Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n apostle_n sin_n word_n 4,593 5 4.4164 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A62445 Exercitations and meditations upon some texts of Holy Scripture and most in Scripture-phrase and expression. By Samuel Thomsonn, M.A. and Doctor of Physick; formerly student in Magdalen-Hall in Oxford. Thomsonn, Samuel, b. 1643? 1676 (1676) Wing T1035; ESTC R221734 178,823 458

There are 10 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the words in our Church-Catechism are a death unto sin and a new-birth unto righteousness So said the Apostle buried with Christ in Baptism wherein also we are risen with Him through faith c. Col. 2. 12. God who usually accompanies His own Ordinance with His blessing will not frustrate our expectation in any of those good things which He hath promised therefore we must strive to be perswaded that remission of sins and regeneration or a renewedness of life by Baptism is offered unto us and that we receive it therein In as much as by Baptism we are incorporated into Christ and receive His Holy Spirit unless we reject the promises there made unto us and so render them unprofitable to our selves The right use of Baptism is placed in faith and repentance if thou wouldst use Baptism aright as it should be then repent and believe so we read in sundry places of the Gospels and also in the Acts of the Apostles that is that we be perswaded that we are purged by the blood of Christ from our sins and be sensible that we have His holy Spirit dwelling in us and so daily to meditate of mortifying our corrupt flesh and of yielding obedience to all Gods commands Baptism is a Sacrament of the New Testament by the washing of water representing the powerful washing of Eph. 5. 26. the Blood and Spirit of Christ and so 1 Cor. 6. 11. Heb. 10. 22. sealing up our regeneration or new birth our entrance into the Covenant of Grace our ingraffing into Christ and into His mystical body which is the Joh. 3. 5. Tit. 3. 5. Church Acts 8. 27. This Sacramental washing sealeth to those that are within Gods Covenant their birth in Christ and entrance into Christianity The Covenant which is in general to all believers is in Baptism especially made and established with every one of the faithful And it is always ratified and sure even to them that fall when they do repent Although Novatus and his Sect taught otherwise Neither do they enter into a new Covenant after their falls but that which was entered into is restored renewed and confirmed again We must often meditate on and consider of the Covenant made and entered into in our Baptism Baptism came in place of circumcision and keepeth analogy and proportion with it for both of them were a Sacrament of entrance or of receiving into the Covenant of Grace Baptism came in place of circumcision 1. By the command of God God sent John to baptize with water so we have it Joh. 1. 33. 2. By the Ministry of John therefore he was called John the Baptist so we have it Mat. 3. 1 In those days came John the Baptist preaching in the wilderness c. 3. It was sanctified and confirmed by our Saviour Christ Himself being baptized by John Mat. 3. 13. 4. By his giving commission to His Apostles and Ministers to continue the Mat. 28. 18. same in His Church unto the end Baptism is therefore also called the circumcision made without hands or t●ue regeneration in the Spirit in puting off the body of the sins of the flesh Col. 2. 11 by the circumcision of Christ That is by virtue of the gift of regeneration which is the spiritual circumcision whereof Christ alone is the worke● Buried with Him in Baptism c. So Baptism is our Circumcision on comes to us in the place of Circumcision that is by which the same things are confirmed and in all things assured to us in the N●w Testament which were confirmed and conferred on those in the Old Testament by Circumcision The words of institution of Baptism are recorded in Mat. 28. 19. Mark 16. 14. Go ye into all the world and preach the● Gospel to every creature that is to every rational and intelligent creature or Teach all Nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved but he that believeth not shall be damned To be baptized in the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost signifies and imports these things 1. That it is done by the command of God 2. To testifie that by this Rite and Ceremony that he that is thus baptized is received into Grace and favour by the eternal Father for and through His Son and is sanctified by the Holy Ghost We must still understand this of believers and them alone for Mark 16. 1● He that believeth not shall be damned and that for all his Baptism unless he believe So here is the principal end of Baptism 3. To be baptized in the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost is to shew that the p●●son baptized is bound to know and acknowledg to believe and trust in to worship and fear to honour and call upon this true God Father Son and Holy Ghost and this is the second end of Baptism which St. Paul shews in these words 1 Cor. 1. 13 Were ye baptized in the name of ●aul ●● as much as if he had said ye must be His to whom in Baptism ye have given and obliged your selves given your names unto and in whose name ye were bapti●e● Of Baptism there are two parts 1. The water of Baptism 2. The lawful use thereof 1. By the water of Baptism is signified both the Spirit and the Blood of Christ spilt upon the Cross This is that blood of sprinkling which speaketh better Heb 12. 24. things than that of Abel We are redeemed by the precious blood of Christ as of a lamb without blemish and without 1 Pet. 1. 19. spot This is the fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness Zech. 13. 1. As the Blood of Christ so also the Spirit of Christ is signified by the water of Baptism Therefore said our Saviour If any man thirst let him come unto Me Joh. 7. 37 38 39. and drink he that believeth on Me out of His belly shall flow rivers of living water this spake He of the Spirit which they that believe on Him should receive John indeed baptized with water but Acts 11. 16 ●e shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost The lawful use of the water of Bap●ism is perceived in the action both of the Minister administring it and also of the faithful who receive Baptism The action of the Minister is two●old 1. The Sanctification of the water 2. The outward washing 1. The Sanctification of the water is the setting it apart to this end to signifie the Blood and Spirit of Christ by His ordinance and institution which the words of institution do declare 2. The outward washing is a most sure sign pledg and seal of the inward washing whereby we with the Blood and Spirit of Christ are washed from out sins He hath washed us from our sins Rev. 1. 5. in His own blood So many of us as Rom. 3. 1. are baptized into Jesus Christ are
man shall set upon thee to hurt thee It is endless to quote all the texts in the Old and New Testament to this purpose I will only add a few Corollaries 1. God will have glory attributed Corollar●●● to Him not only as He is the Creator and Upholder of Heaven and Earth but also the most High Wise Just and Great Governor and Directer of all things This is against the Figments of the Bpicureans and Pelagians 2. This Doctrine of Providence may confirm and strengthen our hearts against the Blasphemies of the Manichees and Libertines who say that God willeth sin as it is sin Whereas He willeth the act but not the evil of the act c. 3. Against the Opinion of the Stoicks for all things are govern'd by Gods most free and unchangable Decree 4. Therefore He will be acknowledged and praised by us as the Author Fountain and Worker of all good things for nothing in any creature is or can be of good unto us but by Gods Will affectually working in it and by it 5. Seeing all good things are from God Let us not sacrifice to our own ●●● 1. 16. nets or burn incense to our own drag that is not resting in creatures or second causes by which we may be benefited but giving all glory and praise to God to acknowledg the creatures are but instruments and ministers in His hand and by His ordering to do good unto us 6. Sith nothing rashly or casually happeneth to us but all things betide us by Gods most Blessed Just and profitable Decree and Good-will towards us Let us effectually be stirred up by knowing and acknowledging hereof to exercise patience in all our adversities As Psal 39. 9. David said I was dumb and opened not my mouth because Thou hast done it Job 1. 21. And Job the Lord hath taken away blessed be the Name of the Lord. 7. Let our confidence and comfort be sound firm and established in the Lord who will defend and preserve us in the midst of all enemies and dangers moderating and ordering all evils so that they tend to our good and salvation For we know that all things work Rom. 8. 28. together for good to them that love God 8. By all our past and present afflictions let us be bettered and amended Sith not by chance but by God they are inflicted upon us that we may say Psal 119. 71. It is good for me that I have been afflicted c. 9. For future crosses and afflictions seeing they are signs and tokens of Gods anger against sin Let us fear them and strive to avoid them by fleeing and abstaining from sin the cause of them 10. Let us not faint much less despair when we are in dangers troubles or adversities when the outward means of our deliverance fail and the creatures seem to be against us because God is not ty'd to help by them For man lives not by bread alone c. The Mat. 4. 4. 16. 18. gates of Hell shall not prevail c. There 1 Sam. 14. 6. is no restraint to the Lord to save by many or by few He can deliver either by means or without means or against means 11. Seeing all events are ordered by God and no wholsome counsels can be undertaken without Him neither doth any thing please Him but what we undertake according to His Word Let us not be lifted up in confidence of our own wisdom and power c. but demeaning our selves in the fear of God let us pray that all our actions may be directed by Him and so blessed unto us and that we may never depart from His Will revealed unto us And then confidently wait on Him for s●ccess 12. Sith we know as before we said God hath a care of all things especially of mankind and most principally of His own Children whom He peculiarly loveth and careth for so as Christ said the hairs of our head Mat. 10. 31. are all number'd and we are of more value than many Sparrows Let us in doing our duty faithfully in our places rest confidently on the Providence of God Casting all our care on Him for He careth for us EXERCITATION THE FOURTEENTH Rev. 20. 12 15 Verses And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire EXpect not a Logical Analysis of the words and a procedure thereon accordingly that I leave to Divines in their Sermons But according to my use in my former Exercitations to chuse out some heads out of the words read and so meditate and dilate upon them And here we may consider these four heads 1 Death 2 Judgment 3 Hell 4 Heaven Accordingly we shall frame our ensuing discourse 1. Death out of these words And I 1 Death saw the dead c. First there must be death before they could be dead 2. Judgment out of these words 2 Judgment Stand before God c. and they were judged c. 3. This Judgment shall be according to their works They that have done good shall go into life everlasting and 3 Heaven they that have done evil into everlasting 4 Hell fire So it is in the Creed of Holy Athanasius And so also in the Apostles Creed I believe that Christ shall come to judg both the quick and dead I believe the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting So also in the Nicene Creed That is everlasting life for the good in heaven and everlasting life for the wicked in hell in those never Mark 9. 44. dying flames where the worm dyeth not and the fire never goeth out First to speak of Death Death is the 1 Death fruit of Sin Sin brings shame misery and death 1. Sin brings shame for before the fall our first Parents were both naked Gen. 2. 25. and were not ashamed But since the fall sin causeth shame in all men and women except those who are come to that height of impudence that they are past shame of whom the Prophet speaks Were they ashamed when they had Jer. 6. 15. committed abomination nay they were not at all ashamed neither could they blush Therefore said the Apostle What Rom. 6. 21. fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed c 2. Sin brings all sorts of miseries calamities losses c. I have wounded them Jer. 30. 14 15. with the wounds of an enemy with the chastisement of a cruel one for the multitude of thine iniquities because thy sins were increased I have done these things unto thee 3. Sin brings death the end of these Rom. 6. 21. things is death So we see that sin guiltiness and
baptized into His death Christ loved the Church and gave Himself for it th●● He might sanctifie and cleanse it by the Eph. 5. 25 26. washing of water through the word The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from 1 Joh. 1. 7. all sin As the filthiness of the body is washed away with water so we are purged from our sins by the blood and spirit of Christ Ye are washed ye are sanctified 1 Cor. 6. 11. ye are justified in the Name of the Lor● Jesus and by the Spirit of our God That inward washing is made or done both by the blood and by the spirit of Christ 1. Washing through the blood o● Christ is Justification So we have it Acts 22. 16 Arise and be baptized calling on the name of the Lord. 2. Washing through the spirit is regeneration when we are by the Holy Spirit regenerated or born again to a new life 1 Cor. 6. 11. Thus far of the action of the Minister now to speak of the action of him or her baptized Every faithful person that is baptized receiveth the outward Baptism of water that there may be signified and sealed up unto him that he is assuredly washed from his sins by the blood and spirit of Christ as surely as his body is sprinkled or washed with water Then will I Ezek. 36. 25. sprinkle said the Lord clean water upon you and ye shall be clean from all your filthinesses and from all your Idols I will cleanse you To be washed with the blood and spirit of Christ signifieth to be made partakers of the Covenant of Grace namely to be reconciled to God justified regenerated adopted to be the Son or Child of God and to be endowed with the freedom of the Sons of God All are washed with water but believers only by the blood and spirit of Christ Therefore not all that are baptized receive remission of sins and regeneration but the believers only For without a man have his name in the Covenant the seal set to it confirms nothing unto him To the receiving of the Sacrament as very worthily it is in our Liturgy there must be adjoyned thanksgiving which is presently performed by every person that is baptized if he be adult or of years of discretion or by the witnesses in his stead if he be an infant who when he comes to years of discretion all his life long ought to be thankful unto God for this benefit Q. What are the ends of Baptism A. Especially these four 1. To be a seal to us of our receiving into the Covenant of Grace and fellowship with Christ and His Church 2. By the outward washing to represent and confirm to us the inward cleansing of our Souls which standeth in justification and regeneration Eph. 5. 26. So in this sence Baptism as it is 1 Pet. 3. 21. is said to save us because it sealeth unto us eternal salvation 3. To mind us of repentance and reforming our lives for we are baptized with water unto repentance Mat. 3. 11. 4. To be sealed to the certain hope of resurrection and of an eternal blessed life In Baptism Original sin is washed and taken away especially as concerning the guilt that is to say the fault and the punishment there remaining notwithstanding the vitiation and the sickness namely wicked lusts and inclination to evil and that to this end that we might all our life long fight against sin and the Devil who is the Author of sin But the Papists say that by Baptism rightly administred not only the guiltiness but also the corruption of Original sin is so washed away as that it is not afterward properly accounted a sin But we contrarily distinguish thus of sin sin in regard of the guiltiness or obnoxiousness to the wrath of God and also in regard of the punishment together by one act is taken away in Baptism But in regard of that error and corruption of Nature it is not at the first wholly taken away but successively and by little and little or by degrees it is extinguished even as our renovation or renewing by the Holy Ghost is by little and little begun increased and carried on in us And this we evince by these four reasons 1. Else St. Paul would not so greatly bewail his Original sin if after Baptism it ceased to be a sin when-as he cryed out O miserable man that I am who shall Rom. 7. 23 24. deliver me from the body of this death● I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members 2. Original sin is called a sin exceeding or out of measure sinful and a sin that hangeth fast on or easily encompasseth Rom. 7. 13. us about Heb. 12. 1. 3. Concupiscence is the root of actual sin and therefore after Baptism it must needs properly be a sin 4. Unless that concupiscence were a sin where would or could be that vehement and hot combate between the flesh and the spirit for the flesh lusteth against Gal. 5. 17. the spirit and the spirit against the ●lesh and these are contrary the one to the other Q. Why was Christ baptized what could Baptism signifie or seal unto Him He had no sin to wash away A. ● That He might fulfil all righteousness that is for us and on our behalf Mat. 3. 15. 2. That He might in His own person commend and confirm Baptism against all those who so debase and decry it 3. That He might sanctifie our Baptism in Himself 4. That by Baptism we might know Him to have entered into His office and the execution of it Q. How doth Baptism belong to Infants and how are they capable of performing the conditions required A. I have perused the learned Exercitations of Mr. John Tombes B. D. formerly a Cotemporary with me in Magdalen-Hall who is the best and most learned of that opinion and perswasion who hath many arguments against Infant Baptism which require a large volume particularly to answer I shall therefore only lay down some argument to assert the laudable use of the Churches Infant-Baptism which do fully convince and satisfie me and I suppose by God's blessing on serious meditation and consideration may satisfie those which will not wilfully close their eyes against the truth Arguments 1. Because Infants are comprehended in the Covenant of the Grace of God and therefore both the faith of the Parents themselves and also of the Church 1 Cor. 7. 14. is confirmed by this sign that God will be the God and Saviour as of the faithful Parents so of their seed and children which promise of His He at His good Rom. 8. 29 30. Tit. 3. 5. time performeth in His elect 2. Because to them belongeth also the promise of forgiveness of sins through the blood of Christ 3. Because they belong to the Church of God 4. Because they are redeemed by the blood of
Baptism are the Sacrament of our reception and entrance into the Church Q. Wherein do Circumcision and Baptism differ A. 1. In the Rite or Ceremony which is not the same in Baptism as in Circumcision for in Baptism is only a washing but in Circumcision a cutting off the foreakin of the flesh 2. In the circumstance of the sex or age Circumcision belonged only to Males and at eight days old Baptism belongs to both sexes Male and Female and presently after they are born 3. In the manner of signifying Circumcision on God's part promised Grace through the Messiah to come but Baptism through Christ already come And on their part they being Circumcised were received into Grace by believing on the Messiah to come but we through faith in Him already come 4. In the particular promise Circumcision had also the promise of corporal blessings as of the land of Canaan c. But Baptism hath no such special promise of any temporal benefit 5. In the manner of obliging Circumcision on their part obliged them to the keeping of the whole Law Ceremonial Judicial and Moral but Baptism obligeth us only to the keeping of the Moral Law that is to faith and repentance 6. In the objects and duration Circumcision was commanded to the posterity of Abraham only and the Proselytes and was to endure but till the coming of Christ Baptism is instituted for all Nations that will come into the society of the Church and to endure to the end of the world To close up all with these few heads Aphorisms about Baptism 1. Baptism avails though administred by a contemptible person as much as if it were administred by an Apostle for if Baptism were in the merit or worth of the Minister then it did not belong unto Christ 2. The power of baptizing the Lord hath reserved to Himself it is Christ alone that baptizes with the Holy Ghost the applying of the outward Element Christ hath committed to His Ministers lawfully called and deputed 3. Baptism is the same as He is by whose power and authority it is administred Not as He is by whom it is performed 4. Every true believer in Baptism is made a King and a Priest and Prophet Rev. 1. 5. Christ washes us from our sins in His own blood and so makes us Kings and Priests unto God and His Father So St. Crysostome When as Christ hath washed us from our sins in the laver of Baptism by His blood He makes us Kings and Priests unto God Baptism as we have seen is a high Ordinance of God and a means whereby He hath appointed to communicate Christ and His benefits to our Souls and therefore not to be neglected or slightly esteemed but used with all reverence and thankful devotion when it may be had Yet where God denyeth it either in regard of the shortness of the Infants life or by any other unavoidable necessity there comes no danger from the want of Sacraments but only from the contempt of them The right use of Baptism is when inwardly in thy heart thou feelest some motion to sin through thy lusts then meditate on that solemn vow thou madest to God in thy Baptism And if by infirmity thou fallest once or oftner into some sin still have recourse to Baptism that thy Soul may be encouraged therehence For although Baptism be but once administred yet that once testifieth that all mans sins past present or to come are washed away 1 Pet. 3. 21. Eph. 5. 25 26 27. And never rest before thou hast a feeling of that renewing power signified in Baptism namely the power of Christ's death Mortifying sin and the virtue of His resurrection in the renewing of the Spirit EXERCITATION THE THIRD Of the Lords Supper the second Sacrament of the New Testament IT hath several appellations it is called 1. The Lord's Supper or Caena Domini from the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Communis caena vocatur à communione vescentium For seorsim prandebant prisci Romani sed cum amicis caenabant About Supper-time the Jews were to eat the Paschal Lamb which circumstance of time the Church hath changed according to the liberty in these things she hath It is called the Lord's Supper because our Lord Jesus Christ sitting at His last Supper ordained it instead of the Passeover 2. It is called the Table of the Lord 1 Cor. 10. 21. 3. A convention of the Church 1 Cor. 11. 20 33 When ye meet together in one place c. And When ye come together to eat 4. The Eucharist because of the usual Thanksgiving 5. A Sacrifice so it was called by the ancient Fathers non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aut meritorium not a propitiatory or meritorious Sacrifice as the Papists would have it but an Eucharistical Sacrifice because it is a solemn commemoration and celebration of the propitiatory Sacrifice of Christ 6. At length it was called Missa from the offerings sent by the rich to the relief of the Poor or from a dismission of the Congregation after the publick Ordinances But we retaining the appellation or name delivered in Scripture call it the Supper of the Lord. There are many detestable and abominable differences between the Lord's Supper and the Popish Mass which I think not fit here to recite as not at all for edification I define the Lords Supper thus The instituted and commanded distribution of Bread and Wine by Christ Himself in which Christ is certainly promised to me and all true believers Or thus The Lord's Supper is the distributing and taking of Bread and Wine commanded by Christ to all true believers that He might testifie by these tokens that He gave His body to death for us and shed His blood and that He gave us these to eat and drink to assure us that He will dwell in us and nourish and quicken us to eternal life First He assures and seals that He gave His body for us upon the Cross and that His blood was as truly shed for us as we see with our eyes the bread to be broken for us and the cup to be given to us Next that He by that His body Crucified and by that His blood poured out will as certainly nourish our Souls to eternal life as surely as our bodies are fed by Bread and Wine taken from the hand of the Minister which are reached forth unto us as seals and pledges of the body and blood of Christ The Rites or Signs here are the Bread broken and eaten the Wine distributed and taken or the breaking and distributing of the Bread the distributing and drinking of the Wine The things signified are the body of Christ Crucified and the blood of Christ poured out the eating and drinking of them signifie our union with Christ by faith whereby we being made partakers of Him and all His benefits from Him as branches from a Vine do suck and draw eternal life or nourishment to eternal life Of this our union and communion with Christ
while we are here in this life for God knows as we have souls so bodies also which have need of sustentation food and rayment which are needful for us And God hath promised not to deny us things which are needful 6. If we in the first place do seek the kingdom of God and his righteousness all these things shall be added unto us and given in as an advantage for they are but accessive and must come in in the second place 7. Our Saviour iterateth His charge unto us therefore take no thought for the morrow for the morrow shall take thought for the things of it self sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof Therefore let us not be troubled through the care and apprehension of future time which is a distrustful a vain unprofitable and sinful care Time present is only ours for the future what shall betide either us or ours is known only to God who hath times events and seasons in His own hand There is a Two-fold care of the things of this life 1. A care of diffidence distrusting Gods providence mercy and goodness which is here condemned 2. A care of diligence to use industry and diligence in our places and callings for the supply of our wants and of those who depend upon us with a moderate care and that in reference to Gods command and resting on His providence promises blessings and goodness This care is good and commendable so it be moderate not to hinder us from or interrupt us in our holy duties We know it is Gods Ordinance in the sweat of our face to eat our bread to Gen 3. 19. use pains diligence and industry And the Apostle commands that if any will 2 Thes 3. 10 12. not work neither should he eat And exhorteth that with quietness we work and eat own bread Not to live like droans devouring the honey which the laborious Bee brings in but to eat our own bread bread and maintainance of our own getting and earning without being burdensom or chargeable to others He becometh poor that dealeth with a Prov. 10. 4. slack hand but the hand of the diligent maketh rich And in the same Chapter the wise-man hath it the blessing of ver 22. the Lord it maketh rich and He addeth no sorrow with it So the meaning is the blessing of the Lord which accompanies our honest diligent endeavours that maketh rich and the Lord will add no sorrow with it or we shall have His blessing with comfort in the enjoyment of it So a little that a righteous Prov. 16. 8. man hath is better than the treasures of many wicked Our blessed Saviour compares the Mat. 13. 22. cares of this world to thornes which as the Apostle speaks pierce or bore a man through with many sorrows 1 Tim. 6. 10. 1. These cares they are wonderful thornes and cause vexation of spirit they beget many sorrows and those sorrows at last cause death for worldly 2 Cor. 7. 10. sorrow causes death 2. They are choaking thornes they stifle and keep down all the gracious Seed of the word yea the very natural sproutings of nobleness ingenuity and morality in the dispositions of men 3. They are deceitful thornes they will deceive us at last 4. They are vanishing thornes nothing so apt to catch fire as thornes and so easily quenched They are quenched Psal 118. 12. like a fire of thornes said the Psalmist Irregular cares are both superfluous and also sinful 1. Superfluous for as unto us belongs the industry but the care belongs unto God unto us the labour and use of lawful means but unto God the blessing and success of all God must be trusted with the events of all our pains and industry our cares can never bring to pass our smallest desires the care of events was ever God 's Prerogative and belongs wholly to His providence 2. As irregular cares are superfluous so also sinful too for they are worldly distrusting of Gods providence they Jam. 4. 3. are adulterous cares stealing away the heart from God they take off the heart from the word and make it become unfruitful In all these and other respects they are sinful and we ought to arm our selves against them For as in avenging our selves we sinfully take Gods sword of justice out of His hand to whom vengeance belongeth and I Rom. 12. 19. will recompence saith the Lord. So in carking or caring for our selves we intrench on Gods Prerogative Royal who hath bid us to cast all our care upon Phil. 4. 6. Him for He careth for us Therefore let us be careful for nothing but in Phil. 4. 19. every thing by prayer and supplication with thanks giving let our requests be made known unto God And our God shall supply all our need according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus Yet let us use the means and be diligent in the works of our calling Now in the labour and works of our calling there is required a double action of faith 1. To do our labour in good manner that is to the glory of God and the good of men with whom we live 2. In our dayly labours to restrain and moderate our care Men commonly take upon them a double care as First to do the works and labours of their callings Secondly to procure a blessing and good success to their labours But faith in God where it reigns it stirs up the hearts of men only to the first care which is the faithful discharge of their labours and duties in their place And it restrains them from the second for a blessing and good success and makes them to leave that wholly to God For when men have done their duty which appertains unto them then Faith makes them without any more ado to wait upon God for a blessing which as we said before is Gods part as the former which is the faithful discharge of our duties in our places is our part Therefore it is said cast thy burden Psal 55. 2● upon the Lord and He shall sustain thee Now this faith whereby we depend upon God for the success of our labours hath an infallible ground namely that God best knows our wants and He will give us all things which He in His Wisdom knows to be necessary for us So Christ saith your heavenly Father Mat. 6. 32. knows that we have need of these things There is no want to those that fear Him Psal 34. 9 10. The young Lions do lack and suffer hunger but they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing If men by faith would build on these promises they need not like drudges of the world toyl and spend themselves and the best part of their days in worldly cares so as they do For they should have a greater blessing from God with less care if they would trust Him and also they should have far more time than they have to care for
18 There is no fear in love c. And also largely to that place Rom. 8. 15 Ye have not received the Spirit of bondage again to fear c. That place in Rev. 21. 8 But the fearful c. shall be cast into the lake of sire c. answered What is that fear of God here commanded farther set down in three particulars Q. What are the special marks of the true fear of God answered in seven particulars Q. What the arguments are to induce us to fear God answered in eight things In way of a conclusion Thirteen sentences about the fear of God Exercitation V. Of waiting upon God upon these words My Soul wait thou only upon God for my expectation is from Him Three ingredients to wait upon God What waiting upon God is Four signs of our waiting upon God Four helps for strengthening us against troubles An explanation out of the Greek of waiting and expectation The manner of our waiting in three things Gods waiting upon us Wait upon God only What expectation is What we expect from God Examples of the miseries of those who would not wait upon God Exercitation VI. The way to salvation repentance and faith On these words Mark 1. 15 Repent ye and believe the Gospel What repentance is Repentance is twofold 1. Legal 2. Evangelical What they both are The signs whereby they may be known Four parts of Evangelical repentance Repentance must be renewed What faith is Five acceptations of faith The object of true saving faith The manner of Gods working of it The absolute necesssity of it in every part of Gods worship Encouragements to labour for it Exercitation VII Holiness on these words Psal 93. 5. Holiness becometh thine house O Lord for ever What Holiness is 1. As applyed to God 2. To believers Our holiness must bear a conformity to Christs holiness in four things What sanctification is The terms from which and to which Two degrees of sanctification Two parts of it The ends of it in two things What we must do that we may be holy Four things thereto Three things to be observed for holiness sake Christ is the principle of our holiness and also the pattern of it the comeliness of holiness Of Gods house How holy it is and how holy we must be A Scriptural Prayer to God for Holiness A farther Encomium and praise of Holiness Exercitation VIII Of Swearing On these words Jer. 23. 9 For because of Oaths the Land mourneth A sad complaint of the over-spreading and greatness of this horrid sin of prophane swearing Of taking Gods name in vain Superstitious and foolish swearing How an Oath is to be taken The parts of an Oath The form of an Oath The end of an Oath The divers kinds of an Oath How an Oath is to be performed Is it lawful for Christians to take an Oath Proved affirmatively by four reasons An exploding the Opinion of the Anabaptists c. by six Arguments By whom we must swear About what things an Oath may be taken Whether all Oaths are to be kept How God in Scripture is said to swear The sum of the third Commandment Six Corollaries Of the government of the tongue Exercitation IX Hardness os heart On these words And Pharaoh hardened his heart at this time also The Plague of hardness of heart Examples of it To harden the heart what it is 1. In reference to God 2. ●o Satan 3. To a mans self Of conscience what it is How did God harden Pharaohs heart and how he did i● himself The miseries ensuing hardness of heart Exeroitation X. Of the Sabbath On these words in Exod. 31. 13 14 15 16 17. 20. 8 Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy The necessity of a sabbath The morality of it The excellency of the Moral Law above the Ceremonial or Judicial What the sanctifying of the sabbath is the parts of it A short Paraphrase on Isai 58. 13 14. which is borrowed The strict observation of the sabbath belongs more to us then to the Jews the reasons of the alteration of it How the sabbath is a sign Woe to sabbath prophaners and sabbath idlers The right manner of sanctifying of the sabbath Be not weary of sabbath-duties For Reasons why it is called sabbath The many sabbaths of the Jews formerly Three Reasons why God commands us to observe the sabbath We must lay out our strength in sabbath-duties Exercitation XI Of Patience On these words Luk. 21. 19 In your patience possess ye your souls Of afflictions to the Godly 1. For correction 2. For tryal Inferences upon each Examine for what particular sin God so afflicts Afflictions a sign of Gods love Why afflictions are called temptations What patience is Of impatience The good effects of patience Motives to it The true nature of patience towards God our selves and others Four Arguments to strengthen us in our patience The vices contrary Exercitation XII Pride and humility On these words James 4. 6 God resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble What Pride is The parts of Pride How it is shewed Of pride against God and of pride towards men Of the sin of the fallen Angels and of the sin of our first Parents Four helps to subdue pride What grace is Several acceptations of grace A description of humility Humility towards God humility towards men Five means to attain humility towards God Three marks of humility towards men Humility farther described and praised Incitations to humility Some additional notes about pride and humility Fourteen Aphorisms about humility Exercitation XIII Of Care On these words 1 Pet. 5. 10 Casting all your care upon God for He careth for you Seven Arguments against carefulness Twofold care of outward things Worldly cares compared to thorns in four respects Irregular cares are 1. Superfluous 2. Sinful We are to do our duty faithfully and then trust in God who is our Father and the great house-keeper of all the earth The fourth Petition in the Lords Prayer fully explained If we rowl our selves upon God He hath engaged Himself to relieve us Outward things are necessary for us in a threefold respect Rest upon Gods Providence What Gods actual Providence is Of the fate of the heathen Philosophers The parts of Providence Depend upon Providence Wait Gods time Live by faith Be we diligent in our callings The tenderness fidelity and wisdom of Gods Providence The twelve miracles observed about Manna More of Gods Providence and twelve Corollaries thereabout Exercitation XIV Of death judgment hell and heaven On these words Rev. 20. 12. 15 And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire 1. Of death what death is The causes of it The
other true believers that God for ever will be the God of His people and of their posterity also if they walk in God's ways and make not void His Covenant And they again promise and oblige themselves to God to be His people to keep His Covenant by believing in Him and obeying His Commandments Let all those that truly endeavour to keep Covenant with God beware of Covenant-breaking if they fail that way be duly humbled for it and be more watchful and wary for the future striving to recover themselves by serious and renewed repentance Let them set God always before their Psal 16. 8. eyes endeavouring to walk before Him Gen. 17. 1. and to be perfect The meaning is let them bear God always in their mind as present with them rest themselves by faith on Him alone depend upon His Providence and regulate all their actions according to His Will revealed in His Word God hath made His Covenant between Him and all such and God declares it is so and enlargeth on it saying to Abraham I will establish My Verse 2. 4. 7. Covenant between Me and thee and thy seed after thee to be a God unto thee and to thy seed after thee These words to be a God to thee signifie as if God had said By virtue of my Covenant I will communicate to thee and thy seed the effects of all the perfections of My nature and all that I am in My Self I will be on their behalf and as I do live eternally so will I cause all mine to live likewise And so in reference to our part of the Covenant it is as much as if God had said I will be He alone whom thou shalt serve acknowledge and worship as God and upon whom alone thou shalt absolutely depend forsaking all others For so the words of the Covenant are I will put My Law in their inward Jer. 31. 33 34. parts and write it in their hearts and I will be their God and they shall be My people and they shall all know Me from the least even to the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their iniquities and remember their sins no more And in Ezekiel it is laid down thus Ezek. 36. 25 26 27. I will sprinkle clean water upon you even the sanctifying Graces of My Spirit and ye shall be clean from all your filthiness and from all your Idols will I cleanse you A new-heart also will I give you and a new-spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and will give you an heart of flesh And I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes and ye shall keep My judgments and do them They that are thus brought into the Ezek. 20. 37. bond of the Covenant may say and so said the Apostle Paul I am perswaded Rom. 8. 38 39 that neither death nor life nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall ever be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. I entered into Covenant with thee saith the Lord God it is in the Hebrew the Lord Jehovah Where-ever in Scripture in the Old Testament the Word Lord or God is written in great or Capital Letters it is in the Hebrew Jehovah Jehovah setteth out God's eternity in that it contains all times to come or present or past The 3 syllables in the word Jehovah contain the notes of all times The first syllable Je denotes the time to come The second Ho the time present The third Vah the time past God hath His being and is from Himself He always is always liveth and always is the same For He is unchangeable Mal. 3. 6. So none can say IAM but Exod. 3. 14. God alone Thus the title given to Christ which Rev. 1 4 8. is and which was and which is to come is an express interpretation of Jehovah It sets out also God's Self-existency coming from the Verb that signifieth to be God gives a being to Himself to His Creatures and to His Promises When-ever in Scripture some special Levit. 19. 12 14 16 18 25 30 34 37. Mercy is promised or some extraordinary Judgment threatned the Name of Jehovah is affixed or added I am Jehovah To shew that God is just and faithful in the performance both of His promises and threatnings This Name Jehovah as the Hebrews well note consisteth of Letters quiescent or Letters of rest to shew that there is no rest till we come to Jehovah and that in Him we may safely rest There the wicked cease Job 3. 17. from troubling and there the weary be at rest The Septuagint in the Greek Translation do almost every-where render the Name Jehovah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord for He that is Jehovah namely whose essence and being is from Himself who giveth to all their beings and preserveth and upholdeth them therein He is most absolutely and properly Lord. Jehovah sometimes is used essentially for the three Persons in the blessed Trinity joyntly as Exodus 20 2 5 7. Sometimes personally for the Father Jehovah said to my Lord sit thou on my Psal 110. 1. right hand c. that is God the Father to God the Son Sometime Jehovah is used personally for the Son as Jehovah rained from Gen. 19. 24. Jehovah fire and brimstone upon Sodom and Gomorrah out of Heaven that is God the Father from God the Son For the Father hath committed all judgment Joh. 5. 22. to the Son And sometimes the Name Jehovah is given to the Holy Ghost as it is understood and gathered out of Numb 12. 6. God in the Hebrew tongue in the Old Testament hath been pleased to name and manifest Himself by ten Names whereof three are from His being or ab esse as Jehovah Jah Ehejeh Sum Ero from His eternal Essence Three more from His Almighty Power or a posse as El Eloheh Elohim And three from His being over all or a prae-esse as Adonai Shaddai Jehovah Tzebaoth or Deus exercituum the Lord of Hosts And the last Name of God is from His eminency or ab eminere Gnel jon which signifies God above all or Lord over all This last Name of God is used in Psal 73. 11. Is there knowledg in the most High And in Genes 14. 10. 20. Blessed be Abraham of the most High God the possessor of Heaven and Earth And blessed be the most High God c. He alone is King of Kings and Lord Rev. 19. 16. of Lords By His Name Jehovah hath He been Exod. 6. 3. Isai 26. 4. made known to us Therefore trust we in the Lord for ever for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength As all things were made by Him and for Him so all things are upheld and preserved by Him He
justice and judgment and so opened to him a way that he might run head-long to his own utter ruine and destruction So God confounds his implacable enemies two ways here 1. By hardness of heart which ariseth as we said before when God with-draweth His Grace from a man and leaveth him to himself so as he goeth on from sin to sin and never repenteth to the last gasp And we must esteem of it as a most fearful and terrible judgment of God for when the heart is possessed therewith it becomes so flinty and rebellious that a man will never relent or turn to God This was manifest in Pharaoh for though God sent most grievous plagues upon him and all the Land of Egypt yet would he not submit or humble himself save only for a fit while the hand of God was so heavy upon him for when the hand of God was removed he returned to his former obstinacy wherein he persisted until he was drowned in the red Sea And this judgment of God of hardness of heart is the more fearful because when a man is in the midst of all misery he feels no misery 2. God confounds His enemies as by hardness of heart so by final desperation I say final because all kind of desperation is not evil for a man may despair of himself and of his own power in the matter of Salvation which tends to his everlasting comfort But final desperation is when a man utterly despairs of the pardon of his sins and of everlasting life Examples we have in Saul that slew himself in Achitophel and Judas that hanged themselves c. This sin of desperation is caused thus so many sins as thou committest without repentance so many wounds thou givest to thine own soul and in life or death God will make thee to feel the smart of it and the weight of them all whereby the soul sinks down to the gulph of despair without recovery The sins which thou committest lye at the door of thy heart though thou feel them not as God said unto Cain Gen. 4. 7. sin lyeth at the door and if thou dost not prevent them by speedy and timely repentance God will make thee to feel them once before thou dyest and raise up such terrours in thy Conscience that thou shalt think thy self to be in Hell before thou art there They that were sent from the chief Priests c. to apprehend Christ though He had acknowledged I am He and they were astonished and fell to the ground and He had miraculously healed Joh. 18. 12. Malchus his ear yet for all though they had seen his wonderful power both in word and deed they proceed in malice against Him and bind Him as a Malefactor In this we note what a fearful sin hardness of heart is The danger whereof appears in this that if a man be possessed with it there is nothing that can stay or daunt him in his wicked proceedings no not the powerful words and deeds of our Saviour Himself And indeed among all God's judgments there is none more fearful than this of hardness of heart and yet how rife is it among us even in these our days For it is very evident that the more men are taught the Doctrine of Gods Law and Gospel the more hard and senseless are their hearts like unto an anvil the more it is beaten upon with the iron hammer the harder it is So that that denunciation against the Jews Acts 28. 26 27. is fulfilled in them It is such a terrible judgment of God into which when a man is fallen he feels neither pain nor grief Therefore we have cause with fear and trembling to look into it lest it take such hold of us that we be past all hopes of recovery Sin is a deceitful thing and custom in sin brings hardness of heart therefore read that Heb. 3. 13. and Rom. 2. 5. Let us bewail and be humbled for our hardness of heart whereby we are hindered from knowing and acknowledging God aright and from discerning His glory and Majesty from acknowledging God's judgments or our own sins dreaming we are safe from God's vengeance and such perils and miseries which arise from sin whereas all those out of Christ and in this estate have nothing stands between them and vengeance EXERCITATION THE TENTH Exod. 31. 13 14 15 16 17. Verily my Sabbath ye shall keep for it is a sign between Me and you throughout your generations that ye may know that I am the Lord that doth sanctifie you Ye shall keep the Sabbath therefore for it is holy unto you every one that defileth it shall surely be put to death for whosoever doth any work therein that soul shall be cut off from among his people Six days may work be done but in the seventh is the Sabbath of rest holiness to the Lord. Whosoever doth any work in the Sabbath-day he shall surely be put to death Wherefore the Children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath to observe the Sabbath throughout their generations for a perpetual Covenant It is a sign between Me and the children of Israel for ever for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth and on the seventh He rested Exod. 20. 8. Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it holy HEre we have the Commandment of God for the strict observation of the Sabbath-day No one Commandment so often iterated or so much pressed This Commandment requireth at the hand of every man one day of seven in every week to be set a-part unto a holy rest and requireth all persons to separate themselves from their ordinary labour and all other exercises to God's Service alone on that day that so being severed from their worldly businesses and all the works of their Labours and Callings concerning this Nehem. 13. 15. 22. life they may wholly attend to the Worship of God alone wholly to separate themselves to the Worship and Service of God that they may with more freedom of Spirit perform the same If Adam in his perfection had need of this holy day as it was first enjoyned in the state of innocency much more Gen. 2. 2 3. have we To teach man from time to time on the Sabbath-day to withdraw himself from the cares and labours of this life to apply himself in freedom and tranquillity of mind to the meditations and actions of a spiritual life Q. But some will say this fourth Commandment is ceremonial and so it is taken away by the death of Christ A. I answer No but it is constantly and perpetually to be observed 1. For it is placed in the number of the ten Commandments which are perpetual otherwise the Moral Law should consist but of nine which is contrary to God's Word And He declared unto Deut. 4. 13. you His covenant which He commanded you to perform even ten Commandments 2. Because this fourth Commandment among the rest and in the middle of them as a Diamond in a ring was written
punishment did grow from the fall of our first Parents The punishment of sin which we now speak of is the wrath and curse of God by whose just sentence man is delivered over for his sin into the power both of bodily and spiritual ●eath begun here and to be accom●lished hereafter Bodily death is the separation of the ●ul from the body with all personal ●iseries and evils that attend thereon ●● make way thereunto Spiritual death is the final separation ●f both soul and body from God together with spiritual bondage and all ●re-runners of damnation Or more particularly All the misery ●f man God in this one word Death ●●th comprehended In the day thou Gen. 2. 17. ●●est of the tree of knowledg of good and ●●il thou shalt dye There are four degrees of death 1. There is a spiritual death which a privation of spiritual life whereby man is destitute of saving Grace and ● lives only unto sin So Christ of the ●hurch of Sardis I know thy works Rev. 3. ● ●ou hast a name that thou livest but thou ●t dead 2. The second degree is of afflictions ●d miseries So Pharaoh said to Moses ●d Aaron Pray ye to the Lord that He Exod. 10. 17. ●ay remove from me this death only 3. Corporal death which is a priva●on of natural life and a resolution of the body into dust and returning o● the soul again unto God Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was and Eccles 12. 7. the spirit unto God that gave it 4. The fourth degree is everlasting death or the state of the damned Rev. 21. 8. which in respect of corporal death ●● called the second death But it is the third of these corporal death which ●● here meant Spiritual death hath three degrees 1. When a man who is alive in regard of corporal or temporal death lies dead in sins She that liveth in pleasures is dead while she liveth And this 1 Tim. 5. 6. is the case of all men by nature wh● are children of wrath and dead in sin● Eph. 2. 1. and trespasses 2. The second degree is the very end of this life when the body is to be layed in the earth and the soul descend● to the place of torment 3. The third degree is in the day o● Judgment when the body and soul me●● again and go both to the place of the damned there to be tormented for ever and ever But now we are to speak of tempora● or corporal death which is a punishment inflicted on man for sin Deat● passed upon all men for that all have Rom. 5. 12. ●inned This death is a miserable pri●ation of life And yet this death is not so properly as by Gods appointment ●ut from God as revenging on Sin and so properly it is from Sin as the meritorious and procuring cause of it And so this death is not only a simple and a bare privation of life but joyned with a subjection unto misery Therefore it is not an annihilation of the Sinner because the subject of misery being ●aken away then misery it self should be ●aken away also Now sith we must all dye let us labour Heb. 9. 27. to dye well To dye well two things are requisite 1. A preparation 1. Preparation before death before death 2. A right behaviour and disposition in death 1. The preparation unto death is an action of a repentant Sinner whereby he makes himself ●it and ready to dye That which we can do but once how careful should we be to do it well sith there is no place after for amending of errours therein committed This preparation is a duty very necessary to which we are bound by God's Commandment Therefore we are bid to watch and pray As death leaves us so judgment finds us as the tree falleth so Eccles 11. 3. it lyeth This preparation is twofold 1 General 1. General preparation for death 2. Particular 1 General to prepare our selves to dye through the whole course of our life for we know not neither the time of our death nor the place of our death nor the manner how whether of a sudden death or of a lingring sickness Therefore all the days of my Job 14. 14. appointed time will I wait till my change shall come The best Art of living well is to learn the Art of dying well Balaam would dye the death of the righteous Numb 23. 10. and that his latter end might be like to his but he did not care to live the life of the righteous I protest by our rejoycing which I have in Christ Jesus our 1 Cor. 15. 31. Lord said St. Paul I dye daily That is in preparation for it meditation upon it and expectation of it This will keep us humble and further our daily repentance and help us to be contented in every condition and make us watchful over our selves to fly and avoid Sin careful to grow in Grace and to be frequent in Prayer to God that He would teach us so to number Psal 90. 12. our days that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom For if we would live for ever we must begin to live that blessed and everlasting life here before we dye to live the life of Grace here which is the life of Glory begun We all with open face beholding as in a 2 Cor. 3. 18. glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory a● by the spirit of the Lord that is we by faith contemplating the glorious light of God's mercy truth power c. by which means we are made like unto Hi● in the glory of holiness and newness of life by the Spirit of regeneration which hath its progresses in this life until such time as it cometh to its perfection in the life everlasting ● Of particular preparation before 2. Particular preparation ●o● death death this contains three duties 1. Concerning God 2. Our selves 3. Our Neighbour ● Concerning God to seek to be reconciled to Him in Jesus Christ This reconciliation is had by renewing our former faith and repentance To see and acknowledg that Visitation of sickness from God's hand and usually it is for sin 1. Therefore make we a new examination of our hearts and ●am 3. 3● lives search and try our ways and turn again to the Lord. 2. Confess we our sins to the Lord and He will forgive the iniquity of our sins If we confess our sins He is saithful and just to forgive 1 Psal 32. 5. Joh. 1. 9. us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness 3. Pray earnestly unto God with sighs and groans of the Spirit for pardon of sin and that God would assure us of it and that He is reconciled to us in Christ Jesus our Surety 2. Concerning our duties to our selves and that 1. In reference to the Soul 2. In reference to the Body 1. In
exhibited and given unto them 4. The same promise is sealed in the Sacrament whence it is they are not called signs only but seals also So we have it in the Word Abraham received Rom. 4. 11. the sign of circumcision a seal of the righteousness of faith which he had c. There are three things required in a Sacrament 1. The outward signs and sacramental actions concerning the same 2. The inward things signified thereby namely Christ Jesus with His saving Graces and Spiritual actions conc●rning the same 3. A similitude and likeness between them both As for example In Baptism as water doth wash away the filth of the Body so the blood of Christ doth wash away the spots of the Soul As the bread and wine do nourish and feed the Body so the body and blood of Christ laid hold on by true and lively faith do nourish and cherish the Soul to eternal life The signs used in the Sacraments are either 1. Representing as Water Bread and Wine Or 2. Applying as washing eating drinking c. The signs and the things signified in both Sacraments do so agree that the sign doth so fitly represent the things signified thereby that the mind of a Christian is drawn by the signs to consider of the things thereby signified The ends of Sacraments are the sealing of the Covenant of Grace or more fully thus in these three particulars 1. To help our understanding and insight therefore the Sacraments are as clear glasses So the Apostle said to Gal. 3. 1. the Galatians in regard of the celebration of the Lords Supper that Christ was crucified before their eyes that is Sacramentally in the breaking of the Bread and pouring forth of the Wine whereas we know that corporally Christ was crucified at Jerusalem which was far distant from the region of Galatia 2. To help our memories to bring to our remembrance as lasting Monuments Do this said our Saviour in Luk. 22. 19. 1 Cor. 11. 24. remembrance of Me. 3. To perswade our hearts and to confirm our faith as most certain seals and pledges to assure and strengthen us in the promises of Salvation which God hath not only made to us in word but confirmed it by writing and lest we should any ways doubt as naturally we are inclined to do therefore He hath set to His seals that nothing may be lacking to increase and strengthen our faith from whence the Sacraments become not only marks and pledges of our Christian profession but also so many bonds to bind us to obedience So that hereby not only the free Grace of God and the promises are sealed to us on Gods part but also our thankfulness and obedience towards God This is the primary end of the Sacrament and the secondary end is the profession of our faith and charity For there are represented in our use of the Sacraments not only that union which we have with God in Christ but also that communion which we embrace with all those who are partakers of the same union with us We must understand and believe that the efficacy of the Sacrament is not included in the external element but wholly comes from the good Spirit of God as He is pleased to shew His manifest power by those instruments that so He may help our weakness For if we were wholly spiritual as the Angels are then we should be able spiritually to contemplate God and His gifts but now sith we are overshadowed with this lump of our earthly body it is necessary that God should by certain figures as it were by glasses as I said before represent unto us spiritual and heavenly things who cannot otherwise conceive of them in our minds For now we see as through a glass 1 Cor. 13. 12. darkly We enjoy the efficacy of the Sacraments when we receive them by faith Of Baptism NOw come we particularly to speak of the two Sacraments and first of Baptism Baptism is a Greek word from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 immergo abluo which is primitively derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mergo tingo to dip or plunge into water signifying properly such a kind of washing as is used in Bucks where linnen is plunged and dipt Yet it is taken more largely for any kind of washing rinsing or clensing where there is no dipping at all as Mat. 3. 11. 20. 22 c. Christ no-where requireth dipping but only baptizing which word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implies no more than lavatio ablutio washing or ablution which may be done without dipping This word Baptism is used many ways Dr. Featly 1. Generally for washing Luk. 11. 38. Heb. 9. 20. the Pharisee marvailed Christ washed not before dinner 2. Figuratively for great and sharp afflictions Mat. 20. 22. Luk. 12. 50 I have a baptism to be baptized with and how am I straitned till it be accomplished 3. To sprinkle or wash ones body Sacramentally Mat. 3. 11. John said I indeed baptize you with water c. 4. For the whole work and action of the Sacrament of Baptism as Mat. 28. 19 Go and teach all Nations baptizing them c. 5. Spiritually to wash the Conscience Mat. 3. 11 He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire Acts 1. 5. Ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost 6. The native and proper signification is to dip into water or to plunge under water tanquam ad tingendum mergo Acts 8. 38. Philip and the Eunuch went down both into the water Mat. 3. 16 Jesus when he was baptized went up out of the water So Joh. 3. 22 23. There is a fourfold Baptism 1. Fluminis seu aquae which is a Baptism of water Mat. 3. 11 I baptize you with water c. 2. Luminis seu doctrinae Mat. 21. 25. the Baptism of John is put for the whole Ministery of John both his Preaching and his Baptism Acts. 18. 25. Apollos knew only the Baptism of John 3. Flaminis seu donorum Spiritus Sancti Acts 1. 5 Ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost that is with the gifts of the Holy Ghost 4. Sanguinis seu martyrii a Baptism of Blood or Martyrdom so Christ asked the Apostles Can ye be baptized with the Baptism that I am baptized with Mat. 20. 22 23. Baptism represents unto us two things 1. The forgiveness of Sins 2. Spiritual regeneration Q. But what proportion hath water with these that it should be a sign of these things A. 1. Because the remission of sins is in a sence like unto a laver whereby the sinfulnesses and defilements which are in our minds are cleansed as the filthiness of our body is washed away with water 2. The beginning of our regeneration is that our nature should be mortified as the end is that we should be new-creatures the pouring of water signifies a death and in that runs away from us and we remain not under it it signifies a return unto life as