[A golden chaine: or The description of theologie containing the order of the causes of saluation and damnation, according to Gods word; (Printed by Iohn Legat, printer to the Vniuersitie of Cambridge, 1600)]
William Perkins, born in the year of our Lord 1558 in Marston Jabbett, Warwickshire, did rise from modest origins to become a shining luminary in the reformed Church of England. Educated at Christ’s College, Cambridge, where he attained the degrees of Bachelor and Master of Arts, Perkins was elected Fellow of that College, a station in which he diligently exercised his gifts in the sacred discipline and did greatly profit the students in sound doctrine and holy conversation. Ordained within the ecclesiastical polity of the Church of England, Perkins served faithfully as lecturer at the renowned Church of Great St. Andrew’s, Cambridge. There, by the power of the Spirit, he did powerfully expound the Scriptures, laboring to reform men’s lives and to bring them into the obedience of Christ. His ministry was marked by an extraordinary zeal for experimental divinity, wherein he pressed upon men the necessity of true conversion, effectual calling, and a sanctified walk. Perkins excelled in the art of casuistry, providing godly counsel for tender consciences perplexed with the weight of sin, as demonstrated in his manifold treatises, among which The Golden Chaine and The Arte of Prophesying are eminent. He contended earnestly for the doctrines of grace, upholding predestination, the sufficiency of Christ’s atonement, and the authority of Scripture, all in the service of God’s glory and the edification of His elect. He departed this life in Cambridge in 1602, leaving a legacy both deep and wide, whereby his writings continue to guide souls in the straight and narrow path of godliness.
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Sin, is the corruption, or rather deprivation of the first integrity. More plainly, it is a falling or turning from God, binding the offender by the course of God’s justice, to undergo the punishment.
Here a doubt may be moved, whether sin be a thing existing, or not. The answer is this: Of things which are, some are positive, other privative.
I. Things positive, are all substances together with those their properties, effects, inclinations, and affections, which the Lord hath created and imprinted in their natures.
II. The thing is called privative which granteth or presupposeth the absence of some such thing, as ought to be in a thing. Such a thing is sin, the which properly and of itself is not anything created, and existing; but rather the absence of that good which ought to be in the creature.
Sin hath two parts: A defect, or impotency; and is a confusion or disturbance of all the powers and actions of the creature. Impotency is nothing else, but the very want or loss of that good, which God hath engrafted in the nature of his creature.
I. [Participation of all in the first sin of Adam; (namely the Fall).]
II. [Original Sin.]
III. [Actual Sin.]