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A26879 The catechizing of families a teacher of housholders how to teach their housholds : useful also to school-masters and tutors of youth : for those that are past the common small chatechisms [sic], and would grow to a more rooted faith, and to the fuller understanding of all that is commonly needful to a safe, holy comfortable and profitable life / written by Richard Baxter ... Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1683 (1683) Wing B1205; ESTC R22783 252,758 464

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And that we gather one thing from another and that we Love Good and Hate Evil and Choose Refuse and Do accordingly Q. 5. What do you next know of your selves A. When we perceive that we See Feel c. and Think Love Hate c. we know that we have a Power of Soul to do all this for no one doth that which he is not made able to do Q. 6. And what do you next know of your self A. When I know what I Do and that I can do it I know next that I am a Substance endued with this Power for nothing hath no Power nor Act it can do nothing Q. 7. What know you next of your self A. I know that this Substance which Thinketh Understandeth and Willeth is an unseen Substance for neither I nor any mortal Man seeth it and that is it which is called a Spirit Q. 8. What next perceive you of your self A. I Perceive that in this one Substance there is a Threefold Power marvellously but One and yet Three as Named from the Objects and Effects that is 1. A Power of meer Growing motion common to Plants 2. A Power of Sense common to Beasts 3. And a Power of Understanding and Reason about things above Sense proper to a Man three Powers in one spiritual Substance Q. 9. What else do you find in your self A. I find that my spiritual Substance as Intellectual hath also a Threefold Power in one that is 1. Intellectual Life by which I move and act my faculties and execute my purposes 2. Understanding 3. And Will and that these are marvellously diverse and yet one Q. 10. What else find you by your self A. I find that this unseen Spirit is here United to a humane Body and is in Love with it and careth for it and is much limited by it in its Perceivings Willings and Workings and so that a Man is an Incorporate Understanding Spirit or a humane Soul and Body Q. 11. What else perceive you by your self A. I perceive that my higher Powers are given me to rule the lower my Reason to rule my Senses and Appetite my Soul to rule and use my Body as Man is made to rule the Beasts Q. 12. What know you of your self as related to others A. I see that I am a Member of the World of Mankind and that others are better than I and multitudes better than one and that the Welfare of Mankind depends much on their Duty to one another and therefore that I should Love all according to their worth and faithfully endeavour the good of all Q. 13. What else know you of your self A. I know that I made not my self and maintain not my self in Life and Safety and therefore that another made me and maintaineth me and I know that I must Die by the Separation of my Soul and Body Q. 14. And can we tell what then becomes of the Soul A. I am now to tell you but how much of it our Nature tells us the rest I shall tell you afterward we may know 1. That the Soul being a Substance in the Body will be a Substance out of it unless God should destroy it which we have no cause to think he will 2. That Life Understanding and Will being its very Nature it will be the same after Death and not a thing of some other kind 3. That the Soul being naturally Active and the World full of Objects it will not be a sleepy or unactive thing 4. That its Nature here being to mind its Interest in another Life by Hopes or Fears of what will follow God made not its Nature such in vain and therefore that Good or Evil in the Life that 's next will be the Lot of all CHAP. III. Of the Natural Knowledge of GOD and Heaven Qu. 1. YOu have told me how we know the things which we see and feel without us and within us But how can we know any things which we neither see nor feel but are quite above us A. By certain Effects and Signs which notifie them How little else did man differ from a Beast if he knew no more than he seeth and feeleth Besides what we know from others that have seen you see not now that the Sun will rise to morrow or that Man must die you see not Italy Spain France You see no mans Soul And yet we certainly know that such things are and will be Q. 2. How know you that there is any thing above us but what we see A. 1. We see such things done here on Earth which nothing doth or can do which is seen What thing that is seen can give all Men and Beasts their life and sense and safety and so marvellously form the bodies of all and govern all the matters of the World 2. We see that the spaces above us where Sun Moon and Stars are are so vast that all this Earth is not so much to them as one Inch is to all this Land And we see that the Regions above us excel in the glory of purity and splendor And when this dark spot of Earth hath so many millions of Men can we doubt whether those vast and glorious parts are better inhabited 3. And we find that the grossest things are the basest and the most invisible the most Powerful and Noble as our Souls are above our Bodies And therefore the most vast and Glorious Worlds above us must have the most invisible powerful noble inhabitants Q. 3. But how know you what those Spirits above us are A. 1. We partly know what they are by what they do with us on Earth 2. We know much what they are by the Knowledge of our selves If our Souls are Invisible Spirits essentiated by the Power of Life Understanding and Will the Spirits above us can be no less but either such or more excellent And he that made us must needs be more excellent than his work Q. 4. How know you who made us A. He that made all things must needs be our Maker that is GOD Q. 5. What mean you by God And what is He A. I mean The Eternal Infinite Glorious Spirit and Life most Perfect in Active Power Understanding and Will Of whom and by whom and to whom are all things being the Creator Governour and End of all This is that God whom All things do declare Q. 6. How know you that there is such a God A. By his works And I shall afterwards tell it you more fully by his Word Man did not make himself Beasts Birds Fishes Trees and Plants make not themselves The Earth and Water and Air made not themselves And if the Souls of men have a maker the Spirits next above them must have a Maker and so on till you come to a first Cause that was made by none There must be a first Cause and there can be but one Q. 7. Why may there not be many Gods or Spirits that were made by none but are Eternally of themselves A. Because
be judged for that which it never ●id All the Texts that threaten Hell or future Punishment and promise Heaven prove it Matth. 25. ● was hungry and ye fed me naked and ye cloathed ●ne c. Ye did it or did it not to me Might they not say We never did it nor ever lived till now Math. 13. The Angels shall gather out of his Kingdom all things that offend and them that work iniquity and cast them into the lake of fire 2 Thes. ● 6 7 8 9 10. 2. 12. and all the Scripture which threatneth Damnation to them that obey not the Truth and promiseth Salvation to the faithful which is never performed if all be done on another ●oul 26. And all the Texts that speak of Gods Justice ●nd Mercy hereafter Is it Justice to damn a new-made Soul that never sinned 27. Paul knew not whether he were in or out of the Body when he was in Paradise 2 Cor. 12. 2 3 4. The separated Soul then may be in Paradise 28. 2 Cor. 4. 16 17 18. How can the hope ●… unseen things make Affliction and Death easie ●… that Soul that shall never be saved And how ●… we be comforted or saved by such hope 29. 2 Cor. 5. 1. We know that if our earthly hous● of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a buildin● of God V. 2. For in this we groan earnestly desirin● to be cloathed upon with our house which is from heaven V. 5. He that hath wrought us for the se●● same thing is God who also hath given us the earne●● of the Spirit V. 6. Therefore we are alwayes confident knowing that whilest we are at home in the bod●… we are absent from the Lord we are confident ●… willing rather to be absent from the Body and pres●● with the Lord. Wherefore we labour that whether pr●sent or absent we way be accepted of him For ●… must all appear before the Iudgment-seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body whether it be good or bad 30. Phil. 1. 21 22 23. To me to live is Christ and to die is gain What I shall choose I know not For I am in a strait between two having a desire ●● depart and be with Christ which is far better 31. Rev. 14. 13. Blessed are the dead that ●… in the Lord c. 32. Heb. 12. 22 23. We are come to mount Zio●… the City of the living God c. the spirits of the ju●● made perfect Abundance more might be added And I hav● been so large on this because it is of most unspeakable importance as that which all our comfo●● and our Religion lyeth on and though the Light of Nature have taught it Philosophers and almost all the World in all Ages yet the Devil is most busie to make Men doubt of it or deny it Religion lyeth on three grand Articles 1. To believe in God ● and this is so evident in the whole frame of Nature that there is a God that he is worse than mad that will deny it 2. To believe the Immortality of the Soul and the Life hereafter And 3. To believe in Christ And though it be this third that is known only by supernatural Revelation yet to him that believeth the Immortality of the Soul and the Life hereafter Christianity will appear so exceeding Congruous that it will much the more easily be believed And experience tells us that the Devils main Game for the Debauching and Damning of fleshly worldly ungodly Men and for troubling and discomforting Believers lieth in raising Doubts of the Souls Immortality and the future Life of Reward and Punishment Q. 3. But what good will a Resurrection of the Body do us if the Soul be in happiness before A. 1. It will be for Gods Glory to make and bless a perfect Man 2. It will be our Perfection A whole Man is more Perfect than a Soul alone 3. It will be the Souls delight As God that is perfectly blessed in himself yet made and maintaineth a World of which he is more than the Soul because he is a Communicative good and pregnant and delighteth to do good so the Soul is made like God in his Image and is communicative and would have a Body to act on As the Sun if there were nothing in the World but it self would be the same that it now is but nothing would receive its Motion Light or Heat or be the better for it And if you did imagine it to have understanding you must think that it would be much more pleased to enlighten and enliven so many Millions of Creatures and cause the flourishing of all the Earth than to shine to nothing So may you think of the Soul of Man It is by God inclined to actuate a Body Q. 4. If that be so it is till then imperfect and deprived of its desire and so in pain and punishment A. It is not in its full Perfection and it is a Degree of punishment to be in a state of Separation But you cannot call it a pain as to sense because it hath an unspeakable Glory though not the most perfect Nor hath the will of the Blessed any trouble and striving against the will of God but takes that for best which God willeth And so the separated state is best while God willeth it though the united State will be best as more perfect in its time Q. 5. But the dust in a Grave is so vile a thing that one would think the raising it should not be very desireable to the Soul A. It shall not be raised in the shape of ugly Dust or filth nor of corruptible Flesh and Blood But a Glorious and Spiritual Body and a meet Companion for a Glorified Soul And even now as vile as the Body is you feel that the Soul is loth to part with it Q. 6. But there are so many difficulties and improbabilities about the Resurrection as make the Belief of it very hard A. What is hard to God that made Heaven and Earth of nothing and maintains all things in their state and course What was that Body a while ago Was it not as unlikely as dust to be what it now is It 's folly to Object difficulties to Omnipotency Q. 7. But the Body is in continual Flux or Change we have not the same Flesh this Year that we had the last And a Man in a Consumption loseth before Death the Mass of Flesh in which he did good or evil shall all that rise again which every day vanisheth And shall the new Flesh be punished for that which it never did A. It 's a foolish thing from our Ignorance and uncertainties to dispute against God and certain Truth Will you know nothing unless you know all things Will you doubt of the plain Matter because in your darkness you understand not the manner or circumstances of it The Soul hath a Body consisting of various parts The fiery part in the Spirits
Books which may be read in another place If any say that I speak against that which I want my self I only desire that it may not be those who cast by my Catholick Theologie Methodus Theologiae c. with no other Accusation but because they are too Scholastical Accurate and hard for them I here bewail it as my great sin against God that in the Youth of my Ministry Pride made me often blush with shame for want of Academical Degrees but usually God will not have us bring our own humane honour to his Service but setch honour from him in faithful serving him Fringes and Laces must be last set on when the Garment is made and not be the ground or Stamen of it There have been men that have desired their Sons to learn all the Oriental Tongues and the rare Antiquities and critical applaud●d sort of Learning not for its own worth but that they might Preach the Gospel with the advantage of a greater name and honour And this course hath so taken up and formed such Students into the quality of their Studies when their Souls should have been taken up with Faith and Love and Heavenly Desires and Hopes that it hath overthrown the end to which it was intended and rendred such Students unfit for the Sacred Ministry and caused them to turn to other things When others who as Usher Bochart Blondel c. have first taken in a digested Body of saving Truth have after added these Critical Studies at full maturity have become rare Blessings to the Church Let those that think all this digressive or unmeet for the Preface to a Catechism Pardon that which the Worlds Miscarriages and Necessities bespeak If at least Masters of Families by such helps diligently used will keep up Knowledge and Religion in their Houses it is not publick failings in Ministers nor the want of what is desirable in the Assemblies that will root out Religion from the Land But if the faithful prove few they must be content with their Personal Comforts and Rewards there is nothing amiss in the heavenly Society and the World which we are entering into Come Lord Iesus Come quickly Amen Lond. Octob. 3. 1682. The CONTENTS Chap. 1. THE Introduction About Catechizing and Learning pag. 1 Chap. 2. How to know our selves by Nature p. 6 Chap. 3. Of the natural Knowledge of God and Heaven p. 9 Chap. 4. Of Gods Kingdom and Government of Man and Providence p. 13 Chap. 5. Of Gods Law of Nature and Natural Officers p. 19 Chap. 6. Of supernatural Revelation of Gods Will to Man and of the Holy Scriptures p. 27 Chap. 7. Of the Christian Religion what it is and of the Creed p. 27 Chap. 8. Of Believing what it signifieth in the Creed p. 70 Chap. 9. Of the first Article I Believe in God the Father almighty maker of Heaven and Earth p. 82 Chap. 10. Of Gods Almightiness and Creation p. 88 Chap. 11. Of the Person of Jesus Christ the only Son of God p. 92 Chap. 12. How Christ was Conceived by the Holy Ghost and Born of the Virgin Mary 97 Chap. 13. Suffered under Pontius Pilate was Crucified Dead and Buried he descended into Hell p. 101 Chap. 14. The third day he rose again from the Dead p. 109 Chap. 15. He ascended into Heaven and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father c. p. 113 Chap. 16. From thence he shall come to Judge the Quick and the Dead p. 116 Chap. 17. I Believe in the Holy Ghost p. 123 Chap. 18. The holy Catholick Church p. 130 Chap. 19. The Communion of Saints p. 136 Chap. 20. The Forgiveness of Sins p. 144 Chap. 21. The Resurrection of the Body p. 154 Chap. 22. The Life everlasting p. 165 Chap. 23. What is the true Use of the Lords Prayer p. 173 Chap. 24. Our Father which art in Heaven Expounded p. 177 Chap. 25. Hallowed be thy Name p. 182 Chap. 26. Thy Kingdom come p. 198 Chap. 27. Thy Will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven p. 209 Chap. 28. Give us this day our daily Bread p. 213 Chap. 29. Forgive us our Trespasses as we forgive c. p. 219 Chap. 30. Lead us not into Temptation but deliver us from evil p. 224 Chap. 31. For thine is the Kingdom the Power and the Glory for ever Amen p. 227 Chap. 32. Of the Ten Commmandments in general p. 229 Chap. 33. Of the Preface to the Decalogue p. 233 Chap. 34. Of the first Commandement p. 239 Chap. 35. Of the second Commandement p. 251 Chap. 36. Of the third Commandement p. 262 Chap. 37. Of the fourth Commandement p. 273 Chap. 38. Of the fifth Commandement p. 290 Chap. 39. Of the sixth Commandement p. 314 Chap. 40. Of the seventh Commandement p. 324 Chap. 41. Of the eighth Commandement p. 337 Chap. 42. Of the ninth Commandement p. 353 Chap. 43. Of the tenth Commandement p. 365 Chap. 44. Of the Sacred Ministry Church and Worship p. 380 Chap. 45. Of Baptism p. 392 Chap. 46. Of the Sacrament of Christs sacrificed Body and Blood p. 412 Chap. 47. How to prepare for a safe and Comfortable Death p. 432 Amend these misprintings with your Pens PAge 31. line 21. for the read that p. 58. l. 24. r. maketh p. 95. l. 21. for least r. last p. 99. l. 6. for light r. sight p. 166. l. 3. blot out with Henoch p. 200. l. 10. for were r. where p. 202. l. 8. r. every p. 208. l. 6. blot out for p. 374. l. 31. for any r. my In some places the same things are repeated the occasions being divers and the Author having not strength and time to correct the Copy Books of Mr. Baxter's sold by T. Parkhurst at the Bible and three Crowns at the lower end of Cheapside near Mercers-Chappel 1. CHristian Directory or Body of Practical Divinity 2. Catholick Theologie in three Parts 1. Pacifying Principles 2. Pacifying Practices 3. Pacifying Disputations fol. 3. Life of Faith in three parts 1. Sermon on Heb. 11. Preached before his Majesty publisht by his Command 2. Instructions for Confirming Believers in the Christian Faith 3. Directions to live by Faith Quarto 4. Disputations of Original Sin Octav. 5. An Apology for the Nonconformists Ministry Quarto 6. Which is the True Church A Defence of Protestantism against Popery 7. An Answer to Mr. Dodwell confuting an Universal Church-Supremacy and defending Dr. Isaac Barrow against it 8. True History of Councels Inlarged and Defended against a Pretended Vindicator of the Primitive Church To which is added Diocesan Churches not yet Discovered in the Primitive times or A Defence of the Answer to Dr. Stillingfleets Allegations out of Antiquity for such Churches THE CATECHIZING OF FAMILIES OR A TEACHER of HOUSHOLDERS How to Teach their Housholds Useful also to School-Masters and Tutors of Youth The Questions are the Learners and the Answers the Teachers CHAP. I. The Introduction Qu. 1. WHat is it which must be Taught and Learned Ans. All
and they driven hastily out they yearly continued the Eating of the Passover with unleavened Bread as in a hasting posture 3. Since the Law given in the Wilderness they constantly used the Sacrifices the Oblations the Tabernacle the Priesthood and Ceremonies as that Law prescribed them And the National constant use of these was an ascertaining Tradition of the matters of Fact which were their cause 4. Yea so tenacious were they of this Law that as they taught the very Syllables of it to their Children and kept in the Ark the very Tables of Stone that had the Ten Commandments so they were Enemies to Christianity because the Christians were against the Gentiles Observation of their Law and for its abrogation 4. Consider again that the Matter of Fact and the Divine Institution is since made certain to us by Christs Testimony Q. 11. But seeing this Law doth not bind us now nor the particular Messages of the Prophets were sent to us is it any of our Concern now to know or believe them It belonged to those that they were made for and sent to But what are they to us A. There is not the same necessity to know them and so to be such that they were all of God as there is to know and believe the Gospel But it is greatly our Duty and Concern to believe them 1. Because they were preparatory to the Gospel and bore an antecedent Testimony to it 2. Because the Gospel it self beareth witness of their Truth which therefore if we believe it we must believe 3. Because by the Holy Ghost's direction all now make up our Books of Sacred Records which is the certain Word of God though not all of the same Necessity and Evidence And here I must tell you a great and needful Truth which ignorant Christians fearing to confess by overdoing tempt Men to Infidelity The Scripture is like a Mans Body where some parts are but for the preservation of the rest and may be maimed without death The Sence is the Soul of the Scripture and the Letters but the Body or Vehicle The Doctrine of the Creed Lords Prayer and Decalogue and Baptism and Lords Supper is the Vital part and Christianity it self The Old Testament Letter written as we have it about Ezras's time is that Vehicle which is as imperfect as the Revelation of those times was But as after Christ's Incarnation and Ascension the Spirit was more abundantly given and the Revelation more perfect and Sealed so the Doctrine is more full and the Vehicle or Body that is the Words are less imperfect and more sure to us so that he that doubteth of the Truth of some Words in the Old Testament or of some small Circumstantials in the New hath no reason therefore to doubt of the Christian Religion of which these Writings are but the Vehicle or Body sufficient to ascertain us of the Truth of the History and Doctrine Be sure first that Christ is the very Son of God and it inferreth the certainty of all his Words and enforceth our whole Religion Q. 12. I perceive then that our main Question is both as to Necessity and Evidence How we are sure that the Gospel is true and the Records of it the very Word of God A. It is so And as it is this that must Rule and Judge the Church so we have to us fuller proof of this than of the Old Testament Because that the narrowness of the Iews Countrey in comparison of the Christian World and the many Thousand Years distance and a Language whose Phrase and Proverbial speeches and the very sence of the common words of it must needs make it more unknown to us than the Language that the Gospel is Recorded in And it is not the least proof of the Truth of the Old Testament that it is attested and confirmed by the New Q. 13. Will you first tell me How the Apostles and that first Age were sure that the Gospel of Christ was the very Word of God A. Here I must first tell you that the great Mystery of the Blessed Trinity Father Son and Holy Ghost being One God is made necessary to us to be believed not only as to the Eternal unsearchable Inexistence but specially for the Knowledge of Gods three great sorts of Works on Man That is As our Creator and the God of Nature as our Redeemer and the God of Governing and and reconciling Grace and as our Sanctifier and the Applyer and Perfecter of all to fit us for Glory And so the Son as Redeemer is the way to the Father to know him and his Love and be reconciled to him And the Holy Ghost is the Witness of the Son The proof therefore of the Gospel of Christ in one word is the Holy Ghost that is the certain Testimony of God's Spirit And this Testimony consisteth of these several parts I. The foregoing Testimony of the Spirit by all the Prophesies of the Old Testament and the Typical Prefigurations which became a fuller proof than before when they were seen all to be fulfilled in Christ Yet many were fulfilled before When Abraham had no Child he was promised the Multiplication of his Seed and that all Nations should be blessed therein Gen. 12. 2. 13. 16. 15. 5. 17. 2. 18. 11 12. The 400 Years of their abode in Egypt and Canaan before were foretold and punctually fulfilled Gen. 15. 13 14. Ex. 12. 31 32. So was Iacob's Prophesie of Iudah's Scepter Gen. 42. 8 9 10. And Ioseph's dreams And verily Balaams last Prophesie was marvellous who when he had blessed Israel and foretold their Victories foretold also the Scepter of David and Christ and the success of the Assyrians and after that of Chittim against the Hebrews themselves Numb 24. And who seeth not the fulfilling of the terrible Prophesie of Moses against the Iews Deut. 31 Iosiah by Name and his Deeds were foretold 300 Years before he was Born 1 Kings 13. 2. 2 Kings 23. 15. Oft was the Captivity of the Iews foretold and the destruction of Babylon and the Iews return by Cyrus named long before he was Born and the very time foretold From the beginning Christ was promised and the circumstances of his coming foretold Gen. 3. 15. 26. 4. 49. 10. Deut. 18. 15. Psal. 2. 27. 89. 110. Isa. 53. 11. 1. Ier. 33. 15. Mic. 5. 2. That he should be Born of a Virgin Isa. 7. 14. in Bethlem Mic. 5. 2. and then the Infants killed Ier. 31. 15 that he should come into the Temple as the Angel of the Covenant whom they desired but they should not endure therein when he came because he came as a Refiner Mal. 3. 1. 3. That he should go into Egypt and return thence Isa. 19. 1. Hos. 11. 1. That One should go before him to prepare the way Mal. 3. 1. That he should do wonders for the People Isa. 35. 5. That a familiar should betray him and that for Thirty pieces of
is folly to be stalled at the Believing of any thing which we once are sure that God revealeth considering how unmeet our shallow Wit is to judge of the things of infinite Wisdom to us unseen 2. To Holy illuminated prepared Souls Belief is not so hard It 's Blindness and Vice that make it difficult 3. God did not become Man by any Change of his Godhead nor by confining his Essence to the Manhood of Christ But 1. By taking the humane Nature into a special Aptitude for hi● Operations 2. And so Relating it neerly to himself 3. And Operating peculiarly in and on it as he doth not on any other Creature And when all are agreed that God is essentially every where and is as near us as we are our selves and more the Cause of all good which we do than we our selves are it will be harder to shew that he is not Hypostatically united to every Man than that he is so to Christ Though the foresaid Aptitude of Christ's humane Nature and the Relation and Operation of the Divine indeed make that vast difference If God can so peculiarly Operate in and by our humane Nature where lyeth the Incredibility Q. 31. But it is so transcendently above all the Works of Nature that such condescension of God is hard to be believed A. Great Works best beseem the Infinite God Is not the make of the whole World as wonderful and yet certain Gods Love and Goodness must have wonderful products as well as his Power But is it not very congruous to Nature and Reason that God should have Mercy on lapsed man And that he should restore depraved humane Nature And that he should do this great work like his Greatness and Goodness and above Mans shallow reach And that Polluted Souls should not have immediate access to the most Holy but by a Holy Mediator And that Mankind should have one Universal Head and Monarch in our own Nature And that when even Heathens are conscious of the great need of some Divine revelations besides the light of Nature and therefore consult their Oracles and Augurs that God should give us a certain Menssenger from Heaven to teach us necessary Truth Many such Congruities I have opened in the Reasons of the Christian Religion Part 2. Ch. 5. The Summ of all that is said is This I. If any History in the world be sure the History of the Gospel is sure II. And if the History be sure the Doctrine must needs be sure III. The continued Evidences 1. In the Holiness of the Doctrine And 2. In the Holiness of all true serious Believers are a standing proof of both as the Miracles were to all the beholders who did not Blaspheme the Holy Ghost Q. 32. But how comes it to be so hard then to the most to become serious Believers and Godly when the Evidence is so clear A. A Blind Dead Worldly Fleshly Heart doth undispose them and they will not Consider such things nor use the means Yea they so wilfully sin against Knowledge and Conscience and will not obey that which they know that they forfeit further Grace I will name you briefly many things which every Mans Natural Reason might know and ask you whether you ever knew any Unbeliever that was not false to this Light of Nature 1. Doth not Sence and Reason tell men how vile a thing that Flesh is which they preferr before their Souls 2. Doth it not certifie them that they must die and so that Fleshly Pleasure is short 3. Doth it not tell them of the Vanity and Vexation of this World 4. And that greatest Prosperity is usually parted with with greatest sorrow 5. Doth it not tell them that Mans Nature can hardly choose but fear what will follow after Death 6. Doth it not tell them that there is a God that made them and Ruleth all 7. And that he is infinitely Great and Wise and Good and therefore should be Obeyed Loved and Trusted above all 8. And that their Lives and Souls and all are his and at his will 9. And that Man hath Faculties which can mind a God and a Life to come which Bruits have not and that God doth not make such Natures in vain 10. Doth not experience tell them that humane Nature seeth a vast difference between Moral Good and Evil and that all Government Laws and Converse shew it And no Man would be counted false and bad 11. And that Good Men are the Blessing of the World and Bad Men the Plagues 12. And that there is a Conscience in Man that condemneth Sin and approveth Goodness 13. And that most Men when they dye cry out against that which Worldly Fleshly Men preferr and wish that they had lived the Life of Saints and might die their death Are not these easily knowable to all And yet all the ungodly live as if they believed none of this And can you wonder if all such Men understand not or believe not the Heavenly things have no experience of the Sanctifying Work and Witness of the Holy Spirit and have no delight in God and Goodness no strength against Sin and Temptations no Trust in God in their necessity no suitableness to the Gospel nor the heavenly Glory But as they lived in sin do die in a stupid or despairing state of Soul CHAP. VII Of the Christian Religion what it is and of the Creed Q. 1. NOw you have laid so good a Foundation by shewing me the certain Truth of the Gospel I would better know what Christianity is and what it is to be a true Christian A. First I must tell you what Religion is i● general and then what the Christian Religion is Religion is a Word that signifieth either that which is without us the Rule of our Religion or tha● which is within us our conformity to that Rule The Doctrinal Regulating Religion is the Signification of Gods will concerning Mans Duty to God and his Hopes from God The inward Religion of our Souls is our Conformity to this revealed regulating Will of God even our absolute resignation to God as being his own our absolute subjection to him a● our absolute Sovereign Ruler and our prevailin● chief Love to him as our chief Benefactor and a● Love and Goodness it self Thus Religion is ou● Duty to God and Hope from God Q. 2. Now what is the Christian Religion A. The Christian Religion as Doctrinal is The Revelation of Gods will concerning his Kingdo● as our Redeemer or the Redeeming and savin● sinful miserable Man by Jesus Christ. And the Christian Religion as it is in us is Th● true Conformity of our Understanding Will an● Practice to this Doctrine or The true Belief o● the Mind the Thankful Love and Consent of th● Will and the sincere Obedience of our Lives to God as our Reconciled Father in Christ and to Jesus Christ as our Saviour and to the Holy Ghost as our Sanctifier to deliver us from the guilt and power of Sin from
Qu. 1. WHy is there nothing said in the Creed 1. Of Christ's overcoming the Temptations of the Devil and the World 2. Or of his fulfilling the Law his perfect Holiness Obedience and Righteousness 3. Nor of his Miracles A. 1. You must know that the Creed at first when Christ made it the Symbol of Christianity had but the three Baptismal Articles to be Baptized into the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost 2. And that the rest were added for the Exposition of these three 3. And that the Errors that rose up occasioned the additions Some denyed Christ's real Humanity and some his Death and said that it was another in his Shape that dyed and this occasioned these Expository Articles 4. But the Apostles and other Preachers expounded more to those whom they Ca●echized than is put into the Creed and more is implyed in that which is expressed And had any Hereticks then denyed Christ's perfect Righteousness and Victory in Temptation it 's like it would have occasioned an Article for these 5. But Christ would not have his Apostles put more into the Creed than was needful to be a part of the Test of Christianity And he that understandingly consentingly and practically believeth in God the Father Son and Holy Ghost shall be saved 6. And as to Christ's Miracles yea and his Holiness they are contained in the true meaning of Believing in the Holy Ghost as I shall after shew Q. 2. But why is none of Christ's Sufferings mentioned before that of his being Crucified A. This which is the consummation implyeth the humilation of all his Life his mean Birth and Education his mean estate in the World his Temptations Accusations Reproaches Buffeting Scourging his Agony his Betraying his Condemnation as a Malefactor by false Witness and the Peoples Clamour and the Rulers Malice and Injustice his whole Life was a state of humiliation ●inished in his Crucifixion Death and Burial Q. 3. What made the Jews so to hate and Crucifie him A. Partly a base fear of Caesar lest he should destroy them in jealousie of Iesus as a King And having long revolted from sincerity in Religion and become Ceremonious Hypocrites God left them to the blindness and hardness of their Hearts resolving to use them for the Sacrificing of Christ the Redemption of the World and the great enlargement of his Church Q. 4. Why is Pontius Pilate named in the Creed A. Historically to keep the remembrance of the time when Christ suffered and to leave a just shame on the Name of an unjust Judge Q. 5. Why was Crucifying the manner of Christ's death A. 1. It was the Romans manner of putting vile Malefactors to death 2. And it was a death especially cursed by God and Christ foretold it of himself Q. 6. Was it only Christs Body that suffered or also his Soul and Godhead A. The Godhead could not suffer but he that was God suffered in Body and in Soul Q. 7. What did Christs Soul suffer A. It suffered not by any sinful Passion but by Natural Lawful fear of what he was to undergo and feeling of pain and specially of God's just displeasure with Mans sin for which he suffered which God did express by such with-holdings of Joy and by such inward deep sense of his punishing Justice as belonged to one that consented to stand in the place of so many sinners and to suffer so much in their stead Q. 8. Did Christ suffer the pains of Hell which the Damned suffer A. The pains of Hell are Gods just punishment of Man for sin and so were Christs sufferings upon his consent But 1. The Damned in Hell are hated of God and so was not Christ. 2. They are forsaken of Gods holy Spirit and Grace and so was not Christ. 3. They are under the Power of Sin and so was not Christ. 4. They hate God and Holiness and so did not Christ. 5. They are tormented by the Conscience of their Personal guilt and so was not Christ Christs Sufferings and the Damned's vastly differ Q. 9. Why must Christ suffer what he did A. 1. To be an Explatory Sacrifice for sin God thought it not meet as he was the just and holy Ruler of the World to forgive sin without such a Demonstration of his Holiness and Justice as might serve as well to the Ends of his Government as if the Sinners had suffered themselves 2. And he suffered to teach Man what sin deserveth and what a God we serve and that we owe him the most costly obedience even to the death and that this Body Life and World are to be denyed contemned and forsaken for the sake of Souls and of Life Everlasting and of God when he requireth it The Cross of Christ is much of the Christians Book Q. 10. What sorts of Sin did Christ die for A. For all sorts except Mens not performing those Conditions which he requireth of all that he will pardon and save Q. 11. For whose sins did Christ Suffer A. All Mens sins were instead of a meritorious cause of Christ's Sufferings he suffered for Mankind as the Saviour of the World And as to the Effect his Suffering purchased a conditional Gift of free pardon and life to all that will believingly accept it according to the nature of the things given But it was the will of the Father and the Son not to leave his death to uncertain success but infallibly to cause the Elect to believe and be saved Q. 12. Was it just with God to punish the Innocent A. Yes when it was Christs own undertaking by consent to stand as a Sufferer in the room of the guilty Q. 13. How far were our sins imputed to Christ A. So far as that his consent made it just that he suffered for them He is said to be made sin for us who knew no sin which is to be made a Curse or Sacrifice for our sin But God never took him to be really or in his esteem a sinner He took not our fault to become his fault but only the punishment for our faults to be due to him Else sin it self had been made his own and he had been relatively and properly a Sinner and God must have hated him as such and he must have dyed for his own Sin when ours was made his own But none of this is to be imagined Q. 14. How far are Christ's Sufferings imputed t● us A. So far as that we are reputed to be justy forgiven and saved by his Grace because he made an expiation by his Sacrifice for our Sins But not so as i● God mistook us to have suffered in Christ or tha● he or his Law did judge that we our selves have made satisfaction or expiation by Christ. Q. 15. Was not that penal Law In the day tha● thou eatest thereof thou shalt die and The Soul that sinneth shall die fulfilled by execution for us all in Christ and now justifieth us as
so fulfilled A. No That Law condemned none but the Sinner himself and is not fulfilled unless the Person suffer that sinned That Law never said Either the Sinner or another for him shall die Christ was given us by God as above his Law and that he might justly and mercifully forgive sin though he executed not that Law That Law did but make punishment our Due and not Christs but not bind God to inflict it on us when his Wisdom knew a better way It is not that Law as fulfilled that justifieth us but another even the Law of Grace Satisfaction is not the fulfilling of the penal Law Q. 16. Did not Christ fulfill the Commands of the Law for us by his Holiness and perfect Rrighteousness What need was there that he suffer for us A. The Law or Covenant laid on him by his Father was that he should do both and therefore both ●s the performance of that Condition on which God gave us to him to be pardoned and saved by him If he had fulfilled the Commands of the Law by perfect Holiness and Righteousness in our Legal Persons so ●s that God and his Law would have reputed us to have done it by him then indeed being reputed perfect Obeyers we could not have been reputed Sinners that needed suffering or pardon But Christs habitual active and passive Righteousness were all the parts of his One Condition performed by him to be the meritorious Cause of our Justification Q. 17. Why is Christ's Death and Burial named besides his Crucifixion A. Those words have been since added to obviate their Error who thought Christ dyed not on the Cross. Q. 18. What is meant by his descending into Hell A. Those words were not of some Hundred Years in the Creed And since they were put in have been diversly understood There is no more certain nor necessary to be believed but that 1. Christs Soul was and so ours are immortal and remained when separated from the Body 2. And that as death being the separation of Soul and Body was threatned by God as a punishment to both so the Soul of Christ submitted to this penal separation and went to the place of separated Souls as his Body did to the Grave Q. 19. Of what use is this Article to us A. Of great and unspeakable use 1. We lea● hence what Sin deserveth shall we play with tha● which must have such a Sacrifice 2. We learn hence that a sufficient expiatory Sacrifice is made for sin and therefore that God is reconciled and we need not despair nor are put to mak● expiation our selves or by any other 3. We learn that Death and the Grave and th● state of Separate Souls are Sanctified and Satan conquered as he had the power of Death as Gods Executioner And therefore that we may boldly die i● Faith and commit Soul and Body into the hand ●… him that died for them Q. 20. But did not Christ's go to Paradise and c●● that be penal A. Yes And so do faithful Souls But the So●● and Body are a perfect Man and Nature is against Separation And as the Union of Christs Soul a●● glorified Body now in Heaven is a more perfect sta●● than that was of his separated Soul so the deprivation of that Union and Perfection was a degree ●● penalty And therefore it was the extraordinary priviledge of Enoch and Elias not to die CHAP. XIV The Third Day he rose again from the Dead Q. 1. HOw was Christ said to be three dayes in the Grave A. He was there part of the Sixth day all the Seventh and part of the First Q. 2. Is it certain that Christ rose from the Dead the third day A. As certain as any Article of our Faith Angels witnessed it Mary first saw him and spake with him Two Disciples going to Emmaus saw him to whom he opened the Scriptures concerning him Peter and others Fishing saw him and spake and eat with him The Eleven assembled saw him Thomas that would not else believe was called to see the print of the Nails and put his Finger into his pierced side He was seen of above Five hundred Brethren at once He gave the Apostles their Commission and Instructions and his Blessing and ascended Bodily to Heaven in their sight And afterward appeared in Glory to Stephen and Paul But I have before given you the proof of the Gospel and must not repeat it Q. 3. Was it foreknown that Christ would rise A. Yes It was foretold by the Prophets and expresly and often by himself to his Apostles and the Iews and therefore they set a Sealed Stone with a Guard ●● Souldiers on the Sepulcher to watchit Q. 4. It is a wonder that the Iews th●n believed no● in him A. The Rulers were now more afraid than before that Christ would by the People be Proclaimed their King and then the Romans destroy their City and Nation for they feared Men more than God And withal they had put him to death on that account a● if his making himself a King had been Rebellio● against Caesar and King of the Iews was writte● as his Crime by Pilate on his Cross and so they were engaged against him as a Rebel though he told them hi● Kingdom was not a Worldly one And they seemed to believe that he did all his Miracles by the Devil a● a Conjurer and therefore that he was raised by tha● Devil which was the Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost And as for the Common People they deceived them by hiring the Souldiers to say Tha● his Disciples stole his Body while they slept Q. But why would Christ appear to none but his Disciples A. We are not fit to give God a Law His works are done in infinite Wisdom But we may see 1. That they who had hardned their Hearts against all his Doctrine and the Miracles of his Life and maliciously put him to Death as a Blasphemer a Conjurer and a Traitor to Caesar were unworthy and unmeet to be the Witnesses of his Resurection And its like it would but have excited their rage to have tryed a new Persecution His Resurrection being the first act of his triumphant Exaltation none were so fit to see him as those that had followed him in his Sufferings Even as wicked Men are not meet as Paul was to be ●rapt up into Paradise and the Third Heavens and hear the unutterable things 2. The Witnesses whom he chose were enow and fit Persons for that Office being to be sent abroad to Proclaim it to the World And God confirmed their Testimony by such abundant Miracles of which you heard before 3. And yet he left not the Infidels without convincing means As he before told them that he would raise in three Dayes the Temple of his Body when they destroyed it so they saw the Earthquake the Sun darkned the Vail of the Temple rent at his Death and their Souldiers saw the Angels that
the Soul continue not the next at the Resurrection would be another Soul and a new created one and not the same And then the Body would not be the same Souls Body nor the Man the same Man but another Who was ever so unwise to think that God had so much more Care of the Body than of the Soul as that he would let the Soul perish and raise the Body from the dust alone a●d join it with another Soul 4. Very Learned and wise Expositors think that the Greek word Anastasis used for Resurrection indeed signifieth the whole Life after this both of Soul first and Body also after oft in the New Testament It is a Living again or after this Life called A standing up again And there is great probability of of it in Christs Argument with the Sadduces and some passages of Pauls 1 Cor. 15. Q. 2. What Texts of Scripture do fully prove that the Soul liveth when it is separated from the Body A. Very many 1. God breathing into Man the breath of Life and making him a living Soul is said thereby to make him in the Image of God who is the Living God And so the Soul is essentially Life 2. God's calling himself the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob is by Christ Expounded as proving that he is the God of Living Abraham 3. None ever dreamt that Henoch and Elias had no company of humane Souls in Heaven For Mat. 17. Moses also appeared with them on the Mount and shewed that his Soul did live 4. When Saul himself would have Samuel raised to speak with him it plainly implieth that it was then the common belief of the Iews that separated Souls survive 5. When 1 King 17. 22. Elias raised the dead Child of the Widow of Sarepta and 2 King 4. Elisha raised the Shunamites Child and 2 King 13. 21. ● dead Man was raised all these proved that the So●● was the same that came again Else the Persons had not been the same 6. When Christ raised Lazarus and Iairus Daughter Mar. 5. 41. 42. Luke 8. 55. and another Luke 7. 12 14 15. The same Souls came into them 7. Many of the Dead rose and appeared at Christs Death And Peter raised one from Death which was by a reunion of the same living Soul to the same Body 8. Christ tells us Luke 12. 4. that Men cannot kill the Soul 9. He tells us Luke 16. 9. that as the wise Steward when he was put out was received by the Persons whom he had Obliged so if we make us Friends of the Mammon of Unrighteousness when these things fail us which is at Death we shall be received into the Everlasting Habitations 10. The Parable of the sensual Rich Man and Lazarus one going presently to Hell and the other to the Bosom of Abraham in Paradise fully prove that Christ would have this believed and would have all Men warned accordingly to prepare and that Moses and the Prophets were so sufficient for such notice as that one from the Dead would have been less credible herein Though it be a Parable it is an instructing and not a deceiving Parable and very plain in this particular The Name of Abraham's Bosom was according to the Common sence of the Iews who so called that State of the blessed not doubting but that Abraham was then in Happiness and the blessed with him 11. Herod's thought that Iohn had been risen from the Dead and the Iews conceit that Christ had been one of the Old Prophets risen and the Pharisees approbation of Christ's argument with the Sadduces do put it past doubt that it was then taken for certain Truth that the Souls of the Faithful do survive by all except such as the Heretical Sadduces 12. Christ saith Ioh. 17. 3. This is Life Eternal to know Thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent How is it Eternal if it have as long an interruption as from Death till the Day of Judgment 13. It is the Summ of God's Gospel that whosoever believeth in Christ shall not perish but have Everlasting Life Joh. 3. 16. Therefore they perish not till the day of Judgment 14. Christ hath promised that whoever drinketh of the Water which he will give him the Spirit it shall be in him a Well of Water springing up to Everlasting Life Ioh. 4. 14. But if the Soul perish that Water perisheth to that Soul 15. To be born again of the Spirit fitteth a man to enter into the Kingdom of God But if the Soul perish all that New Birth is lost to that Soul and profiteth the Dust only 16. Joh. 3. 36. He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life Joh. 5. 24. He is passed from death to life Ioh. 6. 27. He giveth meat which endureth to everlasting life V. 35. He shall never hunger or thirst that is be empty that cometh to Christ V. 39. Of all that cometh to him he will lose nothing Therefore will not lose all their Souls V. 40 47. They have everlasting life 54 56. He dweleth in Christ and Christ in him and therefore is not extinct 58. Ioh. 8. 51. Verily verily I say unto you If a man keep my sayings he shall never see death Joh. 10. 28. I give unto them eternal Life and they shall never perish neither shall any pluck them out of my hand 17. Joh. 11. 26. Whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die 18. Joh. 14. 16. The Comforter shall abide with you for ever V. 17. For he dwelleth with you and shall be in you 19. Joh. 17. 24. I will that they whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory If the Soul perish it is not they that shall be with him but others 20. Luk. 23. 43. To day shalt thou be with me in Paradise 21. Luk. 23. 46. Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit 22. Joh. 12. 26. Where I am there shall my Servant be But Christ is not perished 23. Act. 7. 59. Stephen called on God saying Lord Iesus receive my Spirit Therefore it perished not 24. Rom. 8. 17. If children then heirs V. 23. We groan waiting for the Adoption V. 30. Whom he ●ustified them he glorified In short All the whole Gospel that promiseth Life to the Sanctified doth prove the Immortality of the Soul For if the Soul perish no man that lived on Earth is saved For if ●he Soul be not the Man it is most certainly the prime essential part of the man The dust of the Carkass is not the Man And if another Soul and not the same come into it it will be another man and so all the Promises fail 25. So all the Texts that speak of Resurrection ●udgment that we shall all be judged according to our Works and what we did in the body If it be ●nother Soul that must be judged which never was ●n that body before nor ever did any thing in that body how shall it
the Creature-knowledge and to be able to talk as knowing Men or the better to serve our Worldly Ends and not to know and glorifie God is to prophane the works of God And alas then how common is prophaneness in the World Q. 10. What is it to Sanctifie God's Name as in our Redemption A. Redemption is such a wonderful work of God to make him known to sinners for their Sanctification and Salvation as no Tongue of Man can fully utter To think of God the Eternal Word first undertaking Man's Redemption and then taking the Nature of Man dwelling in so mean a Tabernacle fulfilling all Righteousness for us Teaching Man the knowledge of God and bringing Life and Immortality to light dying for us as a Malefactor to save us from the Curse Rising the third day Commissioning his Apostles undertaking to build his Church on a Rock which the Gates of Hell should not prevail against ascending up to Heaven sending down the wonderful and sanctifying Spirit Interceding for us and Reigning over all who receiveth faithful Souls to himself and will raise our Bodies and judge the World Can all this be believed and thought of without admiring the manifold wisdom the unconceivable Love and Mercy the Holiness and Justice of God! This must be the daily study of Believers Qu. 11. How is this Name of God prophaned A. When this wonderful work of Mans Redemption is not believed but taken by Infidels to be but a deceit Or when it is heard but as a common History and affecteth not the Hearer with admiration thankfulness desire and submission to Christ when Men live as if they had no great Obligation to Christ or no great need of him Q. 12. How is Gods Name as our Sanctifier to be hallowed A. Therein he cometh near us even into us with Illuminating Quickening Comforting Grace renewing us to his Nature Will and Image Marking us for his own and maintaining the cause of Christ against his Enemies And therefore must in this be specially notified honoured obediently observed and thankfully and joyfully admired Q. 13. But how can they honour God's Spirit and Grace who have it not Or they that have so little as not well to discern it A. The least prevailing sincere Holiness hath a special excellency turning the Soul from the World to God and may be perceived in Holy desires after him and sincere endeavours to obey him And the beauty of Holiness in others may be perceived by them that have little or none themselves if they be not grown to Malignant Enmity You may see by the Common desire of Mankind to be esteemed Wise and Good and their Impatience of being thought and called Foolish Ungodly or Bad Men that even corrupted Nature hath a radicated Testimony in it self for Goodness and against Evil. Q. 14. Who be they that prophane this Name of God A. Those that see no great need of the Spirit of Holiness or have no desire after it but think that Nature and Art may serve the turn without it Those that think that there is no great difference between Man and Man but what their Bodily temperature and their Education maketh and that it is but Phanatick delulusion or Hypocrisie to pretend to the Spirit Those that hate or deride the Name of Spirituality and Holiness and those that resist the Holy Ghost Q. 15. How is God known and honoured in his Providence A. By his Providence he so Governeth all the World and particularly all the Affairs of Men as shews us his Omnipotence his Omniscience and his Goodness and Love ordering them all to his Holy End even the pleasing of his good Will in their Perfection Q. 16. How can we see this while the World lyeth in Madness Unbelief and Wickedness and the worst are greatest and Contention Confusion and Bloody Wars do make the Earth a kind of Hell and the Wise Holy and Iust are despised hated and destroyed A. 1. Wisdom and Holiness and Justice are conspicuous and honourable by the odiousness of their contraries which though they fight against them and seem to prevail do but exercise them to their increase and greater glory And all the Faithful are secured and purified and prepared for Felicity by the Love and Providence of God 2. And as the Heavens are not all Stars but spangled with Stars nor the Stars all Suns nor Beasts and Vermine Men nor the Earth and Stones are Gold and Diamonds nor is the Darkness Light the Winter Summer or Sickness Health or Death Life And yet the wonderful Variety and Vicissitude contributeth to the Perfection of the Universe as the Variety of parts to the Perfection of the Body so God maketh use even of Mens Sin and Folly and of all the mad Confusions and Cruelties of the World to that perfect Order and Harmony which he that accomplisheth them doth well know though we perceive it not because we neither see the Whole nor the End but only the little Particles and the Beginnings of God's unsearchable works 3. And this dark and wicked World is but a little Spot of God's vast Creation and seemeth to be the lowest next to Hell while the lucid Glorious heavenly Regions are incomprehensibly great and no doubt possessed by Inhabitants suitable to so glorious a place And as it is not either the Gallows or the Prison that is a dishonour to the Kingly Government so neither is Hell or the Sins on Earth a dishonour to the Government of God 4. And as every Man is nearest to himself it is the duty of us all carefully to record all the Mercies and special Providences of God to our selves that we may know his Government and him and use the remembrance of them to his Glory Q. 17. How is the heavenly Glory as a Name of God to us that see it not A. We see vast lucid Bodies and Regions above us And by the help of things seen we may conceive of things unseen and by Divine Revelation we may certainly know them We have in the Gospel as it were a Map of Heaven in its description and a title to it in the Promises and a notifying earnest and foretast in our Souls so far as we are Sanctified Believers Q. 18. How must we hallow this Name of God A. 1. Firmly believing the heavenly Glory not only as it shall be our own Inheritance but as it is now the most Glorious and Perfect part of Gods Creation where Myriads of Angels and Glorious Spirits in perfect Happiness Love and Joy are Glorifying their most Glorious Creator and as the Saints with Christ their most Glorious Head shall for ever make up that Glorious Society and the Universe it self be seen by us in that Glorious Perfection in which the Perfection of the Creator will appear 2. And in the constant delightful Contemplation of this Supernal Glorious World by Heavenly Affections and Conversation keeping our Minds above while our Bodyes are here below and looking beyond this Prison of Flesh
must here re●…ve and the Glory which we shall receive hereafter at Death and at the General Resurrection A●… the great dutyes of Faith and Repentance of Obdience and Love to God and Man and renounc●… the Lusts of the flesh the world and the Devil wh●… must be done by all that will be Glorified by a●… with Jesus Christ. This is the Catechism which Parents must te●… their Children Q. 20. Alas it will be a hard and long work ●… teach Children all this or Servants either that ●… at age A. All this is but the plain meaning of the Cr●… and ten Commandements which the Church re●…reth all to learn And no more than in their B●…tism the Parents should and the Godfathers do ●…lemnly Promise to see them taught It is these thi●… for which God hath given them life and time and ●…son and on which their present safety and comf●… and their Everlasting Life dependeth And will y●… set them seven years Apprentice to a Trade ●… set them Seven and Seven to Schools and Univ●…sities and Innes of Court where study must be th●… daily business And will you think it too much teach them the sence of the Creeds Lords Pr●…er and ten Commandements needful to far gre●…er and better ends Q. 21. In what manner must Parents teach th●… Children A. 1. Very plainly by familiar talk 2. Ge●…ly and Lovingly to win them and not discour●… them 3. Beginning with the History and the ●…ctrine which they are most capable to receive 4. Very frequently that it be not neglected or forgotten Deut. 6. 11. 5. Yet a little at a time that they be not overwhelmed 6. Praising them when they do well 7. Doing all with such holy reverence that they may perceive it is the Work of God and not a Common matter 8. Teaching them by an answerable Life Q. 22. What else besides Teaching is the Parents duty A. 3. To use all just means to make Religion pleasant to them and win their Hearts to Love it And therefore to tell them the Author the Excel●…ency the certainty and profit of it here and here●…fter 4. To possess them with necessary Fear of God of Death of Hell and of Sin 5. To make ●… great difference between the good and the bad ●…ewarding good Children and Correcting the bad ●…isobedient and stubborn 6. To choose safe and ●…odly School-masters for them if they teach them ●…ot all themselves 7. To keep them out of ill Com●…ny and from Temptations especially to know ●…heir Vices and watch against all occasions of their ●… 8. To choose meet Trades or Callings for them ●…d faithful Masters ever preferring the welfare ●…f their Souls before their Bodies 9. To choose ●…eet Husbands or Wives for them if they are to ●…e marryed 10. To settle them under a faithful ●…astor in the real Communion of Saints And all this with constant serious diligence praying to God for his Grace and Blessing O how happy were the Church and World if Parents would faithfully do all this needful certain Duty and not perfidiously and cruelly break the Promise they made in Baptism and by negligence worldliness and ungodliness betray the Souls of their own Children to Sin and Satan The happiness or misery of Families Churches Cities Kingdoms and of the World lyeth most eminently on Parents hands Q. 23. What is the duty of Children to their Parents in special A. To Honour their Judgment and Authority to be Thankful to them for their Being Love and Education To Love them Dearly To learn of them willingly and diligently To obey them faithfully and to requite them as they are able and what is included in the General duty of Subjects opened before Q. 24. What if the Father be a Papist and th● Mother a Protestant and one commandeth the Chil● to read one book and go to one Church and the oth●● another which must be obeyed A. Either the Child is of age and understanding to try and Judge which of them is contrary to God● Law or not If he be he must obey God first and therefore not obey any thing that is contrary t● his Law But if not then he is one that will not pu● such questions nor do what he doth out of Conscience to God but perform meer humane Obedienc● to man And if his Ignorance of Gods Law b● through his own negligence it will not excuse h● Sin if he mistake But if it be from natural incapacity he is ruled like a Bruit and no doubt the Father is the Chief Governour of the house ●●d will and must be obeyed before the Mother when obedience to God doth not forbid it which this Child understandeth not Q. 25. What if Children be rebellious in wickedness as Drunkenness Stealing c. must the Parents cause them to be put to death as Moses Law Commanded or what must they do with them A. Moses Law had some special Severities and was peculiar to that Nation and is abrogate whether the Common good and safety require the death of such a Son or any the Supream Power is judge and not the Parents Nor is it meet though some think otherwise that Parents have the Power of putting to death their Children For the Common-wealth which is better than the Family is concerned in all the Subjects lives And experience proveth it that were this granted Whores Beggars and raging passionate Persons would be Common Murderers of their Children But if the Magistrate would appoint one house of Correction in every County for Children that will not be ruled by Parents where they may be kept ●n labour till they are humbled and subdued it would ●e an excellent work Q. 26. But what shall such sorrowfull Parents ●o A. First use all means by Wisdom Love and Pa●ience while there is hope And next if they are ●ast their Correction send them to the House of ●orrection And lastly disinherit them or deny them ●l maintenance for their lust Q. 27. Is it a duty to disinherit an incorrigible wicked Son or to deny such filial maintenance and Portions A. Supposing it to be in the Fathers power it is a duty to leave them no more than will maintain their lives in temperance For all men are Gods Stewards and must be accountable for all that he doth trust them with And they ought not to give it to be the fewel of Lust and Sin when they have reason to believe that it will be so used That were to give Gods Mercies to the Devil to be turn'd against him Nor are Parents bound to give those Children the necessary maintenance for their lives and health or any thing at all who by obstinate rebellion utterly forfeit it Nature is not so strong a bond but that some sin may dissolve it and forfeit Life it self and therefore forfeit fatherly maintenance The rebellion and ingratitude of an incorrigible Child is far more hainous than a Neighbours injuries And though Moses Law and its rigors be ceased
teach them their duty to God and Man and see that they joyn in publick and Family Worship and live not in any wilful sin And as Fellow Christians if they are such to further their comfortable passage to Heaven Q. 36. But what if we have Slaves that are no Christians A. You must use them as Men that are Capable of Christianity and do your best with pity to cure their Ignorance and Unbelief and sin and to make them Christians preferring their Souls before your wordly commodity Q. 37. Is it lawful to buy and use men as Slaves A. It is a great mercy accidentally for those of Guiny Brasile and other Lands to be brought among Christians though it be as Slaves But it is a sin in those that Sell and buy them as Beasts meerly for Commodity and use them accordingly But to buy them in compassion to their Souls as well as for their Service and then to sell them only to such as will use them Charitably like men and to employ them as aforesaid preferring their Salvation is a lawful thing specially such as Sell themselves or are sold as Malefactors Q. 38. What is the duty of Servants to their Masters A. To honour and obey them and faithfully serve them as part of their service of Christ expecting their chief reward from him To be trusty to them in Word and Deed not lying nor stealing or taking any thing of theirs without their consent nor wronging them by idleness negligence or fraud Learning of them thankfully and sincerely and obediently joyning with them in publick and Family Worship of God Q. 39. Doth God require Family Teaching and daily Worship A. Yes both by the Law of Nature and Scripture All Christian Societies must be sanctified to God Christian Families are Christian Societies They have as Families constant dependance on God constant need of his protection help and blessing and constant work to do for him and therefore constant use of prayer to him And as Nature and Necessity will teach us to eat and drink every day though Scripture tell us not how oft nor at what hour so will they tell us that we must daily ask it of God And stated times are a hedge to duty to avoid omissions and interruptions And Scripture Commandeth Parents to teach and perswade their Children constantly lying down and rising up c. Deut. 6. 11. And to bring them up in the Nurture and admonition of the Lord Cornelius Crispus and others Converted brought in their housholds with them to Christ. Daniel prayed openly daily in his House The fourth Commandment requireth of Masters that all in their House do Sanctifie the Sabbath Reason and Experience tells us that it is the keeping up Religion and Virtue in Families by the constant instruction care and Worship of God by the Governours that is the chief means of the hopes and welfare of the world and the omission of it the great cause of all publick corruption and confusion Q. 40. What must Children Wives Servants and Subjects do that have bad Parents Husbands Masters and Magistrates A. Nature bindeth Children in minority so to their Parents and Wives to their Husbands except in case of lawful divorce that they must live in patient bearing with what they cannot amend And so must such Servants and Subjects as by Law or Contract may not remove nor have legal remedy But those that are free may remove under better Masters and Princes when they can Q. 41. But whole Nations cannot remove from Enemies and destroyers A. It is God and not I that must answer such cases Only I say 1. That there is no Power but of God 2. That Governing Power is nothing but Right and Obligation to Rule the People in order to the Common good 3. That destroying the Common good is not Ruling nor any act of Power given by God 4. That all mans Power is limited by God and subordinate to his universal Government and Laws and he hath given none Authority against himself or his Laws 5. That so far as Gods Laws have not determined of the species and Degrees of Power they must be known by the humane Contracts or Consent which found them 6. Nations have by Nature a right to self-preservation against destroying Enemies and Murderers 7. And when they only seek to save themselves against such they resist not Governing Authority 8. But particular persons must patiently bear even wrongful destruction by Governours And whole Nations tolerable injuries rather than by Rebellions and Wars to seek their own preservation or right to the hurt of the Common-wealth 9. They are the great enemies of Government who are for Perjury by which mutual Trust is overthrown CHAP. XXXIX Of the Sixth Commandement Qu. 1. WHat are the Words of the sixth Commandement A. Thou shalt do no Murder Q. 2. What is Murder A. Killing unjustly a reasonable Creature And that culpably tends to it bringeth an answera●●e degree of guilt Q. 3. Why is this command the first that forbiddeth ●●ivate wrongs A. Because a mans Life is more precious than the ●●cidents of his Life Death depriveth him of all ●… time of Repentance and earthly Mercies and ●●priveth all others of the benefit which they might ●●ceive by him They rob God and the King of Subject Therefore God who is the giver of Life a dreadful avenger of the sin of Murder Cain ●●as cast out with terrour for this sin for it was the ●evils first Service who was a Murderer from the ●●ginning Therefore God made of old the Law ●gainst eating Blood lest men should be hardened ●… cruelty and to teach them his hatred of blood●●iltiness And it was the Murder of the Pro●●ets and of Christ himself and his Apostles that ●●ought that dreadful destruction on the Iews when ●rath came upon them to the uttermost Q. 4. If God hate murder why did he Command ●… Israelites to kill all the Canaanites Men Women ●●d Children A. Justice done by God or his Authority on Ca●●tal Malefactors is not murder You may as well ●… why God will damn so many in Hell which worse than Death The Curse was fallen on Chams ●osterity They were Nations of Idolaters and Murderers of their own Children offering them to Ido● and so drown'd in all wickedness that God justly ma● the Israelites his Executioners to take away th● forfeited Lands and Lives Q. 5. When is killing Murder or unlawful A. When it is done without Authority from Go● who is the Lord of Life Q. 6. To whom doth God give such authority to ●● men A. To the Supream Rulers of Common-wealt● and their Magistrates to whom they communic●… it Q. 7. May they kill whom they will A. No None but those whose crimes are so g●… as to deserve death by the Law of God in Nat●… and the just Laws of the Land even such wh● crimes make their death the due interest of the 〈◊〉 publick and needful
to its good and safety Q. 8. What if a Prince think that the death 〈◊〉 an Innocent man is accidentally necessary to the s●…ty of himself or the Common-wealth through other 〈◊〉 fault may he not kill him A. No he is a Murderer if he kill the Innoce●● or any whose fault deserveth not death should 〈◊〉 permit killing on such pretences no mens lives wo●… be safe In Factions there be other wayes of ●…medy and such wicked means do but hasten 〈◊〉 increase the evil which men would so prevent Q. 9. May not Parents have power to kill bad ●●●ldren A. No I have given you the reason under the 〈◊〉 Commandement Q. 10. May not a man kill another in the neces●●●y defence of his own Life A. In some cases he may and in some not He ●…y in case it be his equal or inferiour as to pub●●● usefulness and he have no other means being ●…ulted by him to save his Life from him But 〈◊〉 may not 1. If by flight or other just means he 〈◊〉 save his own Life 2. Nor if it be his King 〈◊〉 Father or any publick Person whose death ●…uld be a greater loss to the Common-wealth than 〈◊〉 own Q. 11. How prove you that A. Because the Light of Nature tells us that see●… Good and Evil are the objects of our Willing 〈◊〉 Nilling therefore the Greatest Good should still 〈◊〉 preferred and the greatest evil be most avoid●… and that the Good or Hurt of the Common●●alth is far greater than of a single private per●… Q. 12. But doth not Nature teach every Creature preserve its life and rather than die to kill ano●… A. The Nature of man is to be Rational and ●…ve bruitish Nature and to choose by Reason ●…gh against sensitive inclination Why else ●●t Martyrs choose to dye rather than to sin and ●●ldiers choose their own death before their Captains or their Kings in which God and reason ju●fie them Q. 13. But by this Rule an Army should kill th● General rather than to be killed or betrayed to de●● by him because all their lives are better than one man A. If they be but some part of an Army a● the Generals life be more useful to the rest and 〈◊〉 their King and Countrey and the publick good th●… all theirs they should rather dye as the Theb●… Legion did But if the General be a Traytor to 〈◊〉 King and Countrey and would destroy all or p●… of the Army to the publick loss and danger i●… no Murder if they kill him when they have no o●… way to save their Lives Q. 14. How many sorts of Murder are there 〈◊〉 which are the worst A. I. One of the worst is Persecution Kill●… men because they are good or because they 〈◊〉 not break Gods Lawes And lower degrees of P●…secution by Banishment Imprisonment Mul●… participate of guilt against this Command II. A second sort of hainous Murder is by 〈◊〉 sacres and unlawful Wars In which multitudes 〈◊〉 murdered and that studiously and with greatest 〈◊〉 dustry and Countreys ruined and undone The m●●titude of hainous Crimes that are contained in 〈◊〉 unlawful Warre are hardly known but by sad ●●perience III. Another sort of hainous Murder is when 〈◊〉 rents kill their own Children or Children their 〈◊〉 rents IV. Another is when Princes destroy their own Subjects whom by Office they are bound to protect or Subjects their Princes whom they are bound to obey and defend and honour V. Another sort of hainous Murder is when it is committed on pretence of Justice by Perjured Witnesses false Accusers or false Iudges or Magistrates As Naboth was murdered by Iezebel and Ahab and Christ by the Iews upon false accusations of Blasphemy and Treason For in this case the Murder is fathered on God and on Iustice which most abhorre it and the best things which should preserve the peace of the Innocent are used to the worst ends even to destroy them And a man hath no defence for himself as he may have against Murtherers or open Enemies and he is destroyed by those that are bound to defend him And the most devilish wicked Perjured men are made the Masters of mens Lives and may conquer Subjects by perverting Law VI. One of the most hainous crimes is soul-murder which is done by all that draw or drive men into sin or from their duty to God and the care of their Salvation either by seducing false Opinions opposing necessary Truth and Duty or by scorns or threats But none here sin so grievously as wicked Rulers and wicked Teachers and Pastors of the Churches Others kill Souls by one and one but these by hundreds and thousands And therefore it is the Devils main endeavour through the World to get Rulers and Teachers on his side and turn the Word and Sword against him that did ordain them All the Idolatrous World that know not Christ are kept under the Power of the Devil principally by wicked Rulers and Teachers And so is the Infidel and Mahometan World When the Turks had once conquered the Eastern Empire how quickly did those famous Churches and large Nations forsake Christ and turn to the grossest of Deceivers O how many millions of Souls have been since hereby destroyed And what wicked deceitful and contentious Teachers have done to the murdering of Souls alas the whole Christian World is witness Some by Heresie and some by Proud Tyranny and some by malignant opposition to the serious practice of that holy Law of God which they preach and some by Ignorance and some by slothful treacherous negligence and some by Church-divisions by their Snares or contentiousness Such as Paul speaks of Phil. 1. 15 16. 2. 3. And some in envy malign and hinder the preaching of the Gospel by such as they distast 1 Thes. 2. 16. VII But of all Soul Murder it is one of the greatest which is done by wicked Parents on their own Children who breed them up in Ignorance Wickedness and profane neglect if not hatred and scorn of serious Holiness And teach them malignant principles or hinder them from the necessary means of their Salvation That by Example teach them to Swear and lie and be drunken or profane For Parents to be the cruel damners of their own Children and this when in false hypocrisie they Vowed them in baptism to God and promised their godly education is odious cruelty and perfidiousness VIII And it is yet a more hainous Sin to be a Murderer of ones own Soul as every ungodly and impenitent sinner is For Nature teacheth all men to Love themselves and to be unwilling of their own destruction And no wonder that such are unmerciful to the Souls of Wives Children and Servants who will damn themselves and that for nothing and that after all the importunities of God and man to hinder them Q. 15. When may a man be accounted a Soul-selfmurderer seeing every man hath some sin A. Every sin as
Savages are who are taught by nature to set bounds to lust And besides all this the very Lust it self thus increased by lawless liberty would so corrupt mens Minds and Fantasies and Affections into a sordid beastly Sensuality that it would utterly indispose them to all spiritual and heavenly yea and manly employments of Heart and Life men will grow sottish and stupid unfit to consider of Heavenly things and uncapable of Holy pleasures Q. 5. But if these evil consequents be all then a man that can moderately use Fornication so as shall avoid these evils sinneth not A. Sin is the breach of Gods Law These mischiefs that would follow lawless lust shew you that God made this Law for the welfare of Mankind But Gods own Wisdom and Will is the Original reason of his Law and must satisfie all the World But were there none but this forementioned to avoid the Worlds confusion and ruine it was needful that God set a Law to Lust And when this is done for the Common good it is not lest to man to break Gods Law whenever he thinks he can avoid the consequents and secure the end of the Law For if men be left to such liberty as to judge when they may keep Gods Law and when they may break it lust will alwayes find a reason to excuse it and the Law will be in vain The World needed a regulating Law and Gods Law must not be broken Q. 6. Which are the most hainous sorts of filthyness A. Some of them are scarce to be named among Christians 1. Sodomy 2. Copulation with Bruits 3. Incest sinning thus with near kindred 4. Rapes or forcing Women But the commonest sorts are Adultery Fornication self-Pollution and the filthiness of the thoughts and affections and the words and actions which partake of the Pollution Q. 7. Why is Adultery so great a sin A. Besides the foresaid evils that are Common to it and Fornication it is a perfidious violation of the Marriage Covenant and destroyes the conjugal Love of Husband and Wife and confoundeth Progeny and as is aforesaid corrupteth Family order and humane Education Q. 8. Why may not a man have many Wives now as the Jews had A. As Christ saith of Putting away From the beginning it was not so but it was permitted for the hardness of their Hearts that their Seed might be multiplyed in which they placed their chief prosperity And that we may not think worse of them than they were as God hath taught the very Bruits to use Copulation no ofter than is necessary to Generation so it is probable by many passages of Scripture that it was so ordinarily then with men and consequently that they that had many Wives used them not so often as now too many do one and did not multiply Wives so much for Lust as for Progeny Q. 9. But is no ofter use of Husband and Wife lawful than for Generation A. Yes in Case of necessitating Lust But such a measure of Lust is to be accounted inordinate either as sin or a disease and not to be causlesly indulged though this remedy be allowed it Q. 10. But why may not many Wives be permitted now as well as then A. 1. No man can either dispense with Gods Laws or forgive sin against them but God himself If he forbear men in a sin that doth not justifie it 2. If a few men and many Women were cast upon a Wilderness or sent to plant it by Procreation the case were liker the Israelites where the Men were ofter kill'd by Wars and Gods Judgments than the Women But with us there is no pretence for the like Polygamy but it would confound and disquiet Families If one should make a difficult case of it whether a Prince that hath a Barren Wife may not take another for the safety of a Kingdom when it is in notorious danger of falling into the hands of a destroyer as Adams own Sons and Daughters lawfully marryed each other because there were no others in the World this would be no excuse where no such publick notorious necessity can be pleaded Q. 11. Why must marriage be a publick act A. Because else Adultery and unlawful Separations cannot be known nor punished but Confusion will come in Q. 12. But is it not Adultery that is committed against secret Marriage which was never published or legally Solemnized A. Yes Secret consent makes a Marriage before God though not before the World and the violation of it is Adultery before God Q. 13. May not a man put away his Wife or depart from her if she seek his death or if she prove utterly intolerable A. While he is Governour he hath divers other Remedies first to be tryed A Bedlam must be used as a Bedlam And no doubt but if he have just cause to fear poysoning or other sort of Murder he may secure his life against a Wife as well as against an Enemy Christ excepted not that case because Nature supposeth such Exceptions Q. 14. But if utter unsuitableness make their Cohabitation an insuperable temptation or intolerable misery may they not part by consent for their own good seeing it is their mutual good which is the end of Marriage A. 1. The publick good is a higher end of all mens worldly Interests and Actions than their own And when the Example would encourage unlawful Separators they must not seek their own ease to the publick detriment 2. And if it be their own sinfull distempers which maketh them unsuitable God bindeth them to amend and not to part And if they neglect not his Grace he will help them to do what he commandeth And it 's in his way and not their own by the Cure of their sin and not by indulging it that they must be healed But as the Apostle saith in another Case if the faulty Person depart and the other cannot help it a Brother or Sister is not left in Bondage but may stay till the allay of the Distemper incline them to return Q. 15. What is inward heart Fornication or Uncleanness A. 1. Inordinate filthy thoughts are some degree 2. Inordinate desires are a higher degree 3. Inordinate contrivance and consent are yet a higher And when such thoughts and desires become the ordinary Inhabitants of the Soul and pollute it when they lie down and when they rise and shut out holy and sober thoughts and become a filthy habit in the Mind then the degree is so great as that an unclean Devil hath got great advantage if not a kind of possession of the Imagination and the Soul Q. 16. Which way are the other senses guilty of this sin A. 1. When an ungoverned Eye is suffered to fetch in lustfull thoughts and desires into the mind 2. Much more when to such immodest or unchas●e Looks there is added immodest Actions and dalliance unfit to be named 3. And when fleshly Appetite and Ease do bring in fewel to unchaste incli●ations 4. And
Atheists Sadducees or Infidels after And these are worse than common Infidels that never were baptized The Church is no Church if it be common to these 6. Some that continue a Nominal Christianity openly hate and persecute the Practice of it and live in common Adultery Perjury Murder And the Church is Holy and a peculiar People a holy Nation a royal Priesthood And Repentance and Obedience are necessary to the Church as well as Faith If therefore these notorious flagitious impenitent persons must be Members in Communion with the Church it will be a Swine-sty and not a Church a Shame to Christ and not an Honour If his Church be but like the rest of the World Christ will not be honoured as the Saviour of it nor the Spirit as its Sanctifier It is the Unity of the Spirit that all Christians must keep in the bond of Peace But these have none of his Spirit and therefore are none of Christs The Sacraments are Symbols of the Church as differenced from the World and Christ will have them be a visibly distinct Society 7. Communicants come to receive the greatest gift in the world Pardon Justification Adoption right to Heaven The Gospel giveth these to none but Penitent Believers To say that Christ giveth them to flagitious impenitent Rebels whose Lives say We will not have him reign over us is to make a new Gospel contrary to Christs Gospel which Paul curseth were it done by an Angel Gal. 1. 7 8. They are not yet capable of these precious gifts 8. The Objectors take no notice of 1 Cor. 5. 2 Thess. 3. Rom. 16. 16 17. Tit. 3. 10. Rev. 2. 3. where the Churches are reproved for suffering Defilers nor Heb. 13. 7. 17. 24. Luk. 12. 42. 42. 1 Thess. 5. 12 13. which describe the Office of Church-guides nor 1 Tim. 3. 4 c. where the governing of the Church and avoiding Communion of the Impenitent are described 9. In a word Christs Office Works and Law the Nature of the Church and Sacrament the Office of the Ministry the frequent Precepts of the Apostles and the constant practice of the Church in its greatest Purity down from the Apostles dayes do all speak so plainly for keeping and casting out Infidels and impenitent wicked men and for keeping the Church as a Society of visible Saints separated from the World that I can take him for no better than a Swine or an Infidel who would have the Church-Keyes cast away and the Church turned common to Swine and Infidels Q. 24. But it will make Ministers Lords and Tyrants to have such power A. 1. Some body must be trusted with the Power if the work must be done The Church must be differenced from the World Therefore some must trye and judge who are fit to be baptized and to have its Communion And who is fitter than those whom Christ by Office hath thereto appointed Would you have Magistrates or the People do it Then they must be prepared for it by long study and skill and wholly attend it For it will take up all their time Q. 25. Must Ministers examine People before they communicate A. They must Catechize and Examine the Adult before they baptize them and consequently those who were baptized in Infancy before they number them with adult Communicants or else Atheists and Infidels will make up much of the Church who will come in for worldly Interest This Examination should go before Confirmation or the publick owning of their Baptism But there is no Necessity of any more Examination before every Sacrament except in case of Scandal or when persons need and crave such help Q. 26. Who be they that must be Excommunicated or refused A. Those who are proved to be Impenitent in gross scandalous sins after sufficient admonition and patience And to reject such is so far from Tyranny that it is necessary Church-Justice without which a Pastor is but a Slave or Executioner of the sinfull will of others Like a Tutor Philosopher or Schoolmaster who is not the Master of his own School but must leave it common to all that will come in though they scorn him and refuse his conduct But no man must play the Pastor over other mens Flocks nor take the Guidance of a greater Flock than he can know and manage Much less be the only Key-bearer over many Score or Hundred Churches And least of all take upon him to Govern and judge of Kings and Kingdoms and all the World as the Roman deceiving Tyrant doth CHAP. XLVII Of Preparation for Death and Iudgment Qu. 1. HOw must we prepare for a safe and co●fortable Death A. I have said so much of this in my Family Book that to avoid Repetition I must refer you thi●her only in brief I. Preparation for Death is the whole work of Life for which many hundred years are not too long if God should so long spare and trie us And all that I have hitherto said to you for Faith Love and Obedience upon the Creed Lords Prayer and Commandements is to teach you how to prepare for Death And though ●ound Conversion at last may tend to Pardon and Salvation to them that have lived a careless wicked Life Yet the best the surest the Wisest Preparation is that which is made by the whole course of a holy obedient heavenly Life Q. 2. What Life is it that is the best Preparation A. 1. When we have so well considered of the certain Vanity of this World and all its pleasures and of the truth of Gods Promises of the Heavenly Glory as that by Faith we have there placed our chiefest Hopes and there expect our chief Felicity and make it our chief business in this world to seek it preferring no worldly thing before it but resolved for the hopes of it to forsake them all when God requireth it This is the first part of our preparation for Death II. When we believe that this mercy is given by Christ the Mediator between God and Man and trust in his Merits and Intercession with the Father and take him for our Teacher also and our Ruler resolving to obey his Word and Spirit This is the second part of our preparation for Death III. When the Holy Spirit hath shed abroad Gods Love upon our hearts and turned their nature into a habit of Love to God and Holiness and given us a Victory over that Love of the World and fleshly Prosperity and Pleasure which ruleth in the hearts of Carnal men though yet our Love shew it self but in such Mortification and endeavour and grief for what we want we are prepared for a safe Death But if the foretasts of Heavenly Glory and sense of the Love of God do make our thoughts of Heaven sweeter to us than our thoughts of our Earthly hopes and cause us out of Love to God and our glorified Redeemer and his Church and out of love to a Life of perfect Knowledge Love and
Joy to long to depart and be with Christ then we are prepared not only for a safe but a joyful Death Q. 3. O! But this is a great and difficult work A. It is not too hard for the S●… of Christ● and a Soul renewed by it It is our great foll●… and naughtiness that maketh it hard Why e●… should it be hard for a man that loveth himself and knoweth how quickly a Grave and rotting in the Dark must end all his pleasures in this World to be earnestly desirous of a better after it And why should it be hard for one that believeth that mans Soul is immortal and that God hath sent one from Heaven who is greater than Angels to purchase it for us and promise it to us and give us the first fruits by his Holy Spirit to rejoyce that he dyeth not as an unpardoned Sinner nor as a Beast but shall live in perfect Life and Light and Love and Joy and Praise for ever What should rejoyce a believing considering man like this Q. 4. O! But we are still apt to doubt of things unseen A. 1. You can believe Men for things unseen and be certain by it for instance that there is such a place as Rome Paris Venice that there have been such Kings of England as Hen. 8. King Iames c. You know not but by believing others whether ever you were Baptized nor who was your Father or Mother 2. You see not your own Soul nor any ones that you talk with and yet you feel and see such things as may assure any Sober man that he hath a Soul God is not seen by us yet nothing is more certain than that there is a God 3. We see Plants Flowers Fruits and all vital Acts produced by an unseen Power we see ●ast lucid glorious Regions above us and we see and feel the effects of invisible powers therefore to doubt of things because they are unseen is to doubt of all the vital noblest part of the World and to believe nothing but gross and lowest things and to lay by Reason and become Bruits But of this I have said more near the Beginning Q. 5. What should we do to get the Soul so familiar above as to desire to be with Christ A. I. We must not live in a foolish forgetfulness of Death nor flatter our Souls into delayes and dulness by the expectations of long life on Earth the grave must be studied till we have groundedly got above the fears of it II. We must not rest quiet in such a humane belief of the Gospel and the Life to come as hath no better grounds than the common opinion of the Countrey where we live as the Turks believe Mahomet and his Alcoran for this leaveth the Soul in such doubts and uncertainty as cannot reach to solid Joy nor Victory over the World and Flesh But the true Evidences of the Gospel and our Hopes must be well digested which I have opened to you in the beginning of which I give you a breviate in two Sentences 1. The History of the Gospel of Christs Life Miracles Death Resurrection Ascension sending down the Spirit the Apostles Miracles and Preaching and Writing and Sufferings is a true History Else there is none sure in the World for none of such Antiquity hath greater Evidence 2. And if the History aforesaid be true the Doctrine must needs be true for it is part of the History and owned and sealed certainly by God III. We must not be content to be once satisfied of the Truth of the Life to come but we must mentally live upon it and for it and know how great business our Souls have every day with our Glorified Lord and the Glorified Society of Angels and the perfected Spirits of the just and with the blessed God of Love and Glory We must daily fetch thence the motives of our desires hopes and dutyes the incentives of our Love and Joy The Confutation of all Temptations from the Flesh and World and our supporting patience in all our Sufferings and Fears Read oft Ioh. 17. 22 23 24. 20. 17. Heb. 12. 22 23 24. Mat. 6. 19 20 21 33. Col. 3. 4 5. 2 Thes. 1. 10 11. Heb. 11. 2 Cor. 4. 16 17. 5. 1 2 3 5 7 8. Phil. 1. 21 23. 3. 18 19 20 They that thus live by Faith on God and Glory will be prepared for a joyful death IV. We must take heed that no worldly Hope or Pleasure vitiate our Affections and turn them down from their true delight V. We must live wholly upon Christ his Merit Sufficiency Love and Mediation His Cross and his Kingdom must be the summe of our Learning Study and Content VI. We must take heed of grieving the Spirit of Consolation and wounding our Consciences by wilful Sin of Omission or Commission VII We must Faithfully improve all our Time and Talents to do God all the Service and others all the good that we can in the World that we may be ready to give an account of our Stewardship VIII We must be armed against Temptations to unbelief and despair IX We must while we are in the Body in our daily thoughts fetch as much help from sensible Similitudes as we can to have a suitable Imagination of the Heavenly Glory And one of the most Familiar is that which Christ calleth the Coming of the Kingdom of God which was his Transfiguration with Moses and Elias in Glorious appearance in the Holy Mount Mat. 17. 1. Which made Peter say It 's good to be here Christ purposely so appeared to them to give them a sensible apprehension of the Glory which he hath promised And Moses that was buried appeared there in a Glorified Body And we must not think only of God but of the Heavenly Society and even our old Acquaintance that our Minds may find the more Suitableness and Familiarity in their objects and Contemplations X. We must do our best to keep up that Natural Vivacity and Chearfulness which may be Sanctified for Spiritual Employment for when the Body is diseased with Melancholy Heaviness or Pains and the Mind diseased with Griefs Cares and Fears it will be hard to think joyfully of God or Heaven or any thing XI We must exercise our selves in those dutyes which are nearest kin to the work in Heaven Specially labouring to excite Hope Love and Joy by Faith and Praising God especially in Psalms in our Families and the sacr●d Assemblies and using the most Heavenly Books and Company XII We must not look when all is done to have very clear Conceptions of the quality and acts of separated Souls or the World of Spirits But must be satisfied with an implicite Trust in our Father and our Glorified Lord in the things which are yet above our reach And giving up Soul and Body to him we should joyfully trust them with him as his own And believe that while we know as much as may bring us well