a blessing, if the Government be not given in love: For then whosoever be the Governors, They will imagine mischief as a Law, and gather them together against the soul of the righteous, and condemn innocent blood. So Musculus, (an ex∣cellent Protestant Divine,) glosseth those words of the Psalmist, That they do note unto us judiciary meetings of wicked men, to oppress the Righteous, and to Condemn innocent blood, by vertue of some unjust Laws or Constitutions, not at consensus Ju∣diciarios Hominum iniqu••rum, qui ad hoc conglobantur, ut Just••s opprimerent, & sanguinem innocentem vigore Legum injusta∣rum condemnarent. Thus that Author glosseth upon the place,
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and we cannot gainsay his gloss, since it is undeniable, that truth and righteousness doth hold only of Christ, not of mans Government, whether it be by one or by many.
Again, the Gospel of Christ is the best spiritual gift that can be given to any People, yet given not in love, oft-times proves no Blessing, and consequently no gift. Like Manna to the Israeli∣tes, in Psal. 78. Manna was a type of Christ, so owned by Christ himself. Joh. 6. 32. That was the Typical, this is the real Bread from Heaven which nourisheth our souls to eternal Life: And it, is with this as it was with that bread; with the Gospel of Christ as it was with the Manna; If given not in love but in anger, it will scarce turn to our spiritual nourishment: And we may justly fear it is now with the Gospel as it was then with that Manna. God gives it without his love, to those that either tempt him in their hearts, as the Jews did, ver. 18. asking meat for their lusts, looking after the Word more for curiosity then for conscience: or that tempt him with their mouths, as the Jews did, ver. 19, 20. They spake against God, and said, Can God furnish a Table in the wilderness? can he give bread also? can he provide flesh for his people? A sin that contentious men are too much guilty of, who in the midst of Eden cry out as if they were in in a wilderdess: in the midst of plenty repine as if they were in want: they do in effect say, that God cannot pre∣pare them a table good enough, unless their own hands help to make it; or will not prepare them a table soon enough, unless they overhasten his preparation. To complain against God instead of rendring humble & hearty thanks unto him to complain against him out of meer wantonness, not out of any want, save only of a thankful heart within our selves, is to do as the Jews did in this place, and then we must look to fare as they did; for a fire was kindled amongst them, and anger came up against them, ver. 21. And if we make God angry as they did, we cannot but expect to feel the same sad effects of his Anger, as it is said ver. 30, 31. But while the meat was yet in their mouths, the wrath of God came upon them, and slew the fastest of them, and smote down the chosen men of Israel. Just so is it with those that are of a quarrelsom reli∣gion, that will not receive Christ in the way that God offers him; they commonly have Christ not in love, but in anger: not to make them the more happy, but the more inexcusable: not
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to make them the better Christians, but to bring them under a stricter account for their defiance of Christ, and their abuse of Christianity: they know more of their Masters will, but it is to do the less of it, that so they may be beaten with many stripes: Luke 12. 47. Nay indeed they know less of their Masters will, though they would be thought to know more of it. For those know least of Christ, who seek to know most of him by conten∣tion and by faction: since he that said, learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in heart, Mat. 11. 29. will never take contention for meekness, nor faction for lowliness (and therefore will not teach such as love to be contentious and factions.) Saint Paul indeed tell us of some who preached Christ out of Envy, Phil. 1. 15, 16. but he doth not tell us of any that ever learned him so: he said to the Galatians, Christ shall profit you nothing, and Christ is become of none effect to you, Gal. 5. 24. but he had given the rea∣son of that saying before he said it, in the first chapter, and sixth and seventh ver. I marvail that you are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ, unto another Gospel; which is not another, but there be some that trouble you, and would per∣vert the Gospel of Christ: wherefore let those that make nothing of removing from the Church by which they have been cal∣led to the Grace of Christ, take heed lest they cause Christ to re∣move himself and his Gospel from them; let those that surfet of one Christ, take heed they have not many Christs for one; for there are many false Christs spoken of Mat. 24. 24. who though they shall not deceive the elect, who are constant to themselves, and to their Saviour, yet may not onely deceive and delude, but also destroy the wicked, that love to gad after their own Inventions, and please themselves in their own ima∣ginations: For Christ himself, if he be indeed given to such men, is not given in love; and that is the reason that he profits them nothing, and becomes of none effect to them, though to others he be all in all, working with great power to the establishment of their hearts here, and with greater mercy to the salvation of their souls hereafter.
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IT is observable that Saint Paul first rejoyceth in the love, and then in the gift of Christ. Gal. 2. 20. I live by the faith of the son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me. First he gave me his love, then he gave me himself; for even himself had been no gift to me without his love.
〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Saint Chrysostom, What dost thou say blessed Apostle? did he love thee only? did he give himself only for thee? no, he loved the whole nature of man, all the world besides: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; But I think my self as much bound to my Saviour, as if he had only loved me and given himself only for me: I think my self as much bound to live to him, as if he had died▪ only for me: and to give my self as entirely to him, as if he had given himself onely for me. A large soul which can readily comprehend, much more which doth willingly embrace and entertain the obligation of the whole world: and yet there is no Christians soul but must be thus enlarged: For Gods love in Christ, though universal in the diffusion, yet is it particular in the obligation: obliging every particular man to love the Lamb of God as if he had been slain only for his sake, as if in him alone he had taken away the sins of the world; For indeed in him alone, (be he never so righteous) hath he taken away both the sin of the world, and a world of sin; the sin of the world, that is the ori∣ginal corruption contracted in his nature; and a world of sin, that is, a numberless number of actual transgressions committed in his person.
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WE have seen Gods eternal love given us in Christ, the main reason of our Christian joy; and we must now en∣deavour to see the fruits and effects of that love, that we may accordingly rejoyce in him, even in our blessed Saviour. And truly Saint Paul makes eternal life to spring from no other root, but only from this root of Jesse; when he saith in his Epistle to Titus, cap. 1. v. 2. That God promised eternal life before the world began; I ask to whom did he promise it? Saint Hierom thinks to the Angels; but they not having been before the world, it was impossible a promise made before the world began, should be made to them; It is much safer to say, That this promise of eternal life was made to our blessed Saviour in our stead, and that God the Father promised to God the Son before the world began, That as many as should live according to the Faith of Gods Elect, and the acknowledgment of the Truth which is after Godliness, should in him have eternal life: For thus the same Saint Paul makes a dialogue betwixt God the Father and God the Son, in the Love and Communion of God the Holy Ghost, to which the Angels were not admitted, Heb. 1. 13. To which of the Angels said he at any time, Sit on my right hand until I make thine enemies thy foot-stool? And the Psalmist tells us plainly the persons that were in this Dialogue, saying, The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou on my right hand, &c. Psal. 110. v. 1. whence we may safely conclude that there was a great consultation be∣twixt God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost concerning the Redemption of mankind from the vassalage of sin and Satan; and what can we think was the ground of this Consultation, but only Gods everlasting love to us in our Redeemer?
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GOD will have love for love, and never casts away his love in vain: Man may love where he may be hated for his pains; it fared so of old with the best of men; the Church of God among the Iews, whose sad complaint is registred▪ Psal. 109. 3. 4. for the love that I had unto them lo they take now my contrary part, but I give my self unto prayer; Thus have they rewarded me evil for good, and hatred for my good will: we may be sure this complaint was made by the Church; for none else could say, but I give my self unto Prayer, or as it is in the Hebrew 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 but I am Prayer, save onely the Church, which being more peculiarly consecrated to the service of God, knew Her self bound more then any other to Pray Continually: Thus it is said of the singers, chief of the Fathers of the Levites, who remaining in the chambers were free, for they were imployed in that work day and night, 1 Chron. 9. 33. that is to say, in the work of singing Gods praises; according to that of the 134. Psalm, ver. 1. Behold now, Praise the Lord all ye servants of the Lord, ye which by night stand in the house of the Lord.
But least we should think that these words, they were imploy∣ed in that work day and night, did only shew the continual obli∣gation of the Levites duty, not their continued actual discharge thereof, we are told the particular times of the day and night wherein they did actually discharge the same, 1 Chron. 23. 28, 30. Their office was to wait for the service of the house of the Lord, and to stand every morning to thank and praise the Lord, and likewise at even: It was their office every morning and evening to sing Gods praises publickly in Gods house, and not to con∣tent themselves only with, and much less to confine themselves
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only to their Sabbath, as if God by claiming or challenging that day, had thereby denyed and rejected all the rest: Had this practice of praising God daily in the Temple been supersti∣tion or will-worship in the Jewish Church, we should have found it not commanded and commended, but reproved and reformed by their Pious Kings and Prophets, (for their Kings did not reform without the advice of their Prophets) but not finding this Practise Reproved or Reformed by them, how comes it among some Christians to be accounted as a main Piece of their Reformation, to shut up the doors of Gods house all the week daies, and to open them only upon Sundaies? and then in truth to open them for such a worship of God as is publick rather for its accidents then for its substance; rather for its time and place, then for its matter and form, rather for its notice and for its noise, then for its Communion? For though a man may go to Church as a Judge, (wherein he chiefly serves himself, and pleases his curiosity) upon unknown and uncertain terms; yet he can scarce go to Church as a Communicant, (wherein alone he serves his God, and satisfies his conscience) unless he be sure and certain of the terms of his Communion; for the conscience cannot be satisfied, and much less can God be served upon un∣certainties: And since the Apostle hath expresly said, That whatsoever is not of faith is sin, Rom. 13. 23. Those men do very indiscreetly, who in their publick worship do rather exercise their Phansies then their Faith; and those do very irreligiously who labour all they can to spread and to promote that exercise; For in the work of serving God, above all other works, it is evident, That the diminution of Faith is the addition of sin; wherefore men have little reason to bring themselves, and less Religion to seek to bring others to any the least diminution of their Faith in Gods service; for that is to come under the ha∣zard of Judas his curse, Let his prayer be turned into sin, Psalm 109. v. 6. We must then take it for an argument of true love, even the love of our souls and of our salvation, that the Christi∣an Church did in imitation of the Church of the Jews, offer up daily Prayers and Praises unto Almighty God for us, and also teach us to offer up daily Prayers and Praises for our selves; And it is to be feared That men have rewarded the Church of Christ evil for good, hatred for her good will, in that the dismal
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curse which follows in the next verses, hath fallen upon so ma∣ny Nations of the Christian world: For it is evident that this curse, set thou an ungodly man to rule over him, and let Satan stand at his right hand, let his days be few, and his children be vagabonds, &c. is ushered in with this sin, For the love that I had unto them, loe they take now my contrary part, ver. 3. and is continued and confirmed; for it is because his mind was not to do good, but persecuted the poor helpless man, that he might slay him that was vexed at the heart: and ver. 16. His delight was in cursing, and it shall happen unto him: he loved not blessing, therefore shall it be far from him. For nothing is more offensive to God, then that men will not return love for love: And yet this hath been always the portion of his Church: she hath still found returns of hatred for love; For there is no true Christian Church, but may truely say with Saint Paul, 2 Cor. 12. 15. I will very gladly spend and be spent for you, (it is in the Original Greek, for your souls) though the more abundant∣ly I love you, the less I be loved. No love affectionate like this, which loves the soul: no love abundant like this, which makes the lover spend and be spent for his affection; and such is the love of every true Christian Church, (which is the grand A∣postle of its nation,) it loves affectionately, it loves abun∣dantly, (for what it wants of this charity, it wants of true Christianity) but doth seldome receive back again love for love: It was Luthers complaint, that whilst he Preached and practised mans Inventions, he found too much love; but af∣ter he preached Gods truth, (the Gospel in its own since∣rity,) he found too little: so hath it been ever since his time with Protestant Churches: for those which have most deserved the peoples thanks, (for teaching them the true and the right way to heaven,) have least found their love.
Thus we see to our grief, no less then to our mischief, that the best of men may love in vain: but God never loves in vain. For he never loves, but he is beloved again: so saith the belo∣ved Disciple, 1 Joh. 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us. As he loves us, so we love him again; though he love first, we afterwards: and therefore if we love not him, the reason is, because he hath not loved us, in the Son of his love. I say not, if we love not God in himself, for thats impossible; acccord∣ing
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to that excellent position of Aquinas, Deus secundum essenti∣am suam à nullo potest odio haberi, sicut neque bonitas; At secun∣dum quosdam Justitiae suae effectus, potest. 22. qu. 34. God can∣not be hated by any man as he is in himself, no more then good∣ness can be hated; but he is hated only for some effects of his Ju∣stice: therefore I say not, if we love not God in himself, but if we love not God in his Vice-gerency or Authority, (whether Civil or Ecclesiastical,) by our dutifulness and fidelity; If we love not God in his Commands and Ordinances, by our Obedience and Piety: Lastly, If we love not God in his image and likeness by our brotherly and Christian Charity, we do indeed not love God: (for himself hath said, I ye love me, keep my commandments, Joh. 14, 15.) And if we do not love God, the reason can be no other but this, because he hath not loved us. And it were to be wish∣ed that some men, who most think themselves the darlings of heaven, would try their spiritual estate by this touchstone; for if we are indeed in the love of God, and in the Son of his love, it will appear by our returning love back again to him; And the Apostles consequence being as good for the Negative, as for the Affirmative, it must needs follow, that if we love not God, it is because he first loved not us.
GOD had a good reason of his love to us, thoug not in our selves, yet in our Saviour, the Son of his love. For he began his first Epistle or message of love unto our souls, as Saint John began his second and third Epistles, Ʋnto the elect and wel∣beloved, whom I love in the truth: (the same in effect with sa∣lutem in Christo, or dearly beloved in the Lord, which salutations have since been used by the Church) God loves us in the truth, that is in our Saviour Christ, who is called the truth, John 14. 6.
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And as no man cometh to the Father but by him; so no man abi∣deth with the Father but in him: so saith Saint Paul, 2 Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them; where is punctually set down, both the meritorious cause of our reconciliation, Christ; and the formal cause of it, Gods not imputing our sins to us for Christs sake. For God cannot be reconciled to a sinner, whilst he looks upon him as a sinner, because sin is directly opposite to his own goodness, and therefore he cannot but hate sin, as he cannot but love himself: and God cannot but look upon a sin∣ner as a sinner, whilst he looks upon him in himself, not in his Saviour, who hath expiated his sin. Hence Scotus tels us how God proceeded in primo, secundo, tertio, quarto Instanti, concerning Ju∣das: and makes Judas a sinner before he supposeth God to hate him at all; and a final sinner before he supposeth God to hate him finally: and we being all sinners, by the same reason must needs also be under Gods hatred, till he look on us in Christ, the only ground and reason of his love: According to which the learned Grotius saith, Distinguenda sunt tua, ut ita dicam momenta divinae Voluntatis circa hominem peccatorem: We must distinguish (as it were) three Moments in Gods will concerning sinful man: (Grotius his Moment comes very neer to Scotus his instant) Primum est ante Christi mortem: The first moment is before the death and pas∣on of Christ; In this God is altogether angry. Secundum est positâ jam Christi morte, the second moment is after Christs satisfacti∣on made. In this God is willing to be reconciled. Tertium est quum homo verâ fide in Christum credit, & Christus credentem Deo commendat: The third Moment is after Christs satisfaction is actually laid hold on by a lively faith, and Christ actually re∣commendeth the believer to his Father: And in this Moment God is actually reconciled, and well pleased with the sinner, and gives him all the benefits, if not the comforts, of that reconci∣liation: For Christ may be said to reconcile, where he may not be said to recommend: He is said in Saint Paul to reconcile the world unto God, 2 Cor. 5. 19. But himself saith in Saint John, he did not recommend the world unto God, John 17. 9. I pray not for the world. His reconciliation (it seems) concerns the whole nature of man; but his recommendation concerns only the persons of some particular men, even such as lay hold
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on his reconciliation by faith and repentance, saying, Lord, I believe, help my unbelief. For there is a meritorious or potential, and there is a personal or actual reconciliation wrought by Christ: The potential reconciliation belongs to all mankind, because it is founded on the infinite merit of Christs satisfaction; But the actual reconciliation belongs only to the true believers, because it is founded on the Application of that merit unto our souls: Still the 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 is only in Christ: God is well pleased in him for his own sake; but in us only for his sake. Excellently Zanch. (lib. 4. de tribus Elohim. cap. 1.) glosseth upon those words, Mat. 3. 17. This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: Tria beneficia iis paucis verbis docet Pater per Christum nobis communicari; dilectionis, reconciliationis, adop∣tionis, seu regenerationis; three blessings doth God the Father teach us in these few words to be communicated to us by Christ: The blessing of dilection, of reconciliation, and of adoption, or regeneration: we beloved in him, there is the dilection; we sons in him, there is the adoption; we accepted in him, there is the reconciliation. And indeed the words added to this voice, Hear ye him, Mat. 17. 5. plainly shew that the voice it self came not for Christs sake, but for ours, that we might think our selves in him beloved, and sons, and such in whom God is well pleased. The voice was from heaven, and the comfort is hea∣venly; Blessed be the God of heaven for them both. And we beseech him to repeat this heavenly voice, and to renew this Heavenly comfort by his own Holy Spirit, unto our souls.
AS God loves us in order to our Saviour, and therefore not causelesly; so also he loves us in order to our salvation, and therefore not fondly or preposterously: Gods love is not a fond love••; for whom he loveth, he chastneth: but it is a saving love; for when he chastneth, he chastneth us for our good, that we might be partakers of his holiness, Heb. 12. 10. He loves not
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like a fond mother, who had rather venture to break her own heart, then her childs stomack. For God will make his sons by adoption, like his Son by nature, whom he most loved, and yet he most scourged: He will make those whom he in∣tends to save, like the Captain of their salvation by wearing a crown of thorns, before he will make them like him by wearing a crown of Glory. Hence happily it comes to pass, that though we find many and great expostulations with God in the Old Testament, concerning the persecutions of his Church, (as particularly, Psalm 74. and Jer. the twelfth) Yet we scarse find so much as a direct complaint (which is much less then an expostulation) concerning it, in all the New Testament. The reason is plain, that the Christian Church might be taught by Christs Doctrine, as well as by his Exam∣ple, not to look to fare better then her Master; and sure she is, she cannot fare worse. Therefore is the Christian Church in a manner ashamed to say with David, Psalm 74. 1. O God, why hast thou cast us off for ever? Since she knows the Son of God himself hath said, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? or with the Prophet, (Jer. 12. 1.) Righteous art thou O Lord when I plead with thee, yet let me talk with thee of thy judgements. Since she knows Saint Peter hath said, For the time is come that judgement must begin at the house of God, (1 Pet. 4. 17.) or again, with the same Prophet, Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper? Since Christ himself hath said, this is your hour, and the power of darkness, (Luke 22 53.) Or lastly, with the same Prophet, Wherefore are all they happy that deal very treacherously? Since our blessed Saviour himself, had a Traytor among his own Apostles? and hath shewed us that true happiness consists not in having power to persecute, but in ha∣ving patience to be persecuted for righteousness sake, Mat. 5. 10. Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness sake, for theirs is the Kingdom of heaven Christ himself was crucified between two theives, and thats reason enough why his Church should not greatly complain, though she be crucified, not only between, but also by two thieves. The one robbing God of his honour, the other of his Patrimony; Saint Paul hath given a hint of them both in one piece of a verse, Rom. 2. 22. Thou that abhorrest Idols, dost thou commit Sacriledge?
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For in truth, Idolatry and Sacriledge have a long time been the two grand scourges of the Christian Church; Idolatry whip∣ping God out of his Temple, to let in other petty Dieties; and Sacriledge whipping him in it. They that abhor the Sacriledge, committing the Idolatry; they that abhor the Idolatry, com∣mitting the Sacriledge.
I must needs confess that being in this Eden of God, in this Paradise contemplating the tree of life, I am unwilling to divert my eyes from that tree, and much more my heart from that contemplation; but am desious to perswade my self, that I see the Prophet Isaiahs vision turned into action, and God acting it in heaven, no less then the Prophet acting it on earth, Isa. 6. 8. Also, I heard the voice of the Lord saying, whom shall I send, or who will go for us? then I said, here am I, send me. For God the Father did as it were consult with himself, saying, whom shall I send? and God the Son did forthwith answer him, Here am I, send me. For as there was faciamus hominem, Gen. 1. 26. God consulting and deliberating with his Son, (his eter∣nal wisdom) and with his Spirit, (his eternal power) about our creation; so there was redimamus hominem, God consult∣ing and deliberating with his Son (his eternal righteousness) and with his spirit (his eternal love) about our redemption: For Gods goodness is as infinite as himself, and that hath made him impart to man, not only his goodness, but also himself: Hence that saying of the sublime Areopagite, quod ipse Deus propter amorem est exstasin passus, That love made God as it were go out of himself: For great love is never without some kind of exstasie, and therefore as it makes man go out of him∣self, and be not where he lives, but where he loves; so it also
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made God the Son, as it were; go out of himself, and come and be in man, whom he had loved with an eternal love. Thus hath love brought God from God to be in man: and thus should it also bring man from man to be in God: For this is the end of that blessed Mysterie, and more blessed mercy which we commemorate when we celebrate the incarnation of the Son of God; he was made of us, that we might be new made by him; he made one flesh with us, that we should be one spirit with him. Saint Peter accounted it a great mercy, that God had sent his Angel to deliver him from the hand of Herod, Act. 12. 11. How much more ought we to account it a great mercy, that he hath sent his only Son to deliver us from the power of sin and Satan, which persued us much more fiercely, and would have wound∣ed us much more desperately? He considers his deliverance, (ver. 12.) and shall not we? especially since the Apostle hath shewed us the way how to enlarge this consideration? Heb. 1. 1, 2. God who at sundry times, and in divers maaners, spake in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son. It was a great mercy that he spake to the Fathers by holy men, a greater that he spake to them by the holy Angels (for that was one of the divers manners of his speaking.) But the greatest mercy of all was, that he hath spoken to us by his son; and the reason is intimated in the following words; for in time past was the beginning, the inchoation of his love, when he spake by his Prophets and Angels; but in these last dayes hath been the accomplishment and consummation of it, when he spake to us by his Son. Before, he had made the world and upheld all things by the word of his power; but now he hath redeemed the world, and having purged our sins, upholds it by the hand of his mercy: For till our sins were purged, it was only the power of God upheld the world, that he might purge it; But now our sins are purged, tis the mercy of God up∣holds the world, that he may save it: This is the only reason Saint Peter gives us why the last day, that shall destroy all things by fire, is so long in coming, 2 Pet. 3. 9. The Lord is not slack, but is long-suffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. The same mercy that made him ha∣sten his first coming, makes him delay his second. And was it not a mercy, not only beyond our expression, but also beyond our
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admiration, that the Son of God, who was the brightness of his glory, should become the brightness of his enemies, and the glory of his people? Yet so saith Saint Luke 2. 32. to be a light to lighten the Gentiles, there he was the Bridegroom of his enemies; and to be the glory of thy people Israel, there he was the glory of his own people.
It was a mercy that we could never deserve, and therefore must ever acknowledge, that God was pleased to send his Apo∣stles to teach us his saving truth, and to shew the way of salva∣tion; for they were the pillars of the Church, Gal. 2. 9. But infinitely greater was the mercy that he pleased to send his own Son to teach the Apostles; for he is the cheif corner stone, 1 Pet. 2. 5. For it is observable, that Saint Peter himself was con∣tent to be accounted a pillar of the Church, and leaves it only for Christ to be called the chief corner stone; And there∣fore that Preface of Bellarmine which he once made in the Ro∣man Schools, Praefatio habita in gymnasio Romano, and hath since prefixed before the third general controversie of his first Tome, which is de summo Pontifice, had need of all the waters of Tiber to wash it from gross flattery, if not from detestable blasphemy, since he is pleased therein to wrest those words of the Prophet Isaiah, Behold I lay in Zion for a foundation, a stone, a tryed stone, a precious corner stone, a sure foundation, and to apply them to Saint Peters Successor, which Saint Peter durst not apply unto himself, but leaves them only for Christ, the eter∣nal Son of God.
We cannot too much prize the voice of the Apostles; as for example, Saint Pauls Epistles cannot be in too great esteem, which (saith Saint Hierom) bring him every day more glory, as Christ more converts: But the voice of the eternal word, calling to Saint Paul from heaven, (Act. 9. 4, 5.) and in him to us, who can ever hear with sufficient care and attention, who can embrace with sufficient reverence and estimation, who can follow with sufficient alacrity and devotion?
Saint Paul was but 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, one sent from God, and yet how greatly doth he magnifie that office in every one of his Epistles? but our Saviour Christ was 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, one sent out of God to man; for so saith Paul, Gal. 4. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, God sent forth his son: that is, God sent him not only from himself as
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he sent the Apostles, but also out of himself, as he sent none but only his beloved Son.
GReat was the love of the Son of God towards man, that he would be sent forth from his Father; yet much greater (if greater can be) that he would be sent forth after so mean a manner, as to be made the Son of man; And yet even in this meaness was no less then a miracle; For our blessed Savi∣our was so made the Son of man, as that he was not made the Son of a woman, but of a pure Virgin: and therefore Saint Paul saying that he was made of a woman, Gal. 4. 4. doth call the blessed Virgin-mother a woman, only to declare her sex, not to dispute, much less to disparage her Virginity: for she was 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 semper Virgo, alwayes a Virgin, before, in, and after the birth of Christ, in the judgement of the Ca∣tholick Church, which reputed Helvidius an Heretick for con∣cluding otherwise from some slight Grammatical notions, whereby he did rather blaspheme the Text, then understand it, whiles he let the itch of his Criticism (as too too many in these latter times have done) overspread and infect his Divinity:
Accordingly Saint Chrysostom justly finds fault with Aquila and Theodosius, for rendring the words of Isaiah 7. 14. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, that is, Behold a young woman shall conceive: and he confutes them by the Authority of the Septuagint, (which (saith he) are to be preferred before all other Interpreters, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, (Chrys. hom. 5. in Mat.) For their antiquity, for their number, and for their consent; and they interpret the words, thus, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a son:
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But Justine Martyr hath sufficiently cleared this doubt to Try∣pho the Jew; and I have not to do with Jews, (that I should need insist on this controversie,) but with Christians; for such we are in our belief, and had need labour to approve our selves to be such likewise in our practice, for fear our practice should else subvert and ruine our belief: For he that hath said, I will shew thee my faith by my works, (Jam. 2. 18.) hath thereby as∣sured us, that contrary works do at least shew, if they do not make a contrary faith: For which cause they are certainly much to be pittied, who scoff and mock at our most Christianlike commemoration of this great Mysterie and greater mercy of the Incarnation of the Son of God: for though the Angels were thought worthy of the Mysterie, and desired more and more to look into it, 1 Pet. 1. 12. yet it was man only that had the blessing of the mercy; so saith the Apostle to the Hebrews, Heb. 2. 16. For verily he took not on him the nature of Angels, but he took on him the seed of Abraham. Hence it is the privi∣ledge of men, equally with Angels, to be called the Sons of God; but above them, if we consider the reason why they may be so called. For as the Sons of God is spoken of the An∣gels, Job 1. 6. so the Sons of God is spoken of men, Genesis 6. 2. And Saint Ambrose expounding those words thus, Vi∣derunt Angeli Dei, (for he did not read, but only expound them so, which if our late Criticks had observed concerning the rest of the Fathers, they would have found less various lecti∣ons, but more various Expositions of the text,) I say, Saint Ambrose expounding those words of Gen. 6. 2. thus, Viderunt Angeli Dei, did not meant by his Angeli, the spiritual and heavenly substances, (saith Vellosillo in his Theological Problems) but holy and religious men, of the Progeny of Seth, who be∣cause they persisted, and persevered in the true Religion and worship of God, (when all the rest of the world fell away from it, by a damnable Apostacy,) were by the Holy-Ghost honoured with the glorious title of the Sons of God, and Saint Ambrose for that same reason calls them Angels. O that we would consider how far we have degenerated of late from be∣ing Angels in this sense, when for want of constancy in Gods undoubted and everlasting truth, we may scarce justly be re∣puted or called men!
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〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉.
But holy men were indeed called the sons of God, not only be∣cause they were holy, which gave the Angels that same title, but also because they were men, & did carry about them that nature, which the Son of God was determined to take upon himself: so that in the title it self, the sons of God, men are equal with the Angels. But in the reason of that title, the son of God made man, they are above them. And for this cause it is that men are of∣ten called his brethren, as Heb. 2. 17. It behoved him to be made like unto his Brethren, because he is of the same flesh and blood with men; but never was it said of Angels, that they were brethren to the son of God. O mercy of mercies, the Son of God made lower then the Angels, to exalt the sons of men above them! This was the good Angels joy for us, and sheweth how much more it should be our own joy for our selves. They have still joy in heaven for our conversion, Luke 15. 10. but they had once joy in earth also for our re∣demption.
Earth the place of sorrow, because of sin, till Christ came on it; and then the place of joy because he came to take away the sin, and with the sin the sorrow: This made earth at that time seem heaven to the Angels, and that made them leave of looking on God in God, that they might look on God in men; leave of praising God in heaven, that they might praise him in Earth; Luke 2. 13. Lord keep us men from ceasing to praise thee for this mercy of mercies here on earth, least we keep our selves from beginning to praise thee for it hereafter in heaven; for this mercy, God made man, is a mercy not be forgotten, till there be no man left upon earth to remember it: But if it should be forgotten upon earth through our perversness, or profaness, yet sure we are, it will never be forgotten in heaven, where this very same son of man now sitteth on the right hand of God; and shall at the last day come in the same flesh to judg us, in the which we now acknowledge his coming to save us; Lord grant that we may so praise thee in this day of salvation, that we may not be condemned of thee in that day of Judgement. It is an excellent argument that Bellarmine useth amongst others, to prove that the Jews never corrupted the Hebrew
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Text, because they still in their Bibles retain all the prophecies concerning Christ, insomuch that they are far more powerfully convinced from the Hebrew originals, then either from the Greek or from the Latine translations. (Bell. lib. 1. de verbo Dei, cap. 2.) as for example (saith he) in the second Psalm; (which the Apostles applyed more peculiarly to our blessed Saviour, Acts 4. 25.) The Greek 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and the Latine Ap∣prehendite disciplinam, Apprehend instruction, makes nothing against the Jews: but the Hebrew 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Kiss the Son, makes so much against them that it wholly stops their mouths, because it bids them exhibit worship and reverence to the Son of God. And shall we think that those men do not open the mouths of the Jews to blaspheme our blessed Saviour, and shut their hearts from receiving him as the Messias, who forbid others to exhibit this worship or reverence unto him?
So little Reason is there, and less Religion, for us instead of kissing the Son least he be angry, to be angry with others for desiring to kiss the Son, even our blessed Saviour, the Son of God from all eternity, but by his blessed incarnation made also in time the Son of man.
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OUR blessed Saviour was therefore made under the Law, that we should not be kept under it; He was made un∣der the Obedience, that we should not be kept under the curse of the Law.
Factus ex muliere, factus sub lege; He was made of a wo∣man, and therefore made under the Law: For nothing that is made of, but is also made under: This is the Doctrine of hea∣ven, Apoc. 4. 11. and the inhabitants there rejoyce in it, that as they were made by Gods power, so also for his pleasure: There∣fore we say of the eternal Son of God, that he was begotten of the Father, not made of him, because he is not under him: but of the Son of man we justly say, he was made of, and consequently he was made under God.
Debitor essentiae, & debitor Justitiae, Christ as man owed his being to God, and therefore owed his service to him; as such, he was made by his power, and therefore made under his Ju∣stice.
Christ was made under the obedience of the Ceremonial and Judicial Law, that we should not be detained under the obedi∣ence of either: He was made under the obedience of the mo∣ral Law, not that we should be exempted from under the obe∣dience, but that we should be exempted from under the curse and condemnation of it. Christ himself as made, was made un∣der the Law; for made, and made under, cannot be severed; and there is no being under, without a Law. We cannot consi∣der the Son of God made under the Law, but we must needs condemn the Sons of men who will make themselves above Law. Sin is the transgression of the Law, saith Saint John, 1 John 3. 4. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; now this 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 is as well sine lege, as contra legem; as well without Law as against it: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 is on∣ly
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beside or against Law, but 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 is also without Law: And we may a little Criticise upon those words of the Greek Text, so as we teach our Grammar to be subservient to our Divinity; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Omnis qui facit peccatum, & iniquitatem facit; whosoever doth sin, doth also ini∣quity; for it is much more 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 then 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, much more to do sin as our work, then barely to sin, as our misery: The latter may be only 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, a transgression of the Law, but the former is also 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉▪ a privation of the Law; that is a detestation, and as far as in us lies, an abolition of it; For a willful sinner doth not only contemn Law, but as much as he can confounds it; as he sins against the Law, so he would fain sin without the Law: He wishes there were no Commandment to restrain him, no Lord to over-rule him, no judge to over-aw him: And he that is of this temper, is properly 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, a wic∣ked man, a son of Belial, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 sinc jugo, one that will not be under a yoke, one that will have no Law, because he will not be under any.
This temper should be far from Christians, because it was far from Christ: The Text tells us, He was made under the Law; sure not for us to make our selves above it; but that all good Christians should labour to follow him both in active and in passive obedience: As for active obedience, the Text is plain; It is said of Christ, Heb. 10. 7. Lo I come to do thy will O God; And Saint Paul requires no less of every Christian, Eph. 6. 6. Doing the will of God from the heart; Again, Christ saith of him∣self, John 4 34. My meat is to do the will of him that sent me; he could not live without his obedience; and he also tells us that we have little hopes of eternal life without it; Mat. 7. 21. Not every one that saith unto me Lord, Lord, shall enter into the King∣dom of heaven, but he that doth the will of my Father which is in heaven.
And as for passive obedience, the Text is also as plain; for Christ saith concerning himself, when he was going to his suffer∣ings, not as I will, but as thou wilt, Mat. 26. 39. And Saint Peter saith no less concerning the Christian, 1 Pet. 4. 19. Where∣fore let them that suffer according to the will of God, commit the keeping of their souls to him in well doing as unto a faithful Crea∣tor.
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The obediential power in the creature is much more excellent then the natural power: The power whereby we serve and obey our God, is much more glorious then the power where∣by we serve or preserve our selves: And when we are come to so great a perfection of Christianity as to know this, then we shall truly know Christ; For truly to know Christ is to follow him; and truly to follow Christ, is to follow him to his Cross; which when we shall be content to do, we shall then find that as his service is perfect freedom, so his affliction is perfect conso∣lation: but that belongs to another head, and shall be the argu∣ment of the next Chapter, wherein the Spirit of God will afford us more consolations, then the malice of men can load us with afflictions.
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CAP. III. The joyful manner of Christs welcom, as proceeding from joy in the Holy Ghost: witnessing to our consciences that through Christ we are not under the Law, but under Grace, and made the children of God by Adoption.
THere is no man but naturally desires joy and delight as a remedy against his labours (na∣turaliter appetit delectationes & medicinas contra labores sensuum & motuum, saith A∣quinas.) The reason why the natural man looks so much after his delights, is, because he looks upon them as medicines to heal his sicknesses, or as remedies against the continual labours of his sense, and of his motion. And for this reason the spiritual man ought much more to look after his spiritual delights, because he is much more under the labours of sense and motion then is the natural man; for there is no sense so irksom as the sense of Gods wrath, and of mans unworthiness: and no motion so toilsom as that which seeks to climb up from earth to heaven: and this is the sense, this is the motion of the spiritual man; he is continu∣ally feeling the burden of flesh, and much more of sin upon his soul; there's his sense: He is continually panting and ••ighing after God for rest; there's his motion: In so great a labour, both
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of his sense and of his motion, how should he be able to subsist, if it were not for the comfort of spiritual delight, which proceeds only from Gods Holy Spirit?
For delight cannot be but from some good that is convenient and present, and known to be so: Ad delectationem duo requi∣runtur; conjunctio boni convenientis, & cognitio hujus conjuncti∣onis, saith the same Aquinas. A man cannot have delight with∣out two things; first the conjunction or acquisition of some convenient good, then the knowledge of that conjunction; so is it in this case. The Redemption of our souls from death, is undoubtedly both a convenient and a present good; and yet few men have true joy and delight from it, because few apprehend it as actually present. Wherefore it is the singular gift and love of God the Holy Ghost to any man, to give him the true know∣ledge of his Saviour, that he may give him the true joy of his salvation. For this indeed is the joy in the Holy Ghost, and comes only from him. It is he that teacheth the Church Militant to sing a new song on earth for her joy in Christ: it is he that teacheth the Church Triumphant to sing a new song in heaven for the same joy: O sing unto the Lord a new song, saith the Psalmist, Psal. 98. and that Psalm is nothing else but a song of Joy and Thanksgiving for the Redemption of mankind by Je∣sus Christ; there's the new song on earth; and again, Rev. 5. 9. They sung a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the Book, and to open the seals thereof; for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood; there's the new song in heaven, to ex∣press the joy of the same Redemption; For the Holy Spirit teacheth them to practise this new song in earth, who are to sing their part of it in heaven: For those men are not like to come to Abrahams bosom, who are not Abrahams sons: and those men are not yet Abrahams sons, who have not his faith, and do not his works▪ Now this was the Faith of Abraham to see the day of Christ; and this was his work, to joy in that sight▪ John 8. 56. Your Father Abraham rejoyced to see my day, and he saw it and was glad: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, exultavit & gestivit, He re∣joyced, and he desired to express his joy. His desire encreased his joy, and his joy inflamed his desire: He did see it a far off by faith, the eye of his soul: and he desired to see it nearer by sense with the eye of his body: the joy of the one did not hin∣der,
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but advance the joy of the other; for if the heart of them must rejoice that seeke the Lord (Psal. 105. 3.) then much more must the heart of them rejoce that have found him.
Accordingly good Christians, do indeede shew no other then Abrahams faith by desiring to looke on Christ; and no other then Abrahams worke by rejoycing in that vision: which we may well suppose was the cause that the Latine Church anti∣ently used (and still useth) some such peculiar hymns before the nativity of Christ, as it is hard to determine whether they have more of desire in them to see his day comming, or of joy to see it come; our Calander still retains the memory of the first of those hymns, (which was O sapientia) on the 17 of Decem∣ber; but the hymns themselves in the Latine Church hold out till Christmas eve; I will give you a short scheme of them;
- 1. O Sapientia! veni ad docendum nos viam prudentiae. O Thou who art the eternal wisdom of God, come and Teach us the way of true wisedom.
- 2. O Adonai! veni ad redimendum nos in brachio extento. O thou who art the Lord of might, come and redeem us by thy mighty hand.
- 3. O radix Jesse! veni ad liberandum nos: O thou root of Jesse come and deliver us.
- 4. O Clavis David! veni & educ vinctum de domo carceris: O thou Key of David, come and open the prison doors, and let out the Prisoners.
- 5. O oriens splendor lucis aeternae! veni & illumina sedentes in tenebris, & umbrâ mortis: O thou Day-spring of eter∣nal light, come and enlighten us who sit in darkness, and in the shadow of death.
- 6. O Rex gentium! salva hominem quem de limo formasti: O thou who art the King of the Nations, come and save man whom thou hast formed of the dust of the earth.
- 7. O Emanuel! veni ad salvandum nos Domine Deus noster: O thou who art God with us, be also a God to us, and save us O Lord our God.
These greater and more solemn hymns (called Antiphone majores) were at first made only in the honour of Christ, though in process of time (after the Invocation of Saints had crept in∣to
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the Church) there were two more added to them, O Thoma Didyme, and O virgo Virginum, (as Hugo testifieth in his Com∣mentary upon the 38. Psalm) which now the office it self of the blessed Virgin blusheth at, and taketh no notice of at all: and it were to be wished it had left out other prayers to the Blsseed Virgin, which are as grosly superstitious as were those Hymns: For they that believe Christ to be God, must confess him to be a jealous God, and that he hath said, I am the Lord, that is my name, and my glory will I not give to another, Isa. 42. 8. and what is his glory but that of Prayer, and of Praise? Accor∣dingly it is observable that at the time of his coming in the flesh, the Oracles of Jupiter, Apollo, Hecate, were silent and gave no answer, as if by their silence they had proclaimed, that the Word was only in Judea: which is not only historical, but also rational, not only credible for the relation, but also for the reason; because it was convenient that he who came to break the head of the Serpent, should at the time of his coming stop his mouth.
Wherefore those Oracles that spake from the false and evil Spirit, were all silenced at Christs coming, as being unfit wit∣nesses to Gods Truth, because they were from a false Spirit: and to his goodness, because they were from an evil Spirit: But their mouthes were then most open, who spake by the Spirit of God; The Angels that had been silent long before, then began to sing: Babes and sucklings were advanced above men, to chant out their Hosanna's to the Son of David, when he was made lower then the Angels: In a word, all tongues and languages of the world, accustomed before to speak vanity, were then taught to speak the wonderful works of God; and Saint Peter gives us the reason of it, because God did then pour out his Spi∣rit upon all flesh▪ Acts 2. 17. This is the Spirit, that still filleth the hearts of good Christians with Thankfulness, and their Mouths with Thanksgivings, that they may continually more and more rejoyce in this Son of God▪ till they come to enjoy him: For as Christ is called panis descendens, Joh. 6. 50. not qui descendit, the bread decending, to shew that he is alwaies descending in his salvation: though he descended but once only in his person: so our praise and thanksgiving to God for his descent, may be called Cantus ascenden••, the praise that is alwaies ascending, ac∣cording
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to that of the Psalmist, Psal. 71. 12. As for me, I will patiently abide alway and will praise thee more and more; for this praise never comes to its zenith or vertical point till our souls be there where our Saviour now is, and from whence we expect him again to our salvation. For good Christians can ne∣ver meditate enough on their Redeemer, & never joy too much in that meditation: They can never be weary of singing Hosan∣na, blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord, because in their souls, they have tasted the sweetness of that song; The Spirit of God making melodie with their hearts, whiles they are making melody with their mouths.
WE cannot but have great joy, if we have true joy in our Redeemer: and we cannot but have true joy in our redeemer, if we rightly weigh and faithfully embrace the mercy of our redemption: therefore when the Holy Ghost hath said, Let Israel rejoyce in him that made him, Psal. 149. 2. he hath much more said in effect, Let Israel rejoyce in him that re∣deemed him: for the Joy is not so truly that he is made, as that he is made Israel: according to that of Saint Augustine, frustra profuit hominem nasci, nisi redimi etiam profuisset, in vain had man been made partaker of the Creation, if he had not also been made partaker of the redemption. And agreable to this is our Saviours doctrine concerning Judas, who in that he betrayed his redeemer, forfeited his share in this redemption; It had been good for that man if he had not been born, Mat. 26. 24. To seek to make the contrary true by Metaphysical quiddities, (as a Divine of late hath done) is so to be in Metaphysicks as to be out of Divinity: for though singly and simply in it self, being is
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better then not being, yet a Metaphysical being which only ex∣empts from nothing, accompanied with a moral not being that makes worse then nothing, is certainly not better but far worse then a bare Metaphysical not being: for it is clearly better to be nothing, then to be worse then nothing, and consequently to be no soul at all, then to be a damned soul, under an eternal enmi∣ty with and eternal separation from that goodness which is the fountain of being, and which only doth make our being to be good: wherefore it must needs be a dangerous Position that re∣quires such a proof: but more dangerous▪ that admits it▪ For to admit this, is in effect to say, that our Saviour Christ is not a man of his word, as he that first broached this desperate do∣ctrine, being urged with the authority of our Saviours fore∣mentioned words, It had been good for that man if he had not been born, made his answer that our blessed Saviour did there speak secundum captum vulgi, according to the opinion of the com∣mon people; which is little less then to put a fallacy in the mouth of Truth it self, and to fasten such a blasphemy upon the word of Christ, as will easily enable us to elude the whole Text, and verifie his most wicked words by our more wicked practice, who once said in zeal to his Church, but not to his Saviour, Scripturam esse nasum cereum, that the Scripture was a meer nose of wax. But we have not so learned Christ, and dare not so revile his word, least we should so learn him; we will therefore rejoyce in him that made us out of nothing to be his creatures, because he hath also redeemed us from being worse then nothing, when we were his enemies: and we will commit the keeping of our souls to him in well-doing as unto a faithful creator, because we know him to be also our merciful redeemer: For the same son of God who made the world, and upheld all things by the word of his Power, and con∣sequently was our Creator, hath by himself purged our sins, and is now sat down on the right hand of the majesty on high, there making intercession for us; (Heb. 1. 2, 3. & Heb. 7. 25.) and consequently is also our Redeemer: The joy of our Creation we have lost by losing our Innocency▪ but the Joy of our Redempti∣on is never to be lost, unless we lose our Repentance; which is so true, so great a comfort to a man who is born in sin, lives in sin, dies in sin, that if you deny him this, you can afford him no true comfort against his sinfulness.
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THat would not be so great a comfort to a good Christian which Saint Paul gives him, Rom. 6. 14. for sin shall not have dominion over you, were not the reason of that a much greater comfort, for ye are not under the Law but under Grace: For they that groan under the oppression of Tyrants, must needs be most glad to be delivered from their unjust and unmer∣ciful dominion; and here is that deliverance: for sin (which is a greater tyrant over the soul, then any monster of men can be over the body) shall not have dominion over you; but they that have once been under the dominion of tyrants, cannot be sure they are delivered out of their hands, till they see themselves actually under the righteous and merciful dominion of their own rightful Governours. And we may accordingly see that such is our deliverance from the dominion of sin, in that it is said in the next words, for ye are not under the law, but under Grace: the spirit of Grace now reigns in you, and therefore will not let sin raign any longer in you; nor the Law reign any longer over you, as it is the strength of sin to provoke it, or the judge of sinners to condemn and to torment them: For if we lay not some such restriction upon the Apostles words, we shall never be able to prove it is a mercy not to be under the Law; which is gloriously magnified by the Spirit of God, as that which giveth both holiness and wisdom, Psal. 19. 17. The Law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul; there is the ho∣liness. The testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple; there is the wisdom: we must therefore say that the Law had a threefold use, to restrain, to condemn and to instruct; to restrain sin, to condemn the sinner, and to instruct in righteousness.
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The power the Law had to condemn sinners, and to wrack our consciences before Gods judgement-seat, is taken away by Christ; so that they who truly lay hold on the Merit of Christ, are not thus under the Law, as condemning them: And thus not to be under the Law is an invaluable mercy, because the Law worketh wrath, Rom. 4. 15. in shewing Gods wrath against sinners, and us, as sinners, subject to that wrath; But the power the Law had of restraining from sin, and of instructing in righteousness, still remains uncontroled of God, and should be undoubted and undisputed of men: for he that gave to the Jew an inheritance on earth to have his Law kept, as tis said, Psal. 105. 43, 44. And gave them the Lands of the heathen, and they took the labours of the people in possession, that they might keep his statutes and observe his Laws, hath not promised to the Christian an inheritance in heaven, to have his Law broken.
Therefore the Law must still restrain us from sin, and direct us in righteousness, only with this difference: The power it hath of restraining us from sin, grows less and less every day in the regenerate, and can remain no longer then this life, because sin it self in them shall remain no longer: But the power the Law hath to instruct and direct in righteousness, grows day∣ly more and more, and is as immortal as righteousness it self, and can never be abolished, neither in this life, nor in the life everlasting: for it is easier for heaven and earth to pass, then one tittle of the Law to fail, Luke 16. 17. Nay the Heavens shall pass away with a great noise, (2 Pet. 3. 10.) But this power of the Law shall not pass away; for it follows ver. 13. that in the new heavens dwelleth righteousness: And if righteousness dwell there, then also the Law which is the rule thereof: for it is not possible that any creature should have its own will, but only the will of God for the rule of righteousness, on which will it must as necessarily depend for its doing, as for its being, since nothing can be independent in its working, which is not in∣dependent in its being: and he only is independent in his being, who is wholly in, and of, and for himself; that is, God bles∣sed for ever; who is the efficient and final cause of all things, the efficient cause by whom, the final cause for whom they are, and were created. In a word, the regulating power of the Law cannot be abolished, for that shall still remain in heaven;
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the restraining power of the Law is not abolished, but only chan∣ged, in that true faith makes us more obedient for love, then the Law for fear: and the condemning power of the Law shall never be abolished, for it shall still reign over the damned souls in hell, and breed the worm of conscience that dyeth not: And yet tis this condemning power of the Law that we are chiefly redeemed from; not that the power of condemning is taken from the Law, but that we are taken from its condemnation; so saith the Apostle, Rom. 8. 1. There is therefore now no condem∣nation to them which are in Christ Jesus. He saith not, There is no condemnation from the Law, but he said, there is no con∣demnation to them which are in Christ; because they that are in Christ do in him fulfil the Law, and so cannot be under the condemnation of it. For though they perform not that legal obedience which is able to satisfie Gods Justice, yet they per∣form that Evangelical obedience which is undoubtedly accepta∣ble to his mercy: Their obedience though not worth acceptance in it self, yet is very well accepted in Christ; and that makes them that are in Christ so exceedingly strive to shew themselves dutiful and obedient, because no other are made the Sons of God in Christ, but only those who are made obedient to him by his Spirit.
And they truly are under grace, because they truly are under Christ, the fountain of grace; for grace and truth came by Jesus Christ, John. 1. 17. Gratia dupliciter dicitur, uno modo ipsa voluntas Dei gratis aliquid dantis; alio modo ipsum gratu∣itum donum Dei, saith Aquinas, 3a. 2. 10. cap. Grace hath two significations; First, it is taken for the love of God; Se∣condly, it is taken for the gift of that love: and accordingly he that is under Grace, is partaker of both these, both of Gods love, and of Gods free gift proceeding from that love: And the latter is the infallible demonstration of the former, the gift is the demonstration of the love. For grace as it is the love of God, is the cause of no Religious operations in the soul, but as it is the gift of Gods love: and therefore this phrase ye are un∣der grace, doth not bid us look up to Gods decree, but look down upon our own souls, to see if we can find there such Re∣ligious habits as may cause those Religious operations which are the undoubted evidences and effects of the gift of grace, and
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therefore the undoubted evidences, because the undoubted effect of it: For grace as it is the gift of God in the soul, works not immediately by it self, or by its own essence, but by virtuous habits as by its instruments; and therefore these have the least reason to boast of grace, who least regard the virtuous habits whereby it worketh, and so cry up Faith in Christ, as in effect to beat down the cheifest duties of Christianity: For grace is the beginning of spiritual actions, by the mediation of virtu∣ous habits, even as the soul is the beginning of vital actions by the mediation of its powers and faculties; And as the soul works not immediately from it self the actions of the natural life: so neither doth grace work immediately of it self the acti∣ons of the spiritual life. For grace indeed hath two acts in re∣gard of the soul, as the soul hath in regard of the body; Pri∣mus ad esse, Secundus ad operari. The first act is to give life, and that is immediate from it self; the second act is to give the operations of life, and that is mediate, by virtuous qualities and dispositions; so neerly doth it concern every Christian that desires to be under grace, to lead his life in all Godliness and vertue: for there can be no assurance of life, but from the ope∣rations of life; no assurance of the spiritual being, but from the evidence of the spiritual working: Excellently, Aquinas, Po∣test aliquis cognoscere se habere gratiam in quantum percipit se delectari in Deo, & contemnit res mundanas, & non est consci∣us sibi alicujus mortalis peccati, 1a. 2ae. 112. 5. cap. A man may know himself to be in grace, if he find that he delights in God, and contemns this world, and is not conscious to himself of any grievous or mortal sin. There are but few signs or tokens, but they are infallible; And we must conclude that those men who care not what sins they commit against God, their brethren and their own consciences, either to get or to keep the advanta∣ges of this world, as they shew but little contempt of the world, so they shew a great contempt of God: And they that contemn God, cannot be said to delight in him: and they that do not delight in him, cannot receive comfort from him; where∣fore it is an evil spirit, not the spirit of God which doth witness to such men that they are the Sons of God, when their own consciences cannot but witness that they are his enemies.
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MAny men have a cheerful countenance, that have but a sorrowful heart; The yong man seems to be of this temper, whom Solomon so sharply reproves, or rather so plain∣ly derides, Eccles. 11. 9. Rejoyce O yong man in thy youth, and walk in the wayes of thine heart, and in the sight of thine eyes: there is cheerfulness enough as to the outward man; but know thou, that for all these things, God will bring thee into judgement; There's sorrowfulness more then enough, as to the inward man: whilst walking in his own wayes, makes him lift up his face; the thought of judgement cannot but cast down his heart: there∣fore they alone do truly rejoyce, who have such a joy as cannot end in sorrow: not a joy for being the Lords over their Bre∣thren, but a joy for being the servants of their God: not a joy for overcoming others, but for overcoming themselves▪ not a joy for having gained an inheritance on earth, but a joy for being assured of an inheritance in heaven. Our Saviour said to his own Disciple, Notwithstanding in this rejoyce not, that the Spirits are subject unto you; but rather rejoyce because your names are written in Heaven, Luke 10. 20. If it be not the cause of a true Christians joy to have power and dominion over evil spirits, which is the peculiar priviledge of Christs own Church: much less can it be the cause of a true Christian joy to have dominion and power over good men, which is the common priviledge of Christs enemies.
The joy then of a Christian is not for having his name far spread on earth, but for having his name written in heaven; not for overcoming his Brother, but for overcoming his lusts: And to him that thus overcometh, will he that holdeth the seven Stars in his right hand, and walketh in the midst of the seven golden Candlesticks, give to eat of the hidden Manna,
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(Rev. 2.) which without doubt affords a marvellous sweetness to all those that eat of it.
But who can eat of this heavenly Manna, save only they who have their names written in heaven? for it is not meet to take the childrens bread, and to cast it unto the dogs, (Mark 7 27.) Nor can the dogs eat so much as the crumbs that fall from this heavenly table. We must be children before we can eat of this bread; and then may we not always expect to eat our fill of it, least that Scripture be fulfilled of us the second time, He that eateth bread with me, hath lift up his heel against me. John 13. 18. For Jesurun waxed fat and kicked; then he forsook God which▪ made him, and lightly esteemed the rock of his salvation, Deut. 32. 15. Therefore do the most judicious Divines advise us, that though▪ we stedfastly believe our selves to be Gods adopted Sons, yet we may not too suddenly make sure of our inheritance, but must work out our salvation with fear and trembling, Phil. 2. 12. And though we be indeed the called of Jesus Christ, Rom. 1. 6. yet we must give diligence to make our calling and election sure, 2 Pet. 1. 10. Saint Peter is very zealous in this point, as by his own sad experience, having known the mischeif of too much confidence: And therefore al∣though in Saint Pauls words, there be reason enough for our fear and trembling, because our salvation is to be worked out, before it can be enjoyed, (for no man but hath cause more then enough to suspect his own works, and much more the continuance of his good working,) yet Saint Peter gives us another reason of our fear, because we must all be judged, before we can be saved, 1 Pet. 1. 17. And if ye call on the Father, who •…•…hout respect of persons judgeth according to every mans work, pass the time of your sojourning here in fear. Here is supposed an adopted child, for he cals on the Father; but he is not supposed to be puffed up with his adoption, for he is to pass his time of sojourning in fear; and the reason is, because his Father is to be his Judge, and will judge him according to his works; for which one reason are alledged three reasons by Aquinas, when he saith, Expedit quandoque praesentiam Dei in nobis per gratiam ignorare, ut timor Divini judicii nos humiliet, ne praesumpta securitas nos praecipitet, ut de∣sideranter Gratiam Dei expetamus, It is expedient for us some∣times to be ignorant of Gods grace in us, and (which is all one)
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of his favour towards us, that the fear of Gods judgement may humble us; that the presumption of our own secure state and condition may not ruine us; and that the desire of Gods grace may daily more and more increase in us; All these three reasons are intimated by Saint Peter, If ye callon the Father; there's the desire of the increase of grace; who without respect of persons, judgeth according to every mans works; there's the fear of Gods judgement; pass the time of your sojourning here in fear there's against the presumption of our own secure state and condition: As then I desire to be humbled, as I desire not to be eternally ruined, and as I would increase in my soul more and more such holy desires, so I must take heed that I be not puffed up with the conceit of my adoption; for he that hath given me that inestimable grace, when I did not deserve it, hath not promised to continue his gift if I will needs abuse it.
ADoption is the assumption of a stranger into a son, Adop∣tio est personae extraneae in filium assumptio, saith the Civili∣an: so that our adoption implies three things.
- 1. An assuming or taking of a man from his own kindred, in∣to Gods family.
- 2. An assuming or taking such a man as was a stranger, into that family.
- 3. An assuming or taking that stranger to be one of the best of Gods family, to be a Son.
A most blessed assumption which gives to the true Christian soul, not an imaginary, but a real, not an anniversary, but an everlasting Holy day: Hence it is that Saint John cannot speak of this infinite mercy without a double Preface, 1 John 3. 1. Be∣hold
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what manner of the love of the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the Sons of God!
Behold, there is one Preface, a practical Preface that con∣cerns the person, to fix his attention, to raise his affection, and to confirm his devotion; what manner of love the Father hath bestowed, there is another Preface, a Doctrinal Preface, that concerns the thing; shewing in it that sublimity which challengeth the best of our attention, that excellency which challengeth the purest of our affection, that immortality which challengeth the firmest of our devotion: There can be no Pre∣face appositely made, but is either practical to exite and move the reader, or didactical to make way for the explication of the work; the end and scope of the first is to shew that the thing taught is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 to beloved of us; the end and scope of the second is to shew that the thing taught is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, lovely in it self, (for so is Aristotles distinction 20. Magn. Moral. c. 10.) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉:) The Apostle joins these two several ends and scopes of Prefaces both together, before he treats of our adoption, saying, Behold, to shew this lovely and amiable to us, richly worth our looking after; and what manner of love, to shew it is most lovely and amiable in it self: And we may easily see by the ensuing words that it is such a good as is not to be va∣lued by the judgement of the flesh, for the world knows it not, nor sufficiently to be valued by the judgement of the spirit; for we our selves yet scarce know it; it doth not ap∣pear what we shall be. It doth not appear to the world what we are, nor to our selves what we shall be; only this we know, that when he shall appear, we shall be like him, ver. 2. as if he had said, there are at least two degrees, if not two parts of this filiation or adoption of sons; one in this life, when we are regenerated into the hope of everlasting glory; the other in the next life, when we shall be admitted into the pos∣session of it; When Christ who is our life shall appear, then shall we also appear with him in glory, Col. 3. 4. The first degree of our adoption the world knows not of us; the second, we do not, cannot, in this life, fully know of our selves: Of the first degree of adoption speaks the same Saint John in his Gos∣pel, John 1. 12, 13. As many as received him, to them gave he
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power to become the Sons of God: Of the second degree speaks Saint Paul, Rom. 8. 23. We our selves groan within our selves, waiting for the adoption, to wit the redemption of our body; as if the adoption were not to be obtained here, but to be expected hereafter; wherein however he speaks as it were out of Christs own mouth, as well as by his spirit; for our blessed Saviour himself useth these words, Luke 20. 36. They are the children of God, being the children of the resurrection; not that they were not the children of God before, but only that they were not compleatly and perfectly children, till they were admitted to their inheritance, and were come to a full similitude and like∣wise with their Father. For as a natural son of man is partaker of his humane nature, or else he cannot be his son; so also is an adopted Son of God, partaker of his Divine Nature; though not Originally, because he is adopted; yet sure derivatively, because else he cannot be a Son: for on the participation or communication of the Divine nature is founded our adoption, or being the Sons of God, according to that of the Apostle, 2 Pet. 1. 4. That by these you might be partakers of the Divine Nature, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Divinae consortes naturae, con∣sorts or companions of the Divine Nature, that is, communi∣cants in it as well as partakers of it. And upon this ground it is we do assert, that as the participation of the Divine nature to us is different in degrees, so also is our adoption different in de∣grees, as inchoate in this life, and consummate only in the next. For in this life we are made partakers of the Divine Nature but inchoately and imperfectly, that is, as it is resembled in grace; but in the next life we shall be made partakers of it consummate∣ly or perfectly, that is, as it will be revealed in glory: For there is in man a threefold Image of God, Imago creationis, Imago recrea∣tionis, Imago similitudinis, as saith the angelical Doctor, (1 2ae. qu. 93. ar. 4.) The first Image is by likeness of Nature, the Image of creation; the second, is by likeness of grace, the Image of regeneration; the third Image, is by likeness of glo∣ry, the Image of perfection. Tbe first Image hath been so de∣faced and blotted, and slurred by our sin, that we are all by na∣ture the children of wrath, Ephes. 2. 3. So that in and from this Image of God in us ariseth only the necessity or want of adoption; for there is only so much of it left as to shew how
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great need we have to be made his children, that we may be made more like him then we are by nature. But the adoption it self is founded in our new begotten Image or likeness with our heavenly Father, which is after the similitude of his only Son, by Grace in this world, and by glory in the world to come; and may accordingly be called either incompleat or compleat adoption: Concerning the first Saint John saith, that we are made the Sons of God, as being already partakers of the Divine nature in the likeness of grace; concerning the second he saith, It doth not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that when he shall appear, we shall be like him; that is, we shall hereafter be made the Sons of God after a more perfect manner, by being made parta∣kers of the divine nature in the likeness of glory: Blessed be that eternal Son, in whom we are made Sons; and blessed be that day wherein he took on him our nature, that he might give us his.
THE Spirit of adoption, though it were given under the Law, yet was it not so fully given, as it is now under the Gospel. For though it were the same Covenant of Grace to the Jew and to the Christian, to be saved by Christ, yet was this Covenant much different in the manner of its administration: And therefore we must consider the Church before Christ came in the flesh, though as an heir that had a right (from Gods fi∣delity, though not from his strict Justice) to all Spiritual Gifts and Graces whatsoever, yet withal as an infant that had not the full possession of that right: And this distinction Saint Paul himself teacheth us, Gal. 4. 1. Now I say that the heir as long as he is a child, (or rather an infant, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, such an one as can∣not speak) differeth nothing from a servant, though he be Lord of
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all; but is under Tutors and Governors until the time appointed of the Father. And himself plainly applies this distinction to the Church before Christs time, verse 3. saying, even so we, when we were children (or infants) were in bondage under the elements of the world; that is, as long as we continued in the Jewish Re∣ligion: For the Church before the coming of the Son of God, was so an heir as that she was also an infant: As she was an heir, so she was free; but as she was an infant, so she was a ser∣vant under Tutors and Governors: As she was an heir, she had spiritual hopes; but as she was an infant, she had carnal Ordi∣nances, Heb. 9. 10. As she was an heir, she had the Spirit of adoption; but as she was an infant, she had the Spirit of fear and bondage; which makes the Apostle say, Rom. 8. 15. For ye have not received the Spirit of bondage again, (ye had it once, sc. whiles ye were under the Law, but ye have it not again, sc. now ye are under the Gospel) to fear; but ye have received the Spi∣rit of adoption, whereby we cry Abba Father. Hence it is that the Jews had then the same spiritual blessings in dark representa∣tions and figures, which we Christians now have in full revela∣tions and substance: I will set down some few examples concern∣ing the chiefest spiritual blessings, by which we may easily be able to judge of all the rest, and not be mistaken in our judge∣ments.
1. What a vast difference is there betwixt those words of Moses, The seed of the woman shall bruise the Serpents head, Gen. 3. 15. and those words of Saint Paul, the God of peace (mean∣ing our Saviour Christ who was our peace-maker, and gave himself to make it) shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly, Rom. 16. 20. or those words of Saint John, For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that he might destroy the works of the Devil, 1 J••••n 3. 8. And yet both alike speak of the same re∣demption.
2. What a vast difference is there betwixt that of Gen. 25. 23. the elder shall serve the younger, and that of Rom. 9 16. Not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that shew∣eth mercy; yet both alike concern the same Doctrine of Ele∣ction.
3. What a vast difference is there betwixt Abrahams being called to go out of his Countrey; and from his Fathers house, Gen.
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12. 1. and our being called out of darkness into his marvellous light, 1 Pet. 2. 9. and yet both alike confess the same Voca∣tion.
4. What a vast difference betwixt the sacrifices of the Jews, and the sacrifice of Christ upon the Cross? and yet both alike assure us of the same Justification, in so much that Saint Paul explaineth the one by the other, Eph. 5. 2. as Christ hath loved us and given himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling Savour.
5. What a vast difference is there betwixt the Sons of Abra∣ham according to the promise under the Law, and under the Gospel, (for as Isaac was, so also we are the children of the Promise, Gal. 4. 28.) The one having the promise of an earth∣ly, the other of an heavenly inheritance, and yet both promises alike belong to the same Adoption.
6. What a vast difference betwixt the Cirumcision of the flesh, and of the heart, betwixt the outward purifications of the Jews, and the inward purgings of Christians, (for the blood of Christ purgeth our consciences from dead works to serve the li∣ving God, Heb. 9. 14.) and yet both of them do set forth the same Sanctification.
7. Seventhly and lastly, what a vast difference betwixt their entring into Canaan, and our entering into the heavenly Jerusa∣lem? and yet both of them declare one and the same Glorifica∣tion.
They were all partakers of the same spiritual blessings that we are; they had the same Redemption, Election, Vocation, Justifica∣tion, Adoption, Sanctification and Glorification that we have; but they had them in a dark representation, not in an open reve∣lation, so that they could not so fully know them; and they had them in types and figures, not in reality and substance, so that they did not so fully enjoy them: For they all had carnal Ordinances imposed on them until the time of reformation, Heb. 9. 10. that is, till the time of Christs coming to plant the Chri∣stian Religion: which was a true reformation indeed, because it proceeded from a true cause, and to a true end; from a true cause, a more perfect knowledge of Christ, who before had not been fully discovered; and to a true end, a more perfect esta∣blishment of Christianity, which before was not rightly
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practised: This was truly 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, a time of rectifica∣tion or direction; for 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, is properly said of them who are directed immediately to their journeys end, whereas before they were going the farthest way about, and such indeed was the Jews way to heaven, God leading them about through the wilderness into Canaan, as well in the Mysterie as in the Histo∣ry, as well in regard of the Coelestial as of the Terrestrial Hieru∣salem.
TO be glad in the Lord and to rejoyce in him, makes Christ∣mass last all the year, yet is that no better reason why we should not keep Christmass-Day, then our rest and contentati∣on in God, which we have or may have all the week, is a reason why we should not keep the Sabbath, or the Lords own day: for it is very bad Logick, and worse Divinity, which argues from the position of the Duty, to the eversion of the Day wherein we ought to exercise it; for if the Duty must be exercised, how can we reasonably deny the time of its exercise? Yet do I not think that a particular time is to be allotted to rejoyce in Christ by way of restriction or limitation, as if we should not rejoyce in him at other times; (for that is the malignant gloss which some of late have put upon the fourth Commande∣ment, confining Gods solemn publick worship only to the Sab∣bath, not considering that the Jews had other grand festivals, not prescribed in the Law, and yet were more strictly bound to the letter of that Commandment, then we Christians) but I say that a particular Time ought to be allotted to rejoyce in Christ by way of application or of specification, that we may more eminently and notoriously rejoyce in him at some time,
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though our joy in him is to be confined to no time: For the spiritual joy of the Jew was unconfined, and much more the spiritual joy of the Christian, who in a larger proportion hath received the Spirit of joy.
And therefore its observable, that though in the Old Testa∣ment we are earnestly called upon to rejoyce in God, yet are we not called upon for so much joy as in the New Testament; let this one instance serve for all: Be glad in the Lord and rejoyce ye righteous, and shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart; so the Prophet concludeth the 32. Psalm, and in the same strain beginneth the 33. saying, Rejoyce in the Lord O ye righteous, for praise is comely for the upright, calling for a very great propor∣tion of Joy from the Jew; but yet the Apostle in saying, Re∣joyce in the Lord alway, again I say rejoyce, Phil. 4. 4. hath cal∣led for a far greater proportion of joy from the Christian; For here is not only the same joy that was before, to wit joy in the Lord, but here is the same joy in a greater degree of extensi∣on; for he saith, rejoyce in the Lord alway; and in a greater degree of intension, for he saith, again I say rejoyce: And if we further consider who are called the just and righteous, and upon what terms they are called so, we shall find also a greater degree of extension, for that where is the greatest measure and diffusion of righteousness, there must needs be the greatest measure and diffusion of joy: And it is evident that they who trust in the Lord (not in themselves) are by the Psalmist called the just and the righteous, or the upright; For it is the priviledge of true faith not only to make us just, but also to make us upright; not only to justifie us, but also to rectifie us; it justifies us in that it absolves from sin; it rectifies us, in that it directs in righteousness; and therefore the disobedient as well as the un∣believing heart, the stubborn as well as the faithless generation is said not to trust in God, Psal. 78. 7, 8▪ and the faithless gene∣ration is there known as well by this Character, that set not their heart aright, as by this, whose spirit was not stedfast with God: For true faith hath the priviledge first to set the heart to God, then to settle it in God; first to make the spirit right, then to make it stedfast: The heart is made right when it points di∣rectly towards God, moving as a line from the circumference to the Center; and the heart is thus made right, or set towards
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God, by the same faith that it is made stedfast or settled in God; Wherefore since true faith at the same time both Rectifies and Justifies the soul of man, it is no wonder if it cause its unspeak∣able as well as its unmoveable joy: And where shall we look for this true faith, if not in Christians? for though the act of faith is as expresly set down in the Old Testament as in the New; yet the object of faith is much more plainly declared in the New Testament: So that Christians having a more perfect faith in Christ then had the Jews, must needs have a greater joy in Christ then they could have.
And indeed, what joy like the joy of the Redeemed by Christ, or rather what joy like the joy of the adopted in Christ, Since the joy of the Redemption is not to be had without the joy of the Adoption? For many more have been Redeemed by Christ, then do truly rejoyce in him; because many more have been Redeemed, then are adopted: For the Redemption which man hath by Christ, is of a greater latitude then is the Adoption; because the Redemption concerns all mankind in general, but the Adoption is restrained to some particular per∣sons; sc. to those only within the Pale of the Church; and that not only in their number and outward profession, but also in their merit or inward affection, as Aquinas hath laid the ground of that distinction, 22••. qu. 1. art. 9. ad tertium, in these words, Talis enim fides (sc. formata) invenitur in omnibus illis qui sunt numero & merito de Ecclesia: A true and lively faith is found in all those who are meritoriously as well as numerically members of the Church: And where the true faith is found, there and there only is the true joy in Christ, or the joy of ado∣ption. And these two may very well agree, that the Redemption it selfe should be universal, and concern the whole nature of man, which Christ assumed, and therefore redeemed; but yet the benefit thereof in the adoption of sons, should be onely particular, that is concerne those alone to whom God doth give special grace to make a right use of Christ; nay concerning adoption it selfe Saint Paul seems to speake as if it were in some kind a potential, and not all together an actual blessing or mercy, when he saith, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, ut adoptionem acciperemus, that we might receive the adoption of Sons, Gal. 4. 5. thereby intimating, that many more might be adopted
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Sons, then are, were it not for their own default; and those that are adopted, might (if they had made a timely and full use of Gods grace in their Redemption) much sooner have re∣ceived their Adoption: Nay yet more, if the Greek Orators Criticism be justifiable, (for Libanius is loth to ascribe the Oration, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 to Demosthenes) That 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 may be to take or receive what we never had before: but 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 is properly to receive that which we had lost; then the 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 used by the Apostle, will tell us, that the gift of Adoption was once ours before (to wit by the innocency of our nature) till we lost it; and is ours so now by the Sanctificati∣on of our persons, that if we should lose it in our selves, we may again recover and receive it in our Saviour: it was once ours by nature, and so we lost it; and do now receive it by grace the second time: And we now so receive it by grace, that if we should lose it, we may yet hope to receive it again: Which consideration ought to fill our souls, not with careles∣ness but with comfort, that as by our own weakness and unwor∣thiness we daily fall and deserve to be put out of the number of Gods servants: so by our blessed Saviours Merits and Mercies we daily rise again, and are still accepted and continued as his sons.
AS there is no greater comfort then the comfort of Ado∣ption, so there is not a more comfortable, if there be a more evident, testimony to assure us thereof, then that most holy prayer which our blessed Saviour hath sanctified by his lips, no less then he hath commanded and commended in his Word: For this prayer teacheth us to say to God, Our Father, which
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cannot be true and right in the Invocation, if it be not true and right in the Doctrine: for if it be not an undoubted truth that God in Christ is Our Father, then can we not truly in our wor∣ship call him so: Wherefore since we are taught by Truth him∣self to call God Father in our worship, we are sure it must be true in our Doctrine, That God is our Father in Christ, and consequently we his adopted Sons; or we must assert the same Thing to be a Truth and not a Truth: a Truth in our Prayer, and not a Truth in our Belief; and moreover say, That we pray in Faith, when we do not pray in Truth: For if we pray not in faith we sin; and we cannot pray in Faith, if there be an untruth in our Prayers: Wherefore this expression Our Father, being recommended to us by our Saviours own mouth, as it teacheth us to pray in his Communion in and through whom we are adopted, so it affordeth us an undoubted testimony and proof of our Adoption; for under what pretence can we say to God Our Father, if we be not his sons? and how are we his sons, so as to expect any blessing from him, but only by the grace of Ado∣ption? Accordingly as we cannot but say, (with Saint Au∣gustine) that all other prayers are reducible to the matter of this short prayer: so we may likewise say with him, (for he al∣ledgeth not one precedent or petition which is not immediatly directed unto God) that all other prayers are reducible to this form of saying Our Father; and by this rule, those prayers which rather say Our Brother, then Our Father which art in hea∣ven, cannot be said in Faith, and do not proceed from the Spirit of Adoption; and they that so pray, do not communicate with Christ in their prayers, who neither prayed himself, nor taught us to pray to any but only to his Father: And it is not sapient nor safe for us to pray out out of Christs communion, since we are sure our prayers will not be heard, but through his Interces∣sion.
Yet in all probability, that humour of praying to petty Dei∣ties, if it did not at first help to thrust out the conclusion of this prayer, yet it hath since helped to keep it out, because we can∣not with any colour of truth say to any but to God alone, for thine is the Kingdom, the power and the glory for ever and ever: For this Doxologie is without doubt the conclusion of the Lords prayer in Saint Matthews. Gospel, as it hath been generally re∣ceived
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both by the Greek and the Latine Church, neither of which hath set down that prayer in Saint Matthews Gospel in Greek, without the addition of these words at the end of it: and for that allegation that it is not so in Saint Luke, it is of no force, since it is against that common maxime, Argumentum ab authoritate non valet negativè, An Argument from authority is worth nothing in the negative, but only in the affirmative: and we should lose very much of the Gospel, if we should ex∣punge and blot that out of one Evangelist, which we cannot find in another: Yet some Criticks have gone so far as to per∣swade the world, That this heavenly conclusion did not at all belong to the Lords prayer, but is both an unnecessary and an unwarrantable addition: One is pleased to call it a foppery, (non veriti sunt tàm divinae precationi suas nugas assuere) If this Doxologie be a foppery, then what is true wisdom? but if it be indeed true wisdom, then what is this censure of it, but plain blasphemy? And is not that true wisdom, which proceeded im∣mediately from the mouth of the eternal wisdom? Yet the learned Grotius complieth so far with those that have opposed this Doxologie, as to perswade himself it came at first out of the Greek Liturgies into the Bible, not considering that there can∣not be allowed such chopping and changing of the Text, but we must reproach the Catholick Church of Christ first as uncareful in suffering such changes, then as unfaithful in obtruding them for Text; First as uncareful, in suffering men to make havock of Gods Word which was committed to her charge to keep; then as unfaithful, in obtruding the Word of man upon us, in∣stead of the Word of God; and what authority or repute will be left to the Church, if we suppose her to want both care and trust? for God intrusted his Church with his Holy Word, that she should first faithfully keep it, and after that faithfully in∣terpret it; wherefore to say the Church hath falsified her trust in keeping Gods Word, is in effect to say, she is not trust∣worthy to interpret it: which is bring all Religion to doubts and uncertainties in the knowledge: to schisms and divisions in the practice thereof. For surely if the Lords own most holy prayer hath been so ill kept by the Church, which in all ages hath been looked upon as the sum of the Gospel, and as the plat-form, or rather the ground-work of all true Religion, then
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we must needs have but very little or no assurance concern∣ing the rest of the Scriptures: wherefore it concerns all Christian Divines in the first place to vindicate the Church of Christ, concerning her faithful keeping of this Prayer, which would have been altogether needless, had not some Cri∣ticks of later years obtruded their own observations for various Lections, and by that means not cleared the Text but puzzled it: But let us ask them, Are the unknown manuscrips, or the known and received Copies of the Church to be taken for the Text? If the former, we trust private men and private spi∣rits, which God never entrusted with his word: If the latter, we have as unquestionable a Lords Prayer, as if we had heard it immediately from his own mouth: For we have it thus ex∣actly delivered us by the Greek and the Latine Church, in the undoubted Originals of Saint Matthews Gospel. For the Greek Church, let Saint Chrysost. speak, who hath so elegantly and so exactly expounded at this Doxology, in his nineteenth Homily upon Saint Matthew, plainly shewing the necessary connexi∣on thereof to the last Petition of the Lords Prayer, that it is evi∣dent he accounted it as a part of the Prayer, though as no part of the Petitions; for (saith he) Our Saviour having told us of that evil one which we were to fight against, (for so he ex∣pounds, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, deliver us from that evil one, that is, the devil, thought fit to encourage us to the fight, by telling us also of the King that would lead us to the battel: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: and therefore he saith, For thine is the Kingdom, &c. shewing, that if the Kingdom be his, we ought to fear no other but him, for that the power is his to defend us, and the glory is also his to reward us: Thus in ef∣fect Saint Chrysoft. upon the place, so that tis a wonder to see Beza hath reckoned him among those Fathers who expound∣ed the Lords Prayer of purpose, and yet omitted these words in their Expositions; for sure he omitted them not who expounded the Original Greek, though Saint Cyprian, and Saint Augustine, and Saint Ambrose omitted them; happily be∣cause they looked no further then the Latine translation, which adds Amen at the end of libera nos a malo, and takes no notice at all of the Doxology; And yet Saint Ambrose, (lib. 6. de Sacram. cap. 5.) asserting that our Prayers ought to begin and
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end with the praise of God, after the example of the Lords own Prayer, (habes hoc in oratione Dominica, &c.) doth in effect allow the Doxology to be the end of that Prayer, since it is evi∣dent that Deliver us from evil, is no matter of praise; nay in∣deed he doth rather alledge it in sense, though not in words, in saying that the priest concludes with such a form of praise, as is in truth no other then an exposition of this Doxology, only applied to all three Persons of the blessed Trinity: Per Dominum nostrum Jesum Christum, in quo tibi est, cum quo tibi est honor, laus, gloria, magnificentia, potestas cum Spiritu Sancto, à se∣culis & nunc & semper, & in omnia secula seculorum. But how∣ever, if that be a good Argument why we should leave the Doxology or the conclusion out of the Lords Prayer in Saint Matth. (because it is not in the Vulgar Latine) it must be as good an argument why we should leave the introduction and the last petition out of the same Prayer in Saint Luke, for there in the Latine translation is no mention of noster qui es in coelis, nor of libera nos à malo: whereas the Greek Text gives us that Prayer with its conclusion in Saint Matthew, and the same Prayer not mangled but whole and entire, though without its conclusion in Saint Luke; and there is no greater reason, but only some mens bold conjectures, to say that the conclusion of that Prayer was added to the Greek Text in Saint Matthew, then to say that the introduction and last Petition of it was ad∣ded to the Greek Text in Saint Luke; for both alike are left out of the Latine translation: But though they have been both left out of the Bibles by the Latine translation, yet we cannot say that either hath been left out of the Bibles by the Latine Church; For the Greek copies of Saint Matthews Gospel, this day agnized by the Latine Church, are ready to depose the contrary, all of them having the Doxology annexed to the Pe∣titions, as the conclusion to its premisses, without any the least interruption, and then at last adding' A 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 at the end of the whole, which is an invincible argument that the Latine Church received those words of the Doxology as an undoubted part of the Greek Text, and therefore durst not leave them out of their Bibles, though they found no footsteps at all of them in their own Latine translation. Wherefore it is evident that this Prayer both in its Petitions and in its conclusion, hath
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alwaies been received as an unquestionable part of Saint Mat∣thews Gospel, both by the Greek and the Latine Churches; and consequently those men have disparaged the Church of Christ, and disadvantaged the Christian Religion, who have either commenced or continued, either begun or maintained any quarrels against this most holy Prayer, either in it self, or in its use: Nay, in truth such men have disparaged and dis∣advantaged themselves; for cavilling with that Prayer which so plainly teacheth them to say Our Father, must needs be account∣ed an ill sign that they have received, and a worse means, that they may retain the adoption of Sons: Surely Saint Cypri∣an who whipped those Sectaries with scourges that refused to communicate with Christs Church, as not caring by their obedience to say Our mother, would further have whipped them with scorpions, had they refused to communicate with Christ himself, as abhorring in their Prayers, to say Our Fa∣ther: And doubless it may reasonably be demanded of us, with what certainty of faith, or satisfaction of conscience we do communicate with them in their Prayers, who will not communicate with Christ in his Prayer? And how we shall answer it to our Saviour, when he shall come to be our Judge, that we have indeed renounced his Prayer, and have given oc∣casion to sober men to fear that we have also renounced his Communion? since it is evident, that no man can renounce his Prayer, but must also by consequence renounce his Com∣munion: But let Saint Cyprian speak to this argument, that we may be sure to have a good spokesman, who in his Book de Oratione Dominica, saith thus: Qui facit vivere, docuit & orare, ut dum prece & Oratione quam filius docuit apud Pa∣trem loquimur, facilius audiamur: He that made us to live, taught us to pray, that speaking to the Father in the words of his Son, we might be sure not to speak in vain: Again, Que enim potest esse magis Spiritalis oratio, quàm quae vere à Christ•• nobis data est, à quo nobis & Spiritus Sanctus missus est? What Prayer can be more spiritual then that which he gave us who hath also given us the holy Spirit? Lastly, Oremus itaque fratres dilectissimi sicut Magister Deus docuit, Let us pray my beloved brethren, as God our master hath taught us; Agnosca•• Pater Fi∣lii sui verba cum precem facimus; qui habitat intus in pectore,
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ipse sit & in voce: Let God the Father see his own Sons words in our Prayers, and let him also that dwelleth in our hearts, be also in our tongues. Here is such a threefold cord as is not to be bro∣ken, an argument drawn from God the Father, Son, and Ho∣ly-Ghost, why we should often say Our Father, as becomes du∣tiful children: That God the Father may own and hear us; God the Son may pray with us; and God the Holy-Ghost may accompany and assist us in our Prayers.
THere is nothing that so much prevails with God to give us his grace, as our frequent and fervent praying; and no∣thing that so much calls upon us to make a right use of Grace when tis given, as our serious consideration and devout use of the Lords most holy Prayer: for he that doth cordially say to God Our Father, will not easily forget the duty and, obedi∣ence that belongeth to a son; according to that truly Theolo∣gical observation of Saint Chrysostome in his nineteenth Sermon upon the Epistle to the Romans, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: When in our own Prayers we say to God Our Father, we do not only call to mind his great grace and goodness, but also our own obligation to vir∣tue and righteousness, that we may not do any thing unworthy of so honourable a descent or alliance: For though the title of Fa∣ther belong to God by virtue of the creation, (in which respect we profess to believe in God the Father Almighty maker of hea∣ven and earth) yet in the Lords most holy Prayer it is under∣stood
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of him only as he is our Father by adoption; having made us that were his enemies, sons in his eternal Son, and cal∣led us first to be heires of his promises, and at last to be heirs of his Kingdom: So that in saying to God Our Father, we do im∣plicitely and virtually give him thanks for our happy estate through his eternal Son, that though by nature we were the children of wrath, yet by him we are made the children of God; that though in our selves we were enemies, yet in our Saviour we are made sons: and we do beseech him to confirm in us this assurance we are his children, by framing us dai∣ly more and more to the Image of his only begotten Son, whilst he filleth our souls with heavenly affections, and our lives with a heavenly conversation, such as may shew all manner of duti∣fulness to our Father, and all manner of love to our brethren: This happy estate we acknowledge he conveyed unto us in our Baptism, when he made us Christians, that is to say, mem∣bers of Christ, children of God, and inheriters of the Kingdom of heaven; as our own Church teacheth us; or when we put on Christ, (Gal. 3. 27.) or when God sanctified and cleansed us with the washing of water by the word, (Ephes. 5. 26.) when he saved us by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost, (Tit. 3. 5.) as Saint Paul teacheth the Church: that is, to say yet in plainer terms, when God first made us his sons, and gave us the priviledge of calling him Father; For they that have not been baptized into Christ, have no right to say unto God Our Father; for whence should they have it, being born the children of wrath, and not yet incorporated into Christ, to be made the children of God? Wherefore it was not lawful heretofore for the Catechumeni or such as were not yet baptized, to say the Lords Prayer, as not being yet exempted from the dominion and power of the Devil, and consequent∣ly not reckoned or reputed amongst Gods children; whence that memorable saying of Saint Ambrose. (lib. 5. de Sacram. cap. 4.) Primus Sermo, quanta sit gratia! O homo faciem tuam non audebas ad coelum attollere, & subito accepisti gratiam Chri∣sti; ex malo servo factus es bonus filius: The first word of this Prayer, sc. our Father, how much grace and favour doth it import? Thou didst not dare lift up thine eyes to heaven, and thou didst suddenly receive the grace of Christ; thy sins
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were forgiven thee, and of a bad servant thou becamest a good son: Ergo attolle oculos ad Patrem qui te per lavacrum genuit, ad Patrem qui te per filium redemit, & dic Pater noster; There∣fore (now being baptized) lift up thine eyes to thy Father who hath regenerated thee, (by Baptism) who hath redeemed thee by his Son, and say Our Father: concluding he had no right to say so before he was baptized; and doubtless the Text which saith, The Pharisees and Lawyers rejected the Counsel of God against themselves, being not baptized with the Baptism of John, Luke 7. 30. doth much more declare, that those Christians do reject the counsel of God against themselves, who will not be baptized with the Baptism of Christ: Ergo Baptismus consili∣um Dei est: Quanta est gratia, ubi est concilium Dei? Au∣di ergo; nam ut in hoc seculo nexus Diaboli solveretur, inventum est quomodo homo vivus moreretur, & vivus resurgeret, saith the same Saint Ambrose, (lib. 2. de Sacramentis cap. 6.) Therefore is Baptism the counsel of God: And how great is the Grace of God where we have the counsel of God? Hear it there∣fore; For God that he might destroy in man the power of the Devil (that is sin) whiles he is yet in this world, hath in his coun∣sel appointed Baptism, whereby being yet alive, he might both dye and rise again; dye unto sin, and rise again to newness of life. This is the happy estate we acknowledge God conveyed unto us in our Baptism, (for other visible conveyance there is none) when he made us Christians; for then he gave us the right of calling him Father: and we by saying unto him Our Father, do beseech him to confirm this s••me happy estate unto us, in making us good Christians: But how shall those that are bad Christians, and cannot be assured of the adoption of sons, (as having defiled themselves since their Baptism,) say unto God, Our Father? I answer if they heartily repent, and desire to be adop∣ted, and to become children of God, they may say so (by vir∣tue of their desire) though they have not yet actually received the inward seal, and have actually defaced the outward seal of their adoption: wherefore those only have no right to their Pa∣ter noster, but do hypocritically and falsly say the Lords Prayer, who neither are the children of God by adoption, nor desire to be so: But those that heartily desire to be adopted (suppo∣sing they have been baptized) may rightly and truly say to
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God, Our Father; because they are accepted as sons in Christ, though not in themselves. I will rise and go to my Father, and say unto him, Father I have sinned, saith the Prodigal Son, Luk. 14. 18. He was not yet risen he was not yet gone, he did only desire and resolve to rise and go to him, and this de∣sire and resolution gives him a right of calling God Our Fa∣ther, as if he had still continued a dutiful son; our blessed Sa∣viour teaching us in that chapter, both by his Doctrine and by his example, that God is ready to receive sinners, when they truly desire to draw neer to him. The Pharisees and the Scribes murmured at the example, but they were ashamed to murmur at the Doctrine; The lost sheep and the lost groat had opened their eyes; but the lost son was enough to open their hearts; the lost sheep and the lost groat had made way in their apprehensions for the receiving of the lost son, when he returned to his Father; but the lost son was enough to make way in their hearts for their own returning, that they also might be received: they were convinced that there was joy in the pre∣sence of the Angels of God over one sinner that repenteth, (ver. 10. And they were ashamed least what was the Angels joy, should be thought their sorrow: Therefore though they were still enemies to their own souls, in not embracing this Doctrine, yet they were ashamed to shew themselves enemies to other mens souls in gainsaying it; nay indeed to shew themselves enemies to God himself, who must be excluded out of heaven, or he cannot be excluded out of thy joy; for it is said, ver. 6. Joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth: And our Saviour having taught us to say to God Our Father which art in heaven, will not have us exclude him out of this joy, which is proper to those in heaven; nay indeed the parable di∣rectly includes him in it, ver. 32. Twas meet that we should make merry and be glad; and without doubt God is so well plea∣sed in the righteousness of his Son, that he joyes to see penitent sinners made righteous in him; and willingly bestowes upon them his righteousness, when with unfeigned lips, and peni∣tent hearts they call upon him for it; For as through Christs satisfaction they have a right to the adoption of Sons, so also through his intercession, (which is always ready to accom∣pany his own prayer) they are sure to obtain that right, if
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they continue heartily praying for themselves, that so they may have the benefit of his intercession: For as far as we are made partakers of Christ, so far can we truly in his me∣rit and with his Spirit, say unto God Our Father: For the right of filiation belongs Originally to Christ, and but dirivatively to us: He is the Son of God in himself, we are the Sons of God in and through him; and tis happy for us that we are so; for else we could not but fear the loss of our adoption, as often as we did find the loss of our obedience: For there can be no assurance of such an adoption as shall last till we be instated in our inheritance, from our selves, but only from our Saviour Christ: God indeed is pleased to call good men his sons; but none was ever called the Son of God, with this promise and Prerogative, that God alwaies was and alwaies would be his Father, but only Christ: or else Saint Pauls Argument would lose much of its strength, when he proves our Saviour Christ to be above all the An∣gels, because God had not said to any of them, but had said only to him, Thou art my Son; And again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son: For Angels and men are so the Sons of God, as to be his Sons in Christ, not in themselves; and therefore no sooner nor no longer his sons then they were and are in Christ: For which cause we can be no farther sure of our adoption in Christ, then we are sure of our conjunction and communion with him: and that not of a corporal conjunction in the same flesh, but of a spiritual conjunction in the same Spirit: For our corporal conjunction with Christ doth not only make us ca∣pable of being adopted in him; but it is our spiritual con∣junction with him that gives unto us the seal and benefit of our adoption whereby we are joyned with Christ in the same mystical body here, and shall be joyned with him in the same glorious body hereafter: Thus may every good Chri∣stian saith with Saint Paul, Phil. 1. 21. For to me to live is Christ; and to die is gain; to me to live is Christ, because I am now with him in the communion of the same Mystical bo∣dy; to me to die is gain, because I shall hereafter be with him in the communion of the same glorious body: There needs no dissolution for my union with Christ in the same mystical body,
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but only of my sinful being, the dissolution of sin from my soul; but for my union with Christ in the same glorious body, there needs also a dissolution of my natural being, a dissolution of my soul from my body: I will then labour for that union with my blessed Saviour in my life, which will keep me from the fear of my own dissolution at my death: For I shall not make a right use of his corporal union with me, unless I lay it for the ground and rise of my spiritual union with him, where∣by to be united with my Saviour, not only in the same natural, but also in the same mystical body inchoately in his Church mili∣tant, consummately in his Church Triumphant: And this is the way for me so to welcom the Son of God in his Nativity, as much more to see and enjoy him in his immortality, Amen.
Christ admired in his Passion.
I Cannot admire my Saviour in his sufferings, unless I admire him in his person, which made him liable to suffer; and in his propitia∣tion, satisfaction, application, whereby I have the benefit of his sufferings: And in all these respects hath the holy Apostle Saint Paul admired my Saviour for me, 1 Cor. 5. 7. when he said, for Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us: for these few words afford no less then four considerations of our blessed Saviour; the first is of Christ in his person, for Christ; the se∣cond is of Christ in his propitiation, our Passeover; the third is of Christ in his satisfaction, is sacrificed: the fourth is of Christ in his application, for us: So that I have a very good prece∣dent for making these four considerations of Christ, the four Chapters of my ensuing discourse.
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CAP. I. Christ admired in his Person.
THE contemplation of God in himself, is not a ground of joy to us on earth, though it is to the Saints and Angels in heaven: not that the beatifical vision doth not consist in seeing God, but that the eye of mortal man must be strengthened before it can see him, and the eye of sinful man must be cleansed, before it can see him with comfort, and without confusion: for if Aristotle could alledge his 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, noctu•• oculus ad so∣lem, an Owl or Bat looking upon the Sun, to excuse the im∣perfect contemplation of some inferiour Truths: how much more may we plead this excuse for our imperfect contemplati∣on of the first truth? since there is much more in this case, an Owl or a Bat looking upon the Sun: for there is not only a weak but also a sinful eye looking upon God: A weak eye, because not accustomed to light: A sinful eye because not unaccustom∣ed to darkness: Such a weak and sinful eye is it wherewith man in this life looketh upon the Sun of righteousness; an eye which cannot stedfastly behold him for its weakness; an eye which cannot comfortably behold him for its sinfulness: There∣fore man whiles he is cloathed with sin and mortality, must look on God not in God but in man; not in the majesty of the Spirit, but in the humility of the flesh: or else he will be more con∣founded then comforted with the vision. The Apostles saw but a glimps of our Saviours Divinity in the transfiguration, and they fell to the ground, Mat. 17. 16. and what then do
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we think they would have done, had they seen the full luster and brightness of the Sun of righteousness? Jacob tells Laban of the God of Abraham, but only of the fear of his Father Isaac, Gen. 31. 42. The reason we may conceive to be this, because Abraham was dead, but Isaac was yet alive; for it is impossible but the Divine majesty should strike terrour and consternation to the most upright man that is, whiles he is clogged and bur∣dened with flesh, and much more with sin: And this observa∣tion doth Solomon Jarchi intimate in his gloss upon the place, saying thus, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 God is called the Fear (not the God) of Isaac, because he doth not appropriate his name to just men whiles they are yet alive: The reason cannot be, That they are less his Favourites, but that they are not so much capable of his Favour; he is the same God to the living and to the dead, but the living have him for their fear, because they are in a state of weakness and unworthiness; the dead have him for their love and their reward, because they are in a state of glory and of blessedness: And therefore said God himself to Moses, No man shall see me and live, Exod. 33. 20. If we see God in himself, that sight will destroy our life: but if we see him in his Son, that will preserve it; for as the Chrystal glass may afford much glittering light, but not any delightful reflexion to the beholder, till it be clouded and darkened with a back of some grosser mettal; so the Divinity of Christ may afford many glorious speculations of his Majesty, but no one comfortable reflexion of his mercy till it be as it were darkened and shadowed with his humanity: Then me thinks I can easily (without the help of a Crucifix) see in him a head bowed down to hear me, an eye carefully looking after me, an hand stretched out to defend me, a mouth open to call me, and a bo∣som as open to receive me: So that I cannot but still desire to see my Saviour in the flesh, though not with the eye of my flesh, but with the eye of my faith▪ for if I see him in God he is my consternation; but if I see him in man, he is my salva∣tion.
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IT is impossible that a good Christian should either desire not to know Christ because he loves him, or not to know him in the flesh, because so he hath most reason to love him: and yet Saint Paul hath said, Henceforth know we no man after the flesh, yea though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now henceforth know we him no more, 2 Cor. 5. 16. But sure the Apostle speaks not positively, but comparatively: Henceforth know we no man after the flesh, not so as to forget the relations and substance of the flesh in others, which we carry about our selves, for that were to forget the Law of nature: But so, as not to over∣prize the seeming pre-eminencies, but indeed real vanities of the flesh, (beauty, honour, riches and the like) when they are de∣stitute of the gifts and graces of the Spirit, as if Christian love and conversation more concerned the outward then the inward man; for that were to forget the Law of Grace: Thus we must know no man after the flesh, no not Christ himself, that is in the external representation of his flesh, or more admiring the image of his person, then the power of his Redemption: or in the external presence of his flesh, as desirous to enter a carnal instead of a spiritual communion with him, and bring∣ing rather our mouths then our hearts to feed upon his precious body and blood: Thus must we no more know Christ himself after the flesh; but yet we may not, we must not forget the substance of his flesh, in which the Son of God and the Son of man is but one Christ, unless we will forget the substance of our own salvation: For in that same flesh he was our Redeem∣er, in that same flesh he still is our Mediator and Intercessor: In that same flesh was his head crowned with thorns, that ours might be crowned with glory: in that same flesh be often bow∣ed down his head to look upon us; he once suffered his feet to be fastened to stay for us; his hands to be stretched out to em∣brace us, and his side to be pierced to send forth water and
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blood, his (two blessed Sacraments) to cleanse and strengthen us: by that same flesh was he made liable to suffering, and in that same flesh did he actually suffer all those things, which at first bought the purchase, and which do still bring to us the joy of our salvation.
KNowledge in the natural man exalts him above other men; but knowledge in the good Christian, (who al∣waies loves what he knows of Christ,) exalts him above him∣self; By knowing natural truths I do improve my reason; but by knowing supernatural truths I do also improve my Religion. The improvement of my reason exalts me above other men; but the improvement of my Religion, exalts me above my self: And what knowledge can improve my Religion, but only the knowledge of Christ, who is both the Author and the Finisher of my Faith? Therefore let me ever say with Saint Paul, I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, Phil. 3. 8. for indeed truly to know Christ in his person, is truly to know the whole Christian Faith in the ground and substance of it: For what is the ground or sub∣stance of our Christian Faith, but that which Saint Paul hath set down, 2 Cor. 5. 19. That God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them; which is in effect a short sum of the Apostles Creed; for that treats of nothing but of God and of Christ reconciling us to God, and of the benefits of that reconciliation, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting: Accordingly Aquinas makes it equally necessary to salvation to believe ex∣plicitly the mysterie of the blessed Trinity, and to believe ex∣plicitly the mysterie of the incarnation of Christ: 22 ae. qu. 2.
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art. 7. & 8. There is an absolute necessity (saith he) of be∣lieving the Incarnation of Christ, for that is the only way for a man to come to eternal blessedness, because it is said, Act. 4. 12. Neither is there salvation in any other; for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved: And there is (saith he) as absolute a necessity of believing the bles∣sed Trinity; for the Incarnation of Christ cannot be explicitly believed without faith in the Trinity; for we cannot believe that the Son of God did take our flesh upon him, but we must acknowledge God the Father, and God the Son; and we can∣not believe that he took this flesh of a Virgn, by the operation of the Holy Spirit, but we must acknowledge God the Holy Ghost; so that truly to believe and confess the incarnation of Christ, is truly to believe and confess God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost: Wherefore it was not an objection but a calum∣ny in him that said of the Protestants, For these good Gospellers have a faith and a justifying faith, whereby they apprehend eternal life without Father, Son and Holy Ghost, without Christ and his Passion, or any of those other matters which are rather subtile points of the Papists historical faith, then of the lively justifying faith, wherewith these Evangelical Brethren in all security are warranted of the certain favour of God in this life, and assured glory in the next (Reynolds against Whitaker, p. 282.) for no true Protestant doth believe, and indeed no true Christian can believe that to be a true Faith in Christ, which believes not the Holy and Undivided Trinity, and all other Articles of the Apostles Creed; For such a faith cannot justifie it self, much less can it justifie the man that hath it; wherefore Protestants do not, dare not say, That justifying Faith doth not believe the Trinity and Judgement to come, as well as the Merits of Christ and the forgiveness of sins: They only say, the former truths are believed with the greater astonishment and admiration, the latter truths with the greater affiance or affection; but neither with a greater certainty or confidence then the other. Fides ex ae quo assentit omnibus articulis fidei quoad certitudinem, sed non quoad modum: Faith doth equally assent to all the Articles of the Creed, as to the certainty of assent, though not as to the man∣ner of assenting: The sublim truth of the Trinity she believes with admiration; the comfortable truths of Christs dying for
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sinners and the forgiveness of sins, she believs with joy and consolation; the dreadful truths of hell and judgement to come, she believes with sorrow and contristation: but all the truths contain'd in the Creed, whether sublime, or comfortable, or dread∣ful, she believeth with one and the same certainty or undoubted confidence; And those who teach us that to believe in Jesus Christ our Lord is the proper act of justifying faith, (for to believe the forgiveness of sins is rather an effect then a cause of justification,) do not confine our justifying faith meerly to the belief of this one Article, but do only profess; that though true faith hath as many acts as objects, and hath as many objects as supernatu∣ral truths revealed from God, yet it justifies the sinner only by this one act of believing in Christ, and relying wholly upon his merits and mediation; Thus do we desire with Saint Paul to be found in Christ, not having our own righteousness, which is of the Law, but that which is through the Faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith, Phil. 3. 9. But we dream not of a righteousness either by a vain or by a false faith; ei∣ther by a vain Faith that believes not entirely with affection; or by a false faith that believes not truly, without mistake or deception: Wherefore Antitrinitarian and Antichristian may go for all one in the Protestants, as well as in the Papists account; for indeed they have alwaies gone for one in the account of the Catholike Church. We have heard Aquinas speaking the sense of the Western, let us now hear Damascene speaking the sense of the Eastern Churches; for so he tels us in his third Book de Orthodox•• fide, and fifth chapter; That the two cheif heads of the Christian Faith, are 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, that is to say, the Doctrine of the blessed Trinity, which he cals 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, because it treats only of God; and the Doctrine of the incar∣nation of Christ, which he cals 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, because it sets forth the wonderful dispensations of God about the salvation of men: And these two heads he not only joins, but also compares to∣gether in one chapter, shewing wherein they agree, and wherein they differ: They agree (saith he) in four particu∣lars. 1. That each article is a mysterie. 2. That each ar∣ticle is made known to us only by Divine revelation. 3. That neither article can be sufficiently explained in this life. 4. That either article cals for our Faith to believe it, not for our un∣derstanding
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to scan it; And they differ, (saith he) in these two particulars. 1. That in the Trinity there is one substance, and three Persons; but in Christ three substances, the soul, the body, and the Divinity, but one person. 2. That in the Tri∣nity there is another and another person 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, for the Father is one person, the Son another, the Holy Ghost a third: but not another and another thing, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, for Father Son and Holy Ghost are but one God: But in Christ there is another and another thing, to wit, the Divine nature, and the humane; but not another and another person, for these two natures of God and man, make but one Christ.
Accordingly the same Greek Father tells us most excellently (lib. 3. cap. 7.) that though Christ was twice born, yet he was but once a son; he had indeed two Nativities as well as two Natures; one from his Father, which was eternal, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, above cause, reason, time, and Nature; the other temporal, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 for our sakes, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 af∣ter our manner, as to the time of his birth; from the time he was conceived; but 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 above our manner, as to the way both of his birth and conception; yet notwithstanding these two different Nativities, as well as two different Natures, we must say that Christ was but one Son, or but once a Son; for to say that he was twice a Son, or two Sons, were to say that he had two subsistences, and consequently was two persons: wherefore the Council of Ephesus did justly decree that the blessed Virgin should be called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 The Mother of God, because the Manhood which our Saviour took from her, had no other personal subsistence but only in the Son of God.
I will not here insist upon those four words, which in all probability made the four first general Councils to be received as four new Gospels: The council of Nice defining 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, that our Saviour Christ was truly God, against the Arrians: The Council of Constantinople defining 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, that he was perfectly man, against the Apollinarians: The Council of Ephe∣sus defining 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; that he was indivisibly God and man in one person, against the Nestorians: and The Council of Chal∣cedon, defining 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, that he was distinctly and incon∣fusedly God and man in two natures, against the Eutychians:
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To which four words all the Doctrine concerning the Per∣son of Christ may be reduced; and by which all the here∣sies that oppose that Doctrine may be refuted: Nor will I insist upon the Creed of the Council of Chalcedon, which alone hath set down five words to shew the manner of the union of God and man in one Christ, that it was, 1. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 without conversion of one into the other: 2. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, without confusion of the one with the other; 3. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 with∣out alteration or change of the one by the other. 4. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 without division of the one from the other. 5. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 without distance of the one from the other; for it is sufficient for my purpose to declare that in the person of Christ was such an union of the two several natures of God & man, as was without conversion of one into the other; for God was not turned into man, nor man into God: without confusion of the one with the other: for the God-head was not confounded with the man∣hood; nor the man-hood with the God-head; and without di∣vision of the one from the others: for God is not to be separa∣ted from man, nor man from God: In so much that we may boldly and truly say, and therefore boldly because truly, that this Jesus Christ in our humane flesh is the second Person of the most holy blessed and glorious Trinity, not that our flesh is coessentially or consubstantially of the Trinity: but that it is hypostatically or personally of it; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, as the Greeks distinguish, not in, for, or of it self, by virtue of its own essence; but in, for, and of the Son of God, with whom it is personally united; so that in one Christ we may contemplate and must confess all the beauty and loveliness both of heaven and earth; The beauty of heaven is God; The beauty of earth is man; the beauty of heaven and earth toge∣ther, is this God-Man.
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CAP. II. Christ admired in his Propitiation.
THough in speculatives the bare act of know∣ledge makes a man learned, yet not so in practicks; there the cheifest thing that ad∣vanceth our learning is the manner of knowing: And Christianity being chief∣ly a practical Science, tis not the bare know∣ledge of Christ, but the manner of know∣ing him, that makes a man a well grounded Christian: Hence Saint Paul saith to the Ephesians, But ye have not so learned Christ, (Ephes. 4. 20) that is, so as not to practice him; he looks not only after their knowledge of Christ, but also after their manner of knowing him, which he would have to be such as might work upon their lives and conversations: According∣ly he adviseth the Colossians, that as they had received Christ Jesus the Lord, so they would walk in him; for that was their only way to be rooted and built up in Christ, and stablished in the faith, abounding therein with thanksgiving: Col. 2. 6, 7. Ex∣cellently Saint Bernard, like a very good Divine, and a far bet∣ter Christian, (Sermon 36. in Cant.) Modus sciendi est ut scias quo ordine, quo studio, quo fine quaeque nosse operteat; quo ordine, ut id prius quod maturius ad salutem; quo studio, ut id ardentius quod vehementius ad amorem; quo fine, ut non ad inanem gloriam, aut curiositatem, aut aliud quid simile, sed tan∣tum ad ••dificationem tuam vel proximi: The manner of knowing
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Divine truths, is this, that we know them in a right order, with a right zeal, and for a right end; The right order is to know that first which first procureth salvation: The right zeal is to desire to know that most which most enflameth our affections: And the right end is to use all our knowledge to edification; and in these three respects the knowledge of Christ in his Pro∣pitiation, doth challenge our best endeavours that we may gain it, and our greatest contentedness when we have gained it: be∣cause this knowledge doth most procure our salvation, most en∣flame our affections, most conduce to our edification: There∣fore Saint Paul said to the Corinthians, that he determined not to know any thing among them, save Jesus Christ and him cru∣cified, 1 Cor. 2. 2. That is to say, 1. Not to know any thing before Christ crucified; for he would have that know∣ledge first in order, which was most necessary to their salva∣tion; that is, the knowledge of God, not in himself, but in his Son, not as our maker, but as our redeemer. 2. Not to know any thing with the same activity and fervency of spirit, as Christ crucified; for he would have that knowledge most predominant in their hearts, which most inflamed their affecti∣ons, and that was the knowledge of Christ upon the Cross, overcoming the power of hell, and opening the gates of hea∣ven, which cannot but beget an immortal love of Christ in all those souls which truly consider what it was to be under the fear of death, what it is to have an assured hope of everlasting life. 3. And lastly, not to know any thing but with relation and subordination to Christ crucified; for he would have that knowledge chiefest in their aims and intentions, which alone could make all other knowledge tend to theit edification; And such was the knowledge of Christ crucified; for if Christs Cross pass not through the whole Alphabet of our Divinity, all the words we can use will signifie nothing to a sin-sick soul, which must first be healed, (and what balm can heal a wound∣ed Spirit, but only the blood of Christ?) before it can be saved: yea though we speak with the tongues of men and Angels, and shew not this charity, this love of our Saviour to our perishing souls, we shall become but as sounding brass, or as tinkling Cymbals, make a great noise to very little or small purpose: Therefore doth an excellent late Divine, (Zanchys by name)
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advise all men when they go to read the Scriptures, to have Christ in their thoughts, if they desire to profit by their reading; for so they will be sure to find nothing in the Text to make them ei∣ther Hereticks or Schismaticks, but very much, to make them good Christians, and zealous in the love and practise of good Christianity: Aedificat ad gehennam, was an improper speech of the Canonist, yet we find it in Gratian, in his decree; for to edifie to damnation is to build downwards, that is indeed to de∣stroy and raze all building; but aedificat ad salutem, is proper∣ly spoken, to edifie to salvation, for that building still rises up∣wards, till it come to the heavenly Jerusalem: And the reading of the Scriptures, with Christ crucified before our eyes, will thus edifie us.
SAint Paul calleth Christ our Passeover, 1 Cor. 5. 7. Pascha nostrum; the word in the Hebrew from whence this Pascha is derived is, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Transitus; and Christ is called Pascha, i. e. Transitus, Quia per eum transimus ab hostè ad partrem, à Tene∣bris ad lucem, à reatu ad gratiam, à Poenâ ad gloriam, à pugnà ad victoriam; saith Durand. Christ is called our Pass or Pass∣over in five respects; because by him we have passed from our Enemy to our Father, from darkness to light, from sin to righte∣ousness, from misery to glory, from a combate to victory: The enemy was implacable, the darkness was uncomfortable, the sin was full of deformity, the misery was full of vengeance, the combat was full of danger; wherefore it was surely a most bles∣sed Passage, whereby we passed from this enemy to our Father to be reconciled and beloved: from this darkness to light, to be rejoyced and comforted; from this deformity, and vengeance, and danger, to a state of glory, of peace, and of security:
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And hence the Latine Church hath turned these words of Saint Paul forecited into an Hymn, and appointed that Hymn to be sung for the first Hallelujah on every Lords day from the Re∣surrection to the Ascention of our blessed Saviour, who was this our Passeover, saying, Pascha nostrum immolatus est Chri∣stus, Alleluja; it aque epulemur in Azymis sinceritatis & verita∣tis, alleluja, alleluja, alleluja; Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us, allelujah; therefore let us keep the feast with unleaven∣ed bread of sincerity and truth, alleluja, alleluja, alleluja; There is certainly no superstition, but there is a very great ob∣ligation for all Christians to sing such an Alleluja as this, for which we have so excellent a precedent, Rev. 19. 1. I heard a great voice of much people in heaven saying, Allelujah; salva∣tion, and glory, and honour, and power unto the Lord our God; & so say we, that the Church Militant may joyn with the Church Triumphant, in one and the same Communion of praise and thanksgiving to our Almighty and most Merciful Father, not only for that true and righteous are his judgements, but al∣so, and much rather, for that great and many are his mercies, his inestimable and undeserved mercies, in providing for us such a Passeover whereby we might pass from sin and misery, to righteousness, and bliss, and eternal glory; and for causing us to pass to himself through his only begotten Son, for as much as there was no other way for men to come to God, but through that man who came from God.
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MEN and Angels might stand amazed to see so much mercy where they had seen so little innocency, were it not that they could not but see so much merit, where they had seen so much mercy. No wonder then if this mercy was contra∣ry to our doings, when the merit was according to his doings and sufferings, who died for our sins, and rose again to make us righteous: He is brought as a Lamb to the slaughter, said the Prophet Isaiah some hundred of years before he was actually slain, Isa. 53. 7. But he comes nearer the fountain-head of this mercy, who telleth us of the Lamb that was slain before the foundation of the world, 1 Pet. 1. 20. Wherefore we must needs confess that the Church of Christ well knew the powerful invo∣cation, and desired we should find the comfortable perswasion of this mercy thus purchased for us, when it thus taught us to pray for it, O Lamb of God that takest away the sins of the world, have mercy upon us: For the Son of God was called the Lamb of God for no other reason, but because he was slain as a sacrifice to take away the sins of men: And if we shall com∣pare the Paschal Lamb and our Saviour Christ both together, in the most remarkable circumstances, we shall then see how pro∣perly our blessed Saviour was called the Lamb of God. First the Paschal Lamb was one of the flock, Exod. 12. 5. So Christ was one of us, and dwelt among us, Saint John 1. 14. And the word was made flesh, and dwelt among us; This consideration, That the word was made flesh, as it may inflame our devotions because our Saviour is in our own flesh to pitty us, and to re∣lieve us; so it must cool and allay our distempers, That he is in that same flesh which we so easily suffer in our selves to be ex∣cessively passionate, and either distracted by sinful factions, or distempered by sinful affections: So that now what sins I com∣mit
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in the flesh, I commit not only against that flesh which in my self goes creeping and growling on the earth; but also against that flesh, which in my Saviour is exalted into heaven, and there sitteth at the right hand of God: This is the Apostles most pathetical argument against all the sins of uncleanness, and should be mine in the like case or temptation, Know you not that your bodies are the members of Christ? Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them the members of an Harlot? God forbid, 1 Cor. 6. 15. as if he had said, I must abandon & abhor all uncleannesses of the flesh, in that thereby I shall sin against mine own body; How much more in that thereby I shall sin against my Saviours body?
Secondly, the Paschal Lamb was without blemish; so Christ was without sin, the only spot and blemish of the soul; In pec∣cato sunt reatus & macula, saith the School: All sin as it brings a guiltiness with it, so it leaves a spot and blemish after it: Our Saviour Christ was without this spot, and we must labour to be without it likewise, by being made conformable to him: So should we rightly understand the hidden mysterie of pre∣destination, more by our practise then we can possibly by our speculations or disputes, if every one of us would really endea∣vour to fulfill that part of it, To be conformed to the image of his Son; Rom. 8. 29. For whom he did fore-know, he also did pre∣destinate to be conformed to the image of his Son: The great quar∣rel of Christendom at this day is about conformity, that all Churches will not be conformed to one; And yet even that con∣formity, if it were brought to pass, would not, could not put an end to other differences; But here is such a conformity that would soon end all quarrels whatsoever, if men would make it their study and business, to conform themselves to the image of the Son of God: If men would seriously endeavour a confor∣mity with Christ, by holiness, meekness, patience, obedience, (vertues so much out of our use, that they are almost out of our knowledge, but quite out of our remembrance) they would never be Non-conformists in any lawful thing, nor require con∣formity in any that is unlawful, much less would they brand one another as reprobates; but every one would strive to make his own Election sure, & Hope well of anothers, & so we should all forth with prove unerring students & unblamable proficients in
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that grand controverted Doctrine of Predestination; if we did but truly follow the meekness of this Lamb.
Thirdly, the Paschal Lamb was slain as a memorial of the Jews deliverance from the bondage of Egypt: So was Christs death our deliverance from the bondage of sin and Satan: Let me then stand fast in that spiritual liberty wherewith Christ hath made me free, and be no less afraid of returning to my former sins, then the Israelites were of returning to their former bond∣age, alwaies remembring that dreadful sentence in the Apostle, who in that he had fallen himself, was the more careful to keep others from a relapse, the latter end is worse with them then the beginning, 2 Pet. 2. 20.
Fourthly, the blood of the Paschal Lamb sprinkled on the door posts, made the destroying Angel pass over the Israelites, when he smote the Egyptians; So the blood of Christ sprinkled upon our souls, preserveth us from the destroying Angel: A mercy to be remembred with an everlasting thankfulness, and to be commemorated with an everlasting thanksgiving; for this is a part of the new song in heaven, Rev. 5. 9. Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God with thy blood. What was the ground of their thanksgiving in heaven, must be the ground of our supplication on earth, that we lose not the benefit of this blood which is the price of our Redemption: that neither through the infirmities of the flesh, nor the anguishes of the Spirit, nor the backslidings of the world, nor the temptations of the De∣vil, we be drawn or driven from faith in the blood of our dear∣est Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ: And accordingly we must take care that we be not driven or drawn from the outward profession and exercise of this faith, least we come by degrees to be driven or drawn from the inward settlement and assurance of it.
Fifthly, the Paschal Lamb was to be eaten with bitter herbs, and without leaven; so Christ is to be received with repentance, and without malice or hypocrisie; which is the most common, but the most unsavoury leaven of the soul; for a small parcell of either of these will infect and corrupt all our best Religious performances, even as a little leaven leaventh the whole lump: Accordingly the Apostle is most industrious to chase this leaven out of our hearts, when he biddeth us to keep the feast, not with
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old leaeven, that is, the leaven of hypocrisie, when we pretend to be new men but are not: Nor with the leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth, 1 Cor. 5. 8. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, in azymis sinceritatis & veritatis; for 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, sincerity is a righteous judgement against the sophistications or delusions of malice; and 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Truth is a righteous practise (for there is a moral, as well as a Metaphysical truth) against the prevarications of Hypocrisie: They generally go both together, hypocrisie in the tongue and malice in the heart, fair pretences and foul intentions; The hy∣pocrite being most commonly malicious, as having the Devil in his heart; and the malicious needing the hypocrite to disguise his malice, by seeming to be an Angel in his tongue: But what ever the leaven be, whether these or any other infectious sins, our care must be first to find it, and then to cleanse it: where∣in it will not be amiss if we follow the great scrupulosity of the Jews, who to the intent that not so much as the suspition of leaven should be amongst them at their feast of the Passeover, did first cleanse their ordinary vessels of it; then searched eve∣ry cranny or chink of their houses after it, then burnt all they found, then execrated or cursed all that might possibly be left behind, which they could not find; So should every one of us keep the feast of our Christian Passeover, cleanse our vessels from the leaven of all sin and wickedness, then search the cor∣ners of our hearts to find it out; then burn and consume what we have found, then detest and abandon what we cannot find, crying out with a hearty sorrow and repentance never to be re∣pented of, Who can tell how oft he offendeth, O cleanse thou me from my secret faults, Psal. 19. 12. Secret not only to others, but also to my self: He that so heartily repents of the sins he knows not, doth much more repent of those he knows: And indeed the Paschal Lamb might not be eaten without bitter herbs, nor can Christ be received without sorrow and bitterness of Spirit, so as to become the nourishment of our souls; and those men are grosly mistaken, who think they can receive him by faith alone, without repentance; for who dares preach Christ otherwise then he preached himself? and that was by re∣pentance; So saith the Evangelist, Jesus began to preach and to say, Repent, Mat. 4. 17. We cannot phansie, but we may weep
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our selves into our Saviours mercy; nor can we truly rely up∣on his righteousness by faith, till we have first bewailed our own unrighteousness by repentance: And indeed the strange faith that some of late have desired and devised, (and there∣fore devised because they desired it) of being in Christ whiles they be in malice, injustice, disobedience, profaneness, pervers∣ness, and other such like grievous sins, is much like the strange woman spoken of in the Proverbs, Her lips drop as a honey-comb, and her mouth is sweeter then oyl, but her end is bitter as worm∣wood, Porv. 5. 3, 4. for such a faith begins in honey and oyl, promising salvation with much sweetness and smoothness, but its end is as bitter as wormwood, for it bringeth death and dam∣nation upon the soul.
Sixthly and lastly, The Paschal Lamb was to be eaten whole, and to be eaten only by the circumcised; So Christ is to be ta∣ken whole, in all the Doctrines of the Christian faith; That which he hath commanded is as necessary to salvation, as that which he hath promised; and we may not expect to inherit his promises, if we neglect and disobey his commands; not a bone of his natural body was broken by the Jew; nor may a bone of his spiritual or of his mystical body be broken by the Christian: They brake the legs of the malefactors who were not yet dead, but they brake not the legs of Christ, (Saint John 19.) so may the Magistrate break the legs, and stop the proceedings of male∣factors, (especially if they be not yet dead to their sins by a hearty repentance and amendment of life) but he may not break the legs of Christ, or crush any of those whom Christ hath appointed to be the supporters of Christianity: Again, we must remember, that unless the Jew was circumcised, he had no right to eat of the Paschal Lamb: So we Christians may not hope to receive Christ, unless we be spiritually circumcised in our ears and in our hearts; in our ears to hear his voice, in our hearts to obey it; Else it were possible for us so to receive God the Son, as to resist God the Holy Ghost; for so saith Saint Stephen, Act. 7. 51. ye stiff-necked, and uncircumcised in hearts and ears, ye do alwaies resist the Holy Ghost: The uncircumcised in hearts and ears cannot be the receivers of Christ, because they are the re∣sisters of his Spirit; because they resist the Holy Ghost.
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WHere shall a good Christian look for comfort but in the Word of comfort? what word of comfort like that which proceeded immediately from the Comforter? And what text so comfortable in that word, as that which assures us not only of God the Holy Ghost, but also of God the Son to be our Assistant and Advocate to intercede for us? For we may have the assistance of the Holy Ghost, and yet say, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me, when we seriously consider how often we have deserved to be forsaken: But there is no∣thing to discomfit or dismay an offender, (though his offences be never so many and great) if he may be sure that his Judge will be his friend to absolve and to acquit him. Now we all be∣lieve that the Son of God is to be our Judge, and therefore must needs be most rejoyced with that saying that assures us, he will be our friend in the Judgement; and that saying is recorded, 1 John 2. 1, 2. If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous. No greater friend to a poor Client, that hath a bad cause, then a good Advocate to plead for him, unless it be a favourable and friendly Judge to absolve him. And behold the Penitent sinner hath here both these joyned in one; for the same Christ that is his Advocate to plead for him, is also his Judge to absolve him: And therefore he is called in the Greek 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, that is, a Comforter; the same title which is given to the Holy Ghost, John 14. 16. I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter▪ 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: not only an Advocate, but also a Comforter. The Spirit of God is both; the Son of God is both to the true Penitent: The Spi∣rit is our Advocate to make intercession for us, with groanings which cannot be uttered, Rom. 8. 26. And he is our Comforter to assist us in our Temptations, and to stengthen us against them: And so also is the Son our Advocate to make intercession for
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us, with the Father: And our Comforter, in that the Father will not refuse, nay more, cannot resist his intercession; For the same Christ who is the Advocate to plead for penitent sinners, is also the propitiation for their sins, to make good his own Plea, as it followeth, and he is the propitiation for our sins: So that as he is our Advocate to undertake our cause, so he is our Comforter to assist and to deliver our souls: by one and the same Plea defending us against the Devil, who will busily ac∣cuse us; and delivering us from the fear of hell, which will be ready to receive us; in that he is our Advocate to plead for us before him, and to prevail for us with him, who alone is able to destroy both body and soul in hell: So that our blessed Saviour is our 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 in both senses, as it signifies an Advocate, and as it signifies a Comforter: and indeed in one and the same re∣spect as he is our Mediator, is he both our Advocate and our Comforter: Our Advocate to plead our cause, our Comforter to rescue and to free our persons: Wherefore we may with re∣verence and without derogation to the Spirit of God, say of our Saviour Christ, That he is Paracletus super Paracletum, a Com∣forter beyond the Comforter: For the Spirit of God is our Comforter to speak for us only in the day of mercy, whiles we are speaking for our selves, that we may be able to pray acce∣ptably; but is not our propitiation to make our persons or our prayers to be accepted: But the Son of God is our Advocate to speak for us, when we shall not be able to speak for our selves, even in the day of Judgement, when all flesh must keep silence before God, according to that of holy Job; for how should man be just with God? if he should contend with him, he cannot an∣swer one of a thousand; And he is also our Propitiation, to make both our persons and our prayers accepted with God: And it is impossible he should not prevail in making the intercession, who hath already prevailed in making the atonement: This is the inexpressible, the inestimable comfort of a distressed sinner, who bewaileth his sins, and flieth to the Son of God for mer∣cy, that the same Jesus now is, and will be at the last day his Advocate, who hath already been his propitiation: And this is a comfort, that men and Devils cannot deny unto us, and there∣fore we may not deny it to our selves; For the sinner comes un∣der accusation no longer then tell his sin is expiated; but when
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that is fully done, then he comes under absolution: wherefore since my sins are expiated by my Saviour, I will not fear that the Devils shall accuse me; for I have an Advocate to answer their malice: I will not doubt but God will absolve me, for I have a propitiation to satisfie his justice.
So that by this means Elies question, which otherwise is un∣answerable, may be fully and easily answered: But if a man sin against God, who shall intreat for him? 1 Sam. 2. 25. for here is an Advocate that will intreat for us, if we put our selves under his Patronage and Protection: And surely it is concern∣ing this Advocate that Saint Peter hath spoken, Casting all your care upon him, for he careth for you, 1 Pet. 5. 7. All our care is or should be how to save our souls; and therefore the first thing we should all do, is to put our selves in such a condition that our blessed Saviour may take care of us, that so we may securely cast all our care upon him: Then will Saint Pauls Problem be turned into a Position, Rom. 8. 33, 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect? it is God that justifieth, who is he that condemneth? it is Christ that dyed, yea rather that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh in∣tercession for us: and that position will carry this sense, Good Christians ought not to be afraid of condemnation, since they have so many sure and certain arguments of Gods love and fa∣vour towards them; for none can justly accuse them, because God himself, (before whom the accusation must be made) hath already absolved them; and none will be able to condemn them, because Christ, (who alone is to be the Judge) dyed for them, to deliver their souls from death; or rather is risen from the dead, to open to them the gate of everlasting life: And he hath power to give them life▪ for he is at the right hand of God: and he hath a will and a desire to give it, for he maketh intercession for us. We may reduce all these benefits and mercies to those four heads, which Alensis saith are the effects of our Saviours Passion, Effectus Passionis Christi ponuntur quatuor; Primus, Justificatio à peccatis; Secundus, Reconciliatio ad Deum; Terti∣us, Religatio potestatis Diaboli; Quartus, Apertio januae Para∣disi▪ (Par. 3. qu. 18. m. 6.) There are four effects of our blessed Saviours Passion: the first is our Justification from sin▪ the second our Reconciliation with God: the third is, the re∣straining
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of the power of the Devil: the fourth is, the open∣ing of the gate of heaven. O my soul, evermore give him hear∣ty thanks for this Passion, which hath purged thy sins that did both defile and oppress thee; which hath satisfied and appeased thy God who was angry with thee; which hath stopped the Devils mouth that he cannot claim thee; which hath opened the gate of heaven, that it will receive thee. We now fully see the vertue of this Propitiation; we are in the next place to consider the great goodness, wisdom, justice, and power of God in find∣ing it for us, and giving it to us; wherein we shall do best to follow his method, who first put the Divinity of the Greek Church into a Methodical System, and that was Damascene, who lib. 3. de orth. fide, c. 1. saith, That this giving of Christ to be made our Propitiation, did in one and the same act, shew the goodness, the wisdom, the justice, and the power of God; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 First the goodness of God, in that the Creator did not de∣spise the infirmity of his creature, but did rather communicate therein, and take it upon himself; which should make us say with great devotion, and greater thankfulness, O that men would therefore praise the Lord for his goodness, and declare the wonders that he doth for the children of men, Psalm 107. Words of thanksgiving which the Psalmist did not think they could re∣peat too often, when he considered of mans temporal preserva∣tion; and therefore sure we cannot repeat them often enough, when we think of our eternal salvation, and of the infinite goodness of our Saviour in purchasing and procuring it for us.
Secondly the wisdom of God, That there was so miraculous a way found out to pay the price of our Redemption, that he who was exalted in the highest and could not be humbled, yet was so humbled to the lowest, as not to lose any jot of his ex∣altation; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉.
Thirdly, the Justice of God, that though man was his choicest workmanship, and after his own image, yet he would not pull him by violence from the Tyrant who had unjustly got Dominion over him, but paid such a value for the redemption of his captive, as was indeed above all valuation; which had in effect been said many years before Damascene by Leo the great
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in one of his Christmass Sermons, (Serm. 2. de Nativ.) hanc potis∣simum consulendi viam elegit, quà ad destruendum opus diaboli non virtute uteretur potentiae, sed ratione Justitiae: He followed that counsel whereby he might destroy the Devils work, not by the strength of his power, but by the reason of his Ju∣stice.
Fourthly, the power of God; for nothing could be an act of greater power, then to make God become man, accor∣ding to that of Saint Basil in his homily upon the 44. Psalm, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. It was the demonstration of the greatest power, that God could be in the nature of man; For not the constitution of heaven and earth and all things in them, above them and be∣low them, did so fully set forth the power of God, as did this condescention, that God was made man, saith the same Father; He looked upon it as an act of great power, That God had emptied himself, then that he had filled all the world.
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CAP. III. Christ admired in his Satisfaction.
NExt those Hereticks that oppose Christ in his person, they are in the saddest condition who seek to oppose him in his Satisfaction; for as the one overthroweth the foundation, so the other hindereth the edification of the Christian Faith; both acting the wicked parts of Sanballet and Geshem, whiles true Christians (with Nehemiah) are labouring to build up the Temple of God. For if there needed no satisfaction for sin, why was the eternal Son of God offered up as a sacrifice for our sins? And if we be indeed pattakers of his satisfaction, what madness is it for us to rely upon our own? Let the first question be seriously pondered, there will be no Pelagian to deny origi∣nal sin, for fear he find not cause enough for the death of Christ, if there were no sin of mans nature to be expiated: Let the se∣cond question be seriously pondered, there will be no Pharisee to maintain personal righteousness, for fear he make not a right use of Christs death; in that he thinks he hath not so great need as others, of that his expiation. Alexander Hales who was re∣puted and called the irrefragable Doctor, is opposed by A∣quinas, (his greatest admirer) and by Bonaventure, (his choicest Schollar) for teaching that Christ should have come into the world, though with flesh not capable of suffering (••arne tamen impassibili) if so be that Adam had not sinned. The Angelical and Seraphical Doctors thought it unreasonable, that Christ
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should come in the flesh not to suffer; and shall not we think it irreligious to extenuate the vertue of his sufferings? Sure we are that the whole creation of men and Angels are not able to satisfie the justice of God for one sin, because there is no pro∣portion betwixt their Satisfaction and his Justice; for the one is finite, the other is infinite; And as sure we ought to be That God did not give us his Son to satisfie for our sins, that we should question the necessity, much less that we should un∣dervalue the efficacy of his satisfaction. For all other sacrifices were but Types of this great sacrifice, which in the end of the world appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself, Heb. 9. 26. Judah desired to be a bondman for Benjamin, but he was his brother; Saint Paul said, He could wish himself accursed for the people of the Jews, but they were also his brethren and his kinsmen; But our Saviour Christ was contented to be made both a bondman and a Curse for us, whiles we were yet his enemies; His bondage was our freedom; His Curse was our blessing; but let not his love be our enmity; for though he came to save us whiles we were his enemies, yet he will not save us, if we continue so. O thou art my Priest to bring me unto God, and my sacrifice to reconcile me to him; make me to present my self, body and soul as a living sacrifice unto thee▪ that thou maist at the last day present me both in soul and body without spot and blemish unto thy heavenly Father, in thine eternal and everlasting kingdom, that though thou wilt then cease to be my Priest, yet thou maist never cease to be my King.
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WE cannot consider Christ as a sacrifice, but we must consider that sacrifice as a full expiation of, and sa∣tisfaction for all our sins, and consequently we must look up∣on it as such a sacrifice as may only be remembred, but not re∣peated: For other sacrifices shewed their own insufficiency by their often repetition; they were offered year by year continu∣ally, because they could not make the Commers thereunto perfect: (Heb. 10. 1.) But this sacrifice is proved to have been suffici∣ent, because it is not again to be repeated; So saith the Apostle ver. 10. We are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all; (to say there is more offering, were to say there is less Sanctification; to say his body is more offered, were to say, that our souls are less Sanctified:) ver. 11. And every Priest standeth daily ministering, and offering oftentimes the same sacrifices which can never take away sins¿ (This saepe in the Sa∣crifice is nunquam in the Satisfaction; because there is an often∣times in the offering, there is a Never in the taking away of sins:) ver. 12. But this man after he had offered one sacrifice for sins, for ever sate down on the right hand of God; (This man hath so ful∣ly expiated all sin by one sacrifice, that it is as absurd to think he may be sacrificed again, as to confound his state of exalta∣tation with his state of humiliation, or to think he may be brought again to his cross, now he is sate down at the right hand of God:)
And indeed our blessed Saviour himself in that he saith, Do this in remembrance of me, doth evidently call for the comme∣moration of his sacrifice upon the cross, till his coming again, (for as long as he shall be out of sight, He may not be out of mind; whiles he cannot be seen, he must be remembred)
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But he that cals only for a commemoration▪ doth in effect, dissal∣low of a Repetition.
So that the burning of the blessed Sacrament into a sacrifice properly so called, is neither sound divinity as they teach it, nor sound devotion as they use it, who by pretending to repeat and renew the corporal Sacrifice of Christ, do in effect (accord∣ing to the Apostles rule) bring it under the suspicion, or at least leave it under the imputation of insufficiency: for what is done once sufficiently as to all intents and purposes, is in vain desired to be done again; yet we deny not that Christ is offered in the holy Eucharist, but we say he is offered mystically, not corporally; We deny not that he is also there Sacrificed, but we say it is by way of Commemoration and representation, not by way of renovation or repetition: when Christ was corporally of∣fered and sacrificed, he himself alone was the Priest who was the Offering and the Sacrifice: But he is still mystically offered and sacrificed by those Priests or Ministers, who are obliged to continue the representation of his corporal offering and sacrifice, though not the repetition of it,
Accordingly it is much to be observed, that such as was the difference of opinion concerning this sacrifice, such was also the difference in the ordination of those men who were appoin∣ted to offer it;
For the manner of ordination in the Greek Church supposed the man ordained only as a Minister to the administration of the sacrament; for the Bishop that ordained him, put the consecra∣ted bread into his hand saying; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, &c. Take this (holy) thing committed to your charge, and keep it till the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, when he will call you to an account how you have dis••osed of it; This man so or∣dained had delivered to him the Trust and charge only of a Sa∣crament. But the manner of ordination in the Latine Church, supposeth the man ordained as a Priest to the offering of a Sacri∣fice; for the Bishop that ordained him put the Communion plate and chalice into his hand, saying, Accipe potestatem offerre Sa∣crificium Deo, Missamque celebrare tam pro vivis quam pro de∣functis in nomine Domini, &c. Receive the power of offering a Sacrifice to God, and of celebrating the Mass both for the quick and the dead, in the name of our Lord, &c. And agreeable to this is the
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benediction of the Presbyters after this ordination in the same Church, Benedictio Dei omnipotentis, Patris, filii & spiritus Sancti, descendat su er vos, ut sitis benedicti in ordine sacerdotali, & o••feratis placabiles hostias pro peccatis atque offensionibus popu∣li, &c. The blessing of God, the Father, Son and Holy-Ghost, descend upon you, that you may be blessed in the order of Priests, and offer acceptable sacrifices for the sins and offences of the People; (Pontifical. Rom. Venetiis editum, An. 1561.) This man so ordained had delivered to him the trust and charge, not of a Sacrament, but of a sacrifice; But in the ordination of the Church of England (and some other Protestant Churches) the Bishop saith to him that he ordains, Receive the Holy-Ghost; whose sins you forgive they are forgiven▪ whose sins you retain they are retained; but be thou a faithfull dispencer of the word of God, and of his holy sacraments, in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy-Ghost; This man so ordained hath delivered unto him the trust and charge of no sacrifice, but only of the Sa∣craments and also of the word; and it were to be wished, that those whom it nothing concerns, would neither invade nor di∣sturb this trust; especially since it is so exactly agreeable with the Text, which in all the new Testament hath not recommen∣ded to the Church the trust and charge of a Sacrifice, but only of the Word and Sacraments: And it can be no shame for us to confess that in the judgement of our Church the holy Eucharist is a Sacrament, not a Sacrifice, unless it be in a mystical sense, a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving; or in a figurative sense, a commemoration or representation of a sacrifice, but by no means a repetition of Christs corporal sacrifice, since the Apostle hath expresly said concerning that, We are sanctified through the offe∣ring of the body of Jesus Christ once for all, Heb. 10. 10. According to which our Church doth believe and profess in different words the very same truth, saying, That Christ made upon the cross by his one oblation of himself once offered, a full perfect, and sufficient sa∣crifice, oblation and satisfaction for the sins of the whole world; and I will ever rejoice in this belief and profession, since he that hath made a full satisfaction for the sins of the whole world, hath not left his father unsatisfied only for my sins.
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CAP. IV. Christ admired in his Application.
TRuly to know Christ, is truly to know the whole Christian Faith, as hath been said; For truly to know Christ in his person, is to know the Christian Faith in the ground or substance of it: And truly to know Christ in his Propitiation, Satisfaction, Application, is to know the Christian Faith in the power or vertue of it: Accordingly Saint Paul is not content to know Christ only in his Person, saying, that I may know him, but he will also know him in his Propitiation, Satisfaction, and Appli∣cation, saying, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellow∣ship of his sufferings, being made conformable to his death, Phil. 3. 10. To know Christ in the power of his resurrection, is to know him in his propitiation; for he was delivered for our offen∣ces, and raised again for our Justification, Rom. 4. 25. To know Christ in the fellowship of his sufferings, is to know him in his satisfaction, whereby he slaked body for body, soul for soul in our stead, that he might satisfie for all the sins both of our bo∣dies and of our souls: And to know Christ so as to be made conformable to his death, is to know him in his Application; for we cannot apply the merit of his death, till we be conformed to it by dying unto sin, and rising again to newness of life: for the Application of Faith doth no less require that man apply him∣self to God by hol••ness of conversation, then that he apply God unto himself by strength of perswasion; And truly the one cannot be without the other, since it is impossible for that man
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to lay hold on Gods promise of mercy, who looks not after the conditions on which it is promised; to wit, a hearty repentance of his sins, and an amendment of his sinful life: for Gods pro∣mises of mercy are not made to all sinners, but only to penitent sinners: so that where is no true repentance, there can be no true faith; and where is true repentance, there cannot be too much: for if man perform his part of the Covenant of grace, he may assure himself that God will perform his part; nay he must assure himself so, unless he will remain in the state of infi∣delity: For a true and lively faith is a full perswasion of the heart, grounded upon the promises of God, that whatsoever Christ hath done or suffered for the salvation of man, he hath done and suffered for me as well as for others: And I must ne∣ver be satisfied with my self, nor think I am in a good state or condition, till I have gotten such a faith as will give me such a perswasion: For the satisfaction of Christ in general will afford me but little comfort, without the application thereof in parti∣cular to mine own soul: Wherefore my labour must be to put my self in such a condition, that though I cannot but think my self unworthy of the invaluable blessing of this satisfaction, yet I may not think, much less make my self uncapable of it.
I Do not find any desert in man that entitled him to a pro∣perty in the creature; but sure none can be found to entitle him to have a property in the Creator. Yet he that saith unto his Saviour as Saint Thomas did, My God and my Lord, seems to claim a property in him: For how can a man assume or ap∣ply that unto himself, in which he hath no property? Where∣fore it is necessary that we examine how Christ is made ours, that so we may see the ground both of our property and of this application: I say then that Christ is ours in a threefold re∣spect,
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because of a threefold conjunction of Christ, with us, in his nature, in his person, and in his office.
First, Christ is ours in his nature by a real conjunction, having taken our nature upon him: and in that respect he is ours as we are men, and he hath bestowed on all mankind a greater capacity of his Grace, then otherwise they would have had, by reason of their corrupt nature: for which cause the Evangelical Promises which God maketh to man in Christ, are universal, as excluding none, because Christ hath taken the nature of all: but yet conditional, as including only those who repent and believe the Gospel: for no others make a right use or attain the end of Christs Merits and Mercies.
Secondly, Christ is ours in his person by a voluntary con∣junction, having taken our sin upon him, as our surety or pledge; for he hath born our griefs, and carried our sorrows, Isa. 53. 4. And in that respect he is ours as we are Christians, and hath bestowed on us the knowledge of his grace, though very many of us by our own infidelity and impenitency, make but a little and a bad use of that knowledge.
Thirdly, Christ is ours in his office by a mystical conjuncti∣on, such as is between a King and his Subjects, both making but one mystical body; and in that respect Christ is ours only as we are good Christians, and hath bestowed on us the communion or rather the communication of his grace, incorporating, nay more inspiriting us, as his members, into himself. And this is the happiest conjunction that we can have with Christ whiles we live here on earth; To be one with him in the same mystical body, or in the same actual communion, not only external of his nature or of his person, as many are that are little benefited thereby, but also to be one with him in the same actual internal Communion of his grace; to the inestimable benefit of our souls, which are first sanctified, and at last saved by this communica∣ting with Christ.
For all the priviledges and blessings of his Regal, of his Pro∣phetical, of his Sacerdotal function; of his power as King, of his instruction as Prophet, of his sacrifice or intercession as Priest, are made ours by this blessed conjunction, according to that comfortable assertion of the Apostle, 1 Cor. 3. 22, 23. All are yours, and ye are Christs: for the words are not spoken conse∣quutive
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sed causaliter, not by way of consequence, but by way of causality, and accordingly import this sense, All are there∣fore yours because ye are Christs: Ye are Christs, and Christ is yours, and he being All in All, in and through him, All is yours; but without him, All is nothing, and you are worse then no∣thing O then let me so rejoyce for his coming to me in the bo∣dy, as much more to desire and long for his coming to me in the soul: That as the Lord of all is joyned with me in one flesh, so I may be joyned with him in one Spirit; that I may dwell in him, and he may dwell in me for ever: There is a mutual In∣being betwixt Christ and every good Christian (saith Saint Bernard) even as betwixt Christ and God: As the Father is in the Son, and the Son is in the Father; and therefore Father and Son make but one essentially: So Christ is in the good Christi∣an, and the good Christian is in Christ; and therefore Christ and the good Christian make but one mystically: If either the Fa∣ther were not in the Son, or the Son were not in the Father, they could not be perfectly one by essential Unity. And if either Christ be not in the Christian, or the Christian be not in Christ, they cannot be one by mystical Unity: Sic igitur Anima cui ad∣herere Deo bonum est, non ante se existimet ipsi perfecte unitam, nisi quum & illum in se, & se in illo manentem persenserit, (Bern. Serm. 71. super Cant.) Therefore let not the soul, which is happy only through her union with Christ, think her self perfectly united unto him, till she perceive that he so dwell∣eth and abideth in her, as that she also dwelleth and abideth in him, and desireth so to dwell and abide for ever.
O happy soul that is thus wedded to her Saviour by a spiritual marriage! for man and wife are not more nearly and more in∣dissolubly joyned together by being one flesh, then Christ and the Christian soul by being one Spirit: Vere Spiritualis sancti∣que connubii contractus est iste; Parum dixi contractus, complexus est: Complexus plane, ubi idem velle, & nolle idem, unum facit spiritum •• duobus. This is more then a spiritual contract, it is a compleat marriage, when the same will being in two persons, shall make them both but one Spirit: So the same Saint Bernard, and so likewise saith Saint Paul, He that is joyned unto the Lord, is one spirit, 1 Cor. 6, 17. Then let me be joyned to him, that I may be one spirit with him, and that my spirit may be his, rather
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then mine own: For mine own spirit will be death to me be∣cause of sin, but his spirit will be life to me because of righte∣ousness; (Rom. 8. 10.) In my self I can see nothing but sin and death; In my Saviour I see both righteousness and life; righteousness to deliver me from sin, and life to deliver me from death: Therefore I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord; my soul shall be joyful in my God; for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation; he hath covered me with the robe of righteousness, Isa. 61. 10. A fit Epithalamium to celebrate this spiritual marriage betwixt Christ and the good Christian, wherein though the An∣gels be ready to make up the Chorus, yet the devout soul her self alone sings the song: There is joy in them, but much more in us for this marriage, because we have such a wedding gar∣ment bestowed on us, as expells the fear both of a Divorce and of a Dissolution; the first of which may be, the second of which must be in all other marriages; They may be under a di∣vorce by sin, they must be under a dissolution by death: But the marriage betwixt Christ and the good Christian, if it be once indeed truly consummated, is under neither; for the bles∣sed Bridegroom of souls bestows both righteousness and salva∣tion upon all those who are espoused unto him: Such a righte∣ousness as will keep off sin from causing a Divorce; He hath co∣vered me with the robe of righteousness: such a salvation as will keep off death from causing a dissolution in their marriage; He hath clothed me with the garments of salvation: Therefore I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God; for neither shall my sins disturb this joy since, I am covered with his righteousness; nor shall my death diminish, it since I am cloath∣ed with his salvation: To him be glory for this righteousness, and for this salvation for evermore, Amen.
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Christ adored in his Resurrection.
CAP. I. That Christ is to be adored chiefly in his Resurrection.
WHat is the sorrow of the soul for sin, we may partly see by every true penitent, who can∣not but say for his sins as our Saviour once said for them; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, My soul is exceeding sorrowful even to the death, Mat. 26. 38. But what is the sor∣row of the soul for death, the wages of sin, God make us such true penitents, that we may never see; for if we are so unfit by reason of our impati∣ence, and so unable by r••••son of our infirmity to pass over the momentary sor••o•••• of the earth; it must needs fill our souls with astonishment and confusion but once seriously to think of the sorrows, the everlasting sorrows of hell. Wherefore most welcom to the Christian soul is that joy which delivers it from this sorrow, and that is the joy of Christs resurrection, where∣by we have been delivered from the sting and mischief of the
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temporal, & from the pangs & horrours of the eternal death. Ac∣cordingly it hath been observed by Christian Chronologers, that our blessed Saviour did rise from the dead on that very same day of the year, on which Moses and the children of Israel had (al∣most two thousand years before) passed safely through the red Sea; And indeed as their deliverance by Moses from the Egyp∣tians, was a type of our deliverance by Christ from our spiritual bondage; so their joy may well be in our hearts, and their Song in our mouths, only heightned by a greater measure of thankfulness and of thanksgiving, for as much as ours hath of the two been infinitely the greater deliverance.
Therefore let me say as they did, but let me say it with a more thankfull heart and with a more cheerfull voice; for greater is my duty, though lesser is my ability; I will sing unto the Lord, for he hath triumphed gloriously, Exod. 15. 1. Never was so glorious a triumph as this, which triumphed over the grave that devours all this worlds triumphs; nay over Hell, which makes the bare memory of them odious and detestable, either that they were gained unjustly, or used immoderately, or abused intem∣perately: The Lord is my strength and song, and he is become my Salvation, ver. 2. What can my soul say more? what should it say less for being delivered from the pangs and horrours of the temporal and eternal death, but that the Lord is my Song, for being my strength to rescue and to redeem me; much more for being my salvation to receive me and to crown me? Again, Who is like unto thee O Lord amongst the Gods, who is like unto thee glorious in holiness, fearfull in praises, doing wonders? ver. 11. Let me but think of the Son of God dying for my sins, and ri∣sing from the dead to make me righteous, and I must needs say he was glorious in holiness, and ought to be fearfull in praises for doing such wonders as to bring glory out of shame, holiness out of Sin, and life out of death; Lastly, Thou in thy mercy hast led forth the people which thou hast redeemed; Thou hast guided them in thy strength to thy holy habitation, ver. 13. All those Saints that did rise from the dead when our Saviour Christ arose to go along with him into heaven; and all those Saints that shall rise hereafter by vertue▪ of his resurrection, to follow him thither, can say no more then this to express their joy and thankfulness, Thou hast led us forth from the grave; thou hast redeemed us
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from death, thou hast guided us in thy strength to thy holy habita∣tion, there to see and bless and enjoy thee for ever.
So that those late▪ Hebr. Criticks are too much in love with the glosses of the Jews, who oppose them against the Judgement of the whole Catholick Church, that they may enervate one of the soundest proofs of the Resurrection that is to be found in all the Old Testament: And that proof is, Job 19. 25, 26, 27. I know that my redeemer liveth, and that I shall rise out of the earth at the last day, and shall be covered again with my skin, and shall see God in my flesh; Yea and my self shall behold him not with other, but with these same eyes; Words so expresly spoken of the resur∣rection, that the Church hath thought fit to use them at the bu∣rial of the dead, as the chiefest comfort and consolation against death; yet upon these words thus saith the Learned Mercer, Nostri ferè omnes tam veteres quàm recentiores hunc versiculum cum duobus sequentibus ad resurrectionem referunt; s••d ego cum▪ Hebraeis aliter accipio: Quod si de resurrectione futura hic lo∣queretur Job, non erant haud dubie id praetermissuri Hebraei, qui & ipsi resurrectionem credunt; At ne unum quidem ex sex aut sep∣tem Hebraeorum commentariis invenies qui eò referat. Almost all Christian writers ancient and modern do expound these three verses of the Resurrection; but I with the Jews do expound them otherwise: For if Job had here spoken of the resurrection to come, doubtless the Hebrew doctors would not have pretermitted it in their Commentaries, since they also believed this Doctrine; but in six or seven of their Expositors, there is not one that expounds these words of the resurrection: This reason is unsound in it self and therefore unsatisfactory in its Proof: For the Jewish expositors labour after nothing more, then not to see Christ in the Old Te∣stament; And their Doctors knowing that the Christians did believe and profess the Resurrection of the dead, by vertue of Christs resurrection, had rather leave the doctrine of the resur∣rection out of their glosses, then allow it to be by vertue of our blessed Saviour, whom their fathers had crucified, and whom themselves not only hated, but also accursed and blasphemed every day: Thus Saint Mathew tells us plainly that the Jews gave the Souldiers mony to say that our Saviours disciples came by night and stole him away; And they that were so willing to put a lye in other mens mouths, were as willing to put the truth
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out of their own Hearts; for so saith the same Evangelist, And this saying is commonly reported among the Jews until this day, Mat. 28. 15. Nor is it easie for any man to shew another Day wherein they first left off this Report.
Sure we are that when the Apostles preached through Jesus the resurrection from the dead, (Act. 4. 2.) that the Jews were greived, and with might and main opposed their Doctrine; and this spirit of contradiction continued in them throughout all that age wherein the New Testament was written; and Ec∣clesiastical writers do shew us that by its long continuance, it was rather increased then abated in their successors: Where∣fore it must be unsound and unsafe for any Christian Divine to appeal to the Jewish Comments for the true sense of any Text in the Old Testament concerning Christ; For although they unanimously maintain and justifie the Letter of the Scripture, (wherein they have shewed themselves more thankful, if not more faithful, then many of our late Christians, who would teach the translations to justle out the Original) yet they have laboured to corrupt and deprave the meaning of it, in most of those prophesies which they found the Christian Church had applied unto our Saviour Christ. I speak especially of the lat∣ter Jews who are the cheifest Commentators we now have up∣on the Old Testament; for those Rabbies who were before Christ, did interpret many Texts of the Messiah, which the later Rabbies have since wrested to, and obscured by another Interpretation; so that in truth those later Rabbies whose com∣ments we now have upon the Bible, have used what Art▪ they could to obscure the Prophesies concerning Christ, and there∣fore must needs be ill guides in any Doctrine that concerns the Christian Faith: As for example, Isa. 7. 14. the place which Saint Matthew quotes to prove that Christ was to be conceived and born of a Virgin, yet Kimchi who is one of the cheifest and the best of the late Jewish Expositors, expounds it of the Prophets, or of Ahaz his wife, and saith that 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 is not there put for a Virgin, but only for some younger woman; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 He is willing to distinguish Almah from Bethulah, because Bethulah must be an incorrupt Vir∣gin, but Almah may signifie a maid that had not an incorrupted Virginity, as Prov. 30. 19. And Aquila had too much of the Jew
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in him to follow the Septuagints interpretation of this place, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Behold a Virgin, therefore he saith, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Behold a young woman shall conceive; for the Jews did meerly out of envy render the Hebrew word, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, a young woman, instead of 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, a Virgin; And sure we are, the infallible spirit of God hath thus rendred it, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Behold a Virgin shall be with child, Mat. 1. 23. So again Isa. 9. 6. For unto us a child is born, &c. Kimchi labours to prove this child to be Hezekiah, though he be fain to divide the predicate from the subject in the same proposition, con∣trary to all Logick, and to divide the relative from the ante∣cedent in the same sentence, contrary to all Grammar, that he may wrest the latter part of the words, His name shall be cal∣led wonderful, Councellour, &c. which are unappliable to any man, and expound them of God the Father, because he will not allow the Prophesie to concern God the Son. So again, Isa. 53. A place which Bellarmine alledgeth to prove that the Jews did not corrupt the Text, for that the Original Hebrew did plainly assert the Divinity of Christ, calling him 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 a smitten God, when as our translations only say, he was smitten of God; This place making more against the Jews in the Hebrew Original, then either in Greek or Latine translations, is a substantial proof indeed that the Jews did not seek to corrupt the letter of the Text; but yet this same place doth as plainly prove that they did seek to deprave the sense of it; for Jarchi and Kimchi both would fain perswade us that all this Chapter is to be interpreted of the Jews in their present captivity, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 of the captivity of Israel, although the expressions be such throughout the whole Chapter, as can belong only to one single person. (He shall grow up, he is despised, he was wound∣ed, &c.) and there be many passages which cannot possibly be applyed to Israel: I will insist that but on three. 1. That it is said, he was wounded for our transgressions, whereas Israel was afflicted for their own sins. 2. That it is said, He had done no violence, neither was any deceit in his mouth, whereas every man is a liar, and God only is true, who is the first truth. 3. That it is said, He made intercession for the transgressors, whereas the Jews are so far from praying for the Christians, who, they say, hold them in captivity, that they revile and curse them
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every day, and pray for their destruction.
Lastly (that I may instance in one placec which neerly concerns this Doctrine of the resurrection, which the Jews care not to see in the forenamed testimony of holy Job) It is most evident that the ninth and tenth verses of the sixteenth Psalm do ex∣presly prophesie of the resurrection of Christ; and Saint Peter plainly proves as much, (Acts 2.) to the conviction of all those Jews that heard him, and to the conversion of some thousands of them; yet the late Jewish Expositors will find no such piece of Divinity in it, but Jarchi will needs expound it of David, contrary to all sense and reason, and Ezra slubbers it over with a Platomical 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 called by the Jews 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Volutatio animarum the tumbling and jumbling of souls, whereby they phansied one soul to pass through three se∣veral bodies, as that the soul of Adam was afterwards in David, and shall hereafter be in the Messiah, which say their Cabbalists, is intimated in the word 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 which hath in it the initial let∣ters of Adam, David, Messias; to shew that his soul should also possess their two bodies: And Elias in his 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 in radice 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 tels us of a Text which they quote to make good this their wild position, (of one and the same humane soul recei∣ving, as it were a threefold creation, and possessing three se∣veral bodies,) and that Text is Job 33. 29. Ecce omnia ista operatur Deus cum homine tribus vicibus, Lo all these things worketh God with man three times; It were the loss of my la∣bour, and of the Readers patience, to insist upon the confutation either of their opinion, or of their proof they alledge for it, since both are equally absurd and erroneous; And yet Ab••n Ezra would needs shuffle in this frantick opinion into his Comment upon those words of the sixteenth Psalm, for thou wilt not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt suffer thine holy one to see corruption, rather then he would allow them their own plain proper sense whereby they did necessarily infer his resur∣rection from the dead, in whose person they were spoken: which is the more to be observed, for that himself had acknow∣ledged some peculiar eminence of this Psalm from the Title of it, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 which he therefore had thus glossed, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Tis glorious or precious as Gold, tis a Golden Psalm; and yet he would not see that mysterie in it, which
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alone had given it that glorious title (in the judgement of the best Divines,) even the Mysterie of Christs Resur∣rection.
SInce we cannot deny the Christians unspeakable joy for the Resurrection of Christ; why should we go about to di∣minish it by opposing the grand Christian Festival which hath been instituted to express that joy? For excellently Greg. Naz. and most like a true Divine, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 (Orat. 39.) the sum or business of a Festival, is the remem∣brance of God; and to put the Thesis into an Hypothesis, the sum and business of this Festival is to remember Christ, in whom alone we Christians must remember God: so that to oppose this Festival, is in effect to oppose the remembrance of God in Christ, and to shake the very foundations of Christianity. For we cannot oppose this Anniversary, but we must also oppose our weekly Lords day: Therefore did that Council judi∣ciously, which began its reformation of abuses in the Church with this Canon, Custodite diem Dominicam quae nos denuo pe∣perit & à peccatis omnibus liberavit; estote omnes in hymnis & laudibus Dei, animo corporeque intenti; & si aliter fecerit ru∣sticus aut servus, gravioribus fustium ictibus verberabitur: (Con∣cil. Matiscon. 2. cap. 1.) Keep the Lords day which hath begot∣ten us anew, and delivered us from all our sins: Be all of you intent in body and soul to the praises of God, and if any country man or servant do otherwise, let him be soundly cudgelled for his pains: And Bullinger in his Decades upon the fourth Com∣mandment, gives an excellent reason why set times and seasons
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should be consecrated and set apart for the publike worship and honour of God, saying, Oportet autem definitum tempus con∣secratum esse exercitio religionis, ut Dominicum: idem sentien∣dum arbitror de pauculis quibusdam Christi Domini festis, qui∣bus peragimus memoriam Nativitatis, incarnationis, circumcisi∣onis, resurrectionis, ascentionis in coelum, & missionis Spiritus Sancti in discipulos; libertas enim Christiana non est licentia, & dissolutio Ecclesiasticae piaeque observationis, juvantis & provehen∣tis gloriam Dei, & charitatem proximi: There must be some set and certain time consecrated to the exercise of Religion, (by vertue of this fourth Commandment) as the Lords day: and I think the same of those other Festivals instituted and observed in memory of Christ, as his Nativity, incarnation, circumcision, resurrection, ascention into heaven, and sending down the Holy Ghost upon his Disciples: For Christian liberty is not a licen∣tious dissolution of such holy and pious Ecclesiastical observations as tend wholly to the glory of Christ, and the edification of our Christian Brethren. Yet do we most willingly confess that the Christians feast of Jubile is not to be confined to a day, because he that is the cause of it, Jesus Christ, is the same yesterday, and to day and for ever, Heb. 13. 8. And indeed so doth Saint Chrysostome expound that Text of Saint Paul, 1 Cor. 5. 8. Therefore let us keep the feast, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: He saith not Let us keep the feast because it was then Ea∣ster or Whitsuntide, when he writ this Epistle, but to shew that a good Christians life is a continual Feast, and therefore every day might serve him for a Festival: So that in Saint Chryso∣stomes judgement, Saint Pauls Let us keep the Feast, is little other then a short extract of the Psalm of Jubile, Jubilate Deo omnis terra, O keep your Jubile in the Lord all ye lands, Psalm 100. 1. Only the reason is much more express in the New, then in the Old Testament; Be ye sure that the Lord is God, saith the Psalmist: It is he that hath made us; but much more forcible is the Apostles reason, It is he that hath redeemed us: We are his people, and in that regard ought to hold a feast unto him, (Exod. 5. 1.) but much rather because he hath been a sa∣crifice for us, that we might be his people: we are the sheep of his pasture, and ought to hear his voice; much rather because
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he hath been our Paschal Lamb that we might be his sheep. The whole Psalm is nothing else but a song of Jubile in one verse, and the reason of it in the next; as ver. 1. O be joyful in the Lord with gladness and with a song, there's the Jubile; but ver. 2. The Lord he is God, it is he that hath made us: there's the cause of it. And again, ver. 3. O go your way into his Gates with thanks∣giving, and into his Courts with praise, and be thankful unto him; there's the Jubile. But ver. 4. For the Lord is gracious, his mercy is everlasting, and his truth endureth from generation to generation, there's the reason of it. Grace, mercy, and truth, are all met together in the Lord, saith the Psalmist; a grace without repenting; the Lord is gracious, that is, still con∣tinues so, notwithstanding our multiplied provocations; a mercy with ending, His mercy is everlasting; and a truth with∣out failing, His truth endureth from generation to generation: But the Apostle tels us moreover in whom they are met, and the ground of their meeting, when he saith, For Christ our passover is sacrificed for us: For the cause of the grace, is, that this Christ is ours, made ours by conjunction: The cause of the mercy, that he is our sacrifice by propitiation: and the cause of the truth, (which is one and the same from Genesis to the Revelation) is this, that the same Christ was this sacrifice of the passover, according to the prediction so long foreshewed in the Paschal Lamb, Exod. 12. and so long foretold in the Pro∣phets; particularly, Isa. 53. 7. He is brought as a Lamb to the slaughter: so that though a stranger from the Common-wealth of Israel could ask the question, Of whom speaketh the Prophet this? he was led, like a sheep to the slaughter, and like a lamb dumb before the shearers, so opened he not his mouth, Act. 8. 34. Yet the Israelites did all so generally know the meaning of this phrase, that Saint John the Baptist used no other title to pro∣claim the Messias but this, Behold the lamb of God, (John. 1. 29.) which was so well understood, that two of his own Disciples presently left him and followed Jesus, ver. 36, 37. And Saint Philip acknowledgeth the person typified and foretold to agree exactly with the Type, and prediction, when he saith, ver. 45. we have found him of whom Moses in the Law and the Pro∣phets did write; as if he had said, All that the Law and Pro∣phets had promised was now fulfilled: Grace in the con∣junction,
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mercy in the propitiation, and truth in the prediction; All met together in Christ our Passeover; therefore Jubilemus, let us keep our Jubile, or in Saints Pauls language, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Let us keep our holyday; or yet farther, (if you please,) let us keep this Holyday, that is the feast of the Passover, called by the Council of Antioch, c 1. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the Holy feast of the soul-saving Passeover: For Aerius his obje∣ction against keeping of Easter, from this very text, saying, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, we ought not to keep the the Passover, for Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us; though it overthrow the Jewish Passeover, which was a type of Christ, yet it rather establisheth a Christian Passeover, which is a memorial of him; unless we will say that Christ was therefore our Passeover and sacrificed for us, of purpose that we should for get him and his sacrifice; For as we may not now retain any types of Christ, because that were in effect to deny that he is come in the flesh; so we may not let go the memorials of Christ, because that in effect is to be unthankfull for his coming: And our Saviour himself by saying do this in remembrance of me, hath shewed that he will look upon those Festivals which should be appointed for memorials of him as upon so many religious and Christian like Institutions, since he that hath prescribed to do this, hath also prescribed, or rather presupposed a set and solemn time of doing it. For though the Christians joy in Christ is not to be limited or confined to a day, yet that is no reason why a day should not be limited and confined to that joy: Let spiritual joyes be eternal in themselves, but for that very cause let our time be subservient to their eter∣nity, that they may likewise be so to us: For God appointing a set time for a spiritual duty, hath not thereby debased the duty, but exalted the time, even as our blessed Saviour appointing a set form of prayer, hath not thereby confined the spirit of prayer, but rather enlarged it: And the Holy-Ghost having given us so many set formes of prayer and praise in the Psalmes and the rest of the ible, Bhath not therefore taught the duty of prayer to be the less spiritual, but hath taught us to be the less carnal, that we should not in pouring out our souls to God rely upon our own phansies or inventions, but upon his holy dictates and directi∣ons: For there is the same reason both of hic and of nunc in
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matters of Divinity; the same reason of these words and of this time; God having consecrated words to his service as belonging to the substance of it, and having consecrated times, places and persons only as accidents and circumstances belonging to the so∣lemnity thereof; And therefore it is strange to see those men who are most zealous for the set times and Dayes of serving God eve∣ry week, to be so impetuous against the set forms of serving him, as thinking the set time to help devotion, but the set form to hin∣der it; whereas it is evident that setting a time to the spirit must needs be a confinement of him, as well as setting of words: And to say to the Spirit of prayer, Pray now, is as great an intrusion and encrochement upon him, as to say to him, Pray this?
But in truth nither are confinements to Gods spirit, and both alike are intended for the enlargements of our spirits: Set times and Set words, that we pray in the greater assurance of faith, knowing we cannot be willworshippers, whiles we conform our selves to his will whom we worship.
AMong all Gods Attributes, none are so remarkeable in our lives and deaths, as his mercy and his Justice. His mercy in our preservation, his justice in our destruction: And accordingly God himself requires us most especially to take no∣tice of the great effects of his justice and of his mercy: Hence is it, that we find him instituting few or no memorials
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of his wisdom or of his Power, but very many of his Justice and of his Mercy, though not so many of his justice as of his mercy: we find but one memorial of his Iustice more particularly recommended to the care of his Church, and that is against those men who had said to Moses and to Aa∣ron, to their Civil and Ecclesiastical Governours, Ye take too much upon you, seeing all the congregation are holy, every one of them, and the Lord is among them, Numb 16. 3. These men because they had invaded the Priests office in burning incense, had their censers nailed upon the altar of incense, and the Text saith, to be a memorial unto the children of Israel, that no stran∣ger which is not of the seed of Aaron, come near to offer incense be∣fore the Lord, that he be not as Corah and his Company, ver. 40. Te miror Antoni quorum facta imitare, eorum exitus non perhor∣rescere, said the Orator most pathetically; I much wonder that since you do follow their sins, you do not fear their punishment: And how can any Christian Minister say less, since it is evident that the Gospel, in this case, still retains the sentence, and con∣sequently revives the severity of the Law; For so saith the Apostle, No man taketh this honour unto himself that is not cal∣led of God as was Aaron, Heb. 5. 4. as if he had said, no man rightly taketh the office of a Priest upon him, but he that is ex∣ternally and publickly called of God as was Aaron, so as all the Congregation may take notice of his calling; And if he do take Aarons office that is not called as Aaron was, he hath great reason to fear least the earth should open under him, and hea∣ven should be shut above him, and against him; for that he is a sinner against his own soul, Numb. 16. 38. and doth provoke God to make him as Corah and his company.
In this one case we have a memorable example of Gods ju∣stice, and as exemplary a memorial thereof, and we have scarce any other such as this: but we find very many exemplary me∣morials of his mercy: Scarce any singular blessing bestowed up∣on the Iews, but there was a special feast appointed in the Church to propagate and to perpetuate its remembrance: Thus was the feast of tabernacles instituted, that your generations may know that I made Israel to dwell in bothes when I brought them out of the Land of Egypt, Levit, 23. 43. Thus without Gods im∣mediate command was ordained the feast of Purim, Esther 9.
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which yet was faithfully observed, and the observation thereof looked on as a religious, not as a superstitious practise, by God and man. Nay yet more, we find another feast after this, not mentioned in the Canonical Scripture, but only in the Apo∣crypha, the feast of the Dedication of the Altar, (1 Macchab. 4. 59.) and yet this feast was not only carefully observed by the Iews, but the observation of it was also approved by our Saviour himself, John 10. 22, 23. which is warrant more then enough both for the Church to constitute still such festivals to the honour of God, and for us to observe the Festivals that are so constituted: And it is also check more then enough to their insolency and perversness, (if they would take notice of it) who in matters of the Christian Religion will pretend to be wiser not only then Christs Church, but also then Christ him∣self. For if the argument be undenyable concerning marriage, from John 2. 1, 2. which holy estate Christ adorned and beautifi∣ed with his presence, and first miracle that he wrought in Cana of Galilee: Then it is as undenyable concerning Festivals from Iohn 10. 22, 23. which holy institution Christ himself adorned and beautified with his presence, in that he went to the Temple at the feast of the Dedication, as well as at other feasts, which were im∣mediately commanded in the text.
In a word, Thus the feast of the Passover was instituted▪ to commemorate to the Jews how God had passed over them when he slew the Egyptians, Exod. 12. 12. And the Christian Church hath appointed this Gospel Anniversary feast of Easter; to succeed that legal Anniver•…•…y feast of the Passeover; not so much to shew her Authority; (which however cannot be de∣nyed without Heresie, nor resisted without Schism) as to dis∣charge her trust: For the Apostle 1 Cor. 9, 10. saying, that those words, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the Ox that treadeth out the corn, were written no doubt for our sakes, hath laid it for an immoveable grouud of our Christian faith, that the general equity even of the Levitical Law (as far as it was not typical) is still in force among Christians, (concerning the solemnities of Religion) and must be so, till the worlds end: And if we will stick fast to this ground, All our late contests about the times, places, and persons belonging to Gods publick worship, will soon be determined; if we will not stick to it, we
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shall in effect put aside the Apostles Divinity, that we may bring in our own. By this ground Aerius his Heresie will soon be ejected out of the Church, who taught, That Imparity of the Ministry was condemned, and Parity commended in the word of God, (as saith Saint August. lib. de haeres. haeres. 53.) Dicebat Presbyterum ab Episcopo nullâ differentiâ debere dis∣cerni.) For it is evident out of the Levitical Law alone, That God himself ordained and instituted an Imparity in the Priest∣hood; and as evident, That he hath since not reversed but plainly approved (if not established) an imparity in the Ministers of the Gospel, as appears by the power of Jurisdiction given by Saint Paul to Timothy over Presbyters, 1 Tim. 5. 19. unless we will say, That he might receive accusations against Presbyters, & pass sentence upon them, without having jurisdiction over them: Again, By this ground tithes and all other provisions made for the Ministry will rather be encreased then diminished; for the Gospel being so much above the Law, doth rather call for a greater, then for a lesser maintenance: so that if the Ox that trod out the corn might not be muzzled then, much less now: Churches will no longer be nick-named, much less unfre∣quented or profaned; and the Sabbath will no more afford us matter of Disputation but of Devotion, if we will stick to this ground: for that God himself hath said, Keep my Sabbaths▪ and reverence my sanctuary, Levit. 19. 30. and the same God that hath forbad us to profane the time, hath also forbad us to profane the place of his worship, Levit. 21. 23. that ye profane not my sanctuaries, for I the Lord 〈…〉〈…〉 sanctifie them: I say, by this ground all our late contests about the times, places and persons belonging to Gods publick worship, may easily be determined, ••nless we will needs say, (for wilful men will say any thing) That Gods commands about Oxen contain in them matter of precept for our Christian conversation, and obedience, (though the Apostle plainly telleth us, That God careth not for Oxen) But not so his commands about the time, and place, and persons of his own worship, concerning which God himself hath pro∣fessed that he is solicitous and careful even to a jealousie. And by this same ground it is evident, That as the Jew under the Law ••as, so the Christian under the Gospel is obliged to com∣memorate Gods extraordinary benefits to his Church, with ex∣traordinary
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thanksgivings. And as God prescribed the Jews a set form of Catechism to instruct their children in the reasons of this solemn festival, Exod. 12. 24, 25, 26. which Solomon Jarchi calleth 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 (upon Exod. 13. 8.) that is to say, The Annuntiation of the Passeover; so did the Christian Church think fit to require catechizing, specially against Easter, and more particularly because of those who addressed themselves to the Holy Communion, which never failed heretofore to be ad∣ministred at that time, and is our true 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 a most full and ex∣act Annuntiation of our spiritual deliverance: nor is it impro∣bable that Saint Paul alluded to this very Text of Exod. 13. 8. & Annuntiabis filio tuo, and to this very custom of the Jews grounded thereon, of making their Catechetical annuntiations when he used the very same word concerning the blessed Sacra∣ment, saying, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Annuntiatis mortem Domini, 1 Cor. 11. 26. thereby himself calling, or at least licencing us to call the holy Eucharist the annuntiation of the death of Christ: And it is remarkable that the Jews used this manner of Catechizing only at this feast; and their Catechism consisted of these three heads, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Pascha, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 herba amara, & 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Azymus: Their Annuntiation belonging to the Passeover was, how God passed their Fathers over that night wherein he destroyed the first born of the Egyptians; Their annuntiation belonging to the bitter herbs, was of their Fathers grievous servitude and bondage in Egypt, which made even their lives bitter unto them: And their annuntiation belonging to the unleavened bread, was their happy and sudden deliverance from that bond∣age; for the Egyptians were so urgent upon the people, that they took their dough before it was leavened, their kneading troughs being bound up in their cloathes upon their shoulders, Exod. 12. 24.
We had at the same time a much greater deliverance; and why should we have a less Annuntiation? For where the mer∣cy it self is much greater, why should the memorial thereof be so much less?
God gives a signal intimation to the Jew, Exod. 12. 42. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Haec ista, non illa, This is that very night, as if there were not demonstrative pronouns enough to shew, that this mercy was to be as particular in their thankful commemo∣ration,
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as it had been in Almighty Gods free donation; And Saint Paul seems to speak as signally to the Christian, when he saith, The same night that he was betrayed, 1 Cor. 11. 23. as if he would not have us forget the particular time, when he com∣eth so near the very words of Moses, This is that very night to be observed to the Lord: And indeed, why should not we keep a Christian Passeover, as well as a Christian Sabbath? were they not both alike feasts of the Jews, and as so, are they not both alike abolished by the Apostle, Gal. 4. 10. saying, ye observe daies, and moneths, and times, and years, I am afraid of you least I have bestowed upon you labour in vain; A Jewish observation of daies, which observes daies for themselves, is without doubt destructive of Christianity, for it places Religion in things meer∣ly ceremonial: Not so a Christian observation of daies for du∣ties, for that places Religion only in morals: Again, why hath not the Christian Church as good Authority, if not as justifi∣able warrant, to observe an Anniversary, as it hath to observe a Weekly festival? as well the feast of the Christian Passeover once a year, as the feast of the Christian Sabbath, once a week? for both are alike recommended in the Law, and neither is di∣rectly commanded in the Gospel, and we may not add to Gods commands, no more then we may take from them; nor may we think the New Testament defective in any necessary com∣mand or doctrine, unless we will advance Judaism above Chri∣stianity. Therefore since it will pose the best Divine in Christen∣dom to shew that Text in the New Testament, which com∣mandeth the observation of a Sabbath: and we cannot run to the letter of the fourth Commandment, to keep the first day in stead of the seventh; we must be contented in this case with the general equity of the Law, and that gives the Church power to consecrate Annual as well as Weekly Festivals to the honour of God, and condemneth our profaness in neglecting, our per∣versness in despising the one as well as the other: Besides, it is evident we cannot, (or if we can, sure the Apostles could not) keep a Lords day all the year, but as a repetition of Easter-day, which was the first Lords day, even the very day of his resur∣rection: wherefore we must either say, it is a Jewish, not a Christian Sabbath: or say, it is a Lords day from the great Lords day, the day of our Lords resurrection: For though Saint
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John telling us, He was in the Spirit on the Lords day, pointeth clearly at our Sunday, the weekly remembrance of Christs re∣surrection, and not at Easter-day, the annual remembrance of it, because in those Churches of Asia, to which he writ, Easter-day was not yet confined to the first, but might be kept on any other day of the week; yet without doubt he called it 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 the Lords day, for that it was a weekly repetition of that very day which our Lord had consecrated to himself by ri∣sing from the dead, called for that reason 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 the great Lords day by the primitive Christians.
And shal we then not think it worth our notice that our blessed Saviour himself chose such a time for his Passion and Resurre∣ction, as by the unerring Characters of heaven might be exact∣ly observed all the world over to the worlds end, were it so that our Civil year were made agreeable with the Tropical: or that the Catholick Church of Christ in its first and purest age would have been so careful to find out, and so zealous to settle the time of this Festival, if the Fathers of these blessed ages (which were less quarrelsom, but more pious then any have been since) had not thought it highly concerned the honour of Christ, and the propagation and justification of the Christian Religion? Surely we cannot easily more gratifie the Jews, then by putting down the memory of that time wherein they cruci∣fied Jesus Christ our Lord, which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh; nor can we more easily scandalize good Christians, then by putting down the memorial of that time wherein he was declared to be the Son of God with power, accor∣ding to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead, Rom. 1. 3, 4. And God deliver his Church from such practises as are fit to gratifie Jews, but to scandalize good Christi∣ans.
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FAmous was the controversie betwixt Policrates and Victor, the one Bishop of Ephesus, the other Bishop of Rome, concerning the celebrating of Easter-day: For the Churches of Asia would needs keep the very day of the first full moon in Spring, conceiving the Apostles condescention to the Iew, to have been a dogmatical sanction to the Christian; but the West∣ern Churches who had no conversation with the Iews, and therefore were not moved, through compliance with them, at first to forsake their Christian liberty, and at last the Christian truth (for the Quartadeci•…•… were in pro••ess▪ of time de∣clared Hereticks) would not keep the very day of that full Moon, but the Sunday after it, for their Easter-day; the learned Scaliger gives this reason for their difference: The Jew∣ish Converts following their old custom, kept still 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 a Passeover in remembrance of Christs Passion, and therefore sought after the very day of the moneth on which the Paschal Lamb had been slain, and our Saviour had been crucified; But the Gentile Converts kept 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the Passeover in remembrance of Christs resurrection; and there∣fore deferred their feast till the first day of the week that follow∣ed next after that day of the moneth: So we see, that both Churches agreed about the feast it self, and thought themselves bound to observe a Passeover once a year; and that they agreed also about the time of the year, wherein it was to be observed; their disagreement was only about the very day; For the
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Churches of Asia had mistaken Saint Johns condescention to the Jew, for an approbation to themselves, as if because he had al∣lowed this manner of celebrating the feast of the Passeover ac∣cording to the known and received custom, among the Iews, he had also approved, and by consequent established the same among the Christians. The like mistake whereunto might also have been in other Eastern Churches concerning the Iewish Sabbath, had they retained the observation of it with the same opinion of necessity: For that the Sabbath was at first joint∣ly observed with the Lords day, by the Christian Churches, ap∣pears from antient canons, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Clement, cap. 33. And Scaliger takes it for granted that those Churches were converted betimes, which retained that old custom: Quod Ethiopes sabbatum ••que ac Do∣minicum ab opere immune habent, id non est argumentum Judaismi, sed veteris Christianismi (saith he lib. 7. de emend.) That the Churches of Aethiopia do keep Saturday a Holy-day as well as Sunday, is not a proof that they are new Iews, but that they have been old Christians: The truth is, the Apostles zeal busi∣ed and spent it self wholly upon duties, not upon daies, and so should ours: They continued daily in the Temple, Acts 2. 46. and again, daily in the Temple and in every house they ceased not to teach and preach Iesus Christ, Acts 5▪ 42. This daily preach∣ing shewed their chief zeal was for duties, not for daies; and yet their every day doth not forbid their particular choice of one principal day, for those holy purposes and performances, at the same time; for so we read, Acts 20. 7. Ʋpon the first day of the week when the Disciples came together to break bread▪ Paul preached unto them: Here's a particular day culled out from the rest of the week, both for preaching the word, (and conse∣quently for praying) and for administring the holy Communi∣on: for so we may well expound the breaking of bread with some antient Interpreters, though it be an ill inference that some of late have made from thence, that they may lawfully leave out the other part of that blessed▪ Sacrament: By the same reason they might tell us, that the Church hath authority to change the very form instituted in Baptism, because we read in the Acts of the Apostles, that many men were baptized in the name of the Lord Iesus, Acts 8. 16. & 19. 5. For without
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doubt if Christs institution may be dispensed withal in the one, it may also in the other Sacrament; and if not in the one, then not in the other: Wherefore it is ill arguing from a Synechdoche partis in dicto, to a Synechdoche partis in facto, from a part for the whole in speaking. to a part for the whole in do∣ing. The bread may be named without the wine, but it fol∣lows not therefore it may be given without it: We may ad∣mit of half speeches, but we must be sure of whole Sacraments. For though words are not sacrilegious in putting a part for the whole, because that is a right way of speaking; yet works may be guilty of sacriledge by doing but a part for the whole, because that is not a right way of working; for in speaking we may follow the custome or practice of men, but in doing, we must follow the precept and prescription of God. Nor can a man that wilfully transgresseth the institution of Christ, be ex∣cused from infidelity if we will embrace (as we cannot justly reject) Aquinas his distinction, Infidelis non ut habeus malam voluntatem circa finem, Sc. Christum; sed tamen ut deficiens in Electione mediorum, quia non eligit quae sunt à Christo tradita; a Christian may be an infidel, not as erring about the end, for he aims at Christ; but yet as erring in the choice of the means, when he followeth not those ways which Christ hath prescribed him.
And thus have they erred about the administration of the holy Eucharist, who would be accounted very strict observers of the grand Christian Festivals; although in truth they cannot keep a Festival in honour of Christ, who falsely administer the Eucharist, no more then they who Preach false Doctrine, or use false devotions: For it is evident from this practice of the Apostles, that Christian Festivals ought to be celebrated by preaching the word, and administring the holy Eucharist, and much more by holy and religious prayers, which may not be left out either in preaching of the word, or in administring of the Sacrament, unless we will not regard Gods blessing on the one, nor his presence in the other: Nay indeed, holy and religi∣ous Prayers do in effect partake both of the word and of the Sa∣crament; of the word as they are professions of our faith; of the Sacrament, as they are remembrances of our Saviour. And it is ac∣cordingly observable that in all the collects of the Church, there
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is in the first part of them a recognition or profession of some heavenly Doctrine which we are bound to believe; as in the latter part there is a special remembrance of our blessed Sa∣viour, whom we are bound to honour alwayes, concluding Per Jesum Christum, Dominum nostrum, through Je∣sus Christ our Lord; so that false devotions, (that is, not true in themselves, or not true in his certain knowledge who useth them) False Doctrine, and false administration do all alike profane a Festival. Nay, Saint Paul thinks the Lords Day not sufficiently celebrated by words and Sacraments and prayers, but he requires also the giving of alms; Ʋpon the first day of the week let every one of you lay by him in store, 1 Cor. 16. 2. And Saint Chrysostome tels us he chose such a day for it, as could not but very much advance the duty: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, &c. He argues from the day to the duty, bidding them consider what great mercies the Lord hath bestowed on them that very day, for that alone would make them willingly and liberally shew mer∣cy to his distressed members: This was the antient practice of the primitive Christians, to offer up their alms as well as their prayers to God upon those Festivals which they celebrated in a thankful remembrance of his mercies conveyed unto them by his Son, and therefore they might beseech him mercifully to ac∣cept their alms as well as to receive their prayers which they offe∣red to his Divine Majesty: But our charity and our devotion are both grown cold, and our charity so cold, that it hath quite chilled our devotion; we are loth to be at the charges to ho∣nour Christ with set anniversary Festivals, for fear of conti∣nuing or reviving the formerly accustomed alms to his poor members; for we cannot deny but giving something to the poor is a most fitting Concomitant or proper adjunct of a Fe∣stival, being so taught, John. 13. 29. where our Saviours words to Judas, That thou dost do quickly, being spoken against the feast, ar•• thus interpreted, that he should give something to the poor: And indeed they are so rightly interpreted. For since our Saviour hath suffered so much for us, we connot do enough for him, and our doings for him, must needs then be most seaso∣nable when we record his sufferings for us: And as he was so
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willing to suffer for our sakes, that he called upon the Traytor to dispatch quickly; so we should be as willing to do for his sake, and in all matters of charity that may be helpful unto our brethren, every man say to himself, what thou dost do quickly: Wherefore let me seriously and constantly pour out my soul to God in unquestionable devotion, meditate on Gods holy word, hunger after his body, thirst after his blood, and willingly and frequently releive and refresh his poor mem∣bers; and though I may be able to keep nothing else, yet I shall be sure to keep a good conscience, which will be to me a con∣tinual Feast; yea though all the Holy Dayes that are institu∣ted in the remembrance of Christ should be forbidden and for∣gotten by others, yet the performance of these holy duties, will never let me want my Christian Festivals.
THE Primitive Christians did exceedingly rejoyce at the Anniversary Feast of our Saviours Resurrection, and did long continue that their rejoycing, even till the day of his Ascension, or rather till the day of his descending again in the gift of the Holy-Ghost; so saith Balsamon of some in the Greek Church, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, that they accounted the whole time from Easter to Whitsontide, but a one continual Lords day: And it is evi∣dent that the first Council of Nice, which hath but twenty Ca∣nons in the whole, hath bestowed one of them (and that is the last) meerly upon the manner of celebrating this solemnity, re∣quiring all people to say their prayers standing on every day of the week betwixt Easter and Whitsontide, no less then on the Lords days all the year after, to proclaim their joy for, as well as to profess their faith in their Saviours Resurrection: Nor were they acquainted with any other salutation at that time of
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the year, but only this, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the Lord is risen; and the party thus saluted made answer, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, true, he is ri∣sen indeed; they thought they could not wish one another any joy like the joy of Christ, nor any joy of Christ like the joy of his Resurrection: The like salutation was in the Latine Church; Resurrexit Dominus, the Lord is risen, said he who saluted his neighbour; and the other answered, Deo gratias, the Lord be thanked, or Apparuit Simoni, he hath appeared unto Simon: This was all their Good morrow & Good even one to the other in the more antient and more innocent times, (of the Church:) Nay yet more, on every Sunday from the Resurrection to the Ascention did the Latine Church repeat the collect for Easter day, Deus qui per Ʋnigenitum tuum aeternitatis nobis aditum reserâsti, Almighty God which by thy only begotten Son hast opened unto us the gate of everlasting life, leaving out only hodiernâ die, on this day, because they could not make one day hold out to forty. And as they did so long continue the same prayer, so did they as long continue the same praise; singing three several Alle∣luiahs on every one of these Sundays for this infinite mercy and eternal consolation in our Saviour Christ, for a heavenly comfort expressing a heavenly joy, as if they had already passed from the Church militant, to be of the Church triumphant, & would have no more to do with the earth, since our Saviour was risen from it, and going into Heaven. Surely Saint Augustine cals the whole three days of our blessed Saviours passion, death and Resurrecti∣on, sacratissimum triduum, the three most holy days in the circle of the whole year; and the cheif of the three was that of his Re∣surrection, which was therefore antiently accounted not only the first day of the week; (for so is any other Sunday) but also the first day of the year, that is to say, the first in dignity as well as in order. Veteris anni Ecclesiastici initium à Pascha; & Pascha dicebatur annus novus, saith Scaliger, (lib. 1. de em. tem.) The beginning of the Ecclesiastical year was antiently at Easter, and that was called the new year: And in the Greek Church, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, new years week, was the same with Easter week; and how this account came afterwards to be altered in the Church, and the new year translated from Easter to Christ∣mass, the same Scaliger sheweth (lib. 6. de emend. temp.) in these words, Institutum vetus in Ecclesiâ fuit in natali Domi∣ni
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Pascha proximum, ejusque diem indiculis aut breviculis no∣tare; Ab hoc more fluxit ut à natali Domini anni passionis ejus numera••entur; hoc est, ut annum passionis inciperent putare à na∣tali Domini, qui tamen putandus erat à sequenti Pasch••: Be∣cause at Christmas they did antiently give out the Calender for the ensuing Easter, thence it came to pass that some began the ac∣count of the year of Christ at Christmas, which they should not have begun till the Easter after. But for a long time in the account of the Church, Easter day was the first day, and Ea∣ster week was the first week in the whole year, which was the occasion that the common dayes of all the other weeks were by the Latine Church called feriae, that is, holy-dayes; as feria secunda, tertia, quarta, the second, third, and fourth holy∣day, instead of Munday, Tuesday, Wednesday, because they followed the account of Easter week, whereof every day was a holy-day: So the same Scaliger (lib. 7. de emend. temp.) Qua∣re prima, secunda, tertia, quarta, quinta Septimane dictae sunt feriae, quum in omnibus hebdomadibus feriandi necessitas nul∣le incumbat, haec ratio est, quod annus Ecclesiasticus incipiat à Pascha; septimana autem Paschatis erat immunis ab opere facien∣do, & feriata; unde quum sex illi dies post Pascha feriati es∣se•…•…, & ea esset prima anni hebdomas, inde factum ut omnes di∣••s septimanae vocarentur feriae. Lex enim est Constantini M. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: non solum hebdomadem post Pascha, sed & antece∣dentem excipit ab opere faciendo; sed de posteriore hebdomade usus tantum obtinuit.
The sum of all is this; Because Easter weeke was the first weeke in the year, and the dayes of that week were all accounted and kept holy, and accordingly were thus computed, the first, se∣cond, third, fourths fifth holy day: Hence it is that the same computation still hold: of the days in the other weeks throughout the whole year, that instead of the first, second, third, fourth and fifth day, it is said, the first, second, third, fourth and fifth holy∣day: For the Emperour Constantine the great, made a Law that all Easter week, and the week before it, should be kept as one Holy-day; And though in our age this Law holds only of Easter week, yet we have some footsteps of that observation still in the week before it; for our Church appoints Epistles and
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Gospels for every day of the week before Easter, and most Churches beyond the seas, still call it the holy week; and some make it so: For which Religious practice, it is not to be doubted but the Church of Christ hath warrant enough from that Text, Mark. 14. 8. She hath done what she could, she is come aforehand to anoint my body for the burying, or rather, to anoint her self for my body, to prepare her self for to receive the Holy Eucharist, and to celebrate the Resurrection: Where∣fore it is evident that in the judgement of the first and best Christians, Easter day was a greater Sunday then any other all the year after it; even as the Sabboth of the Passover was, in the Jews account, a greater Sabboth then any other of all the year; nor was this judgement any way superstitious, but truely Religious, since we find it authorized by the Text, saying, for that Sabboth day was an high day, John 19. 32. as if he had said, that Sabboth day was higher then any other Sabbath, because the Passover was joyned with it. I will not then quarrel with the Church for preferring one Sunday before another, since she observeth them all as holy to the same Lord; there was the Holy of Holyes in the Sanctuary, without any dis∣paragement to the rest of the Temple; The Paschal Sabbath was a high day, and yet the other Sabbaths not put down the lower. By taking off the opinion of holiness I see much profaness and irreligion in all respects, which makes me conclude, that though the Church should proclaim, Holy, Holy, Holy, never so much before the place and time of Gods worship, yet all would be little enough to beget the love and practice of holiness in the worshippers.
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WE may not pass by that memorable Canon in the Coun∣cil of Trullo (cap. 66.) which hath these words; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: From the Holy Festival of the Resurrection of Christ our God untill the New Lords Day, all true believers ought to go to Church, and there uncessantly praise God in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual songs.
Tis worth our notice that the Fathers of that 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 holden in the Emperours Pallace, called Easter day it self 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, The Resurrection day; but the Sunday after it 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, The New Lords day; not simply the Lords Day, of its self or by its own virtue, but as it was a repetition or re∣novation of the former, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, of the day of our Lords Re∣surrection.
For to say it was called the New Lords Day, because of the renewing by Baptism, (which antiently was administred at that time) is not satisfactory; for besides that other Sundays must have been called New as well as that, (upon the same account) to wit those of Easter and Pentecost, it is manifest that Bap∣tism cannot justly cause any Sunday to be called the Lords day,
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and therefore surely not the New Lords day: Whence it follows, that if this Sunday was called the New Lords Day as renewing the day of our Lords Resurrection, this and all other Sundayes do belong unto the Lord, chiefly upon this account that they are memorials of his Resurrection: So that though the Law of the Sabbath (as well as of other things) came by Moses, yet the grace and truth of it came by Jesus Christ, John 1. 17. And for this reason was the Sabbath translated from its own day to our Lords Day, that the Law of Moses might give place to the grace and truth of Jesus Christ; and happily for that cause (amongst others) hath the Church appointed some annual memorials of the grace and truth which came by Jesus Christ to be solemnized as so many Sabbaths, least we should think that in this weekly memorial she did rather follow the Law given by Moses; then the grace and truth which came by Jesus Christ: And doubtless when we have said all that we can, there can be no entire keeping of a Sabbath from Mo∣ses but only from Christ; because in him alone the soul may seek for rest, and in him alone is sure to find it. For as the souls trouble is from sin; so her rest is from the expiation and for∣giveness of sins: Therefore as her trouble is from her self, so her rest is from her Saviour; Saint Paul hath taught us both together in his Sermon▪ and our own Church in her An∣thymn of the Resurrection, For seeing that by man came death, by man also commeth the Resurrection of the dead: for as by A∣dam all men do dye, so by Christ all men shall be restored to life: By man came death, by Adam all men do die. There's the souls trouble from her sin for the wages of sin is death: By man commeth the Resurrection of the dead: by Christ all men shall be restored to life, there's the souls rest or Sabbath, from her Savi∣our: for the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. If we will needs gainsay the Judgement of our own Church, to set up the Sabbath instead of the Lords day, yet we may not gainsay the Doctrine of Saint Paul, which requires us to set up the Lords day instead of the Sabbath: so that if we will needs borrow the name from Moses, yet we can have the thing it self only from Christ; for it is not Moses but Christ which can give the soul a Sabbath, or make it truly to rest in God: And indeed i•• our Sabbath be grounded on this foundation, the
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gates of hell will not be able to prevail against it, because on it our Lord and Saviour prevailed against the gates of hell; And all Christians will see cause enough to observe it not only religious∣ly but also joyfully, because as many as are in the communion of the blessing, ought also to be in the communion of the Joy and thanksgiving, and wholly devote themselves to the publike profession and acknowledgement of Gods infinite and undeser∣ved mercies (and as undeserved as infinite mercies) conveyed unto us, in and by our blessed Saviours Resurrection: If we keep the Sunday (or Sabbath) upon this ground, we shall find a double reason of strictly keeping it; one from the duty which is to serve God, and to praise him for our Redemption by his Son; the other from the day it self, which by his own Apo∣stles, (if not by his own Son) htah been consecrated to this duty: But we must be sure to take the duty for the principal, the day for the less principal, unless we will prefer accidents before substances; For the worship of God belongs to the substance of Religion, but the time of worshipping is meerly an accident of it; though being consecrated thereunto by God himself, we may well admit it for an inseparable accident. Wherefore men had need take heed of that Sabbatarian Do∣ctrine, which seeks to advance the day above the duty, as if the publike exercise of Religion had been appointed for the Sab∣bath, and not rather the Sabbath for the publick exercise of Re∣ligion; for this is not in truth to alledge the fourth Command∣ment, but to mistake it: For the moral or substantial and eternal part of the fourth Commandment consists of these two particulars. 1. That there be a publike solemn worship of God, or exercise of Religion for our souls to rest in God. And this is morale naturae, moral by the Law of Nature, that man should desire and declare his rest to be only in God. 2. That some certain dayes (and consequently other requisites or adjuncts) be consecrated or made holy for that publike worship, and in relation thereto be esteemed holy and religious, as set apart to serve our God, not to serve our selves. And this is Morale Disciplinae, (as saith Halensis) or ex instituto; moral by way of Discipline, or by way of institution, and is also a substantial part of the fourth Commandment, belonging not only to the Jew, but also to the Christian.
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But the determination of those dayes to the seventh was meerly ceremonial (as a sign to the Jew) and to a seventh, cannot be moral (as a duty to Christians) by virtue of this commandment, save only according to the rule of general equity, that Gods proportion is the best proportion; and that, if one of seven were apportioned for the lesser, how much more for the greater bles∣sing? Yet still in asserting thus much, we must take heed that the institution of the day which belongs to the letter, be not alledged to confine the obligation of the duty which belongs to the end of this commandment; for that were to set up the second and lesser, against the first and greater morality of the Sabbath; In which respect tis probable that Damascene so plainly averreth, That whiles there was no Law, no Scriptures, there was no Sabbath, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: Dan. lib. 4 de▪ orth. fide cap. 24.) But after the holy Scripture was given by inspiration from God to Moses, then, was the sabbath consecrated to God, for men to exercise themselves in his holy Scriptures: So that according to Gods own example (if this author say true) we are first to provide for the duty, then for the solemnity of Religion; And we may the better believe him, because his saying is according to Gods command; For the fourth commandment, being the commandment of con∣secrations, yet first requires a worship intrisically and essential∣ly▪ holy, before it requires the adjuncts of that worship to be made extrinsically or accidentally holy: So that clearly by the fourth commandment it self, rightly understood, the duty is above the day, and the exercise of Religion is to be preferred above the Solemnities of time and place, wherein it is exercised; and consequently if the publike exercise of Religon that is in use, doth not truly glorifie God, a man may better keep the sabbath in his own, then in Gods house, supposing he worship God better in his own house, then he can in the Church: So neerly doth it concern us all to be sure of the substance of our worship, before we can pretend to be true keepers of the sabbath; for if the Prayers or Administrations wherein we communicate, do not in very deed rightly glorifie God, tis not going to Church can make us keep the sabbath (for infidels and heriticks may do that as well as the best Christians; and the best Christians may be kept
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from doing it) because what we get of the day, we lose of the duty, ••••t is not possible that any thing of superstition or of irreligion should afford the soul of man any true rest in God which is the end of the sabbath: And this seems to be our Saviour own do∣ctrine at that same time when he reproved the blindness of the Pharisees about the observation of the sabbath, by scrip∣ture, by reason and by a miracle; (Mathew 12.) three such arguments as were sure to leave none of them uncon∣futed; for if they had judgement, reason would be their confuta∣tion; If they had Faith, the Scriptures; But though they had neither judgement nor faith, yet a miracle was able to do the work; and we may well suppose the error was very dangerous which our blessed Saviour did confute with so much industry, and so many arguments, as he did scarce any other in all the Go∣spel: In this case he said to the ruler of the Synagogue, Thon Hy∣pocrite, Luke 13. 15. In this case he looked round about on the Pharisees with anger, being grieved for the hardness of their hearts, (Mar. 3. 5.) He imployed his tongue, his eyes, his heart, his head all to beat down this Heresie, or rather this Hypocrisie, which under pretence of being zealous for Gods command∣ments, did in truth not only secretly undermine, but also open∣ly oppose them. Accordingly our blessed Saviour and Master hath in one chapter, (Mat. 12.) fortified us with no less then four limitations of this or any other positive or Ceremonial Law, wherein it doth not bind and oblige: or at least four inter∣pretations to mitigate the rigour of its obligation: The first is, Lex naturae or necessitatis: it must give place to the Law of nature or of necessity, as in the case of Davids Hunger, ver. 3▪ 4. The Se∣cond is Lex cultus: it must give place to the Law of Religion, as in the case of the Priests working about the sacrifices on the Sab∣bath, and yet they were blameless, ver. 5. The third is Lex cha∣ritatis: it must give place to the Law of charity, as is proved from the saying of Hosea, I will have mercy and not sacrifice, ver. 7. The fourth is Authoritas legislatoris: the authority of the law∣giver; for he that made it may abrogate it, (an argument not used in the Text concerning any (intrinsically) moral law or duty) The Son of man is Lord also of the Sabbath, ver. 8. We may add a fifth from the repetition of the same story, and that is Intentio legislatoris: it must give place to the intent of the Law∣giver,
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which is the good, not the mischief of those to whom he gives his Law; And this Limitation or Interpretation we find Mar. 2. 27. in these words, the sabbath was made for man; that is, for mans good, to wit the outward rest of his body and the in∣ward rest of his soul; and therefore it is not his intent who made the Sabbath for mans good, both in corporal and spiritual rest, that it should bind him to any real mischief either in his body or in his soul: wherefore it is evident by our blessed Saviours own determination, That though great is the obligation of those ce∣remonies which are of Gods own immediate appointment, yet greater is the obligation of the least moral duty then of any of those ceremonies, when that Moral duty concerns either our selves or our neighbours, and not only when it concerns our God.
For ceremonials are appointed for Morals; but Morals are ap∣pointed for themselvs: Positive constitutions are for the inforce∣ment of natural institutions, but natural institutions are for the God of nature. Wherefore since Gods worship is not cere∣monial but moral, not positive but natural, & the Sabbath is both positive and ceremonial, it must follow that the worship was not ordained for the Sabbath, but the Sabbath for the worship, and consequently the worship is cleerly above the Sabbath: And this same Antisabbatarian doctrine, is not only of Christs, but al∣so of Moses his own teaching, if we may believe the Jewish Doctors themselves, upon those words of Exod. 12. 16. And in the first day and in the Seventh day shall be an holy convocation; For there this is Aben Ezzra's gloss in the first day, because that was the day of their going out of Egypt; and in the seventh day be∣cause that was the day of Pharaohs being drowned: therefore those two dayes were more strictly observed then any of the rest that came in betwixt them; And yet if we look narrrowly into the matter, not the dayes themselves, but the duties performed on them, made the holy convocations; for it is evident from the Text, that the first day was sanctified by eating of the Passeover, and the Seventh day was sanctified by the heavenly Songs and thanksgivings of Moses and Miriam; so it was the Passeover and the thanksgiving; not the first and the seventh day; that is Holy, duties, not holy dayes, which made the Gathering of the people to be an holy convocation, and shewed it to be so.
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We ask no more of Christians but this, That they will allow Duties to be above dayes in making of holy convocations, and consequently the publike worship of God to be above the Sabbath, the day wherein he is to be so worshipped; And this being granted (which cannot well be denied) it must needs follow that they best keep the sabbath who have the best publike worship of God, which is the duty; not they who are strictest in observing of the day which is the ceremony, who talke much of the Sabbath, but follow such a service or worship of God as is more agreeable with mans humors, or with humane inven∣tion, then with Gods word or divine institution; A Service or worship which though it may be solemn and publike in regard of the Convention, yet not in regard of the Communion, since no man can c••me as a Communicant to that worship concerning the which he is not well assured, that it is according to the analogy of Faith: For he may neither give up his conscience in a blind obedience, nor may he retain it upon uncertainties, the one being against the evidence, the other against the assurance of faith; and whatsoever is not of faith is sin, Rom, 14. 23. Whether it be not of faith for want of evidence, or for want of assurance.
Nor doth this divinity whereby we ••ollow the best Divine that ever was in preferring substances above accidents, morals above ceremonials, Duties above dayes, any whit diminish the true Santification of the Sabbath, but rather improve & advantage it: For it is an undeniable rule of reason, and much more of religi∣on, That all moral duties must have moral antecedents, concomi∣tants, and consequents, which if we will apply to this moral duty of Gods publike worship, we shall find any day consecra∣ted there to, whether weekly or yearly, little enough either for our preparation before we go to worship, or for our attention whiles we are worshipping, or for our meditation and thankful∣ness after we have worshipped.
In a word, a Sabbath in general is doubtless moral by the fourth commandment, which requires a day to be set apart or made ho∣ly for Gods publike worship, & requires that the day so set apart, be esteemed holy and religious, though not so much for its own sake, as for its works sake, according to St. Pauls command con∣cerning the Ministers that are set apart for the same worship, 1. Thes. 5. 12, 13. We beseech you brethren to know them which
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labour among you, and are over you in the Lord, and admonish you; And to esteem them very highly in love for their works sake: which text plainly convinceth those men to be the greatest sabbath∣breakers, and contemners of the fourth commandment, who will not know those which labour among them in the Lord, un∣less it be to contemn, and to revile and to oppress them; and are so far from acknowledging those labourers to be over them in the Lord, that they strive both to bring the labour under their girdles, and to tread the labourers under their feet; for the Apostle saith expresly, they are to be esteemed highly, if not for their own, yet surely for their works sake; & in saying so teacheth us to say the same of the time and place that are consecrated to the publike worship of God; For by the rule of proportion what is commanded concerning one adjunct of Religion, is com∣manded concerning the rest; and we may not think we have di∣charged our duties to the fourth commandment by honouring the time, but pillaging and defying both the Places and the Per∣sons that are consecrated to Gods service; or to speak yet more plainly, by crying up the Sabbath, but beating down both Churches and Ministers.
And indeed the fourth commandment it self hints no less, which deriveth the reason of the Sabbaths being sanctified above other dayes, not from any holiness in the day it self, or any set number of dayes, but only from the holiness that is in God: (Wherefore the Lord blessed the seventh day and hallowed it:) The Sabbath in respect of its duty, is without doubt of Di∣vine right; in respect of its day, may without derogation to the fourth commandment, in the Judgement of many good Divines be said to be of Ecclesiastical right; For the duty is matter of Religion, which God hath reserved wholly to himself; the day is matter of order, which God hath in part left unto his Church, even in this very case; for though he hath determined a set day for his publike worship, yet he hath not confined his Church to that day (as he hath to the worship it self) by his determination: Therefore we may not deny Gods Church that liberty which he hath given her, though we are willing to say he hath given it with this limitation or restriction, that where the Apostolical Church hath positively determined any thing in the practice of Religion, (as in the weekly festival for the honour of Christ,) 〈…〉〈…〉 Church after it may not lawfully alter the deter∣mination;
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And where the Catholick Church hath determined to the same purpose, (as in the yearly Festivals for the honour of Christ,) particular national Churches may not with sobriety or with safety determine against it; For though neither of these in it self is against the substance of Religion, yet both are against the order and exercise of it, and therefore against God, who is the God of order, and hath commanded the exercise of Reli∣gion.
We conclude then, that though the Sabbath in special is abo∣lished, that is to say, that determinate set day, no less then that Temple and that Priesthood, yet not others instead of them; which having been since determinately pointed out, and ap∣pointed by the authority of Christ and his Apostles, have as much real holiness in them as the other ever had, and that by virtue of the same Commandment, which requires as a holy a publike worship now as it did then, since the same God who said to the Jews in the old, hath said to the Christian in the new Testament, be ye holy for I am holy, 1 Pet. 1. 16.
Wherefore the name Sabbath, cannot add to the Religion of the worship, but it may add to the superstition of the worship∣pers: And tis safest for us now to look upon it as a name of the old use, though it signifie a thing of the new use: wherein it is not amiss to take notice of Eustathius his Criticism upon the third of the Iliads, concerning 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, words that are still of the old usage; as 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 still signifies a head∣peice, though now it be not made of a sea doggs skin, for which cause it was first called so; And 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 signifieth Arms, though now they are not made of brass but of yron: So 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 is still used for to write, though now our writing be not by ingraving or making any hollow impressions: many other of the like kind may be observed both in the Greek and Latine tongue, wherein the same word is still retained, though the thing be quite out of use; And by this rule we may still retain the words, Priest, Altar, Temple, Sacrifice: as well as sabbath, viz. all of them by way of custom, but none of them all by way of contestation; And God himself calling the day of Attonement a sabbath, (Lev. 16. 31.) though it came but once a year, hath licenced us to give the name Sabbath as well to our Aniver∣sary, as to our weekly Festivals. But indeed the question is
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not about Sunday a Sabbath, as if Caesar-like it would admit of no Superiour; but of Sunday the Sabbath, which Pompey-like, will admit of no Equal: and I answer, That to call Sunday the Sabbath, by way of eminency, though it were lawful, yet it is not laudable; and is therefore better omitted then practised: for besides that every language in the Christian world takes the Sabbath day for Saturday, save only our late new English, and God himself hath taken the seventh day and the Sabbath for terms convertible, and all the wit of man cannot take the first day for the seventh day, it is neither safe for us nor for our fe∣stival to seek to derive its holiness from the Jewish Sabbath; not safe for us, because it will make us Judaize, at least in other mens judgements, if not in our own, which is a thing that Saint Paul, if he were amongst us, would be much afraid of for our sakes, (Gal. 4. 10, 11.) and therefore much more should we be afraid of it for our own sakes: Not safe for our festival, which by that means will be made rely upon a broken reed (for the broken reeds are more now in Judaea then in Egypt) and so be subject to a downfall; For the Sabbath is as alterable to the Christian, as to the Jew: but the Lords day is eternal. And if we have such a Sabbath as is subject to alteration, we must have such a Sabbath as is subject to annihilation; for the one is naturally not only a fore-runner of, but also a preparation to the other.
Wherefore let my soul look after such a Sabbath, as may lead me not to an outward and temporal, but to an inward and eter∣nal rest, of which the Apostle speaketh, Heb. 4. 9. There re∣maineth therefore a rest to the people of God: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the keeping of a Sabbath; but it is such a Sabbath as hypocrites can∣not keep, nor Atheists hinder good men from keeping; where∣as this outward Sabbath may be most observed by hypocrites, and altogether opposed by Atheists: But this is such a Sabbath as Hypocrites cannot keep; for it is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: only for the people of God; And such as Atheists cannot hinder good men from keeping; for the text saith, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, relin∣quitur; They that can take away all other things, cannot take away this Sabbath from us: they must still leave that behind them, though they have plaied at sweep-stakes with all the rest; This is a Relique that I must highly prize, because they cannot
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plunder; according to that admirable gloss of Epiphanius (adver. Her. Manich.) upon these very words of Saint Paul, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, The Lord Iesus Christ himself is our Sabbath and our rest; and in this sense we had need both labour and pray that we may be Sabbata∣rians.
WILL you plead for a Sabbath in Paradise from Gen. 2. 2? you will not from thence be able to advantage our weekly Festival; For besides that the Fathers are of ano∣ther mind, (particularly Justine Martyr in his Dialogue with Trypho, who quarrels not with him about that Tenent, though being a Iew, he would have been zealous to have proved his Sabbath before Moses, could he have made good his proof?) and that these words seem to be spoken by way of anticipation, to continue the history, like that of the Saints rising at our Saviours death, Saint Mat. 27. 52. which yet was not so, till after his resurrection, for Christ was to be the first that should rise from the dead, Act. 26. 23. The reason of the name Sabbath depends upon the creation, of which God repented soon after, as saith Moses, it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart, Gen. 6. 6. when as the reason of the name Lords day depends upon the Redempti∣on, of which he cannot repent: For Christ rising again from the dead now dieth not, death from henceforth hath no power upon him: for in that he died, he died but once to put away sin: but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God, Rom. 6. 9, 10. And as Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more, so neither can this Festival die which is consecrated to the memory of his resurre∣ction:
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but as long as the first day of the week shall last, so long it must be our Lords day, and not our own: As is the mercy immortal, so is the duty that recordeth it; and as is the duty, so is the day on which it is recorded: As is the Lord himself, so is his day, as much as a day can be, the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever: The same in all ages and successions of the Church; Not changeable now by the Authority of his present Ca∣tholick Church, because that hath a power for edification not for destruction, 1 Cor. 10. 8. and in this change the Church that is now, would but pull down, what the Church, when it was un∣der the master-builders hands, did set up: Not changeable by the Authority of Angeis, for they in so doing would in effect preach another Gospel, another Christ delivered for our offen∣ces, and risen again for our Iustification, and so being them∣selves under Saint Pauls anathema, Gal. 1. 9. I dare further say, (and I hope it is no presumption, sure it is intended with reverence) not changeable by Christ himself, according to his power of excellency whereby he is head of the Church, and founder of all Christian Institutions; because though the change be Me∣taphysically possible, that is, in its own nature, for that all daies are alike in themselves, as to Gods worship; yet it is not mor∣rally possible, that is, in the end and reason of the change, be∣cause Christ cannot rise again from the dead, and consequently, there cannot be another day, as a memorial of his resurre∣ction.
More daies then this may be set apart for the honour of Christ, by the example and from the reason or end of this; for the duty is of extent large enough to employ many daies, and God having consecrated time to his own service, hath made it lawful, or rather necessary for the Church to do so too; and we find the Jews did ordain the feasts of Purim and Dedication, without any peculiar precept from the text, and yet are justified for so doing: But this day must be set apart by the example of Christ himself, who made it his free-will-offering to God, by making on it the first ordination of the ministers of his Gospel. Other daies are authorized by vertue of this: but this day is authorized by vertue of Christ, who chose it for the day where∣on to ordain his Apostles the Teachers and Governors of his Church; and also to give unto them the power of ordaining
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others: So that both the circumstances of time and person, the day and the Ministers of Gods publick worshp, have no less then the chief corner stone for their foundation: For they both are grounded upon the practise of Christ on the day of his re∣surrection, though builded upon the practise and precepts of his Apostles. So we read, John 20. 19. The same day at evening, being the first day of the week, came Jesus and stood in the midst, and saith unto them, Peace be unto you; the same day at evening; the evening follows the morning in the Christian, but went be∣fore it in the Iewish account of daies. The evening and the morning made the first Sabbath, but the morning and the eve∣ning made the first Lords day; what other reason can we give of the change, but because the Lord rose from death in the morning, Being the first day of the week? Why is the first day of the week so punctually named? Surely not to tell the Apostles what day it was, but to tell us that should be after them, that we might know the very day on which Christ had purchased for, and bestowed on his Church such unvaluable mercies, and so know it as to keep it, as it followeth, ver. 21. Theu said Je∣sus unto them again, Peace be unto you; Now it is more then an ordinary salutation, it is certainly a most solemn benediction: Peace be unto you; as my Father hath sent me, even so send I you and when he had said this, he breathed on them, and saith unto them, receive ye the Holy Ghost. We have here the practise and ex∣ample of Christ, for solemnizing the day of his resurrection, and for the ordaining of his Ministers: We have his example for the observation of the Lords day, which as he made holy by his own rising, so he kept holy by his blessing, and ordaining the Apostles on it: And we have his example for the ordinati∣on of the Lords Ministers: and there is little reason why we should easily, and much less slightly, pass by the former, since we are sure that the latter is to continue till the worlds end; for this is the full meaning of the words, As my Father sent me, and endued me with the Holy Ghost, or with spiritual authority to be the teacher and governor of his universal Church: So I send you, and endue you with the Holy Ghost, or with spiritual authority and power, to be teachers and governors of the Church after me: And as the Father sent me with power and authority of sending others, and of giving them the Holy Ghost, or my spiritual power: So do
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I send you with the power of sending others, and giving unto them the Holy Ghost, or this spiritual authority and power of sending others still after them, even to the worlds end. This is the full meaning of those words, and therefore the antient Fathers, (particularly Saint Cyprian and Firmilian) did rightly apply this Text to prove by it the authority of the Church in their daies, and we may as rightly alledge it now to justifie the same authority: For the Bishops are obliged by this Text to ordain a succession of Ministers even to the worlds end, One must be ordained to be a witness with us of his resurrection, saith Saint Peter, Acts 1. 22. If God say, One must be ordained, it is not for boisterous men to say, ye shall nor ordain; nor for timerous men to say, we dare not: They that are enemies to the or∣dination to the witnesses, can scare be friends to the Doctrine of the resurrection. The Lords daies and the Lords Mini∣sters will stand or fall both together; and there is no opposing the one, without opposing the other; and no opposing either, without opposing Gods command. For indeed they are both alike in general commanded by the fourth Commandment, though only one be named, (even as uncleanness and fornica∣tion are both forbidden in the seventh, though only adultery be mentioned) and they are both alike in special determined by the example of Christ and of his Apostles, and the constant and universal practise of the Christian Church: As there is an or∣der from the Holy Ghost that concerns the time or the day proved from the first of the Corinthians 16 2. As I have given order to the Churches of Galatia, even so do ye: that is, the same order that I gave to them concerning the first day of the week, I give also to you, and in you to all other Churches; (which order was accordingly speedily and generally obeyed, because there was an irresistible reason for that obedience;) so also there is an order from the Holy Ghost concerning the persons, proved from Acts 20. 8. The Holy Ghost hath made you Over∣seers or Biships; and Titus 1. 5. That thou shouldst ordain El∣ders or Presbyters; whence it must needs follow, that to disturb the persons ordained to be in the Church of God is equally sa∣crilegious, as to disturb the day that was settled by the same order▪ For the determination of the persons appointed to be the Lords Ministers, is full as plain (to speak but sparingly) both
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in the prescript of the Text, and in the practice of the Catho∣lick Church, as is the determination of the Lords day; and those men are equally inexcusable, who make bold to alter Gods determination in the one, as those who make bold to alter it in the other; for both being established by the same authori∣ty, are alike unalterable.
An universal obligation bindeth equally all persons, at all times, and in all places; and therefore only moral and eternal duties of the Text, can immediately and from themselves have such an obligation, as the duties of faith, hope and charity: But yet a determination of the Text, though by way of example only, concerning the publick exercise of those duties, which is without controversie in the Gospel of Christ given to us Christians, may also immediately and by vertue of the said du∣ties, have an universal obligation; because to occasion the di∣sturbance or disesteem of the true and laudable exercise of Religion, whether by profaness or perversness, whether by throwing aside or pulling down the time, place or persons ap∣pointed for that purpose, is certainly ungodly and irreligious, and it is at no time lawful to do an act of ungodliness or irre∣ligion.
NO Christian festival whatsoever, but must be wholly Christian, both in its foundation, Christian Verity; and in its institution Christian authority; and in its observation, Christian service or duty; For the day is holy for the duty, not the duty for the day: and they who teach or practise other∣wise, are like those Priests of Spain, mentioned and reproved in the fourth Toletane Council, (can. 9.) who would not say the Lords Prayer, but only on the Lords day, Orationem Do∣minicam tantum die Dominico dicere voluerunt, as if Religion
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were an adjunct of time, and not rather time an adjunct of Religion; Christian Verity, Christian Authority, Christian Duty: no man can willfully go against either of these principles, but he must profess himself either Unchristian or Antichristian: And behold our weekly festival in honour of our Saviour Christ, is justifiable by all these three, and consequently being truly Christian in all these respects, that is to say, in its founda∣tion, in its institution, and in its observation, must needs be an universal feast for all Christians to be partakers of, for that it is annexed to the Christian Religion as necessary (by the necessi∣ty of Justice) from the duty and thankfulness we all owe to our Saviour Christ, and therefore may not be carelesly neglected, much less irreverently profaned without the Imputation of in∣justice and unthankfulness: The Casuists speak louder, and say; not without the imputation of Sacriledge; So Cajetane in his sum∣mulae; Festos dies in honorem Dei sanctificat••s violare, peccatum est Sacrilegii, quia injuria fit tempori sacro, quantum ad illud ad quod sanctificatum est; To profane a Holy day, that is made and kept holy in honour of God, is a sin of Sacriledge, because the pro∣fanation of time that is sanctified, is an affront and defiance of its sanctification; so that in effect it is a double Sacriledge, for it robs time of that holiness which belongs to it, and it robs God of that time which belongs to him. This great Sacriledge is yet further accompanied with one of the seven deadly sins (com∣monly so called) and that sin is spiritual slothfulness: So saith Alensis, Accidia opponitur praecepto de sanctificatione Sabbathi; In peccato enim Accidiae, Tristitia est de spirituali laborioso, cum amore quietis carnalis; è contra vero, in illo praecepto est Amor sanctae quietis, quae est cum gaudio in bono spirituali; (par. 2 qu. 140. m. 10.) The sin of slothfulness is opposed to that pre∣cept of the sanctification of the Sabbath; for in the sin of slothfulness there is sorrow for spiritual labour, and love of carnal rest. But in the precept concerning the sanctification of the Sabbath, is commanded the love of a Holy Rest, or Joy in our spiritual good, which as it is not obtained without great la∣bour, so it is not enjoyed without great rest, even the sweet and most comfortable rest of the soul in God, for his everlast∣ing mercies in Iesus Christ: so that all those Festivals which com∣memorate to us the mercies of God in Christ, are to be account∣ed
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as our Christian sabbaths, and we shall be little less then ene∣mies to our own souls (if not to be our blessed Saviour) un∣less we seriously endeavour to make them so: Surely if men did truly believe and earnestly desire the life everlasting, they would be as carefull not to defraud their souls of due nourish∣ment, as they are not do defraud their bodies, and would no more begrutch the time for the one then for the other; but would rather be more industrious to save their souls, then they are to preserve their bodies, and consequently more solicitous how to lay in provision for a supply against their spiritual, then for a supply against their corporal necessities; alwaies remem∣bring that Motto Ex hoc momento aeternitas, as we spend our time here, so we shall find our eternity hereafter.
For God who hath given us time only to prepare and provide for eternity, will certainly call us to a strict account for all our time; but to the strictest account for that time which he hath more immediately allotted and consigned us to make that preparation.
CHristian Feasts were not ordained not so much for the out∣ward as for the inward man; Hence excellently the divine Nazianzen, (or at. 44.) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: No beauty doth so much enamour and delight the most affectionate lover of beauties, as our spiritual keeping of publike assemblies doth delight a Christian lover of Festivals: We will therefore
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enquire how a good Christian may best keep a spiritual feast unto the Lord, and we hope thereby not to overthrow but rather to establish our set temporal Festivals: And indeed we cannot bet∣ter keep a spiritual feast unto the Lord, then by accounting it a day of observations; as Moses said of the feast of the Passeover, that it was a night of observations, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, & Salomon Jarchi gives this gloss upon the place, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 because the Lord observed himself that night, and watched that he might deliver Israel according to his promise. And sure we are, that our blessed Saviour thus observed and watched him∣self that he might deliver us from sin and death; and as sure that this day of our deliverance ought be a day for every good Christian most especially to observe himself, and yet much more to observe his Saviour; That sabbath day was an high day, to the Jew whereon was celebrated the Passeover, (John 19. 31) And since there is much greater reason it should be so to the Christian, tis not possible there should be greater supestition in it: For reason and superstition could never yet agree so well to∣gether, that what was truly Rational, could by the wit of man be proved superstitious.
We must then account this day an high day, and not confine our devotions so to our weekly Festival, as if that alone were within the compass of the fourth commandment; For we may not limit the first commandment by the fourth, since the first is the great commandment to which all the rest, in that Table, are to be reduced, according to our blessed Saviours own determi∣nation, Mat. 22. 37, 38. Jesus said unto him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, with all thy soul; and with all thy mind; this is the first and great commandment.
By which his determination, our infallible Doctor hath concluded the fourth commandment to be moral, in that he maketh it reducible to the first, but withall, to have its chiefest morality meerly by vertue of that reduction: And in this respect we may pray in faith, Incline our hearts to keep this law, as well as any of the rest in the Decalogue, looking on the duty as moral for it self; on the day as moral for its duty; for the duty is clearly reducible to the love of God, and consequently to be most religiously observed for it self; & by vertue of that comes in the day, (with its other adjuncts,) to
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be most religiously observed for the duty: We have a Theo∣logical certainty concerning the duty, which is the rest of our souls in God; we can have but a moral certainty concerning the day, as set apart for that rest; yet we need not fear a mistake in the day, being sure of no mistake in the duty; and consequently observing the day for the duty, we cannot but pray in faith for mercy, because we have transgressed, (for who did ever rest in God as he was bound to do?) and for grace, that we may not transgress; but may still more and more rest in him, till we come to our eternal rest. There∣fore we may not limit or restrain the end of the fourth Com∣mandment by the letter of it, advancing the day above the duty; for that is the way not to pray in faith that we may keep this Law; much less may we limit and restrain the first Commandment by the fourth; for that is the way not to be able to pray in faith, that we may keep any other Law, since it is evident that the love of God is the foundation of faith in all our prayers, and that Love is required in the first Command∣ment, so that to restrain that Commandment is to restrain our love of God; and to restrain our love of God, is to re∣strain our faith in God: Again, we may not limit the first Commandment by the fourth; for that were to limit the grea∣ter by the lesser; and tis evident, the fourth was given to esta∣blish the exercise of the first, not to enfeeble its obligation; since then the first commands us to love God with all our hearts and with all our souls, we may not think that the fourth was given to confine this love in any one particular member of Christ, much less in his whole mystical body, as if Christians were bound to make use of their hearts and souls in the publike exer∣cise and profession of their love to God only upon Sunday, or upon one day in seven.
Accordingly we must account every Christian Festival that is truly in honour and for love of Christ. (and particularly this of the Passover) An high day; and to shew that we account it so, our best way is to endeavour to make it so, by making it a day of observations. Now observations cannot be less then two; and that two may indeed serve our turns one of these observations must be of our selves, another of our Savi∣our: The observation of our selves must be three-fold, what
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we have been, what we are, what we resolve to be. First, what we have been; miserable sinners; Thus the Psalmist ob∣served himself, when he said, for innumerable troubles are come about me, my sins have taken such hold upon me, that I am not able to look up, yea they are more in number then the hairs of my head, and my heart hath failed me. O Lord, let it be thy pleasure to deliver me; make haste O Lord to help me, (Psalm 40) I have been hitherto a miserable sinner, but I beseech thee to deliver me both from my misery, and from my sin.
Secondly, what we are, penitent sinners; Thus holy Job observed himself when he said, wherefore I abhor my self and repent in dust and ashes, Job. 42. 6. Tis in the Origin 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Idcirco reprobabo, therefore I will reject and reprobate; what? 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 saith Ezra, all my words; we may say more: all my thoughts words and work▪ which have been a∣gainst thee, I will account them all as reprobate, for fear they should make me so: and I will repent in dust and ashes, that I have so frequently, so undutifully, so unthankfully sinned against that great Majesty which was able to confound me in my sins, and much more that I have thus sinned against that good mer∣cy that is willing to save me from my sins, and dayly inviteth me to that salvation.
Thirdly, what we resolve to be; amended sinners: Thus the Prophet Jeremiah adviseth us; therefore now amend your ways, Jer. 26. 16. I appeal to all the consciences of all men now living, whether ever any ways of men so much needed amend∣ment as ours do, who have made Saint Pauls general Doctrine of all mankind, as it were a particular History of our selves; They are all gone out of the way, they are altogether become un∣profitable, (that's too mild, take it as tis in the Psalmist, they are altogether become abominable) there is none that doth good, no not one: Their throat is an open sepulchre, with their tongues have they used deceit, the poison of asps is under their lips, their feet are swift to shed blood, destruction and misery are in their ways, (1. quacunque incedunt, solitudinem & vastitatem faci∣unt omnia perdendo, saith Beza, where ever they go, they car∣ry desolation along with them;) and the way of peace have they not known; 1. Vitam innocentem & pacisicam, saith Be∣za,
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they have not known what belongs to an innocent and a peaceable life; and indeed how can they know what belongs to peace, who will not know what belongs to innocency? These words were spoken in the Old Testament of the best of men, the Jews; and of them in the best of their times, that is, when King David, and King Hezekiah governed them; for all the Testimonies are taken out of the Psalms and the Prophesie of Isaiah; And hence it is, the Apostle by an argument à majori ad minus makes them Doctrinal of all men whatsoever; for though they were particular in their occasion or in their example, yet they were universal in their instruction and in their document. They were spoken only of some men, and that occasionally; but they are true of all men, and that Doctrinally, till God please to purifie their hearts by faith, and their lives by repentance: But we have again made them particular and occasional, and meerly Historical of our selves, who have been called to the knowledge of faith and the practice of repentance above all o∣ther Nations, and yet have outstripped them all in our works of infidelity and impenitency: Our infidelity whatever we vainly talk of faith) hath made us guilty of all this impiety and wickedness both against God and man; and our impenitency makes us still persist and continue in our guiltiness: Surely Saint John Baptist if he were now alive, would think himself bound to teach us, (though he were sure to lose his head for his Doctrine) that therefore the Kingdom of Heaven, the power of the Gospel, is so far from us, because we are so far from re∣pentance. For he that might not preach the Gospel in vain, first preached repentance, saying, repent ye, for the Kingdom of Hea∣ven is at hand, Mat. 3. 2. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 resipiscite, repent ye; so Beza and our new translation, looking to the inward contri∣tion and conversion of the heart: poenitentiam agite, saith the Vulgar Latine, do pennance, looking to the outward confession of, and humiliation for the sin. Amend your lives, saith our old translation (as it is still in the sentences before the common prayer) looking to the real correction and amendment of the sinner: contrition for the heart, confession for the mouth, correction for the life and conversation; not one of these must be wanting in him that desires and resolves to be
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an amended sinner: This for the observation of our selves.
The other observation must be of our Saviour, and that is also threefold, what he was, what he is, and what he will be. What he was in his humiliation, what he is in his exaltation, what he will be in his retribution.
First, what he was in his humiliation; our Surety and pledge to undertake for us: surely he hath born our griefs, and carried our sorrows, Isa. 53. 4. And again, the chastisement of our peace was upon him, ver. 5, that is, what chastisement was fit to have come upon us, that we might be in peace, did come up∣on him in our stead: So doth Aben Ezra gloss the words aright, though he be grossly (if not wilfully) mistaken in the person, applying this text to the Jews, as bearing the chastisement of the Gentiles, and not to Christ as bearing the chastisement of both Jews and Gentiles: where as it is unreaso∣nable that the Jews should be punished for us Gentiles, and un∣possible that their punishment should expiate our transgressi∣ons: No, it cost much more to redeem a soul, so that only he who was worth infinitely more then the whole creation, was able to pay the price of our Redemption: Excellently Saint Athanasius, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, (Athen. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉,) The eter∣nal Son of God brought the Temple of his Body for our pledge and ransom: The Grecians call a pledge or surety, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, one that stakes soul for another; so was our blessed Saviour our pledge, to stake body for body, and soul for soul in our stead; we should also be his 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 in another sense: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Hesychius, the birds which (according to the Poets fiction) sprung out of Memnons ashes, were called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, because they sacrifi∣ced their life to him from whom they had received it; we are bound to sacrifice our lives to our blessed Saviour, and much more to offer our selves to him as a living sa∣crifice.
Secondly, what he is in his exaltation, even our Mediator and Intercessor: He sitteth at the right hand of God, and maketh in∣tercession for us, Rom. 8. 34. We cannot be so ready to pray for our selves, as he is to pray for us, and yet tis to be doubt∣ed
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whether he will pray for us, if we will not pray for our selves; Whether his offering himself to God will be available to our salvation, unless we also offer our selves unto him; for so the Apostle seems to intimate, Heb. 7. 25. Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them. For whom? For them doubtless that came unto God by him; but scarce for others who either come not to God at all, or come not to God by him, but by some other Mediator: Tis a dangerous matter not to look on Christ in his passion; and as dangerous not to look immediately on him in his interces∣sion: The first shews us what he was in his humiliation; the se∣cond, what he is in his exaltation; and yet the eye of faith will still look further after him, not only as a Saviour, and as a Mediator, but▪ also as a Judge: for that's the third observation concerning Christ, what he will be in his retri∣bution: Not a severe but a merciful Judge, to judge us ac∣cording to the Gospel, which will condemn only the unre∣penting and unbelieving sinners; not according to the Law which will condemn even the most righteous.
A merciful Judge to acquit us by the Merits and righteousness of that blood which he himself hath shed for us; according to that most comfortable Prayer in the heavenly Hymn of Saint Ambrose, (which alone was of merit enough to entitle the Ambrosian office, so long to keep its station against the Gregorian) We believe that thou shalt come to be our Judge; we therefore pray thee help thy servants when thou hast Re∣deemed with thy precious blood: We are sure thou wilt not lose thine own blood, and that makes us hope thou wilt not lose us, for whom thou hast been pleased to shed it.
Thus to draw neer to Christ, is to draw neer to him with a true heart, as we are commanded, Heb. 10. 23. Let us draw neer with a true heart, in full assurance of Faith: The heart with which we must draw neer to Christ, ought to be true to itself by examination, contrition, conversion; for tis a false heart to it self that wants this repentance; and it ought to be a heart true to its Saviour, by a lively faith in his death and passion; by a constant faith in his mediation and intercession; 〈1 page duplicate〉〈1 page duplicate〉
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by a conquering faith in his aquitment and absolution; for the heart is false to its Saviour, that wants this faith and being false to its Master, cannot enter into his joy: O my God, make my heart true to it self by repentance, that it may be true to its Saviour by faith; then though I have sor∣row in my self, yet I shall have joy in him, whose joy alone is an eternal joy.
A Carnal heart receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, (1 Cor. 2. 14.) and much less the joys of that Spi∣rit; wherefore we must look for a spiritual Feast, that we may have a spiritual joy: And accordingly the Church of Christ, as it hath not a carnal but a spiritual communion with Christ, so it hath not a carnal but a spiritual Feast, wherein it doth communicate, feeding on him in the heart by faith with thanksgiving: for without that, we may call the holy Eu∣charist a Communion, but shall not find it so, because we do not Communicate with our blessed Saviour; and so our souls may starve, whilst we are at this Feast, if we do not Spiritually eat the flesh of Christ, and drink his blood.
〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Suidas, diem festum agebant. 1. Sa∣crificium offerebant, They kept a Feast, that is, they offered sa∣crifice; nor can we rightly celebrate this holy Feast, unless we offer unto God our sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving: And what sacrifice is left for Christians, but the living sacri∣fice of their souls and bodies, spoken of Rom. 12. 1.? For the soul though not named, must also be in the sacrifice, or else it cannot be a reasonable service. 'Tis not offering our Saviour,
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but offering our selves to God, that makes the accehtable sa∣crifice; not observing the holy institution, (yet I could hearti∣ly wish that were better observed by them who best observe it) but observing it with a holy intention that makes a spiritual Feast; and therefore our Church at the celebration of the ho∣ly Eucharist doth in Gods name invite us not so much to a cor∣poral as to a spiritual feeding on the body and blood of Christ: And though some do scruple the offering up of Christs real bo∣dy in that sacrifice, for they had rather say it is commemoratio sacrificii, then commemorativum sacrificium, yet none scru∣ples the offering up of his mystical body in it; never any Chri∣stian did think he might leave himself out of the offering, though many have thought they might leave their Saviour out of it, (as to his carnal presence) for every man believes he is bound to offer the sacrifice of praise to God, and therewith also his own soul: so that even this our Feast must likewise be a spi∣ritual Feast, or though the outward Elements may nourish our bodies to this natural life, yet the inward grace will not nourish our souls to the life eternal.
We conclude then, that no Feast can truly honour God, the God of Spirits but a spiritual Feast; And that whosoever hath once kept this, will endeavoor to turn all others into it, or at least to extract this out of them: he will feast his soul more then his body, as one that cannot well relish the carnal, because he hath tasted the spiritual delicacies; for most undoubtedly, our spi∣ritual joyes though they come short of carnal joys in their mea∣sure and proportion, yet they far exceeed them in their cause and foundation: we are more zealous for our carnal joys, be∣cause they are connatural to us whiles we are cloathed with our flesh, but our spiritual joys, which are supernatural, do more de∣serve our zeal.
I will say to my soul, Soul take thine ease, eat drink and be merry, said the rich glutton, Luke 12. 19. What a great preparation is here to carnal joy? I will say unto my soul what a great proportion of it? take thine ease, eat, drink and ••e mer∣ry; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Rest that thou maist eat and drink, eat and drink that thou mayst delight thy self and be merry; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Saint Basil; If thou hadst the soul of a swine, what couldest thou say or do more?
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so great a proportion is there of joy in the carnal man from carnal delights, as if even the spiritual part of him were made carnal, as if the soul it self were incorporated into flesh, and that flesh incorporated into swine, made the most brutish and sensual in the whole world, even swines flesh▪ yet so little a foundation is there of this joy, that tis grounded only on the mans own fansie; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, ver. 17. He made his reckoning, but twas a false reckoning meerly of his own making, and not agreeable with the truth of the account: For the word is fit to express the condition of worldlings, saith Beza, quia totam vitam in subducendis rationibus consumunt, because they spend all their days in making reckoning; they spend all their time in casting up accounts either for their pleasure or for their pro∣fit; but tis by a false Arithmetick, an Arithmetick that is on∣ly in their own fansie, by which they cast up that which is not, and so must needs be out in their account. For they cast up for the time to come, making that a part of their reckoning; and by that, their life longer in their fansie then tis truely in it self, or in Gods appointment: which is so unimaginable folly, that it causeth the Son of God to thwart his own instructions; and though he much dislike the language of thou fool, Matth. 5. 22. Yet here he useth it, saying, verse 20. Thou fool, this night thy soul shsll be required of thee.
Thus are our carnal joys great in their proportion, not so in their foundation; but contrarywise our spiritual joys are grea∣ter in their foundation, then in their proportion; which shews that even the best of us, do so live in the flesh, as to live too much after it; contrary to that profession which should be ours, as well as Saint Pauls, for though we walk in the flesh, we do not war after the flesh, 2 Cor. 10. 3. Hence it is that the cause or foundation of our joy in Christ is infinitely greater then the measure and proportion of it: But yet the man af∣ter Gods own heart, the Prophet David, sets it out to the full; He was a man after our hearts in his carnal failings, but a man after Gods heart in his unfeigned repentance, which caused his spiritual rejoycings; And his spiritual joy was so great that he cals for company to rejoyce wirh him, saying, Rejoyce in the Lord O ye righteous, for it becommeth well the
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just to be thankful, Psal. 33. 1. As if he had said, since ye are truly righteous and just, being made righteous by his propitia∣tion, and just by his satisfaction, it becommeth you well to re∣joyce in him, that you may be thankful for this transcendent sal∣vation: So let me be just; so let me be joyful.
IT were a fowl shame for Christians, who are most obliged to serve God, to be least devoted to his service; and there∣fore we must beware of shewing less zeal in our moral, then the Jews shewed in their ceremonial worship. When they cele∣brated their Passeover, they did sing some Psalms of Repent∣ance, as a lamentation for the sinner; other Psalms of thanks∣giving, as a triumph and rejoycing for the righteous: Canebant quaedam 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, quaedam 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Scal. lib. 6. de emend. temp. They did sing some Psalms for propitiation, some for thanksgiving: And this was their hymn for thanksgiving, Blessed art thou O Lord our God King of heaven and earth, who hast sanctified us by thy Commandments, and hast commanded us in this manner to bless and praise thee: which hymn of theirs holy Zachary seems to have imitated, but withal to have am∣plified in his Benedictus, Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, for he hath visited and redeemed his people, that we being delivered from the fear of our enemies, might serve him without fear in holi∣ness and righteousness all the daies of our life: A main ground of his blessing God is this, That God hath enabled his people to bless and praise him; Which invaluable mercy the Greek Church alwaies thought worthy of a particular thanksgiving, saying, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, we give unto thee humble and hearty thanks, that thou hast given us this Liturgie, this good form of serving thee: That thou hast called us to this 〈1 page duplicate〉〈1 page duplicate〉
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duty of publick thanksgiving: That thou hast vouchsafed us this great honour, who are dust and ashes, and greater mercy, who are sinful dust and ashes, to bless and praise thee and to call upon thy holy name. And they have this reward of their thankfulness, that in the middst of the greatest and bitterest ene∣mies of the Christian Religion, they do still enjoy their Liturgy, groaning indeed under the bondage and oppression of their bodies, but infinitely rejoycing in the liberty of their souls: the Turks themselves thinking it too inhumane a tyrannie to bring that people into bondage both of body and of soul: And as for the Jews, they would have laughed at any man that should have offered them whimsies instead of certainties, and would sooner have let their bread be taken out of their mouthes, then this their hymn of blessing and praising God; So great, so fer∣vent, so constant was their zeal, for that which they knew to be true godliness.
This, I say, was the general thanksgiving of the Iews at all their great Feasts, to the which they added those particular forms of thanksgiving, that most properly concerned the oc∣casion.
And this was their spiritual manner of feasting, God himself suggesting no less, in that he commanded them to take their Lamb the tenth day of the moneth, which was not to be slain till the fourteenth; for why was the Lamb to be taken so long before hand, but only that their souls might feed on the good∣ness of God, before their bodies feasted on the Lamb? And the Jewish Authors tell us, that during those four daies, the Lamb was tyed to their bed-posts, that not only eating and drinking (as Saint Paul requires of us, 1 Cor. 10 31.) but also sleep∣ing and waking, they might glorifie their God. And so will we too, if we have the true love and zeal of godliness, saying with those three holy men, for the same cause that they did, even our deliverance from the fiery furnace, not of temporary but of everlasting burnings, O ye servant of the Lord, bless ye the Lord, praise him and magnifie him for ever: O ye spirits and souls of the righteous, bless ye the Lord, praise him and magnifie him for ever: O ye holy and humble men of heart, bless ye the Lord, praise him and magnifie him for ever. So that unless we will profess that we serve our selves, not our God, that we are men whose spirits and
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souls are unrighteous, and that we are unholy, and proud of heart, we must bless the Lord, praise him, and magnifie him for ever.
This is the zeal we should bring with us to this and all other our Christian Festivals, as the Prophet requireth, saying, If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day, and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honourable, and shalt honour him, not doing thine own waies, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words, Isa. 58. 13. which text (in Kimchies gloss) is to be interpreted of the Sabbath in general, for (saith he) the feast of expiation was strictly to be observed as a Sabbath, though it was placed on the 10. day of September (which might fall on any day of the week.) And he proveth a strict observation from the words themselves, wherein are both a negative and an affirmative Precept, which betwixt them do comprize the obligation of the whole Law: There's a negative Precept 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 in that he saith, You may not do your own pleasure, nor speak your own words: And 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 an affirmative Precept, in that he saith, you must call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honourable, and must accordingly honour him there∣in: Nor can we reasonably think our selves unconcerned in this Precept, unless we will think (or make) our selves unconcern∣ed in the promise that is annexed to it, of delighting our selves in the Lord, and being fed with he heritage of Jacob, (v. 14.) so that this text was without doubt written also for our instru∣ction, though not as Iews, yet as Christians: And therefore as the Apostle hath said, We have an Altar, whereof they have no right to eat, which serve the tabernacle, Heb. 13. 10. So may we say, we have a Sabbath, whereof they have no right to be ob∣servers, who serve the Tabernacle: And this text of the Pro∣phet will as much concern our Sabbaths as it did theirs: For we must turn away our feet, that is, our affections from these Sab∣baths, not seeking on them any rest or delight in our selves, but only in our God. Thus did the primitive Christians keep their feasts, as is affirmed by Nazianzene, (orat. 44.) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. We also keep holy day, but as it seemeth good to the Holy
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Ghost, either saying or doing something of our duty: So that our keeping of a Feast is nothing else but laying up treasure for our souls, or laying in provision upon which we may live in another world.
Wherefore it shall be my labour and my prayer, so to keep all the Feasts which are kept truly in honour of my Saviour, That I may at last be a guest at his own wedding Feast, and be numbred among those of whom it is written, Blessed are they which are called unto the marriage Supper of the Lamb, (Rev. 19. 9.) And though I cannot deserve it by my service, yet I will hope by being his constant and faithful servant, That he who maketh the marriage Supper, will bestow on me the wedding garment, and clothe me with his own righteousness, that I may be a guest prepared to come to, and set at his heavenly table, to keep one everlasting Feast with him and his, world without end, Amen.
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CAP. II. That God is to be adored only in Christ.
IT is the property of a sinner to run from God; and therefore no man that is a sinner, and looketh upon God as angry for his sins, can truly worship him: For he that will worship God, must come unto him; but he that looks upon God as angry, will be sure to flie from him. And it is much to be obser∣ved, that after Saul knew God had rejected him for his diso∣bedience, he desired to worship him only in shew, not in reality, 1 Sam. 15. 30. Then he said, I have sinned, yet honour me now I pray thee before the Elders of my people, and before Israel, and turn again with me that I may worship the Lord thy God: Here was a worshipper, but such an one as worshipped more to ho∣nour himself then to honour his Maker: Honour me now I pray thee before my people; not a word of honouring God by his wor∣ship; which is still the practise of such wicked miscreants, and will be to the worlds end, to make a shew of Religion, not for Gods sake but for their own; not to serve him, but to serve themselves: For where is much of sin, there must be little of Religion, (little in truth, though perhaps not in shew) it be∣ing the property of sin to drive us from God, but of Religion
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to draw us to him: And accordingly Saul being in the state of sin, professeth in effect that he was desirous to keep at a distance from God, saying unto Samuel, Turn again with me that I may worship the Lord thy God: He durst not say, the Lord my God: for he had too much provoked him by his sin, and too little sought to be reconciled to him by repentance, to claim any inte∣rest in his mercy: Sin wilfully committed drives a man from God; sin carelesly unrepented, keeps a man from him; so that whiles the man is in sin, whether it be willfully, or carelesly, he cannot come near God, but is either driven or at least kept from him; yea let him come never so near to God, yet by his sin he is sure to be kept far from him; for he so draweth near him with his lips, as to be far from him with his heart; It is not to be doubted but David made many a fair shew of worshipping God during that year that he continued in the guiltiness of his murder and of his adultery: And yet it is not to be thought, much less believed, that during that guiltiness he was a true worshipper; for it is plain from his own mouth that sin had shut up his lips because he prayed God to open them: and as plain, that sin shutteth not up the lips, but where it hath first shut up the heart, since the heart is the first mover in the order of Re∣ligion, and consequently the first stander-still in the neglect of that order.
No wonder then if the Text saith, God heareth not sinners, (John 9. 31.) for how can he hear those that do not speak? or if they do speak, yet they do not pray, because they have only Verbum oris, non verbum mentis, because they speak only with their lips, not with their hearts: God is not as man to be ap∣proached unto by outward addresses and applications; if the tongue move without the heart, the man sits still, and doth not at all draw near, in Gods account, whatever he may do in his own: Therefore the Apostle ascribeth it to one and the same faith that we please God, and that we come unto him: Heb. 11. 6. Without faith it is impossible to please God; for he that cometh to God must believe: The words will afford this Syllo∣gism; He that doth come to God, doth alone please God; he that hath not faith doth not come unto God: Therefore he that hath not faith, doth not or cannot please God: And this Syllogism will afford us this Doctrine, That we must come to God if we
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will please him, and must have faith if he will come unto him: For he that cometh to God, must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him: That he is God, the fountain of all goodness; and that they who thirst after, shall drink deep of this fountain: Nay yet more, as the words are alledged to prove Enoch had faith, they must have this expositi∣on, He that cometh to God, must believe that God is his God, and that he will be his rewarder, if he diligently seek him; for so did Enoch believe, when he did forsake, and by forsaking did provoke the men of that wicked age of the world, (foul enough for a flood to wash it, though no washing could cleanse it) only that he might walk with God: His Faith strengthened him against his fears, whiles it represented God thus speaking unto him, Fear not, I am thy shield and thy exceeding great re∣ward, Gen. 15. 1. Wherefore though Moses spake not one word of Enochs faith, yet Saint Paul takes it for as good a proof that Enoch had faith, because he pleased God; as that he pleased God, because God took him.
And is it possible that this faith should be in any man who is yet in his sins? No certainly; for he cannot believe God to be his shield, whom he hath made his enemy; nor to be his reward∣er, whom he hath made his avenger: Look upon your first Father Adam after he had sinned, and you will see your self in him, and your sin his: God called unto him, and said, Where art thou? but he said, I heard thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked, and I hid my self, (Gen. 3. 10.) A strange folly that made him think he could hide himself from Gods All-seeing eye; A stranger fear that made him desire to hide himself from Gods All-saving Presence; He knew that in God alone he lived, and moved, and had his being, and yet was afraid of him, when he was yet scarce fully entred into the pos∣session of his life: The reason was, he had taken such an inmate into his soul as he knew God could not but hate, and could not but confound and destroy. Whiles he continued in his inno∣cency, nothing that God said could fright him; nothing that God did, could hurt him: But when once he had sinned, Gods voice that only called for his appearance, was more terrible then his hand before that had taken away his rib; a still small voice in the cool of the day makes him flie into a thicket, as
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thinking thereby to secure himself. In this miserable con∣dition he would have lived and dyed; (for the same cause must have produced still the same effect,) had not God pro∣mised him that the seed of the woman should bruise the Ser∣pents head, and in that promise revealed Christ unto him as a propitiation for his sins; After that, though he was im∣mediately thrust out of Paradise, yet he could think of com∣ming into Gods presence with sacrifice and burnt offerings, (for sure twas he taught his sons those offices of Religion,) because he saw he had a Mediator to intercede for him; where∣as before that promise, though he was actually in the Garden of God, yet he durst not come neer him, as not knowing how to intercede for himself: For his sin had cast such a confusi∣on, such an amazement upon his soul, that he durst not open his eyes to look on God, and could not open his mouth to make supplication to him, because he knew he was first to make satisfaction, before he could be admitted to make inter∣cession; for that Gods offended justice was to be satisfied, be∣fore his undeserved mercy might be implored: And so is it with all mankind ever since, being all conceived and born in sin, we cannot but come into the world with a natural aver∣sion from God, that is, with a fear to come neer him, and with a desire to go and keep far from him, if it were possible, alwayes out of his sight. And as we come into the world, so we abide in it with a total aversion from God, till he be pleas∣ed to reveal his Son to us that we may know him, or rather in us that we may love him: Nor would any man that is de∣scended from the corrupt loins of Adam, ever have thought, much less have desired to come neer God to worship him, had there not been revealed a sufficient atonement for his sin; For till our sins be expiated, we cannot hope that our worship should be accepted: And as for the heathens and Jews who worship God without the knowledge or with the contempt of Christ, we must say their worship is not good, and is rather out of a good custome, then out of a good conscience, (as too many Christians still worship God, who know not Christ effe∣ctually or practically) And tis better saying so, then to say they can have either a good conscience or a good worship, who have not faith in Christ.
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Wherefore let my soul evermore bless God, for having re∣vealed this great mystery and greater mercy of godliness, that he is reconciled to me in Christ, having blotted out my sins by his precious blood; And let me now be as much afraid of not coming into Gods presence to beg and gasp for his mercy, as I should have feared to come to him, if he had not made known to me the means and way of this reconciliation: For the Son of God having expiated all my sins, that by him I might come un∣to his Father, hath in effect told me that my sin of not comming to God is now like to prove of all others the most inexpiable.
REason teacheth all men to adore and worship God; but tis only Religion that teacheth some few men how he is truly and rightly to be adored and worshipped; and those few men were heretofore the Jews, and are now the Christians; for they alone rightly worship God, who worship him in his Son, that is, in Christ; So saith the beloved Disciple in ho∣nour of, and in justice to his master, Whosoever denyeth the Son, the same hath not the Father, 1 John 2. 23. That is, he that hath not the Son for his God, hath not the Father for his God; For the nature of Relatives evinceth thus much, that if there be a Father there must be a Son; and if there be not a Son, there cannot be a Father; wherefore it is a gross mistake or rather a great blasphemy, to say that the Jews or Turks, or other Infidels do worship the same God with us Christians; for they not having the Son, cannot have the Fa∣ther, and not having the Father, have not the true God: but an idol of their own making, nay a lyar insteed of God, as saith the same disciple, He that believeth not God, hath made him a lyar,
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because he believeth not the record that God gave of his Son; And this is the record, that God hath given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son: He that hath the Son, hath life; and he that hath not the Son, hath not life, 1 John 5. 10, 11, 12. Wherefore that Religion which hath not the Son, hath not life; and the Religion which hath not life, what can it have but death? Nor is it lawfull, and much less laudable in any man, to account those men Christi∣ans who doubt the divinity of Christ: much less, who deny it: For they that have not Christ for their God▪ cannot have the true God for their God: And therefore Saint Paul takes these two for one and the same mischief, to be without Christ and to be without God: saying to the Ephesians, At that time ye were with∣out Christ, being Aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel, and strangers from the Covenants of promise, having no hope and with∣out God in the world, Eph. 2. 12. Saint Cyril in his Catechism expound these words of the Heathen, saying thus, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: Some of them made the Sun their God, that all the night long they might be without God; others made the Moon their God, that they might be without God all the day: But in truth the words will con∣cern many men that are far from that stupid and gross Idolatry, even all Jews and all Turks, and too too many that are called Christians, even as many as question the divinity of Christ for all these alike are 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, All Atheists alike as being without the true God: And if their Religion make them Atheists, what shall we call it but Irreligion or Atheism?
But I will not insist any longer upon the proofs of the Text to justifie the Christian Religion, since even common sense it self doth make known this Tenent, and common experience doth make it good: For it is a very substantial and sufficient proof, that no other Religion hath in it those truths which are really conformable to a rational mans understanding, but only the Christian; for that no other Religion subsisteth any longer then the sword that forceth it: whereas the Christian Religion still abideth and continueth in the world, not by the violence but by the patience of those that uphold and maintain the same, no∣withstanding the many and great difficulties that are in and with it, and the many and great oppositions and persecutions that
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have been and are against it: which must needs argue an inward consonancy or congruity of the Christian Religion with the very soul of man, as alone having truths able to satisfie it, and alone shewing means able to save it.
And indeed these three excellencies (among many other,) do give to the Christian Religion the preheminence above all other Religions.
The first is, That no other Religion declareth au expiation for sin: The Jewish Religion it self being defective in this particu∣lar, (but as it was Christian and looked unto Christ,) the Apo∣stle plainly and positively assuring us, That it is not possible the blood of bulls and of goats should take away sins, Heb. 10. 5. So that no Jew could have this opinion of his own Religion, that it taught a way of expiating sin, unless he would be mad, that he might be thought religious; for there is no room for any the least probability against an absolute impossibility; but the Apostle saith it is not possible. And yet there can be no comfortable nor cordial practice of Religion to a man that groaneth under the burden of his sins, unless he have this perswasion that his sins may be expiated, and his person accepted, since it is impossible that any man should care to worship or serve God being offended with him, if he had no hope to appease him; Let this then be the peculiar excellency of the Christian Religion, that it may be most comfortably and most cordially practised, because it most teach∣eth that God may be appeased: nay indeed it teacheth how he is appeased, even by the merits and mediation of his son, who is both founder and the foundation of our Christian Religion.
The Second excellency is, That no other religion proposeth, much less promiseth, so great and glorious a reward to those that embrace it, as is the eternal and everlasting glory both of the body and soul; for to let pass the disputes of the Heathen in this kind, which were all either vanities or uncertainties, even Moses himself in the institution of the Jewish Religion, if we look upon the ex∣press and explicite Covenants of the law, went no farther then a a land flowing with milk and honey, and a long and prosperous continuance of them and their seed in that land; But for what concerns a better life after this, tis either darkly included in this promise, or rationally concluded from it, not without strong collections of a searching Judgement, such as was that of our
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blessed Saviour; Now that the dead are raised, even Moses shewed at the bush, when he calleth the Lord the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob; for he is not a God of the dead, but of the living, Luke 20. 37, 38. Where the conclusion was virtually in the premises, though not found out, till the eternal wisdom of God discovered it: and since that discovery, we see tis undeniable in our own humane reason: yet if the Jew∣ish Doctors could have seen so much before, tis scarce imagina∣ble that one of their chiefest Sects or Parties (I mean the Sad∣duces) would have denied the resurrection: Let this then be ano∣ther peculiar excellency of the Christian Religion, that it teach∣eth the body shall live again with the soul in the life everlasting: for this doctrine must needs terrifie us from the sins of the flesh, because we shall all rise again with our own bodies, and give account of the works done in them, and be acquitted or con∣demned according to that account: And this same doctrine must also needs comfort and strengthen us against all the maladies and miseries of the flesh; for what is a momentary sickness or mi∣serie, to an endless and everlasting glory? Wherefore since it is the work of Religion to subdue the flesh to the spirit, both in its doings and in its sufferings, and thereby to subdue the spirit to God; and since the Christian Religion alone can do this work, subduing the flesh to the spirit in its doings, by ter∣rifying it from sin; and in its sufferings, by strengthning it against miseries, I will evermore bless my God for calling me to such a Religion, which maugre all the mischief and malice both of men and devils, will neither let me be impenitently sinfull, nor uncomfortably miserable.
The third excellency of the Christian Religion above all other religions consists in that admirable holiness and Purity which it requires in the worship of Christ, and in all other duties and works of Christianity; whereas the Pagan sacrifices were full of cruelty, delighting in the blood of men, and their mysteries full of obscoenity invading the modesty of women; And the Jewish Religion, though it had nothing unlawfull or immodest, yet it had many things in themselves unusefull and unnecessary (though both useful and necessary in regard of the Jews, to keep them in obedience and from idolatry;) as circumcision, sacri∣ficing of beasts, the distinction of meats, and the rigorous
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observation of the Sabbath: But the Christian Religion requires nothing of us, save what is usefull and necessary in it self, though it were not commanded▪ as it requires us not to circumcise the foresking of our flesh but of our hearts; not to keep a Sabbath by the external rest of the body ceasing from motion, but by the internal rest of the soul, ceasing from sin; and taking its re∣pose in God; Not to offer the blood of bullocks, but to be ready to offer our own blood for Gods glory: not to abstain from certain kinds of meats, but to use them all with sobriety, for the chastisement of the body, and sometimes to use none at all, for the advantage of the soul; And whereas other Religions have too much of Mammon in them to teach men to forsake their estates, ours teacheth us to forsake our selves: nor if I had the tongue of men and Angels, were I able to express the incomparable purity of that faith whereby we are taught to hope in God, not only above hope, but also against it: in the midst of death to hope for life, in the extremity of Justice to hope for mercy: and so wholly to trust God with our souls, as not to hope for salvation but only to glo∣rifie him thereby, desiring his glory equally with our own eternal bliss, or rather above it. Nor if I had a Seraphins quill, were I able to delineate the purity of that worship, which teach∣eth us to pray for nothing but in relation to the honour, and with subordination to the will of God: and to rest secure in the deni∣all of temporal blessings, whiles we rely upon the promises of those which are eternal.
This being such a purity as is above our Praise, and yet re∣quired to come under our Practice, plainly sheweth that our Religion is too much above our selves, either to proceed from our own understanding, or to depend upon our own wills: and consequently that God alone was the first founder, and is still the Master-builder and defender of it.
Nor doth our Christian Religion teach us this admirable puri∣ty and holiness only in conversing with our God, but also in conversing with our selves: not only in our duty towards God, but also in our duty towards our neighbour; Do but consider the ordinary offices of humanity, and the Christian Religion will shew you there is some thing of Divinity in those offices: for that teacheth you to relieve your brother not only as a member
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of your own body, having the same flesh and blood with your self, which is according to the office of humanity, but also to relieve him as a member of your Saviours body▪ as a member of God the Son, as a▪ temple of God the Holy-Ghost, which adds something of divinity to that office: Humanitas quàm sit proprium hominis, ipsum nomen indicat; shew the offices of Humanity to another man for your own sake be∣cause you are a man, unless you would be accounted a beast, was a forcible argument for men to be curteous and friendly one to another, before Christ came in the flesh: But now that argu∣ment must be strained to a higher pitch, and we must say, shew the offices of humanity to another man for the Son of Gods sake because you are a Christian, unless you would be accounted not a beast, but a devil.
So undeniable is the argument of the Christian Religion for the practise of Charity: So inexcusable are Christians above other men for the practice of uncharitableness: For surely we cannot deny but this doctrine of doing good to all, and hurt to none for Christs sake, is nowhere to be found but among Chri∣stians, though their practise in this yron age of the hard-heart∣ed world hath much disagreed from this doctrine: As for the Turks religion, it was born in the camp, smells of the camp, lives by the camp; it was brought in by the sword, savours of the sword, is preserved and propagated by the Sword: And yet in this respect, (shame it is to say it, but the shame is theirs of whom it may be truly said,) many Christians are of late turned Turks: So that the black-mouthed calumnie of Calvino-Turcis∣mus is in this sense a Truth, and the retaliation of that by Papis∣mo-Turcismus, is in this sense not to be thought a calumnie; for both Protestants and Papists as much as they have of cutting of purses and cutting of throats in their late inhumane rapines and butcheries, so much they have of Turcism, not of Christianity: For that hath said, If thine enemy hunger, feed him, if he thirst, give him drink, Rom. 12. 20. That is, strive to make thine ene∣my thy friend by overcoming evil with good, but in no case to make thy friend (and much less thy God) thine enemy by over∣coming good with evil. And indeed this mild voice is only the voice of the Christian religion: For even the Jew who came neerest to God and his goodness, did nevertheless say, An eye
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for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth; and thou shalt love thy neighbour, but hate thine enemy; Tis only the Christians hath learned this les∣son from the mouth of their master, Love your enemies, bl••ss them that curse you, and do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you and persecute you, that ye may be the children of your father which is in heaven, Mat. 5. 42. As much then as love is above hatred, blessing above cursing, forgi∣ving above reviling, relieving above revenging, and praying a∣bove persecuting, or in one word, heaven above hell, so much is the Christians Religion above all other religions in the offices of humanity, or in the conversation of man with man.
Again, look upon the conversation of man with woman, and you shall find the Christian is taught, and the good Christi∣an doth practice a greater chastity in his marriage, then other men look after in their virginity. He knows he is bound to possess his vessel in sanctification and honour; not in the lust of con∣cupiscence, even as the Gentiles which know not God, 1 Thes. 4. 1. and therefore will take heed of making his remedy his disease, of adding oyle to the fire, of provoking that lust of concupiscence, which he should banish and expel; for what he retains of lust, that he loses of sanctification and honour in his body, and of the knowledge of God in his soul: This chast consideration being grounded in the hearts of good Chri∣stians, will either keep them innocent or make them penitent; whereas other men that know not this Doctrine, or re∣gard it not, do let loose the rains of their concupiscence, and are further from chastity in their virginity, then these men are in their marriage: For the one follow the Apostles advice, It remaineth that they who have wives be as though they had none, 1 Cor. 7. 29. The other follow their own unbrideled distem∣pers which makes them that have no wives, to be as though they had them; And surely of the two, these are the further from chastity: The Heathen did glory of rapes and adulteries in their Gods, and therefore could not easily be ashamed of ra∣pines and adulteries in themselves; And the Jew though he was tyed from fornication and adultery, yet whiles he practiced his polygamy, he did in effect commit fornication with his second wife; and whiles he exercised his divorce, he did in effect invite others to commit adultery with his first wife: For
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the best that we can say in this case of Polygamy, is, that the text which forbad it, (Gen. 2. 24.) was not so fitly explained to the Jews, as it hath been since to the Christians; and so the Jews were excusable because of their ignorance: For the words of Moses did leave them some liberty of thinking a man might be one flesh with as many women as he made his wives; for there it is only said, and they shall be one flesh: But our Savi∣our Christ hath plainly shewed us that those words are in truth to be confined to two persons, one man and one woman, by saying; And they twain shall be one flesh, Mat. 19. 5. where∣by it appears to us Christians that Polygamy was a sin from the beginning, for it was against the law; but in the Jews, it was a sin of ignorance, and by that means not without excuse; for not being able to prove that God gave them a dispensation to make more wives we must either say their ignorance excused them, or their conscience condemned them; but tis not safe to say their concience condemned them, since no man can be saved that sins against his conscience, and doth not repent him of his sin, whereas without doubt the Patriarchs and King David were saved, though we find not they repented for having been Polygamists.
However it is clearly evident that the Christian Religion teach∣eth a far more chaste, modest and innocent conversation of man with woman, then did that of the Jews; and what can we re∣quire more in that conversation, then chastity, modesty, and innocency? And yet Saint Peter doth moreover add piety, bidding the husband and wife to dwel together, that their prayers be not hindred, 1 Pet. 3. 7. Others may look only after pleasure, or profit; but Saint Peter bids all Christians look after prayer and piety in their marriages.
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GOD cannot be rightly worshipped by those, by whom he is not truly known nor loved; and he cannot be truly known or loved by those who know and love him not in Christ; For he is the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person, Heb. 1. 3. The brightness of his glory, so that we can∣not love God but for his brightness; and the express image of person, so that we cannot know God but by this image: which being a Doctrine that contains something of ambigui∣ty in regard of the several states of men, some having been trained up as Jews, others as Christians in the true know∣ledge and love of God, though it contain nothing of un∣certainty in regard of it self, yet will not unfitly be ex∣plained by way of Catechism, and that in these three que∣stions.
1. Whether a man can love God save only in Christ? I answer he cannot, with an elective or deliberative love as a man, though he may with a natural love as a creature; The reason is, because having defiled and corrupted both his nature and his person by his sin, he hath lost the innocency and the com∣fort of his being, though he cannot lose the obligation of it; And consequently if he look upon God without Christ, he cannot look upon him as a merciful Father that will relieve
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his infirmities and forgive his infirmities, but only as an angry Judge, that will pass against him the sentence, and will bring upon him the vengeance of eternal condem∣nation.
2. Whether a man can love God in Christ, till Christ be revealed or manifested to his soul? I answer again, he can∣not: Ignoti nulla cupido; As a man cannot desire, so neither can he love what he doth not know; and he doth not know God in Christ, to whose soul Christ is not yet manifested or revealed: So that in this case, most true is that common Axi∣ome of the Law, idem est non esse & non apparere; It is all one for a thing not to be and not to appear: All one to me if I know not God in Christ, as if he were not at all to be known in him: For which cause it is worth our enquiry how it comes to pass that so many who are called Christians, (and who perchance think and call themselves the best Christians,) yet do not truly know God in Christ: and I must say, tis because they desire to receive Christ only according to the promises, and not also according to the precepts of the Gospel, or only for the speculation and knowledge, not for the practice and obe∣dience of faith; so that indeed they do not desire truly to know Christ; and therefore he is not revealed or manifested to their souls: And this is the reason there is so little love of God a∣mongst us, because there is so little manifestation of the Son of God in us: We think and say we know Christ more then all other men; but sure we know him less, or else we would not love him less then others: For what shall we say, that the wise men from the East were mistaken in their love of Christ, when they offered him gold, frankincense and myrrh, (Mat. 2.) but that we are now better instructed and directed in the love of Christ, whiles we take away all that we can rape and rend from him? This is in truth as unquoth an argument that we know him, as it is an unkind proof that we love him: himself hath taught us another lesson, saying, he that hath my Com∣mandments and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me; and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and manifest my self to him; John 14. 21. We must love his Commandments that we may love him; and we must love him,
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that he may love us, and manifest himself unto us; for he will not manifest himself to those whom he doth not love; and he doth not love those who do not love him; and they do not love him, who do not keep his commandments; This is such a Doctrine as our Saviour did not think he could teach too much, and therefore sure we cannot learn enough: If ye love me keep my Commandments, John 14. 15. and ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you, John 15. 14. Love is the inchoa∣tion of friendship, and that is not shewed without some obe∣dience. If ye love me keep my Commandments: But friendship is the consummation of love, and that is not shewed without an universal obedience; Ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you; he that will be thus universally obedient, must be sure to interpret all Christs commands after the true rules of Logical supposition, that an universal Affirmative must hold in every particular, (as thou shalt love thy neigbbour as thy self) must reach to all mankind, and to all offices of love; thou shalt honour thy father, must reach to all our governours, and to all offices of reverence and honour; We may not leave out any one particular either of the subject, or of the predicate, but we shall make a false supposition in Logick, and a false inter∣pretation in Divinity: And so on the other side, that an universal negative must hold in no one particular; as do no wrong, bindeth us to our good behaviour, not only in our word•• and deeds, but also in our very thoughts, and that in regard of all men whatsoever, (and much more in regard of those to whom we have been obliged either for natural, or civil, or spiritu∣al benefits:) So that if I have but an uncharitable thought of any man living, I do him wrong, but I do my self more wrong, in sinning against this Commandment: Wherefore though other men be never so confident of their own innocency, yet will I weigh my self in this ballance; for this is the ballance of the sanctuary, and I am sure God will one day weigh me in it; that seeing I have many wayes been a delinquent for want of obedience, I may not accumulate my delinquencies by want of repentance: For this I cannot but see, that if Zaccheus had not at last been as willing to give and to restore, as he was at first to take away, he would not easily have gotten that com∣fortable saying from our Saviours own lips, (to which all the
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comforts of this world are comfortless) This day is salvation come to this house, for so much as he also is the son of Abraham, Luke 19. 9. And let not my profit be the impediment of my piety; for what is a man profited if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? Mat. 16. 26. I know that my Saviour hath given his blood in exchange for my soul, that he might redeem it from death and damnation; and therefore as I will love my soul above my estate, because it was redeemed at so great a price, so I will love my Saviour above my soul, because he paid that price for my redemption; to make me of an enemy a servant, of a ser∣vant a friend, that I might not only be in his love, but also abide in it: Therefore I will offer my soul to him, to do whatsoever he commandeth me; for I cannot hope to be confirmed in his love as his friend, unless I be desirous to offer unto him this uni∣versal obedience, or at least be sorry that I have not offered or cannor offer it.
A little of this affection will more strengthen my faith in Christ, then my greatest perswasion can strengthen it: And I shall more truly know my Saviour by devoting my will then my understanding to him, by obeying his law, then by studying it; Therefore I will pray the Lord to make me increase and abound in love, to the end he may establish my heart unblamea∣ble in holiness, 1 Thes. 3. 12, 13. For himself hath told me, If any man will do his will, he shall know of the Doctrine whether it be of God, John 7. 17. That is, he, and he only shall have an experimental knowledge of Religion, that it will bring him to God, who labours to do the will of God; such a man shall know that Christ is the way, the truth and the life, and that the Christian Religion is the way to Christ, not only by a specula∣tive knowledge which swims in his brain, and may be ejected thence by arguments of Sophistry; but also by an effective knowledge which sinks into his heart, and which he will keep as carefully and as faithfully as he will keep his heart.
Thus to know Christ is truly to have him manifested in our souls: and this manifestation is not gotten so much by specula∣tion as by practice, not so much by knowing Gods will as by doing it: For it is undeniable by Saint Pauls argument,
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Gal. 3. 1. That though Jesus Christ were evidently set forth crucified among the Galatians, yet it was before their eyes on∣ly, not in their hearts, whilst they obeyed not the truth; And that the Jews had not known Christ, though he had stretch∣ed out his hands unto them all the day long, because they were still a disobedient and a gainsaying people, Rom. 10. 20, 21. And Saint John saith expresly, hereby we do know that we do know him, if we keep his Commandments, 1 John 2. 3. Telling us of a twofold knowledge of God and of Christ, the one inefficacious to salvation, such as hypocrites may have, who know God, but glorifie him not as God, Rom. 1. 21. or who profess that they know God, but in works they deny him, being abominable and disobedi∣ent, and to every good work reprobate, Tit. 1. 16. The other is a saving knowledge of God and of Christ, such as only good Christians can have, who keep his Commandments; for this knowledge is joyned with obedience, and that is the cheif ground of its assurance; hereby we know that we know him, if we keep his Commandments: A man may have some evi∣dence of faith without obedience, but he cannot have the assu∣rance of faith without it: Whence we may gather that the true knowledge of God is not that which enables a man to talk sublimely of his essence, or to talk confidently of his secrets, but that which knows him in his precepts, and in his promises, seriously obeying the one, no less then truly relying on the other; And only he that thus knows God, knows him truly to salvation, because he only knows him truly in his Saviour: and only he so knows God as to love him, because only he knows him in the Son of his love.
Thirdly, it may be demanded, whether the Jews before the comming of Christ had the same love of God, that we Chri∣stians now have; since they seem not to have had the same knowledge or manifestation of Christ? I answer, yes they had the same love of God; for they had the same knowledge or manifestation of Christ in substance, that we now have, though not the same in manner, nor in degree; They knew him to be the Mediator between God and man, as well as we, but they know this confusedly and imperfectly, we now know it clearly, distinctly and perfectly: The difference was not in the substance of the knowledge, but in the manner and de∣grees
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only: So that the Jews worshipped God in Christ as we Christians worship him; for in all their sacrifices they did look upon the Messiah as the only propitiation for their sins: Hence the 22. Psalm was a part of their dayly morning ser∣vice, which may not unfitly be called Christus Patiens, for that it doth rather Historically then Prophetically set forth the passion of our blessed Saviour: For Christ upon the Cross appropriated this Psalm unto himself, by using the first words of it, My God my God, why hast thou forsaken me? And Saint Matthew applieth it unto him in the eighth verse, He trusted in God, let him deliver him now if he will have him; Saint John in the eighteenth verse, They parted my raiment among them, and for my vesture they did cast lots: And Saint Paul in the twenty second verse, I will declare thy name unto my brethren, in the midst of the Church will I praise thee, (Heb. 2. 12.) Christ assumes this Psalm to himself, whilst he is in his passi∣on, and the Apostles apply it to him whilst they are descri∣bing of it; And this very Psalm, amongst all the rest, was chosen out by the Jews to be a part of their dayly morning ser∣vice, nay indeed it was composed of purpose by the Spirit of God, that it might be so; As plainly appears from the title or inscription thereof, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, ad primordium au∣rorae, for the dawning of the morning; Sensus est Psalmum hunc sacerdotibus & Levitis fuisse traditum, ut singulo quo∣que mane in Ecclesia quamprimùm aurora erumperet, caneretur; Sic voluit Deus Ecclesiam veterem singulis diebus recolere fi∣duciam de expectatione Christi, saith Junius: The mean∣ing of the title is, That this Psalm was delivered to the Priests and Levites to be sung in the Congregation every mor∣ning, at the break of day: For so would God inure the Church of the Jews, to have a daily recourse to Christ, and to revive the hope they had of his comming in the flesh.
And indeed the Chaldee Paraphrase saith no less on the in∣scription of this twenty second Psalm, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 pro robore seu virtute sacrificii jugis & matutini, For the virtue or strength of the dayly morning sacrifice or ob∣lation, (for 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 comprizeth both 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 and 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 both sa∣crifice
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and oblation,) The meaning of the gloss is this, that this Psalm concerns him who is the virtue and strength of all their service or Religion; And that all their sacrifices and oblations had their virtue only from the Messiah, who was exhibited unto them in this Psalm, as offered upon the Cross.
The Jews offered all their sacrifices in hopes of being ac∣cepted in this Mediator; and what do we Christians more, but believe and profess that our persons and our prayers are accepted in him? Only here is the difference, the Jews wor∣shipped God in the Messiah that was to come, the Christians worship him in the Messiah that is come: The Religion is but one in substance, though two in circumstances: And we may say, that the worship of the Jews was the inchoa∣tion of the Christian, but the worship of the Christians is the perfection of the Jewish Religion: For whom they wor∣shipped implicitely in Types, we do worship explicitely in spi∣rit and in truth: All the fault is, they were more zealous in their typical, then we are in our substantial and real wor∣ship: For the Babylonian captivity could not make them forsake their Religion, but we have captivated our Religi∣on of purpose that we might forsake it, and so are fallen un∣der that severe reprehension, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; O Insensati, quis vos fascinavit? O ye that are mad and sensless, who hath bewitched you not to obey the truth? For we who could not be seduced not to receive the truth, are little less then be∣witched not to obey it.
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GOD never yet had, never can have any true worship or glory, but only in Christ; Hence Saint Paul saith, To God only wise be glory, through Jesus Christ for ever, Rom. 16. 27. Take away Christ from the glory, and you were as good take away the glory from God: And again, unto him be glory in the Church by Christ Jesus, throughout all ages, world without end, Eph 3. 21. This is the true Catholick Religion or worship of God, that obligeth all persons in the Church, at all times, throughout all ages, and in all places, in heaven as well as in earth, world without end: for no worship can be world with∣out end, but that which shall be in heaven: And sure we are the worship whereby we Christians glorifie God, in and by Je∣sus Christ, shall be in heaven: The Jews worship, though in substance it was Christian, yet the manner being figurative and typical, in extent it was but National, and in duration it was but temporal; But the Christians worship being wholly in Spi∣rit and in truth, in the manner of it is angelical, in the extent of it is universal, in the continuance of it is eternal: The same to all ages that it is in this, the same in heaven that it is in earth: It is not safe for Christians to worship God so now, as they can∣not worship him world without end. If they worship him now by his Son, they may so worship him for ever: But if they worship him now by any other Mediator, they are sure they must leave that worship behind them, when they leave this world: and therefore they are on the surer side who had rather not take it, then be forced to leave it. For the Angels and Saints in heaven do not go to God by one another, but all go to him by his Son: and why should we men on earth go to him by any other, then by him by whom they do go with us now, and
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we shall go with them hereafter? Shall the Church Militant set up a Communion of Saints disagreeing in the worship of God from the Church Triumphant? And why then doth the Canon of the Mass begin with an Illative particle that hints a conclu∣sion rather than a beginning, saying, Te igitur clementissime Pater per Jesum Christum filium tuum Dominum nostrum suppli∣ces rogamus, : Therefore O most merciful Father we humbly be∣seech thee by Jesus Christ thy Son and our Lord, that thou wilt ac∣cept those our gifts and sacrifices; Why doth this particle Therefore begin the Prayers at the Mass, but only to shew (as saith the Ritualist) that the Angels and Saints in heaven have begun, and that we men on earth do but only continue and as it were conclude this sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving to Al∣mighty God? And why then should we otherwise continue or conclude then they have begun it? Will they join with us in this our new worship? or is that not a new worship (meer∣ly of our own inventing) wherein they cannot, will not join with us? Since they glorifie God only in Christ, how shall we venter to glorifie him in any other? unless we will perswade God to accept one manner of glorifying him whiles it is our du∣ty, and another manner of glorifying him, when it shall be our reward, and so make grace not the inchoation, but as it were the contradiction of glory? or unless we will perswade our selves, that it is not best practising such Songs on earth, as we know we shall sing in heaven, but such as we know we shall not sing there, if so be our singing them here, do not indeed keep us from coming thither, and from singing there: nor is this a cause∣less fear; For he that in the case of his worship hath proclaimed himself a jealous God, hath in effect told us that in that same case it is the best and surest way for every man to have his fears and jealousies. Those holy prayers and praises which are offered up to God through Christ Jesus, we are sure do glorifie him: and consequently we cannot but fear that those which are offer∣ed up unto him through any other Mediator, or Intercessor do not, cannot tend to his glory: Nor is it either just or safe to appeal to the practise of Gods Church at any time, much less in the corruptest times, against the Precept of Gods Word: For we cannot be assured that any Church is his Church but from his word; and we are sure that we have indeed the determinati∣on
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of a most infallible Doctor, if we can truly say that we have the determination of his spirit, in his holy Word: For as what prayers go from man to God by our Saviour Christ are un∣doubtedly true worship: so what precepts come from God to man by him, are unquestionably true Doctrine; Wherefore since, See thou do it not, I am thy fellow servant, and of thy bre∣thren thaet have the testimony of Jesus, worship God, is one of his precepts, and that twice repeated almost in the very same words, Rev. 19. 9. & 22. 9. How shall we dare to do it, and not think to make his Doctrine as well as our own worship, both alike questionable?
Saint Augustine gives us such a definition of a Mediator as will quite exclude all but one, and that is our blessed Saviour: Qui pro omnibus interpellat & pro quo nullus, is verus est Media∣tor ac Intercessor noster, (lib. 2. contra Parmen. cap. 8.) He that intercedeth for all, and none intercedeth for him, is our true Me∣diator and Intercessor. Mark how he makes Mediator and Inter∣cessor both one, though some of late would make a great diffe∣rence betwixt them, by that new distinction of Mediator re∣demptionis & intercessionis; saying that Christ alone is a Mediator of Redemption, but Saints and Angels may also with him be Mediators of Intercession: A distinction not known in Aquinas his daies, who concludes positively that to be a Mediator betwixt God and man, is proper only to Christ, and proves his position by Saint Pauls words, There is one Mediator between God and man, the man Christ Jesus, 1 Tim. 2. 5. He did not think of eluding this text by saying, Mediator est duplex, redemptionis & intercessionis: A Mediator is twofold, of Redemption and of Intercession; for that had been to say, Ʋnus est duplex, one is two, a singular is a plural; for there cannot be the ground of a distinction unless there be two, and therefore a singular subject cannot be distinguished but by making one two, or a singular a plural; and the Apostle having said Ʋnus Mediator, declared the subject of his proposition so numerical and singular, that it could not be capable of a distinction: For it is not possible to make of one subject numerically the same, two specifically di∣stinct: And it is evident that a Mediator meerly of intercessi∣on and not of redemption, is not a Mediator in the Apostles ac∣count; for he proves that Christ only is a Mediator for all, be∣cause
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he gave himself a ransom for all, ver. 6. How then can any be a Mediator to intercede for me, who hath not been a Re∣deemer to ransom me? or why should I go to them for Inter∣cession, to whom I cannot go for Reconciliation? Doth not the blood of Christ speak better things then the blood of Abel to my soul? and why should I then not wholly pant and gasp after his blood? Is it not folly in me to leave the better and take the worse? Nay is it not impiety in me to neglect the Son of God, and go a gadding after the sons of men? To neglect the Medi∣ator God hath given me, and to set up others of my own make∣ing? Can I bestow any of my hope in praying to Saints and Angels, and none of my Faith and Charity go along with it? or have I too much of these excellent vertues in my soul, that I could take or translate some part of them from my God, were they indeed to be fixed on any creature? Can I devote my self too much to a true Invocation? or, will not a false Invocation set up a false Religion, and a false Religion calumniate the truth, and endanger the benefit of my redemption?
Well then, & Tutior & Sanior pars must needs be my rule in a matter that so nearly concerns my Saviours honour, and mine own salvation; and I will leave the Saints out of my prayers, because it is both safer and sounder so to do: For all the world cannot object against me for going to God only by his Son, but I must object against my self for going to God by the best of his servants in conjunction with, much more in de∣rogation to his Son: Wherefore I must resolve to let the Saints stand in my Calander, but not let them come into my Liturgie, for fear I should either exclude my Saviour out of his own of∣fice of Intercession, or at least exclude my self and my prayers out of the blessing of his Communion: For this I am sure of, He will not join with me in my prayers which I make to any but only to his Father; and it is dangerous for me to pray with∣out his Intercession, if not damnable for me to pray out of his Communion: Wherefore though others be careless in this point who pretend to a perfection, if not to a supererogation of righteousness, yet I have work enough to pray against my sins, dare not willingly admit a sin into my prayers; for it was the curse of Judas, Let his prayer be turned into sin; and I dare not venter to bring that curse upon my self: For I that now
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ask pardon for the sins of my prayers, if I make my prayers more sinful then my infirmities do make them for me, what shall I have left whereby to ask pardon for the sinfulness of my sins?
I will therefore ever give God humble and hearty thanks, that he hath caused me to be educated in a Church which hath taught me to make my addresses to him only in and by his Son; and I wil never cease so to make my addresses to him, in behalf of that distressed and oppressed Church; For he that hath given us the parable of the importunate widow, to this end that we should alwaies pray and not faint, will certainly hear our prayers and the prayers of his Church that is now a widow, and therefore brought to the state of widow-hood and desolation, because we her sons have hitherto been so slothful and sluggish in our prayers, suffering them infinitely to out-strip us in the practise, who came far short of us in the purity of Devotion, and not shewing that zeal towards the eternal Son of God, which others have shewed and do still shew towards their petty Deities; This our abominable neglect or rather contempt of God, hath made him jealous, and his jealousie hath made him for a while cast us off; but we hope he will not cast us off for ever even for his Truths sake, for his mercies sake, for his names sake; yea though we have slighted his Truth, abused his mercy, and blasphemed his most Holy name; by throwing away our Pray∣ers with as much fury as if Truth had been a lye, Invocation had Superstition, and Piety had been Idolatry; yet we will still hope that he will not cast us away for ever, for his Sons sake, because in him he is well pleased, though with us he be most justly displeased: For in him alone, in his merits, in his righte∣ousness, in his intercession, have we called and do call for grace and mercy; and therefore cannot doubt but in him and for his sake we shall be heard at last and relieved, and shall see the salva∣tion of our God: For the unrighteous Judge himself could say, Though I fear not God, nor regard man, yet because this widow troubleth me I will avenge her, least by her continual coming she weary me; Much more shall the righteous Judge say so: Yea O Lord we know that thou fearest not thine enemies, but yet regardest thy servants, and therefore we thy most unworthy servants will never leave troubling thee with our continual ad∣dresses,
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nor wearying thee with our daily prayers, till thou arise and maintain thine own cause, and either avenge our inju∣ries, or vindicate our innocency: If our Church was once thy Spouse, she is now thy widow; O let not her, nor us for her, cry any longer in vain to thee: But we beseech thee to avenge her of all her enemies, not by confounding, but by converting them: For this will be a vengeance worthy of thy Justice and of thy Mercy both together, when thou shalt indeed destroy the sin, but yet save the sinners: However we cannot but pro∣fess our selves so well assured of the truth of our Religion, whiles we adore and worship thee only in thy beloved Son, that though all the world discountenance, yet we dare not disconti∣nue, much less forsake it; And though for our many and grie∣vous sins, thou still suffer us to be eaten up like sheep, and sell∣est thy people for nought, and makest us to be rebuked of our neighbours, and to be laughed to scorn, and had in derision of them that are round about us, yet we will not forget thee, nor behave our selves frowardly, much less falsly, in thy Covenant; nor suffer our hearts to be turned, nor our steps to decline from thy way. Yea though thou still more and more smite us into the place of Dragons (creatures that are both mischievous and venemous) and cover us not only with the shadow, but even with the body of death; yet we will ever resolve, and we be∣seech thee to confirm and consummate our resolution▪) not to forget the name of our God, nor to stretch out, or hold up our hands to any strang God; For thou hast told us, This is life eternal that we might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent, (John 17. 3.) Lord, we desire so to know thee as to love thee, so to love thee as to worship thee, so to worship thee as to glorifie thee, so to glorifie thee in this world, as to be glorified by thee in the world to come; Thou hast commanded us to forsake all to follow thee; Lord make us readily to obey this command, that we may so follow thee, as at last to come to thee, to be with thee, and to abide in thee for ever. For those who saw thy Son but in tpyes and figures, have taught us this lesson of sincerity and of constancy, not to be careful to answer any of our adversaries in this matter: but readily and chearfully to say, Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us; and he will (in his good time) deliver us: But if not, be it
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known unto all the world, that we will not worship the images which our Fathers have set up, nor the imaginations which our children are now setting up; for our God is too spiritual to be worshipped with images, and too substantial to be worshipped with imaginations: He is a Spirit, and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth, (Joh. 4. 24.) His wor∣ship hath too much of Spirit to consist in images, and too much of Truth to consist in imaginations: Wherefore we knowing that our worship of God is both in Spirit and in Truth, are sor∣ry to see that any should oppose it, (for it is prodigious, as well as odious, for any Christian to oppose the glory of Christ) but will not give them that occasion of joy, to see that their opposition should make us forsake it; For he that hath said, Seek ye after God, and your soul shall live, (Psal. 69. 33.) hath taught us to say in our Doctrine, What shall we do with a Re∣ligion that seeks after any but God, since our soul cannot live in any but in him? and much more hath he taught us to say in our devotion, Lord, we make our prayer unto thee in an acceptable time: Hear us O God in the multitude of thy mercies, even in the truth of thy salvation, Psalm 69. which is a prayer in times of persecution for the cause of Religion; For as long as we make our prayers only to thee O Lord, we are sure that we do pray in the truth of our Religion; and therefore may not doubt but thou wilt at length hear our prayers in the truth of thy salva∣tion; and that for our blessed Saviours sake, to whom with the Father and the eternal Spirit be all honour and glory now and for ever, Amen.
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Christ glorified in his Ascention.
The Prooeme. That our blessed Saviours Ascention is not so truly ob∣served by our commemoration, as by our imitation; and the manner how to consider the History of his Ascention.
THere is no blessing of Christ but imposeth up∣on a Christian the necessity of commemo∣rating it; and withall affords him exceeding great joy in its commemoration, if he so ob∣serve it with other Christians, as also to imi∣tate it with good Christians.
For at Saint Luke gives a full definition of Christs Gospel, when he calleth it a Treatise of those things which Jesus did do and teach, Acts 1. 1. as if he had said, A Book that containeth Christs sayings and doings: so may we give this definition of a true Gospeller, or of a good Christian, He is a lively representer of the sayings and doings of Christ; of the sayings of Christ by his profession; of the doings of Christ by his practise and imitation: For that man alone hath a true faith in the Passion, Resurrection and Ascention of Christ, who sheweth his faith by his works, dying with Christ that he may live to him; rising with Christ that he may live with him; and ascending to Christ that he may live in him; who sheweth his faith in Christs Cross by crucifying his own sinful lusts, in Christs resurrection, by rising to newness of life: and in
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Christs ascention, by ascending thither in heart and mind, whi∣her his Saviour is gone before him.
Thus did the holy Apostles follow their Master with their eyes and with their hearts, when they could not follow him with their bodies; They looked stedfastly towards heaven, as he went up, Acts 1. 10. Surely the more to fix their hearts on him when he was above: And so must we too; we must go up with him thither, that we may tarry with him there; accordingly as Christs own Church hath taught us to pray, Grant we beseech thee Almighty God, that like as we do believe thine only begotten Son our Lord to have ascended into the heavens; so we may also in heart and mind thither ascend, and with him conti∣nually dwell, who liveth and raigneth with thee and the Holy Ghost, one God world without end: which is such an heavenly prayer, That we are infinitely bound to bless God for putting it into our devotions, but yet more bound to beseech him that he will also put it into our lives and conversations.
For which cause I will enlarge my considerations concerning the ascention of our blessed Saviour: And as Binius in setting down that vast and voluminous Council of Ephesus, digesteth his work into three Tomes, in the first tome reciting, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the acts before the Council: in the second Tome, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; the acts done in the Council; in the third Tome; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the acts done after the Council; So will I consider the history of our blessed Saviours Ascention, first insisting upon those things which are recorded before it, His apparitions, his instructions, his consolations, and his benedictions: Secondly, insisting upon those things which are recorded concerning the manner of his ascending: And lastly insisting upon that one thing which is recorded of him after he was ascended, viz. his sitting at the right hand of God.
And I have warrant enough so to do from the two Pen-men of that very History: For Saint Mark describeth the Ascenti∣on with reference to Christs Apparitions upon the very day of his resurrection, though that was full fourty daies before he ascended; for so we read, Mar. 16. 14. Afterward he appear∣ed unto the eleven as they sate at meat, and upbraided their unbelief and hardness of heart; which apparition was clearly on the very
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day of his Resurrection, unless we will say, that unbelief and hardness of heart remained in the Apostles, when it scarce re∣mained in any of the other Disciples: for he had appeared unto them no less then five several times on that very day, for the confirmation of their faith: And yet without any mention of more apparitions, it followeth, v. 19. So then after the Lord had spoken unto them, he was received up into heaven.
But Saint Luke describeth the Ascention with the sending down of the Holy Ghost, which was not till ten daies after our Saviour Christ was actually ascended, as appears, Acts 1. 8, 9. But ye shall receive power after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: And when he had spoken these things, he was taken up; The Ascention is so placed in the narrations of these Evangelists, as both to look backward to the Feast of Easter, and forward to the Feast of Pentecost; To look backward upon the Resurrecti∣on of God the Son; to look forward upon the Descention of God the Holy Ghost: Happily to teach all Christians, That they must first arise from sin, before they can ascend up to God; there's the Resurrection before the Ascention: And that they must ascend up to God, before they can receive the gifts and graces of his Holy Spirit; there's the Ascention before the coming of the Holy Ghost. However this is ground enough for me to look a little backward and a little forward in my con∣siderations of the Ascention, because the Evangelists have thus related it with its antecedent apparitions and words, and with its consequent exaltation, or sitting on the right hand of God.
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CAP. I. Christ Considered before his Ascention.
IT is much to be observed; That since in the Gospel are mentioned but ten apparitions of Christ between his Resurrection and his A∣scention, yet no less then five of them are recorded on the very day of his Resurrecti∣on; For he appeared five several times, to several persons, on that same day: which Durand would perswade us the Latine Church did intimate in her very Church musick of that day, singing that Invitatory Hymn, The Lord is risen indeed, in the fift musical tone; Et est quinti toni, propter quinque apparitiones Domini in ill•• die, saith he. This Anthymne, Surrexit Dominus verè, The Lord is risen indeed, is sung in the fift Tone, because the Lord appeared five times on that very day; This is an elegant way of teaching mysteries, by musical tones; somewhat above that gross inven∣tion of turning pictures into Lay-mens books; but yet whatso∣ever is to be said of the musick, we are sure the thing it self is consonant to the Truth; For our blessed Saviour did appear five several times on the very day of his resurrection, that as soon as he had raised his own body from the Grave, he might raise his Apostles souls from incredulity, and prepare them to receive
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those Heavenly doctrines pertaining to the kingdom of God, concerning which he resolved to speak with them from that day till the time of his Ascention.
The first apparition was to Mary Magdalen alone, as saith St. Mark, Now when Jesus was risen early the first day of the week, He appeared first to Mary Magdalen, out of whom he had cast seven Devils, Mark 16. 9. Which must needs be the grand comfort of any sinfull, and sin-sick man that though he hath very impure and unclean thoughts and inclinations which do possess him, like so many devils, yet if he fly to his Saviour for relief, he will immediately cast out those devils, and likewise shew himself unto him in the bright beams of his grace and mercy, as soon as to others that can boast of a much greater Purity: But yet sure this first appearing of Christ to Mary Magdalen, did neither give nor bespeak her any priviledge or prerogative above others; It only shewed that he who came into the world to save sinners, would not have them discouraged or dis-heartned because of their sins, after their consciences had been throughly purged from dead works by faith and repentance.
Yet some men in these latter ages of the Church, thinking those had a real preheminence above others to whom Christ first shewed himself after his resurrection, would needs phansie our blessed Saviour to have appeared first to his own Mother; So Durand in his Rationals, (lib. 6. in rubrica de septem diebus post Pascha) Quidam dicunt, in ipsâ etiam resurrectionis die primò apparuit Matri; Some men say that on the very day of his resur∣rection he first appeared to his mother; which is directly contrary to the Text; for if first to his mother, then not first to Mary Magdalen; These men were so resolved to accumulate pre∣heminencies upon the blessed Virgin, that they feared not to in∣vade the Text, meerly to force upon her this imaginary privi∣ledge or prerogative.
The like is Baronius his Logick, (Anno Christi 16. num. 8.) Ʋnde inferri potest in titulo crucis Domini, non eo ordine quo re∣censentur ab Evangelistis, Inscriptiones esse positas: His drift be∣ing to advance the Latine tongue, (that all the world forsooth might use it in their Liturgies) he would fain perswade us that the Inscriptions upon our Saviours cross were not reckoned up in order as they were written, but that the Latine was before the
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Hebrew and the Greek Inscriptions. His aim was to extoll his Churches language; but this was no right way of extolling it, to give it a priority of order against the Text, nay against the Re∣liques of our Saviours cross, that are daily shewed and worship∣ped at Rome, where the first inscription is in Hebrew, the second in Greek, the last in Latine; so that either Baronius is false, or the Reliques are false, saith Causabon, Ergo vel Baronius falsus, vel reliquiae falsae. It seems he thought not of the reliques, or happily he would not have disproved them; but tis evident he thought of the text, and cared not to disprove that; This is the jumbling of Scripture, which some will rather use then want arguments to justifie their own parties or phansies; One saith the Latine was first written, though the Hebrew and Greek be first named; others say, though Mary Magdalen was first named, yet she was not first meant, but that the blessed Virgin Mary must step in before her. These Divines are not so moderate, so ingenuous in their Divinity, as Gregory Naz. was in his Poetry, in his tragedy of Christus Patiens. For although he allows Saint Mary Magdalen to say to the blessed Virgin, (as he supposeth them both going together to the se∣pulchre,) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Sure you shall see him above any other, yet when Christ comes indeed to be seen, Tis Mary Magdalen first spies him, and first speaks of his appearance. For when the text saith expresly he appear∣ed first to Mary Magdalen, tis no less then blasphemy to say he appeared first to his own mother; for it is in effect to contradict the Holy-Ghost, and to call that second which he called first.
The second apparition was to the same Mary Magdalen to∣gether with other women, even those who had prepared their spices and ointments, Luke 24. 1. & 10. O my God, let me never cease to prepare for thee spices and ointments, even the sweet odours of praise and thanksgiving joyned with the tears of an unfeigned repentance and the oyle of good works, that the Sun of righteousness may arise to me with healing in his wings, and shew me the light of his countenance, and I may be healed of all those wounds whereby I have so long weakned, and so grievously tormented mine own soul.
The third apparition was to Saint Peter alone, as saith Saint
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Paul, 1 Cor. 15. 5. He was seen of Cephas, then of the twelve, which is Saint Peters ninth prerogative in Bellarmines ac∣count; Nona est quod Christus resurgens primùm omnium ex Apostolis Petro se videndum praebuerit; (lib. 1. de Pontif. Rom. cap. 18.) But if this third apparition to Saint Peter, did ad∣vance him above the rest of the Apostles, how did not the first apparition to Saint Mary Magdalen, advance her above Saint Peter? Why should we not rather suppose, that our blessed Saviour made such haste to appear to Saint Peter, because he knew he was still under the sorrow and burden of his three∣fold denyal; for some of the antients were of opinion that Saint Peter never left weeping for denying his Master, from the time of his death tell he saw him risen again from the dead: So Sabellicus, lib. 5. exemp. cap. 5. Tribuunt lachrymis im∣pendisse, &c. He wept bitterly all those three dayes wherein he had lost his Master; and the rather certainly, because he had denyed him, before he lost him; This reason is in effect the same with that before, concerning the first apparition to Saint Mary Magdalen; and tis more agreeable with true Divinity to magnifie Saint Peter for his Repentance, then for his Pri∣macy; and questionless he himself had rather be so magnified; However this we are sure, that some very good Divines have given us this same gloss, though upon another text: For upon those words of Saint Mark, Go ••ell his Disciples, and Peter, (Mar. 16. 7.) The reason why Saint Peter is particularly na∣med, is thus given by Theophylact, ut scrupulus illi adimeretur quo poterat jure solicitari, ne propter trinam abnegationem, discipu∣li jure excidisset, To take that scruple out of his mind which might then justly trouble him, least by thrice denying his master, he had lost the priviledge or right of a Disciple, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, (are the fathers own words,) Christ first ap∣peared to Saint Peter, that he might shew him, he was not cast off because of his threefold denyal. The same reason is in effect given by Saint Chrysostome, as saith the learned Causabone, in these words, because he alone had denyed his Master, and had reason to be afraid of appearing in his presence.
The same reason is moreover given by Saint Gregory the great; Si hunc angelus nominatim non exprimeret, qui magi∣strum negaverat, venire inter Discipulos non auderet: If the An∣gel
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had not particularly expressed his name who had denyed his Master, he would never have durst to come with the other Disci∣ples: All those Expositions are cited by Causabone against Ba∣ronius, in his sixteenth Exercitation, for alledging this text to prove Saint Peters Primacy. And to all these I will add yet one more, the Exposition of one as much addicted to the Pa∣pacy as Baronius, but much more to substantial Divinity, and that was Franciscus Lucas Brugensis, who thus glosseth the words, Dicite discipulis, & Petro; Petrum nominatim exprimit ne ille existimaret se ex discipulis non haberi, qui praeceptorem ne∣gâsset; ne putaret se loco excidisse, qui turpiter adeò offendisset: Sciret contra, se ob poenitentiam, quae & Deo placuerat & An∣gelis, in gratiam ac pristinum inter discipulos locum receptum es∣se, sibique proinde ut capiti, caeteros in Galilaeam esse ducendos: He expresly nameth Saint Peter, lest he should think him∣self not one of the Disciples, who had denied his Master; lest he should think himself fallen from his place, who had so shame∣fully offended; contrary, that he might know how by his repen∣tance, which had pleased both God and Angels, he was restored into favour and to his former place among the Disciples, and that all the rest should be gathered to him as to their head, in Galilee.
He was willing enough to bring in the Primacy, (as appears by this last clause) but he would by no means leave out the re∣pentance; taking it for granted that our blessed Saviour had the greatest regard to Saint Peter, because he saw him so exceeding penitent. O my God, give unto me a heart truly sorrowful for what evil I have committed and daily do commit, that thou maist give unto me a heart truly thankful for what good I have received and daily do receive, and that thou maist make me fully capable of receiving the greatest good thou hast in store for a penitent sinner, even the forgiveness of my sins, and the comfortable assurance of that forgiveness sealed unto my conscience by the Testimony of thy holy spirit, and the amendment of mine own sinful life, that so thou maist shew unto me the merits of my Saviour, and give unto me the joy of his salvation. O thou who of thine infinite mercy and inesti∣mable goodness hast granted repentance unto life, (Act. 11. 18.) grant me also thy grace to repentance, that I may live in con∣tinual
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sorrow for my sins, and may have thy comforts in my sorrows, looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ; (Tit. 2. 13.)
The fourth apparition, which our blessed Saviour made on the very day of his resurrection, was that to the two Disciples as they were going to Emmaus: which was next after that to Saint Peter; for it is plain that when they returned to Hieru∣salem, they found the eleven gathered together, saying, The Lord is risen indeed, and hath appeared unto Simon, (Luke 24. 34.) And how was it that he appeared to those two? The text saith, they talked together of all those things which had happened, and it came to pass that while they communed together, and rea∣soned, Jesus himself drew near, and went with them, (Luke 24. 14, 15.) They were making great lamentation that the cheif Priests and Rulers had condemned to death and crucified one that was a Prophet mighty indeed and word before God and all the people, (vers. 19, 20.) for as yet they took Christ on∣ly for a Prophet: Could the loss of one Prophet so afflict them? and shall not the loss of many Prophets more grievously afflict us? Can we see the destruction of a whole national Church, wherein God was so truly glorified, and Gods truth so impartially maintained, to the envy of her enemies, to the admiration of her friends, and not be troubled for Gods sake, as well as for our own, that we should be so grosly unthank∣ful to God for not removing his Candlestick, as our selves meer∣ly out of wantonness, playing with the light to put out the Candle? Can we see the desolation of so many Prophets to∣gether, (as if they had rather been Felons then Prophets) without tears in our eyes, complaints in our mouths, and sor∣row in our hearts? Is it not a most terrible sight to see a whole member at once torn away from Christ's mystical body? or can there be any thing more terrible then this dividing of a mem∣ber from the body, unless it be the dividing of the body from the head? and where the one is actually done, may not the other justly be feared? In such a dismal conjuncture of so many sins and sorrows together, (but yet more sins then sorrows) what hath any good Christians left to do but to go to Emmaus, to retire himself to some place of solitariness, and there to lament and bewail his own sad condition, that by his sins he hath caused
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so many labourers to be cast out of the Lords Vineyard, when as he is no more able by his righteousness to deserve, then others are able by their power to make so much as one true labourer: And sure he is, he can never want such lamen∣tations as God will accept, whilst he hath such as God himself hath made, and practised; and such are to be had in the La∣mentations of Jeremiah. For God the Holy-Ghost made those Lamentations, and the Prophet uttered them in the person of God the Son; So that the badness of the occasion being more then recompenced by the goodness of the company, let him sigh with himself and say, Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by? behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow, which is done unto me; wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce anger, Lam. 1. 12. For he may well say this, when he cannot but say what follows, cap. 2. ver. 6. The Lord was an enemy, he hath swallowed up Israel, and he hath violently taken away his Tabernacle; he hath destroyed his pla∣ces of the assembly; The Lord hath caused the solemn Feasts and Sabbaths to be forgotten in Zion, and hath despised in the in∣dignation of his anger the King, and the Priest; I will then leave the pomps and vanities of this wicked world before they leave me, and go to Emmaus, to some place of privacy, and there sit down and consider what I have lost, (not of my temporal, but of my spiritual inheritance,) that I may accordingly bewail and lament my losses; for I who regarded not my Saviour as the mighty God, the everlasting Father, the Prince of peace (Isa. 9. 6.) must now regard him as he is despised and rejected of men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief, (Isa. 53. 3.) till by my hearty sorrow and incessant supplications I may get him to return again as it were by a glorious resur∣rection after death, and in his power as the mighty God to restore his Church, in his mercy as the everlasting Father to bless it; and in his dominion as the Prince of peace, to go∣vern and establish it for ever: Thus had I rather suffer with him in his shame, then reign with his enemies in their glory; and I shall rejoyce more in my sorrows, then they shall in their joyes; For in their joyes, they may if they will, see their sins; but in my sorrows, I shall see my Saviour.
The fifth and last apparition which our blessed Saviour made
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on the day of his resurrection, was that which Saint Mark hath recorded in these words, (Cap. 16. ver. 14.) After∣ward he appeared to the eleven as they sate at meat, and upbrai∣ded them with their unbelief and heardness of heart, because they believed not them which had seen him after he was risen. Our bles∣sed Saviour upbraided them, yet were they more truly believers in their unbelief, then many of us are in our faith; for Saint Luke faith, They yet believed not for joy and wondred (Luk. 24. 41.) They believed not for joy and admiration; but many of us so believe, as neither to rejoyce nor admire at the grounds of our belief; in so much that their infidelity was much better then our faith; for we have too hasty a faith, to have a sure and a sound faith, and that makes us fall away in these times of temptation, and rather then want temptation, become our own tempters: Whereas if we did with the Bereans examine whether these things were so before we believed, or with the Apostles did rejoyce and admire to see them so when we believe, it would not be possible for those that can so easily turn the times, more easily to turn our faith, but being sure that we are indeed in a true conjunction and communion with Christ, we would never suffer any thing of this world to separate us from that ho∣ly conjunction, nor to divert us from that blessed communion. Thus it is for want of joy and admiration that we dayly turn unbelievers, whereas the Apostles did not yet believe for joy and wonder; therefore were they the more true believers; for what kept them from believing, did in truth strengthen their belief.
And accordingly we may suppose our blessed Saviour check∣ed their incredulity, not so much that he might blame and re∣prove their faith, as that they might the more labour to in∣crease and to improve it; for that they could never have that faith too much setled and fixed in themselves, which they were now bound to preach to others: And withall, that they should not be soon discouraged in their preaching, if they found not the event presently answerable to their pains, since it was long before they themselves did believe, though they had met with infinitely a far better Preacher: For this Rule, When thou art converted, strenghthen thy brethren, (Luk. 22. 32.) holds not only in the substance but also in the degree of that
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charitable duty, those being bound to take the greatest pains in converting others, who most know, how much the spirit of God hath laboured about their conversion; For he that considers how long his Saviour hath tarryed for him, will ne∣ver think that he can tarry too long for his brother. And yet there is one more particular very observable in this apparition, that it was when the Apostles were gathered together to hear what Saint Peter and the rest could say concerning their Ma∣sters resurrection; And as they thus spake, Jesus himself stood in the midst of them, Luke 24. 36. That is then, and not till then, he appeared to them, when they were thus prepared to receive him. O my God, make me zealously to follow all those means which thou hast given me of knowing thy eternal Son, my blessed Lord and Saviour; that pursuing after those means with an active industry, I may overtake them with a happy speed, and lay hold on them with immortal joy, and make use of them with unwearied care and constancy: Let me never absent my self from the assemblies and meetings of thy Apostles, the guides and governours of thy Church, for fear I should lose the opportunity of seeing thee, whilst I am absent from them; For thou hast promised to be with them alway, even to the end of the world; if therefore I will not be with them, how can I hope thou wilt be with me? For surely of all men that are gathered together in thy name, upon the face of the earth, they are most so gathered whom thou hast commanded to gather others, and therefore thou hast promi∣sed to be most in the midst of them; for as much as they are thy Trustees, whom thou hast entrusted with thy name, and with thy truth, and with thy blood; with thy name, lest Atheists should blaspheme it; with thy truth, lest Hereticks should corrupt it; with thy blood, lest Apostates should pro∣phane it; O then let thy unworthy servant be alwayes gather∣ed together with them, that I be never guilty either of Athe∣ism, or of Heresie, or of Apostasie: And when I am gathered together with them, make me to open mine eyes to look, and mine ears to hearken diligently after thee, and not only af∣ter them, that thou mayest open my heart to receive thee.
And make all guides and governours of thy Church still to
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follow the footsteps of thy Apostles, and to enquire what is written in the Law of Moses and in the Prophets, and in the Psalms concerning thee, ver. 44. For how shall they know thee, to whom thou dost not reveal thy self? or where dost thou reveal thy self but in thy word? Then opened he their understanding, that they might understand the Scriptures, (Luke 24. 45) that is, when they had used all the means they could to un∣derstand them, then and not till then he opened their under∣standing. And who can tell but tis a judgement immediately from God, and a judgement worthy of God, inflicted upon many great Scholars, not to understand the Scriptures so much to their salvation, as some private unlearned men do under∣stand them; because they had rather cast their reproaches then their affections upon Gods most holy word, inventing arguments to keep others from reading it, whilst they should be making prayers that God would bless their own reading of it! for unless he that hath the key of David open the un∣derstanding, in vain do we labour to open the Text: Where∣fore the Church of England did upon unquestionable grounds recede from the Latine Liturgy in the second Sunday of Ad∣vent, to bring in this most excellent prayer, Blessed Lord, which hast caused all holy Scriptures to be written for our learn∣ing, grant that we may in such wise hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them, that by patience and comfort of thy holy word, we may embrace and ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life which thou hast given us in our Saviour Jesus Christ; I doubt not but the Church might for her liberty have changed more of those Collects then she thought fit to change, but infinitely bless God that she valued her Christian charity above her Christian liberty, so that she hath never at all changed but for the better; not desiring to de∣part from other Christians, but only to come nearer to our Saviour Christ: And truly when the Contest was once broach∣ed, between the Church and the Scriptures in point of autho∣rity, (the most unhappy Contest that ever was broached among Christians, for some Church men; by laying aside the Autho∣rity of Christ did in effect teach other men to lay aside the au∣thority of the Church) I say when this unhappy Contest was once broached between the Church and the Scriptures in point
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of Authority, it was high time for our Church to cleave to the Scriptures, that she might profess her desire and intention of remaining truly Christian, wherein she did but follow Saint Peters own example, saying, Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life: John 6 68. For surely our blessed Saviour did not bring down with him the words of eternal life to carry them back again to heaven, but to leave them here on Earth; and where hath he left them, if not in the holy Scriptures? Wherefore since Christ himself alledged the Scriptures to confirme the Apostles in their faith, who yet believed because they had seen him with their their own eyes, (John 20. 29) How shall any Christian Church deny the People to read the Scripture, &c. and not hinder the confimation of their faith in Christ? For when the Church hath done all that she can to make true believers, she must confess that their faith doth not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the pow∣er of God; (1 Cor. 2. 5.) and that the word of God is the chiefest instrument of his Power, according to that of the holy Apostle, For the word of God is quick and powerfull, and sharper then any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of Soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart, Heb. 4. 12. In which words, the Spirit of God setteth forth the excellency of the word of God, from its nature, and from its effects: from its na∣ture that it is quick and powerfull, neither a dull nor a dead let∣ter, but quick in motion and powerfull in operation; from its effects, that it pierceth, that it devideth, that it discerneth the thoughts and intents of the Heart; Piercing the thoughts by entring into the botom of our hearts, to make us sound and sin∣cere Christians against Hypocrisie; Dividing the thoughts by separating good from evil, Truth from falshood, in our Religion, to make us Orthodox Christians, against Heresie; and discer∣ning the thoughts, by shewing us the first truth and the chiefest good in our religion, to make us firm and constant Christians, against Apostasie; For that man never yet discovered Christ in his Religion, who could be perswaded to fall away from it. He was at the best but a divider of the truth from falshood, He was not a Discerner of the first Truth in that Truth which he professed; for then he would have been immovable in his Pro∣fession;
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Wherefore if you would indeed perswade or rather tempt me, (for tis properly a temptation, which induceth to evil) to leave the Scriptures that I may cleave to the Church, you must first be able to shew so much in behalf of the Church as is here said in behalf of the Scriptures, or you were as good perswade and tempt me to quit my reason, that I may get Reli∣gion; or to cease to be a man, that I may begin to be a Christian.
THE proper work of a Christian is to consider and con∣template his Saviour Christ, in all his sayings and in all his doings; (for never any speak like him who was the eternal word of God, never any did like him who was the eternal son of God:) but more particularly in those which come neerest his Ascention; for all those his sayings and doings do more im∣mediately and directly concern the Constitution and the conser∣vation of his Church, it pleasing the blessed Redeemer and lover of Souls to give his special directions and instructions to his ho∣ly Apostles, when he was even now to be taken away from them; that so he might leave behind him in their minds the stronger impressions of his all-saving Truth, and the greater assurance and perswasions of his everlasting love. Wherefore though no one word that ever our blessed Saviour was pleased to speak either concerning his love towards us, or our duty towards him, should be let fall to the ground without our observation, because he was so much our friend: yet the words that he spake last of all should most diligently be received, most carefully retained, and most conscionally regarded, because they were the words not only of a loving but also of a parting friend: and by consequent such words as should both represent him, and comfort us during his
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absence, though never so long, and keep him in our remembrance till his coming again, when he will undoubtedly exact a severe account both of the Ministers & of the people how they have ob∣served those words. For this cause though our blessed Saviour did after the day of his Resurrection, make five more apparitions be∣fore his Ascension, as that after eight dayes when S. Thomas was now with the rest of the Apostles, Joh. 20. 26. And that to his Di∣sciples who went a fishing, Joh. 21. 4. And that to his eleven disci∣ples on the mountain in Galilee, Mat. 28. 16. And those two spoken of by S. Paul which are not at all mentioned by the E∣vangelists, the one to above five hundred brethren at once, the other to S. James alone, 1 Cor. 15. 6, 7. Yet I will omit all these, because the words he spake to his Apostles, were spoken on the ve∣ry day of his Resurrection as well as at the time of his Ascension: Only I cannot but wish that Beza had spared his Criticism upon S. Pauls words, 1 Cor. 15. 6. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Quod si vero scriptum erat 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: i. e. Quinquaginta; Non certè mirum est quingentos hic fra∣tres commemorari quum postea coacto universo coetu, numerentur duntaxat centum & viginti, Act. 1. 15. What if it were at first written by the numeral letter••, which signifies fifty, (and that fifty come after to be made five hundred) for we see that all the Disci∣ples who were in Jerusalem at S. Peters first Sermon were but 120. He is afraid of an imaginary miscief, but fals into a real inconve∣niency; the mischif was meerly imaginary, as if S. Paul to the Co∣rinthians had clashed with S. Luke in the Acts; whereas Saint Luke saith not there were then in Jerusalem, but 120. disciples, only there were but one hundred and twenty of such note, as the Apostles had called together to consult about the election of a new Apostle; accordingly he saith 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the num∣ber of the names, that is, such as were notorious and eminent in the Church, not denying but there might be many hundreds of the inferiour sort of people, (which are called by the Poet, sine Nomine turba, the common sort that are without a Name) who were at that time reckoned among the disciples, though they had not been called to the election of Saint Matthias: Thus the mischief he feared was meerly imaginary, but he fell into a real inconveniency: For this supposition, that it is possible there should have been such chopping and changing in the Text, tends
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directly to the enervating of the Authority of the Scriptures, and the fidelity and veracity of the Catholick Church; for both Greek and Latine Churches do now read 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 five hundred; and if they read not now as they found it delivered to them, they are defective in their Veracity; if it was not deliver∣ed to them; as it was at first written, their forefathers were defective in their Fidelity; for this is too great a change to come in by the mistake of a writer, though it is very improbable that the whole Church should be so careless as to suffer any such mistakes; However in this particuler Eusebius will justi∣fie our present reading of the Text against all conjectures what∣soever; for he lib. 1. Histor. Eccles. cap. 12. setteth down this very apparition of our blessed Saviour, totidem verbis, not by numeral letters, but in so many several express words as Saint Paul had before, saying, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, which is an undeniable argument that these words were so writ at large from Saint Pauls own hand.
Having given this hint only out of zeal to Gods holy word, which must sway my faith against the practice of whole Churches, much more against the phansies of private men, I pass to the words which our blessed Saviour spake immediately before he ascended; for without all question he then again repeated them, though he had spoken them several times before; Saint Luke records them as spoken on the very day of his Resurrection, Luke 24. 47. Saint John records them as spoken, also on the very same day, John 20. 19, 20, 21, 22. Saint Mathew records them as spoken after that day, sc. on the mountain in Galilee, Mat. 28. 16, 19. And Saint Mark records them as spoken both on the day of his resurrection, for so was the Apparition to which he annexeth them, and also on the day of his Ascension, for such is the manner of his annexion; So then after the Lord had spoken unto them, he was received up into heaven; For what was it that the Lord had spoken unto them, but these words concerning the discharge of their Apostolical Office or Function, Go ye therefore and teach all Nations, &c. which is yet more evidently attested by Saint Luke, Acts 1. 9. where it is said, when he had spoken these things, (that is those things which concerned their Function) whiles they beheld, he was taken up▪ For Saint Matthew's Go ye therefore and teach all Nations; And Saint M••••k's, Go ye into all
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the world: And Saint Lukes, ye are witnesses of these things: And Saint Johns, As my Father sent me, even so send I you, do all of them concern one and the same office of preaching the Gospel, and administring the Sacraments, and whatever else the Apostles were bound to do in order to the gathering, or preserving, or governing the Church of Christ. And we cannot deny but these same words, or at least words to this effect, were solemnly spo∣ken at three several times by our blessed Saviour to his Apostles, that is to say, On the day of his Resurrection, and afterwards again in Galilee, and yet a third time also after that immediately before his Ascention, to shew what a necessity was laid upon them to discharge that sacred function, when he thought it neces∣sary so often to repeat their charge, as if it had been his only bu∣siness from his Resurrection to his Ascention.
And doubtless, if we seriously consier the words themselves, we shall easily see and willingly confess, that as they did concern the constitution of the Church at that time, so they do concern the constitution of the Church at this day, and will concern both its constitution and conservation to the worlds end. I will accordingly explain them briefly, as I find them in the Evange∣lists, yet so as to make Saint Matthew the standard for the rest, having already explained the words, as they are recorded by Saint John: And thus Saint Matthew records the words, All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth; our blessed Savi∣our had all the power of heaven and earth given to him from the Father, both as he was the Son of God, and as he was the Son of man; as he was the Son of God, so this power was gi∣ven him by eternal generation; as he was the Son of man, so the same power was given him by free donation: partly at his first conception, by vertue of his union with the God-head, but more fully after his resurrection, for the merit of his death and passion: So that though he exercised this power in his life time by choosing Apostles; and instituting the Holy Sacraments, yet after he was risen again he exercised the same much more emi∣nently in a threesold respect, Quoad modum, quoad statum, quoad usum: First because he was possessed of it after a more excellent manner, as having merited it by his death: Secondly because he was possessed of it in a more excellent state, as now being past all fear and danger of dying: Thirdly because he
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was possessed of it for a more excellent end, as being how to use it, not for the conversion of one people, but of all the world, as it follows, Go ye therefore and teach all Nations: Go ye there∣fore, relying upon my authority which is founded upon all pow∣er both in heaven and in earth, whereas any authority that can forbid you to go, is founded only upon the power in earth.
And teach all Nations,) This the Apostles could not do; (no more then they could continue to the end of the world) in their own persons; Therefore our Saviour Christ speaks these words to their Successors, as well as to them; And so this Pre∣cept was given to make good that Promise, Mat. 24. 14. The Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached in all the world, for a wit∣ness unto all Nations; and then shall the end come. For the Apo∣stles themselves did not, could not, preach the Gospel in all the world, and unto all Nations: therefore they were to ordain others to preach it after them, nor may we suppose the Mini∣sters of the Gospel to have been a Temporary calling, or oppose them in their Ministry, unless we will resist the fulfilling of Cbrists promise, and do what we can to make Truth himself a lyar.
Baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost) The Apostles were commanded to baptize in this form for three reasons; 1. To distinguish Christians from Jews; for they worshipped God only in the unity of essence as their Creator; but the Christians are to worship him in the Tri∣nity of persons, as their Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier. 2. To shew that here was nothing of humane invention or power to be given or received in baptism, which was in the name of God only. 3. To shew that there was great vertue and ef∣ficacy in Baptism, even such as did concern our re-union with God, by remission of our sins, and sanctification of our souls, or why else should we be baptized in the name of God? And al∣so, that all that vertue and efficacy did wholly depend upon God alone, in whose name only we are to be baptized.
And this efficacy of Baptism is more fully expressed by Saint Mark saying, He that believeth and is Baptized, shall be saved, Mark 16. 16. where it is plain that the Apostles are re∣quired to invite men to the Christian Faith and Baptism by the promise of salvation; and consequently are forbidden to preach
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salvation upon any other terms then those of believing and of being baptized: And those men who make so slight account of Baptism, will one day find the Heathens and Infidels of Syria to rise up against them in judgement, who said to their Master Naaman, My Father, If the Prophet had bid thee do some great thing, wouldst thou not have done it? how much rather then when he saith to thee, Wash and be clean? 2 King. 5. 13. For they dare not deny but they are as unclean as Naaman was in his leprosie, unless they will deny themselves to be of the same mould and make with other men; for David hath spoken in the person of every man that is born of a woman, Behold I was shapen in ini∣quity, and in sin did my mother conceive me, Psalm 51. 5. And they cannot deny but that God (since Naamans time) hath most eminently sanctified the flood Jordan, and (in that) all other waters, by the Baptism of his well beloved Son Jesus Christ▪ to the mystical washing away of sin: And yet moreover, That not only the man of God, but also the Son of God hath said unto them, Wash and be clean; unless they will divide the pre∣cept, wash, from the promise, and be clean, since the words have been in our Saviours mouth, which the Infidels durst not do when they were only in Elisha's mouth.
For it is most certain that Baptism is necessary to salvation as commanded, (wash) and it is most probable, that it is also efficacious thereunto (and be clean) because it is commanded: For he that hath commanded it was able to make it so, nay ra∣ther hath made it so, to shew that he delighteth not in unneces∣sary or unprofitable commands: What need we then to say That Baptism is necessary only as a profession of our faith, or as an outward sign or testimony of Gods grace, whereas we may with much confidence and without any inconveniency acknow∣ledge it to be moreover an instrumental cause whereby our bles∣sed Saviour is pleased to work Grace and Salvation? For who can hinder the first cause to work by what instrument he pleas∣eth? and sure we are, the word of God doth plainly ascribe un∣to Baptism the operation of an instrumental cause in working the effect of grace, when Saint Paul calleth it The washing of Regeneration, Tit. 3. 5. which was the language he had been taught by God himself at his first conversion, saying to him by Ananias, Arise and be baptized, and wash away thy sins, Acts 22. 16.
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Wherefore we will conclude that both Faith and Baptism may be rightly called instrumental causes of our salvation, but in different respects; Faith as instrumental on our parts, whereby we prepare our selves for Christ; Baptism as instrumental on Christs part, whereby he prepareth us for himself: This being granted, which can scarce reasonably be denyed, we shall not delay our childrens Baptism because tis instrumental to salvation on Christs part, though not on their own; and yet not tie God to outward means, because we acknowledge Baptism to be instrumental to salvation only upon his own choice and appoint∣ment, and therefore he can save without it, if himself so pleaseth. Nor shall we need fear a falling away from the state of salvation any more in the baptized Infants, then in the believing men, since our blessed Saviour in saying, he that believeth and is bap∣tized shall be saved, doth suppose or rather include the same con∣dition as alike necessary to both, to wit, of leading their lives according to their good beginnings: For the promise of salva∣tion upon a mans believing and being baptized, is not absolute but conditional, that is to say, If he lead his life answerable to h••s faith, and to the grace given him in his Baptism; as if it had been said, his faith and his Baptism shall save him as far forth as is pos∣sible for instrumental causes, or as far forth as belongs to them▪ that is, they shall really and effectually conduce to his salvation, unless he himself be in the fault, and hinder their working, either by forsaking his Faith, or by polluting and prophaning his Bap∣tism; and not returning back again to God by his repentance. This interpretation must be given of our Saviours words, as ap∣pears from the foregoing part of his speech, Go and preach the Gospel; for tis most certain that he would not have his Apostles preach any other Gospel then what himself had preached, and that was, Repent ye and believe, Mar. 1. 15. Wherefore Repen∣tance must also come in as a necessary condition to salvation no less then faith and Baptism, because all men do fall away from the purity which they had through their Faith, and through their Baptism, by their daily sins; and there is no promise of salvation to any man that continueth and abideth in his sins; so that they must rise again by repentance or they can∣not be saved.
Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have command∣ed
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you] After you have made them my Disciples by Baptism, then keep them so by right doctrine, for 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, is no more then Discipulate omnes gentes baptizantes eos, make all nations my Disciples, baptizing them; so the command is to make Disciples unto Christ; and the man∣ner is explained how they are to be made, even by baptizing, not by preaching; according to that of John 4. 1. Where 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; To make more Disciples, and 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, To Baptize, are put for one and the same thing. And this may properly be the signification of 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 in this place, only to make Disciples by baptizing them, without any preaching, or else the words cannot concern all nations; for they cannot concern children, since tis in vain to la∣bour to make them Christs Disciples by preaching, but not in vain to make them so by baptizing; But if we will needs have 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 signifie to teach, then we must distin∣guish upon the Doctrine; And these two words 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 and 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 may be so distinguished, as to shew that tis not the same Doctrine which is to be zealously preached be∣fore, and after men are made Christs Disciples; as if he had said, Teach strangers and aliens the Doctrine of faith to make them my Disciples; but teach Converts and Christians, the duties of life to keep them my Disciples, and to make them good Christians: Though I must confess that Epiphanius hath found out all this only in the first word 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, which he hath thus explained, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: (Epiph. Haer. Herodiani.) That is, Bring them over from their wickedness to the truth, and from divers Sects and Heresies to one communion: which is all one with Make them my Disciples, or teach them to observe all my com∣mands: Whence we may gather this definition of Christs Disciple, he is one that observes all Christs commands, and therefore carefully embraceth the Christian truth, and as care∣fully maintaineth the Christian communion; Whence it neces∣sarily follows, that neither Hereticks nor Schismaticks are to be accounted Christs Disciples, since the one embrace not his truth, the other maintain not his communion.
And lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world.) I that have the power of life and death, do promise or rather
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give you my actual assistance and favour and grace, as if I were still actually present with you; And this presence of my power and grace shall never be taken away neither from you nor your successors as long as this world shall last; so that both you and they (for they are also necessarily included, since this promise cannot be made good without a succession in the Ministry) may cheerfully undertake and couragiously discharge your callings, notwithstanding all the contradicti∣ons and persecutions you shall meet with from disobedient and gainsaying people; For I that am above all the world, have placed your Doctrine above their contradictions, and your life above their persecutions; and the worst they shall be able to do, shall be to send you the oftner to your Master for in∣struction, or the sooner to your Master for reward: Surely the Apostles understood more in this promise then we can ex∣press, and therefore they made neither excuse nor delay, when they were bid to go, though they were sent out into the wide world, already destitute, and very speedily to be af∣flicted and tormented; Of whom the worl•• ••as not worthy, if we consider them in their persons; much less if we con∣sider them in their calling; yet were they sent into the world to be despised in their persons, and to be opposed in their cal∣ling, and sent with no other credential letters to countenance them, with no other guard to protect them, but only this, And lo I am with you alway.
This was the answer that put Moses to silence, though he had been almost refractory in objecting that he was slow of speech; Now therefore go, and I will be with thy mouth, and teach thee what thou shalt say, Exod. 4. 12. This was the an∣swer that silenced the Prophet Jeremiah, so that he replyed no more Ah Lord, I am a child and cannot speak, after God had once said unto him, Be not afraid of their faces, for I am with thee to deliver thee, Jer. 1 8. And this answer must silence all our objections in Saint Chrysostomes gloss, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: Talk not to me of the difficulties that are in the work, for I am with you who make all things easie; and if all things, then surely not only our doings, but also our suf∣ferings in his service and for his glory: He will make all easie;
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those who are called by him, shall labour with more ease then others loiter; and suffer with more pleasure then others domineer: But those only are called by him to whom he hath said, Go and teach: To those alone he hath given the command of teaching; and to those alone he hath given this promise, Lo I am with you alwayes: They that are concern∣ed in the precept, (which can concern no other but such as can justly plead a succession to the Apostles in the Ministry of the Gospel) are also concerned in the promise; And they that are concerned in this promise, may turn Preache••s with confidence, and preach with comfort; But they that are not concerned in this promise, as tis to be admired how they can have the confi∣dence to be Preachers, so tis to be affirmed, they can have no true spiritual comfort in their Preaching: Nor would the world so abound with uncommissionated Preachers (that dares not abound with uncommissionated Souldiers) were not their con∣fidence more in themselves, then in their Saviour; more in their own swords, then in his word, for the support of their preaching, which is a very sinful confidence: Nor would such Preachers be so zealously disposed to preach, did they not more rejoyce to advance their own then their Saviours glory and interest, by their Doctrine, which is a very misera∣ble comfort.
But I will conclude all with Prospers gloss upon this Text, as I find him cited by the learned Brugensis, Nolite trepidare de vestra infirmitate, sed de med potestate confidite, qui vos in hoc opere non derelinquam, non ad hoc ut nihil patiamini, sed quod multo majus est, praestiturus ut nullâ saevientium crudelitate su∣peremini. Be not afraid of your own weakness, but relie wholly on my strength; for I will never forsake you in this work: not that you shall not suffer very much from your cruel adversaries, but that notwithstanding all their cruelties I will make you more the con∣querours in your sufferings.
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IT may not be amiss to consider some of our blessed Saviours consolations and benedictions as well as instructions, which he bestowed on his Apostles before he ascended: And to this purpose we may not unfitly reduce all the words which he spake from his Resurrection till his Ascension, to these three heads, verba instructionis, verba consolationis, verba benedicti∣onis; words of instruction, words of consolation, and words of benediction: or words of grace, mercy, and peace; For like as Saint Paul said to Saint Timothy whom he called his own son in the Faith, Grace, Mercy, and Peace; so did God from the beginning speak to his Apostles, and so doth he still speak to all those whom he accepteth as his sons, (though un∣worthy to be his servants) the words of grace by instruction, the words of mercy by consolation, and the words of peace by benediction.
Saint Luke saith our Saviour was full forty dayes with his Apostles after his Resurrection, speaking of the things pertain∣ing to the Kingdom of God, Act. 1. 3. He had so fervent a desire of teaching them, (and in them us) the right way of sal∣vation, that he differred to enter into his own glory, which he had so dearly earned by his sufferings, till he had fully instruct∣ed and confirmed them in that way: He was willing to leave the impression of heaven in their hearts, before he was willing to take possession of it in his own body: Oh that we did imitate our Master in this his unspeakable charity; for though it be above our expression, yet may it in some sort come under our imitation, by truly desiring and zealously promoting one
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anothers Salvation: This would be indeed to shew, not to speak our selves Christians; This would be indeed not Verbally but Really to put on the Lord Jesus Christ: He was unwilling to leave his Apostles before he had given them all manner of Instructions both how to teach and how to govern his Church; the one, that he might keep all after-ages from he∣resie, the other that he might keep them from schism: Oh that all Christians would accordingly consider what a grievous sin it is not to hearken to Christs own Teaching, not to obey Christs own Government; And what a Severe account he will call them to, when he shall come again as Judge of quick and dead: for being hereticks against his doctrine▪ put afterwards in writing in his word, or for being Schis∣maticks against his discipline, put immediately in practice in his Church. For if he kept himself forty dayes from hea∣ven to settle his Church, how shall any that is called a Christian, think the best way thither is to unsettle it? Our blessed Savi∣our gave instructions, and not only so, least we should think any thing of Religion to be arbitrary, but he also gave commands That we should know and acknowledge all matters of Religion to be necessary. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, After he had given commandments unto the Apostles, Acts 1. 2. But where are these commands? Are they, or any of them, devolved down unto us only by unwritten Tradition? we dare not say so; for that were to make the holy Apostles so regardless of Christs in∣structions, as to care to teach them only to those men who had the happiness to live in their dayes, since verbal Tradition is as changable as the breath that derives it: whereas what is spoken of Abel, is much more to be verified of Saint Peter or Saint John, God testifying of his gifts, and by it (that is by his faith) he being dead, yet speaketh, Heb. 11. 4. Nay more, yet Preacheth; for the reading of the law of Moses is called Preaching, Acts 15. 21. For Moses of old time hath in every City them that preach him, being read in the Synagogues every Sabbath day, and if reading in the Law of Moses was Preaching, who dares deny it to be so in the Law of Christ? Therefore the books of the New Testament do certainly contain the Instructions and commands which Christ gave to his Apostles by word of mouth during those forty dayes he abode with them; And we need go no
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farther then the written word to know our Saviours mind, for it is therein taught us either by Precept or by Promise, or by Pre∣cedent; And consequently what we find not there written for our instruction in one of these three wayes, that we must not ascribe either to his dictating or to their Preaching, unless we will impute gross forgetfullness to the Registers of Christ, as not re∣membring all things necessary (when as our Saviour himself pro∣mised them such a Comforter as should bring all things to their remembrance, Joh. 14. 26. or supine negligence to the Pen-men of the Holy-Ghost, as not writing what was necessary to be re∣membred: For if the words which Job spake concerning Christ were to be engraven with an yron pen & lead, in a rock for ever, Joh. 19. 24. then much more were those words to be so engraven which Christ himself spake to his Apostles; words ingraven in a rock with an yron pen are lasting, but they are not so legible un∣less they be also drawn over or coloured with lead to make them conspicuous; So Salomon Iarchi glosseth this Text: he would have the Characters of his Letters engraven with yron to make a deep impression: but after that, he would have those same Characters coloured or died with lead 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 dare litteris aspectum nigrum ut cognoscan∣tur; That their black tincture might make them the more legible.
And without doubt, our blessed Saviour took such a course, that the main effect of his words should be so engraven as to be both lasting and legible, to the worlds end, when himself hath said, that heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away: Mat. 24. 35. and amongst the rest, sure not his last words.
Saint Luke records this for one of them, that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the father, Acts 1. 4. And this word doth our Saviour Christ still speak to eve∣ry good Christian, saying unto him, depart not from Jerusalem, though it were in truth, what some have made it reputed by their false clamours, prophane, unclean, impure Ierusalem; For you may not hope to fare better then Christ and his Apo∣stles whereever you stay, and you are sure not to fare worse then they did, though you stay in Jerusalem.
Jerusalem the City of God, had been turned into Sodom, a cage of unclean birds for its impurity; into an Aceldama, a field of blood for its cruelty; yet here is such a promise annex∣ed
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to it, as makes Christs Disciples willing to bear with the im∣purities and to bear the cruelties; For it is an Elisha promise, which signifieth, My God saveth; And no wonder then if it hath the power of reviving the Soul, as Elisha's bones did re∣vive a dead body; And when the man was let down and touched the bones of Elisha, he revived and stood upon his feet, 2 Kings 13. 21. So if the soul be let down never so low into the pit of destru∣ction, yet if it touch this Elisha, this promise of My God saveth, with a true and lively faith, it will make the man revive, and stand again upon his feet.
And those men who are so ready to depart from our Jerusalem for every petty dislike of the high Priests and Elders in it (though the dislikes be rather phansied then found,) do shew that they are not so well instructed in the faith as to know the promise of the Father, or not so well grounded in hope and rooted in cha∣rity, as to wait for that promise according to the appointment of the Son: He bids all tarry in Jerusalem that look after his pro∣mises, and therefore doth not allow any to call Jerusalem Babel, much less to make it so, that either themselves or others may have a pretence to go out of it.
But what was this particular promise of the Father to the Apo∣stles? it was the promise of sending the Holy-Ghost to enable them to be his wtnesses unto the uttermost parts of the Earth.
A promise which much concerns carnal men to look after, that they may have the spirit of God; A promise which much con∣cerns spiritual men, that they may have him more: Both must tarry in Jerusalem; in the unity of the Church; for the mercy is not without the promise, and the promise is not without Jerusalem: Depart not from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the father; till therefore the carnal man shall need no spirit who hath none at all, and till the spiri∣tual man shall need no more spirit who cannot have too much, both must pray for the peace of Jerusalem, labour for the peace of the Church, in their prayers and in their practises, neither may recede from the Apostles nor from their Successors, to whom was made the promise of the Holy-Ghost: And it is worth our notice, that though the Apostles had fourty dayes conversation with Christ, and were fully instructed in the knowledge of Chri∣stianity, yet they did not presently go and preach the Gospel;
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Nay Christ himself bad them not go till they had received Com∣mission from the Holy Ghost: So that there are two things required to constitute a true Preacher of the Gospel; Ability, and Authority; or, Mission, and Commission: He must first be en∣abled to preach, by conversing with Christ in his holy Word: Then besides his Ability, he must also have Authority or Com∣mission from the Holy Ghost, though not immediately by an extraordinary, yet mediately by an ordinary calling, or he hath not leave from Christ to preach the Gospel: For so it is said, Acts 1. 8. But ye shall receive power after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you, and ye shall be witnesses unto me: Without this coming of the Holy Ghost men may be witnesses to themselves, but they cannot be witnesses unto Christ, because he hath not enabled or not authorized them: For which cause it is, that in the Ordination of a Minister, the Bishop pronounceth those words of our Saviour, (the first Bishop that ever pronounced them) Re∣ceive ye the Holy Ghost, thereby giving him a Commission to be one of Christs witnesses unto the people: For this promise of be∣ing baptized with the holy Ghost, to be Christs witnesses, did cer∣tainly belong to the Apostles, not as members, but only as mini∣sters of Christs Church: those words he spake to them only as his Ministers, though other words he spake to them as his Members.
Receive ye the Holy Ghost] are words both of consecration and of benediction; words of consecration, as they set a man apart for Gods service; words of benediction, as they enable and authorize a man to serve him: if not as a member, yet doubtless as a minister: if not by Gratia gratum faciens, yet by Gratia gratis data (as the School distinguisheth) if not by gifts and graces that tend to his own regeneration, yet surely by gifts and graces that tend to others edification: And as it is said, The Lord blessed the seventh day and hallowed it; so we may say, The Lord blessed his Apostles and hallowed them: for his hallowing was and is a blessing: And as our Saviour Christ is said to have blessed the bread and the wine, when he con∣secrated them to be his own body and blood: So he also blessed the Apostles when he consecrated them to be his own peculiar servants, thereby shewing, That there cannot be a greater bles∣sing then to serve him. And accordingly we must look on those words whereby he consecrated his Apostles, as words of
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his Episcopal benediction, no less then of his Episcopal consecra∣tion. Wherefore the Ministers of the Gospel, rightly ordained, are no less blessed then they are hallowed in their callings, (whatever they may be, or may be thought in their persons) and may comfortably make this answer to their Revilers and Persecutors, Though they curse, yet bless thou, and let thy servants rejoyce, Psal. 109. 27. or rather, Thou hast blessed, and there∣fore we must, and will rejoice though they curse us: For he that loved the wages of unrigh••••ousness, could not with-hold from the world this word of truth and righteousness, He hath blessed, and I cannot reverse it, Numb. 23. 20. so that unconscionable men by reviling their Ministers whom God hath blessed, do in effect revile, though they cannot reverse, Gods undoubted blessing and though by so doing they may hinder themselves, yet surely they cannot hinder their Ministers from being the bles∣sed of the Lord: For Saul in the midst of his Apostacie and falling from God, when he was even now ready to butcher Abimelech and all the Priests, yet gave his Testimony to this Truth, saying unto Samuel, Blessed art thou of the Lord: for so it is in the He∣brew, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Benedictus 〈…〉〈…〉 Domino, Blsseed art thou of or to the Lord; or as Targum ••enders it, Blessed art thou before the Lord; Though they be as a cursed thing in the eyes of men, yet they are Blessed before the Lord: Let the world vilifie them as it pleaseth, yet doubtless God hath magnified them, in that he hath blessed them, and commanded them to bless in his name: And bless they must, though they be more and more cursed of those whom they bless; for being Gods Ministers, they must speak no other but Gods word, and his words are the words of blessing. The words of God in themselves are the words of Majesty and Ve∣rity; calling for our fear and reverence, because words of Ma∣jesty; for our attention and diligence, because words of Verity: and consequently calling for some of our reverence and atten∣tion to those who are entrusted with them, and licensed to say, Harken to the word of God: The Prophet Isaiah said, Hear O Heavens, and give ear O earth, for the Lord hath spoken, Isa. 1. 2. Where we find an undenyable connexion in the position, Gods speaking and our hearing; but a more undenyable confutation in the supposition, if he should speak and we not hear: For
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his words are words of Majesty, able to bow down the highest heavens; and words of Verity, able to quicken the dullest earth: Such are the words of God in themselves; but to us (blessed be his condescention and goodness) they are the words of Grace, Mercy and Peace: The words of Grace by instru∣cting, of Mercy by promising, of Peace by blessing: And this word of blessing is so much his delight, that he chose it for his very last word here on earth; and whiles he was speaking this word, he was parted from them, and carried up to heaven, Luke 24. 51. The word of blessing is certainly the word of Peace, There being no Peace in any condition or kind of life but meerly from Gods blessing: Therefore in every thing we go about, we should first look after Gods blessing, then after our own peace and contentment; for he doth justly punish us with the loss both of his blessing and our own peace, when we look for the peace either before or without his blessing, expecting con∣tentment and satisfaction in such a thing as he will not, or in such a way as he cannot bless.
Whiles he blessed them, he was parted from them, and carried up into heaven: The last word in his mouth was blessing, and must be the last in ours if we hope to part from earth as he did, and be carried up into heaven: Therefore let every word that comes from us be blessing, for fear it should be our last word: He that went up to heaven with blessing, will not take us up thither without it: Saint Peter could not forget that Christ parted from him and the rest of the Apostles, blessing them; and takes what care he can, that cursing and railing should not make one man, and much less one Church, part from another, and both part from the eternal Son of God▪ Love as Brethren, (saith he to those of the despersion, that is, to several Nations, much more to those of the same Church and Nation) be pittiful, be courteous, not rendering evil for evil, or railing for railing, but contrariwise blessing, knowing that ye are thereunto called that ye should inherit a blessing, 1 Pet. 3. 8. 9. Where we see that rail∣ing is opposed to blessing; which opposition must teach us that not only blasphemies against God, but also revilings and re∣proaches against men (especially those who have a peculiar stamp of God upon them, as our Teachers and our Governors) are in the guilt, and consequently under the condemnation of
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cursings: And though this sin be now the common road of men upon earth, who blazen their own righteousness chiefly by others pretended sins, yet it can never be the right way to hea∣ven: And we must forsake it, as we will stick to our calling, and to our inheritance; knowing that we are thereunto called, that we should inherit a blessing: So that if we part not with this sin of rayling, it will either part us from our calling, or part both us and our calling from our inheritance: it will either make us to be no Christians, or such Christians as not to inherit a blessing: But what was this blessing, which our Saviour at parting be∣stowed upon his Apostles? (for we have yet only spoken of that which was on the very day of his Resurrection, Joh. 20. 19.) May we not give a fair guess at it from that curse or male∣diction, since commonly used by his pretended Vicar General, Indignationem omnipotentis Dei & Apostolorum ejus, Petri & Pauli sentiat in aeternum? May we not here put Indulgentiam for Indignationem, and avow that it came from our Saviours own mouth by unwritten Tradition? If ever Tradition will help out the Text, let it be now, that we may not lose our Savi∣ours last word and his best word both together: But Tradition cannot help us; and sure we are from the Text, That our Savi∣our never taught his Apostles to join themselves in Commission with his Father, (creatures with their Creator) either to bless or curse, although not only they, but also their Successors can rightly do both in his name, and by his power. We have here only a probable conjecture, That the benediction which Christ gave to his Apostles, was the same in effect which the Apostles afterwards gave unto the Church in his name, as having recei∣ved it from his own mouth; Grace unto you and peace be multi∣plyed, saith Saint Peter: Grace be with you, mercy and peace, saith Saint John: It seems grace and mercy were reserved till Christs ascention; for we find only Peace be unto you, after his Resurrection; and Saint John hints a reason of it; for the Holy Ghost was not yet given, because Jesus was not yet glorified, John 7. 39. upon which ground we may not unreasonably build this Position, That Grace and mercy were reserved for Benedictions after his Ascention, or till the giving of the Holy Ghost.
But seeing we cannot tell certainly the exact word of Bene∣diction
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which Christ left to his Apostles when he parted from them: we shall do well to lay hold on that which we are sure came from his own mouth whiles he was yet with them, even that recorded, Luke 11. 28. Blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it; that is, keep it in their memories, and in their consciences, and in their conversations: Keep it in their memories, that it may sink into their consciences; and keep it in their consciences that it may break forth into their lives and conversations: Let us be sure to lay hold on this, and we shall be sure not to want his last blessing, though per∣chance we may not know it till we come to enjoy both it and him.
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CAP. II. Christ considered, whiles he was Ascending.
THE considerations that are most remark∣able in our blessed Saviours Ascension, are best discovered from the words that are used to express it. In the Apostles Creed, the word for He Ascended, is, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He went up; borrowed from Saint Paul, Ephes. 4. 8. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, when he ascended up on high: But the word used by Saint Luke is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He was carried up, Luke 24. 51. He was carried up into heaven; But Saint Mark yet useth a third word, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He was received up; Mark 16. 19. He was received up into heaven.
This twofold expression, he went up, and, He was carried or received up, shews our Saviours twofold title or claim to hea∣ven, if we consider Christ in his two several natures: For as God, he claimed heaven for his Inheritance, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He went up as unto his own: As man he claimed it as his reward, and so 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He was carried up, or 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He was received up as unto that which he had so fully merited and deserved.
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Again the same twofold expression shews a twofold miracle, if we consider Christ in the unity of his person; as those two na∣tures of God and man made but one Christ▪ the first miracle, was the conquest over earth in his body, which was taught to ascend upwards, contrary to the nature of Earth; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 He went up in that body: The second miracle was the conquest over heaven in his soul; which for his singular piety was taught in some sort to descend downwards, contrary to the nature of heaven, in that the light clouds were made to come down, that they might minister to his Ascension; So that these must be our considerations of our blessed Saviour from the act and manner of his Ascending, his twofold Title in claiming heaven, and his twofold miracle in possessing it; his first title to heaven was as the Son of God; for so he claimed heaven by inheritance, and the word used in the Apostles Creed intimates that claim or title, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 he went up, sc. to take possession of his own: he went by his own power to enter upon his own right, claiming heaven as his natural inheritance, because he was the Son of God: And this right of his, Saint Paul exactly describes, Heb. 1. 2, 3. Where he saith, God hath appointed his son heir of all things, by whom also he made the world, who being the brightness of his glo∣ry and the express image of his person, and upholding all things by the word of his power, when he had by himself purged our sins, sate down on the right hand of the Majesty on high: In which words the Apostle teacheth us to say to the son of God, what the Son taught us to say unto the Father, For thine is the Kingdom, the power and the glory: For he fully setteth forth unto us the Kingdom of Christ, both as Redeemer and as Crea∣tor; As Redeemer, when he saith, God appointed him heir of all things, in which respect Christ himself saith, All things are delivered unto me of my father, Mat. 11. 27. and all power is given unto me, Mat. 28. 18. and, the Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into his hand, John 3. 35. And he setteth forth unto us the Kingdom of Christ as Creator, when he saith, By whom also he made the worlds; for in that respect our Saviour had all power in heaven and in earth without its be∣ing given or delivered unto him, as he was the eternal Son▪ of God, coequal with his Father: Which his coequality the Apostle expresseth from three particulars: First, in that he
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was the brightness of his glory: that is, the natural brightness of his glory by necessary generation, not by voluntary com∣munication, even as the Sun naturally begets brightness, and not voluntarily upon choice or deliberation. Secondly, In that he was the express Image or character of his person, not on∣ly representing his essential glory as God, (of which represen∣tation it is said, No man hath seen God at any time; the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father, he hath de∣clared him, John 1. 18.) but also representing his personal glo∣ry as father, because the person of the Father is wholly and ful∣ly expressed in the person of the Son, as in a lively Image, or Character thereof, in which respect Christ himself saith, If ye had known me ye should have known my Father also; and from hence∣forth ye know him and have seen him, John 14. 7. and again, he that hath seen me hath seen the Father, ver. 9. Thirdly, In that he upheld all things by the word of his pow∣er, to wit, by the same word by which he had made them, ver. 2. All this being said, tis no wonder if it follow immedi∣ately after, that he sate down on the right hand of the Maje∣sty on high, as taking that place in the nature of man, which was his proper right as the Son of God. But what comfort is this to us who are born the Sons of wrath, and so have title only to the place of wrath and vengeance as to our inhe∣ritance?
Tis true, we have no title from our selves save only to hell, such a title as we care not to claim, though we labour to make good: But we have also a title of inheritance to heaven, from our blessed Saviour, as saith the Apostle, And if chil∣dren, then heirs, heirs of God, and joynt heirs with Christ, Rom. 8. 17. For the Son by adoption is admitted to the inheritance as if he were a Son by nature: And we being adopted in Christ, cannot be denyed to have a title to his Inheritance: But we were best take heed that we abuse not this title, or at least mistake it not, as some, do who cry Abba Father, and are no sons, or who are so the Sons of God as not led by the Spirit of God; or so led by the Spirit of God, as not doing the works of the Spirit but of the flesh, being guilty of hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, envy∣ings, murders, (such horrid murders as have out-faced heaven,
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and amazed the earth,) and will not believe the Apostle, though, he tell it before and after, though he say it and say it again that they which do such things, shall not inherit the Kingdom of God, Gal. 5. 21. Let the man after Gods own heart both ask and answer this question for us, Psalm 24. ver. 3, 4. Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord, or who shall rise up in his ho∣ly place? Even he that hath clean hands, (not defiled with blood) and a pure heart, (not corrupted with Faction or Se∣dition) and that hath not lift up his mind to vanity (by taking fancie for faith, or vain imaginations for holy inspirations) nor sworn to deceive his neighbour (convenanting for spoil and rob∣bery, to be not only impiously, but also blasphemously guilty of theft) He shall receive the blessing from the Lord, and righ∣teousness from the God of his salvation: For such a man as hath clean hands and a pure heart, is led by the Spirit of God, and with his pure heart thinks the thoughts, with his clean hands doth the works of the Spirit; This man is heir to an inheri∣tance in heaven, because he is the Son of God; and he is the Son of God, because he is led not by his own private Spi∣rit, but by the Spirit of God; for as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the Sons of God, Rom. 8. 14. He that saith, as many, doth in effect say, no more; they are, and none but they are the Sons of God, who are led by the Spirit of God: He that lifts up his mind to vanity, cannot lift up his mind to heaven; he that hath sworn to deceive his neighbour, is sure to deceive himself; he that hath no share in the righ∣teousness, may not look to have a share in the blessing: And therefore Aben Ezra's gloss is not to be rejected, who observes the same word used in the reward and in the work; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 He shall receive the blessing, be∣cause he did not lift up his soul to receive the vanity; The Lord shall lift him up by true sanctification, because he did not lift up himself by pride and presumption: For no man more tru∣ly lifts up his soul to vanity, nor more truly labours in vain, then he that thinks to go to heaven only by the strength of his own perswasion, since it is not possible for him to receive the bles∣sing, who cares not to receive the righteousness. For these two are joyned together, he shall receive the blessing from the Lord, and righteousness from the God of his salvation; not the
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blessing of salvation without the righteousness thereof: For it must be a real not an imaginary ascension, whereby we get up to heaven; the soul that will be there must be lifted up by devotion, not by opinion: For the Righteousness of salvation is not opinionative, but affective, and active▪ not in conceit, but in practice: Take heed of a mock-Ascension into heaven, which will make that be truly spoken of thee, which those mistaken novices did falsly put upon Eliah, Lest peradventure the Spirit of the Lord hath taken him up, and cast him upon some mountain, or into some valley; (2 King. 2. 16.) It was their fond fear concerning Eliah; it ought to be the just fear concerning thy self: For if thou lay hold of the Spirit of adoption only to cry Abba Father, but not to become a duti∣ful Son; or to confine thy dutifulness to observe only those of thy Fathers commands that suit with thine own humour and advantage, (which is the lame and limping godliness of this hypocritical age, wherein men cry up their duty towards God, meerly to beat down their duty towards their neigh∣bour) If thou thus lay hold of the spirit of adoption, others may justly fear concerning thee, and thou oughtest to fear concern∣ing thy self, Lest peradventure the spirit of the Lord (for so thou thinkest it) take thee up and cast thee down again upon some mountain, or into some valley: For indeed the Spirit of the Lord being thus mistaken, or thus misapplied, doth so take men up as to cast them down again; first upon the mountain of presumption, then into the valley of despair: Secondly, our Saviour claimed heaven by the right of his desert, even as his just recompence and reward: And that claim or title of his is intimated in the words 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 and 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, he was carri∣ed or received up into heaven, as having before merited to be carried or received up thither; so saith Saint Paul, he humbled himself and became obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross▪ Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, Phil. 2. 8, 9. Our blessed Saviour was obedient in doing, before he was obe∣dient in suffering: He first had a most perfect active; and then a most perfect passive obedience: He was first obedi∣ent: He was first obedient unto the life, and after that obe∣dient unto the death; He was zealous in doing the work of God, and that made him patient in suffering the will of God;
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yet here is no mention made of his active, but only of his passive obedience; and no mention made of his obedience without re∣spect to his humility: How then shall any Christian forego his humility to stand upon the merit of his obedience, when our Sa∣viour Christ himself, (whose obedience alone is or can be merito∣rious with God,) was exalted no less from being humble, then for being obedient? Surely to teach us, how we may soonest have comfort from this his title to heaven; nay after some sort be sharers in it, claiming heaven as a reward, but of our Saviours, not of our own righteousness; or rather as a reward of his righteousness, but made ours.
So Saint Bernard most Divinely comforted himself against all the accusations of Satan at Gods Judgement seat; Fateor non sum dignus ego, nec propriis possum meritis regnum obtinere coe∣lorum; Caeterùm duplici jure illud obtinens Dominus meus, hae∣redita te Sc. Patris, & merito passionis, altero ipse contentus al∣terum mihi donat, ex cujus dono, jure illud mihi vendicans non confundor: I confess that 〈…〉〈…〉 ••t worthy, nor can I hope to ob∣tain heaven by mine own merits; But my Lord having obtain∣ed the same by a double right, the one by the inheritance ef his Fa∣ther, the other by the merit of his passion, being himself conten∣ted only with one of them, hath given the other unto me, by whose gift I do now claim it as my right, and am not to be confound∣ed in my claim: Which we might very well take for a great miracle wrought upon us men, by our Saviours ascending in our flesh, and so entitling that flesh to heaven, were it not for those other miracles, which neerly concern our Saviour Christ in his own person: For we have a twofold miracle intimated in these same words, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 he went up, though in his body of flesh; there's one miracle, his conquest over earth in his humane body: For earth was now taught to ascend upwards contrary to its own nature, which of it self so descends downwards as to press to the Center, nay actually to pos∣sess it.
Earth in it self moves furthest from heaven, but in the body of Christ, earth moved towards heaven, nay earth went up into heaven: And the reason is given by Saint Paul, Phil. 3. 21. Who shall change our vile body, that it may be like his glorious body. The body of Christ after his resurrection, was
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more peculiarly 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, a glorious body; Saint Paul gives us this distinction of 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, A vile body, and a glorious body: Our body is a vile body, dejected and debased by the sinfulness, the grossness, the weakness, the sluggishness of the flesh; our Saviours body was never thus a vile body in the state of his humiliation, be∣cause he knew no sin, yet was it subject to all infirmities, or he could not have dyed for sinners; And therefore we may truly say that his body in the state of his exaltation was made a glo∣rious body, and invested with four conditions or qualities, quite contrary to these of our bodies, called by the School, impassibilitas, claritas, subtilitas, agilitas, and by Saint Paul 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, 1 Cor. 15. 42, 43. to whom we are primarily beholding for this part of School Divinity, which unfoldeth the conditions of a glorified body: And the same Apostle comforteth us, that after the Resurrection, our vile body shall be fashioned like unto his glorious body, and consequent∣ly be made, first impassible and incorrupt, without sinfulness; for where is no sin, there is no corruption, there can be no suffer∣ing: Secondly, Clear and transparent, without grossness, so that we should then see the thoughts of one anothers hearts, look∣ing through one anothers breasts, were there no other obsta∣cle to hinder us, but only the grosness of the flesh, according to that position of the Angelical Doctor, Cogitatio unius homi∣nis non cognoscitur ab ••alio propter duplex impedimentum, sc. propter grossitiem corporis & propter voluntatem claudentem sua secreta; primum obstaculum tolletur in resurrectione, nec est in angelis; sed secundum impedimentum remanebit post resurrectio∣nem, & est modò in angelis: (1. p. qu. 57. art. 4. ad 1.) There are now two impediments of knowing mans thoughts, one from his body, another from his will; The first shall be quite taken away in the resurrection, and then men shall be like Angels, have no∣thing to keep their thoughts secret, but only their own wills of not revealing them: Thirdly, Our bodies after the Resur∣rection shall be nimble, active, and powerful, without any weak∣ness. For as the soul will move wholly with God, so the body will move wholly with the soul; and as there will be no impotency in the soul to hinder it from following God, so there will be no impotency in the body to keep it from follow∣ing
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the motions of the soul. Fourthly and lastly, they shall also be spiritual and subtle without any sluggishness. Now I have almost a carnal soul, but then I shall have a spiritual bo∣dy: Now I have a gross spirit, but then I shall have a subtle and active flesh; why should I not long for that minute which will take away my weakness and sluggishness and cloath me with power and activity in immortal glory? So we see that this first miracle, the conquest over earth in our Saviours natural body, shall in due time be accomplished also in his my∣stical body; For we men shall be partakers of it, after the last Re∣surrection from the death of the body; nay we are already in some sort partakers of it, after the first Resurrection from the death of sin. For as many as are truly regenerated, have al∣ready even in their flesh, (in some weak degree,) this incor∣ruption, this glory, this activity, this spirituality; They are not subject to so much corruption as formerly in their con∣versation, for that is reformed; nor to so much grosness of heart, for that is refined, and moves towards heaven; nor to so much weakness, for they are able; nor to so much dulness and sluggishness, for they are willing, through the grace of God to run the way of his commandments.
A blessed miracle this to be considered, but much more to be enjoyed, the first miracle in our Saviours Ascention, the conquest over earth in his body; And yet we have Another miracle, The conquest over heaven in his soul, in the words 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, he was carried up; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 he was received up; Heaven it self as it were stooping down to carry and to receive him up: Christ had conquered heaven in his humiliation, by the fervency of his prayer making an Angel Minister unto him, Luk. 22. 43. So that tis no wonder if he conquered heaven in his exaltation, making a bright cloud to minister unto him; For though his glori∣fied body needed no fiery charet as Eliahs did, because he ascend∣ed by his own power into heaven, yet he was received by a cloud out of his Apostles sight, to shew that even heaven it self was rea∣dy to minister to his Ascention; This ministerial assistance of the creature, not derogating from the power, but proclaiming the goodness of the creator, according to that determination of the school, Non propter defectum suae virtutis, sed propter abundanti∣am suae bonitatis, ut dignitatem causalitatis etiam creaturis com∣municet,
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God makes use of his creatures in many things, not for the defect of his power, but for the abundance of his goodness, that he may communicate to them the honour of doing good one unto another, whiles he himself is the only true Efficient cause of doing good to all. But here the honour was so much the great∣er, by how much the need was the less; for though the creatures may one need another, yet the Creator himself hath need of none; and our Saviour in making use of this cloud did only shew unto us that he could have commanded heaven it self, if he had so pleased, to receive him up, as well as to receive him in: Thus did the kingdom of heaven first suffer violence, from Christ him∣self; and now, from every good Christian, Mat. 11. 12. The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, & the violent take it by force; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Clemens Alexandrinus, not by contentious wranglings and disputes, but by the constancy of an up∣right life, and by uncessant prayers do we get the conquest over hea∣ven: many men do now mistake this violence, whiles they seek to invade the kingdom of Grace, using the sword of the flesh not of the Spirit, to set up religion, forcing other mens faith and consciences, but neglecting their own; whereas the violence should indeed be offered to the kingdom of glory; every man should now invade that by the strength of his Faith, since Christ hath opened it to all believers: For nothing is, or can be a good Christians treasure, but only Christ, not to be kept from him by the most watchfull Sentinel, not to be taken from him by the most merciless plunderer, or the most deceitfull seque∣strator; and therefoe where his only treasure is, there will his heart be also, even at the right hand of God: This makes him alwayes pressing into the wounds of Christ who sitteth there; for in his wounds there is a place to hide his soul from Venge∣ance, and there is blood to wash his soul from sin: This is indeed the violence of faith; but this violence is more safe in affection then in perswasion; for our affection may without doubt carry us up to heaven, (after our blessed Saviour,) but our perswasion cannot. Therefore a faith which is strong in per∣swasion and not in affection, is but as a dream which soon va∣nisheth; and the image of Christ which is imprinted in us by such a faith, cannot but vanish with it: So dangerous a thing
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is it to put asunder those two which God hath joined together in A true and lively faith, Perswasion and affection: Israel himself could not so prevail with God, though he had his name of Israel from prevailing with God. Tis true, he said I will not let thee go except thou bless me, there's the strength of his faith in its perswa∣sion: But tis as true that he wept and made Supplications (Hosea 12. 4.) there's the strength of his faith in its affection: Twas both together made him Israel, and not the one without the other: Thus is the true strength of faith set down by the Pro∣phet David, Psal. 73. 24. It is good for me to hold me fast by God, to put my trust in the Lord God, there's the strength of perswasion; And to speak of all thy works in the gates of the daughter of Sion, theres the strength of affection; first in the exercise of devotion, to speak. Secondly in the extent of it, of all thy works. Thirdly in the profession of it, in the gates. Fourthly in the integrity or purity of it, in the gates of the daughter of Sion: What pitty is it that we who out-pass others in the purity of our devotions, should come far short of them in the profession, extension and exercise of the same? That we who are in the daughter of Sion, should come short of those who we say, are under the Whore of Babylon? For this second miracle in Christs ascension, The conquest over heaven in his Soul, must needs make us conclude concerning our selves, that we cannot possess heaven, till we have first conquered it: Man in his composition is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 a little world, but in his affection he is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 a great world.
A conqueror over heaven and earth: over neither by him∣self, but over both by his Saviour; In all these things we are more then conquerours through him that loved us, Rom. 8. 37. and we may see who it was that loved us, from ver. 35. who shall se∣perate us from the love of Christ? It was he that loved us, it is by him that we are more then Conquerours: Let me fight the good fight of faith, that I may have my Saviours love, and though all the Nimrods and mischiefs of this wicked world prevail against me, yet none of them shall conquer me.
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LOgicians do tell us, that it is the property of verbs to be ad∣significant, as saith the great scholler of nature and greater master of Art, Aristotle in his book 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. cap. 3. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Verbum est quod adsignificat tempus; It is the pro∣perty of a verb not only to express the thing it self, which is to be significant, but also to declare the chief circumstances of time and place and person, which is to be adsignificant: And for this rea∣son it will not be improper to consider in these three verbs, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He went, he was carried, he was re∣ceived up; not only the substance or act of our Saviours Ascen∣tion, but also the chief circumstances of it, to wit, the time in which, the place from which, and the persons before whom he was pleased to ascend into heaven; As for the time in which, it was exactly the fourtieth day after his resurrection; being seen of them fourty dayes saith the Text, Acts 1. 3. which doubtless is not set down superfluously, and therefore ought to be observed carefully, I may justly add, conscientiously. For though duties and not dayes, yet duties upon their own dayes, call for a most religious observation: God himself having said in express terms to the Jews, and consequently by the rule of general equity to the Christians, since the reason of his saying is rather moral then typical, The man that is clean, and is not in a journey and forbeareth to keep the Passeover, even the same soul shall be cut off from his people, because he brought not the offering of the Lord in his appoint∣ed season; that man shall bear his sins: Num. 9. 13. Whence we may safely conclude not as Jews but as Christians, that tis not safe but sinfull meerly out of peevishness or willfullness to neg∣lect the appointed seasons of serving God; for such a grievous
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punishment as being cut off from Gods people, would not be threatned but for a grieveous sin, such as begins in the contempt of God, and ends in the scandal of men: Therefore duties are to be most strictly observed upon their own dayes: Thus the resur∣rection is most solemnly to be celebrated on its own day, the first day of the week: and the Ascention on its own day, the fift day of the week; for the fourtieth day after a Sunday, can be no other then thirsday: So that either the fourtieth day after the resurrection of Christ is lawfully consecrated to celebrate his ascention (and by consequent is the day appointed for that duty) or this particular circumstance was unnecessarily set down in the text, and as unlawfully observed by the Apostles, who turning from the mount Olivet came into Jerusalem, and went up into their upper room, (when they durst not assemble toge∣ther in the Temple) and prayed there immediately upon their return, even on the very same day of Christs Ascension, and did not think fit to put off their solemn meeting till the next Sab∣bath, or till the next Lords day after it.
Wherefore it is reasonably concluded by Judicious men, that Apostolical practice is to us Christians, what Mosaical precept was to the Jews, concerning the observation of dayes, places and persons for religious assemblies; and therefore our Lords day is as indispensable as was their Sabbath; our Churches as invio∣lable as their Temple and Synagogues, our orders of Ministers as unchangeable as their orders of Priests: for Apostolical Practice, in these circumstances, or adjuncts of Religion, doth oblige us Christians to conformity, as Mosaical precept, did the Jewes to obedience: (I say Comformity, because time, place & person were all essential parts of their ceremonial (and typical) but cannot be so of our moral worship; and therefore obedience was necessary for them, but comformity is enough for us) So that a willfull neglect, and much more a scornfull contempt of any rite observed by the Apostles, cannot but be impious in it self, dangerous to us, and scandalous to our brethren; And as this is judiciously concluded by some learned men, so it must be couragiously resolved by all good men, not to fear superstition in that which the Apostles pra∣ctised, when their practice is declared in the text, since all circum∣stances & adjuncts of Religion are derived to us Christians, rather by practice then by precept, as not being of the Substance of our
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Religion; And indeed they could not well be derived otherwise, because types and ceremonies were utterly to be abolished to the Jews: and therefore ceremonies, though without types, could not but with offence to the Jews, be particularly prescribed to the Christians, & consequently were to be left unto them only in example and practice, as matter of decency and order, which are capable of dispensation: not set down in the text by way of com∣mand or imposition, as matter of Substance, which hath alwayes a rigour of Justice, and should alwayes have a readiness of obe∣dience, both alike indispensable: Nay yet more, Apostolical practice recorded in the Text, was therefore imbraced by the Catholike Church, as if it had been Precept, for the time, and place, and persons of Religious worship, because that Practice in all these respects was founded upon the precepts of the old Testament, not as they were typical and figurative, but as they were solemn and positive, and did no less concern the Christian in the publike exercise of his moral, then they did concern the Jew in the publike exercise of his ceremonial Worship.
For publike worship requires the same publike adjuncts of time, place, and person no less in the Christians, then it did in the Jews Religion; And therefore we cannot deny but all those pre∣cepts in the old Testament that were given about those publike adjuncts, do still remain in force as to that intent of the publike ex∣ercise of Religion, unless we will deny that Christians are obliged to the exercise of Gods publike worship; we must then still have our set dayes, (as Sabbaths:) our set places, (as Churches:) our set Persons, (as Ministers,) for the solemn publike worship of God: And consequently they who go about to abolish any of these adjuncts, or circumstances of publike worship, do in ef∣fect go about to expunge the fourth commandment out of the Decalogue, which was written with Gods own finger as well as the rest, & commandeth the solemn benediction, & consecration, and conservation of all those adjuncts of time, place & person, as conducing to the Publike service of God, and exercise of Religi∣on: And as for times and persons, they have been since in many respects determined by Apostolical Practice, and particularly the Day of our Saviours Ascension seems to have been An∣nually observed by them, as the day of his Resurrection was
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observed weekly, since we find that Festival universally re∣ceived by the Catholike Church, and the Fathers made ma∣ny admirable Sermons or Homilies upon it long before su∣perstition had infected, or Popery had invaded the Church of Christ; in so much as Saint Augustine tells us plainly, that the feast of the Ascension was observed in the Catholike Church, even from the Apostles times.
Sure we are, those primitive Christians well understood that God did not intend to confine, but to enlarge his own worship by the fourth Commandment; to wit, to make that exercise of Religion solemn and publike in the fourth, which was private in the other three Commandments; not to make that to be on∣ly on one day, which was before commanded to be all the week. For he that saith Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, supposeth, that as no day thou canst be without thy heart, so no day thy heart may be without his love; And therefore when we have a publike day set apart to make this our love publikely known, if we do wilfully neglect the same, we are grievous transgressors and downright plain Sabbath∣breakers, though not on the Sabbath day; and consequently twice sinners in one contempt or profanation, for omitting the substance of the duty, and for contemning the circumstance of the day.
Another circumstance in our blessed Saviours Ascension, is, the place from which he was received up, and that was not Hi∣erusalem, but Bethany: For although the Apostles had been with him in Galilee many dayes, (where he conversed with them after the first day of his Resurrection,) yet now they were again returned back to Hierusalem, waiting there for the promise of the Father, as they had been commanded, Act. 1. 4. And he led them out from thence as far as Bethany (Luk▪ 24. 50.) before he was pleased to ascend into heaven, part∣ly because he would not have the people see, but rather be∣lieve the Mysterie of his Ascension; and partly because he would not expose his Apostles to the outrages of those, who though they had seen it, yet were resolved not to believe, but to per∣secute the true believers: And yet in that he led his Apostles out to Bethany, he shewed them what was the right use they were to make of this worlds afflictions or persecutions, even
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to have their conversation with him in heaven: For Bethany is by interpretation the house of sorrow or affliction; and our blessed Saviour Ascending to heaven from thence, hath shewed us that then do we make a right use of of our affli∣ctions on earth, when they do make our souls ascend up to hea∣ven: This is to turn Bethany into Bethel, the house of sorrow in∣to the house of God.
But the place from which our blessed Saviour ascended into heaven, is called Mount Olivet, Act. 1. 12. And indeed these two were but one and the same place; for Bethany stood upon Mount Olivet: Christ ascended from a Mount, and from this Mount Olivet: He ascended from a Mount, to shew it was not an easie step from earth to heaven; there must be three ladders joyned together to accomplish this ascent, scala mentis, scala vo∣luntatis, scala vitae; one ladder of the mind by contemplation; another ladder of the will by affection; a third ladder of the life by action: All three have several rongs or degrees, as Jacobs ladder had, and God is only at the top: Again, he ascended from this Mount Olivet, where he begun his passion by sweating blood, (Luk. 22.) to shew us the necessity of passive obedience if we desire to go to heaven; Moses his Mount Sinai which teacheth the rule of active obedience, will not serve the turn; we must also go up to Christs Mount Oli∣vet, and there learn his passive obedience, that by suffering with him, we may also reign with him; for he humbled him∣self, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross, and therefore God highly exalted him, Phil. 2. Can you drink of his cup, without fear it may overcome your weak Stomack, since the fear of it made him offer up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears, (Heb. 5. 7.) If you can, then may you find some pretence, though little cause, to take that for granted to you, which the sons of Zebedee only requested for themselves, to sit with him in his Kingdom; But if your frailty and humility bid you fear you may stick at the dregs in drinking of his cup; much more should your frailty, and mo∣desty bid you blush, that you are so exceeding unworthy of comming to his Kingdom, and of sitting in it together with him; that so you may not turn your own Churchwarden to appoint your own place in heaven, but may wholly relie upon
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him for your place, upon whom you must relie for your wor∣thiness.
THE persons before whom, or in whose presence our blessed Saviour was received up into heaven, will af∣ford us several considerations; for they were of two different kinds; Angels, and men; The one were Citizens of heaven in their Pilgrimage to earth; the other were inhabitants of earth in their Pilgrimage to heaven: He was taken up be∣fore some Angels that were newly come down from heaven; and before some men, that were in their journey thither; none is accounted by him a fit witness of his ascension into heaven, but such a one as is already there, either by the excellency of his condition, or by the purity of his affection; either an An∣gel, or an Apostle: The Angels are mentioned, Act. 1. 10. Behold two men stood by them in white apparel; that is, Two Angels in the shape and appearance of men: They had been witnesses of his humiliation to their astonishment, and were now of his exaltation to their joy; He is going up, and they are coming down; He seems to carry away Heaven from his Apostles, they seem to bring it back again: God never leaves his servants destitute of all comfort; If not Christ, yet an Angel is still with them, till at last comes the Comforter himself: Nor did our blessed Saviour account a bare promise of the Comforter to be enough, but here he also gives a pledge of that promise: Those Ministring spirits being as it were so many harbingers sent before hand to be speak and provide lodg∣ing
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for God the Holy-Ghost against his comming, and so ma∣ny sureties or pledges, that he would now very shortly come. Yet our blessed Saviour appointed not Angels for witnesses of his ascension to the world, lest the Divels (which can trans∣form themselves into Angels of light) might also have been witnesses of the same without his appointment, not to the confirmation, but the utter depravation and subversion of the true Christian Faith; Therefore hath God flatly bound us up to be guided and governed only by those things which his Apo∣stles have preached unto us, that our faith should be wholly grounded and fixed upon certainties, so that though an Angel from heaven should preach any other Gospel, we should not hear him but curse him, Gal. 1. 8. But Aquinas (in 3. 64, 7.) upon this question, Ʋtrum Angeli possint Sacramenta Ministrare, whether Angels may administer the Sacraments, concludes they may not, upon such demonstrative reasons, which will also prove that they may not preach the Gospel; one of his reasons is this, Tota virtus Sacramentorum à passione Christi derivatur, cui in naturâ conformantur homines, non autem Angeli; & ideo ad homines pertinet dispensare Sacramenta, non autem ad An∣gelos; All the vertue of the Sacraments, is derived from the pas∣sion of Christ, who took not on him the nature of Angels, but of man, and therefore it belongs to men, not to Angels, to be the Mi∣nisters of the Sacraments: We may say the same concerning the word, (for the Word and Sacraments were both ordained by the same Author, and for the same end, and are both under the same trust,) That Christ became man to the intent that he might him∣self preach the Gospel, and therefore would nor make use of any but of men to preach it after him: That like as the Son of God had priviledged the nature of man, not of Angels, by taking it in∣to the Unity of his person; so he might priviledge the persons of men, not of Angels, by taking them into the society of his office.
The other of his reasons is indeed above all reason, because it is founded upon Gods Authority, and therefore serves him for an Argument to be opposed against all the contrary obje∣ctions; Sed contra est, quod dicitur, Heb. 5. Omnis pontifex ex hominibus assumptus, pro hominibus constituitur in his que sunt ad Deum; sed Angeli (boni vel mali) non sunt ex homini∣bus; ergo ipsi non constituuntur ministri in his quae sunt ad Deum,
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1. in Sacramentis. The Apostle saith, That every high Priest is taken from men, and is ordained for men in things pertaining to God; but Angels are not taken from men; Therefore they are not ordained Ministers for men, in things pertaining to God, & doubt∣less the word and Sacraments are things pertaining to God; the argument concerns the whole discharge of a Priests office, That an Angel may discharge no part of it; For the Apostles intent is to clear the Priest-hood of Christ against all objections of the Jews; and accordingly he proves out of their own Law that God had absolutely circumscribed and limited the Priest-hood, in three respects. 1. In regard of the person of the Priest, for that none could be a Priest who was not a man, because none else was fit to intercede for men; none else would have compas∣sion of men. 2. In regard of the office of the Priesthood, which was to reconcile the sinners, and expiate the sin. 3. In regard of the outward calling to that office, for no man might take that honour to himself, but he that was called of God as was Aaron. Accordingly our Saviour Christ was pleased to be made man, that he might be capable of being our high Priest, to intercede for us and to have compassion on us: And he did actually undertake this office of the Priest-hood, in reconciling sinners and in expiating sin; nor did he undertake this office without being thereunto called of God, as was Aaron.
From this Argument we may deduce these two conclusions.
1. That Angels cannot be Priests, nor discharge those duties which belong only to Priests, as Preaching the word, and mini∣string the Sacraments, because they are not men: and every Priest is to be taken from among men.
2. That all men may not be Priests, to discharge these same duties, but only those who are called of God as was Aaron, that is, who are set apart by an outward calling for that discharge; And they that are not so called, and yet will needs be either Preaching the Gospel, or Ministring the Sacraments, do affront our Saviour Christ in his Priest-hood, opposing him in his office, rejecting him in his example, and contemning him in his Autho∣rity: For as an Angel may not do the office of a Priest, propter impedimentum personae, for the impediment of his person, be∣cause he is not a man, not taken from among men; So that man who is not called of God as was Aaron, may not do the office
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of a Priest, propter impedimentum causae, for the impediment of the cause or office it self, because he is not ordained for men in things pertaining to God; and unless God ordain him, sure God will not accept him: Let him meddle only with things pertain∣ing to men, let him not meddle with things pertaining to God: For he that struck Ʋzzah dead for rashly going to uphold his Ark when it was shaken, (2 Sam. 6. 7.) because not having Commission to touch it, he had profaned it with his touch; hath plainly shewed how much he hateth all will-worship in his service, (though proceeding out of never so good intentions) because it is without, and therefore against his Commission: And if it were an act of profanation and provocation to uphold his Ark without his leave when it was shaken, what is it to help shake it, or rather to throw it down? I pray God speedily make such men to see how much they have out-gone Ʋzzah in their sin, and therefore cannot come short of him in their punish∣ment; For he that struck Ʋzzah with a corporal, can strike them with a spiritual death; and except they repent, will un∣doubtedly so strike them; unless it may be feared, he hath alrea∣dy so stricken them, because they have not repented. To affront Christ in his Priest-hood, whereby he reconciled man to God, is the ready way to lose the benefit of that reconciliation: He will not have his Priestly office invaded by Angels, much less will he have it invaded by men; He will not let Angels preach his Gospel, least their preaching should beget uncertainties, whiles the Devils might come and preach among them; And much less will he have men that are not called of God to preach his Gospel, because their preaching can beget nothing but Im∣pieties, whiles the Devils may come and preach in them: He will have no other witnesses of his truth, but such as are of his own choice: For thus he declared his own will, (and hath ne∣ver since reversed that declaration) Acts 10. 40, 41. Him God raised up the third day, and shewed him openly, not to all the people, but unto witnesses chosen before of God: He would then have his choice and select witnesses, and would not entrust his Sacred Mysteries with all in common, least they should be neg∣lected of all; But he chose such men for his witnesses as should rather lay down their lives, then the profession of the Christian Faith: And we cannot reasonably deny, but that he still hath his
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choice witnesses, whom he hath entrusted with his truth, whom he hath enabled to discharge that trust, & whom he will call to a strict account for not discharging it: so that we must say, God is still pleased to shew his Son openly as he did then, not to all the people, but only to some chosen witnesses. And he will have the people still to depend upon those witnesses to be instructed and informed in the Sacred truths concerning his Son, or in the my∣steries of the Christian Religion: And the gadding humour which now possesseth the people, to run from Gods witnesses, is the ready way for them to fall into all kinds of false Doctrine and heresie, and that will in a short time bring them to hardness of heart, and contempt of Gods word and commandments, especially since they are not now taught to pray against it, but rather to expell and revile such heavenly prayers: And thus we plainly see, that the more Christs Ministers have of late been hindred from being the witnesses of his saving Truth, the more they have been forced to be the witnesses of this sad Truth, even of the encreasing of Heresies and hardnesses in his people: And though they may be denyed to be Christs witnesses to the people for their conversion, yet they cannot be denyed to be his witnesses against the people for their condemnation: Jesu God, what an infinite misery is it for thy Ministers to be such witnesses! and yet infinitely more miserable are thy people, in that thy Mini∣sters must bear thee such witness. Surely when thou didst first say, And ye shall be witnesses unto me unto the uttermost parts of the earth, Acts 1. 8. thou didst intend a succession of witnesses whereby the uttermost parts of the earth should come to hear of thee, and that no sort of men should stop their mouthes from testifying or witnessing concerning thee, nor stop their own ears against their testimony; And doubtless Saint Peter advising the Elders to feed the flock of God under so many intro∣ductive perswasions, That he was also an elder, and a witness of the sufferings of Christ, and a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed (1 Pet. 5. 1.) did use that strain which is called by Rhetoritians Titulus argumentosus, a title that hath as many arguments as words: for an Elder is fit for the office of looking to others, and may not neglect his office; a witness of Christs sufferings may not shrink from his testimony, unless he will be∣tray his trust; And a partaker of Christs glory, may not renege
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that blessed Communion, unless he will betray his own soul.
Tis true that his first witnesses forsook him and fled, Mar. 14. 50. and one of them also denyed him, yet after his resurrection he neither upbraids the one nor the other, as if they had been scandalous Ministers, but pitties their infirmities, and encou∣rages and confirms them in their Ministry.
They had parted with him before his death, but would not part with him again after his resurrection, till he was taken away from them▪ For they found it sadness enough unto their souls that they had forsook him once, and durst not so much as go out of his sight, for fear they should be tempted to forsake him again; Good God, what a deep sadness would possess, if not over-whelm, our guilty consciences, should we but seriously consider, how often we have, out of meer peevishness, forsa∣ken our blessed Saviour, Running away from him in his Nativi∣ty, Passion, Resurrection, (for we look upon Sunday more as the Sabbath, then as the Lords day) and Ascention, as if ei∣ther these Festivals did not invite us to converse with Christ, or conversing with Christ were not the best platform, and exactest practise of Christianity! Then all the Disciples forsook him and fled, saith Saint Matthew, Mat. 26. 56. Then, that is, when they were possessed with carnal fear; but we forsake him meer∣ly out of spiritual pride and presumption, and we forsake him in his Authority, in his Church, and in his Ordinances, as if we needed no good examples to move us, no instructions to inform us, no directions to guide us, no duties to sanctifie us, no affe∣ctions to inflame us: God grant that we come not at last to think, that we need not no Word to govern us, and no Christ to save us.
Then the Disciples forsook him and fled; In this we can be as good Disciples as the best, in forsaking our blessed Saviour and in flying from him, but not so in returning and in cleaving un∣to him again; Alfonsus is so bold as to say, that during the time of our blessed Saviours Passion till his Resurrection, true faith remained only in the blessed Virgin; And this seems not to have been his private opinion; for the Missale ad usum Sarum, gives this for the main reason, why chiefly on Saturday or the seventh day of the week, (there called the Sabbath day, as in∣deed
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in all other antient Missals or Liturgies) the office made in honour of the Virgin Mary, is appointed to be said, Quia Do∣mino crucifixo & mortuo, discipulis fugientibus & de resurrectione desperantibus, in illâ solâ tota fides remansit; Because the Dis∣ciples being fled and despairing of the Resurrection, (when they saw their master was dead,) the whole Christian faith remained in the blessed Virgin alone, specially that day, wherein Christ himself lay in the grave, (that was the Sabbath day, or Satur∣day) as if he had been captivated under death. The founda∣tion is unsound, and so is the superstruction; But we are sure, whatever the Disciples frailty was in our Saviours Passion, yet their zeal and constancy were both very eminent after his resur∣rection: For then they attended diligently and constantly up∣on their master, till they saw him taken up from them, and they lost nothing by their diligent and their constant attendance: For his Valediction was a Benediction, as he left them, he blessed them: A good example for us how we ought to leave this world, though never so injurious to us, never so oppressive of us: for a Benediction is the only true Christian Valediction: and there is no ascending into heaven without that: They who part, and go away hence in discontents and grudgings, (which are but secret curses of the heart, against God or man) can scarce go to heaven by Christs assistance, because they desire not to go thither after his example. But let their names be en∣rolled in the records of eternity, who notwithstanding all the provocations and insolencies of unjust and unrighteous men, have died with more patience and contentedness, then we dare live: Sure even they also did see Christ in his Ascention, (though so many hundred years after it)▪ or they could not so exactly have followed his pattern: But whatever we may think or say of them, sure we cannot deny but some others did see it full as many hundred years before; as Moses, Deut. 33. 26. Ascensor coeli auxiliator tuus, He that ascendeth the heavens i•• thy helper; (for not only Saint Hierom, but also Jarchi so ex∣pounds those words:) And David, Psal. 47. 7. Ascendit Deus in jubilatione, God is ascended with a shout. Nay many more (it seems) did see this Ascention together with him, up∣on whom he calls earnestly to glorifie God for it, Psalm 68. 4. O sing unto God, and sing praises unto his name, magnifie him that
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rideth upon the heavens, as it were upon an horse, (what could the Apostles say more when they saw our Saviour triumphantly sitting upon the cloud, and so ascending up?) Praise him in his name, yea and rejoyce before him: Concerning which places the Angelical Doctor hath thus determined; Quòd autoritates illae propheticè dicuntur de Deo secundum quod erat incarnandus, (3. p. qu 57. art. 2. ad 1m.) Those authorities were spoken prophetically of God the Son, in respect to his Incarnation: And a more truly Angelical Doctor did in effect so determine long before him, and that was Saint Paul, when he applyed those words of Psalm 68. 18. Thou art gone up on high, thou hast led captivity captive, &c. directly and expresly to the ascension of our Saviour Christ. Thus were there many witnesses of our blessed Saviours Ascension long before it come to pass, and therefore certainly that truth (and consquently the rest tend∣ing to it) may not want its witnesses to the worlds end; This is clearly evidenced from Saint Pauls words, who saith, that when he ascended, he gave gifts unto men; that there should be a succession of witnesses to testifie of him till his coming again: for this is the effect of those words, Eph. 4. 11, 12. He gave some Apostles, and some Prophets, and some Evangelists, and some Pastors and Teachers, for the perfecting of the Saints, for the work of the Ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ; The meaning is, that the testimony of his Truth should not expire with the first witnesses of it, but should continue by a succes∣sion of other witnesses to the worlds end, even as long as there should be a Church to be edified, or Saints to be perfected, or the work of the Ministry to be performed. Let these men consider whether they come not near denying Christs Ascension, who do in effect deny the Apostles proof it; He proves that Christ was ascended, because he had established a Ministry; they say there is no no need of a Ministry; they were as good say, That Christ is not ascended; Again, others there are that will have a Mini∣stry, but yet set up new officers in it or with it, for the edifying of the body of Christ, which Christ himself never instituted at his ascension, and reject those which were of his own undoubt∣ed institution; These men ought not to obtrude upon the Church any office, as of Christs erecting, that is not compre∣hended among those in this Text, since they cannot shew us
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another Ascension; much less ought they to disturb some of those which Christ himself then erected, (and his Church hath ever since acknowledged and retained) unless they will be thought disturbers of this Article of their Christian faith, He ascended into heaven: For that institution cannot be only for a time, which hath a reason that continues for ever: And such is the reason here given by Saint Paul, for instituting these Church-officers, to wit, The perfecting of the Saints, the work of the Ministry, and the edifying of the body of Christ: A reason which is to hold till the end of the world, and therefore doubt∣less so also must the Institution.
But we may ••ot stray away from our Mount Gerizim, on which not the Sons of▪ men, but the eternal Son of God hath blessed us, to follow after those whose delight is to be upon Mount Ebal, to revile and to curse their Brethren, nay their Mother, (the Church:) Let us then fix our eyes and our hearts upon our blessed Saviour; for though one cloud received him out of his Disciples sight, whiles he was ascending, yet not all the clouds nor the whole body of heaven was able to keep Saint Stephen from seeing him after he was ascended; for so we read, Acts 7. 55. But he being full of the Holy Ghost, looked up stedfastly into heaven, and saw the glory of God, and Jesus stand∣ing on the right hand of God; what he did then see with the eye of flesh, we may still see with the eye of faith, especially if with him we suffer couragiously and contentedly, and not only so, but also thankfully for Jesus sake, we shall with him likewise see Jesus standing on the right hand of God; Behold I see the hea∣vens opened, and the Son of man standing on the right hand of God, v. 56. Adstantem ad dexteram Dei, i. e. Paratum ad me confir∣mandum in veritatis confessione, & recipiendum ad sese, saith Beza. I see him standing, that is ready to confirm me in the confession of his truth, and as ready to receive me for confes∣sing it: And he borrowed this his gloss from Saint Gregory in his Sermon upon the Ascension, Sedere est judicantis, stare vero pugnantis & adjuvantis; Stephanus ergo in labore certaminis po∣situs stantem vidit quem adjutorem ••abuit; sed tunc post ascensi∣onem Marcus sedere describit, qua post Ascensionis gloriam inde in ••i••e videbitur; To sit belongs to one that judgeth, to stand, to one that helpeth: Therefore Saint Stephen saw Christ standing
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when he needed his help, though Saint Mark described him as sitting, because after he was ascended, he looked on him as rea∣dy to judge the quick and dead: God grant all the persecuted Ministers and servants of Christ, so to see their master standing as ready to help them; nay indeed so they do see him, or they could not contentedly undergo their persecutions; Quo pro∣piùs mortem accedunt martyres, eo propiùs Christum intuentes in coelum assurgunt, saith the same Beza in his short notes upon the place; The Martyrs the nearer they approach to death, the nearer they behold Christ; and when they seem to fall lowest, they do indeed rise highest; when their head is nearest earth, (even upon the block) their heart is nearest heaven: when we most see their destruction, they most see their own salvation: we look on their destroyers standing over them ready to dis∣patch them; but they look on their Saviour standing over their destroyers, even at the right hand of God, ready to receive them. Most heavenly is that contemplation of Tertullian, (lib. de resur. carn.) Quemadmodum nobis arrhabonem Spiritus reliquit, ita & à nobis arrhabonem carnis ac∣cepit▪ & vexi•• in coelum, pignus totius summae illuc quandoque redigendae: Securi igitur estote caro & sanguis; usurpâstis enim & coelum & regnum in Christo. Our blessed Saviour as he gave unto us the earnest of his Spirit, so he took of us the earnest of our flesh, and carried that with him into heaven, as a pledge that all the rest should follow after it: Be secure then O flesh and blood, for ye have already ascended into heaven, and do even now, in Christ your head, possess and enjoy the Kingdom of God.
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CAP. III. Christ considered after he was ascended, as sitting on the hand of God.
SAint Augustine in his hundred and fifteenth Sermon de tempore, ascribes this part of the Apostles Creed concerning Christs ascending into heaven, and sitting on the right hand of God, to Saint Bartholomew; and the an∣tient Fathers do generally make them both but one Article, or at least joyn them so together as if they were bur one: Wherein they speak▪ much after the dialect of Saint Peter, 1 Pet. 3. 22. Who is gone into heaven, and is on the right hand of God. But I have rather cho∣sen to treat of them severally, because though we should al∣low them to be but one article of our Faith, yet they are two several mysteries of our Religion, and indeed the one an effect and consequent of the other, and therefore not the same with it; For our blessed Saviour first ascended in his hu∣mane body, and afterwards in that same humane body sate at the right hand of God. But here we must be sure to ob∣serve Origens caution, Ne tibi describas sensibiles sessiones & duas cathedras, & sedentes super ••as humano Schemate Patrem & Filium; take heed you phansie not to your self any visible sit∣ting, as if there were two chairs in heaven, the one for the Fa∣ther to sit in; the other for the Son to sit by him; Nor may we think that God hath such a right hand for Christ to sit on, as Solomon had for his mother Bathsheba, 1 King. 2. 19, He
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caused a seat to be set for the Kings Mother, and she sate on his right hand; We must have no such earthly and fleshly thoughts of the place, and much less of the God of spirits; but by the right hand of God, We must understand the power and majesty, and glory of the God▪ head: So Saint Basil, (in lib. desp. S. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: The right hand of God doth not signifie any relation of place, but equality of power: So Saint Athanasius, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, when you hear of, Gods right h••nd, you must thereby undeastand the glory, ho∣nour and worship of God; and nothing else is meant by Christs sitting at the right hand of God, but his being in the same glory with the Father. Excellently Damascence lib. 4. de orth. fide. cap. 2. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: I was the more willing to transcribe the whole words, because this piece of Damascen is scarce to be met with but in Colledge Li∣braries, and is not like to be there very long, if some men may have their wills, who gaping after Colledge lands would force the poor Scholars to sell their books to buy bread; but the mean∣ing of them is this, We say that Christ sitteth on the right hand of his father corporally or locally in his humane body; But we do not say that the right hand of his Father is local or corporal; confined to any place or situation; for how can he that is uncircumscrîbed and unconfined have such a right hand? But we call the right hand of the Father, the glory & honour of the Godhead, in the which Christ, as the Son of God, was Copartner with his Father before▪ all ages, being coessential with him. But now also as the Son of man in his humane flesh or body is he possessed of the same glory, his humane nature being glorified together with his Divine nature, and worship∣ped in the same person, by all the Saints and Angels in heaven.
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IT is not to be denyed but that our Saviour Christ, doth as he is a man, sit at the right hand of God: For he doth sit there in his humane nature, whether we take his sitting at the right hand of God for his resting in eternal blessedness, after all the travails and labours of his sufferings, as Saint Augustine doth, (in Expos. Symb.) or for being assumed and associated into the glory of the Divinity, as Damascen expounds it: For as in his Divine nature he sate at the right hand of God from all eternity, being in the same power, and glory, and blessedness with him; so also after his ascension he carried up his humane nature to sit there, having taken the nature of man as into the unity, so also into the glory and blessedness of his person, and in it administring the Kingdom of his father, as head of the Church both Militant and Triumphant, King of Saints, and go∣vernour of all things in heaven and in earth. For so himself hath told us, Mat. 28. 18. All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth; Go therefore and teach all nations, baptizng them; (or rather, Go therefore and Disciple all nations, baptizing them, that is, make them my Disciples by baptizing them in the name of the Father, &c. thereby distinguishing them from those who are not my Disciples, even by Baptism) Here is such a commission for the Minister to execute his cal∣ling, (both for Word and Sacraments;) as all the Magistrates in the world can neither give nor take away: For they have a power only from Christs power in earth: but this calling of the Ministry is founded upon the power of Christ which he hath also in heaven.
And they who make it their business to discountenance and oppose the Ministers of the Gospel, whilst they preach, and pray, and administer the Sacraments according to the appoint∣ment and command of their Master, do but in effect strive to justle Christ out of the heads and hearts of men, and to thrust him away from the right hand of God: Surely he that hopes
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to be set one day at the right hand of Christ, will now willing∣ly acknowledge, and reverently adore Christs sitting at the right hand of God; And they who do not willingly now put themselves under his power, shall at last be brought under it against their will; for he must reign till he hath put all his enemies under his feet; and though he shall still reign after that, (for his Kingdom shall have no end, as being an everlasting Kingdom, 2 Pet. 1, 11.) yet he shall not, after that, exercise his go∣vernment so visibly by the cooperation of his humane nature as now he doth, but only by the essential power and presence of his Godhead, in which respect it is said, And when all things shall be subdued unto him, then shall the Son also himself be sub∣ject unto him that put all things under him, that God may be all in all, 1 Cor. 15. 28. For the office of his Mediatorship will then be at an end, no less as King. then as Priest and Prophet, when he shall have brought all men either to his Father or un∣der him, though the Majesty of his person be immortal and everlasting: And therefore as the Man Christ Jesus did not actually sit at the right hand of God, till he was exalted into heaven, and yet was potentially there, (that is, in right and power) by virtue of the hypostatical union, even from the first instant of his incarnation; so when he shall have exalted and drawn all his mystical body thither after him, though he shall still sit there in the same person, yet not in the same respect or to the same end; for not Man, but God, shall then admini∣ster the Kingdom of the Father; that as from all eternity, so also to all eternity, God may be all in all: Excellently Saint Augustine, Ipsam Dexteram intelligite potestatem, quam accepit ille homo susceptus à Deo, ut veniat judicicaturus qui prius ve∣nerat judicandus; Non enim Pater judicat quenquam, sed om∣ne judicium dedit Filio, ut omnes honorent Filium, sicut ho∣norant Patrem; By the right hand of God understand the power, which that man hath received, who is taken into God, that he may come to judge, who at first did come to be judged; For the Father judgeth no man, but hath com∣•…•… all judgement to the Son, that all men should honour 〈…〉〈…〉 As they honour the Father: So that this 〈…〉〈…〉 at the right hand of God, is to be expounded of ou•• bles••ed Saviour, not according to his Divine, but ac∣cording
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to his humane nature, as the Apostle hath fully declared, Eph. 1. 21. When he raised him from the dead, and set him at his own right hand in heavenly places: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: saith Saint Chrysostome.
These words cannot be spoken and therefore may not be understood, of God the word for he was never dead, and therefore tis not said of him that he is set on Gods right hand:So likewise Saint Cy∣prian, Dominus ascendit in coelum; non ubi verbum Dei pri∣us non fuerat, quippe qui erat semper in coelis, & manebat in Patre; sed ubi verbum caro factum, ante non sedebat. The Lord ascended into heaven, not where the word was not be∣fore, for he was alwayes in the bosome of the Father, but where the Word made flesh, never sate before.
But let Saint Augustines determination decide this con∣troversie, who purposely handleth it, lib. 3. de Symbolo, cap. 8. Quis est qui sedit ad dexteram patris? Homo Chri∣stus: Nam in quantum Deus, semper cum Patre & ex Pa∣tre; & quando ad nos processit, à Patre non recessit: Who is it that sitteth at the right hand of the Father? The Man Christ: For as God, he was alwayes with his Father, and of his Father; and when he came to us, did not depart from him; Therefore Christ was alwayes at the right hand of his Father, as God; but since his ascension, he is there also as Man.
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IF it be demanded, whether to sit at the right hand of God be proper only to Christ, it must be answered, Yes: For none else is, none else can be there but only he. For by this argument doth the holy Apostle prove him to be the Son of God, Heb. 1. 13. But to which of the Angels said he at any time, Sit thou on my right hand? And if he hath not said so to the Angels, much less hath he said so to any man: And ••ow then shall we say unto either, sit thou on the right hand of God, by our invocation and adoration, placing the creature in the throne of the Creator, God blessed for ever.
And what else do they who thus invest a Bishop, saying, Ac∣cipe pallium, (plenitudinem, sc. pontificalis efficii) ad honorem om∣nipotentis Dei, & gloriosissimae Virginis Mariae genitricis ejus, Bea∣torum Apostolorum Petri & Pauli: Take this pall, (and with it the fulness of Episcopal power,) to the honour of Almighty God, and the most glorious Virgin Mary his Mother, and his blessed Apostles Peter and Paul; for to joyn the blessed Virgin and the Apostles in the same honour and glory with Almighty God, is in effect to joyn her and them in the same Kingdom and power with him; since they all go together, For thine is the Kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever and ever.
Therefore Laus Deo Virginique Matri Mariae, used by Bellarmine at the end of each general controversie, must needs beget a new controversie, (were all the rest amicably conclu∣ded) among those Christians, who love not to think, but to know they do God good service in their prayers and praises: For such a form of worship must needs be controverted to the worlds
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end, unless it could be proved, that not only Christ, but al∣so the blessed Virgin doth indeed sit at the right hand of God, being joyned with Christ in the government of his Kingdom: which is altogether impossible, for that Christ himself sits there in his humane nature, only by vertue of the personal union to, and with the eternal Son of God, whose property alone it is to sit at the right hand of his Father: For though the Holy Ghost be also equal with the Father in the same power and glory, (and therefore together with the Father and the Son is worshipped and glorified) yet he is not said to sit at his right hand; thats a phrase spoken peculiarly of the Son, in whom the Divine nature was as it were ecclipsed for a while in the state of his humiliation; and in whom the humane nature now shineth most gloriously in the state of exal∣tation.
And besides, for that the Son alone doth administer the Kingdom of the Father immediately from the Father, but the Holy Ghost administreth the same Kingdom, not only from the Father, but also from the Son: For although God the Fa∣ther, Son and Holy Ghost do equally govern the Church both militant and triumphant, that is, do equally administer one and the same Kingdom in heaven and earth, yet the Father administreth it of himself, not by himself; for he is of none, as in being, so in working. The Son administreth the same King∣dom by himself, not of himself; for as his being, so his work∣ing is of the Father: The holy Ghost administreth the same Kingdom by himself, not of himself, for he is of the ••ather and of the Son; so that God the Father administreth his King∣dom immediately by God the Son, who is next him in order, and mediately by God the Holy Ghost, who so administreth from the Father, as also from the Son; and therefore is not said to sit at the right hand of the Father, because he hath the administration of the Kingdom of God; not of the Father alone, but of the Father and of the Son, whereas the Son hath it immediately and only of the Father. So that our blessed Saviour did administer the Kingdom of his Father from all eternity as God: But now, since his Ascension, he doth also administer the same as God in man, or as God manifest in the flesh: And it is his property alone to sit at the right hand
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of God, because it is his property alone to govern all things in heaven and in earth, immediately from the Father.
Laus Deo will reflect directly on him, no less then on the Father and the Holy Ghost, for the blessed administration of his Kingdom, but Virginique Matri Mariae may securely be left out, and is blasphemously and idolatrously put in, since the blessed Virgin her self must needs think it robbery to be equal with her Son, when her Son thinks it no robbery, to be equal with God. And certainly if the Fathers in the first Council of Constantinople, thought it enough to prove the Holy Ghost coequal with the Father and the Son, by saying, Who with the Father and the Son together is worshipped and glorified, Then we cannot but think it too much that the blessed Virgin is wor∣shipped and glorified with all three persons of the Trinity, as if she were to be thought coequal with Father, Son, and Ho∣ly Ghost; But perchance Bellarmine was resolved to grati∣fie the present practise of his Church, with a doxology answer∣able to that Antiphona, Gaude Maria Virgo, cunctas haereses sola interemisti in universo mundo; Rejoyce O Virgin Mary, thou alone hast taken away all heresies in the universal world; And he having made it his work to confute all for hereticks who were not of his own gan, gives thanks to the blessed Virgin, as if by her help he had perfected this great confutation; whereas without doubt it is no more in the power of any crea∣ture to take away a heresie, then it is to change the heart or will of the heritick: nor is it in the power of all the Je∣suites in the world to prove us poor protestants guilty of he∣resie, because we dare not be guilty of blasphemy, nor of Ido∣latry. For it is blasphemy to ascribe that perfection, and it is Idolatry to give that honour to the creature which is proper only to the Creator: And tis a wonder that Baronius who is pleased to say that our Church of England is wholly drown∣ed in heresie, would not impute the cause of that mischeif, to our rejecting this and the like Hymns or prayers to the blessed Virgin, and say, she would not take away our heresies, be∣cause we had taken away her worship: for this reason had certainly been more ingenuous, (in one of that perswasion,) then to tell us that we were therefore given over to our delu∣sions, because we denyed to pay the Peter pence: For that
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is his observation in his Annals, (Anno Christi 740.) That Ina King of the West Saxons appointed every house in his Dominions to pay a penny to Saint Peter every year, that his subjects knowing Saint Peter to be their Lord, should more zealously addict them∣selves to his service, and call upon him in their necessities: (••t annui census pensitatione cognosceret se subditum S. Petro, quem & scientes omnes Dominum esse suum, propensiori studio colerent, & in opportunitatibus invocarent) But that when this yearly re∣venue did cease to be payed, the Church of England was swallow∣ed up by an inundation of heresies: (Ʋbi cessavit pendi vectigal istud, utcunque mali redemptum, haeresum alluvione Anglicana Ecclesia absorbetur:) whereas if the mony were paid upon that reason of Invocating Saint Peter, it could not be excused from heresie, to have continued that payment: However this rea∣son is more for the Penny then for the Pater noster, and sure the Church of England had more heresies whilst it paid the Peter pence, then it hath had ever since, unless we look upon these few late years wherein the poor woman cloathed with the Sun, hath been distressed by a great red Dragon, and forced to flee into the wilderness, (Rev. 12.) But Gods truth is never the worse for being persecuted, and Gods faithfull servants will not fall from his truth because of persecution: For they know they serve a Master, who himself hath said, My Kingdom is not of this world, John 18. 36. and therefore they who profess them∣selves subjects of his Kingdom, will not change with the world: For though our Saviours Kingdom be not of this world, yet hath he subjects on earth, as well as in h•…•…en; And therefore in his Ascension, whereby he took possession of his Kingdom, he provided for them both; For those on earth, by the diffusion of his grace, called by the Apostle, Re∣ceiving gifts for men; for those in heaven, by the diffusion of his glory, expressed by this phrase, And sate on the right hand of God.
By the diffusion of his glory he hath prepared a man∣sion for us with him; by the diffusion of his grace, he hath prepared a mansion in us for himself; O the im∣mortal comfort of a good Christian, and the more immortal glory of the Christian Religion. shew me a comfort like to the comfort of a good Christian, who is already in his head,
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ascended into heaven; shew me a glory like to the glory of the Christian Religion, which hath him alone for its author, for its head, who sitteth on the right hand of God: Ask the Jew, he will tell you he left his Prophet upon Mount Nebo; Ask the Turk, he will tell you his Pcophet was left at Meca; Ask other Religions, they will tell you they know not what is become of their Prophets: It is only the Christian Religion that can say, it had such a Prophet as now sitteth at the right hand of God. A Prophet who taught not a religion without righteousness, as is the Religion of Turks and Heathens; nor a Religion with Righteousness, but which could not make men righteous, as was the Religion of the Jews; But a Religion with Righte∣ousness, to shew it self righteous, and a righteousness with Re∣ligion to make us so. For the law (which was the rule of righte∣ousness) came by Moses, but grace (which maketh righteous) came only by Jesus Christ, John 1. 17. By this, He still dwelleth in us, even now that he is farthest from us: which is so invalu∣able a blessing that it cannot be valued till it be enjoyed, and when it is enjoyed, it is found invaluable: For the soul of man cannot but have a wretched dwelling in the body, and a more wretched dwelling out of it, unless Christ have a dwelling in the soul: It is the glory of men above Angels that Christ dwel∣eth in their flesh: It is the glory of good Christians above other men, that Christ dwelleth in their spirits: By his grace he dwel∣eth with us and in us, by our faith and love we dwell with him & in him; nor shall this dwelling ever be destroyed, it shall only be enlarged, when what is now of grace, shall hereafter be of glory.
There is so inseparable an union betwixt Christ and the good Christian, that as the Christian cannot be in the state of Grace without Christ, so Christ not fully in the state of glory without him. The head thinks himself not in honour, whiles the mem∣bers are in dishonour, and therefore our head being ascended into heaven, makes it his work to draw us (the members of his mystical body) thither after him; For we are united unto Christ by a threefold cord, that is not easily broken: First by the tie of Election, God having chosen us in him before the foun∣dation of the world, having predestinated us to the adoption of chil∣dren by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will, Eph. 1. 4, 5. Secondly by the tie of incarnation,
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wherein he took our flesh unto himself. Thirdly by the tie of Inspiration, wherein he hath given his Spirit unto us: All which have begot so inseparable an union betwixt the Son of God and the sons of men, by a golden chain reaching from heaven to earth, that Saint Paul speaks of the good Christians, as of those who are already in glory with Christ: And hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Je∣sus, Ephes. 2. 6. He looks on them not only as having jus ad rem, but also as having jus in re; not only as claiming, but also as possessing their heavenly inheritance. O that we would be so careful, or could be so happy, as not to abuse those mercies which we cannot deserve! O that we would lift up our souls truly and entirely unto the Lord, then would our hearts be where our treasure is, at the right hand of God: For we may not be in heaven by our perswasions, whiles we are either in earth by our affections, or in hell by our dispositions: How can we see our Saviour at Gods right hand, whiles Satan stands at ours? making us to butcher his servants, to deface his Sanctua∣ry, to discountenance his Religion, to defile or despise his Ordi∣nances, to deceive his people, to destroy his inheritance? How can we believe him to be making intercession for us, whiles we care not to make intercession for our selves? or at least wise, use such extravagant prayers wherein we cannot justly expect, much less judiciously hope he should make intercession with us? Be it the priviledge of faith to have an eye to be able to see Christ; but of devotion to keep that eye alwaies open, actual∣ly to behold and look upon him, for which cause some have thought that prayer was the proper act of justifying faith, men then most especially believing in Christ, when they are praying to him: So that to oppose or disturb the exercise of well∣grounded and well-settled devotions, under pretence of reform∣ing them, is to put out the eye of faith whiles we pretend to take off the film, that it may see the clearer. For the precious talent of faith, must neither be wrapped up in a Napkin, nor indis∣creetly managed, if we expect it should enrich our souls with heavenly and immortal comforts; but must be diligently and discreetly imployed in judicious, as well as in fervent pravers and praises to Almighty God, that so we may fight the good fight of faith, by defending and maintaining not only the truth of the
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Gospel, but also our profession and practise of that truth: Saint Paul requires both alike of his Scholar, and in him of us; 1. Tim. 6. 12. Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life whereunto thou art also called, and hast professed a good pro∣fession before many witnesses. Saint Timothy had not only embra∣ced the Christian faith (in general,) but had also (in particular) professed a good profession thereof, before many witnesses; and Saint Paul binds him, (as well as he had bound himself) to make it good; Else as many as had been witnesses of his profes∣sion, must have been Judges and Condemners of his revolt: And doubtless God having exalted our Saviour Christ at his own right hand in the heavenly places, far above all principalitie, and power, and might, and dominion, (Eph. 1. 20, 21.) hath suf∣ficiently declared, That we should so exalt and advance the Christian Religion (whereby we seek to glorifie his Son in earth, as the Father hath glorified him in heaven) that neither principality, nor power, nor might, nor dominion here on earth, (for those in heaven will not endeavour it) should be able to remove us from the truth of Christ, either in its belief or in its practise, no more then they can remove Christ himself from sitting at the right hand of God.
And we most humbly beseech thee O blessed Saviour, who hast conquered all things, to conquer also our inconstancies, that we may perfectly and without all doubt believe in thee, and shew the sincerity of our faith by the zeal of our piety, and the constancy of our saith by the unweariedness of our piety, that neither faith nor piety may be reproved in thy sight when thou shalt come to Judge us, who rulest and governest all things, with the Father and the Holy Ghost, ever one God world without end, Amen.
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Christ communicated in the coming of the Holy Ghost.
CAP. I. Of the Communication of Christ to his Members.
IT is no small part of mans misery, (who is born in sin and sorrow, and therefore born in sorrow because in sin,) that the afflicti∣ons of this world may grieve his soul, but all the comforts of this world cannot rescue or release it from grief. The Spirit may be perplexed from the flesh, but cannot be re∣lieved from it; it is only the lover of souls that can exhilerate the soul, only the God of Spirits that can comfort the Spirit: And till this lover of souls shew his love to us, we are hateful to our selves; till this God of Spirits do comfort our spirits, we cannot but remain altogether comfortless: For we are of our selves strangers and aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel; and consequently from the comforts and immunities of that Common-wealth; being alienated from God as far as earth from heaven in our affection, as far as hell from heaven in our condi∣tion:
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Tis a sad truth which may be lamented, but may not be denied, (for in its denyal though a man may shew himself a good Sophister, yet he must shew himself a bad divine, and cannot shew himself a good Christian) That we are all by nature children of disobedience, and children of wrath; The Jew though he came of the stock of Abraham, yet came not into the world without disobedience, nor without wrath no more then the Gentile; for so saith Saint Paul, we were born the children of wrath even as others, that is, we Jews who came of Abraham, no less then the Gentiles who came of the most unworthy and most unrighteous stock in the world; Among whom (sc. the children of disobedience) we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh, and were by nature the children of wrath even as others, E••h. 2. 3. as if he had said, we were children of disobedience in our affection; children of wrath in our conditi∣on; strangers from God in our affection, for being under such lusts; strangers from God in our condition, for being under such wrath; The Apostles intent is fully to declare unto us the state of mans misery which he is in by nature till he be relieved by his blessed redeemer; and we may reduce all his doctrine to these four Heads: First, that our misery consisteth of two parts, that we are under the dominion of sin, and that we are under the guilt and punishment of Sin: Secondly, that all men in general, as well Jews as Gentiles, as long as they are without Christ and his Grace, are subject to this misery, that is, are dead in trespasses and in sins, and obnoxious to punishment for the same: Thirdly, that this our misery is meer∣ly voluntary in regard of the sin, though not in regard of the punishment, for it is the course of this world, and the fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind, i. e. perverse and inordinate desires, both external of the body, and internal of the Soul: (for body and soul both are alike infected, both are corrupted by sin, and the desires of the mind are sinfull, no less then the desires of the flesh:) This course of the world we are all desirous to run, these desires of the flesh we are all inclined to nourish and to fulfill: So that our misery is altogether voluntary in regard of our sin, though it be altogether involuntrary and neces∣sary in regard of the punishment: we are willingly under the sin, as pleasing our corruption, but unwillingly under the pu∣nishment
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as bringing our destruction: we are contented with the disobedience, but we are afraid of the wrath; and yet as long as we are under the sin, we cannot but be under the punish∣ment: as long as we are children of disobedience, we are also children of wrath. Fourthly and lastly, that as it is not in our will, so it is not in our power to redeem our selves from this mi∣sery: for that our corrupt nature doth not so much as desire, and therefore cannot recover the state of true liberty either from sin or punishment; but tis only the infinite goodness and mercy of God that recovers us by his Grace, which is as far beyond our desires, as above our deserts; such a grace as we could not ima∣gine, and therefore did not desire; such a grace as we did not de∣sire, and therefore could not deserve, as saith the Apostle, But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us, even when we were dead in sins, hath quickned us together with Christ.
The first Adam communicated nothing to us but sin and death; tis only the second Adam that hath communicated to us Grace and Life; and therfore tis only in relation to him, to our Savi∣our Christ, that the Prophet begins his Sermon of Comfort, Isa. 40. 1, 2.
Comfort ye, comfort ye my people saith your God, speak ye com∣fortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her, that her warfare is accom∣plished, that her iniquity is pardoned: The beginning of the pardon is the end of the war; Her warfare is accomplished, and her iniquity is pardoned, do both signifie the same peace: Com∣pleta est malitia ejus, saith the Latine translation for militia, by a small mistake of the letter, (and that in the printer, not in the translator) but none of the sense; for our malitia is our militia, our iniquity is our warfare: the Hebrew word is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 that is both her work and her time of war: Kimchi in his gloss saith thus 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 vult dicere tempus quod in captivitate vel exilio d••buit transigere; He means the time that she was to pass in banishment or captivity: we may well admit the gloss; For sin is a time of war, banishment, and captivity: of war with God, of banishment from God, and of captivity, not under God, for he can be no tyrant, but under the devil; A sad time surely: And therefore the time of Grace must needs be a joyfull time, wherein this warfare, this captivi∣t••▪ this banishment is brought to an end; For Christ being com∣municated,
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the sin is pardoned; and the Sin being pardoned, the sinner is in peace, and in prosperity and in liberty: to say this, is to speak truly to the heart 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 loqui ad Cor, which is the Hebrew phrase for speaking comfortably; other comforts go no farther then the ear, then the outward man; that his stock is increased, his request granted, his cause advanced: tis only this comfort that enters into the heart, and revives the inner man, That the time of his warfare, banishment and captivity is at an end, because his sin is pardoned; For here are two distinct times to be observed: A time not accepted; thats of warfare, banishment and captivity: And a time accepted, thats of peace or reconciliation, of restitution, of liberty: For Epiphanius his argumentation is not to be denied 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, from the na∣ture of relatives: si fuit unus annus 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, ergo fuit alter 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, If Christ preached one year wherein he was accepted, (as Clemens Alexandrinus labours to prove out of Luke 4. 19. To preach the acceptable year of our Lord;) then it must needs be that he could not preach only but one year; for there must also be another year wherein he was contradicted and no•• accepted; His Logick is not to be questioned, though his tenent be refused by the Learned Scaliger, lib. 6. de emend. temp. who proves that Christ did preach upon the earth, not on∣ly one year as Clemens, nor two years as Epiphanius would have it, but four full years. So here the inference is unquestionable; If there were a time of warfare, of banishment, of captivity be∣fore the pardon, there must needs be a time of peace, of restitu∣tion of liberty after it; If that were a time of expulsion or re∣jection whiles we were enemies; this is a time of acceptance or ad∣mission now we are Sons, as saith Sant Paul, behold now is the accepted time, behold now is the day of Salvation, 2 Cor. 6. 8.
That was a day of damnation, this is a day of salvation: that a a time not accepted, this a time accepted: The time of the flesh, and the time of the Spirit: the time of sin, and the time of Grace, are two opposite times: the time that sin reigns in us, is a time of warfare, banishment, and captivity; the time that the Spirit of Grace reigns in us, is a time of restitution and of li∣berty.
First a time of peace, and that a peace of heart, John 14. 27. My peace I give unto you, let not your heart be troubled,
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neither let it be afraid. The peace that Christ gives us, is a peace of heart; a Peace that puts away all trouble, and all fear; All trou∣ble least it should disturb our peace outwardly; and all fear least it should disturb our peace inwardly; which is the invincible reason Saint Augustin alledgeth to prove that the holy An∣gels are assured of their state of bliss, because otherwise their fear would disturb their peace, and consequently interrupt their blessedness: And Aquinas affirms the Saints in hea∣ven to be no less sure of the continuance of their bliss then of the bliss it self, and therefore to be in some sort partakers of the divine eternity, to which all is actually present, nothing to come, or else they could not have the full quietation of their wills, without which Blessedness it self could be no blessedness, 22. q. 18. art. 2, 3.
Secondly, the time of Grace is a time of restitution, and that to our true Country, even to heaven: The Philosopher could point thither with his finger, but the Christian points thither with his heart. For that being once touched with the spirit of God, al∣wayes moves and beats towards heaven, as a needle touched with a loadstone moves alwayes towards the Pole. For true Chri∣stians are so full of hope, and their hope is so full of immorta∣lity, that they are very well contented to resign this mortal life when God shall require it, as those who know themselves to be but strangers and so journers hereon earth, and that their Country, (where they are to expect a lasting & a sure dwelling) is only in heaven, as saith Saint Paul in their behalf, For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God eternal in the heavens; wherefore in this we groan carnestly, desiring to be cloathed upon with our house which is from heaven, 2 Cor. 5. 1, 2. This house of earth is but our tabernacle, that of heaven is our dwelling; In this we groan, in that we shall rejoice; This is to be dissolved as built by man; thats a building of God, and therefore not capable of dissolution.
Thirdly, the time of Grace is a time of liberty, for Grace is the well-spring and fountain of liberty, as sin is of thraldom; For as sin is an aversion from God to serve our selves, which is the greatest servitude, so Grace is a conversion to God to serve him; whose service is perfect freedom; so that no man is so truly a slave
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as he that serves himself, and none so truly free as he that serves his God; Nemo liber nisi sapiens, None is a free man but he that is a wise man, may not be taken for a Paradox, if we be not mistaken in the wisdom, but think and say with the spirit of God, Behold the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom, and to depart from evil is understanding, Job. 28. 28. Tis a heavenly contempla∣tion of the Seraphical Doctors, Tunc homo rectus est quum intel∣lectus adaequatur summ•• veritati in cognoscendo; voluntas confirma∣tur summa bonitati in diligendo; & virtus continuatur summae potestati in operando: Et ex hoc homo non solùm rectus, sed & rector ipse Deo subditus, ipsi alia. (Bonav. Prol. in lib. 2. Sent.) Man i•• then only well governed in himself, and governour of all other things, when he depends wholly upon God; His dependance upon God in his understanding to know him the first truth; In his will to desire him the chiefest good: and in his power of action to follow and obey him the highest power, makes him subject to God, and all the world sub∣ject to him▪ This is such a kind of liberty which the son of God only gives, and the servants of God only enjoy; See it in the Sons gift, If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free in∣deed, John 8. 38. See it in the servants receipt, And I will walk at liberty, for I seek thy precepts, Psal. 119. 45. They who are Gods servants, are the only free-men; for they are so his ser∣vants as that also they are his Sons; For as the Soveraignty of his dominion claims them for Servants, so the transcendency of his goodness accepts them for Sons, and therefore gives unto them both the Liberty and the Patrimony of children.
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IF we look on men as men, we must look on them as the Sons of wrath; But if we look on men as Christians, we must then look on them as the Sons of God, members of Christ, and inheritors of the kingdom of Heaven; For they are Sons in his Son, in whom they are made Christians, because Christ is commu∣nicated to them in their baptism, whereby they are not only distinguished from Turks and Infidels, but also qualified and exalted above them; for having been baptized into Christ, they have put on Christ.
This is Saint Pauls own assertion in his own words; For ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus; for as many of you as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ, Gal. 3. 26, 27. which two verses in Saint Chrysostoms Judgement, do shew, that Christians are the Sons of God▪ and the means or manner how they are made his Sons; The 26. verse shews their being made Sons (〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉) And the 27. verse shews the means and manner how they are made Sons, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, as he calleth it. For ye are all the children of God in Christ Jesus, theres 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. Christians are made the Sons of God by faith in his Son, by faith in Christ Jesus; which makes Saint Chrysostome break forth in admiration, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; Oh wonderfull, how great is the power of faith! for he shewed be∣fore that it makes us the Sons of Abraham, ver. 7. He sheweth now that it makes us the Sons of God; Again verse 27. For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ, there's the 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the manner of our adoption, how we are made the Sons of Gods, even by being baptized into his son; ye have put on Christ by being baptized into Christ; or
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ye have been baptized into Christ, therefore ye have put on Christ; for this will be the Minor and the Conclusion to that Major: and we may join all these together, and make up this Syllogism: As many as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ; But you have been baptized into Christ; Therefore you have put on Christ.
If you ask how the baptized into Christ, put on Christ, Saint Augustine will answer you with a distinction, Vel Sacramenti perceptione vel rei induunt homines aliquando Christum usque ad Sacramenti perceptionem; Aliquando autem ulterius, usque ad vitae sanctificationem, & hoc accidit quum digne suscipiunt. Men (when they are baptized) do put on Christ: Sometimes outwardly in the visible sign of the Sacrament, Sometimes in∣wardly in the spiritual Grace of the thing signified (as when they worthily receive their Baptism) And this answer is necessary because there are so many Hypocrites in the world who frustrate the Grace of God by their Hypocrisie; But concerning those that are not Hypocrites when they come to be baptized, as true believers, or concerning those who cannot be Hypocrites, as little children, the Judgement of charity bids us say, they have put on Christ both outwardly and inwardly, be∣cause the Judgement of verity teacheth us to say, that the out∣ward visible sign is not without the inward spiritual grace on Gods part who offereth the Baptism, (and is not wanting to his own offers) what ever it be on mans part who receiveth it; for those words of the Gospel, He shall baptize you with the Ho∣ly Ghost and with fire (Mat. 3. 11.) will not allow us to sepa∣rate the Holy-Ghost and the fire from the Baptism which hath been instituted by our Saviour Christ; But Bonaventure lib. 4. Sent. disp. 4. supplies us with another answer; omnes Baptismum aequaliter recipiunt quantum ad characterem & restitutionem innocentiae, non quantum ad infusionem Grati••; As many as have been baptized into Christ, have alike put on Christ, so far as to be accounted innocent, or freed from the guilt and imputation of original sin, (with which they came into the world,) though not so far as to be made righte∣ous by the infusion of Grace, or to be freed and delivered from the infection or the dominion of that Sin▪ for grace hath a two∣fold act, Delere culpam, & habilitare ad bonum, (saith the same
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Author) to blot out sin, and to dispose to righteousness: Sure we are that Baptismal grace doth immediately avail to the blot∣ting out of sin alike in all, though we are not sure that it doth alike dispose all to righteousness, though we hope well of that too. So that in his sense, All that have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ equally as to the restitution of inno∣cency, though not as to the infusion of grace. They are all re∣stored to the innocency that was lost in the first, though not all enriched with the grace that is found and founded in the se∣cond Adam. They have not the sin of their nature imputed, though they have it still inherent: They have it not imputed, in that they are made the children of God; They have it inhe∣rent, in that they are still the sons of men: Baptism is avail∣able unto all alike for Remission of sins, though not for Rege∣neration from sin: And yet sure it makes way for that too; else Saint Peter would not have annexed the receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost to the remission of sins, saying, Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remis∣sion of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, (Acts 2. 38.) Baptism doth immediately conduce to the remission of sins; be baptized every one of you for the remission of sins: and mediately also to the receiving of the gift of the Holy Ghost; in as much as it takes away that guilt of sin which keeps him from us; and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost; That is, some more eminent gift of the Holy Ghost, for your confir∣mation in righteousness, after you have received him in Baptism for the remission of your sins. For surely Baptism of it self without the Holy Ghost cannot avail to the remission of sins▪ therefore this promise of receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost, is to be expounded comparatively, that is, a greater gift of the Holy Ghost. And this exposition is necessary from this very text, because there is no remission of sin without grace, and no grace without the Spirit of grace; and may be proved to be convenient from that other Text which comes near to this, of Acts 8. 15, 16, 17. where after the Samaritans had been Ba∣ptized in the name of the Lord Jesus, Saint Peter and Saint John layed their hands upon them, and they received the Holy Ghost; that is to say, in a greater proportion for their con∣firmation, then they had in Baptism for their conversion.
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But why is it said, They were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus? shall we think that the Apostles did recede from that form of Baptism, which had been given them by Christ himself? Saint Ambrose (lib. 2. de Sacram. c. 7.) seems to affirm there is no need of that, when he saith, In uno nomine baptizari nos oportet, hoc est, in nomine Patris & Filii & Spiritus Sancti, &c. We must be baptized in one name, that is, In the name of the Fa∣ther, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, which is but one name, because but one substance, but one Divinity, but one Majesty; and saith moreover, that name is the name whereby we must be saved, which we are sure is the name of the Lord Jesus, (Acts 4. 12.) So that if we admit of this Gloss, Ba∣ptizing in the name of the Lord Jesus, is all one with Baptizing in the name of the blessed Trinity, which being undivided in nature, cannot well be divided in name. But Aquinas seems to be of another opinion, (3a. par. qu. 66. art. 6. ad 1.) Di∣cendum quod ex speciali Christi revelatione, Apostoli in primitiva Ecclesia in nomine Christi baptizabant, ut nomen Christi (quod erat odiosum & Judaeis & Gentilibus) honorabile redderetur per hoc, quod ad ejus invocationem Spiritus Sanctus dabatur in baptis∣mo; We must say that the Apostles by some special revelation did for a while at first baptize only in the name of Christ, because the name of Christ was odious both to Jews and Gentiles, and this was a way to make it honourable in the esteem of both, when by the invocation of that name they saw the Holy Ghost given in Baptism; But this opinion may the better be deserted, 1. Be∣cause the words upon which it is grounded, require it not. 2. Because no such special revelation can be proved: and it is not safe to allow of special hidden Revelations against the known general revelation of the Text. 3. Because the Apostles by ba∣ptizing in the name of Christ, could glorifie him only amongst unbelievers; whereas, in so doing, they might dishonour him amongst Believers, by receding from his Institution. 4. Be∣cause the Holy Ghost was not given in Baptism after so publick a manner, as to be taken notice of by standers by. 5. Because Aquinas himself is so positive for baptizing explicitly in the name of the Holy Trinity, that he avoweth there can be no true Baptism without it. For these and the like reasons, it may happily not be amiss to give another Interpretation of those
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words; then Aquinas hath given, (though not so exactly to the letter,) and to say, They were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus, is all one in effect, as if it had been said, That they were baptized by his Authority, and according to his instituti∣on: or that they were baptized into his death and resurrection, giving up themselves wholly to him; or that they were bapti∣zed with a special invocation of his name, not in the very act of baptizing, (for then was invocated the name of the Trini∣ty) but before and after it, because in Baptism was made a spe∣cial application of his merits unto them, for the remission of sins: This was the reason that the name of Christ was special∣ly then invocated, because the righeousness of Christ was then specially applyed, as appears by that advice of Ananias to Saul, Acts 22. 16. Arise and be baptized, and wash away thy sins, cal∣ling on the name of the Lord; that is, on the name of the Lord Christ, who instituted Baptism for the remission of sins, and was to be called upon, to bless his own institution: So that to baptize in the name of the Lord Jesus, may happily import no more then to baptize with a peculiar invocation of his name; not altering the form, but shewing the end of Baptism, which was to ingraft the baptized into the mystical body of Christ; However this phrase of being baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus, doth clearly evince that Christ is peculiarly communi∣cated in Baptism; for to suppose the name without the thing, is little less then to take the name in vain. And this is ground enough, why good Christians should desire to have their chil∣dren baptized; and too much, why any should delay, and (which is far worse) deny the baptism of infants; for such men do what they can to hinder Christ from being communicated to those infants, to whom they deny baptism: wherefore as that promise which was made particularly to Joshua, I will not leave thee nor forsake thee, Jos. 1. 5. is applyed generally by Saint Paul to all good Christians, Heb. 13. 5. upon this ground that God is the same in all ages, to all that alike fear and serve him. So doth our Church, (after Saint Pauls example, and in his faith,) rightly infer, that the same good will which our bles∣sed Saviour declared by embracing and blessing those little chil∣dren which were brought to him, (Mar. 10.) belongs alike to all children born within the Covenant of grace: for God is al∣waies
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mindful of his Covenant and promise, that he made to a thousand generations, even the Covenant that he made with Abra∣ham, Psal. 105. 8, 9. and that Covenant was in these words, I will be a God unto thee, and to thy seed after thee, Gen. 17. 7. so that it is a plain case, the Church promiseth no more for God, then God hath promised for himself, who we are sure neither can nor will fail his promise: And therefore since the Church can truly say in the assurance of faith, That our heavenly Fa∣ther alloweth this charitable work of ours, in bringing children to his holy Baptism: who can deny the truth of this saying, but out of infidelity? who can deny the doing of this charita∣ble work but out of uncharitableness? Such an infidelity, and such an uncharitableness, as to provoke the wrath and indigna∣tion of the eternal Son of God against his own soul; for so saith the Text, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, when Jesus saw it he was displeased even to wrath and indignation, indignatus est, saith Beza; indignè tuit, saith the Vulgar: Doubtless he that for this indeliberate and inconsiderate uncharitableness shewed indignation against his Disciples, will for a greater uncharitable∣ness then this, such as proceeds from deliberation and resoluti∣on, pour out indignation upon his enemies.
IT is not to be doubted but that our Saviour Christ is gene∣rally communicated unto Christians in the Holy Eucharist, as well as in Baptism; and that he is also communicated in his word, no less then in his Sacraments: But because the men of this our age pretend wholly to be spiritual, I will (not to vili∣fie, but to confute their preaching) immediatly shew how Christ is more peculiarly communicated by the Spirit of adopti∣on,
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and the rather because his being communicated in Word and Sacraments, would not be available to salvation, unless he were also communicated to us by the coming of the Holy Ghost. Concerning which Alensis hath befriended us with a most com∣fortable and a most Christian-like position in these words, L••∣quendo proprie de missione, non dicitur mitti Filius vel Spiritus Sanctus nisi ratione alicujus effectus pertinentis ad gratiam gratum facientem: Nam in missione illorum, non solum dona ipsorum sunt nostra, sed & ipsi, quia Inhabitant animum, & sunt ibi modo spe∣cialiori quàm prius. Alen. par. 1. qu. 73. m. 4. art. 2. To speak properly concerning the mission (or communication) of the Son and Spirit of God, neither of them is communicated but only in some effect of saving grace, (though in general terms either may be said to be communicated in the gift of any grace) For when they are communicated unto us, not only their gifts are ours, but also themselves, to inhabit and to dwell in us, and to be in us more specially or peculiarly then they were before; And why then should not every Christian take up Holy Davids most holy Resolution, and say, I will not suffer mine eyes to sleep, nor mine eye-lids to slumber, untill I find out a place, (even mine own soul) for the Temple of the Lord, and an Habitation for the mighty God of Jacob, Psal. 132. 4, 5. For indeed the Lord and the mighty God, Christ and his Spirit are communicated both together, according to that of John 6. 53. Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, you have no life in you: As there is a communication and distribution of the nou∣rishment to the body, that it may live; so is there of Christ to the soul, or it cannot live: And he is communicated by the Spi∣rit: For no man can eat his flesh nor drink his blood who is at the right hand of God, by corporal, but only by spiritual man∣ducation; and there can be no spiritual eating of Christ, but by the assistance of his Spirit: So that Christ and the Spirit of Christ, are communicated to us both together, and we have alike need of both: For as Christ is our Advocate to bring us to the Father, so is the Holy Ghost our Advocate to bring us unto Christ: And as Christ revealed to us the will of his Fa∣ther; so doth the holy Spirit reveal to us the will of Christ, making us, in the right use of his Word and Sacraments, to re∣ceive instruction from him, to enjoy communion with him,
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and to find immortal joy and comfort in him: This is that Spi∣rit the Apostle speaketh of, when he saith, For ye have not re∣ceived the spirit of bondage again to fear, but ye have received the Spirit of Adoption, whereby we cry Abba Father, Rom. 8. 15. The Apostle would have us Christians see the happiness of our own condition above the Jews, that we might accordingly shew our thankfulness above them. For they being under the terrours of the Law, could not but have the Spirit of bondage, because they saw nothing in the Law but what was exceeding formidable, the flames of Mount Sinai before it, and the flames of Hell fire after it: But we Christians being under the promi∣ses of the Gospel, (which discharge all that truly repent and unfeignedly believe, from the curse of the Law and from the guilt of their sins) have the spirit of liberty, whereby we can with great confidence, and with greater comfort, draw near to the throne of grace: The Jews had the Spirit of Adoption as well as Christians (though not in the same degree,) but not from the Law but from so much of the Gospel as was re∣vealed to them: And the Christians have also the spirit of bond∣age as well as the Jews, (though not in the same degree) but not from the Gospel, but from so much of the Law as is still in force to scourge them unto Christ. The same spirit of Adopti∣on was to them a spirit of bondage, yet with some hopes and shew of liberty: To us it is a spirit of liberty, and yet with some fear and shew of bondage: They could say unto God, Doubtless thou art our Father, though Abraham be ignorant of us, and Israel acknowledge, us not, (Isa. 63. 16.) but we can say moreover, Abba Father: that is, we can call upon God as our Father, with greater fervency and earnestness, with great∣er assurance and confidence, and with greater joy and comfort, then they could; For this Abba Father is vox clamantis, vox ex∣clamantis, vox acclamantis; The voice of one crying out, the voice of one crying out for help, the voice of one crying out for joy. First, The voice of one crying out, there's the greater earnestness; they did say to God our Father, but we do cry it; not coldly and remissely, least our prayers should be congealed in the middle Region of the air, before they get up to heaven, but zealously and earnestly: They said it with zeal, but we say it with greater zeal. Secondly, The voice of one crying out
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for help, there's the greater confidence; The Jew could say Father, but the Christian saith Abba Father, that is Father, Fa∣ther, with greater confidence and assurance of Gods paternal affection. Lastly, The voice of one crying out for joy, there's the greater comfort: The Jew could rejoyce in God as his Fa∣ther by Creation; but the Christian rejoyceth in God as his Father by Redemption: The joy of the creation had an allay because of the sin and sorrow which we had brought upon our selves; but the joy of our Redemption hath no allay, because our blessed Saviour hath taken away our sins, and with our sins our sorrows.
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CAP. II. Of the coming of the Holy Ghost where Christ is commu∣nicated.
IT is not the part of any Christian to deny the Holy Ghost to be the Spirit of Christ, since that were not only to deny the Word of Christ, but also to deny the greatest and chiefest comfort of Christianity: It were to deny the Word of Christ; for Saint Paul taketh the Spirit of God and the Spirit of Christ for one and the same saying, If so be the Spirit of God dwell in you, and, if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, Rom. 8. 9. The Spirit of God and the Spirit of Christ are one and the same Spirit, for Christ is God: And it were also to deny the greatest and chiefest comfort of Christianity, which is this, That the Spirit of Christ dwelleth in us, to revive our souls now from the death of sin, to revive our bodies hereafter
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from the death of the grave; the Apostle plainly attributeth thr Resurrection of the soul from sin, and of the body from death, only to the dwelling of Christs Spirit in us, Rom. 8. 10. And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin, but the spirit is life because of righeeousness, there's the resurrection of the soul from sin; and again ver. 11. If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ from the dead, shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his spirit that dwelleth in you; There's the resurrection of the body from death; And this is also from the Spirit that dwelleth in us, as well as the other; the Spirit of Christ raiseth the soul from sin; the Spirit of Christ raiseth the body from death; so that to deny the Holy Ghost to be the Spirit of Christ, is to deny both our Regeneration and our Resurrection: Wherefore this being of so dangerous a consequence, The Master of the sentences would not impute this Tenent to the Greek Church, as if they denyed the procession of the Ho∣ly Ghost from the Son, though they would not say in their Creed, I believe in the Holy Ghost the Lord and giver of life, who proceedeth from the Father and the Son, but only, who pro∣ceedeth from the Father, who with the Father and the Son toge∣ther is worshipped and glorified: But he saith plainly that the Greek Church did agree with the Latine Church concerning that Article of Faith, in sense, though not in words: Sensu no∣bis conveniunt, dum aiunt Spiritum Sanctum esse Patris & Fi∣lii, They agree with us in the sense, whilst they say, that the Holy Ghost is the Spirit of the Father and of the Son; on∣ly we speak a little more plainly, saying, who proceedeth from the Father and the Son; nor are we to be blamed, (saith he) for adding to the Creed, much less to be anathemati∣zed, because our addition is not of a contrary assertion, but of a necessary interpretation; Nos enim non praedicamus contrarium, sed addimus quod deerat, ideoque non subjecti anathemati. Lomb. 1. Sent. Dist. 11. He is more careful to justifie his own Church for adding to the Creed, then to condemn the Greek Church for not allowing that addition; But his Scholars are not so moderate; for Aquinas taxes Damascene of Nestorianism in the case, and saith he was carried away with the Schism of the Greeks, Damascenus sequitur errorem Nestorii, Quod Sp. S. non
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procedit à Filio, quia fuit tempore quo incepit illud Schisma Grae∣corum, Aqu. 3. par. qu. 36. art. 2. ad. 3. And Bonaventure is yet much mor fierce, when he saith, that the Greek Church denyed this article out of ignorance, pride, and perverseness, Graecos negâsse hunc articulum ex ignorantiâ, superbiâ, perti∣naciâ, (Bonav. in lib. 1. sent. dist. 11.) Three unmerciful words from a Church-mans mouth against a whole Church, and surely altogether underserved; For the Greek Church al∣ways acknowledged the Holy Ghost to be consubstantial with the Son, as well as with the Father, as appears by the Confes∣sion of Faith exhibited by Charisius in the Council of Ephesus, in the sixth Action, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 The Spirit of truth the comforter being of the same essence or substance with the Father and the Son: which plainly shews the Greek Church did not deny the article, though they were loth to change their Creed, wherein they found it was thus expressed, Who proceedeth from the Father, (no mention at all made of the Son.) For this is their own profession in the Council of Florence in the 25. Session, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: We have our Creed from seven general Coun∣cils, and weneither add thereto nor take therefrom: And tis evi∣dent that the Latine Church it self did a long time demurr about this addition of Filioque to the Greek Creeds: Nay, Leo the third did strongly oppose it, and that not only Papally in his Chair, but also Episcopally in his Chancel; for he did abso∣lutely refuse this addition when he was thereto intreated by Charles the great, and did set up the Creed▪ over the Altar (at Rome) without it; nor did Filioque get into the Article, till the time of Benedict the seventh, (saith Binius, in Syn. Constant.) which was above nine hundred and fifty years af∣ter Christ, and about six hundred years after the divulging of that Creed.
But without doubt the Addition it self is to be justified; for it was not Additio corrumpentium Symbolum sed perficientium, as saith Bonaventure; not an addition to corrupt the Creed but to perfect it; or rather an explication not an addition, as Bellarmine seems to distinguish, Explicatio Doctrine, non
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additio contrarii, but the manner of maintaining it seems altoge∣ther unjustifiable; For those of the Latine Church shewed lit∣tle temper and as little charity in rejecting the Greek Church for hereticks, (which was trampled on enough by Turks, and needed not Christians to help tread it more under foot) for not admitting the same addition, meerly because they thought themselves under the curse (which the Latines are willing to put off by a distinction) if they should recede but one tittle or syllable from the language of their own Creeds. But this (it seems) was the fault of the Greek Church, (which hath been ever since accounted damnable Schism in all other Churches) they could not swallow, much less digest, that crude position, Ad summum Pontificem pertinet fidei Symbolum ordinare, It belongs to the Pope to order and dispose of the Creeds. A position so unreasonable, that Aquinas himself, the greatest Master of reason among all the Schoolmen, is fain to fly to Gratians de∣cree to fetch a proof for it; and that proof depends altogether upon the Authority of some few Popes, who were very parti∣al Judges in their own cause.
This is clear, that the objection about Athanasius his Creed doth so puzzle him, that he is fain in effect to say his Creed is no Creed, because he cannot find the Popes hand was in the making of it; Athanasius non composuit manifestationem fidei per modum Symboli, sed per modum cuiusdam Doctrin••; Atha∣nasius did not set out this manifestation of the faith as a Creed, but as a Doctrinal institution; notwithstanding the very title of it in Greek is the same which is prefixed to the Apostles Creed, and the Latine Church calleth it Symbolum Athanasii, unto this day: It is not suitable with my purpose, (and much less with my desire,) to examine the other exigencies which this excel∣lent Divine is put to, that he may gratifie his Church by seek∣ing to make good this Tenent; but sure other Churches look upon it as an invasion of their Christian liberty, and as a Doctrine which cannot pretend to Christian verity or anti∣quity, though it may fondly pretend to some external unity; Tis certain the Greek Church took it for a Novelty, and there∣fore would not admit this position as a dispensation from the Anathemas denounced by the two Councils of Ephesus and Chalcedon against such as should presume to alter the former
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Creeds: And yet in truth, the alteration was more in word then in sense, and the Greek Church had the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Son, in their Faith, though not in their Creed. And this appears plainly by Simeon the Metaphrast, who lived about the year eight hundred and fifty after Christ, (neer the same time with Walefridus Strabo) yet useth these words, in the Greek Menology, on October 9. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: My Lord Christ is Ascended into heaven, and returned to his Fathers throne, and from thence hath sent down the Holy Spirit which pro∣ceedeth from himself, upon his Disciples: He saith in his Faith, the Spirit proceeded from the Son, though nei∣ther he nor any of his Church would change their Creed, to say so: And upon this ground the Western Churches may still retain the use of Athanasius his Creed in their Liturgies, not∣withstanding the addition of Filioque, without cutting off the Greek Church from the hope of salvation, though they allow not that addition, because the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Son, is also in their Faith, according to the sense, though not according to the words of the Article; And to speak the plain truth, in this controversie concerning the pro∣cession of the Holy Ghost from the Son, as well as from the Father; the animosity was greater betwixt the Greek and La∣tine Church, then the disagreement, the quarrel larger then the difference; And thus much Scotus ingenuously confes∣seth in these words, Sed forte si duo sapientes, unus Graecus, & a••ter Latinus, uterque verus amator veritatis & non propriae dictionis, de hac visa contrarietate disquirerent; pateret uti∣que tandem ipsam contrarietatem non esse veraciter realem, sicut est vocalis: Alioquin vel ipsi Graeci vel nos Latini sumus ve∣rè haeretici: Sed quis audet Johannem Damascenum, Basilium, Gregorium Theologum, & Nazianzenum, Cyrillum & similes patres Graecos arguere haereseos? Quis iterum argueret haereseos B. Hieronymum, Augustinum, A••ibrosium, Hilarium, & consimiles Latinos? Verisimile igitur est, quod non subest dictis verbis contrariis, contrariorum Sanctorum sententia discors; & (Scotus in 1. Sent. dist. 11 qu. 1.) But happily if two wise men, the one of the Greek, the other of the Latine Church, did
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enquire concerning this seeming contrariety, and both of them would prefer the truth above their own words or expressions, they might in time find that this is but a verbal, not a real contro∣versie; For if it be real; either the Greeks or the Latines must needs be hereticks: But who shall dare to accuse Damascene, or Basil, or Gregory the Divine, or Gregory Nazianzene, or Cy∣ril, and the rest of the Greek Fathers of heresie? Again, who dares take Saint Hierom, Saint Augustine, Saint Ambrose▪ Saint Hilary, and the rest of the Latine Fathers for hereticks? It is therefore most probable, that in these contrary expressions was no contrary sense, but they both meant one and the same truth, concerning the procession of the Holy Ghost. Thus far Scotus; and indeed no less appears in the Council of Florence, where, from the twentyeth Session to the twenty fifth exclusively, is a long disputation betwixt Johannes Provincialis for the Latine Church, and Marcus Ephesius for the Greek Church; And the Ephesian professing that the Spirit did proceed from the Father by the Son, the Provincial confesseth it was in effect the same as from the Son: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 That by is here as much as from, saith Johannes Concil. Flor. Sessione 24. For the Father begetting, and the Son begotten, and the Holy Ghost proceeding, being all confessedly coequal and coeternal, whether it be said, the Holy Ghost proceeding from the Father and the Son, or, from the Father by the Son, the Doctrine of the blessed Trinity is uncorrupt and inviolable; for the three distinct persons with their three distinct proper∣ties are believed in one God, none afore or after, none grea∣ter or lesser then other: In personis proprietas, in essentia unitas, in Majestate aequalitas; property in the persons, unity in the essence, equality in the Majesty of the Godhead, being no less acknowledged and believed by the Greek then by the Latine Fathers, which is the short confession of the Doctrine of the blessed Trinity. For it is manifest that the Greeks who denyed not the Son to be consubstantial with the Father, could not exclude him in the procession of the Holy Ghost: Where∣fore we must needs reject that harsh and heavy doom which Bellarmine hath left upon record against the Grecians, Ac▪ ut intelligant causam exitii sui esse pertinaciam in errore de proces∣sione Sp. S. in ipsis ••eriis Sp. S. capta fuit Constantinopolis à Tur∣may
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understand the cause of their destruction to be their pertina∣cy in their error concerning the procession of the Holy Ghost, in the very Festival of the Holy Ghost, that is at Whitsontide, was Constantinople their cheif City taken by the Turks: This he thinks he hath sufficiently proved; but the learned Scaliger thinks no man can sufficiently prove, and laments this Queen Regent of the East in these words, ut cujus calami∣tas ignorari non potest, dies calamitatis ignoretur; And though he incline to their opinion who said that City was besieged the morrow after Easter, and taken upon the day of Pentecost, yet he concludes it dangerous to determine so much: Sed pe∣riculosum est haec definire; De anno quidem non dubito fuisse 1452. sed de mense delibero, utrum sc. mense Maii an mense Apri∣lis capta fuerit: Scal. lib. 5. de emend. temp.) He dares not define the month whether it were in April or in May, (and sure Whitsontide cannot fall in April) much less the week or the day; he sayes tis dangerous to assert it was taken in Whit∣sontide; but sure it is dangerous to assert it with so much un∣charitableness against a whole Church, whose ruine should be thought on with pitty, not with insolency: However though the assertion it self be true, yet the argument is fitter for a Souldier then for a Divine, to appeal to the success of the sword for the justification of the cause, and will much better advance Turcism, which hath full six parts, then Christi∣anity, which in all the several professions of it, hath but five parts of thirty in the known habitable world, as Ma∣ster Brerewood hath demonstrated in his enquiries, (cap. 14.)
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SInce it is an undoubted truth that the Holy Ghost is the Spirit of Christ, we may not doubt but his coming unto men alwayes was and still is of purpose to communicate Christ unto them; either after an extraordinary manner by imme∣diate infusions and revelations as to the Prophets and Apostles, or after an ordinary manner by habitual improvements and assistances as at this day. For the extraordinary manner of his coming, and the extraordinary manner of his communicating Christ to men by immediate infusions or revelations, did both cease together; And we may truly say concerning those mi∣raculous and extraordinary dispensations of the spirit, what Saint Paul hath said concerning tongues, one of the princi∣pal effects thereof, They were for a sign, not to them that be∣lieve, but to them that believe not, 1 Cor. 14. 22. and there∣fore were to continue and remain no longer then signes and wonders, that is, till the preaching or publishing of the Gos∣pel, or till the planting and setling the Christian Reli∣gion.
For Saint Peter plainly sheweth in the second of the Acts, That this Prophecy of Joel, In the last dayes, saith God, I will your out of my spirit upon all flesh, was fulfilled in the miracu∣lous descent of the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles, that these were the last dayes meant by that Prophet, and therefore after those dayes, men were not to expect any more such extraor∣dinary dispensations: Wherefore those that will now preach or pray by the Spirit, may not rely upon infusions for which
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they have no warrant, but must betake themselves diligently to read and consider the word of God, that so they may have the assistance of the Spirit of God; For they that go about to separate the Spirit from the Word, are the most abomina∣ble Separists that ever were, or can be in the world, because they endeavour to separate God from himself; for Gods word is Gods truth, and Gods truth is himself. Be it then taken for granted, which may not be doubted, it cannot be denyed that they are very wicked Separatists who separate man from man, for they fill the world with sedition and privy conspiracy; They yet worse Separatists, who separate man from God, for they fill the world with false doctrine and heresie; But yet still they are the worst Separatists of all who separate God from God, that is, Gods Spirit from Gods Word, for they fill the world with hardness of heart, contempt of Gods Word and Commandment; which is the ready way to make men first impe∣nitent, and then unpardonable; and what more can be said of the sin against the Holy Ghost? Yet these three separations do so naturally and necessarily spring from one another, that they may be accounted themselves inseparable. For the sediti∣on begets the heresie, and the heresie begets the hardness of heart; separating man from man by sedition will separate man from God by heresie; and that will also in a short time endea∣vour to separate God from himself, by contempt of his Word and Commandments: What an unhappy age do we live in, wherein men think they do God good service, to run away from his Word, by pretending to his Spirit! But this is the wit of wickedness, the order of disorder, the method of athe∣ism, that the persons of the holy and undivided Trinity should be sinned against by succession, and blasphemed in the same or∣der that they are to be confessed; first the Father, secondly the Son, and thirdly the Holy Ghost: For under the Law men were generally given to Idolatry, (took an Idol for God) and so more immediately sinned against God the Father; he is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 God of himself. Under the first times of the Gospel, men were generally addicted to Arrianism, denying the Divinity of Christ, and so more immediately sinned against God the Son; for he is God of God. But in these latter times of the Gospel, (for so it is to be feared our sins have made them)
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men are generally addicted to cry up their own phansies for the dictates of the Spirit, and so more immediately sin against God the Holy Ghost: not considering how unconscionable a thing it is to grieve the Holy Spirit of God whereby they are seal∣ed to the day of redemption; and how impossible a thing it is for those not to grieve the Holy Spirit of God, who con∣stantly blaspheme him; and what an unsufferable blasphemy it is to entitle those rude and crude impertinencies to the Holy Spirit, which few sober men can hear with patience, and no zealous man can hear with profit; and no conscientious man can hear with piety: Well may such a worship profit some men by exercising their patience, but yet it scarce deserves the name of worship, because it doth not rather exercise their piety: so that we must confess, that such pretenders to the Spirit are the greatest enemies of the Spirit; and whilst they would be thought the best reformers are in truth the worst blasphemers, for as much as they impute those imprudencies and indescreti∣ons, or rather impieties and irreligions (for imprudencies in the service of God are impieties, and indiscretions are ir∣religions) to Gods Holy Spirit, which are meerly their own vai•• imaginations, and carnal inventions; and in the mean time, reject and disesteem those prayers and praises, which are the undoubted d••ctates of that same Holy Spirit, as if they rather hindred then helped us to cry Abba Father; what is this, but in effect to blaspheme God, instead of blessing him, for giving us so many admirable forms of prayer and praise in the holy Scrip∣tures? and for giving us a Church to teach us to pray exactly according to that pattern in the Mount, according to those pat∣terns of prayers and praises wh••ch came immediately either from God the Son, or from God the Holy Ghost? What is this but in effect to distract and to hinder men; instead of setling and help∣ing them in their Religion, whilst they are made beleive that no∣thing is truly from the spirit of prayer, but what is new and un∣known to them, whereby they are taught first to contemn the known prayers of the Church, and then the known prayers of the Scriptures, (for that the spirit is as much confined by the one as by the other) and to hunt after novelty instead of certainty, which is a way to exercise the phansie before the conscience, (because the conscience first tries the spirits, then follows them,
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1 John 4. 1. but the phansie first follows the spirits, and never at all tries them.) A way that the more it busieth the head, the less it setleth and establisheth the heart; wherefore if that benediction was Apostolical, The Lord Jesus Christ himself stab∣lish you in every good word, 2 Thes. 2. 17 Then this practice must be Apostatical, which doth unstablish and unsettle the People in their Prayers the very best words: Then was Egypt in a sad case when the locusts did eat up what the hail and thunder had left, Exod. 10. And is it not so with Israel when locusts out of the bottomless pit devour that small pittance of Religion which the hail, that is, their own chill and frozen dispositions; or the thun∣der and lightning, that is, the tempestuous terrours and troubles of war, had left in the Peoples hearts? When God suffers such devourers of piety and Religion to come into a land, he either looks upon it as Egypt, or tis to be feared he in∣tends to make it so; The death of the first born is then sure not far off, and the drowning of all the rest is not like to belong after it For what can we expect, but that the read sea, even a sea of blood should cover us all, when we persecute the Israel of God for desiring to serve him, and say unto those who are zeal∣ous for such prayers as they know are either in Gods word, or agreeable with it, ye are idle, ye are idle, therefore ye say Let us go and do sacrifice to the Lord, Exod. 5. 17. as if Praying in known and approved forms, were rather a pretence for idleness then a help to devotion: This is not only to reproach the Church for teaching us to pray by her Liturgies, but also to reproach God himself for teaching the Church to pray by his Scriptures; and by this argument we may throw away not only the dictates of the Church, but also the dictates of the Spirit of God: Sure this is not the part of Chri∣stians, by one and the same wicked practice to oppose both the authority and the doctrine of Christ; the authority of Christ in his Church, the doctrine of Christ in his word: They pretend to have the spirit of God, but yet contemn the word of God: They will needs have the spirit of his Son in their hearts, and yet care not to have the language of his Son in their mouths: giving their Pater noster a quietus est, a writ of ease, as if the Holy spirit had supplied the servants above the son, and taught us better prayers then it had taught our Saviour: or as if it
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were not one and the same spirit that once directed him, and still directeth us to call upon the Father; Doubless such men cannot take it unkindly, that we abstain from communi∣cating with their prayers, since they by rejecting the Lords own holy prayer, do at the same time reject commnnion not only with all the servants, but also with the Spirit and with the Son of God; for the Servants of God alwayes used it, the Spirit of God indited it, the Son of God commanded it; Tis no won∣der if such men be not only Sacrilegious, but also perswade them∣selves there is no such sin as sacriledge, and consequently that whatsoever hath been consecrated to Gods Holy name, is still un∣holy and prophane, though it hath been conscrated according to Gods own express command in the fourth commandment, which is the commandment of consecrations, and requires the sanctification of place, and of persons, and of our substance to Gods publike worship, as well as of time; Time cannot be san∣ctified, or kept holy to Gods publick worship without these; And besides, we find these also expresly commanded in other parts of the Bible, and since they are all commanded for one and the same end, we must reduce the Texts concerning them to one and the same commandment, for the ten commandments are Decem summa genera, as it were ten predicaments or ten general heads to which is to be reduced whatsoever is commanded as a moral duty in the whole word of God: wherefore since it is a moral duty that men should publikely and solemnly call upon the name of God, and time alone, without place and persons, and the maintenance of these cannot serve for the discharge of that duty, we must allow the rest of these outward requisites to be commanded in this of time; And consequently, what of all these alike was common and un∣holy before it was sanctified to Gods publike worship, being once sanctified thereunto is made peculiar and proper to God; and therefore to rob, or pillage, or take away any of these, is sacrilegi∣ously to invade Gods property; which is a sin of so heavy a burden to press down the soul, that the Apostle hath put it in the scale against Idolatry, and seems to make this at least to ba∣lance, if not to out-weigh the other; Thou that abhorrest Idols, dost thou commit Sacriledge? Rom. 2. 22. The argument would be of little consequence, if Sacriledge were not a sin at least equal
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to Idolatry; And truly so it is, (whatever we please to think or to make of it;) For whereas there are two kinds of Idola∣try, the one to take an Idol for God, the other to make God himself for an Idol; the sacrilegious person is in effect guilty of them both: For it is impossible that any man should rob God if he did not make money his God, there's taking the Idol for God: or if he did not take God for one to be mocked rather then worshipped; there's taking God for an Idol: And tis no won∣der if they can do all this, who can contemn the Lords most ho∣ly prayer: for the three first petitions of that prayer contain all the Duty of the first table; and the least part we can shew of dutifullness is to pray that we may be dutifull: and consequently he that will not say Our father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, cannot be troubled at that Sin of Sacriledge, whose property it is to invade and profane all that is dedicated to the hallowing of the name of God; For they that can swallow the Camel, have little reason to strain at the gnat, they that can be guilty of the greater, cannot stick at the lesser Sacriledge; they that can rob God of his publike worship, cannot easily make any scruple of robbing his Church; and to take away such publike prayers as do undoubtedly glorifie the name of God, what is it else but to rob God of his worship, or of the honour due unto his name? For he that doth forbid us to take his name in vain, doth withall command us to glorifie his name, and con∣sequently to make use of such forms of prayer and of praise as we are sure do most glorifie him; These forms being accor∣dingly made for the honour of God after the rule of the two first, and in obedience to the third Commandment, are set apart for this use, in obedience to the fourth; and to take away these forms, is in effect to sin against all the first Table: And they who are guilty of this sin, even of putting down the true service of God, are guilty of many sins together; for as they sin against the third Commandment, they are guilty of blasphemy; as against the fourth, they are guilty of sacriledge and pro∣phaness; and as they sin against the first and second Command∣ments, denying men (as much as in them lies,) to have God for their God, and to worship him with internal and ex∣ternal worship, according to his own holy will and command, so they are downright guilty of Irreligion and of Idolatry.
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Nay yet more, (which is a misery to think, and the greater because tis not a mistake to say) such men are guilty of worse Idolatry then many of the heathen: For no Idolatry is so bad as that wherein a man doth make himself the Idol: and have we not here that Idolatry, when men set up their own pretended gifts, against a known true and substantial worship of God? for what is it for any man to pretend the gift of the spirit (that all others may rely upon his lips, in pouring out their souls to God,) but to make himself an Idol? And what is it for others to rely upon pretences, instead of Certainties in Gods worship, but in effect to make themselves guilty of Idolatry? For to speak the plain truth in this case, the people do worship God not in their own Faith, but in the faith of their Minister if they pray with him as Communicants, before they know what he will pray, which is to be guilty of will-worship, whiles they resign up their souls in a blind obedience: or the minister alone doth worship God, whiles the People are present only as Judges, not as Communicants, reserving their souls unto themselves, all the time he is praying, till they see they can safely say Amen at the end of his prayer, which is in effect to have no publike worship till the worship be quite done; for publike wor∣ship is not rightly so called from its company, but from its communion; And Saint Paul would never have commanded all gifts whatsoever, (in that he commanded the first gift, the gift of tongues, which came immediately from the Holy-Ghost) to submit to Edification, if he would have allowed any other gift afterwards to oppose it self against, much less to ad∣vance it self above true Christian communion, since it is a plain case that Christian communion was at first commanded, and ought to be still observed chiefly for Edification.
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THere is no Atheism so much dishonoureth God or deceiveth men, as that of Hypocrites, who make religion it self a meer pretence whereby to act their irreligious designs and practises: So that the Christians Atheism is worse then the heathens; for the heathen that hath not the true Religion is an Atheist not knowing God; but the Christian who hath the true Religion, and useth it for a pretence, is an Atheist abusing and affronting him. Hence is that terrible curse denounced by our Saviour against such men, saying, Wo unto you Scribes and Pharisees, Hypocrites, for ye devour widows houses, and for a pretence make long pray∣er, therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation, Mat. 23. 13.
Tis not imaginable that our Saviour Christ should discou∣rage either the gift of prayer, or the use of that gift in making long prayers; for himself continued all night in prayer to God, Luke 6. 12. And spake a parable, that men ought alwayes to pray and not to faint, Luke 18. 1. Therefore we may be sure it is a grievous sin to make long prayers for a pretence, when our Sa∣viour himself may seem to dislike the prayers, rather then he would not condemn the pretence: And questionless such Hypo∣crites are most abominable Idolaters; for whiles they make pray∣ers meerly for pretences, they make God an Idol: and whiles they make them for pretences of devouring, they make Mammon their God; And this is the twofold Idolatry of Hypocrites, they pray not to glorifie God, and to do so, is to make God an Idol: they pray to enrich themselves, and to do so, is to make Mammon their God; they pray that they may devour.
So that two grievous sins at once are laid to their charge: one is that they are devourers; for ye devour widows houses; the other that they are pretenders, and for a pretence make long ray∣ers;
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he that makes no prayers is in a sad condition, because he neglects his salvation; but he that makes prayers for a pre∣tence, is in a sadder condition, for he increaseth his damnation; therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation: He that doth this, may easily deceive men, and is sure to deceive himself, but he cannot deceive his God: Thus to pretend the Spirit of God, and to do the works of the flesh, is little less then to blaspheme the spirit both speculatively and practically at the same time; speculatively in pretending to act by him; pra∣ctically in acting downright against him; This is to make them∣selves Edomites, not in Edom but in Israel, to speak with the smooth voice of Jacob, that they may act with the rough hands of Esau; to pretend to snuff the candle, that they may throw down the Candlestick, and put out the light of our hearts and of our eyes both together; even the light of the Gospel, no less then the light of Israel. This is to go far from the Do∣ctrine of Christ, who made that exhortation a main part of his first Sermon, Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorifie your Father which is in hea∣ven, Mat. 5. 16. For though such men are pleased to say they walk in the light more then all the world besides, yet tis evident they heap up together so many works of darkness, re∣bellion, blood, rapine, sacriledge, prophaneness, injustice, oppression, as do even scandalize all good men, and encourage and harden all wicked men; and teach them who once fre∣quently glorified their Father in heaven, now not to glorifie him; and those who before did carelesly glorifie him, now open∣ly to revile and to blaspheme him: So direct a path have they chosen, by following their new lights, to make Protestants turn either Papists or Atheists, and to keep not only Papists from turning Protestants, but also Turks and Jews from turning Chri∣stians. For what sober man can find any rational motives to be of that Church, where men use their Religion not to serve their God, but to serve themselves, nay the worst, though truest part of themselves, their unbridled distempers and concupiscences.
Surely such men cannot truly say, (and yet they say it most of all men) that they have the Spirit of God, who are so far from the works of the Spirit; And they are very far from the works of the Spirit, unless hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife,
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seditions, (〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 dividing and standing in parties) here∣sies, envyings, murders, and such like which the Apostle cal∣leth works of the flesh, (Gal. 5. 19.) may be discerned by some of the new lights to be the works of the Spirit: It were a foul shame for any Minister of Christ to immix such a reproof as this in his Doctrine, if it were not a fowler shame that some Christians have immixed such sins as these in their practise; But those that have Saint John Baptists trust to pre∣pare the way of the Lord by preaching of pennance, must follow his example, constantly speak the truth, boldly rebuke vice, and patiently suffer for the Truths sake; Thus did Saint Paul rebuke the Galatians when they were in the like distem∣per, saying, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 O Amentes, O ye mad men that are out of your wits; or O Insentati, O ye sottish and stupid men that are out of your senses, who hath bewitched you that you should not obey the truth? They would needs pretend to be reformers of the Gospel, when indeed they were disturbers and destroyers of it; for this reason the Apostle reproves them sharply as Apostates, saying, Who hath bewitched you? and again, Ye are fallen from grace: And he also reproves them fitly as hypocrites, calling them fools, whilst they pretended to be wiser then all other Christian Churches, because indeed they were too wise in their own fond conceits ever to attain unto true wisdom: Excellently Saint Chrysostome, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, To preach mild Doctrines to those that more need reproofs, is rather to act the part of a jugler then of a Divine; to be an enemy rather, then to be a friend: Our chief Master did not do so to his Disciples, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, but some∣times blesseth and sometimes reproveth them; and he instant∣eth in Saint Peter, to whom Christ upon the confession of his faith, said, Blessed art thou Simon Barjona; but upon his carnal advice he said, Get thee behind me Satan, thou art an offence unto me; (Greek, a scandal unto me) for thou savourest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men, Mat. 16. 17. & 23. O blessed Saviour, still say to this kind of Satan that loves to get in among the Disciples, Get thee behind me; take away such scandalous Ministers out of thy Church, who savour
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only the things of men, whilst they pretend the things of God; for such will often offend, but never confess thee; or if they do confess thee, it is only, that they may the more covertly and the more securely offend thee: Real scandals they are, not only to thy Ministry, but also to thy self; not only to thy Church, but also to thy religion. Thou hast shewed thy hatred of their sin in that thou hast so sharply rebuked it: O now shew the love of their Function, in not suffering that foul sin any longer to possess thy Ministers, or to deceive thy people.
It is a question very well propounded by Alensis, but bet∣ter answered by him, when he saith, Ʋnde tam detestetur Dominus in Evangelio peccatum Hypocrisis? Resp. 1. ut notetur quanta debet esse detestatio Antichristi, qui maxime per Hypocrisin decipiet. 2. Quia hypocrita est contrarius operi Divino; Dominus enim ordinat malum in bonum, ille bonum convertit in malum. 3. Quia contrarius est toti Trinitati, &c. His question is this, Whence is it that our Lord doth in his Gospel shew so great a detestation of the sin of hy∣pocrisie? His answer is this; 1. To shew men how they ought to detest Antichrist, who will deceive them chiefly by hypocrisie. 2. Because the hypocrite is directly opposite to God in working; For God useth to turn evil into good, but the hypocrite useth to turn good into evil. 3. Because the hypocrite opposeth the whole Trinity: The Father, in seeking after his glory; for the hypocrites aim is to glorifie himself. The Son, in not seeking after his truth; for his whole life is a lie: The Holy Ghost, in not regarding his goodness; for the hypocrite comes only to appear good, but not to be so; For this cause our Saviour intermingled sharp reproofs with his Doctrine, when he had to do with hypocrites, and so did his Apostle after him, saying, O ye foolish, or mad, or sense∣less Galatians, who hath bewitched you? 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He varied the manner of his teaching according to the necessity of his Scholars; sometimes burning and cutting, where was a gangrene, other times applying leni∣tives where was a green wound: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, &c. So great a paroxysm shewed a
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very great distemper; For as to be pettish for a trifle argues a poor degenerous spirit; so not to be moved to anger and in∣dignation when there is just occasion, is the argument of a sleepy and sluggish, if not of a sottish man; And behold saith Saint Chrysostom, Here was a sin greater then the rebuke could be, a sin vast and mountanous, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, such as not only separated, but al∣so estranged them from Christ. A dangerous relapse or reci∣divation! First, because after a full knowledge of Christ, a mer∣cy denyed to others when bestowed on them; For Saint Paul that went through the region of Galatia, was forbidden to preach in Asia, Act. 16. 6. Secondly, because after a full con∣firmation in that knowledge, for the same Saint Paul who had instructed them, did also by way of an Episcopal visitation, see how they followed his instructions: He went over all the coun∣try of Galatia and Phrygia in order, strengthning all the Disciples, Act. 18. 23. In such a case as this, the Apostle of Christ could not, the Ministers of Christ cannot be too zealous, to shew men their apostacy from the Christian Religion; and to vin∣dicate the honour of Christ, and of Christianity; alwayes remembring that distinction of Alensis, qui irascitur per viti∣um, irascitur personae; qui autem per zelum, irascitur peccato; (Alensis, par. 2. qu. 139. m. 11.) He that bids us be angry and sin not, would have us angry only with sin; And the ra∣ther, because for so doing, the Ministers have not only the practice of the Apostles as a president to justifie them, but also the Doctrine of the Apostles as a precept to command them: For this is the express command of the Text, There are very unruly vain-talkers and deceivers, whose mouths must be stopped, Tit. 1. 10, 11. Must their mouths be stopped? then surely such as Titus, (Bishops and Ministers) must stop them; for we cannot expect that God should again send his Angel, and shut the Lions mouths, as he did to Daniel; And the way of stopping their mouths, is by opening their sins; as it follows, Wherefore rebuke them sharply, that they may be sound in the Faith, ver. 13. and without doubt whoso∣ever cordially desires to be sound in the Faith, either is not con∣cerned in the rebuke, or will not be displeased with it. It is Alensis his observation, that the Spirit of God makes no men∣tion
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of the sin of Angels in the book of Genesis, but sets forth at large the sin of man, and he gives this reason for it, Quia Angelicam vulnus Deus non praedestinavit curare, sed hominis peccatum sanare voluit, (Par. 2. qu. 98. m. 8.) Because God intended not to heal the wound or to repair the ruine of the Angels, but he intended to heal the wound and repair the ruine of man: so is it still; where God will not heal the sin∣ners, he suffers their sin to be undiscovered and unreproved; but if he be pleased to reprove them, tis because he is willing to heal them. And if the mouths of unruly vain talkers and deceivers must be stopped by the Ministers; then surely their communion and their Doctrine both, must be shunned and abandoned by the people, who can have no pretence of ex∣cuse if they be misled by false Prophets, since the Text bids them, (in this case) appeal, not to their judgements, wherein they might possibly be misguided by misperswasions, but to their senses, wherein themselves are infallible Judges; for saith our blessed Saviour, ye shall know them by their fruits, Mat. 7. 16. The most ignorant peasant that lives, knows the distinc∣tion of fruits by his outward sense, and goes not to gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles; And our blessed Saviour bids him be guided also by his own sense, in the choice of the tree from which he would gather spiritual fruit to nourish his soul to everlasting life. He may not leave a good, and go to a bad tree to gather good fruit: The false Prophets will say, Lo here is Christ, as well as the true Prophets, Mat. 24. 23. Yet our Saviour saith, believe them not: What shall the people do in such a case? shall they not believe the Prophets? No, they must not believe the false Prophets; But how shall they distinguish betwixt the true and the false Prophets, to believe the one, and to shun the other? I answer, they must look on that other Text, which professedly bids them beware of false Prophets, (Mat. 7. 15.) and there they shall find their note of distinction: for he that bids them beware, teaches them to distinguish, and to discern a wolf though he be in sheeps cloathing; and they must distinguish them meerly by their fruits, whereof they themselves cannot be but sufficient Judges: Wherefore let them examine the works of the Prophets, and they will soon perceive, which are the true and which are the
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false: Whether the scoffing Ismael or the patient Isaac: Whether the covetous Balaam who loveth the wages of un∣righteousness, or the obedient Elisha who slayeth his Oxen, and burneth his Plow, to shew that no worldly interest can keep him from his calling; Whether a false and a fierce Zede∣kiah that is ready to Prophecy according to the mind of A∣hab, and to smite a true Prophet on the cheek: or a true and a mild Micaiah who vows to speak only what the Lord shall say unto him, (though he be sent to the prison never so often) and who forbears to give ill words when he is smitten; Lastly, whether a proud Diotrephes, who loveth to have the preheminence, and receiveth not the brethren, but prateth against them with malicious words; or a meek and modest Demetri∣us, that hath a good report of all men, and of the truth it self: In a word, whether he that serveth the times, or he that ser∣veth the Lord; whether he that invadeth anothers right, to forsake his Religion, or he that forsaketh his own right to keep and practise his Religion? Surely it can be no hard matter, for the people to discern in such a case on which side Christ is, and on which side he is not: and if they will not discern, we cannot say this people who knoweth not the Law are cursed, but this people are cursed because they will not know the Law; they will not know that Christ is to be found in the temple among the Doctors, not among the mony-changers; and out of the temple among just, obedient, patient men that are ready to suffer for righteousness sake; not among unjust, rebellious, outragious men, that are ready to devour those that are more righteous then themselves: For Saint Paul speaking of the works of the flesh, useth this introduction, Now the works of the flesh are manifest, therefore as easily to be discerned by the ignorant as by the learned; by the people, as by the Priests; they are manifest; for all men to see them, and for such men as do them not, to avoid and abandon those that do them; and the same Saint Paul after he hath spoken of the works of the flesh with an &c. saying, and such like (for fear we should think he had named them all in naming those few,) useth this conclusion; of the which I tell you, that they who do such things, shall not inherit the Kingdom of God; doubtless with an intent to instruct the people as well as the Priest, the unlearned
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as well as the learned, that those who have not done such things, should take heed of doing them; and those who have done such things (to procure some worldly advantages) should take heed of doing them any more, unless they will so look after the inheritance of this world, as not to inherit the Kingdom of God: All the works of the flesh which the Apostle there numbreth, do directly proceed either from the sinfull di∣stemper of the body, as adultery, fornication, uncleanness, las∣civiousness, drunkenness, revellings; or from the more sinful, though less visible distemper of the soul, as idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, sedition, heresies, envyings, murders. The distemper of the body is the more opprobious, the more scandalous; the distemper of the soul is the more dangerous, the more pernicious; I find Noah re∣pented of his drunkenness, I find not that Cham repented, who mocked at his fathers nakedness: I find that David repented of his adultery and of his uncleanness, I find not that Doeg re∣pented of his cruelty and of his maliciousness; I find Publi∣cans repenting who thought themselves sinners, I find no Pha∣risees repenting who thought themselves Saints: I will pray as heartily as I can, that God will keep me from the distem∣pers of my body, lest I should defile the members of Christ, and the Temple of the Holy Ghost: But above all will I pray that God will keep me from the distempers of my soul, for they will downright expell Christ out of my heart, and bid defi∣ance to the Holy Ghost: For the temper of Christ was the temper of charity and of humility, and so also is the temper of the good Christian; Come unto me, saith Christ, not go from me, there's the temper of charity, to invite and embrace, not to repell and reject others; for I am meek and lowly in heart, there's the temper of humility; lowly in heart, and cannot be of that pride as to forget my self; meek in heart, and cannot be of that presumption as to disdain and reproach my brother; where you find not this temper, there you may not seek for Christ; where you do find the contrary distem∣per, (in the forenamed works of the flesh,) there you are sure not to find the Spirit of Christ, and therefore must come with your libera nos Domine (though you care not to have the Letanie) and say, Good Lord deliver me from such professors,
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and from such a profession of the Christian Religion, where I can neither find the temper, nor the Spirit of Christ.
IT is very easie for a man to depart and fall away from God, but not so easie to return and to cleave unto him; No man can come to me, except the Father, which hath sent me, draw him, saith our blessed Saviour, John 6. 44. The Father draws us, before we go unto his Son, and he draws us with loving∣kindness, Jer. 31. 3. with bands of love, Hos. 11. 4. that is, by the power of the Holy Ghost, who is the Spirit of love: The Father draws by his Spirit to his Son. He that believes not the Trinity, cannot hope to be thus drawn; and he that is not thus drawn, cannot hope to come unto God; which is plainly shewed by the Apostle when he saith, God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father, Gal. 4. 6. The Greek word is very observable, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: for here's another Exapostle, even God the Holy Ghost, as in the fourth verse we had before one Exapostle, God the Son; There it was God sent forth his Son; here it is, God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son; that is, He sent such a Messenger as was not only an Apostle, one sent from God, but also an Exapostle, One sent out of God: There was one Exapostle to plant the Christian Religion in the world, God sent forth his Son; and there is another Exapostle to plant it in our hearts, God hath
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sent forth the Spirit of his son into your hearts; the same word is used in both places, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, God made use of Ex∣apostles as well as of Apostles, for the planting of the true Re∣ligion: Messengers sent from God would not have served the turn to make men believe the truth, (much less to love and practise it) unless there had been also Messengers sent out of God; Therefore God sent forth his Son, and the Spirit of his Son, that he might settle and stablish our hearts in the Christi∣an faith: So that if we be unsettled in our Religion, and car∣ried away with every blast of vain Doctrine, as being not firm∣ly established in the truth of the holy Gospel, it is a plain case we have not inclined our ears (and much less our hearts) to those two Messengers who came immediately out of God, even his own Son, and his own Spirit, and therefore it is no wonder if we slightly esteem of all Gods other Messengers: God the Father hath sent out God the Son: And God the Father and Son, hath sent out God the Holy Ghost: The salvation of one is the work of three; the salvation of one sinful soul, is the work of all three persons of the blessed Trinity; The Father sending the Son, the Father and Son sending the Holy Ghost; which of these three persons can we lose or let go, and not withall lose or let go our own Salvation? which of these three needs not work as God, a work of All-mighty power, of All seeing wisdom, of All-sufficient and All-saving goodness; to turn us from our evil waies that we may be sanctified, and to keep us in the waies of righteousness that we may be saved? God the Son sent out of the Father into your flesh; and God the Holy Ghost sent out of the Father and the Son, into your hearts: His Son and your flesh; his Spirit and your hearts, both certainly most miraculous conjunctions, & the one the cause of the other; For his Spirit and your hearts, could never have met in man, had not his Son & your flesh met together in God: And this produceth yet another miraculous conjunction, a conjunction of Prayer and of praise both together in the same mouth, and from the same heart, and at the same time, that a righteous man cannot be so over-burdened with sorrow in himself, as not to be relie∣ved and refreshed with joy in his Saviour: Thus Hannah was was in bitterness of soul and prayed unto the Lord and wept sore, but she found that joy and comfort in her prayer, that the
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Text saith, She went her way and did eat, and her countenance was no more sad: So that in effect, she was so of a sorrowful Spirit, as also of a joyful Spirit, and as her sorrow afforded matter of Prayer, so her joy afforded matter of Praise; Her own spirit made her sorrowful, but Gods Spirit made her joy∣ful: And this was indeed the Abba Father of those in the Old Testament, who had but dark promises of a Saviour, yet did with joy draw water out of the wells of salvation, Isa. 12. 3. who had scarce any knowledge or revelation of the person, yet were very well acquainted with the joyes of the Holy Ghost: Hence it is that most of the Psalms, as they are exceeding de∣vout prayers, wherein Gods own Spirit teacheth us to pray, and helpeth our infirmities in praying; so they are also most thankful praises wherein the same spirit teacheth us to rejoyce in God, for hearing our prayers: They are not only prayers, but they are also praises concerning the same deliverance, whe∣ther it be corporal or spiritual, whether it be from bodily or from Ghostly enemies; as for example, The 30. Psalm is a prayer to be delivered from sickness, and death, and damnation, (as that noble Champion of Christ, both for his Church, and for his Truth, and for his Authority, hath piously and judicious∣ly stated it, in his Book of Collects upon the Psalms, which should never be out of the hands of good Christians, till it be fully imprinted in their hearts) I say the 30. Psalm is a Prayer to be delivered from sickness, and death, and damnation, three such sad considerations as were enough to make it a most discon∣solate and doleful prayer: yet it begins with praise, I will mag∣nifie thee O Lord, for thou hast set me up; and it ends with praise, O my God I will give thanks unto thee for ever: And it is the peculiar observation concerning the 88. Psalm, nullâ con∣solatione clauditur, saith Musculus; that it hath in it no clause of comfort and consolation, and yet even this Psalm hath in it some shaddow or dark representation of Abba Father, in that it is said, O Lord God of my salvation, and, O let my prayer enter in∣to thy presence; even as our blessed Saviour when he thought himself most forsaken of God, yet even then laid hold on him by a true and lively Faith, saying, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? This we are sure, It is the same Spirit of ado∣ption that inditeth the most uncomfortable prayer, and the
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most comfortable praise: Only the prayer proceedeth from the great apprehension and constant necessity of our own mani∣fold wants and imperfections, even in our best condition; But the praise proceedeth from the comfortable enjoyment of Gods undeserved goodness in mercies received, and more comfort∣able assurance of his everlasting mercies, in blessings promised; So that the uncomfortableness of the prayer is from the testimo∣ny of our own spirits concerning our miseries and sorrows in our selves; but the comfortableness of the praise, is from the testimony of Gods Holy Spirit concerning the blessings and joys treasured up for us in our Redeemer. Accordingly there is no gift or comfort of the Spirit which we can now pray for in our distresses, which was not prayed for by the Psalmist in his greatest distress, Psal. 51. Renew a right spirit within me; take not thy holy spirit from me; stablish me with thy free spirit: He prayeth for a right spirit against the perversness; for an holy spi∣rit against the profaness and uncleanness; for a free spirit, against the dulness and deadness of his heart: And what can we say more of that spirit which teacheth us to cry Abba Father, but that it is a right spirit to rectifie us when we are out of or∣der: but that it is an holy spirit to sanctifie us that we may be kept in order: and that it is a free spirit, to testifie unto us that being rectified and sanctified, we shall doubtless be accepted as beloved in the beloved: Accordingly Saint Hierom thus trans∣lateth the words, Et spiritu principali confirma me, and con∣firm or stablish me with thy principal spirit, which in Saint Pauls phrase is the spirit of thy Son, or the spirit of Adoption where∣by we cry Abba Father: So that we find these Psalms of Da∣vid as necessary and as useful devotions for us Christians, as they were for the Jews; for that one and the same spirit cryed Abba Father in them, which cryeth Abba Father in us: Wherefore he so prayeth, as that he also praiseth: and so praiseth, as that he also prayeth: He praiseth for the joy of his Saviour, he prayeth for the joy of his salvation: Redde mihi laetitiam salu∣taris tui, restore unto me the joy of thy salvation: So restore it when it is lost, as also preserve and increase it when it is restored. This is a joy which all the delights of this world cannot give, and therefore sure all the sorrows of this world cannot take away: Although the figg tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit
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be in the vines, the labour of the Olive shall fail, and the fields shall yield no meat, the flock shall be cut off from the fold, and there shall be no herd in the stalls, yet I will rejoyce in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation, Hab. 3. 17, 18. The Pro∣phets festival doth not depend upon the joy and mirth of the times; his good chear doth not hang upon the fig-tree, nor up∣on the vine: it ariseth not out of the fields, nor out of the flocks; God may sequester all these from man, or man may se∣quester them all from Gods Prophet, yet still he will keep his solemn feast, he will rejoyce in the Lord, he will joy in the God of his salvation; and the reason is, because God will not, and man cannot, sequester the true Prophet from his God: Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or di∣stress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword, (as it is written, For thy sake we are killed all the day long, we are accounted as sheep for the slaughter) nay in all these things we are more then conquerors through him that loved us, Rom. 8. 35. And as this joy of the good Christian is unsequestrable, not to be taken from him, so is it also unspeakable, not to be expressed by him: thus saith Saint Peter, speaking of our blessed Savi∣our, Whom having not seen ye love, in whom though now ye see him not, yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory, 1 Pet. 1. 8. You that love him from your soul, cannot but rejoyce in him from your soul; If your love of him be with all your soul, with all your might, with all your strength, your joy in him will be so too; you love him with all your might because he is your Saviour; you rejoyce in him with all your might because of his salvation. Who can sufficiently admire the goodness of God in giving the gift of faith unto men, there∣by in some sort to antedate the beatifical vision, and to let us into heaven whiles we live here on earth? For the Apostle de∣scribes to us such a faith as is to be known, not by its pretences, but by its power; and that power is threefold, A power of believing in Christ, yet believing; A power of loving Christ, whom having not seen ye love: A power of rejoycing in Christ, in whom ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable. Whosoever hath not this threefold power of believing, of loving and of rejoycing in Christ, hath not true Faith in Christ, but a phansie in stead of Faith: So inseparable are these three Sisters, the three Theolo∣gical
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vertues, Faith, Hope, and Charity, that whosoever hath one hath All; whosoever doth believe, doth also love; who∣soever doth love, doth also rejoyce, rejoyce in hope of the glory of God, Rom. 5. 2. A joy not to be expressed to others by our speaking, but by our doing; not by our words, but by our works; It is fit they should see us offer the sacrifice of righteousness, and from thence know, that we put our trust in the Lord, Psalm 4. 4. For we Christians also have an Altar, (Heb. 13. 10.) and we have a two fold sacrifice to offer upon that Altar. 1. A Sacri∣fice of thanksgiving: let us offer the Sacrifice of praise to God continually, v. 15. 2. A Sacrifice of Almsgiving: to do good, and to communicate forget not, for with such Sacrifices God is well pleased, ver. 16. These our sacrifices as they do express our joy in Christ, so they should also answer it: and therefore when we have the greatest joyes, we should also have the greatest sa∣crifices: For the analogie or proportion is not only historical, but also causal, which we find set forth betwixt the joy of Gods people and their Sacrifices, Nehem. 12. 43. Also that day they offered great sacrifices, and rejoyced, for God hath made them re∣joyce with great joy: Because their joy was great, their sacrifice also was great: God had made them rejoyce with great joy on that day, and therefore also on that day they offered great sacrifices: And this is the reason why the Church of Christ re∣commendeth to us solemn Festivals as daies wherein the Lord hath made us rejoyce with great joy: and as solemn sacrifices for those festivals, particularly the receiving the holy Eucharist, and the giving of alms (the two proper sacrifices of Christi∣ans) that our sacrifices may be in some sort answerable to our joy. For all the sacrifices we can offer unto God cannot be an∣swerable to the joy we have in him, and from him, (and much less answerable to the joy which we hope to have with him.) And will you see the reason of this joy? it is by reason of the comfort and consolation that good men have in and from God, when they cannot have it in or from the world: They have comfort from the Comforter, and may well have joy with their comfort: This made Saint Paul bless God for all the troubles and tribulations he had from men, because the more they trou∣bled him, the more his God comforted him, and enabled him to comfort others, 2 Cor. 1. 3, 4. Blessed be God, even the Father
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of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort; who comforteth us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble, by the comfort where∣with we our selves are comforted of God; that is, with internal and spiritual comfort, which proceedeth from the Spirit of God; q. d. I will not repine for mens cruelties, but bless God the Fa∣ther of mercies, whiles the more man is my Persecutor, the more God is my Comforter: enabling me to comfort both my self and others with such comforts, as this world is not able to give, and therefore sure is not able to take away. And the same way doth God please to comfort the soul, as the Prophet de∣scribes him comforting of Zion (for what is Zion 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 but an illuminated or enlightened soul?) For the Lord shall comfort Zion; He will comfort all her wast places, and he will make her wilderness like Eden, and her desart like the garden of the Lord; joy and gladness shall be found therein, thanksgiving and the voice of melody, Isa. 51. 3. What an immense, an immortal comfort is this, that the wast places of the soul are comforted, and that her wilderness is made like Eden, and her desart like the garden of the Lord? for the waste place of the soul that needs be comforted, is the conscience which is wasted by sin; the wilderness or desart of the soul is the same conscience overgrown with cares (as a wil∣derness is with thorns) and over-awed with fears and terrours, (as with so many wild beasts,) and overcome with drouth and barrenness, (like the desarts of those hot Countries, that starve their inhabitants:) This wast place, this wilderness, this desart must be quite changed before it can be comforted: The Lord makes this wilderness like Eden, a place of pleasure, this desart like a garden of the Lord, a place of fruitfulness, before joy and gladness can be found therein, thanksgiving and the voice of melody: Till the conscience is purged from dead works, it is like a wilderness, unlovely and unfruitful; unlovely, it makes the man out of love with himself, and much more his God out of love with him: unfruitful, it brings forth no fruits either of righteousness or of repentance: But after it is purged from sin, then it is like an Eden or a Paradise, a place of pleasure, and of plenty, of loveliness and of fruitfulness; Saint Paul joyns them both together, That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto, all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work,
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Col. 1. 10. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, to all pleasing, of God, of your neighbours, and of your selves, there's the pleasure and the loveliness (for no man truly pleaseth himself, whiles he displeas∣eth his God:) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, bringing forth fruit in every good work, or bringing forth the fruit of every good work, there's the plenty and the fruitfulness; for no man walketh worthy of God, but he that is fruitful in every good work; that is to say, fruitful in the works of piety, of tem∣perance, and of charity: of piety towards God, of temperance towards himself, of charity towards his neighbour: He that thus walks worthy of God, cannot but exceedingly rejoyce in God: For he cannot but say with the Psalmist, And now shall he list up mine head above mine enemies round about me, Psalm 27. 6. Hoc erit lentum est nimis; He shall lift up mine head, would make him stay too long for his joy: He may therefore say, He hath already lifted up mine head, even my blessed Saviour, above all mine, and above all his enemies, that I should not fear them: and he is daily lifting me up to my head, that I should not fear my self: Therefore will I offer in his dwelling an oblation with great gladness, I will sing and speak praises unto the Lord, (ver. 7.) Hoc erit lentum est nimis, I will sing, keeps him too long from his duty, he therefore doth sing and say, Praised be the Lord, for he hath heard the voice of my humble petitions; The Lord is my strength and my shield, (my strength to support me when I am not assaulted, my shield to defend me, when I am) my heart hath trusted in him and I am helped; therefore my heart danceth for joy, and in my song will I praise him, Psal. 28. 7, 8. All this and much more then this is set down to express the joy of the Holy Ghost, and it is nothing but Abba Father in the language of those under the Law, who though they did not see God in his Son and in his Spirit so clearly as we do under the Gospel, yet they praised him as loud both for his Son and for his Spirit, as we can praise him; for though in some sort they came short of us in the Object of Faith, because the Son and the Ho∣ly Ghost were not so fully revealed unto them, yet they came not short of us in the Act of faith, whether exercised in prayers or in praises; for they prayed in the mediation of the Son, and they praised in the joy of the Holy Ghost.
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IT is fit that a foolish son should know his folly as well as his filiation; his folly that he may return to himself to do his duty, as well as his filiation, that he may return unto his Father and beg for mercy: Accordingly every good Christian being made the son of God, and yet still abiding too much in the sins of other men, should look with one eye upon himself to in∣crease his humility, and to quicken his obedience and repen∣tance; with the other eye upon his Saviour, to strengthen his faith, and to inflame his piety and devotion: He must see his folly as well as his filiation, that he may ascribe unto God the ho∣nour due unto his name, and much more the honour due unto his nature, in that he disinherits not a foolish Son, besotted and bewitched with the vanities of the world, and with his own sinful lusts and affections, but first looks on him as wise in Christ, his own eternal wisdom, and then makes him so, that he may not only accept him for a son, but may also bring him to his in∣heritance.
For there is no doubt to be made but that the filiation will carry the inheritance, if so be we take care that the folly do not destroy the filiation; And accordingly we must still remem∣ber, that we were by nature the children of wrath, born ene∣mies, but made sons by the grace of adoption, and take heed of returning to our own natural corruptions, or of sinning
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against that grace whereby we have been adopted; For in that we have been adopted into Gods family, we have been put out of our own; so the Greeks do expresly set forth the na∣ture of adoption, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, to be an adopted son, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, (saith Suidas) is to be put out of our own kindred, out of our own stock: And the Psalmist requires no less of us, when he saith, Hearken O daughter and consider, incline thine ear, forget also thine own people and thy fathers house, so shall the King have pleasure in thy beauty, for he is thy Lord God, and worship thou him, Psal. 45. 11, 12. Thou canst not be an adopted son of God, unless thou forget thine own people, and thy fathers house, that is, unless thou go out of the man, that thou maist go in to God; leave off to be an enemy, that thou maist begin to be a son; for∣sake thy self, that thou maist cleave to thy Saviour: For in thy self thou art a stranger, nay an enemy; in him only thou art a servant, or rather a Son: This con∣sideration made Saint Paul say, I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me, and the life which I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God, Gal. 2. 20. As if he had said, I am crucifi∣ed with Christ, in that I am dead unto sin; for the thought that he hath nailed my sins to his Cross, makes me willing to be crucified with him; And yet I still truly live, but not that old carnal man I was before, but made a new creature; so that indeed Christ liveth in me by his Spirit, making me lead a new life; And though I am still in this mortal body, yet my life which I live is immortal; for though my person be on earth, yet my conversation is in heaven: And the same truth which the Apostle here preached by his Example, he did in another place preach also by his Doctrine, saying, And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin, but the spirit is life because of righteousness, (Rom. 8. 10.) that is, the outward man is mor∣tified to the weakning and abolishing of sin, but the inner man is renewed to the encreasing and establishing of righteousness. And this is the proper work of the Spirit of adoption, to change a man from being an enemy to be a servant, and from being a servant to be a son; which we may well look upon as the first priviledge of the Saints, who are truly so, that is,
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Saints in Gods account, though sinners in their own; Saints not of their own calling, but of Gods: or Saints not of their own, but of Gods making. Their duty is to be his ser∣vants, but their honour is to be his friends, nay more, his sons: Ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you (John 15. 14.) They were before his enemies, they are now his ser∣vants and friends; They are to do whatsoever he commands them, there's their duty, they are obliged as servants; yet he saith unto them, ye are my friends, there's their honour, they are accepted as friends: Great is their honour as his friends ad∣mitted to his counsels; yet much greater is their honour as his sons, admitted to his inheritance; But this honour is meer∣ly a priviledge, not a prerogative; tis such as they must thank∣fully receive, not such as they may peremptorily demand; for when ye have done all those things which are commanded you, say, we are unprofitable servants, we have done that which was our duty to do, saith our blessed Saviour, Luk. 17. 10.
Christ looked upon his own obedience as duty, and therefore will not have us look upon ours as supererogation; We are un∣profitable servants in our service, and should be so in our ac∣count, and are we then in Gods account accepted as friends, nay beloved as sons? Great was their priviledge who could say, We are the servants of the God of heaven and earth, and build his house, Ezra 5. 11. (Sure they could not have said so much, if they had pulled his house down;) But far greater is our priviledge, who can say, We are the sons of the God of hea∣ven and earth, and though we be despoiled of our inheritance in earth, yet we cannot be deprived of our inheritance in heaven, The prodigal son saith to his father, I am no more worthy to be called thy Son, make me as one of thy hired servants, Luk. 15. 19. but each of us may now invert those words, and say unto our Father, I am no more worthy to be a hired servant and yet thou hast made me be called thy Son: A consideration which is able to kindle a holy fire in the breast of every good Christian, and enflame his soul with the love of Christ, by whom alone of an enemy he is made a servant, of a servant a friend, of a friend a Son, of a son an heir, even an heir of God, and joint heir with Christ, Rom. 8. 17. For though men have son▪ that are not heirs, yet God hath no son which is not al∣so
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an heir, and therefore this is not so truly a priviledge, as tis a property, for Gods Sons to be his heirs; Accordingly all our care must be to keep our selves in the obedience, that we may be in the acceptance of sons, for then we shall have no cause to doubt of our inheritance: And the best way to keep our selves in the obedience of Sons, is to keep our selves in the communion of his Spirit; for if any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his, Rom. 8. 9. And this is indeed another priviledge of the Saints, that being made the Sons of God, they have the Spirit of his Son. And that Spirit is sent forth into their hearts to testifie unto them his fatherly care and kindness; For the tongue could not truly say Abba Father, if the heart did not truly believe it: We must therefore observe the Apostles Doctrine concerning the Spirit of adoption, that it so moveth in the tongue, as much ra∣ther in the heart, Ye have received the Spirit of adoption, where∣by we cry Abba Father, there's Abba Father in the mouth; and, The spirit it self beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children of God, there's Abba Father in the heart, Rom. 8. 15, 16. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; saith Saint Chrysostome. When the spirit of God is our witness, who can misdoubt the testimony? All the fault in truth is, that we do not so devote our selves to the love of God, and the practice of piety and godliness, as that the Spirit either will or can be our witness: For we often g••eve the Holy Spirit of God by our multiplied transgressions, and hence it is we do not see that he hath sealed us to the day of redemption, (Ephes. 5. 30.) His seal is alwayes sure and good, though not alwayes clear and visible: He doth still imprint it, though we do not still perceive it: the reason is, because our sins do cast a mist before our eyes, nay more, a dismal darkness upon our hearts; and this mist, this darkness interposeth it self betwixt us and the everlasting light. Therefore saith the Apostle, And every man that hath this hope in him, purifieth himself even as he is pure, 1 John 3 3. Every man that hath this hope in him, viz. truly and really, not presumptuously and phantastically, pu∣rifieth himself even as he is pure, and tis no more then needs, because he cannot have this hope in him unless he purifie him∣self: For the same Holy Spirit that maketh the Son of God dwell in us by consolation, doth also make us dwell in him by
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affection; and no longer then we dwell in him, can we be assu∣red that he dwelleth in us: hereby we know that we dwell in him, and he in us (they go both together) because he hath gi∣ven us of his spirit, 1 John 4. 13. And that holy Spirit as it maketh him dwel in us by consolation, so it maketh us dwell in him by affection; God hath joyned these two together, and we may not separate them, even walking in the fear of the Lord, and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost, Act. 9. 31.
Thus doth our own Church teach us to pray, That we may evermore dwell in him, and he in us; which when it shall be ful∣ly brought to pass, we shall fully understand, and more fully enjoy that benediction of the Psalmist, Blessed is the man whom thou choosest and receivest unto thee; he shall dwell in thy Courts, and shall be satisfied with the pleasures of thy house, even of thy holy Temple, Psal. 65. 4. Nay his dwelling shall be much bettered; for he shall dwell not in thy Court, but in thy self; and be satisfied with the pleasures, not of thy house, but of thy Son; nor of thy holy Temple, but of thy holy Spirit.
Thus doth Hierusalem get up thither indeed, whieher Babel got up only in design, even to heaven; Nay yet much higher: Is there any thing higher then heaven? Yes there is, The God of heaven; A true Citizen of Hierusalem never leaves ascending in heart and mind, till he get up to God: And this makes him so given to his de••otions, that he cares to say nothing else but Abba Father; which is yet another priviledge of the Saints; of Gods, not of their own making; (for they, though called Saints here, will be found sinners hereafter,) that having the Spirit of his Son, they have also the language of his Son, and cry Abba Father; For the priviledge of Gods Sons who have the Spi∣rit of his Son in their hearts, is also to have the same Spirit in their mouths, crying Abba Father; as their heart is true to God by inward affection, so their mouth is true unto their heart by out∣ward profession; and consequently, that mans religion is not true which wants either part of this truth; for if his heart be false to his God, he is an hypocrite: If his tongue be false to his heart, he is little less then an Apostate: So hath the irrefragable Doctor determined concerning one that lives among the Turks or Saracens, who still retaineth the Faith in his heart, but not the confession of it in his mouth: Potest tamen
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dici Apostata communi nomine quia à confessione fidei retrocedit; (Alensis par. 2. qu. 153. memb. 2.) He may in a general sense be called an Apostate because he is fallen away from the confession of his Faith: So then a true believer hath not only his heart true to God by affection, but also his tongue true to his heart by profession; being bound to the one by the first, to the other by the third Commandment of the decalogue: If his heart be false to his God, he will one day be ashamed of himself: If his tongue be false to his heart, his Saviour will (one day) be ashamed of him; so himself hath told us, Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words, in this adulterous and sinful generation, of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed, when he cometh in the glory of his Father, with the holy Angels, (Mar. 8, 38.) of him shall the Son of man be ashamed, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He shall blush for the shame of him: O our blessed Redeemer, let us never put thee to the blush, let us never force that precious blood into thy lovely face, which thou camest to bestow upon our sinful souls: But as with our hearts we beleive unto righteousness, so with our mouths let us make confession to sal∣vation: This is Saint Pauls definition of a true Christian, A man that with the heart believeth unto righteousness, and with the mouth confesseth to salvation, Rom. 10. 10. The heart believing brings the righteousness; the mouth confessing, brings the salva∣tion: As tis vain to have a Faith without righteousness, for that is the hypocrites faith; so tis vain to have a righteousness without salvation, for that may be an Apostates righteousness: But the true and constant Christian hath both the heart to be∣lieve, and the mouth to confess his belief: and therefore so hath the Faith, as that also he hath both the righteousness and the sal∣vation: For not being guilty of hypocrisie in confessing his faith whereby to lose the righteousness, he will not be guilty of Apo∣stacy in falling away from his confession, whereby to lose the salvation.
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SAint Paul saying to the Galatians, and because ye are Sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father, (Gal. 4. 6.) hath joyned three eminent privi∣ledges of the Saints altogether in few words; And because ye are sons, there's their first priviledge, that of enemies they are made servants, of servants they are made sons: God hath sent forth the spirit of his Son into your hearts; there's their second priviledge, that being made Sons, they have the Spirit of his Son; whereby we cry Abba Father, there's their third privi∣ledge; that having the Spirit of his Son, they have also the lan∣guage of his Son: But it may not unfitly be demanded how Abba Father is called the language of the Son? I answer be∣cause Christ himself used it in his prayer to the Father, and he said, Abba, Father, all things are possible unto thee, Mar. 14. 36. And the Spirit of Christ teacheth us to use it; as appears Rom. 8. 15. Ye have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father; and Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent forth the spirit of his Son in∣to your hearts crying Abba Father: And it is to be observed that this kind of expression is never at all used in the Old Testament, (as if it had been reserved of purpose for our Saviour Christ) and but thrice used in the new Testament, (in the places fore∣cited) as if it could not rightly be used but only by some few very good Christians, who having entirely devoted themselves to all dutifulness and obedience, can hope for a greater portion of love and kindness from God, then other men; as if he
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were more a Father to them then to others: For so would Syrus interpres have us understand the words, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Abba Pater mi; O Father, my Father, Father of all in ge∣neral, but my Father in particular; which is doubtless the application of a true and lively faith, and cannot belong un∣to those who have not applied themselves to this Father as most dutiful and obedient children; But why 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Abba Father, the one is Syriack, the other in Greek? was our blessed Saviour at so much leasure in his agony, as to look after variety of languages in his prayer? Thats not to be supposed; but tis most probable, that our Saviour used only the Syriake word Abba when he prayed (because he commonly used that language,) and he doubled that word, to express the zeal and earnestness of his affection in his prayer; So Grotius; duplex autem vox posita est affectus te∣standi causâ; simile illud 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Apoc. 1. There is a double word set down to shew the strength of his affec∣tion, as Revel. 1. 7. Even so, Amen: This may happily be a reason of the duplication, but tis not a reason of the va∣riety; that doubt still remains why Abba Father in two seve∣ral languages? I answer, happily to teach us that Christ and the good Christian do call upon God with one and the same Spi∣rit; and therefore Saint Mark agreeth with Saint Paul in the use of one and the same expression; For though Saint Mark writ his Gospel from Saint Peter, yet tis probable he borrow∣ed this emphatical expression from Saint Paul, since it is unde∣niable, that Saint Paul had written his Epistles to the Romans and to the Galatians (in which two he useth this Abba Fa∣ther) long before Saint Mark published his Gospel; For Saint Chrysostome in the argument or Hypothesis before the Epistle to the Romans, (wherein he takes great pains to shew in what order Saint Pauls Epistles were written, and that by ob∣servations collected out of the Epistles themselves) plainly saith, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, It seems to me that the Epistle to the Galatians was writ before the Epistle to the Romans, and tis past all doubt that the Epi∣stle to the Romans was writ long before Saint Paul was carried prisoner to Rome; but the Gospel of Saint Mark was writ af∣after that as may be gathered out of Epiphanius his words
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(in Haer: Alog.) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: next after S. Mathew comes S. Mark who fol∣lowing S. Peter to Rome, was there permitted to write his Gospel. But Saint Peter came not to Rome till after Saint Pauls first an∣swer, under Nero; unless you will comprize him amongst those of whom Saint Paul complains (2 Tim. 4. 16.) At my first answer no man stood with me, but all men forsooke me; I pray God that it may not be laid to their charge; That Saint Peter came soon enough to Rome to die there with Saint Paul for the Go∣spel of Christ, we may not doubt, since all antiquity asserteth it. But that he sate there as Bishop 25. years, sc. from the second year of Claudius, to the 13. year of Nero, (in which he was put to death) seems an unreasonable assertion; for if he were then Bishop of Rome, when Saint Paul was brought to his first answer before Nero, he did plainly forsake Saint Paul; and tis more just to say he had rather forsake his Bishoprick, nay in∣deed his life; And this being laid for a ground that Saint Peter did not forsake Saint Paul at his first answer, it must needs fol∣low that he came not to Rome till after it, and by consequent Saint Mark writ not his Gospel till after Saint Pauls first an∣swer, that is, long after Saint Paul had writ his two Epistles to the Romans and to the Galatians▪ So that Saint Marks Abba Father may not improbably seem to have been derived from Saint Pauls Abba Father, and that for this reason, to assure us that good Christians have the same Father that Christ had, and call upon God with the very same spirit that he did, nay in the very same words, as having their prayers both exem∣plified and sanctified through his intercession; For as some Protestant Divines are willing to believe that the Baptism of John and of Christ were both one, because else we now say they should not be baptized with the same baptism wherewith Christ was baptized; and we cannot be too desirous to receive our Baptism in our Saviours communion: for what is communicated from him is also sanctified by him; So is it in our prayers: we may very comfortably perswade our selves, that Saint Mark used the same Abba Father for Christ, which Saint Paul had used for us Christians; least any man should think we Christians ••ad not the same right to pray, or at least not the same spirit of
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prayer that was in Christ; therefore to assure us that both do pray in the communion of the same Spirit, both are set down praying in the communion of the same words: But yet, whether S. Mark borrowed this from S. Paul, or not, the doubt still re∣mains, why this Abba Father is in two several languages, when as the reduplication might happily have been as emphatical in one tongue as in two; I answer with Saint Augustine, Abba propter illorum linguam, pater propter nostram (Aug. in Psal. 78.) To shew that Christ did no less belong to the Gentiles then he did to the Jews, he useth a Greek word that signifies father for the Gentiles, as well as a Syriack word, that signifies father for the Jews; (for at that time the Jews themselves commonly spake Syriack, having in the Babylonian captivity learned to mix Chaldee with Hebrew, which mixture begat the Syriack) The effect of Saint Augustines answer is this; Syriack and Greek are both joined together, to shew the communion of Jew and Gentile in Christ; we may add, and not only so, but also to shew the cause of that communion, even the communication of the same spirit to them both; which when it descended visibly upon the Apostles, endued them with the gift of tongues; and the scripture still retaining the variety of languages in this Ab∣ba Father, doth not only commemorate that miraculous di∣scent of the Holy Ghost upon them, but doth also confirm his continual descending upon us, with as good success, though not with as great a miracle; For he teacheth us no less then he taught them to cry Abba Father, which puts me upon a second question, who it is that cries Abba Father? is it his spirit or our own? I answer, tis his Spirit, not our own; tis indeed our voice, but tis his breath; for we cannot say Abba Father by the breath and power of our own, but only by the breath and power of his Spirit; and by that we can say it with an undaunted courage, and do say it with an immortal comfort, because with a hope full of immortality: Tis then his Spirit that crieth Abba Fa∣ther though in our mouths; And this crying Abba Father is more fully expressed, Rom. 8. 26. The spirit helpeth our infirmities; for we know not what we should pray for as we ought, but the Spirit it self maketh intercession for us with groanings which can∣not be uttered; whence it may be gathered that the gift of prayer is more in groans then in words: more in groans which cannot,
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then in words which can be uttered: for Moses cried unto the Lord when he spake not one word; (And the Lord said unto Moses, Wherefore criest thou unto me? Exod. 14. 15.) So that he prayed by the Spirit whiles his tongue stood still, and conse∣quently the gift or spirit of prayer (here meant by crying Ab∣ba Father) may not be placed in voluble effusions, but in strong affections; not so much in the tongue as in the heart; for else many adopted Sons must be denied to have the Spirit of Christ, who cannot pour out their conceptions in multiplicity of words; And (which is as bad) many must be affirmed to have the Spirit of Christ, who are enemies to the cross of Christ, whose end is destruction, whose God is their belly, and whose glory is in their shame, who mind earthly things; for many of these men may and do attain to a great perfection in extemporary effusions, we dare not then say that all those who take upon them to be emi∣nent in the gift of prayer, do truly cry Abba Father, or do pray by the Spirit of Christ, because we see that many of them by their works do oppose the name, and blaspheme the truth of Christ; and bring themselves under that terrible reproof and more terrible reproach, They profess that they know God, but in works they deny him, being abominable and disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate, Tit. 1. 16. But there are doubtless many others, more concerned in the gift, though less in the pretence of the Spirit, who make not so many words, but yet make more prayers, even whiles they make use of those prayers which their Church hath made for them, for these bring their groans, though not their words; and those groans are the groans of the Spirit; which without doubt may as well (if not better) accompany a prayer that we are sure is according to the mind of Christ, as a prayer that we cannot tell whether it will be so or no; However, we cannot deny but every one who truly pray∣eth by the spirit of Christ, may say what holy David hath put into his mouth, and the Holy Spirit put into the mouth of Da∣vid, Oh come hither and hearken all ye that fear God, and I will tell you what he hath done for my soul: I called upon him with my mouth, and gave him praises with my tongue; If I incline unto wickedness with my heart, the Lord will not hear me; But God hath heard me and considered the voice of my prayer; praised be God which hath not cast out my prayer, nor turned his mercy from me,
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Psal. 66. v. 14, &c. As if he had said, This great miracle of mercy hath God done for my soul, which I cannot but speak; & all you that fear him, shall do well to hear, he gave me his spirit to call upon him with my mouth, & to give him praises with my tongue; and because praise is not commonly in the mouth of a sinner, and cannot be acceptable from it; he gave me his spirit also to sancti∣fie my heart, that it should not incline to wickedness; & hence it is that I do heartily praise him for enabling me to pray, because praying in the spirit of his Son, I can pray in comfort, that he will not cast away my prayer, because he cannot cast away his only Son; nor turn away his mercy from me, because he cannot turn away frō his own Spirit, which by his mercy, is now becōe mine.
Thus it is said, The spirit of the Lord cloatheth Amasai, 1 Chro. 12. 18. tis in the Hebrew 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, which the Septuagint translate 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and Saint Hierom induit, that is, The spirit of the Lord cloathed Amasai, not barely came upon him but also stuck close to him, and covered him all over; And indeed so doth the spirit come upon us to cloath our souls as our garments do our bodies; that there be neither chilness nor nakedness, neither want of zeal nor of holiness in our affections whiles we cry Abba Father.
But is the spirit therefore gone when the voice is gone? or is the Holy Ghost no longer in our hearts, then Abba Father is in our mouths? For that must be our third Quere, Whether the spirit may be in the heart believing, while tis not in the mouth cry∣ing Abba Father? as when Saint Peter, who doubtless had the Spirit of God, was so far from saying Abba Father, that he de∣nied the Son, nay forswore him, as if a simple denial had not been enough, unless it had been seconded with oaths and curses (which is our unhappy progress of Saviour-denial, instead of self-denial). I answer for Saint Peter, that either the spirit was not quite gone from him, or else soon returned unto him, which appears by the speediness and by the entireness of his repentance in that he wept suddenly, and he wept bitterly; for he had a pe∣culiar prayer and promise of Christ that his faith should not fail; I answer for others of Gods adopted children, as my late reverend and learned Diocesan taught me out of Saint Ambrose, Deus nunquam rescindit donum Adoptionis, God never cuts off his entaile; if once adopted; ever adopted, and out of Biel, Eos 〈…〉〈…〉 qui à▪ salute excidunt numquam fuisse filios dei per adopti∣onem:
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All those who at last fall away from their salvation, were never the children of God by adoption: (Bishop Dave∣nant in his third determination) or rather as Saint John taught them all three, If they had been of us, they would no doubt have continued with us, 1 John 2. 19. But withal I must distinguish betwixt adoption and the state of adoption: betwixt salvation and the state of salvation; for there is salus & status salutis, sal∣vation and the state of salvation, as there is peccatum & status peccati, sin and the state of sin, And the state of either is such as it is in relation to us, and to our reception of it. In actionibus hu∣manis dicitur negotium aliquem statum habere, secundum ordinem propriae dispositionis cum quadam immobilitate seu quiete, (22ae. 183. 1.) in humane actions the state of a business shews the immoveableness of its disposition; so the state of sin is a kind of immoveableness in sin, and the state of Adoption is a kind of immoveableness in adoption: But yet we men are not alike immoveable in both states; because the state of sin is wholly of our own making, and therefore may get some stability from us; But the state of grace is wholly of our receiving, not of our making, and therefore loseth of its stability (as also of its perfection) from the mutable and sinfull condition of our per∣sons: Hence it is, that though to be in sin, is much less then to be in the state of sin: yet to be in Adoption and Salvation, is much more then to be in the state of either; For though we can add to our own misery, yet we can only diminish from Gods mercy: For Adoption and Salvation are much greater in Gods giving, then in our receiving, and consequently the Adoption is greater then the state of Adoption, and the salvation then the state of salvation, according to the old rule, Quicquid re∣cipitur, recipitur ad modum recipientis; whatsoever is received, follows more the nature and condition of the receiver then of the giver; And hence it is that even the adopted Sons of God, have by fearfull failings and fallings made disputable for a time the state of their salvation, though their salvation hath by Gods infinite goodness been made indisputable: For there i•• no be∣ing at the same time in two contrary states, that is to say, in the state of sin, and in the state of Grace; and sure we are that tis no other then madness for any man to be in the hope, who is not in the state of Salvation: So that though we may truly say
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the 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the habit remains, when the 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the act is gone (or cessant) yet we may as truly say, That Gods Elect are not saved only by habits: and therefore the acts of grace if they have been expelled, must necessarily return again, either to keep or to put them in the state of salvation, either to retain them in it, or to restore them to it, before they can be actually saved. And in this sense may we expound Saint James his question, What doth it profit my Brethren, though a man say, He hath faith, and have not works, can faith save him? James 2. 14. As if he had said, It is not the sleepy habit, but the vigorous act of faith (and of all other graces) that brings a man to salvation. And by this means we shall reconcile Saint James his works, and Saint Pauls faith in the Doctrine of Justification; For Saint James affirming that we are justified by works, doth include faith in those works; and Saint Paul affirming we are justified by faith, doth include works in that faith: both of them under∣standing a faith working by love, Gal. 5. 6. though Saint James comprehend the faith in the works, as the cause in the effect: Saint Paul comprehend the works in the faith, as the effect in the cause.
And Saint James as justly urgeth the necessity of works against hypocrites; who deceived themselves with a vain pre∣tence of faith in Christ, and so did not look after the righteous∣ness of works; as Saint Paul urged the necessity of faith against the Pharisees, who trusting to the righteousness of the Law, did not at all look after the righteousness of Christ: Both Saint James and Saint Paul will have us justified by Christs righteous∣ness, (for no other righteousness can acquit and absolve us be∣fore God) only they differently express the instrumental cause of our Justification, which is faith working by love: for where∣as that faith hath a twofold act, actum confidendi & obediendi, An act of believing, and an act of working; Saint Paul rather insists upon the act of believing, because he had to deal with Pharisaical Jews who rejected the Gospel, and thought they could live according to the rule of the Law; But Saint James rather insists upon the act of working, because he had to deal with Hypocritical Christians, who abused the Gospel of Christ, to lawless licentiousness of living: And therefore in Saint James his Divinity, it is as great an absurdity to suppose true faith
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without its proper act of working, and consequently, by the rule of analogie, to suppose the habit of righteousness without the exercise of righteousness, as to suppose true faith and righte∣ousness without salvation: For the act of working being as essential to a justifying faith, as the act of believing; He that will go about to separate true faith from working, may as well go about to separate it from believing; and as well make faith no faith, as make it no working faith.
But how this faith sheweth its work in those who are carried away with any grievous temptation, is not so easie to discover: though that it hath its work, is unreasonable to deny: Therefore Saint Ambrose in his apologie for King David, affords us a three∣fold excuse of his sin, 1. Quia din noluit in peccato manere. 2. Quia corde doluit. 3. Quia potius fragilitate naturae quàm libidine peccandi. Gratianus de Poenit. lib. 3. c. 25. 1. That he would not long continue in his sin: (I suppose he meaneth af∣ter he had been reproved for it; for else he was too long in it, at least a whole year.) 2. That he did repent of it with all his heart. 3. That he had fallen into it rather out of weakness then of willfulness: now if you will ask the reason of his re∣sistance before his sin, of his regret and reluctancie in it, of his repentance after it, you will answer your self, it was from some good principle of the spirit within, which made him war against the flesh, even at that very instant when he was overcome by the strength of its temptation: And accordingly he useth these words in his first penitential prayer, Cast me not away from thy presence, and take not thy holy spirit from me: The holy Spirit was certainly in him when he repented, and therefore not taken away from him when he sinned: And thus much Aquinas is willing to admit, Quod Charitas ex parte Spiritus Sancti mo∣ventis animum ad diligendum Deum, impeccabilitatem habet: Ʋnde impossible est haec duo simul esse vera, quod Spiritus Sanctus velit aliquem movere ad actum charitatis, & quod ipse charitatem amittat peccando; (22••. q. 24. ar. 10.) Charity (or Grace) as it proceeds from the Holy Ghost moving the soul to love God, is not to be lost by sin; wherefore it is impossible that these two propositions should be both true, That the Holy Ghost will move a man to love God, and that he by his sin should lose that love. We conclude then, That they who have
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once received the Spirit of adoption, do still retain him; for Gods gifts are without repentance, and therefore he giveth not his Holy Spirit, the greatest of all his gifts, that he may take him away again: But this Spirit still abideth in the children of God, and will not let them be wholly conquered, much less ca∣ptivated by the flesh, but either holdeth them up that they may not fall, or raiseth them up when they are down: For the foun∣dation of God standeth sure, having this Seal, The Lord knoweth them that are his; And let every one that nameth the name of Christ, depart from iniquity, 2 Tim. 2. 19. The first part of this seal cannot be so much as changed, The Lord knoweth them that are his; for as God himself is immutable, so is his know∣ledge; And the second part of this seal can never be totally de∣faced, Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity; for he that nameth the name of Christ, so as to love what he nameth, doth certainly either first or last depart from iniquity; departing from it either by his righteousness or by his repentance. For though man may be and often is wanting to God, yet God is never wanting to himself; Shall his Spirit be∣gin a good work and not accomplish it? Shall he lay the foun∣dation and not finish the building? We know what our Saviour hath said in this kind, Which of you intending to build a Tower, sitteth not down first and counteth the cost, whether he have suffici∣ent to finish it? least haply after he hath laid the foundation, and is not able to finish it, all that behold it, begin to mock him, saying, This man began to build, and was not able to finish, Luke 14. 28, 29, 30. Be it so that we may pass this jeer and scoff upon man, but let us not think it may be passed upon God: For it were not only unrighteous, but also unreasonable to ascribe less to the Spirit of Grace, then Saint Paul ascribeth to the Word of Grace, since the Word is made powerful by the Spirit which accompanieth it: but Saint Paul ascribeth the power of salvati∣on to the Word of Gods grace, saying, And now Brethren, I commend you to God and to the word of his grace, which is able to build you up, and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified, Acts 20. 32. If the word of grace be able to build you up, then sure the Spirit of grace much more; which is not only able but also willing to build you up, or else he would never have begun to lay the foundation; and when power and
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will are both in the premises, the work or effect must be in the conclusion; So then, though we be cast down, yet since the Spirit of God is both able and willing to build us up, we have a firm hope to be raised at last as high as heaven; for though hea∣ven be as far above our deserts, as above our reach, yet we can∣not doubt but he that hath given us an inheritance among all them which are sanctified, will also give us an inheritance among all them which are glorified; And thus the same Aquinas right∣ly grounds our hope of salvation which we have in this life, not upon mans righteousness which may fade and decay in a mo∣ment, but upon Gods almighty power and all-saving mercy, which can never decay: Spes viatorum non innititur principali∣ter gratiae jam habitae, sed divinae omnipotentiae & misericordie, per quam etiam qui gratiam non habet, eam consequi potest: Our hope of salvation doth not rely principally upon the grace which we have, but upon Gods power and mercy, whereby they may have grace who yet have it not, and consequently we may come to have grace again if we should lose it: Therefore though we should suppose without heresie, that grace it self may fail, yet we cannot suppose without infidelity, that Gods power and mercy should ever fail; and that can as easily restore grace, as it did at first give it: But Saint Gregory will not let us go so far in our supposition, having thus dogmatically determi∣ned this controversie, (though some of his own Church will scarce now stand to it as to his decretory sentence, or Papal de∣termination) Quod in illis donis, sine quibus ad vitam pervenire non potest, spiritus sanctus in electis omnibus semper manet, sed in aliis non semper manet, Greg. 2. Moral. The Holy Ghost doth alwaies abide in Gods elect, as to those gifts without which they cannot be saved, though in regard of other gifts and graces, he may be said sometimes to depart from them. Wherefore we are sure the Spirit of his Son is alwaies in their hearts who are adopted, to work in them an habitual perseverance in godliness, for that is absolutely necessary to salvation, though not alwaies to work in them an actual perseverance in godliness, without which they may be saved; For the Act of sin doth not prevail against the habit of righteousness, and much less above it: So that the habit of righteousness cannot be captivated under an everlasting lethargie, that it should alwaies forget its own act;
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The Spirit of Christ which at first infused the habit, so working in all those who belong to him, that either they still retain the act of righteousness by their innocency, or in due time recover it by their repentance.
God of his infinite mercy give unto us all this Spirit, and continue unto us his own gift, that we being his adopted sons, may so honour and obey him as our Father, that we may have the comfortable assurance of our adoption in this life, and the glorious fruition of our inheritance in the life to come. The one by the Spirit, the other by the merits of his only begotten Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with the Father in the unity of the same Spirit, one God world without end, Amen.
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Christ received in the state of true Christianity.
CAP. I. Of the state of true Christianity.
IT is the special priviledge of Christians, not only to have their appellation or name from Christ, the eternal Son of God, but also to have their Religion from him, and their conversation with him: The Jews could be∣gin 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 with God; and the Heathen learned it from them: But we Christians can begin 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, with the salvation of God, even with Jesus, who had that name from salvation, for he shall save his people from their sins, Mat. 1. 21. Happy soul that is so well acquainted with the dialect of heaven, as to understand the language of Jesus, and so wholly taken up with that acquain∣tance, as to maintain familiar colloquies with him, to hear, and
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to know, and to love his voice. For if the Psalmist could say with great admiration and greater comfort, O how amiable are thy dwellings thou Lord of hosts! Psal. 84. 1. Then much more, O how amiable art thou O Lord who makest thy dwellings so! The hope of men, and the joy of Angels; the salvation of earth, and the beauty of heaven: No wonder if it follow in the next verse, My soul hath a desire and a longing to enter into the Courts of the Lord; my heart and my flesh rejoyce in the living God. But where is the soul that enjoyeth this happiness? for even one of his Apostles who daily seemed to converse with him, enjoyed it not. Saint John plainly excludes him in these words, Judas saith unto him, not Iscariot, John 14. 22. As if the Spirit of God had been afraid least we should think that a Traytor could familiarly converse with Christ, (though he dip∣ped with him in the same dish) or have any comfort from that conversation. Tremelius glosseth the word Iscariot two waies, mercede inducitur ad defectionem; & ultro declinavit ad strangu∣lationem, (Mat. 10. 4.) The hopes of gain made him a Trai∣tor, the thought of his treason made him hang himself; Such was this Iscariot, A man whose heart was so settled and fixed on money, as to sell his Saviour for the love of it: Therefore he could not comfortably and much less familiarly converse with Christ, by questions and answers: For he durst not ask Christ a question to be informed of his Doctrine, for fear the answer should have proved an Indictment, to convine him of his treason, whereof he knew himself already guilty in his heart, which made him afraid least he should disclose the same, who was the searcher of hearts. Therefore he desired not to make any particular addresses to his Master, when as the other Judas who had none of this Treachery or covetousness, did as it were continually hang upon his lips, and was wholly ravished with his Doctrine, saying within himself, How sweet are thy words unto my taste, yea sweeter then hon••y to my mouth? Psal. 119. v. 103. And accordingly our blessed Saviour answers the Jude, but not the Iscariot: answers the Confessor, but not the Traytor; For Jude was a name imposed from confession and praise, Now will I praise the Lord, therefore she called his name Judah, Gen. 29. 35. that is praise, or confession, whence the Vulgar Latine doth often say, Confitebor tibi Domine, I will confess unto thee O
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Lord, for, I will praise thee O Lord, because the same word in the Hebrew signifies both confession and praise; Be it so then; Christ will answer one that confesseth him, but he will not answer one that betrayeth him: This is the reason that though he speak so loud, yet so few hear his voice; That though his love be greatly extended, yet it is but little diffused in our hearts; For though he be most lovely in himself, yet is he not so to them whose breast is filled with another love: The Text tells us of a fourfold lover, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, A lover of himself, A lover of his pleasure, A lover of his profit, and A lover of his God. The first lover will not hearken to Christs voice; for self-love and Saviour-love cannot be together, since self ends and Saviour-ends are so far asunder: The second and third lovers, though they may a little hearken to Christs voice, yet they cannot much regard it; for if any man love the world, (that is, his pleasure or his profit, the whole world consisting of nothing else) the love of the Father is not in him, 1 John 2. 15. It is only the last lover, the lover of God, who heareth Christs voice, and rejoyceth to hear it; for every one that loveth him that begat, loveth him also that is begotten of him, 1 John 5. 1. To such lovers he will not only speak, but he will also answer, which shews a familiarity of speaking; For though he speak to very many, yet he answers to very few: that is, only to those who are willing to discourse and advise with him; He speaks to all that are Christians by outward profession, calling aloud to them now in his Word, as once he did to the Jews in his person, and saying, Repent, for the Kingdom of God is at hand, Mat. 4. 1. But he answers only to Christians by inward affection, because in∣deed they only do hear his voice; for why should he answer to those that will not give him the hearing? Thus himself hath told us, my sheep hear my voice, John 10. 27. He must be a sheep that will hear the voice of Christ, not a wolf, one more ready to devour his Pastor then to follow him, one more ready to scatter and tear the flock, then to associate and joyn with them. I must take heed of being a Wolf towards my Brother, If I de∣sire to be a Sheep towards my Saviour; Homo homini lupus, & Christo ag••••••, were a strange proverb, and more strange Divi∣nit••, That he who is a Wolf to man, should be a Lamb to Christ. It was an evil Spirit that made Saul a Wolf to David,
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1 Sam. 19. 9. And the same evil spirit shewed him to be none of Gods sheep.
He watches to catch David, but to lose himself; and whiles he seeks to destroy Gods servant, he doth indeed destroy his own soul; This makes the spirit of God look upon him as a heathen not as an Israelite, as appears from Psal. 59. 5. Thou therefore O Lord God of hosts the God of Israel, awake to visit all the heathen; This Psalm was made upon that occasion that Saul had sent and watched Davids house to kill him, and we must expound these words according to that occasion; So Tre∣melius, Ad visitandum omnes gentes ist as, i. e. Copias Saulis, quae eo∣dem animo Davidem persequebantur, quo gentes aliene à populo Dei facturae fuissent; Awake to visit the heathen, that is, the Armies of Saul which did persecute David with as malicious a Spirit, as the very heathē, who knew not God, would have persecuted him.
Thou which laughest the heathen to scorn, saith Isacides, wilt also laugh those men to scorn; And Ezra shews how he is able to do it, saying, that he is the Lord of hosts, of the Armies of Angels that are above in heaven, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 no less then of the armies of Israel that are below on the earth: God is not said to laugh any to scorn but only heathen, as in this Psal. ver. 8. And in the second Psalm. v. 4, or such as make themselves like heathen by raging as furiously as they, against the Church of Christ, and the ministers of his Gospel, as appears Acts 4. where the Apostles being persecuted for preaching Christ, make use of this very Psalm in their prayer, Why did the heathen rage, and the people imagine vain things? For such men whether they be Jews or Christians, are no better then heathen in Gods ac∣count; and accordingly he that dwelleth in heaven shall laugh them to scorn, the Lord shall have them in derision; He laughs them to scorn because of their vain imaginations of opposition against Christ, and much more because of their vain endeavours in oppo∣sing him; and his laughing ends in their weeping, and their weep∣ing ends, (as their cruelty began,) in gnashing of teeth; They gnashed on him with their teeth, Acts 5. 54. there's their sin, which shewed them be men little better then Wolves; and again, there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth, Mat. 8. 12. there's their punishment, which will shew them to be men worse then nothing: The first gnashing of teeth was from the
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fierceness, the last shall be from the anguish of their hearts: And the spirit of God seemeth to pray that it may be so, say∣ing, and be not mercifull unto them that offend of malicious wick∣edness: (Psal. 59. v. 5.) So that we need not wonder why so many Christians now a dayes come not to the state of true Christianity, (which alone puts them in a capacity of mercy) for the reason is plain, tis because they sin out of malicious wick∣edness: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Be not mercifull to any wicked prevaricator, Selah; Tremelius renders the words thus, Ne gratiam facias ullis perfidè agentibus iniquitatem summe: He finds a new signification for Selah, to shew he had found a new Selah for their sin, that is, a new hight or exaltation in the sin of those men who are praevaricatores iniquitatis, who do not only continue, but also prevaricate in their iniquity: Qui Deum cultu, & honore Davidem prosequi simulantes, per∣fidè ea perpetrabant quae sequuntur, (saith he,) who pretend∣ing to fear God, and to honour David did perfidiously act all that follows in the Psalm against them both: How are such men like to come to Salvation, when the Son of God will not preach for it, and the Spirit of God doth pray against it? Be not merci∣full unto them that offend of malicious wickedness. Surely OLord, mercy is thy delight no less then it is our desire; It is above all thy works, and shall it not much more be above all ours? shall there be any sin (which is properly our work) of so vast an extent as to reach beyond thy mercy? or of so loud a cry as to make thee stop thine ears against the prayer of a distressed sinner? Oh no, tis not iniquity, but prevaricating in iniquity that makes man not care to pray; Tis not sin, but impenitency in sin, that makes God not hear his prayers: Your iniquit es have separated betwixt you and your God, Isa. 59. 2. that is your multiplied, your malicious sins, committed wth a shame∣less face, with a stiff neck, with a high hand, and with a hard heart, which first fill your Souls with iniquity, and then with impeniteney; such iniquities as these whiles unrepented (and tis like they will be unrepented, whiles they would be unre∣proved) do separate betwixt you and your God: For froward thoughts separate from God; there's the separation of a perverse sinner from God the Father who is God of himself: and again, into a malicious soul wisdom will not enter, there's his Separa∣tion
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from God the Son, who is the wisdom of the Father: And lastly, wisdom is a loving spirit; there's his separation from God the Holy Ghost, who is the Spirit of the Father and of the Son, the spirit of love: (Wisdom 1. 3, 4, 6.) This is the reason why not Iscariot is annexed to that Judas, who spake to our blessed Saviour, and whom our Saviour Christ was pleased to answer; God the Son did not answer such an Apostate, such a Traitor as Iscariot was, and God the Holy Ghost would not have us think that he did answer him; he that once thought it better to be a Traitor then to be a Disci∣ple, doth now think it better not to be, then to have been a tray∣tor: He that once was willing from an Apostle, to become a Divel, is now much more willing from a Divel to become nothing.
He then would not hear the voice of Christ, and now he cannot hear it, unless it be that voice which hath already fil∣led his heart with the horror, though it shall not till the last day fill his ears with the noise of it, Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire, Mat, 25. 41. A voice that Christ hath re∣served as a Judge, for those who would not hear him as a Sa∣viour; A voice which he will utter to the goates on his left hand, not to the sheep on his right hand. Lord, make me con∣sider in due time which is best for my soul; either now to hear thy voice as a sheep to my salvation, or hereafter to hear it as a goat to my condemnation: Thou hast said, My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me, John 10. 27. Which is thy voice Lord that we may hear it? And where wilt thou be that we may follow thee? Is not thy voice in thy Word? art not thou in thy Church? How then do those men hear thy voice that neglect thy word? How do they follow thee, that run away from thy Church? Surely he is no good sheep that doth this, and therefore Christ is none of his shepherd.
He careth not to answer one that is either a Wolf or a Di∣vel; either a Wolf for his bloody cruelty, or a Divel for his con∣tinued Apostacy; or if he do answer such a one, it shall be only as he did once answer Judas Iscariot, who was both a Wolf and a Divel, with a Tu dixisti, Thou hast said, Mat. 26. 25. An an∣swer tending to nothing but to his conviction, or to his con∣demnation;
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He that hath persecuted or betrayed his Saviour, if he say unto him, Master, is it I? shall soon find such an an∣swer returned to him in his own guilty conscience, Thou hast said: an answer tending only to his conviction or to his con∣demnation; But the answer which our blessed Saviour was pleased to return to Saint Jude the Confessor, was of another strain; for it was a gracious answer for his instruction, a satisfactory answer for his contentation.
If Christ made so great a distinction betwixt two of the same communion and of the same order, no wonder if he still make so great a distinction, betwixt those that will not be of the same Church, who regard neither the Doctrine of Christ, nor the communion of Christians! Judas the traytor, had not yet forsaken Christs Communion, yet was not benefited by his teaching, because he regarded not his Doctrine. Judas the Confessor that he might be sure to be well taught by him, rea∣dily embraced his Doctrine, and resolved never to forsake his Communion: And hence it was, that our Saviour Christ returned to him a gracious answer for his instruction, teaching him that great Mysterie of the manifestation of the Son of God in the soul of man: Nay yet more, a satisfactory answer for his contentation, assuring him, that he would thus manifest him∣self unto him: The manifestation of Christ unto the soul, is a great mysterie and a greater mercy; the mysterie instructs the soul, but the mercy contents it: And well it may, for tis no less then eternal life; In qua quidem manifestatione vita aeterna consistit; as saith Aquinas, in which manifestation of Christ unto the soul, consisteth eternal life; and he proveth his saying from John 17. 3. And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent, (Aquin. 22. qu. 24. art. 12.) So then, if I will enjoy eternal life, I must first know it, if I will know eternal life, I must know Christ: If I will know Christ, I must not disesteem his Doctrine, or discountenance his com∣munion; for if I do either, though I live never so long among Christians, yet I am like never to come to the state of true Christianity.
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IF men were as zealous to look after their spiritual, as they are to look after their temporal state, the earth would be less filled with sin, and heaven would be more filled with Saints: But we are generally careless to know the state and condition of our souls, because we are generally careless to make it such as might be worth our knowing: Hence that sad Epipho∣nema from our Saviours own mouth, so is he that layeth up treasure for himself, and is not rich towards God, Luke 12. 21. That is, so very a fool is he, in the account of the eternal wis∣dom, (though perhaps he be wise in his own account,) who is carefull of his Mammon, and careless of his God; who takes so much pains about his body, so little about his soul; who is so busie in contriving of his temporal, but thinks not at all of his eternal welfare: Hence it is, that men so easily betake themselves to that profession of the Chris••ian Religion, which makes most for their temporal advantages, though it much disad∣vantage them in their spiritual condition, and thereby declare themselves not to be in the state of true Christianity, for that would make them prefer the love of Christ above all worldly in∣terest whatsoever.
But we need not have to do with the several professions of the Christian Religion in this case; for the state of true Chri∣stianity, is not to profess but to love Christ; and we are then truly in the state of salvation, when we truly love our Saviour: And this plainly appears by Saint Pauls exhortation to the Ephesians, (and in them to us,) where he saith, Be ye there∣fore followers of God as dear children, and walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us, Ephes. 5. 1, 2. To be followers of God, and to
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be his dear children, and to walk in love, are put for one and the ame thing; And what love is here meant, but the love of Christ, who so dearly loved us as to give himself for us, and therefore may justly require our entirest love? And if we entirely love him, we will be sure not to love what he hateth, nor to hate what he loveth, and consequently not to abide in any sin either of commission or of omission; for to be wilfully guilty of a sin of commission, is to love what Christ hateth; and to be wilfully guil∣ty of a sin of omission, is to hate what Christ loveth: and either of these is enough to keep a man from being a good Christian. Therefore saith the Psalmist, O ye that love the Lord, see that ye hate the thing which is evil, Psalm 97. 10. For ye cannot love him, unless ye hate what he hateth; & he hateth every thing that is evil, whether it be evil by omission or by commission.
The state of salvation consists so much of love, that tis not possible for an uncharitable, and much less for a malicious man, to be in that state, but either he must forgoe his malice, or he must forgoe his salvation; for God is love, and he that dwelleth in love, dwelleth in God, and God in him, John 4. 16. No man can be in the state of salvation, who hath not communion with God; and there is no having com∣munion with God but by love; we must dwell in love, or he will not dwel in us: And therefore it was most Christian Do∣ctrine which was delivered by Saint Augustine, lib. 1. de Do∣ctrina Christiana, when he said, Quatuor sunt diligenda; unum quod est supra nos Sc. Deus; Alterum quod nos sumus; Tertium quod juxta nos. i. e. proximus; Quartum quod infra nos. i. e. cor∣pus: There are four things which every man is bound to love, that he may be a good Christian, or in the state of true Christi∣anity; his God that is above him: His neighbour that is about him: His soul that is within him; and His body that is without him; for as the body is capable of eternal bliss by redundancy from the soul, so is it also capable of true Christi∣an charity; which is not a momentary or temporal, but an eternal and everlasting love, grounded upon the communica∣tion and the communion of a blessed eternity: So that in truth the love of God doth not only produce, but also comprize and contain all those three other loves; man loving his body and his soul, and his neighbour with Christian charity, only in re∣lation
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to Christ, and as they belong to his communion: For undeniable, if not indisputable is that position of the Ange∣lical Doctor, Amicitia charitatis super communicatione beati∣tudinis fundatur, The friendship of Christian charity is founded upon the communication of eternal blessedness; (Aquin. 22••. qu. 25. art. 5.) and by consequent is to be extended accor∣ding to the extent of that communication: Therefore it be∣ginneth with our Saviour Christ, and goeth on to every one of his members, this spiritual unction of the Holy Ghost be∣ing like to that holy ointment poured upon Aaron, which ran from his head down to the skirts of his cloathing, Psal. 133. 2. And yet even from this excellent ground of charity, do many men find a pretence for gross uncharitableness, whilst those that are of divers perswasions in matters of Religion, will needs de∣ny to one another the hopes of salvation; every one being re∣solved to maintain, that his own Religion is the only true Chri∣stian, (though it be no more then a profession of it) and all agreeing, that tis only the true Christian Religion wherein and whereby we can attain eternal blessedness: Hence it is, that we commonly receive those very faintly whom we suspect God hath not received; and those not at all, whom we are perswaded he will not receive: So that we do little less then invade Christs Judgement seat, that we may discard true Chri∣stian charity; and if we now invade his seat, we shall hereafter tremble at his bar. Why should we so grosly abuse the very ground of Christian charity, to a most unchristian uncharitable∣ness? Why should we be so hasty to exclude out of the commu∣nion of eternal blessedness, those whom our Saviour Christ hath called to it? Surely, if it be not in our power to give heaven by our charity; tis not in power to deny heaven by our uncharita∣bleness, unless it be only to our selves.
True Christian charity is of as large an extent as heaven it self, and embraceth all those who have any probability of getting thither; For it is grounded upon the communion of eternal bliss; and therefore as it loves Christ the head, so it cannot but love all Christians as members of that communion: It first loves Christ for his own sake, by whom we have the communi∣cation; it afterwards loves our Christian brethren for Christs sake, with whom we have inchoately, and hope to have consum∣•…•… of eternal blessedness: O Christ let me
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love as a Christian, that I may live as a Christian; for I cannot live as a Christian unless I live in thee, and I cannot live in thee unless I live in love: Let me rather mistake my charity in be∣lieving their salvation who have gross errors mixed with their profession, then not maintain my charity, by denying them salvation, who are not of mine own profession: For thou wilt sooner pardon their errors which may proceed from ig∣norance or infirmity, then my uncharitableness which can pro∣ceed from nothing else but pride and presumption.
THere is not in all the world any thing taught by a Prea∣cher from heaven, but only the Christian Religion: And the Son of God came from heaven to teach that, and his Fa∣thers voice came from heaven to bid us observe and follow his teaching. Behold a voice out of the cloud, which said, This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased, hear ye him, Mat. 17. 5. And we may very well be not only contented, but also desirous to hear him; for the state of true Christianity is with∣out all doubt best taught by Christ himself, and is therefore best learned of him; Moses was faithful in Gods house as a servant, (and the best teachers amongst men can but sit in Moses chair, Mat. 23. 2.) but Christ was faithful as a Son, Heb. 3. 5, 6. The servant was appointed and ordained for the Son, and so was Moses for Christ; but the Son came only for himself; The servant was faithful in his Masters house; but the Son in his own house; Christ as a Son, over his own house, ver. 6. Moses his faithfulness was by way of introduction, for a testi∣mony of those things which were to be spoken after, ver. 5. (sc.
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by Christ;) But Christs faithfulness was by way of perfecti∣on, to speak those things plainly, of which Moses had testifi∣ed obscurely, and to accomplish or perform whatsoever Moses his testimony had either prophesied or promised concerning him: For Moses in his writings spake of Christ, and directed these Jews unto him, in so much that our Saviour telleth the Jews that they needed no other then Moses to accuse them of un∣belief for not turning Christians. Do not think that I will accuse you to the Father; there is one that accuseth you, even Moses in whom ye trust; For had ye believed Moses, ye would have be∣lieved me; for he wrote of me; But if ye believe not his wri∣tings, How shall ye believe my words? John 5. 45, 46, 47. We may put the whole sense of those three verses into these two propositions. 1. That Moses writ so much of Christ as to leave the Jews inexcusable if they did not from his writings look after Christ, and believe in him; which more particularly ap∣pears from Deut. 18. 15. where Moses saith, The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee, of thy brethren, like unto me: unto him ye shall hearken; which words we find Saint Peter and Saint Stephen both, have applied unto Christ, proving he was that Prophet to whom Moses had bid them hearken, Act. 3. 22. & Act. 7, 37. so that the Jews themselves were no longer to hearken to Moses, by Moses his own appointment, then till the comming of Christ.
2. That the Jews who would not believe Moses his writings concerning Christ, were not like to believe any other Prophets words concerning him; which is still a good proof, that no man can possibly reject the authority of the Scripture, and yet truly beleive in Christ from the authority of the Church; for if the writings of Moses, or of the Old Testament, then much more the writings of the Apostles or of the New Te∣stament must needs be above any other Prophets words, since these writings as well as those are looked upon as the un∣doubted word of God; And therefore if the Church hath not found Christ in the Scriptures, how shall we hope to find Christ in the Church? and by consequent, if we will be good Christians, we must above all things take heed of cavil∣ling or rather blaspheming against the word of Christ; for that is in effect to say, that we will have a state of Christianity,
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not of Gods, but of our own making: we question not but the Christian Religion, as it hath an excellency above all other religions, so it hath a certainty agreeable to its excel∣lency.
And this Certainty is grounded meerly on the written word, in the judgement of Saint Peter, who tels us indeed that there came such a voice from the most excellent glory, This is my be∣loved Son; in whom I am well pleased: and that he and some others heard this voice, when they were with Christ in the holy mount: but yet that the Scriptures were a more certain ground of the Christian Faith, then was this Voice; for so he saith af∣ter all, We have also a more sure word of prophecy, whereunto ye do well that ye take heed, as unto a l••ght that shineth in a dark place, untill the day dawn, and the day-star arise in your hearts. 2 Pet. 1. 17, 18, 19. The voice from heaven was sure, but yet the word of Prophecy was more sure; for notwithstanding that voice did say, Hear ye him, Mat. 17. 5. yet they would have suspended their hearing, but for the word of Prophecy which had said before, Ʋnto him ye shall hearken, Deut. 18. 15. So that the voice from heaven had in effect all its certainty from the word of Prophecy; Therefore he said, we have also a more sure word of Prophecy; His full intent was to make us seek after Christ in the Old Testament, much more in the New: He saith we shall do well to take heed unto that, much more unto this; that will guide us unto Christ as a light that shineth in a dark place, but this will guide us to him as a morning Star that ushereth in the day: And this is no more then our Saviour himself had said before, Blessed are the eyes which see the things that ye see; For I tell you that many Prophets and Kings have desired to see those things which ye see, and have not seen them, and to hear those things which ye hear, and have not heard them; Luke 10. 23, 24. The comparison is betwixt those under the Law, and those under the Gospel: and they under the Gospel are declared the more blessed; For they under the Law had but a dim light, which made them see Christ so imperfectly as if they had not seen him; But we that are under the Gospel have a clear shining light clearly, and perfectly to see our Savi∣our Christ, and therefore are much more blessed then they, if we can but see our own blessedness, and will be heartily thank∣full
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for it; therefore saith Saint John, The Law was given by Moses, but Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ; John 1. 17. whereby he excludes the Law both from Grace and Truth; from Grace absolutely, but from Truth only comparatively; The Law did neither teach Grace, nor give Grace; it only gave a rule of righteousness, but not grace to keep it; and therefore only shewed our want of a Redeemer, but shewed not the way of our redemption; Thus the Law was opposed to grace absolutely, and left that to come wholly and en∣tirely by Christ; and it was also opposed to Truth compara∣tively; for many truths were but obscurely and figuratively propounded in the Law, which are plainly and substantially re∣vealed in the Gospel; as the doctrine of the blessed Trinity, of the incarnation, passion, resurrection, and ascension of the Son of God, and indeed all the other articles of our Christian faith; So that Truth substantially or compleatly, that is, in its full revelation and accomplishment, came only by Jesus Christ.
Wherefore if our Saviour Christ himself, (who without doubt best understood the state of true Christianity) sent the Jews to the Law of Moses to be assured of the truth of the Chri∣stian Religion; much more doth he send us Christians to his own holy Gospel, to be assured of the same truth; And, as Moses his writings were then, so the Apostles writings are now a greater ground of assurance to us, then any Prophets words can be: (for as Moses wished That all the Lords People were Prophets, so am I willing to believe, that his Church is to be ac∣counted as a Prophet:) so that it commonly fareth with Chri∣stians in their coming unto Christ, as it did with the Samari∣tans, John 4. who first believed on our blessed Saviour for the saying of the woman, but afterwards believed because of his own word; So do we generally first believe in Christ by the testimony of the Church, which he hath in mercy appointed to lead us to his Word, (for else it were impossible we should ever come neer it) But when once we come to see and under∣stand his Word, then we believe in Christ, not for his Church, but for himself; and may justly say to the Church, as the Sa∣maritans said to the woman, Now we believe, not because of thy saying, for we have heard him our selves, and know that this is
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indeed the Christ, the Saviour of the world; John 4. 42. This may we justly say, not to the undervaluing of the Church, to which we are so much obliged for bringing us to the knowledge of the Word, (for had not she preserved and translated it, we could never have known it) but rather to the overvaluing of the word above the Church, to shew we are infinitely more obliged to God for giving his word, then we can be to his Church, either for preserving, or for expounding it: Therefore we cannot but prefer the word above the Church, and we know this may be done without either undutifulness or unthankfulness; since God hath appointed that his Church should wholly rely upon his word, and prove her self to be his Church from the Testimony of his Word, as appears plainly in the case of the Bereans, who are commended for searching the Scriptures, and believing the Word preached by Paul and Silas, because they found it agree∣able with the written Word; These were more noble in that they searched the Scriptures, whether those things were so; therefore many of them believed; Acts 17. 11, 12. And sure, we are to go in the same way they did go, unless we can prove that ei∣ther the Scripture is now less Dogmatical then it was in those days, or the Church more Apostolical: And there is great Reason for it, as well as great Religion. For we plainly see that the Church is much ordered according to the will of man; but weare sure the word was wholy ordered according to the will of God; For the Prophesie came not in old time by the will of man, but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost, 2 Pet. 1. 21. We must say the same of the New, what he saith of the Old Testament; for as came the Prophecy of old time, so also came the Gospel in the latter times, not by the will of man, but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost: And from hence we must conclude the Authority of the Scripture, to be the highest authority that can be, in setling and establishing the Christi∣an Religion: For if the Prophets and Apostles did not only speak, but also write as they were moved by the Holy Ghost, it must needs follow that the doctrine of the Church must have its force and weight from their doctrine, but their doctrine from it self, as that which came directly and imme∣diately from the Holy Ghost, the infallible Spirit of God,
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which best knew his mind as being his own Spirit, and hath most truly derived his mind and meaning to us, as being his in∣fallible Spirit: So it is evident, The Scripture is no less to teach the Church, then the Church is to teach the People, according to that irrefragable determination of their irrefragable Doctor, Si enim aliquis asserit aliquid quod non sit determinatum in sacra Scriptura, vel quod non sequatur directe ex fide, mortaliter peccat, quia se constieuit supra Deum: Judex enim est supra id de quo debet judicare; Qui ergo suâ authoritate asserit aliquid de Deo, ponit se supra Deum, quia judicat de Deo. Haec est super∣bia Intellectus, quam prohibet Apostolus, Rom. 12. Non plus sapere quàm oportet sapere, sed sapere ad sobrietatem: Alensis par. 1. qu. 68. mem. 1. ar. 2.) If any Doctor, and (conse∣quently if any Church which is but a company of Doctors) doth positively affirm any thing (as matter of Faith or Religi∣on) which is is not directly determined in the holy Scriptures, or doth not inevitably follow from the Faith therein revealed, he sinneth mortally, because he exalteth himself above God; For the Judge is above that of which he is to judge; Therefore he who without warrant from God positively asserteth any thing of God, putteth himself above God in that he judgeth of God: which is the Spiritual pride forbidden by the Apostle, Rom. 12. 3. Be not wise above what is required, but be wise to Sobriety: Therefore surely the Church cannot teach that as a Doctrine of Christianity, which she hath not learned of Christ; and where hath she learned of Christ but in his Word?
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THE state of Christianity, as it came by our Saviour Christ in being, so also in knowing; It hath its being from his merit, its knowing from his word; whence it follows by unde∣niable consequence, that the state of true Christianity is to be learned only in the Church of Christ: for there only is the word of Christ, by which he teacheth to mens conviction: there only is the Spirit of Christ by which he teacheth to mens Conversion; For the voice must needs proceed from the body, and the Church is his body, Col. 1. 24. therefore it is to be feared that those who care not to be of the body, either do not hear his voice, or do not much profit by hearing it; For it is not to be doubted but Christ hath intrusted his Church with his word, as appears, Rom 3. 2. Ʋnto them were commited the oracles of God, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, they were intrusted with the oracles of God: The Jewish Church with the Oracles of the Old Testament, and the Christi∣an Church with the oracles of the new; And this precious Ta∣lent was intrusted with the Church, not to be wrapped up in a Napkin, but to be imployed to Gods glory & the peoples good: for so we find that the law and the Prophets were read in the Sy∣nagogues every Sabbath day, Acts 13. 15. & 27. And by the same reason the Christian Church is still bound to take care that the Gospel or New Testament be also read in our Churches, which because it cannot in the original tongue, wherein it was written, to the Edification of the people, the Church is bound to trans∣late it into such languages as the people do understand, that she may not be defective in her trust, which is to use the word of God most for Gods glory and for his peoples good: And
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that Church doth in this particular best discharge her trust, which sets forth the word of God in the truest and fittest translation; not rigidly according to the words, (in all places,) but yet exactly according to the sense; for neither doth Christ him∣self nor his holy Apostles cite the Old Testament so much ac∣cording to the words, as according to the sense: And if men had no other obligation to their Church but only this, That they could not know what God had said in his holy word, unless their Church had taught them, yet this alone, (if rightly weighed,) would keep them both from Heresie and from Schism: from Heresie, in receding from that doctrine which came from God: and from Schism, in receding from that com∣munion wherein they were first made partakers of that doctrine. This is certain, the Text saith plainly, The Lord, added to the Church daily such as should be saved, Acts 2. 47. which would never have been written, if to depart from the doctrine, or to be out of the communion of the Church, were the ready way of Salvation. Therefore as S. Peter once said to our blessed Saviour, so ought all good Christians still to say unto his Church, for rightly translating the word of Christ, Lord to whom shall we go? thou hast the words of eternal life, John 6. 68. for without que∣stion God did not put it in the power and will of his Church to give unto his people the words of eternal life, that they should run away either from her doctrine or from her communion; The hour is coming and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, John 5. 25. Sweet Jesus, make the dead; to hear thy voice, for the living do little less then scorn it. And this document or instruction, as it much concerns the word preached, so it much more concerns the word written, which hath alwayes in all ages and in all Churches been taught more incorruptly and more impartially by Translations then by Expositions; For in Translati∣ons men generally follow Gods truth, but in expositions they too too often follow their own inventions, if not their own interests.
Thus have men little reason to depart from the Church, be∣cause therein Christ teacheth by his word; and yet much less, because he therein teacheth by his spirit: for it is clear that the spirit goeth along with the word, in that Saint Stephen saith unto the Jews, Ye do alwayes resist the Holy Ghost, Acts 7. 51. When as they had only resisted the words of the Prophets.
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Therefore we may confidently and comfortably affirm, that they who carefully observe and conscionably obey Gods holy Ordinances in his Church••, will be able at the last day to say unto him, not as Sectaries and wanderers will be able to say, Thou hast taught in our streets, Lake 13. 26. to whom he will answer, I tell you I know you not whence you are; depart me from all ye workers of iniquity, ver 27. but, Thou hast taught in our hearts: for I will put my laws into their minds, and write them in their hearts; Heb. 8. 10. And indeed this doctrine concerning the state of true Christianity, and the knowledge of that state, and the comfort of that knowledge, is a most hea∣venly doctrine, and therefore can have its teacher only from heaven; The teaching Priest is not enough to instruct us in it, but we need also The teaching God. Miserable was the condition of Israel to have been without a teaching Priest, but irrecovera∣ble would have been their misery, had they been also without a teaching God; had not the Spirit of God come upon Azariah to teach them, 2 Chron, 15. 1. 3. Man may teach us the way of Gods statutes, and we may never keep that way at all; but if God once teach it us, we shall no•• only keep it, but we shall also keep it unto the end; Teach me O Lord the way of thy Statutes, and I shall keep it unto the end; Psal. 119. 33. Thus hath Saint John said, And ye need not that any man teach you, but as the same annointing teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no lye, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in him, 1 John 2. 27. His intent is not that they to whom he writ, should despise his teaching; he is only willing to commend them to a far better teacher; for the Apostle might teach them, and yet they might not abide either in the Church or in the truth; but if the Annointing, if the Spirit did teach them, they were sure to abide both in him and in his doctrine for ever: And therefore saith holy Job, who teacheth like him? Job 36. 22. Though he be not the only teacher, for man teacheth with him, yet he is the only irresistible and infallible teacher; for man teacheth not like him: He is the only infallible teacher, because he convinceth the understanding: he is the only irresistible teacher, because he converteth the will, teaching us by the representation of himself unto our Souls as the chiefest good, from which we cannot turn away, and against which we will not resist.
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For God teacheth the soul by his own presence, revealing unto it himself and his everlasting blessedness (saith Alensis,) against which the will of man cannot resist in the judgement of some Philosophy, and therefore the scoff of irresistible Grace, must needs be far from the Judgement of sound Divinity: The Church in the Collect for Whitsunday sheweth both the infallibility and the irresistibility of Gods teaching: he teacheth irresistibly: in that he teacheth the Heart which useth to make resistance against all teaching of the ear, unless it self be taught in the first place, wherefore none can be an irresistible Teacher but he that can teach the heart; & he teacheth also infallibly, in that he teacheth by the light of his holy Spirit: wherefore none can be an infallible teacher but he that teacheth by the Holy Ghost; God which hast taught the hearts of thy faithfull people, by sending to them the light of thy holy Spirit: Here's a teacher that subdues my perversness, and makes me willing to learn, in that he teach∣eth my heart: here's a teacher that enlightens my darkness, and makes me able to learn, in that he teacheth by the light of his holy spirit: And the doctrines which he teacheth are agreeable with the manner of his teaching, Recta sapere, & in ejus conso∣latione gaudere: To have a right judgement in all things, that is, in all things of Salvation: as if you would say, to have a right judgement in the state of true Christianity, and of your being in that state, and evermore to rejoyce in his holy comforts, as if you would say, to comfort your self against all temp∣tations and taibulations, that you have such a right judgement. Let me never u••dervalue, much less forsake that School wherein this heavenly master is pleased to teach, for fear I should lose both the right judgement and the Holy comfort which he is pleased to bestow upon his Scholars; And let me not doubt but this Church wherein I have been trained up, is a part of that school, since it hath taught me nothing that is either Antichristian or unchristian, for where I cannot deny the doctrine of Christ, I may not doubt of the spirit of Christ; Wherefore it is a false and an envious principle of divinity which some have so much improved of late to the advantage of their Church, but to the disadvantage of Religion, (if at least any Christian Church can be advanced by that doctrine, by which the Christian Religion is depressed and disparaged) That our
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Saviour Christ hath set up one chair from which he would have all the world to take the documents and determinations of Chri∣stianity: For the state of true Christianity is not to be confined to any one Church, since the author and teacher of it is over all, God blessed for ever; Rom. 9. 5. The Apostle proves that God vouchsafed his Grace to the Gentiles no less then to the Jews, by this argument, is he the God of the Jews only, is he not also the God of the Gentiles? yes, of the Gentiles also, Rom. 3. 29. and again, There is no difference between the Jew and the Greek; for the same Lord over all, is rich unto all that call upon him, Rom. 10. 12. as if it were as absurd to think God not rich unto all that call upon him, as to think him not Lord over all; where∣fore as no Christian Church can doubt of his being Lord over them, so neither of his being rich towards them; unless we will say that Saint Paul did by this argument take away the diffe∣rence betwixt the Jew and the Gentile, that he might set it up betwixt Christians; That he took it away betwixt men of two different Religions, to set it up betwixt men of one and the same Religion; whereas the contrary is evident from his doctrine, for though he said explicitely, yet he said not exclusively, To all that be in Rome Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ, Rom. 1. 7. for he extended the same benediction to all that in every place call upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, 1 Cor. 1. 2. not think∣ing it so little as to be confined to one place: Let us observe his words, Ʋnto the Church of God which is at Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be Saints, with all that in every place call upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, both theirs and ours: Grace be unto you and peace from God our Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ: 1 Cor. 1. 2, 3. He tells us of a Church of God in Corinth as well as in Rome, and in other places as well as in Corinth, which are sanctified and called to be Saints, the one as well as the other; and he proves it, because the Lord Jesus, whose name they call on, is both theirs and ours, therefore have they Grace and peace from him, as well as we. And the like is Saint Peters doctrine when he saith, Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons, but in every Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousness, is accepted with him, Acts 10. 34, 35. He saith, of a truth I perceive
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that God is no respecter of persons; not that he had first per∣ceived it, for Moses had perceived the same before, and had told the Jews so. For the Lord your God is God of Gods, which regardeth not persons, Deut. 10. 17. But S. Peter perceived it bet∣ter then Moses; For Moses did only see that God would not overvalue the Jew, because of his being circumcised in the flesh, if in his heart he remained uncircumcised; But Saint Pe∣ter did moreover see (and tis a wonder his Successors will not see it after him,) That God would not undervalue the Gentiles, confining them all to the dictates and documents of one particu∣lar Church, But that in every nation they who would fear him and work righteousness, should be accepted with him: Nor is this inde∣finite manner of speech, he that feareth him, a warrant for every Schismatick and Sectary to set up a new Church of his own making: for such men do neither truly fear God, because not in his Authority; nor work righteousness, because not accord∣ing to his commands; For if they work for righteousness in the first Table, by renouncing superstition, they work against righte∣ousness in the Second Table, by setting up sedition; And working against righteousness in the second Table they cannot either truly or rightly work for righteousness in the first Table. So saith Saint James, who soever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point he is guilty of all: James 2. 10. The reason is, because he that can despise the authority of the Law-giver, by a volunta∣ry breach or violation of any one of his commandments, cannot observe the rest out of duty or obedience: for the same Au∣thority commanding all, requires the same duty and obedience to all; And therefore he that willfully rejects but one, embraceth the rest more out of conveniency then out of conscience, more for his own then for Gods sake, more for his self-interest then or his Saviours glory.
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THE certainty that is in true Christianity, or the state thereof, is wholly from the word and Spirit of Christ; the uncertainty is wholly from our selves; For what shall we be sure of, if not of our Religion? What certainty can we have but of truth? What truth can we have so certain, as the truth of Christian Religion? grounded upon the word of truth, and testified by the spirit of truth? Therefore doubt∣less the state of true Christianity cannot be capable of any doubt in it self, but only in regard of us that profess to be Christi∣ans: For Saint Paul tells the Colossians of a full assurance of un∣derstanding in the knowledge of Christ, Colossians 2. 2: And Christian faith is in its own nature more sure and cer∣tain then any humane science whatsoever, though in us, it of∣ten hath a less proportion of certainty: For Faith in it self, looks wholly on Gods infallibility, though in us it partake of, and sympathize with mans infirmity: Therefore the doubt, the uncertainty is not in the Religion, but in the professor of it; Tis not in the thing but in the person; as for example, tis without all doubt that true Christianity is to love Christ, the doubt is only whether we that are Christians do truly love him.
But is it lawful for us to make this doubt of our selves, who by our inordinate self-love, have caused all the world besides to make it of us? Doth not the Apostle bid us receive him that is weak in the faith, not to doubtful disputations, (Rom. 14. 1.) And shall we think he would have us oppress a weak faith in our own selves by doubting? I answer out of Bona∣ventures words (in 3. sent. dist. 25.) Quod triplex est modus du∣••itandi; Est enim quaedam dubitatio proveniens ex infidelitate,
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sicut dubitaverunt Iudaei; & est dubitatio proveniens ex tarditate, sicut dubitaverunt Discipuli, quibus dicitur Lucae ultimo, O stul∣ti & tardi corde ad credendum; & est dubitatio proveniens ex pietate, sicut quam aliquis ex magna admiratione ad modum du∣bitantes se habet; There is a threefold manner of doubting, one that proceedeth from infidelity, so the Jews doubted of Christ and of his Doctrine; Another that proceedeth from infirmity; so the two Disciples that went to Emmaus, doubted of Christs. Resurrection, to whom it was therefore said, O fools and slow of heart to believe all that the Prophets have spoken, Luke 24. 25. A third doubting there is that proceedeth from piety, because of astonishment and admiration, which makes a man to seem to doubt what he doth most stedfastly believe, (And such a doubting we read of in the blessed Virgin, Then said Mary unto the Angel, How shall this thing be, seeing I know not a man? Luke 1. 34.) I answer then according to this distinction; First, If the doubt concerning our being in the state of true Christianity, proceed from piety or admiration, it is exceeding commendable, we have an excellent president for it, the man after Gods own heart, who twice spoke these words from Gods own mouth, for surely with his spirit, What is man that thou hast such respect unto him, or the son of man that thou so regardest him? Psalm 8. 4. and 144. 3. Nor is it possible for any one that hath in∣deed the Spirit of God, when he considers the immensity of Gods goodness and of his own unworthiness, not to make this doubt of admiration unto his own soul, What is man! what am I, a sinful man in my person, that thou hast such respect unto me? or What is the son of man! what am I, a sinful man in my nature, that thou so regardest me?
Secondly, If the doubt concerning our being in the state of true Christianity, proceed from infirmity, it is at all times ex∣cusable, because though the spirit be willing yet the flesh is weak; (Mat. 26. 41.) and at sometimes almost commendable, when either by our omissions of piety we have quenched, or by our commissions of impiety we have grieved the Holy Spirit of God, whereby we are sealed to the day of redemption; In this case of spiritual leprosie, Gods answer to Moses concerning Miri∣am, may be taken as a full determination concerning us; If her Father had but spit in her face, should she not be ashamed seven
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days? Let her be shut out of the camp seven days, and after that, let her be received in again, Numb. 12. 14. Si pater terrenus aliquod gravis in eam irae signum edidisset, puderet eam saltem septem Di∣es redire in conspectum ejus, saith Junius; If her father on earth had shewed some great sign of anger against her, she would for shame not presently rush into his sight, but would forbear to come before him, for one seven days: The explanation is very punctual, and we cannot but see that in God Almighties own Logick the argument is good from our Father on earth, to our Father in heaven; Hence that prayer of sorrowful David, Cast me not away from thy presence: He confesseth he durst not come into his sight, and prays that he might not be for ever banished from it, Psal. 51. 11. and again, redde mihi laetitiam salutaris tui, Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation: Having grievously offended his God, he could not but discover in his own soul the signs and tokens of that offence: therefore he prayes God to restore unto him the joy of his salvation: For had he not in his blood-guiltiness lost the joy of his salvation, he might in his impenitency have lost the enjoyment of it: Good Lord, that we should so out-strip this holy man in our sin, and come so short of him in our repentance! This is certainly a ready way not to strengthen our faith, but to weaken it; not to lessen our doubt∣ings, but to increase them: yea to turn our doubtings into distresses, and our distresses into despair, and our despair into damnation.
Thirdly and lastly, if the doubt concerning our being in the state of true Christianity, proceed from infidelity, it is neither commendable nor excusable in any; nay it is so far from being commendable in any, that tis altogether inexcusable in all: For such a doubt supposeth not a weakness, but a want of faith, and consequently sheweth the man that hath it, to distrust his Savi∣our, not himself, and to remain still in the state of infidelity, not∣withstanding God calleth him so earnestly to the state of faith: Wherefore since without faith it is impossible to please God, (Heb. 11. 6.) such a doubting of infidelity must needs leave him that hath it, under Gods most heavy and more just displeasure; under his most heavy displeasure, because he embraceth not reconcilia∣tion when it is offered; & under his most just displeasure, because he believeth not him that offereth it. This is the reason of the Apo∣stles
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exceeding pathetical exhortation, Take heed brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from the living God, Heb. 3. 12. The heart is made evil by unbelief, and shews it is so by departing from the living God; so that we are advised and exhorted to take heed of unbelief, as we would take heed of an evil heart, and of departing from the living God. Tis at first, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, an evil heart o•• ••nfidelity; tis at last 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 an evil heart of apo••tacy, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, in apostatizing from the living God: But we must here take heed that we confound not together the doubtings of infirmity and of infidelity; The one saith, Lord I be∣lieve, help thou my unbelief: the other cannot say, Lord, I believe: The one dare not trust himself, but the other will not trust his Sa∣viour; a doubting of infidelity rejecteth faith, but a doubting of infirmity desireth it. For though doubting cannot be in faith, yet it may be in him that hath faith; Saint Peters faith could not doubt, yet himself doubted; so saith the text; when he saw the wind boistrous, he was afraid, and beginning to sink, he cryed, saying, Lord save me, Mat. 14. 13. Though he was full of fear, yet he was not empty of faith, For he cryed, saying, Lord save me.
And therefore we may not say of any other in his case, more then our Saviour Christ did say of him, O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? Mat. 14. 31. O thou of little faith, not, O thou of no faith; for he did fully believe in Christ, and did only misdoubt himself; And surely it would not be much amiss if every confident man would do so too, and ask himself the question which Christ asks Saint Peter, Lovest thou me? John 21. 17. and ask it again and again, and not be grieved at the often asking it; dost thou indeed love thy Saviour? lovest thou him who died for thee? lovest thou him who loved thee with an everlasting love? For the more you are assured in your own heart that you love your Saviour, the more will he assure you of his everlasting love.
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CAP. II. Of the knowledge of the state of true Christianity.
HE that is in the state of true Christianity cannot but desire to know it, and he that knows himself to be so, cannot but ex∣ceedingly rejoyce and triumph in that knowledge: Accordingly after the dis∣course of the state of true Christianity, in the next place we ought to enquire concerning our own knowledge of that state; for that man can scarce be thought to believe the life everlasting, who labours not to be very well assured that he himself is in the way which leadeth unto that life; and he can never be assured that he is in the way of righteousness, but by the practice and the love of righteousness; Therefore if it be demanded, how any Christian may know that he is in the state of true Christianity, I must answer, meerly by loving and obeying his Saviour Christ: For indeed so Christ himself hath answered, If any man love me, he will keep my words, John 14. 23. All that are in the state of true Christianity, do en∣tirely love our Saviour Christ: and all that love him, do keep his words, that is to say, All his words; for Christ leaves out none, no more must we: so saith the Holy Prophet, For I have an eye unto all his Laws, and will not cast out his command∣ments from me, (Psalm 18. 22.) He had said in the verse be∣fore,
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I have kept the wayes of the Lord, and have not forsaken my God as the wicked doth; and he gives this for the reason of that saying, For I have an eye unto all his Laws: Tis this alone that keeps us from apostasie or forsaking God, even the having an eye unto all his Laws; For many that are very wicked, have an eye to some of his Laws, that they may the more securely act their wickedness against the rest; Wherefore we must keep all his Laws or words, not only in our memories to remember them, but also in our hearts to embrace them, and also in our works to do them; so Moses requires us to keep the statutes and Judgements of God, saying, Keep therefore and do them, Deut, 4. 6.
Tis a question among School Divine, An sit de ratione cha∣ritatis quod homo velit praeceptorum Dei regulam in omnibus se∣qui, Whether it be of the essence of true charity, that a man have a will to sollow the rule of Gods commandments in all things? and Aquinas determines it in the Affirmative; (22••. qu. 24. art. 12.
But it is moreover determined by one who we are sure was more then an Angelical Doctor, even by our Saviour Christ, saying, Whosoever shall break one of these least Commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the King∣dom of heaven; but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the Kingdom of heaven, Mat. 5. 19. If any of Gods commandments might be discarded or laid aside, then surely the least would claim the least observance: but the contempt even of the very least of them, will no less then cast us from heaven to hell in the day of Judgement: For so Saint Chrysostome expounds our blessed Saviours words, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: when you hear the words, He shall be least in the Kingdom of heaven, do not surmise any thing less, then that he shall be in hell, and in everlasting torments; For Christ here calleth the general resurrection and his own comming to Judgement, the Kingdom of heaven, because they will make way for the full power and glory of that Kingdom; and tells us, that such an offender as shall not only practically, but also doctrinally offend against one of the least of his commandments, not only doing wickedly himself, but also teaching others so to
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do, shall be called the least in the Kingdom of heaven, that is, shall be accounted as one rejected or a cast-away at his comming to Judgement; for such a man never was truly in the love of God, nor was the fear of God truely in hin; For had his heart been seasoned with the fear of God, he would have been afraid to have lifted up his hand against the least of Gods command∣ments by a wilful breach thereof, & much more to have lifted his heel against them all, (for whosoever offendeth in one point thereof is guilty of all, Jam. 2, 10.) by denying them to have the force of his commandments; as if Christ had come to abolish the Law, when indeed he hath established it, Rom. 3. 31. This is such a point of Divinity as is now most necessary for all, & can be offen∣sive to none but only such men as may pretend Vertuosi, but act Banditi, as may pretend Saints, but act the most desperate and wilful sinners, resolving to maintain such opinions as are most agreeable with their practices, because they resolve to maintain such practices as are like to be most agreeable with their inte∣rests: I will only ask their consciences, whether it can proceed from the love of God, or rather from the love of Mammon, that they are desirous to advance the wicked precedents of men, against the most righteous precepts of Christ, whereby they run headlong into such tenents as they may well be ashamed of in the worst times, as they must be afraid of in better times, as they will be both ashamed and afraid of, when time shall be no more: Excellently Saint Greg. in his Morals, Sola est quae fidei me∣ritum possidet obedientia, sine qua quisque infidelis esse convincitur, etiamsi fidelis esse videatur: Tis only obedience that maketh or sheweth faith to be a saving faith, without which every man is but an infidel, though he may pretend very much to be one of the faithful; This is a new way of infidelity (even in the midst of faith,) you need not turn Mahometan or Pagan, to become an infidel, it will suffice if you only turn Antinomian; And this is too too palpable, that since we have lost our obedience, we have found none of the blessings promised to it, Deut. 28. but have been a burden to our selves, a reproach to our neighbours, a seorn to our enemies, a laughing stock to all, a pitty to none.
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THere are three practical principles which all those must hold, who will be good Christians, and know themselves to be in the state of true Christianity; The first principle is this, That Christ hath words to be kept as well as to be belie∣ved; precepts as well as promises; and therefore ••o preach the Gospel of Christ, is not only to preach faith in his promises, but also to preach obedience to his precepts; and they who leave out this latter part, preach but a half Gospel, which may shew the glad tidings', but not effect the good work of our salvation: For the precepts lead di∣rectly to the promises; and the way to obtain that which God doth promise, is to love that which he doth com∣mand: Hence Saint James exhorts us to be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving our own souls, Jam. 1. 22. This is the most miserable cheat of all cheats, to deceive our own souls, and cheat our selves of our salvation; And this we shall do if we be only hearers of the word, as it is a promise to strengthen our saith; and not also doers of it, as it is a precept to exer∣cise our obedience; For Saint Paul tells us plainly, that even the Gospel, the preaching of Jesus Christ was made known to all nations for the obedience of faith, Rom. 16. 25, 26. Not for the assent or perswasion only, but also, and much rather for the obedience of faith.
The second Principle of good Christianity is this, That the true love of Christ will make us labour with all our might to keep his words: For this is substantia Christianismi, the very substance of the Christian Religion; so Saint Paul saith expresly, Cir∣cumcision is nothing, and uncircumcision is nothing, but the keep∣ing
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of the commandments of God, 1 Cor. 7. 19. as if he had said, External rights and professions are nothing to the Substance of Christianity (though to the order of it; they may be much) but the keeping of the commandments of God is all in all; And this is the true touchstone of the soul, to try whether it it be made of dross, or of purer metal, whether it love God or Mammon, as its chiefest good: For he that cares not to thwart Gods will to fulfill his own, is certainly in the state of sin, and not in the state of Grace: For he loves his plea∣sure, or profit, or preferment better then God, who for his pleasure, or his profit, or his preferment cares not to break Gods commandments. The Casuists rule is undeniable, Constitui∣tur in honore ultimus finis, si ob honorem consequendum non curat quis offendere Deum mortaliter, (Cajet. Sum.) and again, Si paratus sit non curare de praecepto: He that so resolves upon riches, or honour, or any thing of this world, as to break through a commandment to come by it, is not yet a true lover of God; but loves only himself, nay the worst (though truest) part of himself, his sinfull affections; and is not yet a new Creature, because he hath not yet in him faith working by love, to make him so: For faith working by love, and a new creature, are one and the same thing in Saint Pauls account, as appears, Gal. 5. 6. and Gal. 6. 15. in the former place he tels us, that which availeth in Christ Jesus is a faith which worketh by love; in the latter place, that tis a new creature: For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision availeth any thing, but faith which worketh by love; Gal. 5. 6. For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision, but a new creature, Gal. 6. 15. Compare these two places of Scripture with that other formerly cited, out of 1 Cor 7. 19. Circum∣cision is nothing, and uncircumcision is nothing, but the keeping of the commandments of God, and you will see the cord, which ei∣ther draws or knits us unto Christ, to be made up of these three links, keeping the Commandments of God, A faith which worketh by love; and a new creature: This three fold cord is not easily broken, and cannot possibly be untwisted: In that it is not easily broken, it may comfort the good Christian against the fear of being a Castaway: but in that it cannot possibly be untwisted, it must distinguish him from one that is so;
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For he hath not one of these truly, that hath them not all three, and he that hath them not all three, (at least in his pur∣pose and and desire, where he is defective in his practise and actual performance) is not yet in Christ Jesus: For the love of Christ constraineth us, because we thus judge, thaet if one dyed for all, then were all dead; and that he died for all, that they which live, should not henceforth live unto them∣selves, but unto him which died for them, and rose again, 2 Cor. 5. 14, 15. The love of Christ is a constraining love, impati∣ent either of denial or of delay, and the more impatient of de∣lay, for fear it should end in a denial: The love of Christ con∣straineth, not courteth, those who are in Christ, to live not to themselves but to their Saviour, by whose death they have al∣ready obtained the life of grace, and by whose resurrection from death, they hope to obtain the life of glory.
The third principle of good Christianity, is this, That true faith in Christ was never yet without true love of Christ; And this much we have learned from our Saviours own mouth, who when he was asked a question that concerned faith, returned his answer concerning love: For so we find St Judes question, Lord, how is it that thou will manifest thy self unto us? John. 14. 22. But our Saviours answer is this, If any man love me, he will keep my words, v. 23. The question was made concerning the manifestation of Christ unto the soul, which is by faith: but the answer was only concerning love: and since our Saviours answer may not be thought impertinent, or improper, we must conclude that true faith in Christ cannot be without true love; wherefore the Solifidian must either say, That he may have true faith without Christs manifesting himself unto his Soul; or shew, that Christ hath manifested himself unto his Soul, by lo∣ving him and keeping his words: Saint Jude himself thus under∣stood our Saviours answer, and thus in effect explaineth it (in his Epistle) for our better understanding: saying thus, But ye beloved, building up your selves on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost: v. 20. There's Christ manifested unto the soul by faith; a most pious faith, for tis praying; a most holy faith, for tis praying in the Holy Ghost: not despising, much less destroying either the house, or the exercise of prayer: and again, Keep your selves in the love of God,
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looking for the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ, to eternal life, v. 21. There's that holy faith shewing it self by love, teaching a man to forsake all things else, to gain Christs love, and to forsake himself, to keep it, not looking after that fading life which he hath in himself, but after that eternal life which he hath in Christ: There is in man a two fold manifestation, and a twofold love: for either we are manifested unto our selves, and love our selves; or Christ is manifested unto us, and we love our Saviour; For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that he might destroy the works of the devil, 1 John 3. 8. He was mani∣fested in his own own flesh to destroy sin: and for the same pur∣pose is he also manifested in our spirits; and accordingly till he be there manifested, we are so far from destroying sin, that we wholly delight in it: For as long as we are manifestd to our selves, our love is wholly of our selves, either of our pleasures, to defile the flesh, despise dominion, and speak evill of dignities, (ver. 8.) such a licentiousness as hates to be controuled, and much more to be confined, and therefore hates the dominion and dignities which God hath ordained to controul and to confine it; Or we are lovers of our profits (as in ver. 11.) They have gon in the way of Cain, and ran greedily after the error of Balaam, for reward; and perished in the gain saying of Core; where Balaam, though put in the Second place, yet is clearly the first mover in the way of unrighteousness: for Cain and Core both do homage unto him: For Cain is ready to kill, and Core is ready to rebell, if Balaam once run greedily after reward: Such are we whiles we are manifested to our selves, even lovers of our selves, in our pleasures, to all abominable licentiousness, in our profits to all abominable out-rages; and such are the cursed effects of our self-love, even murders and seditions: So that in truth we are self∣haters whiles we are self-lovers: for we have our woe denounced against us, Woe unto them (v. 11.) Praedicit eorum exitium, quoniam Cainum impudenti malitia, Ba∣laamum turpi avaritia, Core d••nique factioso & ambitioso ingenio referunt, saith Beza in his short notes: He fore∣telleth the destruction of such men, because they follow Cain in his impudent malice, Balaam in his filthy coveteousness: and
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Core in his factious and ambitious unruliness, But if Christ be manifested unto us, our love is wholly of him, and we will never think that we can sufficiently express that love. We will labour to build up our selves in our most holy faith, delighting in those things that are for Edification, not for destruction, and being afraid of that faith which is more for pulling down then for seeting up of holiness; for we may not so build up our selves, as to throw down others: Praying in the holy Ghost, that is, praying in such a manner as that he may pray in us, and in such a form as that he may pray with us, not pinning those prayers upon the spirit of God, which a sober man would be ashamed to speak, and a conscientious man must be afraid to hear: Keeping our selves in the love of God, and lo∣ving whatsoever may be a means to keep us in his love, as his word because it instructs us, his authority be∣cause it restrains us, his ordinances because they confirm and strengthen us; having our eyes and our hearts al∣wayes lifted up to heaven, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life; This is the only way to be assured that Christ is manifested unto our souls, if indeed we thus entirely love him; For our faith makes us accepted in Christ, not so much from the strength of its perswasion, as from the sincerity of its affection; and is therefore called by Saint Paul, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, a faith which worketh by love, Gal. 5. 16. There is no moral certainty to others of our being in Christ without this love: In this the children of God are manifest and the children of the devill: whosoever loveth not righteousness is not of God, neither he that loveth not his brother: 1 Iohn. 3. 10. There can be no theological certainty to our selves of being in Christ without this same love, as it follows v. 14. We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren: He that loveth not his brother abideth in death: And again, cap. 4. v. 13. Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he in us, because he hath given us of his spirit, and sure we are that spirit is the Spirit of love.
Thus if we love, we shall be assured of love: and the more we find that we do love, the more we shall find that we are be∣loved: What have we then to do, who profess our selves Chri∣stians,
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but to walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us, (Eph. 5. 2.) and by this love, to give our selves unto him, who hath given himself for us? So shall we also, (in him,) be made an offering, and a sacrifice to God, for a sweet smelling Sa∣vour: being made partakers of the greatest glory that is incident to the creature, even to be an offering and a sacrifice to the Grea∣tor, and of the greatest blessing that is incident to that glory, even to be an offering and a sacrifice for a sweet smelling Savour unto him; That he smelling the smell of the Goodly raiment which we have borrowed from our Elder brother, may bless us, and say, See the smell of my Son is as the smell of a field, which the Lord hath blessed. (Gen. 27. 27.) God the Son hath blessed that soul, to which he hath given this sweet smelling Savour and God the Father will bless it: and God the Holy Ghost will continue the blessing for ever more: Amen.
CAP. III. Of the Comforts that arise from the knowledge of our be∣ing in the state of true Christianity.
MANY are the comforts of those who know they are in the state of true Christianity; but they are all reducible to these three Heads, That they are assured of love from God, of communion with God, and the continuance of that communion: Three such comforts, the least whereof is able to outweigh all that can be put against it, not only in the balance of the Sanctuary, but
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also in the scales of right reason: For man naturally doth love God above his life, and doth desire communion where he loveth, and doth exceedingly delight in the continuance of that communion; So that the comfort which ariseth from the know∣ledge of our being in the state of true Christianity, consists of these three degrees: 1. That we are thereby assured of the love of God: 2. That we are thereby assured of communion with God: 3. That we are thereby (on Gods part) assured of the continuance of that communion: which must needs bring heaven down to us, if not carry us up to heaven.
The first degree of this comfort is that we are assured of the Love of God, in whose presence is the fulness of joy, and at whose right hand there is pleasure for evermore, Psal. 16. 12. For God is not as man that he should be changeable in his love, but his love is like himself, without beginning or ending: He loves not more or less in process of time, as men do; and if he did, we should have but small comfort of his love. For love that is in time, is but for a time, & not for all times, it will be sure to choose the best time; If Gods love were such, woe would be to us up∣on whom are come the last and the worst times of this wicked world, and therefore the last because the worst; The worst as farthest from God, and for that reason the last, as neerest their own destruction: Were Gods love to have a beginning in such times as these, both they and it would quickly have an ending; his love would end; and the times would end, which are sup∣ported only by his love, and we should all suddenly pass from a most wicked time, to a most woefull eternity: We must therefore say of Gods love to our souls what himself hath said of it by the mouth of his holy Prophet, Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting love, therefore with loving-kindness have I drawn thee, Jer. 31. 3. in that he hath drawn us to himself, tis an ar∣gument he hath loved us with an everlasting love; wherefore every one whom God hath drawn unto himself by the bands of the Christian Religion, is bound to believe that God hath loved him in Christ, from all eternity, and will love him to all eternity if he abide in Christ, the Son of his love: Thus hath Saint Paul joined these two titles both together, beloved of God, called to be Saints, Rom. 1. 7. taking it for a proof that they were beloved of God, because they were called to be Saints; And yet we may
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still admit the School distinction of Gods love Secundum affe∣ctum, & Secundum effectum: not as setting forth a new love of God, but only new effects of his former love; For though his love be eternal and alwayes the same, yet the effects, the benefits thereof are temporal and various, according to our various tem∣per or disposition to receive them: And particularly, the assu∣rance of his love to our Souls, is in time, and not till such time as we have approved our selves to love him: And hence it is that our love to God is reckoned up before Gods love to, us, even that love whereby he loved us in his holy purpose of eternity; We know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose, Rom. 8. 28. in which words our love is put before Gods love, not that it is so in it self, but that it is so in our experience: We must love, be∣fore we can know that we are beloved; for though we are called according to his purpose before we can love him, yet we must love him before we can know that we are called according to his purpose. Hence Saint John writeth to an honourable Lady, as if she had been elected but then when she walked in the truth; and yet Saint Paul saith plainly, we were elected in Christ before the foundations of the world, Eph. 1. 4.
And these two will very well agree; for we are not Gods elect in the judgement of our own consciences, till we have used all diligence to make sure our calling and our election: we cannot know that we are elected in Christ, till we can find that we are approved in him: Hence electus in Christo, and probatus in Christo, are but several expressions of the same spiritual blessing in Christ; Apelles approved in Christ, and Rufus elected, or chosen in the Lord, Rom. 16. 10, 13. set forth to us two several good Christians, but only one true being in Christ: for he that is elected in Christ, is also approved in him: And till he can make good his approbation, he cannot make good his election: whereas on the other side, he that can make it appear that he is approved in Christ, by being in the state of true Christianity, needs not doubt of his being elected in him: for knowing that he loves his Sa∣viour, he shall much more know that his Saviour first loved him: since no man can be so well assured that he loves God, as he must be assured that God is love for the former assurance
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is from the testimony of his own conscience, but the latter is from the testimony of Gods most holy and infallible word.
HE that will truly comfort himself in his communion with God, must first consider the cause of that communi∣on, and then after that the communion it self, and its effects. The cause of that communion is only Gods own free grace, and undeserved goodness, in coming unto us, when we were un∣worthy, if not unwilling to come unto him.
For all the love that we can possibly bestow upon our Savi∣our, and all the obedience that we can possibly bestow upon our love, are not a sufficient invitation for such a heavenly guest to come unto our souls, and much less a sufficient enter∣tainment for him, when he is come: Let us view that scala salutis, that Jacob's ladder whereby we climb up to heaven, set down, Rom, 8. 29, 30. we shall find in it five several steps or degrees, and God freely coming unto us in them all; The five steps whereby we ascend up to heaven are these: 1 Pre∣cognition, 2 Predestination, 3 Vocation, 4 Justification, 5 Glorification: For whom he did 1 foreknow, he also did 2 predestinate to be conformed to the image of his son; whom he did predestinate, them he also 3 called: and whom he called, them he also 4 justified, and whom he justified, them he also 5 glorified: Here are five steps in our ascending up into heaven, & God freely comes to us in every one of them: He did foreknow, there he comes to us in the first step, that of precognition: He did predestinate, there he comes to us in the second step, that of predestinacion: He also called, there he comes to us in the third step, that of vocation: He also justified, there he comes to us in the fourth step, that of Justification: He also glorified, there he
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still comes to us in the fifth and last step, that of glorification: What shall we then say to these things? If God be for us, (and he is certainly for us whilst we are for him, 2 Chron. 15. 2.) who can be against us? He that spared not his own son, but delive∣red him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things? (Rom. 8. 31, 32.) Nay rather, how hath he not al∣ready given us all things in him as our head? how will he not give them us with him, if we continue still his members? We have already all things in him by vertue of his merit; it re∣mains only that we have them with him by virtue of his commu∣nion: God in giving his Son, gives himself; in giving himself, gives all things; for he is all in all: Nothing but God can give God to the soul of man; The Father gives the Son, the Father and Son give the Holy Ghost: For as the Father did heretofore come to us by the Son: So Father and Son do now come to us by the Holy Ghost: and do also by him make their abode with us: Hence that Apostolical benediction, The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, be with you all, Amen, 2 Cor. 13. 14. The grace is of God the Son, the love is of God the Father, but the communication both of grace and love is of God the Holy Ghost; communicatio Spi∣ritus Sancti, (saith the Vulgar Latine) The communication of the holy Spirit be with you all; For our communion with the Father and with the Son, is by the holy Ghost. Thus we see, the cause of our communion with God, is God. Let us now consider the communion it self, that we may know our own happiness, in continuing and abiding with God.
This communion is heartily desired, and fully expressed by the Psalmist, when he saith, One thing have I desired of the Lord, which I will seek after; that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life, to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to enquire in his Temple; Psalm 27. 4. Non dicit simpliciter potii à Domino, sed unum petii à Domino, quibus verbis ostendit se prae omnibus bonis, quibus, liceat in hac vita frisi, unum hoc extollere, si detur pacifice in domo Dei habi∣tare, saith Musculus. He saith not simply, I have desired of the Lord, but one thing have I desired of the Lord, whereby he sheweth, this one thing is to him above all other things, that he might live peaceably in the house of God; And of this he saith,
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which I will seek after, that is, I will never give over seeking, till I have found it; and there is cause enough for this longing de∣sire, for this indesatigable diligence; for it is to behold the beau∣ty of the Lord and to enquire in his temple; Ad contemplandum, ad consulendum Deum; That he might contemplate God, or behold the beauties of the Lord, and that he might consult with God to enquire in his Temple: Tell me what can a sanctified ou•• desire more in earth; tell we what can a glorified soul en∣joy more in heaven, then the contemplation of God, and consul∣tation with God; ut videam voluntatem Domini, saith the Vul∣gar Latine, that I may see the good will and pleasure of the Lord; ut videam pulchritudinem ejus, saith Saint Hierom: that I may see his beauty; and thence Hugo inferres, that in the contemplation of God is a double vision; Visio pulchritudinis, visio voluntatis; The vision of his beauty, the vision of his will; for the first, he alledgeth the words of the Prophet Isaiah, Thine eyes shall see the King in his beauty, Isa. 33. 17. For the second he alledgeth that saying of Saint Gregory, supernae cu∣riae cives dum supra se voluntatem sui Conditoris semper aspiciunt, quod obtinere non valent, nunquam volunt: The Citizens of the heavenly Hterusalem, whilst they alwayes see the will of God, are ready to conform their wills to his will, and never desire what they cannot attain; This is the blessing they have who contemplate God, whether in earth or in heaven; and they who are in his communion, do not only contemplate him, but also consult with him; as they see his beauty, so also they enquire in his Temple; They consult with God, as with their friend, hearing him and asking him questions: maintain∣ing familiar colloquies with him whilst they are in his commu∣nion, that as they are delighted by their contemplation of God, so they may be directed by their consultation with him: And this appears in that heavenly dialogue which we find in the eighth verse, My heart hath talked of thee, seek ye my save, thy face Lord will I seek; that is, my heart communing with it self, and with thee, makes me often hear thee saying, seek ye my face; and I cannot but answer, thy face Lord will I seek; here is a spiritual dialogue, God speaking to the soul, seek ye my face; and the soul answering him, thy face Lord will I seek; So Hugo, Benè dicit tibi dixit cor meum, quiaquaedam familiaris
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colloquutio, & delectabilis confabulatio est, inter Deum & cor justi: He well said, My heart hath talked of thee, or to thee; for there is a kind of familiar colloquie and a delightful discourse betwixt God and the heart of a righteous man: No tyranny can forbid this communion, for tis of the heart; no outrage can disturb it, for tis in the heart; no pleasure can divert or distract it, for tis the delight of the heart; My heart hath talk∣ed of thee, or with thee, desiring no other company to converse withall: He desires to hear no other voice talking with him, but that which saith, Seek ye my face; and as he desires it earnestly, so he answers it readily, Thy face Lord will I seek.
Facies Dei est praesentia ejus, saith Alensis, (par. 1. qu. 2. memb. 1.) The face of God is his presence, that is, the presence of his Grace, for by that alone do we in this life enjoy his communion; His natural presence in our souls may be by knowledge and un∣derstanding, whereby he makes man know him, and so he is present with many wicked men, with whom he will not com∣municate; but his gracious presence is in the will and affections, whereby he makes men love him, and so he is present only with good men, to whom by this his presence he doth also afford his communion; agreeable to this is Saint Augustines Doctrine, concerning the inhabitation of God in the souls of men, Inha∣bitator quorundam est Deus nondum cognoscentium Deum, ut par∣vulorum; quorundam vero inhabitator est, cognoscentium & dili∣gentium; quorundam autem inhabitator non est, qui sc. sunt cognoscentes & non diligentes, de quibus, Rom. 1. Qui quùm Deum cognovissent, non sicut Deum glorificaverunt: (Aug. ad Dardanum.) God dwels in some who know him not, as in regenerated Infants: He dwels in others who know him and love him, as in religious men; but he dwels in none who know him and do not love him: of whom the Apostle speaketh, (Rom. 1. 21.) When they knew God, they glorified him not as God: He is naturally present with those that know him, or else they could not know him; but he is graciously present only with those that love him: Many have found his gracious pre∣sence, that knew him not; but none ever found it who loved him not: For love, as it is the cause of union, so also is it the cause of communion, which is indeed but a reciprocal or inter∣changeable
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union: God may be present where he doth not dwell, for whither shall I flee from thy presence? Psalm 139. 7. and such a presence of God is without his communion: But where he is so present as to make his abode or dwelling, there he hath communion with the soul: For this presence of God is in truth nothing else but his communicating of himself: Praesens autem est: in quantum praesentat seu praesentem facit bea∣titudinem quae est in ipso, in habitu tantum, ut in parvulis; in affectu tantum, ut in adultis: in habitu, effectu, et intellectu, ut in beatis, saith that excellent Schoolman Alensis par. 3. qu. 61. God is then present with the soul, when he represents unto it his own blessedness, either in habit or disposition, as in chil∣dren that know him not, and yet love him: or in desire or af∣fection, as to men that know him and love him; or in a habit, desire, and comprehension, as to the blessed souls that not on∣ly know and love, but also enjoy him.
So that according to the degrees of Gods presence, are also the degrees of his communion: where his presence is incom∣pleat and imperfect, (as in grace,) there his communion is so too: where his presence is compleat and perfect, (as in glory) there so also is his communion; But it is best for us to exa∣mine the effects of our communion with God, in the presence of his grace, that so we the more may undoubtedly attain to a communion with him in the presence of his glory.
And these effects are excellently set down in few words by the Casuists, saying, Spirituale bonum Divinum consistit in amicitia inter Deum & hominem, ac per hoc in consentire, con∣versari, convivere & colloqui cum Deo; The blessing of the soul consists in this, that a man hath friendship or communion with God, and consequently that he lives for him by consent, lives to him by conversation, lives with him by cohabitation, lives in him by contentation: I will briefly explain them all, that the good Christian may know his own happiness, in that he is called to live in this communion, by vertue whereof, First he lives for God by consent. Fiat volunt as tua••, Thy will be done, is a petition twice sanctified unto us by our Saviours own lips, in two several prayers; One of them taught us by his Doctrine in the Mount, Mat. 6. So that we cannot con∣temn his prayer, but we must also contemn his Sermon: The other taught us by his practice or example, Mat. 26. 42. where
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he made but one speech, yet three prayers, he prayed the third time saying the same words, ver. 44, It was one and the same expression of his voice, it was not one and the same elevation of his soul; therefore he prayed the third time, though he spake but his first words: We place the gift of prayer in the volubility of our tongues; our Saviour placed it in the groans of his heart; He pray∣ed thrice in the same words; we use many words, scarce pray at all: It is the heart that pants it, not the tongue that chants it out, when we truly say, Thy will be done: Conformitas in volito formali must be in all our desires, where in volito materiali cannot be: Here was a conformity of our Saviours will with Gods will in what he desired formally in his intention, though a seeming non∣formity in what he desired materially in his expression: And so it must ever be with us; For we are most sure that in this case, the Non Conformist cannot be a good Christian; but the want of conformity is the want of Christianity.
The second effect of this communion, is that the good Christi∣an lives to God by conversation. Tis a pleasant contemplation of Aquinas, that local distance is no impediment in the Angels con∣versing one with another, or speaking one to the other, because that is a meer intellectual operation: In loquutione Angelorum nullum impedimentum praestat localis distantia, quia est mere intel∣lectualis operatio; (Aqu. 1. par. qu. 107. art. 4.) But tis a much more comfortable assertion of the Apostle, that the distance of heaven from earth cannot hinder the conversation of man with God; for so much he plainly asserteth when he saith, For our conversation is in heaven, for whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ, Phil. 3. 20. In which words the Apostle affordeth us three observations concerning the heavenly conver∣sation of good Christians; 1. that it is nothing else but a serious study and exercise of Christian piety, in imitation of Christ, to whom they are always lifting up their eyes, and their hearts: 2. that they only are true Christians who firmly and constantly exercise this piety; for they only have true faith in Christ, they only have a firm hope of immortality: 3. that we have all two great Motives for this exercise; the one is that Christ our Saviour, on whom all our hopes rely, and in whom all our joys are fixed, is in heaven; & thefore what have we to do on earth? The other is, that the same Christ will at the last day come from heaven, to judge us according to the works that we have done; therefore if
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we will have a favourable judgement, we must have an innocent conversation: Conversation is but a frequent conversion, and requires our often turning to God by our repentance, as we of∣ten turn away from him by our sins.
The third effect of this communion, is, that he lives with God by cohabitation; I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God, Gal. 2. 20. Saint Paul by this losing his life, did indeed save it; had he kept his life in himself he might have lost it, by a temporal, a spiritual, an eternal death; for he would have been subject to the separation of his body from his soul, of his soul from grace, and of his soul and body from God: But having lost his life in himself, that he might keep it in his Saviour, he keeps it for ever: He keeps his natural life, which else he could not but lose; for his dissolution is not to him a death, but only a change, making good his We shall all be changed even before the last day: for he had a change only, when others had a death; Our departure hence if looked upon as a change, is our greatest consolation, (for it must needs be much for the better, because our corrup∣tible shall thereby put on incorruption, our mortal shall put on immortality) But if looked upon as a death, must needs be our greatest horror and confusion; for that can only tell us of the destroying, not of the amending or bettering our present state and condition; He keeps also his spiritual life, so continu∣ing as moreover improving it; His soul being more knit and united with grace then before; which is the spiritual life, the union of the soul with grace; for though we suppose it the same grace, yet the soul must needs be united to it the more neerly and the more firmly, the longer it abides in the communion of Christ, the fountain of grace; But we may well suppose the good Christian to grow in grace, since the Apostle so adviseth him, 2 Pet. 3. 18. and say that by communion with his Savi∣our, his soul is united to more and more grace, and that both most neerly and most firmly; so neerly as without a distance, so firmly as without a disunion: Lastly, He keeps also his eter∣nal life, by living to and in his Saviour; that is, he presently enters his claim, that he may keep his right, though he happily stay a long time, before he enters possession: Hence the Apo∣stle
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said, cupio dissolvi & esse cum Christo, I desire to be dis∣solved and to be with Christ, Phil. 1. 23. Tis all one for him to be dissolved, and to be with Christ; for he did live with Christ before his dissolution, and therefore cannot but live with him after it.
The fourth and last effect of this communion with God, is, that the good Christian lives in God by contentation; Hence it is that the outrages of this world may disturb or discompose, but not discontent him; For when he is weary of men, he can retire to himself; and when he is weary of himself, he can retire to his God; And though he be not weary of himself, yet he cannot be satisfied in himself, as long as he is absent from his God: Therefore he will be alwayes turning to him, and ne∣ver satisfied with turning till he get within him: Turn again then unto thy rest O my soul, for the Lord hath rewarded thee; And why? Thou hast delivered my soul from death, mine eyes from tears, and my feet from falling; I will walk before the Lord in the Land of the living, Psalm 116. 7, 8, 9. We have been a long time turning, and we have turned again and again, but surely not unto our God, because not unto our rest; we have tur∣ned unadvisedly and irreligiously, for we have turned away from our peace and from our God; and therefore the more shall be our turnings in this sort, the more will be our troubles; But this holy man turns very advisedly; for he is sure to get rest by his turning: He turns unto God with a deliberate election, because he is sure in him to find joy and rest: Turn unto thy rest O my soul; he turns unto him with a zealous and a thankful affection, acknowledging his manifold spiritual and temporal deliverances; Thou hast delivered my soul from death, mine eyes from tears, and my feet from falling: Lastly, he turns to him with a firm and a constant resolution, of persisting and presevering in his thankful acknowledgements, I will walk before the Lord in the land of the living.
These be the effects and fruits of our communion with God, we have a league of friendship with him; and that friendship makes us more devoted to him then to our selves: And hence it comes to pass that we live for him by consent; live to him by con∣versation; live with him by cohabitation; live in him by conten∣tation.
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TRue friendship consisteth in a proportionable communica∣tion of offices and of benefices; Amicitia consistit in analogica officiorum & beneficiorum communicatione: One friendly office, one friendly courtesie for another: So is it in our communion with God; The friendship on Gods part is wholly in giving benefits or blessings; the friendship in our part is wholly in returning offices or services; we receive bene∣fits from him, he receives offices from us: Beneficium requirit officium, His benefice requires our office; and we cannot bet∣ter befriend our selves, then by readily and faithfully serving so good a Master, who is more willing to pay us our wages, then we are to earn them, and is not willing to cast us off for every neglect or default in our services. It was a sad complaint of the Orator in behalf of that widow whom he lamented, Nescio an foeliciorem dicam quod talem virum habue••it, an mi∣seriorem quod amiserit, I cannot tell whether I may call her more happy in that she once had so good a husband, or more unhappy that now she hath lost him; But God forbid this complaint should be verified of a soul espoused to Christ by a spiritual marriage, and associated with him by a spiritual com∣munion. Therefore there is yet a third comfort arising from the knowledge of our being in the state of true Christianity; which is this, that we are thereby assured of the continuance of our communion with God, according to that triumphant exalta∣tion of the Psalmist, But thy loving kindness and mercy shall fol∣low me all the dayes of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever, Psalm 23. 6. Did my communion with God depend upon mine own deserts, I that could not invite him to me, might justly fear I should soon drive him from me; but
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now that it dependeth upon his mercy and loving kindness, I will hope I shall never lose it, though I know I can never de∣serve it: For what can love do else but love? what can good∣ness do but good? What can the fountain of mercy de∣light in, but in shewing mercy? Therefore though I some∣times step aside from him, yet I hope he will not forsake me; for he hath not only a preventing mercy to receive me, but also a following mercy to recall me; He came to me when I was out of the way, and will he go from me because I can∣not constantly keep in it? No, His mercy and loving kind∣ness shall follow me all the dayes of my life: For though men do follow, that they may receive; yet God doth follow that he may give, and that he may give pardon among the rest of his gifts.
This is the ground of my confidence, that I shall dwell in the house of the Lord for ever, and that he will continue his dwelling in my heart: For God doth not come to men with an intent presently to leave them; He comes to the devout foul, not as a guest to lodge for a night, but as a friend, or a lover, to abide for ever: The Psalmist reckons up four wayes of Gods discontinuing his communion with his servants; Ne abscondas faciem, ne declines in ira, ne dimittas, ne derelinquas, Hide not thy face, turn not away, leave not, for∣sake not, Psalm 27. 8, 9. Each of these is an interruption of Gods communion with us and our communion with him, but none of them is a total abruption of it; each of them is a breach, but none of them is a final breach.
The first breach is expressed by the hiding of his face: the second by turning away his face; the third by leaving us; the fourth by forsaking us: But this which is the greatest of all, is capable of a mitigation; for though he forsake us for a while, yet he will not forsake us for ever. The Psalmist that asks the question, Will the Lord absent himself for ever, and will he be no more intreated? Is his mercy clean gone for ever, and is his promise come utterly to an end for evermore? Hath God forgotten to be gracious, and will he shut up his loving kind∣ness in displeasure? Answers it negatively, in that he checks himself for asking it, saying, It is mine own infirmity, Psalm 77. 8, 9, 10. And agreeable to this Doctrine is that
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distinction of the Schools, desertio explorationis, & Poenae; There is a twofold spiritual desertion, a Desertion of tryal, and of punishment; by the first, God may, and often doth with∣draw his presence from his best servants to prove them, but not by the second to punish them, (taking punishment pro∣perly not as the chastisement of a loving Father, but as the vengeance of an angry Judge.) Thus saith the Evangelist, Jesus having loved his own, which were in the world, he loved them unto the end, John 13. 1. If he had not loved them, he would never have come to them; and loving them to the end, how shall he depart from them? And lest we should think this peculiarly spoken of the Apostles (contrary to that rule of Rom. 4. 23, 24. Now it was not written for his sake alone, that it was imputed to him, but for us also to whom it shall be imputed; where we may plainly see that the Scripture, though it often is but particular in the occasion, yet is al∣wayes universal in the instruction,) I say, lest we should think this occasionally spoken of the Apostles, Saint Paul saith it also Doctrinally of all others, whom God hath been pleased to call to his communion, Who shall also confirm you unto the end, that ye may be blameless in the day of our Lord Jesus Christ, 1 Cor. 1. 8. And he gives the reason of his Doctrine in the next verse, God is faithful by whom ye were called unto the fel∣lowship of his Son Jesus Christ our Lord: as if he had said, he hath converted you, and he will confirm you, not for a while, but unto the end, and the reason is, because he is faithful: He hath called you to the fellowship or the com∣munion of his Son Jesus Christ, and he will keep and confirm you in it unto the end: He forsakes not the fellowship which himself hath ordained, for he is faithful: He hath or∣dained that you should have fellowship with him in his Son, and he is so faithful to his own ordination that he gives his Holy Spirit to call you to, and keep you in that fellowship, to the intent you may be joyned with him in the commu∣nion of grace, till he bring you to the communion of glo∣ry: So that the fault is wholly our own if God make not his perpetual abode with us, after once he is come unto us; Tis because either we do not stick to our Saviour the Son
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of his love, or because we do stick to our sins which he cannot love. For he will not constantly abide either with an unfaithful or with an unfruitful soul: The unfaithfull soul forsakes his communion, the unfrui tfll soul forgets it: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Aristotle, Children are the bond of Wedlock: Nay God saith so too; Now this time will my husband be joyned unto me, because I have born him three sons, Gen. 29. 34. Therefore was his name called Le∣vi. The Levite had his name from conjunction; for shame let him not be the author of separation: And again yet more fully, God hath endued me with a good dowry; now will my husband dwell with me, because I have born him six sons, and she called his name Zebulon, Gen. 30. 20. Zebu∣lon, id est, donum cohabitationis, saith Tremelius, Donatum filium ad conciliandam cohabitationem viri, a pledge or pawn of the husbands dwelling with his wife, and delighting in her so∣ciety.
So is it also in the Spiritual Matrimony, in the Marriage of the soul with Christ; That he may betroth us unto him∣self for ever, he doth betroth us in righteousness and judge∣ment, in loving-kindness, and in mercies, and in faithful∣ness, Hos. 2. There is righteousness and faithfulness, as well as there is loving-kindness and mercy in this blessed wed∣lock: Righteousness and faithfulness required on our parts, as well as loving-kindness and mercies on his part; and we must take heed of losing the righteousness and the faith∣fulness, for fear we should lose the loving-kindness and the mercies: Gratia est habitus mentis totius vit•• ordinativus, Grace is a habit of the mind ordering the whole life, saith Alensis par. 3. qu. 61. m. 2. In what but in righteous∣ness? Grace ordereth the whole life in righteousness, will not suffer any part of it to be spent in unrighteousness; so likewise saith Saint Paul, Grace reigneth through righteous∣ness to eternal life, Rom. 5. 21. Take away the righteous∣ness, take away the reign of grace: take away the reign of grace, and farewell to the reign of glory, unless you will look for glory without eternal life. O blessed Jesus who art the only guest and joy of religious souls! I confess that
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I am not worthy thou shouldest once come under my roof; yet I beseech thee to make me fit for thine everlasting abode; That I being faithfull and fruitfull in all righteousness unto the death; may receive of thee a Crown of life, who didst dye for my sins, and rise again for my Justification, and now sittest on the right hand of God, making intercession for me: Thou hast been the Mediator of this blessed commu∣nion betwixt God and my soul; O be thou also the pre∣server of it, that in it, and for it, I may bless and praise thee with the Father and the Holy Ghost, one God world with∣out end, Amen.
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Christ reteined in the true Christian Communion.
Now I beseech you brethren, mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the Doctrine which ye have learned, and avoid them; for they that are such, serve not our Lord Jesus Christ, but their own belly, and by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the simple, Rom. 16. 17, 18. Nec Haereticus pertinet ad Ecclesiam Catholicam quae diligit Deum: Nec Schismaticus, quoniam diligit Proximum: Aug. de fide & Symbolo cap. 10. Neither doth a Heretick belong to the Catholick Church, because she loves God; nor a Schismatick, because she loves her neighbour.
The Prooem. Christian Communion is to be considered in its Au∣thority, in its Excellency, and in its Sincerity.
GReat are the divisions of wicked and ungodly men, whilst at first they run away from God; and as great are their distractions, when at last they run away from one another: It is their sin that they will needs be at enmity with God; it is their punishment that they cannot but be at enmity among themselves: This small Treatise endea∣vours either to keep us from this great misery, or to recover us out of it; either to prevent it from coming upon us, or to redress it when it is come: For it calleth us to unity against division, to constancy against distraction, (since there can be no constancy where there is no unity) It calleth us to a com∣munion with Christ and with his Church; which communion must have unity from the nature, and constancy from the author
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of it; For our Saviour Christ is the same yesterday to day, and for ever, Heb. 13. 8. and as he is unchangeable in himself, so he desires to be found unchangeable in his members; He will have them the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever; And indeed so they are, for they do partake of the constancy, who were real partakers of the unity in the Christian communi∣on, which is betwixt Christ and his Church: Those Chri∣stians do shew forth a kind of immutability or unchangeable∣ness, by their constancy in religion, who truly have communion with Christ, in the unity of his Church: For they cannot run a gadding after other mens phansies who are really esta∣blished in their own consciences: They know they have met with the true Christ already, and therefore look not after false Christs; and regard not them who say, loe he is here, or loe he is there; They have found him in his Church, and will not look for him in the desert or in the secret chambers; For Christ having said to his Church, Loe I am with you alwayès, even to the end of the world, would not have us think that we can be with him, if we will not be with his Church. There∣fore we must look for Christian communion in Christs Church, though we must not look for it only in his Church, but also, & much rather in himself: For in truth, Christ and his Church do make but one true Christian communion; Accordingly it will be necessary to consider this communion, first in its authority, for that Christ calleth us thereto by his own authority as the head, and the Church calleth us thereto by the authority of Christ as his body.
After that we shall consider the same communion in its ex∣cellency; for authority and excellency are reciprocal in Gods commands; He commonly commaning that with the grea∣test authority, on which he hath bestowed the greatest ex∣cellency.
And lastly, we shall consider the same Christian communion in its sincerity; for in spiritual exercises or duties of the soul, such as is the desire and practice of this communion, the greatest part of the excellency consisteth in the sincerity; for God the seer and searcher, and judge of hearts, accounteth no∣thing excellent in his service, but what proceeds from the heart.
Lord make me earnestly desire this Christian communion,
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for its authority, as proceeding from Christ the eternal Son of God, make me highly admire this communion for its excel∣lency, as continuing with Christ; make me cordially embrace this communion for its sincerity, as wholly ending in Christ.
A true Christian communion indeed, which hath its begin∣ning from Christ, its continuance with Christ, its end in Christ; which is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, ex ip∣so, per ipsum, & in ipsum, which is of him, and through him, and to him, (as the Apostle speaks, Rom. 11. 36.) Because it is of him, it hath great authority; because it is with him, it hath great excellency; because it is to him, it hath great sincerity.
CAP. I. Of Christian Communion in its Authority.
COmmunion with Christ is the only way to Salvation by Christ; for if we embrace not his Communion here, we shall not enjoy his Salvation hereafter: For Christ as man, is the head of our Christian Com∣munion, though as God, he be not only the commander of it by his word, but al∣so the defender and maintainer of it by his power, so that the gates of hell are not able to prevail against it; And this is Saint Augustines Judgement upon those words of our blessed Saviour, John 1. 5. I am the true Vine: That our Saviour spake those words, Secundum quod caput Ecclesiae, as he was the Head of the Church, that is, according to his hu∣manity,
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whereby he is of the same nature with us men, as a Vine is of the same nature with its branches. Nor can there be a fitter similitude to express the communion of Christ with his Church, then is this of a Vine with its branches: For as a Vine in the winter is without its branches, so was Christ in his passion without his disciples: for they all forsook him and fled, Mark 14. 50. And as a Vine when it is without its branches is without it is beauty; so it is said of Christ, whiles he was yet without its disciples, hanging upon his cross, He hath no form nor comeliness; and when we shall see him there is no beau∣ty that we should desire him, Isa. 53. 2. And as a Vine is first planted in the earth before it brings forth branches; So was our Saviour first laid in the earth before his Church was increa∣sed and multiplied And as the Vine is the basis and foundation which sustaineth the branches, so is Christ the foundation of his Church: Other foundation can no man lay, then that is laied, which is Jesus Christ, 1 Cor. 3. 11. The fellow-labourers with God (spoken of in the ninth verse) may help under prop the bran∣ches: but tis only the Vine that can sustain them: And as the branches have all their greeness, and growth, and fruit, from the Vine: So hath the Church all its beauty and nourishment and increase from Christ; and as the Vine doth transfuse its nature, and therewith its vertue into the branches, so doth Christ communicate to his members his name, whereby they are called Christians, his vertue whereby they are made Christians, nay the very nature and being of his filiation or Son-ship, as far as it is communicable, in that he makes them the Sons of God with himself, though not by nature, yet by adoption and Grace: Lastly (which is Saint Augustines observation) As the branches are the most contemptible of all sorts of wood when they are off from the Vine, but the most glorious whiles they are on it: so is it with men, whiles they are without Christ, they are most base and contemptible. Saint Peter can liken them to nothing but to dogs or swine, But it is hapned to them accord∣ing to the true proverb, the Dog is turned to his own vomit again, and the Sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire, 2 Pet. 2. 22. But whiles they are in Christ, they are glorious and excellent above all others; the same Saint Pteer labours for va∣riety of titles to express their excellency, But ye are a chosen gene∣ration.
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a royall Priesthood, an holy Nation, a peculiar People, 1. Pet. 2. 9 Nay yet more, Partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust, 2 Pet. 1. 4. In his first list of titles he makes them much more then other men: but in his Second, he supposes them little less then God: Christ as man, communicating to his members the excellencies of his humanity, making them a chosen, a holy, a peculiar peo∣ple; and as God, communicating to them the excellencies of his Divinity, making them partakers of the divine nature: In capi∣te tria possumus considerare, saith Aqu. (tertia par. qu. 8. ar. 1.) Ordinem, perfectionem, & virtutem: we must consider in the Head these three things; That it is the highest part in order; The noblest part in perfection, and the chiefest part in operation; And so is Christ to be considered as Head of the Church. 1. That he is the highest part in order; for he is neerest the most high, in whom alone men and angels are brought near unto God; For the distance betwixt finite and infinite, must needs be infinite; The Angels then being finite, no less then men, are in the same parallel or equi-distance from infinity, and cannot be Mediators to bring us unto God: Only he that hath joined finite and in∣finite in one person, can join them together by his mediation. 2. That he is the noblest part in perfection, because he alone had the fulness of Grace and truth: all others have re∣ceived from him; and of his fulness have all we received, John 1, 16. Quo propinquius est receptivum causae influenti, eò abun∣dantius recipit; The neerer that which receives the influence, is to that which gives it, the more plentifully it is supplied; thus Astronomy teacheth us, that the Moon in its conjunction with the Sun hath in truth more light in it self: though in the op∣position, when it is farthest from the Sun, it seem more enlightned in regard of us; So the Soul of Christ received most Grace, be∣cause it was neerest God the fountain and giver of grace, as be∣ing joined to him in person, whereas the spirits of the best men and Angels are joined to him only in affection; and those are the best of either sort, who are the neerest God in this conjunction.
3. That he is the chiefest part in operation; For as the vir∣tue and motion ••f all other members dependeth on the Head; So the vertue and motion of religious Souls dependeth on Christ. Hence the Apostle is more, willing to glory in his infirmities, then
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we can be to glory in our supposed strength; for tis but a sup∣posed strength, and that by an unlogicall, much more by an untheological supposition which we do challenge to our selves, without our Saviour; tis a supposed strength by a supponis quod non est supponendum; A man that supposeth himself to have strength from himself, supposeth what is not to be be supposed logically, because it is against reason; much more theologically, because it is against religion; for he hath said without me you can do nothing, Sine me nihil potestis facere, John 15. 5. Nec mirum, quia nec Deus sine ipso aliquid fecit, saith Aquinas; and tis no wonder if we can do nothing without him: For God himself did nothing without him: as appears, John 1. 3. Sine ipso factum est nihil quod factum est, without him was not any thing made that was made. Accordingly Saint Augustine tells us, that by this saying our blessed Saviour hath instructed the hearts of the humble, and stopped the mouths of the proud: In quo & corda instruit humilium, & ora obstruit superborum. I had rather be one of the humble to have my heart instructed, then one of the proud to have my mouth stopped, and will therefore say unto my Saviour, O Lord my strength and my redeemer, Psal. 19. 14. Or I will say of him, I take pleasure in infirmities for Christs sake, for when I am weak then am I strong, 2 Cor. 12. 10. that is, though I am weak in my self, yet I have a sufficient strength to glory in, and to trust to, being strong in my Saviour; therefore let me follow Saint Pauls humility and say, Most gladly will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me, 2 Cor. 12. 9. Power is ac∣counted matter of glory in the man who desireth to rely upon himself; But Weakness is matter of glory in the Christian, who desireth to rely wholly upon his Saviour: Hence Saint Bernard, Quis dabit mihi non solum infirmari, sed & destitui ac dificere penitus à memet ipso, ut Domini virtutum virtute stabiliar, (Serm. 25. super Cant.) O that I could be more and more in-firme and defective, even to a swowning fit in my self, that I might be strengthned and revived by his power who is the Lord of power and strength; He comes very neer Saint Pauls expression 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, ut tanquam in tabernaculo in∣habitet in me virtus Christi, That the power of Christ may rest in me as in a tabernacle, not for the shortness of continuance,
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or the uncertainty of abode that is in tabernacles, for he could never have too much of Christs company; but for the slenderness of entertainment that was used to be in them: for he could never enough bewail his own unworthi∣ness to entertain such a heavenly guest.
But this Communion with Christ, as with our Head, will be better understood from our Saviours own mouth, who maketh a whole Sermon concerning it in the fore-quoted 15. Chapter of Saint John, in the eleven first verses; and we shall best learn this doctrine by considering the chief heads of that Ser∣mon; For therein our blessed Saviour sheweth us the nature, the reasons, the cause, and the proofs or evidences of our Com∣munion with him.
First, The nature of this communion, Abide in me, and I in you, v. 4. It is that whereby we abide in him, and he in us; as our own Church hath taught us to pray, That we may evermore dwell in him, and he in us; we dwell in him by faith believing his promises, by love obeying his commands, and by desire, hungring and thirsting after his presence; He dwells in us by his spirit enlightning our understandings that we may believe, in∣flaming our affections that we may love, and satisfying our desires that we may delight and rejoyce in the presence of his Grace, till we may be admitted to the presence of his Glory.
Secondly, The reasons of this communion: for although his command be enough to compell us, yet he is pleased to use rea∣sons to perswade us to have communion with himself; And those reasons are five, whereof four are positive arguments, the fift is privative; The first positive argument why we should communicate with our Saviour, is, our own Sanctification, set forth by two words of Purging, ver. 2. and of cleansing v. 3. by abiding in him we are purged from the guilt, and cleansed from the pollution of our sins.
The Second positive argument why we should communicate with our Saviour, is, our fruitfulness in all good works, ver. 5. He that abideth in me and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit; that is, fruits of piety and religion towards God; fruits of temperance and sobriety towards himself; fruits of justice and charity towards his neighbour; for he is like a tree planted by the water side bringing forth at all times and seasons the fruits
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of a holy, a chaste, and an upright conversation.
The third reason why we should communicate with our Sa∣viour Christ, is, our own contentation, ver. 7. Ye shall ask what you will, and it shall be done unto you; For he that abideth in Christ, conformeth his will to the will of Christ, and is sure to obtain what he asketh, because he asketh such things as please him; according to that excellent prayer of our own Church, That they may obtain their petitions, make them to ask such things as shall please thee: (Collect for 10. Sunday after Trin.) So Saint Augustine glosseth the words, Manendo quippe in Christo, quid velle possunt nisi quod convenit Christo? quid velle possunt manendo in salvatore, nisi quod alienum non est à salute? He that abideth in Christ, what can he ask against Christ? He that abideth in his Saviour, what can he ask that is destru∣ctive of salvation? Therefore if he beg any thing of God that is not granted him, he begs it as he is in himself, not as he is in his Saviour; so the same Father, Quia si hoc petimus quod non fit, non hoe petimus quod habet mans••o in Christo, sed quod ha∣bet cupiditas aut infirmitas carnis; If we ask that which God will not do for us, we ask not according to our being and abi∣ding in Christ, but according to our being and abiding in our own fleshly lusts and infirmities: Wherefore this being a certain truth, that the good Christian desires to live rather ac∣cording to the will of Christ, then his own will; he can never be discontented for whatsoever befals him, because he knows, that though God hear him not according to his prayer, yet he heareth him according to his profit; si non audit ad volun∣tatem, audit ad utilitatem, as saith Saint Augustine, and being perswaded that all things work together for good to them that love God, (Rom. 8. 28.) he resolves to be thankful for what God gives him, and for what he denies him and, he that resolves to be thankfull, is sure not to be miserable.
The fourth reason why we should communicate with our Sa∣viour Christ, is Gods glory; ver. 8. Herein is my father glorifi∣ed, that ye bear much fruit; which is agreeable with that Do∣ctrine in his first Sermon upon the Mount; Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorifie your Fa∣ther which is in heaven, Mat. 5. 16. An argument so powerfull, that we may call it 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 or violentum, because it offereth
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force or violence to our consciences, which cannot but tell us that unless we do glorifie our God here, we may not hope to be glorified by him hereafter.
The fifth reason why we should communicate with our bles∣sed Saviour, is rather privative, then positive, because it is taken from the punishment of those who are not in his communion; and that reason is urged in the sixth ver. If a man abide not in me, he is cast forth as a branch, and is withered, and men gather them, and cast them into the fire, and they are burned: Where the punishment of those who abide not in Christ, is the same which those endure that are in hell; For it is a punishment of loss, and a punishment of sense; The punishment of loss is twofold, 1. The loss of glory, he is cast forth; 2. The loss of nourish∣ment, he is withered; The punishment of sense is also twofold; 1. He is confined to ill company, men gather them, he is ga∣thered together with other branches as rotten as himself; he can have no other company but of wicked men and of evil spi∣rits; which we cannot but see, in our late outrages, was a most unsufferable mischeif; and if it be so tedious for an hour, what is it for ever? 2 He is cast into a place of torment to be there tor∣mented; and cast them into the fire, and they are burned; Hence Saint Augustine most excellently, Ʋnum è duobus Palmiti congruit; aut vitis aut ignis; si in vite non est, in igne erit; ut ergo in igne non sit, maneat in vite; One of those two things must needs befall every branch, either he is in the Vine, or he is in the fire; therefore that he may not be in the fire, he were best abide in the Vine.
Thirdly the cause of this communion, ver. 9. As the Father hath loved me, so I have loved you; continue ye in my love: Gods love to us in Christ is the first efficient cause of our communi∣on with Christ, even as his grace is the secundary or instru∣mental cause of it; and Saint Augustine hath found that also in these words, manete in dilectione mea, id est, in gratia mea, saith he; continue ye in my love, that is in my grace: He that is an enemy to the grace of God, is not yet fitted for communion with Christ.
Fourthly and lastly, our blessed Saviour sheweth the proofs or evidences of our communion with him, that we may rejoyce when we have it, and repent when we have it not; and those proofs are three.
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The first proof of our communion with Christ is this, that Christs words abide in us, ver. 7. If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, the one alwayes accompanies the other; so that those men give an ill proof of their communion with Christ, who make it their business to revile and reproach his word: Tunc dicenda sunt verba ejus in nobis manere, quando facimus qua praecepit, & diligimus que promisit, saith Saint Augustine. Then is it to be said that his words do abide in us, when we do what he hath commanded, and desire what he hath promised; But Aquinas tells us that Christs words do abide in us when we believe them, when we love them, when we consider them, and when we obey them, Amando, credendo, meditando, & implen∣do; And he proves this his Exposition from Prov. 4. 20 21. My son attend to my words, that you may believe them; Encline thine ear unto my sayings, that you may obey and fulfill them: Let them not depart from thine eyes, that you may consider and meditate upon them; Keep them in the midst of thine heart, that you may entirely affect and love them: If the words of Christ do thus abide in us by faith, by love, by meditation and by obedience, then we have a sure token that we our selves do abide in him; so saith Saint Bern. (Serm. 69. super. Cantic.) Si sensero aperiri mihi sensum, ut intellig••m Scripturas aut uberiores desursum influere animo meditationum imbres, non am∣bigo sponsum adesse; Verbi siquidem hae copiae sunt, & de pleni∣tudine ejus ista accipimus: If I perceive my understanding opened to understand the Scripture, or the influence and di∣stillation of heavenly meditations upon my soul, I cannot doubt but the Bridegroom is at hand; for these are the armies that the word doth march withall; and it is from his fulness, that my soul is thus filled.
The second proof of our communion with Christ, is this, that we continue and abide in his love; and this is a consequent of the former, as it is said, ver. 10. If ye keep my command∣ments, ye shall abide in my love: No keeping of his com∣mandments, no abiding in his love: Wherefore the Solifi∣dian is in a dangerous condition, who seeks not to joyn obedi∣ence to his faith; For he abides not in the love of Christ; and how then can he expect that Christ should interpose his death and passion betwixt the judgement of God and his sinful soul, since
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that interposition is clearly the greatest effect that can be of Christs love? Greater love hath no man, then this, that a man lay down his life for his friends, John 15. 13. Our blessed Sa∣viour dyed for his enemies; but none shall have the benefit of his death, in the day of Judgement, but only his friends; and none are his friends but they that abide in his love; and none abide in his love, but they that keep his command∣ments; if not by their righteousness, yet at least by their repentance.
The third proof of our communion with Christ, is this, that his joy remaineth in us, ver. 11. These things have I spoken unto you, (sc. the things that belong to your abiding in me) that my joy might remain in you; and that your joy might be full; Lord, what a mercy is it that thy joy doth come un∣to us, much more that it doth remain in us? And from whence co••••••h thy joy, but from the testimony of thy Holy Spirit that thou hast reconciled us unto the Father, and from the te∣stimony of our own consciences that we do not abide in any sin, to hinder the comfort, and hazard the fruit of that reconcili∣ation? This is the very joy of the Holy Ghost, a joy not heard of but amongst Christian, a joy not found but amongst good Christians, who have the Spirit of Christ witnessing with their spirits that they are the children of God; and if children, then heirs, heirs of God, and joynt-heirs with Christ; if so be that they suffer with him, that they may be also glorified together: Rom. 8. 16, 17. Tis not all the losses of the earth can discourage those who are the heirs of heaven; tis not all the sufferings of this world can dismay those who have the joy of the next world, because they know they can be losers and sufferers only for a time, but they are sure they shall have gain and glory for ever.
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NO man can hope to be wise without wisdom, righteous without righteousness, holy without holiness, true with∣out truth, or to see without light, or to live without life; And therefore no man can hope to be wise, righteous, holy, true, or to see, or to live without Christ; for he of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, 1 Cor. 1. 30. and he alone is the light which lighteth every man that cometh in∣to the world, John 1. 9. and he alone is the truth and the life, John 14. 6. Therefore we must have Communion with him, or we cannot have wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, truth, light or life from him: But how can we have communion with Christ, since He is in heaven, and we are on earth? I answer, as we can partake of him, so we can communicate with him; For participation and communion, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 are in Saint Pauls language equipollent, one and the same thing: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Quae participatio, quae communio, are set down as terms convertible, 2 Cor. 6. 14. So far therefore as we participate of Christ, so far forth we communicate with Christ; If we participate of him only externally: whether in his Word, or in his Sacraments, we communicate with him only externally; If we participate of him internally, we communicate also with him internally: according to that excel∣lent determination of that irrefragable Doctor, upon this question, An mali pertineant ad unionem capitis cum corpore Ecclesiae? whether wicked men belong to that Union of the Church, wherein Christ as head, is united with the body: which question he determines in the negative, saying thus: Mali quidem sunt in unitate Ecclesiae dummodo habent fidem rectam, ut zizania cum tritico, Mat. 13. sed non sunt in unita∣te corporis Ecclesiae; sunt ergo de Ecclesia, sed non de corpore Ecclesiae; nam ut in corpore humano est unio membrorum duplex, sc. materialis per nervos, & formalis per vitam, sic in corpore
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Ecclesiae est duplex unio membrorum, una quasi materialis quae est per fidem, alia formalis quae est per charitatem: (Al••n. par. 3. qu. 12. m. 2. ar. 3.) Wicked men are in the Unity of the Church as long as they profess the true faith, as the tares are with the wheat, Mat. 13. But they are not in the unity of the body of the Church; therefore they are of the Church, but not of the body of the Church; For as in the body of a man there is a two∣fold Union of the members, to wit a material union by nerves & ligaments, and a formal union by spirit and life; so in the body of the Church there is a twofold union of the members, the one as it were a material union in the outward profession of the same Christian Faith, the other a formal union in the inward affection and love of that Faith which they profess; And hence is that distinction of Aquinas (for Stapleton and the later writers have it from him) Quidam sunt de Ecclesiae numero tantum; quidam & merito & numero; Some men are members of the Christian Church only in their number or in their persons; some also in their merit or in their Dispositions: some men partake of the Word and Sacraments only with their ears, and with their mouths; but others partake of them also with their hearts, as it is said of the blessed Virgin-mother, She kept all these sayings in her heart, Luke 2. 51. the one we may say are Christs external, the other his internal communicants; And the Apostle in the same place useth three other words, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, concord, part, agreement, which are in effect so many pledges to us, and testimonials to others, of our internal communion with our blessed Saviour; for that causeth us to have concord, part and agreement with him; Concord, as being united with Christ, in the same affections; Part, as being united with him, in the same promises; Agree∣ment, as being united with him, in the same professions.
Wherefore this rule as it may increase our knowledge, so it must increase our comfort; as it may be for our instruction, so it must be for our consolation, that as far as we partake of Christ, so far we communicate with him; and as far as we communicate with Christ, so far we partake of him. If our participation of Christ be only external, as is that of hypocrites, who draw neer him with their lips, but their heart is far from him; who hear his Word, and receive his Sacraments meerly for custom,
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or for curiosity, or for some other external consideration, then is our communion with Christ only external, and we on∣ly do help to make up that visible body, whereof man is the Head: But if our participation of Christ be internal, as is that of good Christians, who hear his Word and receive his Sacra∣ments out of conscience, that they may hear him speaking to them in his Word, and find him nourishing them in his Sacra∣ments, then is our communion with Christ not only external, but also and much rather internal, and we do help make up that mystical body, whereof Christ alone is the Head: For tis our heart makes our Head, as we are Christians: if our heart be with man more then with God in our religion, then man is our head in it; but if our heart be with Christ, more then with man in our religion, then Christ is our Head in it: And hence it comes to pass, that some men are better Christians under a more corrupt, then others are under a more incorrupt form of doctrine and discipline; because it is not communion with the Church, but with Christ in the Church, that makes the good Christian: He that looks more af∣ter Christ, then after his Church in the profession of Christiani∣ty, may haply be a good; Christian in a bad Church; for Christ is able to make him a good Christian without his Church; nay indeed against it: He that looks more after his Church then after Christ, must needs be a bad Christian in a good Church; for his Church cannot make him a good Christian without Christ. Accordingly a man may be a better Christian in an unreformed Church, if his religion be above his faction, then in a reformed Church, if his faction be above his religion; and I had much rather have a Christian mind in an unchristian or antichristian Church, then an unchristian mind in the purest Christian Church that is: For though Christ be never so much in my Church, yet that will do me no good, unless he be also in my heart; And if Christ be in my heart, tis not my Churches be∣ing Antichristian or unchristian in some particulars (which I do lament, but cannot help) that can drive him out of it, or de∣prive me of the state and comfort of true Christianity: Tis sin if Christ be not in mine heart, whiles I profess my self to be a Christian: Tis my misery, if. Christ be not in all the profes∣sions and practices of my Church, by which I have been
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brought to Christianity: Let me keep my self from being sin∣ful, by making sure of Christ in my heart; and my God will keep me from being miserable, because of some mistakes or de∣fects of Christianity in my Church.
Saint Paul saith to the Corinthians, but of him are ye in Christ Jesus, notwithstanding at that time there was both here∣sie and schism in the Church of Corinth; Heresie, for some de∣nied the resurrection; 1 Cor. 15. 12. Schism, for some said they were of Paul, others of Apollos, others of Cephas, 1 Cor. 1. 12. Their communion with a bad Church, (when they could not help it) did not hinder their communion with Christ; and their communion with Christ, did make them par∣takers of Christ: for he was made unto them wisdom, and righte∣ousness, and sanctification, and redemption, 1 Cor. 1. 30. wis∣dom to direct them, righteousness to acquit them, sanctifica∣tion to purge them, and redemption to save them: Thus was Christ made unto them either externally in his Word and Sa∣craments, or internally in his Spirit and graces, accordingly as they did communicate with him, and participate of him: If they brought only an outside to him, they received only an outside from him; such a wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctificati∣on, and redemption as did only shew them to be Christians, not make them good Christians: But if they brought their inner man to Christ, he perfected their inner man by an internal com∣munion with, and participation of his wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption. Wherefore if our com∣munion with Christ, or participation of Christ, be only exter∣nal, and not also internal, we ought to quarrel with our selves, not with our Church, and much less with our God: for with∣out doubt, God is faithful who offers us Christ by his Church in his word and Sacraments, (For is the Spirit of the Lord strait∣ned? do not his words do good to him that walketh uprightly? Mich. 2. 7. is a question as unanswerable now, as it was then) and it is meerly from our own unfaithfulness, if we receive not Christ when he is offered, or retein him not when he is re∣ceived.
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THE union of two extreams, is necessarily by some other third thing betwixt them both, which brings the said extreams together; and that, in regard of Christ, is his spirit, which brings him down to us; in regard of us, is our faith, which carries us up to Christ; Both are alike required in our internal communion with Christ: For though his Spirit be never so powerfully with his own ordinances, that to resist the one is to resist the other, as saith Saint Stephen, ye stiffnecked and uncircum∣cised in hearts and ears, ye do alwayes resist the Holy Ghost, Acts 7. 51. Yet if our faith be not with his Spirit, we cannot have communion with him in his word; For so is the same truth spoken by anothers mouth, But the word preached did not pro∣fit them not being mixed with faith in them that heard it, Heb. 4. 2. Their not being profited was not for want of Gods Spirit with his word, but for want of their faith with Gods Spirit: The spirit was not, is not wanting to the word; for the word of God is quick and powerful, sharper then any two▪ edg∣edsword, peircing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joynts and marrow, and is a discoverer of the thoughts and intents of the heart, ver. 12. All which force and activity cannot be from the dead letter which constitutes the word, but from the quick spirit which accompanies and enlivens it; But their faith was, and our faith is wanting to the Spirit of God, which brings us all under that sharp reproof of our blessed Sa∣viour, O fools and slow of heart to believe all that the Prophets have spoken! Luke 24. 25. For if we be not slow to believe, yet generally we believe by an historical faith proceeding from
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the conviction of the understanding meerly through the evi∣dence of truth, (as the Devils believe and tremble) not by a justifying faith, proceeding from the conversion of the will through the love of truth: And hence it is, that though the cheif corner stone be rightly laid in all Christian Churches, all alike confessing Christ to be the eternal Son of God, and the Mediator betwixt God and man; (for if any deny this, they are neither to be thought, nor to be called Christians) yet the building is not rightly raised in many Churches; the reason is, because there be many mockers in these last times, who walk after their own ungodly lusts, separating themselves, sensual, not having the Spirit, as Saint Jude admonisheth; But in no wise building up themselves in their most holy faith, or praying in the Holy Ghost, or keeping themselves in the love of God, as Saint Jude adviseth. No wonder if such a faith as this came far short of its proper object, Christ with all the blessings and mer∣cies of God, since indeed it comes far short of it self; For a faith that maketh men not build up but pull down the pra∣ctice of religion; and pray, not in Gods Holy Spirit, but in their own perverse spirits, and keep themselves not in the love of God, and consequently of his Church, but in the love of their own self-interests and advantages; such a faith, or rather such a phansie or fiction, and faction as this is and must be called, comes far short of faith, and therefore cannot but come far short of Christ the proper object of faith.
Saint Paul tells us of another kind of faith, which to them under the Law was the evidence of things not seen, and must be so to us under the Gospel, saying, these all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off, and were perswaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth, Heb. 11. 13. They died in that faith in the which we ought to live and dye, though the object of it be more clearly revealed to us, then it was to them; a faith which is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen; A faith knowing by evidence, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, they did see the promises a faith approving by adherence, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, they were perswaded of them; A faith applying by affection, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 they embraced them; and lastly a faith working and persevering by profession & practice, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉,
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they confessed the same promises not only in their words but also in their deeds, in their life and conversation, accounting themselves strangers and Pilgrims on earth, when they consi∣dered those heavenly promises: And that made them like Pilgrims earnestly to long after their own country, and not do or desire any thing for love of earth, which might hinder or delay their passage to heaven: So that a faith thus seeing, thus applying, thus approving, thus confessing the promises of sal∣vation by Christ, is the faith which our Apostle defineth to be the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen; that is to say, a faith that now maketh Christ present with the soul by the communion of his grace, and will hereafter make the soul present with Christ in the communion of his glory: Oh for such a faith to bring my Saviour into my soul, and to keep him there, till faith it self be no longer faith, but be tur∣ned into vision! A faith that engageth the whole man, in all his powers and faculties both of soul and body; For only such a faith as taketh up the whole man, in his understanding, will, affections, actions, can take a right and lay a fast hold on Christ; such a faith, though it cannot miraculously now open the hea∣vens, as it did once to Saint Stephen, yet it can and will pierce the heavens, and there see the son of man standing on the right hand of God, ready to defend us on earth, and as ready to receive us into heaven.
Whence we may very well conclude, that this communion of good Christians with Christ, or of the body with the head, though at so great a distance, is in the thing it self most real and substantial, though in the manner it be only spiritual and my∣stical. Christ and his Church, (nay every true member of his Church) are as substantially united together, as man and wife; Husbands love your wives, as Christ loved the Church, Ephes. 5. 25. that is to say, his wife: And therefore as no distance can keep the man and his wife from being one flesh; so neither Christ and his Church from being one spirit: He that is joined to the Lord, is one Spirit, 1 Cor. 6. 17. And to put us out of doubt that we whilst we live here on earth, if we live unto him, are thus joyned unto him, Saint John saith plainly, Hereby we know that he abideth in us, by the spirit which he hath given us. 1 John 3. 24. There cannot be a more sub∣stantial
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union then is of the soul with the body, because the soul abideth in the body; and the same union is of Christ with the soul, because he abideth in the soul; and as we know the soul abideth in the body by the spirit or breath which it giveth to the body; so we know that Christ abideth in the soul, by the spirit which he giveth to the soul; Yet is this union of Christ with his body, not carnal but spiritual, not to be discerned by the strength of the outer, but of the inner man; such an union as Saint Paul describeth to all, but wisheth only to good Christians, (for though he might wish the Son of righteousness to shine upon a dunghill, yet he might not wish him to be joy∣ned to it) that God would grant you to be strengthned with might by his spirit in the inner man, that Christ may dwell in your heart by faith, Ephes. 3. 16, 17▪ Here is a most real and sub∣stantial union and communion betwixt Christ and good Chri∣stians; for the spirit strengtheneth them, and Christ dwelleth in them; but tis only spiritual, for the spirit strengtheneth their inner man; and mystical, for Christ dwelleth in their hearts: And he dwelleth in their hearts by faith, not a faith that com∣meth from their own Spirits, but a faith that commeth from Gods Spirit; A faith that cometh from our own spirits strengthneth only the outer man; but a faith that cometh from Gods spirit strengthneth the inner man: That faith is strong only in perswasion, but this faith is strong in affection; That faith is strong in phansie, but this faith is strong in love, even in that love which is the fulfilling of the Law; loving the bo∣dy for the heads sake, loving the head for his own sake: lo∣ving the Church for Christ, and loving Christ for himself; such a faith as this proceeding from the Spirit of God, cannot but afford us a real communion with the Son of God; and ha∣ving a real communion with Christ as with our head, we shall never delight in separations and divisions from the Church, which is his body.
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TRue Christian communion beginneth with the Church, as with the body of Christ, but endeth with Christ himself, as with the head: God hath joyned those two toge∣ther, let not man put them asunder; Nor is it the intent of this discourse to divide this Christian communion into two seve∣ral communions, by reason determining or defining, ratione ra∣tiocinata, because the body cannot subsist without the head, but only by reason discussing or debating, ratione ratiocinante, be∣cause the head is different from the body: And every good Christian is to take notice, that though he may consider this com∣munion severally, yet he may not persue and embrace it so. For he cannot have actual communion with Christ, unless he have actual communion with his Church, no more then he can have communion with the head, unless he have also communi∣on with the body: yet may he not rest satisfied in his commu∣nion with the body, the Church of Christ, till they come there∣by to have communion with the head, even with Christ himself.
For our Christian communion is much like Jacobs ladder, the lower part whereof was set upon the earth, but the top of it reached up to heaven; And behold the Lord stood above at the top of it, Gen. 28. 12, 13. So is our Christian communion; The lower part of it is with the Church the body of Christ here on earth: but the upper part or top of it, is with Christ in hea∣ven: And we cannot say that our Christian communion is a
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true communion, unless Christ be at the end of it; as for exam∣ple, in hearing the word (read and preached) we at first communicate with the Church, which speaketh to the out∣ward man, but we hear it not profitably to our salvation, un∣less we at last communicate also with Christ, speaking by his Spirit unto our souls, or to the inward man; Paedogogus est Jesus, Our teacher is Jesus, was thought by Clemens of Alexandria, a fit subject both to fill and to name his books of Christian In∣stitutions (v. lib. 1. Paedag. cap. 9.) For as the Church teach∣eth the people, so also Christ teacheth them much more: and the Churches paedagogy i•• or should be to bring them unto Christ, not to make them rest only upon their own teaching for soul-saving truths: nor is this Doctrine any disparage∣ment to the Church, no more then Saint Pauls was to the Law, when he said, The Law was our School-Master to bring us unto Christ, Gal. 3. 24. Nay indeed it is the greatest honour of the Church, (as it was of the Law,) that God is pleased to use her teaching as a means or instrument to bring us unto Christ; That as the Church teacheth us by explaining saving truths to our un∣derstandings, so Christ may teach us by imprinting the same truths in our wills and affections, & therefore the Church should above all things, take heed of offering those truths in her expla∣nations, which she cannot believe, nor wish that Christ should ratifie by his impressions, such as are all those Doctrines which are the inventions of men, and not the institutions of Christ.
And forasmuch as it cannot be denied that Christ teacheth more powerfully by his own word then by ours, it is evident that the Holy Scriptures may not be denied to the people in their own tongue by that Church which will labour to advance their communion with Christ; and as evident, that the people are not bound to communicate with that Church which will not labour to advance this, the highest and greatest part of their Christian communion: Again, in receiving the holy Eucharist, we must not only communicate with the Priest exhibiting unto us the bread and wine, but also, and much rather, with Christ himself exhibit∣ing unto us his most precious body & blood, or we shall receive but half a Sacrament, and enjoy but a half communion: This is Saint Pauls Divinity; The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? The bread which
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we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? 1 Co. 10. 16. We bless the Cup, and we break the bread; there∣fore you must communicate with us, (which we could not say, if we did refuse to do either; for we could not desire you to relinquish your communion with Christs institution, to fol∣low ours;) But the Cup which we bless, and the bread which we break, is the communion of the blood and body of Christ; therefore you must not communicate chiefly, and much less only with us, but also and much rather with Christ himself.
Lastly, Thus is it also in our prayers▪ we are bound in our praying to communicate not only with the Church as the body, but also with Christ as the head; and consequently the Church is bound to use no other prayers then such as may be agreeable with Christs communion, and available by Christs intercession: For if we pray out of his communion, we cannot hope to ob∣tain what we pray for, by virtue of his intercession: And this (I conceive) was one main reason why publick Li∣turgies were at first established in the Church, that Christians might know before hand the terms of their communion, and be assured in their own hearts, that no other prayers should be offered unto them, then such wherein Christ himself would joyn with them in intercession, which assurance during the ex∣traordinary effusions of the Spirit, was grounded upon the infallibility of their persons who prayed; but when it could no longer be grounded upon the infallibility of the persons that prayed, then it was thought fit it should be grounded upon the infallibility of the thing or of the prayer; for that faith cannot rest but upon infallibility; and the people, as well as the Priest, ought to pray in Faith, wherefore this assurance is not only very just and reasonable, but also very necessary and religi∣ous, since we all know we must pray in the merit of Christs in∣tercession, if we hope our prayers should find admittance to God, and acceptance with him, and we are sure he will not in∣tercede with us in such prayers as we have not learned from him. For which cause the Church also teacheth us to conclude all our prayers after this manner, Per Jesum Christum Dominum nostrum, through Jesus Christ our Lord, as if we were bound to believe that Christ then prayeth for us, when we are praying for our selves, (according to the rules of his word)
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and that we have hopes to be heard not by virtue of our own, but of his intercession: And tis observable that Saint Paul saith of those who worshipped Angels, that they held not the head, (Col. 2. 19.) because in such worship, Christ who is the head, could not joyn with them, nor they with him: accor∣cordingly Saint Chrysostome thus expostulates with such a wor∣shipper, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Why do you let go the head to lay hold on the members, whilst you think to come to God by the Angels, (he might have put in Saints too, by the same reason, if that worship had been then in fashion) and not immediately by Christ? For if you fall from him you are certainly lost; and the way to fall from him, is not to lay im∣mediate hold on him; for he that layes not immediate hold of him, cannot lay fast hold of him; Tis holding of the head, not of the body, that gives the nourishment whereby we encrease with the encrease of God: and Angels are of the body, no less then men; Accordingly the Fathers of the Council of Laodicea, give this reason why they accurse them who called upon Angels in their worship, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, (Can. 35.) because such men have forsaken the Lord Jesus, and are guilty of idolatry: And it is a pitiful evasion of Baronius to say that the Council spake of false Angels, which the Heathen called Genii; for besides that no Christians ever worshipped them, and the Canon only concerns Christians, tis too great an absurdity to be pinned upon a Council, to say they spake of Angels, when they meant Divels: For our parts, we must conclude that praying to Saints and Angels is a very unwarrantable, a very unsafe, a very uncomfortable way of praying, because we are sure we cannot have communion with Christ in such prayers: For though he can, doth, and will join with us in saying, Our Father, yet he cannot, will not, saying, Our Brother; Though he doth join with us in our intercessions to the Creator God blessed for ever, yet he doth not, cannot joyn with us in our intercessions to any creature; And therefore since the Church requires our communion only by authority from Christ, it is evident that no Church can just∣ly require our communion in this or any other practice, wherein it self doth not communicate with Christ: For in such prayers as these, we can only hold of the body, (or rather
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some corrupted member of the body) but we cannot hold of the head; and consequently in such prayers as these, there can be no true Christian communion; for that so beginneth with the Church, as that it endeth with Christ; so beginneth in earth, as that it endeth in heaven; Saint Johns determinati∣on may best decide this controversie (for some mens pervers∣ness, hath made it so) who in very few words thus sets forth to us our Christian communion, That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you, that ye also may have fellowship with us; and truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ, 1 John 1. 3. Where we may see that God imparted not the knowledge of Christian truths to his Church that she might reserve them to her self, but that she might pub∣lish and declare them to his people: That which we have seen and heard, declare we unto you: God hath declared them to us, that we should declare them to you: And the reason why the Church is bound to declare these Christian truths to the people, is, to establish them in the true Christian communi∣on, that ye also may have fellowship with us; and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ; where we plainly see, that Christian communion begins with the Church, and ends with Christ; nor would the Apostle seek to draw them to have fellowship with him, but that with him they might also have fellowship with Christ; he desires not to magnifie this communion from himself, but from his Saviour: He therefore exhorts them to have communion with the Church, that they might have communion with Christ: For indeed there are at least two degrees, if not parts, of our Christian communion; the first is our communion with Christs Church as with the body, that ye also may have fellowship with us; The second is our communion with Christ himself as with the head, and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ; and this communion is or ought to be the end of all preaching; that which we have seen and heard, de∣clare we unto you, that ye also may have fellowship, &c. This is or should be the intent of all preaching; even the communion of the people with the Priests, and the communion both of Priests and people with Christ; so likewise saith Saint Peter, speaking of our blessed Saviour, His Divine power hath given
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unto us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of him that hath called us to glory and virtue; whereby are given to us exceeding great and precious promises, that by these you might be partakers of the Divine nature, 2 Pet, 1. 3, 4. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, not only partakers of, but also communicants in or with the Divine nature, as if he had said, the end of your communion with us, is, that you may thereby have communion with God; His Divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain to life and godliness, through the knowledge of himself; And we are desirous to impart to you this knowledge, that you may have part in the same life and godliness: He hath given to us exceeding great and gracious promises, and we desire to publish them ro you, that by these, you also with us, might be parta∣kers of the Divine nature: But because this communion is or should be the only task of our whole life, and is the only, comfort of our death, I will yet alledge one more testimony for it, and that shall be his who was wrapt up into the third hea∣vens, that he might the better shew us the right and the straight way thither, and he bids us Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord, Heb. 2. 14. thereby dec••aring unto us as it were the two integral parts of our Christian communion, Peace and Holiness, and the reason why we should embrace them both, even that we may come to the beatifical vision: follow peace with all men, that you may have communion with Gods Church; and follow holiness, that you may have communion with God himself; for if you leave out either of these, or leave following either of these, you can∣not see the Lord: We that follow peace with no men, not so much as with our selves, how shall we see God? we that fol∣low holiness in no kind, at least conscientiously, but only con∣tentiously, pretending to set it up in some one commandment, that we may the more plausibly beat it down in all the rest, how shall we see God? Let all unpeacefull and unholy men, (for surely they go both together, though holiness hath of late been made a pretence for breaking the peace) here see the danger of their perversness, that hereafter they feel not the mischief of it: those who neither follow peace nor holiness, and yet pretend their eyes are open, so as to see God, more then all
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the world besides, For it is a sad thing so to see God, as not to come neer him; Dives could do so in hell; He could see Abra∣hams bosome; though he could not get neer it, for it was afar off saith the Text, Luke 16. 23. Tis a sad thing to have a Vision of God without a fruition; but tis an impossible thing to have a fruition without a communion; Excellently Alensis asks this question, Per quid est unio membrorum in corpore Ec∣clesiae? By what is it that good Christians are joined together, or the faithfull are united as members in the body of the Church? and he thus answers it: Per unam perfectionem; una enim est per∣fectio in capite Christo & in omnibus Sanctis, sc. Spiritus sanctus ex quo est nobis communio Trinitatis: et per unam dispositionem, sc. Fide, spe, charitate, opere; nam Idem credunt, Idem appetunt seu volunt, Idem expectant, Idem imitantur: Par. 3. q. 12. m. 2. art. 3. Christ and good Christians are all united together by one Perfection, and by one Disposition: By one perfection, for there is the same perfection in Christ the head, and in all the Saints which are his body, to wit the Holy-Ghost, which joins them both in communion with the blessed Trinity: and by one Disposition, to wit, in Faith, Hope, Charity and Works: for they all believe the same thing, viz. The first truth: All desire the same thing, viz. The chiefest good: All expect the same thing, viz. Eternal bliss: All imi∣tate the same thing, viz. The pattern or example of holiness, and hence it is that they all are of the same communion.
HE that truly desires communion with God, cannot but highly esteem, and zealously pursue the actual communi∣on with his Church, because the Church is appointed to bring,
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and lead him unto God; And this was the reason of that antient saying, Extra Ecclesiam non est Salus, Out of the Church there is no hope of Salvation, that is, out of the Catholick Church which is the body of Christ; So that for any man not to be a member of that body, is in effect to be a limb of the devil, and fewel for hell; which consideration made Saint Cyprian break out into that pathetical expostulation, Ʋbi, & ex qua, & ••ui n••tus est, qui filius Ecclesiae non est, ut habere quis possit Deum Patrem, ante Ecclesiam matrem? (Saint Cypr. Epist. and Pom∣peium) Where, of whom, or to whom is he born, who is not •• Son of the Church, that he should have God for his father, who hath not the Church for his mother? And this doctrine not only many very good Christian Divines, but also the Jewish Doctors have enforced as a duty of the Text, from these words of Solo∣mon; My Son, hear the instruction of thy father, and forsake not the Law of thy mother, Prov. 1. 8. for say they, by Father is here meant God the Father almighty, and by Mother is here meant the Church, which teacheth us the word of God; Thus Solomon Jarchi glosseth that Text, my Son hear the instruction of thy father, that is (saith he) Hear the Instruction which God blessed for ever gave to Moses, partly in writing, partly by word of mouth: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉.
And forsake not the Law of thy mother, that is, saith he, for∣sake not the Law of the Church or the Congregation of Israel, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 nor the interpretations of the Scribes, which are as it were a hedge of the Law: And doubtless he that will not hearken to the Churches instruction, will not hearken to Gods instruction; and he that will not hearken to Gods instru∣ction, cannot hope for Gods communion; which made the Prophet Jeremiah to say, Be thou instructed O Jerusalem, lest my soul depart from thee, Jer. 6. 8. Tis in the Hebrew 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 ut non laxetur anima mea à te, lest my Soul be loosed or dis∣jointed from thee: the same word (saith Rabbi David,) that is used about the hollow of Jacobs thigh being out of joint; and the signification of it is, the removing of a thing out of its place, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 from whence we may gather, that the communion of faithful Souls with God, is like the knitting of the joints in the bodies of men; and as a member when it is out of joint, affords great pain,
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but no use to the man as long as it is dislocated: So is it with the Soul whiles it is out of Gods communion, it is sub∣ject to very much horrour and great anguish, but is not capa∣ble of any good motion, or inclination: Consider what it is to put thy soul out of joint, before thou play the Ephraimite, starting aside like a broken bow from the communion of God in his Church; for if the dislocation of a joint be so painfull, be∣cause of the distention of the parts, what pangs and horrours▪ must needs accompany a disjointed Soul that is distended upon the wrack of an evil and a troubled conscience? Accordingly Rabbi David thus glosseth the Prophets words, Be thou instructed O Jerusalem; for if thou wilt not be instructed, my good-will shal be separated from thee, that I will take no delight in thee: A dismal judgement for a Separatist, that God will be separated from him▪ and take no delight in him; but the reason is, because he would needs be separated from God, and take no delight in God: For if he had delighted himself in the Law of God, he would have de∣lighted himself in the Church, to which God committed, and with which God intrusted his Law: But he would not take de∣light in God, and therefore God by way of retaliation, will not take delight in him: And this he may be sure of, if God take no delight in him, what ever he may do for a while in this world, yet certainly in the next world, he will take no delight in him∣self: For he will then be so out of joint, as never to be set again: Behold all ye that kindle a fire, that compass your selves about with sparks: walk in the light of your fire, and in the sparks that ye have kindled: This shall ye have of mine hand▪ ye shall lie down in sorrow, Isa. 50. 11. A text that is to be expounded of Schis∣maticks in Iarchies opinion, who thus begins to gloss it, Be∣hold all ye, because (saith he) they did not hear the voice of his Prophets: So we see that in his judgement the words con∣cern those who would not hear the Church: and we may read in them, The sin and the punishment of Schismaticks: Their sin is twofold; they kindle a fire, and compass themselves with sparks: that is, they are Incendiaries in Church and State, and they love to be so. And their punishment is also twofold. 1. That in this life they are suffered to walk in the ••ight of their own false fire, walk in the light of your fire, and in the sparks that ye have kindled; q. d. Quum non acquiesca•••••• ig•••• sacro, perg••tote in
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prophano vestro, sed perituri tamen ut filii Aaronis, Levit. 10. saith Trem. since you will not acquiesce and rest satisfied with the holy fire that came from God, and with the true light thereof, that is in his Church, go walk in your own strange fire, and after your own false lights, but know, you shall certainly perish as did the Sons of Aaron, Lev. 10. where Nabad and Abihu, for offering of strange fire, were devoured by fire. 2. That at the end of this life, they are punished with ever∣lasting death, This shall ye have of mine hand, ye shall lie down in sorrow; as if he had said, because ye will needs stand up in sin, ye shall be sure to lie down in sorrow; and ye shall so lie down in sorow, as that ye shall never rise up in glory.
And we have little reason to wonder at this grievous punishment, but less to doubt of it: for every Schisma∣tical spirit by putting it self out of the communion of Gods Church, doth also put it self out of the communion of God himself: For Christs Church requires our communi∣on by the authority of Christ the eternal Son of God; And if you ask what Church? it must be answered, That Church which is his body; for that only can act by power and vertue of the Head: If you farther ask what Church is his body: It must be answered the Catholick Church, that is to say, the whole congregation of Christian people, dispersed over the face of the whole earth: For so doth Saint Paul plainly answer for us, saying, And he is the head of the body the Church, Col. 1. 18. Not naming this or that particular Church, but taking the whole body of Christian people for the body of Christ, or for his Catholick Church: For they are all united together in one communion, and fellowship by the spirit of Christ, even as all the members of the body are united in one communion by the soul; So Aquinas, Sicut in uno homine est una anima; & unum corpus, & tamen sunt diversa membra ipsius; Ita Ecclesia Catholica est unum corpus, & habet diversa mem∣bra; Anima autem quae hoc corpus vivificat, est spiritus sanctus: (in opusc. de symbol.) As in one man there is but one soul and one body, although there be very may several members, because they are all made one body by vertue of the soul which gives life to all; so is the Catholick Church but one body, although it consist of divers particular Churches, as of so many
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members, because they are all made one body by the spirit of God, which quickens and enlivens them all: So that no man can say any one particular Church is the Catholick Church, ex∣cluding other Christian Churches without confining the spirit of God, and dismembring the body of Christ; which is little less then damnable blasphemy against the Spirit; for he is infinite and therefore unconfinable; and as damnable Schism against the Son of God, for he hath made himself one with his Church; and therefore to cut off any part of his Church from him, is to cut him off from himself: Let me rather rejoice that the spirit of God is not to be confined, and the body of Christ is not to be dismembred; for why should my eye be evil because he is good? Why should I deny that mercy to others, which God hath undeservedly bestowed on me? Will he not say to me, as Moses to Joshua, Enviest thou for my sake? Numb. 11. 29. for what is it to deny the Holy Spirit to other Christians that are not of our own profession, but enviously to wish that God would deny his spirit unto them? Or what is it to say they are not of Christs body, but malitiously to wish they were not so?
We may not then labour to bring back so much of Judaism into the world, as to say now, He hath not dealt so with any Nation, neither have the heathen knowledge of his Laws, Psal. 147. 20. for we cannot say he hath restrained his Church to any one Nation or People, since himself hath said that in every Na∣tion he that feareth him and worketh righteousness, is accepted with him: (Acts 10. 35.) Be it therefore taken for granted that all the Christian Churches in the world do make up the Catholick Church of Christ; and that it is so called, not only for its accidental Catholicism, which is universality of time, place and person, because it comprizeth all times, all places, all per∣sons, that is all conditions of men; But also and much rather for its Essential or Substantial Catholicism, which is universa∣lity of doctrine, which all they do hold and maintain that are reputed or called Christians; and that doctrine is called by Saint John This confession That Jesus Christ is come in the flesh. Every Spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh, is of God, 1 John 4. 2. The Apostles scope and intention in that place is briefly to teach us how to try or examine the spirits, that
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is, the several doctrin•••• of religion; that we may know who are true, and who are false teachers: and he tells us, that whosoever teacheth that Jesus is the Christ, that is, the only founder and governour of the Church, and Saviour of the world, that mans doctrine is of God; for it is not to be doubted but he that ac∣knowledgeth Christ for the teacher and governour of the Church, is rightly instructed and established in the doctrine of Christianity: Contrariwise, he that acknowledgeth not this, as he hath not Christ, so he hath not God; and as he professeth not the Christian Religion, so he is to be looked upon as one that professeth a false religion: And to this is agreeable the Imperial constitution in the first title of the Code, Fides Catholica, hoc est, ut Patris & Filii & Spiritus sancti unam Deitatem sub pari Ma∣jestate & sub pia Trinitate credamus; Qui ita credunt Chri∣stiani Catholici appellantur; The constitution determineth those only to be called Christian Catholicks who have and pro∣fess a right faith of the blessed Trinity: for indeed none other are Christians, and therefore no other can be Catholicks: For he is not a Christian that hath not this faith of Christ; that he is the eternal Son of God, made man for our Redemption; and he cannot have this saith who believes not the Trinity; For he cannot believe Christ to be the Son of God, who believes not God the Father; and he cannot believe this Son of God made man, who believes not God the Holy-Ghost, for he▪ was concei∣ved of the Holy-Ghost, that he might be born of a Virgin: So that a right belief of Christ cannot be without a right belief of the blessed Trinity; and therefore a right belief of the Trinity is very fitly called by Saint Athanasius, The Catholik Faith, and to be a Christian is to be a Catholick; For Christ alone is the founder both of our religion and of our communion: If he be truly taught amongst us, then is God truly amongst us, and we need neither misdoubt our Religion nor our communion, (for he that abi∣deth in the doctrine of Christ, he hath both the Father and the Son, 2 John 9. but if he be not taught amongst us, let us not deceive our selves; for we cannot be without Christ, but we must also be without God; for whosoever denieth the son, the same hath not the father, 1 John 2. 23.
So that as far as the Christian Church is extended, so far the Catholick Church is extended; and if you will yet farther ask
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what particular Church is now to be reputed most Christian or Catholick; I must answer, that Church wherein Christ is best taught and practised; for we may not separate the practice from the doctrine of Christianity, since the doctrine cannot be proved but from the practice, according to that of Saint John, Hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his command∣ments, 1 John 2. 3. Wherefore that is to be accounted the truest Christian Church, wherein the doctrine of Christ is most truly published, accepted, maintained: and since the doctrine of Christ is not to be known but from the word of Christ, no Christian Church can justly deny to submit its doctrine to the test and tryal of the word: for so saith Saint Paul to the Ephe∣sians, ye are fellow-Citizens with the Saints, and of the houshold of God, and are built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Pro∣phets, (that is the Old and the New Testament) Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone, Eph. 2. 19. 20. They could not have been taken for the houshold or Church of God, if they had not been built upon the foundation of the Apostle•• and Prophets▪ Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone of such buildings, and of no other: For that which proves the Christian Church in general to be now the only true Catholick Church or body of Christ, may not be denied to prove this or that Christian Church to be so in special: which cannot be Tradition, for that hath still varied in all Churches, and at all times, so that never yet any Church would be bound by its own Traditions for any long time, and much less by the Tradi∣tions of another Church: It remains then that only the word of Christ is able to make good that proof, which word hath been generally acknowledged and received by all Churches: That proves the Christian Church in general to be the only Catho∣lick Church, and may not be denyed to prove this or that Church to be so in special. By that alone we prove the Chri∣stian Church to be the only Catholick, against the misguided Jew; by that alone we prove this or that particular Church to be more truly Catholick against the mistaken Christian: And this proof Saint Paul teacheth us in all his Epistles, proving out of the Old Testament that Christ alone was that Prophet who was to come into the world to bring both righteousness and salvation; and consequently that no Religion but only
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the Christian was now any longer to be embraced or expect∣ed, unless we would have a Religion that should continue without righteousness, and end without salvation; And if we will compare the second of the Galatians with the eleventh of the Acts, we shall have more then a probable conjecture, that it was by Saint Pauls advice that the Disciples were in Antioch first called Christians, and the name of Nazarites, by which they had been formerly known, was quite laid aside, be∣cause in that very City some of the Nazarites had endeavour∣ed to mingle Judaism and Christianity into one Religion: But this we are sure of, that in the Epistle to the Hebrews, the same Saint Paul, (for this argument being there so through∣ly canvased, is proof enough alone to conclude him the author of that Epistle) maketh it his whole business to shew, that only in Christ, and in his Gospel, is fully revealed the will of God, and the way of salvation; But more particularly, Heb. 9. 10. He sheweth, that though the Church of the Jews was once the Catholick, viz. till the time of reformation, yet the Church of the Christians alone is so now; which was in∣deed to continue and keep the spiritual, but to reform and lay aside the carnal Ordinances: Therefore this Christian Church still maintaineth communion with the Jewish Church in all Moral duties: (for no reformation of Gods making can put down a Moral duty or obligation, either towards God or towards our neighbour:) as saith Saint Paul, But we are not of them who draw back unto perdition, but of them that believe, to the saving of the soul, Heb. 10. 39. Here is 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, but not 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 in our turning Christians, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 su∣mus substractionis, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, sed fidei, q. d. we are not of those who forsake or deny any one Moral Law enjoyned to the Jews, for that were 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, to draw backward to perdition; but we are of those who profess a true and a lively faith in Christ, the Messias promised to the fathers, but exhibited to us, for thats 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, what we have been taught by the Apostles, and it is to go forward to salvation: For it is in∣deed to outstrip the Jews in their own Moral Law, whilst we establish not our own righteousness, but submit our selves to the right••••usness of God, acknowledging that Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth,
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(Rom. 10. 4.) but by no means for unrighteousness; that is, for the acceptance of our obedience, but not for the abolition of it: Thus we Christians still keep communion with the Jews in all Moral duties; and as for Ceremonials, the Jews themselves cannot deny but they are bound to alter their own communion; For the abolition of all ceremonial or typi∣cal worship was foretold to them even at the first institution of it, by Moses himself, saying, And the Lord said, I will raise them up a Prophet from among their brethren like unto thee, and will put my words in his mouth, and he shall speak unto them all that I shall command him: And it shall come to pass that whosoever will not hearken unto my words, which he shall speak in my name, I will require it of him, Deut. 18. 18, 19. And as this abolition of the Ceremonial worship was foretold to the Jews at the first institution, so was it also believed by them, at the first reception thereof: For hence alone was it, that they found no fault with their Prophets, after Moses, though they found them dispensing with the Law of Moses, nay plain∣ly acting against it in the exercise of their typical or ceremo∣nial worship; as for example, neither they (of Hierusalem, nor of Samaria) quarrelled with Eliah for gathering Israel together to offer sacrifice upon Mount Carmel, 1 King. 18. 19. Though Moses had flatly commanded, That all should bring their offerings to the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, Levit. 17. 2, 3, 4. Here it is plain the Ceremonial wor∣ship was changed without any quarrel at all in that backsli∣ding, and therefore quarrelsome and contentious age of the Church of the Jews, which could scarce have been, had they not received that same worship with some belief of its future change, and had not their Prophets confirmed them in that belief, foreshewing as it were by particular changes intro∣duced by them, the universal change that should one day be introduced by the Messiah, their last and greatest Pro∣phet.
And this general change wrought by our Saviour Christ is so proved to us Christians, that we cannot so much as doubt it, and much less deny it; For those very words of Moses that foreshewed the change, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren like unto me, him shall you hear in all
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things, are quoted by Saint Peter as fulfilled in Christ, Acts 3. 22. And again he saith v. 24. That all the Prophets, from Sa∣muel, and those that follow after, (which words justifie the Jews division of the Prophets into the former, and latter Pro∣phets, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 and put the latter Prophets in as good credit as the former, against the Samaritanes) and as many have spoken, have likewise foretold of these dayes: All the Prophets like so many lines from the circumference in the cen∣tre, meet together in Christ; so that the written word of God, not only is the undoubted, and therefore should be the undeni∣able ground of all Religion, but also of the very Christian Re∣ligion; nor may we endeavour to prove the establishment of the Christian Religion by unwritten Traditions, no more then the Apostles did prove the change of the Jewish Religion by them; They alledged the written word for the introduction. we for the establishment of our Christian Religion; The old Testament so exactly agreeing with the new; and both old and new so exactly agreeing and corresponding in Christ, that there can be no doubt left of the truth of Christianity: Hence Saint Paul will have us make so sure of our Religion, that though an Angel from heaven should preach another Gospel, we should not be ready to believe but to accurse him; Gal. 1, 8. And Saint John saith the same in effect, If there come any to you and bring not this doctrine (sc. that whosoever transgresseth, and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ, hath not God) receive him not into your house, neither bid him God speed, 2 John 9▪ 10. Si quis venit ad vos, If any come unto you, tis all one whether the substantive be an Angel or a man; for that divinity was not yet in fashion, Si Papa erraret praecipiendo vitia, vel prohibendo virtutes, teneretur Ecclesia credere vitia esse bona, & virtutes malas, nisi velit contra conscientiam peccare, Bellar. lib. 4. de Pontif. cap. 5. That if the Pope should err by commanding sins, and forbidding vertues, The Church were bound to believe that sins were good, and vertues were evil, unless she would sin against her conscience; Op. Ac ne forte contra conscientiam agat, tenetur credere bonum esse quod ille praecipit, malum quod ille prohibet; And least the Church should do any thing against her conscience, she is bound to believe that to be good which the Pope commandeth, and that to be evil which he forbiddeth;
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A strange assertion, as if God had put all his Divine Truths whether speculative or practical (for if the one, the other also) under the possibility of mans lawfull contradiction, and all our consciences under the power of his controul: nor is there any remedy for this mischeivous consequence, by translating this pretended Infallibility from his person to his chair, nor from his chair to his Church; for we may justly suppose, or rather must necessarily believe, that Saint Johns words are as well to be un∣derstood and interpreted of a whole Church, as of single man, since there is the same reason of both; for a Church is but a congregation of men; and false doctrine hath no less of falsity, though it hath less of excuse, in a Church, then in any particular man; But we must more then believe this Truth, (if it be pos∣sible) That the Gospel is to sway our faith above and against all authorities to the contrary whatsoever, by the force of Saint Pauls reason; For if not the authority of the Church trium∣phant, then surely not of the Church militant may be allowed to weaken our faith in the doctrine or in the Gospel of Christ; If not an Angel from heaven, then sure not a man upon the earth.
And great pity it is, but greater shame, that the faction and humour of some men should endeavour to shake not only the dictates of nature, in putting vertue and vice under mans determination, but also the very foundation of supernatural Truth, the written Word of God, thereby thinking the more to establish the pillar of supernatural truth, the Church of God; whereas indeed they do the more shake that too; For we are all most sure that the Scriptures came incorrupt from the mouth of God; and therefore if there be now any corruptions in them, they are of mans, not of Gods creating: And consequently if the Scriptures have in any wise lost their authority, they have lost it by the Church; and it were a wonder if the Church should cause the Scriptures to lose their authority, and yet keep her own.
We will then take it for granted that the Catholick Church cannot be fully and infallibly proved to be Christian, but only by the Holy Scriptures, and that she her self seeks for no other, and cannot find a better proof; And from hence it must neede follow that every particular Church as far as it is truly Christi∣an,
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is willing to submit it self to be tryed by the written Word of God; and that if nothing but true Cbristianity had gotten into the Church, men would never have withdrawn their necks, and much less their hearts from that known and certain tryal; for that all the world is not able to prove any thing that is un∣written, (whether it be Tradition or Revelation) to be the undoubted Word of God, but only as far as it is agreeable with what is written; according to that admirable Rule delivered by Saint Athanasius, (who having been vexed by the Arrian here∣ticks above forty years together, hath taught us how best to con∣fute that, and all other heresie saying) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; Athanasius in Epist de decretis Nic. Synodi ad finem, There are much more exact and perfect proofs of the divine truth to be taken from the Scripture alone, then all the whole world beside is able to afford us: where∣fore it must needs follow again that the best way for a particular Church to keep communion with the Catholick Church, is, to keep close to the Scriptures, wherein alone are revealed those Truths, the bare profession whereof makes a Church, and the en∣tire profession whereof makes it truly Catholick: That Curch which hath the written Word of God for the foundation of her faith and practice, is sure to have communion with all good Christians in what she truly believeth and practiseth according to that word; And in case she deviate through humane error, or infirmity, in some particular deductions, yet that deviation or mistake, shall not overthrow her faith, because it is sure and certain in the foundation; and consequently shall not break off her communion with Christ the head, nor with the Catho∣lick Church his body, because that same holy Spirit, on whose dictates she relies, is the sole author and maintainer of that communion: whereas if a Church should believe all the Ar∣ticles of the Christian faith upon any other ground, then that of Divine revelation, (which we cannot now be assured of, but on∣ly from the written Word of God) as she could not have a true Divine saith, not being grounded upon a Divine foun∣dation, so she could not in that faith, have communion with those Christian Churches who allowed no other ground of their belief.
And such were all the Christian Churches of the Primitive
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times; for though Saint Athanasius (in the place fore-alledged) doth on the Arrians behalf bring in an objection against the word 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 as not being used in the Text, and therefore not to be used concerning Christ, for that we may not speak other∣wise of him, then he in his word hath spoken of himself; yet he alloweth this very objection to be according to his own heart, (and sure he was a very good Chatholike) and enfor∣ceth it with the reason afore cited, That the most exact proofs of Divine truths were to be taken from the Scriptures, and withal avoweth, that those about Eusebius (who was a chief uphol∣der of the Arrians) were such egregious turn-cotes and cavil∣lers, that the Bishops assembled in the Council of Nice were in a manner compelled more clearly to expound those words of the text, which did immediately strike at the root of their here∣sie: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: Whereby it appears, that the Nicene Fathers did assume to themselves only the power of Exposition, in matters of faith, not of Addition, or of Invention: They did expound that more clearly which they found in the Scriptures, and in the Apostles Creed; they did not ad or invent that which they found not: As they were expounders, they might and did hold communion with the Catholike Church (whereof they were then the Representative) which did wholly rely up∣the word of God for all the Doctrines of faith; whereas if they had taken upon them to be Inventers, they must have forsaken the main ground of Christian communion, the un∣doubted word of Christ, and have been the authors of a faction, and of a division: And for this cause we see that in that fa∣mous Council of Chalcedon, (wherein were assembled six hun∣dred Christian Bishops,) The Holy Gospel was placed in the midst of them, as that on which they relyed, and to which they appealed, in all their determinations: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, are the words found in the first action of that Council, The most holy and most pure Gospel being set before them; And Baronius tells us that the same had been done before in the Council of Nice, and gives the reason why it was done, out of Saint Cyril, who saith thus, concern∣ing
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the Council of Ephesus, Christum assessorem capitis loco ad∣junxit; venerandum enim Evangelium in throno collocavit, tan∣tum non in aures sacerdotum clamans, Justum judicium judi∣cate: Liber igitur ille in sede regia collocatus divinam prae se ferebat personam, secundum illud Psalmi, Deus stetit in synago∣ga Deorum, in medio autem Deos dijudicat: They looked up∣on Christ as head or president of their assembly, for they pla∣ced his holy Gospel on a throne amongst them, that it might represent the person of God the Judge of all men; and they placed it in the midst, that all might cast their eyes upon it, and be afraid in the presence of their Judge, to pass an unrighte∣ous judgement; Thus saith the Psalmist, God stood in the midst of the congregation of Gods, and he that was in the midst judged the other Gods: (Baron. An. 325. num. 66.) And the same saith Binius in his notes upon the Council of Ephesus, In medio Patrum consessu sedem enm Evangelio collocarunt, cujus intuitu omnes admonerentur, Christum omnium inspectorem ac judicem adesse, Synodique praesidem agere: In the midst of the fathers of the Ephesine Council, was the Holy Gospel placed on a throne, that all the Fathers seeing it, might be admonish∣ed of Christs own presence to overlook them as their Judge, and to overawe them as president of their Council: and he saith no more then is truth, for that form of adjuration mentioned by Fidus the Bishop of Joppe, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Whom we beseech and adjure by the Holy Gospel here set before us, Council. Eph. par. 2. act. 1. doth plainly witness as much; although at the first session of the Bishops there is no mention of the Holy Gospels being pla∣ced among them, as was afterwards at the first session of the Council of Chalcedon: But tis plain that the New Testament was not only before their eyes, but also within their hearts; for they proved all their several Doctrines out of it; particularly this position, that Christ is God by the union of the manhood with the God-head, they proved, 1. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, out of the Apo∣stle Saint Pauls writings, (among which is also reckoned up the Epistle to the Hebrews,) 2. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, out of the Epistles general of Saint Peter, Saint John, Saint Jude, 3. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, out of the Gospels peculiarly so called; Concil.
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Ephes. par. 1. And tis most evident that the Doctrines delive∣red by the four first general Councils in their Creeds, are all plainly to be proved by the Scriptures, so that we may easily grant that they placed the Holy Gospel in the midst of their Sy∣nods▪ as it were to make protestation that they intended to ob∣trude no other faith to the world, then what they had met with there, and could prove from thence; and consequently not to desire other mens communion with them in their Do∣ctrines further then themselves had in the same Doctrines com∣munion with the Holy Ghost; Wherefore this is the ready way for every particular Church to be sure to keep communion with the Catholick Church in her Doctrine, to adhere stedfast∣ly to the written Word of God, which is the only indisputable ground of that Doctrine; For this Word alone sheweth that the Jews in Moral worship had communion with Christians, and that both the Jews (then had) and Christians now have in the same worship communion with Christ: They have Mo∣ses and the Prophets, saith our blessed Saviour, let them hear them, Luke 6. 29. And again, If they hear not Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be perswaded, though one rose from the dead, ver. 31. We Christians have not only Moses and the Prophets, but also the Apostles, for the foundation of our Churches; and as we are sure that Moses and the Prophets were delivered incorrupt to our first Fathers; (for else our Sa∣viour Christ would not have appealed unto them, but rather have reproved the Jews for corrupting them;) so ought we to be sure that the Apostles are now delivered as incorrupt un∣to us, unless we will say that the Christian Church hath been less faithful then the Jewish Synagogue, in keeping the Text, and by so saying, quite disannul her authority in expounding it; and so cut our selves off from one of the best means of our salvation. Why thou should not these writings of Mo∣ses and the Prophets, and the Apostles, which are the only proof of our Churches, be also the grand establishment of our communion? For as tis the faith that makes the Church, so tis the agreement in the Faith, that makes the communion of the Church truely Christian; Accordingly our own Church hath taught us to pray most exquisitely for this Christian com∣munion, in these words, Beseeching thee to inspire continually
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the universal Church with the Spirit of truth unity and concord; and to grant that all they that do confess thy holy Name, may agree in the truth of thy holy word, and live in unity and godly love; A prayer so full of true Christian affection▪ that its Christianity will acquit it from Novelty, though it be scarce to be found in any antient Greek or Latine Liturgie; for it setteth forth true Christian communion in all its four causes; in its ef∣ficient cause, the Spirit of truth unity and concord; in its mate∣rial cause, the universal Church; in its formal cause, the agree∣ment in the truth of Gods holy Word; and in its final cause, to live in unity and godly love: How can any man that heartily saith this prayer, be either an Heretick by willingly sinning against the truth of Gods Word, or a schismatick by wilfully sin∣ning against the unity of Gods Church?
We may conclude then, That all the several Christian Chur∣ches in the world, which have been, are, and shall be, do con∣cur together as members to make up the body of Christ, or the Catholick Church; and that all of them as Christian, are joyn∣ed together, (though thousand of miles and years asunder,) in one outward communion by agreeing in the same word of Christ; and in one inward communion, by enjoying the same Spirit of Christ; The outward communion joyns the members to the body; and I would to God that they were not so much disjoyned and disjoynted: The inward communion joyns the body to the head, and I bless God that in that respect there can be no disjunction; Tis dangerous to be a separatist from the first, but tis damnable to be a separatist from the second communion; to communicate with Gods most holy Spirit in Gods most holy Word, is the most sure and ready way to communicate with the Catholick Church, aud that will keep us from being hereticks; for no heretick, as such, doth communicate either with Gods Word, or with Gods Spirit. To communicate with the Ca∣tholick Church, is the most sure and ready way to communicate with Christ himself, and that will keep us from being Schisma∣ticks; for no Schismatick, as such, doth communicate with Christ either in his body or in himself. But still we must re∣member, that communion with the Word, and with the Church is nothing worth, without communion with Christ, and with the Spirit, and that will keep us from being hypocrites;
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For no hypocrite doth communicate with Christ and with his Spirit, either in his word or in his Church: And we have need, in these dangerous times, of all three cautions; for ne∣ver was there any Heresie without a Schism; and seldome is there any desperate Schism without most damnable hy∣pocrisie.
THE special number of right believing, (and therefore righteously doing) Christians in all the several Churches of the Christian world, which communicate in all things where∣in Christians should, is alone truly and properly named the Catholick Church, because it consisteth of them only that without addition, diminution, alteration, or innovation in matter of doctrine hold the common faith once delivered to the Saints, so that tis impossible for them to be Hereticks; And without all particular or private division or ••act••on retain the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace; so that tis impossible for them to be either Hypocrites or Schismaticks; they cannot be hypocrites because they have the spirit of God; and they can∣not be Schismaticks, because they hold the unity of that spirit in the bond of peace.
Whence we may gather this Negative definition of a true Catholick, that he is such a one who is neither Heretick, nor Schismatick, nor Hypocrite; and this positive definition of a the Catholick Church, that it is such a number Christians, as
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profess the faith of Christ in Verity, Unity and Sincerity; in ve∣rity, and so are distinguished from Hereticks; in unity, and so are distinguished from Schismaticks; in sincerity, and so are di∣stinguished from Hypocrites: And this is the Catholick Church perfectly and properly so called; And of this Catholick Church are those words of Epiphanius to be understood at the end of Colorbasii, or his thirty-fifth heresie, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. My dove, my undefiledis but one, saith Christ, (Cant. 6. 9.) that is, his holy spouse, the Catholick Church; called a dove, for her mildness, innocency, and purity; and called undefiled for the perfect grace and knowledge she hath received from God through our Saviour Christ, by the holy Ghost.
But yet we must acknowledge, that the Catholick Church commonly so called, is of a larger signification then to express, and of a larger extension then to comprize only these choice and selected Christians; For all that outwardly embrace the truth and worship of Christ, do make but one Catholick Church, for as much as they all concur in the outward pro∣fession of faith in the same common Saviour, and in the out∣ward use of those means of Salvation which he hath appointed, though they neither profess the faith so incorruptly as it was taught, nor use the means so inoffensively as they were ap∣pointed. And this Divinity, That all Christians are incorporated into one body of Christ, or one Catholick Church, hath been taught us by Saint Paul, who saith, That he might reconcile both (Jew and Gentiles) unto God in one body, Eph. 2, 16. and again, That the Gentiles should be of the same body, Eph. 3. 6. that is to say, of the same body externally by the same word and Sacraments, and of the same body internal∣ly by the same spirit of Christ: Wherefore the unity of this body of Christians, as tis a visible body, is from one thing; and as tis a mystical body, is from another: For the unity of the Mystical body of Christ, is only from the Holy-Ghost, joining all the members together, and each particular member to the Head; But the unity of the visible body of Christ, is from
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one Lord, one Faith, one Baptism, all the members of the Church as tis visible, being to be discerned and known by this character, even by the outward profession of that truth, and by the outward use of those means, which Christ their com∣mon Lord and Saviour hath instituted and ordained for their Salvation.
Wherefore all men that have the profession of Christs sa∣ving truth, and do practice the means of salvation, must be acknowledged to belong to one Christian, or to one Catho∣lick Church, as being sanctified by the profession of that truth, and the use of those means, though their ptofession be not so entire, nor their practice so exact as it ought to be: Whence the Apostle writing to the Corinthians, though much over run with Heresie and Schism, yet writeth on this manner, Ʋnto the Church of God which is at Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus, 1 Cor. 1. 2. For in that they were of the Christian Church by the outward profession of Christs truth, and the practice of his commands, they were sanctified in Christ Jesus, though some of them were Hereticks and de∣nied the resurrection, others were Schismaticks and denied the Apostles authority; For even Hereticks and Schismaticks though they do not hold in verity and in unity the entire profession of Christs Truth, yet are they of the Christian Church generally so called, for that truth which they do hold; and as far as they remain parts of the true Christian Church, so far they may be a means of saving others either by preaching the word or admi∣nistring the Sacraments, though by reason of their Heresie and Schism, they themselves (without repentance,) are not in the state of Salvation; And surely we cannot reasonably think that there were neither Hereticks nor Schismaticks in the Churches of Ephesus, Philippi, and Colosse; and yet the same Apostle saith, To the Saints which are at Ephesus, Ephes. 1. 1▪ To all the Saints which are at Philippi, Phil. 1. 1. and to the Saints and faithfull brethren in Christ, which are at Colosse, Col. 1. 2. In all which Epistles doubtless Saint Paul writ to the visible body of the several Churches, and sent his letters to the visible head of that body (as Saint John did his epistles to the Angels of the several Churches, Rev. 2. 13:) and yet he cal∣led them Saints and faithfull brethren; not that they were all
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really such, but that they were indeed called of God to be such; and if they were not so in their own inward affection, twas their own fault; He was sure they were so in their out∣ward profession, and therefore might justly be so called; It was their parts to make good that glorious title, not his part to forbear it: for they were indeed sanctified through the outward profession of Christs saving Name and Truth, and therefore he could not in charity but think and say, they were also sanctified by the inward affection of the same: Nor may any man suppose, that the Apostle did send his directions and instructions to the mystical, but to the Visible body of Christ, unless he will say that the Apostle intended to bring confusion into the Church, which for its sin∣gular order, is called acies ordinata, a well ordered army, where∣in not one man is suffered to be out of rank; or that he in∣tended to gratifie some proud contentious spirits, by laying such grounds of schism and faction as might breed strifes and quarrels about the right of Church Government unto the worlds end: For who can tell by looking in a mans forehead, that he is one of the mystical body of Christ, having communion with him through the Holy-Ghost? whence it will follow that those who are best conceited of themselves will violently invade, at least readily usurp, the government of others, and consequent∣ly pride and presumption will challenge universal jurisdiction: for they who have so much pride as to say they are more neerly linked in communion with Christ then their brethren, have seldome so much piety as to make good that saying.
Wherefore it is safest for men to believe, that though the promises of grace chiefly concern the mystical; yet the precepts chiefly concern the visible Church; for as much as Christ hath intrusted that, both with the doctrine and with the means of salvation; with the ministry both of his Word and Sacra∣ments: For these are without question deposited with the vi∣sible Church, though none are benefited by them, (so far as to attain Salvation) but only those that are of the invisible Church, or the mystical body of Christ: But God the searcher of hearts, hath reserved the knowledge of the invisible Church only to himself, and requireth all Christians to join in commu∣nion with that visible Church wherein they live, if so be that▪
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therein is preserved the outward sincere profession of Gods truth and worship, and the right administration of his Sacra¦ments▪ which is a condition not to be excepted against, unles we will deny men the use of reason (there only where they most want it) in the choice of their religion; and yet allow it in the choice of their Church: and think it enough for them to serve God according to the dictates of others consciences, when we are sure they shall be acquitted or condemned in the last judge∣ment▪ according to the dictates of their own: Wherefore we must allow an outward sincere profession of Gods truth, and word, and a right administration of his Sacraments to the con∣stitution of that visible Church, which obligeth us to her communion as a member of the true Catholick Church; And if we cannot make it appear out of the written Word of God that our own Church is faulty in either of these, we may not forsake her communion, since by vertue of these she is to us instead of the Catholick Church, and by authority of the Catholick Church, bindeth us to her communion: For if we acknowledge our Church to be Catholick in her profession, (which we are bound to do unless we can prove the contrary) we must also acknowledge her to be Catholick in her obligati∣on; because where is unquestionable purity, there must be unquestionable Authority, unless we will say that Reli∣gion is a matter of indifferency, and leaves men at their liberty either to practice or to despise it, as they please.
This was not the opinion of the Primitive Christians, of whom it is said, And they continued stedfastly in the Apostles doctrine and fellowship, and in breaking of bread, and in prayers, Acts 2. 42. They thought themselves bound to continue sted••astly in that communion wherein was a sincere profession of Gods truth and worship, (here expressed by doctrine and Prayers,) and a right administration of the Sacraments (here expressed by breaking of bread:) And so must we likewise think our selves bound to continue stedfastly in their Communion, who succeed the Apostles in the publick exercise of the same religious duties, or deny that this Scripture was written for our learning; So that unless it be evident to us that the Church wherein we live is faulty either in doctrine, or in Prayers, or in administration
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of the Sacraments, we may not recede from her communion without being guilty of schism and faction, and then Saint Augustine (unless you will say Fulgentius was the author of that book) will tell us our doom, in these words, Firmissime tene, & nullatenus dubites, non solùm omnes Paganos, sed etiam omnes Judaeos, Haereticos, atque Schismaticos, qui extra Ecclesi∣am Catholicam praesentem finiunt vitam, in ignem aeternum itu∣ros, qui paratus est diabolo & angelis ejus; Aug. de fide ad Patr. Daph. c. 38. You must firmly believe, and in no wise doubt, that not only all Pagans, but also all Jews, and Hereticks and Schismaticks, who end this present life out of the communion of the Catholick Church, shall go into that eternal fire which was prepared for the Devil and his Angels.
For he that willfully lives and dies out of the communion of his own Church, being a true member of the Catholick, lives and dies (at least in the perverse disposition of his soul) out of the communion of the Catholick Church, and consequently lives and dies in the state of damnation: so neerly doth it concern every Christian not to break communion with his own Church unadvisedly and undeservedly, (for that is in effect to break communion with the Catholick Church) but to try the Spirits whether they are of God, and to know there is no warrantable disobedience of that command, Keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace, unless it be evident, That the Spirit is not of God; And yet even in that case, men ought to be very caute∣lous and wary, that they so forsake the communion of the Church, as not to disturb the peace of it; for that was all that those seven thousand did, who bowed not their knee to Baal, in the general defection of the Church of Israel, 1 King. 19. 18. And that is all we are bound to do in the like case, if we will have Gods mark set upon us to preserve us from wrath in the day of wrath; for so saith the Prophet Ezekiel, Set a mark up∣on the foreheads of the men that sigh, and that cry for all the abo∣minations that be done in the midst thereof, sc. of Jerusalem; Ezech. 9. 4. Sighing and crying for those abominations we cannot help, is enough to discharge us from the guilt of them, and this may be done, if not without making of a noise, yet sure without making of any tumult.
And this is according to Saint Augustines advice, Misericor∣diter
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corripiat homo quod potest; quod autem non potest, patienter ferat, & dilectione gemat atque lugeat, donec aut ille desuper emen det & corrigat, aut usque ad m••ssem differat eradicare zizania, & pal••am ventilare: ut tamen securi de salute sua bonae spei Christiani, inter desperatos quos corripere non valent, in unitate versentur, auferant malum à seipsis, id est, ut in ipsis non inve∣niatur, quod in moribus aliorum eis- displicet. Aug. lib. 3. contra Parmen. cap. 2. Let every man correct what he can with mild∣ness; and what he cannot, let him bear with patience: And let him sigh and mourn in love till God from above amend what is amiss, or at the harvest pluck up the tares, and blow away the chaff; yet that Christians who have a good hope, may without danger of their own salvation, live in unity among those desperate wretches whom they cannot amend▪ let every man re∣form one, that he may not find that in himself which he dis∣likes in another; This is the safest way for every particular man, to be sure not to be out of the communion of the Catholick Church, and yet not to be in the corruptions of his own Church; For he that sighs for the abominations, shews he loves Gods truth; and he that only sighs, shews he loves his neighbours peace: His love to Gods truth will keep him in the actual communion of the Catholick Church; his love to his neighbours peace, will not let him violate the communion of his own Church, although he refuse to communicate in its cor∣ruptions: It is not to be doubted, but holy David, all the while he lived in Sauls house, or was afterwards driven from Jerusalem, was under the affliction and temptation of evil com∣pany▪ yet he saith of himself, I have walked in my integrity, I have not sate with vain persons, neither will I go in with dissem∣blers; I have hated the congregation of evil doers, and will not sit with the wicked; and he thus makes good that saying, For thy loving kindness is ever before mine eyes, and I have walked in thy truth; (Psalm 26.) His communion with God, kept him from the corruptions of those unrighteous men he could not avoid, and kept him in the communion of those righteous men he could not enjoy; Though his conversation might be in Gath, or Ascalon, yet his communion was in Jerusalem, (when the Ark was there) as it is said, ver. 8. Lord, I have loved the ha∣bitation of thy house, and the place where thine honour dwelleth.
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Therefore make sure of thy communion with God, by faith and repentance and holiness of life, and doubt not of thy com∣munion with his Catholick Church, though thou live amongst Infidels or amongst such Christians as are fallen into Infidelity, and so having denyed the faith, are worse then those who never embraced it.
For no private man is entrusted with the external commu∣nion of his own Church, nor shall he be called to an account for the sins of it, if he partake not in those sins; but he is intrusted with the internal communion of his own soul, and for that he must look to give a strict account; to the maker and lover and Judge of souls.
But this admonition which only concerns private men, may not be extended to whole national Churches, which have power given them of God to rectifie what is amiss among themselves either in Doctrine or worship, or Sacraments, and are ac∣countable to God for not rectifying it; so that if there be any notorious defect in either, much more in all of these, they that are not bound to obey other men, have no pretence of ex∣cuse if they obey not God, in ordering themselves exactly ac∣cording to his known and undoubted word.
And this is evident by Saint Pauls Epistles to particular Churches, and Saint Johns orders to the seven several Churches of Asia, to all which were sent distinct instructions and reproofs, which sheweth that every one of them was bound to fol∣low those instructions they had received from God, (without expecting new orders from some general Superintendent over them all) and was justly reproved for not following them.
And this is the Judgement of the Catholick Church in the first Council of Nice, in the sixth Canon, which will have the priviledges and dignities, and authorities, of all Churches in∣violably preserved; for so much is comprized in these few words, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: The same Judge∣men is again repeated and reinforced in the first Council of Constantinople, Can. 2. which forbids the confounding of Churches, (〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉) and leaves every seve∣ral provi••ce by a Synod in it self, to administer and order its own •…•…s. The same is again more fully repeated and re∣inforced in the first Council of Ephesus, Can. 8. which will
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have particular Churches keep their own rights and pri∣viledges, lest they should unawares lose the liberty purcha∣sed for them by the blood of Christ: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. And the Council of Chalcedon, Can. 19▪ enjoyns pro∣vincial Synods twice a year to rectifie and dispose all emergen∣cies whatsoever in the Church, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, So we find this is the judgement of the Catholick Church in the four first general Councils; and therefore all the world is not able to prove this practice of our Church to be Anticatholick; For I willingly pass by other Churches in the case, with whom I am not bound to keep external communion, and plead only for this Church where of God in mercy hath made me a happy member, though an unworthy Minister; For if Saint Paul would not judge those men that were without, much less may any of us judge those Churches that are within: And truly it is enough for our satisfaction, and too much for our desert, that though other Churches pretend more, some to the purity, others to the practice of Religion, yet generally they have per∣formed less; Though some rigid Zelots press nothing so much as a circumcision of all rites and ceremonies; other Pharisaical professors can boast of the yoke which they have put upon the neck of their Disciples, which neither we nor our fathers were able to bear; yet we cannot find any sufficient reason why we should not answer them both in Saint Peters words, we believe that through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, we shall be sa∣ved even as they, Act. 15. 11. For we have this reason of our belief, because the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ is truly and clearly set forth in the Doctrine of this our Church, (tis our shame and sin, not our Churches, if it be not also in our pra∣ctice) and Saint Paul hath taught us, that this is the doctrine which most constituteth (and therefore most edifieth) a Chri∣stian Church: For thus much do those words import to the Colossians, And you that were sometimes alienated and ene∣mies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath he reconciled in the body of his flesh through death, to present you holy and unblame∣able, a••d unreproveable in his sight, if ye continue in the faith, grounded and setled, and be not moved away from the hope of
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the Gospel which ye have heard, Col. 1. 21, 22, 2••. Tis the Churches part to preach unto us the hope of the Gospel, or the Doctrine of our being reconciled to God in Christ; where this Doctrine is rightly published, accepted and maintained, there is without doubt a true Christian Church; there is communion with Christ; and if he will present us holy, unblameable & unreprove∣able in his sight for continuing in this faith grounded and setled, we can have little cause, but no excuse, for leaving that Church whereinis the profession of this faith: for as every particular Christian Church may lawfully preserve its own liberty against the incroachment of other Chuuches, so it must necessarily preserve its authority against the insolencies of its own people: The case is notorious concerning Ʋzziah, when he went into the Temple of the Lord to burn incense upon the Altar of incense, that Azariah with the Priests withstood him, saying, it pertaineth not to thee Uzziah to burn incense unto the Lord, but▪ to the Priests the sons of Aaron that are consecrated to burn incense: Go out of the sanctuary, for thou hast trespassed, neither shall it be for thine honour from the Lord God, 2 Chron. 27. 17, 18. And great is the approbation which the Spirit of God giveth to this Azari∣ah for so doing, saying, He it is that hath executed the Priests office in the Temple, 1 Chron. 6. 10. As if none had been high Priest but he, who so couragiously maintained the authority of the Priest-hood; and this is R. Davids gloss upon the words: He was not the first Priest of Solomons Temple, for that was Zadok; nor was he the only high Priest, for there were many others, both be∣fore and after him; but our Rabbies say, because he gave his mind to the holiness of the Temple, [〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉] and would not let Uzziah offer incense, therefore it is said, he it is that executed the Priests office, because he was most zealous for the glory of the Priest-hood; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: So Kimchi: it seems by the Text, that officiating in the Priests office without being a Priest, was a profanation under the Law; and why should we think otherwise under the Gospel, since those who now succeed them in the administration of publick worship, have obtained a more excellent ministry, by how much they are the Mediators of a better Covenant? Heb. 8. 6. For those words though spoken directly of Christ, yet are propor∣tionably true of the Ministry instituted by him, who are surely
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the Mediators of a better Covenant, & therefore have obtained a more excellent Ministry; & consequently to invade their office, must needs be a more dangerous profanation; and we see those who are guilty of it, are commonly even to this day, struck as Ʋzziah was, though not with a corporal, yet with a spiritual leprosie, that infects more dangerously, though less discernably: And if their office may not be invaded without profanation, then much less may it be despised & opposed without irreligion. For God gave all the authority belonging to the Ministry of the New Testament, to our Saviour Christ, and he gave the same to his Apostles, with power and command of giving it to others after them to the worlds end; so saith the Text, John 20. 24. As my father hath sent me, Therrs the authority of the Ministry given unto Christ, even so I send you, there's the same authority given by him to his Apostles, not only for themselves, but also for others; for as Christ was sent that he might send them, so were they sent that they might send others after them. Thus Saint Paul saith for himself, According to the glorious Gospel of the blessed God which was committed to my trust, 1 Tim. 1. 11. And he saith no less for Saint Timothy, I besought thee to abide still at Ephesus, that thou mightest charge some that they teach no other Doctrine. And again, This charge I commit un∣to thee, 1 Tim 1. 3. & 18. Thereby acknowledging that he had received this trust not only to discharge it himself, but al∣so to commit it to others that should discharge it after him: For this calling of Ministers having been instituted for the per∣fection of the Saints, for the work of the Ministry, for the edi∣fying of the body of Christ, (Ephes. 4. 12.) tis evident it must be continued as long as there shall be any Saints to be perfect∣ed, or the work of the Ministry to be performed, or the body of Christ to be edified; and as evident, that it may not be de∣spised or opposed by any who will not put himself out of the communion of Saints, or cut himself off from the body of Christ: For the Text is as plain as if it had been written with a Sun beam, which saith, He that heareth you, heareth me; and he that despiseth you, dispiseth me; and he that despiseth me, dispiseth him that sent me, Luke 10. 16. He that despiseth you that are sent by me, despiseth me that sent you; and he that despiseth me that am sent of my Father, despiseth him that
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sent me; nor may we say that our Ministers are not sent of God; for how shall they preach except they be sent, doth now in∣fer as well as then, that if there be no sending, there can be no preaching: either we must say that preaching (and conse∣quently praying and administring the Sacraments, for there is the same reason of all) is not Gods work, or that those who lawfully do it, have Gods authority for what they do: And if they have Gods authority, how shall they not have my obe∣dience? Saint Pauls saith not only for himself and his assistants, but also for all that were to succeed him in his Ministry, We were allowed of God to be put in trust with the Gospel, 1 Thes. 2. 4. They have Gods allowance or approbation, and may lawfully undertake the Ministry of the Gospel; nay more, they have Gods command or trust, and must necessarily dis∣charge what they have undertaken: so the same Saint Paul, Necessity is laid upon me, yea woe is unto me if I preach not the Gospel, 1 Cor. 9 16. Not speaking the words occasionally con∣cerning his person, (we must betray the authority of the Scrip∣ture to say so, making it an imperfect rule to give us only mo∣mentary or occasional directions) but doctrinally, concerning his calling; and therefore this woe lieth▪ upon all those that suc∣ceed him in the Ministry, binding them to use their utmost en∣deavours, both by their preaching, and by their living, and by their dying to advance the Gospel of Christ; or if they do not their duty, this woe lieth upon them; and consequently if they do, it l••eeth▪ upon those that oppose or hinder them; For it is a clear case that our Saviour Christ hath in every Nati∣on of Christendom entrusted his worship, and Word, and Sacraments, and what ever else directly concerns the salvation of souls, with some peculiar men, who must rather forgoe their lives then forsake their trust; to whom he still saith, as he did to his Apostles when he first gave them his commission, Fear not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul, but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell, Mat. 10. 28. They were not to fear mens killing if they did their duty, but Gods killing if they did it not; And least the world should think them hated of God, because they were by him exposed to all dangers, in another place, (where he still deterreth them from fearfulness in discharging this trust,)
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he calleth them his friends, And I say unto you my friends, be not afraid of them that kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do. But I will fore-warn you whom you shall fear, fear him that after he hath killed, hath power to cast into hell; yea, I say unto you fear him, Luke 12. 4, 5. They are to prefer the discharge of their Trust above their lives, and shall not I prefer it above my humour? Shall I think that my Savi∣our who hath bid me take him for an heathen or a publican that neglects to hear the Church, will take me for a good Chri∣stian if I my self be guilty of that neglect? (Mat. 18. 17.) I will then willingly acknowledge that those only to whom Christ hath given the power of loosing and binding in heaven, are, in this respect, called the Church (for so the sequele of the context there requires) and that if I hear not these, I shall be in his account but as a heathen or a publican.
For this is the Church which God hath in this Nation, en∣trusted with the blood of his Son, with the dictates of his Spirit, and with the souls of his People; and I must hear this Church as I would have the benefit of his Sons blood, as I would have the instructions of his holy Spirit, and as I would not forfeit the sal∣vation of mine own Soul.
Wherefore though the whole world turn round to a meer spiritual diziness, or reel to and fro and stagger like a drunken man, yet this shall be the sober resolution of my soul; I will not sin against that authority which God hath set over me. He hath called his Ministers his friends, I will not call them mine enemies least I put my self out of his friendship: I find that God the Father, Son and Holy-Ghost hath set them over me, and how shall I answer it to this blessed Trinity, if I oppose my self against them, or rather set my self over them! Tis St. Athanasius his observation, (Ath. lib. de communi essentiâ Patris, Filii & Sp. S.) That the election of Ministers in Gods Church, is, in the book of God, equally attributed to all three persons of the holy and blessed Trinity: Saint Paul attributeth it to God the Father, 1 Cor. 12. 28. God hath set some in the Church, first Apostles, Secundarily Prophets, Thirdly Teachers, &c. Again, The same S. Paul attributeth this work to God the Son, Eph. 4. 11. And he gave some Apostles, (sc. He that had descended into the lower parts of the earth, and was now ascended into heaven)
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and some Prophets and some Evangelists, and some Pastors and Teachers: And lastly the same Saint Paul attributeth the choice of Ministers to God the Holy-Ghost, Acts 20. 28. Take heed unto your selves and to all the flock, over the which the Holy-Ghost hath made you Overseers; God the Father, Son and Holy Ghost hath made them my Overseers, and shall I strive to make them my Underlings? And what shall I answer at the last day to this God whose authority I have contemned, and whose power I shall not be able to resist, when he will call me to an account, and pronounce against my soul, and execute upon it the sentence of eternal dammnaton for my contempt?
He hath said expresly, Obedite praepositis vestris & subjacete eis, Heb. 13. 17. Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit your selves; for they watch for your souls as they that must give account, that they may do it with joy, and not with grief; for that is unprofitable for you: There are some certain men that have charge of the peoples souls, and are accordingly to give an account of that charge: Those are here called their Rulers or Leaders, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Their Captains to train and lead them under Christs banner; A word of great humility in regard of their communion with them, in the same Christian duties and combates, but a word of great authority in regard of their command over them; in so much that Gregor. Nazian. in the first of his steliteuticks calls the Ministers, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, The order of those that govern; and the people, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, those that are under that order of government, or those who are to be governed: The one are set over, the other are set under by the power of God the Father, by the wisdom of God the Son, and by the goodness of God the Holy-Ghost: so that to disturb and to destroy this order, is little less then to proclaim enmity against the eternal power, and wisdom and goodness of God; This is reason enough why we should obey, because God the Father, Son and Holy-Ghost hath made them our Rulers; but yet the words enforce another reason of our obedi∣ence, because they watch for our souls: And are accord∣ingly called watch-men in the Text, Son of man, I have made thee a watch-man to the house of Israel, therefore hear the word at my mouth, and give them warning from me, Ezek. 3. 17. Spe∣culatorem dedi te; speculator qui est aliis vice oculorum, i. e.
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〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 saith Calvin upon the place. A watch-man is one who is to others instead of eyes, that is an Overseer or a Bishop: we find here God hath divolved to him a double trust; here is verbum commissum, Animae commissae; Gods word is com∣mitted to his care, and mens souls are committed to his cure; He is entrusted with Gods word, hear the word at my mouth; and he is entrusted with his neighbours Souls, Give them warning from me: His office was instituted meerly for the glory of God, and the salvation of men; and I cannot oppose it, but I must be an enemy both to God and Man; And if I be an ene∣my to Gods glory here, how shall I hope to enjoy it hereafter? If I oppose the Salvation of others, how shall he that came to be their Saviour, take a care to save me? For I do what is in me to trample his blood under my feet; and how can I hope that he should sprinkle it upon my soul? nor may I say that these Texts were only occasional, or this trust was only tempo∣ral, such as concerned the Prophets and Apostles, but not others after them, unless I will moreover say (which in truth I am afraid to think,) That God hath now a less care then he had then both of his own glory and of our salvation; both of his own word, and of our souls. These spiritual watch-men were as necessary in Saint Pauls time as in Ezekiels, and in our times as then; And consequently they are to us, what the Prophets were to the Jews, or the Apostles to the Primitive Christians, saving only their extraordinary commission and endowments: Ezekiel was to give warning to the Jews, and Saint Paul was to give warning to the Gentiles for so himself saith, whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every man in all wisdom, that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus, Col. 1. 28. And our watch-men are now to give warning unto us, by ver∣tue of the same commissions, and therefore Saint Paul speaketh in the plural number, saying, whom we preach, comprizing the whole body of the Ministry; wherefore also he saith warning every man, and that we may present every man; which was im∣possible for himself alone, and indeed for all the Preachers of his time, because there were to be infinite sucessions of men, which could not be their auditors; whereby it is evident, that as long as there shall be men to be warned, and taught, and pre∣sented perfect in Christ Jesus, so long there must be Preachers
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to warn and teach and to present them: whose duty and office is accordingly here described; 1. In the nature of it, To warn and to teach; not only to deliver sound doctrine which is teach∣ing, but also to apply it by particular exhortations according to the capacities or wants of theit auditors, which is warning or admonishing: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, putting your mind to theirs, that they may understand what you say, not soaring aloft in sublime spe∣culations above their apprehensions: or putting the Truth into their minds, as they are able to receive it. 2. In the object of it, every man, excluding none from the benefit of their Mini∣stry, who desire to be taught or to be warned, though more par∣ticularly including those of their own Pastoral charge; in which respect Clemens Alexandrinus his gloss may be admitted, who saith, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, warning and teaching the whole man, that he may be purified both in his body and in his soul. 3. In the man∣ner of it, with all assiduity and industry, for so the Participles 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, do set forth not only continued, but also multiplyed acts. 4. And lastly, in the end of scope of it, which is to bring men to the communion of Christ, that so they may be presented to God as perfect, having that perfection in their Saviour, which they have not in themselves.
Wherefore we cannot deny, but as we still need the warning, so we still need the watchmen; and we must confess that watchmen of Gods own setting up, may not be disturbed or displaced, till himself be pleased to put them away, or to pull them down; and sure we are, that will not be till we shall no longer need them. And if the watchmen are bound to give the warning, then questionless the people are bound to take it when it is given: For it is plain the Text said, Obey them that watch for your souls, (Heb. 13. 17.) before the civil Magistrate was yet Christian, to force men to that obedience: Nay indeed, while he was yet Heathen, to deterre them from it, and to perse∣cute them for it; So that the fifth Commandment obligeth me to obey those whom God hath set over me in spirituals, no less then those whom he hath set over me in temporals: And I may no more forsake the Church to set up a new Religion, then I may forsake the State to set up a new Government: For my obedience is due to both as a moral debt by the necessity of Ju∣stice,
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since I am as much obliged to my spiritual Father for the care of my soul, as I am to my civil Father for the care of my body; and therefore I can no more withdraw my duty from the Church, then I can from the Common-wealth: Nor may I go out of my Nation to look for a Head of the Church, any more then to look for a Head of the State, since the fifth Com∣mandment obligeth me equally to the Church and to the State; And I ought to be as much afraid of Schism, which is a sedition against the Church; as of Sedition, which is a schism against the State: Sure I am, if I will be a true Gospeller, I must see that my conversation be such as becometh the Gospel of Christ, and that's a conversation which requires Unity no less then Ve∣rity; Unity of Spirit, no less then Verity of Faith: So the Apostle advising the Philippians that their conversation should be as becometh the Gospel of Christ, sheweth them in the next words wherein consisteth that conversation, saying, That ye stand fast in one Spirit, with one mind, there's the Vnity; stri∣ving together for the faith of the Gospel; there's the Verity, Phil. 1. 27. He permitteth not the pretence of Verity to break the bonds of Unity; for he saith striving together, (not stri∣ving one with, or against another,) for the faith of the Gospel: Their concord and communion was to be the credit of their Religion, not the pretence of Religion to be the bane of their communion: He accounts it as necessary to their salvation that they should stand fast in the same Unity, as that they should strive for the same Verity: that they should stand fast in one spirit, with one mind, as that they should strive for the faith of the Gospel: This is the true way to set up Christs Discipline; for himself hath said, By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples, if ye have love one to another, John 13. 35. As we are made Christs Disciples by the Verity of our Faith, so we are known to be his Disciples by the Unity of our Love: and if we desire to set up his Discipline, we must take a course that men may know we are his Disciples: which they cannot do unless we have love one to another; and surely factions, divisions, strifes, contentions, are very ill arguments, and worse evidences of love: So that I cannot be a Schismatick in with-drawing my love from Christs Church, but I must be a piece of an Atheist in
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withdrawing my love from Christ himself, as refusing to be accounted his Disciple: This makes Saint Paul come like clypei Dominus septemplicis Ajax, holding out a Buckler with no less then seven folds in it to keep off all the assaults of schism; saying, 1. There is one Body, that is, one Catholick Church of Christ, whereof we are all members that profess our selves to be Chri∣stians. 2. One Spirit, to quicken and enliven that body. 3. One hope of immortality to comfort and confirm it. 4. One Lord, (to wit our Saviour Christ) that hath purchased, and doth claim it. 5. One faith, to feed and nourish it. 6. One Baptism, to wash and cleanse it. 7. One God and Father of all, to rule and govern it, (Eph. 4. 4, 5, 6.) So that I dare no more be a Schismatick, then I dare think to divide this one body, to mul∣tiply this one Spirit, to falsifie this one hope, to renounce this one Lord, to forsake this one faith, to despise this one Baptism, to deny this one God; for I must be zealous to maintain this Christian Communion in its authority, that I may be so happy as to enjoy it in its excellency.
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CAP. II. Christian Communion in its excellency.
THE Christian Church is truly Catholick, in that it comprizeth all true Believers, of what nation▪ sex, age, or condition soe∣ver; for God acknowledgeth them all for his children, by faith in Christ Jesus; So saith Saint Paul. Gal. 3. 26, 27. For ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus; for as many of you as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ: So that whosoever believeth in Christ, and is baptized in his name, must be acknow∣ledged a member of the Christian Church; whether he be Jew or Greek, bond or free; which was not so before Christs com∣ing in the flesh; for then it was said only of the Jews, ye shall be my people, and I will be your God, Jer. 30. 22. But since our blessed Saviour hath broken down the partition wall, God hath called to himself a people, not of the Jews only, but also of the Gentiles; and it hath come to pass, that in the place where it was said unto them, ye are not my people, there they are now called the children of the living God, Rom. 9. 24, 26. Those whom God calls his sons, how shall we not call our brethren, unless we will deny him to be our Father? Whence it must follow, that Chri∣stian communion is of as great a latitude or extent, as is the Christian Church, according to that of Saint Paul, ye are all one in Christ Jesus, Gal. 3. 28. Having said before, ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Iesus, to shew they were of the same Christian Church; he now saith, ye are all one in Christ Jesus, to shew they were also of the same Christian communion. And this principle we
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may not gain-say, if we will acknowledge the excellency of▪ true Christian communion: for it cannot be so excellent if it▪ depend on man, as if it depend on God; if it depend on Christs. Vicar, as if it depend on Christ himself; if it be confined to one party of Christians, as if it be extended to all; for undeny∣able is that rule in reason, Bonum quo communius, eo melius, Every good the more common it is, the better it is; and much more undenyable is it in charity, when it is applyed to our Christian Communion: For it is against the nature of God to be under a restraint or a Monoply. God the fountain of goodness is an universal good; He is good unto all; and every other good, the more it partakes of his goodness, the more it partakes of his universality, and is the more diffusive of it self, being good on∣ly to it self whiles it is not diffused, and therefore diffusing it self, that it may also be good to others. Much more is this to be seen and confessed in the good of Christian Communion, which is therefore good because it is a common good, and may not be abridged of its Community, without being also abridg∣ed of its goodness. Saint Paul will have us if it be possible, to live peaceably with all men, Rom. 12. 18. therefore much more with the best of men, with Christians, who have the name, the word, the image, the Spirit of Christ; with all men we must keep an external and civil, but with Christians we must more∣over maintain an internal and spiritual peace. Our hand is bound to the good behaviour in regard of Christs enemies, but our heart is so bound in regard of his servants. We may not break the outward peace with those that persecute him; much less may we break the inward peace with those that love him: There is a great difference betwixt our Civil and our Christian conversation or communion: The Civil depends upon the bo∣dy, and is accordingly confined to time and place; but the Chri∣stian depends chiefly upon the soul, and therefore may be ex∣tended as far as the souls apprehension and affection, to know and to love the Truth; Whence Saint John saith to that elect Lady, Whom I love in the truth, and not I only, but also all they that have known the truth (though they had not known her) for the truths sake which dwelleth in us, and shall be with us for ever, 2 John 1. 2. As far as truth and love do extend, so far ex∣tends our Christian Communion, the foundation whereof is
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truth, the building whereof is love. Communio spiritualis, est in consensu vero vel interpretativo; Spiritual communion consists either in an explicit or an implicit consent with other Christians, (Alensis par. 2. qu. 161. m. 10.) which as I may not afford to any Christians as they abide in errour, so I may not deny to any Christians as they embrace the Truth: For wherever the Truth is, it calls for my interpretative or virtual consent, not to deny or gain-say it; and where I know it to be, there it calls for my actual and explicit consent to love and follow it; I may not turn Donatist, to confine the spirit of truth; nor may I turn Familist to confine the spirit of love; For as it cannot be denyed but that the spirit breatheth where it listeth; so it may not be disputed, but I must love wheresoever the spirit is pleased to breath; Either I must deny the spirit of Truth to breath up∣on all those Christians that are not of my profession; or the spirit of love to breath upon me, if I will not allow them to be of my Christian Communion; So that I must first limit and confine the Catholick Church, before I can limit and confine the Communion of Saints; for as is the Church, so is the communi∣on, if the one be Catholick, the other is so too: If I will make a particular Christian communion, I must make a particular Christian Church, and consequently make that two Articles of my Faith, which Christ and his Apostles have made but one, even, The holy Catholick Church, the Communion of Saints; Saint John the beloved Disciple loved for the Truths sake, and so must I; where God hath not denyed his truth, there may not I deny my love: If there be such a Christian Church in the world which I cannot well love for its own sake, yet even that Church must I love for the truth sake; as far as it hath my Sa∣viours Truth, so far it must have my souls love; And though that Church may most justly claim my love, which hath most entirely Christs truth; yet no Christian Church, but may in some sort claim it, since no Christian Church but hath Christs Truth, by which it is made Christian.
Some have this truth mingled with many and gross errours: but God forbid that the tares which the enemy hath sowed, should make me out of love with that good seed, which I know came from Christ himself: For why should I be alwaies look∣ing on the mote in my brothers eye, and not rather see the beam
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in mine own? To his own master he standeth or falleth, and God is willing to make him stand; why should I be willing to make him fall, or to keep him down? If I would look on the Christian, not on the man, I should account him a brother, whom now I think an enemy; for what he is in Christ is most ami∣able, though not what is he in himself: God looks on me in Christ to love me, and why should not I so look on my Brother to love him? Gods love in Christ towards me covers a multitude of my sins, and why should not my love in the same Christ towards my Brother cover a few of his mistakes? Sure I am my Saviour hath made Charity a necessary condition to the forgiveness of my sins, and therefore I must willingly cover my brothers faults, or I cannot hope that God will cover mine. If I will needs lay open his miscarriages to my sight, I shall but lay open mine own miscarriages to the sight of God; for he that cursed Cham meerly for not covering, will certainly never bless me only for discovering, either my fathers or my brothers nakedness; I can∣not judge him, but I shall bring my self into Judgement; and therefore I must pass by his faults, as I would have God to pass by mine; This is such a truth as no Christian can deny, and therefore none should contemn; yet is this truth most of all contemned by Christians, whiles each particular Church more stomachs at a man for not being one of her members, then she re∣joyces for his being a member of Christ; Hence those outragi∣ous invectives and impious calumnies of one Christian Church against another, whiles they all had rather contribute to their own unnecessary differences as men, then to their necessary concord and agreement as Christians; Each particular Church so labouring to advance and enlarge her own Communion, as in effect neglecting and confining the communion of Christs Catholick Church. Whereas it is most evident by Saint Paul, that there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcisi∣on, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free; but Christ is all and all, Col. 3. 11. That is, All true Believers promiscuously without any distinction or exception of place or person, do belong to the communion of Christs Catholick Church; And according∣ly the same Apostle sets all Christians a rule, how infallibly to compass, and inviolably to hold this communion, saying, Put on therefore as the elect of God holy and beloved, bowels of mer∣cies,
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kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, long-suffering, forbearing one another and forgiving one another, if any man have a quarrel against any, even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye, ver. 12, 13. How many vertues are here joyned toge∣ther, the least whereof, if put on in bowels, (that is sincere∣ly and without hypocrisie,) will not let us break communion with any Christian? For here is mercy to pitty him, kindness to recall him, humbleness to yeild to him, meekness not to provoke him, long suffering to forbear and to forgive him, when we have a just quarrel, and therefore much more not to make a quarrel against him, when we have none: And all this is enjoined, as we would be the Elect and beloved of God, or thought zealous to follow the example of Christ, who hath forborn and forgiven us much more, then we can (for his sake) forbear or forgive our brethren: These virtues will make us zealous in compassing our Christian communion, and one more follows these which will make us as zea∣lous in keeping it; And that is charity, of which it is said, And above all these things put on charity, which is the bond of perfectness, ver. 14. Charity is the bond of perfection in regard of our souls, in regard of our operations, and in regard of our communion; making our souls perfect, by uniting and binding them together in Christ, that every one may en∣joy the perfections of all; making our operations perfect, by uni∣ting & binding them together for Christ, that all may tend to his glory as if they were but one; and making our communion per∣fect by uniting and binding both our operations and our souls, together with Christ; for our communion in neither is perfect, till both be joyned with him who is the author of all perfecti∣on: For as in the natural body of man, the perfection thereof consisteth very much in the communion which the several mem∣bers have with themselves, but much more in the communi∣on which they all have with the soul; so in the mystical bo∣dy of Christ, the perfection thereof consisteth very much in the communion which good Christians have with one ano∣ther, but much more in the communion which they all have with Christ: It is their great glory and bliss that they all have in effect one common soul, but their far greater glory and bliss that they all have in truth one common Saviour:
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And indeed they first meet in him before they meet in one ano∣ther; Quae in aliquo tertio conveniunt, ea inter se conveniunt, is not only consequently but also causally true; not only if two or more agree in a third, they agree in themselves; but also, because they agree in a third, therefore they agree in them∣selves: Thus the two extreams in a syllogism are joyned both together in the conclusion, because they were both joy∣ned before with the same middle term in the premises; so is it with men of different and disagreeing perswasions, because they rightly agree in medio termino, in one and the same Me∣diator, they cannot but agree among themselves: And as it is a rule in Logick or in reason, Si medium in premissis rite collo∣catur, duo alii termini non possunt aliter quàm recte disponi; If the medium be rightly placed, the two extreams cannot be pla∣ced amiss; so is it in religion, if our Mediator may but have his due place and order amongst us, there will be no fear of our own being out of order amongst our selves: Hence that Eu∣logie of the first Christians, And all that believed were together and had all things common, Act. 2. 44. They were not so to∣gether in their persons, as to be asunder in their affections; and therefore we must interpret this verse from the first, and say, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, They were all with one accord in one place, or with one mind and soul; They were unanimously met together as well as personally, they were in one mind as well as in one place; And so will all true believers to the worlds end; Nay, they will meet in one mind, when they cannot meet in one place; for they are all joyned together as it were in one common soul, though not as men, according to Averrois his phansie, who said there was but one numerical intelligent soul which assisted all mankind; Yet as Christians, according to Saint Pauls Divinity, with one mind and one mouth glorifie God, Rom. 15 6. or perfectly joyned together in the same mind and the same judgement, 1 Cor. 1. 10. or, being of one accord, of one mind, Phil. 2. 2. And in this respect they have also all things common; for though we may not allow an external community of goods and bodies to the confusion of humane property and society, yet we must allow an internal community of affections and souls to the exercise of Christian love and cha∣rity: For if that rule be true of the outward or carnal man,
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Homo sum, humani à me nihil alienum puto; I am a man, and think nothing belongs to a man but belongs to me; then much more is it true of the inward and spiritual man, I am a Christi∣an, and think no prosperity or adversity can happen to any Christian, but the same happens to my self: For this is ac∣cording to the example of Christ, who said unto Saul, I am Jesus whom thou persecutest, Act. 9. 5. Thinking the injuries done unto his members as done unto himself; Nay, it is ac∣cording to the precept of Christ commanding us to think so to; wherefore he saith, Rejoyce with them that do rejoyce, and weep with them that weep; Be of the same mind one towards another, Rom. 12. 15, 16. Bidding us be of the same mind, that we might be of the same affections, and have the same joyes and the same sorrows: This contemplation should indear it self withall Christians to remember, and much more to practice it; for then all outrages in words and deeds, which are now so scandalously heightned, would be peaceably composed, be∣cause every one would look upon anothers injury as his own, and consequently would be afraid of wronging his brother, that he might not wrong himself: Thus would the peace of God rule in all our hands and tongues, if it did first rule in all our hearts, which is also required as the cheifest means whereby to preserve Christian communion, and let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are called in one body, and be ye thankful, ver. 15. Where the Apostle exhorteth us to Chri∣stian unity and concord for three reasons: First, because God is the author, and lover of it, whence it is called the peace of God; and we may be amazed to see that men should say in their dayly prayers, Deus author pacis & amator, O God which art the author of peace, and lover of concord, and yet not love it them∣selves: Secondly, because it is a badge, or rather an ingredi∣ent and part of our Christian calling, whence it is said, To the which also ye are called in one body; that as there is no schism in the body, but the members have the same care one for another; and whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it, or one member be honoured, all the members rejoice with it; so it might also be with us now we are the body of Christ, and members in particular, 1 Cor. 12. 27. For Christ hath called us to be of one body; and how then shall we not be of one mind?
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Thirdly, because it is an expression of that thankfulness which we owe to God, for giving us that peace, which this world, were it never so quiet, could not give, and be it never so quar∣relsome, cannot take away; whence it is said, and be ye thank∣ful; to wit for that peace of a good conscience here, and a blessed eternity hereafter, which Christ hath purchased for you, of which the same Apostle speaketh, Rom. 5. 1. Therefore be∣ing justified by faith we have peace with God, through our Lord Jesus Christ; We can never be truly thankful for that peace of God which our blessed Saviour hath purchased for us, unless we labour earnestly to have peace one with another: Nor may we pretend that the love of truth makes us to have but little regard of peace; for the Apostle supposeth that peace and truth may very well be joyned together in our conversation, in that after the command for peace, he giveth the command for truth; and first saith, Let the peace of God rule in your hearts, and after that, Let the word of Christ dwell in you rich∣ly in all wisdom; He first requireth the peace, and then the truth, inverting the order by confirming the authority of the Pro∣phet Zachariah, who first requireth the truth, and then the peace; therefore love the truth and peace, Zach. 8. 19. For as it is an undeniable argument, that the tenth Commandment of the decalogue cannot fitly be divided into two several pre∣cepts, because the order of the words being changed in Exo∣dus and in Deuteronomy, it could not be known which of the two precepts were to be set down first; for Exod. 20. 17. first is forbidden the desire of our neighbours house; but Deut. 5. 21. First is forbidden the desire of our neighbours wife; so that in both places is forbidden but one inordinate desire in regard of the act, though two in regard of the object; and consequently both inordinate desires come under one and the same precept, or we must be posed to shew which of the two prohibitions makes the ninth, which makes the tenth com∣mandment; So is it in this command of loving peace and truth, the Prophet first names the Truth, the Apostle first names the Peace, that we not knowing which of the two we are bound to follow first, might be the more industrious to follow both, being as much afraid of forsaking the peace to follow the truth, as of forsaking the truth to follow the peace; for that we can
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do neither, but we must invert the order, and pervert the intent of Gods command; which yet more plainly appears from the words of the same Apostle Saint Paul, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Eph. 4. 15. Speaking the truth in love, or doing the truth in love, for so the Vulgar Latine veritatem facientes in charitate; we may render the words, Be ye true in love, shew your selves true men, in that you are charitable men; for here is plainly but one precept for the exercise of both virtues, to shew we cannot be defective in the love, but we must also be defective in the truth; I will then be as zealous for Christian love, as for Chri∣stian truth, and not think I can do my Saviour good service, whilst I am so intent upon the truth of his Religion, as not to re∣gard the peace of his communion; Communicant and Christian, must be to me terms convertible; as far as reacheth the Christia∣nity, so far also reacheth the communion; For he that is a good Christian doth communicate with Christ; and how can I ex∣clude the one without excluding the other out of my communi∣on? What is truly Christian in the worst of Christians is love∣ly for Christs sake; and though I exceedingly rejoyce in old Si∣meons happiness to take my Saviour from the arms of a pure Virgin Church, as he did from the arms of his pure Virgin Mo∣ther, Luke 2. yet I will not run from him, if I find him talking with a woman of Samaria, revealing himself to her that liveth in the state of incontinency, John 4. It shall be my desire to meet with him dayly in mine own Church that is not defi∣led either with superstition or with faction; but it shall be my joy to meet with him in any other Church, though she be actually defiled with both, and run a whoring after her own in∣ventions: For I may not refuse to communicate with any Church in that wherein she is truely Christian, unless I will venter to divide and separate from Christ himself: Wherefore I will communicate with all Christian Churches, as far as they are so, in the disposition of my soul, though I cannot in the pre∣sence of my body; so shall I be sure neither to be a schismatick in a Church that is truly Catholick, and moreover I shall be a Catholick in a Church that may be guilty of schism; Ani∣mus Catholicus in Ecclesia Schismatica, is in my account a better temper then Animus schismaticus in Ecclesia Catholi∣ca;
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I had rather have a Catholick spirit in a schismatical▪ Church, then a schismatical spirit in a Catholick Church; for the one is an antidote to allay the poyson I meet withall, the other is able to turn an antidote into poyson. To have a Catholick Spirit in an Anticatholick Church may keep me a true Catholick in the communion of Schismaticks; but to have an Anticatholick Spirit in a Catholick Church, will make me a Schismatick even in the communion of Saints.
Therefore Christianus Catholicus, Christian Catholick is the Title I desire to assume, and will labour to justifie; the one may be as my proper, the other as my common name; the one shewing what I am in my person, the other shewing what I am in my communion. For I cannot but think Lactanti∣us his pen borrowed inke from heaven, when it dropped down this admirable observation, Christiani esse desierunt, qui Christi nomine amisso, humana & externa vocabula in∣duerunt; Lact. de vera sap. cap. 30. They have left off to be Christians, who have left off the name of Christ, that they may call themselves by other mens external names: For indeed all other names are Notes and causes of division, tis only the name of Christ is the note and cause of com∣munion amongst Christians: This is truely the voice of a dove that hath no gall, and me thinks I see the Holy Ghost still appearing in this Dove: Sure I am there is none other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be sa∣ved, but only the name of Christ, Acts 4. 12. and why should I then either desire a name that cannot shew my Religion, or desire a Religion that cannot bring me salvation?
THE Communion of men is frequently broken off by facti∣on in their life; or necessarily broken off by dissolution in their death; But the communion of Christians is altogether
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indissolvable; for it endures no faction to separate the members from the body, it incurs no dissolution to separate the body from the Head: Other communions are cut off and destroyed by by death, but this is confirmed and enlarged by it; and the reason is, because he is the Head of this communion who is the first born from the dead: So saith Saint Paul, He is the head of the body the Church, who is the beginning, the first born from the dead, Col. 1. 18.
And indeed this is the greatest excellency of our Christian communion, that it not only begins, but also continues with Christ, and that in his twofold exa••tation, in his exaltation 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, which he had by nature, as the beginning, coaeternal and coaequal with his Father; and in his exaltation 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, which he had by dispensation, as the first born from the dead, Col. 1. 18. An excellent communion indeed that is grounded upon eternity, both à parte ante, for he is the beginning; and à parte post, for he is the first born from the dead, Col. 1. 18. And such is the communion of all good Christians with Christ, (and surely no other can have communion with him) for they were joined with Christ in one election before the beginning of the world, (as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, Eph. 1. 4.) and shall be joined with him in one Salvati∣on after the end of it: (Father, I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am, that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me; John 17. 24.) The first com∣munion we have with our Saviour as he is the beginning; the second as he is the first born from the dead; Hence it is that the Apostle Saint Paul so exceedingly labours in all his Epistles, first to make us sensible of, then to make us thankfull for this great mercy. For this Method he observes in all his Epistles, making it his business first to shew us the blessings we have in Christ then to exhort us to the practice of true Christianity: But more particularly in those Epistles which he writ in his captivi∣ty at Rome, immediately before his death, which he purposely divideth as it were into these two parts, one of doctrine, ano∣ther of application; As for example, In his Epistle to the E∣phesians he spends the three first chapters wholly in doctrine, de∣claring the benefits we have by Christ and the three last chap∣ters wholly in application, exhorting us to shew our selves duti∣full
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and thankfull Christians: So again in his Epistle to the Colossians, all his labour in the two first chapters is to shew us what blessings we have in Christ, what prepared in our election, what exhibited in our redemption, what consummated in our salvation; and in the two last chapters, what thankfulness we are obliged to for so great blessings, exhorting us accordingly by all holiness of life, that we may approve our selves to be truly thankfull: In both which arguments he is so zealous that he takes many whole sentences out of his Epistle to the Ephesians, and repeats them again (though a little shorter,) in his Epi∣stle to the Colossians, as neither afraid to pen his Sermons, though he preached by the spirit, nor yet to preach the same Sermon twice; for in truth his Epistle to the Colossians is little other then an Epitome or compendium of that to the Ephesians: He had heard by Epaphras that the Colossians were setled and established in the communion of Christ, (cap. 1. vers. 8.) and that made him write this Epistle to keep them still in that com∣munion: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Sain Chrysost. Saint Paul writ three Epistles to those Churches which he had not then seen, that to the Ro∣mans, that to the Hebrews, and this to the Colossians, which Church it is probable he never saw at all, and accordingly pro∣fesseth he had a great conflict for them, because they had not seen his face in the flesh; Col. 2. 1. His intent was to shew he would be with them in his affection, though he could not be with them in his person; accordingly he gives this reason for his writing to the Colossians (which may likewise serve for his writing to those other Churches) that though he was not one of their company, yet he was one of their Commu∣nion, saying, For though I be absent in the flesh, yet am I with you in the spirit, joying and beholding your order and the stedfastness of your faith in Christ, Col. 2. 5. He openly professeth himself one of their communion, yet I am with you in the spirit, and sheweth the cause why he was so willing to communicate with them, be∣cause of their order and the stedfastness of their faith in Christ.
Good God what a strange course have we taken of late to make all good Christians (which are and must be of Saint Pauls mind,) to abhor our communion, who neither care for order nor for stedfastness; but instead of order, do embrace confu∣sion;
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instead of stedfastness do eagerly pursue inconstancy: who neither have order in the practice, nor stedfastness in the profes∣sion of our religion: who pretend to faith in Christ, but shew no stedfastness in our faith; So that tis much to be feared we have no true faith in him, and consequently no true communion with him! Did we indeed look upon our Saviour as the begin∣ning, we would begin in his fear, and in his faith, (not in our own phansies, and much less in our own factions) that we might live to him; did we look upon him as the first born from the dead, we would go on in his favour that so we might at last die to him, and through him be made partakers of a joyful resurrection from death to everlasting life. This would we all do if indeed we had communion with our Saviour Christ, and we would before and above all things seek to have communion with him, if we did rightly understand, or could sufficiently value not only the future but also the present excellencies of his communion; For what ex∣cellency is there not to be found here, and not to be expected hence? He is the beginning, that's ground for Christian piety, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, to begin with God, or else we must begin without our begin∣ning: He is from the dead; thats ground for Christian verity, no re∣ligion in the world teaching this truth of the resurrection, but only the Christian, and that teaching it as the consummation of all other truths: And lastly, he is the first born from the dead, thats ground for our Christian unity or charity; in that we are all un∣der the same Captain of our Salvation, and therefore should upon no pretences fall into mutinies, and much less into outrages one against another: For that Disciple who leaned in his Masters bosome, and therefore probably knew most of his heart, plainly tells us we cannot have a share in the resurrection of this first born from the dead, or at least not know we have it, un∣less it be from our love to those that are to follow after him: We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren: He that loveth not his brother abideth in death, 1 John 3. 14. Were it possible for any man to pass from death to life who loveth not his brother, yet it were not possible for him to know so much; We know that we have passed, because we love; therefore they who will not have this love, cannot have this knowledge, and indeed they cannot have this passage: for he that abideth in death, hath not yet passed from death unto life;
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And he that hath not passed from death, hath not yet commu∣nion with the first born from the dead; and consequently is no less destitute of piety and of verity then he is of charity; I was willing to find out all these three heavenly virtues toge∣ther in the Apostles expression; but sure I am I shall find them altogether in my Saviours communion; for without doubt therein is piety to keep us from being hypocrites; verity to keep us from being hereticks; and unity to keep us from being schismaticks or sectaries: agreeably to those three honoura∣ble compellations given to the Colossians by Saint Paul, and in them to all good Christians, the Saints and faithful brethren in Christ, Col. 1. 2. Saints, faithful, and brethren; Saints, from the piety, faithful from the verity, and brethren from the unity that is in the true Christian Religion; wherein he is adored who is the beginning, author of the piety; who is from the dead, author of the verity; and the first born from the dead, (to raise us all after him,) author of the unity: I must now confess with Saint Chrysostome, That those of Saint Pauls Epistles have something more of Divinity in them, which were written in his bonds, (as this was to the Colossians,) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, since I find both the grounds and the excellencies of all Christian Religion twice fully expressed in three words, once speculatively in those 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Beginning, first born, from the dead; another time practically in those 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Saints, Faithful, brethren; I cannot hear those compellations of Christ, the Beginning, the first born, from the dead, but I think my self called to the blessed speculation of piety, verity and charity; I cannot hear those compellations of Christians, Saints, faithful, bre∣thren, but I must confess my self called to the more blessed pra∣ctice of them; since he is not a Saint who is without piety, he is not faithful who is without verity, and he is not a brother who is without charity; Wherefore the best and readiest way to be a good Christian, is, to have communion immediately with Christ; for by this means we shall be sure never to be destitute either of piety, or of verity, or of charity, to make us perfect Christians, or of immortality to make us happy Christians, but in the midst of hypocrites we shall have piety, in the midst of hereticks we shall have verity, in the midst of schismaticks
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we shall have Charity, there is our purchase; in the midst of death and destruction we shall have immortality, there is our happiness.
In the midst of life we be in death as men, but in the midst of death we be in life as Christians; And for this cause I conceive the Church did more peculiarly enjoyn Communions at Easter, because then she did more especially commemorate the resurre∣ction of Christ; thereby putting us in mind, that if we did in∣deed communicate with him, we should not only be partakers of his piety, verity, and charity, but also of his immortality; and be not only strengthened against the errours of our life, but also against the terrours of our death. For through his blessed resurrection, even the grave it self hath teemed to eternity, and is become a second Eve, to be called the mother of all living, at least in respect of the true life, that is to say, the life everlast∣ing.
For by vertue of this first-born from the dead, corruption it self is become a father, and the worm is become a mother, to bring forth children to incorruption, and to immortality: So that what was holy Jobs complaint, I have said to corruption thou art my father, and to the worm thou art my mother and my sister, (Job 17. 14.) must be our joy and triumph ever since that text hath been verified, Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption. For ever since that day, hath our corruptible put on incorruption (in our blessed Saviour) and our mortal hath put on immortality: so that although we still carry about us mortality in our condition, yet we have already put on immortality in our Communion: Hence was the time between the Resurrection and Ascention of Christ, antiently called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, (as Cedrenus calls that week 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, which Zonaras calls 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Meursius) partly for the historie, that our Saviour abode in Galilee altogether after his resurrection till his ascension, but much rather for the mysterie, the reason why he chose Galilee for the place of his abode, and that is the signification of its name derived from the Hebrew 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 which signifies joy and exaltation, or our English word Glee; That as the resurrection of Christ was the greatest joy that ever came to earth, whose very dust by this new breathing of God the Son, is the second
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time become a living body, never to die again; so the place wherein it was demonstrated, and the time wherein it was cele∣brated, should be to mankind both of them remembrancers of everlasting joy.
This was enough then to make all the world go to Hierusa∣lem, and Hierusalem it self to go to Galilee, that they might be joyful spectators of this great blessing, and more blessed par∣takers of this great joy, accordingly providing their 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, their songs and hymns of triumph in honour of our blessed Sa∣viour, who had thus overcame death, to open unto us the gate of everlasting life, and let us in to an immortal Communi∣on with himself the first-born of the dead, and with his holy An∣gels, the first-born of the living. This is that communion the holy Apostle recommendeth to our desires, and much more to our delights, when he saith, Ye are come unto Mount Sion, and unto the City of the living God, the Heavenly Hierusalem, and to an innumerable company of Angels; To the general assembly and Church of the first-born, which are written in heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect: and to Iesus the Mediator of the New Covenant, Heb. 12. 22, 23, 24. As many words, so many excellencies of our Christian commu∣nion, which is inchoate here in earth, and shall be consummate hereafter in heaven; but I will reduce them all to three heads, the proper place, the company, and the author of this Communion.
1. The proper Place, is the Church of God, here specified by three most honourable titles or compellations, Mount Sion, The City of the living God, The heavenly Hierusalem; three such titles as will make every sober, much more every Religious man in love with the Churches communion, as he would be in love with the stedfastness of Mount Sion, which cannot be removed; with the holiness of the City of God, which cannot be defiled; and with the happiness of the heavenly Hierusalem, which above all things is to be desired; for without doubt this Chri∣stian communion with the Church of Christ is the safest and the plainest way to stedfastness, to holiness, and to happiness.
2. The company, and that is so good, that we cannot hope for better in heaven: for it consists of Angels, and of the first-born in Christ, whose names are written in heaven, and of God the Maker, Preserver and Rewarder of these, and the Judge of all
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that hate and oppose them; with all these do we actually com∣municate in Christs Church whiles we are here on earth, with Angels as the assistants, with good men as the members; and with God as the president of this communion; nay indeed, we actually communicate with more then these, for also with the spirits of just men made perfect; so that if any just man go from hence out of our company, yet he goes not out of our commu∣nion: for we follow after him to heaven in our affections, though we still continue and remain here on earth, in our per∣sons.
3. The author of this Communion, and he is no other then the eternal Son of God, the hope of men, and the joy of An∣gels; the support of earth, and the beauty of heaven, even Je∣sus the Mediator of the New Covenant, who by his eternal Priesthood offering up himself, hath fully expiated and taken away the sins of the whole world, and by his own death hath ratified and confirmed that Testament in which he hath given us the Inheritance of heaven; 'Tis of his fulness we have all re∣ceived grace for grace; It is of his fulness we shall all receive glory for glory: It is the sprinkling of his blood which washeth away our sins contracted from our earthly parents: and which will present our souls without sin, before our heavenly Father: so that we have great necessity earnestly to desire and constant∣ly to embrace his Communion, by whom alone we can hope to attain the sanctification of our souls here, and the salvation of our souls hereafter.
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CAP. III. Of Christian Communion in its sincerity.
IN other communions every one is like Diotre∣phes, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, ready to challenge, if not to engross the preheminence to himself: But in the true Christian communion, all are wil∣ling to give the preheminence wholly unto Christ: And they have great reason so to do, and greater Religion in so doing; for they do but give unto him, what they have received from him; that like as they have the preheminence among other men in be∣ing members of his body, so he may have the preheminence among them, in being acknowledged for their Head: For his humiliation was very great in stooping down so low as to be joyned to them, and by the Apostles express rule, Phil. 2. His exaltation is to be correspondent to his humiliation: Saint Chrysostom thus expresseth his humiliation in that He descended to this communion, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, That he who was above and above all things, was pleased to joyn himself with those below, that so he might be their Head; It was the Psalmists admiration, Who is like unto the Lord our God, that hath his dwelling so high, and yet humbleth himself to behold the things that are in heaven and earth? Psalm 113. 5. It must be our astonishment that he humbleth himself, not to behold, but to guide and manage them; that he humbleth himself, not to look, but to come down to heaven to be the head
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of Angels; not to look, but to come down to earth, to be the head of men: Three great steps of humility in stepping down to this▪ It was one great step for him to look down to heaven; Another great step to look down to earth; but the third was far greater then both, to come down to earth, that he might there incorporate himself with men in one body, and so become their Head; and inspirit men with himself, as it were in one soul, that they might become his members: Wherefore our enquiry concerning this, must needs begin in admiration, that our admiration may the better end in thanksgiving, according to Saint Pauls example, who after his 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, O the depth of the riches, concludes with 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, to whom be glory for ever, Amen.
Nay indeed according to Saint Pauls Doctrine, for so he ex∣presly saith, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, That in all things he might be first, or that in all things he might have the preheminence, Col. 1. 18. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith his most faithful interpreter, Saint Chrysostom. The first in heaven, as the beginning, the first in earth as Head of the Church, the first under the earth, as the first born from the dead. Thus hath God ordained that our Saviour Christ should have the preheminence in all things, and in all places; from whence we must conclude that the same is the duty, and ought to be the work of all that profess godliness, even to give all honour and glory to this Son of man, whom the King of Kings is pleased to honour: And in this respect those Christians, like Mary, have chosen the better part, (though the other, like Martha trouble themselves and all the world be∣sides, about many unnecessary things) who carefully observe all those anniversary Festivals which have been instituted entirely for the honour of Christ, and consequently, observe our weekly festival rather as a Lords day then as a Sab∣bath: For these sit quietly and orderly at Jesus his feet, hearing his Word, and place him at their head, promoting his honour: according to the Apostles example and advice, To God only wise be glory through Jesus Christ for ever, Rom. 16. 27. They look upon this festival as instituted for Gods glory, and think it nei∣ther safe nor fit for Christians to glorifie God through Moses, but through Christ. And therefore desire to honour him not by a Sabbath, but by a Lords day; for that the Sabbath was a
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type of Christs rest in the grave, (who rested there only that whole day, as it were to bury it with himself) but the Lords day is an undoubted memorial of his resurrection; So that the one carries in its name, if not in its nature a false protestation concerning the Christian faith, and may possibly in time make us turn Jews: The other carries in its name and nature a true profession of our faith, and can only help to make and to keep us good Christians, as immediately directing our thoughts and our thankfulness to our Saviour Christ, which alone is the way to make us true Evangelical professors; this being the summe of the whole Gospel, That he was delivered for our of∣fences, and rose again for our Iustification, Rom. 4 26. And it is plain that the whole Gospel doth so directly tend to the Article of Christs resurrection, that Saint Paul saith expresly, it can neither be rightly preached nor professed without it: If Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith also is vain, 1 Cor. 15. 14. It nearly concerns all Christian Ministers to abandon those tenents which may either directly or indirect∣ly make vain their own preaching, or the peoples faith: And it is to be feared the Sabbatarian Doctrine may tend to this; for it is to be avowed that the turning those solemn festivals out of the Church, which peculiarly commemorate the Incarnation, Na∣tivity, Resurrection and Ascension of Christ, and teach us to bless God for the same, that the Sabbath may be set up as Lady paramount and Queen Regent to controule and confine all our publick worship, can in no case make for the honour of Christ, and therefore not for the truth of Christianity: For Saint Paul saith expresly, that in all things he must have the prehemi∣nence, and if in all things, then surely both in duties and in daies; and if in duties, then much more in daies; for if the wor∣ship be not acceptable to God but in him, then sure the day cannot be acceptable but for him; Tis proper for the Jew to keep a Sabbath, who thinks himself still bound to worship God through Moses; but tis proper for the Christian to keep a Lords day, who knows himself bound to worship and glorifie God only through Christ Jesus the Lord of glory: And Saint Paul readeth this Lecture to the Jews themselves, (and much more to us Christians,) in those words to the Hebrews, Now the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus,
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that great Shepherd of the Sheep, through the blood of the ever∣lasting Covenant, make you perfect in every good work, to do his will, working in you that which is well pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory for ever and ever, Amen, Heb. 13. 20, 21. Where he briefly declares the summe not on∣ly of that whole Epistle, but also of the whole Christian Faith, and that by way of benediction, to shew we cannot have the blessing of Christians, unless we have the faith of Christians; And that faith teacheth us to believe and confess, 1. That God is reconciled to us, Now the God of peace. 2. That our Saviour Christ alone hath wrought for us, and offereth to us this recon∣ciliation, as our King, our Lord Jesus, as our Prophet, the great Shepherd, and as our Priest, through the blood of the everlasting Covenant. 3. That he hath given us sufficient proof of his great work, that he is brought again from the dead. 4. That he is ready to give us the superabundant fruits of all, by making us perfect in every good work, to do his will, working in us that which is well-pleasing in his sight. In all these inestimable and undeserved mercies, it is Christ alone that is all in all; wherefore it follows in the next words, through Christ Jesus, and conse∣quently he in himself, and the Father in him is to be glorified for all, as it is said, To whom be glory for ever and ever, Amen. God is the God of peace to us men, in that he brought again from the dead the Lord Jesus; so that we cannot rightly glori∣fie him for the reconciliation, unless we glorifie him for the re∣surrection. And for this cause happily it was that the Church did antiently interpose Halleluiah in the midst of those senten∣ces of the Text, which she chose for her publick service in cele∣brating the memory of Christs resurrection, not to interrupt the words or sense of the Scriptures, but rather to explain them; teaching us that good Christians should not read or hear any part of the Text without thinking of Christ, and that they should not think of Christ, without praising God in him and for him, and that praising God in and for their Saviour Christ, they can never be zealous enough in their praises, nor rejoyce too much in his salvation. Therefore they intermingled Halle∣lujah not only in the Hymns of the Text, where it might be thought a natural appendix, but also in the Doctrines of it, where (at first sight) it might seem altogether an unnecessary
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addition; As for example, thus they recite that Hymn of the Psalmist, He brought forth his people with joy, Halleluiah, and his chosen with gladness, Psalm 105. ver. 42. And thus also that doctrine of Saint Peter, As new born babes, Halleluiah, desire the sincere milk of the Word, 1 Pet. 2. 2. Where Halleluiah doth not close a part of a Hymn, but breaks off a doctrinal ex∣hortation, surely not to distract our attentions, but to en∣flame our affections; and to possess our souls wholly with the joy and love of Christ, without which neither our praying nor our preaching is acceptable unto God, or available unto us. And the Church seemeth to have borrowed this practice from the Apostles; for it is much to be observed that Saint Paul deli∣vers not any one Doctrine of the Christian verity without his Halleluiah, that is, without a peculiar doxology to God in Christ: So in his Epistle to the Romans, (1. 8.) First I thank my God through Jesus Christ: So to the Corinthians (1. 1. 4.) I thank my God alwayes on your behalf; So to the Galatians, (1. 5.) To God and our Father be glory for ever and ever, Amen: So to the Ephesians (1. 3.) Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ: And so in the rest of his Epistles: Nay he doth not only prefix his Halleluiah and lay it as the founda∣tion and bottom of his work, but he doth also familiarly inter∣weave it whilst he is working, as it were some choice and emi∣nent thred to checquer and adorn the whole piece: Thus in the Doctrine of Christian regeneration, Rom. 7. 25. I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord, speaks little or nothing to the argument, but more to the soul of him that earnestly de∣sires truly to understand it, then the tongue of men and An∣gels is able to express: Thus also in the Doctrine of the re∣surrection, 1 Cor. 15. 57. Thanks be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ, are such words as do more then perswade the belief, they do also enforce the love of that Christian truth, which of it self is able to make not only one Foelix, but also all mankinde to quake and tremble: For Christ raising us from the death, by vertue of his resurrection; will also uphold us in the judgement, by vertue of his satisfacti∣on: Lastly, thus also in the Doctrine of Christian patience and preseverance, concerning our being strengthned with might by the Spirit of God in the inward man, and Christs dwelling in
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our hearts by faith, and our own being rooted and grounded in love, Ephes. 3. He begins with prayer to God before it, ver. 14. For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ; and he ends with praises after it, ver. 21. Ʋnto him be glory in the Church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages world without end: Which manner of teaching by prayer and praise, must needs make a deeper impression upon the soul then all the arguments of Logick, or perswasions of Rhetorick, that have been or can be invented by the art of man.
And indeed the same is also the Method of Saint Peter, and of the rest of the Apostles, to intermingle prayers and prai∣ses to God in all their writings, and may not unfitly be cal∣led the Method of grace: And Alensis gives this reason for it, Alius est modus scientiae ad informationem affectus secundum pie∣tatem; Alius ad informationem intellectus secundum veritatem; (Alex. Ale. qu. 1. mem. 4.) There is one method of teaching the will how to embrace piety, another method of teaching the understanding how to embrace truth: For the under∣standing is best informed by the evidence of demonstration, but the will is best enflamed by the power of devotion: And again, sunt principia veritatis ut veritatis, & sunt principia veritatis ut bonitatis. There are principles of truth which are to be learned as they are true; and there are principles of truth which are to be learned as they are good; other sciences pro∣ceed from principles of truth which are to be learned as they are true, because their truth is most notoriously evident; But Divinity proceeds from principles of truth which are to be learned as they are good, because their goodness is more notoriously evident then their truth; Ʋn∣de hec scientia magis est virtutis quam Artis, & sapientia magis quam scientia: magis enim consistit virtute & efficacia quam in contemplatione & notitia; (Alen. ibid. in respon. 2.) Therefore is Divinity rather a science of power then of Art, and consequently rather a Sapience then a Science; for both in its being, and in its knowing it consists more of virtue and pow∣er, then of contemplation or knowledge: Accordingly the Apostle himself, (saith Alensis) professeth that his preaching was not with enticing words of mans wisdom, but in demon∣stration
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of the Spirit and of power, 1 Cor. 2. 4. which is such a demonstration as is more fitted to the will then to the under∣standing, because it hath more of piety then of evidence; mans wisdom teaching the understanding, but Gods wisdom rather teaching the will and affections; The one working more upon the head, but the other working more upon the heart; And therefore the Method which Gods wisdom useth in teach∣ing man, is not unfitly called the Method of grace. For it is a Method that neither nature nor Art can teach us, but only the Spirit of Grace, and is accordingly used in no other science but only in Divinity: In teaching other sciences he that should break out into a prayer or ejulation, would either for∣get his principle, or mistake his conclusion; But in teaching Divinity, this is the only way to strengthen both our memo∣ries against forgetfulness, and our judgements against mistakes; Here it is not 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, quod demonstrandum erat, nor 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, quod faciendum erat, but 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, quod orandum erat; Not what we can shew, nor what we can do, but what we can pray, makes us the best proficients in the School of Christ.
For doubtless we may best learn soul-saving Divinity in the way the Apostles taught it, that is, by intermingling prayers and praises with our endeavours, since this is the only way to learn Christ; for Christ cannot be learned till he be received, and cannot be received in a soul not prepared by pie∣ty and devotion to entertain him: This occasioned that ex∣pression of Saint Paul, As ye have therefore received Christ Je∣sus the Lord, so walk ye in him, Col. 2. 6. In other sciences we need learn but the Doctrine that is taught, no matter for the author that teacheth it; But in Christian Divinity we must learn and receive Christ the author, or we cannot rightly learn and receive the Doctrine: Haec cloquentia quaedam est Doctrinae salutaris, movendo affectus discentium accommodata, saith Saint Augustine, Epist. 119. ad Januarium; Whence we may gather the true definition of Christian eloquence, It is that which most moveth our affections, and raiseth them up to Christ; this is the reason why the Apostles used this new kind of method in their writings, not for the want of knowledge, but for the abundance of love and charity, which was wholly enamored
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on Christ, and the beauties and excellencies of the Christian Religion, making them to proclaim to all the world these three things concerning that Religion which they taught after this new manner.
1. That Christian Religion is not opus naturae, proceeding from the principles of nature; for then they would have used the Method of nature, who first planted it; but opus gra∣tiae, The work of Grace, and therefore they used the Method of grace.
2. That Christian Religion must not be made opus artis, mat∣ter of mans invention or institution; for if it would not borrow so much as outward form or Method from the art of man, (there being no science in the world taught by such a Method as Divinity is, in the Scriptures) much less any inward matter or substance from it.
3. That Christian Religion must be taken in the whole, in credendis & agendis, in belief and practice both together: for therefore did the Apostles teach it by praying, to shew that we must learn it by practicing, prayer it self being the best practice of Christianity.
Thus it is necessary that Christ should be the Alpha and Ome∣ga, the first and the last in all our thoughts, words and works; for this is the end of all the Scripture, (and they who undervalue the Scripture, seem not to know this end, or not to regard it) as saith Saint John, But these are written that ye might believe, that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing ye might have life through his name, John 20. 31. as if he had said, God gave us the Scriptures, (especially the New Testament,) for this end, that we might glorifie Christ as the eternal Son of God and only Saviour of the world, and that by so doing, we might through him come to inherit eternal glory.
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NO particular Christian Church advanceth our communion with Christ, as such, but only as Christian, and there∣fore no particular Church can justly require another Church to communicate with it, any farther then as tis truly Christian or Catholick; for no further doth she her self keep communi∣on with Christ; And consequently where any Christian Church leaves Christ, there other Churches may, and must leave Her, that is, leave Her as to the communion in Her sin, whereby she leaves Christ, but not in Her righteousness where∣by she still reteineth him; for that were little less then in her to leave the communion of Christ; For this profession of Saint Paul, We are not as many which corrupt the word of God, but as of sincerity, but as of God, in the sight of God, speak we in Christ, 2 Cor. 2. 17. should be the profession of every Christi∣an Church, which desires to have other Churches joyn with her in her communion; we do not corrupt the word of God, and would not willingly pin corruptions upon it; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, non sumus mangones aut caupo∣nes Theologiae, we play not the prolers or hucksters with our Di∣vinity or with Gods word, putting new dresses or false colours upon the Text, or truth, to make our own erroneous Do∣ctrines the more passable, and the less discernable: or rather, we do not mingle Gods truth with our own errors, as false drawers mingle their wines; for so saith Hesychius, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, so that the word 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 here translated which corrupt, is a Metaphor taken from those Vint∣ners who corrupt and mingle their wines before they sell them: A word that speaks much in little, and may serve instead of a whole Sermon to the Preachers themselves: For if they preach phansie,
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they mingle water with this wine; if they preach faction, they mingle blood with it: Lord forgive us these horrid mix∣tures, and renew again amongst us thy miracle wrought in Cana of Galilee, and once more turn our water into wine, and suffer not us any more to turn that wine into blood: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Saint Chry∣sostome, To corrupt wine, is in effect to bastardize it; which consideration should terrifie any Church that hath wittingly corrupted the word of truth, seeing she hath thereby labou∣red as it were to bastardize the eternal Son of God: Non cau∣ponantur, quia meram veritatem praedicant de Filio Dei, nec ip∣sam quasi aqua falsitatis adulterant, saith Saint Cyril (of Alex∣andria) Thes. l. 12. cap. 3. They ••sc. that are true and good Church-men) do not corrupt the word, because they speak nothing but the truth, and do abhorr to adulterate Gods pure wine, with their impure, their puddle water: No Church can be two careful about the sincerity of its Doctrine, since the Apostle did not think he could be zealous enough about it; And therefore he again immediately enforceth this same duty to the same effect, though in other words; seeing we have re∣ceived this Ministry, as we have received mercy, we faint not; but have renounced the hidden things of dishonesty, not walking in crastiness, nor handling the word of God deceitfully, but by ma∣nifestation of the truth, commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God, 2 Cor. 4. 1, 2. His whole intent and purpose is to make them see his sincerity in preaching the Gospel of Christ, thereby obliging every Christian Church, (which is the grand Apostle of its own nation) openly to profess, and much more conscionably to dis∣charge the same sincerity, for which accordingly he alledg∣eth two reasons. First, the incomparable worth and value of the Doctrine, and therefore he saith this Ministry, by way of excellency; for that the Gospel was as far above the Law, (and much more above all other things) as liberty and salvation are above thraldom and condemnation; Secondly, the indispensible obligation of his trust, which God had laied upon him, and therefore he saith, as we have received mercy; he calls it a mercy, not a trust, the more to en∣deer it to his own soul and to ours, yet in that he saith he had re∣ceived
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it, he acknowledgeth the trust, & himself as one accounta∣ble according to his receipts: for as he had received it from God, so he was bound to deliver it to them without either alteration or addition, or diminution, according to his own former professi∣on, I delivered unto you that which I also received, 1 Cor. 15. 3. q. d. If I could not prove the receipt, I could not justifie the de∣livery: Having alledged these two reasons for his sincere preach∣ing of the Gospel, he afterwards shews what it was preserved him in this sincerity; and that was his magnanimity, his innocen∣cy, and his integrity: First, the undaunted courage of his heart, we faint not: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, non deficimus, we are not defective to our selves for want of perseverance, nor to our duty for want of constancy; For thus Aquinas finds out two virtues to strengthen a man in any good enterprize, or great under∣taking: the first is perseverance to encourage him against the difficulties that arise from the long continuance of the work; the second is constancy to encourage him against any outward impediments in working: Saint Paul professeth both in his 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, we faint not either for the remisness of our own spi∣rits, or for the intenseness of other mens oppositions: The word is used of both, that men ought alwayes to pray and not to faint, Luke 18. 1. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, not to faint because of inward weakness or imbecillity; agan, I desire that ye faint not at my tri∣bulations, Eph. 3. 13. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, not to faint because of outward difficulties or oppositions. Secondly the unspotted innocency of his life, we have renounced the hidden things of dishe∣nesty; He did so heartily detest any thing that was against religion and righteousness, that though he might do it never so secretly, yet he would not: as abhorring not only what was notorious and obvious to other mens consciences, but also what was injurious to his own. Thirdly the unfeigned integrity of his mind, not walking in craftiness, neither handling the word of God deceitfully; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, non ambulantes in astutia, not using so∣phistry where he should use simplicity; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 omne faciens, qui quidlibet ex quolibet facere potest, one that can make any thing of any thing, This 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 will never agree together; Tis ill iugling in temporal, but worse in spiritual matters. I may not use art in mis-rendring or mis-interpre∣ting
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the word of man, and much less the word of God; and therefore he saith, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, nor handling the word of God deceitfully: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 saith Saint Basil (in Psal. 14.) every better thing when it is mingled with a worse, is handled deceit∣fully; so is Gods word, when it is mingled with mans inventions or false glosses. But this is not that is all intimated in the Greek word 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 therefore saith the Vulgar Latine, adulterantes verbum Dei, adulterating the word of God. They who handle the word of God deceitfully are guilty of spiritual adultery: Be∣za goes yet farther, falsantes Sermonem Dei, falsifying the word of God; They who handle the word of God deceit∣fully, are guilty of diabolical fasifications: And is it pro∣per for the spouse of Christ to play the whore? for the Church of God to imitate the Devill? He was a lyar from the begin∣ning, let him only be the lyar unto the end: for is it just that any Church should alledge the word of God for her authority, which cares not to alledge it, for her sincerity? it is without doubt the Churches part first to make good her sincerity, by re∣nouncing the hidden things of dishonesty, and not walking in crafti∣ness, nor handling the word of God deceitfully, but by manifestation of the truth commending her self to every mans conscience in the sight of God; And then after that, to stand upon her authority, unless she will profess to be more selfish then Christian, to be more zealous for her own then for Christs interest; and to be more desirous of making proselytes unto her self, then unto her Saviour: For tis only the manifestation of Gods▪ truth can commend a Church to mens consciences, though the manifesta∣tion of pompe and prosperity may too much commend it to their opinions. And what is the Churches glory, but to com∣mend her self to mens consciences, that men may commend their own Consciences to God?
For do I now perswade men or God? or do I seek to please men? for if I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ, Gal. 1. 10. If a Christian Church shall not be servant of Christ, who else will care to do him service? and she cannot be Christs ser∣vant by seeking to please men, in condescending to their humors, but God, in cleaving stedfastly to his truth. If she do this, she will keep her sincerity, which is her chiefest glory: and if she
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keep her sincerity, she cannot lose her authority; For a Church that with Saint Paul, by the manifestation of the truth, com∣mendeth her self to every mans conscience in the sight of God, may say with the same Saint Paul, If our Gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost; In whom the God of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, least the light of the glo∣rious Gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them, 2 Cor 4. 3, 4.
In such a case there is no want of Authority in the Church; but want of conscience in the men she hath to deal withal; For she commends her self to their consciences which is an act of the highest authority; But they have no conscience left to regard her doctrine in the manifestation of Gods truth, and that makes them not regard her authority, though speaking in Gods name: And the reason is, because they will not be gover∣ned by the God of the world above, but by the God of this world below, whereby they come to lose themselves, and the internal light of reason, and the external light of Religi∣on; For he calleth them lost, blind, and unbelievers, and con∣cludeth them lost because they willfully continue in their blind∣ness, and in their unbelief: He complains not that he had lost his authority; for the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ was able to dispell all mists of errour, and to reprove and repro••ch all works of darkness; But he complaines that they had lost their consciences, and were so blinded with their own interests that they would not see this light, though it shined most gloriously unto them: So is it with each true Christian Church, she can never lose her Authority, whiles she preserves her sincerity; well she may lsoe her actual jurisdiction, because men may lose their consciences which should make them obey; but she can∣not lose her habitual jurisdiction, because she hath not lost Gods truth which claimeth their obedience: Thus we find the Church complaining in the Prophet Micah, 1. Of her small number, that she was as the grape-gleanings of the vintage. 2. Of the general corruption, that the good man was perished out of the earth, and those who were left in it did evil with both hands earnestly. 3. Of unsufferable inhumanity▪ the best of them is as a bri∣ar, the most upright is sharper then a thorn-hedge; and 4. Of a most abominable Schism and faction, that the Son dishonoured his Fa∣ther,
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the daughter did rise up against her mother, and that a mans enemies were those of his own house; yet even in that complaint she comforteth her self in God, and triumpheth over her ene∣mies: Therefore I will look unto the Lord; I will wait for the God of my salvation; my God will hear me; there's her comfort; and again, Rejoyce not against me, O mine enemy: when I fall, I shal arise: when I set in darkness, the Lord shall be a light unto me: There's her triumph, Micah 7. 8. Neither could her tribulation deprive her of comfort; for that was no more then she had deserved, therefore she saith, I will bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him, untill he plead my cause, and execute Judgement for me; Nor could her captivity diminish her triumph; for that was no less then he had promised; therefore she saith, He will bring me forth to light, and I shall behold his righteousness: Then she that is mine enemy shall see it, and shame shall cover her which said unto me, Where is the Lord, thy God?
Tis evident the Prophet here complaineth in the person of his Church, as saith Theophylact, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, He takes upon him the person of Sion, And he speaks to sin as his enemy, saith Kimchi; to Babel, saith Jarchi, to Idumea, saith Theophylact; Sin, Babel, Edom, are all three the enemies of Sion; Sin throws her down, Babel and Edom keep her under: But God will raise her again in despite of them all; He will first subdue her iniquities, (v. 19.) and then he will subdue her enemies: Divinely the same Theophylact, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 I have indeed fallen down by reason of my sins & my im∣pieties, but by returning unto Christ, who is the Resurrection, I shall be raised again: And if he will raise his Israel, tis neither Babel nor Edom, neither a stranger nor a brother, neither a forein nor a domestick enemy shall be able to keep him down: And he will not only raise him, but also plead his cause and execute judge∣ment for him, against those that do depress him as saith the same Father, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: for although I have offended against my God, yet I have many iust complaints of their offences against me. So is it still with the Church of God; though she be most sincere in the profession of his truth, yet she may easily incurre the just indig∣•…•… of the Lord▪ because either her profession cometh short
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of Gods truth, or sure her practice cometh short of her profes∣sion; so that the purest Church upon earth may deservedly come under persecution, and being persecuted must contented∣ly say with the Prophet, I will bear the indignation of the Lord, because I have sinned against him: But yet she must not be dis∣maied at the indignation of men; for God will certainly plead her cause when he hath purged her corruptions, proved her pa∣tience, and procured her repentance; He will bring her forth to the light, whiles her enemies shall sit in darkness; and she shall behold his righteousness, though she be punished a while for her own unrighteousness; Nor is it a wonder to see that time come now, which Saint Peter said was come one thousand six hundred years ago, That Judgement must begin at the house of God, 1 Pet. 4. 17. It is Gods pleasure thus to train up his children under the rod; and tis my shame if the severity of his discipline make me repent that I am one of his family: though there is sorrow from the judgement, yet there is joy from the house of God; and I had rather be one of his domesticks, though full of sores, and empty of food, then be a stranger from his house, and be clothed with purple and fine linnen, and fare sumptuously every day; For I can∣not but admire that holy protestation, One day in thy courts is better then a thousand, Psal. 84. 10. It is better to live one day in thy courts and die to morrow, (saith Jarchi) then to live a thousand years in another place, Let this Jew teach me both to be a good Christian, and to be a good Protestant, that I may learn to prize Gods Courts above mens Palaces, and to prefer his service above mine own patrimony: for it is in truth better then my life, and disdains to be brought in competition with my livelyhood: And a more hhly resolution followeth this holy Protestation, when he saith, I had rather be a dore-keeper in the house of my God, then to dwell in the tents of wickedness; excellent∣ly the same Jarchi thus glosseth those words, I had rather be at Gods threshold 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 to be kept watching and waking, then dwell at my ease in the tents of Esau, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 to cleave to, or have communion with them: And indeed the Hebrew words intimate as much, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 I had rather sit at at the threshold: a great descent for a king to come from his throne to sit on a threshold; and yet thats not all; for the Septuagint (from the unquiet estate of those that sit on thre∣sholds
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because of their often being displaced by the goers out and commers in) have thus interpred the words, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, I had rather be tumbled and tossed up and down: Let us joyn both together, and this will be the full meaning of his resolution, I had rather dishonourably sit at the threshold, or unquietly be tumbled and tossed up and down from this to that place in the house of God, then to dwell at my ease, to have a quiet and peaceable, and if it were possible, an honourable habitation in the tents of ungodliness. Therefore though many Disciples go back and walk no more with Christ when they meet with thorns and briers in the way, yet all good Christians will be sure to say with Saint Peter, Lord to whom shall we go? thou hast the words of eternal life, John 6. 68. Others may teach us words more conducing to this life, but thou hast the words of eternal life; We came to thee not to learn how to live in this world, but how to live in the world to come; and therefore all the terrors and mischiefs of this world shall not drive us from thee: We have found thy words in thy house wherein we have lived, and dare not leave thy house, (though at this time the rain descend, and the floods come, and the winds blow and beat upon it,) for fear least we should also leave thy words: If it be not in the wit of man to prove that our Church hath forsaken Christs words, it should not be in the power of man to make us for∣sake our Church; For if there be no just exception against the premisses, tis impossible justly to except against the conclusion; And if there be no lawful objection against the object and act of worship, there can be no lawful objection against the exer∣cise of it.
Wherefore it would be happy for Christendome if all Chur∣ches would stand more upon their sincerity then upon the au∣thority of their communion; For authority without sinceri∣ty is but like will without understanding, power without judge∣ment, to engage men to sin; but sincerity without authority is not to be▪ imagined; for whatsoever appears to me in mat∣ters of Religion to be true, doth require my assent by the au∣thority of the first truth; and whatsoever appears to me to be good, doth require my love and obedience by the authority of the cheifest good; So that if I cannot but confess my
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Churches sincerity, woe will be unto me if I deny, much more if I withstand her authority; For if I cannot justly find fault with her Religion, I must be irreligious if I forsake her com∣munion: God have mercy upon those Christians, who on the one side are so zealous for their Church, as not to be scru∣pulous about their Religion; or who on the other side, are so scrupulous about their religion, as not to be zealous for their Church; the one sinning against the verity, the other against the unity of faith, and therefore neither but hath a spice of in∣fidelity in their sin; and since God hath made me a Christian, why should I make my selfan Infidel, either by superstition sinning against my God, or by faction sinning against his Church? I will therefore take the best care I can both about my Religion, and about my communion: though I will first take care of my Religion, and then of my communion.
EVery man is born an enemy to the true Christian commu∣nion, because his corrupt nature filleth him with vain fears to make him superstitious, and with outragious malice to make him factious: And the true Christian communion is equally opposed by superstition which corrupts the sincerity, and by faction which destroys the solemnity of Gods publick worship: Wherefore God hath given us a Law which taketh care not only for the Religion of his Church against superstiti∣on,
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but also for the Communion of his Church against faction; though it first take care for the Religion, and after that for the communion; For Religion knits and unites us immediate∣ly to God; But communion knits and unites us one to the other; Religion is the very knowledge and worship of God; communion is only the agreement in that knowledge and wor∣ship: Religion makes the Saints, communion only shews and declares them; Religion makes true worship, communion makes publick worship: Accordingly God first provided for the duty, then for the solemnity; first for the Religion, then for the communion: Thus in the three first precepts of the decalogue, he requires the true knowledge and worship of God, which constitute our Religion; and in the fourth, he requires the publick profession of that knowledge, and exercise of that wor∣ship, which constitute our communion: For the first command∣ment requires us to have right apprehensions and affections concerning God, by the internal acts of our souls in trusting, believing, loving him above all things: The second and third require us to testifie those our inward apprehensions and affecti∣ons concerning him, by our outward adoration or reverence, and by our outward confessing or glorifying his holy name: Then follows the fourth, requiring us to muster up our appre∣hensions and affections, adorations and glorifications altoge∣ther, in one publick entire and holy communion: So that the fourth Commandment is little other then a new ratification or establishment of the three first; all in one to be observed or performed solemnly and publickly: enjoyning us to do those holy duties on some set dayes openly and joyntly in one com∣munion, which were before enjoyned every day severally and privately in one Religion: And consequent the 4th Command∣ment is in effect an establishment of the Church, as the three first are an establishment of Religion; For the consecration of times, places, persons, maintenance and forms of worship, is here commanded, though time only be named, and all for this end, that God may be publickly glorified, (and our souls edified) in the communion of Saint.
Wherefore those that prophane the places, oppose the per∣sons, rob the maintenance, and reproach the forms consecra∣ted to the publick worship of God, are as great Sabbath-brea∣kers
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as those that prophane the time; nor is there in truth a greater enemy to the Sabbath then the Sabbatarian: as not a greater enemy to faith then the Solifidean; the one crying up the Sabbath in the day, but beating it down in the duty; advan∣cing the circumstance of time, but depressing and debasing not only other circumstances, but also the very substance of wor∣ship; The other making a noise of faith which fils the phansie with strong perswasions, but neglecting the work of faith which fils the soul with holy affections: What? do we think our Saviour Christ said in vain, Father, glorifie thy name? or that God himself answered in vain by a voyce from heaven, saying, I have both glorified it and will glorifie it again? John 12. 28. If not, let us acknowledge this to be the main end of our Christian Religion to glorifie the name of God, and then we shall be afraid to oppose any thing directly conducing to his praise and glory: For certainly, those words are never to grow out of date, This voice came not because of me, but for your sakes, John 12. 30. We know it was the whole work of Christ to glorifie God, and what else can we think is the work of the Christian Religion?
Let this then, (I mean the glory of God) be taken for the ballance of the Sanctuary, wherein to weigh all our Tenents and all our practices, and we shall never put a parsimonious, much less an envious gloss upon the fourth Commandment, as if it had taken care only for one circumstance of publick wor∣ship, but neglected all the rest; thats a parsimonious gloss; or as if it had provided for the circumstances alone, and not much more for the substance of Gods publick worship and service; thats an envious irreligious gloss; For in truth, as in the Creed every subsequent Article of faith presupposeth the belief of all before it, that it self may be rightly believed, the same truth being first in the order of nature, which is there put first in the order of Revelation; So also in the decalogue, especially in the first table, every subsequent commandment presupposeth the obedience of all before it, that it self may be rightly obey∣ed, the same duty being first in the order of nature which is there put first in the order of injunction: God in his very Me∣thod of revealing truths and enjoyning duties, shewing us that we cannot take any of either, but we must take all: And this is
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most evident in the present case; for the fourth Commandment pl••inly presupposeth all that is enjoyned in the three former commandments concerning holy duties, or the whole substance of Religion both internal and external; and then also farther addeth an obligation of consecrating time and other adjuncts for the publick exercise thereof, that God may be the more solemn∣ly glorified, and men the more truely edified whilst the duties of Religion are all practised together in a full communion of Saints, the Church Militant being obliged in this to imitate the Church Triumphant, that it invite men on earth to glorifie God with one accord, as the Angels do glorifie him in heaven.
And in this respect we may easily believe, and readily con∣fess the first Sabbath to have been both instituted and kept in Paradise; for the Church was there founded, and the Commu∣nion of Saints there first established: That is, the communion of holy men with the holy Angels and with themselves, joyn∣ing together to sing Halleluiahs to God their blessed Creator, which was indeed the principal end of their creation: And accordingly men were at first enabled to the discharge of this great duty, as well as the Angels, having the right and ac∣ceptable forms of praising God imprinted in their hearts; and when through transgression they had disabled themselves, it pleased God of his infinite goodness to grant them as it were a new impression, and to give them a second edition of those praises in his holy Scriptures, which before had been written in their own hearts, but were now very much slurred and defa∣ced, if not quite obliterated and blotted out. This great and un∣deserved mercy of God, those men either shamefully forget, or ineffectually remember, who cry up the Sabbath day, but beat down the Sabbath Duty, making little or no use of the writ∣ten Word of God in their publick worship, and making little or no account of those forms of pra••er and praise which are either contained therein, or agreeable thereto; but setting up their own private gifts against that publick communion, which should be in Gods house and service by virtue of this fourth Commandment; discountenancing the exercise of Re∣ligion, in known forms of heavenly prayers able to establish the heart; and encouraging new-fangled devices which are
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only fit to busie and tickle the phansie.
By which ungodly practice, (for so it must be called, though it pretend to the greatest measure of godliness,) they in effect throw the fourth Commandment out of the Church, whilst they pretend to set it up over the Altar, since not sit∣ting still or keeping an outward rest, but comming together that we may all labour inwardly in Hallowing the name of our Father which is in heaven, is the cheif moral duty of the Sab∣bath; For as in the promise of the fifth, so in the precept of the fourth Commandment, the Lawgivers expression contai∣neth the least part of his intention, and we may no more confine this precept in the duty, then we may that promise in the reward; Therefore as we would be loth to look no far∣ther then the Land of Canaan for our inheritance, so we should be wary how we assert that God looks no farther then the Sabbath day for our obedience: Truth is, it pleased God to train up the Jews in his fear by types and figures, and as it were to wrap up heaven in earth, spirituals in temporals, mo∣rals in ceremonials, substances in circumstances, to them as well in his precepts as in his promises; particularly in that precept which concerned his publick worship because that amongst the Jews was for the most part Ceremonial and figu∣rative. Wherefore if we desire rightly and fully to un∣derstand the fourth Commandment, we must conceive it in so great a latitude as to comprize all those Commissions, injuncti∣ons, invitations, and exhortations which we find in the Old and New Testament, given either to Kings, or Ministers, or Peo∣ple, concerning the ordering, establishing, reforming, practicing, professing or promoting the solemn publick worship of Almigh∣ty God, which is in truth the principal end thereof, unless we will say that all those moral duties are reducible to none of the ten commandments in the decalogue, and consequently that all they were will-worshippers who either professed, or promoted or practised them; For as such duties of Religion are to be done publickly and solemnly by many together in one communion, they are not reducible to any of the three first commandments which speak to single persons, but only to the fourth which alone speaketh to whole families, (or to ma∣ny persons joyned together in one community.) And there∣fore
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it is not amiss to say that Hallowed be thy name is that Peti∣tion which most directly prayes for Grace to perform the duty of the fourth Commandment, since all other things are hal∣lowed for his names sake; God sanctifying times, places, per∣sons and forms of prayers and praise, unto us, that he may san∣ctifie us unto himself: nor is it amiss to say, that the holy Catholick Church, the Communion of Saints, is that Article of faith which most directly professeth to believe the truth of the fourth Commandment; for it is only the Catholick Church, the Communion of Saints, which doth rightly hallow and praise Gods holy name: The Hallowing of Gods most holy name belonging equally to the decalogue, and to the Creed, and to the Lords most holy prayer; belonging to the decalogue, as it is a duty to be performed; belonging to the Creed, as it is a truth to be believed; and belonging to the Lords Prayer, as it is a good to be desired, as we are all bound to pray that we may perform this duty, and believe this truth.
For Faith, Hope and Charity are not to be separated from one another; but do alike belong to supernatural Truths, and to religious or moral duties, because both truths and duties do equally call for our faith to know and believe them, and for our hope to crave and desire them, and for our Charity to love and embrace them: But if we take the outward sanctification of a day for the principal morality of the Sabbath, we shall scarce find a Petition in the Lords most holy and most perfect prayer, relating to such a Duty, nor an Article in the Apostles Creed, relating to such a Truth: and so we shall phansie to our selves such a morality as is without a good to be desired, and without a truth to be believed; for without doubt, The Lords Prayer briefly containeth all the good we are bound to desire, and the Apostles Creed briefly containeth all the Truths we are bound to believe, as well as the Decalogue briefly containeth all the Duties we are bound to practise and perform. Whereas on the other side, if we look upon hallowing the name of God in our publick wor∣ship, as upon the principal moral duty that is enjoyned in the fourth Commandment, we shall find the Decalogue, and the Creed, and the Lords prayer, all joyntly agreeing together in this, the one commanding it to be done, the other believing it
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is done perfectly in heaven, the third praying it may be done perfectly on earth.
And in this sense it is evident, that keeping of the Sabbath is a moral duty, not to end with time, but to last to all eternity, as becometh Righteousness, which is immortal, not temporary; and that so intrinsecally and essentially, that if it be not Im∣mortal, it cannot be righteousness: Thus did Adam and Seth with his righteous posterity keep the Sabbath (long before the Law was given by Moses to appoint the day) as we read Gen. 4. 26. Then began men to call upon the name of the Lord; which words clearly set forth the first exercise of publick wor∣ship in the first communion of Saints upon the earth; so Junius upon the place, Sensus est, Adam & Seth in cujus posteris man∣sura erat Ecclesia, &c. The meaning is, that Adam and Seth, in whose posterities the Church was to be continued, observing that their families were in danger of being corrupted by the un∣godly conversation of the wicked Cainites, and consequently that the worship of God, whereof they were the Ministers (and therefore the Trustees) was like speedily to decay, did from that time assemble their children together into one con∣gregation, or into one body of a Church, and by their preach∣ing, and their praying, and their exercises of piety and Religi∣on, did labour to convert the wicked, and to confirm the righteous, from which their religious observations they did purchase to themselves the title or appellation of the Sons of God; Nam prius quidem invocavit Adam, sed in familia; tunc verò invocarunt multi, sed in ecclesiam, velut in caulam, recepti, à mundi peccantis & seducentis consortio; For Adam had indeed before that, called upon the name of the Lord, in his own family; But at that time many families called upon God together, being gathered into the Church as into a fold, and sepa∣rating themselves from the sinners and seducers of the world; Thus in effect, saith Junius: And we cannot but say, that this was a moral duty suggested to them by the Law written in their hearts, which teacheth men to enter into a society or communion to serve themselves, and much more to serve their God; Drusius goes yet further, saying thus, Eo tempore ri∣tus certos colendi Deum institutos fuisse, quos observarent filii
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Dei; At that time were instituted some certain rites and cere∣monies of worshipping God, which the Sons of God were bound to observe. But Aquinas had said the same long be∣fore him; for after this objection, how could Enos first begin to call upon the Name of the Lord? for that were to say that the Church began not till his time; he gives this answer, Non in∣cepit divinum cultum, sed invenit aliquem modum singularem colendi velorandi Deum, He did not first begin to worship God, but found out a new way of solemnly worshipping him, which new way Junius tells us, was of assembling many fami∣lies together, whereas before, for want of Communicants, Adam had served God only in his own family: But now that the Church was further enlarged and spread in several families, it was necessary that all those families should assem∣ble together to do their homage to their leige Lord and maker.
And the Chaldee Paraphrase did before him give the same exposition of that Text; for though the words▪ of that Para∣phrase be different in Buxtorfs and Montanus his Hebrew Bi∣bles, which is very usual, whilst the Hebrew Text in both is alwayes the same, the Church not thinking her self bound to the same care in keeping of Translations as of the Originals; yet the sense is not different, but one and the same of either Pa∣raphrase, and that is this, then began men to pray in the name of the Lord, that is, then they began to pray altogether in one congregation, whereas before they had prayed only in several fa∣milies.
So then, this is the true keeping of the Sabbath, to Hallow Gods most holy name for its own sake, and to hallow the things conducting or belonging thereto, for his names sake, accor∣ding to that command, Be ye holy, for I am holy, which though found four several times in Leviticus, (Lev. 11. 44. 11. 45. & Lev. 19. 2. & Lev. 20. 7.) yet is not a precept of the Levitical, but of the Moral Law, as Saint Peter plainly shews us, alledging these very words as an invincible demonstration, that it is our bounden duty to be holy in all manner of conversation, be∣cause it is written, Be ye holy, for I am holy; 1 Pet. 1. 15, 16. Where this is the force of the argumentation; such as I am, such must all they be who will have relation to me, or communion
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with me; but I am holy; therefore must they be holy: And this argumentation, though it most properly belong to persons, yet may it not be confined only to them, but is also to be extended to things and Actions; Person••, Res, Actiones, Persons, Things, and Actions must be all holy, or they must not come into the beauty of holiness; And if they be all ho∣ly, they must come in thither, and may not be kept or cast out thence; ungodly profaning of dayes and Churches, unwor∣thy reviling or robbing of Ministers, consecrated to the ser∣vice of Almighty God, unjust excommunicating of Orthodox Christians, undeserved ejecting of Catholick rites, of unblame∣able Liturgies, are all sins against this fourth Commandment, and so many breaches or violations of the Sabbath; all of these directly opposing that communion of Saints which ought to be in the publick worship of God, or the exercise of Religion; and all of them grievously sinning against that command which came to Saint Peter in a voice from heaven, before it came to us in the written word, What God hath cleansed or purified, that call not thou common or unclean, Act. 10. 15. We ge∣nerally do look upon the profanation of consecrated time as the breach of the Sabbath; and we do well, for so it is; But we look not far enough; for profanation is of as large an ex∣tent as consecration; and we are to know that persons and Things, and Actions, are all alike consecrated to Gods pub∣lick worship, by virtue of the fourth Commandment. Thus saith the Psalmist, Give thanks O Israel to God the Lord in the congregation, Psalm 68. 26. Which are the words, (saith Sol. Jar∣chi) that Miriam and the Damosels with her, playing on the timbrels, (mentioned in the verse before) had said in their song of praises to God at the drowning of the Egyptians, so that in the judgement of this great Doctor, blessing God in the congregations, was a duty that belonged to Israel by the Law of nature, (for the Law of Moses was not then given, when Miriam was supposed to say so) Though it was also included in the positive Law concerning the Sabbath, which we find set down in Genesis, as if it had been given immediately after the Creation; but are sure it was written with the finger of God, among the rest of the Moral Law; which is a strong proof that the substance of it was written in mans heart, before it was
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writ in Moses his Tables; And what can be the substance of it, but this, that God ought to be publickly worshipped in the congregations, and therefore all those things are made, and are to be reputed holy, which necessarily belong to his publick worship: For sure that was no will-worship in the Jews which we find recorded for our example, Nehem. 8. And all the people gathered themselves together as one man; I ask by what Commandment, if not by the fourth? so it is apparent that com∣munion in Gods worship is a duty of the fourth Command∣ment; And Saint Peter will have this communion, extend it self to the whole body of Christians wheresoever dispersed, (for he writes to the strangers scattered abroad in several Countries) when he saith, But ye are a chosen generation, a royal Priest∣hood, an holy Nation, a peculiar people, that ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darkness in∣to his marvelous light, 1 Pet. 2. 9. Be good Christians never so far asunder in time and place, yet they are all joyned to∣gether in one chosen generation, in one royal Priest-hood, in one holy Nation, in one peculiar people, and the reason why they are so joyned together, is, to shew forth the praises of him who hath called them out of darkness into his marvelous light; And this (as far as may be) they must all do together as one man, no less then did the Jews, according to that of Saint Paul, Now I beseech you brethren by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, (as you desire to be thought and called Christians) that ye all speak the same thing and that there be no schisms or divisions among you, but that ye be perfectly joyned together in the same mind, and in the same judgement, 1 Cor. 1 10. as if he had said, I beseech you altogether to make but one man amongst you all, in the business of Religion, but one outward man, whilst you all speak the same thing, and there be no schisms or divisions among you, (which is best done by having a set and known form of prayer) and but one inward man, whilst you are perfectly joyned together in the same mind and in the same judgement; he••e is not only a most powerful exhortation, but also, as it were, a most powerful exorcism, By the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, to cast out from us all, the evil spirit of schism; Now I be∣seech you brethren by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ; nor can the Church of Christ now use a more powerful exorcism
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against Schismaticks then that which was once used by the va∣gabond Jews, (such as Schismaticks now strive to make their Ministers, and the more to make them vagabonds, because they cannot make them Jews) saying, We adjure you by Jesus whom Paul preacheth, Acts 19. 13. For there cannot be a stronger adjuration to unity and concord, then the name of Jesus, who joyned God and man together, and therefore will not suffer man and man to be asunder; nor can we more pow∣erfully adjure by that Jesus then as Paul preached him, or in the words of Saint Paul, that they would all speak the same thing; all have one confession of faith, all have one form of prayer and praise, who are of one and the same communion, and not be like that confused assembly of the Ephesians, wherein some cryed one thing, and some another, and the more part knew not wherefore they were come together, Acts 19. 32. Thats for their external union and communion. And again, that they would all be perfectly joyned together in the same mind, and in the same judgement; In the same mind by unity of love, in the same judgement by unity of faith; in the same mind in regard of their affections; in the same judgement in regard of their opi∣nions; thats for their internal union and communion; To speak the same thing is the ready way to be of the same mind, and the same judgement; and consequently to break off external communion in worship, is to break off inter∣nal communion in faith and charity; for worship is the pro∣fession of faith, and the exercise of charity: Here Saint Paul preacheth communion in Christ, so as to have it begin in the mouth, and to end in the mind, they should first speak the same thing, and after that be of the same mind and of the same judge∣ment; But in his Epistle to the Romans; he will have this communion in Christ begin in the mind, and end in the mouth, Rom. 15. 5, 6. Now the God of patience and consolati∣on grant you to be like-minded one towards another according to Christ Jesus, That ye may with one mind and one mouth glorifie God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ: He first prays that they may have one mind in Doctrine, and then that they may have one mouth in prayer; They both so much conduce to each other, that tis indifferent to him which he names first, whether the mind or the mouth; for Hierusalem
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is a City that is at unity in it self, as well in Mouth as in mind; and if Babel, if Confusion once get into the Tongue, it will from thence easily get into the Heart.
And now tell me ye that are possessed with the evil spirit of Schism, is not this word of adjuration, being by the holy Apo∣stle made the word of God, quick and powerfull, and sharper then any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit in you, whiles you procèed to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit in Christs Church? we adjure you by Jesus whom Paul preacheth thus plainly, thus powerfully, that you will endeavour to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace, not violating that internal Communion which ought to be among Christians in the unity of the Spirit, nor that exter∣nal communion which ought to be among them in the bond of peace; Nay more, we adjure by Jesus by whom Paul adju∣reth you, when he saith, I beseech you brethren by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Oecùmenius; I commanding or ex∣horting in mine own name perchance am not sufficent to per∣swade you, therefore I command and exhort you in the name of Christ, that is to say, Christ himself who is injured by you, doth by me command and exhort you to unity and concord in his worship: The words in themselves are no more then a pa∣thetical exhortation, but in regard of the evil spirits of some men, they may be taken for an Adjuration: Saint Paul, as it were leaving the Apostle and taking the Exorcist to allay the furious outrages and distempers of those who make it their work not only to rend Christs coat, (which yet the Roman Souldiers would not do) but also his body; raising factions and schisms in the Church, not only against the decency and or∣der which are as it were the coat or cloathing, but also against the very substance of worship, which is in some sort the body of Christ. So then the Church may still in this regard claim and continue the power of Exorcism, saying with Saint Paul, I exhort or command you by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, or we adjure you by Jesus whom Paul preacheth.
And if the evil spirit of Schism being thus adjured, shall an∣swer, Jesus I know, and Paul I know, but who are y••? making
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no more account of the Ministers of Christ then if they were in∣deed so many vagabond Jews, it will shew it self not only a factious, but also a lying spirit, saying It knows Christ, when it doth not know him: They profess that they know God; but in works they deny him, being abominable and disobedient, and unto every good work, reprobate; Tit. 1. 16. Such a lying spirit deserves not to be confuted by the spirit of Truth, which saith Let a man so account of us as of the Ministers of Christ, and stewards of the mysteries of God, 1 Cor. 4. 5. (shewing that the societies or corporations of Christians may no more take their spiritual food together, without their ministers, then other Cor∣porations do usually take their corporal food without their Stewards:) I say, such a lying spirit as this, (which pretends to know both Jesus and Paul, but indeed knows neither,) deserves not to be confuted by the spirit of Truth, but by the spirit errour; and indeed hath found such a confutation; For Satan in this foul affront of Christ, is devided against himself; and one of his own most false and wicked spirits could not but say of Gods Stewards or Ministers, These men are the Servants of the most high God, which shew unto us the way of salvation, Acts 16. 17. This truth when some men did gainsay, after the father of lyes himself durst not deny, could not dissemble it, they gave occasion to Luther of falling into these bitter expressions, As hitherto men have seemed possessed with Devils; even so now the Devils themselves do seem to be possessed of far worse Devils, and so rage above the fury of Devils; and again, For who ever heard (to pass over the abominations of the Pope) so many monsters to burst out at once in the world as we see at this day in the Ana∣baptists alone, in whom Satan breatheth out as it were the last blast of his kingdom through horrible uproars, as if he would by them suddenly not only destroy the whole world with Seditions, but also by innumerable Sects swallow up and devour Christ wholly with his Church; (Prefat. in Gal.) So Luther in his zeal to Christ and his Church; for he saw the one could not be devoured with∣out the other; he saw the Church could be thrown down, but Christ would also be involved in the downfall.
Without doubt it is a most horrid sin for men to cry up the shadow, that they may beat down the substance of the Law; and yet this is the sin of many men who cry up the Sabbath in
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the Day, that they may throw it down in the Duty, making it their business to discountenance the solemn exercise of Reli∣gion in common Prayer, to disadvantage Gods publike worship and service, to disgrace his Ministers, to defile his ordinances, to revile, and contemn, and pollute his Sanctuaries; whereas in truth, these are all alike sanctified to the hallowing of Gods name by vertue of the fourth Commandment; and if we will needs make a separation betwixt the letter and the end or reason of that commandment, where God hath made a most strict con∣junction, we must give the pre-eminence and superiority, not to the circumstances, or adjuncts, but to the substance of Religion; The Jew in his typical worship, was first to look af∣ter the Time, the Place, the Person, as the Sabbath, the Temple, the Priest, which were the adjuncts of his worship, and then, to offer his sacrifice, which was the substance of it.
But the Christian in his moral worship, is first to look after substance, then after circumstances, though he hath commission to neglect neither, but rather hath express command to look after both; Nay indeed the Jew himself was to do this in his moral worship, even to prefer the Substance before the circumstance; for we find that Ezra did read in the book of the Law, and blessed the Lord the great God, and all the peo∣ple answered Amen, Amen, with lifting up their hands, and they bowed their heads and worshipped the Lord with their faces to the ground; Ezra 8. 5, 6. All these were acts of mo∣ral worship, and accordingly we find them not confined to the Temple, for its evident They were all performed before the Street that was before the water-gate, verse 3. And it is as evident that the duties of Preaching and Praying were ex∣ercised by the Jews in their Synagogues, whereas their sacrifices were offered only in the Temple; The reason we may conceive was this, Because their Typical worship was to continue but for a time, and to shew it deserved not to continue for ever; there was in it this kind of absurdi∣ty, that the accessory did draw the Principal, the Temple the Sacrifice, the Circumstance the Substance: But their moral wor∣ship was to continue for ever, and therefore in that the Princi∣pall was to draw the accessories, the substance the circumstances, blessing the Lord the great God, bowing the head and worship∣ping
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the Lord, reading the Law and giving the sense of it that the People might understand the reading, these being all duties of moral worship, were unconfinable either to place or time, either to the Temple or Sabbath, to shew they were above them both, and were to remain after them, as they had been before them.
This was the main subject of Saint Stephens Sermon, Acts 7. That Abraham and the Fathers worshipped God rightly, long before Moses was born to give them any Laws either about the Tabernacle or the Temple, (and consequently about the Sab∣bath) and that all those outward ceremonies which were after∣wards ordained by Moses, were to last but for a time, but till the coming of Christ. And the Jews themselves who call the Sabbath the foundation of the Decalogue, because the precept of the sabbath was given before the rest, (for that was certain∣ly given in the wilderness of Zin, Exod. 16. where as the rest were not given till they came to Mount Sinai, Exod. 20.) yet do ingenuously confess that Abraham did not keep the Sabbath; so saith Hospinian, (who yet was very zealous for the Sabbath) Judaei ipsi in minori expositione in Genesin, arbitrantur Abrahamum non observasse Sabba∣tum, The Jews themselves in the lesser exposition upon Genesis, do think that Abraham did not keep the Sabbath. Nay the Fathers do plainly say they know he did not. For Tertullian proves, against the Jews, that the Sabbath was tem∣porary, and to be abrogated, because their Antientest and first fathers, Adam, Enoch, Noah, and Abraham did not keep the Sabbath; And lest we should mince the matter by a distincti∣on, and say that he denied not Abraham to have kept the Sab∣bath, but only to have kept it so rigidly and severely as the Jews did, (which is Hospinians opinion) Justine Martyr makes it his business in a great part of his Dialogue with Try∣pho the Jew (wherein he excellently asserts the Truth of the Christian Religion) To prove that neither circumcision was be∣fore Abraham, nor the Sabbath before Moses; and so refutes Trypho's objection, That the Christians did slight the com∣mandments of God in the Old Testament concerning the Sab∣bath and Circumcision, and other outward observations.
〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉
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〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: If before Abraham there was no need of circumcision, nor be∣fore Moses of the Sabbath and Festivals and Oblations, neither now is there any need of them: Nor is it easie for any man to answer the force of this argument which he useth (amongst ma∣ny others,) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. To say that any of these outward ordinances is righteous in and for it self, were in effect to calumniate God, as if he had not at all times taught one and the same Righteousness; which must follow, if there be granted any intrinsecal or inherent holiness either in the Jewish or in the Christian Sabbath, since we cannot prove that the one was established before Moses, and we are sure the other was not established till after Christ; So that by confe∣quent, there was one moral Righteousness before the Law; another under the Law; a third under the Gospel; and we whose salvation it is to sit in Abrahams bosome, shall be saved by a righteousness unknown to Abraham; which cannot be allowed without setting up two several distinct communions of Saints, and two several distinct Religions that made them so; and how can we acknowledge two Religions, and acknowledge but one God? We must there∣fore put a distinction between circumstances and substances in Religion; for though both are to go hand in hand to do their homage to Almighty God, yet substances are to have the upper hand; And this appears plainly by our Saviours own determi∣nation in the like case, even concerning Tithes; for Tithes and the Sabbath are alike moral; if what is numeral be moral in the one, how can it be less then moral in the other? Nay Abraham paying Tythes before Moses, is undisputable, not so his keeping the Sabbath; whence it appears God took care for the Priest before the Sabbath; for the person, before the day of his worship. I say this appears plainly by our Saviours own determination concerning Tythes, Mat. 23. 23. which he will not have put in the ballance against Mercy and Judgement, calling in effect these and the like ceremonial institutions, the lighter, whiles he plainly calleth those moral duties, the weightier matters of the Law; And denouncing a woe against those as Hypocrites, who magnified the one, that they might vilifie the other, Woe unto you
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Scribes and Pharisees, Hypocrites, For ye pay tithe of mint, and annise, and cummin, and have omitted the weightier, matters of the Law, Judgement, Mercy and Faith; This woe was denounced against them, not for what they payed, but for what they omit∣ted; not for paying Tythe of mint, and annise, and cummin, but for omitting Judgement, mercy and faith, whiles they were over zealous and over scrupulous about those payments: for so it follows, These ought ye to have done, (that is the moral duties) and not to leave the other undone, (that is, the ceremonial institu∣tions.) To prefer circumstances above substances, and conse∣quently, to be more zealous and scrupulous about the day or other adjuncts then about the duty of publike worship, is to incur this woe; and it is too too plain, that since tything of mint, and annise, and cummin have been much in fashion in regard of God (for in regard of his poor Ministers Tythes were never less in fashion) Mercy, and Judgement, and Faith have been quite out of request; Since we have been so scrupulous about the Rue and all manner of herbs, we have quite passed over judgement and the love of God, (Luke 11. 42.) since the Sabbath day hath been so much cryed up, the Sabbath Duty hath been quite beaten down: In the name of God let us set up both together, and know that 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Tempori Servientes, Applying our selves to the Time, is not good Divinity, if it exclude 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Do∣mino Servientes, Applying our selves to the Lord; Though Erasmus hath given us that interpretation on Rom. 12. 11. and our Church in the Epistle for the second Sunday after Epiphany hath followed him; and Vorstius would fain justifie 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 to be the truer lection, against the authority of the Text commonly received both in Greek and Latine Churches. This may seem a dangerous assertion in him, to make the letter of the Text come under our Disputes, which God hath set over our Obedience; But yet the other assertion would be more dangerous in us, to make the end and reason of the Text come under the letter of it; We all know this is the end of the Text, That God may be glorified in Christ, and we saved by him; Let us gloss the fourth commandment according to this end, and we shall neither be Hereticks nor Schismaticks by our gloss, neither sin against Religion by having a corrupt Li∣turgie,
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nor sin against communion by having no Liturgie; which are both peccancies against the end of this command∣ment; And (consequently) we shall neither Idolize, nor prophane, much less rob either Times, or Places, or Per∣sons consecrated to Gods publick worship, which are both peccancies against the letter of this Commandment.
Christ is the end of the Law, saith Saint Paul, Rom. 10. 4. shewing that the letter of the Law was to look to the end, and the end of the Law was to look to Christ; let us say so too, and we shall not easily sin against the principal end of this Com∣mandment, which is the glory of God in Christ; we shall not sin against the Christian Religion by having a corrupt Liturgie. Again, the same Saint Paul saith, the end of the command∣ment is charity, 1 Tim. 1. 5. not excluding what he had said before of Christ, but including it: Let us say so too, and we shall not easily sin against the subordinate end of this Com∣mandment, which is the salvation of man by Christ; we shall not sin against Christian communion, by having no Liturgie. For what Saint Paul hath said of the Law or Commandment in gene∣ral, that must we say of this Law, of this Commandment in parti∣cular, The end of it is Christ, and the end of it is charity: For the end of it is twofold; First, the exercise of the true Christian Religion, that God may be glorified in Christ for our redempti∣on: Secondly, the establishment of true Christian communi∣on, that man may be edified, and brought to the knowledge and enjoyment of his Redeemer. And all those Texts in the Old and New Testament, which concern the publick worship of God, are so many interpretations of the twofold end of this commandment; as for example, in the Old Testament, Psalm 95 (which was made to be used in publick assemblies, according to Aben Ezra's gloss) commandeth singing to the Lord, and worshipping of him, there's the exercise of Religion, q. d. Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day: and command∣eth us to sing and worship, there's the establishment of com∣munion, q. d. Thou, and thy son, and thy daughter, &c. and gives this reason of those commands, The Lord our maker; q. d. For in six dayes the Lord made heaven and earth: So again, Psalm 100. O be joyful in the Lord, serve the Lord with glad∣ness, and come before his presence with a song, there's the Reli∣gion: All ye lands, or, as it is in the Hebrew, all the earth,
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there's the communion: It is he that hath made us, and not we our selves, there's the reason of both, from our Creation; For the Lord is gracious, his mercy is everlasting, &c. there's that reason further enlarged to us Christians from our redemption; who are taught that God by his son both made the worlds, and also purged our sins, Heb. 1. 2, 3. So again in the New Testament, Mat. 18. 20. Where two or three are gathered together, there's the communion; In my name, there's the Religion; I am in the midst of them, there's the reason of both; so Heb. 10. 22, 23. Let us draw neer with a true heart, let us hold fast the profession of our faith, there's the exercise of Religion; for he is faith∣ful that promised, there's the reason of that exercise: And ver. 24, 25. Let us consider one another, not forsaking the assem∣bling of our selves together, there's the establishment of com∣munion; To provoke unto love and to good works, there's the reason of that establishment: If we be sure of Christs name, we cannot be too zealous of our gathering together; if we be sure of the Religion, we cannot be too zealous of the Com∣munion, but if we be not sure of the name, (which cannot well be, without a set and known Liturgie) every good Chri∣stian must be contented to say with Joshua, I and my house will serve the Lord, and mou••n that he cannot say with Da∣vid, I was glad when they said unto me, we will go into the house of the Lord: for it is more agreeable with the end of the fourth Commandment, that men have the right Religion in their own houses without a publick visible communion, then that they have a publick visible communion (in Gods house,) without the right Religion. They must first say, Let us hold fast the profession of our faith, and after that, Let us consider one another, not forsaking the assembling of our selves together; For if the Assemblies have forsaken the faith, it can be no sin to forsake the Assemblies, since the end of the Commandment is without doubt above the letter of it, the substance of wor∣ship above the adjunct of it, or to speak in one word, since Christian Religion doth challenge precedency before, and pre∣eminency above Christian communion.
So then without question the end of the Commandment is the first thing to be considered; for if the end be rightly un∣derstood, the letter will not easily be mistaken; for the let∣ter
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of the Law is subservient, to the end of it, and therefore may not have so scanty an interpretation as will not reach the end; And such is that interpretation of the fourth Commandment, which would have the letter mean no more then it mentions, (that is the bare circumstance of time,) and leaves men at li∣berty to do what they please with the other adjuncts of publick worship, (to wit, the persons by whom, and the places in which it is to be performed) and regards not the end or reason of the command at all.
This was the fault which our blessed Saviour did find with the Scribes and Pharisees interpretations of the Law, that they interpreted it not in its full extent or latitude; and this made him so often in one Chapter use these words, Ye have heard it hath been said of old, But I say unto you, &c. not opposing his authority against the authority of God, who gave the Law, but against the authority of the Scribes and Pharisees, who misinterpreted it: As for example, God had said thou shalt not kill, they intepreted this Law only of the act of murder; our Saviour interprets it also of the intent or occasion of it; of ha∣tred in the heart, and of calumny in the tongue: Again, God had said thou shalt not commit adultery, this the Scribes and Pharisees restrained to the act of fornication or adultery, but our Saviour tells us plainly that God meant otherwise, and forbad not only the act, but also the inclination thereto, lust∣ing, nay the occasion thereof, looking on a woman to lust after her, Mat. 5. 28.
The like interpretation have some of late given of the fourth Commandment, as if the day were all that God required, where∣as questionless he requireth also the other adjuncts of publick worship, as much as the day, and he requireth the worship it self much more: For publick worship must first be publick in its substance, then in its adjuncts; first, in its substance, by having such prayers as are of publick concernment to all good Christians, according to the pattern given us in the Mount, that is to say, in Gods most holy word, wherein we find the Spirit of God himself the first author of Liturgie or of com∣mon prayer; having taught us such prayers whose matter and form is common alike to all good men; and taught them, not only for our direction, but also for our use; as plainly appears
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by the Hebrew inscription on the ninty second Psalm, A Psalm for the Sabbath, because, saith Jarchi and Ezra both, they were to say that Psalm on the Sabbath; And Musculus saith the same after them, concinendus in Ecclesia die Sabbathi, this Psalm was to be sung in the assemblies on the Sabbath; Nay the Psalmist saith as much, being nothing else but an invitati∣on to praise the name of God for all his works, most especial∣ly for the wonderful dispensations of his power in pulling down his enemies, and of his mercy in relieving and upholding his servants: So again, Psalm 102. hath this inscription, A prayer for the afflicted when he is over-whelmed, and poureth out his complaint before the Lord, which plainly sheweth that the Psalms were made to be used not only as publick, but also as private devotions, and consequently that set forms do not con∣fine the Spirit of prayer, because the Holy Ghost commandeth the use of this Psalm to the afflicted, not for the hinderance, but for the furtherance of his devotion; not only as a prayer, but also as a prayer fit to pour out his complaint before the Lord: And tis clear our blessed Saviour hath said concerning his own most holy prayer, not only, after this manner therefore pray (Mat. 6. 9.) commending it for our direction, but also, when ye pray, say Our Father, (Luke 11. 2.) commanding it for our use; not only giving this prayer to his Church as a pattern for Liturgie, or publick worship, but also as a part of it; which is also true of the whole Book of God, since those words being a part of the Scripture, cannot be of any private interpretation, 2 Pet. 1. 20. So that God hath provided for himself a Lamb for a burnt offering, in giving his Scriptures to his Church; for in them are not only rules of worshipping, but also forms of worship; such rules as equally oblige all; such forms as equally concern all the Christians in the world.
Secondly, publick worship must also be publick in its ad∣juncts, not only in one adjunct of Time, (though that happily be more particularly named, because it is the most universal or common adjunct, wherein all the habitable world can at once communicate together) but also in the other adjuncts of place and person; God will have his publick places to be worship∣ped in, his publick persons to be worshipded by, as well as his publick day; and all those Texts in the Old and New Testa∣ment,
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which speak of places or persons deputed to Gods publick worship, do belong to the letter of this fourth Command∣ment, as well as those which speak of the day.
Thus hath God himself said, Ye shall keep my Sabbaths, and reverence my sanctuary, I am the Lord, Lev. 19. 30. Here is the same reason given for reverencing the Sanctuary, as for keeping the Sabbath, and not to do the one, as well as the other, is a contempt of God; And lest we should think this injunction did only concern the Tabernacle or the Temple of the Jews, the reverence is evidently communicated to more then one San∣ctuary, Lev. 21. 23. That he prophane not my Sanctuaries, for I the Lord do sanctifie them; God owns the sanctificati∣on of Place as well as of time for his worship, and forbids us to prophane the one as well as the other: Thus as we find ma∣ny complaints in the Prophets against those that prophaned the Day, so we find many in the Psalms, against those that pro∣phaned the place of Gods publick worship, as Psalm 74. 8. They have set fire upon thy holy places, and have defiled the dwel∣ling place of thy name, and ver. 9. They have burnt up all the houses of God in the land; and they that did this, are called Gods enemies, foolish people, and blasphemers, verse 19. Re∣member this, O Lord, how the enemy hath rebuked, and how the foolish people have blasphemed thy name. God owneth to have houses as well as days; and if our Saviours example may pre∣vail with us, we shall be as zealous for his Houses as for his Days: He would not suffer that any man should carry any vessel through the Temple, Mark 11. 16. (and yet he here ex∣cused his Disciples for plucking the ears of corn on the Sab∣bath day, Mark 2.) and he gives a reason for it that concerns Christians who are of all Nations, and not only Jews who were but of one Nation, for he saith, Is it not written, my house shall be called of all Nations the house of prayer? Which words plainly shew that all Nations are to set apart Houses of prayer, and that God hath an interest or propriety in those Houses, (so set apart) they are his houses; which caused Saint Paul to say to the Corinthians, What, have ye not houses to eat and to drink, or despise ye the Church of God? 1 Cor. 11. 22. Where is a plain contradistinction betwixt mens houses and Gods House, they may not do the same offices in both; Their cor∣poral
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food they must take in their own houses, their spiritual food only in Gods house; and they who do otherwise, are said to despise the Church of God, which is here put as a term convertible with the House of God, or is imporperly opposed to their own houses: And indeed the context requires this exposition, when ye come together in the Church, ver. 18. Is thus afterwards explained, when ye come together in one place, ver. 20. For it is evident that if the place of their meeting had not been first determined, and known, they could never have met together; and what is the determining of a place to holy meetings, but the exempting or separating it from prophane or common uses?
Therefore the Canon Law saith expresly, that all men know there was a consecration of places from the beginning, who know the precepts of the Old and New Testament; (de con∣secr. dist. 1. cap. 1.) and accordingly proves it was so among the Jews, and ought to be so among the Christians: Iudaei er∣go loca, in quibus sacrificabant Domino, Divinis habebant sup∣plicationibus consecrata, nec in aliis quam Deo dicatis locis mu∣nera Domino offerebant: si enim Iudaei, qui nmbrae legis deservie∣bant, haec faciebant, multo magis nos, &c. The Jews did con∣secrate those places by prayers and supplications, in which they offered their sacrifices: And if they who had only the shadow of the Law were so zealous and carefull about the pla∣ces of their worship, how much more ought we so to be who enjoy the substance of the Gospel, and the very Sun-shine of Grace? For sure our worship being more holy then theirs, cannot have less claim to the beauty of holiness: And the same was also the Judgement of the Greek Church, in the pu∣rest ages of it, as appears by Athanasius his Apology to the Emperour Constantius, making many excuses for himself, that he had held a religious Assembly in the great Church newly build∣ed by him, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, before it had been consecra∣ted: And the Council of Gangre saith expresly, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, we honour and highly esteem the Houses of God, not speaking of his spiritual, but of his material Temples (which this prophane age blasphemously nick-nameth steeple-houses) for so it follows, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, (Can. 21.) Honouring every place that is built to
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the name, or for the worship of God: But why should we insist upon the practice of the servants, when the master him∣self did no less, who honoured the Feast of the Dedication of the Temple with his own presence, John 10. 22. Thereby shewing it was not superstition but true Religion which first taught men to perform holy duties, not only on Holy-days, but also in holy Places.
And yet we have not quite explained the letter of this Com∣mandment, for it also requires holy persons, as well as times and places, for a holy worship: Nay we find Gods pub∣lick worship performed in a common or unholy place, Nehem. 8. 1. In the street before the water-gate, but not by a common or unholy person, for it was performed by Ezra the Scribe. And we find our blessed Saviour and his Disciples sometimes up∣on extraordinary occasions, preaching and praying publickly, neither in the Synagogues nor on the Sabbaths, that is, neither in consecrated places, nor on consecrated Days, to shew the work it self had a holiness incommensurable with, and there∣fore unconfinable to either; but still we find only them who were without doubt consecrated persons, publickly preaching and praying; we find no unholy or unconsecrated persons in all the Book of God either authorized or allowed to do this Work of God, which immediately concerneth his publick worship: But on the contrary it is said expresly, The Lord separated the tribe of Levi to bear the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord, to stand before the Lord, to Minister unto him, and to bless in his name unto this day, Deut. 10. 8, Those whom the Lord had not separated, durst not meddle with the Ark of his Covenant, nor stand before the Lord to Minister un∣to him, and to bless in his name: One Ʋzzah that was not of this separated tribe, was struck dead for taking hold of Gods Ark, though it were with a good intent, to sustain it when the Oxen shook it, 2 Sam. 6, 7. And we cannot say that this was not written for our learning, unless we will twice contradict Saint Paul, not only in the general Thesis, when he saith, Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples, and they are written for our admonition, 1 Cor. 10. 11. but also in this very particular hypothesis, when he saith, No man taketh this ho∣nour unto himself, but he that is called of God, as was Aaron;
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so also Christ glorified not himself to be made an High Priest, but he that said unto him, Thou art my Son, Heb. 5. 4, 5. In which words though he confine not the Priesthood to the tribe of Le∣vi, of which Aaron was, for he saith that Christ was an high Priest, who was of the tribe of Judah, yet he confines it to the calling of God, for he saith, Christ glorified not himself to be made an High Priest, but he that said unto him, thou art my Son. If Christ would not glorifie himself by taking the Priest∣hood, till he was called of God, then surely no Christian can do the office of a Priest without being called, but he must dis∣obey God, and dishonour Christ; and to countenance any man that doth so, must needs be both ungodly and unchri∣stian; much more to discountenance those whom God hath cal∣led, and who do not their own, but his work; Ministring in∣deed unto him, (exactly according as himself hath prescribed both in Worship, and Word, and Sacraments) and blessing in his name and by his authority: If we will needs expel these Mini∣sters, what do we else but expel our own Blessing? Sure we can∣not deny but our Saviour Christ hath given unto his Ministers the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven, (for the Keys which he pro∣mised only to Saint Peter, Mat. 16. 19. He gave to all his A∣postles, John 20. 23.) Nay also the Keys of the Kingdom of Hell, for so those whom he had sent out, return with joy, say∣ing, Lord, even the Devils are subject unto us through thy name, Luke 10. 17. And how then can we disturb those Ministers whom he hath sent, without grievously sinning against his au∣thority, and dangerously sinning against our own souls? For what is this in effect, but to shut up Heaven, and to open Hell, but to keep out God, and to let in Devils? Tell me if you can, why men are not now so frequently possessed with Devils, as they were before the coming of Christ, but only because Christ hath given his Church power over them; And if we will needs beat down his Church, why should not the Devils again recover their former power of possessing men?
This we have found true by sad experience, that since we have forsaken our Church which prayed God to beat down Sa∣tan under our feet, God hath let Satan get up even over our heads; Angelis malis duplex poenalis convenit locus; Infer∣nus pro ipsorum culpa in quem omnes post diem judicii detruden∣tur
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Aer autem ista caliginosus, usque ad diem Judicii, ad bonorum exercitium, ne totaliter; sc. ab utilitate naturalis ordinis exciderent, saith Aqu. par. 1. qu 64. art. 4. God hath allotted the De∣vils two places of torment; Hell, in regard of their own sin, and they shall be all thrown down thither at the day of Judge∣ment; And also the region of the Air. (till that day comes) for the exercise of good men, lest otherwise those evil Spirits should quite have fallen from the order of nature, and been out of all capacity of doing good.
God hath set the Devils over our Heads in respect of Place; But tis only our contempt of God can set the Devils over our heads in respect of power: And the contempt of Gods Mi∣nisters comes very neer the contempt of God, for so himself hath taught us, He that despiseth you, despiseth me, and he that de∣spiseth me, despiseth him that sent me Luk 10. 16.
What is it then? I will take heed of sinning against the let∣ter, but much more against the end of the fourth Command∣ment; I will take heed of sinning against the circumstances, but much more against the substance that is required in the ex∣ercise of Religion; I will glorifie God in the Sabbath Day, that is, in all the adjuncts or solemnity, but I will much more glorifie him in the Sabbath Duty, that is, in the substance (or form) of his publick worship.
I will first make sure of my Religion, then of my Communi∣on; first of my Liturgie, then of my Company; first of Essentials, then of Ceremonials: I know they are blessed that dwel in thy house, Psalm 84. 4. But withal that this is the reason of their blessing, They will be alwayes praising thee; Great is the blessing of Christian Communion whereby men dwell in Gods house, but greater is the blessing of Christian Religion, whereby men are alwayes praising God; I will not willingly sin against thy house, but above all I will not sin against thy praise; I will not cast them out of thine house, whom thou hast commanded to dwell in it, that they may be always praising thee, (Psalm 134. 2.) much less will I cast thee out of thine own house by disturbing thy praises
If others will not forsake their false Churches to come to the true worship of God, what shall I answer at the last day, if I forsake a true Church, to set up a false worship? If they so
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highly prize a Religion that is in part against thee, a Communi∣on that is in part without thee, for which they can produce only some few specious pretence; what will become of me if I re∣gard neither thy Religion, nor thy Communion, for which I have so many unquestionable arguments, or rather so many irresista∣ble Demonstrations?
I will then be very zealous for that Christian Communion, wherein I am sure I have the true Christian Religion, for I can∣not oppose such a Communion because of its authority, but I shall be guilty of faction; nor because of its excellency, but I shall be guilty of Blasphemy; nor because of its sincerity, but I shall be guilty of Irreligion; And I cannot be either Factious, or Blasphemous, or Irreligious (much less all three together) but I shall sin grievously against the glory of my God, scan∣dalously against the good of my neighbour, dangerously against the salvation of mine own soul.
In a word, since God (of his infinite goodness, which I could not deserve, may not abuse) hath made me an Israelite, I will not strive to make my self an Idumaean, a Babylonian, or an Ae∣gyptian; Saint Bernard finds all these three in one persecutor or opposer of that Church which professeth and practiceth the true Christian Religion, saying thus, Herodiana malitia, & Babylonica crudelitas est nascentem extinguere velle Religionem, & allidere parvulos Israel; Si quid enim ad salutem pertinens, si quid Religionis oritur, quicunque resistit, quicunque repug∣nat, planè cum Aegyptiis parvulos Israelitici germinis neca∣re conatur, imo cum Herode nascentem persequitur salvatorem; It is the malice of a Herod, (who was an Idumaean,) and no less then Babylonian cruelty to labour to suppress Religion, and to dash the children of Israel against the stones: For if in∣deed what is brought forth doth conduce to salvation, or be∣long to true piety, who ever resisteth or opposeth it, doth plainly endeavour with the Aegyptians to slay the young chil∣dren of Israel, nay with Herod he doth seek out his new born Saviour to destroy him; And he that doth this, forgets all the curses denounced against Edom in the Prophets for perse∣cuting his brother Jacob, particularly that of Obadiah, v. 10. For thy violence against thy brother Jacob, shame shall cover thee, and thou shalt be cut off for ever: A Text, the fittest that
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can be alledged in this case, because the Jews tell us that this Obadiah from being Ahabs Steward, was made a Pro∣phet of the Lord, for the kindness which he had shew∣ed to the Lords Prophets when they were persecuted by Jezebel; Hic igitur quia centum Prophetas paverat, ac∣cepit gratiam Prophetalem, & de duce exercitus fit dux Ecclesiae; Tunc in Samaria parvum gregem paverat, nunc in toto orbe, Christi pascit Ecclesias, saith Saint Hierom (prol. in Abdian. Proph.) This man because he fed an hundred Prophets, received the Grace of Prophecy, and from being a Captain under Ahab, was made a Captain under Christ; Then he fed but a small number in Sama∣ria, now he feedeth many millions in all the world; and I doubt not but God hath still reserved the same blessing for all those who have hitherto sustained his persecuted Pro∣phets, not to give them the Spirit of Prophecy (for he will not violate his own orders and institutions) but to give them the Spirit of Grace in this ungracious, the Spirit of perseverance in this backsliding age of ours; So that we may be truly say, The reason why they have not lost their faith (as well as others) is because they would not lose their Charity; whereas many that were of an other temper, as at first they lost their charity, so now at last they have lost their faith, and know not whither to go to seek it; but may truly say with Mary Magdalen, (and so much the more truly, by how much the less sorrowfully, for they would with her have more tears in their eyes, if they had grace in their hearts,) They have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid him, John 20. 13.
They who were among the head-men of Tekoa, Amos 1. 1. and taught to keep cattell from their youth, Zach. 13. 5. and so made themselves Prophets without the Lord; Nay they who were among Sauls messengers sent to take David, 1 Sam. 1. 20. and so made themselves Prophets against the Lord; They have taken away my Lord, my Saviour from me, and I know not where they have laid him. A very sad com∣plaint, which they now least make who have most reason, who from their Sedition and privy conspiracy have fallen into false doctrine and heresie, and from their hardness of heart to∣wards
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men, have fallen into contempt of Gods word and com∣mandments, from which we pray God to deliver them, and to keep us: For since his mercy hath made us Christians, we may not let our own Unthankfulness make us Antichristian; and such are all they who will needs be of a Religion fitter to serve themselves then to serve their God; It is Musculus his observation upon Ps. 52. Saul hic typum gerit ••ntichristi, qui habet in regno suo Sacer∣dotes & tabernaculum, & cultum Dei, verum haec omnia vult sui Juris esse, & sib ministrare; Vult Sacerdotes Domini, esse ini∣quitatis suae Ministres; Non indicastis mihi (inquit) quod David venerit ad vos; Saul was the very type of Antc••hrist, who had indeed Priests and Tabernacle, and the worship of God in his kingdom, but would have them all under his command, and would make them all serve his designs: He would have the Priests of the Lord become Ministers of his wickedness, and destroyed them, because they had not been so, Turn and slay the Priests of the Lord (saith he) because their hand also is with David, and because they knew when he fled, and did not shew it to me, 1 Sam. 22. 17.
This Sin of Antichrist, in striving to make Religion stoop to Interest, (that is in effect, to make God serve Mammon, to make Christ serve Belial,) being most directly against the end of the fourth Commandment, plainly shews that the end of that Commandment is chiefly to set up the honour of Christ, the eternal Son of God; All the Jews service did, all the Christians service should tend only to this end; Do this in remembrance of me, concerned their Sacrifices, no less then our Sacraments; Their Sabbaths no less then our Lords dayes; their weekly, on less then our weekly; their anniversary, no less then our anniver∣sary festivals; and all by vertue of the fourth commandment; Do this in remembrance of me, concerned the Jews in the ge∣neral reason of it, no less then it concerneth us Christians; only it concerned them in types and shadows, it concerneth us in bo∣dy and substance: So saith Saint Paul of their Sabbaths, which are a shaddow of things to come, but the body is of Christ, Col. 2. 17. They were to look after the shaddow, but we are to look after the Body, they were to look after the types, but we are to look after Christ; They were to be zealous for the Sabbath Day, but we are to be most zealous for the Sabbath
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Duty, which is to do all in remembrance of Christ; to mag∣nifie our Redeemer in the first place, and for his sake to magni∣fie the memorials of our Redemption; Thus hath holy Zachary taught us to sing, Blessed be the Lord God of Israel; and hath given this reason of that song, For he hath visited and redeemed his people, Luke 1. 68. That we may assure our selves it is not superstition but good Religion, (agreeable with the end of the fourth Commandment) which teacheth us to celebrate the me∣morials both of his Visitation, that he came to visit us in great humility, and of his redemption, that he hath redeemed us in great mercy, and will consummate that Redemption in greater glory; nor may we think that the letter of this Commandment was to restrain the end of it, or the Sabbath was to confine the publike worship of Christ, no more then we may think that God gave the Law to restrain the Gospel, or set up the practice of Judaism for a time, to confine the practice of Chri∣stianity for ever: we may not so put our necks under the yoke of Jewish bondage, in the Circumstances, and much less in the substance of our Religion: The proportion of time allotted the Jew for his publike worship, may admonish the Chri∣stian to give no less, must not regulate him to give no more to God: For Religion first brings men to God, then binds them to God; and that Religion which brings them neerest, binds them fastest; The Jews Religion brought and bound him to God as to the author of nature, and called for much praise; The Christians Religion brings and binds him to God as to the Author of Grace, and calleth for more praise; The Angels Religion brings and binds them to God as the author of glory, and calleth for all Praises.
The Christians Religion, though betwixt that of the Jews and that of the Angels, yet comes neerer to that of the Angels, and therefore may not look backwards to Nature, but must look forwards to glory: The Author of nature did bid the Jews first number dayes, saying, For in six dayes the Lord made heaven and earth, and rested the seventh day; wherefore the Lord blessed the se∣venth day and hallowed it; There the day called for the duty: But the Author of Grace hath bid the Christian first number Duties, teaching him to say, I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord,
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Rom. 7. 25. Here the Duty calleth for the Day; and bidding us think God will not let us be sti••ted to one day in seven for our thanksgivings: For though nature be under the measure and government of Time, yet Grace is only under the measure and government of Eternity; Wherefore any day that tells me of the Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God in him, shall tell me also of the Communion of the Holy Ghost, to give thanks to God the Son for his Grace, and to God the Father for his love; nor dare I so undervalue the duty of thank∣fullness which I owe to my blessed Saviour, for my redemption from sin and death, as to tarry till the next Sabbath before I say, I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord; And this I am sure, though men may deny me thus to keep the Sabbath on earth, yet God will not deny me thus to keep the Sabbath in Heaven; and the more they may hinder me thus to keep it in earth, the more should my soul be filled with desires and long¦ings to keep it so in Heaven.
AS the Communion of Saints is commanded in the fourth Commandment which requires all men to communi∣cate in those doctrines of faith and duties of life which God hath called them to profess, and practise in and by his Church; So the Religion of Saints is commanded in the three first Commandments which do teach the Doctrines and Duties
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of that communion; For as God hath not left his people to make their own communion, so neither hath he left his Church to make her own Religion; He first saith, Let all things be done, then let all things be done decently and in order, 1 Cor. 14. 40. He first provides the doctrines, then regulates the Prophets or the Preachers; first takes care for the order of Religion, then takes care for the order of Communion: He first taught his Church how to invocate and implore his mercy, how to reverence, and adore his Majesty, how to acknowledge his Au∣thority, and glorifie his holy name in worship, in word, in Sacraments, and after that how to order assemblies and publick meetings for these Invocations, for these adorations, for these acknowledgements or glorifications.
And hence it is that Christian Religion bids all men first look after Gods authority in his word, then after Gods autho∣rity in his Church; So that no Church can be obliged (by the obedience which she oweth to the Christian Faith) to commu∣nicate with that Church which absolutely refuseth to have the doctrines and duties of its communion regulated and orde∣red by the known and undoubted written word of God, be∣cause every man ought first to choose his Religion, whereby to have communion with Christ, then the Profession or exer∣cise of it, whereby to have communion with Christs Church: And by consequent, for any company of men to advance them∣selves against the word, is to incurre Saint Pauls censure, If any man teach otherwise, and consent not to wholesome words, even the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to the doctrine which is ac∣cording to Godliness, he is proud, knowing nothing, but d••ating about questions and strifes of words; And those men which have in∣curred Saint Pauls censure, cannot be acquitted from Saint Pauls sentence, From such withdraw thy self, 1 Tim. 6. 3, 4, 5. In such a case the breach of Christian communion is to be imputed to those who consent not to the words of Christ; for if they break off from Christ, it is no sin, can be no shame in others to break off from them; For the Apostle saith expresly, from such withdraw thy self: So that it is evident the breach of Christi∣an Communion may be causal in a false Religion, as well as for∣mal in an unjust separation; And all the world is not able to excuse the formal, unless it be from the causal breach, since
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no man can have a pretence to leave the Church, unless it be to cleave to Christ; to forsake the Christian commu∣nion, unless it be to follow the Christian Religion: Therefore where Religion is most sincerely kept, there communion is most sinfully and most shamefully broken. For if the Church hath in∣deed taught us the right Invocation and Adoration of God, and a right profession to glorifie his most holy name, according to the three first Commandments, How doth it not bind us to its communion in all these according to the fourth? If we cannot deny the purity, how dare we deny the publike exercise of our Religion? For surely he that will one day say Depart from me ye cursed, to those who have care∣lesly neglected their duty towards their neighbours, will never say, Come ye blessed, to us if we wilfully neglect our duty towards our God; but our peevishness now saying, unto him in effect Depart from us Thou blessed, will then most cer∣tainly be recompenced with his Justice saying unto us, Depart from me ye cursed; Our departure from him is now voluntary, it will then be necessary; it is now our sin, it will then be our pu∣nishment: For if we shall be condemned for our omissions to∣wards our brethren, much more shall we be condemned for our omissions, or rather for our contempts towards our Saviour; And those Jehu's which drive furiously, not to throw down the worship of Baal, but of the true everliving God, shall with∣out doubt answer at the last day not only for their furiousness, as guilty of Schism, but also for their contempt, as guilty of profaness; not only for their breaking the Christian communion, but also for their opposing the Christian Religion; they cannot set up the abomination of desolation▪ in the Holy place, and pull down holiness from thence, but themselves will be in Gods account abominable and desolate. So saith Juni∣us in his Parallel upon Saint Mat. 24, 15. Appellatur exer∣citus omnis infidelium ad subversionem desolationemque populi Dei comparatus, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, i. e. Abominatio desolationis; Abominatio quidem propter naturam & constitutio∣nem ipsius, quia totus ex hominibus abominandis & infidelibus conflatus est; Desolationis vero ab effectu; quia horridam desola∣lationem fuerat importaturus loco in quem irruerit. Christ cal∣leth those Roman Armies which were to lay waste Jerusalem,
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The Abomination of desolations; Abomination from their per∣sons, because they were abominable men; desolation from their work, because they were to make Hierusalem waste and desolate: If those men were the abomination of desolation who laid waste the City of God, what are they who lay waste the worship of God? Therefore saith the Spirit of God in Psalm 68. that such men are Gods enemies, and must expect to be scattered, and either speedily to vanish like smoak, after they have a lit∣tle troubled our eyes, or at least to melt like wax, that they may not stay so long as to harden our hearts: For he is the God that maketh men to be of one mind in an house, verse 6. and most loves they should be of one mind in his own House; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 say the 70. Inhabitare facit unius moris in domo, He makes those of the same fashion to be of the same family; He makes men to be of one disposition, and of one conversation, that they may be of one communion; And he accounts them but runnagates that are not so, But letteth the runnagates continue in scarceness: Nay the Hebrew calls them Rebels, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 but the rebellious: The Greek translati∣ons do render this one word four several ways, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 say the 70. Qui exasperant, they that are contentious, ready to exasperate and to provoke; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Symmachus, Incru∣duli, They that are incredulous and hard to believe; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, saith Aquila, Abscedentes, They that are exceptious or ready to depart from the known way; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 saith Theodotius, Declinantes, They are erroneous and actually declining into false wayes: (for so is that word used, Psalm 124. v. 5. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Declinantes autem ad tortuosas vias, such as turn aside unto their crooked ways:) All which sins are combined together in this one of wilful schism, which makes men Runnagates for their inconstancy, Rebels for their disobe∣dience, contentious for their bitterness, incredulous for their blindness, exceptious for their apostasie, and erroneous for their pertinacy. Such men are commonly Hot-headed, and Hard∣hearted in their sin; and they are accordingly tormented with Heat and Hardness in their punishment; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, habitabunt aestus siccitatem, saith Symmachus, They shall dwell among burning drought, that shews their punishment from heat; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, habitaverent rupem, saith Aqui∣la,
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they do dwel among rocks, that shews their punishment from Hardness: And what is the reason of all, but because they are enemies to God, in being enemies to the communion which he hath established? for so it is said, ver. 26 Give thanks O Israel unto God the Lord in the congregations; but they neither regard Israel, nor the God of Israel, nor the giving of thanks, nor the congregations. And therefore these words, Rise up Lord, and let thine enemies be scattered, and let them that hate thee flee before thee, which were used by Moses when the Ark set forward, Num. 10. 35. are here by David formed into a perfect Psalm, which was sung afterwards (saith Musculus) before that same Ark, when David and all the house of Israel brought it up to Zion with shouting and with dancing, and with the sound of the trumpet, 2 Sam. 6. 15. The Ark was a Type of the Church, and therefore this Psalm which once concerned the Ark and its enemies, doth now concern the Church and her enemies; and Saint Paul in effect assured us as much, in that he hath applied the 18 verse of this Psalm to our Saviour Christs Ascension, wherein he gave such gifts to men by which the Christian Church was first founded and doth still subsist: So that it is evident that this Psalm is a prayer for defence and propagation of the Catholick Church, and consequently these and the like expressions that are found in it, are so many imprecations and curses from the Spirit of God against his Churches enemies. The like is often to be observed in the whole book of Psalms, which is very full of expostulations with, and imprecations against the enemies of the Church; and that being a book of devotions of Gods own making, may neither be neglected by his servants, nor yet se∣curely used by his enemies; for they will but curse themselves by using it, and more mischief themselves by not using it; A sad condition which the Churches enemies most unavoidably bring upon themselves, either not to use those devotions which were of Gods own composing, or to use them against their own prosperity in this world, and salvation in the next. I will make but one instance more, and that shall be out of Psalm 129. one of the Psalms of degrees or Ascensions, which were so called saith Kimchi, from Rabbi Sudia, because the Levites in singing those Psalms were bound to exalt their voices, and as it
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were to ascend higher and higher in every Psalm: so that be∣fore they came to this Psalm, their voices were at a very high pitch, God not permitting them to dissemble their danger who would needs oppose his Church, though by denouncing and divulging it, they incurred their own; They were there∣fore to sing those words in a high and loud tone, The righteous Lord hath hewn the snares of the ungodly in pieces, ver. 4. or ra∣ther as it is in the orher translation, hath cut asunder the cords of the wickd, even those cords whereby they drew the Plow to make long furrows upon the Churches back, saith Ju∣nius; densos funes quibus aratrum trahebant in dorso Ecclesiae; And he borrowed this gloss from Aben Ezra, who thus ex∣poundeth the place, The Lord will cut asunder their cords, that they shall not be able to plow upon my back; and the meaning is, that the Lord will take away their burdens, (sc. who had led Israel captive) from off the shoulders of Israel, by destroying their Domini∣on. Again ver. 5. & 6. Let them be confounded and turned back∣ward as many as have evil will at Sion; Let them be even as the grass growing upon the housetops, which withereth before it be plucked up: If they be not confounded and turned back∣ward in this world, they will in the next; (for this curse can∣not fall to the ground;) and to be turned backward in the next world, is nothing less then to be turned into Hell, as the grass that is withered is good for nothing but to be thrown into the fire: And this is the very doom that Saint Paul hath denoun∣ced against them, Rom. 2. 8, 9. But unto them that are contenti∣ous and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, indigna∣tion and wrath, Tribulation and anguish, &c. What is there more in Hell, then indignation and wrath tormenting the soul? then tribulation and anguish afflicting the body? And this will be the punishment of those who are contentious, and meerly out of contention; at first do not obey the truth, and at last do obey unrighteousness: Therefore the Apostle useth an Emphatical expression to set forth their contentiousness, saying, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, lis autem qui sunt ex contentione, (as the Vulgar Latine hath rendred it,) But to them that are of contention; that is, so contentious, as if they were born or made of contention; this preposition Ex doth here note the material cause, as if contention were the very matter of which such men
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were made. Aquinas ingeniously maintains that Position, Cre∣are est aliquid ex nihilo facere, To create is to make something out of nothing, mainly by this distinction, Quum Praepositio Ex due importet, habitudinem causae materialis, & ordinem, hic non de∣signat causam materialem, sed ordinem tantùm; sicut quum di∣citur, Ex mane fit meridies, id est, post mane fit meridies. Where the preposition Ex doth import two things, either the material cause out of which the thing is made, or the Order of its making; here it doth not import the material cause, but only the Order, as when we say that the noon is made out of the morning, we mean after the morning, so when we say to create is to make something out of no∣thing, we only mean it is to make that something which before was meerly nothing, (1. Par. qu. 45. art. 1.) But we cannot fa∣sten such an exposition upon these words of Saint Paul, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Iis autem qui sunt ex contentione, But those that are of contention; for this Of cannot import their beginning as if they had been such, but now were not, and therefore it must import their constitution; that they are such, and made of such principles: that they are so of contention as of that which is the chief ingredient in their composition; And according to this interpretation, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 They which are of contention, will signifie those who make contention their study and de∣light, as, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Gal. 3. 7, 9. They whch are of Faith, doth signifie those which wholly depend and relie upon faith in Christ; contrary to whom are 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, verse 10. As many as are of the works of the Law, that is, As many as place their hope and confidence in the works of the Law; And again, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, They which were of the circumcision, Gal. 2. 12. doth signifie those which did glory or boast of their circumcision, and made it their business to be zealous for those kind of outward and carnal Ordinances: And this is agreeable with Saint Hieroms criticism upon the word 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, which he thus explaineth, Est 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 quum qui semper ad con∣trad••cendum paratus, stomacho delectatur alieno, & muliebri jur∣gio contendit, & provocat contendentem, alio nomine 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, (Hier. in 5. ad Galat.) The spirit of contradiction and of con∣tention both, are (according to this gloss) in those men of whom Saint Paul saith, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, But unto them that are contentious; None can be a formal Separatist from the
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communion of his Church rightly established, but he must have the Spirit of contention to make him a Schismatick, and the Spirit of contradiction to make him labour to justifie, or at least to continue and prolong his Schism: So that indeed such a man hath indignation and wrath, though unjustly, in his sin, and therefore may expect to have them both, but very justly, in his Punishment; But unto them that are contentious, indignation and wrath, saith the Text: They unjustly had indignation and wrath against their Church, that they might be contenti∣ous; And God will justly have indignation and wrath against them, that they may be punished for their contention.
All which considered, we have reason to believe that exter∣nal Christian communion, as far as it is truly Christian, is to be carefully followed, maintained and preserved in all Chur∣ches; to be forsaken, persecuted and destroyed in no Church; For God hath not left it to the disposal of the Kings and Po∣tentates of this world, whether he shall be publickly served or not; only hath given them a strict command to promote and advance his publick worship and service. He gave not pow∣er to his Apostles for destruction, but only for edisication; and therefore that power that tends only to destruction, cannot be of his giving: What shall we say of those who command∣ed the Apostles not to speak at all in the name of Jesus? Acts 4. 18. Shall we say they had power from God so to do? God forbid; for then the Christian Religion could not have been planted without Rebellion, and so should not have been plant∣ed at all; For the Text is plain, which forbiddeth to do evil that good may come: Gods power doth no thwart it self, nor put men upon contradictions; Therefore in that the Apostles were commanded to pray and preach in the name of Jesus, the Rulers of the Jews were commanded not to oppose them in their praying and preaching in his name; And accord∣ingly we find when they would needs oppose them, such an answer returned as could not but make them condemn them∣selves for that opposition, Whether it be right in the sight of God, to hearken unto you, more then unto God, judge ye, Act. 4. 19. And this Answer was given by the Apostles, that it might serve as a Ruled case (for their Successors) to the worlds end, whom God hath constituted his Trustees for his publick worship,
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That his▪ name may be rightly invocated and adored, his word rightly preached, his Sacraments rightly and duly administred, and who are bound to lose not only their livelyhoods, but also their lives rather then to forsake or betray their Trust; And if they are bound thus to stick to the Truth, then surely the people are bound to stick to them, that they may all be one sheep-fold under one shepherd; and as it were one Diocess under one and the same Bishop of their souls.
Saint Paul did not think his authority confined with his Person, when being a prisoner at Rome he did write to Phile∣mon at Coloss, calling upon him for the effectual communi∣cation of his faith, ver. 6. and telling him, that he was to be Ministred unto in the bonds of the Gospel, ver. 13. and requiring him to put some wrongs and losses upon his account, ver. 18. and all upon this ground, Thou owest unto me even thine own self besides, ver. 19. Is not the Church to us what Saint Paul was to Philemon? Since by her Ministry God hath called us to the knowledge of his Truth and to Faith in his Son? or can we indeed owe even our own selves to her, and not be bound to pay our best acknowledgements? by effectually commu∣nicating in her devotions, diligently ministring to her neces∣sities, patiently suffering in her losses, readily obeying her commands, constantly persisting in her Doctrine, and conti∣nually praying for her deliverance; If we deny these acknow∣ledgements to that Church, to the which we owe them all, because we do own even our own selves besides, shall we not shew our selves untrue in denying our debt, as well as unjust in denying our duty? For a true Christian Church cannot lose her right of obliging us to her communion, because she is in Bonds (with Saint Paul) or in persecution, (with the other Apostles) since it is evident that the precept of Heb. 13. 17. Obedite praepositis vestris, Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit your selves, for they watch for your souls, &c. was given to the people when the Apostles were all grievously persecuted, and was carefully observed during the unhappy time of the ten first Persecutions; And the reason (as we may guess) was this, that the Church required the peoples communion upon no other terms then Christ himself had required it; So that to break communion with the Church, had been then to break
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communion with Christ; and this appears from that professi∣on of faith which was made by the Fifth General Council, (the second of Constantinople) in the third collation; as it is set forth by Binius in these words, Confitemur fidem tenere & prae∣dicare ab initio donatam à magno Deo, & Salvatore nostro Jesu Christo Sanctis Apostolis, & ab illis in universo mundo praedi∣catam, quam & Sancti Patres confessi sunt & explanaverunt, & Sanctis Ecclesiis tradiderunt, & maxime qui in Sanctis qua∣tuor Synodis convenerunt, quos per omnia & in omnibus sequi∣mur, &c. We profess our selves to hold and preach that faith which was at first given from God and our Saviour Jesus Christ to the holy Apostles, and by them preached in all the world; which faith the holy fathers did confess and explain, and deli∣ver to the Churches, most especially those who met in the four first general Councils, whom we exactly follow in all things: And again, Et omnia quae à praedictis Sanctis quatuor Conciliis, sicut praedictum est, pro una eademque fide definita sunt suscipimus; & omnes condemnatos praedictis Sanctis quatuor conciliis, tan∣quam condemnatos & anathematizatos habemus, una cum aliis haere••icis; And we receive all those Definitions or Determinati∣ons concerning the Christian Faith which have been delivered by the four first general Councils, and all that were condemned and ac∣cursed by them we condemn and accurse as we do all other He∣reticks.
If this confession was Catholick in that general Council, how is it since that time Schismatical in us? And if they were Catho∣licks who cleaved to the Apostles Creed, and to the Creeds of the four first Councils, (which had none of those additional Articles, that have since made the breach in Christs Church, and are like to continue it to the worlds end, if they themselves conti∣nue so long; for there will be still many consciencious men who cannot take that for Christian Doctrine which they find not in the Word of Christ, nor that for Christian practice, which they find rejected by his Word) I say, if they were Ca∣tholicks who cleaved to the Apostles Creed, and to the expla∣nations thereof, the Creeds of the four first Councils which are accordingly called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Expositions of the Faith, sc. of that faith in the Apostles Creed, why are not we Catholicks too, who profess and maintain the same Faith?
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And if we be Catholicks, how are they not Hereticks who will∣fully oppose our Doctrine? how are they not Schismaticks who maliciously recede from our communion?
And surely it will be hard to prove that the Primitive Christians did, for the first six hundred years after Christ, reject any men, much less Churches from their communion as Hereticks, who did make profession of the Catholick Faith ac∣cording to the Creeds delivered by the four first Councils; That moderation professed by Saint Cyprian in the third Council of Carthage, was followed by the Catholick Church long after his time, Superest ut de hac ipsare quid singuli sen∣tiamus, proferamus, neminem judicantes, aut à jure communi∣onis aliquem, si diversum senserit, amoventes; It remains that we declare our opinions concerning this business; but so, as to condemn none for being of a contrary opinion, nor for that reason, thrusting him out of our Christian communion; The cause they met about was the rebaptizing of those who had been baptized by Hereticks, wherein though the Catholick Church hath rejected their Determination, yet it hath alwayes fol∣lowed their moderation, suffering particular Churches in those Doctrines which did not immediately corrupt the faith, to con∣tinue in their different opinions, or different expressions, and yet to be of one and the same Christian communion.
And this appears from the first Nicene Council, which de∣nounceth Anathema only against the Arrians, (who denyed the Divinity of Christ,) being contented to establish the Ca∣nons about Ecclesiastical order and government with lesser pu∣nishments, in so much that Athanasius plainly saith, Patres Ni∣cenos non eodem Anathemate inclusisse Arianos & Quartodeci∣manos, That the Nicene fathers did not include the Quartodeci∣mans under the same Anathema with the Arrians. And we may gather the reason of this, from the Synodical Epistle of the Council of Sardice, wherein it is accouted all one to be Ana∣thema, and to be separated from the Catholick Church, or not to be reckoned among Christians: For so those Fathers declare their sentence against the Arrian Bishops, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: We have judged them not only to be unworthy of their Bishopricks, but also of the communion of the faithful; For they
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which do separate the son from the father, are to be separated from the Catholick Church as unworthy of the name of Christians; Therefore let them be to you as Anathema; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉.
But why are they to be Anathema? Because they have cor∣rupted the word of truth, say the same Fathers; This being the Apostles command, If any man preach any other Gospel unto you, then that ye have received, let him be Anathema, or accursed, Gal. 1. 9. Therefore be sure not to communicate with any of them; for there is no communion of light with darkness, but put them all far from you; for there is no concord of Christ with Belial; Thus far in effect, those holy Fathers, accursing only those whom God himself had accursed: So doth the Council of Ephesus Anathematize Nestorius in this form; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, (Concil. Eph. par. 2. Act. 1. The true Orthodox Faith doth accurse this man, the ho∣ly Synod doth accurse him, shewing plainly that if the true Faith had not excommunicated him, they would not easily have denyed him their communion; I will pass by the Acclamations of the Bishops in the Council of Chalcedon in the first action, saying, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Christ himself hath deposed Dioscorus, this is a just sen∣tence, this is a righteous Synod; and their great exultations in the Nicene and Constantinopolitane Faith after the recital of those two Creeds, in the second action of the same Council; and I will hasten to some instances of after-ages, to shew how tender the Primitive Christians were in rejecting others from their communion; the first shall be of the fifth general Council, which was not till the year of Christ five hundred and fifty. And that Council at the end of its fourth collation hath these words, Sancta Synodus dixit, multitudo blasphemiarum, quas con∣tra magnum Deum & Salvatorem nostrum Jesum Christum, imo magis contra suam animam Theodorus Mopsuestenus evomuit, justam ejus facit condemnationem: The holy Synod avowed that the multitude of the blasphemies which Theodorus of Mopsuestia had belched or vomited out against the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ or rather against his own soul, had made his condemna∣tion just, or necessary; as if they had professed, they did not come
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by their own authority to make him a Heretick, but by the authority of Christ to declare him so.
My second instance shall be out of the sixth general Council, which was against the Monothelites, For there the Fathers at the end of the fifteenth action, pronounce their sentence of excom∣munication against Polychronius the Monothelite, in these words, For as much as Polychronius the Monk hath persisted in his erro∣neous and wicked opinion even to his old age, we have therefore put his soul under the curse denounced by Saint Paul, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: Praedicto à Sancto Apostolo Paulo Anathemati jam hunc secun∣dum animam subjecimus: what curse that was, the Coun∣cil nameth not, but we may suppose they meant that denoun∣ced in 2 Cor. 16. 22. If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be Anathema Maranatha: They looked upon this man as one that loved not the Lord Jesus Christ; for in that he was a Monothelite, and said there was but one will in Christ, he did in effect deny his humane nature, whilst he de∣nyed his humane will, as themselves profess in their seventeenth action, That the Monothelites Tenent did by a new subdolous invention, (〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉) labour to overthrow the perfection of Christs humanity; I say, they looked upon this man as one that loved not the Lord Jesus Christ, in that he opposed the perfection of his humane nature, and consequent∣ly as one that had involved himself in that Anathema denounced by Saint Paul, If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be Anathema Maranatha; This is the Anathema that truly strikes the soul, which the Spirit of God denounceth against our Spirits for not cleaving stedfastly to the Son of God, or, for not loving our Lord Jesus Christ; he that is thus bound in heaven, can never think himself a freeman, though he be not bound in earth; He that is thus excommunicated by the sentence of the Law, cannot but think himself in a very ill condition, though happily he may be absolved by the sentence of his Judge: So saith Saint Chrysostom upon the place, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, By this one word hath the Apostle frighted all the impenitent sinners of Corinth, whether guilty of fornication, or of scandal▪ or of faction, or of infidelity, (for some of them also denyed the resurrection,) he first shews them
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the greatness of their sin, that they loved not the Lord Jesus Christ, then the greatness of their punishment, that they were Anathema Maranatha, could not but tremble at the coming of that Lord, whom they did not love. Such men as are in truth excommunicated by God himself, are most justly excommunicated by his Church, and tis apparent that this Council looked upon the Monothelites as such; for it follows afterwards at the end of the Sentence, Anathema to Macarius, Stephanus and Polychronius, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, The holy Trinity hath deposed these three miscreants; I need not look after any more Instances since this Council was held full six hundred and eighty years after Christ.
This is enough to shew the Moderation of the Primitive Chri∣stians, that they did not care to break communion with them in the Christian Faith who had not broken Communion with Christ, and they did not think those had broken communion with Christ, who professed the Christian Faith, as it had been delivered in the Creeds of the four first general Councils; in∣deed they thought the Constantinopolitans Creed alone a full and sufficient explication of the Christian faith; so say the Fathers of this Council, Action 8. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Sufficiebat quidem ad perfectam Orthodoxae Fi∣dei cognitionem atque confirmationem, pium atque orthodoxum hoc divinae Gratiae Symbolum; This pious and orthodox Creed of the Divine Grace, was sufficient for the perfect knowledge and confirmation of the orthodox faith; The Council of Chalcedon had given the same Judgement before concerning that Creed, but in different words, (Action 5) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. Sufficiebat quidem ad plenam cognitionem & confirmationem pi∣etatis hoc sapiens & salutare divinae gratiae Symbolum, This wise and wholsome Creed of the divine Grace, was sufficient for the knowledge and confirmation of Godliness: They both highly ex∣toll this Creed▪ as a peculiar Testimony of Gods grace to his Church, and as an exact Breviary of the Christian Religion, con∣taining the whole summe of saving faith, saith the one; of God∣liness; saith the other Council; and what can be wanting to that Christian Communion which hath in it true faith & Godliness?
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or how can we be wanting to such a communion, and not be wanting to the Christian Religion? But the council at Chal∣cedon gives this reason why they account the Constantinopolitan Creed a perfect Breviary of the Christian Religion, (for so they mean, when they say it is sufficient both for the knowledge and Proof of Godliness,) saying, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 De Patre enim & Filio & spiritu sancto perfectionem docet, ac domini nostri inhuma∣nationem fideliter accipientibus repraesentat: For it teacheth per∣fectly the knowledge of God the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and plainly representeth to all that will receive it with faith, the mysterie of our Lords incarnation or Inhumanation.
And indeed under these heads are all the mysteries of our Christian Religion briefly contained, though not fully ex∣plained and therefore when this Council of Chalcedon had used all exactness of care and diligence in the further explication of such Truths concerning our Saviour Christ which the perverse∣ness of Hereticks had made disputable, though it could not make doubtfull, Shewing that two compleat Natures in him made but one Person, it was high time in their opinion, to put an end to the making of any more new Creeds, and accordingly they forbid all men either to speak or write, or make, or think, or teach a new faith; for these are their own words, at the end of their fift Action, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. His igitur cum omni undique exacta cura & diligentia à nobis dispositis, definivit sancta & universalis Synodus, alteram Fidem nulli licere pro∣ferre aut conscribere, vel componere, aut sentire, aut alios docere.
I will not here argue how they can answer this Prohibition, who have since added twelve new Articles to the Creed as it was delivered by the Council of Constantinople, and have obliged all that will be Ministers of their Church, to swear all that will be members of their Church to profess to live and dye in the belief of those additional (no less then of the other) Articles as the only true Catholick Faith by which men may be saved; it is enough for
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my present purpose; and it may be enough for others future certainty and constancy in their Religion, that all the Christians that were saved for one thousand and five hundred years after Christ, were saved without the necessary belief of those additional articles; And it is clear that the Church of Rome her self denyed not anciently her communion to other Churches, if so be they professed and maintained only that faith which was declared in the known and received Creeds of the uni∣versal Church; for so Optatus Milevitanus testifieth, that all the Churches of the world did hold communion among themselves, and with the Church of Rome by vertue of their communicato∣ry letters: His words are these, lib. 2. contra Parm. c. 7. Cum quo nobis totus orbis commercio Formatarum in una communionis societate concordat, with whom (having named Siricius then Bishop of Rome) we and all the Christian world besides, do by vertue of our communicatory letters, accord in one fellow∣ship or communion; But in those communicatory letters was contained nothing save only the confession of the Catholick Faith, as it had been declared in the known and received Creeds of the universal Church, saith Bishop Davenant in that small but excellent piece of his old age, called Sententia de pace inter Evangelicos procuranda: And we may gather as much not on∣ly from the Epistles of several Bishops in several Synods, but also from the unhappy fate of those two Councils of Ariminum and Seleucia, which both consisted of Orthodox Bishops, and yet for want of communicatory letters were at last brought to subscribe the Arrian heresie: For all the Bishops of the East gathered at Seleucia, did presently agree to the true faith, and sent the Emperour notice of their agreement; And among the numerous company of the Western Bishops, at Ariminum, above four hundered held the Truth, scarce 80. opposed it; yet the Arrians abusing each Synod with perswasions that the other had yielded (saith incomparable Hooker) surprized both which we may say, they could never have done, had each Synod ac∣quainted the other with their assents to the Nicene Faith, by communicatory letters: This Faith then was, and still is ground enough to all Christian Churches for their communion one with another in doctrine; And Prayers (and Sacraments) according to this faith, are also ground enough for their communion in
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worship or devotion, so that if all Christian Churches Believed, and prayed, and administred exactly according to the rule of this Faith, it would not be possible for any man to be a Schismatick in denying his communion, without first being a Heretick in denying his Religion: For if I am required to call only upon him in whom I have believed, and to do this only in remembrance of him on whom I am bound to call, how can I deny my communion either in Prayers or in Sacraments to any Christian Church, and not deny the faith that hath been taught me by the Catho∣lick Church? This seems to have been the ground of Christi∣an communion in Saint Basils dayes, who in his seventy eighth Epistle (which is a confes••ion of his faith) saith thus: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: We must be baptized, as we have received from the Lord; We must believe as we are baptized; and we must give glory as we have believed, Glorifying the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost: 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, &c. But we must abstain from their communion who are not of this Faith, as being open Blasphemers. In that he saith we must abstain from the communion of those that are blasphemers, it is evident he will not have us abstain from the communion of those who are true believers and right worshippers; For where the Baptism, (and consequently the other Sacrament) is according to Christs institution, and the faith is according to the Baptism, and the glory is according to the Faith, there not to joyn in Communion (at least in vote and desire) is so a peice of desperate schism, as it is also a point of damnable heresie; for it comes neer their Sect of whom the Apostle hath said, Denying the Lord that bought them, by reason of whom the way of Truth is evil spoken 2 Pet. 2. 1, 2.
And upon this account the Gloria Patri was so much looked after by the primitive Christians in their publick worship, as being a right Profession of Faith in the Trinity, and conse∣quently the ground of true faith in Christ; Nor can we think of the common People so generally withdrawing themselves from the Arrian Bishops in those dayes for not giving glory to God rightly according to the form of this Hymne, but we must needs censure the dulness and deadness of this our Age, wherein men care not with what Ministers they assemble in publike wor∣ship
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though they see them not only forsake but also revile all the Symbols of true Christian Faith and worship, and all the badges of true Christian communion; such as are the Lords most holy Prayer, the Apostles Creed, and this Hymn of glori∣fication; for though men may have so much Charity, as to pass by that Sacrilegious Tenent which professeth Bishops and Pres∣byters both one, that they may be equally contemned; I call it a Sacrilegious Tenent, because I find it so called by the Catholick Church twice in the Council of Chalcedon, once in the fift Action, in these words, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, Episcopum in gradum Presbyteri redigere Sacrilegium est, to bring back a Bishop to the degree of a Presby∣ter is Sacriledge; and again in the fifteenth Action (wherein are the Canons of that Council,) in the 29th. Canon, in the very same words, only that insteed of 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 to bring back, they say, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 to bring down; 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉: Episcopum in Presbyteri gradum reducere, est Sacrilegium; to bring down a Bishop to the degeee of a Presby∣ter, is Sacriledge; I say, though men may have so much chari∣ty as to pass by that Sacrilegious Tenent, which professeth Bi∣shops and Presbyters both one, that they may be equally con∣temned, yet they should not have so little faith as to commu∣nicate in that Sacrilegious worship which cares not to profess God the Father, Son and Holy-Ghost to be but one, that they may be equally glorified. And surely Saint Basil taking so much pains to clear himself concerning the right use of the Gloria Patri, doth sufficiently condemn all our late Divines, who in such Antitrinitarian (and therefore Antichristian) times as these are, willfully contemn or carelesly neglect the constant and publike use of that most Christian Hymne; For it is most cer∣tain, he that hath not a right belief of the Trinity, cannot have a right belief of Christ, and therefore he that will not openly pro∣fess his belief of the Trinity, cannot justly claim, and conse∣quently not reasonably expect the communion of those who de∣sire and deserve▪ ••e accounted Orthodox Christians: And it is observable that those formes of the communicatory letters which are mentioned by Gratian in his seventy third Distinct (and before him by Jno and Berchardus) do still retain the foot∣steps of this Truth that all Christian Communion was antiently
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grounded on the Profession of Faith in the Holy Trinity; and in this respect we may say that membranas occupare non debet, was an unreasonable censure in him that glossed the case of that di∣stinction for the insertion of those Greek elements, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, being the initials of 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, doth in effect assure us that the ancient Bishops did neither give nor send their communicatory letters to any that did not openly profess their belief in Father, Son and Holy Ghost; for as concerning that phansie in the Canonist, Petri quoque Apostoli prima litera, i. e. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 assumatur, that P must also be added to signifie Peter, it suffi∣ciently confuteth it self, in that it supposeth 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 to stand alone for the Holy-Ghost. contrary to the nature and use of the Greek tongue, and leaveth out 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 to bring in 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, not robbing Peter to pay Paul, but robbing the Holy-Ghost to pay Peter; And yet we may add further to its confutation, that it is as easie for those who resolve to make Saint Peter their author for every thing they say or do, to bring 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 out of 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, as to turn Patres into Petrus; and we find that hath been done, in the very Pontifical it self, where the Bi∣shops Oath was at first to observe Regulas Sanctorum Patrum, the rules of the Holy Fathers; But these words come afterwards to be changed into Regalia Sancti Petri, The Royalties of Saint Peter: but without doubt the Greeks meant nothing else by those initial Elements, save only Father, Son and Holy-Ghost, if at least they had any set Form of communicatory letters among them, which sure is not now easie to be met withal, al∣though Baronius▪ hath assured that the form of those letters was instituted, and Binius hath further assured that it was extant in the 18th. canon of the first Council of Nice. In concilio Nicaeno forma quaedum eiusmodi literarum, (c. 18.) ne fraus irreperet, est instituta; non autem recens res ipsa est in∣troducta, saith Baronius, An. 142. n. 6. Harum literarum for∣mula à Niceno Concilio praescripta extat, can. 18. istius Concilii, saith Binius in notis in Epist. 1. Sixti Papae 1. yet he may chance lose his labour that shall look for that form, not onl•• in that Canon, but also in any other of the Greek Councils, or in the Commentaries of Zonaras Balsamon upon them.
But what ever was the form of their communicatory letters (which by the Latines might be called Formatae, for they ac∣knowledge
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a form of them, such a one as it is) sure we are this was the ground of their communion, that their Baptism, their Belief, & their worship was all in the name of the Father & of the Son and of the Holy Ghost; They kept themselves entire in their Reli∣gion, and that made them keep themselves entire in their com∣munion; They did earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the Saints, (Jude 3.) they did not labour to deliver a new Faith; So that their contending for the faith, kept them from other contentions; as now our contentions do indeed keep us from the faith; They laboured to serve their Saviour, not to serve themselves of him; we labour to serve our selves whiles we pretend to serve our Saviour: they followed the advice of Christs Apostle, Endeavouring to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, Eph. 4. 3. We follow the insolency and outrage of Christs enemies, saying, Let us break their bonds asunder, and casts away their cords from us, Psal. 2. 3. Kimchi saith these were the words of the Philistins against Israel, the Church of God; But the Apostles say in effect they were the words of Herod and Pontius Pilate, against Christ, the Son of God, Acts 4. 27. Let us take heed of saying such words as these against the Church of God, for fear we come in time to say them against the Son of God: For what are the bonds of Christ, but Religi∣on which hath its name from binding, and Communion which hath its work to bind? If we break one of those bonds asunder, how shall we be held by the other? If we cast away Religion, what do we talk of communion? it is more just to call it a conspiracy; If we cast away communion, what do we pretend Religion? it is more just to call it an apostacy: Let both Religi∣on and Communion be truely for the honour of Christ, or let nei∣ther be called Christian: For indeed this is the only true touch∣stone whereby we may try which Churches are the dross of Christendom, and which are the gold of it; they who most labour to glorifie Christ, are the best Christians, according that short but pithy prayer of the Latine Church, Et quia tuum est quod credimus, tuum sit omne quod vivimus; (Orat. in Sabbato quatuor temporum quadragesimae) And because that all our Faith is from thee, grant that all our Life may be for thee and to thee: All our faith is from Christ, all our life must be to Christ, or we shall live infidels, though in belief Christians; Therefore
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they who most labour to glorifie Christ both by their Faith and by their life, are undoubtedly the best Christians; They who most labour to glorifie him as King, to be ruled by his govern∣ment; as Prophet, to be guided by his Word; as Priest, to be reconciled by his satisfaction: they are clearly the best Chri∣stians; and they who are defective in any of these, as they less glorifie Christ, so have they less the purity and truth of Chri∣stianity.
Great is the preeminence of Christians above other men, that they know Christ; but greater is their preeminence above other Christians, that they glorifie him agreeably to their knowledge; such are truly 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, The faithful in Saint Chrysostomes sense, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉. Christians are called the Faithful, not only for trusting in God, but also for being trusted by him, in that they have been entrusted with those mysteries of Christ, which not the Angels themselves did know before them: They were accordingly best take heed they do not betray that trust, which they did not, could not deserve; and they will certainly betray it, if once they seek to take the preeminence to themselves; and not give it to their Saviour: We may not judge some of the an∣tient Churches for so doing, because they were swallowed up by an Earth-quake, soon after they had received Christianity, as Coloss, Laodicea, and H••erapolis, in the reign of Nero, saith Orasius: But we most look carefully to our selves that we may not do so, who dayly hear many amongst us saying, We are of Paul; others, we are of Cephas; others we are of Apollos, meerly to divide the Church; and others saying, We are of Christ, meerly to contemn it: For they intend not to advance our Saviour, but to debase his Ministers; not to come neerer Christ, but only to run further from his Church; I say, we must look carefully to our selves, le••t some such dreadful Earth∣quake swallow us up also, who have provoked heaven, wea∣ried earth, and therefore may justly go down quick into hell; or lest we be swallowed up by the Earth without an Earth quake, as were Corah, Dathan, and Abiram, who were the first notori∣ous authors of divisions in the people of God, and themselves perished by a strange division; for saith the Text, The ground
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clave asunder that was under them, Numb 16. 31. And the ground is still cleaving asunder under us, in so much that it is to be feared, That the Earth, the sons of the earth, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 Filii terrae, as the Text calls them, Psalm 49. 2. the lowest and meanest of the people will at last quite swallow up both Moses and Aaron, that is, all authority and preeminence both Civil and Ecclesiastical: This we are sure of, the only way for the Kings and Potentates of this world, to keep their own authority, is by it to defend and maintain the authority of Christ, who is the blessed and only Potentate, the King of Kings, and Lord of Lords, 1 Tim. 6. 15. nor is it just they should look to have any preeminence without, and much less against him, whose proper right it is, in all things to have the preemi∣nence, Col. 1. 18. Therefore give glory to the Lord your God, before he cause darkness, (in despite of all your new lights) and before your feet stumble upon the dark mountains, and while ye look for light, he turn it into the shadow of death, and make it gross darkness: But if ye will not hear it, my soul shall weep in secret places for your pride, and mine eye shall weep sore, and run down with tears, because the Lords flock is carried away captive; Jer. 13. 16, 17. Carried away captive from the communion of the Lord, to the divisions and distractions of his enemies: A captivity beyond that of Babylon, because of a confusion be∣yond that of Babel; for there only tongues, but here minds and spirits also are confounded.
O sweet Jesus, restore again to thy communion those that have departed from it: retain and confirm those that still abide and continue in it; Thou blessed Mediator betwixt God and Angels and men, and by that thy mediation, the blessed author to the Angels of union, to men of reunion, to both Angels and men of communion with the everliving God; be pleased so to joyn all Christians in one communion here on earth, that thou mayst joyn them all in one communion hereafter in heaven: even that eternal and most blessed communion wherein thou our Head now livest and reignest with the Father and the Holy Ghost, one God world without end,
Deo Trin-uni gloria.