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A07350 The English catechisme explained. Or, A commentarie on the short catechisme set forth in the Booke of common prayer Wherein diuers necessarie questions touching the Christian faith are inserted, moderne controuersies handled, doubts resolued, and many cases of conscience cleared. Profitable for ministers in their churches, for schoole masters in their schooles, and for housholders in their families. By Iohn Mayer, Bachelour of Diuinitie.; English catechisme Mayer, John, 1583-1664. 1622 (1622) STC 17733; ESTC S100659 485,672 636

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is the King my father 2. For a Superiour in knowledge and in wise counsell thus the counsellours of State are Fathers of the State as Ioseph Pharaohs chiefe Councellour speaketh of himselfe God hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh Gen. 45 8. and Pharaoh caused the name Abrech that is Father to bee proclaimed before him and the Senatours of Rome were commonly called Patres conscripti reuerend Fathers 3. For a Superiour in priuate and houshold gouernment thus masters of families are called Patres Familias Fathers of the Familie as Naaman the Syrian is called Father by his seruants 4. For a Superiour 2 King 5.13 in the inuention of any Art or Science Gen. 4. thus Iubal is said to be the father of all that play on the Organs and harpe and Iabal the father of all that make tents 5. For a Superiour in things spirituall towards God thus the Ministers of the Gospell are called Fathers in Christ because that through that spirituall knowledge and grace exceeding others they beget men vnto God 1 Cor. 4.5 as Paul who therefore cals the Galatians his little children and professeth to the Corinthians that hee onely was their father for J begat you saith hee vnto Christ 6. For a Superiour in holinesse and power with God thus the King of Israel calleth Elisha Father saying of the Hoast of the Syrians 2 Kings 6.21 Shall I smite them my Father 7. 2. Kings 2.12 For a Superiour in ouersight and instruction thus Elishab called Elijah who brought him vp in the knowldge of prophesying My father my father the chariots of Israel and the horse-men thereof 8. For a Superiour in estate and condition thus rich men vsing their riches aright are fathers of the poore Iob 31.28 From my youth hee hath growne vp with mee as with a father saith Iob. 9. For a Superior in age and yeares thus the gray-headed is called a father and the ancient are as fathers to be exhorted and not to bee rebuked 10 According to the common acception amongst children 1 Tim. 5.1 there is a naturall father and mother which beget beare and bring vs foorth and vp in the world and if one of them dieth or he or shee that suruiueth bee married againe and hee or shee vnto whom is now made also thy father or mother though not by nature yet by law and there is an honour due vnto them Superiours diuers wayes To honour is to giue that reuerend respect which is due to euery superiour whether in authority and power in place and calling or in worth and dignitie 1. In authoritie and power some are superiors by the law of nature some by the law of nations and some by the law of contract By the law of nature our naturall father and mother who are instruments of our very being by whose tender care wee are preserued in our infancy when we cannot help our selues they are therfore to be recompenced by our giuing of due honor vnto them Ephes 6.1 Col 3.20 And this is first obedience in all things in the Lord Children obey your parents in the Lord. Children obey your parents in all things for that is well pleasing vnto the Lord and he is an vnnaturall beast and no childe that giueth not this obedience vnto both father and mother 2. To beare their corrections with submission of this the Apostle speaketh as of a most common thing euen in children that haue nothing but nature to guide them Heb. 12.9 Wee haue had the fathers of our bodies correcting vs and wee gaue them reuerence 3. To reuerence them in giuing them all outward respect which is due to chiefe superiors and fearing to offend them for from hence the Lord taketh his comparison Mal. 1.6 A sonne honoreth his father and a seruant his master if I then be a Father where is mine honour if I be a master where is my feare 4. To cherish them and to giue them maintenance in time of need When the Pharisees did by their traditions vnder a pretence of holines dispence with this duty they were reproued by our Sauiour Christ for hypocrisie saying Why doe yee transgresse the commandement of God by your tradition Matth. 15.3.4.5.6 for God hath commanded Honour thy father and thy mother But yee say Whosoeuer shall say to father and mother by the gift that is offered by me thou mayest haue profit though hee honour not his father and mother shall be free That is if he dedicate his goods and suffer them to want whereas hee might therewith haue relieued them If a Widdow hath children or nephewes saith Saint Paul let them learne first to shew godlinesse towards their owne house 1. Tim. 5.4 and to recompence their kindred for that is an honest thing and acceptable before God Which he further expoundeth afterwards saying Jf any faithfull man or woman haue widdowes that is Verse 16. to their mothers or aunts let them minister vnto them and let not the Church that is other Christians bee charged And God hath made the Storke a wonderfull example to condemne children that are this way vnnaturall to their parents in their age for she nourisheth and bringeth food to her parents in their old age wherefore she hath the name Chesidah Pious or Mercifull in Hebrew And in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth this kind of mutuall retribution being deriued from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a Storke In these things consisteth the honour due to father and mother and for examples wee may take Iacob who obeyed his father and mother in the choyce of his wife and Shem and Japhet who reuerenced their father Noah and went backward and couered his nakednesse and Ioseph who recompenced his father Iaacobs care with prouiding for him in his old age and all holy men who haue readily performed these duties They are wicked children therefore and accursed as breaking this Commandement in the head that do continually greeue their godly parents by their disobedience and light esteeme of them liuing out of all good order being Drunkards and Swaggerers and plunging into the estate of marriage without yea contrary to their liking The Lord prouided of old that such should be put to death If any man hath a disobedient son Deut. 21.18.19.20 which will not hearken to the voyce of his father nor the voyce of his mother and they haue chastened him and he will not obey them Then shall they take him and bring him out And all the men of the City shall stone him with stones vnto death Honour due to Magistrates Rom. 13.1 The Superiours in authority by the Law of Nations are Magistrates and Gouernours of the Common-wealth The honour due to them is 1. To be subiect vnto them according to that precept Let euery soule bee subiect to the higher powers And againe 1. Pet. 2.13.14 Submit your selues to all manner ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether
by Ely as a drunkard I am not drunken my Lord saith shee rnd as Sarai reuerenced her husband and called him Lord or by a title of reuerence The ninth is to order all our speeches and gestures so as that we passe not the bounds of reuerence for what auaileth it though thou bow the knee and giue titles if thou scorne or deride him in vnseemely speeches or behauiour as C ham that cursed sonne against his father Noah Genes 9. The tenth is to vncouer the head before Superiours and to stand vncouered if the qualitie of the person doth so require And as these be the parts of reuerence due to superiours and they that wilfully offend herein doe not only passe good manners but sinne against Gods Law Hauing hitherto spoken of such as are to bee honoured for their authority or place it followeth now to be spoken of all others which are to haue any honour done vnto them for any dignity or worth appearing in them Men worthy of Honour by Learning and knowledge And these are first men worthy by learning and knowledge or by any other excellent qualitie in them Thus King Salomen was honoured of all the Kings round about so that many sent him presents and many came from farre to see him The honour due to such is highly to esteeme of them to praise them according to their worth and to preferre their acquaintance and friendship After this manner did the Queene of the South 1. King 10. Acts 18.24 honour Salomon for his wisdome and Luk Apollos for his eloquence and power in the Scriptures and Paul Titus and the Brethren sent to Corinth for their holinesse and integrity calling them the glory of the Church of God 2. There is a kinde of worth also in men euen for this because they are Christians Phil. 2.3 and we are all members one of another for which cause euery man is first to esteeme another better then himselfe because other men are not so vnworthy in our knowledge as wee our selues 2. Rom 12 10. In giuing honour we must goe one before another and not in taking such should our humility be 3. As we meet one another in the way giuing due salutations this was often prescribed to the first Christians as by Peter 1 Pet. 5.14 Greet yee one another with the kisse of loue And by Paul Rom. 16.16 c. prouided alwayes that if any were knowne an enemy to the truth 2 Ioh. 10. they should not bid him God speed Not that there is danger in saluting strangers in a Christian common-wealth where all are supposed Christians as some haue foolishly thought but if any be knowne to be Christs enemie 3. There is also a kinde of Worth because of Gods ordinance Thus men are to giue honour to women 1 Pet. 3.7 as to the weaker vessels and not for their weaknesse to despise them and to think them vnworthy of all respect because that howsoeuer the woman is weaker then the man yet shee is also the childe of God and an instrument of much good in the Church The honour therefore due to them is the like to that which hath beene sayd towards man in the like cases And thus much of the honour commanded heere Now wee are to speake of the duties of persons honoured which as is contained in the answer is to walke worthy the honour due vnto them from inferiours 1. The duty of Parents towards children Ephes 6.4 Gen. 18.19 And first to begin with naturall Parents Their duty towards their children is first to giue them good education as it is commanded Parents bring vp your children in the information and feare of the Lord. Season them with knowledge of the first principles and command them to doe accordingly as father Abraham of whom the Lord saith I know Abraham that hee will command his sonnes and his houshold after him t at they keepe the way of the Lord as the vessell is first seasoned it will fauour long after 2. Discreetly to chastize them for their faults whilst they are young according to that 2 Duty Heb. 12.9 Wee haue had the fathers of our bodies which corrected vs. And Hee that spareth the rod saith Salomon marreth the childe They are now young and tender plants and may easily be set to rights deferre till they bee growne and then as Elies children they will be incorrigible and accursed of God 3. Duty 3. Not to exceed in giuing correction but tempering the vinegar of sharpe correction with the oyle of gentle exhortation Ephes 6.4 so that they be not prouoked as the Apostle saith vnto wrath For too harsh vsage is so farre from amending them as that it doth obdurate and harden them like vnto the smiths anuil with continuall beating vpon it 4 Duty 4. To prouide like good parents for them both food rayment and the like and in time conuenient fit marriages and if ability will serue some competencie of liuing For it dishearteneth a childe much to see his father spend all vpon vanity and without all prouidence for his children or when they do their duty and earne something with their labour to haue it taken from them and to bee left without comfort Good Parents haue beene euermore prouident Gen. 25. as Abraham who left Isaac his inheritance and gaue so much as was fit to his other children Ruths very mother in law was carefull to prouide for her a good husband and this is commended to all Parents by S. Paul 1. Cor 7. 5. Duty 5. To beare an equall affection towards their children vnlesse there be inequality of desert otherwise it breedeth enuy amongst brethren and vndutifulnesse to Parents Thus was it amongst Iaacobs children who sought the ouerthrow of Ioseph for his fathers too much cockeriug him and this was a fault in old Isaac as he knew afterwards placing his affection most vpon Esau Parents must take heed therefore that they prefer not the eldest so giuing him all as that they leaue nothing for the rest nor yet the younger depriuing the eldest without iust cause of his du● for either way there is a breach of naturall duty What is a iust cause of disheriting the eldest Gen 49. we may see in Iaacobs last will where Reuben the eldest is put besides his right for incest and Simeon and Leui for bloud-shed So that no deformity or defect but onely sin which putteth out of Gods fauour ought to put any besides this right Lastly to be graue sober honest holy and in all things to giue the example of a father that is of one in Gods stead vnto his children for it is a vaine thing in parents to forbid their children lying swearing drinking and to be lyars drunkards and swearers themselues to bid them feare God and serue him and to bee prophane themselues Rather as Iosuah thou must be the first and chiefe in all goodnesse saying J and my houshold will serue
bastards and no sonnes which call me Father but feare not to offend my will they doe vainely flatter themselues that they are coheires with Iesus Christ vnto God the Father but yet doe not his will they doe but thinke and not beleeue that God is their Father which keepe not his commandements And this is the estate of most men women in the world which make their liues a trade of sinning against God they doe plainely mocke God and his Church in confessing that they beleeue in God the Father 2. Duty Like vnto God The second duty is to be like vnto God and to beare in vs some resemblance of his Maiesty as naturall children doe resemble their Parents Wherefore it is said Ephes 5.1 Leuit. 11.44 1. Joh. 3.10 Be yee followers of God as deare children Now this stands in two things First in holinesse or life Be yee holy as God is holy Secondly in loue for God is loue and he that dwelleth in God dwelleth in loue and this loue expresseth it self by beneficence an aptnesse or readines to doe good Math. 5.45 Doe good to them that hate you saith the Lord that yee may bee the children of your Father which is in Heauen for he maketh his Sunne to rise on the euill and the good c. More particularly by mercy towards the poore for the Lord receiues the miserable Prodigall and the poore Publican and the loue of God dwelleth not in vs Iam. 2. saith Saint Iames if we see the naked and cloth him not c. therefore see how we shall be rewarded Mat. 25. If these things be so then is it not so easie a matter to beleeue in God the Father as the world dreames of and to come to the priuiledge of his children but our corrupt natures must be purged and all wickednesse must bee emptied out 3. Duty Moderate care for the world The third duty is to moderate our cares for worldly things either food or rayment For what needes he to care for the world who hath a louing Father who is al-sufficient and shall liue still euer to prouide for him and how can any true Beleeuer then distract his minde about the things of this life seeing his Father is al-sufficient most louing and alwayes liuing and not onely so but such an one as prouides him a Kingdome Will the Heyres of Kings take care for pins and points or not rather haue their mindes taken vp with more princely thoughts So doe not yee care for such things Math. 6.32.33 saith Christ for thus doe the Gentiles but seeke ye the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof As if he should say This is vnworthy and vnbeseeming the dignity of your condition to be so basely minded and this may serue also for the fourth duty Quest 11. In which wordes doe you learne to beleeue in God the Sonne Answ In these And in Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord which was conceiued by the Holy Ghost borne of the Virgin Mary suffered vnder Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buried he descended into Hell the third day he rose againe from the dead and ascended into Heauen hee sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty from thence hee shall come to iudge both the quicke and the dead Quest 12. What doe you learne heere to beleeue concerning God the Son Answ Two things First his humiliation Secondly his exaltation Explan Before we come to the particular handling of these things it will not be amisse to lay open some general things necessarily to be premised that wee may with the better vnderstanding proceed to the consideration of these two estates of the Son of God as followeth Quest 13. What is the Son of God who is also called Iesus Christ Answ He is perfect God by nature and of the same substance with the Father and perfect man made so of his owne good will that he might become our Redeemer and thus is he subiect to the Father Ioh. 1.14 Explan As the Father so the Son hath beene already proued to be very God in the generall questions concerning the God-head now that he is also very man like vnto vs but without sinne is easie to be shewed St. Iohn tels vs that the Word was made flesh And the Authour to the Hebrewes that The Son of God tooke part with the children forsomuch Heb. 2.14 as they were partakers of flesh and blood Besides infinite places wherein hee is called man and said to be made man and saide to haue become man and that he was without sinne is taught in the Epistle to the Hebrewes Such an high Priest it became vs to haue Heb. 7.26.9.14 who is holy harmelesse and vndefiled And againe Iesus Christ offered ●imselfe without fault which is alleadged to proue that he did much excell all High Priests after the order of Aaron for they had neede being sinfull men first to offer for their owne sinnes and then for the sinnes of the people Moreouer that he was made man of his owne good will the Apostle shewes to the Philippians He made himselfe of no reputation Phil. 2.7 and tooke vpon him the forme of a seruant And whatsoeuer else hee did vndergoe for our redemption was all voluntary And in regard of this estate is it that he saith the Father is greater then I and was before spoken of as his seruant Esa 42.1 Behold my seruant Quest 14. How can this bee that God should bee made man Answ Not by turning the God-head into the nature of man but by taking mans nature vnto the God-head that so one person might be both God and man Explan This is such a mistery that naturall men cannot conceiue of it wherefore some supposing it to be impossible that mans nature should be vnited vnto the diuine which is infinite but rather that it must needes vpon the vnion bee confounded herewith haue held one onely nature to bee in Christ as when a drop of Wine is cast into the Sea wee will not say but that it is all water still and these were the Monothelites Heresie a touching Christs two natures Others supposing that two natures could not concurre in one person haue held that there bee two persons in Christ and these were the Nestorians But that both these be errours that which is written of Christ doth plainely shew First that the nature of man was taken to the God-head and not abolished by the Vnion For howsoeuer hee is said to haue become flesh to haue beene made man which may seeme to imply a conuersion or confusion of substances yet hee is else-where saide Phil. 2.7 Heb. 2.14 to haue taken vpon him the forme of man to haue beene made partaker of flesh and blood c. Which latter phrases may serue to expresse the former viz. Thus He was made man that is tooke to his diuine nature the nature and forme of man so of the like Againe if the
the Lord Ios 24. Otherwise that sharpe sentence belongeth to thee Rom. 2.17 Thou that saist a man should not steale dost thou steale c. The duty of Maisters towards seruants Gen. 18.19 Maisters doe also owe a duty vnto their seruants as being fathers of their families They must teach them also and command them to feare the Lord as Abraham his houshold 2. Not bee too harsh towards them by ouer-correcting by churlish vsage by too sore labouring them but to vse them as those that remember that they also haue a master in Heauen according to that Col. 4.1 Yee maisters doe vnto your seruants that is iust and equall There must be discretion therefore vsed in corrections Sins against God are more seuerely to be punished then against themselues if they be often more if seldome lesse if obstinately or of purpose more if by infirmity lesse And for labour they must remember that the righteous man is merciful to his beast much more to his seruant 3. They must duely recompence their labour with fit maintenance and wages Iam. 5.4 for there is a cry against those that keepe backe their wages which commeth vp to heauen for vengeance 4. They must not despise their good counsell if they can aduise them well at any time but follow it as Naaman did his seruants and Iob acknowledgeth of himselfe saying If I haue despised the iudgement of my seruant and my mayd when they did contend with me Iob 31.13 For what auaileth it for a seruant to bend his minde for his maisters good if his aduice be neuer heard It had been better for the Leuite in his trauell if he had heard his seruant counselling him Iudic. 19. he had escaped a great danger which he doing contrary fell into The duty of Princes to subiects Kings Princes all Magistrates do owe a duty to their subiects to the cōmon people which is to deale iustly truly with them to be coragious to maintaine the right and to hate couetousnesse Exod. 18.2 as Jethro did wisely counsell Moses to prouide for in setting Iudges ouer the people to iudge the fatherlesse and widdow Esa 1.16 supporting them in their iust causes not to lift vp themselues aboue their brethren or pressing them too much with charges Deut 17 19. as the Lord commandeth to the Kings of Israel to reward the good and to punish the euill which is the maine cause why he beareth the sword and hath the Scepter committed to him The duty of Ministers to peop●e 2 Tim 4.2 Ez●ch 3.17 Ministers owe a duty to their people which is publikely to pray for them and with them to preach the word vnto them with diligence in season and out of season to watch ouer them as Ezechiel is charged to espye their danger by reason of their sinnes and to admonish them with all earnestnesse euen as watchmen doe when the City is in danger by the enemies comming to care for them studying how best to further their sanctification 1 Pet. 5.2 as Peter exhorteth Feed the flocke of Christ that dependeth on you caring for it not to domineere or tyrannically to rule ouer them Verse 3. as it followeth Not as Lords ouer Gods heritage but that yet may bee examples to the flocke Ephes 1. And lastly in their priuate dayly prayers to commend them to the Lord as Paul professeth that he did for the Ephesians and Thessalonians 1 Thes 1.2 Ephes 6.28 Duty of Husbans to their Wiues Ephes 5.30 1 Cor. 14.34 1 Pet. 3.7 c. and as the people are also bound to pray for the Minister 1 Cor. 7 3. Husbands owe a duty to their wiues which is to loue them dearly euen as their owne flesh as Christ loueth his Church to teach them if they would or ought to know any thing to dwell with them as men of vnderstanding and not to liue separate and to keepe their bodies as proper and peculiar by a sacred band to them onely and not as their owne to abuse them with other women or to deny them to their lawfull wife as the wife is also bound to her husband The duty of rich toward the poore 1. T●●● 6.17 The rich owe a duty towards the poore and such as bee meaner which is not to carry themselues haughtily and proudly towards them for against this the Apostle giueth warning Warne rich men that they be not high-minded Wherefore as meaner persons giue them reuerence so let them bee courteous to the poorest and another duty is to distribute of their goods vnto the poore as it followeth in the same place That they doe good and be rich in good workes and ready to distribute and communicate This if they doe not they are false stewards and shall be turned quite out of office and haue their portion with hypocrites 7 If any bee learned or excelleth in any faculty or science his duty is not to bee strange and lifted vp in the sight of his gifts but to doe the more good to seeke in all humility to winne the more glory to God As Apollo is commended to haue done Acts 18. mightily confuting the Iewes out of the Scriptures and Paul that did so much excell became all things to all men that hee might winne some Quest 89. What is here forbidden Answ All irreuerence towards those that bee in place and authority aboue v and churlish behauiour in such towards those that be of a low degree Explan Before that we come to speake of the sinnes something is here to be premised Wherefore is the duty of Inferiours onely expressed in this Commandement and not of Superiours if all be alike bound heereby Answ The Commandement indeed is heere in singular and different from the rest but this omission doth not giue any whit the more liberty to Superiours because Parents and children Maisters Seruants c. are relatiues so that the duty of the one cannot be set downe but the duty of the other is by the rule of relation vnderstood nay Superiors are more taxed heereby if they faile of their duty as being of more vnderstanding such as therefore must more readily doe without any pressing by expresse words seeing which is also a more speciall motiue they are as Gods towards others in authority in maiesty in greatnesse and in reuerend antiquity Oh how foule a thing is it then in them not to carry them selues accordingly if it be a fault in inferiours in any thing to neglect their duty much more are they faulty in neglecting theirs because they doe not onely neglect their duty which they ought to doe but being so strongly bound by Gods beneficence towards them and it being presumed so far of their readinesse on Gods part for this honour giuen vnto them that as though meere conscience would not suffer them to be so fouly negligent he maketh no mention of that which they ought to doe
Disobedience Touching the sins against this Commandement they are of two sorts as the duties were 1. Of Inferiours 2. Of Superiours The sinne of Inferiours is irreuerence that is to be without that awfull regard which ought to be towards Superiours and it may be referred to these heads 1. Disobedience and refusing to doe and to bee ruled thus stubborne and vnruly children and seruants sinne greatly and stubborne people that will not yeeld to follow the directions of Ministers they were by Gods censure all subiect to the same most fearefull punishment viz. to bee stoned to death For it was the plaine Law of God touching children See before in their duties to parents Deut. 21.18 And for people it was commanded Thou shalt doe according to all that they that is Deut 17.10.11 12. the Priests and Leuites teach thee According to the Law that they teach thee thou shalt not decline neither to the right hand nor to the left And that man that will doe presumptuosly not harkning to the Priest shall dye Thus people that obey not the wholsome lawes of the Magistrates sinne greatly and if any refuse to be ordered by them they resist the ordinance of God Rom 13.2 and are specially threatned that they shall receiue to themselues condemnation Quest Is it a sinne then in any thing to doe contrary to the Kings lawes for examples sake to eate flesh in Lent or vpon Fridayes Answ If the intent of this Law were that euery one should vse this abstinence without exception it were a sinne to disobey vnlesse necessity did compell but the chiefe politique intent being that Fisher-men might haue vtterance for their fish and so be encouraged for the good of the Common-wealth as the title of that Law sheweth and that young things might in Lent be preserued and not spent before they come to some age and greatnesse if this bee obserued and the Law be not purposely crossed I take it that it is no sinne of disobedience against the higher powers in regard of the ciuill and politicall prohibition and the like is to be thought of all other statute-lawes their intent and scope must be duly by all good subiects obserued Quest It is a sin for children to disobey their Parents by deuoting themselues in their youth to any religious course or order or without or contrary to their liking Numb 30.1 Math 15.4 Answ Yea doubtlesse for God hath taken order that such a vow as vnlawfull should be counted of no force It is therfore meerely pharisaicall in the Romanists that in this case allow nay commend disobedience of young and ignorant children in deuoting themselues to any Monasticall order though to the great offence of Parents 2. Fraudulent and deceitfull obedience Thus seruants sin when they obey and vse diligence in their masters sight Deceitfulnes but are slothfull and negligent behinde their backs they rob and steale from them taking meat drinke and wages to doe their worke with diligence but contrariwise neglect it and prefer their own ease they can haue but cold comfort when they looke to the great Lord of all Christ Iesus that seeth all their sloth and deceit 3. Deriding and scoffing at Superiours as Ham mocked at his father Noah for which he was accursed in himselfe Gen. 9. Deriding Superiours and posterity This is a common vice in wayward youth when they are taught any thing that is good or admonished of their vanity if not openly which they dare not yet in heart they mocke at the admonitions of Parents Masters and Ministers But see what a cutse of God is out against them Pro. 30.17 The eye that mocketh his father and despiseth the instruction of his mother let the Rauens of the valley picke it out and the young eagles eate it This irreuerent scoffing neuer escaped Gods punishing hand The children that mocked Elisha 2 King 2. calling him Bald-pate were suddenly torne in pieces by Beares to two forty of them The Ephraimites that mocked Iphtah and his Gileadites calling them runagates of Ephraim were slaine to two forty thousands Nahash with his Ammonites 1 Sam. 11. that mocked at the conditions of peace offered by tbe men of Iabesh Gilead saying that if they might put out euery mans right eye and bring that shame vpon Israel they should haue peace were all slaine scattered so as that not two of them were left together And what fearefull end the Iewes came to that mocked at Christ and the holy Apostles wee all know Feare therefore to scoffe at any good man but much more at such as thou oughtest to reuerence for his place and function Cursing Superio●rs Exod. 21.17 Exod. 22.28 4 Cursing and backbiting Superiours Hee that curseth Father or Mother shall die the Death And the Lord expressely commandeth Thou shalt not raile vpon the Iudge nor speake euill of the Ruler of the people Thus therefore children seruants people that let loose their tongues against their Gouernors to curse and raile vpon them take the right way to bring Gods curse vpon themselues Numb 23 Balaams case shall be easier at the last day then theirs for he durst not curse where God forbade him 5 Irreuerent gestures towards Superiours in any particular mentioned before in the duty Too much obedience to Superiours Now as this Law is broken by detracting and taking away from the reuerence of Superiours so their is a sinne in ouer reuerencing them 1 If obedience be absolute without respect to Gods will for there we must say with the Apostle Acts 4.19 Wee must rather obey God then men If Parents or Masters bid thee lye steale worke vpon the Sabbatth or the like for their gaine thou must in all modesty deny so to doe If Kings and Rulers command Idolatry Superstition or Heresie obey not lest escaping their hands thou fall into the hands of the Lord. Quest Whether is a Minister of Gods Word being forbidden to preach by the Magistrate to forbeare to execute this his office of Preaching seeing the Apostle did not though straightly charged Ministers suspended may not preach Answ The ordinary Ministers of these times are bound in this case to obey the Magistrate as touching the publike execucution of their office because that howsoeuer they haue an inward calling from God yet their outward to the publike place is from man or by man and may againe bee taken away by man but it was not so with the Apostles who as the other Ministers of those times were immedialy and extraordinarily set a worke by God onely The onely preaching that they may now in this case exercise is by way of conference and exhortation in priuate prouided alwayes that it be not contrary but as the Law doth allow otherwise the power is resisted Here we may see what the Anabaptists are that are enemies to authority viz. euen a sinagogue of fantastick braine-sick soules enemies to Gods ordinance and so are many other humorus
sweare to performe an vnlawfull thing is he not bound notwithstanding to performe his oath Answ In no wise for so he should adde vnto his sinne of swearing vnlawfully a further sinne of doing vnlawfully 249 Quest Which is the fourth commandement Answ Remember that thou keepe holy the Sabbath day c. 250 Quest What is the duty here commanded Ans To keepe holy the Sabbath and to bee mindfull of it 250 Quest How may this be done Answ By assembling together to pray vnto God and to praise him to heare his holy Word and receiue the blessed Sacraments 250 Quest Is this all that is required to the right keeping of the Sabbath day Answ No but we must prepare our selues by praier and emptying our hearts of sin and meditate vpon Gods works and the word which we haue heard suffering it so to work in vs as that we may be furthered in all holines of life 250 Quest Js there no duty to be done towards our neighbour for the hallowing of this day Answ Yes it is a speciall time of exercising mercy by helping against sudden dangers by collecting and distributing to the poore by visiting the sicke and reconciling dissentions amongst neighbours 254 Quest Is there any set day vnder the new Testament thus to be kept holy Answ Yes the day which is commonly called Sunday but in the Scripture the Lords day or the first day in the week is thus to be kept without alteration to the end of the world 260 Quest When doth the Lords day begin and end Answ It beginneth in the morning at the dawning of the day and endeth next morning likewise 272 Quest Are we bound to do the holy duties of Gods worship all this time without ceasing Answ No for we may refresh our selues with eating and drinking singing and musicke and with any honest delight whatsoeuer whereby the mind is cheared vp and ioy and gladnesse befitting the Lords holy day expressed 276 Quest Is this all that we are bound vnto to keepe the Sabbaths our selues in ceasing from labour and doing the duties thereof Answ No but who so hath Sonne or Daughter Man seruant or Maid-seruant Cattell or stranger within his Gates is alike bound to prouide as much as in him lyeth that they all obserue this day in their kind both man and beast 278 Quest Doth the Lord onely take care for the right spending of this day and leaue vs to our selues vpon the sixe dayes Answ No doubtlesse but it is his will and commandement also that wee should vpon the sixe dayes abstaine from idlenesse and diligently labour in the workes of our callings 279 Quest Is it not lawfull then to forbeare working to attend vpon God and his worship vpon the sixe dayes Answ Yes it is not onely lawfull but necessary for euery one to do the duties of Gods worship euery day of the week in priuate and in publike when iust occasion is offered 282 Quest How can this stand with the command of working vpan the sixe dayes Answ Yes very well because that howsoeuer God is to be serued vpon the sixe dayes yet they are for the most part to be spent in the works of our callings 286 Quest What more speciall rules are wee to follow in our weekely deuotion Answ First we must pray euery day morning and euening Secondly before and after the vse of Gods creatures Thirdly the more our necessities vrge vs pray the oftner and more instantly Fourthly let no day passe without some reading and diuine meditation Fiftly neglect not the publike preaching in the weeke dayes where opportunity is offered to come vnto it 286 Quest What is to be thought of whole dayes set apart to publike duties in the weeke as Saints dayes and dayes of thanksgiuing Answ All this may lawfully be done and is commendable by Gods word therfore we are reuerently to conforme our selues to the ordinance of authoritie herein 287 Quest What is the sin by this Commandement forbidden Answ All prophaning of the Sabbath day which is first by doing worldly works that are not of present necessity by iourneying about worldly affaires idle resting or absenting our selues from the publike duties of Gods worship secondly by forgetfulnesse of the Sabboth vpon the six dayes by which we often bring vpon our selues a necessity of prophaning the same thirdly when being parents or gouernors we leaue our children pupils or seruants to their owne libertie vpon this day 291 Quest VVhat be the reasons of this Commandement Answ They are partly infolded in the Commandement and partly expressed in these words For in six dayes the Lord made heauen and earth c. 295 Quest VVhat are the reasons infolded in this Commandement Answ Three First because the law of the Sabbath is ancient and was in force in Paradise before mans fall Secondly because it is most equall the Lord allowing vs six dayes for our worldly affaires and requiring but one of seauen for the worke of his worship thirdly because the seuenth is the Lords peculiar day so that without sacriledge wee cannot any way prophane it 296 Quest What are the reasons expressed Answ Two first from the Lords owne example who rested vpon the seuenth day from all his workes of creation secondly from his blessing inseparably linked to the hallowing of this day so that he which keepeth it holy shall find it to his comfort vnto him a blessed day 298 Quest Which is the first Commaundement of the second Table or the fifth of the Law Answ Honour thy father and thy mother that thy dayes may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giueth thee 299 Quest In which Commandements doe you learne your dutie towards your neighbour Answ In the six latter commandements which be of the second Table 299 Quest Which is the first of these Commandements Answ Honour thy father and mother c. 301 Quest What are we heere commanded Answ To honour that is to loue reuerence cherish and obey our naturall parents the parents of our countrey and our Fathers in Christ Secondly to carry our selues lowly and reuerently towards our masters being ruled by them in the Lord and toward the ancient and all our betters Thirdly if we be superiors to walk worthy the honor due vnto vs from our inferiors to vse all gentlenes toward them 303 Quest What is here forbidden Answ All irreuerence toward those that be in place and authoritie aboue vs and churlish behauiour in such towards those that be of a low degree 317 Quest VVhence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ From the promise of long life if God please not to preuent vs with the blessing of eternall life 325 Quest VVhich is the sixt Commandement or the second of the second Table Answ Thou shalt doe no murder 328 Quest VVhat is here forbidden Answ All murdering of our selues or others and all approbation hereof in others either by command counsel consent or concealment Secondly all iniurious actions tending to
Sol. Verely no. As there are in all well-gouernd Christian common-wealths distinctions of habits ornaments and buildings to put a difference betweene seuerall degrees of subiects so much more is it fit that there should be a maiestique splendor whereby the Prince and his Court may be conspicuous aboue others In domibus Regum sunt qui mollibus indumentis vestiuntur It is the brainsick humor of some Anabaptists to lay all the world leuell Nor is it maruell that they who defie all Kings as limbes of the wicked world and scourges of the disciples should deny all roabes of ornament exceeding the skirts of a weauers or millers iacket Our vow in Baptisme renownceth not ciuil pompes befitting particular callings or occasions but the excesse of them they being too much possessed by them transported with them or addicted to them If they thus entice vs to forget God and become a snare to vs make vs to cling and cleaue to earthly things then by our abuse they degenerate into the vanities of this wicked world Alas this they doe too often God be mercifull in this to the best of vs. The world the flesh and the Diuell The third foe is most sensible and inseperable because neerest vs most powerfull in perswading and conquering vs because it dealeth with vs not as a stranger but a deare part of our selues Our flesh is the wife of our soule no maruell then if this be easily drawne by that as Adam by Ruc Sampson by Dalila Ahab by Iesabell Hardly and rarely can wee with Iob checke this wife when shee giueth vs desperate counsell to curse God and die This weaker part of vs is the stronger by entisements so that we often againe embrace it and beg●t compleate sinne vpon it though wee haue in our baptisme pronounced a finall diuorce against it The sinfull lusts of the flesh though they fight against the soule yet sticke as neare our soules as the very naturall flesh Looke to thy selfe therefore thou baptized Christian put on thy spirituall armour of proofe ô thou champion of God prosecute thy defiance against the Diuell the world and the flesh for that they are all Gods enemies and all enemies to thine owne soule First that they be Gods enemies is plaine the Diuell aduanceth himselfe as a God in this world 2. Cor. 4.4 Eph. 2.2 for which hee is called the God of this world 2 Cor. 4 4. Eph. 2.2 and a Prince that ruleth in the ayre Now hee that shall take vpon himselfe to bee a King is the true Kings most deadly and greatest enemy so is the diuell The world considered 1. Joh. 2 15. not naturally as it signifieth the frame of heauen and earth or things necessary for the the maintenance of this corporall life but morally as signifying vnlawfull or immoderate pleasures or cares abstracting or entising from God in this respect the world is such an enemy vnto God as that the friends of the world are pronounced Gods enemies and hee that serues the world cannot but hate God Gal 5.17 Lastly the flesh is said to fight against the Spirit of God Moreouer they be also thine enemies The diuell as a Lyon 1 Pet. 5.7 goeth about seeking whom hee may deuoure Wee must prepare euery day to fight against him Eph. 6.12 for wee are not to fight only against flesh and bloud but against principalities and spirituall powers in heauenly places Math. 13 22. the world as briers and thornes doth choke the seed of Gods word in our hearts and make vs vnprofitable hearers 1. Tim. 6.9 it is as a pit of water closely made to drown thy soule in perdition Rom. 7. and the flesh so strongly assaulteth thee that it carrieth thee captiue to the Law of sinne and neuer ceaseth vntill that it hath brought thee to be a most miserable creature Quest Doe you think that you are bound to doe as they did promise for you Answ Yes verily and by Gods helpe so J will And I heartily thanke our heauenly father that hath called mee to this state of saluation through Iesus Christ our Sauiour and I pray God to giue mee his grace that I may continue in the same vnto my liues end Explan This Answer is a manifold cord binding the baptised vnto these three duties First an acknowledgement of obligation to performe in our owne persons whatsoeuer our Sureties haue vndertaken in our name The insoluble strength of this bond is euident out of reason and common practise The rule of Law is Quod quis per alium facit per se facere videtur What a man doth by another hee is in law taken to doe it by himselfe If I depute a man to seale a bond for mee his act bindeth me as sure as if I had performed it immediately by my selfe An oath taken by a Proctor in animam Domini lyeth vpon the soule of him that authorized the taker Ob. But an infant cannot make any deputation nor can at all binde himselfe being not of iudgement and discretion so to doe and therefore it seemes wee are free from whatsoeuer was vndertaken by others for vs at our Baptisme Sol Whosoeuer hath capacity of being baptized must needs haue withall a ioynt ability to vndergoe the couenants of Baptisme the duty doth inseparably accompany the benefit The stipulation of others for an Infant where it is to his benefit bindeth not onely in the gifts but in the annexed duties If a childe haue an hand to take a beneficiall Lease hee must also finde an hand to pay the rent and performe couenants Nor doth the Obligation of obedience binde the baptized meerely by vertue of the promise made by the God-fathers though there were no such promise made by others for the childe nor expressly by the party baptized in case hee should then bee of age yet this holdeth ex natura rei as an inseparable condition accompanying the Sacrament of baptisme inasmuch as all baptizing is into the similitude of Christs death Rom. 5. and implyeth on our part the couenant of obedience mortification and dying vnto sinne Whosoeuer therefore whether man or childe hath ability to be baptized must needes withall bee of capacity to vndergoe the couenants of Baptisme Doth Baptisme conferre vpon thee the priuiledge of adoption to bee the childe of God Semblably it layeth vpon thee the yoake of obedience to bee the dutifull seruant of God The second duty is of protestation and resolution to doe and performe in action what wee acknowledge due from vs vpon such our Godfathers stipulation Fitly therefore follow those words By Gods helpe so I will This bringeth the duties home to vs and fastneth them not onely in our vnderstanding but in our wills and affections Many are content to professe this obligation but the most are slow to achieue this resolution A third following duty is of Prayer and that in both kinds First thankesgiuing to God for calling vs to this blessed estate and
in that I beleeue in him the holy Ghost I acknowledge his office of sanctifying and making holy the people of God for otherwise the Father also is holy and so is the Sonne but this is the peculiar office of the Spirit to sanctifie from hence hath hee this name of the holy Ghost Lastly I beleeue in the holy Ghost that is I put my whole trust and confidence in him as I doe in the Father and the Sonne for my preseruation and saluation and more especially as I depend vpon God the Father as my Creator and dayly Protector and vpon God the Sonne as my Redeemer and daily Mediator so doe I depend vpon God the holy Ghost as my comforter and the worker of grace and all vertue in me being of my selfe a lumpe of sinne and a masse of corruption 1 Proofe For the grounds of this Article and first that the holy Ghost is God S. Peter makes it plaine when as hauing told Ananias that hee had lyed vnto the holy Ghost Act. 5 3. verse 4. he added Thou hast not lyed vnto men but vnto God These last words expressing who the holy Ghost was of whom he had spoken before viz. God Act. 28.25 Esa 6 8.9 Moreouer well said the holy Ghost saith Paul by his Prophet Esay Goe make the heart of this people fat and say by hearing yee shall heare and not vnderstand by seeing yee shall see and not perceiue Whereas the Prophet tells vs that Iehouah the Lord God spake these words vnto him whence plainly followes that the holy Ghost is very God and Lord. 2 Proofe Secondly that the holy Ghost is equall with the Father and the Sonne and not inferiour or seruant as Macedonius wickedly taught is plaine from diuers reasons First because he is one with the Father and Sonne according to that of Iohn 1 Ioh. 5.7 There be three that beare record in Heauen the Father the Word and the Spirit and these three are one That is one substance and essence one infinite wisedome power glory and maiesty Secondly because hee is alike worshipped with the Father and Sonne as in that prayer put vp alike to them all The grace of Iesus Christ 2. Cor. 13.13 the loue of God and the Communion of the holy Ghost bee with you all Amen Lastly because hee is alike the Creator of the world and the preseruer of all things for when God in the beginning made the heauens and the earth c. the Spirit is said to haue moued vpon the waters incubasse by a word that signifieth to sit and hatch Gen. 1.2 and breed life as a Henne doth to bring forth her chickins And Elihu mentioned in Iob a man of an excellent spirit saith Iob 33.4 The Spirit of the Lord hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath giuen me life and in the Psalmes it is Psal 104.30 If thou send forth the Spirit they are created and thou renewest the face of the earth speaking of all other creatures which are so made and preserued by Gods Spirit the holy Ghost 3 Proofe Thirdly that the holy Ghost is the Sanctifier of the people of God will easily appeare if wee consider either this attribute holy euer to bee annexed vnto the Spirit as Iesus and Christ serue to set forth the Sonne of God in his office or the comparisons by which he is for the further declaring of the same compared for he is said to bee fire and therefore Iohn the Baptist speaketh thus of him Mat. 3.11 Hee that commeth after me viz. Iesus Christ shall baptize with the holy Ghost and with fire that is the holy Ghost who is as a fire purging away re●ning from the drosse of sinne as is further set forth where we are forbidden to quench the Spirit of God 1 Thes 5.19 Ioh. 3.3 againe hee is compared to water in that saying to Nicodemus Vnlesse a man be borne againe of water and the holy Ghost bee shall not see the kingdome of God that is of the holy Ghost in the vse of water in baptisme setting forth the power thereof viz. to clense from the filthinesse of sinne as water doth from the filth of the flesh Or if wee consider the workes of sanctification to be all wrought by the holy Ghost as first sauing knowledge which is all one with faith that most excellent and holy-making grace Rom. 8 ●6 1 Cor. 2.12 The Spirit witnesseth with our spirits that we are the children of God It maketh vs to know and beleeue those things that are giuen vs of God that is righteousnes in Christ through whom we are his adopted children and in the way to eternall life according to that This is life eternall Ioh. 17.3 to know thee to bee the very God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ Rom. 8.10 Secondly spirituall gouernment whereby euill is suppressed and that which is good increased in vs errour is auoyded and the truth in all things followed They which are in Christ Iesus to whom there is no condemnation walke after the Spirit and not after the flesh the spirit rules in them and causeth them thus to walke and all the sonnes of God are thus ruled and led Vers 14. for all that are led by the spirit of God as hee addeth are the sonnes of God Particularly the spirit so gouerneth by striuing against euill motions and by offering good for ●he spirit fighteth against the flesh Gal. 5.17 as the flesh fighteth against the spirit in our weaknesses it helps vs for when wee are vnable to pray acceptably it workes with vs and helpes vs to offer vp sighes that cannot be vttered Rom. 8.26 in our ignorances it directs vs for it leadeth vs into all truth Thirdly spirituall consolation Ioh. 16.13 Ioh. 14. in our seuerall afflictions tentations which is another part of holines for this he is called the Comforter whom Christ promiseth to send to mittigate the heauines of the disciples after his departture he is called the oyle of gladnes which maketh cheerfulnes euen to appeare in the face he is called the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Psal 45.8 Rom. 8.15 Father that is affecting vs with the assurance and comfort of Gods children when wee are feared and troubled Fourthly power commendably to doe the weightiest duties of our callings therefore it is said to be the spirit Num. 11. that was taken of Moses and put vpon the Elders of Israel that they might be able to iudge and decide controuersies arising amongst their bretheren it was by the Spirit Exod. 35.31 that Ahohab and Bezaliel were inabled to worke all curious workes about the tabernacle it was the Spirit that made the Apostles sufficient vnto a farre greater work about the spirituall Tabernacle viz. to preach the gospell effectually to men of all languages Act. 2. they being vnskilfull of any but their mother tongue and for this
done euill to condemnation We ought then to be ashamed to be sensuall like the beast whose end is when he dyeth to be like the Epicure Sardanapalus whose Epigram was Ede bibe lude dormi post mortem nulla voluptas Eate drinke sleepe and play In death all pleasure flies away But we know that this is the voyce of the blacke children of the night that want the light of the vnderstanding of this thing or that will not vnderstand the same wee are all children of the light we all confesse the resurrection of the body why doe wee not then cease from the workes of darkenesse from surfetting and drunkennesse from chambering and wantonnesse and walke as in the light in sobriety temperance and chastity 1. Thess 5. 3. Duty To beare all diseases patiently The third duty is to beare all our bodily imperfections and sicknesses patiently because in the resurrection all shall be done away weakenes shall be strength deformity shall be beauty crookednesse shall be straightnesse naturall shall be spirituall It would not grieue a man to be in a litle paine for a moment so that he might be free from all paine for euer after to be sicke a day that he might liue the more healthfully all the yeere after yea men will in this case put themselues to paine and make themselues sicke by loathsome drugs of the Apothecary No more ought it to grieue vs that belieue the resurrection if wee suffer by sicknesse or weaknesse or any aberrations in our nature in this world which is but a short time seeing that euer hereafter we shal be freed from all these If we haue any friends or children that be thus let vs neither be ashamed of it nor trouble our selues hereat but let it rather trouble vs if they haue deformed soules miserable blind vgly through sin for these will remaine vpon them as blacke badges for euer disgracing them before God his holy Angels whatsoeuer their outward proportions be 4. Duty To serue God with all our members The fourth duty is not to account it sufficient to serue God with our hearts but with our tongues to speake of his praises with our hands to worke the thing that is good with our feete to runne to religious exercises with our mouthes to glorifie God in daily prayer with our eares to hearken to his holy Word with our bodies to practise sobriety with our eyes to be stayed from wanton lookes and to offer vp our whole selues as sacrifice vnto God to doe his will with all our might because that euen our bodies shall rise and be honoured and become spirituall Rom. 1● 1 But how can we expect that it should be thus with vs in our bodies if our members be instruments of sinne How can he which by vncleannesse weakeneth his body and bringeth it into a filthy case at the stewes looke that it should be strengthened and healed at the resurrection He that drinketh out his eyes how can he expect to haue them made more cleare at that day Hee that breakes his bones by quarrelling and fighting how can he expect so much fauour as to haue them rightened againe Such whorish women as by painting their faces bring them to ill-fauourednesse how can they expect to haue faces as Angels at that day And so for all other iniuries offered to mens bodies by seruing sinne No King will pity his rebellious subiects so farre as to send Chyrurgians or Physicians to cure them if in their rebellion they haue beene wounded or gotten through distemper any dangerous sicknesse but will rather send out his Hangmen to doe execution vpon them no more will the King of Heauen heale the infirmities of such as by sinnes haue rebelled against him but will giue them ouer to his Executioners the Diuels to be further tormented Wherefore thinke it not enough to serue God in thy heart and in thy soule but offer vnto him thy body also that the estate of both may bee amended in the resurrection and so remaine for euer 5. Duty Not to be ouer sorry for our friends departed 2 Sam. 13. The fift duty is to mittigate our sorrow when by death wee are parted from our dearest friends because wee are not without hope with the Heathen of meeting againe at the resurrection They are not lost which dye but as Dauid said of his childe so is it true of all that dye in the Lord Hee shall not come to me but I shall goe to him Wee cannot but grieue I grant so many as bee indued with naturall affections at the departure of our friend but as Christ said vnto the women that followed him to the Crosse Weepe not for mee but for your selues and for your children so is it to bee applyed vnto vs when our friends go to their death weep not for them but weep for your selues who shall for the time of this fraile life want their sweet society counsel and company but we shall all meet againe Quest 50. What meane you by the life euerlasting Answ All that euer-induring happinesse and all those ioyes which the Lord imparteth to all his Elect in the world to come which are so great as that the eye hath not seene nor the eare heard neither can the heart of man conceiue throughly of them Expla This member of the last Article as it is placed last of all so is it the greatest comfort of all to all beleeuers Vnder these two words Life euerlasting is set downe a surpassing weight of glory which all the words deuised by the best wit and vttered by the most eloquent tongue of man cannot expresse It is not only life but ioy not only ioy but riches not only riches but glory and all these not in some measure but in excesse not mixed but absolute without griefe without want without dishonour not by intermissions and fits but continually not after some long time to end but euerlastingly Proofe Secondly for the grounds of these things 1. Euerlasting life taken at large is common to the Elect and to the Reprobate for euen these shall seeke for death and not finde it but to liue shall be a paine vnto them It shall not be so with the elect their life shall be full of ioy for at Gods right hand Psal 16. there be pleasures and fulnesse of ioy They breake out into singing for ioy according to that of the Prophet My seruants shall sing for ioy of heart They shall haue all things to make them ioyous the pleasantnes of their dwelling place Reuel 21. the pauements being of gold the walles of precious stones their amiable company none but holy Esa 11. cap 65. none that hurt or deuoure shall be in the holy mountaine of the Lord the presence of the King of heauen their Father who will himselfe Esa 65.24 with his glorious presence dwell with them giuing them euery thing euen before they shall aske the impassible constitution of
also doe the more priuate workes of our callings so that we obserue the times of publike meetings and giue no scandall to our brethren nor offence to our Gouernours Secondly in regard of more free recreations in which wee may now exercise our selues all waies excepting the times of publike prayer Thirdly in regard of speeches and thoughts out of the publike times we may in some conuenient sort and measure talke of our worldly affaires and deuise in our thoughts for the best for them If any doe otherwise esteeme ordinary holy daies appointed by men hee doth derogate from the dignity of the Lords day as they of the Church of Rome which make more account of some Saints dayes then of the Lords day it selfe and are more carefull then to exercise their deuotion and tyrannise in their strict censures more remisse and licentious vpon this most holy day Quest 81. What is the sinne by this commandement forbidden Answ All prophaning of the Sabbath day Which is first by doing workes that are not of present necessitie by iournying by idle resting or absenting our selues about worldly businesses from the publike duties of Gods seruice Secondly by forgetfulnesse of the Sabbath vpon the sixe dayes by which wee often bring vpon our selues a necessitie of prophaning the same Thirdly when being parents or gouernours we leaue our children pupills and seruants to their owne liberty vpon this day Labour on the Sabbath Explan The sinnes against this Commandement I referre to three heads the first whereof is a direct and the greatest prophaning of the Lords day 1. For labour vnlesse wee be necessarily called heereunto such as it is only then when it is a necessary worke of mercy as hath been already shewed it is the most direct breaking of the Sabbath and taketh away the very nature of it because the Sabbath is the rest And how great a sinne this is the Lord hath sundry waies made knowne vnto his people the Iewes Which motius though they bind not vs in the same rigor as the Iewes were of old yet they are a good inducement to vs to stirre vp our reuerence vnto Gods ordinance and our care to obserue the Christian Sabbath though not in any ceremonious degree of stricktnesse yet in conuenient decency and sequestration of our selues such as may stand with Christian liberty How close the Iewes well held by God to the precise obseruation appeareth Reas 1 1. By his seuere poenall lawes against all labour though neuer so honest Exod. 31.15 and lawfull in it selfe Whosoeuer doth any worke vpon the Sabbath shall die the death Reas 2 2. How much the Lord is displeased with working vpon this day is made knowne by his iudgements executed vpon some in their prophane working He that gathered stickes was stoned to death the Israelites were held captiue in Balon seuenty yeares for their working vpon the Sabbaths Numb 15.32 Ier. 25. that the land might enioy her Sabbaths and sundry examples tending to the same purpose haue been already brought amongst the arguments for our Sabbath which I spare to repeate referring the reader thither 3. How displeasing to the Lord it is to worke vpon this day appeareth by his prouidence for the rest heereof rather then any worke should be done euen about their daily food he sendeth the Israelites Manna enough for two dayes the day before the Sabbath Exod. 16. and whereas at other times the Manna would putrifie and be full of wormes if they kept any of it vntill the morrow after they had gathered it now they did keepe it sweet and good all the next day Reas 4 4. The working vpon the Sabbath hath been at all times condemned by all good men endued with Gods Spirit Moses is most earnest in many places against it Nehem. 13. Nehemiah threatned to punish the Merchants that came to Ierusalem to sell their wares vpon the Sabbath dayes and Esay Ieremy and the rest of the Prophets doe all of them put to their helping hands to roote out this sinne of working vpon the Sabbath day Wherefore if thou makest conscience of stealing because the Lord hath forbidden it make conscience also of doing the workes of thy calling vpon the Sabbath because God hath so strictly forbidden it so seuerely iudged it so carefully prouided against it and stirred vp so many holy men to beate downe this grosse abuse 2. For iournying I shall not need to adde any thing because it hath been specially intreated of already what iourney is allowed and what a breach of the Sabbath Only wee may take with vs this one memorandum that the Lord hath so precisely forbidden trauaile as that he hath charged Exod. 16.29 Tarrie euery man in his place and let no man goe out of his place vpon the seuenth day viz. about his worldly vnnecessary busines though it may seeme vnto thee to bee time gained so that thou shalt not bee hindred now from thy worke vpon the weeke day or though it may seeme otherwise to redound to thy benefit Let them consider this that forecast to make their iourneyes specially vpon the Lords day surely this wisdome commeth not from aboue but from the deuill whose thou art Iohn 8 44. whilest thou doest his will 3. For idle resting and sitting at home all day or most part of the day Idle resting when others assemble themselues to the worship of God or sleeping and lying longer in bed in the morning so that a man cannot prepare himselfe fitly and come in due time to the place of Gods publike worship this is also a most vnworthy vsage of a mans selfe vpon the Lords day He that doth thus like the vaine eccho resoundeth the last word of the Lords precept Thou shalt Sanctifie the Sabbath taking onely Sabbath an idle resting vnto himselfe and therefore as idle watchmen appointed ouer Gods people that see the enemy comming and danger at hand yet doe onely sit still and behold it but sound no trumpet to giue them warning shall be so farre from any reward of their office that the peoples bloud shall be required at their hands so these idle Sabbath-keepers shall be so farre from the blessing attending vpon such as sanctifie a Sabbath as that they shall bee called to account for this pretious time lost through their idlenesse and the vsurpation of that to their owne ease which they were bound to spend to Gods glory Let all therefore that would consecrate this day as glorious to the Lord flie this idlenesse and learne of Nehemiah to rise early in the morning at the least in their hearts to sanctifie the Lords day and duly repaire whilst God inableth to the place of publike meetings otherwise to keepe holy-day at home as his infirmities permit 4. For absence from the publike duties there bee many that content themselues to sit at home Absence from Church and reade some good prayers and other good bookes especially if the weather be but a little
tedious and thinke that they keepe the Sabbath as well as any other or as they need to doe and more especially if there be nothing but diuine seruice at the Church But let all such know their errour and repent of it they doe indeed sanctifie the Lords day but it is not after the Lords but their owne manner and therefore cannot be accepted of no more then a master can accept of the best indeauours of his seruant at home at that time when he appointeth him to trauell about his busines abroad For the Lord doth now appoint thee to attend him in the publike place Acts 3. hee hath now imployment for thee there Christ himself the holy Prophets and Apostles lurked not at such times in corners or in priuat houses but went vp to the Temple to pray to preach to conuerse with Gods people in publike duties Acts 2 41. Here is the place where Gods ordinance is chiefely vsed and only at the times appointed heere the Lords presence is promised here hath his glory euer shined by the conuersion of soules and sometime of thousands at once Let the proud seperatist therefore goe by himselfe now into corners as ouer-iust in his owne esteeme to come with others to Gods ordinance in publike let the idle or daintie Sabbath-keeper stay at home in his blind priuate deuotion and the ouer scrupulous absent themselues from Church in the case of no preaching at that time let those contemne publike prayer that know not Gods house the Church to be the house of Prayer But let all that feare the Lord feare thus to peruert the Lords day least in so doing sinne lye at their doores The second head Head 2. Forgetfulnes of the Sabbath vnto which I referre the prophaning of the Sabbath is all forgetfulnesse of this day vpon the sixe either in generall in any of them or in particular the day before according to our distinction when I spake of the dutie in the word Remember and it may haue reference also to the Sabbath past Remember how holy thou wert then what rules of holines thou wert then taught how thou didst then make shew of a good disciple of Christ when thou sattest to learne thy lesson of him as Saul who fell downe before the Lord and said Lord what wouldest thou haue mee to doe Acts 9. 1. Sam. 2. and as Samuel Speake Lord for thy seruant heareth Least doing contrariwise in the weeke-dayes after and as one that rather listeneth to Satan and to thine owne corrupt heart thou be condemned out of thine owne mouth for drawing neere vnto God with thy lips but hauing thine hart farre estranged from him The third head Head 3. Neglect of inferiours vnto which I referre the prophaning of the Sabbath is by leauing such as are vnder our gouernment to their owne vnbridled and licentious liberty vpon the Sabbath day which is no small fault in parents masters and gouernours For whilst euery priuate man doth thus neglect his domestick charge the minister may preach reproue admonish and teach but little wil it profit to bring them to the right obseruation of Christian duties Besides doth it not grieue any good parents or masters to see their children or seruants miscarry and come to misery but to be negligent of them at these times is the right way to bring them to all lewdnesse and consequently to smart and misery for which they may also then with heauy hearts thanke their gouernors that were too gentle and remisse towards them 1. Sam. 2. as Ely was vnto his children whose lamentable estate in his children and posteritie what hard heart can reade of without relenting Quest 83. What be the reasons of this Commandement Answ They are partly infolded in the Commandement and partly expressed in these words for in sixe dayes the Lord made heauen and earth the sea c. Quest. 84. What are the reasons infolded in the commandement Answ Three 1. Because the law of the Sabbath is ancient and was of force in Paradice before mans fall 2 Because it is most equall the Lord allowing vs sixe dayes for our worldly affaires and requiring but one of seuen for the workes of his worship 3. Because the seuenth is the Lords peculiar day so that without sacriledge we cannot any way prophane it Reasons infoulded in this Commandement Explan This commandement being of maine and speciall vse for the furthering of true godlinesse and such as vpon which the rest of the law hangeth is therefore both placed in the middest and because man naturally is most vnapt to bee moued with the reuerence hereof fortified with many reasons beyond the rest Which reasons are euery one of great force partly infolded and not distinctly placed out of the words of the commandement and partly expressed and set downe at large by themselues Reas 1 The first reason infolded is taken from the word Remember as if the Lord should haue said Howsoeuer all the rest of these lawes haue hitherto passed without such expresse mention especially when mans nature was vncorrupt in Paradise yet this law of the Sabbath was expressely giuen at that time and now I giue you warning only to remember it as most ancient and euer vsed amongst all my deuout people so that if old customs wil beare any sway with you the very remembrance of this must needs be of force to moue you to keepe holy my Sabbaths Or else Remember is a reason of force because it is a note of special charge for the duty vnto which it is prefixed For when a master commandeth his seruants diuers things and would chiefely haue some one thing done hee impresseth it with this word remember as if hee should say I would not haue that neglected or forgotten by any meanes If therefore any earnest speciall charge giuen by the Lord be of any force with thee if the old custome of Gods Church euer since the creation bee of any force doe not prophane but keepe holy the Sabbath day Reason 2 Gene. 2. The second reason infolded is taken from these wordes Sixe dayes shalt thou labour c. as if the Lord should haue said It is no vnreasonable matter or hard vnto thee that I require in bidding thee keepe holy the Sabbath day it is but one day of seauen I allow thee six for the workes of thy calling I will be content onely with the seuenth though I haue made all the dayes and could require six and leaue thee but one therefore doe thou willingly keepe this day This is a reason of great moment and oftentimes onely vsed as being alone sufficient to mooue any honest heart to obedience In Paradise it was the maine reason to Adam and Euah Ye shall eate of all the trees in the garden but of the tree in the middest ye shall not eat it was the reason vsed to mooue the Israelites to let their land rest the seuenth yeare that the poore might haue some comfort
first then the second and the first last Quest. 1 Math 19.19 First What is your dutie towards your neighbour For hauing finished our dutie towards God in the next place cōmeth to be considered our dutie towards our neighbor which is only generally and at large here laid down in the Catechisme in imitation of our Sauiour Christ who being asked which were the Commandements answered The first is Thou shalt loue the Lord c the second is like vnto it Thou shalt loue thy neighbor as thy self to the young man which asked which they were Thou shalt not kill thou shalt not commit adultery thou shalt not beare false witnes honor thy father mother and thou shalt loue thy neighbor as thy selfe And the Apostle in the same briefe manner giueth the summe of these cōmandements not that good Christians should not search any further into the depth of thē but content themselues with this short epitom for they doe more largely in other places expresse euery brāch of euery of these Lawes Math. 5. and Christ doth in precise words taxe the blind Iewes for thus slighting ouer Gods lawes teaching only thus Thou shalt not k ll then shalt not commit adultery c. and not teaching further the sins here forbidden These briefes therefore serue for remembrances for the wekest memories which when they are held and rightly vnderstood doe acquaint vs more fully with Gods will in euery thing Quest 2 Who is our neighbour Secondly Jn which Commaundemement is your dutie towards your neighbour Good reason is it that our dutie towards our neighbour should be placed in a second Table after that containing our dutie towards God both because God is the most high and farre aboue men and Angels and also because this must be the first wheele as it were that must set vs a worke to loue our neighbour euen for our duties sake toward God who requireth it at our hands Now our neighbour is euery man without exception vnlesse God hath noted him for his enemie though hee dwelleth among the furthest Indies and wee neuer see him though he bee our enemie yet we are bound to loue him and if by Gods prouidence wee be brought to behold his necessitie at any time wee are bound to shew our loue by putting to our helping hand This is made plaine by the parable of the Samaritan Luke 10.30 who in his trauell saw a man wounded by theeues and helpelesse vnto whom though hee were a stranger hee shewed mercy powring oile into his wounds and setting him on his owne beast Esa 58.7 and by the Lord commending to vs our dutie towards our poore neighbour Is it not to deale thy bread to the hungrie and to bring the poore wandring into thy house when thou seest the naked that thou couer him and hide not thy selfe from thy owne flesh so that whosoeuer is flesh as thou art is thy neighbour Quest 3 This commandement exceedeth the rest Ephe. 6.1 Thirdly let this question follow Which is the first of these Commaundements Honour thy father and thy mother c. This Commandement hath in it some thing singular and wherein it exceedeth the rest of this Table viz. a promise according as the Apostle hath noted It is the first Commandement with promise Namely the first of the second Table or the first and onely Commaundement with a speciall promise expressely annexed so as it is not the promise of the second Commandement which is generall and belonging to all But I speake this onely according to the reason of others for without doubt the Apostle calleth it in the same sense the first Commaundement and the Commandement with promise so vsuall is it with him speaking of the Commaundements to restraine them to this second Table onely And as the first of the first Table is the ground of al the rest so is this first of the second Table the ground of the fiue Commaundements following In that first is commended vnto vs a right esteeme of God in this of man made after Gods image and specially bearing Gods Image in him of the Magistrate bearing the Image of his authoritie and power whence he is said to bee a God Psal 82.1 of the ancient bearing the image of his eternitie whence it is that he is said to haue appeared as one ancient of dayes Dan. 9 37. of parents bearing the image of the Creatour of things which before were not of Tutours Ministers and Teachers bearing the image of his wisedome and diuine knowledge And where this due esteeme of men according to their places is setled and againe in superiours towards their inferiours the duties of the other commandements will easily follow euen as when God is rightly set vp in the heart hee is not disgraced by base Images by blasphemies and prophaning of his Sabaoths so giue the honour due to the Parents magistrates masters and instructers and murthering adultery theft false witnesses and coueting will easily bee put away Murthering of a superiour is a debasing of him as of an Oxe or Sheep when he beareth the Image of God in him of an inferiour it is an extinguishing of that reciprocall affection by which thou shouldst bee prouident for his safety because he giueth honour vnto thee Adultery in a superiour is a vilefying of his body making it the member of a foule strumpet when God hath graced him with a resemblance of himselfe in an inferiour it is a grosse neglect of the counsell of good parents and of wise tutors and of the magistrates authority Theft is a trumpet to sound forth our discontent with our present estates and our enuying in stead of honouring others False witnesse-bearing is a plaine shaking off and rooting out of our hearts and the hearts of others this esteeme of our superiours and branding them so as that they may be had in base accompt And for couetousnesse there will be no roome left for these desires if there be a setled esteeme of euery man in his place with his house his wife his oxe and other things about him Quest 88. What is heere commanded Answ To honour That is to loue reuerence cherish and obey our naturall parents the parents of our Countrey and our fathers in Christ 2. To carry our selues lowly and reuerently towards our masters being ruled by them and towards the ancient and all our betters 3. Jf wee bee superiours to walke worthy the honour due vnto vs from our inferiours and to vse all gentlenesse towards them Father how taken Explan That we may the better know the duty of this Commandement it is to be vnderstood that the word Father is diuersly taken in the Scriptures euen for euery superiour in any thing 1. For our superiour in gouernment thus euery King is called a Father because he is Parens Patriae the Father of the Countrey it was a common name of the Kings of the Philistines who were called Abimelech Gen 20.3 which
hurt vnder thy hand thou must make it good If thou beest any way wronged not to go to law if by any other meanes thou maist be restored and not for trifles for wee must rather depart from our right in something especially where the Gospell is scandalized by contentious brabbling among Christians according to the Apostle Why rather suffer ye not wrong 1. Cor. 6.7 why rather sustaine yee not harme And as we reade of Abraham that to auoid contention yeelded vnto Lot being his Nephew from his right And if we be constrained to go to law then not to prosecute matters in malice seeking the hinderance but the reformation of our aduersary recalling him frō his error if it be a criminal cause and faire recouery of our owne right if it be a Ciuill cause 4. In giuing and taking do as thou wouldst be done to in mercy relieuing the poore with clothing meat and drink Iames 1.27 and other comforts according to his necessity The pure religion and vndefiled before God is to visit the fatherlesse and widdowes in their aduersitie So that he which performeth not this duty hauing this worlds goods hath no true religion in him yea 1. Iohn 3.17 he hath no loue of God for If any man hath this worlds good and seeing his brother in want shutteth vp his compassion towards him how dwelleth the loue of God in him yea he hath no faith for Iames 2.20 faith without workes is dead yea he hath no sure foundation for 1. Tim. 6.17.18 the rich are warned to be rich in good workes to be ready to distribute and communicate laying vp in store for themselues a good foundation yea hee hath no conformitie with God as the child of God hath for doe good saith the Lord to them that hate you Matth. 5.45 that yee may bee the children of your father which is in heauen Now that this duty may be rightly performed it must be done liberally according to a mans ability for he that soweth liberally shall reape liberally and with all chearefulnes and not grudgingly 2. Cor 9 6.7 for God loueth a cheareful giuer And for taking there must be no more taken then is giuen neither must they aske and receiue almes that are not pressed hereunto by necessity labor must not be neglected an idle loitring vagrant life entred vpon for this is to breed a confusiō to hinder the poore indeed to rob the spittle And thus much of following the rule which hath been embraced euen amongst the heathen by the law of Nature Quod tibi non vis fieri alteri nefeceris Insomuch as that Alexander Seuerus an heathen Emperour of the Romans caused it to be written in all open places and market-places that it might bee continually before the eyes of all people That which thou wouldest not haue done to thee doe not to another man Rules of obedience to this Commandement Now there is further added as a speciall meanes to inable vnto this duty by diligent paines taking to get mine owne liuing in that estate of life to which it pleaseth God to call me 1. Cor. 7.20 For that we may doe the duty of this Law we must first be in a lawful estate and calling according to the precept Let euery man abide in the same vocation wherein he was called and as a remedy against stealing and as a meanes to inable vs to giue to the needy it is said Let him worke with his hands the thing that is good Ephes 4.22 so that thy calling must be good and honest otherwise what thou gainest hereby is stollen and if thou giuest it is not accepted it must be profitable to Church or Common-wealth Gen. 3 17. Secondly thou must be diligent herein for In the sweate of thy brow saith the Lord thou shalt eate of thy bread vntill thou returne to the earth Diligence was at the first enioyned Adam when hee was set to dresse the garden The Lord himselfe though a most omnipotent essence and pure act is in continuall action ruling all things the Angels haue wings to expresse their diligence and celerity the Sunne Moone and Starres with all the heauenly orbes are alwaies in motion and the smallest creatures the very Bee and little Pismire are diligent in their kind all which teach man diligence in his calling 1. Tim. 6.6 Thirdly thou must be content with thy present estate for godlinesse is great gaine with contentation Discontent besides that it is ingratitude against God is a ground of all vnlawful practices to gaine more and cooleth and kils the spirits from the workes of our callings but contentation stayeth from that which is vnlawfull and putteth life into our honest labours and endeauours Prou. 21.5 Fourthly thou must bee frugall and thriftie to saue that wherewith the Lord hath blessed thee not spending it vnnecessarily vpon vanity nor loosing it through neglect The thoughts of the diligent doe surely bring abundance so that a man by thrift hauing in reasonable sort enough of his owne shall not need to gape after other mens goods but may haue wherwithall to giue to others Psal 15.4 Lastly thou must bee constant to performe all thy lawfull promises for Who shall dwell in the Tabernacle of the most High he that sweareth to his owne hinderance and changeth not or if hee maketh any speech or promise of doing any thing to the benefit of another For he that boasteth of false liberality Prou. 25.14 is like clouds and winde without raine Hee bringeth poore men into a vaine hope of some benefit to be receiued but doth nothing or he maketh a shew before others as is the manner of many seeming good and beneficiall and making faire promises but in deeds least of all they shall haue reward accordingly Quest 100. Which is the ninth Commandement Answ Thou shalt not beare false witnesse against thy neighbour Quest 101. What is here forbidden Answ All false witnesse bearing which is first falsely accusing and witnessing against our neighbour before a Iudge 2. By slandring and back-biting and by all readinesse to hearken to such false reports 3 By flattering and soothing any for aduantage against the truth 4 By lying or telling any vntruth against our conscience Explan In this Commandement the maine intent and scope is to preserue the good name of our neighbour and our owne credit and good name for by false witnessing and lying as our neighbours disparagement is sought so a mans owne is procured The maine sin therefore here is vniustly or out of malice to detract from the good name of our neighbour 1. King 19. First I say vniustly because sometime a man is so bad and notorious as that hee which should goe about to maintaine his credit should endanger himselfe of the woe to such as iustifie the wicked Of such like it is iust and right for a man according to their deserts to complaine either before
2. Because God is offended for the same sinne may be to the offending of God and of our selues also because it is some iniury vnto vs as when a seruant neglecteth his masters busines behind his backe or spendeth his money at the Ale-house or when a people walketh stubbornly against their Minister or ruler in these and the like cases our anger must not be for our selues but for our God Here meek Moses himself erred at the waters of Meribah when the people murmured for water so that hee could not enter into the land of Canaan 3. It is not sudden but vpon deliberation 3. It is not sudden Iames 1.19 Theodor. 5. cap. 17. according to that precept Bee swift to heare slow to speake slow to wrath Thus Ambrose Bishop of Millaine obtained at the hands of Theodosius the Emperour after that he had greatly offended by sudden anger that he should not suffer any decree made in his anger to be executed till thirty dayes after 4. It doth not continue long Psal 03.89 Ephes 4.26 4. It doth not continue long but is soone ouer againe where there is repentance according to the example of our Lord who is slow to anger and ready to forgiue wherefore it is said Let not the Sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath 5. It ariseth from loue 1. Cor. 13. Gal. 6.1 5. It ariseth from loue and is guided by loue the loue of God and the loue of our neighbor that hath sinned for whatsoeuer is without this is sinne and if any be fallen by infirmitie saith the Apostle restore such an one with the Spirit of meekenesse When anger is thus ordered it is so farre from being a sinne as that it is necessary in all men it is zeale for Gods glory and out of this anger the disgracefull words of fooles wicked children sonnes of a whore c. haue rightly and without sinne been vsed as by the Prophets our Sauiour Christ and by the Apostles But out of these cases anger is fleshly and if it be more violent it is hatred if it dwelleth in a man to make him watch his opportunity to be reuenged it is malice if it causeth ioy when it falleth out ill vnto our neighbour and griefe when it is well with him it is diuellish enuy if it bee a perpetuall barre to reconciliation it is a reprobate affection as of such as cannot be appeased Rom. 1.30 Now as the very act of murther hath been shewed to be a most odious sinne so are these degrees of railing anger c. 1. First the heart and tongue is here set on fire of the fire of hell Iames 3. neither good men nor good Angels durst euer doe thus no not Michael the Archangell when he stroue with the Deuill about the body of Moses Iude verse 9. he durst not blame him with cursed speaking but said the Lord rebuke thee 2. To sinne thus is to be a murtherer before God euen as Cain was Iohn 3.15 for he that hateth his brother is a manslayer Rom. 3.13.14 3. It is a proper brand of the wicked His throate is an open Sepulcher the poyson of Aspes is vnder his lips his mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse 5. Properties of cruelty Prou 12.10 Cruelty in the lookes Gen. 4. Gen. 31.2 5. The fift sinne against this Commandement is al cruelty towards man or beast for the righteous man is noted to bee mercifull euen to his beast Cruelty is sometime in the very looke and countenance when it is cast downe towards any man thus was Cains towards Abel before his murther and Labans countenance expressed his malice against Iacob before his departure and this downeward looke is a sinne in any when an ill mind is hereby set forth as it is for the most part 2. In the behauiour there is cruelty when it is harsh In their behauiour and churlish as Nabals is said to haue been towards his seruants so as that they could not tell how to speake to him of him therefore it is said He was churlish 1. Sam. 23.3 and ill conditioned and this is an ill condition indeed and vnworthy a Christian seeing our lesson is Learne of me that J am meeke and gentle Matth. 11. Too much seuerity towards the poore 3. When any way too much seuerity is vsed by the rich towards the poore by officers towards malefactors dealing with them in all extremity by gouernours towards such as be vnder them vnreasonably correcting or otherwise expressing an hatefull mind against them This was a sinne in the Pharisees that brought the adulterous woman to Christ Iohn 8. breathing out cruelty against her and al they shal haue iudgement mercilesse that are thus without mercy 4. Cruelty is in the vnmercifull vsage of the dumbe creature Vnmercifull vsage of the dumb creatures working them without reason pinching them in things necessary beating or killing them without mercy or otherwise abusing them so as that they surfet or grow diseased hereby all these are wicked acts and shew wicked men Prou. 12.10 whose mercies are cruelty 1. Cor 9. For howsoeuer the Apostle saith comparatiuely Doth God take care for Oxen it is certaine that God doth take care for Oxen and Horses and for the very fowles of the aire Deut. 22.6 seeing that he hath made a law forbidding when a man findeth a birds neast to take the old together with the young It is therfore to be vnderstood that he doth not take care for Oxen principally and chiefely but subordinately as his care is towards all the creatures And hitherto of the sinnes against the bodily life The murther of soules 1. Cor 8.11 Now there bee sinnes also against the spirituall life and soule according to the teaching of Saint Paul who sheweth a case wherein a man destroyeth the soule of another viz. when he is an occasion of his stumbling and falling into sin Thus Ministers murther 1. In Ministers or at the least make themselues guilty of murthering the soules of the people committed to their charge when as through their default any of them perish This is plainely taught in Ezechiel Ezech. 3. whom the Lord told that he made him a watchman ouer the people and if the enemy which is sin should come and destroy any he not giuing them warning their bloud hee threatneth to require at his hands If any minister therfore either by neglecting to teach and watch ouer the people much more if by false doctrine or a wicked life he be an occasion that any die in their sins he shall vndoubtedly answer for this soule-murther if he endeauoreth being furnished with gifts necessary to saue them whosoeuer shal perish he is acquitted shal haue his reward 2 Parents and Masters Againe parents and masters and all priuate gouernours are murtherers if by their neglect or bad example their children seruants or pupils perish by ignorance prophanenes or any other
sinfull course of life which they might haue amended in them by teaching charging reprouing and requiring better things at their hands and leading them on by a good example For this as hath been shewed is their dutie as it is to furnish them with things necessary for the bodily life and therefore as in the denying of these they which are vnder their gouernment perishing their blood shall be laid to their charge so is it when they deny them meanes necessary for their soules and much more if they giue them the poyson of bad counsell or bad example this murthering of soules shal be charged vpon them 3 Neighbours And lastly euery neighbour that giueth his neighbour drinke to make him drunken that stirreth vp one against another to sighting and quarrelling and generally if hee enticeth to any sinne or doth countenance and fauour and defend it to the heartning of a man on therein euery of these waies he is the cause of the destruction of his neighbour and shall answer as a soule-murtherer For this is taxed in Gods word as an high offence Habbac 2.15 Woe be to him that giueth his neighbour drinke that is to make him drunken and it is set downe as an height of sinne Rom. 1.31 Which not onely doe such things but fauour such as doe them And good reason seeing euery man is bound to keepe his neighbour as much as in him lieth from sinne otherwise he is censured as hating his brother For Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart Leuit. 19.27 saith the Lord but rebuke him plainely ●nd not suffer him to sinne Oh then how shall hee answer it that prouoketh his brother to sinne without doubt hee shall be iudged as an hater yea a murtherer of his brother at the last day Quest 93. What is here commanded Answ Out of the loue that we beare to our neighbour as much as in vs lieth to preserue his life and health and specially the life of his soule by good counsell exhortations admonitions and the like Explan The duty here commanded ariseth from the consideration of the sinne forbidden for if it be forbidden to murther then it is commanded to saue life because he that saueth not life when it is in his power is guilty of murther Now as murther is either of a mans own self or of another man so the duty that we may be free from the guilt of any murther is to endeauour to saue both a mans owne life and the life of another man 1 To saue our owne life by flying in time of danger First then thou art here bound to preserue thine owne life by the vse of all lawfull meanes 1. In the time of danger flying from one place to another whether the danger bee by persecution as Dauid was indangered by Saul and therefore fled from him and as Athanasius an holy father of the Church hid himselfe a long time when he was sought for to the death by the Arians and as Eliah long before fled from Jezabel 1. King 19. or if the danger be by famine as Abraham Isaack Iacob Naomi and other holy persons haue commonly done or if there be danger by the plague the chiefe cure of which deuouring euill next to repentance is to change the aire and that speedily not in an opinion to be safe from Gods stroake but in obedience to his wil who would haue vs to preserue our liues by all lawfull meanes in the time of danger And a principall ground of all this is that commandement of our Sauiour Matth. 10.23 If they persecute you in one City flie into another and the speciall command vnto Eliiah in the time of famine 1. King 17. Gen 12. Gen. 20. and the Lords manifest approbation of Abrahams flying then comforting him and taking his part against Kings If it be demanded but may Ministers flie in the plague-time and leaue their people Answ That Ministers may flie in time of danger Without doubt they may if it bee Gods will to preserue themselues for the greater good of the Church whereas if they should harden themselues and stay amongst the infected there were apparant danger of being cut off and so to bee preuented of doing further good in the Church 2. By vsing lawful meane in times of sicknesse Esay 38.21 Secondly in the time of sicknes keeping thy selfe warme and taking such things as whereby thou mayest be freed from the matter of thy disease and by Gods blessing bee restored Thus Hez●chiah that was sick vnto the death is bidden to take a ●umpe of drie figs and lay it vpon the boile 3. To defend our selues with our best force Thirdly being set vpon by wicked men or by the enemy defending our selues with our best forces 4. By vsing lawfull recreation Fourthly by vsing lawfull recreation at lawfull times by some extraordinary motion of the body or otherwise chearing our minds and spirits with the vse of pleasant pastimes that are in themselues indifferent Such is shooting of which m●ntion is made in the holy Scriptures ● Sam. 1.18 He bad them teach the children of Israel to shoote as it is written in the booke of Jasher And Musicke Nehem. 7.67 Iudges 14 9. vnto which many were brought vp and propounding of riddles and the like But heere is no tolleration for gaming meerely for gaine which in stead of recreating distempereth the mind and body and is commonly accompanied with many foule sinnes To preserue another mans life 1. By almes-deeds Iob 3 9. For the life of another man This is preserued 1. By almes deeds where necessity doth require for thus Iob saith that hee had not seene any perish for want of cloathing c. and some there are in this danger continually vnlesse they be relieued and he that seeth it and hath wherewithall to helpe them but doth not if they perish is guilty of their death 2. To helpe in time of danger 1. King 18.13 2. By rescuing and helping a man in any danger as Obadiah hid the Prophets of the Lord in caues to saue them from Ahab and Iezabel in time of persecution 3 By patience and me●knes 3. By patience and meekenesse preuenting quarrels and bloudshed that doth otherwise often times follow The parts of this gentlenes and meekenes are 1. Soft answers when any meanes be vsed to prouoke vs Prou. 15.1 for a soft answer putteth away strife Dauids fury was calmed when Abigail came vnto him with gentle and pleasing words and without doubt seruants and children might escape many cruell blowes if they would frame their tongues to this soft answering 2. A stayed temper of affections whereby wee are not suddenly moued and for trifling matters neither doe wee keepe our anger as hath beene shewed already Be slow to anger and let not the sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath for thus is this dangerous sinne preuented which for want of this stayd temper many doe