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A66289 The principles of the Christian religion explained in a brief commentary upon the church catechism. By William Wake, D.D. rector of St. James Westminster, and Chaplain in Ordinary to His Majesty. Wake, William, 1657-1737. 1699 (1699) Wing W258; ESTC R217651 113,834 200

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ought there not beyond all this some Satisfaction to be made to God for the Sins which we have committed A. Yes certainly and such there has been made by our Saviour Christ for us who has fully satisfied the Justice of God in that kind and left nothing more for us to do in that behalf Q. What do you then say to those Satisfactions which the Church of Rome teaches we may and ought to make for our Sins A. That they are built upon a false Foundation are contrary to the Goodness of God and beyond the Capacity of Man Q. What is the Foundation upon which they are built A. It is this That when God forgives us our Sins whether upon our Own Repentance or by virtue of the Priest's Absolution He remits indeed the Fault and purges away our Guilt and by this acquits us from the Everlasting Punishment that would otherwise have been due to them But yet still retains us under an Obligation to some temporal Sufferings either by Satisfactory Works to be done for them in this Life or by undergoing a certain proportion of Pain for them after Death in a Place which they call Purgatory Q. How does it appear that this Foundation is false and erroneous A. Because in the first place it is Absurd to suppose that God should forgive the whole Guilt of our Sins and yet having done so should afterwards punish us for them And secondly It is injurious to the Sufferings and Merits of Christ whose Death was a sufficient Satisfaction for the Sins of the whole World and has left no room either for God to require or for us to Pay any thing more Q. Does Repentance then if it be sincere without any thing more restore us again to our State of Grace and reconcile us to God Almighty A. If it be sincere it does through Faith in Jesus Christ. Q. Does God allow Repentance to all Sins Jo. vi 29 Act. xiii 38 xvi 30 31. 2 Pet. i. 5 c. A. There is No Sin but what True Repentance washes away But there may be some Cases in which God may deny Us his Grace so that we shall not be able truly to Repent Q. What Cases are They A. They may All be reduced to this One General namely a Wilful Abuse and Resistance of the Divine Grace Whether it be by a long Habit of Sinning or by frequent Acting against the Dictates of our own Consciences and the Motions of God's Holy Spirit To say nothing of some Sins which are in an Eminent manner destructive of the Divine Grace such as Pride Covetousness Sensuality but especially that Sin which is particularly called in Scripture the Sin against the Holy Ghost Q. What is meant by that Sin A. I suppose it to have been the particular Sin of the Jews heretofore in not only obstinately refusing to receive our Blessed Lord for their Messiah after sufficient Proofs given by Him to convince Them that He was so but ascribing those Miracles which He wrought in proof of his Authority to the Help of the Devil when at the same time they either were abundantly convinced Or but for their Own Fault might have been that He did Them by the Power of God Mat. xii 31 Comp. Mark iii. 28 Luk. xii 10 Q. Do you look upon this Sin to have so wholly belonged to those Men as not to be capable of being Committed by Any Now A. That very Sin which in Scripture is so called cannot now be committed because Christ is not now upon Earth nor have we therefore any Occasion Given us thus to Blaspheme against the Holy Ghost Yet some Sins there are of a like Nature which may still be committed and which being Committed may prove no less dangerous to Those who are Guilty of Them than that Sin did prove to the Pharisees heretofore Q. What Sins are those which you suppose to come the nearest to it A. Apostacy from the Christian Religion after having been convinced of the Truth and made Partakers of the Promises of it Next to that an Apostacy from the Truth and Purity of the Gospel for the sake of some worldly Fears on the One hand or present Hopes on the Other to the Communion of a Church which not only obstinately resists the Truth but damns and persecutes all such as profess it And lastly Apostacy to Idolatry which seems to be the Sin unto Death spoken of by St. John 1 Jo. v. 16 and for the Remission of which He gives Us but little Encouragement to Pray V. 16 Q. What then do you think of Those who Go off from the Communion of the Church of England to That of the Church of Rome A. As of Apostates and Idolaters To whom God may by an Extraordinary Effect of his Mercy give Grace for Repentance and so for Salvation but of whom otherwise we have no Ground of Hope Q. Do you think such in a more dangerous Estate than those who were from the beginning bred up in the Roman Communion A. I do forasmuch as they have both rejected the Truth once known and received by them and cast off the Way in which the Providence of God had placed them and that it may be on some base grounds to be sure without any sufficient Reason to justifie their doing of it Q. What then do you think of those who have always been of the Communion of that Church A. I think them in general in much greater danger Now than they were before the Reformation And still those in more danger who have lived among those of the Reformed Church and so were in a better Capacity of being convinc'd of the Errors of their Way But most of all do I think the Estate of those dangerous or rather desperate who are Learned and know their Errors or are Priests and so called to instruct the People in the Purity of Christ's Religion The Sincere and Ignorant who want Capacity or want Opportunity to know the Truth I hope God will forgive The Careless the Prejudiced but most of all the obstinately blind among them I neither can acquit nor do I think that God will forgive Them SECT V. Q. WHat was the second thing which Your Godfathers and Godmothers promised in your Name A. That I should Believe all the Articles of the Christian Faith Q. Where are those Articles to be found A. In the Holy Scriptures and particularly those of the New Testament Q. What mean you by the Holy Scriptures A. I mean those Books which thro' the Assistance of the Holy Spirit were written by Moses and the Prophets under the Law and by the Apostles and Evangelists of Christ since the publishing of the Gospel to direct us in the Knowledge of God and of the Duty which He Requires of Us. Q. How do you know what Books were written by these Persons in order to these Ends A. By the Constant Universal and Undeniable Testimony both of the Jewish and Christian Church From the
former of which we have Received the Scriptures of the Old from the latter those of the New Testament Q. How do you know that these Books were written by the Assistance of the Holy Spirit A. By the Authors who wrote them who were doubtless no less inspired in what they Wrote than in what they Taught of the Gospel of Christ. 2. By the Design of God in the composing of Them which was to leave thereby a Constant Infallible Rule of Faith to the Church in all Ages of it 3. By the Opinion which all Christians from the time that they were publish'd have had of Them and the deference which upon that account they have paid to Them And lastly By the Subject-matter of Them and those internal Marks of Divine Wisdom and Piety which are so conspicuous in all the Parts of Them Q. Do you look upon these Scriptures as the Only present Rule of your Faith A. I do Nor is there any Other certain Foundation on which to build it Q. What think you of the Tradition of the Church A. Could I be sure that any thing not contain'd in the Scriptures came down by a certain uninterrupted Tradition from the Apostles I should not except against it Nay I do therefore receive the Holy Scriptures as the Rule of my Faith because they have such a Tradition to warrant me so to do But because there is no such Tradition for any thing besides therefore neither do I build my Faith upon it But on the contrary do suppose that by the Providence of God the Holy Scriptures were purposely written to prevent those Doubts those Forgeries and Deceits which his Infinite Wisdom foresaw an Oral Tradition would always have been liable unto Q. Can the Holy Scriptures alone make your Faith perfect A. They Can Nor ought I to believe any thing as an Article of my Faith which is not to be found in them or cannot plainly be proved by Them Q. What do you think of the Church's Definitions A. That I ought to submit to them in whatsoever they define agreeably to the Word of God But if in any thing they require me to believe what is contrary to the Word of God or cannot be Proved thereby I ought absolutely to reject the One and am under no Obligation to Receive the Other Q. But is not this to make your self wiser than the Church A. No by no means but only to make the Word of God of more Authority with me than the Word of Man Whilst I chuse rather to Regulate my Faith by what God has deliver'd than by what Man Defines Q. Are the Holy Scriptures so Plain and Easy to be Understood that every One may be Able to judge for Himself what he ought to Believe A. In Matters of necessary Belief they are very plain even to the most Ordinary Christian Yet we do not deny but that every Man ought to hear the Church and attend to the Instructions of those who are the Pastors of it Only we say that neither the Church nor its Pastors ought to teach any thing as an Article of Faith or Require any Man's assent to it as such that cannot be shewn to have been either expresly deliver'd in the Word of God or by a plain and necessary Consequence be Proved thereby Q. But how shall the Unlearned be able to know what the Scriptures propose seeing they are written in a Language which such Persons do not understand A. By Reading them in their Own Vulgar Tongue into which every Church has or ought to have them faithfully translated for the Benefit of Those who do not understand the Languages in which they were Composed Q. Do you then think that the People ought to be suffered promiscuously to Read the Holy Scriptures A. Who shall forbid Them to Read what was purposely designed by God for their Instruction The Scriptures are as much the Voice of the Apostles and Evangelists to Us of these Times as their Preaching was to those of the Age in which they lived And it may with as good Reason be Ask'd Whether we think the People ought to have been promiscuously Suffer'd heretofore to hear the Apostles Preach as whether they ought to be Suffer'd promiscuously to Read their Writings Now. Q. But amidst so many Things as the Holy Scriptures deliver how shall the People be able to judge what is necessary to be Believed by Them A. Let them Believe All they meet with there and then to be sure they will Believe all that is necessary But for the sake of those who either want Ability to Read or Capacity to judge what is most necessary in Point of Faith to be known and profess'd by Them the Church has from the beginning collected it into a short Summary which every Person of Old was Required both to Know and assent to before he was admitted into the Communion of it Q. What is that Summary of which you speak and which you account to comprehend all the most Necessary Articles of our Christian Faith A. It is commonly called The Apostles Creed not that the Apostles Themselves Composed it at least not in the very Form in which we now have it but because it seems to come the Nearest of any to the Apostles Times and does with the Greatest Simplicity of Expression comprehend a short Summary of the Apostles Doctrine Q. What mean you by the Word Creed A. It is the same in Latine as Belief in English And it is so called in both from the first words of it I BELIEVE and which in Sense though not in Expression Run through every Article of it SECT VI. Q. REhearse the Articles of your Belief A. I Believe in God the Father Almighty c. Q. You said that those Words I BELIEVE were not only the First Words of your Creed but the most Material as running in effect through Every Branch of it Tell me therefore what do you mean when you say I Believe A. To Believe in the General is to Assent to the Truth of any thing upon the Sole Authority of the Person who delivers it Who if He be a Man only the Assent which I give to what He says produces in Me a Humane Faith if as here He be God then the Assent which I give to what is deliver'd by Him is properly a Divine Faith Q. What is the difference with respect to Us between these Two A. It is very Great For because a Man though never so Wise and Careful himself may yet not be honest and so Impose upon Me Or should he be never so Upright may yet after all his Care be Mistaken himself and thereby lead Me into Errour therefore in Assenting to what such a One proposes I can at the most give but such a Belief to it as is suitable to a meer Humane Testimony I may Believe what he says to be True but yet so as not to exclude a Possibility of its being Otherwise Whereas God
where he now Sitteth at the Right-hand of God the Father Almighty Q. After what Manner did Christ Ascend into Heaven A. He went up Visibly in the Presence of all his Disciples A Cloud came down under his Feet and he mounted by degrees in it They follow'd him a long time with their Eyes till at last having lost Sight of Him but yet still looking after him to the Place Where he passed Two Angels appear'd to them and thus confirm'd them in the Truth of what they had seen Ye Men of Galilee why stand ye gazing up into Heaven This same Jesus which is taken up from you into Heaven shall so Come in like manner as ye have seen Him Go into Heaven Acts i. 9 10 11. Q. Did Christ Ascend in the same Body in which He conversed with his Disciples after his Resurrection A. He did Ascend in the same Body and has assured Us thereby that We shall hereafter be Received up thither in our Bodies as well as Souls and so Reign in Both together with Him Q. Into what part of Heaven did Christ Ascend A. He ascended into the Highest Heaven where God does in a singular Manner shew his Majesty and Glory And therefore our Creed tells us that being ascended into Heaven he sat down at the Right-hand of God the Father Almighty Where also He shall continue till he shall come again from thence to judge both the Quick and the Dead Luk. xxii 69 1 Cor. iii. 1 2. Q. What do you mean by the Right-hand of God A. Not to Represent God under the Figure of a Man nor to intimate any particular Posture of Christ Above though having a Humane Body he might well enough be described in it But as by the One I understand a Place of Power Honour and Authority 1 King ii 19 Psal. xvi 11 xliv 3 Luk. xxii 69 Heb. i. 3 4. So by the Other I suppose is meant the settled Possession and Enjoyment of all these Prov. xx 8 Heb. x. 12 And the Sense of the whole I take to be this That Christ being Ascended up into Heaven was immediately thereupon enstated by God in the full Possession of his Regal Office and Dignity and shall continue to enjoy it till he shall have finish'd the whole Work of our Redemption By bestowing Glory and Salvation upon all his faithful Servants and by finally destroying in Hell-fire all the Enemies of his Power and Dignity Q. Does our Saviour do any thing at present for Us with God in Heaven A. Yes he perfects his Priestly Office there by Interceding Effectually with God for our Forgiveness As the High Priest under the Law when he went into the Holy Place before the Ark with the Bloud of the Sin-offering did thereby finish the Propitiation which he was to make for the Sins and Offences of the People of the Jews Rom. viii 34 1 Tim. ii 5 Heb. ix 11 12 24. 1 Jo. ii 1 SECT XIV Q. HOW long shall our Saviour Christ continue to Sit and Intercede for Us at God's Right-hand A. Till the End of the World Which being Come He shall Return from thence with Glory to Iudge both the Quick and the Dead Acts iii. 21 The Heavens must Receive him till the times of Restitution of all Things And then This same Jesus which was taken up into Heaven shall so Come in like manner as he was seen to Go into Heaven Acts i. 11 Q. What do you mean by that Phrase the Quick and the Dead A. By the Quick I understand those who shall be found Alive on the Earth at the Day of Judgment 1 Cor. xv 51 1 Thess. iv 15 By the Dead those who shall have before departed out of this Life And I make mention of Both to shew that ALL Men shall be judged And that Christ shall be the Judge of ALL. Acts x. 42 2 Cor. v. 10 2 Tim. iv 1 1 Pet. iv 5 Q. Do you then believe that there shall be a General Day of Judgment to the whole World A. I do believe there shall be such a Day and that most Solemn and Terrible Mat. x. 15 xi 22 24. xii 36 Jo. v. 22 25. Acts xvii 31 Rom. ii 5 c. 2 Pet. ii 9 iii. 7 Heb. vi 2 ix 27 1 Jo. iv 17 Jude 6. Wherein first the Angels shall Sound the Trumpet at the Voice of which all that are in the Graves shall Arise and Come forth and be Gather'd together into One certain Place Then our Saviour shall come down in the Clouds of Heaven with Power and Great Glory and the Books shall be Open'd and the Judgment sit and every Man be judged out of the things which are Written in those Books according to his Works See Mat. xxv 31 comp Mat. xxiv 30 Q. After what Manner shall this Judgment be transacted A. The particular Manner is unknown to Us Yet this we are told that we shall then be call'd to an Account for all that we shall have done in the whole Course of our Lives here on Earth Every evil Work every foolish and wicked Word every secret Thought shall be brought to light Nothing that we now covet the most to hide but shall be then disclosed And we shall be either Acquitted or Condemn'd according to what we shall have done whether it be Good or whether it be Evil. Eccles. xii 14 1 Cor. iv 5 2 Cor. v. 10 Mat. xii 36 Rom. ii 5 Rev. xx 12 Q. Shall there be any particular Method observed in the Proceedings of this Judgment A. Yes there shall For First The Just shall be Raised and Judged and Acquitted and Caught up into the Air at some convenient distance from the Earth where with the Holy Angels they shall fill up the Retinue of our Blessed Saviour Then the Wicked shall be Raised and brought to Judgment And being condemn'd not only by Christ and his Saints but by the Sentence of their Own Consciences they shall together with the Devils be driven away by the Angels thereunto appointed into their Place of Torments Which being done Our Saviour shall together with all his Saints Return triumphantly to Heaven and there Reign in Glory at the Head of them for Ever and Ever Mat. xxv 1 Thess. iv c. SECT XV. Q. WHat does the THIRD PART of your Creed contain A. It contains all that is needful to be Known and Profess'd by Us with Relation to the Holy Ghost Q. What do you account needful to be believed concerning Him A. Not only that there is a Holy Ghost but that he is the Third Person in the ever-blessed Trinity and partakes as such of the same Divine Nature with the Father and the Son Q. How does this appear A. By the plain Testimony of the Holy Scriptures by which alone we are capable of knowing any thing in these Matters Now those Sacred Writings evidently speak of him not only as a Person but as a Divine