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A60361 The compleat Christian, and compleat armour and armoury of a Christian, fitting him with all necessary furniture for that his holy profession, or, The doctrine of salvation delivered in a plain and familiar explication of the common catechisme, for the benefit of the younger sort, and others : wherein summarily comprehended is generally represented the truly orthodox and constant doctrine of the Church of England, especially in all points necessary to salvation / by W.S., D.D. Slatyer, William, 1587-1647. 1643 (1643) Wing S3983; ESTC R38256 385,949 1,566

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of Christs death and benefits received thereby 20. How is it called Both Coena Domini the Supper of the Lord of the time and occasion when instituted Mensa Domini of the benefit of nourishment and food 1 Cor. 10. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the meeting together of the Church for celebration thereof Communio of the union with Christ the communion of Sai●ts members by it and communication and participation of the faithfull 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of thanksgiving and commemoration of Christs blessings Sacrificium by the Ancients but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by prayse and thankes not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as propitiatory Missa of he late Romish Church either of the division of the rest of the company and this left for the chiefe the receivers or of the al●es and oblations thither sent or as some define of the sacrifice and elevation as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth a signe or ensigne or elevation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sacrifice or that token and action of and in the sacrifice called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the elevation 21. Is it then a sacrifice Nothing lesse yet the commemoration of that sacrifice by Christ once offered and so a holy mystery and signe of that gracio●s redemption of all the Elect continually to be remembred with the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving as is more fully expressed in the parts the signe and thing signified 22. What is the outward part or signe Bread and wine which the Lord commanded to be received 23. What note you in this 1. The matter or elements bread and wine 1. Bread c. 2. The Authour the Lord commanding 2. By the Lord. 3. The action the institution consecration communicating receiving 3. Commanded to be received 24. What for the outward ceremony The bread and wine the elements appointed The breaking and powring out prepared to be used The blessing and consecration in words prescribed The distribution and delivery receiving and using in the action of the Priest Communicant 25. Is all this prescribed Yes for is we observe it we finde it all that 1. At the end after Supper whence the Lords Supper 2. Christ tooke bread and likewise the cup. 3. He gave thankes the consecration 4. He brake it 5. He distributed gave it so f●r the cup taken given 6. He said take Eat this is my body Drinke ye all of this this is the bloud of the New Testament c. 7. He commanded the Celebration so do this Often use and continuall as oft as ye doe it in remembrance of me and so as the Apostle expoundeth it to remember the Lords death till he come 1 Cor. 11. 26. 26. Why are these things observed As principally setting before our eyes the efficacie and vertue use and end of the Sacrament 1. As taking of bread as the Lord tooke his Sonne and gave him for a sacrifice as Abraham commanded to offer Isaac type of Christ his only Sonne 2. As breaking and pouring out as Christs body broken and bloud poured out 3. As giving thanks and consecration whence called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. As distributing as he and his graces distributed whence a communication and communion 5. As taking it apprehension of Christ and his merits by faith 6. As eating virtually application to the soul. 7. As drinking the refreshing of the languishing soule in the fountaine of grace 8. As universall words all of you to signifie the universality of his graces to all 9. As forme of words uniformly set downe in the foure Evangelists for unity and uniformity of faith doctrine manners 10. As prescription of it to all and at all times or often doe this as oft c. and so 11. As the continuance of it in the often celebration 27. What of the other circumstances As lesse materiall and not so primarily noting the efficacie use or end not so much insisted on and so left to the Churches order and discretion 1. As the time supper time altered to morning prayer time as the morning sacrifice in the morne of the new Church which in the even of the old 2. As the place in an upper Chamber now the Church yet the highest roome on earth 3. As the persons Disciples only yet then the whole Church in ●ommunis now all the faithfull 4. As the gesture sitting or lying down now kneeling as of most reverence and humility best fitting the sacrifice of prayse and thanksgiving 5. As the leavened bread water mixed or the like not principally intended nor treated of or commanded So left to the Churches determination with whom power was left to set things in order as the Apostle said Other things will I set in order when I come 28. Why bread and wine appointed 1. Because of the fit and neare resemblance between them and Christs pretious body and bloud food and refreshing of the soule 2. Because of the imitation of Melchisedec's holy action the type hereof and the long continued use and order among them ● Because of the common yet excellent use of them 29. How that fit and neare resemblance 1. In the preparation aforesaid of threshing grinding breaking of the bread treading powring out of the wine as Christs body and bloud or indeed body and soul prepared for an offering for sin 2. In the speciall using by taking inwardly and digesting them for nourishment and refreshing of the body so these to the soule inwardly received and appropriated by faith 3. In the vertue of preservation of the hungry and famished from death so our soules from death also Of strengthening and making glad the heart as Psal. 104. 4. so this bread of life or staffe of bread stayeth strengtheneth the spirituall life and maketh glad the heart and soule of the faithfull even comforted thereby to eternity 30. How in imitation of Melchisedec As he was a type of the Messiah and brought out bread and wine to Abraham Cen. 14. 18. and this continuing in use among the Jewes as their traditions testifie both to blesse and consecrate their bread and wine especially at the Passeover and at the end of the feast such a like distribution of a p●●t of the bread hi● under a napking and a cup of wine at the end of the feast this ou● Savio●● as a Priest ●or ever after the o●der of Mel●hijede● in continua●ce of that rite begun from him at the end of the Passeover when now to vanish and be abolished thus c●useth it to stand for a perp●tua●l r●mem●rance of the perfect Pas●eover and his eterna●● Priesthood 31. How ●or the common and ordinary use As being ordi●ary and at h●●● yet of most excellent use the ●ustent●tion and comfort of life so this Sacrament easie to be com● by and no burde●som● ceremony no● costly yet of most excellent use and comfort ●o the very soule and as easie to be come by so of●en to be used 32. What the inward part or thing signifi●d The body and blou● of Christ
ve●ily and indeed taken and received of the faithfull in the Lo●ds Supper 33. What herein observed T●e matter body and bloud of Christ. The action take ●and received by the faithfull The Analogy and rese●blance of the parts The manner the●eof verily and indeed wherein chiefly the force of the relation 4. What are the relata and correlat● The Bread and Wine cons●cration and blessing breaking powring forth giving and distributing nourishing and strengthening the body Relate u●to and signifying the Body and Blood of Christ his holine●e and ve●tue his suffering and shedding his blood his taking and receiving by faith nourishing and refreshing of the soul. 35. What the Relation and Analogie The similitude of the things and representation of one by the other founded after a sort on the similitude of the things themselves in nature but absolutely obtaining the force of the Sacramentall signifying from the institution and by grace 36. How is the taking and receiving of them then Verily and indeed but after a spirtuall and divine manner not so grossely and corporally or carnally to be understood as poore sense or reason should thinke or presume to define under the compasse of their shallow apprehension which their presuming hath moved and stirred up strange mists in this divine speculation that ought onely mysteriously to be looked on and admired with the eye of faith not curiously to bee pried into by silly eye of sense or humane reason 37. Why say we so Because as there are arcana Dei and Religionis that ought not to be pried into and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that cannot be told and mysteries in the Trinity and faith that even mortall heart cannot comprehend nor is it fitting or needfull for us to know much lesse curiously enquire after so especially in this mystery where Christ is verily and indeed present yet after such an ineffable manner the tongue cannot utter nor reason well comprehend yet faith may plainly see because hee hath said it who is the Truth and wee must beleeve though for our weaknesse not able sufficiently to conceive or comprehend 38. Why cannot we comprehend them Because wee are finite and the counsels and wayes or thoughts of God that he will have concealed to exercise our humility not like us or our thoughts or wayes bu● as his wisedome in the depth of his counsels infinite in himselfe though to us-ward and in part so much as necessary for us to know finite and revealed proportionable to our understanding and apprehension so what is not revealed it is holy modesty and sobriety not curiously to enquire after as in this and many other things 39. But some have devised how in this and the like Yet without Gods especiall grace or command and illumination it may well seeme but lost labour and vain for when many have devised divers wayes of his presence here or in the midst among his Disciples when the doores were shut he to whom all power is given can have other means to shew his presence and power then their poore thoughts or inventions can devise And for this if it had been expedient for us to know he would have shewed it it may then suffice us that since hee hath said it hee is present and how hee is present wee shall finde by his graces here and perfectly in glory when we shall know as we are known and all our imperfections done away 40. What are we to doe then With the Disciples to receive him beleeve and enjoy his blessed presence and grace making no question with those Capernaits as to say Master how camest thou hither considering also the Bethshemites were blessed by the presence of the Arke but cursed and plagued when they began curiously to pry into it 1 Kings 6. And curious questions little availe to godlinesse especially in such things as this where silence and admiration is the best eloquence to expresse such mysterie and here godly meditation safer then Socraticall disputation when commonly discourse of controversie doth abate devotion which ought rather to be kindled by pious and godly meditation 41. Is this sufficient then or best for us It is For we may consider if humane reason waver in things sensible how much more in divine so farre above sense and from sense removed The creation of Angels being above humane sense or capacity Moses is therefore said not to have mentioned it so in this mystery much more the manner of Christs presence and how he commeth uttered onely as Pythagoras Scholars were silent and assured it was so if hee said it though else they did not perceive it much more the authority of Christ should be with us because he said it and so let us honour him in this mystery praise him for his mercies receive his graces beleeve his promises and be thankfull for his presence and blessings and here those things wee comprehend we may admire and what wee cannot we should more admire and if word or heart be wanting to expresse or conceive let not faith be wanting to relieve because he is truth and the Sunne remaines a sp●endent body though Bat● or Owles eyes cannot endure it or our eyes look into this truth 42. But are wee not to beleeve as the ancient Fathers did Yes as the holy and most ancient ever have done as the Disciples who beleeved not que●tioning how and enjoyed his grace and presence and the like by the most ancient Fathers confessed we are to acknowledge as 1. With Dionysius the Areopagite that it is a most divine mystery 2. Justine Martyr that not common bread or drink 3. T●rtullian that it was made Christs body 4. Origen that wee eate and drinke the body and blood of Christ and so the Lord entreth under our roofe 5. Cyprian that as in the person of Christ the Humanity was seen but the Divinity hid so in the visible Sacrament or divine essence communicated 6. Hillary of the verity of the body and blood of Christ there is no place of doubt 7. Ambrose that more excellent food then Ma●●a 8. Jerome the Lord both maker of the feast and food 9. St. Augustine that in this sacrifice the Lord bo●● Priest himselfe and sacrifice And so of others with whom we consent in the Orthodox interpretation and confesse and admire he greatnesse and divinesse of the mystery and with reverence embrace what in some respect we are not able to conceive of the mysterious Majesty of the same 43. How are we then to believe That by the faithfull receivers verily and indeed is the body and blood of Christ received and so duly and in faith received as Christ said it it is his body and blood and with it himselfe and his merits are applied to the soul to make it a holy Tabernacle fit for his presence which yet as it is spirituall food is understood in a spirituall manner and selfe fit●ing the same mystery and not destro●ing the natu●e or parts of the Sacrament but such his presence but the soule
explained the second petition for our selves or fifth in order with the order and Analysis and parts thereof observed what meant by forgivenesse and debts or trespasses and how we are debtors many waies and say justly our trespasses the condition whereon we aske forgivenesse as we forgive others and also no forgivenesse at Gods hand so how and how far men may and ought to forgive their brethren and their trespasses and who offend against this divers wayes how David Moses and others did curse and the Magistrate punisheth and not forgiveth and who truly or as they ought forgive others whereby the way is discussed the power and authority that the Church and Priest hath to forgive sins both according to the doctrine of the holy Scriptures and expositions thereon of the ancient Fathers and all orthodox Writers and so generally of the whole Church of God in all ages as well as the present Church of England with the right understanding of her tenet in that point and the good use to be made of it whereby confession is explaned how far forth requisite and coldly for the most part now used but the defect of discipline and other inconveninces plainly enough to be perceived issuing from the same so the true and genuine use thereof asserted and cleerly proved by many arguments as aforesaid and more fully by the generall practise of the Church and primitiva times demonstrated whereby the manner how it was by them exercised and so the order of the ancient Church discipline is on this occasion set forth and decyphered and for the present petition here is farther declared what herein we ought to doè or avoid so what is here expressed or intimated thus particularly summed up together and explaned 1. VVHat are the three latter Petitions Concerning us and our necessities for things either 1. Temporall as daily bread Give us this day our daily bread 2. Spirituall As forgivenesse of sins c. Deliverance from temptations 3. Partly spirituall and partly temporall as deliverances from all evill ghostly sin and bodily dangers 2. What the first of these Petitions The fourth of the Lords Prayer Give us this day c. wherein we pray for all things necessary for this present life under the name of bread or dayly bread and this day 3. What is the order Placed before those that desire spirituall things or blessings to shew 1. Our exceeding necessity in this life and so first desire food and raiment without which wee cannot subsist 2. Our Fathers mercy that considereth this our need and weaknesse 3. Our account and use wee ought to make of it since allowed to aske it to use it as a step or degree towards better blessings 4. What contained or to be confidered in it 1. The object bread and double epithetons of it 1. Our and 2. Daily bread 2. The action give and adjoyned circumstance twofold of the persons To us time to day 5. What understood by bread 1. Either spiritually bread of life panis vitae or coelestis Angelorum Manna Angels food Christ and Gods word and Sacraments in which respect it might be well preferred to all the rest of the Petitions but thus more improperly 2. Or temporally the staffe of bread food raiment and all other necessities all other comforts of this life whereby to make bread relish well and us to enjoy it 6. How for the first sense Spiritually taken it may be understood indeed that most divinely for Gods holy word which is food of souls bread of life called by such honorable epithetons shewing the vertue and efficacy to sustain the soule according to that of our Saviour Man liveth not by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Secondly also for Christ himselfe who is the incarnate Word and Wisedome of the Father who is the true bread of life and food indeed as thirdly of the Sacraments of his body and blood the spirituall food also of our soules and so this called panis coeli or coelestis Angelorum and the like but not so properly in this place intended since this bread in the first and second Petitions desired where Gods name and glory and kingdome are prayed for and whereas in patriâ wee desire to bee satiated with this heavenly Manna here more properly intended is the panis via or viatorum and that part that concerneth the temporall necessities of this life intimated also by Today and daily and so bread is said to be either Panis Nature of this life Doctrine of Gods word Gratia Christus in Sacramentis Gloriae Christus in Coelis 7. How is the word of God bread As it doth nourish comfort and strengthen the soule as materiall bread doth the body and so noted in these respects of our soules 1. Vivification raising it from death to life 2. Consolation comforting it in that life and against all tribulation 3. Confirmation in goodnesse and against all ill and assaults of the divell 4. Delectation with the heavenly taste and sweetnesse roborating strengthning and illuminating of the heart in the true faith 7. How is Christ the bread of life As the word of God manifested in the flesh to the quickening and raising up of our soules and bodies so panis hominum and as the comfort of Saints and Angels in glory so panis hominum Angelorum c. and so to bee noted this bread of life in I. The Sacraments are to be hol●ly 1. Prepared for with reverence reached unto with feare received by faith 2. Ruminated with devotion that it may nourish us in Christ and make us one with him II. Heaven doth Satiate without any defect to eternity in glory Delight with eternall sweetnesse maintaine life eternally and so Angels food and as the Psalmist said Man did eat Angels food panem Angelorum thus in grace and glory 9. What then of other naturall or materiall bread As by it we understand the very materiall food of our bodies in this life with all the necessary appurtenances of quietnesse and peace friends house lands or revenewes rayment health and other blessings to make it sweet and comfortable to us as that stay of life the staffe of bread is or is accounted to be so we must remember that it ought to be 1. Got by our honest labour 2. Received with moderation and thankfulnesse and so onely properly our daily bread 3. Imparted to others with us as the poore our bread 10. But why is all food called bread To teach us the 1. Use we should intend for strengthning us the property of bread chiefly not for vanity or voluptuousnesse 2. Moderation that should be as the holy and abstemious men that lived with bread and water onely 3. Blessing if we have it from God it shall be sufficient and having food and rayment to bee content 11. Why say you Our bread To signifie both 1. The love of God that granteth it to be ours by the giving when else we
Assyrian Babylon Grecian and Egyptian Militia and Armes had done before them but now numbred by legions whiles Saint John beheld the rude multitudes more swaying by number then by wisedom then reigning and raging in the world and afflicting the Church how appliable to all A●tichristian practices oppressions and oppositions when and wheresoever that man of sinne that first began to move in the Apostles times by Schisme and Heresie the dregges of Gentilisme the nurse of later paganisme shall get head in the power of the Beast among the beasts of the people against the Saints and Church of God to be so high advanced there to defile and prophane it by his own presence bringing in the whore of Babylon or confusion with the Cup of abominations of false strange and wil worship unreverence and prophane novelties the idols of fancy innovating whorish inventions of those that run after strange Gods Religions where rude armed impiety by barbarous force more then gracious wisedome and godlinesse by good counsell can prevaile I leave to be considered by the wisest and most judicious So retur ning from this mystery of iniquity to that divine mystery of the name of God But why said you before that Nomen Tetragrammaton was corruptly pronounced Jehovah It is most evident though it have so long escaped the most curions inquisition of so many thousands nay Myriades or millions of searching eyes and wits that have long sought after it for whether the Jewes by their superstitious silence lost the true sound or by their supercilious envie conceal'd it from us the Gentiles and so at last perhaps lost it as they did their ancient Musicke and Meeter of Davids Psalms in their captivity or propter peccatum as they confesse yet what the true sound is easily to bee discerned by them and us may thus plainly appeare for that it is truly to be pronounced Jaho or Jahu trisyllabum is thus proved by their owne writings and strangers First we may finde in ancient Greek Copies and Poems yet extant that name rendred I●● Jao wanting the letter h or aspiration whereby to write as we may Jahoh But more then this in the Bible it selfe where that name is fixed to the end of any proper names they may most plainly perceive it there as in Isaiahu Jeremiahu Eliahu and the like Thirdly where it is prefixed to proper names as in Jehoram Jehoiada Jehoshap at and the like it is plain where we know by the Grammar Rules Camets by increase of syllables is turned into Shevah which yet is not so little an e as is now sounded but rather French i Feminine sounding our less● a or broader as old Gramarian● testifie as in Solomon Rehoboam and many other like words expresly found Fourthly in the contracted name Jah it is evident the two last letters are cut off or left out as usuall with them and seene in many like words and especial●y in the Conjugations Lamed He and Lamed Aleph is most frequent where Aleph and He with their ending vowels are commonly cu● off much more might be added for confirmation but this may suffice but for the word Jehovah it is onely the vowels of Adonai used to be read for it is preposterously added to the letters of that name So ending with this Sacrament come we now to the Lords Supper SECT 3. Of the LORDS SUPPER The Lords Supper why instituted and how a memoriall of Christ and his death and that his sacrifices with the Analogy or resemblance that relation ●t hath to the same and to the Pascal Lambe and all those other legall saccrifices so often used all of them having relation to Christ being the perfection of them the benefit of whose sacri●ice and perpetuall memory thereof with thankfulnesse 〈…〉 prime reasons though other ends also proposed the institution how it differeth from baptisme many wayes and how it selfe in divers respects called by divers names the parts of it the outward signs ceremonies and actions by the Lord prescribed and observed the other circumstances to the same belonging also propounded to be considered the near resemblance and fit relation of the outward signe and inward or of our receiving the elements of bread and wine and other holy actions and ceremonies to the receiving of the body and blood of Christ by faith and our nourishing and strengthning by the same the manner of Christs presence in the blessed Sacrament as ineffable rather to be reverently admired and thankfully confessed then curiously to be disputed of or contentiously to be enquired after as the Fathers teached therein acknowled●ing a most divine Mystery yet neither transubstantiation 〈…〉 Consubstantiation thereby to be conceived but the Mystery rather more divinely to be understood and accordingly by the ancient ●tiled the figure of it and speeches of the Church and holy Scriptures concerning it and the worthy receiving thereof So the comforts and benefits in the religious receiving and using it and in the grases vertue and effects thereof come to be christianly meditated on and remembred and hereby reasons urged why kneeling at receving the holy Communion and other the like reverent gesturet and postures of the body are in the Church and at such holy actions to be used with the difference and distinction of all such religious and ceremonious as well as civill reverence from the divine worship a● also reasons for it why w● Christians doe usually worship and have our Churches so placed looking towards the East as it were thereby causing it 1. VVHy was the Sacrament of the Lords Supper ordained For a continuall remembrance of the sacrifice of the death of Christ and the benefits we receive thereby 2. What is hereby intimated T●e end wherefore it was ordained viz. First The memoriall of the I. Thing it selfe 1. The Pasehall Lambe now offered indeed Christ. The death of the Lambe of God The sacrifice by his death immolate II. The benefits we receive thereby Secondly The perpetuity of this memoriall to be continued in the Church till his comming a-again at the end of the world as in the institution Do this in remembrance c. and To remember the Lords death till he come 1 Cor. 11. ●6 3. How is it a memoriall of Christ In that as bread and wine are prepared by many strokes of affliction and labour for the comfort of the body so was the bread of life and living water or wine of his bloud for comforting the heart prepared for us and our soules 4. How seene in this bread of life Christ As bread is prepared by 1. Threshing 2. Grinding 3. Baking 4. Breaking 5. Dividing to be eaten So Christ was 1. Threshed with many strokes of anguish and affliction of body and soule 2. Ground in the mill of much sorrows 3. Baked in the fiery oven of Gods anger against sin Mal. 4. 4. Broken for our sakes that we might be made whole and fed with this bread of life 5. How in this wine of his bloud As
and faith are spirituall things so is ●e spiritually and after a divine and in●ffable manner presen● to it and nourishing and sustaining the sa●● But is not this he confession of Con or Transu●stantiation No For neither with the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doe we say it is cum Christo or Christus cum pa●e in or sub pane this with Christ or Christ within or under it Nor with the M 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 turned into his body but with Christ himselfe as Christus is panis vitae so this Bread is his body and the Cup his blood and so say his Apostles but in the Sacramentall locution and phrase of a Sacrament where the signe sheweth the thing signi●ed and by vertue and efficacie of his power and inst●tution ●oth are divinely present by the operation of his Spirit and grace and so found expressed in holy Scripture as also expounded in the same where he is not only figuratively called the Vine the Shepheard c but more mysteriously also to be understood as here in the Sacrament and so expounded in other places 44. How expressed or so expounded In that whereas Baptisme is called Absolutio peccatorum the w●shing of sin The Laver of R●generation Titus 3. 5. 21. and saveth us 1 Pet. 3. 21. being the Sacrament or signe of it onely So ●ircumcision called the Covenant Gen. 17. 10. but the signe or Sacrament of it vers 11. proxime sequenti So the Lamb is the Passover Exod. 12. 11. but called the Remembrance of it vers 14. and the signe of it Exod. 13. 9. and so Matth. 26. 26. and in the other Evangelists it is called Christs body and his blood and 1 Cor. 10. 16. the Communion of his body and Communion of his blood yet bread and partakers they of that one bread in which sense also said Christ was the Rocke spirituall meat and drink and the Rock said to bee Christ 1 Cor. 10. 3. 4. So Christ our Passover 1 Cor. 5. 7. and the Lamb 1 Joh. 29. and in the Revelation and the like● wherein though wee acknowledge Gods powerfull and gracious presence in it and the weaknesse of our apprehension or reason to sound the depth of this mystery and manner of his comming as we doubt not of his presence and true and very receiving neither hold we it needfull for weake reason curiously to enquire further nor need we seek to the Ubiquitaries doctrine or other Comments of humane invention for props of our faith or this holy confession 45. How doe we then apprehend the mystery As it is delivered and to be apprehended spiritually and by faith so mysteries are offered not to questioners but to beleevers yet herein if with Solomon we admire or say How is it credible God should thus dwell with men 1 King 8. 27. let us remember what the Angel Gabriel said The power of the most highest and of the holy Ghost hath overshadowed it Here is his power word to search further or beyond it were teme●ity and not to beleeve it infidelity but to beleeve and acknowledge it life eternall 46. How may we reverently call or esteeme it As the Fathers have in their godly zeale declared described and called it As a great inestimable divine most noble Sacrament a pure venerable eternall praise-worthy Mystery A Mystery of peace and piety holy of holies blessing and hidden Manna and such reverent Titles as their holy zeale and devotions moved them unto And if any way seeming hyperbolical we may well think and know nothing too high to shew it or words too divine for this holy mystery if well and graciously interpreted or understood 47. What figures of this Sacrament 1. The Paschall Lamb principally whose forerunner it was 1 Cor. 5. 7. 2. The bread wine that M●lchisedec brought ●ut when he blessed Abraham Gen. 14. 18. and hee a type of Christ. 3. The Shew-bread alwayes before God lawfull for none to eate but the Priests this those onely that are godly and so a Royall Priesthood 4 The Cake baked in ashes in vertue of which Elias walked fourty dayes and fourty nights and came to Mount Horeb where he saw God as wee hereby strengthened and brought to see God 5. The Manna Angels food for the excellent properties and only ceasing the Sabbath and this in use with us till the eternall Sabbath 6. The Ark containing holy things made of pu●est shining Cedar Shittim wo●d this of the flesh of the Sonne of God and bringing holinesse and graces and blessings with it 7. Elizeus meale 1 King 4. that sweetned the pot and took away bitternesse and death so this bringing life 48. ●ow is Christ generally in holy Scripture said to be received 1. In his person as by Zacheus entertaining him to whom he said This day is salvation come into thy house 2. In the poore received or entertained in charitie when it will bee acknowledged what yee did to these the little ones yee did to me 3. In his M●ssengers Who receive you receive me and who receive me receive him that sent me as who receive a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall have a Prophets reward 4. In his doctrine and by faith so Joh. 1. 12. To such as receive him he gave power to become the sonnes of God 5. In the Sacraments of the old Law shadows and types of the new 6. In Baptisme he that is baptized into Christ hath put o● Christ Gal. 3. 17. 7. In the L●rds Supper most divinely as in this Sacrament exhibited and most effectually as verily and indeed by application of his g●aces and presence powerfully to the soule that whereas the old Sacraments were types and shadowes the Doctrine the Articles or conveyance the Messengers the nectaries and servants Baptisme the seale of a new life and beginning in Christ this of the comforts and nourishing in him as continually feasted with his graces and enjoying his presence 49. What are the benefites whereof wee are made partakers hereby The strengthening and refreshing our soules by the body and blood of Christ as our bodies are by the bread and wine 50. What is here expressed The analogy of these spirituall comforts to the soule and spirituall life correspondent though in a divine manner to those corporall comforts of the body by those excellent meanes and instruments In what manner In the 1. Receiving and using 2. Blessing and graces 3. Effect and vertue of it 51. How seen in the receiving and using In that first as the bread and wine are received by the hand of the body eaten and digested by the mouth and stomach are made the nourishment of the body 2. So the body and blood of Christ received by the hand of faith fed on by the mouth digested by the heart is made nourishment and strength to the soule 52. How in the blessing and graces In that as the bodily life is continually fed nourished and refreshed by these corporall substances so the spirituall
life of grace is sustained continued and confirmed in us by the heavenly Manna food of soules Christ thus received as he hath commanded and as the blessing of God sanctifieth the corporall food no lesse this bread of life to the nourishment and refreshing of the soule 53. How in the effect and virtue As we are hereby made one with Christ and he one with us and we all in him at one with God and so said to be 1. Flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones As the corporall food united to our bodies This spirituall uniting our soules to him and in him 2. One bloud in him and of him the second Adam all the elect as one bloud in the first Adam all mankinde one by transfusion of nature with sin this other by transfusion of power and grace in righteousnesse 54. How is this expressed here As many graines of corne make one loafe and many grapes one cup of wine so we are al● one bread in Christ and one cup or wine acceptable in Christ 1 Cor. 10. 17. and all the faithfull in all ages becomming one body and of one bloud in Christ where ever diversly dispersed over the whole world in him receive all graces as he is heire of all and thus we have union with Christ and in him with God the fountaine life and blisse Communion with all Saints in heaven and earth 55. How is this nourishment seen in the soule As it is increased in strength of the spirituall life and more furnished with graces for as man liveth not by bread only but by the word proceeding from the mouth of God this is most apparantly seen in the soule strengthened and confirmed in the faith grounded on his truth thereby as all things have their being gathering strength to live unto eternity in the mighty power of the same that sustaineth all things and so thirsting to drinke of the fountaine of living waters is thus nourished and refreshed of God so commeth next in place to be considered with what reverence we should come and approach to the holy Table and receiving the Sacrament 56. Why should kneeling at receiving the blessed Sacrament or bowing towards the holy Table be used The very naming of them the blessed Sacrament and holy Table might seem sufficiently to answer this Question as indeed by any that but rightly conceived the due worth of the Sacrament with the benefit and blessing or so reverently esteemed the holy mysteries as they ought and with dutifulnesse to God in all humility at the receiving and else remembred to render thankes for the same it would never be questioned or so questioned as it is by some with intention to deny or decline it they would rather thinke no humility too low reverence too much or devotion too great that could be offered to God or shewne at the receiving and remembrance of so great a blessing and in so great a presence not the like of it againe on earth as where the greatest Potentates and mightest Kings and Emperours may be glad to yeeld their humblest reverence with the rest of Gods Saints and Servants but to content any modest minded man and not engaged to fancie or faction it might suffice that the Church who hath and ever had delegate power as we see in the Apostles and from them derived to their successours to see things in order where they come and commanded things to be done decently and in order and so from antiquity have established it and had the warrant and approbation of Gods holy Spirit in the Church with promise of his gracious presence to be with them to the worlds end to guide them into all truth the promises of God being Yea and Amen in Christ hath so ordained and commanded it which command of his and guidance of that holy Spirit as from the mouth of God himselfe is by all godly men and dutifull sons of the Church to be esteemed though here and in the like cases perhaps nothing will suffice or satisfie some curious questionists and fancifull or furious factionists of our times with a spirit of con●radiction bent wholy to sedition wrangling and dissention 57. But is not this bordering too neare on Idolatry or superstition and tending to diminish the Creators honour It would never be dreamed on but by such men as nothing almost can please that is not of their owne coinage crotchets of their owne devising or an idol of their owne fancies setting up and then iudeed such and such only shal have all the applause or even extream and unreasonable adoration among them and their poore seduced and deluded Sectaries and here it might aswell be said of honouring the King who is Gods Image that it were to diminish Gods honour or that reverence before the chaire of Estate to be diminishing the Kings honour or observance to the Peers on whom his favour shines a disgrace to the Prince as this when indeed it is a more honouring of either by that distinguishing and respect to others in their due place and degree and by the degrees the dignity of each more seen and declared and the reverence done to the one redounding in some measure to the o●her as if not more enhau●sed yet more expressed by it and as the house for the owners so these for Gods sake respected though as the things different so the reverence exhibited to each his due as shewed in the last Section before there being a Cultus reverentiae or R●ligiosa observantia as well as divina adoratio a civill respect religious reverence and divine worsh●p and so some things may have a civill respect others a religious observance God only a divine worship and the holy things in reference to him and for his sake are reverenced so far forth as they are which is far from insinuating their derivation of Gods honour upon any besides God which were damnable Idolatry and God divert it for as the infinitude of his nature cannot be comprehended under the same kinde of being so neither to be comprehended or dispersed under the same kinde of worship with a creature when yet notwithstanding by such reverentiall respects to holy things in their degrees the Church may seem to shew as one learnedly observes by what naturall and rationall proportions she rose and we may with her by way of supereminencie as the Schooles speake from a relative respect of divine things to an absolute respect of the divine Essence and from a just valuation of man to a right estimate of God and this a religious holy and good use of that reverence used according to the severall distance and difference of degrees in it 58. Doth the Church of God so allow it Yes and ever hath as Damas speaks of the like 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may we say of some part of the reverence used whiles divine worship only directed to God and for whose sake yet the respect and reverence that we yeeld to the holy things is to them extended and
saved There are surely many Hypocrites that take the badge of Christ but fight under the banner of Satan but commonly it is seen true by their works we may know them 32. Is it then easily to be discerned who shall be saved Nothing lesse for the most impenitent sinner for a while may at last finde mercy and be converted and as we are to judge none we are to hope well of all and to believe of our selves as we finde by our faith of others in charity 33. Then are we to account all members of Christ that are baptized Charity bindeth us so to it as who have beene washed in the same Lavar of regeneration received into the same fellowship and visible company of Saints and faithfull that wee are though God onely indeed knoweth who are his 34. What use of Baptisme The sacramentall assurance of the love of God and his graces to us and so admittance into his house and Church and by faith cooperating a step to our salvation which as in the use so in the remembrance may be very profitable 35. What profit in the remembrance thereof To confirme the grace well begun in a mans heart whereby to grow in grace and so forward to godlinesse 36. How may that be effected If he beleeve he shall bee hereby more confirmed in the faith so being a true Christian be hereby registred in the Catalogue of Saints that all the fiends in hell shall never be able to blot him out againe 37. How is this benefit here described By these excellent names and titles in the answer here expressed as the baptized is said to be made hereby 1. A member of Christ. 2. Childe of God and 3. Inheritor of the kingdome of heaven 38. How a member of Christ As ingrafted into him by Baptisme and received to bee a member of his body the Church of which he is the head and Spouse 39. How understand you the body of Christ Divers wayes and especially these three either his Naturall body united to his soule so borne and for us offered an oblation for redemption of our offences Or his Mysticall body and that understood either Politically of his Church the company of the faithfull Or Sacramentally and spiritually but verily in the Sacrament of the body and blood of Christ exhibited to his Church under the species and signes of bread and wine 40. Which of these here understood His mysticall and politicall body the Church whereof hee is the head the whole Church his Spouse and every good and faithfull Christian a member 41. How is he seene to be head By giving to the same and every member thereof Life Motion Direction 42. How is any of us known so to be a member of him By our receiving life motion and direction from him and as we feele our soules to be 1. Living in God 2. Moved by his Spirit 3. Directed by his holy Word 43. Is there any difference in the members of this mysticall body Yes according to the diverse gifts and graces of Gods holy Spirit working in them 44. In what manner Though secretly yet evidently by the gifts appearing in them as of prophesie tongues interpretation healing teaching and governing and the like whence some Apostles other Prophets Teachers Governours as the same Spirit giveth power and direction 45. How have these the names of members As in every well governed Commonwealth the Prince representeth the head the State a body his faithfull Councellours eyes the Law the life and soule the Teachers the understanding Governors the will and all Prelates Magistrates and Judges the shoulders whereon the head is borne and all weighty affaires of estate the Artificers Husbandman and Trades the hands which worke and the feet whereon the Commonwealth standeth So in the Church the like order and distinction of members seene 46. How is that showne By the Apostles owne words 1 Cor. 12. where the Prophets who are called Seers Apostles Teachers c. are showne members of that mysticall body of Christ the Church for the good and conveniency of the body in divers degrees yet all needfull even the meanest as well as the more honourable and in the charity and harmony of the whole every one one anothers members as all together members of Christ. 47. What commeth of being members of Christ We are thereby children of God and so consequently in the right of Sonnes inheritors of the Kingdome of Heaven 48. But were not we children of Godelse Not as beloved or in grace and favour with him for so we are onely as we are in Christ. 49. Who are then the children of God Either Generally all creatures men and Angels Particularly men sonnes of Adam who was the son of God Most specially the elect by adoption and grace in Christ who is most essentially intirely and supremely the Sonne of God 50. How is Christ the Son of God By nature of the same essence God of God begotten not made eternally before the world was created the wisedome truth image and beloved of God 51. How are Angels sonnes of God As the most excellent creatures spirits in light created for the service of God who is the Father of light and Father of Spirits the originall of them and all things and so Satan the disobedient spirit or one of them that fell from that excellent estate in which created is said Iob 1. 6. to come and stand before the Sons of God 52. How are men the sons of God Generally as Angels and all creatures else as created in an excellent estate in the first Adam but though disobedient in some measure by the subtilty and meanes of that Angell that fell Satan or the old Serpent yet particularly taken againe into favour and had a Saviour appointed the eternall sonne of God a meanes of their restauration 53. How are the elect the sons of God Most specially in his favour and grace for his love to Christ in whom they are accepted as his members and having put on his righteousnesse by faith and grace given them for his sake as it were accompanying that faith so made acceptable and their soules adorned 54. Why are not the falling Angels in like hope For that they in a more excellent estate created more was required of them in regard of their rare perfection whose sin and guilt was so much more heynous as their knowledge and estate more excellent and so they fell in eternity to eternity 55. How then should men lesse excellent be saved Even in that respect as 1. not so highly transgressing having not received so excellent gifts or so many and heavenly talents but as inferiour in gifts and graces inferiour in offence and who in time fell had in this world a time of returning and meanes of salvation appointed 2. In regard of the occasion and meanes of their fall 56. How is that Their guilt though heynous as against the infinite Majesty of God yet inferiour to that also of Angels in this as who fell of
Herods hog then his childe 3. Flight from his massacre even in his swadling clouts faine to take sanctuary in Egypt such his exile into Egypt and in his return faine to take Galilee for a poore refuge for feare of further danger and so consequently suffering many things to his greatest derogation in the processe of his age both by the Divell and his agents and instruments wicked men 19. What else especially 1. His want and poverty in a high measure 2. Fasting and temptation in the Wildernesse 3. Labours in preaching and teaching ungratefull ones as wel as the 4. Councells and practises against his Doctrine and person 5. Violence offered even publiquely often before that his finall apprehension and time of his suffering and death 20. How his want and poverty 1. Seene at his birth his parents so poore had no roome in the Inne so born in a cave neer it where the poore lodged called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Manger or Stall so antiquity delivereth the place showne divers writers in primitive times recording it in great want and poverty 2. In his education farre from pompe or plenty in the estate of his humble and poore parents at Nazareth 3. Afterwards with his Disciples poor Fishers to the rich and proud Pharisies and Johns Disciples as he professeth that the Foxes have holes and Birds nests but the Son of Man hath not where to lay his head 21. How in his fastings and temptations As his use was in great abstinency so else in the Wildernesse when led out thither by the spirit to be tempted and so fasted forty dayes and in that extremity endured both bitternesse of want and assaults of Satan in the discomfortablenesse of hunger and thirst and want of company in the vastity and solitude of the Wildernesse so on all sides encompassed with misery if possibly to have been by sorrow or subtilty overcome but the end he the vanquisher and at last Angels to his blessed comfort after hellish and grievous temptations came and ministred unto him 22. How in his labours and paines Continually going about doing good as his very enemies confessed frequent and fervent in prayer and preaching visiting and healing the sicke the blinde and lame clensing the Lepers raising the dead disputing reproving and confuting the gaine-sayings of the stubborne Pharisies Saduces and Scorners whipping the prophane persons out of the Temple and though instructing the weake powerfully overthrowing the insolent impostors and deniers or despisers of the truth 23. How by practices and counsels against him and his Doctrine By his suffering and bearing the vile and standerous speeches of those that called him glutton and drunkard friend of Publicans and sinners deceiver impostor and said he had a Divell and cast out Divels by Belzebub Excommunications and revilings of the Pharisies Scribes and Herodians and all the curses they could give when he blessed and blessed of God The Pharisies and others their practices in their counsels to intrap him in his speeches and seeke his life at least to overthrow and disgrace his doctrine 24. In what manner Their Disciples and Herodians cunningly asking him questions if lawfull to pay tribute to Caesar that if he affirme it the people might hate or stone him if deny it the Roman Governours might take his life other questions of the Law and the like with malicious intent to hurt and intangle him and other whiles condemning him as an Heretique sending officers to apprehend him taht were overcome by his Doctrine and excommunicating those that followed him and pronouncing them accursed c. 25. What open violence 1. So much that though the Rulers were moved divers with his workes and did esteeme and honour him they durst not professe it for feare of others of the Jewes and Pharisies and Herodians Ioh. 9. 22. they tooke up stones to kill him Ioh. 7. 19. and 8. 59. 2. They led him to the side of a hill to throw him downe headlong but he passing through the middest escaped Luke 4. 29. his time was not yet come determined of the Father and more and greater torments and sufferings were by him to be sustained 26. VVhich were those Those grievous ones neere his passion when apprehending the heavy wrath of God due to sin and the heavy burden that lay on all mankind as it were wrestling with him 1. Not only prayer Father if it be possible c. and thrice iteration of it in bitter heavineste of spirit 2. And wresting from him but even in deadly anguish of that fearfull Agony in body and soule and sweat of drops of blood And lastly his life in that terrible and fearefull manner by crucifying being made a sacrifice for sin when his body torne and his soule tormented under his fathers displeasure he cried Eli Eli c. that he was a man indeed of sorrow when he so bare our infirmities Esay 53. for what sorrow was ever like his Ier. Lament 27. VVhat considerable in his crucifying The unjust execution and manner of it the meanes of it Gods determinate counsell for our good the malice of the Jewes consequently his death and burtall How the unjust execution and manner of it 1. As it was before Pilate a Roman and Heathen and by himselfe confessed unjust Judge as 2. Who acknowledging him guiltlesse and acquitted him indeed and justice yet at the Jewes importunity for respect of persons and partiall favour condemned him 3. By the malice of the Jewes procured 28. What meanes here seene 1. Seene to men the unjust Judge his partiality malice of the Jewes their malicious accusations and false witnesse when all faile prayers and threats if thou let him escape thou art not Caesars friend 2. Seene to God mans redemption hereby redeemed his determinate counsell this meanes to bee thus made this sacrifice offered and Christ thus to suffer for many Drinke this cup c. 29. This was the greatest of his sufferings Yes for thus hee suffered under Pontius Pilate and was crucified wherein 1. His crowning with thornes 2. reviling mocking and spitting on 3. buffetting c. 4. false accusers and accusations 5. Purple robes in scorn seeme but sparkes to the ensuing flame 30. Wherein shewne When both in body and soule tormented pierced thorow with sorrowes and pressed to death temporall and his soule even feeling the misery of the eternall 31. How meane you that In his body 1. Carrying the Crosse till he fainted under it 2. Nailed to the Crosse the most iguominious death 3. Veynes and limbes rent with cruell torments of all parts 4. Paines of death body and soule parting 5. To comfort him gall and vineger to drinke in encrease of sorrow and scorne 6. Lastly side pierced and heart bloud let out as hands and feet before pierced and wounded In his soule 1. Suffering with his body the separation from the body torments of ignominy and shame but much more the 2. Separation from God and heaven by guilt of our offences by the anger of God
fully dead he had fulfilled the law and curse 2. Later lest his Disciples faith might faile or comfort too long be deprived and their hope to be turned into despaire 6. How the Prophesies Both of Hos. 6. 2. After two dayes c. and the third day he shall rise Jonah 1. 17. and 2. 2. utged the 1 Cor. 15. 4. c. Christ himselfe Matth. the 17. 12. 23. The Son of man shall be slaine and rise againe the third day and Matth. 20. 10. Mark 10. 34 Joh. 2. 19. 7. How the type of Jonah As is declared Matth. 12. 40. as Jonah was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly so must the Son of man be in the heart of the earth 8. What more considerable in the time That it was 1. The first day of the week the Lords day our new Sabbath the Christians rest the day whereon the creationbegun and the day of the second creation so by Christ perfected our redemption 2. Morning early the first time of the day so day of grace here begun and true light arise in it and enlighten it 3. Extraordinary light of the world as before the Sun rising to shew the new Sun of righteousnesse with his preventing graces riseth so for the illustration of the new world in that true light 4. The first Month with the Jewes as a beginning of the new yeare of joy and eternall Jubilee of all Saints 5. Spring of the yeare so the spring of the new world as the day spring from on high so the worlds new birth and spring in restoring peace and redemption 6. Time of the Passeover when to fulfill the Passeover the true Pascall Lambe was offered the ceremonies so to cease all shadowes abolished the truth it selfe appearing 7. Finally he rested the Jewes Sabbath to the fulfilling but end thereof at his death that brought new life to the Christian Church and Sabbath by his Resurrection What note you in that action his Resurrection The efficiency in the power of divinity whereby according to the decree and will of God his soule reassumed the body and raised it out of the grave The effect in him his body raised from death to life the first fruits of them that beleeve The effect in us spiritually our raising from the death of sin to the new life of grace Corporeally our assurance and earnest of our resurrection at the last to the strengthning of our hope and confirming of our faith The effect in Types thereof for our farther comfort and instruction 9. What was the efficiency The great power of the divinity united to his humanity and by that to us as his members to the raising of him the first fruits and us at last that though it suffered him to sleepe that three dayes death in his passion did not leave his body in the grave nor suffered that Holy One to see corruption and in the same vertue by his merits after our sleepe of death will at last raise us out of the dust 10. How the effect In both his humanity and by him over ours in the mighty power of the divinity and raised him first and so will us at the last 11. What Types thereof Not onely Jonas by those three dayes in the Whales belly representing the time of our Saviours stay in the grave and bosome of the earth but Isaac after a sort at his birth in the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe and Abrams age received from death and more at his binding for the sacrifice on Mount Moriah restored to life and a figure of this onely Sonne of God and Sonne also of Abraham Christ here offered in sacrifice on the Crosse and thus restored to life 12. What other Types were there Both Adam himselfe Enoch Elias and divers other types of him and Emblemes herein of him and of the resurrection 13. How was Adam Though in him we all dye yet whiles he was in the state of perfection see wee in him a type of Christ the second Adam and the resurrection who in a dead sleepe had the woman taken out of his side his spouse named Eva the mother of the living as Christ in this dead sleepe had out of his side sending forth water and bloud the Church his spouse taken as it were out of those wounds by his death who is the mother indeed of the living 14. How was Enoch As one that walked with God and so taken from men was no more seene but raised so to life from state of that mortality 15. How Eliah In that manner taken away from men and mortality by the chariot of God translated to heaven to have this part in the resurrection of the just and be an evident type of Christ and embleme of the same 16. How any others The three in the Old Testament raised to life the widowes sonne of Sarepta the Shunamites son and the man raised by the Prophets body The three in the New Testament Lazarus the widowes son of Naim Jairus daughter all as it were to shew us the power of God in them and so many emblemes of Christs resurrection who was so the seventh of them that were raised or tenth of them all that were types and emblemes of him and his resurrection as a perfect number as from whom they received all the holinesse vertues and power of the resurrection which they were ordained to foreshew as figures of the same 17. What learne we hence Our duties as of mortifying our earthly members in remembrance of his death so a rising from the death of sin in the remembrance and power of his resurrection who dyed for our sinnes and rose againe for our justification who will so raise our soules in this life as both bodies and soules after death at last and also many other comforts hence arising 18. Which are they 1. Both the strengthning and confirmation of our faith in the comfortable remembrance of Christs resurrection already performed and so many other Saints of our owne nature of flesh and bloud with him or emblemes of him 4. Erection of our eye of hope to the state whereunto hee our eldest brother is entred and hath already received and invested divers in life and the resurrection of the just 3. Comfortable walking in this vaile of misery where we must one day meet with death in regard of our assurance in him of a joyfull resurrection 19. What fruit hereof Fourefold 1. heavenly minde set on heavenly not earthly things 2. Holy life new borne babes pure innocent and harmlesse 3. Joy in the graces and Spirit of God and in heavenly not corruptible things 4. Growth and increase in holinesse as branches of the true Vine Christ c. 20. What followeth In the sixt Article the second degree of his exaltation in his ascension to heaven in these words Hee ascended into heaven 21. What herein to be considered 1. The matter action ascension termini from earth to heaven 2. The manner in the presence of many witnesses with the time and
the enemies of God to blaspheme 23. How is this to be understood As that all manner of evill examples prophanenesse shew of evill and idolatry may be occasion of blasphemy to the enemies of God and so all evill Christians accessory to the blasphemy of others and causers of it so in effect blasphemers 24. What opposite duty The glorifying of him and honoring of his holy name and his word by all means possible so yeelding him the honour due unto his name 25. What abuse by cursing and banning A malicious sinne the fruit of a heart full of gall and bitternesse and so compared to an arrow shot upright that shall fall downe upon the cursers head as he well deserveth 26. May we not curse then No not at all unlesse God bid ourse as he said Curse ye Meroz and so utterly to take heed of cursing maliciously as many will with desperate speeches and acclamations shewing a heart fraught with gall Cursing vainly as many doe on sleight or no cause calling for vengeance and plague murren and pestilence Cursing customarily as too many also will doe by swearing and cursing bewraying their folly and execrable impiety 27. Why should we not curse 1. Because it is the assured note of a wicked person as in the Psalmes Their throat is an open sepulchre the poison of aspes is under their lips their mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse 2. Because it is noted the fruit gal and bitternes as Rom. 3. 11. water of a corrupt fountain Ja. 3. 3. Because it is forbidden to all Gods people blesse and curse not blesse your persecutors blesse I say and curse not Rom. 12. 14. 4. Because it is a presumptuous sinne to wrest the office out of Gods hand and to whose justice belong plagues and punishments and so to enter upon Gods tribunall 5. It is here forbidden as all prophanation of Gods name and honour and we never read of any good man without Gods command durst enter upon it or doe it nay Michael when he strove with the divell durst not curse him Jud. 9. Nor Balaam though hired by Balaac durst curse without Gods commission Num. 23. and lastly curses are threatned with the curse of God that it shal not depart from the house where the curser or swearer dwelleth so it is an arrow shot upward that will hit him that shot it falling downe heavy with Gods curse on his head and we see not only Gods Law and Commandements all good men and Angells as Michael but even false Prophets as Balaam shall stand up in judgement to condemne this cursing and cursed generation 28. How is it that cursings and excommunications are found in the Scriptures and in the Church By Gods particular appointment and conclusion who is absolute Lord of both blessing and cursing and so we finde that Moses set forth the curses on mount Geresin That David cursed his and Gods enemies from God That Elisha cursed the rebellious children and the Church from God and for his glory used her excommunications and execrations by Christs peculiar commission and upon which no private person or any private authority may enter 29. What opposite duty Blessing and praysing him and his holy name yea and blessing all others even enemies and persecutors according to that blesse and curse not Rom. 12. 14. How blesse we God By praysing him for his blessings and sounding forth his goodnesse with the voice of joy and thanksgiving 30. How blesse we men From him and for his goodnesse and graces shewed in and by them and so blessing is said to be either generally required of all in gracious speech and godly salutations Gen. 47. 7. 10. Rom. 16. 16. Matth. 5. 44 47. Or particularly performed by superiours as from God and in his stead Parents Gen. 27. 27. Minister Numb 6. 23. Magistrates 2 Sam. 6. 18. 1 Kings 8. 55. 31. What abuse by swearing The prophanation of Gods name and injury to his holinesse and truth which as with falshood in our owne speech and injury and wrong to our neighbour is forbidden in the ninth Commandement as derogation to Gods truth and Majesty and prophanation of his name is here forbidden 32. How is this abuse of swearing Such vaine prophanation of Gods name used in oaths either taken falsly deceitfully rashly negligently commonly by creatures or false gods in vaine protestations and foolishly undertaken to the disparagement of truth and Gods glory 33. How many sorts of oathes be there Two sorts Ascertory commonly so understood Promissory in which are vowes What false swearing The taking of Gods name impiously in our mouthes to sweare to a thing we know to bee false or know not to be true both which are false swearing so the false witnesses against Naboth and Christ. How swearing deceitfully When sweating to what we know false or if it happen true what we thinke false and with a purpose to deceive others thereby or not to performe the same all which sorts are accounted perjury 34. What is rash swearing Swearing unadvisedly in heat and choller or any other passion without consideration of the matter circumstances manner or possibility of performance 35. What common swearing An accumulated sinne aggravating the offence of rash swearing by drawing wickednesse with cart ropes of vanity to a custome and so nothing more odious to God then the customary and common swearer who is commonly a vaine and prophane person 36. Whence the heynousnesse thereof 1. For the multitude of oaths reaching to heaven to pull downe vengeance 2. For the continuall neglect and contempt of God indignity offered to God to call him to witnesse in every lewd and trifling matter 3. For the contempt of truth as many must needs be false and lewd 4. For the small conscience of telling or facing a lye ordinarily seene in ordinary and common swearers 37. What other vaine swearing In derogation of Gods Majesty calling any creature to witnesse or using light and foolish protestations savouring of folly impiety and vanity and to the mocking of oaths and making them and the truth suspect 38. How may that be In swearing by creatures as light fire aire c. bread drinke welking c. By ridiculous toyes by laking by cocke by my fay c. By Popish Saints or the like by Saint Mary Saint Anne Saint Loyes by the Masse by the rood c. By Heathen gods or idolls as by Hercules Apollo c. Medius Fidius c. By parts of Christ body as nailes wounds blood heart and so Gods heart wounds c. many times not without cursing and raving most blasphemously 39. What the solly or vanity of them 1. In that they are childish and foolish to attribute the knowing truth to such things 2. Beastly and abominable to set up the creatures in the place of the Creator 3. Divilish and detestable to rob God of his honour and shame the truth 4. Blasphemous to teare Christ in peeces with such execrable oathes and vaine mouthes 5.
his truth if he bid thee so end thy forrowes he is a liar for it is to god from temporall to eternall sorrow if he say thou must commend thy soule to God and die so he is a liar and if it were good he would not tell thee so for it is to die in murder and going from God and a murder of soule and body and that everlastingly so only flie to Gods mercy and leave sin and Satan and if thou pray for this he cannot come nigh unto thee nor hurt thee 40. But some as Lucretia have been commended for it for preservation of chastity or vertue It may be so by heathens that know not God but not by Christians who know Gods Law and the damnablenesse of the crime and so Saint Augustine sheweth this Lucretia's vice in this though by the heathens commended for a vertue whose chastity was to be admired but selfe-murder to be discommended lib. de Civitate Dei 41. What sorts of selfe-murder Either 1. Body and life naturall by 1. Omission and neglecting of the means of life for niggardlinesse or starving through idlenesse or not using other lawfull means of preserving the same 2. Commission of ill in prejudice thereof by 1. Sins of drunkennes whoredome or excesse imparing health 2. Thrusting ones self in danger therewith quarrelling c. and 3. Contriving their owne death 1. Indirectly by cōmitting some capitall crime worthy death 2. Being their own butchers murderers 2. Soul by 1. Omission in the neglecting the means of salvation c. 2. Commission in 1. Making no conscience of sin but sinning against conscience and knowledge 2. Persisting in sin without grace or repentance 4. What opposite duty required Seeking all ordinary and honest means of preservation of life and health by moderate recreations of body or minde physicke and avoiding dangers or sins so distempering both body and soule and finally for the souls health seeking the means of salvation flying sin and praying and practising repentance 43. What in other murder else to be considered The person as well as the matter manner and punishment 44. What of the persons The 1. Murderer whether 1. Principall or 2. Accessory 2. Murdered whether 1. Stranger or near of kin 2. Private person or publick 3. Offender or innocent person whereby the guilt is diversly distinguished and so accepted extenuate or encreased 45. How the principall or accessory I. The principall as prime agent the deepest in offence II. The accessory also murderers if abettors or counsellours whether 1. Superiours by 1. Unjust command 2. Wrongfull sentence 3. Not punishing murder but co●niving at one to the perpetration of other 2. Any others by 1. Consent and abetting 2. Counsell or hiring 3. False testimon 4. Treachery c. 46. What the other respects As 1. the parricide or murderer of father brother or near kin more abominable then the ordinary homicide Secondly the regicide or murderer of superiours or them in authority as of servants their Masters or wives of husbands or private persons of publicke accounted treason or petty treason in the lowest degree more abominable then common murder Thirdly the murder of an innocent person more then of an offender and proscribed or condemned person who is yet to be put to death by the person and manner appointed by law and not at randon by any person which were murder but done according to law is not only not evill but good and just 47. How is it said to be good and just As warranted both by divine and humane law when bloud requiring bloud God commanding that who sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his bloud be shed and who so blasphemeth or obey not the Father Deut. 21. 8. 19. 20. or the voice of the Priest Dent. 17. 12. the Sabbath breaker adulterer ravisher and divers other in Gods Law and such exorbitant offences by humane lawes commanded to be punished by death and so the Magistrate beareth the sword not for naught Rom. 13. 4. 48. All taking away life is not then here forbidden No for hence are exempted and excepted all those persons and in all those cases where the Lord himselfe 1. Giveth the sword Of justice as the Magistrate who beareth it not for naught In lawfull battel as the souldier for their Prince or Countrey In just defence as of ones selfe against theeves robbers or other necessity 2. Offereth another as manslaughter by meere chance and not of any malice or anger for whom God provideth refuge of sanctuary Exod. 21. 13. Deut. 19. 4. 49. How of Moses Phinees and the like Of speciall instinct and commission from God in extraordinary manner and if private men yet of heroicall or divine zeale but Christians must follow ordinary rules and examples not speciall exceptions or imitations of extraordinary actions 50. What else of the matter or manner Murder or the taking away the life the greatest wrong that can be done to man and defacing of Gods image is either in respect of The 1. Meanes perpetrated 1. Directly by force and violence 2. Indirectly by Poyson Witchcraft or the like 2. Manner and motion 1. Ones owne accord and that of 1. Maliceprepensed 2. Blind zeale 3. Heat choler 4. Drunkenness or other passiō 2. Another as 1. Commanded 2. Counselled 3. Hired c. to doe it 51. What the punishment Bloud for bloud usually and in some fearfull manner also according to the aggravation of the offence so that who spilleth mans bloud by man shall his bloud be spilt it being a crying sinne as Cains murder Abels bloud crying to heaven for revenge Gods judgement shewing it selfe many times in extraordinary manner revealing the murderer and presenting him to be punished as by the dead body sometimes the bloud or the murderers owne conscience 52. Why so severe punishment Because it is even 1. A destruction of the little world the Microcosme of man 2. Defacing of Gods image betwixt which and clipping the Kings coin wherein is his image yet death for it there is no comparison 3. An encroaching upon Gods office whose onely right to call men when he please out of the world 4. The greatest sin against man that can be unlesse murder of his soul which also is punished like as this bloud for bloud soule for soule so the bloud of soules is required at their hands and lyes heavy in their heads that destroy them 53. How is soule murder understood Either in respect of the life I. Naturall an unjust grieving and vexing of a mans soule II. Spirituall by first omission of duties of 1. Governours Ministers Masters to whom belongeth the guiding care and 2. Instruction of others for their soules health and salvation Second commission in being cause of sinne and offence as by provocation counsell evill example c. 54. What duties opposite required Both preservation of life and preventing so much as possible all meanes of hurt both in ones selfe and others with helping and not hindering our owne and others
wine is prepared by 1. Cutting downe 2. Casting into the 3. Wine-presse 4. Troden with the 5. Feet 6. Powred to be drunk used So Christ was Cut down for us Cast into and troden in The wine-presse of his Fathers wrath for us Troden under the feet of the contumelious Jewes and others Powred out his soule and bloud for our sakes like water shed on the earth that we might receive the comfort 6. How receive we the comfort As in the creatures of bread and wine though we have them in abundance the comfort onely is by Gods blessing so in this bread and wine though the signes or symboles of it be had it is the grace of God that giveth the true comfort sanctifying them and applying them indeed in the nourishment of the soule to whom we must looke up for a blessing in the use of the Sacrament 7. How was he the Paschall Lambe As by whose bloud on our door-posts the destroyer cannot hurt us and hereby we delivered have power to passe out of the Aegypt of this world into the land of Canaan in heaven 8. How or why minde we his death As he was threshed and troden downe to death for us that deserved it his body broken and bloud shed and soule powred out for ours that ought to have beene so eternally the punishment of our sins was so heavy on him that he was bowed downe to the grave whereby in his stripes we are healed and so with thankfulnesse are to remember his death 9. How was there in his death a sacrifice As his body and soule was made an offering for sin propitiatory by the worth of it for the sins of the whole world as more worthy then the whole world and all creatures being in the Person of the Son and Creatour God and man and so in this one sacrifice of which all other sacrifices were but shadows and types they all had their end and this was the end and substance of all both the Lambe slaine every morning and evening for a dayly and continuall Oblation the Paschall Lambe the Scape-goat the many other sacrifices and bloud shed for propitiation figuring Christs bloud that was to be shed the price and redemption of all our bloud herein and hereby in the Sacrament remembred 10. What was the use of those often sacrifices 1. To expiate and do away sin and so commanded 2. To sanctifie those that were uncleane or infected with leprosie defiled by any other uncleannesse Legall or Ceremoniall 3. To prosper weighty attempts as Saul when he was to fight with the Philistines 1 Sam. 13. 8. 11. Is Christs sacrifice effectuall to this Yes more fully and abundantly in every respect For By it sin is fully expiated his bloud cleanseth from all sin 1 Joh. 1. 6. By it we are sanctified thorowout both in soules and bodies prayers and all our actions and other things sanctified to us in him By it all things made prosperous and a blessing to both soule and body in life and death through him 12. But how was he a sacrifice As his crosse was the Altar whereon offered suffered As himselfe the Priest that made the Oblation As his humane nature the Creature offered of that infinite worth as united to his Divine Nature As his precious bloud the bloud shed in the offering that ought to have purifying power in bloud As the fat fuming up the sweet perfume of his merits by which sacrifice thus offered he obtained eternall Redemption for us Heb. 7. 27. and 9. 12. 13. What the benefits we remember herein The sealing and confirmation of his Covenant and graces The strengthening of our faith The c●mfort and nourishing of our soules The union with Christ and God The communion with all Saints the whole Church Of which more hereafter 14. How said you the perpetuity of memoriall noted As it is the continuall remembrance of his death so in the institution commanded and worthy by all good Christians to be used and remembred as the most beneficiall action that ever was done for mankinde worthy to be remembred everlastingly that maketh him live to eternity 15. But doth not Baptisme represent this also Yes but not so fully and powerfully as this Sacrament it being in that a secondary end to shew that by our washing remembring it on the by but in this Sacrament the full end scope and intention of it 16. What prescribe you then for the end of this Sacrament The 1. chiefe end the confirmation and seale of faith and graces unto us whereby the testification of the union with God and Christ communion with the Saints 2. Other ends also to be con●esired 1. As testification of our obedience and saith used 2. As solemne thanksgiving and praising God therein so called an encharisticall sacrifice 3. As confession and celebration of the memoriall of Christs sacrifice 4. As bond of love among the visible members of Christs Church so called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or festum charitatis 5. As meanes of more solemne celebrating the publicke meetings and drawing them together so called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. As publick note of distinction to the Church and faithfull from all others as also the other Sacrament 7. As recordation of the many benefits of Christs sacrifice called to minde and continually renued in our remembrance 17. How is it then said before the end only a memoriall Because in the memoriall of Christs death and sacrifice all the rest both chiefe and other ends for which it is either instituted or so often so used may seem after a sort to be included 18. How doth it agree with baptisme In the chiefe end the sealing of grace and of the Covenant in generall and divers other particular ends as the testifying our faith obedience thankfulnesse the note of distinguishing between the faithfull and others as well as after a sort also remembrance of Christs death by our being washed in his bloud 19. How differeth it from Baptisme Very much in many things as in 1. The ceremony and externall rites action and elements 2. The signification of them and manner of it in Baptisme a washing in Christs bloud the other a feeding on him and so a communion and participation of Christ and his merits 3. The proper ends baptisme to admit us regenerate renue us The Lords Supper to nourish strengthen conserve us in the Church 4. The order of them Baptisme first the Supper after and not otherwise 5. The person using baptisme all regenerate even children the Lords Supper only those that can acknowledge and remember the benefits and reason of it 6 The manner of use of baptisme with faith and repentance the Lords Supper besides them with confession also commemoration thanksgiving had so only of those in yeares 7. The usurpation of them baptisme but once as once admitted into the Covenant though often renewed by repentance never iterated the Lords Supper the oftner used the better for continuall nourishing of us and commemorations
seeking to procure and 1. Have a sense of feeling and so a knowledge and an acknowledgement of sin 2. To have a loathing leaving and forsaking of the same 3. To have a resolution and firme prosecution of it and a new course of l●fe and holy living as was before declared in the Sacrament of Baptisme and the Godfathers vow and promise at the Font. 18. How is a son●e of sin wrought in us By grace given of God obtained by prayer and consideration of the will of God which is our holinesse and so we may proceed thence 1. To the knowledge of sin which is looking into the glasse of the Law wherein is seen God ● purity Our sanctity required Our sin and so ugly deformity 2. To the acknowledgement of that hatefull monster sin thereby to obtaine remission and forgivenesse and deliverance from the same 19. How is the lo●thing of sin best wrought in us By considering 1. The uglinesse and deformity thereof in Gods sight 2. The uglinesse and deformity of our soules thereby made abominable in Gods sight and like the Divell 3. The losse wosustaine thereby as the blotting out the image of God in our ●oules 4. The impurity of sin and the soule defiled by sin made a cage of uncleane birds 5. The ●ate of God against sin whose eies can behold no evill 6. The loathing wherewith God loatheth a sinner and his actions that are so contra●y to his pure nature polluted and unclean 7. The end of sin shame misery and confusion which may well move ●s to the leaving loathing hating and forsaking the same as so ●oule a monster that God much hateth 20. How may that godly resolution be best wrought and confirmed in us By considering 1. The promises of God to the penitent and godly persons 2. The goodnesse of God requiring it 3. The mercy of God alluring us to him 4. The examples of mercy in sinners received to grace to their comfort and felicity as of Mary Magdel●ne penitent thiefe David Peter c. 5. The judgements of God against impenitent sinners denounced 6. All the actions and workes of God as i● were perswading us to a new obedience 7. The unprofitablenesse shortnesse and contemptiblenesse yea endlesse shame of sin 8. The fruits of conversion to God holinesse and honour joy comfort and peace hereby and here obtained endlesse glory and eternity of reward hereafter in the love favour and presence of God which may move us to a constant resolution yea prosecution of so happy a new a course intended and perseve●ance to the end 21. How is the preparation by faith By examining the truth and lively operation thereof to the saving and adoring the soule by 1. The ground thereof the Rocke Christ. 2. The stedfastnesse there of without wavering 3. The fruits and ●ff●cts thereof in our repentance begun and perfected Love to God in praise and thankfulnesse Love to men in charity and forgivenesse 22. What is faith The evidence and assurance of things not seen but hoped for and so in particular of the mercies and promises of God made to us in Christ expressed in his word and confirmed in the Sacrament the seale of grace the ground whereof is Christ the rock and head corner stone on which the Church is built and whence it is so firme that the gates of hell shall not be able to prevaile against it and as the Apostle saith Neither heighth nor depth principalities nor powers life nor death things present nor things to come is able to remove us from it or the love of God the fruit and effect of the same 23. How is repentance the fruit of it As that is indeed the root and beginning of all goodnesse in us and also yeelding at last perfection to the same as the feare of God the beginning of wisdome is founded in faith the doctrine of salvation apprehended by faith mercy and graces received by faith repentance so begun continued and perfected by the working of faith and so also the fulfilling of the Law begun in faith of God for whose sake we love our neighbour and in the same faith yeeld him our Lord his honour and obedience thus faith formeth in us all vertues and graces as the same testifie the truth of our faith 24. How is this excellency of faith seen Excellently described in ninth and tenth to the Hebrewes where shewn to be the root and foundation of all the excellent graces of God as the power of God in all holy men and Saints on earth the ornament of the soule and to us even all in all for godlinesse so by 1. The eie of faith 1. The Fathers saw the promises afar off 2. We see God and 3. Looke up towards heaven 2. The hand of faith we apprehend Christ and his mercy and merits and apply them to the soul and are ready and prompt to all good works 3. The heart of faith we beleeve and conceive Christ lay hold on the promises 4. The tongue of faith we praise God and make a godly confession 5. The feet of faith Enoch walked with God and we come to his holy Temple and walke the waies of righteousnesse and by this faith as by a hand receive Christ in the Sacrament and a mouth feeding on him and a stomach or digestive faculty taking him to our soules we are nourished by him and turned by his power into one substance body flesh and bloud with him made flesh of his flesh bone of his bones and in him acceptable to God 25. How is this faith seen working by love In our yeelding all honour and praise to God with thanks for his benefits and obedience to his will and Commandements In our yeelding due respect to our neighbour according to the will of God in perfect charity and peace with all men 26. How then in respect of God In generall To yeeld all honour love obedience and duty as it is expressed in the Commandments and first Table especially In particular In respect had to this Sacrament and the receiving thereof 1. To have an humble and thankfull heart 2. To have holy remembrance of this so great benefit and blessing 3. To have reverent commemoration thereof with mouth and lips ready to set forth the praises and goodnesse of God with thanksgiving for the same 27. How in respect of men To be rightly disposed in charity towards them Both generally As it is the will of God and commanded in the Law and Gospel And particularly In regard of this holy action where is so especially required 1. Forgivenesse We desire forgivenesse as in the Lords Prayer 2. And here And perfect peace with all men As we desire to be at peace with God and to have union with him and communion with the Saints whereof this Sacrament is a token and symbole received to the soule 28. How if we sinde not our selves so well prepared We are not to leave the Sacrament but rather labour to be better prepared which if we
Judges or Judges of these things we are to leave them to their superiours whom God appoi eth 43. Can the Church of Rome then or any particular Church fall from God It is apparent for that the Lords Spirit is not tyed to any place for then not only Jerusalem his City but the famous Churches of Asia long since collapsed had yet stood and flourished and many others now under Mahumetan and Turkish servitude or quite decayed 44. How then did God promise his Spirit to his Church to be with it to the end of the world To be present to lead it into all truth wheresoever it is even in all places of the world but as the winde bloweth where it listeth so his Spirit to the faithfull every where ●ut for their infidelity sometimes pulleth one downe and setteth up another even casteth off the naturall branches for unbeleefe and grafteth in others all according to his good will and pleasure 45 What learne you else concerning this Church That as it is the Church of God a holy Church and Catholicke in regard of all times places and persons of all sexes and degrees peoples and nations whatsoever whereof it consists consenting in the truth of the Catholicke doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles so it is also and in unity of Spirit in the communion of Saints 46. What in this communion of Saints considered The union in that it is a communion The persons who are Saints How is their union 1. in the unity of faith the doctrine of salvation 2. The head which is Christ. 3. The body which is his Church they members 4. The Spirit which is the bond of peace among them 2. In the participation of the Sacraments tokens of this union and communion 3. Bond of charity and love between themselves and Christ their head and by him also with God 47. What is that communion then That holy and sweet fellowship which all the members of the Church have one with another and with Christ their head and so with God whereby all good is communicated to them from above and consequently in mutuall charity one unto another 48. Between whom is this communion considered Between the Saints and Christ their head and so with God themselves one with another so the Saints both in heaven and earth 49. How with Christ and God As the excellent Meanes whereby reconciled to God and at peace with him Grace of partaking of Christs righteousnesse being one with him by faith Assurance of my hope of all good things in him and by him attained for that he so feeleth my wants heareth my prayers is ready to relieve my misery 50. What fruit and profit of this All happinesse and goodnesse thereby acquired As peace with God peace of conscience peace in the soule Influence of all graces from Christ our head Effects of holinesse and righteousnesse from him Glorious inheritance title estate and hope of all Saints and all comforts in him 51. How exemplified By the spirituall building Christ the foundation and head cornerstone and we the building By the peacefull Olive Christ and we the branches ingrafted By the Vine Christ and we the pruned branches By the head Christ and we the members By the Bridegroome Christ and we the spouse and such similies of his imparting his goodnesse righteousnesse and graces to us 52. How of the Saints among themselves As members of one body branches of that Vine and Olive stones of that spirituall building all for the good one of another bringing forth much good fruit to the honour of God 53. How between us and Saints in heaven In mutuall sympathy as branches of one vine consent in the praises of God praiers one for another though not one to another and all best duties however unknown to us now will be manifest hereafter they being our fellow servants and brethren that assuredly wish our good and happinesse and in the resurrection to be partakers with us in glory 54. How among the Saints on earth Though plainly and evidently in 1. The unity in Faith the doctrine of truth professed Hope of blessednesse Spirit and bond of peace 2. Union with the Head and participation of the Sacraments yet most essentially in the union in charity and workes of mercy By helping one another By releeving and comforting the weake By bearing one anothers infirmities and doing all good temporall to the body spirituall prayer instruction and the like to the soule to the comfort of the Saints and Church of God 55. Why called Saints Both By the generall calling of God to grace Out of charity to the Church of God in all The visible members presumed faithfull In hope of the inheritance of Saints and desire that it may be given to all For that the best part are indeed Saints of God What comfort in this faith Most heavenly to consider That 1. Christ himselfe in this sympathy feeling our wants heareth and knoweth our prayers 2. Even Saints in heaven desire our good and pray for it 3. How mean soever in worldly eyes yet if Saints of that high and holy fellowship wherewith no compare as joyned so to the King of Kings c. 4. All Saints their prayers devotions fastings are heard and made and done for us and our good as all Christs actions and merits applied 5. That hereby is more content and true riches then in all worldly possessions as all good enjoying of heavenly and earthly good comming of this communion 56. What learne we hence Many good duties and how to behave our selves in and towards the Church of God and communion of Saints As 1. To honour and reverently esteeme of this holy society 2. To desire the good of it as a faithfull member of the same 3. To bee of holy conversation as beseemeth a Saint and a Christian. 4. To come out of the world leaving Egypt and Sodome to be admitted into this Canaan the House and Church of God 5. To be in unity with my selfe God and his Saints in the bond of the peace of a good conscience love and charity 6. To seeke sit company of Saints and so to delight in Gods house the Saints on earth and such as excell in vertue 7. Conversing with Saints on earth by holy conversation and those in heaven by heavenly contemplation to aspire to a more strait union with that holy congregation 8. To doe good to all especially to those that be of the houshold of faith as having a fellow-feeling and compassion to all Gods Children 9. To exercise our selves in fit and holy actions beseeming Gods house and that holy company 10. To have comfort in all things and sufferings both in respect of the Saints and their fellow-sufferings but chiefly Christ his fellow-feeling of our infirmities to helpe and relieve us 57. What followeth The last three Articles of the Creed concerning the priviledges given and belonging to this holy Society remission of sins resurrection of the body and life everlasting SECT 12. The 10.
11. and 12. Articles of the Creed concerning the Priviledges of the Church and first forgivenesse of sinnes by washing us in Christs blood covering of our sinnes and imputation of his righteousnesse to those that are his and none others we being not able to satisfie for our owne but needing God powerfully the Church ministerially to forgive them where faith in Christ is required the condition whence the use of much comfort and consequently the blessed hope of resurrection the second priviledge manner certainty and reason wherof are here observed taken from Gods justice equity and mercy As also farther illustrated by divers examples and similitudes presenting to us a shew of the resurrection so the order of it and excellent estate therein more amply expressed in respect of the godly and what good duties to be hence learned and what good uses to be made of the same Whence also consequently our joyfull hope of life everlasting The last Articls where life of joyntly of soule and body raised and united in joy unspeakable and endlesse in heaven is by that to be understood which is also called the union With God and fruition of the glorious Godhead and blessednesse eternal which is the life of Angels though the meanes or cause of it as Christ or the word sometimes figuratively called life and life eternall or as it may be inchoate herein in the kingdome of grace as consummato in glory whereas the contrary and estate of the damned not properly a life but death or ever dying life and so not mentioned in the Creed where onely the comfort of the godly intended the use they make and duty they ought o learne in seeking striving for it in assuranc● of which their blessed faith and hope they say Amen 1. VVHat is contained in these three last Articles Three priviledges granted to the Church and not elsewhere to be found or attained each Article one viz. 10. Forgivenesse of sinnes 11. Resurrection of body 12. Life everlasting 2. What is forgivenesse of sins Gods passing by our sins without calling them to his remembrance to shame or punish us for them but on the contrariwise imputing righteousnesse to us and accounting and allowing us just 3. Wherein consisteth it In these two things the Covering or cancelling and discharging of sinne Imputation and gift of justice 4. How is the covering or discharging of sin In taking away both the spot and staine of guilt and consequently the removing all punishment 5. How is it done By washing our soules in Christs bloud purging them by his merits and drowning them in the sea of his infinite love and mercy and as wee are in Christ he beholdeth no staine in us hee seeth no iniquity in Iacob and the cause of sin removed punishment the effect and death eternall the due to sin must needs be done away 6. How the imputation of Christs justice and his merits As in him our sins done away so in him is justice given by putting on him and his robes of righteousnesse as we are in him part of that holy society the communion of Saints and members of the true Catholique Church 7. To whom is then forgivenesse of sins Onely to the true members of the Catholique Church for so to them that are in Christ thence is no condemnation because they are of that body and in him in whom God is well pleased and so to all others who are not in him what can bee expected but condemnation 8. Can we not satisfie for our owne sins How can we satisfie for sin that without him and his grace are not able to thinke a good thought and when our best workes in comparison of true holinesse are but as poluted and filthy clouts before him and when wee have done the most we can it is but our duty yea when the best we can we are but unprofitable servants where is then our merit of our selves or ability to satisfie for our misdeeds 9. Who forgiveth sin Onely God the Father Son and Holy Spirit who having power to make the Law have power to forgive the offence 10. How is the Church said or men to forgive sinnes The Church ministerially and that divers ways from God as by The ministry of the word procuring it by offering and ordering the doctrine of repentance and forgivenesse of sin and converting sinners to God The exercising the power of the keyes by Gods order and commission for the benefit of the Church to humble the soule The applying the same to the penitent and so in the power of Gods commission to give and pronounce absolution to the benefit and comfort of the soule desiring the same 11. How the keyes or power of them exercised In foro 1. Exteriori in facie Ecclesiae more publiquely in the sight of the Church to the reforming of offences and removing of scandals 2. Interiori conscientiae more privately to the comfort of the soule and quieting the conscience of the humble penitent 12. How men how doe they forgive Onely partially in regard of some part of some offences concerning them but God forgiveth to the truly penitent totally in respect of all parts of both guilt and punishment and fully whatsoever either the Church holily intendeth or men neglect or wilfully refuse to forgive if he please 13. How stands this with Gods justice As in justice even to the utmost satisfied in the sufferings of Christ and in mercy as he gave and accepteth him and in his merits for us 14. What is then required to forgivenesse of sins A lively faith in Christ whereby we apprehend him and his merits and perfections thereby applyed and made ours whence commeth true repentance forsaking sinne and cleaving stedfastly to God 15. What certainty of it Gods gracious promises in Christ effectually applyed and sealed to the soule by the ministry of the Church in the holy use of his Word and Sacraments 16. What learne we hence In this life seeking this priviledge in the Church 1. To make our calling and election sure in Christ. 2. To become truly a member of his so to have our sins forgiven 3. Obtaine peace of conscience thus and both with God and men 4. To disclaime our owne merits so in humblenesse crave and have Christs justice 5. To try our faith by our repentance and so by our assurance of forgivenesse and thus seeking we shall surely attaine it both from God and his Church and have peace with God and men 17. What followeth of this Resurrection of body as a consequent of forgivenesse of sins for as death entred by sin so sinne also taken away the punishment also to be removed which being of the body in part shall also in that part be dissolved at the last and the body raised 18. But how and when shall it be By the mighty power of God and in his word by the voice of his Angell and sound of his trumpet at the end of the world 19. How can this be Though wormes have eaten it or