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A09365 The whole treatise of the cases of conscience distinguished into three bookes: the first whereof is revised and corrected in sundrie places, and the other two annexed. Taught and deliuered by M. W. Perkins in his holy-day lectures, carefully examined by his owne briefes, and now published together for the common good, by T. Pickering Bachelour of Diuinitie. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one of the heads and number of the questions propounded and resolued; another of the principall texts of Scripture vvhich are either explaned, or vindicated from corrupt interpretation.; Cases of conscience Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Pickering, Thomas, d. 1625. 1606 (1606) STC 19669; ESTC S114066 314,224 686

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so much for their sinne committed as for their lying therin without repentance And this is the manner of Gods dealing with those that haue liued within the precincts of the church they shall be condemned for the very want of true faith and repentance This should admonish euery one of vs to take heed least we lie in any sin and that being any way ouertaken we should speedily repent least we aggrauate our sinne by continuance therein and so bring vpon our selues swift damnation Thirdly the same sinne is made greater or lesser foure waies according to the number of degrees in the committing of a sinne noted by S. Iames Temptation Conception Birth and Perfection Actual sinne in the first degree of tentation is when the minde vpon some sudden motion is drawne away to thinke euill and withall is tickled with some delight thereof For a bad motion cast into the mind by the flesh and the deuill is like vnto the baite cast into the water that allureth and delighteth the fish and causeth it to bite Sin in conception is when with the delight of the minde there goes consent of will to doe the euill thought on Sinne in birth is when it comes forth into an action or execution Sin in perfection is when men are growne to a custome and habit in sin vpon long practise For the often committing of one and the same sinne leaues an euill impression in the heart that is a strong or violent inclination to that or any other euill as hath bin taught before And sinne thus made perfect brings forth death for custome in sinning brings hardnes of heart hardnes of heart impenitencie and impenitencie condemnation Now of these degrees the first is the least the last is the greatest One and the same sin is lesser in tentation then in conception lesse in conception then in birth and greater in perfection then in all the former Sect. 11. Now from this doctrine of the increasing and lessening of Sin in these respects we may gather that all sins are not alike or equall as the Stoicks of auncient times and their followers haue falsely imagined For it hath bin prooued at large by induction of sundrie particulars that there are degrees of sinnes some lesser som greater some more offensiue and odious to God man some lesse And ●hat the circumstances of time place person and manner of doing doe serue to enlarge or extenuate the sinne commited If it be here alleadged that Sin is nothing but the doing of that which is vnlawfull to be done and that this is equall in all men that sinne and therfore by consequent offences are equall I answer that in euery sin mē must not consider the vnlawfulnes thereof onely but the reason why it should be vnlawfull and that is properly because it is a breach of Gods law and repugnant to his will reuealed in his word Nowe there is no breach of a diuine Law but it is more or lesse repugnant vnto the will of the Lawgiuer God himselfe And many transgressions are more repugnāt thereunto then fewer for the more sin is increased the more is the wrath of God in●lamed against the sinner vpon his due desert If it be said againe that the nature of Sin stands onely in this that the sinner makes an aberration from the scope or marke that is set before him and doth no more then passe the bondes of dutie prescribed by God and that all are alike in this respect The answer is that it is a falshood to affirme that he which makes the lesse aberration from the dutie commanded is equall in offence to him that makes the greater For the same sin for substance hath sundrie steps and degrees in respect whereof one man becommeth a more heinous offender then another For example in the seauenth commandemēt when God forbiddes the committing of Adultery he forbiddeth three degrees of the same sinne to wit adulterie of the heart consisting of inordinate and vncleane affections adulterie of the tongue in corrupt dishonest and vnseemely speeches and the very act of vncleannesse and filthinesse committed by the bodie Now it cannot be said that he which breakes this commandement onely in the first degree is as great a transgressour as he that hath proceeded to the second and so to the third And therefore it remaines for an vndoubted truth that Sinnes committed against the Law of God are not equall but some lesser some greater Sundrie other Distinctions there are of sinnes as namely That the main sinnes of the first Table are greater then the maine sins of the second Table And yet the maine sinnes of the second are greater then the breach of ceremoniall duties against the first table But this which hath beene said shall suffice The vse of this doctrine is manifold First by it we learne what the heart of man is by nature namely a corrupt and vncleane fountaine out of which issueth in the course of this life the streames of corruptions infinite in number noysome in qualities hainous in degrees dāgerous in effects For from thence doe flow all the differences of sinnes before named with their seuerall branches and infinite many more that cannot be rehearsed This must mooue vs humbly to sue vnto God earnestly to entreat him to wash vs throughly from our wickednes clense vs from our sinnes yea to purge and to rinse the fountaine thereof our vncleane and polluted hearts And when by Gods mercie in Christ apprehended by faith our hearts shall be purified thē to set watch ward ouer them and to keep them with all diligence Secondly it teacheth vs that miserable mortal man is not guiltie of one or more sinnes but of many sundrie corruptions both of heart and life Who can vnderstand his faults saith Dauid Now the alowance of sinne beeing death by gods ordināce God being iustice it selfe answerably to the number of our offences must we needes be lyable to many punishments yea to death it selfe both of the bodie and of the soule This beeing our wofull estate little cause is there that any man should thinke himselfe to be in good case or presume of Gods mercie in regard of the small number of his sinnes And much lesse cause hath he falsly to imagine with the Popish sort that he can merit the fauour of God by any worke done by him aboue that which the Law requireth considering that it is impossible for him to know either the number or the nature or the measure of his sinnes Lastly the consideration of this point must be a barre to keepe vs in that we be not too secure or presumptuous of our owne estate for as much as we learne out of the word of god that in respect of the multitude of our corruptions this our life is full of much euill and many difficulties that wee haue whole armies of enemies to encounter with all not onely out of vs in the world abroad but within vs
namely in heart to be deepely displeased with our selues the latter is not simply necessary though it be commendable in whomsoeuer it is if it be in truth for Lydia had the first but not the second II. It falleth out oftētimes that the greatnes of the grief taketh away the sensible paine and causeth a mummednesse of the heart so that the partie grieueth not III. Sometimes the complexion will not affoard teares and in such there may be true humiliation though with dric cheekes Sect. 3. The Secōd thing to be done for the attaining of Gods fauour and confequently of saluatiō is to Beleeue in Christ. In the practise of a Christian life the duties of humiliation faith cannot be seuered yet for doctrines sake I distinguish them In Faith ther are two things required and to be performed on our behalfe First to know the points of religion and namely the summe of the Gospel especially the promise of righteousnes and life eternall by Christ. Secondly to apprehend and applie the promise and withall the thing promised which is Christ vnto our selues and this is done when a man vpon the commandemēt of God sets down this with himselfe that Christ and his merits belong vnto him in particular and that Christ is his wisdome iustification sanctification and redemption This doctrine is plaine out of the sixt of Iohn for Christ is there propounded vnto vs as the bread and the water of life Therefore faith must not be idle in the braine but it must take Christ and applie him vnto the soule and conscience euen as meate is eaten The Questions of Conscience touching Faith are these First how we may truly applie Christ with all his benefits vnto our selues For wicked men applie Christ vnto themselues falsely in presumption but fewe doe it truly as they ought to doe I answer That this may be done we must remember to doe two things First lay downe a foundation of this action and then practise vpon it Our foundation must be laid in the word or else we shall faile in our application and it consists of two principles The one is As God giues a promise of life eternall by Christ so he giues commandement that euery one in particular should applie the promise to himselfe The next is that the Ministerie of the word is an ordinarie meanes wherein God doth offer and applie Christ with all his benefits to the hearers as if he called them by their names Peter Iohn Cornelius Beleeue in Christ and thou shalt be saued When we haue rightly considered of our foundation the Second thing is to practise vpon it and that is to giue our selues to the exercises of faith and repentance which stand in meditation of the Word and prayer for mercie and pardon and when this is done then God giues the sense and increase of his grace When Lydia was hearing the Sermon of Paul then God opened her heart Act. 16. v. 12. Secondly it is demaunded When faith beginnes to breede in the heart and when a man beginnes to beleeue in Christ Answ. When he beginnes to be touched in conscience for his owne sinnes and withall hungers and thirsts after Christ and his righteousnes then beginneth faith The reason is plaine As faith is renewed so it is begunne but it is renewed when a man is touched in conscience for his sinnes and beginnes a new to hunger after Christ therefore when these things first shew themselues then faith first beginnes For these were the things that were in Dauid when he renewed his repentance Sect. 4. The third dutie necessarie to saluation is Repentance In which two things are to be considered the beginning namely a godly Sorrow which is the beginning of Repentance 2. Corinth 7. and vpon this sorrow a Change which is indeede Repentance it selfe In Sorrow we consider first the nature of it secondly the properties of it Touching the nature of sorrow it is either inward or outward The inward sorrow is when a man is displeased with himselfe for his sinnes The outward when the heart declares the griefe thereof by teares or such like signes And sorrow in this case called a godly sorrow is more to be esteemed by the first of these then by the second The propertie of this sorrow is to make vs to be displeased with our selues for our sinnes directly because they are sinnes and doe displease God If there were no iudge no hel nor death yet we must be grieued because we haue offended so mercifull a God and louing father And as godly sorrow will make vs thus to doe so is it the next cause of repentance and by this is repentance discerned The next thing in Repentāce is the Change of the minde and whole man in affection life and conuersation And this standeth in a constant purpose of the minde and resolution of the heart not to sinne but in euery thing to doe the will of God Hereupon Paul exhorteth them to whome he wrote to continue in the loue of God and in the obedience of his word Barnabas when he came to Antioch and had seene the grace of God was glad and exhorted all that with purpose of heart they should cleaue vnto God or continue with the Lord. So the Prophet Ezckiel saith if the wicked will turne from all his sinnes and keepe all my statutes and doe that which is lawfull and right he shall surely liue and shall not die In this purpose stands the very nature of repentance and it must be ioyned with humiliation and faith as a third thing auaileable to saluation and not to be seuered from them For a man in shewe may haue many good things as for example he may be humbled and seeme to haue some strength of faith yet if there be in the saide man a want of this purpose and resolution not to sinne the other are but dead things and vnprofitable and for all them he may come to eternall destruction Furthermore we must distinguish this kinde of purpose from the minde and purpose of carnall men theeues drunkards harlots vsurers for they will confesse their sinnes and be sorie for them yea and shed some teares wishing they had neuer sinned as they haue In these men indeed there is a wishing will for the time but no setled purpose And it is a propertie of nature to auoid euill but to haue a constant resolution of not sinning is a gift of grace and for this it is that we must labour otherwise our repentance is no true and sound repentance Sect. 5. The fourth and last dutie is to performe New obedience vnto God in our life and conuersation In this new obedience three things are required First it must be a fruit of the spirit of Christ in vs for when we doe any good thing it is Christ that doth it in vs. To this purpose Dauid praies vnto God Psal. 143. 10. Let thy good Spirit lead me forth into the land of righteousnes And
man is ingrafted into Christ and thereby becomes one with Christ and Christ one with him Eph 3. 17. Now whosoeuer is by faith vnited vnto Christ the same is elected called iustified and sanctified The reason is manifest For in a chaine the two extremes are knit togither by the middle linkes and in the order of causes of happinesse and saluation faith hath a middle place and by it hath the child of God assured hold of his election and effectuall vocation and consequently of his glorification in the kingdome of heauen To this purpose saith S. Iohn c. 3. v. 36. He that beleeueth in the Sonne hath euerlasting life And c. 5. v. 24. He that beleeues in him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life This is the Ground Now for answer to the Question diuerse places of Scripture are to be skanned wherein this case of Conscience is fully answered and resolued Sect. 1. The first place is Rom. 8. 16. And the spirit of God testifieth together with our spirits that we are the sonnes of God In these words are two testimonies of our adoption set downe The first is the Spirit of God dwelling in vs and testifying vnto vs that we are Gods childrē But some will happily demaund How Gods spirit giues witnesse seeing now there are no reuelations Answ. Extraordinarie reuelations are ceased and yet the holy Ghost in and by the word reuealeth some things vnto men for which cause he is called truly the Spirit of Reuelation Eph. 3. 5. Againe the holy Ghost giues testimonie by applying the promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting by Christ particularly to the heart of man when the same is generally propounded in the Ministerie of the word And because many are readie presumptuously to say they are the children of God when they are not and that they haue the witnesse of Gods Spirit when in truth they want it therefore we are to put a difference between this carnall conceit and the true testimonie of the Spirit Now there be two things whereby they may be discerned one from the other The first is by the meanes For the true testimonie of the holy ghost is wrought ordinarily by the preaching reading and meditation of the word of God as also by praier and the right vse of the Sacraments But the presumptuous testimonie ariseth in the heart and is framed in the braine out of the vse of these meanes or though in the vse yet with want of the blessing of God concurring with the meanes The second is by the effects and fruits of the Spirit For it stirrs vp the heart to praier and inuocation of the name of God Zach. 12. 10. yea it causeth a man to crie and call earnestly vnto God in the time of distresse with a sense and feeling of his owne miseries and with deepe sighes and groanes which cannot be vttered to cra●e mercie and grace at his hands as of a louing father Rom. 8. 26. Thus did Moses crie vnto heauen in his heart when he was in distresse at the red sea Exod. 14. 15. And this gift of praier is an vnfallible testimonie of Gods Spirit which cannot stand with carnall presumption The second Testimonie of our Adoption is our Spirit that is our conscience sanctified and renewed by the Holy Ghost And this also is knowne and discerned first by the greefe of the heart for offending God called Godly sorrow 1. Cor. 7. 10. secondly by a resolute purpose of the heart and endeauour of the whole man in all things to obey God thirdly by sauouring the things of the Spirit Rom. 8. 5. that is by doing the workes of the Spirit with ioy and chearefulnesse of heart as in the presence of God and as his children and seruants Now put the case that the testimonie of the Spirit be wanting then I answer that the other testimonie the sanctification of the heart will suffice to assure vs. We knowe it sufficiently to be true and not painted fire if there be heate though there be no flame Put the case againe that the testimonie of the spirit be wanting and our sanctification be vncertaine vnto vs how then may we be assured The answer is that we must thē haue recourse to the first beginnings and motions of sanctificatiō which are these First to feele our inward corruptions Secondly to be displeased with our selues for them Thirdly to beginne to hate sinne Fourthly to grieue so oft as we fal and offend God Fiftly to auoid the occasions of sinne Sixtly to endeauour to doe our dutie and to vse good meanes Seuenthly to desire to sinne no more And lastly to pray to God for his grace Where these and the like motions are there is the spirit of God whence they proceed and sanctification is begun One apple is sufficient to manifest the life of the tree and one good and constant motion of grace is sufficient to manifest sanctification Againe it may be demanded what must be done if both be wanting Answ. Men must not dispaire but vse good meanes and in time they shall be assured Sect. 2. The Second place is the 15. Psalme In the first verse whereof this question is propounded namely Who of all the members of the Church shall haue his habitation in heauen The answer is made in the verses following and in the second verse he sets downe three generall notes of the said person One is to walke vprightly in sincerity approuing his heart and life to God the second is to deale iustly in al his doings the third is for speech to speake the truth from the heart without guile or flatterie And because we are easily deceiued in generall sinnes in the 3 4 and 5. verses there are set downe seauen more euident and sensible notes of sinceritie iustice and trueth One is in speech not to take vp or carrie abroad false reports and slanders The second is in our dealings not to doe wrong to our neighbour more then to our selues The third is in our companie to contemne wicked persons worthy to be contemned The fourth is in our estimation we haue of others that is to honour them that feare God The fift is in our words to sweare and not to change that is to make conscience of our word and promise especially if if it be confirmed by oath The sixt is in taking of gaine not to giue money to vsurie that is not to take increase for bare lending but to lend freely to the poore The last is to giue testimonie without briberie or partialitie In the fift verse is added a reason of the answer he that in his indeauour doth al these things shall neuer be mooued that is cut off from the Church as an hypocrite Sect. 3. The third place of Scripture is the first Epistle of Iohn the principall scope wherof is to giue a full resolution to the conscience of man touching the certainty of his
is a good beginning of true conuersion and repentance I thought saith Dauid I will confesse against my selfe my wickednes vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the punishment of my sinne And to this is added Selah which is not onely a musicall note but as some thinke a note of obseruation to mooue vs to marke the things that are set downe as beeing of speciall weight and moment And surely this is a matter of great consequence that vpon the very vnfained purpose of confession of sinne God should giue a pardon thereof Take a further proofe of this in the prodigall sonne whome I take not for one that was neuer called or turned to God though some doe so and seeme to haue warrant for their opinion● but rather for him that is the Child of God and afterward fals away Now this man beeing brought by some outward crosses and afflictions to see his owne miserie purposeth with himselfe to returne to his father againe and to humble himselfe and confesse his iniquitie and vpō this very purpose whē he had said I will goe to my father and say vnto him father I haue sinned c. at his returne a farre off his father receiues him as his child againe and after acceptation followes his confession The like is to be seene in Dauid who beeing reprooued by the Prophet Nathan for his sinnes of adulterie and murther presently made confession of them and at the very same time receiued by the prophet sentence of absolution euen from the Lord him●elfe wherein he could not erre The fourth Ground To loue any man because he is a Christian and a child of God is a sensible and certaine note of a man that is partaker of the true loue of God in Christ. Hereby saith S. Iohn we knowe that we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren Loue here is not a cause but onely a signe of gods loue to vs. And our sauiour Christ saith He that receiueth a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall receiue a Prophets reward Nowe that we be not deceiued in these grounds it must be remembred that these beginnings of grace be they neuer so weak must not be ●littering and fleeting but constant and setled not stopped or staied in the way but such as daily growe and increase and then they are indeed accepted of God And he that can finde these beginnings or any of them truly in himselfe he may assure himselfe thereby that he is the child of God Sect. 5. Hauing thus laid downe the Groundes of comfort I come now to the Way by which the party in distresse may be brought within the compasse of the promise of saluation This way standes in two things in making Triall and in Applying the promise First then Triall must be made whether the person distressed haue in him as yet any of the forenamed groūds of grace or not This triall may be made by him that is the comforter in the moouing of certaine Questions to the said person And first let him aske whether he beleeue and repent The distressed partie answers no he cannot repent nor beleeue Then he must further aske whether he desire to beleeue and repent to this he will answer he doth desire it with all his heart in the same sort is he to make triall of the other groundes When a man is in the fitte of tentation he will say resolutely he is sure to be damned Aske him in this fitte of his loue to God he will giue answer he hath none at all but aske him further whether he loue a man because he is a Christian and a child of God then will he say he doth indeed Thus after triall made in this manner some beginnings of faith and repentance will appeare which at the first lay hid For God vseth out of the time of prosperitie by and in distresse and affliction to work his grace The second point followeth After that by triall some of the foresaid beginnings of grace be found out then comes the right Applying of the promise of life euerlasting to the partie distressed And that is done by a kind of reasoning the first part whereof is taken from Gods word the second from the testimonie of the distressed conscience the conclusion is the applying of the promise on this manner He that hath an vnfainod desire to repent and beleeue hath remission of sinnes and life euerlasting But thou hast an earnest desire to repent and beleeue in Christ. Therefore remission of sins and life euerlasting is thine And here remember that it is most conuenient this Application be made by the Minister of the Gospell who in it must vse his ministeriall authority giuen him of God to pronounce the pardon For in distresse it is as hard a thing to make the conscience yeild to the promise as to make fire and water agree For though men haue signes of grace and mercie in them yet will they not acknowledge it by reason of the extremitie of their distresse In this manner vpon any of the former grounds may the troubled and perplexed soule be assured that mercie belongs to it And this I take to be the onely generall and right way of comforting a distressed conscience Nowe that the promise thus applyed may haue good successe these sixerules must necessarily be obserued I. One is that the comfort which is ministred be alaied with some mixture of the Law that is to say the promise alone must not be applyed but withall mention is to be made of the sinnes of the partie and of the grieuous punishmēts due vnto him for the same The reason is because there is much guile in the hart of man in so much as oftentimes it falleth out that men not throughly humbled beeing comforted either too soone or too much doe afterward become the worst of all In this respect not vnlike to the yron which beeing cast into the fire vehemently hot and cooled againe is much more hard then it would haue bin if the heate had bin moderate And hence it is that in the ministring of comfort we must somewhat keepe them downe and bring them on by litle and litle to repentance The sweetenesse of comfort is the greater if it be delaied with some ●artnesse of the Law II. An other rule is this If the distressed partie be much possessed with griefe of himselfe he must not be left alone but alwaies attended with good companie For it is an vsuall practise of the Deuill to take the vantage of the place and time when a man is solitarie and depriued of that helpe which otherwise he might haue in societie with others Thus he tempted Eue when shee was apart from her husband And in this regard Salomon pronounces a woe to him that is alone But herein doth his malice most appeare in that he is alway readiest when a man is in great distresse and withall solitarie then vpon the
church yet the truth is they are not wholly cut off from the societie of the faithfull For the seede of faith remaineth in them and that knits the bond of coniunction with Christ though the sense thereof be lost vntill they repent In this case the partie excommunicate is as a free man in bonds who vntill he get out of prison hath no vse of his freedome and yet continues a free man still though he remaine in prison So also the childrē of God may still be the children of God though excluded from the cōgregation of the church for some offences From this that hath beene said ariseth the Answer to the Question propounded namely that the children of such persons as are excommunicated are notwithstāding their excommunication to be baptised because they are indeede and in the iudgement of charitie true members of the bodie of Christ though in some other regards they are not in present holden so to be Yet further besides the former grounds consider these reasons First children of parents that are professed members of the church though cut off for a time vpon some offence committed haue right to baptisme because it is not in the power of man to cut them off from Christ though they be excommunicated Secondly the personall sinne of the parent may not keepe the blessing from the child and therefore not depriue him of participation of the ordinance of God Thirdly we must alway put a difference betweene them which doe not make separation from the church and yet are grieuous offenders and open Apostataes that ioyne themselues with the enemies of the Church to the ruine and ouerthrow of the truth of the Gospel Fourthly we must put a difference betweene those that haue giuen vp their names to Christ though fallen grieuously and Turks and Infidels that are forth of the Couenant and neuer belonged to the Church Lastly if the mercie of God inlarge it selfe to thousands yea to infinite generations why should man be so hard hearted as to make question whether such Infants belong to the Couenant and consequently keepe them from the Sacrament of Baptisme Out of this Question ariseth a second Whether children borne in fornication haue right to baptisme Ans. They are not to be kept from it For the wickednes of the parent ought not to preiudice the child in things that belong to his saluation Yet in this case some Cautions are carefully to be obscrued as first that the parent hold the true faith and religion secondly that he be by the Minister exhorted to a true humiliation of himselfe and to earnest repentance for his sinne committed and that before the child be baptized Thirdly that their be some appointed to answere for the Infant besides the parents and to make solemne promise openly to the Church that it shall be carefully brought vp and instructed in the faith And the same is to be obserued and practized before the baptizing of the children of parents excommunicate IV. Question How men are to make a right vse of their baptisme when they become to yeares The not obseruing hereof is the cause of many sinnes and corruptions in the liues of men It is commonly holden a great fault in ciuill matters for a man not to keepe his couenants Much more is it a hainous sinne before God not to keepe the promises and pay the vowes made vnto him For answere therefore to the Question wee must first take this for a ground That baptisme both for signification force vse and fruit continues not for a moment of time but for the whole course of a mans life It doth not respect onely the time past or present but that which is to come yea that whole time that a man hath to spend from the very act of his baptisme to his death Againe baptisme is the true Sacrament of Repentance for remission of sinnes which being once receiued remaineth a perpetuall testimonie and pledge of the everlasting couenant of God and of the continuall washing away of sinne in the blood of Christ. This Ground premised I come to the vse of baptisme which is two fold The First is that it serues to be a token and pledge of Gods fauour towards vs and that principally three waies First in that it sealeth and confirmeth to vs the free pardon and forgiuenesse of our sinnes Thus Cornelius was baptized of Peter after he had heard the Gospell preached and receiued the Holy Ghost that it might be vnto him a pledge of the remission of his sinnes Act. 10. 48. And in like manner doth Peter exhort the conuerted Iewes to repent them of their sins to receiue the Sacramēt of Baptisme as a seale and pledge of Gods mercie in the forgiuenes thereof by Christ Act. 2. 38. In regard of this vse baptisme is of great force to releeue the hart in distresse For when any childe of God feeles himselfe loden with the burden of his sinnes the consideration and remembrance hereof that God hath pardoned them all and giuen him a speciall and certaine pledge of his pardon in baptisme will serue to stay and support his soule Yea though his sinnes were of force to make a separation betweene God and him Yet remembring that his name is written in the Couenant of God and that he hath by Gods mercie receiued the seale of the Couenant he shall not neede to be much dismaied When Satan tempteth him to doubt of his owne estate in regard of his corruptions even then let him haue recourse to his baptisme and thinke of the earnest and pledge of Gods fauour which he hath receiued Let him draw out his euidences signed with the seale of Gods couenant made vnto him in Iesus Christ and that shall be sufficient to stoppe the mouth of Satan and to repell his temptations Secondly Baptisme is as a pledge of the vertue of Christs death Doe you not know saies Paul that all we which haue beene baptized into Iesus Christ haue beene baptized into his death Rom. 6. 3. For they that beleeue are by baptisme conformed to Christ their head because they are by it buried together with him into his death vers 4. This point is of excellent vse in our liues For it teacheth a man when his owne corruption mooueth him to sinne and he is now euen in the Combate the Spirit lusting against the flesh and the flesh against the Spirit even then to call to memorie his baptisme wherein it pleased God to seale vnto him the mortificatiō of his sinne by the power of Christs death and consequently to pray earnestly vnto him for the continuance of the same power in his his heart for the continuall crucifiing of the old man and the vtter destroying of the body of sinne Rom. 6. 6. Thirdly baptisme is a pledge vnto vs of the Life of Christ of our Fellowship with him therein For looke as he beeing dead in the graue raised himselfe to life by his owne power euen so and more then so being now
THE WHOLE TREATISE OF THE CASES OF CONSCIENCE DISTINGVISHED INTO THREE Bookes The first whereof is revised and corrected in sundrie places and the other two annexed Taught and deliuered by M. W. Perkins in his Holy-day Lectures carefully examined by his owne briefes and now published together for the common good by T. Pickering Batchelour of Diuinitie Whereunto is adioyned a twofold Table one of the Heads and Number of the Questions propounded and resolued another of the principall Texts of Scripture vvhich are either explaned or vindicated from corrupt interpretation Rom. 14. 23. VVhatsoeuer is not of Faith is sinne HINC LVCEM ET POCVLA SACRA ALMA MATER CANTABRIGIA PRINTED BY IOHN LEGAT Printer to the Vniversitie of Cambridge 1606. And are to be sold in Pauls Church-yard at the signe of the Crowne by Simon Waterson TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE EDWARD Lord Dennie Baron of Waltham c. RIght Honourable There is no one Doctrine reuealed in the Word of God or dispensed by the Prophets and Apostles of greater vse and cōsequence in the life of man then is that which prescribeth a Forme of releeuing and rectifying the Conscience The benefit which from hence issueth vnto the Church of God is vnspeakable For first it serveth to discouer the cure of the dangerousest sore that can be the wound of the Spirit Which how great a crosse it is the Wise man reporteth out of true experience when he saith that the Spirit of a man will sustaine his infirmitie but a wounded Spirit who can beare it And his meaning is that no outward griefe can fall into the nature of man which will not be with patience indured to the vtmost so long as the minde is not troubled or dismaied But when once the Spirit is touched and the heart which beeing well apaied is the very fountaine of peace to the whole man smitten with feare of the wrath of God for sinne the griefe is so great the burden so intolerable that it will not by any outward meanes be eased or asswaged Secondly it giueth for all particular Cases speciall and sound direction whether man be to walke with God in the immediate performance of the duties of his Seruice or to conuerse with man according to the state and condition of his life in the Familie Church or Common-wealth The want of which direction of what force it is to turne the actions of men which are good in themselues to sinnes in regard of the agents S. Paul affirmeth in that generall Conclusion Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Wherein he would teach vs that whatsoeuer is done or vndertaken by men in this life whether it concerne the knowledge and worship of God or any particular dutie to be performed by vertue of their Callings for the common good whereof they haue not sufficient warrant and assurance in Conscience grounded vpon the Word that it is to be done or not to be done to them it is a sinne Thirdly it is of all other Doctrines beeing rightly vsed the most comfortable For it is not founded in the opinions and variable conceits of men neither doth it consist of Conclusions and Positions which are onely probable and coniecturall for the Conscience of the doubting or distressed partie can not be established and rectified by thē but it resteth vpon most sufficient and certaine Grounds collected and drawne out of the very Word of God which as it is mightie in operation pearcing the heart and discerning the thoughts and intents thereof so is it alone auaileable and effectuall to pacifie the minde and to giue full satisfaction to the Conscience And as the benefit is great so the want of this Doctrine together with the true manner of applying the same is and hath beene the cause of many and great inconueniences For euen of those that feare God and haue receiued to beleeue there be many who in the time of their distresses when they haue considered the waight and desert of their sinnes and withall apprehended the wrath of God due vnto them haue beene brought vnto hard exigents mourning and wayling and crying out as if God had forsaken them vntill they haue beene releeued by the Spirit of Christ in the meditation of the word promise of God But those especially who haue not beene instructed in the knowledge of the truth nor acquainted with the course of Gods dealing with his distressed children by reason of ignorance and blindnes in matters of Religion and pietie when the Lord hath let loose the cord of their Consciences and set before their eyes both the number of their sinnes committed and the iust anger of God purchased thereby what haue they done surely despairing of the mercie of God and their owne saluation they haue either growne to phrensie and madnes or els sorted vnto themselues fearefull ends some by hanging some by drowning others by embruing their hands in their owne blood And if not in regard of griefe and trouble of minde yet for want of better resolution in particular cases within the compasse of their generall or personall callings though otherwise men indued with some measure of knowledge and obedience they haue either abused or els quite relinquished and forsaken their callings and thereby become scandalous and offensiue vnto others Now then as by these and sundrie other Instances of proofe the matter it selfe appeares to be of great waight and importāce so it is most meete that the best and fittest course should be taken in the teaching and inforcing of the same In which regard we haue iust cause to challenge the Popish Church who in their Case-writings haue erred both in the substance and circumstances of this Doctrine as shall appeare in the sequele First because the dutie of releeuing the Conscience is by them commended to the sacrificing Priest which though according to their owne Canons he should be a man of knowledge and free from imputation of wickednes yet oft times it falls out that he is either vnlearned or els wicked and lewd of conuersation and consequently vnfit for such a purpose Secondly they teach that their Preists appointed to be comforters and releeuers of the distressed are made by Christ himselfe iudges of the Cases of conscience hauing in their owne hands a iudicarie po●…er and authoritie truly and properly to binde or to loose to remitte or to retaine sinnes to open or to shut the kingdome of heauen Whereas the Scripture vttereth a contrarie voice that Christ onely hath the keyes of Dauid which properly and truly openeth and no man shutteth and properly and truly shutteth and no man openeth And the Ministers of God are not called to be absolute Iudges of the Consciēce but onely Messengers and Embassado●rs of reconciliation wherevpon it followeth that they cannot be the authors and gi●ers of remission of sinnes but onely the Ministers and Dispensers of the same Thirdly the Papists in their writings haue scattered here and there sundrie false
127 7 18 21   19 166. 184   1 27   30 74   16 75   28 130. 124   26 286. 277 1 20 204 11 15 95 12 3 480 13 12 417   10 ibid. 14 15 450   23 46   vlt. 70 16 26 95   5 541 13 14 581 1. Cor.     2 15 619 3 18 291 5   324 6 7 30   18 494 7 9 412   27 413   30 530 8 vlt. 69 9 27 427 11 26 340. 337 13 5 496 15 31 389 2. Cor.     1 23 384. 4 17 362 7 9 99 Galat.     3 26 82 4 10 449 5 1 414   12 272 Ephes.     4 26 510 5 18 553   29 419 6 18 282 5 16 479 Philip.     1 10 531 4 8 634. 481   12 531   5 497 Coloss.     1 26 95 2 16 414 3 16 296 1. Thess.     4 11 481 5 17 282   20 294   23 186 2. Thessal     7 8 227 1. Tim.     1 1 19 2 4 94   15 362 4 8 404   5 544   22 32 5 12 420   24 33   19 622   21 389   23 537 6 8 564   9 524   17 18 19 615 2. Tim.     2 19 85 4 14 273 Titus     1 15 544 Hebr.     3 11 383 5 7 288 12 11 126 Iames.     1 15 38   19 291 〈◊〉 2 362   10 64   1 624 5 16 5 1. Peter     2 1 292 3 15 360 2. Peter     1 10 86 1. Iohn     3 2 81   14 9 5 11 15 79. 289 Apocal.     19 10 355 21 6 98 THE FIRST BOOKE of the Cases of Conscience concerning Man simply considered in himselfe without relation to an other The Preface declaring the Ground and Order of the Treatise following Isaiah 50. 4. The Lord God hath giuen me a tongue of the learned that I should know to minister a word in due time to him that is wearie IN that part of the Prophecie which goes before the holy Ghost setteth downe and foretelleth the Calling of the Gentiles which was to beginne at the death of Christ and from thence to continue vnto this day and so consequently to the ende of the world In the former verses of this Chapter there is mention made of the reiection of the Iewes I meane not a generall but a particular rejection namely then when they were in affliction in the daies of Isaiah Now in this and so in all other Prophecies of the like kind which intreat of this point Christ himselfe is brought in speaking in his owne person and the words of this Chapter from the beginning to this present verse and the rest that follow are the words of Christ the Mediatour In the verses going before he disputes the case of their rejection and and the summe of the whole disputation is that either he or they themselues were the causes thereof but he was not the cause therfore they themselues by their sinnes The reason whereby he prooues that they themselues were the cause is framed in this sort You Iewes cānot bring any writing or bill of diuorce to shew that I rejected you therfore I appeale euen to your owne consciences whether you haue not brought this iudgement vpon your selues by your iniquities vers 1. On the other side the reasō why God was not the cause is because he for his part called them in great mercie and ioue but when he called they would not obey ver 2. Now in the ende of the second verse is contained an answer to a secret reply that some obstinate Iewe might make after this manner God hath not nowe the like power in sauing and deliuering vs as he hath had in form●r times therefore we cannot hope or expect any deliuerance from him and howe then shall we doe in the meane while To this the Lord himselfe makes answer ver 2 3 4. that his hand is not shortned nor his power lessened in regard of greater workes much lesse in respect of their deliuerance and though the present affliction which they indured was great and tedious yet they were not to be ouermuch dismayed in themselues but rather to be comforted because God had giuen him the tongue of the learned to minister a word in season to the wearie and distressed and consequently that he had power to case and refresh that their wearines and affliction In this text then there is set downe one principal dutie of Christs propheticall office by allusion to the practises of the Prophets in the old Testament especially those which belonged to the schooles of Elias and Elizeus who are here tearmed the learned And out of the words thereof one speciall point of instruction may be gathered namely That there is a certaine knowledge or doctrine reuealed in the word of God whereby the consciences of the weake may be rectified and pacified I gather it thus It was one speciall dutie of Christs propheticall office to giue comfort to the consciences of those that were distressed as the Prophet here recordeth Now as Christ had this power to execute and performe such a dutie so he hath committed the dispensation therof to the Ministers of the Gospel For we may not thinke that Christ in his owne person ministred and spake words of comfort to the wearie in the times of the Prophets because he was not then exhibited in our nature and yet he did then speake but how in the persons of the Prophets So likewise because Christ now in the new Testament speaks not vnto the afflicted in his owne proper person it remaineth therfore that he performes this great worke in the Ministerie of Pastours and Teachers vpon earth to whom he hath giuen knowledge and other gifts to this ende and purpose There must needes therefore be a certen and infallible doctrine propounded and taught in the Scriptures whereby the consciences of men distressed may be quieted and releeued And this doctrine is not attained vnto by extraordinarie reuelation but must be drawne out of the written word of God The point therfore to be handled is What this doctrine should be It is not a matter easie and at hand but full of labour and difficultie yea very large like vnto the maine sea I will onely as it were walke by the banks of it and propound the heads of doctrine that thereby I may at least occasion others to consider handle the same more at large That I may proceede in order First I am to lay downe certaine Grounds or Preambles which may giue light and direction to the things that follow and in the next place I will propound and answer the maine and principall Questions of Conscience CHAP. I. Of the two first Grounds of Cases Confession and the degrees of Goodnes THe Grounds or Preambles are especially foure The first touching Confession The second touching the degrees of
thing before named that is conformitie or correspondencie to the will of God in regard of obedience But some may say the want of conformitie in the powers of the soule is not sinne properly because in sinne there must bee not onely an absence of goodnesse but be some twentie or thirtie yeares yet the partie offending doth not therefore cease to be a sinner Now then I demaund what is the very thing for which he is named and tearmed still a sinner in the time present the offence beeing past The answer is that euery actuall sinne beside the three former must be considered with a fourth thing to wit a certaine staine or blotte which it imprints and leaues in the offender as a fruit and that is an inclination or euill disposition of the heart wherby it becomes more apt prone to the offence done or to any other sinne For looke as the dropsie man the more he drinks the drier he is and the more he still desires to drinke euen so a sinner the more he sinnes the apter is he to sinne and more desirous to keepe still a course in wickednes And as a man that lookes vpon the Sunne if he turne his face away remains turned vntill he turne himselfe againe so he that turnes from God by any sinne makes himselfe a sinner and so remaines vntill he turne himselfe againe by repentance Thus Dauid was a sinner not onely in the very act of his adulterie mur●… ther but euen when the act was done●… past he remained still a murtherer and 〈◊〉 dulterer because a new or rather a re●… pronenesse to these and all oth●… tooke place in his heart by his fal●… strength till he turned to God by●… vpon the admonition of the Pro●… thing then whereby a sinner is tearmed a sinner is the Fault together with the fruit thereof namely the Blot imprinted in the soule so oft as men doe actually offend The Vse of this doctrine touching sinne is twofold First by it we learne and see what is Originall sinne wherby an Infant in the first conception and birth is indeed a sinner Euery Infant must be considered as a part of Adam proceeding of him and partaking of his nature and therby it is made a sinner not onely by imputation of Adams offence but also by propagation of an apt●esse and pronenes vnto euery euill receiued together with nature from Adam And thus ought we to conceiue Originall sinne not to be the corruption of nature alone but Adams first offence imputed with the fruit thereof the corruption of nature which is an inclination vnto euery euill deriued together with nature from our first parents Secondly by this we are taught to take heed of all and euery sinne whether it be in thought word or deed because the committing therof though in respect of the act it passeth a●… in the doing yet it breedeth and in●…seth a wicked disposition in the heart ●…h beene said to the offence done or a●… sinne Men deceiue themselues that ●…the euill of sinne to be only in the ●…ng to goe no further wheras in●… offence hath a certen blot going with it that corrupteth the heart and causeth man to delight and lie in his offence which lying in sinne is a greater cause of damnatiō then the very sin it selfe This therfore must admonish vs to take heed least we continue in any sinne and if it fall out that through infirmitie we be ouertaken by any tentation we must labour to rise again and turne from our sinne to God by new and speedy repentance Sect. 3. Thus much of Sinne it selfe Now follow the Differences thereof which are manifold The first sort are to be gathered from the causes and beginnings of sinne in man which are threefold Reason will and Affection The differēces of sinne in respect of Reason are these First some are sinnes of knowledge some of ignorance A sinne of Knowledge is when a man offends against his knowledge doing euill when he knoweth it to be euill and this is greater then a sinne of ignorance for he that knoweth his masters will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes A sinne of Ignorance is when a man doth euill not knowing it to be euill Thus Paul was a blasphemer an oppressour and persecuted the Church of Christ ignorantly and in a blinde zeale not knowing that which hee did to be euill Nowe by ignorance here I meane an ignorance of those things which ought to be knowne and this is twofold simple or affected Simple ignorance is when a man after diligence and good paines taking still remaines ignorant this ignorance will not excuse any man if it be of such things as he is bound to know for it is said He that doth not his masters will by reason he knew it not shall be beaten with stripes though fewer And in this regard euen the Heathen which knew not God are inexcusable because they were bound to haue known him For Adam had the perfect knowledge of God imprinted in his nature and lost the same through his owne default for himselfe and his posteritie And it is the commandement of God whereunto euery man is boūd to performe obedience that man should know him that is his will and word But some may say then how can any man be saued seeing euery man is ignorāt of many things which he ought to know An. If we know the groūds of religion be careful to obey God according to our knowledge hauing withall a care and desire to increase in the knowledge of God and his will God will hold vs excused for our desire and indeauour to obey is accepted for obedience it selfe And the greater this simple ignorāce is the lesser is the sinne For hereupon it was that Peter lessened and in some sort excused the sinne of the Iewes in crucifying Christ because they did it through ignorance and so doth Paul his sinne in persecuting the Church when he alleadgeth that it was done ignorantly in vnbeleefe But howsoeuer this sinne by such meanes may be lessened yet remaines it still a sinne worthie condemnation Affected ignorance is when a man takes delight in his ignorance and will of purpose be ignorant not vsing but contemning the meanes wherby to get and increase knowledge and that carelessely and negligently because he will not leaue sinne which he loueth nor forsake the euill trade of life wherin he delighteth This is the sinne of those whereof Iob speaketh who say vnto God Depart from vs for we desire not the knowledge of thy waies And of whome Dauid complaineth that they flatter themselues in their owne eyes and haue left off to vnderstand and to doe good This ignorance is damnable and deuilish it excuseth no man but doth rather aggrauate and increase his sinne yea it is the mother of many grieuous enormities Againe Ignorance is twofold of the Law or of the thing the Law requireth Ignorance of the Law is
this sinne but God in mercie accepted a generall repētance for the same And the like is the case of all the Elect in regard of their secret hidden faults for vnles God should accept of a general repentance for vnknown sinns few or none at all should be saued And herein doth the endles mercy of god notably appeare that he vouchsafeth to accept of our repētance whē we repent though not in particular as we ought to doe Neuertheles this must not incorage or imbolden any man to liue in his sinnes without turning vnto God For vnlesse we repent in particular of all the sin● we know not only our knowne offences but euen our secret sinnes shall cōdemne vs. Many sinnes are committed by men which afterwards in processe of time are quite forgotten Others are cōmitted which notwithstāding are not knowne whether they be sins or no. And in doing the best duties we can we offend often yet when we offend we perceiue it not all these in the regenerate through the mercy of God are sinnes of Toleratiō in respect of particular repentance The third kind of sinnes of Toleration are certaine particular facts of men not approved of in Scripture and yet remitted in respect of punishment Such was the fact of Zipporah in circumcising her child in presence of her husband he beeing able to haue done it himselfe and shee hauing no calling to doe that which she did For though the hand of God was against him yet was he not sick as some would excuse the matter neither is there any such thing in the text but it is rather to be thought that she her selfe circumcised her sonne in hast to preuent her husband for the deede was done in some indignation and shee cast the foreskin at his feete And yet because this fact was some manner of obedience in that the thing was done which God required though not in the māner that he required God accepted the same staied his hand frō killing Moses Thus god accepted of Ahabs humility thogh it were in hypocrisie because it was a shew of obedience and for that deferred a temporall punishmēt til the daies of his posteritie God sent Lyons to destroy the Assyrians that dwelt in Samaria for their Idolatrie yet so soon● as they had learned to feare the Lord after the māner of the god of Israel though they mingled the same with their own Idolatric God for that halfe obedience suffered thē to dwel in peace Sect. 6. The Sixt distinction of Sinnes may be this Some are sinnes against God some against men This distinction is grounded vpon a place in Samuel If one man sinne against another the Iudge shall iudge it but if a man sinne against the Lord who shall plead for him Sinnes against God are such as are directly and immediately committed against the maiestie of God Such are Atheisme Idolatrie Blasphemie Periurie Profanation of the Sabboth all the breaches of the first Table Sinnes against men are iniuries hurts losses and damages whereby our neighbour is in his dignitie life chastitie wealth good name or any other way iustly offended or by vs hindred And such actions must be considered two waies First as they are iniuries and hurts done vnto our neighbour and fecondly as they are anomies or breaches of Gods law forbidding vs to doe them and in this second respect they are called sinnes because sinne is properly against God and therefore by sinnes against man we are to vnderstand iniuries losses or damages done vnto them In this sense must that place in Matthew be expounded If thy brother sinne against thee c. Sect. 7. The seauenth Difference of sinnes is noted by S. Paul where he saith Euery sinne that a man doth is without the bodie but he that commits fornication sinneth against his owne bodie In which place it is implyed that some sinnes are without the bodie some against mans owne bodie Sinnes without the bodie are such sinnes as a man committeth his bodie beeing the instrument of the sinne but not the thing abused Such are Murther Theft Drunkennesse for in the committing of these sinnes the bodie is but a helper and onely a remote instrumentall cause and the thing abused is without the bodie For example in drunkennes the thing abused by the drunkard is wine or strong drinke in theft another mans goods in murther the instrument whereby the fact is committed The bodie indeede conferres his helpe to these things but the iniurie is directed to the creatures of God to the bodie and goods of our neighbour And such are all sinnes adulterie onely excepted Sinnes against the bodie are those in which it selfe is not onely the instrument but the thing abused also Such a sinne is Adulterie onely and those that are of that kind properly against the bodie first because the bodie of the sinner is both a furthering cause of the sinne and also that thing which he abuseth against his owne selfe Secondly by this offence he doth not onely hinder but loose the right power and propertie of his bodie in that be makes it the member of an harlot And lastly though other sinnes in their kind doe bring a shame and dishonour vpon the bodie yet there is none that sitteth so nigh or leaueth a blot so deepely imprinted in it as doth the sinne of vncleannes Sect. 8. The eight distinction of sinnes is grounded vpon Pauls exhortation to Timothie Communicate not with other mens sinnes Sinnes are either Other mens sinnes or Communicatiō with other mens sins This distinction is the rather to be knowne and remembred because it serues to extenuate or aggrauate sins committed Communication with sinne is done sundry waies First by counsell thus Ca●phas sinned when he gaue counsel to put Christ to death Secondly by commandement so Dauid sinned in the murther of Vrias Thirdly by consent or assistance Rom. 1. 31. thus Saul sinned in keeping the garments of them that ●●oned Steuen Act. 22. 20. 7. 58. Fourthly by prouocation thus they sinne that prouok● others to sinne and hereof Paul speaketh when he saith Fathers must not prouoke their children to wrath Eph. 6. 4. Fiftly by negligence or silence This is the sinne of the Minister when men are called to reprooue sinne and doe not Sixtly by flatterie when men sooth vp others in sinne Seauenthly by winking at sinnes or passing them ouer by slight reproofe Eph. 5. 11. Thus Eli sinned in rebuking his sonnes and thereby brought a temporall iudgement vpon himselfe and his familie 1. Sam. 2. chap. and 4. Eightly by participation Eph. 5. 7. thus they doe sinne that are receiuers of the eues Ninthely by defending another man in his sinne for he that iustifieth the wicked and condemneth the iust euen they both are an abomination to the Lord. Sect. 9. The Ninth distinction followeth Some mens sinnes saith Paul are open before hand some follow after Which place by some is
be dissolued and be with Christ. Touching this spirituall ioy and comfort in the holy Ghost these Questions of Conscience are mooued I. First how may we in this life haue and nourish in our hearts a true tast of eternall happinesse and of the ioyes of the world to come Ans. First by a serious consideration of the euills that doe hinder or preiudice our happines and they are principally foure One is the Miserie of our liues in respect of sinne and the consequents thereof For there is no man in the world be he neuer so righteous that can truly say of himselfe I am cleane from my sinne Prov. 20. 9. Yea ●uen the regenerate that haue receiued grace to beleeue to turne vnto God and to liue according to the Spirit doe finde by experience corruption rebellion in their minds wills and affections which daily affordeth matter of sinning against God and on the otherside hindreth and quencheth all the good motions of the Spirit that are in them Againe such is the irreconciliable malice of Satan that he takes vantage of mans corruption and neglectes no time or opportunitie to intrappeth● children of God in the snares of his temptations And hence it is that man by reason of his owne corruption and the wicked suggestions of the Deuill is at continuall strife with himselfe hath daily occasion of sorrow worketh out his saluation with feare and trembling wading as it were euen while he liueth in a sea of many miseries The second euill is the Vanitie of all things that are in the world For whether we consider the world it selfe or the things therein contained done or suffered there is nothing so sure and steadie whereunto man hauing attained can possibly rest fully satisfied and contented or which in the ende will not prooue to be most vaine vanitie And the truth hereof appeareth in the experience of Salomon himselfe who beeing king ouer Israel wanted neither authoritie nor abilitie and opportunitie to take knowledge and triall of all worldly things in all estates and conditions And hauing euen of set purpose carefully and earnestly searched into them all at length he concludes that the issue of all was vnprofitable vanitie and vexation o● minde as we may read in his Ecclesiastes The third euill is the Changeable condition of our life in this world whereby it comes to passe that we are alway in a fleeting and transitorie state For we are as Saint Peter speaketh but strangers and Pilgrimes that wander to and fro in the earth as in a strange countrey and still are making forward to our owne home We haue here no abiding citie The houses wherein we dwell are but Innes in which we sojourne for a time yea the bodies which we haue are but ●ents and ●abernacles alway readie to be shifted and our selues to be translated into another place Fourthly by remembring that Christ our Head beeing now in heauen and we his members vpon the earth during our life we are in presence separated from our Head and consequently from that happie and glorious fellowship which we shall inioy with him and all the Saints our fellow-members in the kingdome of heauen This S. Paul noteth when he saith Whilst we are at home in the bodie we are absent from the Lord and thereupon himselfe desired to be dissolued and to be with Christ. Hauing thus entred into the due consideration of the aforesaid euills we must in the second place exercise our selues in the frequent meditation of the blessed estate of Gods chosen in the kingdome of glorie who beeing translated out of this life into the bosome of Abraham are fully and perfectly freed from sinne from Satan from vanitie and miserie haue all teares wiped from their eyes doe behold the face of God are made like vnto Christ in holines and honour and doe with him inherit the kingdome prepared for them from the foundations of the world In the third place hauing throughly considered of these things we must Compare the estate of this present life in the respects before-●amed with the estate of that which is to come in the kingdome of heauen and laying them in a paralell together we shall sinde the one infinitely farre to excell the other in regard of true ioy and comfort And this will make vs though liuing in the world yet to vse it as if we vsed it not to haue our conversation in heauen to thinke with Paul that to be loosed and be with Christ is best of all for vs to haue a true and liuely tast of the ioyes of the world to come and accordingly with Abraham Isaac and Iacob to looke for a citie that hath foundations whose builder and maker is God II. Secondly it is demanded how a man may truly discerne whether this ioy of the Spirit be in him yea or no For answer hereunto it is to be remembred that there are sundrie properties wherby it differeth from carnall ioy And these are principally fiue First this ioy is brought forth as it were of sorrow for sinne and for the want of Christ. Ye shal sorrow saith our Sauiour Christ to his Disciples meaning for his departure but your sorrow shall be turned into ioy These words are not onely meant of his Disciples but of all beleeuers who vpon consideration of their sinnes and the spirituall want of Christ Iesus doe mourn and lament For not onely they but all true beleeuers are there opposed vnto the World Againe blessed are they that mourne that is being touched with causes of exceeding griefe doe withall mourn for their sinnes for they shal be comforted On the other side carnal ioy as it hath his beginning from the flesh ariseth of things pleasing thereunto so it ends in sorrow and heauinesse In the end reioycing is turned into mourning saith Solomon And Woe ●e to you that now laugh for ye shall weepe Secondly the ioy of the Spirit is a fruit of righteousnes that is it issueth and floweth from Christ knowne and beleeued to be made vnto vs of God wisdome righteousnes sanctification and full redemption For from hence followes peace of conscience and from peace comes ioy in the Holy Ghost Contrariwise the ioy of the flesh ariseth only from the sudden feeling of some worldly delight and therfore cannot bring any sound peace vnto the conscience of the man possessed of it Thirdly spirituall ioy is founded in the holy vse of the Word Sacraments and Praier and in the practise of Christian duties of mercie ●oue iustice c. The other is not so For the world conceiueth a ioy besides the word o●● of the exercises of inuocation and repentance which stands in the practise of crueltie malice oppression iniustice and all manner of impietie And hence it is that hauing spēt their daies in such matter of reioycing at length in a momēt they go down to hell Fourthly heauenly ioy is so fixed
and such like blasphemous thoughts there be which are not fit to be vttered amongst mē forasmuch as they are most horrible and execrable as any can be conceiued Sect. 1. That we may the better know this Temptation let it be considered what are the forerunners thereof and by what meanes it takes place in the heart possessed of it Sometimes it commeth meerely and onely of the suggestion of the Deuill which troubleth the phantasie euen of those which are in that regard innocent and casteth into their hearts impure and vngodly thoughts Sometimes againe it comes vpon men by an euill custome when as they willingly lend their eares to leude and cursed speeches that immediately tend to the dishonour of God or the wilfull abuse of his word his iudgements and mercies and vpon the hearing either giue their applause and approbation though not expressely or doe not hinder or stay them as much as in them lyeth Otherwhiles it creepes into the heart of man by degrees when he beginnes to waxe cold in Gods seruice to make little conscience of those duties that immediately concerne his worship consequently inures himselfe to the taking of the name of God in vaine by often and causelesse swearing forswearing cursing c. By these and such like meanes is this foule and horrible tentation conua●ed into the minde of man Now the danger of it whether it ariseth from these or any other causes is exceeding grieuous specially to those that haue begun to chuse the way of truth and to applie their hearts to serue God and to feare his name For it bringeth forth strange and fearfull effects as namely desperation and manifold horrors troubles of minde Yea diuers persons haue hereupō bin astonished in such sort that they haue bin mooued to make dispatch of themselues beeing in their owne iudgement no better then the very firebrands of hell Sect. 2. Now for the Curing of this wonderfull trouble and distraction of Conscience two things are to be done to wit Inquirie must be made into the next causes whence this Tentation should arise and after that the Remedie is to be applied For the first Inquirie is to be made whether the present distresse had his beginning from the thoughts of a mans owne minde or from the suggestion of the Deuill For this is in all likelyhoode the next way to minister Comfort to the afflicted partie It may be said How shall a man discerne the thoughts that are from the Deuill from his owne thoughts Ans. He shall know them by sundrie notes First by the entrance of thē into the mind For those that co●e from the Diuill come speedily as lightning into a house and they are after a sort forced into the minde by violence so as the partie cannot auoide them and they come into the minde againe and againe yea a thousand times in a day so as by their often comming they weaken the memorie dull the senses wearie and confound the braine These are thoughts that come from the Deuill and by him are co●…uaied from without into the minde of man And if such cogitations were from a mans own self they would not come with so great vehemēcie and cel●ritie but with leisure● and they would rise with more moderation and lesse violence Yea further the frequent vse of them would not produce so many and so fearfull effects as it doth Secondly such thoughts may be discerned to come from the Deuil by this signe because they are directly against the very light of nature the sparkes whereof are not quite extinct in vs by sinne For euery man thinkes reuerently of God by nature But these cogitations are most wicked and deuilish fastning vpon God things that are most vile and monstrous whereas commonly the thoughts that arise from our selues are not against the light of nature though they be most corrupt The third signe is that at the first conceiuing of them the partie 〈◊〉 smitten with an extraordinarie feare his flesh is troubled and oftentimes sicknes and faintings doe follow But the thoughts that men conceiue of thēselues cause neither feare nor fainting nor sicknes Fourthly blasphemous thoughts cannot come ordinarily from the hart of any saue of those alone that are of reprobate mindes But the parties that are thus distressed are honest ciuill and such as professe the Gospell at least in shew yea sometime they befall such as are the true members of Christ. Therefore it is manifest that they come from without euen from the Deuill casting them into the minde and not from within a mans owne selfe In the next place Inquirie must be made whether the partie doth approoue loue and like these and such like thoughts or no To this he will answer if he be asked that he abhors them as the Deuill and Hell it selfe Thus euen naturall men will answer that truly After Inquirie thus made the Remedie is to be applied And the first and principall remedie pertaines to doctrine and instruction in which the partie is to be informed of his or her estate namely that the foresaid blasphemies are not his sinnes but his crosses For they are the Deuils sinnes and he shall answer for them and they are not ours till we intertaine receiue approoue and giue consent vnto them For proofe hereof let this be considered That vncleane thoughts which haue their residence in the minde of man are of two sorts Inward and Outward Inward are such as haue their originall from the flesh and arise of the corruption of mans nature though stirred vp by the Deuill And these at the very first conceiuing are our sins though they haue no long abode in our mindes and they are directly forbidden in the tenth commandement Outward thoughts are those which haue relation to an outward cause or beginning of which sort are those euill thoughts that be conueied into the minde by the Deuill and if we take no pleasure in them nor yeeld consent vnto them they are not to be accounted our sinnes but the Deuills by whome they are suggested The truth hereof appeares in Christs example into whose minde the deuill cast this blasphemous tentation thereby moouing him to infidelitie co●etousnes and idolatrie which neuerthelesse were not his sinnes because his holy-heart gaue not the least approbation to them but abhorred and repelled them and therefore was free from any taint of sinne in or by them This distinction of thoughts must be remembred For hence it followes that blasphemous thoughts not consented to by vs are not our sinnes but the Deuills Euen as in like case whē one wickedly disposed sollicites another to treason or murder if the said partie listen not nor yeild thereto he cannot be holden guiltie of those crimes Therfore men must not feare those kind of thoughts ouermuch at lest if they please not thēselues ouermuch in them because though they be indeede their crosses yet are they not their personall sinnes for which they shall incurre the wrath and displeasure
which is the cause of this violent distresse And here we are to know by the way that it is an vsuall thing with the parties thus distressed to dissemble and cloake their sinnes and therefore they will alleadge that their trouble ariseth from some euill thoughts from wicked affections and from the corruption of nature whereas commonly men are not distressed in violent manner for euill thoughts affections c. but the violent distresse commeth from so●…e actuall and odious sinne or sinnes done which wound the conscience and are the causes of great distraction of minde and they are many which hauing bin vpon occasion before rehearsed I will not now repeat them Onely this must be remembred that the greater sinns against the third sixt and seuenth commandements are the maine and proper causes of violent distresses and the more secret the sinne is in regard of the practise thereof the greater horror of Conscience it bringeth and open offences doe not giue so deepe a wound vnto it as secret and hidden sinnes Secōdly the particular sinne being known Inquirie must be made as much as possibly may be by signes whether the partie distressed repenteth yea or no. For except he hath repented he cannot be fitted to receiue comfort vnlesse he be first fitted to receiue cōfort he cannot be releeued in Conscience Now if it be found that the partie hath repented then care must be had in the next place that his repentance may be renued for the particular sinne committed Thirdly hauing thus done the comfort must be ministred for the moderating or taking away of the distresse And here remember by the way that the comforts ministred vsually and ordinarily must not goe alone but be mingled and tempered with some terrors of the Law that beeing thereby feared with the consideration of sinne and of the wrath of God due vnto the same the comfort may appeare to be the sweeter The ministring whereof in case of this distresse would not be direct and present but by certaine steppes and degrees except onely in the point of death for then a directer course must be vsed These degrees are two First the partie is to be informed of a possibilitie of pardon that is that his sinnes are pardonable and though in themselues they be great and hainous yet by the mercie of God in Christ they may be remitted Now put the case that the afflicted apprehendeth onely the odiousnesse of his sinnes and the wrath of God due to the same and in this fitte puts off the pardon from himselfe and cannot be perswaded that his sinne may be forgiuen what then is to be done Ans. Then for the effecting of this first degree certaine Grounds are to be laid downe whereupon assurance in that case may be built vp in his heart The first Ground of possibilitie of pardon is That the mercie of God is infinite yea ouer all his works Psal. ●45 9. That the death of Christ is of infinite price merit and value before God That God is much in sparing Isa. 55. 7. That with the Lord is mercie and with him is plenteous redemption Psal. 130. 7. That Christs satisfaction is not onely a price but a counterprice 1. Tim. 2. 6. able to satisfie for the sinnes of all men yea for them that haue sinned against the holy Ghost For that sinne is not therefore vnpardonable because the offence thereof is greater then the merit of Christ but because th● partie offending neither doth nor can applie the merit of Christ vnto himselfe An ancient father vpon Cains wordes My punishment is greater then I can beare saith Thou liest Cain for Gods mercie is greater then the sinnes of all men The mercie of God was very great to Manasses to Salomon to Peter and to many others though they were great offenders The second Ground Men of yeares liuing in the Church of God and knowing the doctrine of saluation shall not be condemned simply for their sinnes but for lying in their sinnes Vpon this ground I say that men distressed must be grieued not so much for committing of sinne as for lying and continuing in sinnes committed A third Ground It pleaseth God many times to leaue men to themselues and to suffer them to commit some sinne that woundeth conscience It is true and cannot be denied But we must withall remember that sinnes committed doe not vtterly take away grace but rather make it the more to shine and shew it selfe For God in mercie turneth all things euen sinne it selfe to the good of them that be his and therefore sinne committed cannot either waste or extinguish grace receiued but by diuine dispensation serueth to amplifie and inlarge the same so as where sinne aboundeth there grace aboundeth much more Rom. 5. 20. And the Lord saide to Paul beeing in great extremitie 2. Cor. 12. 9. My grace is sufficient for thee for my power is made perfect through weakenes Hence it appeareth that the grace of God is not vtterly lost but appeareth liuely in the time of distresse The fourth Ground is this The promises of God touching remission of sinnes and life eternall in respect of beleeuers are generall and in regard of all and euery man indefinite that is they doe not define or exclude any person or any sinner or any time onely they admit one exception of finall impenitencie Here a question may be mooued How long he that ministreth comfort must stand vpon the possibilitie of pardon I answer vntill he hath brought the partie distressed to some measure of true repentance and this beeing done then he is to proceede to the second degree of comfort The Second degree of comfort is to teach that the sinne or sinnes of the partie distressed are indeede pardoned But it may be asked vpon what signes may this comfort be applyed I answer vpon these two First if the partie distressed confesse that he or shee is heartily grieued that by their sinne or sinnes they haue offended so louing and so mercifull a God Secondly if they professe that they desire with all their heart to be reconciled vnto God in Christ and at least doe desire to repent for their sinnes and withall doe carrie in heart a purpose to sinne no more but in all things as much as in them lieth to performe new obedience vnto god Luc. 15. 11. c. Now for the better enforcing of this comfort some textes of Scripture fitting this purpose must be rehearsed a● for example Matth. 9. 12 13. I came not to call the righteous that is to say those that iudge themselues righteous but sinners that is those which are grieued because in their owne conscience they are vile and hainous offenders to repentance Againe Matth 11. 28. Come vnto me all ye that are wearie and heauie laden and I will refresh you And Christ saith it was the end of his cōming to preach deliuerance to the captiues and to set at libertie them that are bruised Luk. 4. 18. To
sense Hence followes the first effect strange imaginations conceits and opinions framed in the minde which are the first worke of this humour not properly but because it corrupteth the instrument and the instrument beeing corrupted the facultie cannot bring forth good but corrupt actions Examples hereof are well knowne I will onely touch one or two One is called the Beastiall or Beastlike Melancholie a disease in the braine whereby a man thinkes himselfe to be a beast of this or that kind and carries himselfe accordingly And here with haue all those beene troubled which haue thought themselues to be wolues and haue practised woluish behauiour Againe it is said of Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 4. 30. that he was driuen from men and did eate grasse as the oxen that is behaued himselfe and fed as a beast Now some are of opinion that his humane shape was taken from him and that he was transformed into a beast at least that he had the soule of a beast in stead of an humane soule for a time But they are deceiued For there is no such transportation of soules into bodies either of men or beasts Others thinke that Nebuchadnezzar was smitten in the braine with this disease of beastlike Melancholy whereby he was so bereft of his right minde that he carried himselfe as a beast And this interpretation is not against the text for in the 31. verse of that chapter it is said that his minde came to him againe and therefore in the disease his vnderstanding and the right vse of his reason was lost And the like is true in historie by diuers examples though it were not true in Nebuchadnezzar Againe take another example that is common and ordinarie Let a Melancholike person vpon the sudden heare or see some fearfull thing the strength of his imagination is such that he will presently fasten the thing vpon himselfe As if he see or heare that a man hath hanged himselfe or is possessed with a Deuil it presently comes to his mind that he must doe so vnto himselfe or that he is or at least shall be possessed In like manner vpon relation of fearefull things presently his phantasie workes and he imagineth that the thing is alreadie or shall befall him And this imagination when it enters once and takes place it brings forth horrible and fearefull effects The second effect or worke of Melancholy is vpon the heart For there is a concord and consent betweene the heart and the braine the thoughts and the affections the heart affecting nothing but that which the minde conceiueth Now when the minde hath conceiued imagined and framed within it selfe fearefull thoughts then comes affection and is answerable to imagination And hence proceede exceeding horrours feares and despaires euen of saluation it selfe and yet the Conscience for all this vntouched and not troubled or disquieted 3. Thirdly it may be demanded whether there be any difference betweene the trouble of Conscience and Melancholy for many hold that they are all one Ans. They are not all one but differ much Affliction of Conscience is one thing trouble by Melancholy is an other and they are plainly distinguished thus First when the Conscience is troubled the affliction it selfe is in the Conscience and so in the whole man But in Melancholy the imagination is disturbed and not the Conscience Secondly the Conscience afflicted hath a true and certen cause whereby it is troubled namely the sight of sinne and the sense of Gods wrath but in Melancholy the imagination conceiueth a thing to be so which is not so for it makes a man to feare and despaire vpon supposed and fained causes Thirdly the man afflicted in Conscience hath courage in many other matters but the Melancholike man feares euery man euery creature yea himselfe and hath no courage 〈◊〉 all but feares when there is no cause of feare Fourthly imaginations in the braine caused by Melancholy may be cured taken away and cut off by meanes of Physicke but the distresse of Conscience cannot be cured by any thing in the world but one and that is the blood of Christ and the assurance of Gods fauour 4. Fourthly the way to cure Melancholy is this First the person troubled must be brought to this that he will content himselfe to be aduised and ruled by the iudgement of others and cease to rest vpon himselfe touching his owne estate and by this shall he reape much quiet and contentation Secondly search and triall must be made whether he hath in him any beginnings of grace as of faith and repentance o● no. If he be a carnall man and wanteth knowledge of his estate then meanes must be vsed to bring him to some sight and sorrow for his sinnes that his melancholy sorrow may be turned into a godly sorrow If he want faith and true repentance some good beginnings thereof must be wrought in his heart Thirdly when he is brought to faith in Gods mercie and an honest purpose not to sinne any more then certaine mercifull promises of God are to be laid before him and he must be exhorted to rest vpon these promises and at no time to admit any imagination or thought that may crosse the saide promises Now the promises are these and such like Psal. 34. 9. No good thing shall be wanting to them that feare God Psal. 91. 10. No euill shall come neere the godly man 2. Chr. 15. The Lord is with you while you are with him and if you seeke him he will be found of you Iam. 4. 8. Draw neere to God and he will draw neere to you And the best meanes to cause any man thus diseased to be at peace with himselfe is to hold beleeue and know the truth of these promises and not to suffer any bythought to enter into his heart that may crosse them Moreouer though the former promises may stay the mind yet will they not take away the humour except further helpe be vsed Therefore the fourth and last helpe is the arte of Physick which serues to correct and abate the humour because it is a meanes by the blessing of God to restore the health and to cure the distemper of the bodie And thus much touching the trouble of mind caused by Melancholy Sect. 3. The Second meanes whereby the bodie annoies the minde is when it occasions trouble to the minde by strange alterations incident to the body When a man beginnes to enter into a Phrensie if the braine admit neuer so little alteration presently the minde is troubled the reason corrupted the heart terrified the man distracted in the whole bodie Thus from the trembling of the heart come many fearefull imaginations and conceits whereof a man knowes not the cause The same is procured by the swelling of the splene by the rising of the entrals by strange crampes convulsions and such like The remedie hereof is this First it is still to be considered whether the partie thus troubled hath the beginnings of true faith repentance or
no. If he hath it is so much the better If he hath not as vsually such persons are meere naturall men then the first dutie is to vse all meanes to stirre vp in him some godly sorrow for his sinnes to bring him to the exercises of inuocation and to some confidence in Gods mercy for pardon Secondly this beeing done meanes must be vsed to take away the opinion conceiued which will be done by giuing him information of the state of his bodie and what is the true and proper cause of the alteratiō therof This being knowne the griefe or feare conceiued will easily be staied For take away the false opinion and inform the iudgement and the whole man will be the better Thirdly the opinion beeing altered and reformed it may be the alteration in the bodie will remaine the partie therefore in that case must be taught that it is a correction of God and that God doth not barely suffer the correction to be inflicted but is the very author of it and therefore the partie is to be well pleased and to rest himselfe in that will of God For euery present estate whether it be good or badde is the best state for vs because it comes by Gods will appointment And thus much touching the distinct kindes of distresses of minde whereunto I adde this one thing further that if we make examination of the estate of persons as are troubled with any of these fiue temptations we shall not vsually find them single but mixed together especially Melancholy with terror of Conscience or some other temptations For the distraction of the mind will often breed a distemper in the body and the distemper of the bodie likewise will sometimes cause distraction of mind Again Melancholy wil oftēbe an occasion though no direct cause of terror of Conscience in the same manner the conscience touched and terrified with sense of the haynousnesse of sinne and the Heauinesse of Gods wrath will bring distemper of bodie by sympathy and cause Melancholie In this Case if Question be made what is to be done I answere that for mixt distresses we must haue recourse to mixt Remedies using in the first place the best meanes for the rectifying of the minde the principall growndes whereof haue beene before deliuered and then taking the seasonable aduise of the Phisitian whose calling and seruice God hath sanctified for the cure and releefe of the bodie in case of extremitie And so much of the first Sort of Questions concerning Man simply considered in himselfe The ende of the first Booke THE SECOND AND THIRD BOOKES OF THE CASES OF CONSCIENCE CONCERNING MAN STANDING IN RELATION to God and Man Wherein are handled the Questions touching the worship of God and the practise of Christian vertue Now newly added vnto the former and carefully examined according to the Authors owne breefes and published for the common good by T. P. Bachelour of Diuinitie Rom. 14. 23. VVhatsoeuer is not of Faith is sinne ALMA MATER CANTA BRIGIA PRINTED BY IOHN LEGAT Printer to the Vniversitie of Cambridge 1606. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE EDWARD LORD DENNIE BARON of Waltham c. RIght Honourable It vvas not vvithout speciall cause that the famous Apostle of the Gentiles entring into a serious meditation of the Calling and vv●…ke of the Ministerie and grovving at length to some issue of his thoughts crieth ●ut as it vvere in tearmes of Complaint And who is sufficient for these things For if ●nquirie be made into the reason of his demand th● Scripture shall ansvver for him That Ministers are the Angels of the Lord of Hosts the Interpreters of his vvill th● Salt of the earth the Light of the World And their Calling is to carrie the Embassage of Reconciliation to manifest vnto man the pleasure of the Highest to season the corrupted heart instrumentally vvith grac● to inlighten the darkened minde by the dispensation of sauing knovvledge as the Sunne doth the Aire by the brightnesse of his beames Novv these high Ti●les and greatvvorkes euidently declaring the vveight and vvorth of that Honourable Commission are not either giuen or assigned onely in respect of publike and ordinarie duties vvherein by Diuine ordinance they be made the mouth of God vnto Man by preaching and againe of Man vnto God by prayer For these are determined vpon certaine times and places vvhen and vvhere they are to be put in execution according to the laudable Constitutions and Canons of particular Churches But in a further regard as they haue receiued from God the Tongue of the Learned and are indued vvith knovvledge and abilitie to informe the Consciences of men touching euery action vvhether personall appertaining to particular states or relatiue emploied in the vvorshippe of God and practise of Christian vertues A gift as no lesse necessarie so of a farre larger extent then the other and consequently performable vvithout limitation of time or place in season out of season vvhensoeuer the minde requireth resolution in Case of doubt or Comfort in distresse The light of this candle is therefore erected vp on high and set in open vi●vv that it may communicate it selfe not to all in grosse but to euery one in person The Lords Interpreter in this sense is to dispense his vvill in euery place time to the poore vvidovv of Sarep●a at her ovvne home to the Noble ●…uch of Ethiopia in his trauell to Dauid that he may be dravvne to Confession of his sinne to Peter for his restoring after his fall to the vveake that they may be supported to the strong that they may stand to th● VVauering minde for resolution to the Troubled soule for comfort and releefe Hence it is apparent that this Messenger of God must be as Paul saith a complete man in euery respect armed and well appointed vvith necessaries appertaining for all purposes to the honour of his Lord and the credit of his Calling He should be not onely a learned Text-man mightie in the Scriptures a positiue Diuine established in the truth a man prouided ad oppositum to vvithstand and con●… the Aduersarie but a skilfull Cas●ist readie at all assaies vpon good grounds of knovvledge and obseruation to giue a Rule to yeelde a Reason to speake a vvord in time to him that is vvearie VVhich last propertie to omit the rest beeing so essential as it is to the Calling and condition of a Minister yea of that importance as heretofore I haue declared to your Lords● it seemeth strange at least in my poore conceit that among so many graue and learned discourses published by vvay of Definition and Disputation in matter of Religion ●evv or none haue beene framed and con●riued to this purpose that in this florishing estate both of our Church and Commonvvealth none haue emploied their indeauours in the vnfolding and displaying of this Subiect yea vvhereas they of the Popish Church haue beene so plentifull or rather lauish in their Summes Manuels
of man is too good for them For if those be holden as Traytors to an earthly Prince and are most deseruedly adiudged to death that reuile his person and denie his lawfull authoritie then they that call into question the Godhead are much more worthie to be esteemed traytors to God and consequently to beare the iust punishment of their rebellion death it selfe For this cause I doe not meane to dispute the question whether there be a God or no and thereby minister occasion of doubting and deliberation in that which is the onely maine Ground and pillar of Christian religion But rather my purpose is in shewing that there is a God to remooue or at least to help an inward corruption of the soule that is great and dangerous whereby the heart and conscience by nature denieth God and his prouidence The wound in the bodie that plucks out the heart is the most dangerous wound that can be and that opinion that takes away the Godhead doth in effect rend and plucke out the very heart of the soule This Caueat premised I come now to the point in hand to shew that there is a God And for our better knowledge and assurance of this truth we are to remember thus much that God hath giuen vnto man a threefold light the one of nature the other of grace and the third of glorie And by these as by so many degrees of knowledge the minde beeing inlightened by God receiueth direction in the truth of the Godhead both for this present life and for that which is to come 〈◊〉 If it be demaunded in what order God hath reveiled this light vnto man I answer that the light of nature serues to giue a beginning and preparation to this knowledge the light of grace ministers the ground and giues further proofe and euidence and the light of glory yeelds perfectiō of assurance making that perfectly and fully knowne which by the former degrees was but weakly and imperfectly comprehended Of these three in order Sect. 1. The light of nature is that light which the view and consideration of the creatures both in generall and particular affordeth vnto man From the light of nature there are fiue distinct arguments to prooue that there is a God the consideration whereof will not be vnprofitable even to him that is best setled in this point I. The first is taken from the creation and frame of the great body of the world and the things therein contained Rom. 1. 20. The inuisible things of him that is his eternall power and Godhead are knowne by the Creation of the world beeing considered in his workes And out of this excellent frame of the world the truth of the Godhead may be sundry waies prooued and maintained First I would aske this question This goodly frame of the world had it a beginning or no beginning Let either part or both be taken Let it first be said it had no beginning but is eternall as the Atheist holdeth Then I reason thus If it had no beginning the world it selfe is God and all the creatures that are therein from the greatest and highest to the least and basest yea euery droppe of water in the sea and euery corne of sand by the sea shore are Gods The reason is because according to this opinion they haue their being of themselues without beginning and that which is a substance of it selfe hath no beginning is very God Againe if the world had no beginning then it hath also no ending For that which is without beginning is without ending Now all things in the world are lyable to corruption and consequently are subiect to an ende For whatsoeuer is corruptible the same is finite therfore the world had a beginning Now if it had a beginning then I demand how it was made did it make it selfe or was it made of nothing If it be affirmed that it made it selfe then the world was before it was If it be said it came from nothing that also cannot be For nothing brings forth nothing and that which is nothing in it selfe cannot bring forth something therefore it is absurd in reason to say that nothing brought forth this world And hereupon it must needes remaine for a truth that there was some substance eternall and Almightie that framed this goodly Creature the World besides it selfe If a man comes into a large forrest and beholds therein goodly faire buildings and sundrie kinds of hearbs and trees and birds and beasts and no man he will presently reason thus with himselfe these buildings are the workemanship of some man they were not from all eternity they did not reare themselues neither did the hearbs the trees the birds or the beasts build them but of necessitie they must haue some first ●ounder which is man In like manner when we consider this world so goodly a creature to behold though we see not the maker thereof yet we cannot say that either it made it selfe or that the things therein contained made it but that the Creator of it was some vncreated substance most wise most cunning and euerlasting and that is God Secondly from this frame of the world and the consideration therof I reason thus In the world there are foure sorts and kindes of creatures The first bare and naked substances that haue neither life sense nor reason in them as the sunne the moone the starres The second that haue substance and life but no sense nor reason as plants trees and hearbs The third that haue no reason but both substance life sense and power to mooue themselues as the beasts of the land and fishes of the sea The fourth are such as haue all namely substance life sense and reason as men Now these foure sorts of creatures excell one another in properties and degrees For the first of them which are meere substances doe serue those that haue life as the trees and the plants The trees the plantes serue the creatures that haue sense life as the beastes and the fishes The beastes and the fishes serue man that hath substance life sense and reason And amongst them all we see that those which haue more gifts are serued of those which haue lesse as the sunne and moone serue the plantes the plantes and hearbes serue the beasts and the beasts serue man and that creature that hath most giftes is serued of all Man therefore excelling all these must haue something to honour and serue which must be more excellent then the other creatures yea then himselfe and that is a substance vncreate most holy most wise eternall infinite and this is God Thirdly all particular creatures whether in heauen or in earth are referred to their certaine particular and peculiar endes wherein euery one of them euen the basest and meanest is imployed and which they doe all accomplish in their kind And this is a plaine proofe that there is one that excelleth in wisedome prouidence and power that created all these to such
themselues and their posteritie and yet they haue done it A plaine proofe that they were not carried by policie and naturall reason but were holy men guided by the Holy Ghost For if they had beene guided by reason they would neuer haue written that which would haue tended to their owne disgrace but would rather haue comended thēselues their name stocke and linage Againe humane authors in their discourses doe commonly write of the praises and vertues of men of whome they write But the penmen of scripture with one consent giue all to God yea when they speake of commendation due to men thy giue it all to God in men God is in their writings the beginning the ende all Sect. 2. A second head of reasons is taken from the Matter and Contents of the Scriptures which are manifold The principall are these First the Scripture doth that which no other bookes can doe For it sets out the corruption of mans nature by sinne the fountaine of this corruption the punishment of the same both in this life and the life to come it discouereth sinnefull mans particular thoughts lusts and affections which neuer any book hath don beside it No Philosopher was euer able to make so true record and so plaine declaration of the thoughts motions and affections of the heart The reason of man cannot discerne them by nature vnles it receiue a further light by grace then it hath naturally in it selfe Yea the Scripture sets downe things that no mans heart can imagine yet are true by experiēce For example that it is an euill thought to thinke there is no God mā by nature cānot imagine but yet it is true in experience by the light of the word And therefore Dauid saith The foole hath saide in his heart there is no God Secondly the maine Contents of this booke are sundrie articles of faith all which are farre aboue the reach of humane reason and yet they are not against it but at least some of them may be prooued by it For example that there is a Redeemer of the world is an article of faith aboue reason yet not against the same For in naturall vnderstanding God is not all iustice and no mercie But if there were no redeemer then should God be all iustice without mercie Now because he hath reuealed himselfe to be as well mercifull as he is iust reason concludes there is a redeemer Againe that this Redeemer should be God and man is aboue reason yet not against it For reason teacheth he must be God that he might satisfie the infinite iustice of God for sinne which none but God can doe Againe that he must be man because man hauing sinned man must be punished for the sinne of man Thirdly in the scripture there are sundrie predictions made before hand particularly which notwithstanding were not to come to passe till an 100 200 300 yeares after all these predictions in the same manner as they haue bin foretold haue bin fulfilled Iacob in his will foretold that the scepter should not depart from Iudah till Shiloh that is the Messias came This was verified euen as it was foretold For a little before Christs birth the scepter was taken from the Iewes and translated vnto the Romane Empire And Herod put the whole colledge of the Iewes called their Sanedrim to the sword in which colledge was the heire apparent of the Kings blood Againe Balaam Num. 24. 24. foretold that Kittim that is the Grecians and the Romans should subdue Eber the people of the East and that also was afterward verified For the Hebrewes and Assyrians were afterward ouercome by the Grecians and Cilicians The Apostle Paul in his time foretold the destruction of the Romane Empire and the reuealing of Antichrist 2. Thes. 7 8. c. which prophecie was shortly after fulfilled For Antichrist grew from those times by little and little till at length he came to sit in the Emperours throne Men indeede may foretell things to come but things foretold by them are present in their causes and so they know and foretell them not otherwise But God foretelleth simply and the scriptures foretell simply therefore they are the word of God Fourthly the law a part of the scripture is propounded most purely perfectly without exception or limitation Whereas in all mens lawes some sinnes are condemned but some be tolerated and permitted But in Gods law euery sinne is condemned none either forborne or excused Lastly the style and speech of the Scripture is plaine and simple without affectation and yet full of grace and maiestie For in that simple style it commandeth the whole man bodie and soule it threatneth euerlasting death and promiseth euerlasting life and it doth more affect the heart of man then all the writings in the world whatsoeuer Sect. 3. The third reason to induce vs to receiue the scriptures as the word of God is taken from the Effects whereof I note onely two I. The doctrine of Scripture in the Law and specially in the Gospel is contrarie to the corrupt nature of man Whereupon Paul saith The wisdome of the flesh is enmitie against God And yet the same word beeing preached by the Minister appointed by God conue●teth nature and turnes the heart of man vnto it in such sort as in this last age it hath wonne a great part of the world to the imbracing thereof Now in reason this is impossible that a thing which is so flat against mans corrupt nature should notwithstāding preuaile with it so farre as to cause man to liue and die in the profession maintenance thereof Wee are woont to reiect the writings of men if they please not our humors whereas this word of God is of force to mooue and ●●cline our affections though neuer so much censured crossed and controlled by it And this shewes that God is the author thereof from whome the word of creation came to which euery thing at the first yeelded obedience II. The word of God hath this effect to be able to minister comfort and releefe in all distresses of bodie or minde yea in the greatest and most desperate troubles and vexations of the Conscience And when the helpes of humane learning and Philosophie which are of great vse and force in other cases haue done all that they can to the very vtmost without effect or successe euen then the sweete promises of the Gospel will reuiue and raise vp the heart and giue it full contentment and satisfaction Expetience shewes this to be a confessed truth in particular cases and it teacheth whence and frō whome this word proceedeth wherein these promises are contained namely from God For when he sets the Conscience vpon the racke the Word that releeueth and refresheth the same must needs proceede and come from him alone Sect. 4. The fourth reason is taken from the Properties of Scripture I will name onely two The first is Antiquitie which most plainly appeares
in the historie though the doctrine it selfe be as ancient The Scripture contains a continued historie from age to age for the space of 4000 yeares before Christ euen from the beginning Humane histories that are of any certentie or continuance begin onely about the time of Ezra and Nehemiah As for those which were written before they are onely fragments and of no certentie The second propertie is Consent with it selfe in all parts both for the matter scope and ende The writings of men doe dissent from themselues by reason of ignorance forgetfulnes in the authors But the word of God agrees with it selfe most exactly and the places that seeme to disagree may easily be reconciled which shewes that holy men by whome it was penned were not guided therein by their owne priuate iudgement but were directed by the wisdome of the spirit of God Sect. 5. The fift reason is drawne from the Contraries The Deuill and wicked men are in iudgement and disposition as contrarie to scripture as light is to darkenes I prooue it thus Let a man read any booke of Philosophie and labour to be resolued of any one point therein he shall neuer be tempted to infidelitie But if the same man reade the bookes of Scripture and labour to vnderstand them he shall haue within himselfe many motions and temptations not to beleeue and obey it Now what should be the cause thereof but that these bookes are the word of God which the Deuill laboureth to oppugne with might and maine Againe consider the same in the practise of wicked men They will not brooke the rebuke of their sinnes namely their Idolatrie blasphemie and other notorious crimes by scripture but will seeke the blood and life of him that shall sharply taxe and reprooue them And hence it was that wicked Kings so persecuted the Lords Prophets Yea further let it be marked that these wicked men that are tainted with these horrible crimes and cannot abide the word nor teachers thereof to the death haue commonly fearefull endes Now the opposition of Satan and wicked men to the word shewes the scriptures to be a most holy word and indeede the very word of God Sect. 6. The sixt reason is taken from sundrie testimonies First of holy Martyrs in the Olde and New testament who haue giuen their liues for the maintenance of this word and sealed the same with their owne hearts blood yea suffered the most horrible and exquisite torments that the wit of man could deuise and that most patiently and willingly not beeing daunted or dismaied The stories of Martyrs in all ages confirme this truth especially of those that suffered before in and after the times of the tenne bloodie persecutions And. vnlesse they had beene supported by a d●●ine power in so good a cause they could neuer so many of them haue suffered in such manner as they did The second is the testimonie and consent of Heathen men who haue recorded the very same things at l●ast many of the principall that are set downe in the Bible If this were not so man should haue some colourable excuse of his vnbeleefe And these things which they record were not all taken out of the Scripture but were registred to memorie by Historiographers that liued in the times when they were done Such are the stories of the Creation and Flood of the tower of Babel of the Arke of Abraham and his possessions of Circumcision of the miracles of Moses of the birth of Christ and the slaughter of the young children of the miracles of Christ of the death of Herod Agrippa and such like And these we take for true in humane stories much more then ought we to doe it in the word of God The third testimonie is of Miracles The ●octrine of scripture was confirmed by miracles wrought by the teachers thereof the Prophets and Apostles aboue all power strength of nature and such as the Deuill can not counterfeit as the staying of the sunne and the raising of the dead c. The fourth is the testimonie of the Holy Ghost which is the argument of all arguments to settle and resolue the Conscience and to seale vp the certaintie of the word of God If any shall aske how this testimony of the Holy Ghost may be obtained and beeing obtained how we may discerne it to be the testimony of the Holy Ghost and not of man I answer by doing two things First by resigning our selues to become truly obedient to the doctrine taught Ioh. 7. 17. If any man will doe my fathers will saith Christ he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God Secondly by praying vnto God for his Spirit to certifie our consciences that the doctrine reveiled is the doctrine of God Aske faith our Sauiour Christ it shal be giuen you seeke and ye shall find knock and it shall be opened vnto you For he that asketh rece●●eth Mat. 7. 7 8. Againe Your heauenly father will giue the Holy Ghost to them that desire him Luc. 11. 13. And If any man lacke wisdome let him aske it of God who giueth to all men liberally and reprocheth no man and it shall be giuen him Iam. 1. 7. Sect. 7. Now hauing set down the proofes of this point before I come to the next Question some speciall Obiections against this doctrine are to be answered and resolued For there haue not beene wanting in all ages both Atheists and others who haue professedly excepted against it and of set purpose haue vndertaken to call the written word of God into Question Such were Celsus Lucian Iulian Porpherie Apelles and others From whome some of latter times hauing receiued the poison of Atheisme and prophanesse haue not ceased as much as in them lyeth to oppugne sundry parts and portions of holy scripture Their principall reasons and exceptions I will propound and answere one by one And first they except against that which is written Gen. 1. 16. where it is said God made the sunne the fourth day Now say they the sunne is the cause of the day and therefore there could not be three daies before the sunne was created considering that the effect is not before the cause but the cause before the effect I answere First we must put a difference betweene cause and cause For of causes some be the highest some subordinate vnto them The highest and first cause of all creatures is God himselfe from whom all things at the first immediately flowed without any relation to their causes in nature And thus were the first second and third daies created and appointed immediately from God and distinguished from the night by an intercourse of light ordained by him for that purpose But the subordinate and inferior cause of the day in order of nature was the sunne and that by the same appointment of God and this cause was not set in nature as the cause of the day before the fourth day of creation for then it pleased him
doe with patience expect it Rom. 8. 25. The third is Loue of God which hath two effects in the heart First it makes the heart to cleaue vnto God and to be well pleased with him simply for himselfe In this manner God the father louing Christ testifieth that he was well pleased in him Matth. 3. 17. Secondly it mooues the heart to seeke by all meanes possible to haue true fellowship with God in Christ. This the Church notably expresseth in the Canticles The fourth is Inward praier or Inuocation of the heart and it is nothing els but the lifting vp of the heart vnto God according to his will by desires and grones vnspeakable Or it is a worke of the heart whereby it flies vnto God for help in distresse makes him a rocke of defence When the children of Israel were afflicted They remembred that God was their strength and the most high God their redeemer Psal. 78. 35. Of this kinde of prayer Paul speakes when he saith pray continually 1. Thess. 5. 17. For solemne prayer conceiued and vttered in forme of words cannot alwaies be vsed but we are to lift vp our hearts vnto God vpon euery occasion that by inward and holy motions and affections they may be as it were knitte vnto him Now to conclude this point touching Inward worship we must remember that it alone is properly simply and of it selfe the worship of God and the Outward is not simply the worship of God but onely so farre forth as it is quickned by the Inward and grounded vpon it For God is a Spirit and therefore the true worship that is done vnto him must be performed in spirit and truth Ioh. 4. 24. CHAP. VI. Of the outward worship of God and the first head thereof Prayer THus much of the Inward worship of God The Outward is that which is performed by the bodie externally eitherin word or deede To this belong many particulars which I will reduce to eight seuerall heads I. Prayer II. The hearing of the word preached III. The vse of the Sacraments IV. Outward Adoration V. Confession VI. An Oath VII Vowes VIII Fasting Touching Praier conceiued and vttered by the voice there are many Questions of Conscience the principall whereof are foure I. Question How shall a man make a lawfull and acceptable praier to God Ans. The word of God requires many conditions in making praier to God they may all be brought to three heads Some of them goe before the making of praier some are to be performed in the act of praier some after praier is ended Sect. 1. Conditions to be obserued before praier are three First he that would make such a praier as God may be pleased to heare must repent Esa. 1. 15. God would not heare the praiers of the Iewes because their hands were full of blood that is because they had not repented of their oppression and crueltie Ioh. 9. 31. God heares not sinners that is such as liue and lie in their sinnes and turne not vnto God by true repentance 1. Ioh. 3. 22. By this we know that God heares our prayers if we keepe his commandements I adde further that the man which hath before-time repented must againe renew his repentance if he desire that his praiers should be accepted For the very particular sinnes of men whereinto they fall after their repentance doe hinder the course of their praiers from hauing accesse vnto God if they be not repented of And for this cause the worthie men of God the Prophets in the old Testament doe vsually in the beginning of their praiers still humble themselues and confesse their sinnes as we may see in the example of Daniel chap. 9. v. 5 6 c. and of Ezra chap. 9. v. 6. c. Secondly before a man make a praier he must first if neede require be reconciled vnto his brother If thou bring thy gift to the altar and there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee leaue there thine offering and goe thy way first be recōciled to thy brother then come and offer thy gift Matt. 5. 23. When ye shall stand and pray forgiue if ye haue any thing against any man c. Mark 11. 25. Thirdly he that is to pray must prepare himselfe in heart and mind as one that is to speake familiarly with God In this preparation foure things are required First the mind is to be emptied of all carnall worldly thoughts Secondly there must be in the minde a consideration of the things to be asked Thirdly a lifting vp of the heart vnto the Lord Psal. 25. 1. Fourthly the heart must be touched with a reuerence of the maiestie of God to whome we pray Eccl. 5. 1. Be not rash with thy mouth nor let thy heart be hasty to vtter a thing before God For the neglect herof the Lord threatneth to bring a iudgment vpon the Israelites Esay 29. 13. 14. Sect. 2. The second sort of Conditions are those that are required in praier and they are in number eight I. Euery petition must proceed from a liuely sense and feeling of our owne wants and of our spirituall pouertie For without this no praier can be earnest and hartie and consequently become acceptable vnto God For example when we pray that Gods name may be hallowed we must in making that petition haue in our harts a sense of the corruption of our nature wherby we are prone to dishonour the name of God II. Our praier must proceede from an earnest desire of that grace which we want and this desire is indeede praier it selfe Moses vttering neuer a word but groning in the spirit vnto God in the behalfe of the Isralites is said to crie vnto the Lord. Exod. 14. 15. We know not saith Paul what to pray as we ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sights that cannot be expressed Rom. 8. 26. III. The petition must proceede from sauing and true iustifying faith The reason is because without that faith it is impossible that either our persons or our praiers or any other action we doe should please God Heb. 11. 6. IV. Euery petition must be grounded vpon the word of God and not framed according to the carnall conceit and fansie of mans braine And this is the assurance that we haue in him that if we aske any thing ACCORDING TO HIS WILL he heareth vs. 1. Ioh. 5. 14. Now we haue a double ground of our praier in Gods word a commandement to make the praier either generall or particular and a promise that our requests shal be granted Here we must remember two rules First Things to be asked are either spirituall or temporall Spirituall are such as concerne God whereof some are more necessarie to saluation as remission of sinnes faith repentance and such like some are lesse necessarie as hope ioy in the feeling of Gods mercie in distresse c. Temporall things are such as belong to this life as meate drinke clothing
preferment and such like Now touching things spirituall that are moore necessary to saluation we are to pray for them absolutely without any exception or condition But for things lesse necessary to saluation and for temporall blessings we must aske them at gods hand with this condition if it be his will and pleasure and so farre forth as he in his wisdome shall iudge to be most expedient for vs. Herein we must follow the example of Christ who in his agonie prayed to his father to take that cuppe from him yet with this condition Not my will but thy will be done The reason is this Looke how far sorth God commands vs to aske and promiseth that we shall receiue so far forth are we warranted to aske and may hope to receiue Now God commands vs to aske and promiseth vs the first sort of spirituall things freely and simply without any condition or exception But the other sort of spirituall things that are lesse necessary and temporall blessings he promiseth vs with condition and therefore in like sort ought we to aske them The second Rule is We must not in our prayer bind God to any circumstances of time place or measure of that grace or benefit which we aske V. Our praiers being thus framed as hath beene said are to be presented and offered to God alone and to none but him For first none els can heare all men in all places at all times and helpe all men in all places and at all times but onely he Againe the spirit of God makes vs to pray and in prayer to call him Abba father Furthermore all praier must be grounded vpon the word wherein we haue not the least warrant either expressely setdowne or by consequent implyed to preferre our sutes and requests to any of the creatures VI. Praier is to be presented to God in the name merit and mediation of Christ alone For we our selues are not worthie of any thing but shame and confusion Therefore we cannot pray in our owne names but must pray onely in the name of Christ. Our praiers are our sacrifices and Christ alone is that Altar whereon we must offer them to God the father For this Altar must sanctific them before they can be a sacrifice of a sweete smeiling sauour vnto God Hence it is that not onely our petitions but all other things as Paul wisheth are to be done in the name of the Lord Iesus Coloss. 3. 17. And Christ himselfe saith Whatsoeuer you aske the Father in my name he will giue it you Ioh. 16. 23. VII There must be in praier Instancie and Perseuerance The heart must be instant not onely in the act of praier but afterwards till the thing asked be granted This Instancie is commended vnto vs in the parable of the widdow and the vnrighteous iudge Luk. 18. 1. Hereunto the Prophet exhorteth when he saith keepe not silence and giue the Lord no rest c. Esa. 62. 7. And S. Paul in like manner wisheth the Romanes to striue with him by praiers to God for him Rom. 15. 30. VIII Euery true praier must haue in it some thanksgiuing vnto God for his benefits In all things let your requests be shewed vnto God in praier and supplication with giuing of thanks Phil. 4. 6. Christ himself gaue directiō touching this in that forme of prayer which he taught his Disciples For thine is the kingdome power and glorie Sect. 3. The third sort of conditions are those which are required after prayer and they are specially two The first is a particular faith whereby he that praieth must be assured that his particular request shall be granted Mark 11. 24. Whatsoeuer ye desire when ye pray BELEEVE that ye shall haue it and it shall be done vnto you And that he may haue this particular faith he must first haue that whence it ariseth namly true iustifying faith standing in a perswasion of his reconciliation with God The second is that a man must doe and practise that which he praies for and he is not onely to pray for blessings but also to vse all lawfull meanes that he can whereby the blessings he asketh may be obtained For example As thou praiest for the pardon of thy sinns so thou must leaue thy sinns and vse all good meanes whereby the same may be mortified and crucified And the like is to be done in all other things which we aske of God Thus we haue the first Question of conscience resolued touching Praier that then the praier is acceptable to God when he that prayeth obserueth as much as in him lyeth all these conditions before in and after praier II. Question Whether may a man lawfully make Imprecations that is to say pray against his enemies and how farre forth is it lawfull Sect. 1. For answer to this we must marke and obserue sundry distinctions and differences First we must distinguish betweene the cause and the person that defends and maintaines the cause The euill cause which an euil man defendeth is to be condemned of vs wee may alwaies and that lawfully pray against it but we may not in like sort condemne and pray against his person Secondly we must distinguish of the persons of our enemies Some be priuate enemies some publicke Priuate I call those which be enemies of some particular men and are against them in regard of this or that cause or matter and yet are not enemies of God or of his truth Publike are those which are not only our enemies but the enemies of God of his kingdome of his trueth and relion Now we may not pray against priuate enemies we may as before pray against their euill cause but not against their persons Math. 5. 44. Blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them which hurt you and persecute you And we are commanded to loue our enemies as our selues Againe publicke enemies of God and his truth are also of two sorts either Curable or Incurable Curable are such as offend of ignorance or some other humane frailty so as there is some hope of their conuersion and repentance We must not pray against the persons of these but onely against their dealings and badde causes and pray for their persons and for their conuersiō Thus Christ praied for those that crucified him Father forgiue them and Stephē Act. 7. for them that stoned him Vncureable are those that sinne obstinately and of malice so as there is no hope of their amendment and conuersion And further for the better answering of this Question we must marke another distinction There are two sorts of men that are to make praier vnto God Some that haue extraordinary gifts as the Prophets and Apostles Now he that is an extraordinarie man hath and must haue these two gifts namely first a spirit of Discerning to discerne and iudge whether the person against whome he praies be incureable or no and secondly a pure Zeale of Gods honour and glory The
Of this Saint Paul speaks to the Corinths Iudge ye what I say 1. Cor. 10. 15. The second is the iudgement of the Prophet or minister And this is a surer kind of iudgement then the former proceeding from a greater measure of Gods grace The third is the iudgement of the Holy Ghost in scripture and this is soueraigne and absolute For the Holy Ghost iudgeth all and is iudged of none These three kinds of iudgment are set in this order The first depends vpon the second the second vpon the third and the third is absolute and iudged of none Vpon this caueat two things doe follow First that a priuate hearer though he may iudge of doctrine deliuered yet he may not censure the Teacher or his ministrie Ministers are to be iudged but their spirit is not subiect to euery priuate man but to the prophets For the spirit of the prophet that is the doctrine which the prophets bring beeing inspired by the Holy Ghost is subiect to the Prophets 1. Cor. 14. 32. Secondly a priuate man is not to publish or broach any point of doctrine but that which is plainly propounded in the word and taught by the ministers thereof This is a necessarie rule and the want of obseruation thereof is the cause of many scismes and haeresies in the Church The Lord commands the people Mal. 2. 7. to require the law at the mouth of the priest in all maine points of faith and manners The second Rule to be obserued in hearing Euery hearer must haue care that the word of God be rooted and grounded in his heart like good feede in good ground which Saint Iames expresseth Iam. 1. 21. Receiue with meekenes the ingrafted word Here generally it is to be remembred that not onely ignorant people but euen the most learned ought to be hearers of the word preached For the preaching thereof serues not onely for the increasing of knowledge but also for the reformation of the affection which may be inordinate where knowledge doth abound Now for the rooting of the word of God in our hearts sundry things are required First a true right vnderstanding therof Secondly it must be mingled with faith Heb. 4. 1. For the word is as wine or water of life our faith is the sugar that sweetneth it and giues it a pleasant relish The word therfore must be tempered and mixed with our saith that it may become profitable vnto vs. Now in this mixture there is required a double faith the first generall whereby we beleeue the doctrine deliuered to be true so as we neuer call the same into question Our Gospell to you saith Paul was in much assurance 1. Thess. 1. 5. The second special whereby we apply the word preached vnto our selues for the humbling and comforting of our hearts Thirdly we must labour to be affected with the word Thus Iosiah his heart is said to melt at the reading of the law 2. Chro. 34. 27. And the people reioyced greatly because they vnderstood the word which the Leuites had taught them Neh. 8. 12. The hearts of the two disciples that went to Emmaus burned within them when Christ opened vnto them the scriptures Luc. 24. 32. And the Iewes at Peters sermon were pricked in their hearts and said Men and brethren what shall we doe Act. 2. 37. Fourthly the word of God must dwell plenteously in vs Coll. 3. 16. This is doth when it rules and beares the greatest sway in the heart and is not ouerruled by any corrupt affection III. The duties to be performed after hearing are these First the doctrine deliuered must be treasured vp in the heart and practised in life Psal. 119. 11. I haue hid thy word in my heart that I might not sinne against thee Secondly a man must meditate on the word which he hath heard with lifting vp of his heart vnto God The beasts that were clouen footed and chewed the cudde were fittest both for meate vnto man and for sacrifice to God Levit. 11. It was the olde and auncient opinion of the Church that this chewing the cudde signified holy meditations And he that heares the word must doe as the beast doth fetch vp the meate out of his bellie againe and chewe it ouer a new The man that doth so is the fittest for the Lords vse Thirdly he must haue experience of the word of God in himselfe Psal. 34. 8. Tast and see how gracious the Lord is Fourthly he is to examine himselfe after he hath heard the word Thus Dauid saith of himselfe Psal. 119. 59. I haue considered my wayes and turned my feete vnto thy testimonies Fiftly he must be obedient vnto it and testifie his obediēce though not at all times yet whensoeuer occasion is offered Iam. 1. 22. Be ye doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing your owne selues II. Question touching hearers is How are they to be comforted who after long hearing of the word either profit very litle or not at all For resolution of this Question the Causes of not profiting are distinctly to be considered And they are of two sorts The first sort of Causes are the sinnes of the hearers And that sinnes are the causes of not profiting it will appeare by this signe if the memorie vnderstanding and other parts of the minde in common matters be strong and pregnant but dull and weake in apprehending and retaining the doctrine taught Now these sinnes are principally two First Hardnes of heart when a man is not inwardly mooued and affected with the word preached but remaines in the same state he was before This is set forth by the hard ground that is by the high way side and by the stonie ground Math. 13. 4 5. And such is the heart that is not mooued nor affected either with ioy sorrow feare or consolation The hardnes of heart ariseth from a custome in sinning and from that the deceitfulnesse of sinne Heb. 3. 13. Secondly worldly Cares that is a heart possessed with desire of profits pleasures honours preferments and such like which be as thornes that choake the seede of the word and suffer it not to grow and fructifie yea that fill the heart full of wandering imaginations which steale away the mind from attending to the word preached Those that are thus hindred from profiting are rather to be reprooued then comforted for that the cause of their non-proficiencie is in from themselues They are therefore to vse all good meanes for the remooueall of their sinnes that of hard hearted and carnall they may become good and profitable hearers of the word The meanes are these First they must labour to be touched in heart with sense and feeling of their spirituall pouertie and want of Gods fauour and mercie in the pardon of their sinnes The reason is giuen of Dauid Psal. 25. 9. The Lord teacheth the humble his waies And by Marie in her song Luk. 1. 35. He hath filled the hungrie with good things and the rich he hath sent
the want thereof Gods glorie is directly impeached the saluation of men hindered and our neighbour offended And then we are necessarily to confesse though no examination be made If it be here asked How we may be able to discerne of this time The answer is by Christian wisdome which teacheth vs that when by our silence wicked men are emboldened to speake euill of Gods word and weake ones occasioned to fall from the faith then is the fittest time to stand in the defence and maintenance of the truth Out of these two times and cases Christians haue libertie not to confesse but may lawfully conceale their faith nay which is more their persons by changing their habit and attire vppon this ground because the affirmatiue commandement doth not alwaies binde Here it is obiected First that we are saued onely by faith and therefore confession is not necessarie Ans. We must consider faith two waies First as an instrument created in the heart whereby we apprehend and apply Christ with his benefites to our selues for our iustification and saluation Secondly faith must be considered more largely as it is a way to bring vs to life euerlasting Nowe in the first acceptiō it may truly be said that we are saued by faith alone For there is no grace of God where by we take hold of Christ but faith But if we take it in the second sense as a way to life then we may truly say that it alone saueth not but hope loue repētance good works and all diuine vertues In this sense Paul saith we are saued by hope Rom. 8. 24. because by it we wait for our saluation and hope is the way in which all must walke that looke to be saued Againe he saith Momentany afflictions doe work vnto vs an eternall waight of glory 2. Cor. 4. 17. But how Not as causes but as waies signes and markes that giue vs direction to our iourneies ende And thus The woman is said to be saued by bearing of Children 1. Tim. 2. 15. Which bearing and bringing vp of children is no cause but onely a way wherein she must constantly walke to glory And though in mans iudgement that may seeme a way of misery and death yet indeede it is otherwise if the Children continue in faith loue and holinesse with modestie Againe the Apostle Iames saith that Abrahams faith wrought together with his workes Iam. 2. 2. which are likewise not to be vnderstood as working causes but as testmonies and euidences declaring and manifesting that he was iust in the sight of God Secondly it is obiected that confession of our faith to God is sufficiēt For so Saint Paul seemes to say Rom. 14. 22. Hast thou faith haue it with thy selfe before God Therefore confession before man is not needefull Ans. The Apostle speakes not of that faith wherby we are iustified and saued but of that which standeth in a perswasion of the vse or not vse of things indifferent And this a man may keepe to himselfe that is he may so vse it as he shall not thereby offend his brother That commandement was giuen by Paul for those times when men were not fully perswaded of the vse of God creatures as meates drinkes c. but to these times it is not II. Question Whether it be lawfull for a man being vrged to goe to Idol-seruice and heare Masse so as he keepe his heart to God Ans. It is not and I proue it by the scope of the eigth and tenth Chapters of the first Epistle to the Corinthians where the Apostle disputes the Question whether the Corinthians might goe into the temples of Idols and eate of meat offered vnto them in the meane time not partaking with Idolaters in the worship of the Idols This he auoucheth to be vtterly vnlawfull for that purpose tells the Corinthians That they cannot drinke of the cuppe of the Lord and of the cuppe of Deuills Now as this was vnlawfull for them so it is vnlawfull for any Protestant to goe to any Popish assembly to heare Masse Again God is the Creator of the Body and Soule therefore he is to be worshipped in both cōsequently we robbe him of his due when we reserue our hearts to him and giue our bodies to Idolls To this purpose Paul exhorteth the Romanes to giue vp their bodies a liuing sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto God Rom. 12. 1. Which place vtterly condemneth the errour of some who thinke that God wil be content with the soule and that they may bestowe there bodie in the seruice of the Devill But against this Doctrine sundrie things are alledged The first is the example of Naaman 2. Kings 5. 18. 19. who said to the Prophet when I bowe my selfe in the house of Rimmon the Lord be mercifull to me in this thing To whom Elisha answered goe in peace Here say some the Prophet giues leaue to Naaman to worshippe in an Idols Temple To this there be sundrie answers giuen Some affirme that Naaman speakes only of Ciuill and Politique worship and not of Religious For his office was to kneele down in the Temple that the King might leane vpon his shoulder when he worshipped the Idoll And Naaman makes open protestation v. 7. that he will worshippe no God but the God of Israel Others answere and that more truly that Naaman doth acknowledge it a sinne to goe to the house of Rimmon and therefore he craues pardon for it at the hands of God twice togither ver 18. and withall makes a vowe that he will thenceforth offer neither burnt offering nor sacrifice to any other God saue onely to the Lord and hereunto Elisha answereth Goe in peace Yet further it is answered that Naaman requesteth the Prophet to pray for him that he might be constant in the seruice of the true God And in case he were drawne against his purpose by humane frailtie to bow againe before Rimmon with his King that the Lord in mercie would pardon his offence And to this the Prophet yeeldeth saying Goe in peace As if he should say Goe to I will pray for thee to this ende and purpose This text therefore giues no warrant for bodily presence in Idolatrous assemblies The second Obiection Iehu openly professed the worship of Baal and yet he dissembled meaning nothing lesse 2. king 10. 18. And the Lord commends him for his diligent execution of that which was right in his eies vers 30. Ans. Iehu is commended not for his dissembling but for his diligence in destroying Achabs house his religion the Priests with all that belonged vnto them though in other matters belonging to the seruice of God he departed not from the sinnes of Ieroboam The third obiection Dan. 3. 6. Nebuchad-nezzar made a decree that whosoeuer would not fall downe and worshippe the golden Image should the same houre be cast into the middest of an hotte fierie furnace Now we doe not read that any moe refused to obey but three and therefore it seemes that
for a perpetuall ordinance But to vs in the new testament both it and other Legall ceremonies are abrogated and we haue onely two Sacraments to be administred and receiued as seales of the Promises of God and parts of his worshippe Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord. Secondly that which is not commended vnto vs by God in the name of worshippe is no worshippe to vs. Now the ceremonies of the Iewes are no where commended vnto vs in that name and therefore it is a vaine thing for any man to vowe the obseruation thereof Thirdly vowes of ceremoniall duties did in a peculiar manner and vpon speciall respects pertaine to the Iewes Hereupon when they vowed House Lands Goods c. to the vse of the Temple this they did as beeing the Lords Tenants of whome alone they helde their possessions and hereby they acknowledged and also testified their Homages and Seruices due vnto him And this particular respect concerneth not the Church and people of the New Testament whence it followeth that they are not tyed by the same bond to performe worship vnto God by the vowes of Ceremonies gifts oblations and sacrifices The third and last part of the Answer If a vowe be taken for a promise of some bodily and outward worke or exercise as fasting giuing of almes abstaining from certaine meates and drinkes c. then it is not any part of Gods worship but onely an helpe stay and furtherance of the same For first we haue libertie of conscience in Christ to vse or not to vse all indifferent things Now Gods worship is not a thing of that nature but absolutely necessarie Secondly Paul 1. Tim. 4. 8. affirmeth that bodily exercise profiteth little but godlines is profitable for all things In which words he opposeth godlines to bodily exercise and therefore godlines or the worship of God consisteth not in them But the words of Dauid are alleadged to the contrarie Psal. 76. 11. Vowe and performe vnto the Lord your God Where we haue a double command one to make Vowes another to pay them To which I answer first if Dauid speaketh of the vowe of all moral duties then the Commandement concerneth euery man because the thing commanded is a part of Gods worship For it is as much as if he had said Vow thankefull obedience vnto God and performe it Againe if the place be meant of the vow of ceremoniall duties then it is a commandement peculiar to the old Testament and so bindes the Iewes onely howbeit not all of them but onely such as had iust cause to make a vow for otherwise they had libertie to abstaine from vowing Deut. 23. 22. When thou abstainest from vowing it shall be no sinne vnto thee Of one of these two kinds must the place alleadged necessarily be vnderstoode and not of the third which is of bodily exercise for then it should reuerse Christian libertie in the vse of things indifferent which no Commandement can doe By light of this Answer we may discerne the errour of the Popish Church which maketh Vowes a part of Religion and the Worship of God Nay further it teacheth that some vowes as namely those of Pouertie Continencie Regular Obedience to this or that Order are workes of merit and supererogation tending to a state of perfection euen in this life and deseruing a further degree of glorie in heauen then the worke of the Morall Law III. Question When a Uow made doth binde and when not Before I giue answer to the Question I will lay downe this Ground In making of a lawfull Vow foure Conditions are to be obserued The first concerneth the person of him that voweth that he be a fit person His fitnesse may be discerned by two things First if he be at his owne libertie as touching the things whereof he makes his vow and not vnder the gouernment of a superiour Thus in the Old Testament if a daughter had made a vow without the consent or allowance of her father it might not stand in effect Numb 30. 4 5. Secondly if the partie keepe himselfe within the compasse of his calling generall and particular Hence it followes that Vowes of going a Pilgrimage to worship this or that Idol in this or that place for example S. Iames of Compostella and the Ladie of Loretto c. are vtterly vnlawfull because such persons by this practise doe leaue their calling and condition of life and take vpon them a calling not warranted by the Lord. The second Condition is concerning the Matter of a Vow It must be Lawfull Possible and Acceptable to God Hereupon it followes that there be foure things which cannot be the matter of a Vow The first is Sinne. Thus the Iewes bound themselues with a Vow that they would neither eate nor drinke till they had killed Paul Act. 23. 12 14. This their vow was nothing els but a threatning of God himselfe and therefore vtterly vnlawfull Secondly Trifles and light matters as when a man voweth not to take vp a straw or such like And this is a plaine mocking of God Thirdly things impossible as to flie or to go on foote to Ierusalem Fourthly things meerely necessarie as to die which cannot be auoided The Third is touching the Forme of a Vowe It must be voluntarie and free And that it may be so three things are necessarily required First that it be made in Iudgement that is with reason and deliberation Next that it be done with consent of will And thirdly with libertie of conscience Hence it appeares that the Vowes of children mad-men and fooles or such as are taken vpon rashnes or constraint also the vow of perpetuall abstinence from things simply indifferent are all vtterly vnlawfull For the first sort are not done vpon iudgement the next without due consideration and the last are greatly preiudiciall to Christian libertie The fourth concernes the Ende which is not to be a part of Gods worship but onely a stay and proppe to further and helpe vs in the same Nowe there be three particular Ends of a vow First to shew our selues thākfull to God for blessings receiued secondly to preuent sinne to come by keeping so brietie and moderation thirdly to preserue and increase our faith prayer repentance and obedience This Ground beeing laide the Answer to the Question propounded is this When in vowing we obserue the conditions prae-required the vow is lawfull and consequently binds the partie vowing so as if he keepe it not he dishonoureth God But when the saide Conditions doe not concurre in the action of vowing it becomes vnlawfull and the partie remaineth free and not bound to performance Here by the way a Question of some moment is made Whether Iephte vpon his Vow did offer his Daughter in Sacrifice or no considering that it is plaine euen by the light of Nature as also by the doctrine before taught that a man is bound by the vow which he maketh This Question admitteth sundrie answers according to the diuers opinions
pray and heare the word cheerefully when their stomacks are emptie These persons may eate in the day of a solemne fast so that they obserue the caueats before remembred It is not with vs in these countries as it was with the Iews They could fast one two or three daies together without any inconvenience we cannot doe the like And the reason is plaine Men that liue in those hotte countries haue colde stomackes and so may fast the longer but in colder climates such as ours is in respect of theirs men beeing of hotter stomackes are not able to continue fasting so long as they Sect. 3. The third point is concerning the Right endes of a religious fast and they are foure The first is to subdue the flesh that is to bring the body and so the bodily lusts into subiection to the will and word of God By eating and drinking the body is made heauie the heart oppressed the senses dull and the whole man vnfit for the duties of humiliation praier and hearing of the word Luk. 21. 24. That therfore this vnfitnesse may be taken away not onely the body it selfe but the vnruely lusts of the flesh are to be mortified and subdued by this exercise of fasting The second end is to stirre vp our deuotion and to confirme the attention of our mindes in hearing and in praier To this purpose in the Scripture fasting and prayer are for the most part if not alwaies ioyned togither because when the stomacke is full the body and minde are lesse able to doe any good dutie and contrariwise when abstinence is vsed the heart is lighter the affections in better order the whole man more quicke and liuely in the seruice of God For this very cause Anna is saide to worshippe God night and day with fasting and praier Luk. 2. 37. And the intent of the Holy Ghost there is to commend her for the feruencie of her praier which shee testified in that by such exercises shee stirred vp and increased the attention of her minde The third ende is to testifie the humilitie and contrition of our hearts that is to say our inward sorrow and griefe for sinne and our repentance and effectuall turning vnto God Without this ende the fast is but a vaine ceremonie And therefore the Prophet Ioel calls vpon the people to turne vnto the Lord with all their hearts with fasting weeping and mourning to rent their hearts and not their garments c. Ioel 2. 12 13. The Prophet Esay in like manner reprooveth the Iewes because when they fasted they would afflict their soules for a day and how downe their heads as a bu●rush and lie downe in sackcloath and ashes But made no conscience to turne from their euill waies Esay 58. 5 6. Therefore their outward humiliation was but hypocrisie The fourth end of a fast is to admonish vs of our guiltines before the Lord and to put vs in mind of the acknowledgement of our sinnes wherby we become vnworthy of any blessing gift or mercie yea vnworthy to goe vpon the ground to breath in the aire to eate drinke sleepe or inioy any other benefit In a word that we haue deserued by our sinnes all the plagues and punishments threatued in the Law against sinners The Malefactor in the day of Assises cannot giue greater testimonie of the true confession of his guiltines then by comming before the Iudge with the rope about his neck neither can we bring a more notable signe of our true humiliation before God then by comming before him in the day of the solemne fast with open confession and Proclamation of our guiltinesse both of sinne and punishment Hence it was that in the fast of Nineueh not onely men but euen the beasts were forbidden to feede or drinke water for this very end that the Niuevites might acknowledge their sinnes to be so great and heinous in the sight of God that in regard therof not onely the reasonable creatures themselues but also the beasts of the field for their sakes were vnworthy of life and nourishment III. Question Whether Popish Fasts be lawfull and approoued of God Ans. They are wicked and therefore neither approoued of God nor to be obserued by man and that for three speciall causes First the patrons maintainers of them doe appoint set times of fasting which are necessarily to be kept vpon paine of mortall sinne And abstinence from flesh with them is made a matter of conscience Now to prescribe set times necessarily to be obserued is contrarie to that libertie which the Church of God and the gouernours thereof haue for this purpose onely vpon speciall occasion When the question was mooued to our Saviour by Iohns Disciples Why they and the Pharises fasted often whereas his fasted not Answer was giuen in this manner Can the children of the marriage chamber mourne as long as the bridegrome is with them But the daies will come when the bridegrome shall be taken away from them and then shall they fast Mat. 9. 15. From whence we may gather that times of fasting must be according to the times of mourning For Christ giues them to vnderstand that they were to fast as occasions of mourning were offered As therefore there can be appointed no set time for mourning no more can there be enioyned a set time for fasting but must be left to the libertie of the Church to be prescribed as God shall giue occasion Againe the Apostle reprooueth the Church of Galatia for obseruing set daies and moneths times and yeares in way of Religion Gal. 4. 10. Montanus the Hereticke is thought in Ecclesiasticall stories to haue beene the first that made lawes for set-fasting And the Churches of God in ancienter times fasted of their own accords freely not inforced by law or commandement but as time and occasion serued It is alleadged that this doctrine seemes to chalenge the Church of England of Heresie for it appointeth and obserueth set times of fast Ans. Nothing lesse For our Church inioyneth and approoueth these times not vpō necessity or for religions sake but for ciuill and politicke respects whereas the Romish church holds it a mortal sinne to put off a set fast appointed so much as till the next day following The second reason They of the Church of Rome make a distinction of meates For they wholly forbid flesh to be eaten vpon daies of fast and allow whit-meates onely then to be vsed and that of necessitie Now this difference of meates is partly impious partly absurd and foolish Impious it is because they make it for Religions sake For since the cōming of Christ there is a libertie giuen to all men whatsoeuer to eate of all kindes of meates without any distinction commanding abstinence frō nothing which God hath created to be receiued with thanksgiuing It is true indeede we hold a difference betweene meate and meate but how not in way of religion but in regard of temperance health for ciuill and politike
peace with all men 2. In loue of our enemies with whom we are at controuersie in law 3. In neither vsing nor shewing extremitie in our proceedings Matth. 5. 25. Matth. 18. 28. After that the suit is ended the moderation of our mindes must be expressed by our behauiour in regard of the euent of our action For if the Law goe with vs we are to giue God thankes for the manifestation of his iustice in the course taken If on the otherside it goe against vs we may not rage or be discontentedly grieued but commend our cause quietly to God and accuse our selues for our owne sinnes and say with Dauid Righteous art thou O Lord and iust are thy iudgements Psal. 119. 137. III. Case Whether may a man defend himselfe by force when he is wronged Ans. In some Cases he may lawfully defend himselfe by force Reasons First because the Gospel doth not abolish the Law of nature nor the positiue lawes of all countries but it doth establish them Now it is the Law of nature and nations that a man may defend his life and health in some cases vpon iust occasion Secondly this is Gods Law Exod. 22. 2. If a theefe be found breaking vp a house and be smitten that he die no blood shall be shed for him Abraham was a stranger in the land of Sodom and yet he reskued his brother Lot and recouered all his substance that he had lost by force armes Gen. 14. 14. and his action was approoued of God For Melchisedeck met him at his returne from the slaughter of the Kings and blessed him Yea and blessed God for his deliuerance v. 19. 20. Againe in some cases a man may giue his life for his brother So saies S. Iohn 1. Ioh. 3. 16. We ought also to lay downe our liues for the brethren IV. Case When may a man defend himselfe by force Ans. Not alwaies and vpon euery occasion but onely in these cases First when violence offered is so sudden and vnexpected that when it comes there can be no escape either by yeelding or by flying or by some suffering Secondly when the violence offered is open and manifest so as there is no other way to reskue our selues but by striking or killing Thirdly when violence is offered and the Magistrate absent either for a time and his stay be dangerous or altogether so as no helpe can be had of him nor any hope of his comming In this case God puts the sword into the priuate mans hands Fourthly when the defense is Iust and done in a right manner A Iust defense stands in these things I. It must be done incontinent and forthwith so soone as euer violence is offered For if there be delay and it come afterward it looses the name of a iust defense and becomes a reuenge arising of prepensed malice as the Lawyers vse to speake II. There must be an intention not to reuenge principally or to kill but onely to defend himselfe III. There must be a iust and equall proportion of weapons therefore it is no iust defence to shoote a naked man through with a musket or other peece of ordinance when he offers violence V. Case Whether a man may reskue himselfe or others by Combate Ans. It hath beene of ancient times an vsuall manner of defence in some countries that in case of difference betweene people and people in matters of weight two men should be chosen out among the rest who by fighting hand to hand and killing one an other should ende the controuersie But this way of defense how auncient so euer it be is vtterly vnlawfull Reasons are these First it is the expresse commandement of God Thou shalt not kill In which all priuate men are forbidden to kill or slay but in the case of iust and necessarie defense Secondly we may not hazard our liues without some speciall warrant frō God if we doe it is a flat tempting of God and this is done in euery combate Thirdly if Magistrates will permit such fights as this is then they are bound to defend and saue the life of the innocent For by such permission oftentimes innocent blood is shedde and the more harmelesse partie goes by the worst But it will be and is obiected First that a Combate is a triall of innocencie Ans. It is not so For he that is stronger vsually ouercomes in the combate not he that hath the more righteous cause Againe there be other meanes to trie a truth besides this as by examination and by oath Lastly triall by the combate is of the same nature with the triall of a murtherer by the bleeding of a corpes touched or handled which is very doubtfull and of all other most vncertaine Secondly it is alleadged that if a man take not a chalenge he is disgraced for euer Ans. There is no warrant in Gods word for a priuate man to accept a chalenge Nay it is rather flat against the word For God saies Reuenge is mine The priuate man saies the contrarie The wrong is mine and I will be auenged of him that hath done it Again it is better for any man to indure a little reproch with some men then to loose or hazard his life Thirdly it is obiected that the Philistims offered to trie the victorie by a single combate with the Israelites and appointed Goliah on their side to giue the Chalenge and that Dauid on the Israelites side accepting the chalenge encountred with him and had good successe It may seeme therefore that combates are lawfull For it is better that one man should perish in warre then that a whole armie should miscarie Ans. That was a speciall and extraordinarie example of triall and Dauid was a champion in that fight not by ordinarie appointment but by extraordinarie prophetical instinct of Gods spirit Againe in warre though there be lesse danger in hazarding one mans life then a whole armie yet a good iust cause is to be maintained with all the strength that may be made and not to depend vpon the power and courage of one man who in probability vnlesse he be supported by speciall calling and assistance from God may be ouercome and loose the victorie Fourthly it is alleadged that an armie may fight against an army therfore one man against an other Ans. The reason is not alike For warres and armies are Gods ordinances and so are not combates and it is not Gods will that men should deuise and establish new waies and meanes of triall not allowed by his word but rather rest content with that he hath appointed Fiftly Ionas did hazard his life by casting lots therfore a man may by combate Answ. To say that Ionas did put his life in hazard by lottes is an vntruth For there was onely a coniecturall triall made who should be the cause of the present danger And when the lot fell vpon him he was not cast into the sea by the lotte but by his owne advise and counsell Againe the casting of Ionas
afraid least when he came to the Corinths God would humble him for their sinnes 2. Cor. 12. 21. Againe he teacheth that those which are fallen into any fault must be restored by the spirit of meekenes because we our selues are subiect to the same tentations Gal. 6. 1. And in this regard he would haue men to mourne with them that haue in them the cause of mourning Rom. 12. 15. Thirdly iust anger must be contained within the bounds of our particular calling and civill decencie that is so moderated as it makes vs not to forsake our duties which we owe to God and man nor breake the rules of comlines Thus Iacob was angrie with Laban and yet he speakes and behaues himselfe as a sonne to his father euen in his anger Gen. 31. 36. Ionathan was angrie with Saul his father and yet he withdrawes not any reuerent or dutifull respect from him 1. Sam. 20. Sect. 2. The second part of the Question is When Anger is a vice and vnlawfull Ans. It is a sinne in fiue regards contrary to the former First when we conceiue it without counsell and deliberation This rash hastie sudden and violent anger is condemned by our Sauiour Christ Mat. 5. 22. Whosoeuer is angry with his brother vnaduisedly shal be culpable of iudgment Secondly when it is conceiued for no cause or for a light or trifling cause Prou. 10. 12. Loue couers a multitude of sinnes Therefore euery light offence must not be the cause of open anger Prov. 19. 11. It is the glory of a man to passe by some infirmities Eccles. 7. 23. Take not notice of all the words that men speake no not of all those which seruants speake vnto their masters Besides that causelesse anger is many times forbidden in the Scripture And Paul saies that loue is hardly provoked because it will not be mooued to conceiue hatred but vpon weightie and important causes 1. Cor. 13. Thirdly when the occasion is iust yet the measure of anger is immoderate Eph. 4. 26. Be angry sinne not and if by infirmitie thou fall into it let not the Sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath The reason is added in the next words Giue not place to the Deuill because he is alwaies at hand to inflame the affection as he did Sauls who therefore in his rage would haue killed him that was next him Fourthly when it makes vs to forget our dutie to God or man and to fal to brawling cursing and banning Thus was Shemei angry when he railed vpon the King and flung stones at him and his seruants giuing him bad and vnreuerent tearmes and calling him a man of blood and a man of Belial 2. Sam. 16. 5. 6. 7. Thus did the Disciples forget their dutie of loue vnto their brethren and in anger desired that fire might come down from heauen and destroy the Samaritanes Luk. 9. 59. Thus the Iewes in vndecent and vncharitable manner gnashed with their teeth at Steven Act. 7. 54. And Saint Paul saies that the fruites of wicked anger are clamors and crying speeches between person and person in their fury Eph. 4. 31. And thence it is that we find Balaam in his anger to haue beene more void of reason then his asse Numb 22. 27. Fistly when we are angrie for priuate respects concerning our persons and not concerning the cause of God Thus Cain is said to be exceeding wrothe and to haue his countenance cast downe onely vpon a priuate respect because he thought his brother Abel should be preferred before him Gen. 4. 5. Thus Saul was wrath with Dauid taking himselfe to be disgraced because the people after the slaughter of the Philistimes ascribed to Dauid ten thousand and to him but a thousand 1. Sam. 18. 7. In like manner he was angrie with Ionathan for his loue that he bare to Dauid and for giuing him leaue to goe to Bethleem 1. Sam. 20. 30. Thus Nebuchadnezars wrath was kindled against the three children because he tooke himselfe to be contemned of them Dan. 3. 19. Thus Haman meerely in regarde of priuate disgrace growes to great indignation against Mordecai Esther 3. v. 5. Thus Asa was angry with the Prophet Hanani because he thought it a discredit to him to be reprooued at his hand 2. Chron. 16. 10. And in this sort were the Iewes filled with wrath at Christs reproofe Luk. 4. 28. shewing thereby as it is truly expounded by the Commenter that they were very hotte in their own cause and not in the cause of God III. Question What is the Remedie of vniust Anger Ans. The Remedies thereof are twofold Some consist in meditation and some in practise Sect. 1. The Remedies that stand in Meditation are of three sorts some doe concerne God some our neighbour and some our selues The Meditations cōcerning God are specially sixe I. Meditation That God by expresse cōmandement forbiddes rash and vniust anger and commandeth the contrarie namely the duties of loue Read for this purpose Mat. 5. 21. 22. where we may obserue three degrees of vniust anger The first whereof is that which is inwardly conceiued and not outwardly shewed The second when vniust anger shewes it selfe by signes of contempt as by snuffing rushing changing and casting downe of the countenance The third is railing thou foole which is culpable of Gehenna fire the highest degree of punishment Now all these three degrees are murther and the punishment of a murtherer is to be cast into the lake of fire Rev. 21. 8. Againe Christ commandeth vs to reward good for euill to blesse them that curse vs and to doe good to thē that hate vs if we will be the children of our Father which is in heauen Mat. 5. 45. And S. Paul wisheth vs to ouercome evill with goodnes Rom. 12. 21. II. Meditation That all iniuries which befall vs doe come by Gods providence whereby they are turned to a good ende namely our good Thus David saith that God had bidden Shemei to curse him 2. Sam. 16. 10. And this was the ground of Christs reproofe of Peter Shall I not saith he drinke of the euppe which my Father hath giuen me to drinke of Ioh. 28. 11. III. Meditation God is long-suffering even towards wicked men we in this point must be followers of him In regard of this God is said to be mercifull gracious slow to anger abundāt in goodnes truth Exod. 34. 6. Hence it was that he spared the old world 120 yeres ● Pet. 3. 19. He spared the Israelits after their Idolatrie 390 yeres Ezek. 4. 5. Besides this we haue example of the lowlines long suffering of Christ who saith Matth. 11. 29. Learne of me for I am humble and meeke and of whome it is said 1. Pet. 2. 22. When he was reuiled he reuiled not againe when he suffered he threatned not but committed his cause to him that iudgeth righteously Nowe because some may haply say that these examples of God and Christ are too perfect for man to followe who cannot
of inuocation of the name of God for this end that he in mercie would mortifie all our affections especially this corrupt violent affection of vniust wrath And this must we doe as at all times so then especially when anger is creeping vpon vs. It will be saide of some Our anger is violent and comes vpon the sudden and therefore these remedies will doe vs no good Ans. Such persons when their mindes be quiet must often read and meditate of the foresaid remedies and by this meanes they shall be able to preuent hastines But what if we be ouertaken with anger what must we then doe Ans. If thou fall into it through infirmitie yet remember thy selfe let not the sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath Eph. 4. 26. Consider with thine owne heart that anger is as a poison if a man drinkes poison he must not suffer it to rest and flow into the bodie veines but with all speede must purge it out and so must anger be dealt withall whēsoeuer we are ouertaken with it CHAP. IIII. Of Questions concerning Temperance TEmperance is a vertue that moderateth appetite or lust And this moderation of appetite stands in foure things I. In the vse of Riches II. In the vse of Meat and Drinke III. In the vse of Apparell IV. In the vse of Pleasures wherein Recreations are to be considered Sect. 1. Concerning the Moderation of Appetite in the vse of Riches there are two maine Questions I. Question How farre a man may with good conscience proceed in the desiring and seeking of Riches The Answer of this Question is the rather to be considered because this doctrine rightly conceiued and vnderstood serues greatly for the direction of the whole course of our liues vnto the ende Here therefore I will first set downe the Ground of the Answer and then the Answer it selfe The Ground of the Answer I propound in fiue Rules I. Rule We must consider that riches and goods are of two sorts some are necessarie some are more then necessarie which the Scripture calls Abundance Goods and riches are two waies necessarie necessarie to nature or necessarie to the person of a man Goods necessarie to nature are those without which nature and life cannot be well preserued and these are most needefull Necessary in respect of a mans person are those goods without which a mans state condition and dignitie wherein he is cannot be preserued Now Riches more then necessarie I terme those without which both the life of man and his good estate may well be preserued And whatsoeuer is besides them is necessary For example To the calling of a Student meat drinke and cloth are necessarie in respect of nature besides these other things as bookes and such like are also necessarie for him in respect of his condition and place II. Rule Things and goods are to be iudged necessarie and sufficient not by the affection of the couetous man which is vnsa●●able but by two other things the iudgement of wise and godly men and the examples of sober and frugall persons III. Rule We must not make one measure of sufficiencie of goods necessarie for all persons for it varieth according to the divers conditions of persons according to time and place More things are necessarie to a publicke man then to a priuate and more to him that hath a charge then to a single man IV. Rule That is to be iudged necessarie which in some short time to come may be needefull though it haue no present vse For example the dowrie that a father giues to his daughter at the day of mariage though it be not presently needefull yet because in short time it may be necessarie therefore it is to be reputed amongst necessarie goods V. Rule We our selues doe often erre in iudgement in determining of things necessarie and sufficient for our selues therfore when men seeke things competent necessarie they must alwaies pray to God to giue them that which he knowes in his wisdome to be meete and necessarie not prescribing a measure vnto him I come now to the Answer of the Question which is twofold The first is this Man may with good conscience desire and seeke for goods necessarie whether for nature or for his person according to the former rules but he may not desire and seeke for goods more then necessarie for if he doth he sinneth The reasons of this answer are these First Deut. 17. 16. 17. the commandement is giuen to the King that hath most neede of abundance that he should not multiply his horses or his siluer or his gold That which the King may not doe the subiects ought much lesse to doe therfore they are not to multiply their goods For this cause it is a great fault in subiects remaining as they be subiects to seeke to attaine to the riches of Princes Againe Paul saith 1. Tim. 6. 8. Hauing foode and raiment let vs be ther●ith content Besides that in the petition Giue vs this day c. we craue but onely bread for our substance that is meete to preserue vs for nature in that calling wherein we serue God day by day The prayer of Agur is that God would giue him foode conuenient for him or as the wordes signifie bread of his statute that is which God in his counsell had appointed and ordained for him Prov. 30. 8. Secondly seeking of abundance is a hazard to the saluation of the soule by reason of mans corruption Therefore Matth. 13. Riches are called thornes that choke the word of God sowen in the heart And 1. Tim. 6. 9. They that will that is desire to be rich and content not themselues with things necessarie fall into the snare of the Deuill Thirdly seeking of abundance is a fruite of diffidence in the prouidence of God Now all frutes of vnbeleefe must be cut off we must not therefore desire more then necessarie In the next place for the better clearing of this doctrine the Obiections of Couetous men are to be answered Obiect I. Good things are to be sought for but abundance is a good thing and a blessing of God Ans. Good things are of two sorts Some are simply good that is to say good both in themselues and to vs as remission of sinnes holinesse righteousnesse and life euerlasting in the kingdome of heauen and such like these may we desire and seeke for Som again are good onely in part which though they be good in themselues yet are not alwaies good to vs. Of this kind is abundance of riches and store of wealth more then necessarie for nature and person For which cause riches in abundance are as the knife in the hand of a child likely to hurt if it be not taken away because they are in some men occasions of sinne vnlesse God in mercie preuent and hinder them And for our selues what know we whether God will keepe and preserue vs from sinne when we seeke and labour for abundance Obiect II. It is the
commandements of God but the doctrine and precepts of men Furthermore Paul in 1. Tim. 4. 3. foretells that there should be many in the latter daies that should command to abstaine from meates To which place the Papist answers that that was because such persons taught that meats were vncleane by nature But the words are simply to be vnderstood of meates forbidden with obligation of the conscience and the text is generall speaking of the doctrine not of the persons of those men nor in ciuill respects but in regard of the bond of conscience Lastly it is a part of Christian libertie to haue freedome in conscience as touching all things indifferent and therefore in regard of meates To this doctrine some things are opposed by them of contrarie iudgement Obiect I. Princes doe make lawes and in their lawes do forbidde meates and drinkes and they must be obeyed for consciēce sake Rom. 13. 5. Ans. They doe so but all these lawes are made with reseruation of libertie of conscience and of the vse of that libertie to euery person But to what end then will some say are lawes made if they be made with reservation Ans. The scope of them is not to take away or to restraine libertie or the vse of libertie in conscience but to moderate the overcommon and superfluous outward vse As for that text Rom. 13. 5. It is to be vnderstood for conscience sake not of the law of the Magistrate but of the law of God that bindes vs to obey the Magistrates law Obiect II. There was blood and things strangled forbidden in the counsell at Ierusalem after Christs ascension Act. 15. Ans. It was forbidden onely in regard of offence for a time so long as the weake Iewe remained weake not in regard of conscience And therfore afterward Paul saies that all things euen blood it selfe was lawfull though not expedient in regard of scandall 1. Cor. 6. 12. And to the pure all things are pure Tit. 1. 15. Obiect III. Papists make lawes in which they forbidde some meats onely to restraine concupiscence Ans. Then they should forbid wine as well as flesh For wine spices and some kindes of fish which they permit are of greater force to stirre vp lust then the vse of flesh And hence it is that Saint Paul exhorts men not to be drunke with wine wherein is excesse Eph. 5. 18. Againe I answer that Iust may be restrained by exhortation to temperance without prohibitory lawes for the obligation of the conscience which are flat against Christian libertie Vpon this Answer a further Question may be made Whether a man may with good conscience eate flesh at times forbidden Ans. There are two kinds of eating eating against the Law and besides the law Eating against the law is When a man cats and by cating hinders the ende of the law contemns the authoritie of the law-maker frustrates the law it selfe and withall by his eating giues occasion to others to doe the same This eating is a flat sinne against the fift commandement For it is necessarie that the Magistrates laws should be obeyed in all things lawfull Heb. 13. 17. The master and the parent must be obeyed in all lawfull things much more the lawes of Magistrates Eating beside the law is when a man eats that which the law mentioneth and forbiddeth but not hurting the law And that a man may thus eate sundry cautions are to be obserued I. This eating must be vpon iust cause in a mans owne selfe II. It must be without contempt of the lawmaker and with a loyall mind III. It must be without giuing offence to any by his bad example IV. When it doth not hinder the maine end of the law V. When the eater doth subiect himselfe to the penaltie voluntarily and willingly In this eating there is no breach in conscience neither is it a sinne to eate that which the law forbiddeth For man hath free libertie in conscience to eat that which he doth eate Now if he vse his libertie and hurt no law obseruing these cautions his eating is no sinne For example It was Gods law that the Priests only should eat the shew-bread Now Dauid vpon a iust cause in himselfe all the former cautions obserued eates the shew-bread and sinnes not because his conscience was free in these things and therefore Dauids eating was not against the Law but onely beside the law II. Question How we may rightly vse meates and drinks in such sort as our eating may be to Gods glory and our owne comfort Ans. That we may so doe some things are to be done before we eate some in eating some after our eating §ect 1. The thing that is to be done before our eating is the Consecratiō of the food that is the Blessing of the meates which we are to eate 1. Tim. 4. 5 Euery creature of God is sanctified by the word of God and prayer By sanctification there is not meant that whereby we are sanctified by the holy Ghost neither that wherby the bread and the wine is halowed in the Sacrament of the supper But it is this when we are assured that the creature is made so free and lawfull to vs in respect of our vse that we may eate it freely and with good conscience By the word of God Paul meanes the word of creation mentioned in Gen. 1. 28. 29. repeated Gen. 9. 3. as also the word of God touching the libertie of conscience namely that to the pure all things are pure Tit. 1. 15. It is further added and prayer that is prayer grounded vpon the said word of creation and the doctrine touching Christian libertie whereby wee pray for grace to God that we may vse the creatures holily to his glorie The reasons why this sanctification of our meat is to be vsed are these First that in the vse of it we may lift vp our hearts vnto God and by this meanes put a difference between our selues and the brute beasts which rush vpon the creatures without sanctifying of them Secondly that we may be admonished thereby touching the title we haue to the creatures which beeing once lost by the fall of Adam is restored vnto vs again by Christ. Thirdly that it may be an assured testimony to our heartes that we may vse the creature with libertie of conscience when we doe vse it Fourthly that we may be sanctified to the vse of the creature as it is sanctified to vs to the end that we may vse it with temperance and not abuse it Fiftly that when we vse the creature we may depend on God for the blessing of it to make it our nourishment For no creature can nourish of it selfe but by Gods commandement who as Dauid saith Psal. 145. 16. Openeth his hand and filleth all things liuing of his good pleasure And in bread we must not consider the substance onely but the staffe which is the blessing of God vpholding our bodies Sixtly that we may not grow to securitie forgetfulnes
in prison and ye came unto me Where obserue what person Christ commendeth vnto vs to be releeued the hungry thirstie naked sicke harbourles and the capt●ue or prisoner Rom. 12. 20. If thine enemie hunger feede him if the thirst giue him drinke We must not onely supply the need of our freindes but also our enemies 〈◊〉 Tim. 5. 16. If any beleeuing man or woman haue widowes let him minister vnto them c. that there may be sufficient for them that are widowes indeede Here widowes that are desolate without friends and goods are commended to the liberalitie of the Church Leuit 25. 35. If thy brother be impouerished and hath the trembling hand thou shalt releeue him as a stranger or soiourner so shall he liue with thee By the trembling hand is meant the man that workes hard for his liuing and yet cannot by his labour get things necessarie but must needes stretch out his hand to others that are in better state for helpe Here two Questions may further be made First whether we must giue almes to beggers I meane such as goe from doore to doore for they come vnder the degrees of needie persons Ans. Beggars are of two sorts either such as are strong able to labour and doe somewhat for their liuing or such as are weake and impotent vnable to take paines for the maintenance of themselues or those that belong vnto them The first sort are not to be reiceued For touching them the Apostle hath giuen this rule He that will not labour must not eate 2. Thess. 3. 10. 12. Euery man must liue by the labour of his owne hands and feede vpon his owne bread Againe such beggers are theeues robbers because they steale their labour from the Church and Common-wealth which is as profitable as land and treasure In the old Law if two men striued together and the one had wounded the other the offender was inioyned not onely to pay for the healing but for the losse of his time also Exod. 21. 19. And in like manner ought such persons to beare the punishment both of their theft and of the losse of their labour And the truth is they that giue to them in this their loose life doe maintaine them in wickednes Yet here one Caution is to be remembred that if such a man be in extreame neede he must be helped rather then he should perish And the Magistrate is to punish him for his idlenes and to compell him to labour The Magistrate I say for priuate persons haue no authoritie to inflict punishment in this case As for the other sort that are vnable to worke they are not allowed by the word of God to gather their almes themselues by begging from doore to doore but to be releeued at home in their houses Deut. 15. 4. There shall not be a begger in thee v. 11. there shall be euer some poore in the land Here the holy Ghost makes a plaine difference between the poore and the begger forbidding the one and commanding to helpe the other Saint Paul likewise distinguisheth of widowes whereof some haue rich kindred and they are to be prouided for by them 1. Tim. 5. 4. Others are destitute of friends and kindred by whome they may be releeued and such he willeth to be maintained by the Church v. 16. And this is no toleration or approbation of beggers Againe the begging of almes is the very seminarie of vagabonds rogues stragling p●●sōs which haue no calling nor are of any corporation Church or commonwealth Yea it doth proclaime to the world in the eares of all men the shame either of the Magistrate who restraines it not hauing authoritie or of the wealthie and able that they haue no mercy or compassion It is also a great disorder in commonwealths For the boldest and most clamarous begger carries away all the almes from the rest and so releefe is distributed both vnwisely and vnequally And howsoeuer it is the good law of our Land agreeable to the law of God that none should begge that are able to labour and all men are bound in conscience to see it obserued that haue any care of the good of this Church and commonwealth yet it is a plague of our times and greatly to be bewailed that it is neglected and not put i● execution In the Second place it is demanded whether we must put a difference betweene persons and persons in giuing our almes Ans. There be three differences of men that are in neede The first is a mans owne And such are they that be of his houshold for which he that makes not provision is worse then an Infidell as the Apostle speaketh 1. Tim. 5. 8. Those also which are of a mans own blood as father and mother c. Mat. 15. 5 6. Now contrarie to this sort are strangers to whome we must not giue For to neglect a mans own and to bestowe it vpon forrainers vnlesse there be iust and necessarie cause so to doe is a sinne against the law of nature A second difference of men is this Some are of the houshold of faith Saint Pauls rule is this that we preferre them before the other Gal. 6. 10. Doe good vnto all men but specially to them that are of the houshold of faith A third difference Some are our owne poore of our towne land country some be strangers in the same respects Now howsoeuer we are debters to all that we can doe good to yet those that are neerer to vs in habitation or neighbourhood are to be respected and releeued before others This the Lord commandeth Deu● 15. 7. If one of thy brethren with thee be poore within any of thy gates in thy land which the Lord thy God giueth thee thou shalt not harden thy hart and shut thine hand from him And these beeing releeued we may in the next place afford our helpe to others Thus did the good Samaritane in case of necessitie practize his charitie vpon a stranger Luk. 10. 33. and is therefore commended by our Sauiour Christ. III. Question How much releefe must every man giue Ans. We must put a difference betweene the almes of priuate men and of Incorporations or Churches Touching priuate mens almes the Scripture hath not determined how much must be giuen but hath left it to the discreet consideration of euery Christian. And yet it must be remembred which the Apostle saith that he that soweth sparingly shal reape sparingly And againe Let euery man giue as he hath determined in his owne heart Lastly he giues a commandement touching the quantitie of giuing that euery first day of the weeke euery one lay aside by himselfe and lay vp as God hath prospered him that is according to the abilitie wherewith God hath blessed him 1. Cor. 16. 2. But two cautions are proprounded in the word touching this quantitie First that we must not so giue almes that others be ●ased and we our selues grieued 2. Cor. 8. 13. It is not Gods will that we