Selected quad for the lemma: book_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
book_n new_a testament_n write_v 6,542 5 5.9777 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

our undertaking this subject at this time wherein so many are shaken to and ●ro by every wind of Doctrine desiring to establish you in that Faith once given to the Saints and to confirm you in the do●●rine of the holy Catholick Church to which I presume you were baptized we shall from this Text maintain several grand truths in reference to the Word Sacraments and Prayer which may serve you as Antidotes against that poyson that hath already slain thousands at our right hand and ten thousand at our left but we must first come to the last Section and see some questions resolved SECTION VII Questions Resolved Quest. 1. Whither the Scripture be the word of God Quest. 2. Whither the Scripture ought to be mens onely rule Quest. 3. Whither men may come to a saving knowledg of God without the Scripture Quest. 4. Whither persestion may be attributed to the Scripture Quest. 5. Whither Salvation may be had by the single knowledg of the Scripture Quest. 6. What may perswade one that doubts to beleeve the truth of the Scripture Quest. 7. How far the Saints may be our rule besides the Scripture Quest. 8. Whither the books called Apocrypha be not Scripture Quest. 9. Why would God writ the Scripture Quest. 10. Whether men be bound to beleeve all that is in the Scripture Quest. 1. Whether the Scripture be the word of God By Scripture here is meant the whole word of God contained wholly and onely in the Canonicall bookes of the old and new Testament for though the word Scripture signifies only a writting or a book and may be attributed to any book scrole or writing in the world yet use and custome which is the rule of speaking hath wrought this word Scripture to signifie that writing of the Holy Ghost contained in the Book of God and not any other book 1. From the excellency that it hath above all other it is called the Scripture that is the Book as if there were none deserved that name but it hence the book of Canticles is called the Song of Songs that is the most excellent of Songs so this the Book that is the book of books 2. From that necessity that lies upon men to have this book above all other If all the learning of all the most famous Libraries could be contracted into one book and that one book digested into one mans Head yet he would call for thee Book that book that his life his comforts his salvation stood upon this book was made to mend all other books and the light that all other Learning could afford without this would but make Hell so much the darker when all Books are shown him yet as David said of Goliahs sword there is no Book like that 1 Sam. 21.9 or as Rachel said to Iacob Give me that or else I die Gen. 30.1 The like might be said of the word Bible that signifying also a Book and properly any Book of the world might be called a Bible but customarily it s given only to that Book that contains the word or that Book written by the Spirit of God Now that the Scripture or the Books of the old and new Testament are the words of God and written by none but God that they are from heaven and not of men may appear by these following reasons 1. None but God can be found out to make them let heaven and earth be searched as with a Candle and among all the Inhabitan●s therein the Author of this Book is not to be found For 1. If he was not the writer of them either Angels Beasts or men must for Plants and Trees are not to be once suspected for their original But 1. Angels made it not for then it was either made by them altogether or by some part of them But 1. Not by them altogether for then in some place or other this had been discovered the Angels would have told the world before this time that it was composed by them They would have discovered to the so●s of men by some means or other that they were beholding to them for these comfortable words 2. Neither can the Scripture be supposed to be made by one part of them for then either they m●st be made by the fallen Angels or the confirmed Angels But 1. Not by the fallen Angels the devils are more subtle then to destroy their own Kingdom to give weapons to overcome themselves Satan hath more policy then to reveal how men shall avoid his snares escape his traps overcome his temptations prevent his ambushments frustrate his watchings and disappoint all his purposes every line of the Bible tends to the r●ine of his Kingdom every verse in it is his neck verse Would he have had himself known by no other name then a lyar a Serpent a Dragon a roaring and devouring Lyon a Deceiver an Accuser an unclean Spirit if he had gone to set himself out into the world it will follow therefore it was not them 2. Neither was it made by the confirmed Angels for they acknowledge themselves our fellow Servants Rev. 19.10 22.9 being therefore professedly our fellow servants they could not make Laws to restrain us of our desires nor enjoyn us from performing any thing that our own hearts lusted after neither would men acknowledge the Angels in this case to be their superiors 2. Beasts did not write it It is to be hoped that the Reader is so much a man as to understand Beasts or Fouls composed not that work their irrationality shews sufficiently their impossibility 3. Men did not do it There is but man to be thought on as the Author of this Book since Angels are known not to do it And yet apparent it is that men had no hand in it for then either it must be done by men altogether or by some men But 1. Not by men altogether where was that meeting and in what Country is that place that mankinde gathered themselves together to make L●ws against themselves to bind their own hands to their own feet nay to crush their own heart yea which is more to doom themselves to the everlasting flames for doing that that above all things is most pleasing to themselves What time of the world was this meeting in What Histories mentions of it What Generation was then living and who called this Assembly together What makes this Age to tye themselves to those Laws made by their Fathers since they are dead and fallen asleep 2. Neither was it done by men apart for then those men that composed it must be either good or bad But 1. Good men would not do it for then they ought to have been speakers of the truth they have kept the world in falshood for they say that the Scripture is of God made by his finger spoken by his Spirit if made by themselves it s nothing so yea the best of men find in themselves disobedience to the Laws therein contained which costs them much sorrow many tears
spiritual conflicts which in their own nature are so unpleasing and so bitter that were it only their own Laws we should see them live more merrily in the world And what makes after Ages imbrace those Scriptures though good men should make them since they are contrary to flesh and blood and might therefore be rejected In a word a good man could not have said O earth earth earth hear the word of the Lord Jer. 22 29. if it had been his own Invention 2. Bad men did not do it the lyar the drunkard the thief the swearer would never have made Laws against lying Drunkenness stealing swearing nor have counselled men to have shunned their company nor damned themselves eternally for their so doing Since therefore neither in heaven nor in earth can there be found ●ut a Creature to be but probably supposed the Author of the Scriptures it remains therefore that the Creator must who is God blessed for ever 2. From the testimony of the Scripture it self it is apparent that God is the Author of it He that gave the Law was the same that brought Israel out of Egypt viz. the Lord God ●xod 20.2 He that commanded Iohn to write to the Churches of Asia was the first and the last Rev. 17. Thus saith the Lord Hear the word of the Lord is a usual phrase in Scripture which co●ld not have been said by Men or Angels had it been their own It was he that gave Moses the Law the Statutes and the Judgements for all Israel Mal. 4.4 It was God that spake by the mouth of his Holy Prophets which have been since the world began Luke 1.70 All the words that are written in that Book are his words Ier. ●0 2 What Isaiah uttered it was the Lord that spake it Isa. 1.2 what Ieremiah spake the Lord commanded Ier. 1.7 Nay what ever the holy men of God spake it was as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 3. From the excellency of the matter contained in the Scripture it appears to be of God where it promiseth it goes above the power reason or invention of man as Those that do well shall shine as the stars and as the firmament nay as the Sun for ever and ever Dan. 12.3 and Matth. 13.43 The Incarnation of God a Virgin bearing a Son the resurrection of the dead all without the reach of man making Laws for the hearts of men of Kings and Princes poor and rich high and low shews that it is not of man threatening eternal death and promising eternal life both which are without the power of men and that to soul and body both which by man nor the powers of man cannot be reached unto It perswades to nothing but what is in it self good were it not commanded and disswades from nothing but what is in it self hurtfull were it not forbidden and that oftentimes without giving any reason but the will and authority of the Law-giver why must not men swear steal c. The Lord hath forbidden it The Proem to the Law is I am the Lord thy God Exod. 20.2 I am the Lord is often given as the only reason of the Law Lev. 18. 4. From the effects thereby wrought the Scripture hath wrought that upon the hearts souls and consciences of men that the writings of men and Angels could never have accomplished it fills sometimes the very souls of men so full of terrour and other times so full of comfort that were not God the Author thereof could not be effected he that is in love with sin and dark through sin it makes him to hate sin and to be in love with righteousness it hath brought the hearts and spirits of men to so much certainty that all the tortures torments and pains that men or devils could invent was not once able to make them doubt of it 5. From the scope and final end of the Scriptures it declares that God is the Author of them if any creature had been the composer of them he would in one verse or other have sought something to himself but the scope of the Scripture is purely for the glory of God the honour of God the praise of God to make men admire God to have them praise God to have them pray to God and to depend upon God and in their ways to acknowledge God It debaseth every creature in comparison of God and puts all things under the feet of God by which it is demonstrable it is from God 6. From the constant consent and declaration of the holy Catholick Church that in all Ages under and after Moses before and afte● the Judges before and under the Kings before and after the Captivity before Christ and in his time before the coming of the Holy Ghost and af●er the Apostles untill this very time hath in all Ages been consented to and looked upon as the word of God the very word of God the only word of God the holy word of God and besides this the Church hath owned no other The same Teacheth the Reformed Churches of Helvetia Article 1. of Bohem. Art 1. of Fra●ce Art 2. of Belg. Art 3. of Wirt Art 31. of Scot. Art 17. Quest. 2. Whether the Scripture ought to be mens only Rule There are many that pretend to new Revelations new lights walking according to and going a whoring after their own Inventions but that the Scriptures are to be our only rule these following Arguments may declare 1. It is the only infallible and unalterable Rule Many Rules and Laws have there been in the world which time hath altered and experience hath made to appear not good but the Scriptures of God remain the same no addition to them no dimunition of them to Kings and people they are now what they ever were and they shall be what for the present they are to all generations For ever O Lord thy word is setled in heaven Psal. 119.89 All other Rules have and may still deceive but this hath never deceived nor failed and is the same for ever and ever 2. The Churches of Christ had never any other Rule the word of God the Scriptures of God was ever the Rule of their Doctrine in matters of Faith The Rule of their lives in matters of fact Malachy that ends the Old Testament commands them to Remember the Law of Moses and Iohn that concludes the new pronounceth him Blessed that keepeth the Prophesie of the sayings of this Book Rev. 22.17 And whoever speaks not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Christ himself appeals to the Scriptures to be the Tryers of his Doctrine Iohn 5.39 3. They are written that they might be our Rule These things are written that we might believe that Iesus is the Christ and that believing we might have life John 20.31 We are to take heed unto this doctrine 1 Tim. 4.16 We have a more sure word of prophesie unto which we shall do well if we take heed
remis Saxaque Sisyphi Juditer delabentia Frustra revolvite En Phoebus oritur cujus matutinum vel jubar Ad fugandas valet Fanatici erroris nebulas En Phoebus oritur acutis armatus radiis Ad extirpandam foseresin deleudamque funditus Hercules strenuus qui clava Biblica Hydram a fronte adorieris Tantum ab est ut ad strepitum Hujus Draconis horridum expavescas Plaudite Togatae Gentes plaudite Invictus in arenam jam nunc descendit Agonista Nec de frivolis quibusdam nugis Sed pro Aris focis dimicatur Veritatis causa agitur Fideque Catholica ab infandis Erronum contumeliis vindicatur Aspiret studiis divina caelitus gratia Favonius Ut in sui nominis gloriam Ecclesiae imolumentum Reipub. tutelam Tendant omnia E D. H. A. M. e Col. in Oxon. THE AUTHOR TO HIS BOOK SHake off this panick fit there is no fear poor heart to cause a fear Englan●'s not what it was its Holy Ground since CHARLES was crown'd The Bores the Wolfs the Foxes and wild men are chain'd or watch'd in den The Crown the Mitre Cassock and the ✚ Hath purifi'd the land remov'd the dross Of Schisms Factions Errors Heresie Truth 's got her palace Church her Armoury Then shake off dull Del●y and now at leng●h With man-like s●reng●h Go thou the rounds of Albions soyl and view Phanatique Crew And with thy plainer Rh●tro●ck cause them say This Old is the best way That they may learn an● love both fear and serve Gods Laws Christs Church and from them never swerve Yea leaving Satans Sy●agog●es may turn Into our Temples there the●● incense burn So with thy faithfull Optick digitate and shew The way that 's new Make known that Via Lactea Heavenly path Cal'd Catholick Faith In which our Fathers walk'd and walking were Secur d by Angels care Fear nor the Frowns nor surly looks of those Who Truth and Order's Popery doth oppose Inform the Quaking sinner to his face There 's Rev●rence due to Person Time and Place Hold out thy Lamp present thy spiced Wine They 'r both Divine And thy Baptismal water make appear As Jordan's clear A ✚ is there 't is true declare its loss Was to the Church a ✚ Salute each house with Peace and to each eye Of all thy Treasure make discovery If any sume bite lip or wag their head Abide not there the Son of Peace is fled Put on this Pilgrimes weed poor Baby mine And Heavens shine Upon thy weak endeavours by success much Add daily to the Church Thy Fathers Blessing thou hast also got and now Go forth and prosper thou AN INDEX Directing to the ORDINANCES AND QUESTIONS Contained and discussed in this TREATISE Of the Church page 1. Questions I. WHether the single Testimony of the Church be to be received in matters of faith pag. 19 II. Whether the Church hath power to ordain Ceremonies not ordained of God p. 18 III. Whether the Church hath power to compel any irregular person to her Ordinances p. 24 IV. Whether the Civil Magistrate hath power over or in the Church of Christ And if he have whether his Law be binding to the Consciences of men p. 30. V. Whether the Segregated Churches now in England be true Churches p. 40. VI. What may justifie a mans separation from a true Church p. 75. VII Whether more religions then one are to be tollerated where the true Church is established p. 84. VIII Wherein consists the individuality or singlenesse unity or onenesse of the true Church p. 87. IX Why is the true Church called holy p. 90. X. Why is the true and holy Church called Catholick p. 91. XI Whether the Elect only be true members of the Church p. 93 XII What are the markes of a true Church p. 95. Of the Scripture p. 99. Questions I. Whether the Scripture be the word of God p. 143. II. Whether the Scripture ought to be mans only rule p. 148. III. Whether men may come to a saving knowledge of God without the Scripture p. 150. IV. Whether pefection may be attibuted to the Scripture p. 152. V. Whether salvation may be had by single knowledge of the Scripture p. 154. VI. What may perswade one that doubts to believe the truth of the Scriptures p. 156. VII How f●r the Saints may be our rule besides the Scripture p. 158. VIII Whether the bookes called Apocrypha be not Scripture p. 160. IX Why would God co●municate his to his Church by writting of the Scrip●ure p. 162. X. Whether men be bound to believe all that is in the Scripture p. 164. Of Reading the Scripture p. 165. Questions I. Whether there be a God as is declared in Scripture p. 175. II. Whether God be a spirit p. 178. III. Whether there be but one God p. 180. IV. Whether there be three persons in the Godh●ad and how these persons do agree p. 181. V. Why are Kings and Magistrates called Gods and Rebellion to be like witc●craft in Scripture p. 191. VI. What was that Image wherein God made man and why was man created naked p. 194. VII Whether the reading of the ceremonial law be profitable to a b●liever or whether any part of that law be established under the Gospel p. 196. VIII Why would God suffer his dearest Saints to lye under such sad ●fflicti●●s as are mentioned in Scripture and whether the book of Jo● be a reall hict●●y p. 211. IX Whether there be any diffe●●●ce betwixt the old and new ●●●tament and why the Scriptures are called a Testament p. 215. X. W●● are there some things in Scripture hard to be understood and whether the Scripture can dwel richly in ●●ose that cannot reade p. 218. Of the Sabbath p. 221. Questions I. Whether the keeping of a sabbath be a ceremony and abolished by Christ. p. 235. II. Whether it be lawfull to make feasts on the sabbath p. 236. III. Whether sporting or gaming is to be followed upon the sabbath p. 273. IV. Why did God give charge concerning the resting of beasts upon the sabbath p. 239. V. Why did not God give Charge concerning a wifes resting upon the sabbath p. 240. VI. Why is not the change of the sabbath in Scripture mentioned p. 241. VII Whether the Church may command any other day to be rested on beside the sabbath p. 243. VIII Why doth God put a Remember before the Commandment of the sabbath only p. 245. IX Whether the first day of the week may be termed sabbath or sunday p. 247. X. Why is the sabbath called Holy p. 251. Of a Fast. p. 252. Questions I. Whether the fasts of the Church of Rome differ from those of the Church Catholick p. 249. II. Whether fasting be not a ceremoniall or Iewish Rite p. 251. III. Why is the fast of Lent observed by the Christian Church p. 252. IV. Why are the fast of the weekes of Ember observed by the Church p. 255. V. Whether it would bring advantage to the Church to have those
whose riches were from pill●ging of the goods burning the houses and murthering the persons of those that were not of an Anabaptistical spirit This Kings Title was The King of Iustice the King of the new Ierusalem he erected a Throne of great cost and coyned Money with this Motto Verbum car● factum quod habitat in nobis By this Kings Regall Authority Divorces were frequently made as men grew weary of their Wives all books burned but the Bible all Churches rifled demolished and as from God performed blood sighs tears was only to be seen and heard in this Kings Reign At a feast he gave the Sacrament of the Lords Supper to the Number of 4000. but accusing one of Treason you must note he was a King between them cut off his head himself and with bloody hands consecrated the Elements administring the bread one of his Queens following him delivered the cup. I long to make an end of this Monarch he came in a few days to be tyed to a stake by two Executioners with two hot pincers was his flesh torn from his bones in Munster where his most Sacrilegious Majesty had acted and enacted unhe●rd of Villany This Sacrilegious King was not without Rebellious Subjects which the German Princes by burning drowning killing not for their consciences but for their ●reaso●●●tte● and hell●sh acts put an end to them At which time 〈…〉 of them into England for shelter A. 1535. 〈…〉 were burned and o●hers made to recant yet some 〈…〉 ●slily carrying them-themselves did live and became the 〈◊〉 Father of the Brownist Mr. Robert Brown of Northamptonshire venting their Doctrine in a Saw-pit first near Islington obtained Proselytes three years afterward he Recanted his errour and took Orders becoming a faithfull Teacher of the Doctrine of the Church of England though his Disciples remained as thorns in her sides they did somwhat refine the Doctrine of the German Anabaptists and continuing a separation did bring forth that Creature whom we call an Anabapist who must own the Quaker for his first born and all those by-opinions and fancies taught by the whole Rabble of Phanaticks must be acknowledge to grow out of his Roots and are sprigs of the Tame branch all of them being quickned with the same Sap or Spirit of their German Father who by a pretended humility and s●ow of Godlinesse got into the affections of the Vulgar which ceased not untill they had put them in the throne which deservedly brought them to the stake I have heard of a Welch-man that being condemned to be hanged by the neck called aloud O good my Lord hang her not by the neck her Father was hanged by the neck and her dyed Let our English Anabaptist remember that Her Father was burned at a stake and hanged by the neck for Treason Her Prince Prophet Her King and all Except I say this King they had never a Nursing Father So far hath it been from all Nations coming in unto it that if these be true Churches they have never had a village to boast of If these be true Churches there are more Churches then one and so the unity of the Church must be denied and consequently there must be more Christs then one Christ is the head of the Church Ep. 1.22 and the Church is his body Why because all the members move according to that life that is communicated unto them from the head Now this rabble hath not one Spirit nor one life neither do they preach all one kind of faith therefore there must be diversity of heads to give life to these several bodies consequently if they be Churches there must be divers Christs to quicken those severall Churches which destroy the unity of the Godhead in Trinity the consent Harmony and agreement of Prophets and Apostles and the unity of the Catholick Church on earth and before that be done let us condemn those segregated meetings for those that separate themselves sensual having not the spirit Iud. 19. Whence the Catholick faith came we know how old it is we know it hath Seniority over and above all other Doctrine as truth hath over error i● is of the same standing with the Creation And though heresie hath and must closely follow it yet it was before them the Wheat is first sowed and then the Tares Such is Sathans hast that he begun to lye at the beginning yet from the beginning lyes were not but truth Not to speak of those Heresies that were in the Church before the Time of our Saviour in his time there were those that denied the Resurrection and the being of Angels and Spirits Matth. 22.23 Acts 23.8 Most of those grand Heresies that troubled the Church by false Doctrine the time they came in the Authors that broached them are known by name and the occasion of their so doing is also known not so the Catholick faith We must know that all new lights that now shine are but the stinking snuffs of those old Heresies that were extinguished by the powerful breath of the Catholick Doctrine blown in again by the envious breath of him that fights against the Church and her seed and may be reduced to the same causes that before they of old were kindled by and may be reduced to these heads 1 Envy and discontentednesse when men could not get into those places that either their merit did not deserve or their ambition thought they were worthy of then to revenge themselves like Corah Dathan and Abiram Numb 16.1 they rose up against the Governours of the Church and rebelled against Catholick truth It was this that made Arius rise and swel like a great Sea to overthrow the faith of Christ. An. 310. for not being chosen Bishop of Alexandria of which he was a Deacon when Achillas the Bishop thereof dyed and Alexander a man he thought not so deserving as himself chosen in the place presently he set himself to oppose Episcopal dignity and such Doctrine as plagued the Church for almost three hundred years together purely because he could not be a Bishop whose Doctrine though condemned by 318 Bishops A. 325. gathered together at Nice at the command of the good Emperour Constantin the great is revived again in our Socinians Anabaptists c. for want of discipline in our Church And truly that hideous damp that came upon the Church of England in these last years had it's rise from the same ground viz. from the mouths of those men that were extended in a large measure for the receiving of a Mitre which not coming they vented their ill-favoured breath in the very faces of them that through desert wore it envying the glory that others had because they themselves had but Ordinary respect This made M. M. a principall Pres. break out into extravagancy he Petitioning the King for a Deanry and afterward for a Bishoprick getting neither strove as the King told to undo and overthrow all So D. T. an earnest Suitor for the Deanry of Salisbury or
separate for ever from Gods presence for this very thing or for it received into glory Matth. 25. It behoves all therefore that would stand in judgement to be acquainted with the Scriptures that what sins their souls are inclined to may be known and what iniquity their hands have acted may be found out that they may be repented for and God may cast them behind his back And also to know what duties he laies upon them that performing of them at that day of tryall they may be received into his Kingdome for this Book will be opened this R●le presented and our lives by it measured and accordingly both soul and body shall eternally be sentenced 6. All persons without this may lie under most sad and grievous afflictions without any dram of comfort from God An ignorant soul whose root God hath touched as it were to pluck up and whose heart God hath griped as it were to condemn and whom he hath stripped of all comforts as it were to slay must either bee stupid under that calamity or desperate in such a case while he that is acquainted with the Scriptures will find out some Reason of his trouble and ease of his distemper Unless thy Law had been my delight I had perished in mine afflictions saith David Psal. 119.92 Every promise that is in Scripture a Saint will apply for his own particular as if God had sent it down from Heaven immediately for him assuring him of deliverance in good time Nubecula ●st cito transibit the Momentary afflictions of this life work for him a more Eternal and exceeding weight of glory 2 Cor. 4.17 from the Wells of salvation even from the promises of ●od can they draw refreshment for themselves and their Companions the ignorant in the mean time being like Hagar wandring in the Wildernesse of Beersheba dying for thirst yet a Well of refreshing comforting strengthning nay living water near them Gen. 21.19 7. All the Books of the holy Scriptures were written for the very end and purpose of God These are wri●ten that ye may believe that Iesus is the Christ the Son of God and that believing you might have life through his Name Joh. 20.31 For whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our lea●ning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15.4 Here is an end both of the Old and New Testament that men might have comfort in this vale of misery and hope of future glory and how shall either hope or comfort be drawn from the Word if we know it not Never can men be rich in hope that have not the Scriptures dwelling richly in them Let Gods Word have its end by us and since it was written for our learning Let us learn it yeat get it by heart ●nd both grace and glory shall fill our hearts 8. The want of the onowledge of the Sacred Scriptures is a great da●●ing sin before God How shall men escape ●f they neglect so great salvation He. 2.3 Here is in Scripture life and de●th heaven and hell is set before men blessednesse or misery a Crown of gold or a globe of fire an enlarged Kingdome or a narrow pit an Eternall Throne or everlasting burnings are proffered to men if it be received Heaven and Comunion with God shall be thy por●ion if neglected hell and communion with the Devill and his Angels in torment shall be thy reward which places Moses and the Prophets would deliver thee from Luke 16.29 SECTION V. WE are now according to our proposed Method to discover what hinders the Word of Christ from dwelling richly yea from dwelling at all in the hearts of men the grounds of it cannot exactly be numbered by any but him that made and knows the heart Yet there are 6 things apparently hinder it in these miserable days of ours as 1 Curiosity We have Athenians that give their mind to hearken after some new and curious thing in Religion that studie more the knowledge of such things as God hath locked up in the secret Cabinet of his own bosome or in the secret place of the Stairs of dark and hidden prophesies rather then plain and revealed truth because plain and revealed picking out of the Scripture some dark passages and with them storing their brain conceit themselves to be rich by empty and vain questions such oftentimes as bring the very entity of God in an Atheisticall way into a Question and dispute and in the mean time go empty away of those truths that conduce to peace and holinesse without which no man shall see the Lord. Heb. 12.14 2. Coveteousnesse Mat. 13.22 The Word of God cannot grow nor bring forth fruit where the thorns and cares of the World are nourished that fils the heart of man so much that there is no Room for the knowledge of Sacred Scripture He that had great possessions when he was to part with all for Eternall life went away sorrowful Mat. 19.22 and we never read he returned Give him Earth enough any man shall have heaven Let him be rich in this Worlds goods he misses not the knowledge of the riches of Gods grace shining through Jesus Christ in the Word He knoweth Earth so much and is acquainted with it so wel and troubleth himselfe so much about it he forgets that one thing necessary and becomes unfruitfull in good works 3. Sluggishnesse Idlenesse is usually esteemed the mother of all Vice Ignorance ows both it's birth and education to her Knowledge and acquaintance of the holy Scriptures is not obtained but by industry and pains sluggishnesse wil have a man to loyter therefore he cannot be rich in that Were it possible to see the soul of the Sluggard as Solomon saw his Vineyard Prov. 24.31 we should see it without either Order or Fence and overgrown with all kind of noysome and filthy Weeds Ignorance like a Wolf feeds her self in the sluggards bosome and at last will eat up his own heart The spirituall Manna falls but he is loth to gather the Sun of the Gospell shines but neither the windows nor doors of his soul are open Christ knocks and puts in his finger at the hole of the lock Saying Open to me my Sister my Love my Dove my undifiled Cant. 5.2 But what says the Sluggard I have put off my Coat how shall I put it on I ●ave washed my feet how shall I defile them v. 3. All the fair Words and comfortable expressions glorious things precious promises holy truths that are in the book of God are of no account with the Sluggard but for all the light for all the knocking he cals Yet a slumber y●t a little folding of the hands He will not take pains to be saved from hel nor labour here a little to obtain Eternall rest above He gives not himself to reading nor hearing but at 's conveniency nor to meditating nor to discoursing concerning the Scripture and therefore it is not like to dwell in him The truth
of prejudice nor malice but by simplicity and ignorance By beliefe is not meant a saving beliefe or such a faith as may save him but to cause him behold the Bible as a true History not a fiction now this beliefe may be wrought in such a one by these and the like Argument 1 From the Churches tradition in all ages and through all generations were the books of Moses received and owned to be his Solomons to be his yea they were by the whole consent of the Church owned as the very word of God spoken in the mouths of men Now as he believes the books going under the name of Ovid to be his and of Virgil to be his of Cicero to be his because that former generations yea that age they lived in then gave them down to the next as theirs and they to the next untill it comes to us so he may be brought to a Historical beleiving of these books to be true and not Supposititious 2 The nature of the men that made it They were good just and upright in their generation As Moses Samuell David Solomon Esaiah c. who would not have took pains to have cheated the world nor deceived men as to write those Histo●ies of Israels comeing out of Egypt c. Had they not been true 3 The miseries that the writers of the Scriptures went through is a proof of some concernment if men would cheat it would be for some profit but what honour or preferment had Paul for his preaching or for his writing The Apostles in general might have lived at home in ease and not go abroad to the hazzard of their lives as they did What could their policy or reason suggest to them by being at so much trouble to themselves purely to cheat others What needed or what could provoke Ieremy to undergo such dangers as he did purely to cheat the world We know they were in Jeopardy every hour for writting and preaching of it Which in reason shews that they had no purpose to delude 4 The distance of the place it was written in if it had been done all in one place there might have been some cause of suspicion but what consultation had Moses in Arabia or in Egypt with Daniel in Babylon or what agreement had Paul in Rome with David in Ierusalem severall ages they lived in and no compact had the one with the other which if they had made yet what would have been the issue of their undertaking but stripes death and imprisonment enough to have diverted their thoughts from such a dangerous enterprize 5 The agreement of every part of it with the whole Nothing that David writ contradicted Moses nor nothing that Samuel writ was spoken against by Solomon no prophet spo●k against another nor none of the Apostles wrot against them yea so far were they from that that they strengthened and confirmed each others doctrine Had it been of men there would have been real jangling and apparent contests writing so long after one another and at such a distance from each other 6 The submission of the gravest soberest persons that are now in the world to the practice of it There are men that will not easily give a credence to what they read or hear but are carefull of their reputation that way But yet yeildeth and gloryeth in that yeilding to the truth of what is therein writ and when their glory wisdome parts vertues are tryed they appear to be the most eminent persons in the world 7 From the sincere dealing of the co●posers of it men that would go about to flatter or allure wo●●● 〈◊〉 by some arguments at least seemingly pleasing to th●●● 〈◊〉 they would delude but now the Scriptures are contrary they will ●a●● men to forsake houses wives and land for it Call upon them ●o forsake that which above all things they love most plucking out the right eye hatred affliction persecution is that which the Scripture declares men must undergo that come to her Nothing that is pleasing to flesh and blood throughout the whole Scripture that is promised to or allowed of unto men 8 From the Silence of its greatest and most Implacable enemies How was Christ hated in the times wherein he lived And Ieremiah and Paul and yet none durst nor none did write books in confutation of those books written by them nor to perswade the people that it was but a feigned story The Scribes and Pharises that hated Christ and did persecute him to death yet wrot no book in confutation of Matthew or of Luke which if in the least they could have falsifyed the gospells should not have come to us without a Salvo Quest. 7. How far the Saints be our Rule besides the Scripture That the Saints lives ought to be a Rule for us and that we are to walk according to their steps is Catholick Doctrine Heb. 6.12 Phil. 3.17 But how far they are to be followed is the ground of our Question That the Saints had failings haltings and miscarriages is not to be denied but in such things they are our Examples for evitation but not for Imitation Follow the Saints we must But 1. So farre as they were approved of God where we can hear God saying whether in providence or by his presence Well done good and faithful servant we may be bold to tread in that step and to keep in that Road. 2. So far as their actions tended to the glory of God What we can see Abraham Iacob David doing which brings in any revenue to the Exchequer of Gods praises so far may they be our pattern copy and example 3. So far as they gave no just cause of offence to the Church of God Peter that seemed to be a Pillar yet in this is not to be followed but blamed Gal. 2 11 12 13. In this we must be wary that we tread not in their steps least we make the enemies of God to blaspheme and slay him for whom Christ dyed 4. So far as they had the promise of God we may safely walk in that way wherein wee find God promise to be with them keep them blesse them and in his favour to protect them 5. So far as their own hearts did excuse them before God where we find them doing and afterwards their hearts smite them for their so doing let us by their fall look the better to our own way and by by that blot seek to mend our hand Always provided 1. That be not done by us which was but for a time approved and to some peculiar persons granted as was was the Offerings Washings and Sacrifices under the Law and Iebu with Elishas going into Ba●ls Temple 2. That for which God was silent only for a time as concerning the Saints Polygamy or plurality of Wives he was c. 3. That which for a season was only granted that the gospel might not be hindred as Pauls care in giving of offence which was in great measure but untill the Jews
declared their perversnesse as is evident by comparing Acts 16.3 with Gal. 5.2 3. If there were no limitation in this case of giving offence there would never be an Heretick Whom we are to reject after the first and second admonition Titus 3.10 Quest. 8. Whether the Books called Apocrypha be not Scripture These Books commonly called Apocrypha are so called from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abseondo a thing hid because the authority of them is not known to the Church and in testimony of Faith those Books must not at all be produced The Church of Rome owns them as part of the Canon but the Catholick Church did ever exclude their Authority For 1. They were never used by the Jews neither in their Temples nor in their Synagogues the Jews were always Gods Library Keepers To them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 Now these being never used nor committed to them cannot be Gods Oracles and by consequence their authority is not binding 2. They never received any countenance from the gospel they are never mentioned as a Rule or as Books wherein the will and minde of God was made known to men which Christ would never have neglected to do had they been so yea as he chid the Pharisees for putting false glosses upon the Law surely he would have upbraided them sharply for taking away so great a part of the body of the Law Our Lord Jesus mentions no other parts of the Scriptures then Moses Psalms and the Prophets Luke 24 44 4● of which the Apocrypha is no part 3. There are many things in those Books false both in History and in Doctrine much non-sense and against both sense reason and Canonical Scripture are there many passages 4. The Author of the second Book of Mac. Mac. 2.2.23 Ingenuously confesses that that Book was only an abridgment or compend of those five Books of the Wars of the Jews writ by one Iason a Cyrenean and great sweat pains and labour it cost hi● so to do This was no fit work for the Spirit of God to abridge the long books writ by Iason that men might have more pleasure in the reading of them The same Author concludes this History with a Complement and also desires to have his errours pardoned professing his best in composing that book which also shews it came not professedly from the Spirit of God The same ●each the Reformed Churches of France Art 4. of Belgiae Art 6. of Ireland Art 3. of England Art 6. Yet the Ch●rch does and hath used these books and reads them in their Congregations though not to confirm doctrine but to exhort to manners For these Reasons 1. From that Relation and aspect that it bears toward the Scripture concerning the Jews returning from the Captivity the Passeover kept by King Iosiah the Wisdom so called of Solomon though probably made by Philo the Jew who flourished An. C. 90. the sentences and sayings of the son of Sirach are so much reflecting upon Sacred Writ that they are not to be despised Iohn 10.22 We have some account of a Discourse that was held between Christ and the Jews in the Temple and withall tels us what time this discourse was viz. At the Feast of the Dedication Now of this Feast the Scripture nowhere gives us an account we read of no Laws of it no Sacrifices for it no time set apart for it yet Iesus owns it To know the original and cause of this Feast we must go to Apocrypha 1 Mac. 4. ver 52. to the end In which place we read that when the Iews had defeated the forces of Gorgias and had regained the Temple and rebuilded the Altar they offered Sacrifice thereon and dedicated it for future service and kept the days of Dedication with gladness for joy that God had given them again Liberty to worship in their Temple and ver 59. it is appointed that that feast be kept every year for eight days which in our Saviours time is kept and he graceth it with his presence too blame then are they that are offended at Ministers going down to the Apocrypha citing it for matter of fact for in this and in some other places no Minister under heaven can give his hearers any rational account of this Text without making use of the Apocrypha 2. For those excellent plain Moral Instructions that lie in many places of it so full of variety so plenteous in brevity particularly those books of Ecclisiasticus and Wisdom wherein are excellent documents suited to nay most of them taken from the word of God 3. For those godly and profitable uses beleivers may make in reading and hearing those great deliverances that God was pleased to give his own people Israel in so wonderfull a manner cloathing their enemies with shame when they were at strongest and crowning them with glory and honour when they were at weakest In a word to see how God preserved them in the midst of their enemies keeping to himself still a people when the Heathen about them had said Let them be no more a Nation as is manifest in the history of the Maccabees Yet alwayes care was taken that none of these bookes nor nothing in one of those bookes was ever made use of in matters of Faith or Doctrine but in matters of fact onely as men will make use of Poets Chronicles or moral Authors To this agree the reformed Churches and the Church of England Art 6. the Article it self is this Art 6 of the Church of England Holy Scripture containeth c. And the other books Hierom saith the Church doth read for example of life and instruction of manners but yet doth not apply it to establish any Doctrine c. Quest. 9. Why would God communicate his will to his Church in writing The meaning of this question is this Seeing God was pleased to let his will and his pleasure or his word be known and communicated to the world from the Creation unto Moses by tradition or by speaking why would he have it to be revealed from Moses untill the dissolution of the world by writing might it not have been delivered to succeeding ages by the present through the Fathers delivering it to the Children and so forward to the end as well as it was for two thousand years at the beginning of the world But God would not have it so he would have it given in writing 1 Because of the darkeness of mans nature the candle of the Lord shined darker and darker as man increased sin increased that lamp of light that he put in man at first grew dimmer and dimmer To prevent a gross darkness from falling upon the deluded sons of men he would not trust his word alwayes to remain upon the tongues or hands of men but would have it set in a candlestick and writ in tables of stone to remain a perpetual light 2 That it might be keept the●freer from corruption before man grew more stuborn and as they multiplied
the garden that the Cup might passe from him and upon the Crosse that God had forsaken hm men in a ditch will cry help help and in a Town fier fier and yet no vain repetition a soul may cry Lord have mercy upon us Lord have mercy upon us O Christ hear us and be singularly devout 2. Through holy affection Thus Daniel often calls Lord hear Dan. 9.17 18 19. So Solomon often repeats Then here thou in h●aven thy dwelling place and forgive or do which is above 7. times prayed for in a prayer 2 King 8. 3. Through strength of faith so the Psalmist Blessed be the Lord for evermore Amen and Amen so the Church Reve. 22.20 In a word if repetitions barely considered as such were unlawfull the Church must be blamed for singing and the Psalmist for composing the Psalm 163. and the 57 and the 42 and the 67. In all which Psalms that there are repetitions in the sence above spoken is apparent and that they are and may be used without sin is not to be questioned 2. Vaine repetitions which are to be shunned in prayer and of them we are forwarned by our Saviour Mat. 6.7 of which we have above spoken Now repetitions are vaine 1. When they are affected as strains of Eloquence and signs of wit when to show the quaintnesse of the expession that it may be observed it is brought over again and again such were those of the Gentiles and Heathens 2. When they are Impertient empty frothy unprofitable when there is no Spiritual life nor hear holy zeal nor activity and such vaine repetitions can never be in a book they being in the cold heart and dul soul of a Christian. 3. When they are Idolized when men conceit that God either will refuse to heare them if they repeat not or that he will here them the better for them that is a vaine repetition Thus the Gentiles thought they should be heard for their much babling or speaking Mat. 6.7 4. When they are pretended when men sets themselves to repeat that they may be thought to spend much time in prayer and so be accounted religious which is indeed a taking Gods name in vaine and abusing of his eare by their vain and needless repetition From which we conclude that no vain repetitions are in the book of Common-prayers they being of that nature that the soul and heart of man may zealously and holyly close withall And let me declare my thoughts in this particular since the reestablishment of the Common-prayer I have seen more ardent zeal more watery eyes more lifted up hands and reverent deportment in the publick Churches at the using of those formes then ever I saw in my life at extempore deliveryes Not that I am against those prayers whose rise is immediatly from the heart whether in the house top or in the closet but this I say if set formes were used as they ought to be by laying aside prejudice they would never be spoke against and if conceived prayer or as the phrase is extempore were more used it would not be so much undervalued as it is If he that hath utterance in prayer and promptnesse on a sudden to expresse himself be thankfull he doth well but if he think himself the better Christian because he seeth another use a forme In this he is not to be praised Men of themselves may make vaine repetitions yea vaine petitions yet the same request that to the and by the is vaine may be to another a holy ardent and affectionate request condemn not therefore the service of the Church which in all things is well ordered and sure but thy own heart for not having life enough to answer Amen and Amen to all her holy repetitions but of these things we have spoken elsewhere Quest. 5. Whether it would be convenient to alter any part of these formes This question shall not be directly answered being a matter wherein I ought not to be positive but shall lay down my thoughts concerning both the negative and affirmative part resolving to acquiesce in and submit unto lawfull Authority When those formes are considered and the nature of its adversaries marked in strength of reason it seems inconvenient to alter those formes 1. From the wisdom and opinion of King Iames of blessed and glorious memory who in his Proclamation for ratifying Common-prayer prefixed to that service after the Hampton Court conference resolved never to give way to any alteration by the frivolous suggestions of any light Spirit not being ignorant of the Inconveniences that do arise in Government by admitting Innovation in things once setled by mature deliberation the danger that followes such alterations we shall for the present leave to Statsmen to consider 2. It would incourage brain sick people to proceed further in their opposition to pleasure them in this is but to make ●hem bold in asking a reformation or alteration in higher matters let them in this be satisfied they will but boast and create fresh strength to bawl for something of another nature to let the Common-prayer stand as it doth will be a barre to keep them from approaching higher and shall be a bone for them to pick upon and busie themselves about that his Majesty and his counsell may dive and follow their designs with the lesse trouble the Kings Crown may at last come under some mens censure if every thing be altered with which they are displeased It is good therefore to prevent an evil at first and let those formes stand for the future as they do for the present 3. It will bring the Liturgy itself under contempt not only by Forriagners but natives what reverence or devotion can the generality of people have to it when at every crosse humour of malecontent persons it must be altered and reformed and again reformed and again reformed which consideration moved the glorious King Iames in that forementioned Proclamation to assert That such is the unquietnesse and unstedfastnesse of some dispositions effecting every year new formes of things as if they should be followed in their unconstancy would make all actions of State rediculous and contemptible 4. It would never please the party now offended Let their pretences be what they will it is the book in the bulk of it with which they are displeased a forme that hath in it a prayer for a Bishop will never be digested by many except they be of that society or dignity themselves if they should be quiet this s●ring yet next curow time they would be mad again and the alteration will not please them except it be altered into a Directory and that will not please the people neither so that no satisfaction peace quiet or content can be rationally hoped for therefore it were best to let Common-prayer live as it doth and and remaine as it was brought by law unto us since the alteration will never make us more quiet in matters of religion but the worse