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A26879 The catechizing of families a teacher of housholders how to teach their housholds : useful also to school-masters and tutors of youth : for those that are past the common small chatechisms [sic], and would grow to a more rooted faith, and to the fuller understanding of all that is commonly needful to a safe, holy comfortable and profitable life / written by Richard Baxter ... Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1683 (1683) Wing B1205; ESTC R22783 252,758 464

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it is a Contradiction The same would be both perfect and imperfect Perfect because he is of himself Eternally without a cause and so dependent upon none And yet Imperfect because he hath but a Part of that Being that is said to be perfect For many are more than One and all make up the absolute perfect being and One of them is but a Part of all And to be a Part is to be Imperfect However many subordinate Created Spirits may unfitly be called Gods there can be but one uncreated God in the first and proper sence Q. 8. How know you that God is Eternal without Beginning A. Because else there was a time when there was Nothing if there were a time when there was no God And then there never would have been any thing For nothing can make nothing Q. 9. But how can man conceive of an Eternal uncaused Being A. That such a GOD there is is the most certain easie Truth and that he hath all the Perfection before described But neither Man nor Angel can know him Comprehensively Q. 10. What mean you by his Infiniteness A. That his Being and Perfection have no limits or measure but incomprehensibly comprehend all Place and Beings Q. 11. What is this GOD to us A. He is our Maker and therefore our absolute Owner our Supream Ruler and our Chief Benefactor and Ultimate End Q. 12. And how stand we related to him what duty do we owe him and what may we expect from him A. We are his Creatures and all that we are and have is of him we are his Subjects made with Life Reason and Free-will to be ruled by him He is the Infinite Good and Love it self Therefore we owe him perfect Resignation perfect Obedience and perfect Complacency and Love All that we are and all that we have and all that we can doe is due to him in the way of our Obedience to pay which is our own Rectitude and Felicity as it is our Duty But all this you must much better learn from his Word than Nature alone can teach it you Though Mans Nature and the frame of Nature about us so fully proveth what I have said as leaveth all the Ungodly without excuse CHAP. IV. Of Gods Kingdom and Government of Man and Providence Q. 1. I Perceive that nothing more concerneth us than to know GOD and our Relation and Duty to him and what hope we have from him Therefore I pray you open it to me more fully And first tell me Where God is A. GOD being Infinite is not confined in any Place but all Place and things are in GOD and he is absent from none but as near to every thing as it is to it self Q. 2. Why then do you say that he is in Heaven if he be as much on Earth and every where A. GOD is not more or less in one place than another in his Being but he is apparent and known to us by his Working and so we say He is in Heaven as he there Worketh and Shineth forth to the most blessed Creatures in Heavenly Glory As we say the Sun is where it shineth Or to use a more apt Comparison the Soul of Man is indivisibly in the whole Body but it doth not Work in all parts alike it understandeth not in the Foot but in the Head it Seeth not Heareth not Tasteth not and smelleth not in the Fingers or lower parts but in the Eye the Ear and other Senses in the Head and therefore when we talk to a man it is his Soul that we talk to and not his Flesh and yet we look him in the Face not as if the Soul were no where but in the Face or Head but because it only worketh and appeareth there by those Senses and that Understanding which we Converse with Even so we look up to Heaven when we speak to God not as if he were no where else but because Heaven is the place of his glorious Appearing and Operation and as the Head and Face of the World where all true Glory and Felicity is and from whence it descendeth to this Earth as the Beams of the Sun do from its glorious Center Q. 3. You begin to make me think that GOD is the SOUL of the WORLD and that we must conceive of him in the World as we do of the Soul of Man in his Body A. You cannot better Conceive of GOD so you will but take in the points of Difference which are very great for no Creature known to us doth resemble God without vast Difference The Differences are such as these First The Soul is part of the Man but God is not a part of the World or of Being For to be a part is to be less than the whole and so to be Imperfect Secondly We cannot say that the Soul is any where out of the Body but the World is Finite and God is Infinite and therefore God is not Confined to the World 3. The Soul ruleth not a Body that hath a distinct Understanding and Free Will of its own to receive its Laws and therefore ruleth it not by proper Law but by despotical Motion But God ruleth men that have Understanding and Free Will of their own to know and receive his Laws and therefore he ruleth them partly by a Law 4. The Soul doth not use another Soul under it to rule the Body but GOD maketh use of Superiour Spirits to move and rule things and Persons below them so that there is great difference between Gods ruling the World and the Souls ruling the Body But yet there is great likeness also 1. God is as near every part of the World as the Soul is near the Body 2. God is as truely and fully the Cause of all the Actions and Changes of the World except sin which Free Will left to it self committeth as the Soul is the Cause of the Actions and Changes of the Body 3. The Body is no more lifeless without the Soul than the World would be without God Yea God giveth all its Being to the World and without him it would be nothing and in this he further differeth from the Soul which giveth not material being to the Body So that you may well conceive of GOD as the SOUL of the World so you will but put in that he is far more Q. 4. Is it not below God to concern himself with these lower things Doth he not leave them to those that are under him A. It is below God to be unconcerned about any part even the least of his own works Men are narrow Creatures and can be but in one place at once and therefore must do that by others which they cannot do themselves at least without trouble But God is infinite and present with all Creatures and as nothing is in being without him so nothing can move without him Q. 5. By this you make God to do all things Immediately whereas we see he works by means and second causes He giveth
ultimate End Our Natures being maintained and our sin and punishment forgiven we next need deliverance from all Evils that we are in danger of for the time to come and then we are saved Q. 2. What is meant by Temptation A. Any such Tryal as may overcome us or hurt us whether by Satan or by the strong allurements of the World and Flesh or by Persecutions or other heavy Sufferings which may draw us to sin or make us miserable Q. 3. Doth God lead any into Temptation A. 1. God placeth us in this World in the mids● of Tryals making it our duty to resist and overcome 2. God permitteth the Devil by his suggestions and by the World and Flesh to tempt us 3. God tryeth us himself by manifold afflictions and by permitting the Temptations of Persecutors and Oppressors Q. 4. Why will God do and permit all this A. It is a Question unmeet for Man to put It is bu● to ask him Why he would make a rank of reasonabl● Creatures below confirmed Angels And why he would make Man with free will And why he will not give us the Prize without the Race and the Crown without the Warfare and Victory And you may next ask Why he did not make every Star a Sun and every Man an Angel and every Beast and Vermine a Man and every Stone a Diamond Q. 5. Doth God Tempt a Man to sin A. No Sin is none of God's End or Desire Satan tempts Men to Sin and God tempteth Men to trie them whether they will sin or be faithful to him to exercise their Grace and Victory Q. 6. Is it all that we need that God lead us not into Temptation A. The meaning is that God who over-ruleth all things will neither himself trie us beyond the strength which he will give us nor permit Satan Men or Flesh to over-tempt us unto sin Q. 7. But are we not sure that this Life will be a Life of Trial and Temptation and that we must pass through many Tribulations A. Yes But we pray that they may not be too strong and prevalent to overcome us when we should overcome Q. 8. What be the Temptations of Satan which we pray against A. They are of so many sorts that I must not here be so large as to number them You may see a great number with the Remedies named in my Christian Directory But in general they are those by which he deceiveth the Understanding perverteth the Will and corrupteth our Practice and this about our state of Soul or about our particular actions to draw us to sins of Commission or of Omission against God our selves or others The particulars are innumerable Q. 9. What is the Evil that we pray to be delivered from A. The evil of sin and Misery and from Satan our selves and Men and all hurtful Creatures as the Causes Q. 10. What is the reason of of the Connexion of the two parts of this Petition Lead us not into Temptation but deliver us from Evil A. Temptation is the means of sin and sin the cause of misery And they that would be delivered from sin must pray and labour to be delivered from Temptation And they that would be delivered from misery must be delivered from sin Q. 11. May not a tempted Man be delivered from Sin A. Yes when the Temptation is not chosen by him and cannot be avoided and when it is not too strong for him grace assisting him Q. 12. What duty doth this Petition oblige us to and what sin doth it reprehend A. 1. It binds us to a continual humble sense of our own corrupt dispositions apt to yield to Temptations and of our danger and of the evil of Sin And it condemneth the unhumbled that know not or fear not their pravity or danger 2. It binds us all to fly from Temptations as far as Lawfully we can and condemneth them that rush fearlesly on them yea that tempt themselves and others The best Man is not safe that will not avoid such Temptations as are suited to his corrupt Nature when he may While the bait is still near unto his Senses he is in continual danger 3. It binds us to feel the need of Grace and God's deliverance and not to trust our corrupted Nature and insufficient strength Q. 13. How doth God deliver us from Evil A. 1. By keeping us from over strong Temptation 2. By his assisting Grace 3. By restraining Satan and wicked Men and all things that would hurt us and by his merciful Providence directing preserving and delivering us from sin and misery CHAP. XXXI For thine is the Kingdom the Power and the Glory for ever Amen Qu. 1. WHat is the meaning of this Conclusion and it's Scope A. It is a form of Praise to God and helps to our Belief of the hearing of our Prayers Q. 2. Why is it put last A. Because the Praise of God is the highest step next Heaven a Q. 3. What is the meaning of Kingdom Power and Glory here A. By Kingdom is meant that it belongeth only to God to Rule all the Creatures dispose of all things and by Power is meant that by his Infinite Perfection and Sufficiency he can do it And therefore can give us all that we want and deliver us from all that we fear And by Glory is meant that all things shall be ordered so as the Glory of all his own Perfections shall finally and everlastingly shine forth in all And his Glory be the End of all for ever Q. 4. What is the reason of the Order of these three here A. I told you that the last part ascendeth from the lowest to the highest Step God's Actual Government is the cause of our deliverances and welfare God's Power and Perfection is it that manageth that Government God's Glory shining in the perfected form of the Universe and specially in Heaven is the ultimate End of all Q. 5. But it seems there is no Confession of Sin or Thanksgiving in this Form of Prayer A. It is the Symbol or Directory to the wills Desire And when we know what we should desire it is implyed that we know what we want and what we shall bewail and what we should be thankful for And Praise includeth our Thanksgiving Q. 6. Why say we for ever A. For our Comfort and God's honour expressing the Everlastingness of his Kingdom Power and Glory Q. 7. Why say we Amen A. To express both our Desire and our Faith and Hope that God will hear the Desires which his Spirit giveth us through the Mediation of Iesus Christ. CHAP. XXXII Of the Ten Commandements in General Qu. 1. ARE the Ten Commandements a Law to Christians Or are they abrogated with the rest of Moses Law A. The Ten Commandements are considerable in three States 1. As part of the Primitive Law of Nature 2. As the Law given by Moses for the peculiar Government of the Iews Common-wealth 3. As the
And that we gather one thing from another and that we Love Good and Hate Evil and Choose Refuse and Do accordingly Q. 5. What do you next know of your selves A. When we perceive that we See Feel c. and Think Love Hate c. we know that we have a Power of Soul to do all this for no one doth that which he is not made able to do Q. 6. And what do you next know of your self A. When I know what I Do and that I can do it I know next that I am a Substance endued with this Power for nothing hath no Power nor Act it can do nothing Q. 7. What know you next of your self A. I know that this Substance which Thinketh Understandeth and Willeth is an unseen Substance for neither I nor any mortal Man seeth it and that is it which is called a Spirit Q. 8. What next perceive you of your self A. I Perceive that in this one Substance there is a Threefold Power marvellously but One and yet Three as Named from the Objects and Effects that is 1. A Power of meer Growing motion common to Plants 2. A Power of Sense common to Beasts 3. And a Power of Understanding and Reason about things above Sense proper to a Man three Powers in one spiritual Substance Q. 9. What else do you find in your self A. I find that my spiritual Substance as Intellectual hath also a Threefold Power in one that is 1. Intellectual Life by which I move and act my faculties and execute my purposes 2. Understanding 3. And Will and that these are marvellously diverse and yet one Q. 10. What else find you by your self A. I find that this unseen Spirit is here United to a humane Body and is in Love with it and careth for it and is much limited by it in its Perceivings Willings and Workings and so that a Man is an Incorporate Understanding Spirit or a humane Soul and Body Q. 11. What else perceive you by your self A. I perceive that my higher Powers are given me to rule the lower my Reason to rule my Senses and Appetite my Soul to rule and use my Body as Man is made to rule the Beasts Q. 12. What know you of your self as related to others A. I see that I am a Member of the World of Mankind and that others are better than I and multitudes better than one and that the Welfare of Mankind depends much on their Duty to one another and therefore that I should Love all according to their worth and faithfully endeavour the good of all Q. 13. What else know you of your self A. I know that I made not my self and maintain not my self in Life and Safety and therefore that another made me and maintaineth me and I know that I must Die by the Separation of my Soul and Body Q. 14. And can we tell what then becomes of the Soul A. I am now to tell you but how much of it our Nature tells us the rest I shall tell you afterward we may know 1. That the Soul being a Substance in the Body will be a Substance out of it unless God should destroy it which we have no cause to think he will 2. That Life Understanding and Will being its very Nature it will be the same after Death and not a thing of some other kind 3. That the Soul being naturally Active and the World full of Objects it will not be a sleepy or unactive thing 4. That its Nature here being to mind its Interest in another Life by Hopes or Fears of what will follow God made not its Nature such in vain and therefore that Good or Evil in the Life that 's next will be the Lot of all CHAP. III. Of the Natural Knowledge of GOD and Heaven Qu. 1. YOu have told me how we know the things which we see and feel without us and within us But how can we know any things which we neither see nor feel but are quite above us A. By certain Effects and Signs which notifie them How little else did man differ from a Beast if he knew no more than he seeth and feeleth Besides what we know from others that have seen you see not now that the Sun will rise to morrow or that Man must die you see not Italy Spain France You see no mans Soul And yet we certainly know that such things are and will be Q. 2. How know you that there is any thing above us but what we see A. 1. We see such things done here on Earth which nothing doth or can do which is seen What thing that is seen can give all Men and Beasts their life and sense and safety and so marvellously form the bodies of all and govern all the matters of the World 2. We see that the spaces above us where Sun Moon and Stars are are so vast that all this Earth is not so much to them as one Inch is to all this Land And we see that the Regions above us excel in the glory of purity and splendor And when this dark spot of Earth hath so many millions of Men can we doubt whether those vast and glorious parts are better inhabited 3. And we find that the grossest things are the basest and the most invisible the most Powerful and Noble as our Souls are above our Bodies And therefore the most vast and Glorious Worlds above us must have the most invisible powerful noble inhabitants Q. 3. But how know you what those Spirits above us are A. 1. We partly know what they are by what they do with us on Earth 2. We know much what they are by the Knowledge of our selves If our Souls are Invisible Spirits essentiated by the Power of Life Understanding and Will the Spirits above us can be no less but either such or more excellent And he that made us must needs be more excellent than his work Q. 4. How know you who made us A. He that made all things must needs be our Maker that is GOD Q. 5. What mean you by God And what is He A. I mean The Eternal Infinite Glorious Spirit and Life most Perfect in Active Power Understanding and Will Of whom and by whom and to whom are all things being the Creator Governour and End of all This is that God whom All things do declare Q. 6. How know you that there is such a God A. By his works And I shall afterwards tell it you more fully by his Word Man did not make himself Beasts Birds Fishes Trees and Plants make not themselves The Earth and Water and Air made not themselves And if the Souls of men have a maker the Spirits next above them must have a Maker and so on till you come to a first Cause that was made by none There must be a first Cause and there can be but one Q. 7. Why may there not be many Gods or Spirits that were made by none but are Eternally of themselves A. Because
and should he command the Children to use the contrary it is all Null and powerless But it belongeth to the Magistrate only though not to destroy any of the three former Governments which are all before his in Nature and Time yet to Govern them all by directing the exercise of them in lawful things to the common good Q. 16. How far doth the Law of Nature assure us of Gods rewards and punishments A. As it assureth us that perfect man owed God perfect Obedience Trust and Love so it certifieth us 1. That this performed must needs be acceptable to God and tend to the felicity of the Subject seeing Gods Love is our Felicity 2. And that sinning against Gods Law deserveth Punishment 3. And that Governing Justice must make such a difference between the obedient and the sinner as the Ends of Government require 4. And seeing that before mans obedience or sin God made mans Soul of a Nature not tending to its own mortality we have cause to expect that mans Rewards and Punishments should be suitable to such immortal Souls For though he can make Bruits immortal and can annihilate mans Soul or any Creature yet we see that he keeps so close to his Natural Establishments that we have no reason to think that he will cross them here and annihilate Souls to shorten their Rewards or Punishments Q. 17. But doth Nature tell us what kind of Rewards and Punishments men have A. The Faculties of the Soul being made in their Nature to know God in our degree to Love him to please him and to rest and rejoice herein and this in the society of wise and good and blessed joyful fellow Creatures whom also our Nature is made to Love it followeth that the Perfection of this Nature in these Inclinations and Actions is that which God did make our Natures for to be obtained by the obeying of his Laws And sin being the Injurious contempt and forsaking of God and the most hurtful malady of the Soul and of Societies and to others it followeth that those that have finally forsaken God be without the happiness of his Love and Glory and under the sence of their sin and his displeasure and that their own sin will be their misery as diseases are to the Body and that the Societies and Persons that by sin they injured or infected will somewhat contribute to their punishment Happiness to the good and Misery to the bad the Light and Law of Nature teacheth man to expect But all that I have taught you is much more surely and fully known by Supernatural Revelation CHAP. VI. Of Supernatural Revelation of Gods Will to Man and of the Holy Scriptures or Bible Q. 1. VVHat do you call Supernatural Revelation A. All that Revelation of Gods mind to man which is made by him extraordinarily above what the common works of Nature do make known Though perhaps God may use in it some Natural second Causes in a way unknown to us Q. 2. How many wayes hath God thus Revealed his will to man A. Many wayes 1. By some Voice and Signs of his presence which we do not well know what Creature he used to it whether Angels or only at present caused that Voice and Glory So he spake to Adam and Eve and the Serpent and to Moses in the Mount and Tabernacle and in the cleft of the Rock Exod. 34. And to Abraham Iacob c. 2. By Angels certainly appearing as sent from God and so he spake to Abraham Isaac Iacob Lot Moses and to very many 3. By Visions and Dreams in their Sleep extraordinary 4. By the Vision of some Signs from Heaven in their waking As Saul Act. 9. saw the Light that cast him down 5. By Visions and Voices in an extasie As Paul saw Paradise and heard unutterable things whether in the Body or out of the Body he knew not And its like in such a rapture Daniel and Iohn had their Revelations 6. By Christs own Voice as he spake to men on Earth and Paul from Heaven 7. By the sight of Christ and Glory as Stephen saw him 8. By immediate Inspiration to the minds of Prophets 9. By these Prophets sent as Messengers to others 10. By certain uncontrolled Miracles 11. By a convincing course of extraordinary works of Gods Providence As when an Angel killed the Armies of Enemies or when they kill'd one another in one night or day c. 12. By extraordinary works of God on the Souls of men As when he suddenly overcometh the strongest vicious habits and customs and maketh multitudes new and holy persons by such improbable but assigned means by which he promised to do it Q. 3. These are all excellent things if we were sure that they were not deceived nor did deceive But how shall we be sure of that A. It s one thing to ask How they themselves were sure that they were not deceived and another thing to ask How we are or others may be sure of it As to the first they were sure as men are of other things which they see hear feel and think I am sure by sense and intellectual Preception that I see the light that I hear feel think c. The Revelation cometh to the person in its own convincing Evidence as Light doth to the Eye Q. 4. They know what they see hear feel but how were they sure that it was of God and not by some deceiving Cause A. 1. God himself gave them the Evidence of this also in the Revelation that it was from him and no deceit But it is no more possible for any of us that never had such a Revelation our selves to know sensibly and formally what it is and how they knew it than it is for a man born blind to know how other men see or what seeing is 2. But moreover they also were sure that it was of God by the proofs by which they make us sure of it And this leads us up to the other question Q. 5. And a question of unspeakable moment it is How we can be sure of such prophetical Revelations delivered to us by others viz That they were not deceived nor deceive us A. It is of exceeding consequence indeed and therefore deserveth to be understandingly considered and handled And here you must first consider the difference of Revelation Some were but made or sent by Prophets to some particular Persons about a personal particular business as to Abraham that he should have a Son that Sodom should be burnt to David that his Son should be his punishment his child die to Hezekiah that he should recover c. These none were bound to know and believe but the persons concerned to whom they were revealed and sent Till they were made publick afterwards But some Revelations were made for whole Countreys and some for all the World and that as Gods Laws or Covenants which Life and Death dependeth on And these must be accordingly made known
Christ wrought his Miracles and rose again and that the Apostles by the Holy Spirit did work theirs and that Believers received the Spirit by their Ministry 2. They had not been made Christians but by these Miracles They all professed that it was the Gifts of the Spirit that Convinced and Converted them 3. All the forementioned Professions of their Christianity contained a Profession that they believed these Miracles As the use of the Lords day Baptism the Eucharist shewed their Belief of Christs Life Death and Resurrection 4. They suffered Persecution and Martyrdom in the Profession of that Belief 5. They pleaded these Miracles in all their Defences against their Adversaries 6. The Writings of their Adversaries commonly acknowledge this Plea yea and deny not the most of the Miracles themselves 7. But most fully their receiving the Sacred Scriptures as the Word of God as indited by the Holy Ghost in the Apostles sheweth that they believed the Miracles recorded in that Book Q. 25. You are come up to the last part of the Doubt in the History How are we sure that these Christians then commonly believed the Book as now we have it and that it is the very same A. We have for this full infallible historical Proof premising that some parcels of the Book the Revelations the Epistle of Iude the Second of Peter the Epistle to the Hebrews and that of Iames were longer unknown to some particular Churches than the rest 1. The constancy of Christian Assemblies and publick Worship is a full proof seeing that the Reading Expounding and applying of these Books was a great part of their publick work as all History of Friends and Enemies agree 2. The very Office of the Ministry is full proof which lay most in reading expounding and applying these same Books And therefore they were as much by Office concerned to keep them as Judges and Lawyers are to keep the Statute-book 3. These Ministers and Churches which so used this Book were dispersed over a great part of the World If therefore they had changed it by adding or diminishing they must have done it by Confederacy or by single mens errour or abuse It was impossible that all Countreys should agree in such a Confederacy but the meeting motives and treaties would have been known But no History of Friend or Foe hath any such thing but the clean contrary And that it should be done by all single Persons in the Christian World agreeing by chance in the same Changes is a m●d supposition 4. And it is the belief of all Christians that it ●s a damnable Sin to add or alter in this Book And the Book it self so concludeth Therefore if ●ome had agreed so to do the rest would have detected and decryed it 5. They took this Book ●o be the Charter for their Salvation And therefore would never agree to alter it when Men keep the Deeds Evidences Leases and Charters of their Estates and Worldly Priviledges unaltered 6. When a few Hereticks rose up that forged some new Books as Apostolical and rejected some that were such indeed the Christian Churches condemned and rejected them and appealed to the Churches that had received the Apostles own Epistles and kept them 7. The many Heresies that rose up did so divide Men and set them in cross Interests and Jealousies against each other that it was impossible for any one Sect to have altered the Scripture but the rest would have fallen upon them with the loudest Accusations But all sorts of Adversaries are agreed that these are the same Books And though the weakness and negligence of Scribes have made many little Words uncertain for God promised not infallibility to every Scribe or Printer yet these are not such as alter any Article of Faith or Practice but shew that no Corruption hath been designedly made but that the Book is the same For instance Let it be questioned Whether our Statute-Book contained really the same Statutes that are there pretended And you will see that the Historical certainty amounteth even to a natural certainty the contrary being a meer impossibility For 1. They are the Kings Laws and the King would not bear a fraudulent alteration 2. Parliaments would not bear it 3. Judges that successively judge by these Laws would soon discover it 4. So would all Justices and Magistrates 5. Mens Lives and Estates are held by them and therefore Multitudes would decry the Fraud 6. Enemies have daily Suits which are tryed by these Laws and each Party pleads them for himself and their Advocates and Lawyers plead them against each other and would soon detect the Forgery So that to suppose such a Change is 1. To suppose an Effect that hath no Cause in Nature 2. And that is against a stream of Causes Moral and Natural and so impossible And to ●eign such forgeries in the Book that all Christians have taken for Gods Laws is just such another Case and somewhat beyond it That is but Moral Evidence which dependeth only on Mens Honesty or any free unnecessary acts of Mans will But Mans will hath also of Natural Necessity such as the Love of our selves and our felicity c. And it is a Natural Impossibility that all Men or many should agree in a Lie which is against these Acts of Natural necessity But so they must do if all Men of cross Interests Principles and Dispositions should knowingly agree c. g. That all our Statutes are counterseit that there is no such place as Rome Paris or other such l●●s And so the Gospel History hath such Testimony of necessary Truth Q. 26. You have made the Case plainer to me than I thought it had been But you yet seem to intimate that some Words yea some Books of Scripture have not the same Evidence a● the rest can a man be saved that Believeth not all the Scripture A. All Truth is equally True and so is all Gods Word But all is not equally Evident He that taketh any Word to be Gods Word and yet to be false believeth nothing as Gods Word For he hath not the ●ormal essentiating Act and Object of Faith If God could lie we had no certainty of Faith But he that erroneously thinketh that this or that word yea Epistle or Text or Book in the Bible is not Gods but came in by mistake may be saved if he believe that which containeth the Essentials of Christianity A lame Faith may be a saving Faith And he may see how Miracles sealed the Gospel that cannot see how they sealed every Book Text or Word in the Bible Q. 27. Though we have been long on this it is of so great importance to us living or dying to be sure of the Foundations of our Faith that I will yet ask you Have you any more Proof A. I have told you of four Proofs already I. The Antecedent Testimony of the Spirit in the Old Testament II. The Inherent Constitutive Testimony in Christ and the Gospel III. The concomitant Testimony
Qu. 1. WHy is there nothing said in the Creed 1. Of Christ's overcoming the Temptations of the Devil and the World 2. Or of his fulfilling the Law his perfect Holiness Obedience and Righteousness 3. Nor of his Miracles A. 1. You must know that the Creed at first when Christ made it the Symbol of Christianity had but the three Baptismal Articles to be Baptized into the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost 2. And that the rest were added for the Exposition of these three 3. And that the Errors that rose up occasioned the additions Some denyed Christ's real Humanity and some his Death and said that it was another in his Shape that dyed and this occasioned these Expository Articles 4. But the Apostles and other Preachers expounded more to those whom they Ca●echized than is put into the Creed and more is implyed in that which is expressed And had any Hereticks then denyed Christ's perfect Righteousness and Victory in Temptation it 's like it would have occasioned an Article for these 5. But Christ would not have his Apostles put more into the Creed than was needful to be a part of the Test of Christianity And he that understandingly consentingly and practically believeth in God the Father Son and Holy Ghost shall be saved 6. And as to Christ's Miracles yea and his Holiness they are contained in the true meaning of Believing in the Holy Ghost as I shall after shew Q. 2. But why is none of Christ's Sufferings mentioned before that of his being Crucified A. This which is the consummation implyeth the humilation of all his Life his mean Birth and Education his mean estate in the World his Temptations Accusations Reproaches Buffeting Scourging his Agony his Betraying his Condemnation as a Malefactor by false Witness and the Peoples Clamour and the Rulers Malice and Injustice his whole Life was a state of humiliation ●inished in his Crucifixion Death and Burial Q. 3. What made the Jews so to hate and Crucifie him A. Partly a base fear of Caesar lest he should destroy them in jealousie of Iesus as a King And having long revolted from sincerity in Religion and become Ceremonious Hypocrites God left them to the blindness and hardness of their Hearts resolving to use them for the Sacrificing of Christ the Redemption of the World and the great enlargement of his Church Q. 4. Why is Pontius Pilate named in the Creed A. Historically to keep the remembrance of the time when Christ suffered and to leave a just shame on the Name of an unjust Judge Q. 5. Why was Crucifying the manner of Christ's death A. 1. It was the Romans manner of putting vile Malefactors to death 2. And it was a death especially cursed by God and Christ foretold it of himself Q. 6. Was it only Christs Body that suffered or also his Soul and Godhead A. The Godhead could not suffer but he that was God suffered in Body and in Soul Q. 7. What did Christs Soul suffer A. It suffered not by any sinful Passion but by Natural Lawful fear of what he was to undergo and feeling of pain and specially of God's just displeasure with Mans sin for which he suffered which God did express by such with-holdings of Joy and by such inward deep sense of his punishing Justice as belonged to one that consented to stand in the place of so many sinners and to suffer so much in their stead Q. 8. Did Christ suffer the pains of Hell which the Damned suffer A. The pains of Hell are Gods just punishment of Man for sin and so were Christs sufferings upon his consent But 1. The Damned in Hell are hated of God and so was not Christ. 2. They are forsaken of Gods holy Spirit and Grace and so was not Christ. 3. They are under the Power of Sin and so was not Christ. 4. They hate God and Holiness and so did not Christ. 5. They are tormented by the Conscience of their Personal guilt and so was not Christ Christs Sufferings and the Damned's vastly differ Q. 9. Why must Christ suffer what he did A. 1. To be an Explatory Sacrifice for sin God thought it not meet as he was the just and holy Ruler of the World to forgive sin without such a Demonstration of his Holiness and Justice as might serve as well to the Ends of his Government as if the Sinners had suffered themselves 2. And he suffered to teach Man what sin deserveth and what a God we serve and that we owe him the most costly obedience even to the death and that this Body Life and World are to be denyed contemned and forsaken for the sake of Souls and of Life Everlasting and of God when he requireth it The Cross of Christ is much of the Christians Book Q. 10. What sorts of Sin did Christ die for A. For all sorts except Mens not performing those Conditions which he requireth of all that he will pardon and save Q. 11. For whose sins did Christ Suffer A. All Mens sins were instead of a meritorious cause of Christ's Sufferings he suffered for Mankind as the Saviour of the World And as to the Effect his Suffering purchased a conditional Gift of free pardon and life to all that will believingly accept it according to the nature of the things given But it was the will of the Father and the Son not to leave his death to uncertain success but infallibly to cause the Elect to believe and be saved Q. 12. Was it just with God to punish the Innocent A. Yes when it was Christs own undertaking by consent to stand as a Sufferer in the room of the guilty Q. 13. How far were our sins imputed to Christ A. So far as that his consent made it just that he suffered for them He is said to be made sin for us who knew no sin which is to be made a Curse or Sacrifice for our sin But God never took him to be really or in his esteem a sinner He took not our fault to become his fault but only the punishment for our faults to be due to him Else sin it self had been made his own and he had been relatively and properly a Sinner and God must have hated him as such and he must have dyed for his own Sin when ours was made his own But none of this is to be imagined Q. 14. How far are Christ's Sufferings imputed t● us A. So far as that we are reputed to be justy forgiven and saved by his Grace because he made an expiation by his Sacrifice for our Sins But not so as i● God mistook us to have suffered in Christ or tha● he or his Law did judge that we our selves have made satisfaction or expiation by Christ. Q. 15. Was not that penal Law In the day tha● thou eatest thereof thou shalt die and The Soul that sinneth shall die fulfilled by execution for us all in Christ and now justifieth us as
more on himself than on them And indeed Childrens or mens obedience to others is but an act of self-government It is a mans self-governing Reason and Will which causeth him to obey another nor can a Child perform any act of proper obedience differing from a Brutes unless by a self-governing act But Parents Government is the next to Self-government and the Government of Husbands Princes and Masters which are by Contract is next to that Every Subject therefore being first a Subject of God and next a self-governour is to obey as a reasonable Creature and to understand what is his duty and what not And because all is our duty which God commandeth but not all that man Commandeth Gods power being Absolute and all mens limited therefore we have nothing to do with the Laws of God but to know them and Love them and obey them But as to mans Commands we must know also that they are not contrary to Gods Laws and that they belong to the Office of the Commander If a Parent or Prince command you to blaspheme God or Worship Idols or deny Christ or renounce Heaven or not to pray c. you must obey God by disobeying him And if a King Command you not to obey your Parents or will choose for you your Wife your Dyet your Physick the words you shall say to God in your secret Prayers c. these are things which belong not to his Office no more than to a Captains to become Judge of the Common-pleas Subjects therefore must judge what they must or must not obey as Rulers must judge what they must or must not Command or else they act not as men Q. 9. But what Confusion will this Cause if every Subject and Child become judge whether their Princes or Parents Commands be lawful Will they not take all for unlawful which their folly or Corrupt wills dislike and so cast off all obedience A. It is not finding inconveniencies in the miserable state of lapsed Mankind that will cure them Were there any avoiding Errour Sin and Confusion by Government some would have found out the way before now But while man is bad he will do accordingly In avoiding these evils we must not run into far greater Are they not Greater if men must not discern who is their lawful Governour but must fight for an Usurper in Power against his Prince or Parents if Commanded by him And if every Child and Subject must renounce God Christ and Heaven that is Commanded and men become Gods and Antigods Q. 10. But is there no remedy against both these Confusions A. Yes the remedies are these 1. Rulers that should have most reason must give us the first remedy by knowing Gods Laws and taking care that they Command and forbid nothing contrary to them and not put on Subjects a necessity of disobeying them 2. Children and Subjects must be instructed also to know the Laws of God that they may not take that for his Law which is not It is not keeping them ignorant of Gods Laws lest they pretend them against the Laws of man that is the way no more than keeping them ignorant that there is a God lest they obey him against man 3. They must be taught betime the difference between the capacity of Children and of men at age and of young unfurnished wits and those that Study and Experience have ripened and they must be taught the duty of self-suspicion humility and submission and that as Learning is necessary to knowing so believing our Teachers with a humane belief is necessary to Learning of them Who can learn that will believe nothing which his Teacher saith But this is not taking him for Infallible nor resolving only to be ruled still by his knowledge but in order to Learn the same Evidence of Truth which our Teachers themselves discern it by 4. They must be taught to know that if they mistake Gods Laws and erroneously pretend them against their Rulers their errour and abuse of the Name of God is their sin and will not excuse their disobedience And therefore they must try well before they disobey 5. All the Churches near them should agree publickly of all the necessary Articles of Divine Faith and Obedience that the authority of their Concord may be some awe to the minds both of Commanders and Obeyers 6. Rulers are not to suspend the executive part of their Government upon every Consciencious errour of the Child or Subject If they will pretend Gods Law for intolerable sin or injury they must nevertheless be restrained by punishment 7. But lastly the Conscience of Subjects duty to God must be tenderly used and encouraged and their mistakes through infirmity must be tolerated in all tolerable cases Some differences and disorders in judgement and practice must be born with by them that would not bring in greater Gentle reasoning and Loving usage must cure as much of the rest as will be cured And our Concord must be placed in the few plain and necessary things The King hath more wit and clemency than to hang all ignorant erroneous faulty Subjects or else he would have none left to Govern And if Pastors have not more wit and clemency than to excommunicate all such they will be no Pastors as having no flocks But hainous is their sin that can tolerate multitudes of the ignorant and ungodly in their Communion who will but be for their power and wealth and can tolerate none of the Wise and Conscionable if they do but differ from them in tolerable cases or dislike them Yet there goeth more to make a tolerable Christian and Church-member than a tolerable Subject And consent to the Relation is necessary to both Q. 11. What duty doth the Word Honour contain and Command A. 1. The first and chief act of Honouring them is to acknowledge their Relation to God as his appointed Officers and the Authority which God hath given them that they may be obeyed reverently and God in them 2. The next is to take all their Laws and Commands which God hath authorized them to make to be the Rule of our duty in subordination to Gods Laws and so far to obey them for Conscience sake believing it a sin to resist or disobey them 3. Another is to maintain them honourably so far as we are able and they need Though parents provide for Children in youth Children must maintain Parents if they need it when they come to age And so must People their Princes and Pastors and pay Tribute to whom it is due 4. Also they ought to speak reverently to them and honourably of them and not use any unjust dishonouring Thoughts Words or Deeds against them specially which would disable them for Government 5. Lastly they ought to do their best to defend them against injuries Q. 12. But seeing Parents are named and not Princes must we defend our Parents against our King if he be their Enemy A. If their Cause be