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

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Judges or Judges of these things we are to leave them to their superiours whom God appoi eth 43. Can the Church of Rome then or any particular Church fall from God It is apparent for that the Lords Spirit is not tyed to any place for then not only Jerusalem his City but the famous Churches of Asia long since collapsed had yet stood and flourished and many others now under Mahumetan and Turkish servitude or quite decayed 44. How then did God promise his Spirit to his Church to be with it to the end of the world To be present to lead it into all truth wheresoever it is even in all places of the world but as the winde bloweth where it listeth so his Spirit to the faithfull every where ●ut for their infidelity sometimes pulleth one downe and setteth up another even casteth off the naturall branches for unbeleefe and grafteth in others all according to his good will and pleasure 45 What learne you else concerning this Church That as it is the Church of God a holy Church and Catholicke in regard of all times places and persons of all sexes and degrees peoples and nations whatsoever whereof it consists consenting in the truth of the Catholicke doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles so it is also and in unity of Spirit in the communion of Saints 46. What in this communion of Saints considered The union in that it is a communion The persons who are Saints How is their union 1. in the unity of faith the doctrine of salvation 2. The head which is Christ. 3. The body which is his Church they members 4. The Spirit which is the bond of peace among them 2. In the participation of the Sacraments tokens of this union and communion 3. Bond of charity and love between themselves and Christ their head and by him also with God 47. What is that communion then That holy and sweet fellowship which all the members of the Church have one with another and with Christ their head and so with God whereby all good is communicated to them from above and consequently in mutuall charity one unto another 48. Between whom is this communion considered Between the Saints and Christ their head and so with God themselves one with another so the Saints both in heaven and earth 49. How with Christ and God As the excellent Meanes whereby reconciled to God and at peace with him Grace of partaking of Christs righteousnesse being one with him by faith Assurance of my hope of all good things in him and by him attained for that he so feeleth my wants heareth my prayers is ready to relieve my misery 50. What fruit and profit of this All happinesse and goodnesse thereby acquired As peace with God peace of conscience peace in the soule Influence of all graces from Christ our head Effects of holinesse and righteousnesse from him Glorious inheritance title estate and hope of all Saints and all comforts in him 51. How exemplified By the spirituall building Christ the foundation and head cornerstone and we the building By the peacefull Olive Christ and we the branches ingrafted By the Vine Christ and we the pruned branches By the head Christ and we the members By the Bridegroome Christ and we the spouse and such similies of his imparting his goodnesse righteousnesse and graces to us 52. How of the Saints among themselves As members of one body branches of that Vine and Olive stones of that spirituall building all for the good one of another bringing forth much good fruit to the honour of God 53. How between us and Saints in heaven In mutuall sympathy as branches of one vine consent in the praises of God praiers one for another though not one to another and all best duties however unknown to us now will be manifest hereafter they being our fellow servants and brethren that assuredly wish our good and happinesse and in the resurrection to be partakers with us in glory 54. How among the Saints on earth Though plainly and evidently in 1. The unity in Faith the doctrine of truth professed Hope of blessednesse Spirit and bond of peace 2. Union with the Head and participation of the Sacraments yet most essentially in the union in charity and workes of mercy By helping one another By releeving and comforting the weake By bearing one anothers infirmities and doing all good temporall to the body spirituall prayer instruction and the like to the soule to the comfort of the Saints and Church of God 55. Why called Saints Both By the generall calling of God to grace Out of charity to the Church of God in all The visible members presumed faithfull In hope of the inheritance of Saints and desire that it may be given to all For that the best part are indeed Saints of God What comfort in this faith Most heavenly to consider That 1. Christ himselfe in this sympathy feeling our wants heareth and knoweth our prayers 2. Even Saints in heaven desire our good and pray for it 3. How mean soever in worldly eyes yet if Saints of that high and holy fellowship wherewith no compare as joyned so to the King of Kings c. 4. All Saints their prayers devotions fastings are heard and made and done for us and our good as all Christs actions and merits applied 5. That hereby is more content and true riches then in all worldly possessions as all good enjoying of heavenly and earthly good comming of this communion 56. What learne we hence Many good duties and how to behave our selves in and towards the Church of God and communion of Saints As 1. To honour and reverently esteeme of this holy society 2. To desire the good of it as a faithfull member of the same 3. To bee of holy conversation as beseemeth a Saint and a Christian. 4. To come out of the world leaving Egypt and Sodome to be admitted into this Canaan the House and Church of God 5. To be in unity with my selfe God and his Saints in the bond of the peace of a good conscience love and charity 6. To seeke sit company of Saints and so to delight in Gods house the Saints on earth and such as excell in vertue 7. Conversing with Saints on earth by holy conversation and those in heaven by heavenly contemplation to aspire to a more strait union with that holy congregation 8. To doe good to all especially to those that be of the houshold of faith as having a fellow-feeling and compassion to all Gods Children 9. To exercise our selves in fit and holy actions beseeming Gods house and that holy company 10. To have comfort in all things and sufferings both in respect of the Saints and their fellow-sufferings but chiefly Christ his fellow-feeling of our infirmities to helpe and relieve us 57. What followeth The last three Articles of the Creed concerning the priviledges given and belonging to this holy Society remission of sins resurrection of the body and life everlasting SECT 12. The 10.
Prophets and holy men that had beene since the world began to whom the promise still made or confirmed 38. Who was the Mediator in that Christ one and the same for ever though Moses the type of Christ then seen in his stead to stand between God and the people and making atonement yet Christ so in Moses and to the Fathers in many types and shadowes shewed and to bee seene and Mediator for all flesh with the Father now eternally 39. Who the Authour in the new Testament God the Father also in Christ the Mediator promiser and testator of his mercies and blessings to all his people that observe his Law 40. Who the other party All the faithfull his people on their parts promising to observe his Lawes especially that royall Law of love by which knowne to be his Disciples as which is the summe and fulfilling of the whole Law 41. Who the Dictator of it God himselfe speaking in Christ and Christ himselfe dictating both that Golden rule of Prayer Royall Law of Love All other necessary ordinances to bee observed by his and confirming of the old that were to be confirmed 42. Who the Penmen Both Christ himselfe in the great letters of his most holy life and actions and bloudy characters on the crosse and of his passion blacke letters of his death and buriall as well as glorious and golden letters of his resurrection ascention and sending his Spirit to the comfort of his and writing his Lawes in the hearts of the faithfull besides other holy Penmen and publicke notaries also 43. Who were they The holy Evangelists Apostles and Apostolicall Writers recording it by the assistance of one and the same Spirit the Enditer who also testifieth the same by continuall witnesses and evidence of power unto salvation to the Elect. 44. How signed With his bloud on the crosse on Mount Calvarie 45. How delivered To his Church the Apostles for them and their successors to preach teach interpret keep the same for the use of the faithfull to the worlds end 46. What witnesses Besides a cloud of witnesses then present and eye-witnesses of it thousands else of glorious Martyrs and Confessors throughout all ages testifying the invincible truth with utmost endeavours and dearest bloud in the power and evidence of Gods Holy Spirit 47. How sealed By the same Spirit to the hearts and soules of the Elect in those visible signs or seals the Sacraments representing his graces as engraven in them and presenting or conveighing and confirming the same to their soules 48. What graces in the Sacraments Answerable to their nature the promise in the Covenant and intent of the former Sacraments In Baptisme the Washing of the soul from sin Admission into the Church New birth and life in Christ. Lords Supper the Nourishment of us in the Church Strengthening our souls in the faith Feeding on Christ the bread of life and in remembrance of his death a mortifying our earthly members by repentance and a quickning of us in the Spirit in him raised from death to life and by him living 49. What is this order of this doctrine of the Sacraments to the rest After the doctrine of faith and obedience in the Creed and the Commandements and prayer set forth the meanes of obtaining grace to obey and please God the better come these seales of grace in the last place that after such teaching of the former and apprehension of them by the intellectuall powers of the soule the goodnesse of God descending even to the comfort of sense confirmeth his graces and promise of them by the use and acceptation of visible signes and elements for tokens and pledges of the same 50. How is the number so few as two Because it pleased the Lord so to appoint it and it is also sufficient and fittest as Being Baptisme our admission into the Church The Lords Supper our strengthening and maintenance in the same 51. How is it that five more have been added Not so rightly or properly but rather against the course and consent of best authority and antiquity 52. How say you so Because onely these two are so especially in Scripture acknowledged by our Saviour appointed and generally received by all required to be received and these only properly in all respects the others but improperly and not by all required to be received or acknowledged Sacraments 53. How appeareth this For that besides Scripture the ancient Fathers and chiefe Doctors generall consent and confesse only these two properly so intended As S. Cyprian lib. 2. Epist. 2. ad Stephanum Si utroque sacramento nasc antur they may be throughly sanctified and Sons of God As Saint Augustine de doctrina Christiana lib. 3. cap 9. pauca promult is facta facilima c. the Lord and his Apostles delivered few for many easily to be done divine to be understood and pure to be observed to wit the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords Supper As Saint Ambrose Tertullian Justine Martyr and divers others confessing the same and the others not to be so properly Sacraments nor capable of a Sacraments true definition in the right sense 54. What is a Sacrament then An outward and visible signe of an inward and spirituall grace given unto us ordained by Christ as a meanes whereby we receive the same and a pledge to assure us thereof 55. What here to be observed 1. The matter outward sensible singe and audible forme of words accedat verbum ad elementum fit sacramentum Inward spirituall grace represented and to be understood 2. The Authour ordained by Christ for difference from the Sacraments of the old Law and those improperly so called not having his institution 3. The end of it in respect of the use and benefit twofold 1. As a meanes whereby we receive grace 2. As a pledge to assure us thereof 56. How is it found in the Sacraments In the I. True Sacraments expressely in 1. Baptisme the 1. Matter Outward signe element And forme of words Inward grace 2. Authour Christ himselfe and his institution Go teach and baptise in the name of c. 3. End meanes pledge seal of grace 2. Lords Supper the 1. Matter in the outward sign form of words grace 2. Authour Christ himselfe and his institution 3. Ends a meanes pledge and seale of grace II. Others not so 57. How shew you it particularly of them In Matrimony Neither Authour Christ but institution of God in Paradise and in and by nature not grace Matter no visible signe prescribed or forme of words especially by our Saviour appointed End Not pertaining to all but onely who have not the gift of continencie may marry Not meanes or seale or pledge of any grace thereby promised or obtained but a holy estate of life in all that godlily enter into it and necessary for some but as Durand saith to speake strictly or properly no Sacrament 58. What of confirmation As saith Alexander Hales par 4. q. 24. neither did the
well be said hie labor hoc opus est yet since Gods Spirit biddeth him that hath wit to count the name i● being as the name of a man or mankinde and dies diem docet let us look backe to the times and holy Text praying for wisedome from him and his holy direction as an Ariadnes clew to guide us in the Maeandrine wayes of this Labyri●th of so darke and doubtfull obscurity And as we read of Aristotle if he did Calamum in mentem intingere how much need have we here narrowly to pry herein to the minde of the holy Apostle the Penman or Writer and meaning of the blessed Spirit the E●diter of those revelations and visions well weighing the time place person posture and other circumstances there that the Writer either in body or minde or both beheld who stood on the sea sand when he then saw the Beast rising out of the sea the people or Gentiles and Nations so raging as Psalme the second being the fourth beast in Daniel or Pagan Romane Empire that so cruelly both in his own Western Babylon the holy Citie shed the blood of the Saints who there described by his numbers in his 7 heads 10 horns may well lead us to the other name described also by numbers in Antichrist to usher in the Whore of Babylon into that chamber of the Western Empire where the Church of God was now with the beginning of that Empire begun to be planted by the way to note that as Gentilisme Paganisme are all one thing the one only in meer heathē the other in the ruder skirts of the larger Christian territories out of the dregs of which were strained the puddles of schisme heresy in which Antichrist began first to move in the Apostles time so the beast Antichrist the whore of Babylon are in effect all one thing the power of the Dragon the Divell and his malice onely diversifide by the objects it worketh on us the Beast corrupting the Sate and Policie and perverting it into tyranny cruelty and impiety against God and Man as Antichrist spoiling the Church and corrupting our Religion by perverting the doctrine of faith and manners and all holy discipline as the whore of Babylon or confusion corrupting Gods holy service and worship by bringing in false strange idolatrous and will-worship into Gods House contrary to Christs owne his Apostles Churches holy institution by such as going a whoring after their owne inventions and the Idoles of their own peevish fancies and prophane noveltie so usher her in with her cup of abominations or wine of the fury of her fornication by will-worship and such false and strange worship making them drunke or mad that with corruption of doctrine and discipline faith and manners Gods worship and religion all things might rush into Anarchy confusion if not ruine and combustion which all seem notably described in numbers and else by S. John as it were there before him plainly though prophetically beholding the same Declare it further in what manner As leading to the rest the number first the seven heads of the Beast signifying not onely seven hills or principalities but more properly also mountaines of vice and powers of darknesse or of the Prince that ruleth in the aire the seven capitall and deadly sinnes and pride the foremost crowned with gold of a varice and rose buds of voluptuous pleasures are thus by the beast advanced in the sight of the world whose ten hornes of rude armed impiety pushing against the Saints and Citie of God may well signifie or point at not onely the ten first and primitive persecutions but through times revolutions all of that nature as for a time or times or halfe a time more or lesse God suffereth his Church to be so afflicted and more especially to be considered in ten a perfect and compleat number the compleat ripenesse of sinne and impiety in that Belua and as an indefinite number ten being understood for many as sex ce●ta pro infinito numero the often assaults of his beluine hornes and fury but most fitly as ten the ground and foundation of all great and round numbers all being but multiplied tens to hundreds thousands millions to what grand summe or number soever in men or monies the power of war or Empire all seeming comprehended in this root or radicall number ten whereof all greater numbers are constructed and thus ten she wing the greatest martiall or other strength of hornes to push with the Belua more graced with number and force then wisedome could ever have And thus numbers and mul●itudes shewing his nature whether in numero numeranti ordinati and ordinarily as marshalling his strength and numbring his forces of what kinde soever or in numero numerato Cardinali as his men and M●lites the corpus cardo as the pecunia nervus belli all this shewing the Belua more in number then goodnesse and multitude then godlinesse force then wisedome delighted and exalted which leadeth us directly to the consideration of the numerous and martially numbred name of Antiohrist set up by him and his rude Pagan force of armed impiety that so both externally and internally by force of f●aud piety and religion might bee extirpate by them with his taile of Schisme and Heresie and false Prophets sweeping downe the starres of heaven with his Dragons taile the Saints of God in his Church and if possible making the faith of the elect to fail where now how well Antichrist sympathizeth in name and nature with him as his adopted heire the man of sinne and child of perdition we may observe as nomen est nota rei and forma dat nomen esse the very Fiend that possessed the man and then the swine and after animated the beast and his false Prophets also informeth Antichrist and giving him his name as hee confessed to Christ his name was Legion For said he we are many So whether men or Divels or Men-Divels here are many also in Antichrist numbred by 666. the front of a legion by the Beast or Dragon or Divell shed the blood of the Saints in the holy City and even in the Church corrupted both faith and doctrine Gods worship and religion and brought in the Whore of Babylon as before mentioned for the name Legion noting the then Pagan Roman Militia the power of that Beast and Empire most plainly read in that name so martially numbred 666. the chiefe head or heads and fronts shewing themselves of that number in the Legion whilest of 6000. the whole body of it consisting besides some few troops of horse others for Wings Scouts with their Velites and Triarii to gu●rd their carriages and provisions the Decur●ons being 600. Centurions 60. and K●liarches 6. in whom rested the whole power and command shew that number in the front or head of the Legion whose power committed those out-rages in the Church as well as a wed the world in like manner as the
anointed with the oyle of gladnesse above his fellowes Psal. 45. 39 With what oyle anointed As there expressed of gladnesse glad to doe the will of his Father so the Spirit of God in most abundant measure understood by that oyle wherewith he was endued whence the Spirit of the Lord upon me applyed to him by it apparantly testified the Mediator and Saviour and in the power thereof executing that office 40. Why should he be so anointed As Kings Prophets and Priests were anointed with materiall oyle by Gods institution to shew their due and legimate calling to those offices so our Saviour with that Spirituall oyle to that more Divine office in it comprehending the other 41. What then contained in the office of Christ or Mediator His office of King to govern his office of Priest to make an atonement for sin his office of Prophet to teach and instruct in his Church 42. Wherein consisteth his Kingly office In being head of his Church and so having redeemed it governing and protecting it appointing his law and ordinances in conservation of the estate thereof till he shall deliver it and all dominion to God the Father of whom he received it 43. Wherein is his Priestly office seene In his atonement made for his people so offering that one full and perfect proprietary sacrifice which though but once offered so perfect there needeth no other as all other sacrifices were but shadowes of this and in the vertue and merit of this hath satisfied sufficiently for the sins of the whole world and is a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec 44. But are all the sins in the world thereby forgiven No for though the price and atonement bee of sufficiency in value yet the efficiency pertaineth onely to those according to his ordinance that by the hand of faith take and apprehend it to take benefit and make use of the same 45. How explaine you this As in generall pardon of the Prince or other if granted which is of sufficiency to save the condemned if it be not taken out and pleaded or used to his benefit the party may suffer for the neglect so if this satisfaction and atonement for sin be made by Christ be not taken and beneficially applyed by faith in the ministry of the Church the soule that neglecteth it may perish 46. Wherein is his prophetique office In his instruction of his Church in all things necessary to salvation as he did with his owne blessed words by his owne selfe being conversant in the flesh and after by the doctrine of the Apostles and Evangelists enlightned the same and ever since by those holy Bishops Fathers and Pastors that to succeeding times hee appointed and left in his stead to teach and instruct in his Church 47. How is he said Gods onely Son By excellency as the first of all his brethren Gods onely Son by eternall generation in whom are many sons else made sons by his meanes by vertue of adoption he onely and no other a son by nature 48. How is he our Lord Both as he is Gods Son who is Lord of all As he hath power given him by the Father As he hath purchased us at a price his bloud As hee continually instructeth helpeth governeth and defendeth us And as we have yeelded our soules given our names to him and among so many millions of Saints hope in his name and seeke for his light and his salvation 49. What followeth The third Article of the Creed concerning his Incarnation the first degree of his humiliation in the execution of his office of mediation SECT 5. The third Article Which was conceived c. Concerning Christs Incarnation The Analysis of the third Article and some of the others following whereof of his incarnation and so his conception and nativity whereby as it is said God was made man and taking our nature was borne of Virgin the mystery whereof is expended to the wonder of the Iew and amazement of the Gentiles yet proved to both by their own tenets and principles with the necessity on both his and our parts that it should be so to restore us not onely to the former estate in Adam but a far and more blessed and glorious in Christ where the resemblances and similitudes Or rather dissimilitudes but proportionable difference like respects on both sides are at large recyted and compared together and thence flowing as by humanity attained to the ful satisfaction of Gods justice even in an exact and eminent degree and therefore also is the Genealogy of Christ as the true Messias so exactly and punctually described by two of the Evangelists and the knots and difficulties of the same with some objections made against it solved and unloosed with the good uses we may or might to make thereof observed 1. VVHat is set forth in the execution of his office of Mediation His humiliation in three degrees Incarnation Passion Death and descent to the grave and hell His exaltation in foure other degrees Resurrection Ascension Session at the right hand of God Commission to be Judge over quicke and dead 2. How is his Incarnation here set forth In these words Conceived of the holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary What note you hence Two parts his Conception by the holy Ghost his Nativity borne of the Virgin Mary 3. What meane you by Jncarnation His inanition of himselfe and as it were debasing of himselfe in respect of his majesty of divinity thereby to put on humanity 4. Expresse this more fully Christ taking of our flesh and humanity on him whereby he who according to his divinitie being the eternall Son of God in the bosome and palace of his Father in all happinesse and glory yet of his love to us wretched and miserable and to make us happy humbled himselfe to be found in the form of a servant and to take our nature on him so performed in his conception and nativity 5. Was God then conceived or borne No but that person in Trinity which was God equall to the Father tooke our nature on him or the man Christ that was so conceived and borne into that one person with him by which personall union wee use and are allowed to say the Son of God crucified and Mary the mother of God and the like by a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which figure either natures proprieties are often attributed to the other and both joyntly or severally to the person 6. How in Scripture used Even so also hence we finde it said 1. God was made man 2. The Word was made flesh Ioh. 1. 3. The Son of God crucified Heb. 6. 6. 4. The Son of man with the Father in heaven and that came from the Father Ioh. 3. 13. 5. And the like phrases which expresse the manhood of Christ taken into God and so made one person all these things are so most true in the unity of the person 7. How his conception By the holy Ghost as the Angell said The
setteth forth the glory of God and salvation of soules in the same 7. How doth faith see it so cleerly In all the Scriptures even from the time of Adam in Paradise and Noah in the Ark Abraham the father of the faithfull to these dayes though in narrow bounds of one House Arke or family in the flourishing estate of the Jews in one people or Common-wealth yet still a true Church and company of faithfull beleevers and servants of God but now since by Gods mercies in Christ most flourishing spred over the face of the whole earth as we both see at this day and reade in the histories of the Old and New Testament 8. What Church or Churches One and the same though distinguished in times 1. In the Old Testament in Adam Noah and Abrahams housholds and chiefe of their families in Israel and all his sons the state of the Jewes 2. In the New Testament among The Nations of the Jewes Many 1. Apostles 2. Disciples 3. Beleevers All Nations else the Churches to the very ends of the earth and so far as as we are dispersed As those of Corinth Ephesus Rome c. Achaia Macedonia Antioch c. Asia the 7. Churches in Rev. 1. Which all together make up the Catholique Church 9. What signifies or whence this name Church Ecclesia Of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the calling together as out of the world into the Lords house and company so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying in Greeke the Lords house whence name of our Church and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his congregation 10. What is the Church then That company of Saints elected of God to eternall life called and gathered together out of all mankinde by the preaching of the word saved by the Messiah Christ and in his faith preserved defended and sanctified here to be glorified in heaven and out of the Church there is no salvation 11. Js there but one Church But one true Church whereof Christ Jesus is the head yet of which Catholique Church all particular Churches professing the true faith are parts and all faithfull persons members and all Synagogues though they call themselves Churches if they want that head or the true faith doe falsly chalenge that title as the harlot may of an honest woman but are indeed but Synagogues of Satan 12. How heare we then of many Churches even in the Scriptures and Apostles writings As the particular Churches in several Countries part or members of this one universall Church in that and many other respects so distinguished and divided 13. In what respects Most usually in regard of the 1. Time the Church of the 1. Jewes and 2. Christans 2. Extent universall Church Catholicke Particular Church c. 3. Apparant to men visible on earth in the professors Invisible to men 4. Places Heaven among the Saints and Angels Earth among men 5. Exercises in it Militant in grace Triumphant in glory As other distinctions also in regard of the circumstances may be of this one and the same Church 14. How could the Iewes Church and the Christians be one As both were united in Christ the head profession of the true faith and so elected called and ordained of God 15. How could Christ be the head or his faith in the Church of the Jewes As the Fathers and Patriarkes and all holy men before Christ trusted in the Messias Christ that was to come and in that faith walked with God and attained heaven as all Saints since in the faith of the Messias already come so all of one faith and under one head 16. Is our faith then the same with Abrahams The very same in substance onely diversified by the distinction of time and respect of the same Messias onely exhibitum or exhibendum as already showne or to be exhibited their faith farther off and in hope our more plainly and fully informed all shadowes and vailes removed the substance presented 17. But faith is of things not seene And so are the mysteries of this faith even in the very Messiah though seene with mortall eye yet much more unseene not onely for his divinity but divine actions office and doctrine also onely apprehensible by the eye of faith 18. What are the particular Churches Members of the Univerall Church of which Christ is the head planted by the ministry of good men in the power of God and his word in all parts of the world and in all times preserved by his grace in one part or other so all those famous Churches of Asia Phrygia and Pamphilia of Rome Ephesus Corinth Greece and generally in Europe Asia Africa and now America also and that were in all times as well of the Fathers and Patriarkes even Adam Noah Abraham Moses the Jewes and to our times make up this one Catholicke Church of God or to goe further even all men and Angels elected and saved 19. How expresse you the Church visible or invisible The invisible company of Saints elected of God to eternall life onely knowne to God and not to be discerned of men therefore called invisible whereas all professors of the faith living in the Church and seene in that society charity bindes us to acknowledge as the outward signes and profession shew to be the Church and which we call the visible Church 20. Is the visible Church perfect Nothing lesse for as shee is in the uncleane world she must needs be corrupted with that aire and in her are vessels of honour and dishonour and so as in regard of both shee is called a Net Mat. 13. 47. yet in regard of the better part also called the Kingdome of Heaven 21. How those other distinctions of the Church As in respect of place Heaven where Saints and Angels and earth where men are members of it so in regard of their exercises on earth the Church militant yet in her spirituall warfare and under the crosse but aspiring towards heaven the triumphant part thither already aspired having past the troubles of the world in joy and felicity both together when complete and united make up the Catholique Church 22. How said Catholique In regard of universality of times places and persons as well as Catholique doctrine of truth therein propounded 23. How holy In regard of the holinesse there to be found in the Head Christ the Lord imparting holinesse to the members Holy Father electing it Holy Ghost sanctifying it Holy Faith professed in it Holy Scriptures taught in it Sacraments and Ceremonies Prayers and actions used and exercised in it Life and conversation of the Members in comparison of the rest of the world 24. What are notes of the true Church The true preaching of the word of God and right use and administration of the Sacraments which cannot be well exercised but under a godly discipline and joyned with holy life and conversation 25. How is this proved For that thereby the Church is called together and distinguisht from all other companies whatsoever the word being the meanes the Sacraments
the signes and seales of the covenant of grace 26. How the word and preaching of it For that by it is the Calling together Building up Badge or cognizance of Gods true Prophets and servants to know them of the Church Testimony of the truth most sure and firme so as no other doctrine whatsoever 27. How shew you this For that by this the faithfull are called to bee Saints so Rom. 1. 7. and the Church is built upon the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles Christ being the head corner stone and by this the Lord addeth to the Church those that should be saved Acts 2. 47. so of the contrary if not this it is not the Church 28. How appeares that Because if it be not by Gods word called it is not Ecclesia Dei but rather the Synagogue of Satan as appeares by any company assembled by any other meanes as if assembled by the Talmude a Synagogue of Christs enemies the Jewes Alcaron an assembly of Turkes his enemies Very Word if corrupted with false Interpreters or Glosses a sect of Heretiques and so all heretiques enemies of him and unity but the word truly preached and set forth the only cognizance of his true Prophets and Servants as testified in holy Scriptures 29. How testified in them In the prophet Esay 8. and 20. If they speake not according to this word it is because the truth is not in them So Saint Matthew 15. 7. O hypocrites Jsaiah prophesied well of you In vaine doe they worship me teaching for doctrines traditions of men And John 2. 10. If any come to you and bring not this doctrine receive him not as if hee should say This is the note or token to know him by And Gal. 1. 8. Though we or an Angell from heaven preach otherwise then this doctrine let him be accursed So this firme and true testimony as no doctrine else whatsoever 30. How the Sacraments As instituted for seales of grace so also in their right use and administration the cognizance of the Church and badge of all true beleevers as was spoken 1. To the Fathes This shall bee a signe Exod. 12. 2. 5. 2. Of the Fathers They all eate of the same spirituall meat and drink of the same spirituall drink the Rocke that followed them And all baptized in the cloud and in the sea to Moses 1 Cor. 10. 2. 3. Of the Church since and to the Disciples Goe teach all Nations and baptize c. and Doe this in remembrance of me So it is most apparant they are the true notes and signes as most essentiall of the true Church 31. What say you by those markes of universality antiquity visibility succession consent and the like Though these are not to be neglected as insisted on by Vincentius Lyrinensis and many holy and good men yet we must know that the former are more essentiall and sure these by themselves alone more uncertaine extraneous and as may be found failing and accidentall 32. What use of these If joyned with the former they serve for the better illustration of the truth without them no assurance so we thereby may see the worth of the former and the weaknesse of these as may easily be demonstrated 33. How demonstrated For that without contradiction The true Church hath existed without them The Synagogue of Satan even defections from God and his Church may enjoy them And that not onely in singular but in generall all of them if exempted from holinesse or the former notes 34. How make you that to appeare First that the true Church may be without them is cleere 1. In primitive times without that universality or antiquity 2. Adams sons and Noahs family most of them worst and Christ times and the Apostles fewest good and scarce any visibility much lesse universality or antiquity 3. All first times all such successions troubled by the persecution of Saints both by the Gyants and sons of men in the first ages of the world against the sons of God and the Jewes Church as well as by the tyrants in the first times of the Christians Church and when more consenting against the truth then with or striving for the same 35. How found in the false Synagogues Where ever God had his Church the divell his chappell by instituted by Adams disobedience in Paradise so what more ancient then defection from God In Angels first the companies that fell Ecclesia malignantium in Adam then and all Adams sons that perish what more universall then that contagion what more constant succession then that of sin in mankinde and the divell a most vigilant Bishop in his Diocesse and as ready substitutes his wicked agents and instruments what more visibility then of his kingdome and Church and what more evident consent then of Simeon and Levi brethren in evill and of Herod and Pilate against Christ as of all wicked ones against the Church of God 36. How more particularly The Temples of Idols and Heathen religion we may see what antiquity universality visibility succession and consent even from the first times and Adams disobedience they can shew when Gyants sons of men before the Flood builders of Babell after and all Heathens then and still the greatest part of the world in blindnesse and idolatry bondslaves of Satan and for all sects and heresies as of Mahumetans Nestorians Arrians and such dens of wilde beasts and nests of uncleane birds we may see how great a pretence they may make to these notes without holinesse or the former 37. What shall we say then of these Notes That if they be joyned with holinesse and the former then we may make very good use of them to distinguish and know the Church more plainly for alone they may faile us 38. What say you of the Church of Rome As of a particular Church and by these markes to be examined how a member of the universall Church 39. But is not there holinesse without antiquity If there were it were not to be denied but that it were a true and sound Church of God but as it is we deny it not to be a Church a true Church or truly a Church a particular one as that it is an unsound or much corrupted one can they themselves when put closely to it scarce or hardly denie 40. But the faith and holinesse of that Church is commended in Scriptures and said to be famous throughout the world It is true of the Primitive times thereof but we now speake of the present and late bred corruptions and defections of the same 41. Where is the true Church then Where the truth and purity of Religion is restored according to Gods word and his truth and the corruptions purged and done away as in our and other the best reformed Churches 42. Have not some in pretence of this been too violent to purge or expunge things necessary If any have or seeke to doe so they stand or fall to their owne Judge we as private men must not be their
11. and 12. Articles of the Creed concerning the Priviledges of the Church and first forgivenesse of sinnes by washing us in Christs blood covering of our sinnes and imputation of his righteousnesse to those that are his and none others we being not able to satisfie for our owne but needing God powerfully the Church ministerially to forgive them where faith in Christ is required the condition whence the use of much comfort and consequently the blessed hope of resurrection the second priviledge manner certainty and reason wherof are here observed taken from Gods justice equity and mercy As also farther illustrated by divers examples and similitudes presenting to us a shew of the resurrection so the order of it and excellent estate therein more amply expressed in respect of the godly and what good duties to be hence learned and what good uses to be made of the same Whence also consequently our joyfull hope of life everlasting The last Articls where life of joyntly of soule and body raised and united in joy unspeakable and endlesse in heaven is by that to be understood which is also called the union With God and fruition of the glorious Godhead and blessednesse eternal which is the life of Angels though the meanes or cause of it as Christ or the word sometimes figuratively called life and life eternall or as it may be inchoate herein in the kingdome of grace as consummato in glory whereas the contrary and estate of the damned not properly a life but death or ever dying life and so not mentioned in the Creed where onely the comfort of the godly intended the use they make and duty they ought o learne in seeking striving for it in assuranc● of which their blessed faith and hope they say Amen 1. VVHat is contained in these three last Articles Three priviledges granted to the Church and not elsewhere to be found or attained each Article one viz. 10. Forgivenesse of sinnes 11. Resurrection of body 12. Life everlasting 2. What is forgivenesse of sins Gods passing by our sins without calling them to his remembrance to shame or punish us for them but on the contrariwise imputing righteousnesse to us and accounting and allowing us just 3. Wherein consisteth it In these two things the Covering or cancelling and discharging of sinne Imputation and gift of justice 4. How is the covering or discharging of sin In taking away both the spot and staine of guilt and consequently the removing all punishment 5. How is it done By washing our soules in Christs bloud purging them by his merits and drowning them in the sea of his infinite love and mercy and as wee are in Christ he beholdeth no staine in us hee seeth no iniquity in Iacob and the cause of sin removed punishment the effect and death eternall the due to sin must needs be done away 6. How the imputation of Christs justice and his merits As in him our sins done away so in him is justice given by putting on him and his robes of righteousnesse as we are in him part of that holy society the communion of Saints and members of the true Catholique Church 7. To whom is then forgivenesse of sins Onely to the true members of the Catholique Church for so to them that are in Christ thence is no condemnation because they are of that body and in him in whom God is well pleased and so to all others who are not in him what can bee expected but condemnation 8. Can we not satisfie for our owne sins How can we satisfie for sin that without him and his grace are not able to thinke a good thought and when our best workes in comparison of true holinesse are but as poluted and filthy clouts before him and when wee have done the most we can it is but our duty yea when the best we can we are but unprofitable servants where is then our merit of our selves or ability to satisfie for our misdeeds 9. Who forgiveth sin Onely God the Father Son and Holy Spirit who having power to make the Law have power to forgive the offence 10. How is the Church said or men to forgive sinnes The Church ministerially and that divers ways from God as by The ministry of the word procuring it by offering and ordering the doctrine of repentance and forgivenesse of sin and converting sinners to God The exercising the power of the keyes by Gods order and commission for the benefit of the Church to humble the soule The applying the same to the penitent and so in the power of Gods commission to give and pronounce absolution to the benefit and comfort of the soule desiring the same 11. How the keyes or power of them exercised In foro 1. Exteriori in facie Ecclesiae more publiquely in the sight of the Church to the reforming of offences and removing of scandals 2. Interiori conscientiae more privately to the comfort of the soule and quieting the conscience of the humble penitent 12. How men how doe they forgive Onely partially in regard of some part of some offences concerning them but God forgiveth to the truly penitent totally in respect of all parts of both guilt and punishment and fully whatsoever either the Church holily intendeth or men neglect or wilfully refuse to forgive if he please 13. How stands this with Gods justice As in justice even to the utmost satisfied in the sufferings of Christ and in mercy as he gave and accepteth him and in his merits for us 14. What is then required to forgivenesse of sins A lively faith in Christ whereby we apprehend him and his merits and perfections thereby applyed and made ours whence commeth true repentance forsaking sinne and cleaving stedfastly to God 15. What certainty of it Gods gracious promises in Christ effectually applyed and sealed to the soule by the ministry of the Church in the holy use of his Word and Sacraments 16. What learne we hence In this life seeking this priviledge in the Church 1. To make our calling and election sure in Christ. 2. To become truly a member of his so to have our sins forgiven 3. Obtaine peace of conscience thus and both with God and men 4. To disclaime our owne merits so in humblenesse crave and have Christs justice 5. To try our faith by our repentance and so by our assurance of forgivenesse and thus seeking we shall surely attaine it both from God and his Church and have peace with God and men 17. What followeth of this Resurrection of body as a consequent of forgivenesse of sins for as death entred by sin so sinne also taken away the punishment also to be removed which being of the body in part shall also in that part be dissolved at the last and the body raised 18. But how and when shall it be By the mighty power of God and in his word by the voice of his Angell and sound of his trumpet at the end of the world 19. How can this be Though wormes have eaten it or
things to come and expected A shadow and show or signification of good things present and enjoyed relate also to the Messias and promise of him and rest and deliverance by him Paedagogy of the Jewes and to them a signe of distinction from others Temple and service there in their rest in Canaan Or shewing also the nonage of the law looking towards grace and subjection of that Church as the heyre under age so in the servitude of that Church over-rated with ceremonies and teaching them to bow their stiffe necks to the service of God inuring them to it by legal strict observances And lastly shadowing the rest of Christians and of the law under the Gospell made easie by grace So here begunne in grace and perfected in glory Eternall with God in the heavens So whereas ceremonies are either Chiefly shadowing things to come as here principally the Messias or For signification of some present duty and holy memoriall For order and decency reconciling gravity and authority as well as attention to the divine celebrations and actions Though some of the later may reflect on us Christians with the morality of the Commandement yet all the chiefe respects in the ceremony serving the Jewish Church and Synagogue and shadowing Christ to come hee being come they with that Church are vanished 30. Shew it more particularly This Commandment and their Sabbath though morall in the substance was as many other things in the morall worship of God over-rated with many legall and strict observances to the very letter inducing a ceremoniall respect and shadowing good things to come whiles it and the Jewes Church lasted which the Jewes could hardly beare yet made more hard in many respects by their owne traditions as seene in the Talmude and witnessed by our Saviours words who doing good deeds on it disliked by them reproved their blindnesse and intimating the alteration if not then beginning it shewed hee came to do good and dissolve those hard knots and burdens and make the Sabbath more profitable and pleasant as convenient both to Gods honour and mans comfort and that the pedagogy servitude and nonage of their Law Temple Sabbath and other such legall ceremonies vanished hee would ordain a new Testament Church law Sabbath and Sacraments of Christians and hee the Lord of the Sabbath thus ordering it and as it were beginning first by himselfe she wing and honouring the day by his glorious resurrection and other apparitions as Saint Augustine speaketh after by his holy Spirit perfected it in his holy Apostles and Churches doctrine and ordinances as we see it established where is conserved the morality of it in the worship of God and time destined to his service even according to that in the Commandement determined with the resting and sanctifying that rest though not so literally legally and burdensomly as then to them ceremonially enjoined yet as religiously and with respect to the morality of the rest as it concerned both them and us both the rest of the ox cattell servant for their comfort and refreshing and our rest for our fitter dedication of our selves to such holy action as the service of God then to be performed and attending it with more alacrity that are all by us observed as by the Lord and his Church or by the Lord in his Church ordained he himselfe so declaring and demonstrating the day also as Saint Augustine speaks Epist. ad Januar. 119. 9 13. by his glorious resurrection and honouring it by his many apparitions in Pathmos and else to his servant John that calleth it his day as well as his other Disciples or having finished the Iewes Sabbath by that his rest in his grave on that day and withall their Passeover and Sacraments by his glorious resurrection designing our new Sabbath and day of it by it as the same Father speakes Serm. 15. de verbis Ap. consecrating as it were the Lords day to us and promising us there with an everlasting day in the heavens and so continuing as we may collect or commending to us in it such convenient ceremonies as respect that his joyfull remembrance our deliverance by him our rest begun here in grace and to bee perfected in glory with him in the heavens or the like fitting us Christians for decency order and the beauty of holinesse though all ceremoniall shadowes of him to come and legall pedagoy and servitude ended and thus ensued the change of the day not the law of the ceremony and shadow not the substance or morality of the strictnesse servitude and unpleasantnesse not the duty or profitablenesse of the Commandement by him that was Lord even of the Sabbath and of the Commandement 31. But how say you by him changed for that is still by some controverted 1. As he finished the ceremony and by his appearance actions and presence tooke away the shadowes and unprofitable rudiments that were no longer to endure then to the revealing of the Messias expected and by them shadowed so the substance come they unusefull and vanish and Secondly as by his power his Apostles and Church so ordered and ordained and by his holy Spirit instructed practised it and that even whiles the solemne funerals as one well speakes of the Jewish Church Sabbath and ceremonies were in performing that is betweene our Saviours resurrection and the destruction of the Temple as well as afterward to all succeeding ages which may suffice us whereas else indeed the summe of all may be for that point of the change if that neither I. Christs 1. precept granted since not expresly to be found Though we have as much in effect by his former teaching hee was Lord of the Sabbath and so his example and 2. Practice of sanctifying it in his resurrection and other apparitions on that day and such election and declaration of it with motives and instructions thence arising to his Church and Disciples 3. Denomination of it the Lords day by his servant John as aforesaid may serve II. Nor the Apostles precept so expresly to be found for the sanctifying it in all points as required though we have their First observation of it by the Lords example Second selecting it for pious actions Third so ordaining it in divers Churches Fourth practice and therein tacite precept Fifth Tradition having so left it to the Sixt Church and constitution in some Fathers and Doctors opinions Seventh denomination of it the Lords day III. Nor Churches and primitive times Ancientest 1. Practice without controll from thence derived 2. Tradition received for Apostolicall 3. Constitutions very ancient even as those first times 4. Canons thence successively ensuing consent of all Ecclesiasticall Histories Writers and fathers that all confesse it so delivered received can prevaile to satisfie contentious spirits which doe abundantly satisfie all moderate men they should yet be perswaded the Churches power so granted by the Lord with the assistance of his Spirit promised to guide them into all truth and direct them might suffice to
either our necessities require or Gods blessings invite every day houre minute of time yeelding some new blessing or it selfe a blessing in the enjoying a longer time of grace and so such imitation 6. Fideliter fidenter in true saith with love unsained and sure confidence reposing our trust in God without waving or doubting as Saint James speaketh 7. Presenter as knowing or considering with the Philosopher the present time is only ours and delay breeds danger and here is no delaying or dallying with God in this to be used for true it is Nescis quid serus vesper ferat qui non est hodie cras minus aptus erat as true in this 8. Perseveranter with all constancie and patienc waiting the Lords seisure and never weary of weldoing remembring the widow importunity prevailing with the unjust Judge as much more we with the most good God 9. Practice and thus as perseveringly even to pray continually not only the vicissitude of frequent confession in humility fervent prayer in true faith pious intercession in unfaigned charity and praise and thanksgiving in duty and gratitude a forcible kinde of prayer to pull downe new blessings each taking their turns in a constant and continued course but such gracious speech of the tongue seconding the humble desires of the heart and both seconded by a godly course of life best fitting a devout Christian as the good life of the Preacher may seeme a continuall Sermon so this godly life of a good Christian in this course may seeme a continuall prayer from which directions how great abundance of holy meditations and helpes to devotion all incentives to this divine duty will arise may plainly appeare What followeth in speciall to be considered The Lords prayer as an absolute platforme of true prayer the Preface and other parts of it SECT 3. Of the Lords Prayer in particular and the Preface thereof and that fitly in the words or forme of the Lords prayer or any part of its the Analysis of the same prayer and first of the Preface of it how is our Father and what sons he hath with the comfort that we have of such his being our Father more then in any other title or respect and what use we should make of it in our well living hom he is said ours and in what respect so by us in our prayers to be named viz. to minde us to pray for the generall good of all our brethren why it is said in heaven to minde us of our owne low estate and his excellent Majesty so to elevate our eyes and soules to his Throne of glory Whence we hope for and expect all our helps and supply from him who though on earth and in all places most gloriously there raigning with our greatest joy and comfort if we be truly his why we ought to pray and not neglect it how in this Preface the holy Trinity in m●●ed or to be understood 1. IS it fit to pray in the very words of the Lords Prayer It is very convenient and being rightly understood there cannot be conceived better that if all the wise men in the world had consented together a more absolute frame could not be contrived nor uttered with humane wisdome and therefore well worthy to be used and if God be pleased with us for his sake his words also may well be deemed acceptable especially when we present our selves in his merits and our minde in his words 2. But may we not alter them 3. Not in substance but in circumstance or manner to expresse more in particular our necessities or desires which there in generall are contained 3. May we not pray the effect of any one petition by it selfe Yes if our necessities so require and though in more ample illustration yet the same in effect for if opposite or besides the matter there expressed in briefe it cannot be right or accepted and so having used our best skill to expresse our wants or desires in any particular we usually close with this as in the most perfect and assured acceptable forme that can be uttered and more acceptable how much better understood for so we pray more truly in his words and with his Spirit wherefore we ought to take the best care we may rightly to understand the same 4. What is therein contained Three parts the Preface of confession Our Father which art in heaven The Petitions for our selves and other six in number Hallowed be thy name c. The conclusion of praise and thanksgiving For thine is thy Kingdome power and glory c. 5. What is contained in the Preface I. A confession of Gods great Majesty mercy and goodnesse in that a Father our Father in heaven his throne of glory II. A confession of our owne 1. humility 2. duty 3. wants and 4. hope As we are sonnes we say our Father as we are in earth looke up to heaven up to the hills from whence commeth our helpe even to our God in his holy habitation 6. Who is here understood called Father 1. Either God according to his essence the Father of lights and so the whole Trinity may bee understood as Father of spirits and as the Sonne is called Counsellour everlasting Father and Prince of peace Isaiah 9. 6. 2. Or first Person in Trinity in relation to the Sonne and Holy Ghost and so we pray to the Father in the name of the Sonne and by the help of the Holy Ghost 7. How is God our Father Not only by creation for so are all creatures also with men and Angels But first more particularly as made sonnes in Christ his naturall Son By redemption restored By adoption acknowledged 2. Manifested sonnes by our education in his house the Church Teaching by his word and doctrine Correction by his fatherly chastisements Sanctification by his holy Spirit Inheritance of Sons in his blessing 8. What Sons hath God Both 1. generally all creatures by creation 2. Specially Princes by participation of honour and authority children called of the most High and Gods Most especially and naturally Christ by eternall generation 3. Particularly and legally all Christians by adoption in Christ and though false restored to be the Sons of God 9. What are we put in minde of by this name Father 1. Of the means wherby we are restored to favour our elder brother Christ. 2. The confidence that we may come with before him being admitted Sons 3. The love that he beareth to us whom hee accounteth so as himselfe our Father 4. The dignity and what persons we ought to be so accounted his Sons 5. The indignity we offer if we be not Sonnes or faithfull to presume and so to be assured our prayer is but sinne and we deserve a curse and not a blessing 10. Why call we him Father rather then by any other name Because a name as most truly honourable so most arguing love for though King or Judge or Prince or the like seem in common eyes more honourable titles yet
2. Common as his attributes such as glory honour mercy Iustice c. as called just mercifull c. II. His Word and Sacraments Scripture and all that pertaines to it to make it knowne to men and him in it the preaching hearing it Church persons Saints Sabbaths and ceremonies means whereby we know him 3. His workes of creation heavens that declare the glory of God c Gubernation and providence as his mercies judgements graces and whatsoever any way declare his mighty power or great goodnesse on earth or whatsoever made knowne of him in the Bookes of 1. Scripture the Law and Gospel doctrine and things therein contained his titles names attributes graces and glory 2. Creatures where heaven and earth the pages and every creature character of his glory in which read and represented his creation guiding governance and mighty preservation of them and so al of them speaking and declaring his mighty name and power 13. What is meant by sanctifying Either a 1. Purifying and cleansing of things uncleane as Lepers sinners uncleane persons and their sin and uncleannesse or the like 2. Preferring things poluted and prophane to better and holier use as the Temples of Heathens to Christian use 3. Promoting things of common use to a more sanctified use as Aaron and his sonnes consecrated Priests and water bread and wine so consecrated in the Sacraments 4. Preserving things hallowed in that use as Temples and Oratories to the use and exercise they are appointed 5. Professing and declaring or shewing and setting forth with praise and honour hallowed and sanctifying things and in this sense chiefly understood this sanctifying Gods name as signifying himselfe and his honour though as by it is understood the meanes of it in our selves and other creatures it may bee taken in some of the other senses 4. In what manner As his name is sanctified in the holy and sanctified use of any the creatures or dedicating our selves to his service as we may see in 1. Purifying our soules and consciences from evill workes 2. Converting sinners to God 3. Preserving our bodies and soules in holines and honour doing all good workes to the glory of God 4. But most particularly in speaking and setting forth his honour and glory which is the substance and effect of the third Commandement 5. How is that performed 1. By doing all things pertaining to his honour and manifestation thereof 2. Declining from all things tending to his dishonour 6. How especially and particularly By I. Thinking and meditating graciously of his 1. Holy and great name and so of himselfe in essence persons 2. Titles of his honour and renown 3. Attributes and actions as creation providence mercy Iustice c. 4. Holy Word and Sacraments Law and Gospell 5. Holy Church and Sabbaths and all things dedicate to him and called holy of his holinesse 6. Creatures all of them in heaven and earth II. Speaking discoursing piously religiously of his 1. Holy and great name and so of himselfe in essence persons 2. Titles of his honour and renown 3. Attributes and actions as creation providence mercy Iustice c. 4. Holy Word and Sacraments Law and Gospell 5. Holy Church and Sabbaths and all things dedicate to him and called holy of his holinesse 6. Creatures all of them in heaven and earth III. Doing all the speciall acts of piety and devotion as 1. Preaching his name words and doctrine the Law and Gospel 2. Hearing and receiving the same with reverence 3. Praying and receiving the Sacraments 4. Blessing and praising him 5. Dedicating our selves and soules to his honour 7. How else to be hallowed By declining all impediments of his honour because we see his name too often prophaned by all kinde of evill and wickednesse of mens or the devils invention As 1. Idolatry superstition witchcraft 2. Ignorance 3. Ingratitude 4. Dissimulation and so by Swearing Forswearing Cursing Blasphemy c. Where we desire that all these things evill acts and agents whether men or devils that are against his honour may bee removed and so his name in all places by all and above all to bee honoured and sanctified 8. But his name is most holy and how can it bee more hallowed or prophaned In it selse it is most holy and for ever and so can receive no augmentation or diminution of honour but in regard of the manifestation before men so the wicked seeme to prophane it by their pollutions but indeed come not nighest but onely pollute themselves to their owne perdition that remaining holy for ever and on the contrary the godly strive to hallow it more and so inded procure their owne holinesse and honour and thereby happinesse as God accepteth their good will in setting forth and declaring his honour as especially by 1. Declaring and setting forth his power and greatnesse justice and truth mercy and goodnes 2. Praying to him and praising of him 3. Preaching and declaring his will the Law and Gospel to all men whereby he is most especially honoured even to the ends of the world and all dishonour vices and heresies rooted out 9. Is this then the summe of the third Commandement onely prayed for It may be well understood so 1. Principally that Commandement as where the hallowing of Gods name is commanded according to the scope and words of this petition and all prophanation forbidden utterly as is most plainly apparant 2. So consequently of all the other Commandements of the first Table whereby Gods honour is to be set up in heart as in the first Commandement in the Temple and in his solemne worship as in the second Commandement and especially on his Sabbath as in the fourth Commandement by which means he is more honoured and his name universally glorified as also in the 1. Second petition we desire it openly executed and promoted by his power 2. We desire it may bee willingly performed and submitted udto by our will and best and holiest affections 10. What the sum of this petition then That his name may be honoured and sanctified as acknowledged and declared so amongst all men and the holinesse thereof more famously with all due observances by us and all people glorified whereby 1. We may ascribe all honour to it whether we speake of his titles Behold his creatures Meditate of his words and workes Receive any blessings Be conversant in any holy duties exercises 2. All impediments of his honour may be removed and his honour vindicate from all abuses of unholy and prophane persons or Wordlings 3. He will be pleased so to provide for the preservation of his honour that it may be so hallowed by all people and that consequently his Kingdome of grace may come upon us 11. What is in the letter here expressed Most plainly by the 1. Petition for our selves 2. Intercession for others that God will be pleased to have this duty thus by us and by others done as we pray indefinitely hallowed be thy name and used the Preface our
explained the second petition for our selves or fifth in order with the order and Analysis and parts thereof observed what meant by forgivenesse and debts or trespasses and how we are debtors many waies and say justly our trespasses the condition whereon we aske forgivenesse as we forgive others and also no forgivenesse at Gods hand so how and how far men may and ought to forgive their brethren and their trespasses and who offend against this divers wayes how David Moses and others did curse and the Magistrate punisheth and not forgiveth and who truly or as they ought forgive others whereby the way is discussed the power and authority that the Church and Priest hath to forgive sins both according to the doctrine of the holy Scriptures and expositions thereon of the ancient Fathers and all orthodox Writers and so generally of the whole Church of God in all ages as well as the present Church of England with the right understanding of her tenet in that point and the good use to be made of it whereby confession is explaned how far forth requisite and coldly for the most part now used but the defect of discipline and other inconveninces plainly enough to be perceived issuing from the same so the true and genuine use thereof asserted and cleerly proved by many arguments as aforesaid and more fully by the generall practise of the Church and primitiva times demonstrated whereby the manner how it was by them exercised and so the order of the ancient Church discipline is on this occasion set forth and decyphered and for the present petition here is farther declared what herein we ought to doè or avoid so what is here expressed or intimated thus particularly summed up together and explaned 1. VVHat are the three latter Petitions Concerning us and our necessities for things either 1. Temporall as daily bread Give us this day our daily bread 2. Spirituall As forgivenesse of sins c. Deliverance from temptations 3. Partly spirituall and partly temporall as deliverances from all evill ghostly sin and bodily dangers 2. What the first of these Petitions The fourth of the Lords Prayer Give us this day c. wherein we pray for all things necessary for this present life under the name of bread or dayly bread and this day 3. What is the order Placed before those that desire spirituall things or blessings to shew 1. Our exceeding necessity in this life and so first desire food and raiment without which wee cannot subsist 2. Our Fathers mercy that considereth this our need and weaknesse 3. Our account and use wee ought to make of it since allowed to aske it to use it as a step or degree towards better blessings 4. What contained or to be confidered in it 1. The object bread and double epithetons of it 1. Our and 2. Daily bread 2. The action give and adjoyned circumstance twofold of the persons To us time to day 5. What understood by bread 1. Either spiritually bread of life panis vitae or coelestis Angelorum Manna Angels food Christ and Gods word and Sacraments in which respect it might be well preferred to all the rest of the Petitions but thus more improperly 2. Or temporally the staffe of bread food raiment and all other necessities all other comforts of this life whereby to make bread relish well and us to enjoy it 6. How for the first sense Spiritually taken it may be understood indeed that most divinely for Gods holy word which is food of souls bread of life called by such honorable epithetons shewing the vertue and efficacy to sustain the soule according to that of our Saviour Man liveth not by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Secondly also for Christ himselfe who is the incarnate Word and Wisedome of the Father who is the true bread of life and food indeed as thirdly of the Sacraments of his body and blood the spirituall food also of our soules and so this called panis coeli or coelestis Angelorum and the like but not so properly in this place intended since this bread in the first and second Petitions desired where Gods name and glory and kingdome are prayed for and whereas in patriâ wee desire to bee satiated with this heavenly Manna here more properly intended is the panis via or viatorum and that part that concerneth the temporall necessities of this life intimated also by Today and daily and so bread is said to be either Panis Nature of this life Doctrine of Gods word Gratia Christus in Sacramentis Gloriae Christus in Coelis 7. How is the word of God bread As it doth nourish comfort and strengthen the soule as materiall bread doth the body and so noted in these respects of our soules 1. Vivification raising it from death to life 2. Consolation comforting it in that life and against all tribulation 3. Confirmation in goodnesse and against all ill and assaults of the divell 4. Delectation with the heavenly taste and sweetnesse roborating strengthning and illuminating of the heart in the true faith 7. How is Christ the bread of life As the word of God manifested in the flesh to the quickening and raising up of our soules and bodies so panis hominum and as the comfort of Saints and Angels in glory so panis hominum Angelorum c. and so to bee noted this bread of life in I. The Sacraments are to be hol●ly 1. Prepared for with reverence reached unto with feare received by faith 2. Ruminated with devotion that it may nourish us in Christ and make us one with him II. Heaven doth Satiate without any defect to eternity in glory Delight with eternall sweetnesse maintaine life eternally and so Angels food and as the Psalmist said Man did eat Angels food panem Angelorum thus in grace and glory 9. What then of other naturall or materiall bread As by it we understand the very materiall food of our bodies in this life with all the necessary appurtenances of quietnesse and peace friends house lands or revenewes rayment health and other blessings to make it sweet and comfortable to us as that stay of life the staffe of bread is or is accounted to be so we must remember that it ought to be 1. Got by our honest labour 2. Received with moderation and thankfulnesse and so onely properly our daily bread 3. Imparted to others with us as the poore our bread 10. But why is all food called bread To teach us the 1. Use we should intend for strengthning us the property of bread chiefly not for vanity or voluptuousnesse 2. Moderation that should be as the holy and abstemious men that lived with bread and water onely 3. Blessing if we have it from God it shall be sufficient and having food and rayment to bee content 11. Why say you Our bread To signifie both 1. The love of God that granteth it to be ours by the giving when else we
which what good Christian is free and so good a preparative to our end and calling hence of which who is certaine or who can be too religiously carefull especially since they are so often in holy Scripture called on for it and should often remember their end and the strict account then to be made of all the things committed to their charge and of all that they have done in the flesh which with the holy Father that thought he heard the trumpet of God and Archangells voice continually sounding in his eare that surgite mortui venite ad judicium often meditated on this and the like thoughts and preparations would as to this also be motives to much good and to prevent much evill 50. But how is the Minister able to discerne the spirits or to do this sufficiently not knowing the secrets of the heart or sins lurking there The Priest indeed cannot nor may not absolve any but the penitent nor can know their penitency but by their outward expression it is Gods prerogative to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to know the thoghts and secrets of the heart the Priests eye pierceth not so farre he onely reads the sorrowes of our hearts by our words and outward confession without which he cannot give nor we receive the benefit of absolution 51. But is not private or auricular confession how ever it seeme needfull sometimes rooted out of our Church and abolished Though not so generally and peremptorily commanded or in the Priests power to enforce or require it yet it is not rooted quite out neither nor utterly abolished as we see by that second exhortation before the Communion urging the penitents to it and by the forme prescribed for the visitation of the sicke and their absolution after their private or auricular confession and by the Canon enjoyning the Ministers silence on paine of suspension of such crimes so privately by the humble penitent revealed and confessed in all which passages we see it by Law approved so though the Ministers power of calling them to it be abridged the thing it selfe yet and use of it is not abolished 52. What differs the Priests power ministerialiter that you shewed before and this declarative If you meane declarative onely very much or as much as the Judges and his ●riers declaration of the same things otherwise ministerialiter is declarative too but not that only as ministerialiter in respect of God and his Church may be authoritative also in respect of Gods commission granted to them to be Judges of the sinnes and soules of his people as aforesaid as Gods deputed Judges on earth for those things and so the Kings Judges as his Ministers of justice Ministers in that point to the King and Commonwealth yet having authority from him authoritativé proceed and pronounce sentence of the things in their commission and ministerially execute his the Kings judgements according to his Lawes and have power so to doe and declarative pronounce the same and their authority granted doth no way lessen the Kings which the exercise mediately rather doth more shew and promulge the same but to say they had therefore power but declarative because ministerialiter they execute the Kings authority or declarative only not authorative because ministerialiter they do it whereas they may well stand together yet each in their order and degree were to derogate from their authority and dignity as these schismaticks do in the like manner from the Churches office and authority 55. This authority then of the Church and Priests in that point is cleare enough It is and though ministerialiter to the honour of God and good of his Church executed and declarative uttered or published by them not to be denied authoritative also by power and vertue of his commission granted to them in whose name they doe it as originally in him in his own proper right and only doe existent to them only mediately and by grace derived and thus by The Doctrine of the Church of England according to the true record and rule of holy Scriptures and the consent of the Fathers from all antiquity we are assured hereof and taught this truth against all novelties of Schismatickes so that if we either Assent to our mother Church Beleeve the Scriptures or Credit the ancient Fathers as aforesaid wee cannot deny the Priest this power of the remitting sinnes having thus Gods word and Scriptures sure record his Sonnes promise and holy Spirits testimony so many wayes to assure us of it and since he can in the name of God forgive us our sinnes good reason have we to make our confession to him for surely God who doth nothing in vaine never gave the Priest this power in vain but for our benefit and expects our doing the best we can to make good use of it having ordained in the Priest the power of absolution that wee should use the best meanes we can to obtaine that blessing which is our confession to him nor can we sleight this but we may quickly and well heare Saint Augustine Tom. 10. Homil. 49. applying his speech close to such slieghters teaching us a better lesson nemo sibi dicat saith he occulte ago quia apud Deum ago c. let no man flatter himselfe and say I confesse in private to God and God that knoweth my heart will or shall pardon me though I never confesse at all to the Priest ergo sine causâ dictum esset quae solveritis in terra c. hath God in vaine said whose sinnes ye remit they are remitted Hath he in vaine given that power of the keyes to the Priest Frustramus ergo Dei verbum by our wilfull neglect shall we goe about to make void the promise of Christ God forbid if we have offended this way preveniamus judicium Dei per confessionem let us let us yet now at last prevent the terrible judgement of the last day by timely confession of our sinnes to God and the Priest as he hath commanded who as he hath prime and originall power of absolution Esay 43. 25. and is our high Confessor in the heavens hath not in vaine done any thing or commanded us to humble our selves in his Church and to his substitutes the Priests our confessors here on earth and thus much of the power of the Church in the dispensing of absolution requiring our duty of confession 54. If this were the doctrine of the ancients how was it seconded by their practise Accordingly to all intents both privately to the comfort and absolution of such humble penitents and more publickly in reforming the stubborne or notorious offenders and as with all authority thus commanded with all gravity by them exercised and with all humility and dutifulnesse by all the sonnes of the Church even to the greatest of them obeyed as the Ecclesiasticall Histories doe plentifully declare whereby the Churches discipline grew so religiously admired that even famous for it to succeeding times awfull feare and obedience
efficacie from the person and office of Christ so his was inchoatively Christs absolutely the true baptisme 45. How did they differ from the legall oblations Many wayes but chiefly in that those legall oblations were no admission into the Church as this nor seales or means of grace but only ceremoniall clensings of ceremoniall uncleannesse of the body and outward testification of it whereas this is of the very actuall and naturall filth and corruption of the soule and they might and were often to be iterated this as a seale of our admission only once administred and they all abolished in Christ in whom this is founded 46. What are the ends of Baptisme 1. The chiefe end the 1. Sealing of the Covenant of grace and so the solemne testification of our clensing by Christs bloud Justification and Regeneration in newnesse of life II. The other lesse principall ends as to be 1. A testification of our duty● obedience and thankfulnesse 2. A signe and symbole of our admission into the Church and Covenant and so in that respect not to be iterated 3. A note of discerning us and the members of the Church from all others 4. A token of unity in the Church 5. A means of gathering the Church together and confirmation of our faith 6. A memoriall of the afflictions we must undergoe in this worlds sea by the crosse 7. An occasion also to remember our deliverance from the deluge of sin here as in a Noah's Arke where though immergimur non submergimur 1 Pet. 3. 21. 47. Why ought not baptisme to be iterated Because as once borne so once new borne and admitted into the Church and Covenant and though often comforted and continually nourished and confirmed in the Church by the use of the other Sacrament yet this admission only once to be used 48. How of those that fall out of the Church They are renewed by repentance wherein the force and efficacie of Baptisme is stirred up in them and though againe admitted by penitence into the visible company of the faithfull the Church or Congregation not understood a second time admitted into the Covenant of grace nor Baptisme to be iterated but the vertue and efficacie thereof showne by repentance and acknowledged in that readmission and so wee are but once borne or new borne in the Church though often raised restored fed and comforted as seen especially in the often use of the other Sacrament 49. How hath this been used and practized in the Church In effect as it is now from the very primitive times and all antiquity or indeed more strictly the doctrine of penitence where we finde even the Church it selfe so ordered and disposed as fittest for the practice of this godly discipline as may be seen in the Ancryan Councell Anno 163. Can. 2. 3 4. 5 6. 7. c Where severall and distinct places observed in the Church for the penitents Catechumeni audientes fideles and sacerdotes or Cleri●i as also the Centuriatores Mag●eb though no great friends to good order are driven to confesse and note in their Cent. 3. c. 6. p. 124. in the Canons of Gregory Bishop of Neo-Caesaria scholar of Origen by them cited and the distinct places five of them there remembred 50. Which are they 1. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Church porch or neer the Church doore where the penitents humbled themselves under l●gatos lachrymas mitterent and desired the faithfull as they entred to pray for them 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the auditory within the Church where the audientes and behind them the penitentes such as were admitted a● manuum impositionem as it were the first degree after penance performed 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where the Catechumeni might heare lectionem tractatum and see some rites and place where the fideles did communicate but not the mysteries themselves but were before that dismissed 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where the fideles were allowed a more eminent place and penitents behind them after imposition of hands obtained where they might behold and desire the mysteries but not yet participate and therefore stood whiles the fideles kneeled to distinguish them and signifie their estate 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which understood all the upper part of the Church viz. the whole Chauncell and Quire where the holy mysteries celebrated and the communion participated by the fideles or faithfull and beleevers and penitents when so admitted and called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in respect of these for that after penance fully performed they were at last there again being reconciled received to the Sacrament Who before had staied 1. At the Church doore and 2. In Auditorio ut supra and 3. In 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gradatim ascendendo 4. Huc admissi and so Origen after his fall Extra fores with the penitents and divers worthy men as holy Natolius who prayed them that entred the Church in token of his contrition Calcate me tanquam salem insipidum Philip the first Christian Emperour not admitted but by degrees having stood Loco penitentium as Theodosius ejected and faine to doe so Theodor. lib. 5. c. 17. and some even Priests after lapse and penance no further admitted but to Communio Laicorum which was distinct from Communio Sacerdotum So Trophimus a Priest and Novatus as Euseb. 6. 4. and 3. Cyprian 4. Ep. 2. the strict discipline of those primitive and purest times 51. Were there then so divers degrees in the Church Yes as we see many degrees ●'re admit●ance to the Sacrament of baptisme and the Eucharist and more and greater probation evidently e're into holy orders 52. In what manner Recorded in Histories the Churches Monuments and holy Fathers thus distinguished in their Classes 1. The Educati in their Schooles where the Catechistae frequented for education of youth and teaching converts neere the Churches 2. Audientes admitted to hear the expounding and Homilies in the Church where even heretickes heathen or any might come to bee instructed 3. Catechumeni who taking a liking to Christian Religion and intending to be baptized had a place more honorable then the ordinary Audientes assigned and might see more then they as the place of the Fideles communion and Adyta barred from strangers the ceremony of whose admission was Signum crucis in fronte as Saint Augustine teaches Catechumeni non renati per sacrum baptisma sol●m in u●e●o Ecclesiae per signum crucis concepti Lib 2. 4. de Symbolo ad Catech. So he faith Credo signat se signo crucis 4. Competentes who sufficiently instructed and desiring ba●tisme had therefore given their ●ames to the Bishop who so taught it might say the Creed but not the Lords prayer quia nondum renati per baptis nec filii dicendi the ceremony of whose admission to baptisme was thus On Ashwednesdav in Sack●loth and Ashes unde dies cinerum dictus beginning with the Fast and prayer fourty dayes before Easter Iejuniis
Church in the administration of the Sacraments and admission of Converts to Baptisme and Penitents into the Church and participation of the other Sacrament in primitive times especially and even when whole Nations were converted to Christianity and baptized As this also a preparation by the description of the holy Table or Altar-place of it ceremonies and reverence used at it to the doctrine of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper coming next to be handled Yet once more ere we passe this Sacrament what is meant by these words used in the ceremony In the name of the Father c. By the Name of God as all Divines teach is understood not onely that Nomen ineffabile Tetragrammaton 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as written with foure letters and by some corruptly pronounced Jehovah instead of Jaha or J●hu and usually read Adonai by the Hebrewes themselves and others by their directions but all other the glorious titles attributes and holy meanes whatsoever whereby any no●●●●s of the divine Majesty are imparted and the knowledge of God in any sort derived unto us and so by them as farre as humane frailty will permit God himselfe made knowne unto men And as his attributes of Mercy Justice Goodnesse and the like seeming accidentall attributes are yet ●o essentiall they are his very essence and God himselfe Nullum accidens in Deum cadit quicquid in Deo est essentia est so much more his Name and Titles taken for God himselfe all of them together sparkling like rayes from that their center of theirs the divine Majesty which they would expresse to our knowledge thus God himselfe meant by his name and by the Hebrewes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shem the name is ordinarily accepted for God himselfe absolutely as the chiefe meanes of our knowledge of him which yet hath a twofold consideration as what is either passive received or active set forth byus which knowledge passive received or in the receiving may perhaps properly pertaine to the third Commandment and exposition of the name of God there as the same passive in the setting forth and acknowledgement of it may pertaine to this place and perhaps both to the first Petition of the Lords prayer wherein we desire Gods Name may bee hallowed which we may well interpret by all holy meanes of receiving this knowledge of him as well as setting it forth and acknowledging of it to his glory and in this last sense here properly understood that the person is baptised in the Name that is in the 1. Power and authority 2. Confession and acknowledgement 3. Honour and praise 4. Love and feare Of the divine Majesty of the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost the great and glorious mystery of the Trinity so revealed as in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shem the name and that saving Name Jesus Emmanuel and other names of God the same and other mysteries are no lesse emphatically then sweetly shadowed and included In what manner Thus the name expressing the divine Majesty or all meanes of the knowledge of ●t thereby expressed and all saving health springing from that knowledge or as Nomen est nota rei and the Sonne the Character of his Fathers glory how fitly may the Sonne the Saviour Jesus the center of the Trinity and of our salvation the Father saving by the Sonne actuating it by the holy Spirit to whom committed the dispensation of Faith and treasury of all graces here shadowed under this Name for the name above all names for if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shaddai the Epitheton of the Father may seeme to import the fountaine of his all-sufficiencie and power as it doth right so may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shem the name above all names at which every knee should bow imply the character of the brightnesse of his Fathers glory as it importeth also the Word the Wisedome the Way the Truth the Light the Life of all saving health and knowledge whence all saving health derived and as sweetly suiting with the rest and sympathizing with his nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shekina shadowing unto us the overshadowing power and goodnesse of that holy and blessed Spirit the dispenser of all divine graces and so all of them together the Trinity of the persons in the unity of the divine Majesty whereby showne as opera Trinitatis ad extra so essentia ad intra bein indivisa the Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity mysteriously included in the Name above all names that saving Name Jesus with the revelation of which Name the whole Trinity was also revealed in that Emanuel to all mankinde and which so great a mystery as desired to be looked into by Angels but hidden from all former ages was with him and in him manifested to the world And no wonder if so great mysteries should be in that great and glorious Name involved when in the very name of Antichrist and character of the Beast so deep mysteries are found included For as great is the mystery of godlines●e deep Gods counsels and secret his judgements past finding out so we may observe great are the depths of Satan strong the delusions of the Divell and as hideous as intricate the mystery of iniquity How is that mystery or name of the Beast and Antichrist meant or explained The Divell is usually tearmed Gods Ape so where God planteth his Church he will strive to erect his Chappell hard by And as God will set up his Christ upon his holy Hill of Sion so he striveth to set up Antichrist not onely in his owne Chappell but in the Church of God as much as he can poluted by him and whereas Christ hath his true Prophets and true wonders wrought by them in the power of God so Antichrist working by the power of the Beast hath his false prophets working lying wonders in the power of the Beast and Dragon and delusions of the Divel and thus as Christ to Antichrist Gods truth to Satans delusions and Gods counsels to the depths of Satan we may behold who the mystery of iniquity working by Antichrist and the power of the Beast are opposed to the mystery of godlinesse wrought by God and in Christ revealed as Contra●ia juxta se posita magis elucescunt God advancing his Christ the truth and godlinesse in his Church the Divell that Beast of the field in Paradise the old red Dragon for his bloudy designes and falling Angel for his pride striving to set up Antichrist and all spirituall wickednesse even in the high places as high as Tribunal Ecclesia the very pulpits if his false prophets can get into them to sow their seeds of Heresie Atheisine and prophanenesse and for his name literally it is plainly understood of his opposition to God and his Christ but for his name so mystically expressed by numbers or rather inveyled in them that have busied so many thousands searching eyes industrious wits and judicious heads to pry into them to finde out the mysterie it may