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A80737 Knovvledge & practice, or, a plain discourse of the chief things necessary to be known, believ'd, and practised in order to salvation. Drawn up, and principally intended for the use and benefit of North-Cadbury in Somersetshire, / by Samuel Cradock, B.D. & Pastor there: sometime fellow of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Cradock, Samuel, 1621?-1706. 1659 (1659) Wing C6751; Thomason E1724_1; ESTC R209799 322,548 715

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seems to have regard principally to that which we call the common Worship of God i. e. the right carriage of our selves for his honour in all the common affairs of our life as well as in the exercises of Religion so far forth as we have any thing to do with him therein The sins against this Commandment are 1. Light irreverent using naming the name of God Deut. 28.58 Not fearing this glorious and fearful Name the Lord thy God 2. Customary swearing and in ordinary communication 3. Swearing falsly or perjury not swearing in truth judgment and righteousnesse Jer. 4.2 when lawfully called thereunto 4. Blaspheming 5. Cursing 6. Charms and Exorcisms 7. Prophane jesting on Scripture 8. Unlawful and unwarrantable vowes 9. Calling on God with our lips when our hearts are far from him The fourth Commandment requires the keeping holy to God such set time as he hath appointed in his Word expresly one whole day in seven to be a Sabbath unto the Lord. The sins against this Commandment are 1. Not preparing for it by taking care so to dispatch and dispose our worldly businesses that we may be more free and fit for the duties of the day 2. Not resting from worldly employments and servile works excepting necessary and charitable offices to men and beasts to our selves or others 3. Neglect of or a carelesse heartlesse performance of the private and publick duties that concern the sanctification of it 4. Being weary of the Sabbath not delighting in it nor the duties of it but wishing it were gone 3. Prophaning the day by Idlenesse vain thoughts worldly discourse making it a day of carnal rest of feasting jollity immoderate eating and drinking visiting a day of sports and recreations which alienate the mind more from God than the ordinary labours of our callings 6. Not taking care that those under our charge do sanctifie the day and keep it holy to the Lord but by our carelessenesse or connivance and ill example encouraging them in the prophanation of it So much of the duties commanded and sins forbidden in the first Table The second Table enjoyns the duties of Charity and Justice towards our Neighbour Against this we sin when we do not love our neighbours with such a true unfeigned love as our selves when we do not so deal with them as we desire they should deal with us The fifth Commandment requires the giving of that honour and performing those duties which belong to every one in their several places and which we mutually owe in our several relations as Inferiours Superiours Equals By Father and Mother are meant not only natural Parents but all Superiours in age and gifts and especially such as by Gods Ordinance are over us in place of authority whether in Family Church or Common-wealth The Sins of Inferiours against Superiours are 1. Not paying them due reverence in heart word and behaviour 2. The envying at contemning of or rebelling against their persons places lawful commands counsels or corrections 3 Not praying for them not imitating their Graces and vertues 4. Cursing mocking and all such scandalous and refractory carriage towards them The sins of Superiours are 1. Neglecting the duties of their respective places 2. Seeking themselves and their own Glory 3. Commanding things unlawful 4. Counselling encouraging or favouring that which is evil and discouraging that which is good 5. Undue correction 6. Dishonouring themselves and lessening their Authority either by too rigorous or too remisse a behaviour The sins of Equals are undervaluing the worth envying the gifts grieving at the advancement or prosperity or esteem one of another and usurping preheminence one over another The sixth Commandment requires all lawfull endeavours to preserve our own life and the life of others The sins against this Commandment are 1. Murder 2. Striking maiming or hurting the body of our neighbour 3. Sinful unadvised anger 4. Hatred envy desire of revenge 5. Railing reviling contumelious speeches quarrelling threatning scorning and provoking 6. Sowing strife and contention among neighbours 7. Drunkennesse surfetting uncleannesse or drawing any to those vices which are sins against the body and may bring diseases and death 8. Inordinate passions worldly grief immoderate carking and caring or whatever else tends to the destruction of the life of man The seventh Commandment requires chastity of body mind affections words and behaviour and the preservation of it in our selves and others It forbideth 1. Lodging or entertaining in our minds unclean thoughts and fancying unclean matters with delight 2. Unclean desires affections and lusts though they come not into act which is the adultery of the heart 3. Wanton looks 4. Not shutting our eares against unclean talk 5. Filthy discourse 6. All unclean acts and sinful pollutions 7. Idlenesse intemperance and pampering the body 8. Wanton immodest attiring 9. Light behaviour and society with light persons 10. Lascivious gestures revellings dancings plaies pictures amorous books songs or whatever else tends to foment the fleshly concupiscence which we ought to labour by all good means to quench and suppresse The eighth Commandment requires the lawful procuring and furthering the wealth and outward estate of our selves and others It forbids 1. Violent taking or withholding from our neighbour what justly belongs unto him 2. Fraudulent dealing false weights and measures over-reaching in contracts 3. Unfaithfulnesse in matters of trust 4. Covetousnesse and inordinate love of money 5. Discontent at our own estates distrust of Gods Providence 6. Not paying what we borrow and what is justly due from us if we be able 7. Exaction extortion oppression and not making restitution of ill gotten goods where there is ability The ninth Commandment requires the maintaining and promoting of truth between man and man and of our own and our neighbours good names especially in witnesse-bearing It forbids 1. Giving false evidence and suborning false witnesse and all forgery 2. Wittingly appearing and pleading for an evil cause outfacing and overbearing the truth 3. Credulity sinister suspitions rash belief a ready listning to tale-bearers receiving and countenancing ill reports that tend to the defaming of others misconstruing intentions words and actions and interpreting doubtful matters in the worst sense 4. Lying speaking untruth of any man a readinesse to speak ill and spread the faults of others when it does no way concern us nor is like to benefit others Slandering raising false rumours backbiting detracting talebearing whispering scoffing reviling rash harsh and partiall censuring and uncharitable judging 5. Speaking too highly or too meanly of our selves or others 6. Undue silence when we ought and may defend the innocency of our neighbour The tenth Commandment requires purity and integrity of thoughts desires and wishes contentment with our own estate and condition and the portion God hath given us and a right charitable well-wishing frame of spirit towards our neighbour and all that is his The sins against this Commandment are 1. Discontent with our own estate 2. Having and harbouring in our minds
we hate sin as sin we hate all sin Now the reason why there is such an universal hatred in the true penitent against all sin is 1. Because his judgment is altered his mind is changed he sees with other eies than he did before He sees the evil and danger of sin in those particulars before mentioned He sees plainly that sin is but like a cup of sweet wine that hath rank poison in it 2. His heart and affections are turned against it He hath a new heart put into him If God should offer him his choice of these two things either a liberty to go on in sin or power and Grace and strength against it he would readily close with the latter The remembrance of sin is bitter and grievous to him not so the remembrance of affl●ction he blesses God for afflictions that have weaned his heart from sin He is sick of sin weary of it 't is a burden to him his heart rises against it he had rather God should exercise him with any affliction than give him up to a hardned course in sin Fourthly Confession of sin Every true penitent is bound to make private confession of his sins to God praying earnestly for the pardon of thē For 1. By this meanes the soul is brought into a dislike of sin Confession 't is an act of mortification 'T is the spiritual vomit of the soul it breeds a dislike of the sweet morsels of sin when they are thus cast up again with loathing Sin though sweet in commission is bitter in remembrance and confession 2. By a free ingenuous confession of sin we accuse our selves unto God take shame to our s lves judge and condemn our selves before him humbly acknowledging we are worthy of all his curses all his judgments Now self accusing will prevent Satans accusing of us He can lay no more to our charge than we in our confessions are willing to charge our selves with And self-judging will prevent Gods judging of us 1 Cor. 11.31 If we would judge our selves we should not be judged We are not to judge others but we may and must judge our selves Concerning Confession of sin take these Rules 1. Confesse all thy particular known sins particularly Take thy self in private and open the case of thy soul clearly and without guile of spirit before the Lord make private confession of all thy sins unto him not that thou canst acquaint God with any thing he did not before know but that it may appear thou thy self knowest and art acquainted with the plague of thine own heart and art sensible of thy sins iniquities and defects in obedience And seeing every one is guilty of many more sins than he can remember though he examine his heart and life never so seriously Therefore when thou hast humbly confessed and bewailed all thy particular known sins to God then with a general confession acknowledge the rest namely all thy secret unknown undiscovered sins saying as David Psal 19.12 Lord cleanse me from my secret sins Cleanse me O Lord not only from those particular sins I do remember and humbly confesse before thee but from all other sins also that I am any manner of way guilty of though I do not now remember them 2. Remember that 't is not only words and handsome expressions God regards in confession of sin but there must be shame a deep sense and feeling of the evil of sin a heart hatred against sin a true sorrow for all our offences against God that must accompany our confessions else they are no way pleasing unto him 3. Besides con●essing unto God there are some cases wherein confession also unto man is requisite as 1. Under deep wounds of Conscience 'T is requisite then to open the true state and case of thy soul to some Godly Minister or some faithful experienced Christian that so they may give advice and counsel and suit their prayers to thy particular Case 2. When some eminent judgment seizeth on any for some eminent provocation Here as Joshuah said to Achan Josh 7.19 My son confess and give glory to God That Gods justice may be cleared for hereby God receiveth a great deal of Glory and men a wonderful confirmation of the care and justice of Providence 3. He that by any notorious offence really s●andalizeth his Brother or the Church of Christ ought to be willing by a private or publick confession and sorrow for his sin to declare his repentance to those that are offended who are thereupon to be reconciled to him and in love to receive him Fifthly Forsaking sin leaving off whatever appears to be displeasing unto God The true penitent 1. Forsakes the acting of known sins for the present 2. Resolves against sin for the future I. Forsakes all his former known sins secret sins as well as open profitable sins as well as those that are not True and sincere obedience is universal especially in respect of the purpose of the heart He that out of Conscience of duty to God forsakes one sin will for the same reason fear to offend in another there being the same Divine authority awing and binding the Conscience in one sin as in another To pick and chuse here to obey there to dispense with our selves is a shrewd sign of hypocrisie II. Resolves against sin And his resolutions come 1. From solid reasons and not only from some sudden affections 2. Are accompanied with earnest and fervent prayers to God He that is strong in resolution and weak in supplication is quickly foil'd 3. Are made not in his own strength but the strength of Christ which he humbly implores and rests upon Sixthly Conversion whereby the bent of the heart is turned towards God choosing him for its chief delight and portion desiring to walk with him and approve it self unto him in sincere obedience A true and real penitent does not content himself with a meer negative holinesse and leaving off his former sinful waies 'T is not enough for such an one to be no drunkard no swearer no unclean person c. But as he hates every evil way so he makes Conscience of every known duty required of him The Commands that require duty are as binding to him as those that forbid sin There will be a visible change in such a person and that 1. In reference to God He will love God more and delight in his waies and worship now more than formerly 2. In reference to men He will be careful to discharge his relative duties He will labour to walk exactly and righteously to observe a strict integrity in his dealings with men And in these two things he will manifest the reality of his conversion 1. If he remember he has wronged any man formerly in his goods or estate either by defrauding or unjust detaining what is due to him he will endeavour to make him restitution or other satisfaction He that confesseth and forsaketh his sin shall find mercy Prov. 28.13 He that restoreth not ill gotten
may serve the Lord in newness of life all their daies And if this be the duty of Believers and Christian Parents under the Gospel it will thence follow that those that wilfully neglect it as much as in them lies do withhold their Children from Christ debar them of the blood of Sprinkling keep them from the blessing leave them under the curse cast them out of Gods Family and dangerously expose them to the Adversary both of God and man II. The Second Duty of Parents is to teach and instruct their children to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord Eph. 6.4 Having given them up to Christ by Baptism let them imagine they hear our blessed Saviour saying to them as Pharoahs Daughter said to Moses's Mother Exod. 2.19 Bring up this child for me c. They must as Solomon speaks Prov. 22.6 Train up their Children in the way they should go They must have a special care to provide that they may be rightly instructed and educated As soon therefore as they come to the use of reason they are to be instructed in those things that concern their everlasting welfare They are by little and little to be taught all those things which God hath commanded them as their duty to perform As also what abundance of joy and comfort they will find in the practise of them and what glorious rewards God hath provided for them if they do them and what grievous punishments if they do them not These things ought to be early instilled into their minds which like new vessels do usually keep the savour of that which is first put into them The seeds and principles of Religion and vertue are to be sown in them betimes and their minds possess'd with a love of goodnesse and an abhorrence and detestation of evil and wickednesse as that which is shamefull and abominable If they be not thus early acquainted with the waies of God the devil that arch enemy of souls will be ready and forward enough to instill his wicked principles into them and to blow up the corruption of their natures and hurry them on in waies leading down to endlesse perdition And what a sad account will those Parents give to God who have neglected their duty in this kinde suffering their children to remain almost as rude and ignorant and unacquainted with the principles of Christian Religion and their duty to God and man as if they had been born among Pagans and Infidels III. A Third duty of Parents is To bless their children and that 1. By their prayers They should by daily and earnest prayers commend them to Gods favour and blessing craving all needfull mercies both temporal and spiritual for them Children of many prayers seldom miscarry 2. By labouring to be such persons themselves so truly Religious that a blessing may descend from them on their posterity This is frequently promised in the Scripture to Godly men That their seed shall be blessed The best course any Parents can take to intail a blessing on their children is to be truly gracious themselves IV. They ought to set them a good example else all their precepts and counsels will do no good How many Parents are there that by their wicked conversation do corrupt and deprave their own children This Consideration laies a most strict tie and obligation upon all Parents to lead an holy and religious life else they do not only hazzard their own souls but indanger their childrens also And what an inhumane cruelty is that V. They must watch over them and by a prudent discipline govern them and guard their education 1. Encouraging them when they do well and winning them by love and a fair and kind carriage that they may delight to do their duties Some Parents by too much austerity and harshnesse and a rigorous use of their parentall authority provoke and exasperate their children so that they dread coming into their presence and have no heart to study to please them seeing they will afford them no countenance This is contrary to what the Apostle prescribes Col. 3.21 Parents provoke not your children to wrath c. 2. If fair means perswasions and encouragements will not prevail nor make them mind their duties then another course must be taken Sober yet sharp reproof must be used If that fail too then correction becomes necessary For in this case as Solomon saies He that spareth his rod hateth his son Prov. 13.24 'T is a cruell and foolish fondnesse to spare stripes when all other means have been unsuccessfull But this correction should be 1. Timely before children have been suffered to run on so long that they have got a habit to evil and have contracted a stubbornnesse of Will 2. Moderate not exceeding the quality of the fault nor the tendernesse of the child 3. Not inflicted in anger for then the Child will think he is corrected not so much for his fault as because his Father is angry He must therefore be made sensible of his fault shewed the evil and danger of it and directed how to amend it and this is the way with Gods blessing to reform him VI. They must maintain them and allow them a competency according to their estates for their comfortable subsistence Some Parents are of such a covetous humour they cannot abide to part with any thing almost as long as they live And thereby 1. Lessen their Childrens Affection towards them so that some have proceeded so far as to wish their Parents death Which though it be such a horrible sin as no provocation from a Parent can excuse in a child yet 't is also a fault in a Parent to give such a temptation 2. It puts them upon shifts and sharking tricks to maintain themselves and acquaints them with bad company and makes them surfeit the sooner when they come to their estates 3. The Parents hereby loose that contentment which they might have in seeing their Children live prosperously and comfortably which is such a joy and contentment that none but a Miser or Earth-worm would exchange for that poor pleasure of having Money in the Chest VII They must provide some good and honest profession or some fit way of employment for them that so they may be serviceable in their generation to God and the World and may avoid Idleness that great snare of the Devil VIII They must lay up for them and provide for them as God shall give means as 't is 2 Cor. 12.14 The children ought not to lay up for the Parents but the Parents for the children But let the Parent be careful to get that wealth honestly which he makes his childes portion lest a curse go along with it Let him satisfie himself to make such provisions for his children as God shall enable him honestly to make A little honestly got being better than great riches gotten unjustly and unrighteously Prov. 16.8 Better is a little with righteousnesse than great revenues without right IX And lastly