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A68467 A treatise of the sacraments according to the doctrin of the Church of England touching that argument Collected out of the articles of religion, the publique catechism, the liturgie, and the book of homilies. With a sermon preached in the publique lecture, appointed for Saint Pauls Crosse, on the feast of Saint Iohn Baptist, Iune 24. 1638. / By T.B. Pr. Pl. Bedford, Thomas, d. 1653. 1638 (1638) STC 1789; ESTC S113179 66,854 266

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suppose that one of the Corinthians should have been so wilfull as to deny this medium this argument of Saint Paul what is there to confirm the argument and to convince the gainsayer but only the practice of Infants-baptism this must of necessity be here presupposed else doth the Argument fall to the ground and overthrow it self 2. Object Circumcision was but a seal of the old Covenant even the law which was made to Abraham and to his children after the flesh this fleshie covenant had a seal in the flesh viz. Circumsion but what is this to the covenant of Grace touching life and salvation which is made only with beleevers thus the Anabaptist to the end he may elude the argument drawn from the Circumcision of Infants and wheras the text of Saint Paul doth directly cross this his base esteem of circumcision honouring it with that worthy title A seal of the righteousness of faith The Anabaptist expoundeth it thus A seal of his faith not in the Messiah but in that promise That he should be the father of the faithfull Wherin he bewrayeth a twofold ignorance First in disjoyning these two viz. his faith in the Messiah and his faith in the promise which are subordinate For in Gen. 12.1.4 divers promises are made to Abraham to wit of the land of Canaan of a numerous off-spring of the Messiah in whom all nations should be blessed these doth Saint Paul in Rom. 4.13 joyn in one and calleth it the promise that he should be the heir of the world Of these three the first and second only are mentioned Gen. 15. but questionless the third included and ratified by a formall Covenant to Abraham who beleeved and was thereupon justified Afterward in Gen. 17. the second alone mentioned but questionless the other included and all ratified by the Sacrament of Circumcision which was to him the seal of the righteousness of faith which Abraham had before he was circumcised That all are included in both places tho not all mentioned may yet further appear by this that in Gen. 22. when God would lastly manifest how his covenants and seals had built up Abraham in faith by that sore triall they are again all three repeated his faith accepted and commended This did not or would not the Anabaptist receiv but disjoyneth those which should be conjoyned as being all apprehended by the same faith Another part of his ignorance is the misinterpretation of that phrase The righteousness of faith A phrase twice used in that fourth chapter equivalent to and therfore to be expounded by that phrase The righteousness which is by faith and that also the righteousness of God Rom. 10.3 Both which are joyned in one Rom. 3.22 The righteousness of God which is by faith which betokeneth not the Essentiall righteousness of God but the benefit of justification or imputed righteousness which he bestoweth on beleevers for their justification This benefit God having bestowed upon Abraham did seal it up to him afterward by circumcision which is therfore called not the seal of his faith as the Anabaptist speaketh full ignorantly but the seal of the righteousness that is of justification which commeth by faith and not by works We conclude therfore that infants of beleevers may be lawfully baptised that by Baptism they may be admitted into the covenant of grace Nay inasmuch as Baptism is the Sacrament of admission and no time fitter to incorporate the buds of Christians into Christ than while they are buds that so betimes grace may prevent the growth of naturall corruption Infancy is the fittest time for Baptism nay the only time in the successive ages of the Church So far is God from barring infants from Baptism that he may rather seem to have allotted them to it and it to them We conclude also touching Baptism that it doth not only admit the baptised into the roll of Christians this indeed is done in Baptism wherupon there is a necessity of witnesses and a conveniencie of publike administration but this is not all it is also an admission into the Covenant of grace here is the ground of Assurance that they are indeed within the Covenant and to be dealt withall by the ministerie as men in covenant with God The LORDS SUPPER is the Sacrament of our preservation and confirmation in the covenant of grace Not enough that men be born living and lively except a care be had of their preservation so in the case of spirituall life not enough that we be admitted into the covenant of grace except we be confirmed in grace we may lose our former hopes of future glorie to begin in the spirit doth not profit them who end in the flesh For which cause as the Scripture is full of exhortations to constancy and perseverance to make our calling and election sure So hath God ordained also a Sacrament for our preservation and certain confirmation in grace and holiness This is to us the tree of life and immortality here is provided for us that bread of life of which who so eateth shall live for ever here is that true Nectar and Ambrosia which doth continually renew the youth and the strength of the spirit of grace within us But of this more when we come to the benefits Now let this only be added That this Sacrament being ordained for this end it will hence follow that all those are to be barred from this Sacrament which without breach of charity may be thought as yet not admitted into the covenant of grace Such I count all persons unbaptized these must be sent first to the Laver of Regeneration before they be admitted to this Sacrament of confirmation In vain is food sought where there is no life This also must be thought upon by them that address themselves to this Sacrament This Sacrament was ordained to this end Do I propound the same end to my self in my partaking if not what good can I expect thence Should I propound to my self another end than that which God hath propounded Is then mine end to gain my confirmation in the state of Grace Doth not preservation presuppose admission and initiation How doth it appear to me further than by Register that I have been incorporated into Christ What fruits of my Baptism do I find and feel in my self Were I unbaptised in the flesh the Church would barr me shall I not barr my self till I find and feel my soul baptised with the blood of Christ Such meditations as these would help to dispose the soul and fit it for the Sacrament and for the benefits This is the next thing that we are to speak of CHAP. VIII The Benefits of Baptism THe Church in the book of Articles doth thus explain her self touching this particular That by Baptism as by an instrument the promises of Remission and of our Adoption to be the sonns of God by the holy Ghost are visibly sealed faith is confirmed and grace increased In the second
empty signs but reall instruments to conferr grace Now that barr which alone hindereth is impenitency and infidelity Who so doth not profess repentance and faith may not be admitted who so with his profession doth not joyn reall performance ordinarily doth not receiv the benefit of the Sacrament much less they who profess and practise the clean contrary Note that all this is spoken only De Adultis The case of infants followeth in the next Chapter CHAP. XV. A Digression handling the case of Infants Baptism THis that hath been delivered touching the necessity of Faith and Repentance by the way of qualification is willingly received by the Anabaptists and the authority of our Church in this particular is by our infected Country-men alledged against our practise of infants Baptism the lawfulness of which custome we proved cap. 7. and satisfied their objections made against our Arguments It remaineth that we now examin their arguments and see what strength they have to prov that Infants ought not to be baptised Say they there is no warrant for it in Scripture They have not faith Ergo they ought not to be baptised Insist we a little upon them both The Anabaptists first Argument THe Testament of Christ say they is so perfect and he so faithfull that nothing ought to be practised of Christians which is not there warranted But no warrant therein for the baptising of Infants neither Precept nor President Ergo it ought not to be done This is the triumphing Argument of all Schismaticks which mislike the Ceremonies of the Church whether Nationall or Catholick Note the Answer First To the Major flourished over with that text of Saint Paul Heb. 3.2.6 Christ was faithfull so was Moses he as a sonn Moses as a servant his testament is therefore as perfect as that of Moses True but know we not that the faithfulness of a man in his office is to be measured according to the Intent and Scope of his office imposed in which if he fail he is unfaithfull if he fail not in that then is he not unfaithfull tho he look not to other things The Minister may be faithfull tho he meddle not with the sword of Justice The Magistrate tho he fight not with the sword of the Spirit So then what was the office of Moses of Christ of the Apostles The office of Moses was to plant a Nationall Church in the Common-wealth of Israel The office of the Apostles to propagate the Church and to make it Catholick throughout the world The office of Christ was to work the Redemption of mankind See the particulars in Dan. 9.24.27 If any of them fail in these then are they unfaithfull else not hence it was Moses office to set down particular orders for that Nationall Church Contrarily the office of the Apostles to appoint generall Rules and Orders for the Catholick Church Christ by himself did neither of these but both these and whatsoever else was necessary for the welfare of Church and Common-wealth by his Magistrates and Ministers in severall ages But by himself in his own person he established the Covenant of grace and salvation gave the Word of life ordained the Seals and instituted a Ministery and so was faithfull in his house as a Sonn and worthy of more honours than either Moses or the Apostles Thus we give answer to the Major 2. To the Minor thus We grant that neither Precept nor Pattern formall and explicite is to be found for infants baptising but both Precept and Pattern virtuall and implicite which if found is not to be neglected That both may be found in the new Testament comes thus to be proved First PRECEPT VIRTUALL and IMPLICITE The precept of God to Abraham and Israel for the incorporation of their Infants by a Sacrament was not repealed by Christ but rather confirmed and consequently tho not expressly written by the Evangelists yet nevertheless delivered by Christ the Ceremony indeed of Initiation is altered but the duty it self doth stand still for what was not repealed ought to remain Again this is to be marked that God by Moses establishing a nationall Church hath drawn a perfect pattern and modell therof to our hands Now therefore as no better laws for the Common-wealth than those which from Moses may be transferred So no better Orders for the Church than such as may from thence justly and without wrong to the time of truth and grace in the new Testament be translated Some judiciall Laws were peculiar to that Nation at least to that age of the world some Ecclesiasticall rites were also peculiar to that age of the Church and may not now be allowed but others there were more morall and so more perpetuall And indeed no better directions than what may be fetcht from amongst these Our Saviour hath gone before us and given us an example All grant that the spirituall Courts the Censures of the Church the proceeding in the Censures are by our Saviour fetcht from the Church of the Jews Mat. 18. from thence doth Saint Paul argue for the maintenance of the Ministery Cor. 9.13.14 Laws touching the libertie of womens partaking of the Lords Supper are thence enacted Times places persons consecrated to the service of God are and were ordained by the Church in the Imitation of Israel and so also do we conclude the perpetuation of incorporating Infants into the Church of God which in that Church having been enacted was not repealed in respect of the substance of the duty tho the Circumstance and Ceremony be altered for we read in Act. 1.3 that our Saviour in his 40. dayes conversation taught the Apostles things pertaining to the kingdome of God and Matt. 28. he bid them teach all Nations to observ all things that he had commanded them It being therefore manifest by tradition that Pedo-baptism hath ever since been practised in the Church of God doubtless it had not been admitted had not the Apostles by this Commandement of Christ appointed the observation of it Thus we find a precept virtuall and implicite 2 PATTERN VIRTUALL and IMPLICITE is in the baptising of whole families as of Lydia Crispus Gaius Stephanus and others in which who doubteth but there were Infants also What say we to those three thousand souls mentioned Act. 2. Is it probable that they were all present at Saint Peters Sermon it being in a private house is it not rather probable that the men being present and converted they brought also their families to be baptised so that the totall summ of men women and children might be 3000 souls And here doubtless the proceeding of the Converts was answerable to that in Gen. 17. no sooner is the Covenant made with Abraham but all the males in his house were circumcised young and old So doubtless no sooner was the Covenant of grace ratified betwixt God and the Parents by Baptism but the Infants also of the family were accounted holy and so baptised Doubtless what Saint Peter said to them in Act. 2.
is that we are conformable to him in mortification Now to be baptised into the Communion of Christs death what is it else but by Baptism to be partaker of his death and consequently discharged from the Dominion of sin So the Doctrin Doct. Christians howsoever before their Baptism they be servants of sin yet by Baptism they are freed from the service and dominion therof The uses of this Doctrin are three-fold First for instruction shewing the efficacy of Baptism touching which two cautions 1. That the efficacy of the Sacrament is but instrumentall 2. That it pre-supposeth a right Qualification in the Receiver Secondly For consolation to Parents in respect of their children dying in infancy Quest. Whether all infants be regenerate in Baptism An Answer set down in two conclusions An objection taken from the usuall phrase of Preachers in pressing the duty of attendance upon the means of grace The answer to it Thirdly for exhortation And this directed First to Parents To watch carefully over their children that they be not re-enslaved To acquaint them with this benefit to call upon them c. Secondly To all Christians In generall to walk as Free-men In speciall to hinder the reign of sinn in themselves Object I fain would do so but am not able Sol. Christians have helps to subdue the power of sinn sc. An interest First In the blood of Christ streaming in the Sacraments Secondly In the Communion of Saints the Churches Prayers A Caveat That if Christians desire this benefit they must not forfeit their interest by running into tentation Hitherto the copy of the Sermon These two little books not much unlike to the poore widows two mites have I cast into the Treasury of the Church I pray God they may be no less accepted with God and all good men that so the succesfulness of these my poore endevours may encourage me to go on cheerfully in the work of my Ministery and to bestow some bigger volumn upon the Library of this Church and Nation I know we are not born for our selvs alone not for this present age alone I should choose rather to be too busie in this kind and to over-do rather than to be wanting to my place and people I cannot hope to live at least not here wher I am til I see the harvest of my seeds time the fruits of my labour here bestowed We of the Ministery commonly our greatest comfort is in the happy growth of grace in those whom at our first entrance we find to be of tender years Nor do I doubt but that amongst these there will be found some that hereafter will rejoyce in the remembrance of those holy truths which they have heard received and gathered up in their attendance upon my poore labours and they will say this and this did I then heare and learn and tho for the present I felt no great sweetness in it yet do I now taste it and know it to the holy truth of God In particular this Doctrin of the Sacraments and their efficacy which seemed so strange and uncouth in the ears of divers of the elder Audience will by the younger sort be received now and hereafter remembred with happy congratulation Now then for their sakes that they may keep fresh in memory what they have heard that they may recall to mind what perhaps hath slipt and is forgotten have I sent abroad these and if God say amen I shall send abroad some other of my notes For their sakes I say that they may have wherwithall to perswade others what themselvs do know viz. That those things to use the phrase of the Disciples to Saint Paul in a case not much unlike that those things wherof divers have been informed concerning me are nothing but that I also walk orderly and keep the Law The law I mean of holy teaching and edification not wasting the time in curious and needless speculations but endevouring pro posse meo both plainly to explicate and profitably to apply what the text of Holy Writ hath led me to In the prosecuting of which if I have proceeded otherwise as some say than others have done before me let the indifferent Reader do that which those Hearers should have done sc. try and examine which of us doth most neerly follow the steps of the holy Scripture and tread in the path of our Mother-Church To me I confess it is a scruple to depart from the pattern of wholsome Doctrin to the which I have subscribed if it be not so to others it is not my fault if I dare not follow them But there is a generation of men who have learned to pretend the authority of such Worthies and such grave Divines meerly to countenance what themselvs have pitcht upon in prejudice and opposition of the present Ministery This was say they the Doctrin this the opinion of such and such when upon due examination their judgment was nothing so but clean contrary That this may not hereafter befall me this Treatise shall be a witness to the world what I beleev what I have taught as touching this Argument The scope wherof in brief is to shew That the effect of the Sacraments is ou● union with Christ The fruit is communion in his Merits and Graces in his merits for Remission in his Graces for Regeneration both which are begun in Baptism and perfectly consummate in the Lords Supper This is all Farewell dear Christian Reader pray for him who hath devoted himself and the strength of his labours to the advancement of thy spirituall welfare Let thy prayers commend me and my labours to the blessing of our heavenly Father In whom I rest Thine The Lords unworthy servant in the work of the Ministry T. B. A TREATISE OF THE SACRAMENTS The Preface GReat was the love of our blessed Saviour to the sinful race of the sons of men Greatly did it appeare by that Redemption which by his death is purchased This hath recovered to us the favour of God which is to us the deep and inexhaustible fountain of all goodnesse yet hath not the love of Christ our Saviour stayed here hee thought not this sufficient but hath added the Revelation of this benefit for our Comfort Yea hee hath also wisely invented the way by which this benefit might be conveyed to us and we put in full possession of the same Nor is the later a lesse demonstration of his singular love than the former Without the Redemption purchased what are wee but a masse of misery borne to endlesse woe and irrecoverable destruction Without the Revelation of this Redemption and the means by which it may become ours what is this life of ours but a perpetuall disconsolation Wherefore so often as wee blesse God for the benefit of our Redemption purchased by the blood of Christ so often let us remember to praise him for the Revelation of it made unto us by his spirit The way and meanes by which the spirit of Christ doth
full nature of a Sacrament which serveth not only to represent but instrumentally to convey Christ and all his benefits So that well may the Church determine that verely and indeed Christ is present and consequently verely and indeed taken yet after an heavenly manner and received of the faithfull in the Sacrament Verily tho not carnally Really tho not corporally but spiritually in in the Sacrament that is in the exercise of that sacred action not otherwise Provided also that we understand this efficacy of the Sacraments to have place in them only qui sibi non ponunt obicem as the School speaketh which do not barr themselvs or to speak more plainly in the phrase of the Church only in the faithfull But of this herafter viz. cap. 11. CHAP. VII The speciall End of either Sacrament THE speciall end of Baptism is to communicate unto us the blood of Christ for washing the soul from the guilt of sinn and consequently our Admission into the Covenant of Grace The speciall end of the Lords Supper to communicate the body and blood of Christ for feeding and nourishing the soul unto eternall life and consequently our Confirmation in grace and holiness Hence we have the ground of that choice of Elements which our blessed Saviour made viz. not meerly the analogy which is betwixt the sign and the signified but also the excellency and exquisitness of that analogy and proportion In Baptism water is used and none other liquor because none other so proper for washing none other doth wash so clean as doth water and therfore none other so fit to signifie the blood of Christ which cleanseth the soul from all sinn In the Lords Supper bread and wine is used to represent the body and blood of Christ and see I pray you the excellent proportion that is betwixt them specially in the effects bread and wine nourish the body nothing better the body and blood of Christ nourish the soul nothing better yea nothing else So also in the manner of their preparation The bread is made a food for the body of many grains of corn bruised and baked the wine of Grapes trodden and pressed So the Body and blood of Christ became our spirituall food by being bruised and broken upon the Crosse Add this bread and wine do no good nay much harm except the stomack be prepared to digest them nor doth this spirituall food profit the soul nay it doth much hurt to the soul except the soul be worthily prepared BAPTISM is the Sacrament of our Admission nor is there any other ceremony or rite of admitting any into the Covenant of grace but only by Baptism The Church of Israel was admitted by Circumcision But since the time of Christ which we call the time of the new Testament all that will be admitted must be baptised hence that of our Saviour to Nicodemus Except a man be born of water and the spirit c. that is except by submitting himself to Baptism he do receiv the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdome of heaven for which cause when he sent forth his Apostles he gave them charge to joyn Baptism with their teaching Goe teach and baptise Matt. 28. The Persons that have right of admission are as of old Beleevers and their children The Ceremony of Admission is altered but still as the Covenant is the same so the parties are the same beleevers and their children this is plain Act. 2.39 You and your children By beleevers we understand such as are converted to the faith Converts and Proselites these have right of Admission because faith is the condition of the new Covenant Mar. 16.16 and Iohn 3.16 You will happily say to me that if they beleev they are already in the Covenant partakers of it by faith and therfore need no further admission yes they are not compleatly within the Covenant till baptised Faith giveth them title and interest but the Sacrament admission Add this that it is one part of their faith to beleev the necessity of the Sacrament as a means to give them full possession of Christ And this doth cause them to seek for it in the Sacrament Children of Beleevers also have a right of Admission becaus they are part of their Parents and heirs of the promise due to their Fathers The faith of the parent intitleth the child unto the Covenant so much the more unjustly do the Anabaptists deal with beleevers and their children in shutting Infants out from Baptism thus questioning that ancient and long approved custome of the Church in all ages ever since Christ and his Apostles Traditions Apostolicall are authenticall and not to be refused because not written if found to be Apostolicall Apostolicall customs mentioned in the Scripture have a more unquestioned certainty than traditions but not greater authority Neither is this to set up Tradition as do the Papists to the prejudice of the Scripture because we admit none as Apostolicall which either are contrarie to the customes mentioned in the Scripture or which may not be confirmed as reasonable from the Scripture And such is the custome of baptising Infants which thus we confirm against the fore-mentioned Sectaries The infants of Christians are as capable of present Incorporation into Christ and Admission into the Covenant of grace as were the Infants of the Jews and if so which we prov out of Cor. 7.14 who shall barr them whom God hath not barred If not then hath not grace abounded in the new Testament but is rather shortned in comparison of the old as being restrained only to the Parent wheras before Infants also were comprehended and admitted The strength of this argument will appear more fully by taking away the cavills which they make against it Object 1. That text of Cor. 7.14 sheweth indeed that children are holy but how As the wife not otherwise viz. as she is sanctified to the use of her husband so the children to the use of their Parents Thus they but they falsifie the text for the text saith not of the children as it doth of the wife 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sanctified but they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holy which is more emphaticall neither doth the text speaking of the wife say she is sanctified to the husband but in or by the husband Nor is the text to be understood of the legitimation but of the sanctification of the bedd namely of federall sanctification or the holiness of the Covenant for it appeareth that the pretence of them that repudiated their wives was a fear lest the infidelity of the wife should deprive the husband of the covenant of grace which he had imbraced Saint Paul denyeth this and sheweth that rather the faith of the Beleevers should so farr prevail as to draw the other after a sort within the Covenant his reason is because the children of such are holy that is heirs of the Covenant Now I pray you mark well