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A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

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be exercised 332 Of the spirituall warfare 333 Of our spirituall armour 334 Of our first enemy Satan 335 2. Enemy the world 3. Enemy our flesh 336 New obedience 337 Of good works in generall and of the properties of them 338 That there is no merit in good works Wherein our good works faile 339 Why God rewardeth our works 340 The ends of good works Of speciall good works required 341 Of prayer what it is 342 The necessity of prayer A more full description of prayer What is required that prayer may be holy 343 That we must pray to God alone 344 That we must pray onely in the mediation of Christ. For whom we must pray The parts of Prayer 346 Of Petition The meanes of obtaining the gift of prayer 348 Motives to Prayer Hinderances of prayer 349 The subject of our requests Prayer for others 350 Of thanksgiving In what thanksgiving consisteth 351 Why thanksgiving is required The properties of praise The meanes of thanksgiving Motives to thanksgiving Signes of thankfulnesse 352 Of the Lords prayer Of the preface 353 Our Father 354 Which art in heaven 355 The parts of the Lords prayer 356 Sixe petitions in the Lords prayer The first Petition 357 What is meant by Name What is meant by hallowed 358 What we aske in the first Petition What graces we here pray for 359 What things we here pray against The second Petition 360 What is meant by Kingdome What is meant by Comming The particulars here prayed for 1. respecting the kingdome of grace 362 2. Respecting the kingdome of glory 363 The third Petition The summe of this Petition What meant by the word Thy. What will is here to be understood 364 VVhat we aske in this Petition concerning Gods revealed will What meant by this word Doing 365 VVhat meant by Earth and Heaven The order of the three last Petitions The three last Petitions 366 The fourth Petition 367 What meant by Bread What meant by Give Give us This day 368 Our daily VVhat we begge in this Petition The fifth Petition 370 VVhat is meant by Debts What we aske in this Petition 372 The reason of this Petition The sixt Petition 374 The summe of the sixt Petition Of the temptations and the causes why we must pray against them 375 How God may be said to tempt us 376 What is meant by Deliver us from evill 377 VVhat is meant by Evill VVhat things we pray for in this petition 378 Conclusion of the Lords Prayer VVhat is meant by Kingdome 379 VVhat is meant by Power VVhat is meant by Glory VVhat meant by Thine 380 VVhat by For ever VVhat is meant by Amen VVhether it be lawfull to use any other forme of Prayer 381 VVhat pulike Prayer is VVhat private Prayer is VVhat ordinary prayer is 382 What extraordinary Prayer is Circumstances of Prayer Gesture in Prayer Of the place of Prayer Of the time of Prayer 383 Of Fasting What an holy Fast is Of the time of Fasting 384 Of the kinds of Fasting 385 Of a publick Fast. Of a private Fast. Who are to fast 386 Of the parts of a Christian Fast. Of a holy Feast 388 Of the time of Feasting 389 In what an holy Feast consisteth Of Vowes 390 Who are to vow What is to be vowed 391 The duty of those that have vowed Of Almes 392 Who are to give Almes Whereof we must give Almes How much must be given 393 To whom Almes must be given What order must be observed in giving With what affection Almes must be given The fruits of Almes-deeds 394 Of Vocation Externall Internall Meanes of Vocation 395 Inward Outward Inward the Spirit of God Of the Church visible 396 The infallible markes of a true visible Church VVhether the Church may erre 397 In what cases we may separate from a corrupt Church 398 Of the enemies of the Church Of the Governours of the Church 399 Things proper to the visible Church The Word Sacraments Censures Of the Word What things are common between godly and wicked hearers 401 Things proper to godly hearers How justifying Faith differeth from the faith of worldlings 402 Of the Sacraments 403 The Sacraments of great use VVhat a Sacrament is The use of Sacraments 406 The ends why Sacraments are instituted The persons that are actors in the Sacraments and their actions 407 Of preparation to the Sacraments 408 Duties in the action of receiving Duties after receiving Of the old Testament and the Sacraments of it 409 The new administration of the Gospel 410 The Sacraments of the new Testament Of Baptisme what it is 411 Whether diving or dipping be essentiall to Baptisme 413 Sprinkling in Baptisme warrantable The inward part or thing signified in Baptisme The similitude betweene the signe and thing signified The benefit of Baptisme to a common Christian. 415 To whom Baptisme is effectuall How infants may be capable of the grace of the Sacrament 416 What benefit elect infants have by Baptisme for the present 417 The lawfulnesse of infants Baptism 418 Baptisme not of absolute necessity to salvation 419 Baptism to be highly accounted of 420 That many have a slight esteem of this ordinance What the meanes are to reforme this slight esteem 421 Of the Lords Supper 422 What it is The differences between Baptisme and the Lords Supper 423 Why it is called the Lords Supper Of the matter of the Lords Supper 424 That the bread and wine are not changed into the body and blood of Christ Of the forme of this Sacrament of the Lords Supper 426 The sacramentall actions of the Minister Of the consecration of the bread and wine The sacramentall actions of the receivers 427 The ends and uses of the Lords Supper 428 Who are to receive the Lords Supper Preparation to the Lords Table Duties in the action of receiving to be performed by the Communicant Duties to be performed after the action 430 Of the censures of the Church 431 Of the degrees of Censures 432 Of the kindes of Censures 433 Of private admonition The degrees of private admonition 1. Most private How we must reprove 434 2. The second degree of private admonition Of publick admonition 435 Of Suspension Of Excommunication Anathema Maranatha Of the enemies of the Church 437 Of the generall apostasie Of Antichrist and who he is 438 What difference between Christs miracles and the Popes 442 The seat of Antichrist 443 Of the last judgement 445 Why the righteous dye Of particular judgment at the houre of death 446 Of the generall judgement Of the preparation to the last judgement The signes of the last judgement The second thing in the preparation 447 The third thing The fourth thing 448 The fift thing The act of judgment how performed The execution of the last judgement 449 The state of the Reprobate in hell The state of the Elect in heaven The use of this Doctrine concerning the last judgment 450 FINIS ERRATA PAge 21. line 9. for saith read truth p. 31. l. 33. for distinction
Gal. 3 22. 23. Acts 2. 37 Matth. 23. 28. Gal. 2. 18 19. Heb. 4. 16. Hosea 14. 2 3. Rom. 8. 13 26. What things are common between godly and wicked hearers Things proper to godly hearers How justifying faith differeth from the faith of worldlings Of the Sacraments The Sacraments of great use What a Sacrament is The use of Sacraments The ends why Sacraments are instituted The persons that are actors in Sacraments and their actions Of preparation to the Sacraments Matth. 3. 13. Acts 8. 36. Luke 22. 15. Duties in the action of receiving Duties after receiving The Old Testament and the Sacraments of it The new administration of the Gospel * Esa. 41. 1 2 3. 68. 3 4 5. 65. 12. 66. 12 19 20. Joh. 16. 10. Mat. 18. 19 20. Rom. 15. 25 26. Ephel 3. 5 6 8 9. Col. 1. 5 6. Joh. 1. 17. 14. 21. Rom. 1. 1 2 3. 1 Pet. 1. 10 11 12. 1 Cor. 1. 23 24. The Sacraments of the old Testament How they differ from the New The Sacraments of the New Testament That there bee onely two Sacraments of the New Testament Of Baptisme and what it is Matth. 28. 19. Whether diving or dipping bee essentiall to Baptisme The inward part or thing signified in Baptisme The similitude between the signe and thing signified The benefit of baptisme to a common Christian To whom baptisme is effectuall How infants may be capable of the grace of the Sacrament What benefit elect infants that live to years have by Baptisme for the present The lawfulness of infants baptisme Baptisme not of absolute necessity to salvation Baptisme to be highly accompted of That many have a slight esteem of this Ordinance What are the meanes to reforme this slight esteeme Of the Lords Supper and what it is The difference between Baptisme and the Lords Supper Why it is called the Lords Supper Of the matter of the Lords Supper That the bread and wine are not changed into the body and bloud of Christ. Of the forme of this Sacrament of the Lords Supper The Sacramentall actions of the Minister Of the consecration of the Bread and Wine The Sacramentall actions of the Receivers The ends and uses of the Lords Supper Who are to receive the Lords Supper Of preparation to the Lords Table What duties are to be performed after the action Of the Censures of the Church Of the degrees of Censures Of the kindes of Censures Private admonition The degrees of private admonition How we must reprove The second degree of private admonition Publike admonitions Of suspension Of Excommunication Anathema Maranatha Of the enemies of the Church Of the general Apostasie 1 Tim. 4. 1. 2 Thess. 2. 23. Of Antichrist and who he is Luke 15. 32 Iohn 17. 12. 2 Pet. 2● The differences betweene Christs miracles and the Popes The seat of Antichrist Of the last judgement Why the righteous dye Of particular judgement at the houre of death The generall judg●ment Eccl. 12. 14. 2 Cor. 5. 10. The preparation to the last judgement Acts 1. 7. Matth. 13 32. Mat. 24. 13. 33. The signes of the last judgement Matth. 24. 1 Tim. 4. 1. 2 Thess. 2. 3. 2 Pet. 3. 7. Matth. 24. 30. The second thing in the preparation The third thing Iohn 5. 28. Matth. 24. 31. 1 Cor. 15. 52. Phil 3. 21. The fourth thing The fift thing The act of judgment and how performed Rom. 2. 12. Matth 12. 27 41 42. Ezek. 18. 22. Rev. 14. 17. Rom. 6. 23. Iames 2. 18. Gal. 5. 6. The execution of the last judgment Matth. 25. 46. Psal. 58. 10. The estate of the Reprobates in hell 2 Thess 2. 9. The estate of the Elect in heaven 1 Cor. 2. 9. 1 Cor. 13 10. 1 Cor. 13. 12. Psal. 16. 11. Rev. 3. 21. 2 Tim. 4. 8. 2 Pet. 3. 13. Psal. 17. 15. 1 Thess. 4. 17. Heb. 12. 22. 1 Cor. 15. 24 28. The use of this doctrine concerning the last judgment Rev. 17. Acts 17. Luke 12. 43. Matth. 25. 21. a Prov. 30. 3 4. b Joh. 3. 13. c Esa. 9. 6. d Exod. 9. 16. e Ibid. chap. 10. 14. 11. 6. f Joh. 17. 5. g Prov. 8. 30. h Dan. 2. 11. i Rom. 9. 5. * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 1. 14. k Exod. 40. 34 35. l Heb. 9. 9. 11. m Heb. 3. 3. 6. n Joh. 2. 19 21. o 2 Chro. 7. 1 2 p Coloss. 2. 9. q 2 Chro. 6. 18. r 1 Tim. 3. 16. s Esa. 7. 11 14. t Gal. 4. 4. u Joh. 1. 3. Col. 1. 16. x Act. 1. 21. y 1 King 8. 27. z Heb. 7. 3. with Esa. 53. 8. Mica 5. 2. a Joh. 14. 28. b Joh. 5. 18. Phil. 2. 6. c Joh. 8. 58. d Matth. 22. 42 43 c. e Col. 2. 9. f Gal. 4. 4 5 7. g Joh. 1. 14. 3. 16. h Joh. 1. 12. * Propter quod unum quodque est tale illud ipsum est magis tale i Rom. 8. 29. k Exod. 4. 22 23 l Heb. 12. 23. m Rom. 8. 17. n 1 Joh. 5. 5. o Joh. 1. 14. p Gal. 4. 4. q Luk. 1. 42. r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ja. 5. 17. s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 14. 15. t Heb. 5. 7. u 2 Cor. 13. 4. Heb. 2. 17 18. 4. 15. x Heb. 7. 3. y Jer. 31. 22. z Rom. 5. 12. * Luk. 1. 35. a Gal. 4. 6. Rom. 8. 9. b Luk. 1. 38. 48. c Luk. 1. 35. d Exod. 37. 9. * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 1. 12. e Luk. 1. 34. f Ibid. ver 35. g Ibid. ver 37. 1 Sam. 6. 19. * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i Exod. 3. 2 3. 5 6. Act. 7. 31 32. k Heb. 12. 29. l Esa. 33. 14. m Numb 12. 6 7 8. Exo. 33. 11. n Exod. 33. 18. 20. o Esa. 41. 8. 2 Chron. 20. 7. Jam. 2. 23. p Rom. 4. 11. 16. Gal. 3. 7. q Gen. 18. 27. r 2 Pet. 2. 11. s Esa. 6. 2. t Levit. 26. 11 12. Ezek. 37. 26 27. Revel 21. 3. u Heb. 3. 6. x Eph. 2. 22. y 2 Cor. 6. 16. z Joh. 17. 20 21 22 23. a Mat. 1. 21. 23. See Anselms Cur Deus homo b 1 Tim. 2. 5. c Heb. 2. 14. * Sic pax facta foedusque percussū secutaque res mira dictu ut relictis sedibus suis novam in Vrbem hostes demigrarent cum generis suis avitas opes pro dote sociarent L. Flor. histor Rom. li. 1. ca. 1. d Rom. 5. 10. e Eph. 2. 14. 16. f John 20. 17. g Heb. 2. 11. h Heb. 11. 16. i Heb. 2. 13. k Deut. 32. 6. l 1 Pet. 1. 17 18 19. m 1 Sam. 2. 25. n Job 9. 32 33. o Rev. 5. 3 4. p Rev. 5. 5. q 1 Joh. 2. 1 2. r 1 Tim. 2. 5 6. s Heb. 5. 1. 2. 17. t Rom. 9. 15 16. u Rom. 3. 26. x Heb. 9. 24. y Rom. 8. 34. Heb. 7. 25. z Heb. 2. 17. a Joh.
is present at Baptisme should consider that that being a publike action of the Congregation every particular person ought reverently to joyn in it Shal the whole Trinity be present at Baptism Mat. 3. we be gone joyn ought every one in prayer to God for the Infant joyn in praises to God for his mercy that we and our children are brought forth and brought up within the pale of his Church whereas the rest of the world are like a wildernesse and thank God for adding at the present a member to his Church joyn every one ought in meditation of the pollution of nature of the blessed means of redemption by Christ of the happy benefits that God seals up unto us in our Baptism even before we knew them of the vowes and promises which we in our child-hood made by those who were undertakers for us and finding our failings every time we are present at Baptism we should renew our own Covenant with God and labour to get new strength to close with his promises which in our Baptism he made unto us Thus if we were wise to make a right use of it we might learn as much at a Baptisme as at a Sermon 4. Parents should alwayes bear in mind the promises which their children have made to God by them and they for their children labouring to bring them up accordingly in the instruction and information of the Lord teaching them so soon as they understand the meaning of that Sacrament unfolding unto them Gods precious promises and their strict ingagements The negligence of parents herein is a cause of monstrous profanesse in many they bring children t● receive Christs badge but bring them up to the service of the Divell and God hath not so much dishonour by Heathens and Pagans as by those who have taken upon them the name of Christians Lastly Baptisme should be of continuall use thorough a Christians whole life it is administred but once but it is always lasting in the vertue and efficacy of it Baptism loseth not its strength by time in all thy feares and doubts look backe to thy Baptisme the promises of God sealed up unto thee there now lay hold on them by faith and thou shalt have the actuall comfort of thy Baptisme and feele the effect of it though thou never saw it In thy failings slips and revolts to recover thy self have recourse to thy Baptism new Baptism shall not need the Covenant and seale of God stands firme he changeth not onely renew thy repentance renew thy faith in those blessed promises of grace which were sealed up unto thee in thy Baptisme So much for Baptisme What is the Lords Supper It is the second Sacrament of the new Testament wherein God by the signes of bread and wine signifieth sensibly and exhibiteth to every faithfull receiver the body and bloud of Christ for his spirituall nourishment and growth in Christ and for so sealing unto him his continuance with increase in the body of Christ which is his Church confirmeth him in the Covenant of grace Or thus It is a Sacrament of the Gospel wherein by the outward elements of Bread and Wine sanctified and exhibited by the Minister and rightly received by the communicant assurance is given to those that are ingraffed into Christ of their continuance in him and receiving nourishment by him unto eternall life Are there divers graces offered to us in Baptisme and the Lords Supper No the Covenant solemnly ratified in Baptisme is renewed in the Lords Supper between the Lord himselfe and the receiver and the same graces offered again but to divers ends In Baptisme to the investing and entring of us into Christianity for of that entrance Baptisme is a seale In the Lords Supper to the nourishing and continuance of us in it of which growth and continuance in Christiannity it is a seale And therefore as unto the Sacrament of Baptisme so unto this of the Lords Supper the Popish faigned Sacrament of confirmation is notably injurious Wherein then doth Baptisme differ from the Lords Supper 1. In regard of the thing signified Baptisme as hath been said is a seale of our entrance into the Church of God the Supper of the Lord of our continuance in the same the one of our new birth the other of our spirituall food The former is ordained to this end that being out of Christ by nature we might by the Sacrament of our new birth be ingraffed into his body Titus 3. 5. John 3. 5. the latter that being in Christ by grace we might continue and increase in him 1 Cor. 10. 16. 11. 23. 1 Pet 3. 21. 2. In regard of the outward signe water in the one bread and wine in the other 3. In regard of the Communicants Vnto Baptisme both Infants and those that are of yeares of discretion are to be admitted but unto the Supper of the Lord only those of yeares of discretion 4. In regard of the time The Supper of the Lord is to be received as often as the Lord shall give occasion Baptisme but once VVhy is this called the Lords Supper seeing we use not to make it a Supper It is called the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11. 20. not because he appointed it a Supper to us but because our Lord Iesus Christ sitting at his last Supper ordained it in stead of the Passeover for in the night that he was betrayed 1 Cor. 11. 23. imediately after he had eaten the Passeover with his Disciples he did both himselfe with them celebrate this holy Sacrament Mat. 26. 26 c. and withall gave charge for continuance of the same in the Church untill his second comming 1 Cor. 11. 20. What may we learne by this that both our Saviour Christ and his Apostles likewise administred this Sacrament after Supper That we must not come unto it for our bellies but have our minds lifted up from these earthly elements to our Saviour Christ represented by them for men after Supper set not bread and wine but banquetting dishes upon the Table which serveth to reprove 1. Such prophane persons as come for a draught of VVine only 2. Those that rest only in the outward Elements But doth not the example of our Saviour Christ and his Apostles tye us to administer this Sacrament in the night time No because they had speciall cause so to doe which we have alone What cause had our Saviour so to doe He was to administer it after Supper First because it was to come in lieu and stead of the Passeover and therefore was presently after the eating of it Secondly that it might goe immediately before his passion the better to shew whereunto it should have relation where also is another difference our Saviour Christs Supper representing his death which followed the Supper and was to come our Sacrament representing the death of Christ already suffered and past What cause had the Apostles They did it in the night because it was not safe for the
Church to meet in the day for feare of persecution Wherefore herein the laudable custome of the Church of administring it in the Morning when our wits and capacities are best is to be followed In which respect also there is some difference between this Sacrament and the Sacrament of Baptisme which may without any inconvenience be administred in the afternoone What is the fittest day for the Administration of this Sacrament The Lords day is the fitttest day for the administration of the Sacrament For although our Saviour Christ did administer it on another day for the reasons before declared yet he did not bid us so to doe But the Apostles example and religious practise herein is to be followed which did celebrate the Supper of the Lord on the Lords day So much of the time Now for the nature of this Sacrament how may it be knowne First by the matter and secondly by the forme of it What is the matter of the Supper of the Lord Partly outward as the elements of bread and wine partly inward as the body and bloud of Christ. For as many graines make but one loafe and many grapes but one cup of wine so I beleeve that those outward elements signifie Christ and him crucified with all the benefits of his death and passion even whole Christ with all the fruits of his mediation Mat. 26. 26 27. 1 Cor. 11. 24 25. Wherefore did the Lord make choice of Bread and Wine for the outward Elements of this Sacrament Because meaning to set forth our spirituall nourishment by them they are of all the meanes of our corporall nourishment the chiefest Psal. 104. Why did he not content himselfe with one of these only He tooke both that he might hereby shew how plentifull and assured redemption we have in Christ whom these doe represent Wherefore it is no marvell that the Papists in the prohibiting of the cup doe answerably teach our salvation to be neither wholly in Christ nor assuredly What Argument doe you observe in the institution of the Sacrament against this Robbery The foreseeing Spirit of Christ knowing the sacriledge that Popery would bring in for the robbing of the people of the use of the Cup hath prepared a preservative against it speaking here more fully of the cup which he did not of the bread Drinke ye all of this Mat. 26. 27. What Bread used our Saviour Christ Ordinary bread such as was used at the common Table at that time it was indeed unleavened bread but it was so because no other was then lawfull at the feast of the Passeover Are not the Bread and VVine changed into the body and bloud of Christ in the Sacrament No they are not changed in nature but in use 1 Cor. 10. 16. For the words of eating and drinking doe properly belong to the outward elements of bread and wine and by a borrowed speech doe improperly belong to the body and bloud of Christ to note unto us the communion we have with our Saviour Christ of whom we are as verily partakers by a lively faith as of the bread and wine by eating and drinking them And thus we say that these elements are changed in use because being seperated from a common use they are consecrate to signe and seale to us our spirituall nourishment and growth by the body and bloud of Christ Iesus Luke 22. 19. 1 Cor. 10 3 4. For as the Sacrament of Baptisme doth seale to us a spirituall regeneration so the Lords Supper a spirituall feeding and even as well the body and bloud of Christ is in Baptisme given us for cloathing as they are given in the Lords Supper for nourishment Therefore the bread and wine are not the true body and bloud of Christ but the signes and tokens of them as in Baptisme the water was onely a signe of Christs bloud not the bloud What further reason have you to overthrow the carnall presence of Christ in the Sacrament 1. If the bread were turned into Christ then there should bee two Christs one that giveth another that is given for our Saviour Christ gave the bread c. 2. If the bread be the very body of Christ there should then bee no signe of the thing signified and so no Sacrament Rom. 4. 11. Where their miserable shift that the whitenesse is the seale and signe is not worthy the answer 3. The wicked receiver might then eate and drinke Christs body and bloud as well as any true beleever Iohn 13. 2. 30. 4. The Minister cannot give the inward grace but the outward Element in the administration of the Sacrament Luke 3. 16. What reason was there to move our Saviour Christ to use such a borrowed speech in this so great a mysterie Because it is ordinary and usuall in the Scripture to give the name of the thing signed and signified to the signe as it is called the tree of life which was but a signe of life Gen. 2. 9. So in the Sacraments of the old Testament Circumcision is called the Covenant Gen. 17 10. that is the token of Covenant verse 11. Or the Lambe or Kid the Passeover whereof it was a signe onely Exo. 12. The selfe same manner of speech is also used in the new Testament of Baptisme called the new Birth taking away of sinnes whereof it is onely a seale So that unlesse the Lord would in this Sacrament have departed from the wisdome of the Spirit of God accustomably received he must needs here also tread in the same steps of a borrowed and figurative speech Howbeit it may seem that to have used a more proper speech would have been more meet for him being neare unto his death and more convenient for their understanding He did after his last Supper use as figurative speeches as this in the 14 15 16. of John and that without all danger of darknesse of speech there being often times more light in a borrowed then in a proper speech And a Trope of force must be yeelded when he saith that the cup is the new Testament It maketh further for the corporall presence that our Saviour Christ saith in his supper that his body was then broken and not that it should be broken after That is also usuall to the Scripture for further certainty to speak of things to come as of them that are present But there is nothing impossible unto God 1. The question is here not of the power but of the will of God what he will have done 2. God cannot doe those things in doing whereof he should contradict himselfe and therefore the Scripture feareth not without dis-honour to God to say that he cannot lye nor cannot deny himselfe Tit. 1. 2. 2 Tim. 2. 13. Why is the cup called the cup of the New Testament Because it is a seale of the promise of God touching our salvation in Christ which being in old time under the Law shadowed by the shedding of bloud of beasts is now after a new manner accomplished in
the bloud of Christ himselfe Thus much of the matter of this Sacrament wherein consisteth the forme thereof Partly in the outward actions both of the Minister and of the receiver partly in the inward and spirituall things signified thereby these outward actions being a second seale set by the Lords owne hand unto his covenant What be the Sacramentall actions of the Minister in the Lords Supper Foure First to take the bread and wine into his hand and to separate it from ordinarie bread and wine What doth this signifie That God in his eternall decree hath separated Christ from all other men to be our Mediator and that he was set apart to that office and separated from sinners Exod. 12. 5. Heb. 7. 26. What is the second To blesse and consecrate the bread and wine by the Word and Prayer What doth that signifie That God in his due time sent Christ into the world and sanctified him furnishing him with all gifts needfull for a Mediator How are the Bread and Wine to be blessed and consecrated By doing that which at the first institution Christ did What is that 1. He declared the Doctrine of the mystery of the Sacrament unto his Apostles which received it by teaching the truth of that which these outward signes did signifie 2. He thanked his heavenly Father for that he had so loved the world that he gave him which was his only Son to die for it through the breaking of his most holy Body and the shedding his most precious bloud Also he gave him thanks for that he had ordained these outward elements to seale our spirituall nourishment in Christ. 3. By a trope of the chiefe part of Prayer which is Thanksgiving for the whole the Evangelist giveth to understand that our Saviour Christ sued to God his heavenly Father that his death in it selfe sufficient to save might by the working of his holy Spirit be effectuall to the elect and that those outward signes of bread and wine might through the operation of his holy Spirit be effectuall to the purposes they were ordained unto How shall it be knowne that he gave thanks and prayed for these things seeing there is no mention of these things in the Evangelists 1. The very matter it selfe that is handled doth guide us to the knowledge of these things 2. The like manner of speech in other places of Scripture where there being no mention what words he used yet must needs be granted that he gave thanks and prayed proportionably to the prayer and thanks here used For taking the Barley loaves and Fishes and giving thanks what can be understood but that he giving thanks to God that had given those creatures for their bodily nourishment prayed that he would blesse them and make them effectuall to that purpose and end Mat. 14. 14. and 15. 36. John 6. 11. And as it is not lawfull to eat and drinke the common meat and drinke without such prayer and thanksgiving so is it not lawfull to communicate these elements without thanksgiving and prayer So much for the second Action which the Minister indeed performeth with the Communicants but yet as chiefe in the action What is the third To breake the Bread and poure out the Wine What doth it signifie The passion and sufferings of Christ with all the torments he endured for our sins both in body and soule his blessed body being bruised and crucified his precious bloud shed trickling and streaming downe from him to all parts of the ground and his righteous soule powred out unto death Isa. 53. 5. 10. 12. Heb. 9. 14. That Christ himselfe of his owne accord offered his body to be broken and his bloud to be shed upon the Crosse And that as the Bread nourisheth not if it remaine whole and unbroken so there is no life for us in Christ but in as much as he died What is the fourth To give and distribute the Bread and VVine to the Receiver What doth that signifie That God giveth Christ and Christ himselfe to us That Christ Iesus with all his merits is offered to all sorts of Receivers and that God hath given him to the faithfull Receivers to feed their soules unto eternall life John 3. 14 15. 6. 50 51. What be the Sacramentall Actions of the Receivers They be two First to take the bread and wine offered by the Minister What doth that signifie The receiving of Christ into our soules with all his benefits by faith That they and only they have benefit by Christ crucified which thus apply Christ to themselves by a true and lively faith John 1. 12. What is the second To eat the bread and drinke the wine receiving them into the body and digesting them 1 Cor. 11. 26. VVhat doth that signifie Our uniting to Christ and enjoying of him that we must with delight apply Christ and his merits to all the necessities of our soules spiritually feeding upon him and groaning by him For the eating of the bread to strengthen our nature betokeneth the inward strengthening of our soules by grace through the merit of the breaking of Christs body for us and the drinking of the wine to cherish our bodies betokens that the bloud of Christ shed upon the Crosse and as it were drunke by faith cherisheth our soules And as God doth blesse these outward elements to preserve and strengthen the body of the receiver so Christ apprehended and received by faith doth nourish him and preserve both body and soule unto eternall life John 6. 50 51. 1 Cor. 10. 3. 11. 16 17. Is Christs body and bloud together with the outward elements received of all Communicants No for howsoever they be offered by God to all Matth. 26. 26. yet are they received by such alone as have the hand of faith to lay hold on Christ and these with the bread and wine doe spiritually receive Christ with all his saving graces As for the wicked and those that come without faith they receive onely the outward elements 1 Cor. 11. 27. and withall judgement and condemnation to themselves verse 29. So much for the matter and forme Shew now the speciall ends and uses for which the Lords Supper was ordained 1. To call to minde and renew the memory and vertue of Christs death 1 Cor. 11. 24. 2. To encrease our faith begotten by the Word preached and to confirme unto us our nourishment onely thereby by the means of Christs death 3. To encrease our love 4. To encrease our joy in the holy Ghost our peace of conscience our hope of eternall life and all other graces of God in us 5. To stirre us up with greater boldnesse to professe Christ then heretofore we had done 6. To quicken our hearts to all holy duties 7. To shew our thankfulnesse to God for his mercie bestowed upon us in Christ. 8. To make a difference betwixt our selves and the enemies of Christ. 9. To knit us more neere in good will one to
another 10. To preserve the publike Ministery of the Word and Prayer in Christian assemblies Who are to be partakers in this Sacrament All baptized who are of yeeres and sound judgement to discerne the Lords body ought to repaire to this Sacrament But those onely come worthily who professing the true faith have duely examined and prepared themselves Esa. 66. 23. 1 Cor. 11. 27 28. whereby all not of age and sound judgement are shut from his Sacrament which are not alwayes from the other of Baptisme May none be admitted by the Church to the Supper of the Lord but such as have these things in them which God requireth at their hands Yes those who having knowledge doe make profession of Religion and are found guilty of no great error or crime unrepented of What if any thrust themselves to the Lords Table who are ignorant or guilty of such crimes They are to be kept back by the discipline of the Church What is to be performed by every Christian that he may worthily partake of the Lords Supper There must be a carefull preparation before the action great heed in the whole action and a joyfull and thankfull cloze and shutting of it All which must be performed as well by the Minister as the people For there is great difference betwixt our Saviour Christ the first deliverer of this Sacrament and all other Ministers he having no battel of the Spirit and flesh in him but being always prepared unto every good worke had no need of these things but other Ministers have as much need thereof as the people How are we to prepare our selves to this Sacrament By due search and triall of our own soules whether we can finde in our selves the things which God doth require in worthy Communicants How may we performe that By fitting our mindes framing our hearts thereunto 1 Cor. 10. 15 16 11. 28 How may we sit our mindes By examining our wisdome and knowledge both of Gods will in generall and of the nature and use of this holy Sacrament in particular whether we can give a reason of the representation of Christ in bread and wine and bring the resemblance and difference of the proportion of the bread and wine with the body and bloud of Christ and of the eating and drinking of the elements with the partaking of the spirituall things Rom. 4. 11. 1 Cor. 10. 3. and 4. 16 17. How may our hearts be framed for the feeling of the vertue and power of this Sacrament 1. By weighing with our selves what need we have of it and what benefit we may reape by it 2. By examining of our faith 2 Cor. 13. 5. 1 Tim. 1. 15. and repentance Heb. 10. 22. Iames 4. 8. attended with true love of God Zach. 12. 10. and of our brethren 1 Cor. 16. 14. 3. By servent invocation praying for a blessing upon this Ordinance of God Matth. 26 26. How may we finde what need we have of this Sacrament Partly by our wretched estate by nature and partly by our weak estate by grace What may we finde by our estate by nature That being prone to all evill we had need of this Sacrament to nourish and preserve the life of grace new begun which otherwise by our own corruption might dye or decay in us 1 Cor. 10. 16. What need have we of this Sacrament for reliefe of our weak estate by grace That being weak in understanding and feeble in memory we may by the signes of Bread and Wine have our understanding bettered and memory confirmed in the death of Christ 1 Cor. 11. 24 26. What further need may we finde of it That being fraile in faith and cold in love we may by the same creatures as by seales and pledges have our faith further strengthned and our love more enflamed to God and Gods children What benefit then may we reape by the Lords Supper We see already that the benefit is great this Sacrament being as a glasse for the mind a monument for the memory a support of faith a provocation to love a quickning to obedience and a signe and seal of all the mercies of God in Christ Iesus How must the heart be prepared to finde the power of this Sacrament for supply of these wants and obteining of these benefits The heart must be purged by repentance and purified by faith 1 Cor. 10. 14 16. 21. Acts 15. 9. How may the heart be purified by faith If I have not only knowledge what Christ hath done for his chosen but a full assurance that whatsoever he hath done he hath done it for me as well as for any other 1 Cor. 2. 2. Iohn 17. 3. Gal. 2. 20. What gather you hence That they onely are to present themselves at the Lords Table who after their baptisme are able to make a profession of the true faith and can finde that they truly believe in Christ seeing ignorant and unbelieving persons do rather eat and drink their own judgement than reap any benefit by this Sacrament 1 Cor. 11. 29 30 31. How may thy heart be purged by repentance If from my heart I do repent of my particular sins past and judge my selfe for them bewailing and forsaking them and frame the rest of my life according to Gods will 1 Cor. 11. 30 31. Gal. 6. 16. What learne you hence That it is dangerous for such as remaine in their old sins or after the Sacrament return unto them once to offer themselves to the Lords Table forasmuch as by this means they procure the wrath of God against them and those that belong unto them although not in condemnation in the world to come which the faithfull notwithstanding their unworthy receiving cannot come unto yet to fearefull plagues and judgements in this world It is not meet that we be free from all malice in our hearts when we come to the Lords Supper Yes it is for this Sacrament is a seal both of our conjunction with Christ and of our society one with another 1 Cor. 10. 17. and we must know that true repentance purgeth out malice amongst other sins and a sound faith worketh by love towards God and out Brethren Mat. 5. 22 23. Iames 1. 19 20 21. 1 Pet. 2. 1. Gal. 5. 6. So much for examination and preparation required before the action What is to be done by the communicant in the present action 1. They are to use reverent attention the better to apply the whole action harkning to the doctrine of the Sacrament delivered by the Minister joyning with him in his prayers making use of all the sacramentall actions and so commemorating the Lords death for the comfort and refreshing of their own souls 1 Cor. 11. 17. 26. 2. According as it is commanded all must take the Bread and Wine into their hands contrary to the superstition of divers which will have it thrust either into their mouthes or else take it with their gloves as if the hand of a Christian which God
his name Psal. 145. 1 2 3. among which the chief and principall are his Attributes or Properties What are the Properties or Attributes of God They are essentiall faculties of God according to the diverse manner of his working 1 Joh. 4. 16. Psal. 145. Are they communicable with the creatures No yet of some of them there are some shadows and glimpses in Men and Angels as Wisdome Holinesse Justice Mercy c. other some are so peculiar to the divine Essence that the like of them are not to be found in the creatures as simplenesse infinitenesse eternity c. How may these Properties be considered They may be considered either in themselves as they are essentiall or in their works or effects which are all perfect either as they be absolute or as they be actuall absolute in himself by which he is able to shew them more then ever he will as he is able to doe more then ever he will doe Mat. 3. 9. God is able of stones to raise children unto Abraham actuall is that which he sheweth in the Creation and government of the vvorld as Psal. 135. 7. All things that he will he doth c. Again something we may conceive of his Essence affirmatively knowing that all perfections which vve apprehend must be ascribed unto God and that after a more excellent manner then can be apprehended as that he is in himself by himself and of himselfe that he is one true God and holy but much more by deniall or by removing all imperfections whatsoever as of composition by the titles of simple spirituall and incorporeall of all circumscription of time by the title of eternall of all bounds of place by that of infinite of all possibility of motion by those titles of unchangeable incorruptible and such like What description can you make of God by these Properties God is a Spirit eternall or more fully God is a spirituall substance having his beeing of himself infinitely great and good Joh. 4. 24. 8. 58. Exod. 3. 14. 34. 6 7. Ps. 145. 3. 8 9. What learn you hence To acknowledge both my beeing and wel-beeing from him and for him alone Acts 17. 28. 1 Cor. 10. 30. Eph. 2. 10. What mean you when you say that God is a substance God is such a thing as hath a beeing in himself of himself and which giveth a beeing to all other things What mean you by that addition Of himself It hath a secret opposition to all creatures which have a beeing but not of themselves whereas God alone is he in whom we live and move and have our beeing Acts 17. 28. which proveth that he alone hath his beeing of himself How many things conceive you of God when you say that he is a Spirit Sixe things First that he is a living substance Secondly that he is incorruptible Thirdly that he is incorporeall without body flesh bloud or bones for a spirit hath no such matter Luke 24. 39. Fourthly that he is invisible i. he cannot be seen with any mortall eye neither can any man possibly see him Fiftly that he is intangible not felt Sixtly that he is indivisible i. he cannot be divided How prove you that God is invisible and not to be seen with carnall eyes That no man hath seen God is plainly set down 1 Joh. 4. 12. that no man can see God is as plainly proved Exod. 33. 20. 1 Tim. 6. 16. and besides Scripture the same is also manifest by reason for we cannot see our own souls which are ten thousand times a more grosse substance then God much lesse can we see God which is a most pure and spirituall substance Obj. 1. We read Gen. 18. 1. that God appeared to Abraham and Deut. 5. 24. that he shewed himself to the Israelites God gave them indeed some outward sights whereby they might be certain of his presence and therefore it is said that the Lord appeared unto them but his substance or essence they saw not for to know God perfectly is proper to God onely Joh. 6. 46. Obj. 2. We read Gen. 1. 26. that man was made according to the image of God It would seem therefore that God is corporeall and visible as man is The image of God consisteth not in the shape and figure of his body but in the mind and integrity of nature or as the Scripture saith in wisdome righteousnesse and holinesse Col. 3. 10. Eph. 4. 24. Obj. 3. Why then doth the Scripture attribute unto him hands feet c The Scripture so speaketh of him as we are able to conceive thereof and therefore in these and such like speeches humbleth it self to our capacity attributing members unto God to signifie the like actions in him To what use serveth this doctrine that God is a Spirit It teacheth us first to worship him in spirit and in truth Joh. 4. 23 24. Secondly to drive away all fond imaginations and grosse conceipts of God out of our hearts and all pictures similitudes of God out of our sights that we frame not any image of him in our minds as ignorant folks doe who think him to be an old man sitting in heaven c. For seeing that God was never seen wherunto shall he be resembled Moses urgeth this point hard and often to the Israelites saying Deut. 4. 12. they heard a voice but saw no similitude and addeth ver 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves he saith not only take heed but take good heed and therefore take good heed for saith he again ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake unto you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire then he commeth in the next four verses to the thing that they must therefore take heed of that ye corrupt not your selves and make you a graven Image the similitude of any figure the likenesse of male or female c. Rom. 1. 23. How may the Attributes or Properties of God be distinguished Some doe concern the perfection of his essence some his life which in God be one and the same thing distinguished onely for our capacity What call you the perfection of Gods essence His absolute constitution by which he is wholly compleat within himself and consequently needeth nothing without himself but alone sufficeth himself having all things from himself and in himself Or thus perfection is an essentiall property in God whereby whatsoever is in God is perfect Gen. 17. 1. Psa. 16. 2. 50. 12. Rom. 11. 35 36. What ariseth from hence All felicity and happinesse all endlesse blisse and glory What is the felicity of God It is the property of God whereby he hath all fulnesse of delight and contentment in himself What learn you from the perfection of God That he is to seek his own glory and not the glory of any in all that he willeth or willeth not doth or leaveth undone What gather you thereof They are confuted that think God is moved to
that concerne himselfe 1. Friends and Neighbours should see that his body be honestly buried and Funerals decently performed Gen. 23. 4 19. 25. 9. 1 Sam. 25. 1. Psal. 79. 3. Rom. 11. 9. 2. Moderate mourning is to be used for him Eccles. 12. 7. 1 Thes. 4. 13. 3. We are to report well of him as he hath deserved 4. We are to judge the best of him What is that which concerneth those that belong to him To provide for his wife children and posterity that he may live in them Ruth 2. 20. 2 Sam. 9. 7. So much of the respect which we owe unto our Neighbours Is it not required also that we should shew mercifulnesse unto our beasts Yes A righteous man is to regard the life of his beast Prov. 12. 10. and all hard usage of the creatures of God is forbidden Deut. 22. 6 7. and 25. 4. yet not so much in regard of them 1 Cor. 9. 9 10. as that thereby the Lord would traine us forward to shew mercy to our Neighbour For it being unlawfull to use the dumbe creatures cruelly it is much more unlawfull to use men so What are the breakers of this Commandement to expect The Apostle Iames teacheth that when he saith Iudgement without mercy shall be upon those that are mercilesse Iames 2. 13. Of how many sorts are those judgements They either concerne this life or that which is to come What be those that concerne this life 1. Severe punishments by the Law are to be inflicted upon the body as limbe for limbe eye for eye hand for hand tooth for tooth wound for wound bloud for bloud life for life Exod. 21. 23. Iudg. 1. 5 6 7. although it were a beast if it were knowne to be a striker Exodus 21. 28. 2. Short life Psal. 55. 23. bloud-thirsty men that live not out halfe their dayes 3. Magistrates that should punish murtherers if they spare them their lives are in danger to goe for the offender as Achabs did for Benhadads 1 Kings 20. 42. David was exceedingly punished for sparing bloud-thirsty men such as was his son Absalom and not punishing them 2 Sam. 13. 28 29. 14. 33. 16. 11. 4. God threatneth that hee will not onely revenge the bloud of the slaine upon the murtherer himselfe but also upon his issue and posterity in unrecoverable diseases 2 Sam. 3. 29. What is the punishment that concerneth the life to come 1. That their prayers are not heard Esay 1. 15. 1 Tim. 2. 8. 2. Everlasting death both of body and soule in the bottomlesse pit of Hell and as the degrees of sinne are so shall the punishment be What meanes are we to use for furthering us to the obedience of this Commandement It behoveth us to consider that first all men are made in the Image of God Gen. 9. 6. and of one bloud with us Acts 17. 26. and all Christians in the Image of Christ also in whom we are all one body 1 Cor. 12. 17. 2. God hath appointed the Magistrate also to punish proportionably every offender in this kinde Gen. 9. 6. Lev. 24. 20 21. Yea himselfe also extraordinarily bringing murtherers to light and punishment Gen. 4. 9. Prov. 28. 17. Acts 28. 4. VVhat must we avoyd as hindrances to the obedience of this Commandement 1. The false opinion of the world in placing manhood in revenge aud bloud-shed Gen. 4. 23 24. 2. The company of furious and unmercifull men Proverbs 22. 24 25. 3. Greedy desire of gaine Prov. 1. 19. Mic. 3. 3. 4. Pride Prov. 13. 10. 5. Riot and drunkennesse Prov. 23. 29. Hitherto of the generall duties that belong to the person of man contained in the sixt Commandement what followeth The duties which we owe to man in regard of the things which belong unto him the first whereof concerneth those that bee most deare unto him namely his family and his wife especially who is nearest unto him and as himselfe being one flesh with him In respect whereof temperance and chastity is required in the next Commandement What are the words of the seventh Commandement Thou shalt not commit Adultery Exod. 20. 14. What is comprehended under this name of Adultery All sins of that sort committed either in the body or in the mind of persons whether married or unmarried are signified by this name to signifie the vilenesse of the breach of this Commandement What then is the meaning and scope of this Commandement That all uncleannesse and impurity be avoided and chastity by all meanes preserved 2 Cor. 7. 1. 1 Thes. 4. 3 4 5. What is here forbidden All impurity uncleannes together with all means and provocations to lust What is here required All purity honest behaviour continent and chaste usage towards our selves and towards our Neighbours 1 Thes. 2. 3. 1 Cor. 7. 34. What are the speciall breaches of this Commandement They are either inward or outward What is the inward The unchastity and dishonesty of the mind with all filthy imaginations and inordinate lusts Mat. 5. 28. Col. 3. 5. What are the speciall branches of this inward impurity 1. The desire of strange flesh with resolution to have it if he could Col. 3. 5. 1 Thes. 4. 5. For to lust after a strange woman with consent of heart is forbidden in this Mat. 5. 28. as lust without consent is in the last Commandement Not that the bare affection is of it selfe a sin being rightly directed to a true and good object but the abuse of the affection the right subject manner and measure being not observed 2. Inward boiling and burning in affection whereby godly motions as with a fire are burnt up and a mans mind is so carried away that he is hindered in all other things belonging to his Calling This is an high degree of corruption which if it be not restrained will breake forth into further mischief Jam. 1. 15. And therfore we are earnestly to pray to God against it if we can no otherwise prevaile we must use the remedy of Marriage prescribed by God himselfe For it is better to marry then to burne 1 Cor. 7. 9. 3. Evill thoughts and cogitations in the mind arising from foolish and vaine talke but first and principally from our owne concupiscence when a man suffers as it were his soule to be trampled under foot with impure imaginations Jam. 1. 14 15. 4. Iealousie in the mind betwixt two persons upon no just occasion or good ground which is contrary to that entire love and affection which a man should have towards his wife Numb 5. What is the inward vertue here commended The virginity and constancy of the mind and the chastity and purity of the heart 1 Cor. 7. 34. 1 Thes. 4. 3 4. 5. 23. What is the outward breach of this Commandement Such uncleannes as being once seated in the mind after sheweth it selfe outwardly Wherein doth it shew it selfe Either in things that belong to the body
onely to the faithfull for the strengthening of their faith in the eternall Covenant and the bringing them more effectually to the practice of Gods Commandements Exod. 12. 16. Luke 1. 59. 3. 3. 16. 1 Cor. 11. 23. Mat. 26. 26. Rom. 4. 19. 6. 4. 1 Pet. 3. 21. Why call you it Action Because it is not a bare signe alone but a worke 1 Cor. 11. 24 25. Why call you it an action of the whole Church Because it is a publick action and appertaineth to the whole Church and therefore ought to be done in the presence of the Congregation by the example of John Matth. 3. 11 12. and commanded of Paul 1 Cor. 11. 18 20 22. it being a greater indignity for the Sacraments to be administered privately then for the civill judgement which is open and publike That we say nothing of the sacrifices under the Law which were not so excellent as these and yet it was not lawful to offer them in private which reproveth the disorder of the Papists who turne the Communion into a private Masse and minister the Lords Supper to one alone without the presence of the Congregation But may not the Sacraments be so administered upon necessity as namely to a sick man ready to depart out of this life There is no such necessity for a man believing wanting that opportunity of comming to the Lords Supper wanteth not the effect thereof seeing the Lord promised by Ezekiel that hee would be a Tabernacle to his people being banished from it Ezek. 37. 27. And therefore the want of the Sacraments doth not hurt when with conveniency a man cannot enjoy them but the contempt or neglect of them when they may conveniently be come unto What the● is the fittest time and place for the administration of the Sacraments The fittest time is the Lords or some other day of publike meeting The most convenient place is the Church and usuall place of the assembly of the Congregation Did not Abraham minister the Sacrament of Circumcision in his private house His house was at that time the Church of God and therefore not private and so in the time of persecution the godly did oft-times meet in Barnes and such obscure places which were indeed publick because when the Church of God were there the house or place availed nothing to make it publick or private even as wheresoever the Prince is there is the Court also said to be though it were in a poore Cottage What difference is there between a Sacrament and a Sacrifice In a Sacrifice there is an offering made to God in a Sacrament there is an offer made by God to us In the Sacrifices Christ was signified as given for us in the Sacraments as given to us the Sacrifices onely signes the Sacraments seales also Who is the Author of a Sacrament God alone because he onely can bestow those graces which are sealed in a Sacrament How doth God ordaine a Sacrament By his Word How many parts of Gods Word are there whereby he doth institute and and ordaine a Sacrament Two First a Commandement to doe it Secondly a promise of a blessing upon the right using of it Was not the Rain-bow a Sacrament being a signe ordained by God No for though it were a signe yet it was no signe of salvation by Christ. What is the matter and substance of every Sacrament One and the same Iesus Christ although diversly communicated in divers Sacraments and in some more forcible then in others because of some elements communicating with or taking hold of or reaching to more of our senses What things then are required in a Sacrament Three First the outward signes and Sacramentall actions concerning the same Secondly the inward thing signified thereby viz. Christ Iesus with his saving graces and spirituall actions concerning the same Thirdly a similitude betwixt them both As in Baptisme for example that as water doth wash the body so doth the bloud of Christ wash away the spots of the soule What signes are used in Sacraments Some onely representing as water bread and wine some applying as washing eating drinking and such like What are the things signified First Christ Iesus and his merrits and secondly the applying of the same unto us in particular Wherein doth the signes of the things signified differ 1. In Nature 2. In the manner of receiving 3. In the parties which doe receive them 4. In the necessity of the receiving of them Wherein doe they agree In this that the signe doth so fitly represent the things signified thereby that the minde of a Christian is drawne by the signe to consider of the things signified What is then the Sacramentall union betwixt the signes and the things signified Such as betwixt a sealed will and the things conveighed in the same From whence it is that the names effects and properties of the one are given to the other What is the cause that moved the Lord to grace the outward signes in the Sacraments with the names of the things signified The outward elements have the names of the spirituall things they set forth 1. Because of their fit proportion and agreement in regard of the resemblance and similitude of the elements and the things signified in which respect they are called signes 2. To shew the inseparable conjunction of the things signified with the signe in the worthy receiver in which regard they are called Seales as in the person of Christ his two natures are so inseparably united that often times the properties and effects of the one are attributed to the other What is the ground of this Sacramentall union In generall the institution of Christ whereby fit things are appointed so to be used with a promise annexed In speciall the applying of that word unto certain speciall signes with prayer in particular and unto me the ground is my reverent and worthy receiving What is the use of Sacraments God hath ordained them to the end that by comparing and conferring the outward things with the inward they might help 1. Our understanding in which regard they are as it were images and glasses Gal. 3. 1. 2. Our remembrance in which respect they are Monuments Luk. 22. 19. 1 Cor. 11. 24. 3. And especially the perswasion of our hearts by reason whereof they are seals and pledges Rom. 4. 11. for they are appointed by God to strengthen us in the promises of salvation which God hath not onely made to us in word but also confirmed the same by writ and lest that we should any wayes doubt as naturally we are inclined he hath set to his seales according to the manner of men that nothing might be lacking which should increase our strength What Doctrine is here to be gathered 1. What root of blindnesse of forgetfulnesse and especially hardnesse of heart to beleeve is in us that the Word and Oath of God is not sufficient to pluckup but that we must have such aides 2. The mercy of God that applieth himself
for the cleansing of it Thus much of the Sacramentall element and Sacramentall actions which are the outward part of baptism What now is the inward part Those spirituall things which are signified and represented and exhibited in and by the outward element and actions as the water signifies the blood of Christ the Ministers consecrating the water signifies God the Fathers setting apart his Son for the expiation of the sins of the world by his blood the Ministers applying the water to the body of the baptized to cleanse it signifieth Gods applying the blood of his Son to cleanse the soule for justification and remission of sins and not onely to signifie but to seale up unto the beleever that the inward part is effected as well as the outward How come these visible things to signifie such invisible mysteries First there is a naturall fitnesse and aptnesse in the outward things to expresse the inward as for water to bee a resemblance of the blood of Christ thus they agree First water is a necessary element the naturall life of man cannot be without it and the blood of Christ is as necessary to his spiritual life Secondly water is a comfortable element as the Hart panteth after the water brooks Psal. 42. 1. The thirst of the body cannot bee quenched but by water hence the heighth of misery is described by a barren and dry ground where no water is Psal. 63. 1. so the thirst of the soule cannot bee quenched but by the blood of Christ Joh. 4. 13. Thirdly water is a free element as it is necessary usefull and comfortable so it is cheap and easie to come by without cost so is the blood of Christ Esa. 55. 1. Hoe hee that thirsteth come and drink freely Fourthly water is a common element none are barred from it any may go to the river and drink and the blood of Christ is offered as generally to all rich and poore high and low bond and free every one may lay claim unto him come have interest in him Joh. 1. 12. Who ever receiveth him who ever beleeveth the proposall is without restraint none can say I am shut out or excepted Fifthly water is a copious and plentifull element there is no lesse in the river for thy drinking of it there is enough for all men so is the blood of Christ all-sufficient it can never bee drawn dry of his fulnesse wee may all receive and yet hee bee never the more empty hence the Scripture speaks of plenteous redemption Sixthly lastly and especially water is a cleansing and a purifying element and it resembles the blood of Christ fitly in that for 1 Joh. 1. 7. The blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin And here we may also observe the symbolicalnesse betwen the Sacramentall action of washing and the inward grace signified First nothing is washed but that which is unclean even so the Sacramentall washing implies our naturall pollution whosoever submits to this Sacrament of Baptism doth by so doing acknowledge himself to bee defiled whoever brings a childe to bee baptized doth by so doing make confession of originall corruption and sinfulnesse as Johns hearers were baptized of him in Jordan confessing their sins Mat. 3. 6. Secondly as the applying of the water to the body washeth and cleanseth so it is with the blood of Christ it cleanseth not the soule but by being applyed to it in the merit and efficacy of it by the sanctifying Spirit of which the outward ministeriall washing is a sign and seale 1 Cor. 6. 11. What is there besides the naturall fitnesse of the outward things to expresse the inward 2. There is also considerable Gods divine institution ordaining and appointing these things to typifie to the soule Christ crucified in his cleansing quality for otherwise though there were never such aptnesse in the creature yet it hath nothing to do to meddle with a Sacrament unlesse the Lord do specially appropriate it to serve for such a purpose and then with Gods institution there goeth a blessing and a speciall vertue and power attends on a divine Ordinance that which makes the outward signs significant is Gods Word and appointment But is Christ and the cleansing power of his bloud only barely signified in the Sacrament of Baptisme Nay more the inward things are really exhibited to the beleever as well as the outward there is that sacramentall union between them that the one is conveyed and sealed up by the other hence are those phrases of being born again of water and of the holy Ghost Joh. 3. 5. of cleansing by the washing of water Eph. 5. 26. so arise and be baptized and wash away thy sins Acts 22. 16. so Rom. 6. 3. we are buried with Christ by baptisme c. the Sacraments being rightly received doe effect that which they doe represent Are all they then that are partakers of the outward washing of baptisme partakers also of the inward washing of the Spirit Doth this Sacrament seal up their spirituall ingraffing into Christ to all who externally receive it Surely no though God hath ordained these outward means for the conveyance of the inward grace to our souls yet there is no necessity that we should tie the working of Gods Spirit to the Sacraments more then to the Word the promises of salvation Christ and all his benefits are preached and offered to all in the ministery of the Word yet all hearers have not them conveyed to their souls by the Spirit but those whom God hath ordained to life so in the Sacraments the outward elements are dispensed to al who make an outward profession of the Gospel for in infants their being born in the bosome of the Church is in stead of an outward profession because man is not able to distinguish corn from chaffe but the inward grace of the Sacrament is not communicated to all but to those onely who are heirs of those promises whereof the Sacraments are seals for without a man have his name in the Covenant the seal set to it confirms nothing to him What is the advantage then or benefit of baptisme to a common Christian The same as was the benefit of Circumcision to the Jew outward Rom. 2. 28. Rom. 3. 1 2. there is a generall grace of Baptisme which all the baptized partake of as a common favour and that is their admission into the visible body of the Church their matriculation and outward incorporating into the number of the worshippers of God by externall communion and so as Circumcision was not onely a seal of the righteousnesse which is by faith but as an overplus God appointed it to be like a wall of separation between Jew and Gentile so is Baptisme a badge of an outward member of the Church a distinction from the common rout of Heathen and God thereby seals a right upon the party baptized to his ordinances that he may use them as his priviledges and wait for an inward blessing by them yet
discharge in the least measure His surety therefore being to satisfie in his stead none will bee found fit to undertake such a payment but he who is both God and Man Man it is fit he should bee because Man was the party that by the articles of the first Covenant was tyed to this obedience and it was requisite that as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one man likewise many should be made righteous Again if our Mediatour were onely God he could have performed no obedience the Godhead being free from all manner of subjection and if he were a bare man although he had been as perfect as Adam in his integrity or the Angels themselves yet being left unto himselfe amidst all the temptations of Satan and this wicked world he should be subject to fall as they were or if he should hold out as the elect Angels did that must have been ascribed to the grace and favour of an other whereas the giving of strict satisfaction to Gods justice was the thing required in this behalf But now being God as well as Man he by his own eternall Spirit preserved himself without spot presenting a far more satisfactory obedience unto God then could have possibly been performed by Adam in his integrity For beside the infinite difference that was betwixt both their Persons which maketh the actions of the one beyond all comparison to exceed the worth and value of the other we know that Adam was not able to make himselfe holy but what holinesse he had he received from him who created him according to his owne image so that whatsoever obedience Adam had performed God should have eaten but of the fruit of the vineyard which himselfe had planted and of his own would all that have been which could be given unto him But Christ did himself sanctifie that humane nature which he assumed according to his own saying Joh. 17. 19. For their sakes I sanctifie my self and so out of his own peculiar store did he bring forth those precious treasures of holy obedience which for the satisfaction of our debt he was pleased to tender unto his Father Againe if Adam had done all things which were commanded him hee must for all that have said I am an unprofitable servant I have done that which was my duty to doe whereas in the voluntary obedience which Christ subjected himself unto the case stood far otherwise True it is that if we respect him in his humane nature his Father is greater then he and he is his Fathers servant yet in that he said and most truly said that God was his Father the Jews did rightly infer from thence that he thereby made himself equall with God and the Lord of Hosts himselfe hath proclaimed him to bee the man that is his fellow Being such a man therefore and so highly born by the priviledge of his birth-right hee might have claimed an exemption from the ordinary service whereunto all other men are tyed and by being the Kings Son have freed himself from the payment of that tribute which was to be exacted at the hands of Strangers When the Father brought this his first-begotten into the world he said Let all the Angels of God worship him and at the very instant wherein the Son advanced our nature into the highest pitch of dignitie by admitting it into the unity of his sacred Person that nature so assumed was worthy to be crowned with all glory and honour and he in that nature might then have set himself down at the right hand of the throne of God tyed to no other subjection then now he is or hereafter shall be when after the end of this world he shall have delivered up the kingdome to God the Father For then also in regard of his assumed nature he shall be subject unto him that put all other things under him Thus the Son of God if he had minded onely his own things might at the very first have attained unto the joy that was set before him but looking on the things of others he chose rather to come by a tedious way and wearisome journey unto it not challenging the priviledge of a Son but taking upon him the form of a mean servant Whereupon in the dayes of his flesh hee did not serve as an honourable Commander in the Lords host but as an ordinary soldier he made himself of no reputation for the time as it were emptying himself of his high state and dignity hee humbled himself and became obedient untill his death being content all his life long to be made under the Law yea so farre that as he was sent in the likenesse of sinfull flesh so he disdained not to subject himself unto that Law which properly did concern sinfull flesh And therefore howsoever Circumcision was by right appliable onely unto such as were dead in their sins and the uncircumcision of their flesh yet he in whom there was no body of the sins of the flesh to be put off submitted himself notwithstanding thereunto not onely to testifie his communion with the Fathers of the old Testament but also by this means to tender unto his Father a bond signed with his own bloud whereby he made himself in our behalf a debtor unto the whole Law For I testifie saith the Apostle to every man that is circumcised that he is a debtor to the whole Law In like manner Baptisme appertained properly unto such as were defiled and had need to have their sins washed away and therefore when all the land of Judea and they of Jerusalem went out unto John they were all baptized of him in the river Jordan confessing their sinnes Among the rest came our Saviour also but the Baptist considering that he had need to be baptized by Christ and Christ no need at all to be baptized by him refused to give way unto that action as altogether unbefitting the state of that immaculate Lambe of God who was to take away the sinne of the World Yet did our Mediatour submit himself to that ordinance of God also not onely to testifie his communion with the Christians of the new Testaments but especially which is the reason yeelded by himselfe because it became him thus to fulfill all righteousnesse And so having fulfilled all righteousnesse whereunto the meanest man was tyed in the days of his pilgrimage which was more then he needed to have undergone if he had respected only himself the works which he performed were truly workes of supererogation which might be put upon the account of them whose debt hee undertook to discharge and being performed by the Person of the Son of God must in that respect not onely be equivalent but infinitely over-value the obedience of Adam and all his posterity although they had remained in their integrity and continued untill this houre instantly serving God day
the glory of Christ. We read in the holy story that God took of the spirit which was upon Moses and gave it unto the seventy Elders that they might bear the burden of the people with him and that hee might not bear it as before hee had done himself alone It may bee his burden being thus lightned the abilities that were left him for government were not altogether so great as the necessity of his former imployment required them to have been and in that regard vvhat vvas given to his assistants might perhaps bee said to bee taken from him But wee are sure the case was otherwise in him of whom now wee speak unto whom God did not thus give the Spirit by measure And therefore although so many millions of beleevers doe continually receive this supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ yet neither is that fountain any way exhausted nor the plenitude of that well-spring of grace any whit impaired or diminished it being Gods pleasure That in him should all fulnesse dwell and that of his fulnesse all wee should receive grace for grace That as in the naturall generation there is such a correspondence in all parts betwixt the begetter and the Infant begotten that there is no member to bee seen in the Father but there is the like answerably to bee found in the Childe although in a farre lesse proportion so it falleth out in this spirituall that for every grace which in a most eminent manner is found in Christ a like grace will appeare in Gods Childe although in a far inferiour degree similitudes and likenesses being defined by the Logicians to bee comparisons made in quality and not in quantity Wee are yet further to take it into our consideration that by thus enlivening and fashioning us according to his own image Christs purpose was not to raise a seed unto himself dispersedly and distractedly but to gather together in one the Children of God that were scattered abroad yea and to bring all unto one head by himselfe both them which are in Heaven and them which are on the Earth That as in the Tabernacle the vail divided between the Holy place and the most Holy but the curtaines which covered them both were so coupled together with the taches that it might still bee one Tabernacle so the Church Militant and Triumphant typified thereby though distant as farre the one from the other as Heaven is from Earth yet is made but one Tabernacle in Jesus Christ In whom all the building fifty framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord and in whom all of us are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit The bond of this mysticall union betwixt Christ and us as elsewhere hath more fully been declared is on his part that quickning Spirit which being in him as the Head is from thence diffused to the spirituall animation of all his Members and on our part Faith which is the prime act of life wrought in those who are capable of understanding by that same Spirit Both whereof must bee acknowledged to bee of so high a nature that none could possibly by such ligatures knit up so admirable a body but hee that was God Almighty And therefore although wee did suppose such a man might bee found who should perform the Law for us suffer the death that was due to our offence and overcome it yea and whose obedience and sufferings should be of such value that it were sufficient for the redemption of the whole world yet could it not be efficient to make us live by faith unlesse that Man had been able to send Gods Spirit to apply the same unto us Which as no bare Man or any other Creature whasoever can doe so for Faith wee are taught by S. Paul that it is the operation of God and a work of his power even of that same power wherewith Christ himself was raised from the dead Which is the ground of that prayer of his that the eyes of our understanding being enlightned wee might know what is the exceeding greatnesse of his power to us-ward who beleeve according to the working of his mighty power which hee wrought in Christ when hee raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places far above all Principality and Power and Might and every Name that is named not onely in this World but also in that to come and hath put all things under his feet and gave him to bee head over all things to the Church which is his body the fulnesse of him that filleth all in all Yet was it fit also that this Head should bee of the same nature with the Body which is knit unto it and therefore that hee should so bee God as that hee might partake of our Flesh likewise For wee are members of his body saith the same Apostle of his flesh and of his bones And except yee eate the flesh of the Son of man saith our Saviour himself and drink his blood yee have no life in you Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in mee and I in him Declaring thereby first that by this mysticall and supernaturall union wee are as truely conjoyned with him as the meate and drink wee take is with us when by the ordinary work of Nature it is converted into our own substance Secondly that this conjunction is immediately made with his humane nature Thirdly that the Lamb slaine that is Christ crucified hath by that death of his made his flesh broken and his blood powred out for us upon the Crosse to bee fit food for the spirituall nourishment of our soules and the very well-spring from whence by the power of his Godhead all life and grace is derived unto us Upon this ground it is that the Apostle telleth us that wee have boldnesse to enter into the Holyest by the blood of Jesus by a new and living way which hee hath consecrated for us through the vaile that is to say his flesh That as in the Tabernacle there was no passing from the Holy to the most Holy place but by the vaile so now there is no passage to bee looked for from the Church Militant to the Church Triumphant but by the flesh of him who hath said of himself I am the way the truth and the life no man commeth unto the Father but by mee Jacob in his dream beheld a ladder set upon the Earth the top whereof reached to Heaven and the Angels of God ascending and descending on it the Lord himself standing above it Of which vision none can give a better interpretation then hee who was prefigured therein gave unto Nathaniel Hereafter you shall see Heaven opened and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man Whence wee may well collect that the onely meanes whereby God standing
every thought to the obedience of Christ. Where as wee must needs acknowledge that it is God which worketh in us both to will and to doe and that it is hee which sanctifyeth us wholly so are wee taught likewise to beleeve that both hee who sanctifyeth and they who are sanctifyed are all of one namely of one and the self-same nature that the sanctifyer might not bee ashamed to call those who are sanctifyed by him his brethren that as their nature was corrupted and their blood tainted in the first Adam so it might bee restored again in the second Adam and that as from the one a corrupt so from the other a pure and undefiled nature might bee transmitted unto the heires of salvation The same God that giveth grace is hee also that giveth glory yet so that the streams of both of them must run to us through the golden pipe of our Saviours humanity For since by man came death it was fit that by man also should come the resurrection of the dead Even by that man who hath said Who so eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternall life and I will raise him up at the last day Who then shall come to bee glorifyed in his Saints and to bee made marvellous in all them that beleeve and shall change this base body of ours that it may be fashioned like unto his own glorious body according to the working whereby hee is able even to subdue all things unto himselfe Unto him therefore that hath thus loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him bee glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen PHILIP 3. 8. I COUNT ALL THINGS BUT LOSSE FOR THE EXCELLENCY OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST JESUS MY LORD FINIS 1 Pet. 1. 19. 21. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16 17. 1 Tim. 1. 17. Psalm 147. 5. Exod. 34. 6 7. 1 Joh. 5. 7. 1 Chron. 29. 11 12. Psal. 145. 10 11 12. Act. 17. 24. Gen. 1. 26 27. Psal. 103. 19. 66. 7. Jude ver 6. Rev. 12. 7. Gal. 3. 10. Gen. 2. 17. Eccl. 7. 31. Rom. 5. 12. 14. Gal. 3. 10. Deut. 28. 45. Mat. 1. 21 22 23. Gal. 4. 4 5. Phil. 2. 7 8 9. Heb. 5. 4 5. Rom. 8. 34. Heb. 10. 12. Luk. 4. 18 19. Isay 9. 6 7. Heb. 3. 1. 2 Tim. 1. 9. Heb. 12. 23. Cant. 2. 16. Joh. 17. 21 22 23 24. Rom. 3. 24 25 26. and 4. 6 7. Rom. 8. 15 16 17. 23 24 25. Eph. 1. 4. Col. 3. 9 10. 12. 14. Mat. 22. 37 38 39 40. Exod. 20. 2 3. Exod. 20. 5 6. Exod. 20. 7. Exod. 20. 8 9 10 11. Exod. 20. 12. Exod. 20. 13. Exod. 20. 14. Exod. 20. 15. Exod. 20. 16. Exod. 20. Acts 26. 20. 2 Cor. 7. 10 11. Jer. 31. 18 19. Eph. 6. 10 11 12. 1 Pet. 5. 8 9. Gal. 6. 14. Rom. 8. 35 36 37. Gal. 5. 14. Col. 3. 5 6. Lev. 1. 74 75. Tit. 2. 11 12 13 14. Matth. 6. 6 7. Matth. 6. 9 10. Ver. 11. 12 13. Matth. 6. 13. Matth. 5. 16 17 18. Eph. 4. 28 29. Heb. 13. 16. Rom. 10. 14 15. Eph. 4. 11 12 13. Rom. 4. 11. Matth. 18. 15 16 17. Heb. 9. 1. 9 10. 1 Cor. 10. 1 2 3 4. Joh. 1. 17. Heb. 12. 27 28. Matth. 28. 19. 1 Pet. 3. 21. 1 Cor. 11. 23 24. 1 Tim. 4. 12 13. 2 Thes. 2. 3 4. Heb. 9. 27. 1 Thes. 4. 15 16 17. 1 Cor. 15. 51 52. Matth. 25. 34 35. All men desire eternall happinesse Religion the means to obtain happinesse No salvation but by the true Religion Diverse kindes of false Religion What Christian Religion is Of Catechising what it is Where to bee used and by whom The necessity of it a Eccles. 1. 2. True happines consisteth in God How we come to injoy God b Job 22. 21. c Joh. 17. 3. Gal. 4. 9. d Eccle. 12. 13. e 2 Cor. 5. 9. f 1 Sam. 2. 30. Means to know God By his Divine Works and holy Word Job 22. 20. Joh. 6. 68. Of the Divine Works of God Plato Galen Homer Virgil. Ovid. The uses of knowing God by his Works Of Gods holy Word the Scriptures How the Scriptures were delivered Revelations Oracles Visions What Scripture is That the Scriptures are the Word of God Reasons to prove God to be the Author of the holy Scriptures 1 Efficient Instrumentall 2 The simplicity and sincerity of the writers 3 The quality and condition of the Penmen of holy Scriptures 4 The heavenly matter of holy Scripture 5 The Doctrine of the Scriptures above humane capacity 6 The concord of the several writers one with another 7 The prophesies fulfilled in their due time 8 The Majesty and authority of the Scriptures 9 The motives used in them to perswade not reason but commands 10 The end and scope of the Scriptures which is Gods glory 11 Their admirable power 12 Their antiquity 13 The hatred of the Devill and wicked men against them 14 The preservation of the Scriptures 15 Their power to humble a man and raise him up again 1 Cor. 14. 25. 16 The consenant testimony of all men at all times 17 The known miracles done by the Writers of the Scriptures 18 The testimony of the Spirit in the hearts of men That the authority of the Scriptures doth not depend on the Church What are the books of holy Scriptures In what language the Old Testament was writen That the Scriptures of the Old Testament were first writen with vowels and pricks The books of Moses The books of the Prophets The Historicall books The Doctrinal books The Poeticall books The Prosaicall books The Apocryphall books The errors of the Apocryphal Books Of the books of the New Testament The properties of the holy Scriptures As 1 holy 2 Highest in authority 3. Sufficient in themselves That the Scriptures are a perfect rule for doctrine life and Salvation Objections against the sufficiency of the holy Scriptures answered Tim. Qu. An. Of the perspicuity of the holy Scriptures The Papists objections against the perspicuity of the Scriptures answered Ans. Why God hat● left some places of Scripture obscure Of the Translation of holy Scriptures An objection grounded on various readings answered Why the Scriptures must be expounded by the Scriptures The use of holy Scriptures Who must read the Scriptures That all must read the Scriptures proved The Papists objections against reading the Scriptures answered That there is a God Of the Nature of God Of Gods Essence The name of God Of the Properties or Attributes of God A description of God God a Spirit The perfection of God The felicity of God Of the simplenesse or singlenesse in God Gods infinitenesse Gods immensity or greatnesse Gods eternity The life of God Of the knowledge and wisdom of God Fore-knowledge and Counsell of God The Counsell of God Gods absolute wisdome and knowledge 1
wee see that wee need no more but to bee born and then to have this life preserved The Sacrament of Baptisme sheweth us the first the Sacrament of the Lords Supper the second Therefore those five other Sacraments of Confirmation Penance Matrimony Orders and extreame Unction joyned by the Papists are superfluous because some of them have no warrant at all out of the Word of God and God hath not promised a blessing upon the using of them others of them though they bee agreeable to the Word yet are without the nature and number of the Sacraments What is Baptisme It is the first Sacrament of the New Testament by the washing of water Ephes. 5. 26. representing the powerfull washing of the blood and spirit of Christ 1 Cor. 6. 11. Heb. 10. 22. and so sealing our regeneration or new birth our entrance into the Covenant of Grace and our ingraffing into Christ and into the body of Christ which is his Church Joh. 3. 5. Tit. 3. 5. Act. 8. 27. The word Baptisme in generall signifieth any kinde of washing but here it is specially taken for that sacramentall washing which sealeth unto those which are within Gods Covenant their birth in Christ and enterance into Christianity How was this Sacrament ordained and brought into the Church in the place of Circumcision At the Commandement of God Joh. 1. 33. by the Ministery of John therefore called the Baptist Matth. 3. 1. after sanctified and confirmed by our Saviour Christ himself being baptized by John Mat. 3. 13. and giving commission to his Apostles and Ministers to continue the same in his Church unto the end Mat. 28. 18. Why call you it the first Sacrament Because Christ gave order to his Apostles that after they have taught and men beleeve they should baptize them that so they might bee enrolled amongst those of the houshold of God and entered into the number of the Citizens Burgesses of the heavenly Jerusalem What abuse doth this take away That which sometimes the ancient Church was infected withall namely that they baptized men at their death and let them receive the Lords Supper twice or thrice a yeer whereas this is the first Sacrament of the Covenant What are the essentiall parts of this Sacrament of Baptisme As of all other Sacraments two the outward signes and the inward things signified where also is to bee considered the proportion and union which is between those two parts which is as it were the very form and inward excellency of a Sacrament What are the outward signes in Baptisme They are the outward element of water and the outward sacramentall actions performed about it What are those Sacramentall actions First the Ministers blessing and consecrating the water And secondly the right applying it so consecrated to the party to bee baptized May none but a lawfull Minister baptize No for baptism is a part of the publique Ministery of the Church and Christ hath given warrant and authority to none to baptize but those whom hee hath called to preach the Gospel Goe Preach and Baptize Matth. 28. 29. those onely may stand in the roome of God himself and Ministerially set to the seale of the Covenant And it is monstrous presumption for Women or any other private persons who are not called to meddle with such high Mysteries nor can there bee any case of necessity to urge as will appeare afterwards Touching the first action of the Minister how is hee to blesse and consecrate the water First by opening to them that are present the Doctrine of Baptisme and the right institution and use of it what inward mysteries are signified and sealed up by those outward signes So did John when hee baptized hee preached the Doctrine of Repentance and taught the people the inward baptisme of the Spirit signified by his baptizing with vvater Matth. 3. 11. Secondly by acknowledging in the name of the congregation mans naturall pollution that vve stand in need of spirituall vvashing by giving thanks to God the Father for giving his Sonne for a propitiation for our sins and appointing his blood to bee a fountain to the house of Israel to wash in and for ordaining of this service to bee a Sacrament and seale of so great a mystery Thirdly by making profession of Faith in Gods promises in that behalf and praying that they may bee made good unto the party that is to receive the seale thereof for as every thing is sanctified by the Word of God and prayer so in especiall manner the Sacramentall water in baptisme is blessed and consecrated by the Word of institution and prayer to God for a blessing upon his own Ordinance What is the second Sacramentall action The action of washing that is of applying the Sacramentall water unto the party to be baptized diving or dipping him into it or sprinkling him with it In the name of the Father the Son and of the holy Ghost Is the action of diving or dipping materiall and essentiall to the Sacrament or is there absolute ground and warrant for sprinkling which is most commonly practised with us in these cold Countries Some there are that stand strictly for the particular action of diving or dipping the baptized under water as the onely action which the institution of this Sacrament will bear and our Church allows no other except in case of the childes weaknesse and there is exprest in our Saviours baptisme both his descending into the water and rising up so that some think our common sprinkling to bee through ease and tendernesse a stretching the liberty of the Church further then either the Church would or the symbolicalnesse of the outward sign with the thing signified can safely admit it typifying our spirituall buriall and resurrection Rom. 6. 8. Others conceive the action of sprinkling of water upon the face of the baptized very warrantable especially in young children to whom further wetting may bee dangerous and the grounds are these First it seems that neither dipping is essentiall to the Sacrament of Baptisme nor sprinkling but onely washing and applying water to the body as a cleanser of the filth thereof Secondly then as in the other Sacrament a spoonfull of wine is as significant as a whole gallon so here a handfull of water is as significant as a whole river Thirdly the action of sprinkling beares fit resemblance with the inward grace as well as dipping and hath authority in the Scriptures read 1 Pet. 1. 2. and Heb. 12. 14. there is speech of the sprinkling of the blood of Christ and the blood of sprinkling speaks better things then the blood of Abel Fourthly it is not unlikely that the Apostles baptized as well by sprinkling or powring upon as by diving and dipping into sith wee read of divers baptized in houses as well as others in rivers However the washing the body by water is essentiall Ephes. 5. 26. though whether way it bee done seem not to bee essentiall so water bee applyed to the body