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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

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Bread grows in and rises out of the Earth so did the body of Christ he brought it not with him from Heaven for it had its Original in the womb of the blessed virgin 2. Bread undergoe● much labour sown dyes quickens reaped threshed winnowed grinded kneaded baked Christ body under-went the like things It was sown in the womb of the Virgin by Devils and wicked men was he continually threshed and winowed he was grinded in the high priests hall knead in his Cross and Passion baked in the Oven of his Sepulchre and then presented upon this table as bread for his people 3. Bread is broken before it can be food for man men cannot eat whole loaves nor whole joynts it must therefore be broken into parts even so must he be broken upon the Cross in satisfying his Fathers justice before he can be compleat or perfectly made the Captain of our salvation 1 Cor. 11.24 not that properly he was broken on the Cross for that the Scripture should be fulfilled a bone of him shall not be broken Iohn 18.36 Ex. 12.46 Breaking is renting one part of a thing from another so was Christ soul rent from his body his blood rent from his flesh he was poured out like water all his bones were out of joynt his heart was like wax melted in the midst of his bowels without question then broken his bones might have been told they looked and stared upon him Psal. 22.14.17 4 ●read is common to all that are about a table none hath a propriety in it every one cuts sufficient for himself unto whom is the merits of the Lord limited have not all Saints since the Creation been feeding upon them and all that now are and all that shall be every one saying My Lord and my God and yet no scarcity nor absolute propriety but a holy Communion this was darkly represented ●y our Saviours birth what house in a City more common then an Inn and what place of an Inn more common then a stable shewing that the fowlest sinner he is ready to embrace cleanse and entertain 5. Bread naturally strengthens mans heart Psal. 104.15 hence it is called the staff of bread Isa 3.2 the main upholder of natural strength without which man would fall unto his first nothing Nothing more strengthens a drooping soul a doubting Christian then the application of the merits of Christ unto its heart by the holy Ghost with a morsel of this bread men may walk many dayes unto the mount of God 6. Bread is necessary for life so necessary that all things conducing to mans life are subordinate to it as the Reader may know by the Lords prayer if he have not forgot it or slights ●t because common Christ in us Our hope of glory is most necessary and as we know without food or bread we cannot live a natural life we ought to know without receiving of this Ordinance we have no ground to imagine that we shall live a spiritual We dayly hear men chiefly ministers complaining of their peoples Apostacy and yet since this Sacrament in its season was not presented to their faith which might be a strong means of confirming it is not to be wondered to see their people faint stagger and all for want of bread Further between the wine the outward sign and the blood of Christ the thing signified stands this proportion 1. Wine is the juice of ●he grape pressed out by the wine press so was Christ blood pressed out by the weights of his Fathers infinite justice Isa. 63.3 2. Wine comforteth the heart of man Psal. 104.15 the blood of Christ drank in faith in large spiritual draughts out of the vessel or chalice of this Ordinance with the mouth of the affections and received into the stomach of meditation will produce holy purposes and give good spirits to the languishing Christian. 3. Wine encourageth and emboldens It raiseth the spirits that are otherwise cast down and makes the Gyant himself to shout at the flight of his enemy it makes a man to forget trouble and sorrow Prov. 31.6 Ecles 19. Christs blood applied to the soul makes it exceeding bold to fight against principalities and powers it makes them that are of a fearful heart be strong saying fea● not Isa. 35.4 and emboldens it to come to the throne of grace Heb. 4.16 It makes the people to clap their hands and shout unto God with the voice of triumph Psal 47.1 4. Wine is of a healing nature Luke 10.34 the Samaritan poured in Wine with Oyle into the wounds of the bleeding traveller the bleeding wounds of an afflicted conscience know that the blood of Christ is of a Soveraign nature to preserve it from dying and yielding up the Ghost Rev. 22.2 From this Doctrine we may draw these inferences 1. When we see bread and wine and feel the comforts of the one and know the necessity of the other to think of Christ and the comforts to be had in his death and the necessity that lyeth upon believers to receive this Ordinance 2. To strive for a spiritual hunger in our approaching to the table of the Lord for otherwise there is no refreshment will be found at the receiving of this spiritual banquet 3. That the Church of Rome by her doctrine of transubstantiation takes away the beauty of this holy Ordinance robbing the people of the cup of the New Testament and by making or teaching that the Accidents of the Elements that is the whitness or roundness of the bread and the colour of the wine to be the sign of the body and blood of the Lord for which cause she is justly condemned by the reformed Churches SECT V THis Ordinance of the Supper is instituted to assure the penitent receiver of the remission of his sins yet all that receive it are not pardoned in regard that some receive it unworthily and their sins are not forgiven justly in as much as the condition upon which the Lord promiseth absolution for his part is not performed upon their part and because of that they are so far from having their soul eased that it is more burthened They being guilty of the body and blood of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.27 by reciving unworthily Now there are three wayes by which men receive unworthily First by not giving due reverence to the mystery in that Sacrament contained Secondly to the ends for which it was appoint●d Thirdly to the Author by whom it was instituted 1. The Ministery in that Sacrament contained As 1. To the crucified body of Christ this presents unto us Christ and him crucifed and the same reverence or respect that we would give to Chr●●● were he visibly present with us we must give unto him represented before us by bread and wine Not that we should give it to the bread and wine but to the Person who is represented to us by them 2. All that God ever did do or that ever he promised to do for the best and dearest of his Saints is
glory of God Iohn his zeal was not zeal but ambition 4. In a found knowledge of things prayed for we must understand what we pray that our zeal may be according to knowledge and our Amen agreeable to religion 5. In a constant making conscience of the duty for Gods glory our own and our neighbours good This grace in prayer is very necessary For 1. It is a servent of zealous Prayer that will avail for any thing Iam. 5.17 2. It is a servent prayer that will only obtaine heaven Mat. 11.12 3. It is by it only that the true Christian can be distinguished from the Hypocrit Math. 23.14 These are the graces that constituts prayer and makes it move toward heaven and indeed without these prayer is no more a prayer then 2 dead coarse is a man these being the very form and inward life of it Read pag. 513. before p. 512 made by him therefore he is great honour by it 1 Cor. 6.20 2. God hath redeemed the body as well as the soul he cures the deseases of the one as well as pardons the sins of the other 3. God will glorify the body as well as the soul. 4. We can only give a good example by the body not by the soul how shall our light shine to others but through the lanthrone of our outward man and where this light appears not It is to be suposed there is no light in them For were they burneing they would also be shineing lights Iohn 5.53 SECT VII Questions Resolved Quest. 1. Whether men by Industry may obtaine a promptnesse in prayer Quest. 2. Whether the wicked be bound to pray Quest. 3. Whether the set forms of prayer used by law in the Church of England be lawfull Quest. 4. Whether there be not vaine repitions in those formes Quest. 5. Whether it would be convenient to altar any part of those formes Quest. 1. Whether men by Industry may obtaine a promptnesse in prayer This question taketh its rise from the practise of those ignorant pretenders to the spirit of prayer whose devotion in a great 2. The external forme which consists in the gestures of the body must be considered God will be worshipped with the whole man that is both soul and body We have them that pretending to inward worship will not give God outward service but we shall find the Saints both in the old and new Testament using their bodies in this duty of prayer both in the generall and some particular parts of it 1. The body in general and that in different gestures as prostration Numb 16.22 Kneeling Acts 20.36 Standing Luk 18.13 Lying Isa. 38.12 a Sitting 2 Sam. 7.18 leaping Act. 3.8 2. We have some particular parts of the body exercised in this ordinance in a particular sort as the head eyes hands mouth or tongue 1. The head and that bowed down 2 Chro. 29.30 noteing the reverence they bore to him in their hearts It is also called a bowing with the face and once was done so low as the very ground of the pavement 2 Chro. 7.3 2. The eyes and they sometimes cast down Luk. 18.13 noteing humility and sometime cast up Iohn 12.41 noteing faith 3. The hands and they spread abroad noteing fulnesse of grief Ezra 9.5 and also fulnesse of joy 1 King 8.22 holding forth anger to throw a way the thing prayed against and a desire to receave the thing prayed for Again the hands are lifted up noteing zeal of Gods glory Psal. 63.4 and sincerity of heart Lam. 3.41 In praying and noteing an appeal to God inswearing Gen. 14.22 Dan. 12.7 further they finite some parts of the body at the breast noteing sorrow Luk. 18.13 as the thigh noteing shame and guilt Iere. 31.19 3. The tongue this needs no proof it is so clear and so commonly known And was there not a cause to use the severall parts of the body in his service did the Saints do this without a reason 1. The body is Gods as well as the soul it is a creature measure consisted in hums and haws way faces and strained words not being prompt in their extemporary deliveries which to a voyd and that the weak Christian may have where with to expresse himself in a prompt and decent manner let him practise those known following rules 1. Be observant of the providences of God to themselves or others that they ether know hear or see this evil befalling now upon such and this good being given to others our own deliverance in such a danger and anothers being left in the same danger will afford abundance of matter in prayer 2. Be studious of the Scriptures of God by observing and heading the promises threatnings and passages therein a great furtherance shall they be to him that intends to go to God by prayer 3. Be often in the pactise of prayer In this use may go a great way and bares a great stroake men that have great parts may lose them by not useing of them and they that have small parts with exercise may abundantly improve them ● Be frequent in examinings the turnings and windings of the heart the vanity and folly and wickednesse that lodge therein will bring in great store of provision to that part of prayer Confession 5. Be strengthening the heart in the doctrine of faith this will make a man bold confident which will also make him prompt and fluent 6. Be studious in reading practical Divinity which treasures the soul with abundance of found knowledge and that affords matter of meditation and that again in prayer is brought forth with abundance of advantage 7. Call upon God for the Spirit of prayer not that I mean thou shouldst desire the spirit imediatly to act upon the heart and mind and then upon the tongue as some fond ones in those dayes for it may be aquestion whether that prayer would be lawfull in regard that whatever is sayd upon that ground is equall to what was delivered by the Apostles and equally binding the whole Church of God and to be a rule and canon of faith to all that hears thee so pray and Indeed some mens zeal in calling up a spirit of prayer gave breath to their Impudence who pretended a spirit of preaching which spread so farre that even womens preaching hath been taught to be as Infallible as St. Pauls and their sayings to be received under the pain of damnation as well as the sayings of our Lord. By the Spirit of prayer therefore we understand two things 1. The spirit of Justification to sprin le the soul of Christ. of sanctification to wash away all uncleannesse called the washing of regeneration Tit. 3.5 which spirit wherever it is is accompained with a desire to pray and disposeth the soul to pray though it were but in groans and wishes Rom. 8.26 and by observeing the rules before given having obtained this gift the soul may not only gro●ne but speake unto God its desires 2. The graces of the spirit or fruits of
are providing our selves to defendin points of grand concernment and as a preliminary discourse to the following truths we shall preface upon that Subject Every Heretick stands confident in his errour and each seducer pleads for a belief of his Doctrine by imposing the name Church upon those whom they have so seduced and made Proselytes to their Hereticall Tenets by which means the glorious Fabtick of the Catholick Church is like a lodge in a Garden of Cucumbers sleighted and disesteemed of many we shall stand therefore a short season upon this holy ground and take a true survey of her large dimensions Da Domine perficere qui dedist● velle For her height or Altitude by the Scripture I see that she is higher then the Heavens her Head who is above all principalities and pow●●s is Christ the Lord. Ephes. 5.23 He is at Gods Right hand and in her affections she is at the same place Col. 3.2 Behold see you her not going up to heaven like Pillars of smo●k leaving the Wildernesse of this World Can. 3.6 Her hasty departure occasion'd betwixt Love and fear longing to be with her beloved and fearing to be devoured by faithlesse and unreasonable men who like Foxes have encompassed her about purposing to tear her in pieces from whom that she may be delivered she assumes the wings of a great Eagle and maketh her nest above the stars For her breadth or Latitude by my Creed I see her of an infinite and inconceiveable extension I believe that the Church is catholick she is as broad as the World as old as the Creation her age you may suppose to be attended with weaknesse but it is not the last visit that Christ her Husband made her renewed her strength like an Eagle so that shee walks and is not weary she runs yet is not faint holds pace with eternity it self Perceive you not Christ the everlasting Son of the father to be the corner stone of this glorious building 1 Pet. 2.6 And untill he cease being it shall never know dilapidations By the same Perspective or Fiduciary Optick Nerve I see her of a comely and beautifull proportion and holy uniformity I believe that the Catholick Church is holy The Kings Daughter is glorious within Christ her Spouse is ravished with the beauty of her eyes Cant. 4 9. Therefore she shall ever be Reverenced in mine He whose eyes are Ten Thousand times brighter then the Sun hath shined upon her garments of wrought Gold and protests that there is no spot in her Cant. 4.7 Let me therefore never cast a blot upon her He that is her Husband hath made her so Ephes. 5.27 Therefore let me that am her son ever hold her so but for the clearer understanding of this matter we shall 1. See the Nature of the Church in Generall 2. Resolve some questions concerning her The nature of the Church of Christ by a due weighing of this description through faith and Scripture may be fully manifested and known It is First The Whole Society or Company of Beleevers 2. Elected and appointed by Gods Eternall decree 3. Called by the Word of the LORD 4. From amongst the rest of Mankind 5. For the bringing of glory to his own Name and giving unto them Eternal lfie In this Description take notice 1. Of the Members of the Church they are the whole Society or Company of Believers in what age soever they lived in what place soever they aboad in however dispersed where everscattered whether far or near old young male female High and Low Rich and Poor All that ever were and all that ever shal be all that ever lived upon the Earth with all that ever dyed in the Womb from Adam the first man that ever was known with and until the last man that shal ever be born makes up this Temple of God and all of them are but severall Members of that body whereof the Lord Jesus is the head 1 Cor. 1.2 Rom. 12.5 2. Of the Causes of the Church and they are either 1. The efficient cause Gods Eternal decree There are none made members of the Church by chance nor by their own care and industry who by taking thought can adde one Cubit to his Stature and he is high with a witnesse who hath his head above the clouds None shall sit in the Kingdome of God but they for whom it is prepared of the Father Matth. 20.23 And it is prepared for them before the Foundation of the World God by his decree must separate Believers from among men or faith shall never purifie the hearts of men and Election must precede Vocation Gal. 1.15 The least blossome of true holinesse will never grow nor never was seen to bloom upon that stem whose root was not Predestination Ephes. 1.4 5. 2. The Instrumentall cause which is their Call by the Word of the Lord this is the means used for the bringing of many Sons and Daughters into glory It is the charge of Almighty God to the Apostles to hear his Son Iohn 17.5 It is the charge of the Son that the Apostles preach to the World Matthew 28.18 19. And by the benediction of the Spirit by that there is added to the Church dayly such as shal be saved Acts 2.47 None shall be glorified but such as are called with a holy calling we must hear the joyfull sound of his Word before we can see the glory of his countenance for whom he glorifieth he justifieth and whom he justifieth them he also calls Rom 8.30 This Call is so necessary to the Churches being that the Greek Word for Church comes from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from their being called and indeed none shall be crowned with the Lamb but such as fight with him and none shall fight under him but such as are called chosen and faithfull Revel 17.14 We have those that pretend a call in this generation but we have cause to suspect it is not by the word of the Lord for if so they would be holy without blame before him in love Ephesians 1.4 They would be full of love were they full of the Spirit and of joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith Galathians 5.22 Bitternesse wrath anger clamor and evill speaking should be far from them with all malice Ephesians 1.31 The word of Christ we are to look after if we seek to obtain glory for that leads unto it Revelations 22.7 And we are to entertain it in our hearts if we would have that to shine upon our heads the same Doctrine is taught us by the Church of England Art 17. Yet we must understand this calling of or by the word to be onely necessary First when God is pleased to give the word Secondly to those persons who are of years wit or discretion to understand the word or Thirdly where God hath given the naturall meanes for the hearing or reading of his word 3. The formal cause remotely described Separated from amongst the rest of mankind by
disagreement we must and ought to agree with the Word in all Circumstances as wel when it frowns as when it smiles It wil never chide without a cause nor reprove but for the souls good reason wil have us neither rage nor murmur Quid ergo non altquando castigatio necessaria Quid ni hoc sincer● cum ratione non enim nocendi c. piety will not suffer us to turn it out of doors When once Ierusalem began to fall out with the Word the day of peace was hid from her eyes and destruction comes like an Armed man If the Word cannot live in peace it wil not live at all it will not always strive with man Bear with its sharpest reproofs therefore take its most plain instructions and contemn not it's frequent admonitions and in the end it shall be health to thy Navel and marrow to thy bones Prov. 3.8 Say ever with Hezekiah 2 Kin. 20.29 Good is the Word of the Lord and peace and truth shall be towards thee all the days of thy life Whate contention is there is pride where pride is there Sathan is and where Sathan is an Inmate Christ nor his Word will not dwell SECTION III. LEt the Word of Christ dwell in you c. This is the third particular above proposed wherein we have the persons in whom our Apostle would have this Word of Christ to dwell which because we shall have occasion to speak largely of it in another place we shall be the briefer here In you that is in you Archippus Chap. 4.17 and Evagras Chap. 1.7 i.e. in you Ministers of the Gospel they being Ministers of Colos. that you may be faithfull Stewards and Ministers of Christ that you may know how to comfort the dejected and strengthen the feeble stock In you Parents that you may bring up your children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. In you Masters that ye may know how to command in the Lord and that you may know how to obey as to the Lord. In you young men that you may cleanse your way In you old men that you may be as Guides In you Husbands that you may love your Wives In you Wives that you may reverence your Husbands In you that is in all you that professe the truth and have been baptized in tye Name of Christ that you may work out your salvation with fear and trembling That you may do all things without murmurings and disputings That ye may be blamelesse and harmlesse the Sons of God without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and perverse Nation Phil. 2.14.15 Looking for that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Iesus Christ Tit. 2.13 SECTION IV. LEt the Word of Christ dwell richly in you c. O 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 copiose abundanter have good store of it let it overflow your souls as Iordan overflowed it's banks in time of Harvest Ios. 3.15 This Word richly imports 1. A diligent care and study after the Scriptures men will take much pains to have their houses richly furnished Nunquam tam mane egredior neque tam vespers domum revert●r quin semper te in fund● conspicer sodere aut errare aut aliquid serre And they will labour hard to increase their substance so men must labour for to obtain the sacred knowledge of the holy Scriptures they must dig for it as for hidden Treasures denoting the labour about it and love they bear unto it Nil tamen difficile c. It may be hard to flesh and blood but remember if any of you lack Wisedome let him ask of God that giveth to all men liberally and it shall be given him Jam. 1.5 and it is true wisedom to know God and him whom he hath sent who is to be found only in in the swaddling cloaths of the Scripture and unto whom we are guided by the light of those Prophesies that went before us of him and he that would take him in his Arms but must take the pains to go into the Temple 2. It holds out abundance of it he is not said to be rich that hath but smal store nor wealthy that hath but wherewithal to supply necessity we must have enough for our selves and our Lanthorn full of light that others may walk holily uprightly and cleanly by our guidance counsell and direction this is not to eat our Morsell alone this makes the mouth of a Righteous Well of Life Prov. 10.11 Where any any that wants refreshment shal not misse of it and none shall go thirste away 3. It holds out some choise portion this is not spoken absolutely but chiefly there is something in it that must be chiefly studied retained he is not said to be rich that hath store of ordinary goods but of some choce Commodity as Plate Mony Jewels which though he look to preserve other things yet chiefly his care is for them there are truths of grand concernment there are foundation stones necessary graces that must be wel laid in the soul that his faith fail not There are some things that Titus must constantly affirm Tit. 3.8 There are weightier matters of the Law these must cheifly be done Mat. 23.23 There are some points that all the Law and Prophets hang upon Mat. 22.40 Temperance Righteousnesse and Judgement to come would be well studied Act. 24.25 when we have studied the Almightinesse of the Father we shall the sooner see how the Son was born of a Virgin I am to study better the cause merit benefit of Christs death then of Stephens The nature of that Covenant that God made to save poor sinners is of greater concernment to me then that that David made with Ionathan concerning his Posterity Now to study well and ponder upon the holynesse graciousnesse and largeness of the nature Covenants and of the mercy of God the Offices sweetnesse of the Lord Christ to know the cause and effect of his first and second coming is of gre●t concernment and he is rich that is wel stored with those great matters yet despiseth not the least 4. A care to preserve and keep it Riches that have been gotten by hard labour are preserved with care and diligence What made men sweat for in the getting they usually observe the profit of it in the spending a bloody Conquest is watchfully looked after whilest an easie victory is secured without noise Where this Word of Christ dwels richly there must be a holy care t● keep it there be thieves that wil endeavour to break through and steal Sathan hath a Picklock to enter the House of the soul of man This made God cause his people to write his Law upon the posts of their house and upon their gates Deut. 6.9 that being constantly in their eye they might not through carelessenesse be debarred the heart The Law is a Tree of life to them that lay hold upon it and by this Word of Christ even with a scriptum est we
the places of publick worship from the dayes of Adam might be called Temples however it is generally used for that glorious structure of the house of the Lord in Ierusalem IV. The Church 1 Cor. 11.22 of which there are two sorts 1. The material Church which is builded with the same matter that other houses are yet distinct from them in regard of the use they are designed for they being made to eat and drink in and what if I said to sleep in these for to worship God Of them the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 11.18 22. 2. There is a spiritual Church which is the whole number of the faithfull souls in general or any holy soul in particular which is a personal Church Of them the Apostle speaks Rom. 16.5 The same distinction is made of Temples 1 Cor. 6.19 Hence it is that those places of publick worship of which we are now speaking may be called a Church or Temple that is material Churches being as the Temple set apart for Gods worship and as it were abiding in them Rev. 1.20 SECT III. We come now to be informed touching the necessi●y of those publick places for Christian worship by which we hold not the inconsistency of a Church without these but the dignity only they are necessary for its honourable being and for decency and order for these reasons 1. From the nature of the precepts there are commands in Scripture for the keeping of a Sabbath for the peoples hearing of the Law for the Prophets teaching and for the peoples gathering together all which in their own nature implie the necessity of having a proper and publick place to do these things in 2. From the practise of all Nations we see no Nation almost throughout the habitable world but hath places set apart for the worship of their false Idol gods and it hath been discovered that the Saints of old had places not to say buildings for they were not from the beginning where they erected Altars and worshipped the Lord and inquired of him touching doubtfull cases Gen. 25.22 shall Christians then be backward and want places of worship for to serve their Lord and Master 3. From the confusion that would upon the want of them ensue if every one might worship God in what place he pleased or every family in what place they pleased We may without the Spirit of Prophecy foresee as by a vision that thereupon would follow nothing but disorder confusion devision sedition destruction and it were to be feared damnation 4. From that ease it gives to Ministers In those places one Sermon may feed five yea ten thousand which could not be done were he to go to every particular company in what place they thought best so he should no where be sure of a Congregation and while he were teaching one the other might be without instruction and he not able through weariness to preach any more some must want which in time would make the people heap to themselves Teachers contrary to the practise of good people and sober Christians 2 Tim. 4.3 5. From that care that it puts upon Ministers These publick places and solemn meetings puts a certain awe upon the Preacher that he dare not utter that but what he is able to defend and what he knows to be truth in regard it cannot be recalled without some stain nor denyed without abundance of sin in regard of the multitude that hears which private meetings and corner-assemblies and brew-house or kitchin Sermons clearly takes away it being possible to preach to recal and deny that to one of them which he uttered in another and to speak truly the Kitchin or Barn is a good shelter both against Ignorance Heresie and Falshood 6. From that honour they bring to religion Is it not more honourable for Christ to be worshipped by his Disciples in large decent comely structures the very walls of which hath a certain holiness in them to put an awful respect into the soul of him that enters to see a number of Christians praising the Lord with one breath in this house then to see the same number meeting in a Washouse Warehouse Backhouse or any other outhouse worshipping God When the Turk hath starely Temples the Jews clean Synagouges to perform that service their ignorance and infidelity leads them to SECT IV. Questions resolved Quest. 1. Whether those places may be consecrated Quest. 2. Whether those places may be termed holy Quest. 3. Whether such places that have been builded by Romanists may be lawfully used by Catholicks Quest. 4. Whether at a Christians Entry into those places he may perform his devotion Quest. 5. Whether it be lawfull to have Musick in Churches now Quest 1. Whether those places may be conscecrated When it is affirmed that Christian Churches may be consecrated or dedicated it is not granted that the Walls of it are to be sprinkled with holy water or that crosses are to be ma●e on the pavement with Salt Ashes Water and Wine mingled together with many other Fopperies used in the Church of Rome But a solemn publick setting apart that building for holy uses and no other by preaching and praying which practise is lawfull 1. From the practice of Salomon and other pious Princes 1 King 8.63 having builded the Temple of the Lord at Ierusalem he and his people did consecrate or dedicate the same that is separated it from all secular or civil uses and appropriated the same unto God by prayer and sacrifice desiring that God would own it for his house and hear the prayers that should be made in it or towards it ver 9. which service was accepted and God promised so to do 1 Kings 9.3 the like did Zerubbabel at the building of the second Temple Ezra 6.16 The like did Iudas when he had raised a new Altar in the Temple of Ierusalem the heathens having polluted the other for three years 1 Mac. 4.59 which dedication was owned countenanced and graced by our Saviour himself Iohn 10.22 He was not it seems so scrupulous in his judgement as some in our generation are but that they value not Christ and they differing often in point of practise well may they differ in point of judgement The like we read 2 Kings 12.18 1 Kings 15.15 2. From the Law or rule of proportion if all along we find in the Scripture things that were appointed for the service of God consecrated and that service approved of countenanced and owned by him whether done to persons things or places what should hinder but that things and places set apart now for his worship and service might be also so de●icated were it a pulpit that God would bless the doctrine taught in it a Church that he would bless and cause to prosper the souls of such as delight in it and so of any other thing 3. From the practise of people in their several dwellings they will when they have finished a house set one room apart for a Parlour another for
or Superiours 1. Tim. 2.1 There are five sorts of persons cheifely need our prayers and we sin if they want our charity when we aproach the throne of God they are Magistrates or Princes Ministers or Evangelists Apostates or backsliders Heathens or Idolaters Saints or Religious 1. For Kings Magistrates or Princes whether we be under good or bad governours that God that hath set them over us commands prayer for them from us 1 Tim. 2.1 good men have done it for wicked cruel and Idolatrous Princes Gen. 20.17 Dan. 4.19 Dan. 6.21 also for good kings 1 King 1.29 and thy are the sonnes of Belial that do it not For 1. Their frailties and Imper●ections stand in need of it kings are but men in nature and have their failings witnesse Davids Ambition Hezekias forgetfullnesse Iosias rashnesse and Solomons wantonnesse Non tutum est semper bonum dare consilium Regibus was an old saying 2. Their dangers and their labours to procure our good deserves it they are higher then others so their care is greater then others no crown but hath its crosse if not visibly to their subjects yet sensibly to themselves Bonus Rex servus est publicus It was a true speech and had much under it that was uttered by the Emperour Trajan that the Sea and the Empire were pleasant to look upon but troublesome and dangerous to be upon 3. Our Christian profession binds us to it If we would not be thought to be infringers of the laws and examples Ch●ist and his Saints have layd before us we are not to forget our Soveraign when we minde our selves and justly may God shut that part of our prayer from him that is not attended with this piece of loyalty We may think it a slight matter to oppose magistracy but God is strong and mighty to uphold his own ordinance and through justice seldome can we see Traitors go in peace to their graves Scripture shews us that Zimry had no peace who slew his master 2 Kings 9.31 and though they should scape on earth first or last they shall receive damnation Rom. 13.2 This is a scripture truth and a secure or deluded conscience shall never be able to ward its blows Let a prince be a hunter after Innocent blood Let him be a known Hypocrite Let it be known that God hath forsaken him let it be known that an evil and wicked spirit possesses him let it be known that God hath designed another to succeed hi● all which we know to be true of Saul yet who can put forth his hand against him and be guiltlesse seeing he is the Lords annointed 1 Sam. 26.9 Every true Christian will pray with David the Lord forbid that I should v. 11. The Macedonians had a law that condemned and put to death five of their nearest kinred that were once convicted of treason In a word our goods our bodys our lives and our pray●rs are to be laid out in the service of our Prince or else we are traitors to the King of Kings and may be punished by his deputy here on earth 4. The good or the evil that they may be the cause of may force us to i● An oversight in the general may ruine a whole army a single errour in the pilot may sinke a rich ship Kings and princes like great oaks if they fall will spoyle thousands of the lower shrubs that are about them they are the eyes of the nations to prevent dangers and perceive conveni●nces It went ill with him in scripture that cryed out My head My head 2 King 4 19. Regis ad exemplum totus componit●r orbis It is observable in sacred writing that Israel after their rebellion from the house of David never had good Kings all of them being successively wicked which made the people desperatly prophane untill God swept all away for ever but in the house of Iudah which did cleave to the house of David we find good Princes making their people good and sometimes wicked Princes makeing their people sinners such influence hath the lives of Princes upon the practises of their subjects which consideration will make the Christian pray for his soveraigns happinesse 5. Their true title and lawfull succession calls for it since in their persons they must dye like men to avoyd future danger we are to pray for their successours that God would out of their loyns raise up seed to sit upon the throne the first Saint we find praying for a King is Abraham and his prayers are for the Kings seed Gen. 20.17 a local alleigance we owe to every Prince in whose country we are ●nd a natural to that Soveraign under whom we are born ' a great part of which consists in this doing for Abraham was a stranger and a sojourner in Gerar when he prayed for posterity to King Abimelech 6. The best of Saints both to the good and wicked Kings have done it 1 King 1.34 1 Sam. 10.24 2 King 11.12 Act. 28.29 Vivat Rex or regnes in aeternum was a usuall complement the Pinces of Persia gave their Heathen kings D●● 5. 10. Dan. 6 6. the same is used by Daniel A man greatly beloved then to the same kings and by all true subjects to this day throughout the world whether Christian or Heathen Dij te serv●nt was the Romans prayer at the Installment of their Emperours D●j te servent Feliciter Imperator es cumfilio im peres was the prayer of the inhabitants of Tysdrum when Gordianus was proclaimed Emperor Antonie Pie Dij te servent Antonie Cl●ments Dij te servent Antonie Clemens Dij te servent vincis Inimicos hostes exuperas Dij te tuentur did the Roman Senators cry out having read some letters from Antonius their Emperour and God save the K●ng was the usual petiton of the Hebrews at the anoynting of their Kings and the same is the acclamation of the Ch●istian at the Co●onation of their Princes What shall we say since the days of Gambrivins who according to Authors was the first that ever ware a crown or royall Diademe never had people mor● reason to pray Give the King thy judgments O God then the people of these nations and for such as do is not let them know that the subjects of the South shall rise up in judgment against them and condemne them at the last 2. Ministers pastors or Evangelists must be partakers of our prayers and ought to be remembered of us when we appea● before God When those Cedars as Sylvarus and Timotheus men of the highest rank seeme to be pilla●s in the ca●t●h of God want the prayers of the people and call for it 1 Thes. 5.25 Rom. 15.30 Ephes. 6.18 19. Heb. 13.18 P●il 1.19 shall others that are but as shrubs and in comparison of them seem to be but smal pins in the temple of the Lord go without our prayers These things ought not so 〈◊〉 b● For 1 Of all men they have the greatest discouragements in the works of their
dayly bread c. Those petitions that concern God goeth before the other shewing that before all things we ought to seek the things concerning the Kingdome of God and of all those things the Glory of God ought to be most and first in our eye H●llowed be thy name being the first petition God being above all things most Jealous of that and will have it hallowed 1. Over all 2. By all 3. In all That it may be hallowed by us we pray next for the coming of his Kingdome 1. Of grace in our hearts 2. Of glory in the clouds He had need have a good cause that prayes for the coming of the Judge we must have his Kingdome to come in our hearts by grace or then that in the clouds will never come to our souls in comfort and without these his name by us shall never be hallowed But grace inwardly tends not much to edification if it be not acted outwardly and therefore we pray againe that his will might be done in earth as it is done in heaven Obedience is better then sacrifice and what better pattern can we have before us then heaven Now there is a twofold heaven 1. A sensible or visible heaven wherein he hath put a tabernacle for the Sun which keeps the ordinances he gave it from the beginning 2. A rational or invisible heaven this is the Saints and Angels though cheifly the Angels be here understood who spends their eternity in doing the will of God 1. Fully 2. Freely 3. Cheerfully 4. Speedily 5. Satisfactorily 6. Unweariedly And in all these things we ought to indeavor to be like the Angels of God by which meanes it will appeare that his Kingdome of grace is established in us and therefore his kingdom of glory shall be hastened for us and then his name to all eternity shall be hallowed by us Those petitions that concern man are either to his body as give us this day our dayly bread or his soul Forgive us our trespasses c. In which this number is observable that there is but one petition for the things of the body and two for the soul shewing that in prayer our care labour zeale for the good of the soul should at least be double to that of the body Two of these are for the obtaining of good give us this day our daily bread c. and one for the avoiding of evill lead us not into temptation shewing that if we by faith struggle hard for grace though it be but like a mustard seed yet it shall prove effectuall to keep us from a great deal of evill and by consequence prevent a great deal of sorrow That for the body shews that in prayer we should aske nothing but what is necessary for us as bread in which is included drink sleep rayment and what is necessary for the life of man Yet we must understand that according to mens states and conditions their necessities are either more or lesse It is necessary for a King a General of an Army or for a Judge what is not for me and according to that state and quality they may pray for a supply of their necessity From the body by a short transition or cut we are brought by our Saviour to look upon the soul upon which we are bound to dwell longer by one petition at least for a●ter our dayly bread we presently pray for forgivenesse of sinnes c. noting 1 That there may be danger in long feasting 2 That there may be sin committed in a short meale Indeed when men have eaten and are full they are in danger of sin and to prevent judgment it is fit to pray forgive us our trespasses or debts as we forgive them that trespasse against us In which there is 1 A petition Forgive us c. 2 The rule of that petition as we forgive c. Which shews that in our prayers we are to be full of love and charity as Sons of consolation not of wrath and hatred as was in those sons of thunder But we must know that our forgiving others is not the meritorious cause of Gods forgiving us but a declarative sign of it a certain condition of our part cause sine qua non of our forgivenesse It is a very mocking of Almighty God to beg forgivenesse for sin after we have eaten except the bread be our own he in this case of rape requiring restitution which some in this age refusing to do laid aside this prayer they eating that bread which to enjoy they had possibly banished the owner murthered the Parent and made the Child an exile Through the fraily of nature and subtilty of the tempter God becomes no sooner mercifull then man becomes sinfull which makes our Saviour next to forgivenesse of sin shew that we must pray for Deliverance from it for time to come as we have forgivenesse for the time past in these words lead us not into temptation c. In the former petition we pray for the justifying gift of God that our sins be not imputed in this for the sanctifying grace of God that our natures may be purified before which can be had the former must be obtained Now 1. Satan tempts us to evill 2. Wicked men tempts us to evil From both which we are shewed it is our wisdom to be freed that God might not leave us to our selves nor we be drawn from the simplicity that is in Christ by our inadvertancy yet if God suffer either the one or the other to tempt us as he did Iob we are to pray againe deliver us from evill That neither the one nor the other make us to sin or charge God foolishly but stand through his assisting grace 1 Against the tempters 2 Against the temptation 3 Against above all others the evill One that is Satan the other being but his instruments This notes that what ever grace or blessing we have asked obtain'd we ought to sue for the grace of perseverance that we may bear up against all temptations that are cast before us to destroy that grace given And as Gods glory or the Hallowing of his name is toward him the chief thing to be asked so our own eternal happinesse in a constant perseverance of the truth is to be the end of all our petitions towards our selves And not to our selves only but as this prayer is divided between God and man so our prayers are to eye the honour and glory of God and the good and prosperity of all men and then our petitions are according to our Saviours rule and institution not otherwise 3 The third considerable in this prayer is the greatnesse or excellency of the person unto whom this prayer is directed In these words For thine is the Kingdom c. Which words both for matter and form are a thanksgiving ascribing all wisdom power and glory might majesty and dominion to be in our Father nothing to be in our selves and these to be the Lords peculiar property