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A49797 Magna Charta ecclesiæ universalis the grand charter issued out and granted by Jesus Christ for the plantation of the Christian faith in all nations ... / by George Lawson ... Lawson, George, d. 1678. 1686 (1686) Wing L708; ESTC R37962 90,290 226

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Obedience Disobedience Punishments and Rewards of the obedience of the blessed Angels and their Confirmation in a state of holiness and bliss of the fall of the rest and the wrath of God upon them and their irrecoverable misery Sect. 5. The second general Head and Topick i● that of the Son who redeems us The particulars considerable under this Hea● are 1. The party Redeemed 2. The Redeemer 3. The work of Redemption 1. To that of the party redeemed which is man as sinful and guilty we may reduce such places as inform us of the first Laws both Moral and Positive which God gave man upon his creation of mans obedience and comfortable condition and his hope of future happiness of the fall and first sin of man of Satans temptation and temptation and sin in general what it is what the aggravations or attenuations thereof what the consequents especially shame fear guilt punishment of the derivation of sin and death unto all mankind from Adam the root and head of all his posterity and of the sad condition of man in respect of the first sin upon which an inevitable ruine had followed if God had not prevented it 2. The Redeemer and hither refer such places as speak how God decreed and promised a Redeemer and Saviour and all the Prophesies Predictions Types Shadows of him such as inform us of his person as he is the eternal Word and Son of God of his God-head Manhood united and the eternal distinction of both of his Offices Sacerdotal Prophetical Regal of his Conception Birth Life of his Doctrine Miracles holy life and excellent vertues and the whole history of the same as delivered by the Evangelists 3. His work of Redemption which hath two parts Humiliation Exaltation In his Humiliation we have his low estate suffering To that of his low estate may be reduced the Scriptures which speak of the poverty and meanness of his Birth as he was born in stable and laid in a manger of the poverty and mean condition of his Parents his Circumcision Presentation in the Temple his Infirmities as Hunger Thirst Weariniss and the like which were without sin and his mortality To that of his suffering refer the Texts concerning his Persecutions dangers from the Contempt malice envy jealousie of Herod first then of the Pharisees Scribes Priests Rulers of the Jews of his Agony Judas treachery Peters denial and principally such as represent unto us his death upon the Cross and his continuing under the power of death for a time and in these sufferings of his Pains Cries Tears Complaints and inward sorrows of his Meekness Patience Humility Charity Hope of glory Considence in his Father of his obedience to the great command to suffer so many indigninities such shame and curse that by his death he might make propitiation for the sin of man and such as speak of this death as a sacrifice propitiatory offered unto God as supreme Judge offended by our sins and that out of dearest love unto us and a longing desire to save us of the eternal vertue and efficacy of the sacrifice so highly accepted of God and the rare effects of the same both mediate and immediate of the prodigies which fell out in the time of his passion and at his death of the Prophesies fulfilled in this humilitation even to the casting lots upon his seamless Coat the piercing of his side and the not breaking of a bone His exaltation follows in his Resurrection Ascension Session at the right hand of God Coming to judgment To this Head of Resurrection may be reduced such Texts as spake of the Prodigies falling out near unto the same the distinct time the manner the manifestation of it the persons to whom the time where the places where he was manifested his abode upon earth for forty days his converse with his Disciples his instruction given his commission granted to the Apostles who saw him The use which is to be made of this Doctrine to that of his Ascension may be reduced such places as speak of the time when of the places from which and to which he ascended the persons both Men and Angels who beheld it of the end of this part of this exaltatio● which was to be confirmed in his everlasting Kingdom and Priesthood and to exercise his power which he received more solemnly upon his Resurrection and to receive fulness of joy in his Fathers presence and pleasures at his right hand for evermore to make intercession for such a● come to God by him and to prepare eternal mansions for his Saints and so be fully blessed for ever To that of his sitting at the right hand of God refer those places which speak o● the super-eminency of his power above all men and Angels and all creatures of his being the head of the Church the administrator general of Gods spiritual kingdom of the exercise of this power and the wonderful effects thereof in heaven and earth and his abode in the place of glory and the continuance of his reign untill all enemies be subdued To that of his coming to Judgment refer such Scriptures as speak of the place from whence he comes the manner of his coming in the glory of the Father in flaming fire with the attendance of all the holy Angels the burning of the world the Archangel sounding his Trumpet the Resurrection whereby death the last enemy is destroyed the parties to be judged their summons appearance discovery of all their works even the secrets of their hearts the sentence of him the universal Judge the execution of the same in eternal punishments and rewards the delivering of the Kingdom up unto his Father Sect. 6. The third and last Head is concerning the holy Ghost in which we must observe 1. The Holy Ghost himself Vocation Justification Glorification 2. The effects of this Holy Ghost in respect of the Churches To the first reduce such places as inform us of his Divine Nature Properties perfections and the Worship due unto him of his relation to the Father and the Son of his working with them and from them of his apparitions of his resting upon Christ of the several Names and Titles given him As for the effects and works of this Spirit we must know that he with the Father and the Son is the universal cause of all things for the Father and the Son doth all things by his Spirit yet the Creed takes notice in this place only of those works and operations which tend to the eternal salvation of man The first whereof is Vocation To this Head refer all Scriptures which speak of the condition of man to be called as being blind ignorant senseless perverse guilty not thinking of any danger not desiring not seeking any remedy yet redeemed and by Redemption made saveable For Redemption found man in no capacity of salvation vocation finds the foundation of his salvation laid To this Topick also bring such places as speak of preventing grace and the
irrecoverably lost and are delivered into chains of darkness reserved for the judgment of the great day Man received Laws both moral and positive by which he was bound to perform perfect and perpetual obedience or else to suffer death yet man being tempted by the Devil fell and by one man sin entered into the world and by sin death and death passed over all men in that all men have sinned This was the just judgment of God who cursed the Serpent and the Devil punished man and woman yet promised them a Saviour the seed of the woman who should break the Serpents head and take away his kingdom and power over mankind This was the judgment of the supream Lord whereby many of the Angels continuing obedientin the day of their great trial were confirmed in an estate of holiness and bliss the apostate wretches were condemned to eternal death and so fell as never to rise again yet man had hope of recovery because God by his infinite mercy was willing to prevent his eternal ruine I believe that God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth on him should not perish but have everlasting life This Son who is our Redeemer is that word whereby all things in Heaven and Earth even the Principalities Powers Thrones and Dominions of Heaven were created who is the brightness of his Fathers Glory and the express Image of his Person This word issued out of Eternity and in fulness of time was made flesh dwelt amongst men who saw his glory as the glory of the onely begotten Son of God full of Grace Truth So that he is truly God and truly Man in whom conceived by the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin Mary we have One Person Two Natures eternally distinct and inseparably united He was conceived at Nazareth bornat Bethlehem saved in Egypt from bloody Herod and brought up in the place of his conception and his very birth was matter of joy and melody to the Angels of Heaven This Jesus of Nazareth was the Christ promised of old the seed of the Woman of Abraham of David according to the flesh and was anointed with the Holy Ghost above his fellows and was made King Priest and Prophet above all other Kings Priests and Prophets that he might govern us by his Power direct and teach us by his Wisdom and sanctifie us for ever by his own Sacrifice first offered for sinful men and then pleaded in Heaven 〈…〉 s all penitent Believers I believe that Jesus Christ the Word made flesh did humble himself very low took upon him the form of a servant and became obedient unto death the death of the Cross and both in life and death did manifest his Divine excellency and glorifie his heavenly Father In the day of his humiliation he did hunger thirst fast pray weep and took upon him the infirmities of man yet without sin and was mortal His conversation was holy and spotless and was so ordered that both in life and death he was a Mirrour of all heavenly Virtues His Doctrine whereby he revealed the Mysteries of Heavens Kingdom was pure and full of profoundest Wisdom and of sovereign power to save mens souls and his words such as never man spake and were confirm'd by signs and wonders and glorious miracles by which he declared himself to be the Son of the living God He by himself his Apostles and other assistants whom he had chosen and qualified for this work began to gather Disciples and lay the foundation of his everlasting Kingdom yet notwithstanding these so many Divine excellencies he suffers many indignities from his unworthy and ungrateful Brethren whom he loved above all other People in the world though he was a Son yet he learned obedience by the things he suffered For many did not believe in him many were offended with him The ambitious covetous corrupt hypocritical High-Priests Rulers Scribes Pharisees Sadduces being discovered unto the people and by him reproved for their sins and deserted by many of the people did envy him hate him persecute him revile him blaspheme him and designed his death which they often and many ways attempted and in the end prevailed In the last night of his mortal life on earth after the eating of the Passover the institution of the Sacrament of his blessed body and blood his consolatory speech unto his Disciples his heavenly prayer he enters into the fatal place and garden where his greatest sufferings began Then upon his serious consideration and lively apprehension of the bitter Cup he was to drink and the fearful passion and tempattion now at hand he falls into a grievous and extreme Agony wherein with earnest prayers tears and loud cries he desires his heavenly Father to spare him and to let the Cup pass from him yet so that he wholly resigns himself unto his will He desires his Disciples especially three of them to watch with him and to pray for an hour yet they fail him he falls upon the ground deprecates the Cup three several times sweats drops as it were of bloud and at length an Angel was sent from heaven to comfort the Lords of Angels so deeply was he humbled so greatly was he afflicted so much was he difcomforted while he prepares himself to encounter the powers of Hell and expiate the sin of man This woful fit was no sooner passed over but he is betrayed into the hands of sinners apprehended bound brought before the Council accused condemned as a plasphemer worthy of death and so the judg of Men and Angels was judged he is hoodwink't buffeted blasphemed spit upon and most fearfully aboused and being formerly betrayed by s and now with cursing swearing and forswearing denyed by S. Peter and forsaken of all his Disciples As for this he is brought before Pilate falsly charged with heinous crimes yet justified as having done nothing worthy of death The Judge is afraid to condem him willing to release him scourgeth him and at the importuniy of his bloudy enemies he at length condems him to the cruel cursed ignominious death of the Cross and delivers him to the Souldiers who deride him abuse him torment him and lead him to the place of execution There he is stripped crucified endures open shame cruel pains revilings bitter taunts from the High-Priests the People the Malefactors crucified with him and the Souldiers yet he reviles not again nor threatens but in respect of wrong received he is silent and dumb as the sheep before the shearer prays for his enemies provides for his disconsolate Mother comforts such as do bewail him and foretells their future misery In the height of his passion he cries out such was the extremity My God my God why hast thou forsaken me commends his Spirit into his Fathers hands and so dies This suffering and death was such as never any before it never any after it like unto it So much was signified at that time when the Heavens were darkned
the Earth did quake the Rocks did rend the Graves were opened the Veil of the Temple was rent in the midst from the top to the bottom to signifie that the great High-Priest having offered himself by the eternal Spirit without spot was entring with his own Blood into the Holy Place of Heaven to obtain eternal Redemption and the expiation of mans sin for ever The very frame of Heaven and Earth seem'd to be shaken in the time of this great suffering men were astonished women wept many beat their breasts the Centurion who had the charge of this execution was convinced that the party executed was the Son of God Our blessed Saviour suffered this death with unparallell'd patience meekness he laid down his life willingly in obedience to his heavenly Father and out of love and a longing desire of sinful mans salvation No man could take it from him till the hour was come and he was willing to part with it because he as a Priest and general head and representative of mankind offered his life unto his heavenly Father as supreme Judge as a ransom for sinful man therefore his death was the greatest Sacrifice and the highest piece of service and obedience that ever was performed and was so highly accepted of God that it made him propitious satisfied his Justice merited his favour to sinful man made his sin pardonable and his salvation possible upon fairest terms whil'st he was by his own blood entring the sacrary of heaven his side is pierced and out of the same issue water and blood His body is taken from the Cross decently interred in a new Sepulchre where never any man was laid before his soul abides for a time separate and under the power of death and his humiliation did continue till the Resurrection and by his burial he hallows the grave to all believers By this Humiliation thus finished the foundation of our eternal salvation is laid and a way prepared and opened for a passage into heavens Kingdom I believe that Jesus Christ who was thus humbled who suffered cruel pains and was delivered to death for our transgressions was raised for our justification and so to communicate the mercies merited by his death converts us and procures the actuall remission of all the sins of such as repent and believe in him and by his life saves such as he had reconciled by his death He that did rise was the very same who died upon the Cross and the same body and soul which were separated by Death were united again by Resurrection as man he was raised as God he raised himself he rose never to die again but to live for evermore The time was the third day according to the predictions and prefigurations of old and the decree of God's eternal wisdom God did not suffer his Holy One to see corruption The manner of this Resurrection was glorious God then shook the Earth sent from Heaven an Angel appearing in great glory who terrified the Guard rouls away the stone which closed up the Sepulchre and made way for Christs Disciples to come freely and see that he was not there The Graves were opened divers of the Saints raised and appear'd in the holy City Death was conquered and divers of his Captives rescued out of his hands This his Resurrection was made manifest by testimony of Angels and of divers others who saw him spake with him and were assured of it he appears unto many and that many times and especially to the eleven Apostles who saw him heard him did eat and drink with him touched him with their hands To these he unfolds the Mysteries of his Kingdom gives them commission to go into all Nations and commands them to stay at Jerusalem till they received the Holy Ghost according to the promise of his Father God by thus raising him did manifest that he had accepted his Sufferings and Death as a full propitiation of the sins of men and by saying Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee made him universal King and Priest fully consecrated for ever He rose as head and representative of mankind especially of his Church and became not only the pattern but the first fruits and cause of our Resurrection so that as in Adam dying all died so in Him rising we shall all be made alive first to newness of life then to eternal glory The same Spirit that raised Christ from the dead shall raise us from the death of sin unto newness of life and raise our bodies to immortality forty days he stays on Earth to comfort his Disciples strengthen their Faith make evident his Resurrection and give orders for the administration of his future Kingdom then he ascends from Mount Olivet in a Cloud up into the Heaven of Heavens Men and Angels being witnesses according to a former Vision that one like the Son of man came with the Clouds of Heaven and came unto the ancient of days and that the Angels brought him peace before him He ascended that he might fulfill all things send down the Holy Ghost enjoy full joy in his Fathers presence and pleasures at his right hand for ever make intercession for his Saints prepare eternal blessed mansions for them raise up their thoughts and affections to that heavenly estate he had merited and prepared for them that where he is our hearts might be also and that he might receive a place at his Fathers right hand so it was prophesied of old that when the Son of man was brought before the ancient of days there was given him Dominion and Glory and a Kingdom that all People and Nations and Languages should serve him his Dominion is an everlasting Dominion which shall not pass away and his Kingdom that which shall not be destroy'd For his Father said unto him Sit at my right hand till I make thy foes thy footstool and gave him a name above all names and set him far above all Principalities and Powers and Might and Dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but in that which is to come He was solemnly invested with a supreme universal power above all men and Angels established in his Kingdom confirmed by Oath in his everlasting Priesthood sent down the holy Ghost the Gospel the rod of his power went out of Zion he reigned in the midst of his enemies and many thousands did willingly submit unto him and his people for number were like drops of dew which fall from the womb of the morning When all things are fulfilled all enemies subdued the number of his Saints finished he will come from Heaven to determine of the final estate of men and Angels and judg both quick and dead And then he will deliver up his Kingdom to the Father that God may be all in all I believe that the Holy Ghost which is One God with the Father and the Son and is the Spirit of the Father and the Son by whom all things in Heaven and
Sacraments of the New Testament look at Christ as already come having shed his blood and finished the work of Redemption and require ●aith in him under that notion and in that respect As it differs from the former by this that it 's a Sacrament of the New Testament so in this particular it agrees with the Eucharist so that from hence we may describe a Sacrament of the New Testament to be a Rite instituted by Christ to confirm the Covenant of Grace in the blood of Christ already shed wherein we may observe 1. The blood of Christ shed 2. A Covenant confirmed in and by this blood of Christ and Sacrifice already offered 3. A confirmation of this Covenant made between God and particular persons by these holy Rites Sect. 3. Baptism as it is 1. a Sacrament 2. a Sacrament of the New Testament so 3. it is the initiating Sacrament of the New Testament For there are but two Sacraments of the Gospel instituted by Christ and this is the first in order and first to be administred it presupposeth the party to be baptized as an Alien and not yet solemnly admitted into the Church and Kingdom of God though he may be prepared for this admission and incorporation In respect of this initiation it differs from the Eucharist which cannot lawfully be administred to any but such as are members of the Church and incorporated already For as under the Law no stranger might be admitted to the Passover so under the Gospel no unbaptized person may come unto the Lords Table This is the reason why this Rite is called the Laver of Regeneration the Sacrament of our New Birth and of our ingrafting into Christ And as we are but once born so we are but once baptized for this Sacrament once rightly administred is not to be reiterated whereas the Eucharist being a Sacrament of our spiritual nourishment and growth is often to be celebrated Sect. 4. Thus you have heard that Baptism is an initiating Sacrament of the New Testament it remains that I inform you of the particular Rite of Initiation which is by washing with water In the Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost For this is the instruction and command of our Saviour in this Commission in these words Baptizing them in the Name of the Father c. where we have three things to be considered 1. Water the Element 2. Washing with water the Action 3. Washing in the Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost the words 1. Water in it self is a natural substance and a liquid Element granted unto mankind as a special blessing and to be used according to several virtues thereof for several ends one end is washing and cleansing bodies and other things that are ●ullied or defiled and this according to the purging and cleansing virtue thereof This Water according to this natural virtue was singled out by a Divine Institution and determination for an higher end and that is to signifie and confirm a spiritual cleansing And though some make this in Baptism to be a sign of Christ's blood which hath a power to cleanse and purge the conscience from dead works to serve the living God yet in this Sacrament it rather signifies the Holy Ghost which sanctifies and regenerates the Church Therefore our Saviour saith 3. 5. Verily verily except a man be born of the Spirit and Water he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God In this respect Baptism is said to be the Laver of Regeneration by the renewing of the Holy Ghost which God shed on us abundantly Tit. 3. 5 6. In both which places the Spirit is assimilated to Water as washing cleansing renewing yet here it 's to be noted that the Spirit doth not renew and cleanse us but by virtue of Christ's blood which merited the renovation and purification of the soul. For if Christ's blood had not been shed the Spirit had never been given to sanctifie us Sect. 5. The action is Washing expressed in this word Baptize which word as you heard before signifies to wash and that often washing is the use and application of this Elemement for to cleanse which may be done many ways as by plunging the thing to be washed into the water wholly or by dipping or by pouring water upon it and sometimes by sprinkling for many things under the Law were cleansed by sprinkling of water or blood This action for this end implies the party to be baptized as polluted with sin and so unfit to have communion with God and to be admitted into his heavenly Kingdom Therefore he must be renewed purified and regenerated and that by the Holy Ghost ingrafting him into Christ and planting him into the similitude of Christs death and Resurrection thence we have two parts of this Regeneration 1. Remission 2. Sanctification in sanctification a death unto sin and a life unto righteousness In some kind of washing the death and Resurrection of Christ and also a death unto sin and a life unto righteousness were more clearly represented yet there is hardly any kind of washing but doth in some measure resemble these things But we must not in this Sacrament stand upon the more perfect or imperfect representation of the spiritual part thereof The principal thing visible sensible is washing cleansing the principal thing signified is the sanctification and purging of the soul and conscience Sect. 6. The words are In the name of the Father c. Where we must observe 1. That to be baptized in the name into the name unto the name of the Father of the Son of the Holy Ghost are the same 2. That as the name of Christ and Christ are often the same so the name of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost is God the Father Son and Holy Ghost 3. That though Father Son and Holy Ghost are three and some ways distinct yet they are but one and the same God 4. That the Baptism in this name presupposeth the party to be baptized to have professed his faith in and his obedience unto the name of God the Father and the Son and Holy Ghost that his sins may be forgiven and that he may attain eternal life according to the promise of the Covenant on Gods part so that the Covenant is actually made between God and the party to be baptized These things premised the meaning is that in the name and person of God the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost baptize thee in this water and by this solemn rite admit thee to be one of Gods people a subject of his blessed Kingdom of grace to enjoy all the priviledges thereof and assure thee of the performance of the promises of the Covenant according to the profession and promise thou hast made and by this same rite solemnly bind thee to make good the profession and perform the vows which thou hast made unto God the Father who hath made thee and God the Son
must be universal we must do whatsoever our Lord hath commanded us for though there may be an inequality of things commanded yet there is the same reason why we should obey one as well as another the least as well as the greatest and that is the will and command of our Saviour In this respect it 's said that he that offends in one offends in all because of the contempt of the will of the Lawgiver we must not pick and chuse to do what we please obey some and disobey other commands we must not expect from Christ any liberty indulgence toleration dispensation to transgress any of the least of Gods Laws 3. It must be constant and continued to the end for there are no days nor hours of intermission we must always be doing and we must not rest till we have finished our work that will not be till this mortal life is ended we must serve our God day and night whilst we have any being And as God did not rest till he finished his work of Creation so we must not expect our Sabbath till we have finished the work of our Salvation our obedience must be one line drawn out and continued from the first moment of our conversion to the last day of our dissolution 4. As we must be constant so we must be diligent zealous active watchful God loves not lazie servants and the work is great and difficult and we meet with many enemies much opposition and must wrestle with many difficulties which are the greater because of the Devil and the World without and the Relicks of corruption within us Therefore our Christian life is a race and a continual warfare therefore we must not only put on the complete armour of God but we must strive and fight and put forth all our power and never think of rest till we have obtained a final and ful victory And though we cannot reach yet we must aim at the perfection of Angels according to that prayer Thy will be done on Earth as it is done in Heaven that is by those immortal blessed spirits who never sinned but do his Commandments hearkning to the voice of his word 5. Yet we must know that of our selves we are frail weak and without Christ we can do nothing and can do all things through Christ who strengthneth us Christ must give us his Spirit and strengthen us within and by this Spirit support us and assist us without Therefore must continually pray that according to his promise he would put his Laws in our inward parts and write them in our hearts and to do this more and more according to his promise we must not presume upon our strength but always humbly depend upon him who worketh both the will and deed of his good pleasure If he but a little desert us and withdraw his hand how suddenly may David and St. Peter fall and sin grievously 6. Yet though we may transgress and sometimes fall grievously yet we must not despair nor be secure but presently renew our repentance return unto God muster up all our power and fight and work and strive again and this with the greater force and power And this is our comfort we are not under the Law of Works which requireth perfect perpetual obedience or else threatneth certain and unavoidable death and destruction but under Grace which ministreth power and when we fall upon our repentance promiseth pardon life ane Christ will plead our Cause procure our Peace From all this it doth appear that baptized Christians must not be Soli●idians much less Antomonians and Lawless we must be loyal and obedient and not live like base earthly worldlings but like Citizens of Heaven for upon this condition we are admitted Subjects of an heavenly Kingdom Thus we understand that our duty is to submit to Christ our Law-giver know his Laws remember them observe them all out of Faith Love Fear with all our hearts carefully constantly depending always upon our Saviour and renewing our repentance daily For this obedience must be universal perpetual sincere free and we must obey not only in doing good but suffering evil if we be put unto it Sect. 3. By this time we know what our duty is now follows the reasons why we should perform it And lest any man should be discourag'd with the difficulty of the work or think it impossible I must first prove that it may be done It was a famous question of old Whether it be possible by Grace to observe and fulfil all the Commandment● of God And it hath been determined in the affirmative that by Grace it is possible for what cannot Grace do Paul saith I can do all things A Christian hath a kind of Omnipotency in things necessary to Salvation and may truly say That these things which are impossible with men are possible with God and if God be for us who can be against us It 's true that to deny our selves to subdue our native and deeply-rooted corruptions and our sins confirm'd by custom to bear the heavy burthen of the Cross and suffer reproaches and bitter afflictions and persecutions for Christ's sake to forsake all and hate Father Mother dearest relations and life it self to offer an Isaac to rejoyce in the midst of fiery trials are very difficult things and far above the power of nature and so indeed they are Yet there is a divine power in Faith whereby all this may be done and hath been through the assistance of Christ And therefore let none of us despair but let us be assured that whil'st Christ sits at the right hand of God and his holy Spirit abideth in the Church we shall be enabled to remove Mountains subdue Sin and conquer Satan the great enemy of our Salvation Christ did never intend to bind us to impossibilities what we cannot do of our selves he will enable us to do neither did he ever require that we should observe whatsoever he hath commanded us by our own strength but as he hath merited Grace and Power for us by his Death so he will give it us by his Resurrection and then such things as are grievous to flesh and blood shall be sweet and delightsom to sanctified souls This being possible let us consider the reasons 1. We not only by God's command but also by our promise so solemnly confirmed by Baptism are bound to observe these commandments A loyal Subject will obey his Sovereigns command and will remember his Oath of Allegiance and Fidelity and an honest man will be as good as his word and promise made unto man and shall not we obey our Saviour's Laws written and confirmed with his own blood shall we promise and promise unto him and not perform shall we not only be disobedient but perfidious too and violate ou● sacred bonds This will make our sins most heinous and our punishment most grievous O therefore let us remember our Baptism and solemn Vows and prove faithful unto God and
Commandments of Christ whatsoever Christ had commanded his Apostles 4 As these and as these alone and all these must be taught so they must be taught and represented unto them as to be observed and that freely constantly and with delight out of love unto their dearest Saviour If they teach any other Commandments but these the knowledg of them will be in vain if they teach some and not all their knowledg will be imperfect if they teach all these so that their knowledg should be perfect and yet not effectually stir them up to obedience their knowledg will be in vain if they exhort them to observe some and not all their obedience will be short and not reach the end for which these Laws and Commandments were given Sect. 5. But because many may be ignorant o● these Laws I will 1. Premise some general observations 2. Note some places of Scripture where the morals are contracted 3. Shew how Love is the performance and fulfilling of them all 4. Deliver the Doctrine of the Eucharist 5. Reduce the matter of these Commandments into the form of a vow 1. The observations are these 1. That the Commandments of Christ are either moral as the precepts and the prohibitions of the moral Law or ceremonial as the two Sacraments of Baptism and the Eucharist which we call the Communion of the Lords Supper 2. That the morals are to be understood Evangelically in which respect they admit of divers additions whereby they differ much from the morals as given to Adam in innocency or to Israel in the Wilderness for they were given to Adam by God as Creator to Israel by God as choosing them and bringing them out of Egypt but they are given in the Gospel especially since the exhibition of Christ by God as redeeming us by Christ already come therefore called Christ's Commandments and so obedience in them must be performed unto God not only as Creator but as Redeemer 3. The blood of Christ's death made the transgressions against these morals pardonable and the punishment due unto the transgressors avoidable upon certain terms but according to the Covenant made with Israel and the Law of Works neither was transgression once past remissible nor the punishment possible to be avoided 4. According to the Law and Covenant of Works perfect personal perpetual Obedience was the only condition of life according to the Gospel Faith in Christ is the condition so that though the sins of man against this Law may be many heinous yet upon Faith in Christ they are no● only pardonable but shall be pardoned 5. Obedience to this Law was to be perform'd by Adam according to that sufficient power which he had received in his creation and lost by his transgression bu● obedience of Believers is performed according to the power of the Spirit restored in regeneration 6. Tho' our obedience under the Gospel be imperfect and therefore by it we cannot be justified yet it 's accepted of God and rewarded ugon the account of Christ's Merit and Intercession 7. We are strictly bound under the Gospel unto these morals and therefore the sincere and constant obedience unto them is so much urged and professed by Christ and his Apostles in the New Testament For Christ died not to free us from obedience to these Laws but to sanctifie us that we may keep them better and that upon our transgressions we should renew our Repentance and Faith 8. Though these moral Laws are more at large expressed and made known unto us by Moses the Prophets the Evangelists both in the Old and New Testament yet in many places they are contracted in a few words and reduced to a few heads Sect. 6. These things premised I will in the second place observe some places where they are contracted 1. We are informed tha● in the Decalogue published upon Mou● Sinai all moral Duties are reduced to towords or heads and that in an excelle● method and manner And indeed upo● due consideration it will appear that th● model of the Law was from God as bein●●ar above the wisdom of men and Ange●●● Because every Commandment hat●●egative and an affirmative consideratio● and consists of a Precept requiring goo● and a prohibition of the contrary ev 〈…〉 erefore we find this moral Law contr●c●ed divers times to two Heads the 〈…〉 ewing of evil and doing good Psal. 14. Isa. 1. 16 17. 3. Because that ma● whom this Law is given hath relation God and man his Neighbour there●● the whole is reduced to two parts the Ou● duty towards God 2. Our duty tow 〈…〉 Neighbour therefore the whole b● of the Law is reduced to these two heads according to that of the Prophet He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly and love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God Micah 6. 8. Where to do justly and love mercy is our whole duty to man to walk humbly with God is our whole duty to God 4. But that contraction of the whole to one head which is Love is most excellent yet this Love is two-fold 1. The Love of God 2. Of our Neighbour For our blessed Saviour determined the first and great Commandment to be the Love of the Lord our God and the second which is like unto it is to love our Neighbour as our selves Yet though this latter be like unto yet it 's not equal with the first for there is so great an inequality between the love we owe to God and that which we owe unto man that if the love of man come in competition with our love to God so that they cannot consist together we must hate Father and Mother and nearest Relations for Christ's sake Our Saviour further adds that upon these two Commandments hang the Law and the Prophets that is all the moral Duties mentioned in the Law and the Prophets are comprized in these two Mat. 22. 37 38 39 40. The Apostle tells us that love is the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13. 10. that is of the second Table 5. Because man is indebted to himself to his Neighbour to his God therefore some think the Law is contracted in the words of the Gospel which teacheth us to live soberly in respect of our selves righteously towards man and godly towards God Tit. 2. 12. 6. The Divine Apostle Disciple whom Christ loved comprehends all in two Commandments Faith and Love saying And this is his Commandment That we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and that we love one another as he hath commanded us 1 3. 23. 7. And here we must observe that prohibitions reproofs threatnings examples exhortations dehortations promises denuntiations and executions of judgments belong and are to be referred to the Law of God 8. Repen●●nce Faith in Christ Self-denial bearing Christ's Cross are duties not naturally but supernaturally moral and may be reduced to the first Commandment Evangelically understood Repentance as it hath God Creator
pardonable the belief in this blood-shed and accepted obtains actual remission For God was so just that he would not pardon any sin without effusion of this blood and yet so merciful that for an inconsideration of the same believed on by guilty man on Earth and pleaded by Christ in heaven he will fully and for ever pardon sin and justifie the guilty 3. The Testament is the Covenant which is so called because in some respect it 's like a Testament which is confirmed and made effectual by the death of the Testatour so the Covenant being grounded upon the death of Christ whereby he became mediatour of the same is confirmed by the blood and death of Christ and is made eternally effectual It 's called the New Testament or Covenant to distinguish it from the Old which was also confirmed with blood Exod. 24. And is a Covenant not of works and strict justice but of faith and Gods mercy and it s said to be the New Covenant in this blood because confirmed by this blood and to be the New Covenant in this blood and the blood of the New Covenant are the same For both signifie the Confirmation of it by Christs Blood 4. We have the Cup that is the Wine contained in the Cup which signifies the Blood of Christ shed for the Remission of sins and puts us in mind of Christs Death and Blood shed and it s given and taken to confirm the Covenant renewed between God and the Communicant 5. The Communicants are commanded to drink of this Cup in remembrance of Christs Blood shed for the remission of sin And by this command they are bound to drink and also to drink it in remembrance of Christ that so by faith they may receive Christ into their hearts for their spiritual life and comfort In this part we have as before in the former the Redemption the Covenant the fealing of the Covenant The Redemption was signified before by the bread broken and given and here by the Wine in the Cup poured out for both signifie but one and the same death and sacrifice of Redemption The Covenant as formerly hath a promise of remission of sins and a precept commanding to take and drink of the Cup in remembrance of his death And this remembrance presupposing knowledge and faith with sense of our sins is practical and effectual to stir up to love and thankfulness in an high degree For how can we remember and seriously consider the greatest love of our Saviour unto us his enemies his cruel sufferings for us and the incomparable blessings merited thereby and not be made sensible of our sins relie upon his sufferings love our enemies and be for ever thankful to our God! 3. The sealing of the Covenant in this part is like unto the former And here it 's to be observed that the Covenant is sealed and confirmed in this Sacrament two several times that God may more fully assure man that as by his Minister he gives both Bread and wine so certainly he will give Christ and all his benefits and continue constant in his Covenant and as certainly as he receives bread and eats it wine and drinks it in remembrance of Christ so certainly he shall receive remission of sins and eternal life by Christ. And by the Celebration of this Sacrament doth more deeply engage himself to God for to continue faithful in his Covenant unto the end Sect 9. Before I conclude this Doctrine of the Eucharist I will add some observations upon the same For 1. As Christ in Baptism contracted all Purifications Cleansings and Lustrations in the Law so in this he abridged all the Ilastical and Eucharistical sacrifices with their Meat-offerings Drink-offerings and sacrificial Feasts 2. The Author institutor and first efficient cause of this Sacrament is Christ the Son of God our Saviour 3. The subject and principal matter thereof is the death of Christ and the benefits procured thereby 4. The form is the use of the Elements with the words according to the first institution 5. The end is the continued remembrance of the sacrifice of Christ upon which depends our eternal salvation 6. This is one of the Laws of Christ which we are bound to observe till his coming to judgment as appears by these words Do this in remembrance of me 7. The dispensation of it belongs to the Minister of the Gospel for he that must baptize must administer the Eucharist and he that dispenseth the one must dispense the other Sacrament 8. The reason why this Sacrament is administred in two several Elements is more fully and distinctly to represent the death of Christ to signifie the plenty of food God hath prepared for our souls and the more strongly to confirm the Covenant 9. It 's to be celebrated not only once but often and is to be continued in the Church unto the worlds end 10. In it we have many points of Christian Doctrine concerning mans sin Gods love the Redemption the Covenant and therein of Gods promises mans duty as Repentance and Faith the benefits wereceive thereby and the Confirmation of the Covenant 11. In it we have many parts of Gods worship imployed as confession of sin profession of faith prayer charity thanksgiving and the whole Celebration of it is a piece of Divine Service 12. By receiving of this Sacrament we profess our Christianity our continuance in the Christian faith and in the Communion with the holy Catholick Church and the Renunciation of all other Religions 13. By the Doctrine of this Sacrament and the tenor of Christs commission we understand something of Church Discipline For as no man before he by the profession of his faith and promise of obedience manifest himself to be a Disciple can be baptized so no man except he appear to be baptized continue in the Christian faith keep Christs Commandments may be admitted to this Table neither may one grosly ignorant before he be instructed or guilty of scandal before he signifie his repentance and be absolved be received as a guest of this heavenly Feast They also who do neglect it when they are invited and have opportunity are unworthy Therefore besides the power which God gives unto the Minister it is fit that in every Church there should be some order established and some trusted with power to judge what persons are fit and worthy and who are not 14. No man can have benefit by this Sacrament but such as are truly penitent and believing of whom God can only judge and the Minister doing his duty according to his best judgment and the appearance of such as desire to communicate must refer all such as he admits to the judgment of God who alone knows the hearts of men And here it s to be noted that such as are habitually penitent and believing may so come unto the Sacrament as that they may offend God because not actually prepared at such a time Sect. 10. The last work to be done for to close up
will seek their temporal and eternal good relieve mine enemies do good for evil and overcome evil with good pray for them that despitefully use me bless them that curse me think none evil and have charitable thoughts till I have evidence of the truth to the contrary I will endeavour to reform such as do amiss and wander out of the right way I will do all the acts and good offices of love and will not do any thing contrary to true love and charity Thus I will love not only my private but my publick Neighbour and I will not deny it to strangers or enemies and out of this love will endeavour to do as I would be done unto and be perfect as my heavenly Father is perfect and follow the example of my dearest Saviour These are the moral Laws of my Saviour which by my Baptism I am bound to observe By them I understand my sins to be many and grievous and my self guilty and liable not only to temporal but eternal punishments even the regenerate Children of God cannot obey them perfectly but have their failings and sometimes grievously fall so that by the works of the law no man living can be justified yet this is my comfort that my Saviour by suffering for these my sins hath made them pardonable and the punishments deserved by them avoidable And he not only dyed for mine offences but rose again for my justification makes intercession in heaven and pleads his blood for all penitent sinners These things I verily believe and according to this belief I rely upon my Savirous propitiation and intercession and renewing daily my supplications before the throne of grace hope to obtain remission of all my sins against this Law and his other commands I acknowledge it a great unspeakable mercy that my God hath made faith and not perfect obedience the condition of life As this Law doth discover my sins so it is a rule of my life and as I will renew my repentance daily and seek remission of sin past so I will daily pray for the sanctifying power of his Spirit to write th●se Laws more and more in my heart to strengthen me against all temptations enable me to observe them willingly and with delight beseeching him to accept my poor endeavours and to look upon me as washed in the blood of my Saviour There is another positive and ceremonial Law of my Saviour which I by Baptism am bound to observe together with these morals and that is the Sacrament of the Eucharist which is to be Celebrated by all Christians to the worlds end in remembrance of the Sacrifice sof Christ death Therefore I promise with an humble penitent and believing heart to come unto this heavenly Table when I am invited and called to eat the blessed Bread in remembrance of my Saviours body which was broken and offered for me and drink the blessed Cup in remembrance of his blood whereby the New Covenant is confirmed as being shed for the remission of my sins And as my God by his Ministers giving this Bread and this Cup doth seal and confirm anew his promises unto me to strengthen my faith and hope so I will by receiving these Elements according to the first institution solemnly renew and confirm my engagement for the performance of the conditions of the Covenant and thereby I will testifie my union with the Church my charity to all my thankfulness to Christ and will never forget his unspeakable love to my poor soul manifested in his sacrifice of everlasting vertue and will hope according to the integrity of my heart though my failings be many that he will increase my graces and heavenly comforts upon the receiving of the same Chap. 8. Of Prayer one of Christs Commandments Sect. 1. PRayer is a duty required in the moral Law of God especially as it is understood Evangelically and is to be used both by every Christian both in private and publick and also by the universal Church whilst Militant on Earth until it become triumphant in Heaven when all prayers shall be turned into praises and petitions into thanksgiving It s a part of Gods worship both moral and ritual for neither Word nor Sacraments can be rightly dispensed without it and this is the reason why it takes up so great a part of our Liturgies and Forms of Worship To pray alwaies is one of Christs Commandments and without prayer we can neither observe his Commandments nor persevere in our profession because without prayer we cannot expect grace which is necessary to enable us to do both And because it is continual a necessary and an excellent piece of service I intend to speak of it more particularly and distinctly And for order sake I will 1. Premise some generals 2. Expound the Lords Prayer 3. Reduce the matter of it into a form of Prayer 1. Prayer may be described thus It 's a part of God's Worship wherein we represent our minds unto God As it is a part of God's Worship it 's to be ranked amongst the duties of the first Table and in several respects to be referred to the several commandments of it It looks at God as supreme Lord of infinite and eternal excellency and perfection as all other religious acts do yet it considers in God some particular perfections more then others as shall be shewed hereafter The more particular nature of it is a presentation of our minds to God The matter thereof is something in our minds which we desire and propose to make known to God and the act of it is the representations of these to his glorious Majesty Therefore the School-men make prayer to be an act of the understanding presupposing the heart first affected with those things which are the matter of our prayers which were nothing to purpose without the affection of the heart which may be said to animate and give life unto them yet we must not think that we can inform God who knows our thoughts afar off of any thing which he is ignorant of Therefore the intention of prayer is not only to honour him but to move and affect him with the matter represented This is the nature of prayer largely taken so as to include in one continued Speech Petition Praise Thansgiving Therefore Praise and Thanksgiving are said to be parts of Prayer which in respect of the representation of our minds is said to be a speaking unto God and a conference with him For in all these we address our selves to God approach to his Throne and express our minds unto him and pour our hearts out before him Petition ascends mercies descend praise and thanksgiving are returned unto him again Prayer strictly taken is an humble presentation of our petition unto God as able and willing to effects them This may be made either unto a false God or the true God and to the true God either according to the Law of Nature or the Light of Grace and that either implicitly in the name
deluded our first mother Eve perswaded her that in transgressing Gods law there was no fear of death but certain hope of high advancement as he is subtle so he is malicious restless raging knows our weakness takes all advantages and seeks our everlasting ruine Besides the Devil there are the wicked men of the world who are his agents who by their evil example customs laws promises threats preferments persecutions and many other ways seek to draw us unto sin therefore if any person either fear men more then God and temporal miseries more then eternal punishments or love himself more then God and the world more then heavenly glory and eternal life then a little temptation will easily draw such an one into transgression We are also said to be tempted in this respect by our own lust or concupiscence for when any occasion is offered we are easily moved and overcome Such is our ignorance and blindness that our understanding is easily deluded Such is the corruption of our wills that we are easily perverted This makes us like tinder and we take fire at every spark of temptation nay we are so vile by nature that our own corruption inclines us unto sin and sometimes when there is no temptation from without carries us violently into iniquity 2. To be led into temptation is not meerly to be tempted but something more for one may be tempted and yet be in no great danger because the party tempted may be so armed and prepared that the temptation may be overcome and that sometimes with ease so that in such a case there is no great danger but one may be said to be led into temptation when the party tempted is weak or surprized or deserted or over-powred or brought into such straits that there is great fear of a foil and little hope of escape because of the advantage gained by the tempter and disadvantage befallen the person tempted In this case the danger is great and the temptation difficult if not impossible to be overcom This is to be brought into the midst of potent enemies plunged into the depth of great waters and cast into the mouth of the Lion and so sin is unavoidable 3. In these words we pray 1. That God would so order all occurrences and events that we may not be brought into straights for this petition implies that nothing can come to pass without the providence of God doing or permitting what he pleaseth and ordering all events Without his permission neither man nor devil can tempt us without it Satan could not touch Job nor be a lying Spirit in the mouth of Ahab's Prophets nor enter so much as into the Herd of Swine And the event of all temptations depends upon his will 2. That when we are too weak he would restrain the malice and power of Satan 3. That he would not suffer us to be secure and so easily surprized 4. That he would continually arm and strengthen us that we may not only resist but overcome 5 That he would not suffer us to presume upon our own strength or despair of his assistance 6. That he would not desert us in the day of trial and great danger 7. That he would so inflame us with the zeal of his glory possess us with the fear of sin and his wrath and the desire of heavens glory that no earthly prosperity may much affect us or any earthly affliction much daunt us yet he requires that we acknowledg all our strength to be from him that the issue of all temptations depends upon him that renouncing our own strength we trust in him that we continually watch and pray and use all means to provide for our safety and when we see and consider the fall of David Peter and other eminent Saints how great cause have we to fear and be careful This must be our daily prayer and our earnest petition 4. To deliver us from evil may be understood to be a distinct petition from the former or part of the same In the former sense evil is not the evil of sin from temptation but the evil of affliction And in this sense we desire God so to perfect and bless us as either to prevent the miseries troubles afflictions and adversities of the world or if we fall into them that he would sanctifie them unto us for our spiritual good give us strength to bear them with patience and in the end deliver us out of them and hasten that day and time when there shall be no sorrow pain crying but eternal peace and joy when all sorrow shall flee away and all tears be wiped from all faces yet though God by these doth chastise and try us yet the devil by them takes advantage to tempt us unto many sins and discourage us in the ways of godliness So great is the frailty of man that both in prosperity and adversity he is in danger and in both hath need to pray to be delivered from evil therefore the wisdom of God mixeth our joys with sorrow and our prosperity with adversity For thine is the Kingdom c. Some make this no part of the body but the conclusion of the Prayer We find not these words in Luke nor in many Greek Copies nor in the Arabick and therefore it may be a question whether our Saviour added them to this form of Prayer or no but suppose them to be the words of our Saviour it 's doubted whether that be a form of Doxology or contain certain reasons for to move God to hear our petitions or both The words are found in Scripture 1 Chron. 29. 11. and there used in form of a Doxology and praising of God which is a part of divine Worship and sometimes joyned with petition and oftentimes concludes the same and in this sense it may be a part of prayer and fit to be used when we depart out of his presence and take our leave with our heavenly Father Amen is made the conclusion and by it we signifie our desire that God would hear us and put his hand and seal to our petitions and also our joynt consent in our desires with him who is the mouth of the people praying together which implies that we understand the Prayers made have attended to them and approve them and by this word make them Our Prayers It 's oftentimes a word of confirmation and then it signifies so it is sometimes a word of petition and then it signifies so be it Sect. 5. The matter of all these petitions may be reduced into the form of a Prayer in this manner 1. O Almighty Lord and in Christ Jesus our most gracious Father we thine unworthy Servants do here present our selves before the throne of Grace and desire in the first place and above all things that thy name be hallowed and thine eternal excellency and supreme dominion being manifested more and more both by thy blessed word and glorious works we and all others may know thee to be God alone who dost