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A43581 A review of Mr. Horn's catechisme, and some few of his questions and answers noted by J.H. of Massingham p. Norf. Hacon, Joseph, 1603-1662. 1660 (1660) Wing H177; ESTC R16207 79,887 160

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them Secondly to bring to an end issue or event So Predictions and Prophesies Types and Figures are said to be fulfilled when the things are come to pass which those did foresignifie So the Scripture was fulfilled which saith He was numbred with the transgressours and thus the Ceremonial Law of Moses was fulfilled when Christ came and died for us and put an end to it Now of these two significations of the word fulfill in this sentence Love fulfilleth the Law he seemeth to take it in the latter sense as if it were said The Spirit of God and Grace of Charity hath made the Law out of Date and put a final period to it so that now it is not to be regarded any otherwise than the prophesies and shadows which have accomplishment in Christ whereas the word fulfill is not to be taken in this sense but in the former And yet if he doth take the word fulfill in the former sense namely perfectly to perform as the word is taken there understanding the while perfection of parts not of degrees then he is mistaken in thinking that love fulfills the Law per actus elicitos doing it self all that is required whereas it doth not fulfill the Law otherwise than per actus imperatos by setting others other faculties and graces on work The Sun giveth light to the world per actum elicitum it bringeth forth flowers and fruits per actum imperatum Love causeth us to be well and kindly affected this is the own and proper work of it but over and above it layes a command upon us to be serviceable in several Duties Love is not the fulfilling of the Law by elicit actions for fear and trust are required moreover in the first Table upright dealing and mercifulness in the second if it were it should indeed bring some discharge to the Law because it should contain in it self all the several parcels of the Law But because it doth fulfill the Law onely by exciting us or setting us on work to do the several duties enjoyned therefore it is needfull nevertheless that the Law should still abide in place and force that we may know what the particulars are that God requireth of us and that we may do them out of obedience to his will who commandeth these particulars to be done And certainly Love is not more a fulfilling of the Law after that Christ is come then it was before his coming for to love God above all was ever the sum of the first Table and to love our Neighbour as our self was always the sum of the second Table and howsoever meant the meaning was ever the same and as much did charity put an end to the Decalogue in the Old Testament as it doth in the New One chief place of Scripture by occasion of which and by following the sound of it more than seeking after the sense of it he is mis-led and mis-leadeth others is that which he quoteth to the Qu. 167. of the Law being a schoolmaster to Christ which text as some others also do he mis-understands thorowout For first by the Law they mean the Moral or ten Commandments whereas indeed it meaneth the Law Ceremonial chiefly if not onely which hath as much of the Gospel in it as of the Law the several rites and Ceremonies being but appendices Evangelii annexed to the Doctrine of the Gospel then though somewhat darkly revealed That the Apostle means this and not the Law Moral considered as a Covenant of works holding nothing for the present of a Saviour appears by the scope of the Apostle to the Galatians which is against them that would have circumcision and all the Ceremonies of Moses retained in the time of the Gospel as necessary to our Justification in Christ the very same opinion that beginning at Antioch the Apostles condemned at Jerusalem Acts 15. The errour of the beleeving Pharisees was not that it was needfull to be circumcised and to keep the ten Commandments but to be circumcised and keep the Law of Moses namely that Law of Moses which was of the same kinde with circumcision which properly is the Law of Moses the law Moral being the Law of Nature written in mans heart before and by Moses ministery written out fair in Tables of stone Yet is it true that the Apostle speaketh in that Epistle against the Moral Law so far as it was supposed to justifie us but this he doth by way of argument against his adversaries and not as if he made the cause of the Moral Law and Ceremonial all alike in respect of retaining or not retaining them his way of arguing being à genere ad speciem negativé We are not justified by the Law any Law whatsoever therefore not by the Law Ceremonial And as our Authour mistakes the term Law here so doth he also in the fourth lawfull use of the Law which is to witness to Christ quoting Rom. 3. 21. where it is said that the Righteousness of Christ is witnessed by the Law and the Prophets Where the Law signifies the Books of the Law not the ten Commandments In the promise made to Adam Gen 3. to Abraham Gen. 12. is testimony given to Christ and his grace and in all those places where Moses wrote of him The Law and the Prophets being the same in that place that Moses and the Prophets Acts 26. 22. Moses in his five books wrote of Christ so did the Prophets So for the Law The word Schoolmaster mistaken helpeth to deceive them further for upon hearing of that they presently imagine great rigour and hard usage to be intended they think of nothing but stripes and scourges and ruling with a wooden sceptre as if he must needs be an Orbilius plagosus such a one as Fr. Junius met withall that he complains of so much in his life Corpus suum exercitavit in corpore meo whereas the best authours that treat of teaching young scholars as Plutarch and Quintilian will not allow of striking of them But be it as it may for that Paedagogus howsoever through penury of words we be forced to turn it is Formator morum such a one as was allowed and appointed to wait on great mens sons and heirs apparent and to teach them how to behave themselves and to frame their pliable and waxen age to love of goodness and practise of vertue and detestation of vice to fashion them betimes so far as might be for what they were to be another day {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} so calls it Constantine Manasses speaking of him that was Pedagogue to the Emperour Augustus he did set him in right tune for his carriage and made his behaviour congruous to himself so great a Personage Thus Cyrus had one who taught him before-hand not to respect persons in matters of Justice by reproving him for that he would have adjudged a coat that was in question not to the true owner but to another whom it best fitted And Iulian in his