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A25294 The substance of Christian religion, or, A plain and easie draught of the Christian catechisme in LII lectures on chosen texts of Scripture, for each Lords-day of the year, learnedly and perspicuously illustrated with doctrines, reasons, and uses / by that reverend and worthy laborer in the Lord's vineyard, William Ames ... Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1659 (1659) Wing A3003; ESTC R6622 173,739 322

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spiritual distemper and as it were with a drunkennesse and lethargick stupidity whereby he is sensible of nothing rightly and spiritually Reas 3 Because we are so borne in sin that in a manner it becomes natural to us nor ever have had we experience of any other condition As those that are borne with deformed and crooked limbs and never saw aright and well proportioned disposition of all the members do not know that their own limbs are deformed and ill proportioned but esteem their distortion and disproportion to be the right proportion it self even so is it in this case of sin and corruption of nature Use 1. Of Admonition that for this cause we might more and more humble our selves before God seeing that we are so miserable that of our selves we can never know our own misery Use 2. Is of Direction to deny all our natural wisdome that so we may flie to God and seek wisdome from him that we may know our selves and him aright Doctr. 2. The onely way to know sin aright and the cause of our mysery is by the law of God It is gathered from these words For unlesse the law had said c. Reas. 1. Because the law of God doth in some way enlinghten the eyes of our minde Psal. 19. Reas. 2. Because the law of God is the rule of our life and is therefore the touchstone not onely of the straightness but also of all the obliquity and crookedness of it Reas. 3. Because the law of God is set before us as a glasse wherein we may clearly see our faces and quality Iames 1. 23. Now it performs this use of a glass to us by a comparison made between the perfection which the Law requires of us and the manifold defects and deformities that are found in our life Questions hence arising Quest. 1. Whether did not some wise men at least among the Heathen know sin without this Law of God I answer 1. That they were not altogether without this law of God because in part they had it written and ingraven in their hearts But yet 2. They knew not many sins which by the Law might easily have been known 3. They knew not sin under the first and most proper reason of it to wit as it was an offence against God but onely as it was repugnant to reason in man himself 4. They knew not those spiritual miseries which accompanie sin 5. They did not know sin practically and efficaciously so as to be by that knowledge driven to a spiritual humbling of themselves before God Quest. 2. In what manner doth this Law of God shew us our sin I answer 1. It sheweth us our duty or the will of God that we should do 2. It shews us our fault in transgressing of this will 3. It shewes us our guilt whereby for this guiltiness we are bound over unto punishment 4. It shewes also the punishment it self for the threatenings of the Law wherein the punishments are contained and denounced are parts of the Law and belong unto its sanctification or ratification Use 1. Of Direction that in passing judgement upon our lives we follow not either our own fancies nor the tenets and opinions of the vulgar but the law of God alone Use 2. Of Admonition that we often make trial of our life according to that law and that as well for time past for our greater humiliation as for the time to come for our caution and better direction in every part of our conversation The Third Lords Day Rom. 5. vers 12. Wherefore as by one man sin entered into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men in whom all have sinned THe Apostles purpose in this place is to illustrate that Doctrine which he had before taught concerning justification by Iesus Christ for which end he makes a comparison of the likeness between this grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the sin of Adam our first Father after the flesh And the comparison runs upon the efficacy and effects of each of them The Proposition of the Comparison is in ●… 12. and the Reddition to that is after explicated by way of Parenthesis In the Proposition Adam is set forth as the cause of a twofold effect to wit of the bringing in of sin and of the bringing in of Death And the reason of the Connexion of these effects with that cause is given in the last words of this verse to wit from the conjunction that all had with Adam in that first sin in these words In whom all men c. Doct. 1. Sin entered into the world not by Gods creation but by mans defection This is manifest in the Text by man not by God c. Reas. 1. Because God made man upright and after his own image that is not onely free from all sin which may in some sort also be said of all other Creatures but also adorned him with all those endowments and faculties whereby Gods nature might as it were in a pourtrait be expressed and represented and by help whereof in keeping of the law he might have attained unto a certain sort of divine blessedness or felicity For as there is no fault in a pourtrait so it be well drawn or made by a perfect workman unless the fault be in the Original from whence the pourtait is taken so also no fault could be in man created according to Gods Image and that by God himself unlesse some fault be attributed to God himself whose Image man is Reas. 2. Is because God did not onely prescribe a law unto man in the Creation but also engraved it upon his heart by which means it was that man had in himself a most certain Testimony of his uprightness in which and to which he was created and withall a most sufficient and ready means of living well and unblameably to God For the law of God perfectly purely written in the heart of man is as it were a solemn Testimony registred in a Table or Book that man was made fit and able to keep that Law It is as it were the voice of God sent down from Heaven whereby man was called and stirred up to observe that way of living which is taught thereby Reas. 3. Because God added thereunto a pledge and Sacrament in the Tree of Life whereby he would have that Covenant of the Law written in the heart more clearly confirmed also outwardly to wit that he would by the observation of his Law first perpetuate mans life in this world unto the solemn justification of him at his appointed time and then advance him to a further and heavenly Felicity And on the other side he threatens Death unto him in case he should depart from that Will and Law of God all which had been done to no purpose if man had been at first made by God himself in any measure or manner sinfull and perverse Reas. 4. So far was God from being the cause of sin in the first creation of
manner infinite without end so also the punishment which taketh away its measure from the nature of the transgression will be without end infinite and that as wel in the privation of an infinite good as in the endles duration of this privation or losse Neither ought it to seem strange that for a sin which is committed in a short time an endlesse punishment should be inflicted because equity its ●…elf requires this that every one should be deprived of that good of which by his own fault he hath turned from But every ●…inner hath turn'd himself away from an endless good by a fault he can never come out of by himself and make an end of and therefore it is but reason that he be endlesly deprived of that good And moreover because he hath disturbed that order that God set appointed it is but ju●…tice if he never be freed from the punishment of this fault untill he have repaired God his honor which an unrepenting sinner can never do unto eternity It ought not therefore to move any that sin which is but momentary should be punished eternally Reas. 1. The committing of it is as it were a spiritual wounding and yet a wounding in what ●…ort time soever done doth often leave behinde it a wound of long duration and often endlesse and eternal death Reas. 2. The committing of sin is as it were a spiritual fall or sliding and yet the fall in short time passed may be such that thereby for a very long time or without end the party may remain in the depth or pit whereinto he fell Reas. 3. The committing of sin is as it were a ●…ying with bands or thongs whose nature is that it may quickly be done and yet for ever keep the party bound as long as the bands themselves remain unloosed or unbroken Reas. 4. T is as it were a bargain in which the sinner for the enjoyment or use of some short pleasure out of a madnesse sells himself into slavery Now from a bargain of buying and selling though passed in a short time the right is conveyed to the buyer for ever and the alienation is eternal or endlesse in its own way Reason 1. It is as it were the putting out of a lamp for a sinner once drowning himself in the ●…ilth of sin puts out as it were the whole light of his mind and a lamp once put out though it be done in a moment yet by vertue of that putting out remains of its self endlesly extinct and put out Use 1. Of Condemnation against such as remain in their carnal security and please themselves in this condition over which perpetually hangs the so horrible wrath and anger of God Use 2. Is of Admonition that with all care above all things else we go about this to shew this wrath of God Matt. 3. 7. where also the way to shun it is shewed to be by repentance verse 8. And yet this is not so to be taken as if this shunning lay in our repentance as it is our action and as if that had some vircue of freeing from the wrath of God for Christ alone is our enfranchizer from the wrath to come 1 Thess. 1. 10. We therefore truly flee from the wrath of God when we flie to this mercy in Christ Jesus by true faith in him and repentance unfained Doct. 3. All such speeches as promise impunity of sin and indempnity from the wrath of God are but vain and seducing This is also cleare in the Text. Now that they are vain hence it appeareth because they are against his decree and his will clearly revealed and therefore can have no solid truth in them And that they are seducing is apparent enough also from the first author of such speeches For the devill when he would seduce our first Parents promised them this impunity in these words Ye shall not dye The Fifth Lords-day Rom. 8. 3. For what the Law could not doe in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likenesse of sinfull flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh THe Apostle in this place expounds why the faithfull may be freed from sin and death by Christ The reason is given as it were from the cause moving God to this giving of Christ. And this moving cause was the needinesse of our want which appears in the defect of power in any other means to produce such an effect as if the Apostle had said because it was needfull for us to be delivered from sin and death and yet this could be effected by no other means therefore God performed it by Christ. The strength and necessity of this consequence depends upon the will of God which tacitly supposeth that God would not have mankinde fall utterly to perish but to be restored again The whole syllogism or reason is this If by no other means faln men could be restored but by Christ then that way was to be taken because God would that some way it should be done but the first is true and therefore also the latter The assumption is proved to wit that man could be restored by no other means by the most likely instance of the law which once had been of great power and of force sufficient to bring man to happinesse For except Christ and the Gospel never any thing was given of God to man that was more perfect and divine than the Law That therefore which the Apostle says here of the law hath the force of such an argument as this If by vertue of the Law man could not be restored than by no other means could he be but by Christ but the first is true and therefore the latter also The Apostle both proves and expounds the Assumption at once from the reason or cause of this defect or weakness of the law to restore man that it is not properly inherent in the law it self but in our flesh or corruption whereby it is that we cannot fulfill the law that so it might save us much lesse by the Law rise up again from Death to life Doct. 1. It is the will of God that miserable men may be delivered from their misery and restored to life eternal This is here presupposed by the Apostle as granted and is used by him as the ground of his reasoning Reas. 1. Is taken partly from Gods mercy partly from his wisdome partly from his power and partly from the stability of his decrees from his mercy God would relieve miserable men therein to shew the glory of his grace and free mercy as it is called Ephes. 1. 6. the riches of his mercy his great love and the supereminent riches or treasures of his grace and bounty Ephes. 4. 7. for unlesse God had helped miserable men that were all drown'd in sin and death he had not accomplished above the half of his goodness and bounty towards mankind For that bounty that was manifested in the creating of us was neither fully
suffering was the perfecting of all his obedience Reas. 2. Because Christ by his suffering made satisfaction to divine justice and repayed God as much of his honour in our name as he had suffered in it by our sins Therefore Gods justice is now appeased the grace of God hath had its free course that it may derive all good upon us Reas. 3. Because that Christ now by virtue of his passion and consummate obedience as it were of his own right that he acquired makes intercession with the Father for us that we may be and live with him Ioh. 17. 24. Use 1. Of Consolation to the faithfull against the guilt of their sin and terrors of their conscience that arise from sin For in Christ and his sufferings we have a remedy against these wounds that are otherwayes deadly Use 2. Of Admonition that we would detest all sinnes as things that brought our Saviour to death and would wave brought a thousand deaths upon us unless he had turned them away from us The sixteenth Lords day Joh. 10. 17 18. Therefore the Father loveth me because I lay down my life that I may take it up again None taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it up again This commandment received I from my Father CHrist in these words expounds what he had said before of the duty effect and signe of a good Shepherd to wit that he layes down his life for his sheep This he had applied to himself verse 15. where two things were propounded 1. The Object to which this laying down of the life is referred or which be those sheep of Christ 2. The manner of this laying down the life This is explained in the 16 and these two following verses The death of Christ or laying down of his soul or life is explicated from the efficient cause which is Christ himself I lay down my life 2. From the manner of doing of it that Christ is a cause voluntary and doing it from a counsell and deliberation not of coaction None taketh it from me but I lay it down 3. From the adjunct of this efficiency that he did it not of weakness but from power I have authority to lay it down This is shewn from another effect that followes this to wit from his resuming it again or his resurrection I have authority to take it up again as if he would say he that so layes down his life that with power he takes it up again he layes it not down out of coaction with weakness but voluntarily of his own accord he doth it But I so lay downmy life ergo Which is illustrated here from the impulsive cause the Fathers commandment This commandment I received of my Father 4. From the end and effect to wit the Fathers love and delight or complacency in this Therefore my Father loveth me because c. Doct. 1. Christ so far humbled himself for us that he underwent death it self for us I lay down my life c. Now he underwent a double death for us a spiritual and a corporal death The spiritual is about Christ's descent into Hell This consisted in the separation of God's favour from the soul of Christ for a time not really but as to sense and feeling and that influence from which comfort useth to be felt as also in impressions of divine wrath which with horror did strike all the faculties of the soul so that for the time the soul was at so low an ebbe and concussion of all its happiness as any creature could be that was without sin formally inherent in it self The death of the body is that which consists in the separation of the soul from the body the confirmation and continuance was in the burial of Christ. Now such was the separation of the soul from the body in Christs death that the conjunction and union of both of them with the divine person remained the same that it was before as if one drawing a sword held the scabberd in the one hand and the sword in the other there would be there a separation between the scabberd and the sword but of neither of them from the man that so held them So also in this mystery there is a separation of the soul from the body but neither of them was separated from the divine nature nor person but the person still sustained both in the unity of it self as one person with him The reason is because if there had been any such separation from the di vine person then the second person had ceased to be God-man and so could not for that time have been our Priest or Mediator Also a new incarnation or assumption had been made again in the resurrection of Christ. It is most true therefore which is in the mouthes of many Divines and used proverbially almost That what the Son of God assumed he never laid aside again Reas. 1. Because the perfection and consummation of humiliation is in undergoing death Phil. 2 8. And this also was the first reason why he did not onely undergo death but the most vise contemptible and contumelious death that is the death of the Cross as in that place is more especially set down Reas. 2. Because his charge of redeeming us required this to wit that he should pay that price to divine justice which we did ow and so be subject to the same punishment that we were liable to And this was also the reason why he chose the death of the Cross that he might shew that he did not barely sustain death but that cursed death that was due to us and that in our place or for us Gal. 3. 12. Reas. 3. That by the most convenient way he might procure the death of sin in us by assimiliation and making us conform to himself Rom. 6. from verse 1. to the 8. Use 1. Is of Information for directing of our faith ●…o wit that while we seek remission of our sins and reconciliation and salvation in God we so have our faith in Christ that we may be specially united to him in his sufferings blood-shedding and death Rom. 3. 25. Use 2. Is of Consolation to all those as have such true faith because they are out of all hazard of death or condemnation according to that of the Apostle Rom 8. 34. Use 3. Is of Direction 1. In the study of Sanctification that with Christ we may dy to sin 2. In the study of all obedience love and humility according to the example of Christ in whom all the perfections of these vertues we have marvelously shining to us in a most eminent and excellent way Doct. 2. Christ ordained his own death from certain wise deliberation and power to dispose of it as he pleased I have power to lay down my li●…e From which words it appears first that the death of Christ was voluntary For though it was violent also as it came from external
that there is no joy nor gladness in the practice of godliness and so they shun godliness and the care of it as that which is full of sadness and melancholy But the Scriptures teach otherwayes that the godly are called to this that they may alwayes rejoyce Phil. 4. 4. and that they alwayes are as it were feasting with all gladness according to that of Solomon Prov. 15. 15. The proper cause of this errour is ignorance a depraved sense of their sins 〈◊〉 in this like unto an herd of swine who make it their greatest pleasure and delight to wallow in the 〈◊〉 Use 3. Of Consolation for the godly in that 〈◊〉 their outward condition is yet they have 〈◊〉 of more true joy than can be either felt or understood by worldly men Use 4. Of Exhortation that striving with our utmost indeavour we must labour more and more to receive and be sensible of this joy Now the mean●… which we ought chiefly to use for attaining and 〈◊〉 thereof are these 1. We must in good 〈◊〉 remove all hinderances of this joy that is that by repentance a real amendment of life we 〈◊〉 cleanse and disburthen our selves of our sins 〈◊〉 We ought to have a true care that we daily make more sure and constant to our selves our union and communion with God by diligent examination and confirmation of our faith and hope 3. That we 〈◊〉 much and often exercised in the religious meditation of Gods Promises which promise all good things to such as have God for their God 4. I●…●…duceth much to this purpose if in our selves we exercise and excite this joy in and by the daily praise of Gods name that is as well in private as publick thanksgiving coming from the bottom of our heart for all those blessings with which God hath blessed us in Christ Jesus Doct. 5. That this joy●… and this comfort brings a certain holy security to the consciences of believers This is gathered from the last verse of the Psalm And this is that security wherein the Apostle ●…oasts and glories Rom. 8. If God be for 〈◊〉 who 〈◊〉 be against us c. For I am perswaded that nothing can separate me c. And David every where in the 〈◊〉 Why do I fear God is my rock c. This security differs much from carnall security wherein men of this world lye and sleep 1. Because true and prais-worthy security is grounded upon true faith and not upon vain imagination 2. Because it is bred in us by the Word and Promises and by the preaching and knowledge of the word of God It doth not proceed from traditions or mens dreams and customes in sin as that doth 3. Because this security relies alwayes upon Gods protection as it is in the Text Thou onely makest me c. it doth not rely on outward means or on our own strength and wisdome 4. Because this security is fed cherished and advanced by diligent use of calling upon Gods name and of all other means that God hath prescribed and appointed us Reas 1. Because Gods protection secureth believers from all evill at least from the sting of it by reason whereof it is onely truly evill for God hath all things both evill and good in his own power Reas 2. Because Gods presence brings all other good things with it for God is so good in himself that in himself virtually and eminently he contains all things that can be called good Reas. 3. Because Gods goodness towards believers is unchangeable so that there can be no danger of the changing of this happiness into misery Use The use of this Doctrine is for consolation to the faithfull to wit that from this ground they 〈◊〉 and ought to depend upon God and lay aside all those anxieties whereby they may be discouraged from adhering to God with joy and gladness The second Lords day Rom. 7. vers 7. What shall we say then Is the Law sin God forbid Yea I had not known sin but by the Law For I had not 〈◊〉 that concupiscence or lust was a sin unless the Law had said Thou shalt not covet THe Apostle that he might stir up the faithfull to a new obedience had proposed to them the difference of their condition that are under the Law and of them that are under Grace to wit that such as are under the law of the flesh and sin bring forth fruits unto death but such as are under the grace of the Spirit bring forth fruits in a new obedience unto life eternall But because of this opposition between the Law and Grace some might gather that there was then a very great agreement between the Law and sin therefore in this seventh verse this objection is preoccupated by the Apostle 1. Then the Objection is proposed What shall we say Is the Law sin 2. It is rejected with a certain kinde of detestation God forbid 3. The case is plainly set down and resolved in these words I had not known sin c. Where the singular effect and use of the Law is declared to wit that by forbidding and reproving is begotten in man a sense and acknowledgement of sin as of that which is contrary to its self and therefore it cannot be the cause of sin The Explication By the Law is understood in common a way and rule of walking Now this way and rule is imposed upon reasonable creatures by divine authority and the greatest obligations that can be And this is the Law to wit of God which the Apostle heer understands especially the moral Law By sin here is not onely understood the transgression of Gods will but also all those things that follow upon such a transgression which in this Chapter is defined by the name of Death and is called sometimes misery Sin is either known confusedly and speculatively onely or more exactly and practically Now the accurate and practicall knowledge of sin is here understood whereby it is efficaciously concluded in our consciences that sin is a detestable thing and by all means to be avoided Doct. 1. Men of their own nature are so blinded that although they be altogether drowned in sin and death yet of themselves they cannot know it This is gathered from these words I had not known sin Reas. 1. Because the very mind and conscience of man which is his eye and light is corrupted after a twofold manner 1. Privitively In that it is deprived of that light whereby it might rightly judge of it self and of such things as belong unto its spiritual life a. Positively In as much as it is possessed with a certain perverse disposition whence it often calls evill good and good evill For as the eye being put quite out feeleth nothing and as the eye infected with humours and depraved by the indispositions of the organe sees all things otherwise than they are presented so is it with the eye of the soul. Reas. 2. Because the whole man is possessed with a certain
man that by no means it can be conceived how God at any time can be the cause of any sin because seeing sin is a defect it can have no other cause but a deficient one and God seeing he is perfection it self can no ways nor ever be deficient Use Of Direction that in all our speeches and thoughts we may keep Gods glory untouched and unspotted and confesse that all the good we have comes alwayes from him but that all the evill that either we doe or suffer ariseth not from him but from our selves Doct. 2. Through Adams first disobedience sin passed upon all his Posterity Nor did this happen onely by way of imitation as the Pelagians teach but also by way of propagation or natural descent This is proved by this Argument If this had onely come to pass by imitation then the Apostle might as properly have said that Adam with all his Posterity sinned in the Angels who first fell from God as to have said that all men sinned in Adam because they as much follow the example of the Angels as of Adam For it is expressely said vers 14. That death and so also sin reigned over them that sinned not after the similitude of Adam that is by the imitation of Adam therefore vers 19. men are said to be made sinners by Adams disobedience it self The manner of this propagation is taken up and understood 1. To stand in imputation because that first transgression was held as the transgression of the whole nature of mankinde For as in the receiving of the benefits and endowments that belonged to all mankinde Adam bore the place and person of all men so also it was but right and reason that he should maintain their place either in their conservation by obedience or losse by disobedience untill they were capable of standing to or falling from their primitive condition in their own persons Herein he was as it were the Surety of all mankinde so that what he did in this businesse was to be held valid by all as done in their names 2. The second degree of this Propagation stands in the derivation or traduction of that corruption which by our first transgression seised upon the person of Adam himself This corruption is usually called the languishing of nature the seed or tinder of sin the law of our members the law of the flesh lust and sin that dwels in us but most usually originall sin because it cleaves unto us even from our first original and is some way natural unto us to wit as in our nature corrupted also it is the original of all other sins for all actuall sins flow from this as from their fountain This corruption first and principally consists in the privation of original righteousness the absence whereof so far as it is penall is inflicted by God but as it is a privation having the nature of a fault to wit the losse of that rectitude or right constitution which we should have kept and preserved entire it depends upon that relation that all men have to Adam and to his first sin Now that such corruption naturally is found in all men is not onely proved from Scriptures but seems also to be confirmed by experience it self Reas. 1. For in all men there appears a manifest perversion of our wils and inward appetite as much as spirituall and truly good things are of no good relish to all animall and naturall men but the contrary evils which of their own nature have no good rellish seem to them most sweet Now as the perversion of the sensitive appetite doth denotate bodily sicknesse so the perversion of the inmost most spiritual appetite doth point forth unto us sicknesse that is inward and in the spirit The same also may be observed of the perversion of the judgement and understanding from whence come so many and shamefull errours whereby good is esteemed evill and evill good Reas. 2. It is manifest that there is in all men a certain rebellion of the inferiour and animall faculties and appetites against the superiour and most spiritual faculties of the soul which shews the ficknesse of the upper part as not having strength enough to govern the lower and again a disorder and confusion of the inferiour faculties whereby they will not be subject to their Superiour For as as every infirmity debility and perturbation in the body so also in the soul hath its cause of sicknesse disease or certain corruption from the depravation of other parts Reas. 3. There may be observed in all a certain natural crouching of our selves to things that are below us and a certain aversion and turning away from those that are above us and for which we were made so that there are few amongst men that live not more like beasts stooping naturally to their belly-food and bowing towards the ground than according to the nature of man whose body was erected to look up to heaven and seek after God Now as a crouching in the constitution and fashioning of the body is a sign of a bodily sicknesse so also this soul crouching of the spirit doth manifestly declare some foul sickness of the spirit Reas. 4. There appears manifestly in all men a certain insensibleness from nature it self in discerning of things truly good and truly evill howbeit there is a far greater sweetness in true spiritual good things than in corporall and a far greater bitterness and sowreness in spiritual than in carnall evils Now this insensibleness and spiritual blockishnes is a manifest defect and vice cleaving to us from our very original even as the want of any outward sense is a great defect and fault of the body Reas. 5. Experience teatheth with how great difficulty and slowness men are stirred up to things that are truly good therefore as it is the definition of a good habit that makes a man ready and quick unto good works so must it be an evill and corrupt habit whereby the contrary comes to passe because slowly and with difficulty men set themselves to any good endeavours Reas. 6. It is well enough known to all that man hath not the power to do so much good as he knows should be done and as he desires to doe Wherefore when one hath not the power to move the members of his body it is a manifest disease that hinders its motion so where one hath not the power to move himself spiritually it is a manifest spiritual disease as when there is difficulty of corporal motion and one moves his body with great pains it discovers a great weaknesse of his body even as this other doth a weaknesse of the spirit Use 1. For Humiliation by reason of this misery 2. Of Exhortation that we rest not till we perceive that by the grace of God we are freed from this misery 3. For Direction that in our Prayers before God and in all parts of our care for amendment of our life we may chiefly go about this that not onely in
our outward words and works as being but the rivulets and branches of our sin we be reformed but that in the fountain and root of this sin dwelling in us we may be cleansed and renewed The Fourth Lords Day Ephes. 5. 6. Let no man deceive you with vain words for because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the children of disobedience IN these words is contained an argument whereby the Apostle labours to perswade all the faithfull that they may keep themselves from those sinnes whereof he had made mention a little before The Argument is drawn from an adjunct that follows upon sin to wit the wrath of God of which sinnes are not onely the antecedents but also meritory causes certainly procuring it as is intimated in these words For these things The connexion of this effect with its cause is limited and confirmed 1. It is limited by a description of the subject wherein Gods wrath doth alway pursue sin in these words upon the children of disobedience 2. It is confirmed by rejecting of all vain shifts in these words Let no man deceive you The Explication by the wrath of God 1. Is understood Gods vindicative justice 2. His will to inflict punishment according to that justice 3. The punishment it self that is so inflicted And in this place most properly the punishment is understood which in other places is often called death distress severities hot anger and the like This wrath of God is said to come against or upon men because as it were coming down from Heaven it suddenly fals upon and overwhelms and holds as intangled in a net the sinners so that by no means they can escape it In the same sense that not unlike phrase is used Rom. 1. 18. by the expression of the children of contumacie or stubbornness upon whom this wrath comes those sinners are understood which can by no means be perswaded to leave their sins and seek God by true faith and repentance where this is to be marked that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may be turned both children of incredulity and children of disobedience but it agrees better to this place to be turned children of disobedience and of rebellion because we read not this phrase the children of saith but of obedience 1 Pet. 1. 14. Doct. 1. Such mens condition is most desperate because they are not onely sinners but also stubborn in their sins It s gathered out of these words Upon the children of disobedience or stubbornnesse So they are named here as men whose condition is much to be abhorred and whose example and company is most to be shunned as appears from vers 7. be not therefore partakers c. Reas. 1. Because such men serve a most miserable servitude to a very base Master that is to sin for sin exercises a spiritual Kingly power and dominion over them because they do all that the lusts of sin commands them and can by no means be perswaded to shake off that slavish yoke and so much the lesse as they perceive that slavery by so much are they the more fully under its command because by this means it comes to passe that their very will it selfe and the spirit of their minde is possessed by this slavery and oppressed For as a brute or a man that comes neer to a brute serving some cruell Master takes no thought for that his condition because of his stupidity neither cares nor wishes for a better is a more full and perfect slave than some free-born and free-minded man who is by force constrained to serve one but yet under such servitude and force keeps a free minde even so it fares in this matter Reas. 2. Because such men are furthest off from repentance and so from the kingdome of God and from salvation For repentance doth most consist in the turning of the heart from sin to God by perswasion of the Word and holy Spirit And to this temper the obstinacy and unperswasibleness of such men is flat opposite who are not onely not perswaded to turn to God but are perswaded to the contrary that such perswasion of converting is not to be embraced or regarded for such are properly called the children of rebellion or disobedience As therefore those diseases are most mortal which admit of no cure and are but the more exasperated the more they are dealt with even so also is it with such kinde of men Reas. 3. Because these men do most grievously encrease their guilt in this that they withstand the means that God hath sanctified for procuring their salvation For while they will not suffer themselves to be perswaded to that conversion unto Faith and Repentance they directly fight against God and not onely so but in this very thing that he would and is some way striving as it were to save them Use Of Adm●…nition That most of all we be carefull of this stubbornnesse or rebellion which is not onely to be understood in common of that con●…umacy whereby men refuse altogether to be converted but also specially and in every part of obedience For if we perceive that God calls us to this or that special duty t is then our part mainly to take care that even in that we present our hearts to God flexible and perswasible whereunto we are invited Doct. 2. Upon the children of disobedience certainly and unevitably the horrible wrath of God comes This is clear in the Text without any collection made from it That this wrath is horrible and altogether intolerable the Scripture every were testifies as Heb. 10. 27. Apoc. 6. 16 17. and elswhere And the thing it self doth sufficiently shew it if we consider Gods anger as to its intensness extensness and duration as to its intensnesse it is called in Scripture a consuming fire Heb. 12. 29. Now this fire of the wrath of God consumes not lightly or light things onely as in the superficies but as it is said Deutro 32. 22. Gods wrath set on fire will burn down to the grave c. Nah●…m 1. 6. Where there is a most likely pithy description By all which descriptions is signified that the wrath of God doth throughly peirce not onely into the body but into the soul and inward part of the spirit for which reason in many places of Scripture it is compared unto sharpe arrows peircing into the heart its self and consuming the spirit and life As to the extension this wrath of God contains in it all sort of evils whether corporal or spiritual whether in this life or at the end of it and in death or at death ●…ither belong those catalogues or inventories of curses that are found Deutr. 28. and Levit. 26. 3. As to the duration it remaineth upon impe●…ient sinners Iohn 3. 36. not for some short space but unto all eternity and without end For as that obligation whereby we are bound to render God all obedienees without end so consequently the transgression whereby sinners break that obligation is in a
suffer a great evill Now that he is said to have suffered for sinnes and for the unjust the particle for designes the cause of his suffering and that is threefold a meritory or material a formal cause and a final The meritory cause because Christ suffered for the things which the sinnes of unjust men had deserved The formal cause because for our sinnes Christ was induced as the form as of divine imputation as of that which by God was imputed so of the suretiship undertaken by Christ or that form which by Christ was undertaken or accepted to be accounted his when he underwent these sufferings Lastly also the final cause because for this end set before him or for this very purpose Christ suffered that he might take away the sins of unjust men and make unjust men to become just and so might bring them to salvation Doct. 1. Christ the Lord suffered all these evills of punishment which were due to us for our sins This is not so to be understood as if in kind and particularly he had undergone all the evills but in value onely and generally in the summe or upcast of all and in that which was equivalent and equipollent to all and so he is said to have suffered all the evills of punishment Reas. 1. Because he suffered generally all sorts of evill to wit as well spiritual in the agony and horror of his mind as corporal in his body and the extreme as well positive as privative both in a kind of loss and in kind of sorrow or feeling Reas 2. Because he suffered from all from whom any evill could be inflicted He suffered from men as well Jews as Gentiles as well his own domesticks as forrainers he suffered from the powers of darkness and Hell which were the murtherers from the beginning and the authors of all these evills which Christ suffered from them and their instruments lastly he suffered from God himself whose cup full of wrath he drunk out Reas. 3. Because he suffered in every part of himself every way that he could suffer For he suffered in his soul horrors and unspeakable sorrowes he suffered in his body hunger thirst nakednesse wounds spitting stripes and buffetings and whatsoever witty malice and cruelty could devise Use 1. Of Direction that continually in meditating on the passion of Christ we may look upon the singular and incomprehensible goodnesse grace love mercy justice and wisdome of God by which he sent his eternal Son to suffer such things for us and for our salvation and together also the abundant grace of our Lord Jesus Christ who was willing to it and did suffer so many and so grievous things for us Use 2. Of Exhortation that from the consideration of this suffering of our Lord and Saviour we strive to stir up our selves powerfully that we may daily have more faith and hope about grace and our salvation to be perfected by Christ and that our hearts may be kindled with greater heat of love towards God and Christ and with greater zeal of the glory of his name lastly that with more courage constancy and patience we bear all the troubles of this life for Christ's sake who suffer'd all things for us Doct. 2. Christ suffer'd all these things neither out of any necessity of nature neither by constraint neither by casualty and chance but of his own ●…ree choice of wisdome and will This is gathered from the Text in that it is put amongst Christ's praises as an example of obedience that he thus suffered But there is no place for praise nor obedience in such things as one suffers out of necessity or chance without the free consent of the will Reas. 1. Because this was the will of the Father whereunto he would conform his will in all things so far forth as he laid this charge upon him Reas. 2. Because this was the very thing for which Christ came into the world according to the form of covenant made between the Father and the Son Isa 53 10. Reas. 3. Because in this consisted the most perfect obediences which is the way to the most perfect glory Phil 2. 9. Object Every evill of punishment is against the will of the sufferer but what Christ suffered for us were very great evills of punishment They were therefore suffered against his will Ans. That evills of punishment are said alwayes to be against the will of the sufferer First Because they are against his natural inclination For therefore punishment is onely evill because it tends to the destroying of nature and so is against inclination of nature whereby every thing seeks the conservation of it self Secondly The evill of punishment is against the will of the sufferer conditionally to wit if by no other means the sufferer can attain to his wished end but it is not alwayes against his will absolutely The first had place in Christ because these passions were against the inclinations of nature since otherwise they had brought him no pain and they were also against his conditional will as appears by these words Father if it be possible let this cup pas●… from me But they were not against his deliberate determinate and absolute will The reason is because he suffered all out of obedience to the Father and of love to us and our salvation Use ●… Of Instruction how we may from this ground arme our mindes against those tentations that use to come by occasion of Christ's sufferings For in this respect Christ was a stumbling stone unto the Jewes and foolishness unto the Grecians But if we will well weigh with our selves that Christ suffered all these things not out of coaction or any necessity or any external violence but from the obedience of love towards mankind and that he might give us a most perfect pattern of obedience in his own person We shall be so far from finding any stumbling block or foolishness in these sufferings that on the contrary nothing could be found that was or is more suitable to the Saviour of the world Use 2. Of Exhortation that calling seriously to mind this grace of our Lord Jesus Christ out of thankfulness and mutual love to him we may be ready with all willingness and chearfulness of mind to undergo all sufferings and afflictions for his sake Doct. 3. Christ's sufferings were an expiatory Sacrifice for our sins This is it which is said in the Text That he suffered for sins for the unjust that is he had the virtue to take away the punishment from us the guilt also and the spot and to acquire to us the favour of God and righteousness and life eternal It is the same that useth to be signified by satisfaction by merit by redemption by restitution or restauration made by Christ. Reas. 1. Because this was the covenant between the Father and the Son that if he would undergo that obedience for us then we should be freed from our disobedience and death and should live thorough him Isa. 53. 10. For this
diminution in its ralative perfection There were two parts of this resurrection revivification or a quickening again of the humane nature by the renewed union of soul and body and its going out of the grave to make it manifest that it was restored This resurrection was confirmed moreover by Angells by the Scriptures by Christ himself and by the assent and eye-witness or experience of many witnesses in divers apparitions reiterated from time to time during the space of forty dayes Reas. 1. Because it was unbeseeming and impossible that the Son of God and author of life could be long detained by the power of death Acts 2. 24. Reas. 2. That by this means Christ himself might be justified in the spirit or according to the spirit of holiness that is by the power of his God-head justified to be God as well as man in one person justly and fully declared and proved to be God by his raising of himself again from the dead Rom. 1. 4. 1 Tim. 3. 16. and might shew that we were justified by him from our sins for which he died and rose also again to shew that he had overcome for us and delivered us from them Rom. 4. 25. Reas. 3. That being now alive he might powerfully apply to us what before he had purchased by his death Rom. 5 10. Reas 4. That he hereby might be the cause foundation and sign of assurance and earnest to us of our resurrection as well spiritual as bodily Rom. 1 Cor. 15. 12 13 14. Use Is of Information for the direction of our faith that believing in Christ unto justification and salvation we may so lay hold on Christ's death that we still also look upon his resurrection wherein his victory for us was shewn and his power over death and efficacy to work in us appeared and which renders his death full of comfort to us Rom. 5. 34. 1 Pet. 3 2. Doct. 6. Christ's resurrection came to pass by his own proper vertue and power It is clear in the Text I take it up again and I have power of taking it up again For this is the difference between Christ's resurrection and that of others that they rise again by the power of another to wit of Christ as many as are his But Christ by his own power as Lord of life and death and therefore hath the disposing of both as he sees good Neither doth it make any thing against this truth that it is often said that God raised him again from the dead and the Spirit of God For the works of the Trinity from without are undivided common to all the three Persons Reas. 1. Because what is thus attributed to God is therefore also attributed to the Son together with the Father and Holy Spirit and is not taken from him as is clear by our Text. Reas. 2. When Christ is said to be raised by God or the Spirit of God then properly his humane nature is considered as raised by Father Son and Holy Spirit though not alwayes all three expressed but now one now another But when he is said to have raised himself his divine nature and person is spoken of and considered as raising his assumed humane nature together with the Father and the Spirit Reas. 3. Because by the Spirit and glory of God whereby Christ is said to be raised no other vertue or power can be understood than that of the divine nature which was in Christ. Use 1. Of Information to confirm our faith about the person of Christ. For he that by his own power ●…rose from death can not be a bare man onely but must of necessity be acknowledged to have been God also For the raising of a dead body is no less divine a work than the creation of a live body He that raised himself from the dead at the same time while he was dead in one of his natures yet had life and the fountain of life in his other nature to wit the divine at his command whereby he did so great a work as to raise his other nature to life again As Christ therefore by his death proved himself to be true man so also in and by his resurrection he proved himself to be the eternal and natural Son of God and true God especially not by office onelie and that most manifestly Use 2. Of Consolation to all such as are in Christ. For they are in him who hath vertue and power to raise them again from the dead and to give them eternal life Iohn 6. 39 40 Doct. 7. Christ's resurrection was for us or to do us good This is hence gathered because in the Text the common end of laying down his life and taking it up again for all is mentioned For for such as he laid down his life for such also he took it up again Now the resurrection of Christ turnes to our good in another way than his death doth For his death hath the account of satisfying and deserving for us But his resurrection not so but it hath the place and account of a samplar and efficient cause and some way of an efficacious and powerfull applier and perfecter Reas. 1. Because Christ in his resurrection represented some way all the elect of God and by a virtuall containing had them all in himself and brought them all back from death Reas. 2. Because the same Spirit that raised Christ again from the dead by a certain sort of communicating the same resurrection quickened as well the soules as bodyes of the faithfull that they may be made conforme to the likenesse of his resurrection Rom 8. 11. Reas. 3. Because that same Spirit quickens us by the power and vertue of the resurrection of Christ. Reas. 4. Because the whole reparation of our nature will be after the image and pattern of the resurrection of Christ Rom. 6. 5. Use 1. Of Consolation because in the resurrection of Christ as brought to pass for us or for our good we have our victory over Death Devill Sin and Hell and all our Enemies ready purchased and prepared for us It is not therefore left to us to fight that we may overcome but onely in sincerity that we may mind this to lay hold on the victory already acquired by Christ for us and that in the same manner we may strive to keep it prosecute it and more and more put ourselves in perfect possession of it by faith in Christ. Use 2. Of Admonition that by no means we suffer sin to reigne in our mortal bodies but that we may spiritually imitate such as arise from the dead The eighteenth Lords day Mark 16. 19. So then after the Lord had spoken unto them he was received up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God HEre is explicated a singular act of Christ after his resurrection Where mark 1. The motion wherein the act is designed And 2. The thing brought to pass by that motion The motion is but the means The thing done by the motion was
rewards and punishments were more justly and equally to be distributed where it should be ill with evill men and not well at all and should go well with good men and not ill at all Which reason seems also to be confirmed by our Lord himself Luke 26. 15. and the Apostle Paus 1 Cor. 15. 19. Now after this life while the Soul remaines separate from the body the judgement of God is not compleat nor fully accomplished because it is not passed upon the whole man in his full being as he was in this life while he committed the things that were to be judged Therefore another and fuller ●…udgement than that on the souls departed onely followeth to be looked for which is this last judgement and shall be certainly in its own time Reas. 2. It is most convenient agreeable to Gods glory that God in by Christ in a most glorious manner should make manifest before all as well Angels as men as well his mercy as his justice that he might have the publick and solemne glory of both mercy and justice and this is the thing that at that time is topass come in that universal and last judgement Reas 3. This belongs also to the glory of God the joy of the faithfull and just confusion of the unfaithfull that before their faces they may see the promises and threatenings of God almost perfectly and accurately fulfilled not onely particularly on their own persons now in the body as before death but universally upon all others both men and Angells Which shall then onely be when this last and universal judgement shall be held Use 1. Of Information that we take care to have our faith and hope solidly confirmed and strongly rooted about this article least we be any wayes troubled with prophane blasphemies and mockings of Infidells and Heathens who first cast downe and trample upon the profession of this article by their life and manners and then also by words and speeches fight and dispute against it Concerning whom we are admonished by the Apostle St. Peter 2 Pet. 3. 3 4. c. Use 2. Of Admonition that with all fear and trembling we watch over our wayes as those that certainly mind and look for the day of this judgement 1 Pet. 1. 17. 2 Pet. 3. 11 12. Doct. 2. Our Lord Iesus Christ will be Iudge in this judgement Reas 1. Because it belongs to his Kingly office and power whereby he was made Lord and King and had all judgement committed to him Reas. 2. Because Christ is he from whom and by whom the faithfull have salvation adjud●…ed unto them even in this life and from whom also unbelievers have death adjudged unto them Now it is the same judgement that in this life both wayes is begun and in the last judgement shall be fully manifested and perfected Reas. 3. Because at that time it is that Christ should fully and actually triumph over all enemies and opposite power and crown all his own servants souldiers and adherents And this is most conveniently and gloriously done in forme of publick and solemne judgement Use Is of Consolation chiefly to the faithfull because they shall have him for their Judge whom they received for their Redeemer Justifier Sanctifier and Intercessor or Advocate from whom therefore they may with all confidence expect all good Doct. 3. Christ's glory at that time shall be incomparable It hence appears from the Text that if the Angells so glorious shall then be his Ministers of State and attendants and his Throne with all the rest of that procedure shall be so glorious it mmst needs be that Christ himself be excellent in glory above all that we can think of Reas. 1. Because the exercise of this judgement belongs to the manifestation of Christ's highest exaltation Reas. 2. Because the very end of his coming was to give glory to such as sought God in him It is fit then that Christ appear in greatest glory Reas. 3. The majesty of the supreme Judge of the world and the terror and confusion of his enemies that they must be put to require that he should come clothed in the greatest glory Use Of Consolation to the faithfull against the crosses and contempts they are liable to in this world together with Christ because as now they are partakers of the cross of Christ so then they shall be partakers of his glory Doct. 4. In this judgement the condition of the godly and ungodly shall be quite unlike and opposite one to another This is taught in the Text by the separation of the sheep from the goats by the right hand and the left by ●…ome ye blessed and go ye cursed Reas. 1. Because there is a great unlikeness and opposition in the lives and wayes of the godly and ungodly while they are in this world Reas. 2. Because there is a great dissimilitude or opposition between the promises that belong to the godly and the threatenings that belong to the ungodly Reas. 3. Because there is great disparity and opposition between the manifestation of greatest mercy and of greatest execution of justice Use Of Admonition that we separate our selves from ungodly men as much and in such manner as we can that is if we cannot separate in places yet in internal affections as well as external conversation we should be as unlike unto them as can be in that wherein they are ungodly Doct. 5. The cause of any blessing to the godly is the mercy of God but the cause of any ca●…se to the ungodly is their own sault This is clear in the Text when the godly are called blessed of the Father But the ungodly barely are called ye cursed not of the Father nor from the Father nor from God because though it is God that curseth them yet the first cause of this curse is in their sins Reas. 1. Because all good is from God who is the greatest good and chiefly good in himself But all evill of punishment ariseth from evill of fault and this evill of fault is from the creature it self breaking the Law and Order that God hath set to it Reas. 2. Because the blessing of life is the meer free gift of God but the curse of death is the reward or wages of sin Rom. 6. 23. Reas. 3. Preservation from the curse which is by Gods favour is necessary for our blessing but to incur the curse there is nothing more needfull but onely to neglect or contemne that way that leads unto the blessing Use Of Direction that we may alway give God the glory in every good thing that we either have or seek or look for and alwayes blame our selves for any evill that befalls us Doct. 6. The blessing of the godly consists in the communion that they shall have with God in Christ and the curse of the ungodly in the separation of them from such communion This is plaine in the words come ye blessed and go ye cursed Reas. 1. Because this is the end whereunto all
our justification might be of free favour Reas. 1. Because it was impossible for the laws and the righteousnes thereof to justifie sinners Rom. 8. vers 1 Reas. 2. Because in the justification of a sinner is remission or pardon of ●…in and all pardon is of free ●…avour Reas. 3. Because in justification is a free Donation of righteousness and of life eternal which to sinners cannot be done but with especial grace and favour The satisfaction made by Christ for us withstands not the freenesse of this favour of justification because it was of free favour and grace that Christ himself was given us and by calling appointed to this satisfaction for us and of his own free-grace also accepted of that calling Use 1. Is of Refutation against Papists and many others who will have our justification to depend upon our Works which yet every where by the Apostle are opposed to this free grace in our justification Use 2. Is of Consolation to believers and repenters against all these shakings of minde which they feel or can feel from the unworthinesse of themselves that their own consciences tell them of because our whole justification hangs on the free favour or grace of God and not upon our worth or merits Use 3. Is of Exhortation 1. That we alwayes flee to the Free-grace of God as to the onely garrison of our souls 2. That from admiration of this grace of God we alwayes study to be thankfull to God Doct. 3. The obedience of Iesus Christ imputed unto us or given us and so accounted ours justifies or makes us righte●… and is the foundation of all our righteousnesse It is in the Text By the Redemption made by Iesus Christ. 1. For he that is justified by the Redemption 〈◊〉 other as by paying a ransom that price is conceived as it were to be paid for him who is redeemed ●… If Christ be the pacification in our justification when we please God as it is in the Text then we please him for something which Christ hath performed for our good 3. If Faith justifies as it hath relation to Christ and the shedding of his blood then there is something in his blood thus shed or in his obedience unto death by vertue whereof we are justified Now the obedience of Christ in respect of our justification hath 1. the place of a meriting cause which obtains it for us because it was the means that Gods justice required to be performed to him before his grace could justify us 2 It hath the place of the formal cause in as much as it is so accepted and taken for ours being given us by free-gift and so made ours indeed as that we are lookt on by God as truly clothed with it when he pronounces the sentence of our justification whence that phrase of the Apostle is Not having mine own righteousnesse but that which is Christs Phil. 3. 9. Reas. 1. Is because this is most agreeable both to the justice and mercy of God joyntly For if our justification had stood in the bare remission of sin without the imputation of a sufficient righteousness or obedience for satisfaction to justice then onely Gods mercy and favour had had place in this businesse no regard being had of the justice of God that satisfaction might be made Reas. 2. Because if we had been pronounced just without any imputation of a satisfying righteousness or obedience performed then there could have been no just ground of such a sentence to wit that he should be pronounced just which was no way just neither by his own inherent justice or righteousness nor yet by anothers justification freely given him Rea. 3. Because by this means we have in some manner a divine righteousnesse or the righteousnesse of God himself to wit that which Christ who is God performed for us not the essential righteousnes of God as Soliander dream'd as God-man in one person on which therefore we may rely and with the greater confidence appear before God and for it hope for all divine and good things at the hands of God Reas. 4. Because in this manner we the more own our salvation as wrought by Christ. Use 1. Is of Refutation against Papists Anabaptists Remonstrants or Arminians and almost all Sects and Sectarians who all agree in this errour that our justification depends upon our works and is not to be sought by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse to us or accounting his obedience ours Use 2. Is of Exhortation unto due thankfulness towards Christ by whose Redemption or ransoming of us we are justified and set free from sin and death the wages of sin and adjudged unto life and glory above what any meer creatures righteousness could ever have deserved Doct. 4. The obedience of Iesus Christ is powerful for justifying of us by being accepted and laid hold on by our Faith It is in the Text. Through Faith in his Blood Reas 1. The very nature and duty of Faith is to rely on Christ or on the favour and mercy of God in Christ for pardon of sins Reas. 2. Because by Faith we are united unto Christ and ingrafted into him that so we may be partakers of all the blessings that in him are prepared for men Reas. 3. Because Faith receives layes hold on and embraces all the promises of God and the things in them contained offered or proposed amongst which pardon of sins and justification in Christ hath a chief place The Use is of Direction that it may be our onely care in the business of our justification to direct our Faith and confidence towards Christ and to stir up and confirm it more and more that we may thence have firm and aboundant comfort The twenty fourth Lords day James 2. 22. Seeft thou how faith wrought with his works and by works was faith made perfect IN these words is contain'd the conclusion of that disputation which Iames had against such as vant of Faith that is destitute of good-works For the Apostle concludes that such Faith is of no worth unto justification And this conclusion is often repeated as vers 14 17. and 20. 22. and 24. under sundry formes of words but to one and the same sense Now this Conclusion which the Apostle proves is not that good-works are any part or cause of our justification before God as Papists take it nor yet as many of our own think that our works justifie us before men however that contain a truth in it but this is the conclusion that justifying faith is such that it worketh and puts forth its operation by good-works And it is proved 1. from a comparison of likes from vers 15. to the 18. 2. By another comparison of likes to wit of such a fruitlesse faith in men and devils vers 19. 3. from the example and pattern of that faith that was in Abraham vers 21. of all which the conclusion is set down in this 22. vers In which two things are determined 1. That true and
in this cleannesse that is that neither the end of it may be broken nor it self be drawne beyond the bounds of modesty and temperance nor that it be any way from a remedy of sin and lust turned into a cover for uncleannesse and wantonnesse The forty second Lords day Exod. 20. 15. Thou shalt not steal IN this eighth Commandement mens possessions are handled as things that come under the name of their outward goods and commodities For thus God would shew what a care he hath of us in that not onely by his Law he hath provided for the safety of our life and chastity and honour of our persons but also for our possessions and external goods He would also hereby admonish us how confidently we may trust all that is ours to him where by his eternal Law he would have us secured about these lesser matters There is in this Commandment ordained and presupposed a propriety to every particular man in his own goods by reason whereof it s truly said his is mine and that is ●…hine For though at the beginning of the creation all things were in a manner common yet afterwards by lawful seizure and possession of this or that a division of things ensued the unjust breach of which division is condemn'd in this commandment with all such things as make for it or lead to it For as in a feast some dish is set downe in common and is no more this guests than that 's yet when any guest hath taken to himself a portion or share of it then that is more his owne than any others so that it cannot by any other be taken from him without uncivility so were all the commodities of this life at the first set out in common to all but when one took to himself a certain portion of them another could not by violence take it from him without sin Now by name theft onely is forbidden because it is one of the grossest and manifestest sins of this kinde because in theft to every one is apparent the breach of that right which every one hath to his own commodity and so the unjustice and the wrong is clear Yet together with it also according to the perpetual use of speech in all the other Commandments all the degrees and causes principles and occasions or provocations to it are forbidden Doct. 1. We must keep our selves out of cons●…ience towards God from all unjust hurting of our Neighbour in point of his possession or outward goods Reas. 1. Because otherwayes we sin against God and that after diverse manners 1. That dispensation of his providence whereby he hath made division of such things amongst men is disturbed against his revealed will 2. The dominion of God himself which he exercises in the dispensing of such things as seems best to himself seems this way to be contemned 3. We invade as it were this soveraignty and dominion of God while at our pleasure we will make ours whatsoever we list Reas. 2. Because we do our neighbour grosse and manifest injury while we take by force to our selves what belongs to him and so take away from his his goods Reas. 3. Because in this manner charity is directly broken while instead of that good which we both ought to wish and procure to our neighbour we do him reall evill in depriving him of his own goods Reas 4. Because from such sins follow strifes hatred and the disturbance of all society Use Is of Admonition that we not onely shun that which is commonly called theft but also all those sins which in Scripture are referred to theft as their common head As 1. the too great love of riches 2. The desire of our own profit with our neighbours losse 3. All unjustice of bargains and commerce how ever it may be done with colour of right 4. All using or appropriating to our selves that which is anothers without its masters consent whether this be done by force or by deceit and circumvention Doct. 2. With the same religion or conscience that we ought to abstain from theft we ought to s●…t ou●…selves to this on the contrary that we may seek our neighbours good and further it in his outward goods It is gathered from the likeness of reason that is between the sins forbidden and the duties commanded that are contrary to the same Reas. 1. Because by this means we make our selves instruments of Gods bounty and good providence whereby it is his pleasure that all be provided for in things necessary to this life Reas. 2. Because it is the exercise of our charity towards our neighbour Reas. 3. Because it belongs also some way to iustice in as much as we ought to behave our selves as members of the same society and every one hath right to such duties from others as far as conveniently they can be by them performed Reas. 4. Because our Lord admonisheth us that we make unto our selves freinds from the use of this communion and so further others by our good example and our selves by their good desires and prayers for us in the way to salvation Use Is of Direction that we set our selves with all care that according to this duty of humanity we further the profits of others as our occasion and power shall require Hence 1. we ought to purchase nothing to our selves but by honest means and just titles of right For whatsoever is otherwise purchased or acquired turns alwayes to the wronging of another 2. Every one should betake himself to some honest exercise of life which is in its self lawfull sutable to our selves and profitable to others and such as live at ease For who so live disorderly as stout beggars with him in the Gospel who having full Bags and Barns sings a requiem to their souls saying Soul take thine ease thou hast much laid up these as in other things so they sin in this that they take not upon them such a condition of like whereby they may doe good unto others 3. Diligence is to be used in our calling without which we cannot keep the things we have much lesse increase them that we may spare something from them and lay it out unto the common good of others 4. Frugality and moderation in our expenses about our selves ought to be used least the fountain should be drawn dry whence such streams should flow for helping and refreshing others 5. Bounty and mercy ought to be exercised in communicating our goods unto others especially persons that are to be pittied and of these chiefly such as are of the houshold of faith For in this duty is most of all exercised and most manifestly that vertue that is most contrary to theft because as in theft we take unjustly to our selves what is not our own so in liberality and alms we justly take from our selves what is our own and freely bestow it on another The forty third Lords day On Exod. 20. 18. Thou shalt not beare false witnesse against thy neighbour IN this Commandment
no time in no place for no party whatsoever no not for God himself as hath been said we ever witnesse any thing Moreover we are always bound to give witnesse unto the truth and to confirm it when either religion or conscience towards God or iustice and charity towards our neighbour shall require this duty from us The forty fourth Lords day Exod. 20. 17. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbours 〈◊〉 thou shalt not covet thy neighbours wife nor his man-servant nor his maid-servant nor his ox nor his ass nor any thing that is thy neighbours IN this last commandment is handled the estate and condition of our Neighbour in common as appeareth by these last words or 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 neighbours For as in the first Commandment of the first Table that duty is commanded whereon all other duties lye and depend so also in this last Commandment of the last Table that duty is handled on which all others that relate to our neighbour do depend About this state of our neighbour in common coveteousness is forbidden by which neither is understood the natural faculty of coveting or desiring which is of it self good and lawfull and not to be ranked in the place of things forbidden Nor yet every concupiscence or lust is here to be understood because such acts of filthy lust as have the consent of the will joyned with them for the accomplishing the acts of sin if occasion were given are prohibited in the other Commandments according to their kindes whereunto they belong as Christ himself teacheth of a man inordinately lusting after a woman which while he calls adultery he shows that it is forbidden in the seventh Commandment Nor yet is understood that innate and inbred lust in us which is original sin and the ●…inder to all actuall sin because that is no more forbidden in any one Commandement than the contrary original righteousness and innocency is commanded in the whole Law but as this primitive righteousness is commanded us in all the Law throughout so the contrary original sin lust or inclination and propensity to evill in general is forbidden in the whole Law and not in any one commandment Here then is properly understood that coveteousness which is a disorderly desire or longing after any thing that is our neighbours though we do not fully consent thereto and though we never desire to accomplish the same by unlawfull means Doct. 1. The first motions wherein we are touched with an inordinate desire are to be holden ●…or sins that are to be shunn'd It is gathered from the words of the Commanment because that first lusting after any thing that is our neighbours is expresly condemned and all other inordinate motions are of the same kinde Reas. 1 Because such motions are contrary to the perfection of Gods Image which we are every where bound to keep intire in our selves as much as is possible Reas. 2. Because such motions are contrary to charity whereby we ought to love God with our whole hearts and our Neighbour as our selves For if this charity were perfect in us no place would be left in us for such motions of affections either against God or against our Neighbour Reas. 3. Because in such motions there is a certain beginning of a consent to evill though it be not full and perfect which appeareth from that hidden liking and delight that useth to accompany such motions untill seriously they be repressed Use 1. Of Refutation against Papists who hold not such first motions for sins and so do not acknowledge the spiritual depth of sin and by the same meanes in great part take away the power of repentance and spiritual humiliation Use 2. Of Admonition that with all diligence we keep our hearts that however we cannot be altogether free from such motions yet as much as may be we may keep our selves from them and that for two causes 1. Because they have something of sinfulnesse in them and tend also to the promotion of heavier sins 2. Because in some sort they defile our mind and make it less fit for excercising and preserving holy motions Doct. 2. Every one ought to be content with that portion and condition that God hath measur●…d out unto him This is hence gathered because contentment with our owne is the duty directly contrary to desiring what is anothers Reas. 1. Because we ought to rest in Gods dispensation as in our Fathers good providence who knowes best what is good for us Reas. 2. Because this contentment makes much for the quietnesse of our minde and so for the happinesse of our life Reas. 3. Because the want of this content argues our too great love of the world and of our selves and it comes from a perverse affection that we are not content with our lot Use 1. Of Reproof against such as do or think nothing else almost than how they may compasse such or such a worldly thing that they have not so that their whole life is nothing else but a continual exercise of avarice and ambition Use 2 Of Exhortation that we may more and more strive unto this contentment of minde which is the companion of true piety as is said Godlinesse is great gain with a minde contented with its owne condition For we brought nothing with us into this world nor can we take any thing out of it with us but having fo●…d and raiment let us there ●…ith be content But such as will be rich fall into tentation and into a s●…are and many lusts or covetousnesses c. 1 Tim. 6. 6 7. Doct. 3. We ought to desire our Neighbours good as well as our owne This is hence gathered that here is forbidden the coveting of that which is our Neighbours whence followes that we ought not onely to leave to him such things as are his but also which is more desire heartily that he may keep and enjoy his owne to his owne content not that we should have them or desire them So that as the love of God above all things else is commanded in the first Commandment so this love of our Neighbour as of our selves seems chiefly to be commanded and as it were summed up in this last Commandment Reas. 1. Because love to our Neighbour ought to follow from our love to God and God may be as well honoured by the things he gives to our Neighbour as the things that he gives to us Reas. 2. Because however it be more natural to wish well to our selves yet it is more divine and perfect to wish well to others in such external things Reas. 3. Because by wishing well to others we wish well to ourselves in as much as by the exercise of this duty we further our owne salvation Use Of ●…eproof against the common frailty of us all For from this as from the Commandment of a loving God above all things it followes that none can perfectly keep this moral Law in this life to wit if we understand such perfection as consists in compleat
this prayer Reas. 2. Because God according to his infinite wisedome hath so ordered things in Christ that he can with safety to his justice of his free mercy forgive us our sins Reas. 3. Because this mercy being infinite farre surpasseth our sins though in themselves they be horrible Use Of Exhortation that with all our hearts we fly to this mercy and rest in it and on it Doct. 4. Unto remission of sins together with ●…aith is required a confession of them and repentance or a change of minde and amendment This followes from the nature of the petition Reas. 1 Because none can earnestly desire the blotting out of his sins unless he both confess and also hate and detest them Reas. 2. Because otherwise he can by no meanes rightly magnify the mercy of God whereunto he flies but rather goes about to prostitute it and make it a Pander or Baud to his sins Reas. 3. Because without these none is fitted for receiving comfort from the mercy of God in remission of his sins Use Of Reproof against such as presume on the mercy of God though they never thus seriously repent of their sins nor can be brought to confess or acknowledge their cruell dispositious to men Doct. 5. Mercy and love to our brethren is a signe of the mercy and love of God to our selves From these words As we forgive our debtors Reas. 1. Because the mercy and love of God shed abroad in our hearts begets mercy in us to our bretheren as heat begets heat Reas. 2. Because this mercy and love towards men is for its conformity thereto and suitableness to it a special condition of obtaining the mercy of God and so is declared to be tied to it Mat. 6. 14. If ye forgive men their trespasses your Father also that is in Heaven will forgive you Reas. 3. Because this forgiving of all injuries and wrongs done to us by others is taken of the special and free mercy of God communicated unto us and this grace is the effect of Gods mercy forgiving us our sins Use Of Admonition that we deceive not our selves and promise to our selves the mercy of God whilst we nourish in our own hearts hatred and ran●…our against our brethren The fifty second Lords day On the sixth petition of the Lords prayer 〈◊〉 u●… not into temptation c. IN this petition the business is about the evill of sin in respect of its dominion which it uses to have over men concerning which we have first the petition and secondly its declaration or opposition In the petition we pray against this evill in its twofold cause whereof the first is the proper cause of sin intending it which is the temptation of the Devill or the Devill tempting us to sin Now temptation is nothing else but an argument propos●…d to us whereby we are induced to be perswaded and drawne into sin The other cause that is looked at in this petition is not properly the cause of the sin nor any efficient or author of it but a governour and orderer as well of the sin it self as of the tempting to sin and of the effects of both but the true cause of the evill of punishment that followes sin And this is Gods effectual and powerfull way of working about sin or exercising of his providence which usually is called Gods permission although it be more than a bare and an idle permitting The explication of this petition is in praying for the contrary to this evill that we prayed against in the words going before which is prayed against from Gods gracious acting towards us contrary to that which before was called a leading into temptation For it is called a delivering or plucking of us out of temptation Doct. 1. The guilt of former sins committed deserveth altogether at gods hands that we should be quite given over to temptations and sins This is gathered from the connexion wherein first forgivenesse of sins is sought and then deliverance from temptations and evill for sin Reas. 1. Because sin being an aversion or turning away from God therefore it deserves that he should turne away himself and his grace from us Reas. 2. Because for sin we both give our selves up as it were servants to sin and to him that tempts to sin We deserve therefore directly and very rightly that we should be given to such masters as we our selves have chosen Reas. 3 When we rush into sin we neglect that grace of God by which we might have been preserved from sin and therefore we deserve to be deserted by him Use 1. Of Admonition that we so much the more take care to keep our selves from sin Use 2. Of Direction that we daily seek from God the forgivenesse of our sins even for this end that we be not further given up to sin and to temptation but that we may be preserved from both Doct. 2. Whosoever have forgivenesse of sins or seriously se●…k after it they have a desire and true purpose to abstain and keep themselves from sinning in time to come This is also clear from the connexion of these two petitions Reas. 1. Because otherwayes they would not truly abhor sin and so would shew themselves altogegether indisposed and not qualified for remission of sins Reas. 2. Because else they would not be thankfull to God that forgave them their sins Reas. 3. Because else that forgivenesse would be in vain if they should again purpose to themselves to returne to the like condition wherein they were before Use Of Reproof of such as seem to wish for forgivenesse of sin but in the mean time have no care to fly from sin Doct. 3. Who so desires to keep himself from sin ought also to keep himself from all temptations and occasions that lead into sin It is clear from the petition which prayes against temptations to sins Reas. 1. Because the end of such temptations is sin and the misery that followes upon sin Reas. 2. Temptations are so many so subtile and so powerfull that unless with great care we take heed to our selves it cannot be but they lead us into sin Reas. 3. Because of our selves we are carried that way and incline unto this that by giving place to temptations we may betray our owne soules to the tempter Use Of Admonition to such as from too much security and boldness rashly expose themselves to the danger of diverse temptations and inticements to sin for temptation is not to be desired and sought after but as wisely as we can to be shunn'd and where that cannot be stoutly and couragiously to be repulsed Doct. 4. Our Father that is in Heaven disposeth also of our temptations according to his owne good pleasure For thus it is here held out to us that it is he that either leads us into temptation or causes us not to be brought into it but kept from it Reas. 1. Because he exercises his providence in guiding and measuring of every temptation Reas 2. From him depends the
agents and was against Christs internal natural inclinations and in some sort natural also as it was wrought by external causes naturally producing such an effect Yet it was voluntary not onely as to the willing disposition and choice of it whereby Christ set himself to suffer it but also as he suspended his own power of hindering it and averting death and so gave way and power to the enemies inflicting it in which respect also his death may be called miraculous or wonderful because he himself who was dying ordered his owne death and willingly admitted the same So that by doing he suffered and by suffering he acted and had his owne action in it all without which he could not have suffered by any creature whatsoever Reas. 1. Because it became him to dy so that was God For since the humane nature subsisted in the f●…me person with the divine nothing could befall the humane nature either in doing or suffering but as the divine willed and ordained it Reas. 2. Because otherwise Christ in his death had not been together both Priest Sacrifice and Altar For though it be the part of a Sacrifice to be passive and to be offered up to the Father yet it is the part of the Priest by being active about it and ordering the whole to offer up the Sacrifice Use 1. Is of Information for arming our faith against tentations and scandals which use to arise hence in that Christ in whom we believe as our God was subject to death For Christ died not of weakness and coaction but by certain resolution and of his own proper will and power so that the divine nature and power of Christ appeared not onely in his resurrection but if the thing be rightly considered had as great a hand and was as evident in his death also Use 2. Is of Direction for our preparation to undergo death in whatsoever way God would have it come to pass For from these two things that were in Christ that he both willingly underwent death and then also ordered it himself the first of these lies upon us all out of duty that we be ready at such time and such manner to dy as God is pleased we should The other though it cannot be performed by us because we have not the power of laying down our lives and ordering our deaths yet by faith and holy desire to our comfort we ought to seek this of God and look for it that in Christ who ordered his own death for us he would order our death unto our salvation and unto his own glory Doct. 3. Christ underwent this death by his Fathers command It is in the Text This command I received of my Father And this command was neither any of the law of nature nor of the moral ceremonial or judicial but it was a peculiar condition of the mediatory office that was laid upon Christ by the Father and of his own free consent It was therefore a command to the Messias alone as he was our Mediator Reas. 1. Because as by disobedience of the first Adam sin and death entered into the world so by the obedience of the second Adam righteousnesse and salvation shoud be brought us and as the disobedience of Adam was the breach of the command given to him so also the obedience of Christ was to be in the keeping of that command that was given him with his office of mediatorship or whereby the office it self was also imposed upon him Reas. 2. Because in Christ we were to have such an example of obedience as was most perfect in keeping the commandments of God Use 1. Of Resutation against the superstition presumption of popish Monks who have devised a kind of perfection in obedience of councells beside and beyond that which stands in keeping of the commandments of God when yet Christ himself that hath given us the whole pourtraict and pattern of perfect obedience confesses that he went no further than to obey that which the Father cōmanded him Use 2. Of Admonition that we may set our selves to follow Christ in this point that we may even unto death it self cleave fast unto the commandements of God Doct. 4. God the Father loveth Christ for this obedience This is in the Text Therefore the Father loveth me that is is delighted with this obedience and so delighted that he commends it to be looked upon by every Christian and all such as are Christ's Reas. 1. Because by Christ's death God was most glorified by Christ Ioh. 12. 18. and 17. 4. Reas. 2. Because by that death of Christ the counsell of God was fulfilled whereby he had from eternity appointed in himself to communicate his grace and glorious good will unto men Ephes. 1. 5 6 7 9. Use 1. Of Resutation against such as use to conclude from such phrases whereby God is said to love men for this and not for that that such mens works were the first causes of Gods love For Christ was the Son of God beloved of him from all eternity and yet the Father is said to have loved him also for his obedience Use 2. Of Consolation to all such as are in Christ by Faith For as the Father loveth Christ so will he also love them that are in Christ. Use 3. Of Exhortation that with all chearfulness we stir up our selves to obey God because God loveth such as obey him The seventeenth Lords day Joh. 10. 17 18. 17 I lay down my life that I may take it up again 18. None taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have authority to lay it down and I have authority or power to take it up again This commandment received I of my Father SEeing the Text is the same that it was before the same analysis that was there may here also serve and be made use of Doct. 5. Christ rose again from the dead For this is it that is understood in the Text by taking up his life again For this taking up again is a reunion of things that were separated before And in this reunion of the soul and body there was a change or motion from an inferior condition to a superior of that which was before in a better also or superior to this from which the change is now And therefore it is properly called a reassumption or taking again and not barely a resurrection The forme then from which this change was made was from his state of humiliation and the forme to which was the state of exaltation and glory the subject of this transmutation or motion was Christs humane nature which had fallen unto the lowest and abjectest condition of his humiliation Christ's own body arose again from true death and from the grave And his soul also is said to have risen again as it was now restored and reunited unto the body and so delivered from the state and dominion of death or as delivered from the privation of its act in the body wherein there was some
their own ordinance Use 2. Is of Direction that in worshipping God we have a precise regard of Gods own holy Ordinances in the ministry of the Word Sacraments and Discipline and on the other part that we despise all humane devises with how soever faire colour and pretence they may be commended to us Doct. 2. God is not to be worshipped at or before an Image For otherwayes Images in this place are not absolutely forbidden because there is a civill lawfull use of some Images but onely the use of Images in Gods worship Neither are such Images onely forbidden in Gods worship as are of counterfeit Gods as Papists will have it but also of the true God Deut. 4 1●… Where Moses opposeth the voice of the true God which the people had heard in the Mount unto all Images of the same God and not of other counterfeit gods This was also said expresly to have been signified in the sin of the Israelites about the Image that they made Exod. 22. verse 6. that they would make a Calf for an Image or representation of Iehovah The distinction therefore between an Image and an Idoll in which and by the which Image God is served hath no ground neither in writing nor right reason nor in common use of words The grievousnesse of this sin every where appeareth that in scripture it is commonly called Idolatry For such as worship the true God at or before an Image they do not altogether and professedly forsake the true God and therefore do not commit that principal and essential Idolatry yet are they guilty of secondary Idolatry and that which is such indirectly and by participation Reas. 1. Because in some sort they make unto themselves another God besides the true God to wit such an one as will be represented by an Image and worshipped there by us Reas. 2. Because they not onely diminish that glory which they ought to give unto God but they also refer a part of it either expresly or implyedly unto the image which is due unto God alone Reas. 3. Because also they honour in some sort with Divine honour the Authors of Images while they grant them the power or authority of instituting divine worship which belongs to God alone and by that means also they are said to worship the Devill himself because he is the principal authour of Image worship Hence it is that scripture useth to call this grievous sin by some special phrases as when in the sanction of this commandment it is called a hating of God and in other places treachery or perfidiousness adultery and violation of the wedlock-covenant Hence also it is that so heavy a punishment is denounced against this sin as is in the threatning laid down in this commandment whereby it is said that God will visit this iniquity on the Sons Nephews and their Children again unto the the thrid and fourth generation Use 1. Is of Refutation against the Idolatry of Papists who as they commit Idolatry against the first commandment in praying to Angels and Saints departed and the like so here they commit secondary Idolatry 1. In that they make Images of God the Father Son and Holy-ghost which is expressely forbidden 2. In that they honour with divine worship these and other Images 3. In that they make the worship it self Idolatrous which they would offer to God while by the intervention of an Image they thrust it upon God against his own revealed will And this amongst others gives just and necessary cause to all the godly of making separation from the Church and worship of Papists Because such a worship is abhominable to God and ought to be in abhomination and detestation with all the godly Use 2. Is of Exhortation as well for thanksgiving to God that he hath delivered us from such Idolatry as unto care and caution that we communicate in no manner with such Idolatrous ordinances Doct. 3. Such Images are diligently to be shunned of us It is gathered from the manner of setting forth the command whereby with such care and so precisely all and every sort of Images are forbidden And this is it that thē Apostle Iohn means in 1 Epistle chap. and last verse●… Reas. 1. Because such Images belong to that greatest abhomination to wit of Idolatry from which all the godly ought to keep themselves very far Reas. 2. Because there is great danger in these humane inventions least they should insensibly allure us unto an apostacy or defection from God as is evident by the words of this precept Thou shalt not bow thy self neither worship c. Reas. 3. Because by this means we should reprove Idolaters and as much as in us lies call them back from their Idolatry Use Is of Direction that we alwayes have a care to be precise in this kinde that so we may preserve unto our selves the worship of God pure and undefiled Neither then are any Images of God to be admitted nor any other Images for holy use nor any thing of our devising that hath analogy or proportion to an Image as are all symbolike or signifying ceremonies in divine worship introduced by men And the instructing of rude and ignorant people hereby is but of vain pretence because Images are teachers of lies Hab. 2. 9. Ier. 10 18. The thirty six and seventh Lords day On Exod. 20. 7. Verse 7 Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain for the Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain THe third command is here proposed and its Sanction or Confirmation The Command is concerning the manner of worshipping God or the right use of such things as have a speciall relation to God and his worship For by the name of Iehovah all is understood whereby God is made known to us or discernable as a man is by his name By taking of Gods name into our mouths is understood then the use of all such things because things use to be taken up so commonly that they may be applied unto use And by in vain or vainly is understood all pravity of this use by a Synecdoche of the special put for the more general kinde and that because a vain using of sacred and holy things is a grievous abuse of them though there may be others that are more grievous as when not onely without their just and true end and fruit they are used or for no settled end that is rashly or in vain but also setledly and purposely they turn and wrest them about to some wicked and impious uses So then by taking Gods name in vain all abuse of sacred things is understood The Sanction of this precept is by its threatning which is generally of all misery This misery is explicated by its proper causes that is the prosecution of that guilt which followeth the breach of this Command God will not leave him or hold him guiltless c. For as the blessednesse of a man is declared by the taking
away of the guilt of sins Rom. 4. 6. 7. So also mans misery is declared by prosecution of the same guilt Doct. 1 We ought with all religion or devotion to be conversant about such things as belong unto Gods worship both as to the things themselves and as to the manner of handling them It is clear enough in the words themselves Take not the name of the Lord thy God in vain Reas. 1. Because this manner of handling things belongs some way to the form of the action and of our duty and it more inwardly belongs to our duties that we rightly direct our actions as to the point of their form than of their matter and object though a care must be had of both and that with a devotion of the same kinde Reas. 2. Because in such things the name of God is as it were committed and recommended to our trust that it may appear with what devotion and respect we will use the same Reas. 3. Because that name of God hath so much worth and excellency in it that it is with little or no lesse wickednesse used with contempt or sight than when it is altogether neglected Now the religious manner of using Gods name consists chiefly in these things First in the sincerity of our intentions whereby we are to look at the very end in the use of it and worship of God unto which of ●…s own nature and by Gods appointment it tends and was ordained 2. In the reverence wherewith we use it which is to be such as thereby we may shew that we are careful to preserve keep up the honour of God and of his worship in good esteem and save it from all contempt slight dishonour and reproach 3. In our zeal whereby we endeavour with all earnestnesse of minde to glorifie God in the use of these things and so advance our own salvation These and the like wayes are pointed out to us in the very forbidding the using of them vainly Reas. 1. Because that is used rashly and vainly which is not used to its own end therefore to exclude this vanity sincerity about our intention must first be used Reas. 2. Because that is counted but vain and empty which is but light and slightly handled as if it were a thing of no weight or importance therefore the forbidding to use vainly commands us by the same means to use it with reverence earnestnesse and gravity Reas. 3. Because a thing is used in vaine when it attains not to its end uses and fruit it was ordained for therefore for the taking away of this vanity also a diligent endeavour is required of reaping and receiving the just fruits of such ordinances thus is done by zeale Use 1. Is of Reformation against Papists who in many things look onely to the worke done and neglect the manner of doing and disposition of the d●…er Use 2. Is of reproof of all carnall and irreligious manners of men in the use of Gods worship and sacred things when as they go about them either after a wonted fashion of their owne or out of custome rather than from conscience and a knowing and feeling resentment of duties and have in them for the most part other ends set down and proposed to themselves than such as God appointed and they ought onely to intend or they are lightly touched with them and therefore but slightly busied in them as if they were matters of sport or high-way pastimes or lastly these are so old in the good duties they do though they look not like men in sport that yet they look as such that never either looked for nor had any great care of reaping any great benefit from the things they did Use 3. Is of Exhortation that we may more and more stir up in our selves and in our minds and consciences this religious care Doct. 2. This religious care ought singularly to be had in the use of Oathes and such things as are of the like nature thereto It is gathered from hence because the name of God in a special manner is taken up into our mouths in Oaths Vows Promises Covenants and the like and a reverence of Gods dreadfull name is especially here commended unto us Reas. 1. Because in every Oath there is a certain calling upon the name of God in a speciall sort Reas. 2. Because God is not barely and onely called upon as in other businesses to help us but as a witnesse judge and an avenger if we speak not and think not truth and do not right Reas. 3. Because in an Oath we binde our selves not onely to man or our party on earth but also unto God and for the most part of our own accord and where otherwaies we needed not put our souls under the wrath and curse of God and his fearful ●…engeance if we should deceive Reas. 4 Because as it were we here interpose God and his name for our Surety all which respects require a singular religious care of the use of Gods name in such a behalf Use Of Condemnation against such as are given to ●…ash Oathes or to superstitious blasphemous and prophane ones Doct. 3. It is a most grievous sin and such as God will ●…n a singular man●…er avenge to abuse Gods name in this manner This is gathered from the sanction adjoyn'd to the precept God will not leave him unpunished c. And this sanction is grounded on two Reasons Reas. 1. Because this sin amongst men is accounted venial and is daily committed without any punishment Reas 2. Because it is our natural corruption little or nothing to regard the dispositions of our minds in worshipping God which yet God chiefly looks at Now the grievousnesse of the sin appeareth in this 1. That God is in this as it were mocked 2. That Gods worship is turned as it were into a stage-play 3. That an occasion hereby is given of contemning and blaspheming of Gods name And amongst the punishments wherewith God follows this sin that spiritual revenge is most horrid whereby he so deserts such men that things which of their own nature are a savour of life unto life become unto them a savour of death unto death which also by the very order of nature follows upon this kinde of sin Use Of Admonition is that we take heed of such sort of sins and these are not to play and make a sport with passages of holy Scripture or to make use of them to charms or inchantments and witchcraft without any reverence or gravity to tosse them to and fro like Tennis-bals in common discourse and purposes lastly to be exercised in any part of Gods worship meerly for a shift and for the fashion and for the custome that is in use Doct. 4. That for the fear or horrour of such a sin we ought not altogether to abstain from Oathes as things in themselves and absolutely unlawfull For in some cases times and matters we are bound unto them by the affirmative or commanding part of this