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A60361 The compleat Christian, and compleat armour and armoury of a Christian, fitting him with all necessary furniture for that his holy profession, or, The doctrine of salvation delivered in a plain and familiar explication of the common catechisme, for the benefit of the younger sort, and others : wherein summarily comprehended is generally represented the truly orthodox and constant doctrine of the Church of England, especially in all points necessary to salvation / by W.S., D.D. Slatyer, William, 1587-1647. 1643 (1643) Wing S3983; ESTC R38256 385,949 1,566

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Pathmos inspiring him this day c. 3. Resting the Jewes Sabbath as it were finishing it by his Resurrection and other appearings and as it were hereby appointing and approving this new Sabbath to his honour as Lord of the Sabbath 17. How by the Apostles doctrine and practice Most evidently 1. By their meetings that first day of the week when Christ arose and appeared to Simon and Mary Magdalen and the Disciples and after Thomas and others with them Luke 24. and Iohn 20. c. 2. Continuall practice of it and preaching and ministring the Sacraments that day Act. 20. 7. 1 Cor. 16. 1. 3. Constitution of it in the Churches as 1 Cor. 16. 1. is set downe where both First the day first day of the weeke named and appointed Secondly every first day so appointed Thirdly instituted both there and in the Churches of Galatia Fourthly instituted and there taught for the Churches instruction generally as we see at Troas and other places also Fiftly the duties of the Sabbath or Lords day plainly exercised then gathering together the congregation and gathering for the poore 4. Constant observation continued forty years after performed by Saint John in Pathmos in holy meditations as sitting especially that day had his illumination and holy inspiration from God to the instruction of the Church by propheticall revelation when Christs farther presence apparition and blessed illumination of him and the Church by him seemes further confirmation of that holy institution and Sabbaths sanctification as Estote imitatores mei sicut ego Christi 18. How farther confirmed By the continuall and continued practice of it ever since proved by all Ecclesiasticall histories ever since without any interruption to these daies and so by The primitive times and Church Holy men that lived and succeeded next to the Apostles times the learnedst and wisest ever since and so consequently as from thence both at and to this day and none found to oppose unlesse some idle turbulent and fanaticke spirits wanting learning judgement and discretion that who seeth not this must be wilfully blinde 19. The Sabbath then is certaine and fixed The seventh day at the consummation of the worke of the Creation the Jewes Sabbath till Christ and his consummation of the ceremony of it a new Sabbath now by him consecrated at the consummation of the worke of redemption so to remaine to the worlds finall consummation as the first to Christ from the creation so this from Christ to the end and finall consummation of all things to continue after with a new and third Sabbath perpetuall in the new Jerusalem in the Heavens 20. What use or end of these renewed Sabbaths To consider and magnifie the name and glory of God more and more expressed and made knowne to men 1. As in the first Sabbath remembred his works of creation mighty acts and glory 2. In the second Sabbath or Lords day both all that and further the workes of his mercy and redemption in the worlds restauration 3. In the third Sabbath both all them and further his excellent justice and glory most amply more then ever demonstrated to all creatures over all the world and for evermore 21. How summe you up these collections For full illustration or confirmation of the doctrine of the Christian Sabbath or Lords day may be considered 1. How estote imitatores mei sicut ego Christi implies a command from Christ of what the Apostles teach and practise 2. How Christ promised the Comforter who should instruct them in all truth and bring all things to their remembrance c. 3. How Christs example and apparitions evincing the same or shew the ground for the following doctrine and practice 4. How the Apostles doctrine and establishing the Lords day by power delegate from him 5. How dies Dominicus Rev. 1. 1. sheweth that prime and primitive appellation as well as doctrine and practice more to confirme it his and not only Domini as Mal. 3. 1. or Amos 5. 18. or Jo. 8. 56. but Dominicus also all which besides the authority of primitive times Fathers and Councells though the Churches instruction might be enough to any devout Christian doe more dignifie the Lords day as raising it to the highest degree of sacred and Apostolicall or divine institution and what was then so ordained hath beene since by continuall and constant practice of all succeeding ages and all good Lawes Ecclesiasticall and Civill confirmed never by any unlesse such as were publickly noted or branded for schisme spoken against or oppugned also further if not this instituted so primarily it may seeme that there was no Sabbath or Lords day for a while in the Church or but the Jewes Sabbath which were to leave the Church too naked of so holy and necessary a point of Christianity 22. But the Apostles sometimes used the Jews Sabbath Yes and for divers good reasons both to instruct them in the same To draw them to Christ and his Church To confesse a Sabbath and the like and so they refused not the Heathen Temples or their assemblies as at Ephesus Athens or Feasts or Schools as in the Schoole of Tyrannus but tooke all good occasions to instruct them and of this it came to passe that both the Lords day and Jewes Sabbath were by many kept and observed from their use and example a good while after in primitive times 23. What other arguments or reasons of convenience are brought for our Christian Sabbath or Lords day As upon this day many excellent things were and greatest benefits that ever happened to mankinde or the people of God so in his new Sabbath to remember them and praise him for the same as on this day 1. The worlds creation began Elements framed Angells created 2. This day Christs resurrection the worlds new creation or restauration 3. This day manna first fell and the Israelites passed through the red sea 4. This day Christ baptised turned water into wine and fed five thousand miraculously 5. This day Araon and his sons consecrated c. 6. This day Christ often appeared to his Disciples and others after his resurrection 7. This day the holy Ghost descended and Saint John in Pathmos enlightned 8. This day Christ we hope at last shall come to judgement to begin the perpetuall Sabbath after the night of this Sabbath ended 24. What course then to be used and held for the due sanctification of the Sabbath and rightly to understand or interpret the fourth Commandement Rightly and duly to remember and consider how the Christians Sabbath or Lords day though not literally commanded for the whole ceremony and circumstance or punctually in all things to be observed yet is virtually intimated and for the morality and substance of it exemplarily propounded to us there in the fourth Commandement without which heed taking and observation or right understanding moderation any may be apt and ready to fall into Thomas Brabornes and others judaizing errors concerning the same however otherwise we cannot
fully dead he had fulfilled the law and curse 2. Later lest his Disciples faith might faile or comfort too long be deprived and their hope to be turned into despaire 6. How the Prophesies Both of Hos. 6. 2. After two dayes c. and the third day he shall rise Jonah 1. 17. and 2. 2. utged the 1 Cor. 15. 4. c. Christ himselfe Matth. the 17. 12. 23. The Son of man shall be slaine and rise againe the third day and Matth. 20. 10. Mark 10. 34 Joh. 2. 19. 7. How the type of Jonah As is declared Matth. 12. 40. as Jonah was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly so must the Son of man be in the heart of the earth 8. What more considerable in the time That it was 1. The first day of the week the Lords day our new Sabbath the Christians rest the day whereon the creationbegun and the day of the second creation so by Christ perfected our redemption 2. Morning early the first time of the day so day of grace here begun and true light arise in it and enlighten it 3. Extraordinary light of the world as before the Sun rising to shew the new Sun of righteousnesse with his preventing graces riseth so for the illustration of the new world in that true light 4. The first Month with the Jewes as a beginning of the new yeare of joy and eternall Jubilee of all Saints 5. Spring of the yeare so the spring of the new world as the day spring from on high so the worlds new birth and spring in restoring peace and redemption 6. Time of the Passeover when to fulfill the Passeover the true Pascall Lambe was offered the ceremonies so to cease all shadowes abolished the truth it selfe appearing 7. Finally he rested the Jewes Sabbath to the fulfilling but end thereof at his death that brought new life to the Christian Church and Sabbath by his Resurrection What note you in that action his Resurrection The efficiency in the power of divinity whereby according to the decree and will of God his soule reassumed the body and raised it out of the grave The effect in him his body raised from death to life the first fruits of them that beleeve The effect in us spiritually our raising from the death of sin to the new life of grace Corporeally our assurance and earnest of our resurrection at the last to the strengthning of our hope and confirming of our faith The effect in Types thereof for our farther comfort and instruction 9. What was the efficiency The great power of the divinity united to his humanity and by that to us as his members to the raising of him the first fruits and us at last that though it suffered him to sleepe that three dayes death in his passion did not leave his body in the grave nor suffered that Holy One to see corruption and in the same vertue by his merits after our sleepe of death will at last raise us out of the dust 10. How the effect In both his humanity and by him over ours in the mighty power of the divinity and raised him first and so will us at the last 11. What Types thereof Not onely Jonas by those three dayes in the Whales belly representing the time of our Saviours stay in the grave and bosome of the earth but Isaac after a sort at his birth in the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe and Abrams age received from death and more at his binding for the sacrifice on Mount Moriah restored to life and a figure of this onely Sonne of God and Sonne also of Abraham Christ here offered in sacrifice on the Crosse and thus restored to life 12. What other Types were there Both Adam himselfe Enoch Elias and divers other types of him and Emblemes herein of him and of the resurrection 13. How was Adam Though in him we all dye yet whiles he was in the state of perfection see wee in him a type of Christ the second Adam and the resurrection who in a dead sleepe had the woman taken out of his side his spouse named Eva the mother of the living as Christ in this dead sleepe had out of his side sending forth water and bloud the Church his spouse taken as it were out of those wounds by his death who is the mother indeed of the living 14. How was Enoch As one that walked with God and so taken from men was no more seene but raised so to life from state of that mortality 15. How Eliah In that manner taken away from men and mortality by the chariot of God translated to heaven to have this part in the resurrection of the just and be an evident type of Christ and embleme of the same 16. How any others The three in the Old Testament raised to life the widowes sonne of Sarepta the Shunamites son and the man raised by the Prophets body The three in the New Testament Lazarus the widowes son of Naim Jairus daughter all as it were to shew us the power of God in them and so many emblemes of Christs resurrection who was so the seventh of them that were raised or tenth of them all that were types and emblemes of him and his resurrection as a perfect number as from whom they received all the holinesse vertues and power of the resurrection which they were ordained to foreshew as figures of the same 17. What learne we hence Our duties as of mortifying our earthly members in remembrance of his death so a rising from the death of sin in the remembrance and power of his resurrection who dyed for our sinnes and rose againe for our justification who will so raise our soules in this life as both bodies and soules after death at last and also many other comforts hence arising 18. Which are they 1. Both the strengthning and confirmation of our faith in the comfortable remembrance of Christs resurrection already performed and so many other Saints of our owne nature of flesh and bloud with him or emblemes of him 4. Erection of our eye of hope to the state whereunto hee our eldest brother is entred and hath already received and invested divers in life and the resurrection of the just 3. Comfortable walking in this vaile of misery where we must one day meet with death in regard of our assurance in him of a joyfull resurrection 19. What fruit hereof Fourefold 1. heavenly minde set on heavenly not earthly things 2. Holy life new borne babes pure innocent and harmlesse 3. Joy in the graces and Spirit of God and in heavenly not corruptible things 4. Growth and increase in holinesse as branches of the true Vine Christ c. 20. What followeth In the sixt Article the second degree of his exaltation in his ascension to heaven in these words Hee ascended into heaven 21. What herein to be considered 1. The matter action ascension termini from earth to heaven 2. The manner in the presence of many witnesses with the time and
glory though their confusion that oppose it as seene in Pharaoh Herod Sennacherib and all Tyrants and who art thou in his hand that art so hellishly disposed that thou carest not to despite and despise God and blaspheme though thou goe to hell with shame and confusion 56. What the commination That they shall not be held guiltlesse but so guilty and beare the insupportable burthen of their sinnes that will presse their soules to hell as the most fearfull estate curse and punishment so signified and so too plainly seene in such blasphemies who commonly are as it were 1. Given over to a reprobate sense in lying filthy talke drinking and prophanenesse and vanity with this abuse of Gods name 2. Insensible of their sinnes by Gods just judgement in neglect of all holy duties of prayer and Gods honour with scorning and mocking at his Sabbaths or any reproofe though most just 3. Set downe in Gods booke for damned persons even condemned already bearing that palpable marke of prophanenesse like Cains marke in their foreheads that he that hath an eye to see may see them stand guilty and the sentence that they may reade in their conscience of heavy condemnation even written in their foreheads that every one may read it to their shame who shamed not to dishonour Gods holy name 57. Whence this so fearfull commination More fully to manifest the Lords fierce anger and jealousie as against idolaters and those that prophane his worship accounted to hate him in the second Commandement so here against all other prophane wretches that shall abuse his most holy name and any other way derogate from his glory which hee is most jealous of and will not give away or part with to any other much lesse lose it with contempt he chiefly standing on and above all things highly prizing his honour 58. But what followeth The fourth Commandement in a fourth respect also in regard of the due celebration of his Sabbaths aiming at the setting forth of his honour SECT 6. The fourth Commandement The Analysis of the 4. Commanaement shewing the parts and duties therein commanded and abuses opposite so prohibited whether intimated or more fully expressed where first the duty of sanctification of that day of rest called the Sabbath and of thh Christian Sabbath or Lords day with the reasons of the difference and alteration thereof but perpetuall necessity of the substance and duties of the same and our Christians Sabbath or Lords day proved to be established by many reasons and arguments as by the Lords owe● doings the Apostles preaching and doctrine or constitutions as received from the Lord himselfe to be understood as well as the practice of the Church directed by his Spirit according to his promise and who oppose it but troublesome and unquiet spirits or fanatick and fantasticke Schismaticks too commonly to be sound So of the rest and right use and observation thereof on the Lords day in holy duties and workes of piety and charity or of necessity on truly urgent not every frivolous occasion The factious schismaticks overnicenesse here as well as others loose prophanenesse deserving worthily to be taxed that on both sides disturbe the peace good order and peace of the Church the one of them prophanely with negligence contempt the other sedititiously with malice and disdaine to avoid both which extrenes and keepes an even and equall course betweene them we are carefully to distinguish betweene the morality and ceremony in this Commandment how far forth in the substance of it for the morall duty to God-ward perpetually to be observed and how for the ceremony and legall observances many of them interwoven with the said duty with which to the Iowes-ward in that Churches nonage as it were before Christs appearance in the flesh It was burdened but as now freed of them it ought to be discharged and so in that particular for the time among many others with them respecting the creation the greatest benefit ever till then manifested to be remembred by and in it now altered and the duty yet unchanged to the remembrance of a greater our redemption in that change of the ceremony not duty by us now principally respected and thus as we see by the Churches authority and power with sufficient warrant from holy Scriptures ordered and established whose power in that point to change it and wisdome in so well ordering it guided by Gods own president and direction of his blessed Spirit is here amply demonstrated and to be justified against the malevolent oblatrations or detractations and calumnies of any factious humorist and separatist whatsoever and thus the substance of the duty in the morality of the Commandement remaining entire to all holy intents and purposes the onely the illegall shadow removed is by them into a more divine respect and better for us Christians as more suting with our Church altered or changed and divers objections against it of no great moment the truth well weighed are hereby and withall answered as especially the Iudaizing faction and fancies confuted and so next for the due observing and sanctification of it we are to take notice of the rest and holy exercises commanded and others permitted for recreation and comfort of our weaknesse nature not to make a riotous revell or drunken Bacchanalia of that day as neither otherwise to prophane it by ordinary worldly labours or other Iewish superstitions or vain unlawfull and wicked exercises of any sort spending that so set apart and sanctified time to remember that rest and sit our selves to the same by removing the impediments using the helps studious to fit our selves to both private and publiqus duties of the day as well Minister as people the opposite which is here farther deciphered and in divers points particularized or especially the more common and enormous offences The use and reason of other Sabbath or holy dayes ordained and appointed by the Church as well in the times of the Old as New Testament as in particular many both feasting and fasting dayes set apart for divine worship the farther explication of the Commandement in the permission command of the six dayes for labour and works of our vocations whereby the Sabbath may be the better sanctified which as most necessary is sostrictly urged for the honour of God the generall good and besides other reasons even the very example of God himselfe so resting on it and blessing and sanctifying it 1. VVHat is the fourth Commandement Remember that thou keepe holy the Sabbath day six dayes shalt thou labour c. 2. What contained herein The Commandement in these words Remember c. The explication and illustration of the duty Six dayes c. The reasons of the duty and Commandment taken both from the Creators own example actions as well as the creatures profit necessity and duty But the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy Lord c. 3. What is the order of this Commandement to the rest A fourth duty as fourth in
place appointing and establishing the time allotted to his publique service and worship his honour being the maine scope of the first Table And as it is to be set up in our hearts the intent of the first Commandement And as his outward worship rightly performed the intent of the second The glorifying of his name in all things the intent of the third The rightly observing of his Sabbaths the appointed times of his worship the intent of this fourth Commandement 4. What manner of Commandement An affirmative inferring and enforcing his opposite negative viz. to remember to sanctifie the Lords Sabbath and not negligently to let it passe or prophane the same 5. What the affirmative part 1. Our duty to sanctifie the Sabbath by setting a rest apart sanctifying the rest by holy exercises 2. Our duty to be mindfull and carefull of it so to remember to sanctifie it by preparing our selves using all good meanes removing impediments 6. What the negative part The forbidding of the prophanation of it by not setting apart a rest misspending it in any superstition idlenesse vanities sin c. The passing it over in forgetfulnesse by unpreparednesse neglect or contempt 7. How the parts and duties opposite seene opposed The sanctifying opposite to the prophanation of the Sabbath and holy exercises to the mis-spending it in ill actions The minding it opposite to forgetfulnesse and drowsinesse therein as the preparing the soule to that holy and fit celebration thereof opposite to neglect contempt or unpreparednesse 8. What is the duty of sanctification of the Sabbath The setting apart a day of rest and exercising our selves therein in such holy duties as the Lord requireth 9. What day is so to be set apart The seventh day so he appointeth and alloweth the six dayes for our labour whereby we with more chearfulnesse and readinesse may sanctifie his Sabbath the seventh 11. How is it that our Sabbath differeth from the Jewes Sabbath For divers reasons as to shew that the old Law hath given place to the new and so the Jews Sabbath to this of Christians That the ceremonies are vanished and what was ceremoniall in this vanished as the time altered though the morality remaine That the Sonne of Man indeed is Lord of the Sabbath and so hath power to alter it 11. How prove you this Commandement to be merall and perpetuall For that it is ranked there among the rest of the Commandements that are morall and to endure as well as from the necessity of it no lesse to us and to the worlds end for Gods honour then it was to the Jewes and all the holy Patriarkes and Fathers from the beginning and therefore vaine and impious is their assertion that as a ceremony would have it passed and vanished or account it needlesse or a burthen whereas it is indeed to all good Christians comfort and the especiall honour of God 12. What necessity of a Sabbath For divers and weighty reasons such as these 1. That the faith and obedience of men may hereby be exercised more particularly in setting themselves apart from worldly businesse what haste soever and dedicate themselves and this time holy to the Lord. 2. That concord and unity Doctrine and Gods service may be maintained which without this meanes would hardly be effected but confusion would follow every one let loose to his own will or fantasie as commonly so many heads so many opinions 3. That love and charity and all graces were encreased by publicke teaching the duties required and reproving the vices as it is done by Gods word preached then whereby the good and vertuous encouraged the vitious shamed 4. That Gods service and publicke worship may be thus upheld that else were like to decay if men left to private devotions had not such publicke meetings some forgetting others nelecting all duty and most that did not ignorantly or superstitiously performing the same 5. That more acceptable service to God performed when prayer and holy duties so publickely exercised by all as many brands making a great flame so the prayers of many with greater fervency ascending up to God and every good servant of his more enflamed by joyning with others in these holy duties 6. That it may be for rest to the very servants and cattle that else groning under their yoake may be too much grieved by unmercifull minded masters without relaxation 7. That it may be a difference between Gods servants and the heathen that know not God by such sanctifying the Sabbath and so be a signe to us of that eternall Sabbath and rest in Heaven wherein as we are taught we may meditate how with Saints and Angels we all doe enjoy Sabbath dayes recreations of singing hymnes and Hallelujahs as we shall the prayses of God for evermore 13. But is not a Christians Sabbath every day Yes in spirituall rest from sinne and private satisfaction of the soule in practising of holy duties sitting a godly life not to forget thereby or neglect the publicke service of God on his appointed Sabbath whichevere to dishonour God most of all and bringing in confusion and i● religion 14. But since the Jewes Sabbath altered may not any Christian make or set out what day he please for Sabbath Nothing lesse for it were not onely temerity and presumption to break the Lord and his Churches institution as may be shewed but the high way to Atheisme and Irreligion when if every one might set out what Sabbath he pleased one setting out one day and another another there would be no day in effect kept holy and so not onely no order and uniformity but even no unity or charity and likely much uncharity jangling and dissention and consequently irreligion 15. How then is our Sabbath to be shewed or proved or established instead of the Jewes Sabbath Most firmly against all obstreper●as clamors of gainsayers 1. By the Lords owne approving and sanctifying it who is the Lord of the Sabbath 2. By the Apostles doctrine and continuall practice and keeping the same 3. By the whole Churches and all holy mens uniforme practice and consent ever since 16. How by the Lords owne doings Most plainly by his 1. Naming or giving his name to it in holy Scripture as Apocal. 1. 10. called the Lords day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that as the Lords supper the Lords people and his Church or the like so his day 2. Sanctifying it by and with his First resurrection thereon and finishing the worke of our redemption and resting on the new Sabbath as God the Father the creation on the former Secondly presence and divers appearances to the Apostles on the same day at their holiest and Sabbath dayes exercises as I. To the women and the Disciples and Mary Magdalen at the first II. In the morning John 20. and to Simon III. And to the Disciples in the way to Emaus Luke 24. 34. IV. And to the Disciples and Thomas with them John 20. V. And at other times and to Saint Iohn in
things to come and expected A shadow and show or signification of good things present and enjoyed relate also to the Messias and promise of him and rest and deliverance by him Paedagogy of the Jewes and to them a signe of distinction from others Temple and service there in their rest in Canaan Or shewing also the nonage of the law looking towards grace and subjection of that Church as the heyre under age so in the servitude of that Church over-rated with ceremonies and teaching them to bow their stiffe necks to the service of God inuring them to it by legal strict observances And lastly shadowing the rest of Christians and of the law under the Gospell made easie by grace So here begunne in grace and perfected in glory Eternall with God in the heavens So whereas ceremonies are either Chiefly shadowing things to come as here principally the Messias or For signification of some present duty and holy memoriall For order and decency reconciling gravity and authority as well as attention to the divine celebrations and actions Though some of the later may reflect on us Christians with the morality of the Commandement yet all the chiefe respects in the ceremony serving the Jewish Church and Synagogue and shadowing Christ to come hee being come they with that Church are vanished 30. Shew it more particularly This Commandment and their Sabbath though morall in the substance was as many other things in the morall worship of God over-rated with many legall and strict observances to the very letter inducing a ceremoniall respect and shadowing good things to come whiles it and the Jewes Church lasted which the Jewes could hardly beare yet made more hard in many respects by their owne traditions as seene in the Talmude and witnessed by our Saviours words who doing good deeds on it disliked by them reproved their blindnesse and intimating the alteration if not then beginning it shewed hee came to do good and dissolve those hard knots and burdens and make the Sabbath more profitable and pleasant as convenient both to Gods honour and mans comfort and that the pedagogy servitude and nonage of their Law Temple Sabbath and other such legall ceremonies vanished hee would ordain a new Testament Church law Sabbath and Sacraments of Christians and hee the Lord of the Sabbath thus ordering it and as it were beginning first by himselfe she wing and honouring the day by his glorious resurrection and other apparitions as Saint Augustine speaketh after by his holy Spirit perfected it in his holy Apostles and Churches doctrine and ordinances as we see it established where is conserved the morality of it in the worship of God and time destined to his service even according to that in the Commandement determined with the resting and sanctifying that rest though not so literally legally and burdensomly as then to them ceremonially enjoined yet as religiously and with respect to the morality of the rest as it concerned both them and us both the rest of the ox cattell servant for their comfort and refreshing and our rest for our fitter dedication of our selves to such holy action as the service of God then to be performed and attending it with more alacrity that are all by us observed as by the Lord and his Church or by the Lord in his Church ordained he himselfe so declaring and demonstrating the day also as Saint Augustine speaks Epist. ad Januar. 119. 9 13. by his glorious resurrection and honouring it by his many apparitions in Pathmos and else to his servant John that calleth it his day as well as his other Disciples or having finished the Iewes Sabbath by that his rest in his grave on that day and withall their Passeover and Sacraments by his glorious resurrection designing our new Sabbath and day of it by it as the same Father speakes Serm. 15. de verbis Ap. consecrating as it were the Lords day to us and promising us there with an everlasting day in the heavens and so continuing as we may collect or commending to us in it such convenient ceremonies as respect that his joyfull remembrance our deliverance by him our rest begun here in grace and to bee perfected in glory with him in the heavens or the like fitting us Christians for decency order and the beauty of holinesse though all ceremoniall shadowes of him to come and legall pedagoy and servitude ended and thus ensued the change of the day not the law of the ceremony and shadow not the substance or morality of the strictnesse servitude and unpleasantnesse not the duty or profitablenesse of the Commandement by him that was Lord even of the Sabbath and of the Commandement 31. But how say you by him changed for that is still by some controverted 1. As he finished the ceremony and by his appearance actions and presence tooke away the shadowes and unprofitable rudiments that were no longer to endure then to the revealing of the Messias expected and by them shadowed so the substance come they unusefull and vanish and Secondly as by his power his Apostles and Church so ordered and ordained and by his holy Spirit instructed practised it and that even whiles the solemne funerals as one well speakes of the Jewish Church Sabbath and ceremonies were in performing that is betweene our Saviours resurrection and the destruction of the Temple as well as afterward to all succeeding ages which may suffice us whereas else indeed the summe of all may be for that point of the change if that neither I. Christs 1. precept granted since not expresly to be found Though we have as much in effect by his former teaching hee was Lord of the Sabbath and so his example and 2. Practice of sanctifying it in his resurrection and other apparitions on that day and such election and declaration of it with motives and instructions thence arising to his Church and Disciples 3. Denomination of it the Lords day by his servant John as aforesaid may serve II. Nor the Apostles precept so expresly to be found for the sanctifying it in all points as required though we have their First observation of it by the Lords example Second selecting it for pious actions Third so ordaining it in divers Churches Fourth practice and therein tacite precept Fifth Tradition having so left it to the Sixt Church and constitution in some Fathers and Doctors opinions Seventh denomination of it the Lords day III. Nor Churches and primitive times Ancientest 1. Practice without controll from thence derived 2. Tradition received for Apostolicall 3. Constitutions very ancient even as those first times 4. Canons thence successively ensuing consent of all Ecclesiasticall Histories Writers and fathers that all confesse it so delivered received can prevaile to satisfie contentious spirits which doe abundantly satisfie all moderate men they should yet be perswaded the Churches power so granted by the Lord with the assistance of his Spirit promised to guide them into all truth and direct them might suffice to
ordaine whatsoever necessary for Gods honour as this is and setting things in order as they cannot but confesse done in all other things 32. Such as doe question this make as little scruple to question the Churches power and disobey it Which they should not doe especially if they well consider that spoken to the Apostles by Christ and in them to the Church Who receiveth you receiveth me and who despiseth you despiseth me and not so onely but him that sent me and as reverent Hooker to this point hath it is it a small offence to despise the Church of God or disobey the Lawes and Ordinances of the Church saith Salomon My sonne keepe thy fathers commandement and forget not thy mothers instruction binde them alwaies about thy heart it doth notstand with the duty we owe the heavenly Father to disobey the Ordinance of the Church our mother and let us not say or thinke we keepe the Commandements of the one when we break the Law of the other for unlesse we observe both we obey neither and which is more the Laws thus made and ordained by the Church God himselfe doth in such sort authorise that to despise them is to despise him in them so then for the power Christ giving them such power and his Spirit and promising assistance to the worlds end and they executing his will and exercising that power as we see the Apostles did and used to doe ordered and gave rules for it saying let all things be done decently and in order with the like instructions as they also promised by themselves to see done the Apostle saying Other things will I set in order when I come as most likely by the consequent practice of it this was then done and that power never dying but that Spirit continuing and directing them in all truth to the worlds end they and their successors had full power to ordaine as no doubt they did these and the like things and this by all good Christians to bee obeyed 33. How farre then is the Churches order to bee obeyed As we heard before and however by divers minced and controverted limited curtalled and contracted yet God and Christ binding us to it and the decree in things so primarily pertaining to the honour of God as this is without contradiction to be accounted of Apostolicke and sacred authority and as we heare simply and absolutely in spiritualibus so in ordine ad spiritualia no doubt but deservedly to be reverenced and obeyed by all good Christians in all necessary circumstances and all reasonable and indifferent things and this day and manner of sanctifying it in every respect primarily and directly subject to the Churches authority nor need they question this since the Jewes Church had power in such things and circumstances of the divine worship not particularly determined by God himselfe or his servant Moses in the Law as seen in sundry very materiall rites and observances as the appointment of hours for the daily sacrifice building of their Synagogues throughout the land to hear Gods word and pray in divers feasts as of Purim dedication and the like which Christs Church no way inferiour to theirs rather superiour in the measure of grace and presence of his Spirit should not be abridged of in all reason or to prescribe and ordaine lawes for things tending to her better edification and in things undetermined as this is in that circumstance and the rather to be granted for this determination of the time as well at least as of the place manner of prayer and formes of it and celebrating the Sacraments and divers other as prime and remarkable circumstances of the divine worship and the place assuredly as materiall as the time to be determined or assigned nor should our brethren that are gone from us in place and no lesse in opinion as farre as the breadth of the Atlantique ocean or that staying at home yet hold a wood perhaps or barn or parlour for places good enough for their divine worship since Christ not assigned Churches particularly they should I say not complain of the time not set out by Christ since neither was the place set out by him nor of the time assigned by the Church if Christ not assigned it since so well ordered and they will arrogate more liberty in many things and authority to themselves but rather as the Temple so fitly translate to our Churches which they cannot well deny though they hug that poor device of their new meeting places be as well content with the Sabbath translate to our Sunday by the same authority 34. If this be granted in the Churches power why may they not now alter it or then have appointed any other day then the seventh It is well and sufficiently answered by the greatest and learnedst of our Divines as well as those of the Church of Rome That absolute or absolutâ authoritate the Church had power from God and his Christ they might or may doe it That congruè or congruâ dispensatione conveniently now they may not for many ill consequents that would thence ensue or that might follow as we know how odious and dangerous such innovations are in meaner places and matters so especially in Kingdoms and great Estates or Religion which too much affected would make the government ridiculous and whereby all matters by giddy heads shall quickly so be questioned as we see the strange presumption of some men that on such grounds uncertaine ones are too ready to innovate and readier to despise and deprave all things they fancy not and arrogate authority to themselves to chop and change all things whatsoever their fancy serves them to call into question and would be glad to have fellowes so to go blamelesse as they would thinke especially if they could but tax the Church or times of such inconstancy that might well be wished by them more to countenance their lenity and in the end nothing shall be left out of their inconstant queres and that shall not by their fancy or fury be disturbed or perverted and in this point in such inconstancy and diversity we may well expect divers appointing or approving divers dayes as their fancy serveth them shall in effect no day be duly as it ought observed therefore when the Church hath once pitched on the day and decreed it moved by so many great and good reasons as aforesaid and more on the seventh day in seconding Gods owne appointment in a holy imitation of his precept and admiring his wisdome as many other things of the like nature were likewise done not presuming to be above him or wiser then their Maker or Master in their choise as to picke out any other number nor to settle on any other number or day then that in imitation of the former by our blessed Lord and Saviour himselfe so picked out and sanctified so many wayes acknowledged being thus that seventh day our Christian Sabbath now so long and quietly setled in the Church it remaineth
and shadowes and so have already had their solemne funerals and obsequies as dead and buried and new in their roomes substituted but as the appointing other feasts and Sabbaths both by God himselfe as well as the Iewes Church besides this seventh the Lords Sabbath and other houses of prayer their Synagogues besides the Temple even whiles the Temple stood as well as since were held no breach of the Commandements concerning them rather inlargement and illustration of either in making the worship and duties more publique and generall or for satisfaction and recompence of the neglects in the due observation visiting and sanctification of them that was required so the Christian Sabbath and Churches thus substituted and succeeding the former and in place of them might well bee accounted no breach but enlargement of the Commandements with the dispensation and illustration of Gods graces in more ample manner and measure shewed and bestowed on the whole world the duties made more publique and illustrations and the morality more illustrated by it 37. How shew you this Cleerly and plainly enough both in the Temple where for a particular one or a few Synagogues besides now so great a multitude of Christian Churches over the whole world are seene with Gods solemne worship in them most religiously promoted and in this particular of the Sabbath where the creation and onely temporall deliverances were by it remembred though spirituall ones that were hoped shadowed in it now the spirituall ones that are performed in it and by it remembred and that great worke of redemption so graciously promised and performed on this day the new and Christan Sabbath consummate and shewn to the world in the glorious resurrection of our blessed Saviour and the comming of the holy Ghost and thereby as demonstrated and honoured as it were universally published and both duty and morality of it more illustriously declared And thus we see how the strict observances servitude and legall types doe not concerne us or our Sabbath nor in all respects and circumstances to bee pressed on us as some prone to Judaizing have done yet though not the ceremony the morality to us fully extended and the Commandement though not literally and punctually in all points by us to be observed nor our Christians Sabbath so in it expressed yet expresly included for the substance and all due observance virtually intended whence what is done is so done and on so good grounds by the Church that were it to doe again the order and change of what is therein changed the Church could well doe no other then as is therein already established so little reason have our Novellists in their clamours raised against it and study of contradiction and thus much of the scruples cast in the way concerning the same it followes how wee Christianly ought to celebrate it and conceive of it in the rest and true sanctification of it 38. How is it ordained a Sabbath or rest Not onely for the servants and cattell though for their sakes also ordained but much more for the rest of the soule to be thereby fitted for spirituall exercises of the day 39. How the rest 1. From sinne the best Sabbath and spirituall rest of the soule else in vaine to rest with the body and the soule busied in sinne or vanity 2. From perturbations of minde better to attend the Lords businesse and that dayes duties 3. From ordinary workes both we our selves and all that are ours Whether of Speciall times as sowing reaping c. Or speciall callings c. Or generall import for the Commonwealth that may be done other times 4. And from all disturbance of this as Fayres Markets Courts c. 5. From worldly speeches words and works better to attend heavenly things and Gods service 40. How the sanctification of this rest By holy duties such as besit the Lords day to be exercised and our duties thereon imployed 41. What duties are they The chiefest best and holiest that can bee done on earth so best beseeming that day viz. pertaining to I. Gods honour immediately 1. Prayer or speaking to God c. All such holy and common service 2. Reading and preaching and hearing it which is Gods speaking to us 3. Singing Psalmes and thanksgiving 4. Administration and receiving the Sacraments 5. Holy meditations conference c. II. Men and so Gods honour secondarily workes of 1. Mercy to releeve the poore 2. Peace charity and love to visit the sick comfort the distressed and to make peace c. 3. Necessity as of wars or in First helping the oxe or asse from perishing much more a soule or Christian in any deepe necessity or Secondly casualty as of fire and helping out of danger a woman in travaile and the Lord healing the sicke c. which are accounted sit Sabbath dayes workes and duties and not onely permitted but even commanded to be done and so as the Priests must labour in sacrifice the Ministers greatest taske this dayes exercise 42. Are there not other workes of necessity Yes but permitted onely for avoiding inconveniences as necessary workes that cannot bee shunned for natures necessity as dressing food setting things in order and such houshold businesse which not to doe with decency were to offend in the Jewes or Iewish superstition not considering the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath 43. How are they then permitted For the better and more carefull celebration of the Sabbath with more decency and conveniency and so a Sabbath dayes journey 44. How is that Not for any worldly occasion at all allowed but for the performing of any the foresaid duties so to goe to Church or about any such godly workes and without disturbance of the greatest or best duties or as may best further them and the service and honour of God 45. May not the poore then be suffered to worke for necessity Nothing lesse for all are bound and they also must as labour the 6. dayes in the seventh rest in obedience expecting his blessing on their honest labours which shall thereby bee either sufficient for their content or his mercy will stirre up charity for their farther reliefe 46. Js the whole Sabbath to bee spent in such holy exercises Yes to our weake ability the best wee may especially the principall times allotted to Gods publique service and duties by the Church enjoyned not to be neglected and for the resting in godly sort as may beseeme Christians and the Lords day so in godly meditations singing Psalmes and other good exercises 47. But this may seeme burdensome and make the Lords day grievous It may be to the raw and unexercised Christian but to the best it will be most comfort the holiest and best spending of that day and most glad will they be of ability to performe both the best exercises and most of them as comming nearest Saints and Angels doing Gods will and the best things with willingnesse and alacrity 48. But is no relaxation of such exercises
and service of God at the Church and in that great congregation 64. What of the Minister As the chiefe actor in this dayes sanctification publique prayer and calling upon God in the behalfe of the congregation Reading and preaching the word and catechising Administration of the Sacraments 65. What of the people Their yeelding their presence in the holy assembly and both Comming duly Staying to the end Behaving themselves religiously being present in hearing the word Praying and using the Sacraments Doing all other convenient workes of sanctification as in their assisting the Minister and congregation collections for the poore c. 66. What the opposite offences In generall all carelesnesse and contempt remisnesse and negligence forgetfulnesse and sloath drowsinesse and sleeping or sleepinesse in any of the persons in any of these foresaid devotions and private or publique duties arguing unpreparednesse and backwardnesse in rendring to God the honour due to his name or sanctification fitting to his Sabbath 67 How more in particular I. In the Ministers carelesnesse negligence absence or idlenesse c. II. In the People 1. Absence from Church in carelesnesse negligence contempt obstinacy or any pretence or cause whatsoever arguing unwillingnesse or unpreparednesse 2. Departure without necessary cause 3. Irreligious behaviour in the Church and worship of God 4. Other negligence or vanities before or after 68. What else may be said to offend thus I. Those who are mindfull of the Sabbath to prophane it as 1. Who provide not to be free that day 2. Who provide businesse against that day 3. Passe over extraordinary businesses or journeyes to it 4. Make bold with God to borrow part if not all to their owne use which wisedome is not from above but from the divell II. Observe it but for fashion sake III. Observe the outward rest onely IV. Are dainty Sabbath keepers or rather prophaners V. Account putting on gay cloathes costly fare or other excesse that dayes worke VI. Absent themselves from publique duties or thinke on private which may bee done every day sufficiently VII Are weary of it and wish it gone VIII Unwillingly performe the duties of it and the like as Separatists Recusants and Nonconformists 69. What say you then of other holidayes appointed To be understood as a second sort of Sabbath and even by the Lords example and institution warranted as also by holy men practised from all antiquity as is apparant in the Old Testament How were such Sabbaths The very Passeover and Penticost feast of Weekes and Tabernacles by God himselfe besides his ordinary Sabbaths and so likewise the feast of Purim and Dedication and like deliverances and blessings with peculiar Festivals as on other great occasions solemne Feasts also and holy assemblies which were in effect extraordinary Sabbaths of the which some holy and festivall with joy as the other holy but fasting daies 70. What use of these our holy dayes For the honour of God and remembrance of some extraordinary and great blessings on that time conferred on his Church as in those feasts remembring our blessed Saviour whether his Nativity Circumcision Incarnation or some holy mystery and likewise the Saints dayes those vessels of grace Gods especiall and extraordinary instruments for the illustration of his Church whom we so remember and praise him for the same 71. But how doth this agree with the Commandement that appointeth the six dayes for labour Very well for if part of the seventh upon necessity may be taken to our use as aforesaid much more part of the six for his honour who is to bee honoured all our dayes in some convenient sort as Daniel three times a day praying and David seven times a day to teach us some weeke dayes exercise which commonly can never countervaile our negligence on the Sabbath if no other duty did binde us to this daily sacrifice 72. What rules for weekly or daily devotion Such as any good man may propose to himselfe remembring Gods blessings and benefits bestowed on him as especially to use 1. Prayer morning and evening 2. Blessings and thanksgivings before and after meat and receiving the creatures 3. To give thankes at all times for benefits blessings or deliverances received 4. To pray often and more instantly as our necessities may require 5. Tolet no day passe without some reading or divine meditation 6. To take benefit of weeke day Sermons if opportunity be fitly offered and may bee without palpable wandring Pharisaicall pride and shew of hypocrisie or neglect of our calling 73. What further warrant have wee for holy dayes or fasting dayes As that example of God himselfe and holy men in the Old Testament so since 1. Primitive times institution and practice most of them 2. Authority of the Church commanding and constituting 3. The benefits themselves and mercies of God therein requiring a thankfull remembrance 4. All the former reasons and authorities together with our owne necessities and sometimes urgent and extraordinary occasions as before enforcing some ordinary fasting dayes sometimes also extraordinary fasting and festivall dayes 74. Are these to be observed as strictly as the Sabbath There is no reason for that for though sometimes celebrated with extraordinary joy or solemnity yet as secondary Sabbaths assuredly in a second degree and also among them degrees may be observed yet all of them in some measure for holy and festivall dayes and to the honour of God as the mystery or memoriall doe require and so these may be Sabbaths dedicated to the Lord in memory of his blessings but this peculiarly the Sabbath of the Lord. 75. What was that farther explication of this Commandement In the permission or injunction of labour the six dayes In the duplication of the Commandement and 1. Naming the Sabbath the seventh day and againe enjoyning it 2. Amplifying it by forbidding all servile work both of ones selfe and all that pertaine to us 76. How is the permission of the six dayes to labour Not onely a bare permission but even an injunction to worke in the same commanding moode that the Commandement it selfe is and that both to avoide idlenesse hatefull to God and nurse of vices and also thereby the better to sanctifie the Sabbath As 1. rest after labour is sweeter 2. We better prepared by vicissitude and change may 3. More cheerfully entertaine it 4. More sensible of it and thankefull for it 5. Better abled for it and fitter to rest Provision being made for the rest and sanctification by the weekes labour and Gods blessing and so the Commandement againe repeated 77. Why is the Commandement then doubled 1. For ratification of the stability of it as first not onely commanded but to be remembred and here againe redoubled 2. For specification of the very day the seventh and so determined and by no humane ordinance but only by divine to be altered and so in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek the seventh day not only a seventh the Sabbath ordained and in it farther
names of Daniel and his fellowes when he consecrated them to his Idols service Dan. 1. 7. 2. The Turkes doe by their Christian Renegadoes and their Janizaries 3. The Popes doe usually change their names at entrance to the Papacy 4. Kings of Scotland have done Ominis causâ changing their names one for another as Iohn to Robert 5. Queenes of England many before the Conquest tooke the name of Algive in honour of a worthy Queene of that name so did the Caesars from Julius Caesar and divers others 28. How if for any evill intention It is unlawfull and aggravated according to the quality of the offence and villany intended 29. Who have power to change names The same that have power to impose them 30. Who are they Superiours as parents or ones selfe so God gave Adam his name Adam named his wife Eva and gave names to all creatures Eva named her sonne Cain Rachel hers Benoni whom Jacob named againe Benjamin the Angell from God and Zachary John the Baptist the Angell Gabriel from God Jesus before conceived in the wombe 31. How for alteration of them So also Abram called Abraham by God Sarai Sarah Iacob Israel Benoni Benjamin by Jacob Simon also Peter by Christ Saint John Baptists name by his father changed Naomi saith of herselfe call mee Marah The Popes doe usually change their names and fathers may change their childrens with diseretion or on good occasion if they mislike them 32. Is it not a falshood or lye to change ones name No for superiours and ones selfe have such power authority over the name on good occasion 33. How in doing ill or mischiefe Then it is not onely a falshood or lye but a mischievous and malicious lye or otherwise capitall according to the nature and quality of the offence and villany thereby intended against any else an equivocation or imposture and so an offence and heynous sinne before God and men 34. How the concealing of ones name According to the former lawfull and tolerable on good occasion as in danger of life or other eminent perill or inconveniency so Beza that silencing his owne name writ a Treatise in Nath Neskius name Bucer of Aretius Fellinus with lesse envie to be read of others so in ancient stories many as Saint Athanasius in danger of killing silencing his name and Saint Paul supposed silencing his in the Epist. to the Hebrewes to be read with lesse envy or prejudice by his Countrimen who hated his person as is seene in his story 35. The occasion then ought to be good of the changing and concealing of ones name Yes or else it argueth lightnesse or rashnesse and folly if not worse 36. Names are also imposed for some good reasons and occasions as well as distinction It is apparantly seene in all the chiefest and the best of the ancients and especially in the holy Scriptures so Adam earth Eva mother of the living Noah rest Abraham Israel David beloved Salomon peacefull Jesus a Saviour and our Christian names for that blessed hope we have in Christ our Saviour 37. What then doest thou particularly minde by thy Christian name My Christian duty calling and profession 38. As how As 1. my duty to God my heavenly Father the Church my Mother Christ my Saviour and all the faithfull my brethren and kindred in the flesh and more especially in him 2. My calling to this happy estate begunne in Baptisme where I receive this name 3. My profession of this faith then promised for me at Baptisme by them that gave mee this name SECT 3. Quest. 2. The imposition of the name and benefit thereof Authority of such imposers of the name with the ancient and laudable use in the Church and therefore retained Of taking new or keeping the old name in and after baptisme Of the new name received in baptisme and for that compared with circumcision Divers instances to the contrary and reasons of them The generall and received use now and reasons of it Why children baptised as in imitation of circumcision and from Christs example of receiving them The covenant also pertaining to them and they can never be too soone presented to God this being the ordinary meanes of salvation and way to heaven How faith required with baptisme and in very infants of faithfull parents and in the bosome of the Church Charity binding us to doe and thinke the best we can of all So the new Christian use and benefit of Baptisme Further described as thereby made a member of Christ the members of Christs mysticall body● and the difference and degrees of them as in a well governed common-wealth the like to be seone The profit of being Christs members that we thereby become best the children of God How Christ Angels Men and all Creatures Sonnes of God the elect and their hope and preeminence The falling Angels And their losse and misery How workes required As signes of sons and heires not cause of inheritance The Lawyers question discussed And how heaven An inheritance or kingdome and the excellency of that inheritance 1. VVHo gave you this name My Godfathers and Godmothers who were my sureties to God in receiving his Covenant of grace and promising and undertaking covenants on my part to be performed 2. When was it In my Baptisme at the Font solemnly before God and the congregation 3. What benefit thereby I was thereby made A member of Christ The childe of God Inheritor of the kingdome of heaven 4. Why doe you call the Sureties Godfathers and Godmothers Because betweene God and me for my good they did undertake such things for mee and in my name that I should have done my selfe if I had beene able 5. What authority had they for it The ancient use and institution of the Church and primitive times continued to our dayes the order of the present Church and times concurring with the bond of charity doing good for one another and at the request of my naturall parents 6. Js it an ancient use or custome Yes as used neere from the Apostles times it appeares in the Ecclesiasticall Histories and Decretals as Higinus Bishop and Martyr in the 5. Decretall mentioneth so in our Church from the first plantation of faith here even Adulti those of yeares had Godfathers as appeares by Cunigils King of West Saxons baptized by Birinus whose Father in law and Godfather King Oswald was 7. But how have Godfathers authority to name the childe At the request of the parents who have the absolute authority to name it 8. Are the parents hereby barred No it is likely as they request the sureties and that they doe it so at their request and in love that they have the greatest stroke and it appeareth the Priest was went before at the Church doore to aske the name of the parents 9. How then is it said the Godfathers doe it or are required to name it For publique testification of it so they doe it and that most publiquely and solemnly by
their owne accord perversnesse and pride when mans disobedience by the meanes subtilty and solicitation of that wicked one the old Serpent and enemy of mankinde one of those rebellious Angels the originall of his owne and Adams f●ll and so all our ruine 57. There is then onely that meanes left of mans salvation Onely in Christ the Mediator and Redeemer one of our owne bloud as man and one with God and in whom we are sons and beloved 58. This is then a great priviledge The greatest priviledge and prerogative that can be and most glorious title to be the sonnes of God for if Kings sons on earth bee honourable how much more sons of the King of heaven 59. What benefit by this priviledge or prerogative To be inheritors of the kingdome of heaven due onely to the sonship and to no other worthinesse or workes 60. How is the inheritance of heaven then due to us As sons not without doing good workes nor yet for the workes sake but for Christ in whom God is well pleased with us and our workes that would else bee but splendida peccata even our best works without Christ. 61. Why did the Lawyer then say Master what shall I doe to inherit eternall life A solecisme in both Law and Divinity to think that inheritance should descend by workes or doing and not by filiation or being sonnes which as sons will doe the will of their Father yet hope to have the inheritance not for doing the works but by being sons 62. The question was not then well proposed It shewed the propounder was no perfect scholler in Christs schoole and howsoever signifieth his good intention yet arguing him in that point neither good Lawyer nor found Divine 63. How is heaven then an inheritance As it belongs to the sons of God and by them to be inherited as they are members of Christ. 64. Are they inheritors then onely so Onely as they are thought worthy to have the prerogative to be accounted sons of God being members of Christ so accepted in him and made acceptable by him who is the true Vine and naturall Olive and all the elect the branches 65. How is it said a kingdome As it hath all the honour nobility splendor and glory that can be ensignes or annexed to dominion or majesty with stability of peace and eternity of durance in that most happy estate and in so high measure of contentment that all earthly Kingdomes State and Majesty are but drosse and contemptible in comparison of the same 66. How a kingdome of heaven In regard of the excellency and eminency of glory in that highest degree that nothing can bee more whereas in the kingdome of grace a small sparke of peace and comfort is onely seene to the soule and conscience of the faithfull all true sons and servants of God there God himselfe in full and beatificall vision is seene in the heavenly Jerusalem the City of God and supernall Palace and Courts of that great King filled with his glory presented before and in presence of Cheruh Seraph with all those heavenly Quires Orders and Hierarchy that celestiall company innumerable Saints and Angels 67. Is this the benefit of Baptisme It is thereunto ascribed as whereby I am so admitted into the Church the visible company of the faithfull and being engrafted into Christ accounted a childe of God and heire in hope of the kingdome of heaven SECT 4. The third Question The Godfathers promise in Baptisme for the performance of our Christian duties Of repentance faith and obedience our Repentance in forsaking world flesh and Divell The Divell and enmity to God man being anthor of all evill and sin in heaven paradise ●on the 〈◊〉 continually by his wicked motions and suggestions and Agents or instruments so sowing tares in Gods field Sin in the heart of seduced mankind The Divels works being sias of all sorts so evill and opposite to the works of God as sins of omision ana of commission of ignoranc● and of mal● of weaknesse of infirmity Or presumption and the like All workes of the Divell the wicked world with her ompes and vanities Or vain pompes how to be understood and distinguished from the necessary ornaments of the Prince or State How sinne is vaine and all worldly things vanity the sinful lusts and corruptions of the flesh all evill how to be resisted of faith and how we make profession of it in Baptisme and reason Of it The fruit of faith obedience So then also professed showne in our diligence to seeke learne and will therein revealed with constancy all the dayes of our life 1. VVHat did your Godfathers and Godmothers then for you They did promise and vow three things in my name 2. What is meant by promise and vow That they did Both promise the matter and for assurance Confirme it with a solemne vow for me and so not Only simply and Barely promise though promise bee much to be respected and kept in all honest and lawful things but solemnly vow and confirme that promise by publique profession and protestation Made Before God and the Church To God and his Church so In the face of his Congregation and for such things so Good holy and Just and My duty that had they neither been promised vowed or protested yet in all right ought to have beene so soone as knowne acknowledged and to the utmost of my power performed 3. Wherefore is this question here put To shew the reason of the ancient custome and use to have sureties at Baptisme 4. What is that To undertake for us between God and us so before the face of his Church our Christian duties 5. How our Christian duties here described By these three things in the answer propounded Of 1. Forsaking evill The Divell and all his works The world and the flesh 2. Beleeving the Articles of the Christian faith 3. Both Keeping Gods holy Will and Comandments Walking Diligently in the same Continually all the daies c. 6. Whence is this question and answer taken From the very words of the Liturgy where the things here repeated in the ordinary administration of Baptisme are required of the Infant and sureties and by them vowed and promised according to the Churches laudable and most ancient in stitution 7. Recite these three things briefly Repentance faith and the fruits thereof obedience 8. How Repentance To forsake all evill 9. How faith To cleaveto God by believing on him and pursuing that which is good 10. How obedience In that generall duty to feare God and keepe his Commandements 11. How is repentance described here By forsaking all evill in these three branches intended comprehended the Divell World Flesh. 12. What is the Divell The ancient and accursed enemy of Adam and all his posterity who fallen from God expelled out of heaven devoid of grace is the author of sin and of our ruine and misery 13. How fell he from God By disobedience and pride and so called 1. In
spirit 72. How is Gods will knowne As it is revealed in his holy Word 73. VVhere is that word conteined In the bookes of the Old and New Testament 74. VVhat are the Commandements of God The Law of God given to us and his will in generall as before mentioned for the morall part thereof more particularly expressed in the ten Commandements hereafter recited 75. How long obliged to this duty and diligence So long as we have any being all the dayes of our life 76. VVhy so Because from him wee have received our life and being and so to his honour ought all to bee referred 77. How all our dayes Whether of prosperity in praises or adversity in patience to give him thankes and submit our selves wholly to his holy will and pleasure 78. How life Whether our naturall life so rightly understood or life of grace in Gods Church and service as well applyed that the life of grace here may bee an entrance to the life of glory hereafter 79. Is this the summe of the sureties promise It is into these three parts distributed viz. 1. Our repentance to forsake and renounce all evill the Divell World and the Flesh. 2. Our faith to beleeve all the Articles of our Christian faith 3. Our obedience to keep and walke in Gods holy wil and his Commandements all the dayes of my life SECT 5. The fourth Question Our Christian resolution to performe the vow made for us in baptisme and how we are bound to performe and that many wayes in common morality conscience and reason law and Religion since for our so apparent good and Church and superiour institution and command to which wee are to submit our selves in humility our duty to praise God for our happy estate of salvation given to us in Christ by the administry of the Church and meanes of the Sacraments Confirmed and sealed to our soules and to pray for the grace of continuance so to persevere therein to the 〈◊〉 and here also a reason is rendred why the first part of the sureties promise or vow in Baptisme is passed by and the second part concerning the Creed is so here first and principally insisted on as followeth 1. DOst thou thinke thou art bound to beleeve and doe as they have promised for thee Yes verily by Gods helpe so I will c. 2. What is conteined in this answer A fourefold resolution 1. As a direct and resoulte affirmation of the demand yes verily 2. As a resolute asseveration and protestation to the same and by Gods helpe 3. As a resolute praising of God and giving of thankes I heartily thanke c. 4. As a resolved prayer for grace of continuance and perseverance to the end I pray God c. 3. Is then the party bound by anothers act He is both in morality and conscience reason and Religion 4. Without any deputation Yes since it is for his good and if it had not been promised yet in conscience and else bound to performe that 5. How so 1. In common morality since it was for his good and so in duty for good order and vertues sake to doe it 2. In conscience since for the honour of God and good of our owne soule so obliged 3. In reason since by superiours and those that have authority over us our parents and superiours enjoyned 4. Religion since by the Churches authority so for the honour of God and our owne good ordained 6. But can Infants be bound or those under age by their owne or which is lesse others acts By both when it is for their good otherwise not if to their prejudice and rather by tutors and governours acts then by their owne 7. Why so Because they are intended of wisedome and judgement and knowing what is convenient and trusted with the guiding and government of the Infant or young here yet wanting discretion 8. How appearoth it that they are so bound In very law as well as reason the ground of all good lawes when it is for their good and necessary occasions as meat drinke and apparell teaching and bringing up and the like the Infant and Pupill or heire in nonage as well as the most aged persons bound to performe pay and discharge such dues and promises 9. What is the reason for it Because it is for his apparant good and benefit so if he finde a hand to receive a beneficiall lease in law being an Infant he must also finde a hand to pay the rent and performe the condicioned covenants 10. But how is this for his good In an uncomparable great and high degree as hereby received into the heavenly society of Saints and to have that glorious priviledge hereby signed to him to be the Son of God member of Christ and heire of blessednesse and so as hee receiveth the benefit tyed to performe the Covenants 11. How followeth it that he saith By Gods grace so I will In acknowledgement of 1. The fountaine whence all sufficiency and ability doth flow 2. The readinesse and propensity we ought to have to perform it 11. Have we then no ability of our selves No not so much as to thinke a good thought much lesse to performe any good deed but all our sufficiency is from God 12. What is our duty then to doe To pray for ability from him expect his graces and after the same in humility as considering whence all our ability comes to direct our courses 13. Can we doe this then Not we as of our selves but Gods grace and good Spirit within us that beginneth will performe every good worke to his glory 14. What shall we doe then Only submit our selves to his will be prest to obey and doe as his good Spirit moveth us not to quench the spirit but being ready to say Speake Lord for thy servant heareth accordingly continue in well doing 15. How shall we finde or know this If we praise God for graces received and pray unto him for more as followeth in this answer 16. Why should we praise him Because thanksgiving for graces received is the fruit of the former grace and seed of the latter 17. VVhat doe you praise him for here For calling me to this state of salvation 18. VVhat is this state of salvation The state of a Christian in the love and favour of God by his Covenant of grace whereof the Sacraments are signes and seales 19. How are we else Out of Gods favour weltering in our owne bloud and pollution of sin by nature but restored to his favour thus by grace 20. In or by whom or what meanes Through Jesus Christ our Saviour in whom God is well pleased and for his sake doth blot out all our guilt and offences 21. How are we brought to this estate We are called by God by whom elected and by the Ministry of his Church by his appointment and the voice of his holy Word and thus lastly sealed for his receive these signes the Sacraments with the vertue and effect of them pledges
or tempters will but set on it to tempt the soule and seeke the subversion of the same 34. And this is a necessary consideration Yes and a good preparation to repentance but faith the principall and most necessary matter yet preferred and the rather for that in that one word I beleeve is necessarily included the forsaking of all these things and so that first part of the promise thus else overpassed is yet thereby as effectually as possibly may bee intimated The second part of the Catechism Wherein of the Creed in generall SECT 1. Quest. 5. The Creed of the Apostles and why so called How it is the Symboll or note of a Christian and so called the Symboll or token of their faith and unity in it The twelve Apostles composers of it by tradition and so partition of it into 12. Articles The authority of this Creed and compared with others received of the Church this being the most ancient and summe of them They the illustration of this and all the rule of faith and unity and so with the description of faith premised is set forth and declared How and why first propounded with the nature of saith and the severall sorts of it both historicall faith temporary faith and degrees thereof Faith of miracles and lastly true and saving faith which is onely properly called faith with the extent root and fruit of the same The substance also and degrees of this faith and difference from the others seene by the root fruit and continuance The wsake faith yet be true saith and how it is to be strengthned The strongest faith yet imperfect requiring increase and divers good effects of it How faith is else diversly in holy Scriptures taken with the causes whence produced the efficient God he giver Instrumentall the word and Sacraments Naturall and formall in our apprehension and application finall cause in Gods glory and our jestification The value of workes and of generall ana speciall Or explicate and implicise faith The effects of true and saving faith and how are need both i● and workes for a testification of the same both to our selves and our owne soules The comfort assurance of the true faith above the vaine arrogancy and presumption of the others the meanes of preserving it and parts of Creed 1. REcite the Articles of thy Beleefe I beleeve in God the Father Almighty c. 2. What is here contained Summa credendorum the summe of our faith or Christian beleefe 3. How are these Articles usually called Either the Symboll of the Apostles Symbolum Apostolorum or The Apostles Creed 4. Why so called Because it summarily containeth the principall points of Religion handled and propounded in the doctrine and bookes of the Evangelists and Apostles 5. Is there any other reason rendered Yes as though by some compiled by the Apostles themselves yet wheresoever dispersed over the whole world in preaching or propagating the Gospell as an abridgement thereof this holy Symboll might be a rule to their Disciples and a token of their agreement in the one onely and true faith 6. To what end Both by the analogy thereof to direct the doctrine of the teachers and right understanding of the hearers in these principall points of faith and so consequently any heresies arising by these as a touchstone tryed found drosse might be rejected and so thereby to know a true Christian. 7. Js it then thought composed by the Apostles themselves So Saint Augustine and others have beene of opinion but whether by themselves or their disciples out of their writings and preachings it is assuredly found to be most Orthodox and even from their times Most Anciently Universally received 8. Why called a Symboll As a token or badge of their faith and also as jointly compiled by them as aforesaid and so thought according to the number of the 12. distributed into 12. Articles by Saint Augustine and others remembred 9. In what manner To each of the 12. Apostles as to the compilers thereof an Article assigned viz. 1. To Saint Peter I beleeve in God the Father c. 2. John Maker of heaven and earth c. 3. Iames And in Jesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord c. 4. Andrew Which was conceived c. 5. Philip He suffered under Pontius Pilate c. 6. Thomas He descended into hell the third day c. 7. Bartholomew He ascended into heaven and sitteth c. 8. Matthew From thence he shall come to c. 9. Iames Alph. I beleeve in the holy Ghost c. 10. Simon Zelot The communion of Saints c. 11. Judas Iacobi Forgivenesse of sinnes resurrection of c. 12. Matthias Life everlasting Or thus 1. I beleeve in God c. 2. And in Jesus Christ c. 3. Which was conceived c. 4. He suffered under c. 5. The third day he rose c. 6. He ascended into heaven c. 7. From thence he c. 8. I beleeve in the holy Ghost c. 9. Holy Catholique Church the communion of c. 10. Forgivenesse of sinnes c. 11. Resurrection of bodie c. 12. Life everlasting 10. Of what authority is this Creed If it were penned by the Apostles then as Canonicall Scripture indeed but howsoever of greatest authority next to them above and before all others as most anciently and universally received 11. Are there any other Creeds then Other in forme of words according to severall occasions of the times and compilers but one and the same in substance and matter and so may seem expositions of this former 12. Who were those compilers of them Some of them Generall Councels some others worthy and reverend Fathers lights of the church in those times and for the most part occasioned by heresies arising for the plainer discerning and confutation of the same 13. Which are they The Nycene Creed composed by the Fathers in that Councell Constantine the great Emperor being present and President to explaine the Apostles Creed and extirpate Arrius impiety Athanasian Creed compiled by Saint Athanasius persecuted by the A●ians for a testimony of his sincerity in the truth and to instruct and confirme others Ephesine Chalcedon Agathen and others the like in severall Councels on the like occasions set forth 14. How should I then know and rightly understand which to receive and embrace In receiving this one of the Apostles wee receive all for they are but expositions upon severall occasions or explanations of this former 15. What use of this and those others Divers and sundry uses and no lesse manifold then excellent both for a 1. Rule of faith 2. Preservative from and against heresie 3. Meanes of distinguishing true Christians from heretiques 4. Briefe memoriall at entrance into Christianity to know thereby what 1. To have continually before their eyes for profession 2. To stand in defence of it even to the death 3. To answer at Baptisme 16. In what forme was the Creed first propounded In forme of an answer as that of
arguments retorted on themselves and other scisenatiques and Heretiques or misbeleevers but showne more strengthning and confirming our present assertion with the use to be made of the same 1. VVHat is the last degree of Christs humiliation His descent into Hell expressed in these words He descended into Hell which some annex to the former as included in them others to the following words as a preparation to the consideration of his resurrection from the dead some repute it a distinct Article 2. How is it then interpreted After divers manners and so consequently as diversly understood so variously referred 3. Whence growes this difference From the divers significations and interpretations of this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used in the Hebrew and more Easterne Churches as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greeke Church 4. What is the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It signifieth either the Grave or Hell and so divers times either way accepted and used 5. What is the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By it also signified the Grave and Hell and no lesse the estate of the departed indifferently whether good or bad to joy or torment 6. How many severall interpretations are there then Six at the least deduced from this ground or difference 7. Which are they The first figuratively understood for the torments of soule and in his soule suffered at in and before his death the heavy anger of God against our sins which caused his agony and bloudy sweat and crying out Eli Eli c. even as it were the paines of hell being depraved of that solace which he was wont to finde in God as learned Doctor Field speakes l. 5. de Eccles. c. 18. 8. Which the second Literally understood of the place of the damned whither he is said to descend not to suffer any torments for consummatum est was said before and the worke finished of redemption and he assured the penitent thiefe This day thou shalt bee with me in Paradise but to triumph over the Divell and Hell conquered and for manifestation of his glory there and to the disobedient spirits to their greater torments and confusion 1 Pet. 3. 19. 9. Which the third Understood the lower parts or some places neare hell but not the hell of the damned where the Patriarchs or Saints before were supposed to abide not having full sight and fruition of God 10. Which the fourth Literally by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 understanding the grave to which his body descended 11. Which is the fifth Figuratively thereby understood in the phrase of the Greeke the estate of the dead 12. Which the sixth Figuratively also to signifie his stay in that state or the grave three dayes as it were the duration or permanency thereof 13. Which is the most approved interpretation The first and second as most consonant to the analogy of faith and expressed or allowed in the doctrine of our Church the others either exploded or impertinent 14. How the first approved For that it is most assuredly true that our Saviour felt most extreame torments in his soule that even the paines of hell after a sort gat hold upon him as the Psalmist and Prophet David speaketh when he sweat drops of bloud and that there needed an Angell from heaven to comfort him as Luc. 22. 34. and after cryed Eli Eli c. by the dismall apprehension of the heavie wrath of God and sorrowes endlesse due to us and lying so heavy on his soule which may further bee illustrated and proved by these reasons following 15. Which be they That such and so great sorrowes did seize on his soule appeareth in that 1. That with onely consideration of them hee was so troubled that he confessed My soule is heavie even unto the death and prayed those three times with that fervency Father if it be possible c. Mat. 26. 28. c. 2. His apprehension of the sorrowes caused these drops bloudy sweat and agony and so terrible griefe and trouble of soule that needed the Angell from heaven Luke 22. 42. c. 3. The feare of death so terrible was so apprehended that it wrested those prayers and supplications from him with strong cryings and tears to him that was able to save from death whereby he was heard in that hee feared Heb. 5. 7. which shewes the greatnesse of the trouble of his soule 4. So wonderfull was that feare he was surprised withall when he suffered that hee cryed Eli Eli c. and a second time and gave up the ghost that offering for sin 5. As he was more powerfull then all the Martyrs so he suffered more then all if all were put together from righteous Abel to this day 6. His soule being an offering for sin and soules having sinned and all the faithfull in him and their sins in his soule to be expiated and everlasting death due heavy indeed and grievous paines must needs take hold on him by which we delivered in his power though with extreame paines and sufferings 16. But what is the end thereof That howsoever insupportable by men and Angels or unutterable yet thereby perfectly redeemed both body and soule by passions both of body and soule in the power of his divinity that never left him not even in that agony passion and death when hee seemed to bee overcome whereby yet he became conqueror 17. This interpretation then of his descent into hell is approved of Yes though perabolically interpreting it yet as agreeable to Scriptures and the analogy of faith 18. How the second interpretation Literally true also as consorting with the plain text of Scripture words of the Creed and testimony of Fathers and expounded by our Church so in regard of his triumph over hell and Satan and manifestation of his glory there and to them to their greater terror torments and confusion as Saint Peter seemeth to intimate saying in the spirit hee went and preached to the spirits in prison which were disobedient in the dayes of Noah 1 Pet. 3. 19. 19. How of the third Exploded by our Church and holy Scriptures as that acknowledge no third place or state of soules departed but Heaven or Paradise the place of joy and hell the state of the damned 20. How the fourth As lesse pertinent or proper since thereby is only signified what was before expressed by hee was buried and so a tautology of buriall as to say He was buried and descended to the grave in effect but he was buried and he was buried 21. How the fifth A like impertinent interpretation and inferring A tautologie of death before expressed in that he was dead for what difference betweene he was dead and descended into the state of the dead 22. How the sixth Little other then the former for being in that state it importeth some stay and how long that was is declared in the words following The third day he rose againe from the dead 23. What then Catholiquely understood by his descent Either
types thereof and analogies to be observed 22. What analogies herein An analogy or correspondency of it both to the descension as he came downe to earth from heaven the bosome of his father and height of glory by his incarnation so here he ascended from earth to heaven to his father and his right hand in Majesty by his glorious ascension The types thereof Moses Enoch and Elias of whom hereafter 23. What the ascension or action His glorious ascending to heaven in the sight and presence of many witnesses as it were foretold accordingly performed 24. How foretold Both by the Prophet David thou art ascended up on high hast led captivity captive and given gifts to men By himselfe Joh. 14. 2. I go to prepare a place c. Joh. 20. 17. I ascend to my Father and your Father to my God and your God By the types of it in the old Testament Enoch Moses and Elias 25. Why in sight and presence of many witnesses To their comfort and our confirmation that as his resurrection manifested to the women the Disciples one after another and sometimes two or three and then more together even till more then 500. at once so many times during his abode on earth so his ascension as every part of his actions for us and so our faith might be confirmed in the mouth of many witnesses and so indeed were by both Prophets Martyrs and others 26. Whence ascended he From earth to heaven from top of Mount Olivet by Jerusalem as it were from the earth to the heavenly Jerusalem City of the great King from the Church here to the Church above 27. To what end To prepare a place for us as he taught his Disciples To elevate our hearts to heaven and heavenly things To shew the way to us and all that are his To manifest his power and glory to mortall eyes and hearts according to their capacity that abundantly more is apparent in the highest degree to the blessed Saints and Angels in heaven 28. In what manner ascended he In an admirable and wonderfull manner as appeared by the Angels words then appearing to his Disciples and those present testifying of him and saying ye men of Galilee why stand ye gazing up into heaven This Jesus whom ye saw ascend shall so come as c. Acts 1. 11. 29. When was that Forty dayes after his resurrection during which time he was conversant on earth directing and comforting his Disciples and strengthning them 30 Why were those forty dayes interim For many good reasons and gracious comfort and instruction to his Church As 1. assurance of his resurrection in that space conversing though after a more divine manner and appearing so often and to so many 2. Confirmation of the verity of his humanity offering himselfe to be seene and touched and felt yea and eating with them though hee needed no sustenance yet as to Thomas herein descending to them to confirme their weake though ravished and admiring faith 3. Strengthning his Disciples opening their hearts and so comforting instructing and confirming them against all occurrences and times of fiery trials and persecutions 29. Did he not also appeare at other times and to others Yes but after a more ravishing strange and transcendent manner so to divers holy men As to Saint Paul on the way to Damascus but with such glory and splendor that hee was both amazed and stricken blinde but converted To Saint Stephen full of faith and of the holy Ghost even from heaven and in his majesty at the time of his martyrdome and very dissolution To Saint Iohn in Pathmos on the Lords day in a heavenly vision to the illustration of his understanding in writing that prophesie of the Revelation And to many Saints else to whom the Lord in grace yet with manifestation of some part of his glory appeared 30. Who were types of this his ascension Enoch who walking with God was taken away and no more seen Moses who ascending to mount Nebo was taken from men and Eliah who went up to God in that fiery charet and in the sight of Elisha ascended up to heaven 31. What analogy of their ascension to this As types to the antitypes usually have so those both to Christ and his ascension 1. As Enoch the 7. from Adam a holy and sabbaticall member and generation of the just walked with God and was so translated 2. So Christ the 7. of those that were ever til then raised to life of that line the Holy and Just One Prince of peace and author of our rest and endlesse Sabbath having walked with God now thus ascended 32. How Moses As that great Lawgiver and who in the wildernesse after forty dayes fast received the Law from God on mount Sinai and delivered the curses on mount Ebal and blessings on mount Geresin Deut. 27. 12. at last ascending mount Nebo though buried by God thus translated and taken from men was from the earth and tents of Israel ascended So Christ the Law-giver and confirmer of a better Law and covenant of grace after 40. daies fast in the wildernesse having vanquished Satan and on mount Sion manifested his Majesty after forty dayes conversing with men after his ascending Mount Calvary and death buriall and resurrection to life thus from Mount Olivet ascended up to heaven 3● How Eliah As the greatest Prophet that ever arose in that state and the Church of the Jewes as who raised the dead to life opened and shut heaven at his prayer without dying was translated and ascended up to God in the power of the Spirit in that strange manner and convoy the fiery Charets and horsemen of Israel So Christ the great Prophet and Messias raising the dead in soule and body to life eternall having the key of David and opening and shutting heaven by those siery trials at his passion opening the gate of life and entring thereby at his resurrection thus triumphed in his ascension 34. Was this so manifested It might seeme so even by himselfe in his transfiguration where those types thereof Moses and Eliah met with him the Antitype on Mount Tabor as it were in a divine conference about the same 35. What was the event of it In that triumph ascending he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men 36. What gifts Gifts and graces of his holy Spirit yea and the pouring forth of that Spirit in his Church most abundantly or as he speaketh the sending of the Comforter the holy Ghost the Spirit of truth for the direction guiding and comfort of his Church to the worlds end 37. What learne we hence In duty of humble thankfulnesse and praises often to ascend 1. In our contemplation to those high Palaces that so with preparation of soule in this life we may ascend to those high Courts hereafter whither he is gone before 2. In affection and hearty desire and longing after them by our preparation of will and wishes to be there with Christ whither he ascended and is
setteth forth the glory of God and salvation of soules in the same 7. How doth faith see it so cleerly In all the Scriptures even from the time of Adam in Paradise and Noah in the Ark Abraham the father of the faithfull to these dayes though in narrow bounds of one House Arke or family in the flourishing estate of the Jews in one people or Common-wealth yet still a true Church and company of faithfull beleevers and servants of God but now since by Gods mercies in Christ most flourishing spred over the face of the whole earth as we both see at this day and reade in the histories of the Old and New Testament 8. What Church or Churches One and the same though distinguished in times 1. In the Old Testament in Adam Noah and Abrahams housholds and chiefe of their families in Israel and all his sons the state of the Jewes 2. In the New Testament among The Nations of the Jewes Many 1. Apostles 2. Disciples 3. Beleevers All Nations else the Churches to the very ends of the earth and so far as as we are dispersed As those of Corinth Ephesus Rome c. Achaia Macedonia Antioch c. Asia the 7. Churches in Rev. 1. Which all together make up the Catholique Church 9. What signifies or whence this name Church Ecclesia Of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the calling together as out of the world into the Lords house and company so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying in Greeke the Lords house whence name of our Church and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his congregation 10. What is the Church then That company of Saints elected of God to eternall life called and gathered together out of all mankinde by the preaching of the word saved by the Messiah Christ and in his faith preserved defended and sanctified here to be glorified in heaven and out of the Church there is no salvation 11. Js there but one Church But one true Church whereof Christ Jesus is the head yet of which Catholique Church all particular Churches professing the true faith are parts and all faithfull persons members and all Synagogues though they call themselves Churches if they want that head or the true faith doe falsly chalenge that title as the harlot may of an honest woman but are indeed but Synagogues of Satan 12. How heare we then of many Churches even in the Scriptures and Apostles writings As the particular Churches in several Countries part or members of this one universall Church in that and many other respects so distinguished and divided 13. In what respects Most usually in regard of the 1. Time the Church of the 1. Jewes and 2. Christans 2. Extent universall Church Catholicke Particular Church c. 3. Apparant to men visible on earth in the professors Invisible to men 4. Places Heaven among the Saints and Angels Earth among men 5. Exercises in it Militant in grace Triumphant in glory As other distinctions also in regard of the circumstances may be of this one and the same Church 14. How could the Iewes Church and the Christians be one As both were united in Christ the head profession of the true faith and so elected called and ordained of God 15. How could Christ be the head or his faith in the Church of the Jewes As the Fathers and Patriarkes and all holy men before Christ trusted in the Messias Christ that was to come and in that faith walked with God and attained heaven as all Saints since in the faith of the Messias already come so all of one faith and under one head 16. Is our faith then the same with Abrahams The very same in substance onely diversified by the distinction of time and respect of the same Messias onely exhibitum or exhibendum as already showne or to be exhibited their faith farther off and in hope our more plainly and fully informed all shadowes and vailes removed the substance presented 17. But faith is of things not seene And so are the mysteries of this faith even in the very Messiah though seene with mortall eye yet much more unseene not onely for his divinity but divine actions office and doctrine also onely apprehensible by the eye of faith 18. What are the particular Churches Members of the Univerall Church of which Christ is the head planted by the ministry of good men in the power of God and his word in all parts of the world and in all times preserved by his grace in one part or other so all those famous Churches of Asia Phrygia and Pamphilia of Rome Ephesus Corinth Greece and generally in Europe Asia Africa and now America also and that were in all times as well of the Fathers and Patriarkes even Adam Noah Abraham Moses the Jewes and to our times make up this one Catholicke Church of God or to goe further even all men and Angels elected and saved 19. How expresse you the Church visible or invisible The invisible company of Saints elected of God to eternall life onely knowne to God and not to be discerned of men therefore called invisible whereas all professors of the faith living in the Church and seene in that society charity bindes us to acknowledge as the outward signes and profession shew to be the Church and which we call the visible Church 20. Is the visible Church perfect Nothing lesse for as shee is in the uncleane world she must needs be corrupted with that aire and in her are vessels of honour and dishonour and so as in regard of both shee is called a Net Mat. 13. 47. yet in regard of the better part also called the Kingdome of Heaven 21. How those other distinctions of the Church As in respect of place Heaven where Saints and Angels and earth where men are members of it so in regard of their exercises on earth the Church militant yet in her spirituall warfare and under the crosse but aspiring towards heaven the triumphant part thither already aspired having past the troubles of the world in joy and felicity both together when complete and united make up the Catholique Church 22. How said Catholique In regard of universality of times places and persons as well as Catholique doctrine of truth therein propounded 23. How holy In regard of the holinesse there to be found in the Head Christ the Lord imparting holinesse to the members Holy Father electing it Holy Ghost sanctifying it Holy Faith professed in it Holy Scriptures taught in it Sacraments and Ceremonies Prayers and actions used and exercised in it Life and conversation of the Members in comparison of the rest of the world 24. What are notes of the true Church The true preaching of the word of God and right use and administration of the Sacraments which cannot be well exercised but under a godly discipline and joyned with holy life and conversation 25. How is this proved For that thereby the Church is called together and distinguisht from all other companies whatsoever the word being the meanes the Sacraments
no more now safe to alter it and shew such lenity nor well indifferent having been already so solemnly chosen concluded on and decreed on though absolutâ potestate they may or with more shew of reason they might have done it yet thus limitatâ dispensatione and congruè they may not with which we may well stop the mouth of inconstant curiosity and hold our selves relgiously and christianly resolved 35. This is then your resolution It is and of all the gravest Divines moderne or ancient keeping the morality of the Commandement and letting the ceremony passe or so much of it as not concerneth us and had a rollish of the legall pedagogie and servitude so whereas the morall law was written in the tables of our hearts in more plaine characters at the creation but by the fall was so defaced that we now want discipline in most things or divine revelation to instruct us yet thus farre even depraved nature straight sees the morality of this Commandement that as God is to be worshipped so a time as well as place is due unto it but then that it should be on the seventh day onely divine revelation or Gods instruction can shew us wherefore as not else knowne God addes that reason from the creation which now by his will revealed is the secondarily morall and positive part of the Commandement with the sanctification of it and the rest so far as serves to the sanctification of it the rest of it involved in ceremony with the particularity of that seventh examplar'd by the creation the greatest benefit then to be remembred and God praised for it though a greater our restauration by Christ in expectation and promised and now chiefly to be remembred on it and the no small cause or reason of the change which thus followes on the former reasons for that when God had so portion'd it nature enformed by grace cannot but acknowledge God the wisest and his wisdom best so follow his choise of the seventh rather then any other number and Christs honouring and so demonstrating this seventh by his blessed actions performance of that our restauration resurrection preaching and apparitions on it even shewed his election and confirmed the change which his Church by such directions of him and his holy Spirit stedfastly embraced so the first seventh with the strictnesse pedagogie and servitude under legall ceremonies as the ceremoniall part of it expiring the morall part remaining that second seventh our Christian Sabbath was so chosen and decreed in imitation of the former as many things else corresponding in the Christians and Jewes pollicy conveniently enough acknowledging Gods instruction by patterne where expresse precept not found or plaine and punctually existent which so now decreed many offences in the breach of it for Gods precept is wrapt up in the precept of the Church which if broken both Gods fourth Commandement and his precept to obey the Church and i withall the Churches precept and power are with t in breach of the Sunday despised broken and contemned 36. It seems then as strict if not stricter and heavier then the Jewes Sabbath In the offence as heavie at least though in the performance easier as the burthen of ceremonies vanished with which it was overrated and that strictly to the letter that even no workes might be done as they interpreted it and the rest as scrupulously burdened by their traditions whereas now the rest is fitted to the service and sanctification of the day more then to the ceremony and the workes more spirituall in prayses that then in sacrifices and for the scrupulosity of other works even good workes by them as they by our Saviour reproved we are so allowed works of 1. Necessity of our selves 2. Charity or mercy for the necessity of our poore brother 3. Piety in the sanctification of it for God or workes of Necessity for our selves though not of our callings but fitting us to the better sanctification of the day Mercy and charity for the necessity of our poor brethren fitting the day and our devotion as honouring God with our substance Piety proper to the day for God and sanctification of it to God as honouring him with our selves and soules and with all such laudable recreations allowed by the Church and Christian Magistrates as may make it a joyfull feast not sorrowfull fast which is not the nature of it or a festivall of rejoycing before the Lord wherein to be seene a Christian liberty from the legall servitude and burden of the ceremonies as well as the threats and curse laid on it and other traditions like those of Touch not taste not handle not not to kindle fires dresse meat and many more like cumbring it but now removed besides allowance of more comfort in gracious manner to celebrate it as a joyfull and solemne festivall to the Lord and so a liberty of grace to more alacrity in piety not out of licentiousnesse to prophanenesse though moderate recreations approved in the eye and judgement of the Church and State to avoid some else worse inconveniences are allowed that yet shall not hinder the duties of the day required of which more hereafter And whereas some object why then is the Epiphona or prayer for enclining our hearts to the keeping of it added to the end of it as well as of the other Commandements if it be not punctually in all respects as they to bee understood The answer is plaine from that before taught that it is so added for that part of it that it agreeth in with them for the morality of it so far as that extends which is as it is now by the Church enjoyned it being as we see in all points so fully by the Church delivered demonstrated and explained how farre it is morall and how and in what manner it is in force and by us to be observed Nor boots it them to say Why was the time so punctually commanded and determined more then the place both circumstances being equally materiall to the worship if not wholly morall in the Commandement and so precisely and punctually to be observed for that it appeares the time was present and in their power to observe it and so determined besides that that it was a signe to difference them from other nations then appointed whereas the place that was to be appointed was not yet attained unto as appeares by that so often repeated in the Law When you shall come to the place which the Lord your God shall chuse to put his name there viz. the Temple at Jerusalem in Canaan they being then in the wildernesse or at most the plaines of Moab but had the Temple as well as the Sabbath beene there expresly mentioned and determined yet both Temple and Sabbath being in effect for that particular but types and shadowes of better things to come with other ceremonies of servitude and legall observances then and there to be performed were to expire in the Messias so farre as they were types
the prohibition of all worke in amplification of the command 78. Wherein the amplification chiefly 1. In that the six dayes are allotted commanded and by Gods example also established for labour and workes that the seventh may be a Sabbath a holy and festivall day of rest 2. In that all worke is thereon forbidden not onely to the Master or Magistrate but even 1. To the son and daughter and servant 2. To the cattell Oxe Asse c. 3. Nay the very stranger whatsoever with us in company 79. Why so That it may be the better sanctified by all That the cattell and servant may rest with us That the stranger draw us not away by evill example from God nor we accessory to others offences 80. Why this so strictly urged 1. Because Parents and Masters being in Gods stead are to see inferiours trained up in godlinesse 2. As the head receiveth comfort in the good of the other members so should the superiours from these 3. It is a sin and shame for Parents to bring up children not servants of God but vassalls of the Divell and firebrands of hell or masters of such servants 4. What blessing can be expected from their labours if they sanctifie not the Sabbath with us 5. What comfort can it be for Parents or Masters to see their sons or servants come to wretchednesse or misery or miscarry as they cannot chuse in neglect of Gods service and their duty nay what corrasive to their conscience by suffering it to be accessory to their wickednesse and how shall they be taught if not brought to Church to learne their duties 81. What then the end of the Sabbath 1. For the sanctification of Gods name in holy and publique duties 2. For the rest of even the servant and cattell 3. For the type of the spirituall rest both from sinne by the Messiah and perpetually in the Heavens 82. What reasons of this duty urged here Divers both 1. Interlaced and intimated by the 1. Antiquity and excellency thereof 2. Equity and justice of it 3. Propriety of it to God belonging Expressed by the 1. Reduplication of the Commandement 2. Example of God himselfe 3. His blessing annexed 83. What are the reasons intimated 1. The antiquity and excellency of that day and duty instituted by God himselfe in Paradise in time of mans innocency sanctified first with his owne example intimated in the serious remembrance and reiteration of the command as well as in the example of God Secondly the equity and justice of it that having allowed six dayes to us he may well require the 7. with our best duty and care to sanctifie it Thirdly the propriety the Lord hath to it it being his day or Sabbath not onely made by him as all the rest but the day of his rest besides 84. What reasons expressed 1. The often reduplication of the command as both the day to be remembred rested upon sanctified and no servile worke done not by any person thereon 2. The example of God not onely working the six dayes to appoint that our exercise but also resting and sanctifying this for our instruction and to perswade us 3. His blessing annexed who both rested and sanctified and for that use blessed it so the holy use of it shall procure us a blessing in the blessednesse thereof both to our labours in this to our comfort and rest hereafter to eternall happinesse What more learne you from the sanctifying the Sabbath day With it may be noted the setting apart to holy uses other things whereby the sanctification of the day may be better performed and observed and thereby as it were depending upon the sanctification of the same Which are they With the sanctification of the time may bee well understood to be inferred the sanctifying 1. Place or places for Gods service such as his Altars in the most ancient times the Tabernacle Temple and Synagogue of the Jewes afterwards and since our Churches and Christian Temples throughout the world set apart for such holy meetings and actions principally on that day 2. Persons as of the first borne and eldest of the families for Priests to attend Gods service before the Law and since by Christ appointed the Evangelicall Priests and Ministers of the Gospell who all were principally to attend that day and service 3. Maintenance of those persons and this ordinance tythe offerings and the like consecrated and set apart to this use and maintenance of them that attend his service and consequently maintenance of his honour upon earth whose morality and so perpetuity of institution may abundantly be shewed both before under and since the Law under the Gospell 4. Other things consecrate and set apart to holy uses and performance of Gods service especially on this day both which the Fathers in the Jewes Church and now since in ours abundantly to be shewed as both the sacrifices Arke Cherubins Shewbread Candlesticke and ornaments of the Temple and such things for practise of devotion ornament order or decency in our Christian Churches appointed And Lastly the very bringers offerers of the sacrifices themselves and those that joyne with the Priests in performance of the holy duty the Saints on earth and such as excell in vertue or the communion of Saints a people holy and acceptable to the Lord and no lesse with the holy actions practises and performance of those knowne duties in Gods service and worship on that day of rest such as hearing praying preaching or the like and their comming and presence at them the rites orders ceremonies used in the performance of that duty of publique sanctification of the day all of them included sanctified with it they with the day and the day the better by them But these things are not to be found perpetuall and at all times in the Church Yes the most essentiall of them and for the others as the infancy or growth of the Church did obtaine to more maturity and perfection whereby Gods appointment and for the more accomplished and orderly performance of his service in their due time left to the wise governours discretion instituted What difference between Gods sanctifying the Sabbath and ours His sanctifying it authoritative have full power to constitute and ordaine the setting apart of it to holy uses our sanctifying of it either imitative so appointed to follow him our patterne in the setting of it apart to such holy use or obedientialiter and executive in performance of those holy services and duty therein by him commanded This duty it seems of sanctifying it is vehemently and often here pressed and urged Yes as principally inforced and so five times at least therein urged in memento both of the prevention of the neglect preparation to the duty being by the neglect of it many other good duties are neglected which by it might and ought to bee learned and by the practise of it all other good duties are practised or renewed and recalled to minde by hearing the word then read and preached
Father c. as let thy name be sanctified by all 12. What farther intimated Very apparantly also a I. Confession of a 1. Due to God to have his name hallowed 2. Duty of our selves and others to sanctifie the same 3. Defect that it is too often and ordinarily prophaned and so we pray for reformation II. A deprecation against that abuse and prophanation and that God will be pleased to vindicate his honour III. Profession of praise and thanksgiving for that measure of grace whereby we are able to desire this That hope we have to have it performed by our selves and others 13. How summe you up all these together I. Our confession of a 1. Due it is sit O Lord that thy name should receive the glory and be sanctified 2. Duty of our selves others it is just O Lord that we should give thee praise 3. Defect it is too manifest O Lord that thy name is not honoured as it ought to be but by us and others too much dishonoured and prophaned II. Our petition O Lord let thy name be hallowed by us III. Our intercession we pray not only for our selves but O Lord let thy name be hallowed and sanctified by us all and thy glory among all Nations IV. Deprecation we beseech thee to vindicate thy name and honour and let not thy name be prophaned by the enemy V. Our thansgiving for this well disposednesse to his honour that it hath pleased thee O Lord to give us this grace Our hope in respect of our selves and others that thou O Lord hast ordained thy name by us and many others to be hallowed 14. What the second petition That Gods Kingdom may come the number of true beleevers encreased the Kingdome of grace enlarged and his Kingdome of glory hastened 15. What the order of it That after Gods name sanctified his glory desired and advanced his Kingdome and power of grace is thereby promoted extolled within us in our heart by faith and the working of his good Spirit to the subduing of sinne and all that is against God and without us in the world in which Kingdome we and all that are his may readily obey him and doe his will both men on earth with willingnesse as Saints and Angels in heaven with all readinesse joy and alacrity 16. What parts of this petition Two the 1. Object Gods Kingdome 2. Action to come 17. What meane you by his Kingdome That mighty power and infallible providence seen in guiding governing and directing all things to good end for his glory and we use to shew a threefold Kingdome of his as of I. Power in his universall Kingdome the world unto which all creatures are subject both men and Angels yea and Divels and this Kingdome Gods fold and field and draw-net c. as in the Parables and the parts both 1. Good and bad sinners and others 2. Wicked men and tyrants 3. Who are the tares drosse chaffe goats cockle and the like c. 4. As the godly the sheep and the like wheat gold c. and all shall bow under Gods hand II. Grace in his Church militant on earth of which only the godly are subjects as the wheat gold sheep that shall be severed from the tares and chaffe drosse and goats 3. Glory in the Church triumphant in heaven in the which Angels and Saints or soules of the just after the separation are his subjects 18. What meane you by the action come That his Kingdome may be 1. Erected where it is not 2. Continued and confirmed where it is 3. Restored where it is decayed 4. Encreased and enlarged by his effusion of his graces more abundantly 5. Perfected in us and our translation to felicity 6. Consummate in all and in due time compleat to his glory in eternity 7. Universally ruled and guided according to his good pleasure and will 19. How make you application particularly of the action to the object For the universall Kingdome that it may be so universally governed and if it be his good will all Turkes Pagans Infidels and Hereticks converted or confounded all evill men reduced to godlinesse tyrants and persecutors tamed the Divell and his wicked instruments brideled that his power may be seen in all things and celebrated by all and his good pleasure performed 20. What for his Kingdome of grace That it may be erected where it is not both in our hearts by faith and praces of his Spirit and in all places of the world where it is not or where it never was planted so among the heathen and to the ends of the earth that they may glorifie God with us 2. That it may bee continued and strengthened by his gracious presence and blessings where it is both within us in our hearts and without us where ever in the world 3. That it may be daily encreased and enlarged by more abundant measure of his graces and effusion of his Spirit into our hearts and upon all flesh to his more honour and praise and more and more willing obedience 4. That it may be restored where ever by Satans malice decayed whether within us by temptations of sinne from the world the flesh or the Divell or without us in any others or in the vastity of those decayed but sometime flourishing Churches where Gods honour did formerly stand and as among the Turkes and Jewes at this day in that wonder of the world Jerusalem and her Sion now under Turkish bondage and slavery those famous Churches in Asia Greece and Alexandria now oppressed by savage Barbarisme and Mehometicall insidelity and tyranny and where ever else the true faith now oppressed or opposed that God will be graciously pleased to relieve and restore it 21. How for the Kingdome of glory That as begun in grace in us and others by the power and earnest-penny of his Spirit and gracious revelations of his presence that it may be more perfected by our translation to that beatificall vision of his glory and for as much as it is daily tending to more perfection in the encrease of the number and approaching of the determinate consummation that finally he will hastening the marriage of the Lambe consummate and make compleat that number and give them full complement of all joy in eternity that all Saints and Angels together in fullest happinesse and felicity may set forth and enjoy his glory everlastingly 22. What is the Scepter of this Kingdome of God The power of Gods Spirit ruling every where most perspicuously and over all creatures universally as more particularly by grace in his Church militant and in most excellent glory in his Church triumphant 23. What instruments doth God exercise in it Even all creatures generally as instruments of his glory so shall the very Divells be wicked men and tyrants though unwillingly and constrained godly men more willingly and with readinesse and joy Saints and Angels most willingly cheerfully and speedily and more particularly seen by us in this Kingdome of grace 1. All good Kings and
Sacrarium in superiori parte ubi altare seu mensa Domin● the holy Table or Altar and neere it the Secretorium a retiring place as it were behinde or neere the Altar for the Priest or Bishop till the second service or celebration of the divine mysteries as the Diaconicon or Vestry on oneside or not farre off being not for such Vestry-men and lay Elders as have lately lately got into it or the possession of it but for a repository for laying up the Vasa and Vestimenta sacra sub custodia Diaconi of the Deacon Clerke or Sexton who was subsacrista and into the Sacrarium none but Priests might enter or officiate there Non nisi Presbyterio a●t Sacerdotes Concil Consta● 6. c. 69. and Cyprian lib. 1. Ep. 9. intra septa Altaris nemo Laicus ingrediatur c. Concil Nicen. 2. c. 4. and the Emperour himselfe post oblationem having off●red must depart out of it Theod. lib. 5. c. 18. and sometimes in service that place and the Altar drawne with curtaines may be collected out of St. Chrysostome 66. Why were these things thus observed For the more reverence of the same as was fit and Majesty of those divine mysteries o●●wfull regard they had of the holy things and that ought not to be prophaned or un●everently handled wh●nce the most gracious effects of pi●ty and devotion breeding obedience and good affection to God and his house his oracles and lawes consequently to Princes and Magistrates did ensue with good order and decorum thence flowing through all parts both of the Church and common-wealth for which reason a so next to Gods honour the Fathers and Councels were so serious in promoting the reverence and good order here which might well teach more reverentiall re-respects and religious observance to the holy places and things then ou● unlimitedly irregular Schisma●●ckes and vulgar Libertines by their leading and incensing wil easily yeeld or be brought to by the Churches or almost by any superiours command bee induced to exhibite being once obst●nately set and by such their ring-leaders no lesse un●everently then disobediently and frowa●dly informed 67. But is not thereby too much reverence used or too much magnisicence brought into Churches No godly or wise man would ever thinke so but rather feare all were too litle hee could use or present there and that hath been usually a conceit but of the very prophanest or cavill of the factious for who else would think too much reverence and humility could be used to Godward or too reverent respect or regard could be had of such holy things or too great care had or cost bestowed on them especially so appointed by the gravest worthiest and wisest men of the Christian world for did God create so many good and glorious things as we see to be served himselfe with only the worst and basest a conce●t too strongly savouring of Atheisme and impiety and indeed never thought so by any wise men that would be supposed till these last and worst dayes abounding with iniquity and so now by the very worst men and seum of the people to whom that heathen and sacrilegious Tyrants words as well as actions perhaps well arriding their humours and palats in templis quid facit aurum would very likely be most pleasing and acceptable who robbing them of their riches and ornaments made that his pretence 68. But the word Altar hath offended s●me Mightily no doubt displeased them that for hate of Altars could be content to hunt Churches and all good order in them out of all antiquity and Primitive times and so i● they could out of the Christian world which yet they can never do they may only shew their good will for with the first dawing of Christian Religion when the poore persecuted Christians were faine to use any houses lower rooms or upper chambers as they could be gotten yet sacred to that purpose some times Caverns under ground as some think faine to use lights in them whence as well as for other reasons lights became retained in the Church to testifie they were successours of those poore Primative persecuted Christians yet still that order was observed and though sacred accordingly had in veneration and the holy mysteries most religiously celebrated with the duties belonging performed in all respects to the greatest degree of reverence pertaining to the action and things as well as magnificence that the angustialoci straitnesse of the place time or their poverty and pressure would permit which also from the Apostles owne hands and their successours consequently delivered and in Churches by them consecrated were even in the first times in faire and decent sort performed and when they had gotten root to spread by Gods gracious permission and his planting and watering this garden of his with his owne and his dearest Saints and servants hands so great bounty was freely and liberally soone profferred professed and shewed in their more publicke and stately Churches insomuch that by Saint Chrysostomes testimony in his Homily an Christus sit Deus it was even to wonder what Nations and multitudes converted to Christianity and the faith propagated and Churches over all the world so far as Persia India and Britaine worthy our noting among Mores Scythians Indians and remotest Is●es and Nations immediately after Christ and his Apostles times erected which howsoever afterwards by persecutions often oppressed and overthrowne when they got but respiration from their troubles or any more Halcyon dayes they stil with all alacrity restored to the pristine and ancient state and fashion and so their smallest Oratories and Churches or very Chambers Caverns or Crypte if any where resembled as much as their smalnesse would permit the order and fashion of the more stately and succeeding buildings which were conformed to them as now we may see our Chappels though never so little as much as their smalnesse will suffer conformed to the greater and those to the Churches as all of them doe or of right ought so much as they can conforme to the mother Churches and Cathedrals the patterne in all chiefest points of our religious devotions and descending nearest patern'd to Primitive times 69. How shew you Altars so ancient or in them Even by all the ancient Histories Councels and Fathers as some of them before rehearsed and so Saint Chrysostome lib. 2. and 6. de sacerdotio describeth quae apud altare siunt fieri debent and saith he locus altarivioinus in illus honorem qui immolatur Angelor choris plenus est so Saint Ambrose in Psal. 38. alibi remembreth the Altar and sacrifice as lib. 5. Ep. 33. pro quibus sc. populo Ego quotidie instauro sac●isicium so Saint in Psal. 33. and in orat Psal. 39. and de Civit. Dei lib. 17. cap. 20. and lib. 10. cap. 20. and lib. 22. cap. 8. and cap. 10. and lib. 8. cap. 27. where abundant mention of Altars Christian Altars and their sacrifice and though memoria Martyris