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A65285 A body of practical divinity consisting of above one hundred seventy six sermons on the lesser catechism composed by the reverend assembly of divines at Westminster : with a supplement of some sermons on several texts of Scripture / by Thomas Watson ... Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1692 (1692) Wing W1109; ESTC R32148 1,021,388 604

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Apostacy 'T is a renouncing of our Baptism 'T is damnable Perjury to go away from God after a Solemn Vow 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me He turned Renegado and afterward became a Priest in an Idol Temple saith Dorotheus Iulian the Apostate Gregory Nazianzen observes bathed himself in the Blood of Beasts offered in Sacrifice to the Heathen Gods and so as much as in him lay washed off his former Baptism The Case of such as fall away after Baptism is dreadful Heb. 10.38 If any Man draw back The Greek Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to draw back alludes to a Souldier that steals away from his Colours So if any Man steal away from Christ and run over to the Devils side my Soul shall have no pleasure in him That is I will be severely avenged on him I will make my Arrows drunk with his Blood If all the Plagues in the Bible can make that Man miserable he shall be so II. The Second Sacrament wherein Jesus Christ communicates to us the Benefits of his Redemption is the Lord's Supper Mark XIV 24 And as they did Eat Iesus took Bread c. Secondly Having spoken of the Sacrament of Baptism I come now to the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper The Lord's Supper is the most Spiritual and sweet Ordinance that ever was instituted Here we have to do more immediately with the Person of Christ. In Prayer we draw nigh to God in the Sacrament we become one with him In Prayer we look up to Christ in the Sacrament by Faith we touch him In the Word Preached we hear Christ's Voice in the Sacrament we feed on him Quest. 1. What Names and Titles in Scripture are given to the Sacrament Resp. 1. It is called 1. Mensa Domini The Lord's Table 1 Cor. 10.21 The Papists call it an Altar not a Table The Reason is because they turn the Sacrament into a Sacrifice and pretend to offer up Christ corporally in the Ma●s It being the Lord's Table shews with what Reverence and solemn Devotion we should approach to these Holy Mysteries The Lord takes notice of the Frame of our Hearts when we come to his Table Matth. 22.11 The King came in to see the Guests We dress our selves when we come to the Table of some Great Monarch We should think with our selves we are going to the Table of the Lord therefore should dress our selves by Holy Meditation and Heart-Consideration Many think it is enough to come to the Sacrament but mind not whether they come in Due Order Perhaps they had scarce a serious Thought before whither they were going All their Dressing was by the Glass not by the Bible Chrysostom calls it The dreadful Table of the Lord So it is to such as come unworthily 2. The The Sacrament is called Coena Domini the Lord's Supper 1 Cor. 11.20 to import it is a Spiritual Feast It is indeed a Royal Feast God is in this Cheer Christ in both Natures God and Man is the matter of this Supper 3. The Sacrament is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Communion 1 Cor. 10.16 The Bread which we break is it not the Communion of the Body of Christ The Sacrament being called a Communion shews 1. That this Ordinance is only for Believers because none else can have Communion with Christ in these Holy Mysteries Communio fundatur in ●nione Faith only gives us Union with Christ and by Vertue of this we have Communion with him in his Body and Blood None but the Spouse communicates with her Husband A Stranger may drink of his Cup but she only hath his Heart and communicates with him in a Conjugal manner So Strangers may have the Sign drink of the Cup but only Believers drink Christ's Blood and have Communion with him in his Priviledges 2. The Sacrament being a Communion shews That it is Symbolum Amoris a Bond of that Unity and Charity which should be among Christians 1 Cor. 10.17 We being many are one Body As many Grains make One Bread so many Christistians are one Body A Sacrament is a Love-Feast The Primitive Christians as Iustin Martyr notes had their Holy Salutations at the Blessed Supper in token of that Dearness of Affection which they did bear each to other It is a Communion therefore there must be Love and Union The Israelites did eat the Passover with Bitter Herbs so must we eat the Sacrament with bitter Herbs of Repentance but not with bitter Hearts of Wrath and Malice The Hearts of the Communicants should be knit together with the Bond of Love Thou braggest of thy Faith saith Austin but show me thy Faith by thy Love to the Saints For as in the Sun Light and Heat are inseparable so Faith and Love are twisted together inseparably Where there are Divisions the Lord's Supper is not properly a Communion but a Disunion Quest. 2. What is the Lord's Supper Resp. It is a visible Sermon wherein Christ crucify'd is set before us or it is a Sacrament of the New Testament wherein by receiving the Holy Elements of Bread and Wine our Communion with Christ is signify'd and seal'd up to us Or thus It is a Sacrament Divinely Instituted wherein by giving and receiving Bread and Wine Christ's Death is shewed forth and the worthy Receivers are by Faith made Partakers of his Body and Blood and all the Benefits flowing from thence For the further explaining of the Nature of the Lord's Supper I shall look back to to the Institution 1. Iesus took Bread Here is the Master of the Feast or the Institutor of the Sacrament The Lord Iesus he took Bread He only is fit to Institute a Sacrament who is able to give Vertue and Blessing to it 2. He took Bread Christ's Taking of the Bread was one Part of his Consecration of the Elements and setting them apart for an Holy Use. And as Christ did consecrate the Elements so we must labour to have our Hearts consecrated before we receive these Holy Mysteries in the Lord's Supper How unseemly a Sight is it to see any come to these Holy Elements having Hearts leavened with Pride Covetousness Envy These do with Iudas receive the Devil in the Sop and are no better than Crucifyers of the Lord of Glory 3. And Blessed it This is another Part of the Consecration of the Element Christ blessed it He blesseth and it shall be blessed Viz. He look'd up to Heaven for a Benediction upon this Ordinance newly founded 4. And Brake it The Bread broken and the Wine poured out was to signifie to us the Agony and Ignominy of Christ's Sufferings the Rending of Christs Body on the Cross and that Effusion of Blood which was distilled from his blessed Sides 5. And gave it to them Christ's giving the Bread denotes Christ's giving of himself and all his Benefits to us freely Tho Christ was sold yet given Iudas did sell Christ but Christ gave himself to us 6. He gave it to Them viz. The Disciples This is Childrens Bread
Christ doth not cast these Pearl before Swine Whether Iudas were present at the Supper is controverted I rather incline to think he was not For Christ said to the Disciples This is my Blood which is shed for you Luke 22.20 Christ knew his Blood was never shed effectually and intentionally for Iudas In eating the Passover Christ gave Iudas a Sop which was a Bit of Unleavened Bread dipt in a Sauce made with bitter Herbs Iudas having received the Sop went immediately out John 13. But suppose Iudas were there tho he receiv'd the Element yet not the Blessing 7. Take Eat This Expression of Eating denotes Four things 1. The near mystical Vnion between Christ and his Saints As the Meat which is eaten incorporates with the Body and becomes one with it so by eating Christ's Flesh and drinking his Blood Spiritually we partake of Christ's Merits and Graces and are mystically one with him Iohn 17.23 I in them 2. Take eat Eating shows the infinite Delight the believing Soul hath in Christ. Eating is grateful and pleasing to the Pallat So feeding on Christ by a lively Faith is delicious Nullus animae suavior cibus Lactantius No such sweet feeding as on Christ crucifyed This is a Feast of Fat things and Wine on Lees w●ll refined 3. Take eat Eating denotes Nourishment Meat as it is delicious to the Pallat so it is nourishing to the Body So eating Christ's Flesh and drinking his Blood is nutritive to the Soul The new Creature is nourished at the Table of the Lord to everlasting Life Iohn 6.54 Whoso eateth my Flesh and drinketh my Blood hath eternal Life 4. Take eat shows the Wisdom of God who restores us by the same means by which we fell We fell by Taking and Eating the Forbidden Fruit and we are recovered again by Taking and Eating of Christ's Flesh. We died by eating the Tree of Knowledge and we live by eating the Tree of Life 8. This is my Body These Words Hoc est Corpus meum have been much controverted between us and the Papists This is my Body that is by a Metonymy It is a Sign and Figure of my Body The Papists hold Transubstantiation that the Bread is after Consecration turn'd into the very Substance of Christ's Body We say we receive Christ's Body Spiritually they say they receive Christ's Body Carnally which is contrary to Scripture The Scripture affirms that the Heavens must receive Christ's Body until the times of the restitution of all things Acts 3.21 Christ's Body cannot be at the same time in Heaven and in the Host. Aquinas saith It is not possible by any Miracle that a Body should be locally in two places at once Besides it is absurd to imagine that the Bread in the Sacrament should be turned into Christ's Flesh and that his Body which was hung before should be made again of Bread So that This is my Body is as if Christ had said This is a Sign and Representation of my Body 9. And he took the Cup. The Cup is put by a Metonymy of the Subject for the Adjunct for the Wine in the Cup it signifies the Blood of Christ shed for our Sins The taking of the Cup denotes the Redundancy of Merit in Christ and the Fulness of our Redemption by him He not only took the Bread but the Cup. 10. And when he had given Thanks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ gave Thanks that God had given these Elements of Bread and Wine to be Signs and Seals of Man's Redemption by Christ. Christ's giving of Thanks shows his Philanthropy or Love to Mankind who did so rejoyce and bless God that Lost Man was now in a way of Recovery and that he should be rais'd higher in Christ than ever he was in Innocency 11. He gave the Cup to them Why then dare any with-hold the Cup This is to pollute and curtail the Ordinance and alter it from its Primitive Institution Christ and his Apostles administred the Sacrament in both Kinds the Bread and the Cup 1 Cor. 11.24 25. And the Cup was receiv'd in the ancient Church for the space of 1400 Years as is confess'd by Two Popish Councils Christ saith expresly Drink ye all of this He doth not say Eat ye all of this But Drink ye all as foreseeing the Sacrilegious Impiety of the Church of Rome in keeping back the Cup from the People The Popish Council of Constance speaks plainly but impudently That altho' Christ instituted and administred the Sacrament in both Kinds the Bread and the Wine yet the Authority of the Holy Canons and the Custom of the Mother Church think good to deny the Cup to the Laity Thus as the Popish Priests make Christ but half a Saviour so they administer to the People but half a Sacrament The Sacrament is Christ's Last Will and Testament in the Text This is my Blood of the New Testament Now to alter or take away any thing from a Man's Will and Testament is a great Impiety What is it then to alter and mangle Christ's Last Will and Testament Sure 't is an high Affront to Christ. Quest. 3. What are the Ends of the Lord's Supper Resp. 1. It is an Ordinance appointed to confirm our Faith Iohn 4.48 Except ye see Signs ye will not believe Christ sets the Elements before us that by these Signs our Faith may be strengthened As Faith cometh by hearing so it is confirmed by seeing Christ crucify'd The Sacrament is not only a Sign to represent Christ but a Seal to confirm our Interest in him Object But it is the Spirit confirms Faith therefore not the Sacrament Answ. This is no good Logick The Spirit confirms Faith therefore not the Sacrament is as if one should say God feeds our Bodies therefore Bread doth not feed us whereas God feeds us by Bread So the Spirit confirms our Faith by the Use of the Sacrament 2. The End of the Sacrament is to keep up the Memory of Christ's Death 1 Cor. 11.25 This do ye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in remembrance of me If a Friend give us a Ring at his Death we wear it to keep up the Memory of our Friend Much more then ought we to keep up the Memorial of Christ's Death in the Sacrament Christ's Death lays a Foundation for all the magnificent Blessings which we receive from Christ. The Covenant of Grace was agreed on in Heaven but sealed upon the Cross. Christ hath sealed all the Articles of Peace in his Blood Remission of Sin flows from Christ's Death Matth. 26.28 This is my Blood of the New Testament shed for many for the Remission of Sins Consecration or making us Holy is the Fruit of Christ's Death Heb. 9.14 How much more shall the Blood of Christ purge your Conscience Christ's Intercession is made available to us by Vertue of his Death Christ could not have been admitted an Advocate if he had not been first a Sacrifice Our entring into Heaven is the Fruit of Christ's Blood Heb. 10.19
their chrystal streams the Sun inlightens others with its golden beams the more a Christian is enobled with Grace the more he besiegeth Heaven with his Prayers for others If we are Members of the Body Mystical we cannot but have a sympathy with others in their wants and this sympathy sets us a praying for them David had a publick Spirit in Prayer Psal. 125.4 Do good O Lord unto those that be good Though he begins the Psalm with Prayer for himself Psal. 51.1 Have Mercy upon me O God yet he ends the Psalm with Prayer for others ver 18. Do good in thy good pleasure unto Sion VSE III. It is matter of Comfort to the Godly who are but low in the World yet they have the Prayers of Gods people for them they pray not only for the increase of their Faith but their Food that God will give them Daily Bread He is like to be rich who hath several stocks going so are they in a likely way to thrive who have the Prayers of the Saints going for them in several parts of the World So much for this second word in the Petition Give us Thirdly The thi●● word in the Petition is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This day We pray not give us Bread for a month or a year but a day Give us this day Quest. Is it not lawful to lay up for afterwards Doth not the Apostle say He who provides not for his Family is worse than an Infidel 1 Tim. 5.8 Answ. 'T is true it is lawful to lay up for Posterity but our Saviour hath taught us to pray Give us this day our bread for two Reasons 1. That we should not have carking care for the future We should not set our Wits upon the tenter or torment our selves how to lay up great Estates if we do vivere in diem if we have but enough to supply for the present it may suffice Give us this day Take no thought for to morrow Matth. 6.34 God fed Israel with Manna in the wilderness and he fed them from hand to mouth sometimes all their Manna was spent and if any one had asked them where they would have their break-fast next morning they would have said our care is only for this day God will rain down what Manna we need If we have Bread this day do not distrust Gods Providence for the future 2. Our Saviour will have us pray Give us bread this day to teach us to live every day as if it were our last We are not to pray give us Bread to morrow because we do not know whether we shall live while to morrow but Lord give us this day it may be our last day we shall live and then we shall need no more VSE If we pray for Bread only for a day Give us this day then you who have great Estates have cause to be thankful you have more than you pray for you pray but for Bread for one day and God hath given you enough to suffice you all your life What a bountiful God do you serve Two things may make rich Men thankful 1. God gives them more than they deserve 2. God gives them more than they pray for Fourthly The fourth thing in the Petition is Our bread Quest. Why is it called our Bread when it is not ours but Gods Answ. 1. We must understand it in a qualified sense it is our Bread being gotten by honest industry There are two sorts of Bread that cannot properly be called our Bread 1. The Bread of Idleness 2. The Bread of Violence 1. The Bread of Idleness Prov. 31.27 She eateth not the bread of idleness An idle Person doth vivere aliena quadra he lives at another bodies cost and is at their finding Prov. 1.25 His hands refuse to labour We must not be as the Drones which eat the honey that other Bees have brought into the hive If we eat the bread of Idleness this is not our own bread 2 Thess. 3.11 12. There are some that walk disorderly working not at all such we command that they work and eat their own bread The Apostle gives us this hint that such as live idly do not eat their own Bread 2. The Bread of Violence We cannot call this our Bread for it is taken away from others That which is gotten by stealth or fraud or any manner of extortion is not our Bread it belongs to another He who is a bird of prey who takes away the Bread of the Widow and Fatherless he eats that Bread which is none of his nor can he pray for a Blessing upon it Can he pray God to bless that which he hath gotten unjustly 2. It is called our Bread by vertue of our Title to it There is a twofold title to Bread 1. A Spiritual Title In and by Christ we have a right to the Creature and may call it our Bread As we are Believers we have the best Title to Earthly things we hold all in capite 1 Cor. 3.22 All things are yours by what Title Ye are Christs 2. A Civil Title which the Law confers on us To deny Men a Civil Right to their Possessions and make all common it opens the door to Anarchy and Confusion VSE See the priviledge of Believers they have both a Spiritual and a Civil Right to what they possess They who can say Our Father can say our Bread Wicked Men tho' they have a Legal right to what they possess yet not a Covenant right they have it by Providence not by Promise with Gods leave not with his Love Wicked Men are in Gods eye no better than usurpers all they have their Money and Land is like Cloth taken up at the Drapers which is not paid for but this is the sweet priviledge of Believers they can say our Bread Christ being theirs all is theirs O how sweet is every bit of Bread dip'd in Christs Blood How well doth that Meat relish which is a pledge and earnest of more The Meal in the barrel is an earnest of our Angels food in Paradise Here is the priviledge of Saints they have a right to Earth and Heaven Fifthly The fifth and last thing in this Petition is the thing we pray for Daily Bread Quest. What is meant by Bread Answ. Bread here by a Synechdoche speciei pro genere is put for all the Temporal Blessings of this Life Food Fuel Clothing Quicquid nobis conducit ad bene esse Aust. whatever may serve for Necessity or sober Delight VSE Learn to be contented with that allowance God gives us If we have Bread a competency of these outward things let us rest satisfied We pray but for Bread Give us our daily Bread we do not pray for superfluities not for Quails or Venison but for Bread that which may support Life Tho' we have not so much as others so full a Crop so rich an Estate yet if we have the staff of Bread to shore us up from falling let us be content most people are
Lion of the Tribe of Judah whose Eyes are as a Lamp of fire and the Rocks are thrown down by him Nahum 1.6 He shall cut off the spirit of Princes Psal. 76.12 Use 3. If Christ be a great King submit to him Say not as those Iews We have no King but Caesar no King but our Lusts. This is to choose the Bramble to rule over you and out of the Bramble will come forth a fire Iudg. 9. Submit to Christ willingly all the Devils in Hell submit to Christ but 't is against their will they are his Slaves Not his Subjects Submit cheerfully to Christ's Person and his Laws Many would have Christ their Saviour but not their Prince such as will not have Christ to be their King to rule them shall never have his Blood to save them Obey all Christ's Princely Commands if he commands Love Humility Good Works be as the Needle which points which way soever the Load-stone draws Branch 2. Let such admire God's Free-grace who were once under the Power and Tyranny of Satan and now Christ hath made them of Slaves to become the Subjects of his Kingdom Christ did not need Subjects he hath Legions of Angels ministring to him but in his Love he hath honoured you to make you his Subjects O! how long was it e're Christ could prevail with you to come under his Banner How much opposition did he meet with e're you would wear this Prince's Colours but at last Omnipotent Grace overcame you When Peter was sleeping between two Souldiers an Angel came and beat off his Chains Acts 12.7 So when thou wert sleeping in the Devil's Arms that Christ should by his Spirit smite thy heart and cause the Chains of Sin to fall off and make thee a Subject of his Kingdom O admire Free-grace Thou who art a Subject of Christ art sure to Reign with Christ for ever Christ's Humiliation in his Incarnation 1 TIM 3.16 Great is the Mystery of Godliness God manifest in the flesh Quest. XVII WHerein did Christ's Humiliation consist Resp. In his being born and that in a low condition undergoing the Miseries of this Life the Wrath of God and the cursed Death of the Cross. Christ's Humiliation consisted in his Incarnation his taking Flesh and being Born It was real Flesh Christ took Not the Image of a Body as the Manichees erroniously held but a true Body therefore Christ is said to be made of a woman Gal. 4.4 As the Bread is made of the Wheat and the Wine is made of the Grape so Christ was made of a Woman his Body was part of the Flesh and Substance of the Virgin This is a glorious Mystery God manifest in the flesh In the Creation Man was made in God's Image in the Incarnation God was made in Man's Image Quest. How it came about that Christ was made flesh Resp. It was by his Fathers special designation Gal. 4.4 God sent forth his Son made of a Woman God the Father did in a special manner appoint Christ to be Incarnate which shews us how needful a Call is to any business of weight and importance to act without a Call is to act without a Blessing Christ himself would not be Incarnate and take upon him the work of a Mediator till he had a Call God sent forth his Son made of a Woman Quest. But was there no other way for the restoring of fallen Man but this that God should take flesh Answ. We must not ask a Reason of God's Will it is dangerous to pry into God's Ark we are not to dispute but adore The wise God saw this the best way for our Redemption that Christ should be Incarnate it was not fit for any to satisfie God's Justice but Man none could do it but God therefore Christ being both God and Man he is the fittest to undertake this Work of Redemption Quest. Why Christ was born of a Woman Resp. 1. That God might fulfil that promise Gen. 3.15 The Seed of the Woman shall break the Serpents head 2. Christ was born of a Woman that he might roll away that reproach from the Woman which she had contracted by being seduced by the Serpent Christ in taking his flesh from the Woman hath honoured her Sex that as at the first the Woman had made Man a Sinner so now to make him amends she should bring him a Saviour Quest. Why Christ was born of a Virgin Resp. 1. For Decency It became not God to have any Mother but a Maid and it became not a Maid to have any Son but a God 2. For Necessity Christ was to be an High Priest most pure and holy Had he been born after the ordinary course of Nature he had been defiled all that spring out of Adam's Loins have a tincture of sin but that Christ's Substance might remain pure and immaculate he was born of a Virgin 3. To answer the Type Melchisedeck was a Type of Christ he is said to be without Father and without Mother Christ being born of a Virgin answered the Type he was without Father and without Mother without Mother as he was God without Father as he was Man Quest. How could Christ be made of the flesh and blood of a Virgin yet without sin The purest Virgin that is her Soul is stained with Original sin Answ. This Knot the Scripture unties Luke 1.35 The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and overshadow thee therefore that holy Thing which shall be born of thee shall be caled the Son of God The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee that is the Holy Ghost did consecrate and purifie that part of the Virgins flesh whereof Christ was made As the Alchymist extracts and draws away the dross from the Gold so the Holy Ghost did refine and claritie that part of the Virgins flesh separating it from sin Though the Virgin Mary her self had sin yet that part of the flesh whereof Christ was made was without sin otherwise it must have been an impure Conception Quest. What is meant by the power of the Holy Ghost overshadowing the Virgin Answ. St. Basil saith It was the Holy Ghost's blessing the flesh of that Virgin whereof Christ was formed But there is a further Mystery in it the Holy Ghost having framed Christ in the Virgins Womb did in a wonderful manner unite Christ's Humane Nature to his Divine and so of both made one person This is a Mystery which the Angels pry into with Adoration Quest. When was Christ incarnate Answ. In the fulness of time Gal. 4.4 When the fulness of time was come God sent forth his Son made of a Woman By the fulness of time we must understand Tempus à Patre praefinitum so Ambrose Luther Corn●à Lap. the determinate Time that God had set More particularly this fulness of time was when all the Prophesies of the coming of the Messiah were accomplished and all Legal Shadows and Figures whereby he was tipified were abrogated in the fulness of time God sent his Son And
Commandments for a sign upon thy Hand and they shall be as Frontlets between thine Eyes Deut. 6.8 The Pharisees took it in the Literal Sense they got Two Scrolls of Parchment wherein they wrote the Two Tables putting one on their Left Arms and binding the other to their Eye-brows Thus they wrested the Scripture and took Gods Name in vain That Scripture was to be understood Spiritually and by a Figure God meant by binding his Law upon their Hands that they should meditate in his Law and put it in practice And so the Papists expound that Scripture This is my Body Literally of the very Body of Christ then when Christ gave the Bread he should have had Two Bodies one in the Bread and the other out of the Bread whereas Christ meant it Figuratively It is a sign of my Body Thus they by wresting the Scripture to a wrong Sense prophane it and take Gods Name in vain Secondly When we expound those Scriptures Figuratively and Allegorically which the Holy Ghost means Literally For example Christ said to Peter launch out into the Deep and make a Draught Luke 5.4 This Text is spoken in a plain Literal Sense of Launching out the Ship but the Papists take it in a Mystical and Allegorical This Text proves say they That the Pope which is Peter's Successor shall launch forth and catch the Ecclesiastical and Political power over the West Parts of the World this say they was meant when Christ bad Peter launch out into the Deep But I think the Papists have launched out too far beyond the meaning of the Text. When Men strain their Wits to wrest the Word to such a Sense as pleaseth them they do profane Gods Word and highly take his Name in vain VII We take Gods Name in vain when we swear by his Name Many seldom name God's Name but in Oaths for this Sin the Land Mourns Mat. 5.34 Swear not at all that is Rashly and Sinfully so as to take Gods Name in vain not but that in some cases it is lawful to take an Oath before a Magistrate Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him and Swear by his Name Heb. 6.16 An Oath for Confirmation is an end of all strife But when Christ saith Swear not at all he forbids such a Swearing as takes Gods Name in vain There is a Three-fold Swearing forbidden 1. Vain Swearing when Men in their ordinary Discourse let fly Oaths Some will go to excuse their Swearing It is a course Wool that will take no Dye and a bad Sin indeed that hath no Excuse Excuse 1. I swear little trifling Oaths as Faith or by the Mass. Resp. The Devil hath Two false Glasses which he sets before Mens Eyes the one is a little Glass in which the Sin appears so small that it can hardly be seen this Glass the Devil sets before Mens Eyes when they are going to commit Sin the other is a great Multiplying Glass wherein Sin appears so big that it cannot be forgiven The Devil sets this before Mens Eyes when they have sinned Thou that sayest Sin is small when God shall open the Eye of thy Conscience then thou wilt see it great and be ready to despair But to answer this Plea thou sayest they are but small Oaths but Christ forbids Vain Oaths Swear not at all If God will reckon with us for Idle Words shall not Idle Oaths be put in the Account Book Excuse 2. But I swear to the Truth See how this Harlot-Sin would paint it self with an Excuse Resp. 1. Though it be true yet if it be a Rash Oath 't is Sinful Besides 2. He that swears commonly it cannot be avoided but sometimes he may swear more than is true as where much Water runs some Gravel or Mud will pass along with the Water so where there is much Swearing some Lies will run along with the Oaths Excuse 3. But I shall not be believed unless I seal up my Word with an Oath Resp. 1. A Man that is Honest will be believed without an Oath his bare Word carries Authority with it and is as good as Letters Testimonial 2. I answer He who swears the more he swears the less others will believe him Iuras credit minus Thou art a Swearer Another thinks an Oath weighs very light with thee thou carest not what thou swearest and the more thou swearest the less he believes thee He will trust thy Bond but not thy Oath Excuse 4. But it is a Custom of Swearing I have gotten and I hope God will forgive me Resp. Though among Men custom Carries it and is pleadable in Law yet it is not so in the case of Sin Custom here is no Plea Thou hast got an habit of Swearing and canst not leave it is this an Excuse Is a thing well done because it is commonly done This is so far from being an Excuse that it is an Aggravation of Sin As if one that had been accused for Killing a Man should plead with the Judge to spare him because it was his Custom to Murder this is an Aggravation of the Offence so it is here Therefore all Excuses for this Sin of Vain-Swearing are taken away Dare not to live in this Sin it is a taking Gods Name in vain 2. Vile Swearing Horrid prodigious Oaths not to be named Swearers like Mad Dogs fly in the Face of Heaven and when they are angred spue out their blasphemous Venom on Gods Sacred Majesty Some in Gaming when things go cross and the Dice run against them their Tongues run as fast against God in Oaths and Curses And tell them of their Sin go to bring home these Asses from going astray and it is but pouring Oyl on the Flame they will swear the more St. Austin saith They do no less Sin who blaspheme Christ now in Heaven than the Jews did who Crucified him upon Earth Swearers prophane Christs Blood and tear his Name An Harlot told her Husband that of her Three Sons there was but one of them his the Father dying desired the Executors to find out which was the true natural Son and all his Estate he bequeathed to him The Father being dead the Executors set up his Corps against a Tree and delivered to every one of these Three Sons a Bow and Arrows telling them that he who could shoot nearest the Fathers Heart should have all the Estate the Two Bastard Sons shot as near as they could to his Heart but the Third did feel nature so work in him that he refused to shoot at his Fathers Heart Whereupon the Executors judged him to be the true Son and gave all the Estate to him Such as are the true Children of God fear to shoot at him but such as are Bastards and not Sons care not though they shoot at him in Heaven with their Oaths and Curses And which makes Swearing yet more heinous is when Men have resolved upon any wicked Action they bind themselves with an Oath to do it such
8.44 By saying to our First Parents Ye shall not die he brought in Death to the World 4. It is a Cursed Sin If there be a Curse for him that smites his Neighbour secretly Deut. 27.4 then he is double cursed that kills him The first Man that was born was a Murderer Gen. 4.11 And now art thou cursed from the Earth He was an excommunicate Person banish'd from the place of God's Publick Worship God set a Mark upon bloody Cain Gen. 24 15. Some think it was Horror of Mind which above all Sins doth accompany the Sin of Blood Others think this Mark was a continual Shaking and trembling in his Flesh which was a Mark of Infamy God set upon him He carried a Curse along with him 5. It is a Wrath-procuring Sin 2 Kings 24.4 1. It procures Temporal Judgments Phocas to get the Empire put to Death all the Sons of Mauritius the Emperor and then slew him But this Phocas was pursued by his Son-in-law Priscus who cut off his Ears and Feet and then kill'd him Charles the 9 th who caused the Massacre of so many Christians at Paris Blood issued out at several parts of his Body of which he died Albonia kill'd a Man and then made a Cup of his Skull to drink in afterwards his own Wife caused him to be murdered in his Bed Vengeance as a Blood-hound pursues the Murderer Bloody Men shall not live out half their Days Psal. 55.23 2. It brings Eternal Judgments It binds Men over to Hell The Papists make nothing of Massacres theirs is a Bloody Religion They dispense with Men for Murder so it be to propagate the Catholick Cause If a Cardinal put his Red Hat upon the Head of a Murderer going to Execution he is saved from Death But let all impenitent Murderers read their Doom Rev. 21.8 Murderers shall have their part in the Lake which burns with Fire and Brimstone This is the Second Death We read of Fire mingled with Blood Rev. 8.7 Such as have their Hands full of Blood must undergo the Wrath of God Here is Fire mingled with Blood and this Fire is inextinguishable Mark 9.44 Time will not finish it Tears will not quench it EXOD. XX. 12 Thou shalt not Kill 3. We must not injure anothers Soul This is the greatest Murder of all because there is more of God's Image in the Soul than in the Body Ths Soul tho it cannot be annihilated is said to be murdered because it misseth of Happiness and is for ever in Torment Now how many are Soul-murderers 1. Such as corrupt others by bad Example Vivitur Exemplis The World is led by Example especially the Examples of Great ones are very pernicious Magnates Magnetes We are apt to do as we see others before us especially above us Such as are placed in High Power are like the Pillar of Cloud when that went Israel went When Great Ones move in their Sphere others will follow them tho it be to Hell Evil Magistrates like the Tail of the Dragon draw the third part of the Stars after them 2. Such as entice others to Sin The Harlot by curling her Hair rolling her Eyes laying open her Breasts doth what in her lies to be both a Tempter and a Murderer Such an one was Messalina Wife to Claudius the Emperor Prov. 7.7 10. I discerned a young Man and there met him a Woman with the Attire of an Harlot so she caught him and kissed him Better are the Reproofs of a Friend than the Kisses of an Harlot 3. Ministers are Murderers who either starve or poyson or infect Souls 1. That starve Souls 1 Pet. 5.2 Feed the Flock of God which is among you These Feed themselves and starve the Flock Either through Non-residing they do not Preach or through Insufficiency they cannot There are many in the Ministry a shame to speak it so ignorant that they had need to be taught the First Principles of the Oracles of God Heb. 5.12 Was not he fit to be a Preacher in Israel think ye who being asked something concerning the Decalogue answered He never saw any such Book 2. That Poyson Souls Such are Heterodox Ministers who poyson People with Error The Basilisk poysons Herbs and Flowers by breathing on them The Breath of Heretical Ministers like the Basilisks Breath poysons Souls The Socinian that would rob Christ of his Godhead the Arminian that by advancing the Power of the Will would take off the Crown from the Head of Free-Grace the Antinomian who denies the Use of the Moral Law to a Believer as if it were antiquated and out of date these Poyson Mens Souls Error is as damnable as Vice 1 Pet. 2.1 There shall he false Teachers among you who privily shall bring in damnable Hereresies denying the Lord that bought them 3. That Infect Souls viz. By their Scandalous Lives Exod. 19.22 Let the Priests which come near to the Lord sanctifie themselves Ministers who by their Places are nearer to God should be holier than others The Elements the higher they are the purer The Air is purer than the Water the Fire is purer than the Air. The higher Men are by Office the holier they should be Iohn Baptist was a shining Lamp But there are many who infect their People with their Bad Life They preach one thing and live another Qui curios simulant Bacchanalia vivunt They like Eli's Sons are in White Linen but they have Scarlet Sins Some say that Prester Iohn the Lord of Africa causeth to be carried before him a Golden Cup full of Dirt A fit Emblem of such Ministers as have a Golden Office but are dirty and polluted in their Lives They are Murderers and the Blood of Souls will cry against them at the last Day 4. Such as destroy others by getting them into bad Company and so making them Proselytes to the Devil Vitia in proximum quemque transiliunt Sen. A Man cannot live in the Aethiopian Climate but he will be discoloured with the Sun nor he cannot be in bad Company but he will partake of their Evil. One Drunkard makes another as the Prophet speaks in another Sence Ier. 35.5 I set before them pots full of Wine and Cups and said unto them Drink ye Wine So the Wicked set Pots of Wine before others and make them drink till Reason be stupified and Lust enflamed These are guilty of the Breach of this Commandment they are Murderers of Souls How sad will it be with these who have not only their own Sins but the Blood of others to answer for So much for the First thing forbidden in the Commandment the Injuring of others II. The Second thing forbidden in it is the injuring ones self Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt do no hurt to thy self 1. Thou shalt not hurt thy own Body One may be guilty of Self-murder either 1. Indirectly and Occasionally 2. Directly and Absolutely 1. Indirectly and Occasionally As First When a Man thrusts himself into Danger which he might prevent
Christ could not have prepared Mansions for us if he had not first purchased them by his Death So that we have a great deal of cause to commemorate Christ's Death in the Sacrament Quest. In what Manner are we to remember the Lord's Death in the Sacrament Answ. It is not only an Historical Remembrance of Christ's Death and Passion Thus Iudas remembers Christ's Death and how he betray'd him And Pilate remembers Christ ' Death and how he crucify'd him But our remembring Christ's Death in the Sacrament must be 1. A Mournful Remembrance We must not be able to look on Christ crucified with dry Eyes Zech. 12.10 They shall look on him whom they have pierced and mourn over him O Christian when thou lookest on Christ in the Sacrament remember how oft thou hast crucifyed him The Jews did it but once thou often Every Oath is a Nail with which thou piercest his Hands Every unjust sinful Action is a Spear with which thou woundest his Heart O remember Christ with Sorrow to think thou shouldst make his Wounds bleed afresh Mark XIV 22 23 24. Iesus took Bread c. 2. It must be a Ioyful Remembrance Iohn 8.56 Abraham saw my Day and rejoyced When a Christian sees a Sacrament Day approach he should rejoyce This Ordinance of the Supper is an Earnest of Heaven 't is the Glass in which we see him whom our Souls love It is the Chariot by which we are carried up to Christ. When Iacob saw the Waggons and Chariots which were to carry him to his Son Ioseph his Spirit revived Gen. 45.27 God hath appointed the Sac●●ment on purpose to chear and revive a sad Heart When we look on our Sins ●e have cause to mourn but when we see Christ's Blood shed for our Sins this may make us rejoyce In the Sacrament our Wants are supplyed our Strength is renewed Here we meet with Christ and doth not this call for Joy A Woman that hath been long debarred from the Society of her Husband how glad is she of his Presence At the Sacrament the believing Spouse meets with Christ He saith to her All I have is thine My Love is thine to pity thee my Mercy is thine to save thee How can we think in the Sacrament on Christ's Blood shed and not rejoyce Sanguis Christi clavis Paradisi Christ's Blood is the Key which opens Heaven else we had been all shut out 3. End of the Sacrament is to work in us an endeared Love to Christ. When Christ bleeds over us well may we say Behold how he loved us Who can see Christ die and not be Sick of Love That is an Heart of stone whom Christ's Love will not melt 4. End of the Sacrament the mortifying of Corruption To see Christ crucified for us is a means to crucify sin in us Christ's Death like the Water of Jealousie makes the Thigh of Sin to rot Numb 5.27 How can a Wife endure to see that Spear which killed her Husband How can we endure those sins which made Christ vail his Glory and lose his Blood When the People of Rome saw Caesar's bloody Robe they were incensed against them that slew him Sin hath rent the White Robe of Christ's Flesh and died it of a crimson Colour The Thoughts of this will make us seek to be avenged on our sins 5. End the Augmentation and Encrease of all the Graces Hope Zeal Patience The Word Preached begets Grace the Lord's Supper nourisheth it The Body by feeding encreaseth Strength so doth the Soul by feeding on Christ Sacramentally Cum defecerit virtus mea calicem salutarem accipiam Bern. When my spiritual strength begins to fail I know a Remedy saith Bernard I will go the Table of the Lord there I will drink and recover my decayed strength There is difference between Dead Stones and Living Plants The Wicked who are Stones receive no spiritual Encrease but the Godly who are Plants of Righteousness being watered with Christ's Blood grow more fruitful in Grace Quest. 4. Why are we to receive this Holy Supper Answ. Because it is a Duty incumbent Take Eat And observe it is a Command of Love If Christ had commanded us some great matter would not we have done it 2 Kings 5.13 If the Prophet had bid thee do some great thing wouldst thou not have done it If Christ had enjoyned us to have given him a Thousand of Rams or to have parted with the Fruit of our Bodies would we not have done it Much more when he only saith Take and Eat Let my broken Body feed you let my Blood poured out save you Take and Eat This is a Command of Love and shall we not readily obey 2. We are to celebrate the Lord's Supper because it is a provoking to Christ to stay away Prov. 9.2 Wisdom hath furnished her Table So Christ hath furnished his Table set Bread and Wine representing his Body and Blood before his Guests and they wilfully turn their Backs upon the Ordinance Christ looks upon it as a slighting of his Love and that makes the Fury rise up in his Face Luke 14.24 For I say unto you that none of those that were bidden shall taste of my Supper I will shut them out of my Kingdom I will provide them a black Banquet where weeping shall be the first Course and gnashing of Teeth the Second Quest. 5. Whether the Lord's Supper be oft to be Administred Resp. Yes 1 Cor. 11.26 As oft as ye eat of this Bread The Ordinance is not to be celebrated once in a Year or once in our Lives but often A Christians own Necessities may make him come often hither His Corruptions are strong therefore he had need come often hither for an Antidote to expell the Poyson of Sin and his Graces are weak Grace is like a Lamp if it be not often fed with Oyl it is apt to go out How therefore do they sin against God who come but very seldom to this Ordinance Can they thrive who for a long time forbear their Food And others there are who do wholly forbear This is a great Contempt offered to Christ's Ordinance Men do as it were tacitly say Let Christ keep his Feast to himself What a cross-grain'd piece is Man he will Eat when he should not and he will not eat when he should When God said Eat not of this forbidden Fruit then he will be sure to eat When God saith Eat of this Bread and Drink of this Cup then he refuseth to eat Quest. 6. Are all to come promiscuously to this Holy Ordinance Resp. No that were to make the Lord's Table an Ordinary Christ forbids to cast Pearls before Swine The Sacramental Bread is Children's Bread and it is not to be cast to the Profane As at the giving of the Law God set Bounds about the Mount that none might touch it So God's Table should be guarded that the Profane should not come near In the Primitive Times after Sermon done and they were going to
not having a Wedding Garment Men are loth to ask themselves the Question O my Soul art thou a fit Guest for the Lord's Table Are there not some Sins thou hast to bewail Are there not some Evidences for Heaven that thou hast to get Now when Persons will not ask themselves the Question then God will bring such a Question as this to them How came ye in hither to my Table not prepared How came ye in hither with an unbelieving or profane Heart It will be such a Question as will cause an Heart-trembling God will examine a Man as the chief Captain did Paul with Scourging Acts 22.24 'T is true the best Saint if God should weigh him in the Ballance would be sound defective But when a Christian hath made an impartial Search and hath laboured to deal uprightly between God and his own Soul Christ's Merits will cast in some Grains of Allowance into the Scales 4. Self-examining is needful because of that Secret Corruption in the Heart which will not be found out without searching There are in the Heart Plangendae Tenebrae Aug. Hidden Pollutions It is with a Christian as with Ioseph's Brethren when the Steward accused them of having the Cup they were ready to swear they had not the Cup in their Sack but upon Search it was found there Little doth a Christian think what Pride Atheism Uncleanness is in his Heart till he searcheth Therefore if there be such hidden Wickedness like a Spring that runs under Ground we had need examine our selves that finding out our secret Sin we may be humbled and repent Hidden Sins if not searched out defile the Soul If Corn lie long in the Chaff the Chaff defiles the Corn hidden Sins layn long in defile our Duties Needful therefore it is before we come to the Holy Supper to search out these hidden Sins as Israel searched for Leaven before they came to the Passover 5. Self-examining is needful because without it we may easily have a Cheat put upon us Ier. 17.9 The Heart is deceitful above all things Many a Man's Heart will tell him he is fit for the Lord's Table As when Christ asked the Sons of Zebedee Matth. 20.22 Are ye able to drink the Cup I shall drink of Can ye drink such a Bloody Cup of Suffering They say unto him We are able So the Heart will suggest to a Man He is fit to drink of the Sacramental Cup he hath on the Wedding Garment Grande profundum est homo Aug. The Heart is a Grand Impostor It is like a cheating Tradesman which will put one off with bad Wares The Heart will put a Man off with ●●eming Grace in stead of saving A Tear or two shed is Repentance a few lazie Desires is Faith Blue and red Flowers that grow among the Corn look like good Flowers but they are beautiful Weeds The foolish Virgins Lamps looked as if they had had Oyl in them but they had none Therefore to prevent a Cheat that we may not take False Grace in stead of True we had need make a thorough Disquisition and Search of our Hearts before we come to the Lord's Table 6. Self-examining is needful because of those False Fears the Godly are apt to nourish in their Hearts which make them go sad to the Sacrament As they who have no Grace for want of Examining presume so they who have Grace for want of Examining are ready to despair Many of God's Children look upon themselves through the black Spectacles of Fear They fear Christ is not formed in them they fear they have no Right to the Promise and these Fears in the Heart cause Tears in the Eye Whereas would they but search and examine they might find they had Grace Are not their Hearts humbled for Sin And what is this but the bruised Reed Do they not weep after the Lord And what are these Tears but Seeds of Faith Do they not Thirst after Christ in an Ordinance What is this but the New Creature crying for the Breast Here are you see Seeds of Grace and would Christians examine their Hearts they might see there is something of God in them and so their false Fears would be prevented and they might approach with Comfort to these Holy Mysteries in the Eucharist Mark XIV 22 Iesus took Bread c. 7. Self-examining is needful in respect of the Danger in coming unworthily without Examination 1 Cor. 11.27 He shall be guilty of the Body and Blood of the Lord. Par facit quasi Christum trucidaret Grotius i. e. God reckons with him as with a Crucifyer of the Lord Iesus He doth not Drink Christ's Blood but sheds it and so brings that Curse upon him as the Jews His Blood be upon us and our Children The Vertue of Christ's Blood nothing more comfortable the Guilt of it nothing more Formidable 4. We must examine our selves before the Sacrament in respect of the Difficulty of Self-examining Work Difficulty raiseth a Noble Spirit Self-examining is difficult 1. Because it is an Inward Work it lies most with the Heart External Acts of Devotion are easie To lift up the Eye to bow the Knee to read over a few Prayers this is as easie as for the Papists to tell over a few Beads But to examine a Man's self to take the Heart as a Watch all in pieces to make a Scripture-Trial of our Fitness for the Lord's Supper this is not easie Reflexive Acts are hardest The Eye cannot see its self but by a Glass We must have the Glass of the Word and Conscience to see our own Hearts 'T is easie to spy the Faults of others but it is hard to find out our own 2. Self-examination is difficult in regard of Self-Love As Ignorance blinds so Self-love flatters What Solomon saith of Love Prov. 10.12 Love covereth all Sins is most true of Self-love A Man looking upon himself in the Glass of Self-love that flattering Glass his Vertues appear greater than they are and his Sins lesser Self-love makes a Man rather excuse himself than examine himself Self-love makes one think the best of himself and he who hath a good Opinion of himself doth not suspect himself and not suspecting himself he is not forward to Examine himself The Work therefore of self-Examination being so difficult it requires the more Impartiality and Industry Difficulty should be a Spur to Diligence 5. We must examine our selves before we come because of the Beneficialness of Self-examination The Benefit is great which way soever things turn If upon Examination we find that we have not Grace in Truth then the Mistake is discovered and the Danger prevented If we find that we have Grace we may take the Comfort of it He who upon Search finds that he hath the Minimum quod sic The least Degree of Grace he is like one that hath found his Box of Evidences he is an happy Man he is a fit Guest at the Lord's Table he is Heir to all the Promises he is
fare grow short yet an Interest in God is a Pillar of Support to us and we may with David encourage ourselves in the Lord our God Mat. 6.12 And forgive us our Debts as we forgive our Debtors BEfore I speak strictly to the Words I shall take notice 1. That in this Prayer there is but One Petition for the Body Give us our daily Bread but two Petitions for the Soul Forgive us our Trespasses lead us not into Temptation but deliver us from Evil Hence observe that we are to be more careful for our Souls than for our Bodies More careful for Grace than daily Bread more desirous to have our Souls saved than our Bodies fed in the Law the Weight of the Sanctuary was twice as big as the common weight to typify that Spiritual Things must be of far greater Weight with us than Earthly The Excellency of the Soul may challenge our Chief Care about it 1. The Soul is an immaterial Substance it is an heavenly Spark lighted by the Breath of God It is the more refined spiritual Part of Man it is of an Angelical Nature it hath some faint resemblance of God The Body is the more dreggish part it is but the Cabinet which though curiously wrought the Soul is the Jewel the Soul is near a-kin to Angels it is Capax beatitudinis capable of Communion with God in Glory 2. It is immortal it doth never expire It can act without the Body tho' the Body dissolve into Dust the Soul lives Luk. 12.4 The Essence of the Soul is Eternal it hath a beginning but no end It is a Blossom of Eternity Sure then if the Soul be so Ennobled and Dignifi'd more care should be taken about the Soul than the Body We make but One Petition for the Body but Two Petitions for the Soul Vse 1. It reproves them that take more care for their Bodies than their Souls The Body is but the brutish part yet they take more care 1. about dressing their Bodies than their Souls They put on their best Cloaths are dressed in the Richest Garb but care not how naked or undrest their Souls are they do not get the Jewels of Grace to adorn their inner Man 2. About feeding their Bodies than their Souls they are Caterers for the Flesh they do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make Provision for the Flesh Rom. 13.14 they have the best Diet but let their Souls starve As if one should feed his Hawk but let his Child starve The Body must sit in the Chair of State but the Soul that princely thing is made a Lacky to run on the Devil's Errand Vse 2. Let us be more careful for our Souls Omnia si perdas animam servare memento If it be well with the Soul it shall be well with the Body If the Soul be gracious the Body shall be glorious for it shall shine like Christ's Body Therefore 't is Wisdom to look chiefly to the Soul because in saving the Soul we secure the Happiness of the Body And we cannot shew our Care for the Soul more than in taking all Seasons for our Souls Reading Praying Hearing Meditating O look to the Main Chance let the Soul be chiefly tended the loss of the Soul would be fatal other Losses may be made up again If one loseth his Health he may recover it again if he lose his Estate he may get it up again but if he lose his Soul this Loss can never be made up again The Merchant that ventures all he hath in one ship if that ship be lost he is quite broken 2. From the Connexion in the Text assoon as Christ had said Give us daily Bread he adds and forgive us Christ joyns this Petition of Forgiveness of Sin immediately to the other of Daily Bread to shew us that tho' we have daily Bread yet all is nothing without Forgiveness If our sins be not pardoned we can take but little comfort in our Food As it is with a man that is condemned tho' you bring him meat in Prison yet he takes little comfort in it without a pardon So tho' we have Daily Bread yet it will do us no good unless Sin be forgiven What tho' we should have Manna which was call'd Angels Food tho' the Rock should pour out Rivers of Oyl Iob 29.6 all is nothing unless sin be done away When Christ had said give us our Daily Bread he presently adds and forgive us our Trespasses Daily Bread may satisfie the Appetite but forgiveness of sin satisfies the Conscience Vse 1. It condemns the Folly of most People If they have Daily Bread the delicious things of this Life they look no further they are not sollicitous for the pardon of sin If they have that which feeds them they look not after that which should Crown them Alas you may have Daily Bread and yet perish The Rich man in the Gospel had Daily Bread nay he had Dainties he fared deliciously every day but in Hell he lift up his Eyes Luk. 16.19 Vse 2. Let us pray that God would not give us our Portion in this Life that he would not put us off with daily Bread but that he would give us Forgiveness This is the sawce that would make our Bread Relish the sweeter A Speech of Luther Valde protestatus sum me nolle si● satiari ab illo I did solemnly protest that God should not put me off with outward things Be not content with that which is common to the bruit Creatures the Dog or Elephant to have your Hunger satisfi'd but besides daily Bread get pardon of Sin A drop of Christ's Blood a dram of forgiving Mercy is infinitely more valuable than all the Delights under the Sun Daily Bread may make us live comfortably but forgiveness of Sin will make us die comfortably So I come to the words of the Petition Forgive us our Debts c. 1. Here is a Term given to Sin it is a Debt 2. The confessing the Debt Our Debts 3. A Prayer forgive us 4. A Condition on which we desire Forgiveness as we forgive our Debtors I shall speak of the Term given to Sin it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Debt that which is here called a Debt is called Sin Luk. 11.4 forgive us our sins So then sin is a Debt and every sinner is a Debtor Sin is compar'd to a Debt of ten thousand Talents Mat. 18.24 1. Why is sin call'd a Debt 2. Wherein sin is worse than other Debts we contract 3. Wherein sinners have the property of bad Debtors Q. 1. Why is Sin call'd a Debt Answ. Because it so fitly resembles it 1. A Debt ariseth upon non-payment of Money or the not paying that which is ones due So we owe to God exact Obedience and not paying what is due thus we come to be in debt 2. As in case of non-payment the Debtor goes to Prison So by our sin we become guilty and stand oblig'd to God's Curse and Damnation Tho' God doth a while
cast his skin but he eats it up again In this be not like the Serpent to forsake Sin and then take it up again 2 Pet. 2.22 It is happened according to the Proverb the Dog is returned to his own Vomit again such were Demas and Iulian. Many after a Divorce espouse their Sins again as if one's Ague should leave him a while and then come again The Devil seemed to be cast out but comes the second Time and the end of that Man is worse than his beginning Luk. 11.24 because his Sin is greater he sins knowingly and wilfully and his Damnation will be greater 10. Serpents are great Lovers of Wine Pliny who writes of Natural History saith if Serpents come where Wine is they drink insatiably In this be not like the Serpent though the Scripture allows the use of Wine 1 Tim. 5.23 yet it forbids the excess Eph. 5.18 Be not drunk with Wine wherein is excess be not like the Serpents in this Lovers of Wine Because this Sin of Drunkenness doth so abound in this Age I shall enlarge something more on this Head 'T is said of the Old World They eat they drank till the Flood came Luk. 17.27 Drinking is not a Sin but the meaning is they drank to intemperance they disordered themselves with Drink and God let them have Liquor enough first they were drowned in Wine and then in Water There is no Sin which doth more deface God's Image than Drunkenness it disguiseth a Person and doth even unman him Drunkenness makes him have the Throat of a Fish the Belly of a Swine and the Head of an Ass Drunkenness is the Shame of Nature the Extinguisher of Reason the Shipwrack of Chastity and the Murder of Conscience Drunkenness is hurtful for the Body The Cup kills more than the Cannon it causeth Dropsies Catarrhs Apoplexies Drunkenness fills the Eyes with Fire and the Legs with Water and turns the Body into an Hospital but the greatest hurt is that it doth to the Soul Excess of Wine breeds the Worm of Conscience The Drunkard is seldom reclaimed by repentance and the ground of it is partly because by this Sin the Senses are so inchanted Reason so impaired and Lust so inflamed and partly it is judicial the Drunkard being so besotted with this Sin God saith of him as of Ephraim Hos. 4.17 Ephraim is joyned to Idols let him alone so this Man is joyned to his Cups let him alone let him drown himself in Liquor till he scorch himself in Fire How many Woes hath God pronounced against this Sin Isa. 28.1 Woe to the Drunkards of Ephraim Joel 1.5 Howl ye Drinkers of Wine Drunkenness excludes a Person from Heaven 1 Cor. 6.10 Drunkards shall not inherit the Kingdom of God A Man cannot go to Heaven reeling King Solomon makes an oration full of Invectives against this Sin Prov. 23.29 Who hath Woe Who hath Contentions Who hath Babling Who hath redness of Eyes they that tarry long at the Wine Who hath Contentions Drink when abused breeds Quarrels it causeth Duels Who hath Babling When one is in Drink his Tongue runs he will reveal any Secrets of his Friend Who hath redness of Eyes Redness of Eyes comes sometimes from Weeping but too often from drinking And what is the Issue verse 32. at last the Wine bites like a Serpent and stingeth like an Adder The Wine smiles in the Glass but stings in the Conscience Drunkenness is a Sin against all the Ten Commandments 1. Drunkenness casts off the true God Hos. 4.11 Wine takes away the Heart It takes the Heart off from God 2. It makes the Belly a God Phil. 3.19 To this the Drunkard pours Drink-Offerings there 's a breach of the Second Commandment 3. The Drunkard in his Cups takes God's Name in Vain by his Oaths 4. The Drunkard makes no difference of Days he is seldom sober on a Sabbath he on that Day worships Bacchus 5. The Drunkard Honours neither his Natural Father nor the Magistrate his Civil Father he will be intemperate though the Laws of the Land forbid it 6. The Drunkard commits Murder Alexander killed his Friend Clitus when he was Drunk for whom he would have given half his Kingdom when he was Sober 7. The Drunkard's Wine provokes Lust. Austin calls Wine Fomentum libidinis the Inflamer of Lust. Nunquam ego ebrium castum putavi I never did believe a drunken Man to be chast saith St. Hierom. 8. The Drunkard is a Thief he spends that Money upon his drunken Lust which should have been given to charitable Uses so he robs the Poor 9. The Drunkard is a Slanderer he cares not when he is on the Ale Bench how he doth defame and belye others when he hath taken his full Cups he is now fit to take a false Oath 10. The Drunkard Sins against the Tenth Commandment for he Covets to get another's Estate by Circumvention and Extortion that he may be the better able to follow his drunken Trade Thus he Sins against all the Ten Commandments If this Sin of Drunkenness be not reformed I pray God the Sword be not made Drunk with Blood And whereas some will go to shift off this Sin from themselves that they are no Drunkards because they have not drunk away their Reason and Senses they are not so far gone in drink that they cannot go He is a Drunkard in the Scripture-sence who is mighty to drink Wine Isa. 5.22 He is a Drunkard saith Solomon that tarries long at the Wine Prov. 23.30 He who sits at it from Morning to Night that drinks away his precious Time though he doth not drink away his Reason he is a Drunkard that drinks more than doth him good and that though he be not himself drunk yet he makes another drunk Hab. 2.15 Woe to him that gives his Neighbour drink that puttest thy Bottle to him and makest him drunk Oh! I beseech you be not in this like the Serpent Lovers of Wine This I fear is one cause why the Word Preached doth so little good on many in this City they drink away Sermons they do as the hunted Deer when it is wounded runs to the Water and drinks so when they have been at a Sermon and the Arrow of Reproof hath wounded their Conscience they run presently and drink away those Convictions they steep the Sermon in Wine The Tavern-Bell doth more hurt than the Sermon Bell doth good Thus you have seen wherein we should not be like Serpents II. Wherein we should be like the Serpent and that is in Prudence and Wisdom Be ye Wise as Serpents The Serpent is a most prudent Creature therefore the Devil made use of the Serpent to deceive our First Parents because it was such a subtile Creature Gen. 3.1 The Serpent was more subtile than any Beast of the Field There is a Natural Wisdom and Subtilty in every part of the Serpent and we should labour to imitate them and be Wise as Serpents First The Serpent hath a subtilty in his
boast what we will do to morrow The Apostle seems in the Text to meet with them by way of Answer Do ye know all this Then the greater is your Sin that you do it not To him that knoweth to do good and doth it not to him it is Sin I shall only explain this Phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to him it is Sin that is it is an heinous Sin it is Sin with a witness every infirmity every thing that falls short of the Rule is Sin much more that which contradicts the Rule this man's Sin hath an Emphasis it is a crimson Sin and it shall have a greater punishment He that knew his Master's Will and did it not shall be beaten with many stripes Luke 12.47 If he that sins ignorantly be damned then he that sins knowingly shall be double damned 1. Doct. implied That we ought to know to do good know our Duty 2. That we ought not only to know to do good but to do it 3. That he that knoweth to do good and doth it not is of all others most guilty 1. Doct. implied That we ought to know to do good we ought to be well informed of those things which are to be done by us in order to Salvation The Word written is a Rule of Knowledge and the Word preached is a Commentary upon the Word written and both of them are to enrich our understanding and to nurse us up in the knowledge of that which is good The Reasons why we should know to do good are 1. Knowledge is our Lamp and Star to guide us in the Truth It shews us what we are to do and what we are to leave undone If we do not know that which is good we can never practise it Without Knowledge we cannot do any thing in Religion aright we offer up the Blind we cannot give God a reasonable Sacrifice He that doth not know his Trade is like to make but bad Work of it 2. Knowledge is the Foundation of all Grace Every Grace borrows its Light from this Lamp it is the radical Vertue it is the Seed out of which the Flower of Grace grows it ushers in Faith They that know thy Name will put their trust in thee Psal. 9.10 Knowledge carries the Torch before Faith A blind Faith is as bad as a dead Faith It inflames Love Phil. 1.9 This I pray that your Love may abound yet more and more in Knowledge The Knowledge of Christ's Beauty enticeth our Love it breeds Perseverance it is like the Mariner's Lanthorn to direct the Ship and as the Anchor that holds it steddy in Storms and Tempests The Apostle joyns these two together unlearned and unstable 2 Pet. 3.16 Such as are unlearned will be unstable 3. The chief Work in Conversion consists in Knowledge Rom. 12.2 Be ye transformed by the renewing of your Mind The Mind being renewed the Man is transformed The first thing in the Creation was Light so in Conversion the first thing is Illumination The first part of God's Image consists in Knowledge Col. 3.10 The first thing a Limner draws in a Picture is the Eye so the first thing God draws in the Soul is the Eye of Knowledge Psal 51.6 In the hidden part thou shal● make me to know Wisdom 4. There is nothing in Religion though never so excellent can do us good without Knowledge The Blessed Sacrament which is one of the highest Ordinances yet if we come to it without Knowledge it can do us no good What Benefit can he receive that is not able to discern the Lord's Body If one come to a Physick Garden and knows not the Nature of the Herbs he may gather Poison instead of the Physical Herb as he who went into the Field and gathered wild Gourds and then there was Death in the Pot 2 Kings 4.39 So if one understand not the Mystery of the Lord's Supper there is Death in the Cup he eats and drinks his own Damnation Vse See how necessary it is to get the knowledge of what is good It ushers in Salvation 1 Tim. 2.4 We must know to do good before we can do it Omne Peccatum fundatur in ignorantia Ignorance of God is the cause of all Sin Ier. 9.3 They proceed from evil to evil and know not me saith the Lord. Ignorance of God damns Hos. 4.6 My People are destroyed for want of Knowledge 'T is sad to be ignorant in Gospel-times to be blind in the Sun How many go to Hell blind-fold And which is worse not only nescire but nolle scire they do not only not know Good but they are not willing to know Ier. 9.6 They refuse to know me saith the Lord. II. Doct. That we ought not only to know to do Good but to do it This the Apostle implies To him that knows to do good and doth it not he implies that he who knows to do Good should do it The End of Knowledge is Practice Search from one end of the Bible to the other and you will find that it is the practick part of Religion is chiefly intended The Crown is not set upon the Head of Knowledge but Practice Rev. 22.14 Blessed are they that do his Commandments that they may have right to the Tree of Life The Eye is to direct the Foot Knowledge is the Eye that is to direct the Foot of Obedience Vse 1. It shews us wherein most Christians are defective in the Times of Gospel viz. In the doing part of Religion they know how to do Good but do it not They have good Eye-sight but are lame on their Feet they are like Rachel beautiful in regard of Knowledge but barren We are like our first Parents greedy of the Tree of Knowledge Knowledge is an Ornament and People love to hang this Jewel on their Ear but though they know what they ought to do yet they do it not They know they should abstain from evil and pursue Holiness they know to do Good but do it not 1. They know they should abstain from evil They know they should not swear Matth. 5.34 Swear not all yet they do it they are more free of their Oaths than their Alms. They know uncleanness to be a Sin it wastes the Body wounds the Conscience blots the Name damns the Soul Gal. 5.19 Yet they will go on in that Sin and for a Cup of Pleasure drink a Sea of Wrath. They know Drunkenness to be a Sin it doth brutifie them take away their Reason they cannot think to go reeling to Heaven God is brewing a Cup for the Drunkard Rev. 16.19 The Cup of the Wine of the fierceness of his Wrath Wormwood-Wine yet he will not leave his drunken Fits Men know that rash censuring is a Sin Iam. 4.11 Speak not evil one of another Brethren Yet they are guilty of this they will not swear but they will slander and speak to the prejudice of others They can never make them Recompence for this No Physician can heal the Wounds of the