speaking â⦠him should be customary and dead and like thâ Thoughts and talk of Common things and in some degree of Taking of Gods Name in vain CHAP. XXXVII Of the Fourth Commandement Qu. 1. WHat are the Words of the fourth Commandement A. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy six daies shalt thou Labour and do all thy work But the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt not do any work thou nor thy Son nor thy Daughâer thy Man-Servant nor thy Maid-Servant nor thy Cattel nor thy Stranger that is within thy Gates For in six daies the Lord made Heaven and Earth the Sea and all that in them âs and rested the seventh day Wherefore âhe Lord blessed the Sabbath day and âallowed it Q. 2. Why doth Deut. 5. repeat it in so different Words A. Because the words are but for the sence and âhey being kept in the Ark as written in Stone and safe from alteration Moses in Deut. 5. gave them the sence and added some of his own explication And nothing is altered to obscure the sence Q. 3. Which day is it which was called the Sabbath in this Commandement A. The seventh commonly called from the Heathen Custom Saturday Q. 4. Why was that day made the Sabbath A. God having made the world in six daies space seeing all Good and very Good rested in his own complacency and appointed the seventh day every week to be separated as Holy to worship and praise him the Great Creator as his Glorious perfections shine forth in his works Q. 5. What is meant by Gods resting from his work A. Not that he had been at any labour or weaâiness therein but 1. That he finished the Creation 2. That he was pleased in it as Good 3. And that he would have it be a day of holy pleasant Rest to man Q. 6. What is meant by keeping Holy the Sabbath day A. Separating it to the Holy Worship and praise of the Creator and Resting to that end from unnecessary bodily labour Q. 7. What doth the word Remember signifie A. First it is an awakening Caveat to bid us take special care that we break not this Commandement 2. And then that we must prepare before it comes to avoid the things that would hinder us in the duty and to be fit for it's performance Q. 8. Why is Remember put before this more than before the rest of the Commandements A. Because 1. Being but of Positive institution and not naturally known to man as other duties are they had need of a positive excitation and Remembrance And 2. It is of great importance to the constant and acceptable worship and the avoiding of impediments to keep close to the due Time which God hath appointed for it And to violate it tendeth to Atheistical ungodliness Q. 9. Why is it called The Sabbath of the Lord thy God A. Because 1. God did institute and separate it 2. And it is separated to the honour and Worship of God Q. 10. When and how did God institute and separate it A. Fundamentally by his own Resting from the work of Creation But immediately by his declaring to Adam his Will for the sanctifying of that day which is expressed Gen. 2. 3. Q. 11. Some think that the Sabbath was not instituted till man had sinned and Christ was promised and so God Rested in Christ A. When the text adjoineth it close to the Creation and giveth that only as the reason of it that God ended his works which he had made and rested from them this is humane corrupting presumption Q. 12. But some think the Sabbath was first instituted in the Wilderness when they were forbid to gather Manna A. It is not there mentioned as newly instituted and it is mentioned Gen. 2. 2 3. and then instituted with the reason of it And God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it because in it he rested from all his works which God created and made And the same reason is repeated in the Fourth Commandement Q. 13. Is this Commandement of the Law of Nature as are the rest A. It was more of the Law of Nature to Adam than to us his nature knowing otherwise than ours both when God ended his works and how beautiful they were before the Curse It is now of the Law of Nature that is known by Natural light without other Revelation 1. That God should be worshipped 2. That Societies should assemble to do it together 3. That some set Time should be separated statedly to that use 4. That it should be done with the whole heart without worldly diversions or distractions But I know nothing in Nature alone from whence a man can prove that 1. It must be either just one day in seven 2. Or just what day of the seven it must be 3. Nor just what degree of Rest is necessary Though reason may discern that one day in seven is a very convenient proportion Q. 14. Are the words Six dayes shalt thou labour c. a Command or onely a License A. They are not only a License but a Command to man to live in an ordinary calling or Lawful course of Labour according to each ones ability and place and diligently to exercise it and not spend time in Idleness And the ordinary time is here assigned thereto Q. 15. Then how can it be lawful to spend any of the week-dayes in Religious Exercises any more than to spend any part of the Sabbath day in Labour A. All Labours are to be done as the Service of God and as a means to holy and Everlasting ends and therefore it is implyed still that God be sought and remembred and honoured in all As our Eating and drinking is our duty but to be done to the Glory of God and therefore with the seeking of his blessing and returning him our thanks Q. 16. But is it lawful then to separate whole dayes either weekly or monthly or yearly to Religious Exercises when God hath commanded us to labour on them A. As Gods command of Resting on the Sabbath is but the Stating of the Ordinary Time supposing an exception of extraordinary Cases as in time of War of Fire of dispersing Plagues of hot Persecution c. As Circumcision was omitted in the Wilderness forty years so this Command to Labour six dayes doth state our ordinary time but with supposed exception of extraordinary occasions for dayes of Humiliation and Thanksgiving And all Gods Commands suppose that when two dutyes meet together and cannot both be then done the greater must ever be preferred And therefore saving the Life of a Man or a Beast yea feeding and watering beasts labouring in Temple Service c. were to be preferred before the Rest of the Sabbath And so when our necessity or profit make Religions exercises more to oâr good and so a greater duty as Lectures Fasts c. we must preferre them to our ordinary Labour For as the Sabbath was made
Joy to long to depart and be with Christ then we are prepared not only for a safe but a joyful Death Q. 3. O! But this is a great and difficult work A. It is not too hard for the Sâ⦠of Christâ and a Soul renewed by it It is our great follâ⦠and naughtiness that maketh it hard Why eâ⦠should it be hard for a man that loveth himself and knoweth how quickly a Grave and rotting in the Dark must end all his pleasures in this World to be earnestly desirous of a better after it And why should it be hard for one that believeth that mans Soul is immortal and that God hath sent one from Heaven who is greater than Angels to purchase it for us and promise it to us and give us the first fruits by his Holy Spirit to rejoyce that he dyeth not as an unpardoned Sinner nor as a Beast but shall live in perfect Life and Light and Love and Joy and Praise for ever What should rejoyce a believing considering man like this Q. 4. O! But we are still apt to doubt of things unseen A. 1. You can believe Men for things unseen and be certain by it for instance that there is such a place as Rome Paris Venice that there have been such Kings of England as Hen. 8. King Iames c. You know not but by believing others whether ever you were Baptized nor who was your Father or Mother 2. You see not your own Soul nor any ones that you talk with and yet you feel and see such things as may assure any Sober man that he hath a Soul God is not seen by us yet nothing is more certain than that there is a God 3. We see Plants Flowers Fruits and all vital Acts produced by an unseen Power we see âast lucid glorious Regions above us and we see and feel the effects of invisible powers therefore to doubt of things because they are unseen is to doubt of all the vital noblest part of the World and to believe nothing but gross and lowest things and to lay by Reason and become Bruits But of this I have said more near the Beginning Q. 5. What should we do to get the Soul so familiar above as to desire to be with Christ A. I. We must not live in a foolish forgetfulness of Death nor flatter our Souls into delayes and dulness by the expectations of long life on Earth the grave must be studied till we have groundedly got above the fears of it II. We must not rest quiet in such a humane belief of the Gospel and the Life to come as hath no better grounds than the common opinion of the Countrey where we live as the Turks believe Mahomet and his Alcoran for this leaveth the Soul in such doubts and uncertainty as cannot reach to solid Joy nor Victory over the World and Flesh But the true Evidences of the Gospel and our Hopes must be well digested which I have opened to you in the beginning of which I give you a breviate in two Sentences 1. The History of the Gospel of Christs Life Miracles Death Resurrection Ascension sending down the Spirit the Apostles Miracles and Preaching and Writing and Sufferings is a true History Else there is none sure in the World for none of such Antiquity hath greater Evidence 2. And if the History aforesaid be true the Doctrine must needs be true for it is part of the History and owned and sealed certainly by God III. We must not be content to be once satisfied of the Truth of the Life to come but we must mentally live upon it and for it and know how great business our Souls have every day with our Glorified Lord and the Glorified Society of Angels and the perfected Spirits of the just and with the blessed God of Love and Glory We must daily fetch thence the motives of our desires hopes and dutyes the incentives of our Love and Joy The Confutation of all Temptations from the Flesh and World and our supporting patience in all our Sufferings and Fears Read oft Ioh. 17. 22 23 24. 20. 17. Heb. 12. 22 23 24. Mat. 6. 19 20 21 33. Col. 3. 4 5. 2 Thes. 1. 10 11. Heb. 11. 2 Cor. 4. 16 17. 5. 1 2 3 5 7 8. Phil. 1. 21 23. 3. 18 19 20 They that thus live by Faith on God and Glory will be prepared for a joyful death IV. We must take heed that no worldly Hope or Pleasure vitiate our Affections and turn them down from their true delight V. We must live wholly upon Christ his Merit Sufficiency Love and Mediation His Cross and his Kingdom must be the summe of our Learning Study and Content VI. We must take heed of grieving the Spirit of Consolation and wounding our Consciences by wilful Sin of Omission or Commission VII We must Faithfully improve all our Time and Talents to do God all the Service and others all the good that we can in the World that we may be ready to give an account of our Stewardship VIII We must be armed against Temptations to unbelief and despair IX We must while we are in the Body in our daily thoughts fetch as much help from sensible Similitudes as we can to have a suitable Imagination of the Heavenly Glory And one of the most Familiar is that which Christ calleth the Coming of the Kingdom of God which was his Transfiguration with Moses and Elias in Glorious appearance in the Holy Mount Mat. 17. 1. Which made Peter say It 's good to be here Christ purposely so appeared to them to give them a sensible apprehension of the Glory which he hath promised And Moses that was buried appeared there in a Glorified Body And we must not think only of God but of the Heavenly Society and even our old Acquaintance that our Minds may find the more Suitableness and Familiarity in their objects and Contemplations X. We must do our best to keep up that Natural Vivacity and Chearfulness which may be Sanctified for Spiritual Employment for when the Body is diseased with Melancholy Heaviness or Pains and the Mind diseased with Griefs Cares and Fears it will be hard to think joyfully of God or Heaven or any thing XI We must exercise our selves in those dutyes which are nearest kin to the work in Heaven Specially labouring to excite Hope Love and Joy by Faith and Praising God especially in Psalms in our Families and the sacrâd Assemblies and using the most Heavenly Books and Company XII We must not look when all is done to have very clear Conceptions of the quality and acts of separated Souls or the World of Spirits But must be satisfied with an implicite Trust in our Father and our Glorified Lord in the things which are yet above our reach And giving up Soul and Body to him we should joyfully trust them with him as his own And believe that while we know as much as may bring us well
to know natural good from evil and an Appetite to desire it accordingly But because Natural Good and Evil are to be estimated as they tend to Spiritual and everlasting Good or Evil God giveth us Reason and Faith to Order our desires accordingly And because our Knowledge of this is imperfect when and how far Natural Good or Evil conduceth to Spiritual and Eternal it is still supposed that we make not our selves but God the Judge and so desire Life Health and Food and Natural Supplies with submission to his Will for time and measure they being but means to higher things Q. 4. Why ask we for no more than Bread A. To shew that Corporal things are not our Treasure nor to be desired for any thing but their proper use and to renounce all covetous desires of Superfluity or provision for our inordinate fleshly Lusts. Q. 5. Some say that by Bread is meant Jesus Christ because there is no Petition that mentioneth him A. Every part of the Lord's Prayer includeth Christ It is by him that God is our Father by him that the Holy Name of God is hallowed It is his Kingdom that we pray may come it is his Law or will which we pray may be done It is he that purchaseth our right to the Creature and redeemed Nature It is by him that we must have the forgiveness of Sin and by his Grace that we are delivered from temptations and all Evil c. Q. 6. Why ask we Bread of God as the Giver A. To signifie that we are and have nothing but by his gift and must live in continual dependance on his Will and begging receiving and thanksgiving are our work Q. 7. But do we not get it by our Labour and the gift of Men A. Our Labours are vain without God's Blessing and Men are but God's Messengers to carry us his gifts Q. 8. What need we Labour if God give us all A. God giveth his Blessings to meet Receivers and in the use of his appointed Means He that will not both beg and labour as God requireth him is unmeet to receive his gifts Q. 9. Why do we ask Bread from Day to Day A. To shew that we are not the keepers of our selves or our stock of Provisions but as Children live upon our Fathers daily allowance and continually look to him for all and daily renew our thanks for all and study the daily improvement of his maintenance in our Duties Q. 10. But when a Man hath Riches for many Years what need he ask daily for what he hath A. He hath no assurance of his Life or Wealth an Hour nor of the Blessing of it but by God's gift h Q. 11. Why say we Give us rather than Give me A. To exercise our common Love to one another and renounce that narrow selfishness which consineth Mens regard and desires to themselves And to shew that we come not to God meerly in a single Capacity but as Members of the World as Men and Members of Christ's Body or Church as Christians And that in the Communion Saints as we shew our Charity to one another so we have a part in the Prayers of all Q. 12. May we then pray against Poverty and Sickness and hurt A. Yes as aforesaid so far as they are hurtful to our Natures and thereby to our Souls and the ends of Life Q. 13. Doth not naming Bread before Forgiveness and Grace shew that we must first and most desire it A. We before exprest our highest desire of God's Glory Kingdom and Will and as to our own Interest all the three last Petitions go together and are inseparable but the first is the lowest though it be first in place Nature sustained is the first but it will be but the subject of sin and misery without Pardon and Holiness I told you that the three last Petitions go according to the Order of Execution from the lowest to the highest step God's Kingdom and Righteousness must be first sought in order of Estimation and Intention by all that will attain them Q. 14. But if God give us more than Bread even Plenty for our delight as well as necessaries may we not use it accordingly A. Things are necessary to our well being that are not necessary to our Being We may ask and thankfully use all that by strengthening and comforting Nature tendeth to fit the Spirit for the joyful Service of God and to be helpful to others But we must neither ask nor use any thing for the service of our Lusts or tempting unprofitable pleasure Q. 15. What if God deny us necessaries and a Christian should be put to beg or be famished how then doth God make good his Word that he will give us whatever we ask through Christ and that other things shall be added if we seek first his Kingdom and Righteousness and that Godliness hath the promise of this Life and that to come A. Remember as aforesaid 1. That the things of this Life are promised and given not as our happiness but as Means to better 2. And that we are promised no more than we are fit to receive and use 3. And that God is the highest Judge both how far outward things would help or hinder us and how far we are fit to receive them Therefore if he deny them he certainly knoweth that either we are unmeet for them or they for us Q. 16. When should a Man say He hath enough A. When having God's Grace and favour he hath so much of Corporal things as will best further his Holiness and Salvation and as it pleaseth the Will of God that he should have Q. 17. May not a Man desire God to bless his labours and to be rich A. A Man is bound to labour in a lawful Calling that is able and to desire and beg God's Blessing on it But he must not desire Riches or Plenty for it self or for fleshly Lusts nor be over importunate with God to make him his Steward for others Q. 18. What if God give us Riches or more than we need our selves A. We must believe that he maketh us his Stewards to do all the good with it that we can to all but specially to the Houshold of Faith But to spend no more in sinful Lust and Pleasure than if we were Poor Q. 19. What doth daily Bread oblige us to A. Daily Service and daily Love and thankfulness to God and to mind the end for which it 's given to be alwayes ready at the end of a Day to give up our account and end our journey Q. 20. What is the sin and danger of the love of Riches A. The Love of Money or Riches is but the fruit of the Love of the Flesh whose Lust would never want Provision But it is the Root of a Thousand farther Evils As it shews a wretched Soul that doth not truly believe and trust God for this Life much less for a better but
and the perfecter of his work on that day The Apostles settled that day as the stated time for constant Church-Assemblies and Communion And all the Churches in the World have constantly called it The Lords day and kept it as thus appointeâ and uâed by the Apostles from their dayes till now with one consent And because I must not here writâ a Volume on this point instead of a Catechismeâ he that doubteth may see all this fully proved in mâ book called The Divine appointment of the Lorâ day and in Dr. Youngs book called The Lords dââ vindicated Q. 26. Is Rest as necessary now as under Mosââ Law A. It was then commanded both as a means tâââhe holy work of the day and also as a Ceremoââ which was made a duty in it self as a Shadow ââ âââ Christian Rest. In the first respect we are as much âââ more obliged to forbear Labour even so far ââit hindereth holy work as they were then But ââ in the second respect Q. 27. When doth the Lords day begin and end A. It 's safest to judge of that according to the Comâ⦠estimation of your Countrey of the measure of ââ other dayes remembring that it is not now as âââ Jewish Sabbath to be kept as a Ceremony but as âââ season of Holy Works As therefore you allow âââ other dayes a stated proportion of twenty four ââârs for Labour and the rest for sleep or rest do ââ by the Lords day and you need not further be ââpulous as to the time But remember 1. That you ââid scandal â That even the Sabbath and so ââ Lords day was made for man and Christ is the ââd of it who will have the greatest works preââ¦ed Q. 28. Doth not Paul tell us that all dayes are alike ââ we must not judge one another for dayes Why then ââd Christians make a difference and not serve God ââlly every day A. Paul tells you that Christ hath taken away the ââish Ceremonial difference of dayes for neglect ââ which none is to be judged But it followeth not âââ Christ hath made no difference himself and hath ââ stated a day for Christian Work in Communion ââve the rest One hour of the day doth not in ââlf now differ from another And yet every wise ââter of a Family will keep the Order of stated ââs for Dinner and for Prayer And so will a Congregation for Lectures and other ordinary ocââsions I told you in the beginning that the Light â⦠Law of nature tells us that Gods publick Worsâââ should have a stated day in which as free from versions and distractions we should wholly apâ⦠our selves thereto And that all the Christians in â⦠world assemble for the same work on the same dâ⦠hath much of laudable concord harmony and mââ¦al help And therefore it concerned him who oâ⦠is the King and Law-giver to the universal Churââ to make them a Law for the determination of âââ day which he hath done Q. 29. But is it not more spiritual to make eâ⦠day a Sabbath A. It is most Christian-like to obey Christ â⦠King Thus the same men pretend to make evâ⦠meal a Sacrament that they may break the Law Christ who instituted the Sacrament Satans way drawing men from Christs Laws is sometime by ââ¦tending to do more and better But to keep evâââ day a Sabbath is to keep none It is not lawful cast off our outward labour all the six dayes nor â⦠mind or body bear it to do nothing but religious Wââsâip These men mean no more but to follow thâ⦠earthly business with a spiritual mind and at soâ⦠seasons of the day to worship God solemnly And â⦠is but what every good Christian should do every â⦠But who knoweth not that the mind may with more advantage attend Gods instructions and be ââ¦ed to him in holy Worship when all worldly ââ¦verting businesses are laid by and the whole man ââployed towards God alone If men will regard 1. The experience of their oâ⦠Souls 2. And of all others in the World they miâ⦠â⦠be resolved how mischievous a thing the negâ⦠of the Lords day is and how necessary its holy ââ¦rvation 1. That man never knew what it is ââ¦ttend Gods worship seriously and therein to reââ¦e his special blessing who hath not found the ââ¦t advantage of our separation from all common ââ¦ess to attend holy work only on the Lords day â⦠that feeleth no miss or loss of it sure never knew ââ¦t Communion with God is 2. And Servants ââ¦d be left remediless under such Masters as would â⦠oppress them with Labour and restrain them â⦠Gods service It is therefore the great mercy the universal King to secure the Liberties of the ââ¦vants and to bind all men to the means of their â⦠felicity 3. And common reason will tell us that a Law obââ¦ing all men to spend one day of seven in Learnâ⦠Gods Word and offering him holy Worship ââ¦st needs tend abundantly more to the increase of ââowledge and Holiness than if all men were left ââ¦heir own or to their Rulers wills herein 4. And common experience puts the matter of fact â⦠of doubt that where the Lords day is most conââ¦nably spent in holy exercises there Knowledge ââ¦ty Charity and all Virtue do most notably prosâ⦠And where the sanctifying of the Lords day âeglected Ignorance Sensuality and Worldliness ââ¦nd O how many millions of Souls hath Grace ââ¦erted and comforted and edified on the Lords ââ¦es When men are obliged to hear read pray â⦠praise God and to Catechize their Children and ââ¦vants as that which God requireth is it not liker ââ¦e done than if they be left to their own erroneâ⦠backward sluggish minds or to the Will of ââ¦ers perhaps worse than they Q. 30. How is it that the Lords day must be sâ⦠and Sanctified A. Not in diverting worldly thoughts wordââ⦠deeds Much less in idleness or vain pastimes â⦠least of all in such sinful pleasures as corrupt â⦠mind and unfit a man for holy Work such as gââ¦tony drunkenness lasciviousness Stage-playes ââ¦mances Gaming c. But the Lords day is ââ¦cially separated to Gods publick Worship in Châ⦠Communion and the rest to private and secret â⦠exercises The primitive Christians spent moâ⦠the day together And the publick Worship shâ⦠not be only preferred but also take up as much of day as we can well spend therein Q. 31. What are the parts of Church-Service be used on the Lords day A. 1. The Reading of the Sacred Scriptures the Teachers and expounding them to the Peoâ⦠Their preaching the Doctrine of the Gospel applying it to the case and Consciences of the ââ¦ers Their guiding them in the solemn exercisâ⦠Gods Praise special Worship celebrating the Sââ¦ments especially that of Communion of the Bâ⦠and Blood of Christ and that with such conjuncâ⦠of Praises to God as that it may be fitly called Eucharist speaking and singing joyfully of Gods
ââ¦fections and his Mercyes to man but speciall the wonderful Work of our Redemption and tâ⦠in chiefly of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. ââe day is to be spent as a Day of Thanksgiving in âoyful and praising Commemoration of Christs Resurâection Q. 32. On dayes of Thanksgiving men use to Feast May we labour on the Lords day in providing Feasts A. Needless cost and Labour and sensual excess âust be avoided as unsuitable to spiritual work and âejoicing But such provision as is suitable to a Festival âor sober holy Persons is no more to be scrupled âhan the labour of going to the Church or the Miâisters preaching And it 's a Laudable use for men to âear their best Apparel on that day Q. 33. What are the private duties of the Lords âay A. Principally speaking and singing Gods Praises âor our Redemption in our Families and calling âo mind what we were publickly taught and Catechizing Children and Servants and praying to God ând meditating on Gods Word and Works of Nature Grace and Glory Q. 34. Seeing the Lords day is for the Commemoration of Christs Resurrection must we cease the Commemoration of the Works of Creation for which the seâenth day Sabbath was appointed A. No The appointing of the Lords day is acâumulative and not diminutive as to what we were ââ do on the Sabbath God did not cease to be our Creator and the God of Nature by becoming our Redeemer and the God of Grace we owe more âraise to our Creator and not less The Greater ând the subsequent and more perfect work comprehendeth the Lesser antecedent and imperfect The Lords day is to be spent in praising God both as our Creator and Redeemer The Creation it self being now delivered into the hands of Christ. Q. 35. But is it not then safest to keep two dayes the seventh to honour the Creator and the first to commemorate our Redemption A. No For when the world was made all very Good God delighted in Man and Man in God aâ⦠his only Rest. But upon the sin of Man God is become a condemning Judge and displeased with Man and the Earth is Cursed so that God is so far from being now mans Rest that he is his greatest Terrour till he be reconciled by Christ No maâ cometh to the Father but by the Son So that now the work of Creation must be commemorated with the work of Redemption which restoreth it to iâ⦠proper use Q. 36. But what if a man cannot be satisfied that the seventh day is repealed is it not safest for him ââ keep both A. God hath laid no such task on Man as to dedicate to Religious Duties two dayes in Seven And he that thinketh otherwise it is his culpable Errour But if he do it conscionably without contentious opposing the Truth and dividing the Church for it good Christians will not despise him but own him as a Brother Paul hath decided that Case Rom. 14. 15. Q. 37. Why is mention here made of all within ouâ gates A. To shew that this Commandement is not only directed to private Persons but to Magistrates and Masters of Families as such who though they cannot compell men to believe may restrain them from violating the Rest of the Sabbath and compell them to such external Worship of God as all men are immediately obliged to even all within the gates of their Cities or Houses Q. 38. What if one live where are no Church-meetings or none that he can lawfully joyn with A. He must take it as his great loss and suffering and with the more diligence improve his time in private Q. 39. What Preparation is necessary for the keeping holy that day A. I. The chief part of our Preparation is the habitual Holiness of the Soul a Love to God and his Word and Grace and a sense of our Necessities and Heart full of thankfulness to Christ which relisheth Sweetness in his Gospel and in Gods Praise and the Communion of Saints II. And the other part is Our endeavour to prevent all distracting hinderances and to enjoy the greatest helps that we can in the most suitable Means and to meditate before of the great mercy of our Redemption of Christs Resurrection the giving of the Holy Ghost and the everlasting Heavenly Rest which this prepareth for And to pray for Gods assistance and blessing CHAP. XXXVIII Of the the Fifth Commandement Qu. 1. WHat are the Words of the fifth Commandement A. Honour thy Father and thy Moeher that thy dayes may be long on the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee Q. 2. Doth this Commandement belong to the first Table or the second A. No man knoweth which of the two Tables of Stone it was written in by God But if we may judge by the Subject it seemeth to be the Hinge of both or belong partly to each As Rulers are Gods Officers and we obey God in them it belongs to our duty to God But as they are Men it belongs to the second Q. 3. Why is Father and Mother named rather than Kings A. 1. Parents are our first Governours before Kings 2. Their Government is deeplyer founded even in Nature and not only in Contract 3. Parents give us our very being and we are more obliged to them than to any 4. They have a natural Love to us and we to them so that they are justly named first Q. 4. Is it only Parents that are here meant A. No All true Governours are included but so far as the Commandement is part of the Law of Nature it bindeth us but to natural Rulers antecedently to humane Contract and consent and to those that Rule us by Contract but consequently Q. 5. What is the Power of Parents and Rulers which we must obey A. They are of various ranks and Offices and every ones power in special is that which belongeth to his own place and Office But in general they have power first to command Inferiors to obey Gods Laws And 2. To command them such undetermined things in subordination to Gods Laws which God hath left to their Office to determine of As Corporations make By-Laws by Virtue of the Kings Law Q. 6. What if Parents or Princes command what God forbids A. We must obey God rather than men Q. 7. Are we not then guilty of disobedience A. No for God never gave them power to contradict his Laws Q. 8. But who shall be Iudge when mens Commands are contrary to Gods Must Subjects and Children judge A. While we are Infants naturally uncapable of judging we are ruled as Bruits by our Parents But when we grow up to the use of Reason our Obligation to Govern our selves is greater than to be governed by others Gods Government is the first in order of Nature Self-government is the next though we are not capable of it till we come to some ripeness A man is nearer to himself than his Parents are and his happiness or misery depends
teach them their duty to God and Man and see that they joyn in publick and Family Worship and live not in any wilful sin And as Fellow Christians if they are such to further their comfortable passage to Heaven Q. 36. But what if we have Slaves that are no Christians A. You must use them as Men that are Capable of Christianity and do your best with pity to cure their Ignorance and Unbelief and sin and to make them Christians preferring their Souls before your wordly commodity Q. 37. Is it lawful to buy and use men as Slaves A. It is a great mercy accidentally for those of Guiny Brasile and other Lands to be brought among Christians though it be as Slaves But it is a sin in those that Sell and buy them as Beasts meerly for Commodity and use them accordingly But to buy them in compassion to their Souls as well as for their Service and then to sell them only to such as will use them Charitably like men and to employ them as aforesaid preferring their Salvation is a lawful thing specially such as Sell themselves or are sold as Malefactors Q. 38. What is the duty of Servants to their Masters A. To honour and obey them and faithfully serve them as part of their service of Christ expecting their chief reward from him To be trusty to them in Word and Deed not lying nor stealing or taking any thing of theirs without their consent nor wronging them by idleness negligence or fraud Learning of them thankfully and sincerely and obediently joyning with them in publick and Family Worship of God Q. 39. Doth God require Family Teaching and daily Worship A. Yes both by the Law of Nature and Scripture All Christian Societies must be sanctified to God Christian Families are Christian Societies They have as Families constant dependance on God constant need of his protection help and blessing and constant work to do for him and therefore constant use of prayer to him And as Nature and Necessity will teach us to eat and drink every day though Scripture tell us not how oft nor at what hour so will they tell us that we must daily ask it of God And stated times are a hedge to duty to avoid omissions and interruptions And Scripture Commandeth Parents to teach and perswade their Children constantly lying down and rising up c. Deut. 6. 11. And to bring them up in the Nurture and admonition of the Lord Cornelius Crispus and others Converted brought in their housholds with them to Christ. Daniel prayed openly daily in his House The fourth Commandment requireth of Masters that all in their House do Sanctifie the Sabbath Reason and Experience tells us that it is the keeping up Religion and Virtue in Families by the constant instruction care and Worship of God by the Governours that is the chief means of the hopes and welfare of the world and the omission of it the great cause of all publick corruption and confusion Q. 40. What must Children Wives Servants and Subjects do that have bad Parents Husbands Masters and Magistrates A. Nature bindeth Children in minority so to their Parents and Wives to their Husbands except in case of lawful divorce that they must live in patient bearing with what they cannot amend And so must such Servants and Subjects as by Law or Contract may not remove nor have legal remedy But those that are free may remove under better Masters and Princes when they can Q. 41. But whole Nations cannot remove from Enemies and destroyers A. It is God and not I that must answer such cases Only I say 1. That there is no Power but of God 2. That Governing Power is nothing but Right and Obligation to Rule the People in order to the Common good 3. That destroying the Common good is not Ruling nor any act of Power given by God 4. That all mans Power is limited by God and subordinate to his universal Government and Laws and he hath given none Authority against himself or his Laws 5. That so far as Gods Laws have not determined of the species and Degrees of Power they must be known by the humane Contracts or Consent which found them 6. Nations have by Nature a right to self-preservation against destroying Enemies and Murderers 7. And when they only seek to save themselves against such they resist not Governing Authority 8. But particular persons must patiently bear even wrongful destruction by Governours And whole Nations tolerable injuries rather than by Rebellions and Wars to seek their own preservation or right to the hurt of the Common-wealth 9. They are the great enemies of Government who are for Perjury by which mutual Trust is overthrown CHAP. XXXIX Of the Sixth Commandement Qu. 1. WHat are the Words of the sixth Commandement A. Thou shalt do no Murder Q. 2. What is Murder A. Killing unjustly a reasonable Creature And that culpably tends to it bringeth an answeraââe degree of guilt Q. 3. Why is this command the first that forbiddeth ââivate wrongs A. Because a mans Life is more precious than the ââcidents of his Life Death depriveth him of all â⦠time of Repentance and earthly Mercies and ââpriveth all others of the benefit which they might ââceive by him They rob God and the King of Subject Therefore God who is the giver of Life a dreadful avenger of the sin of Murder Cain ââas cast out with terrour for this sin for it was the âevils first Service who was a Murderer from the ââginning Therefore God made of old the Law âgainst eating Blood lest men should be hardened â⦠cruelty and to teach them his hatred of bloodââiltiness And it was the Murder of the Proââets and of Christ himself and his Apostles that ââought that dreadful destruction on the Iews when ârath came upon them to the uttermost Q. 4. If God hate murder why did he Command â⦠Israelites to kill all the Canaanites Men Women ââd Children A. Justice done by God or his Authority on Caââtal Malefactors is not murder You may as well â⦠why God will damn so many in Hell which worse than Death The Curse was fallen on Chams âosterity They were Nations of Idolaters and Murderers of their own Children offering them to Idoâ and so drown'd in all wickedness that God justly maâ the Israelites his Executioners to take away thâ forfeited Lands and Lives Q. 5. When is killing Murder or unlawful A. When it is done without Authority from Goâ who is the Lord of Life Q. 6. To whom doth God give such authority to ââ men A. To the Supream Rulers of Common-wealtâ and their Magistrates to whom they communicâ⦠it Q. 7. May they kill whom they will A. No None but those whose crimes are so gâ⦠as to deserve death by the Law of God in Natâ⦠and the just Laws of the Land even such whâ crimes make their death the due interest of the ãâã publick and needful
which two General Councils have condemned his Body being a Spiritual Body now 4. They feign either himself to have eaten his own Flesh and Drunk his own Blood or at lest his Disciples to have done it while he was alive 5. They feign him to have been the Breaker of his own Flesh and Shedder of his own Blood and make him to do that which was done only by the Iews 6. They contradict the express words of the Scripture which three times together call it Bread after the Consecration in 1 Cor. 11. When yet they say It is not Bread 7. They condemn the belief of the soundest senses of all men in the World as if it were heresie All our Eyes Touch Tast c. tells us that there is Bread and Wine and they say there is none 8. Hereby they deny all certainty of Faith and all other certainty For if a man may not be certain of what he Seeth Feeleth and Tasteth he can be certain of no sensible thing For we have no Faculties but sence to perceive things sensible as such Nor any way to transmit them to the Intellect but by sense And we can no otherwise know that there is a Bible a Church a Council a Pope a Man or any thing in the World and therefore much less can believe any of them So that all Humane and Divine Faith are thus destroyed yea man is set below a Beast that hath the Benefit of sense 9. Hereby they feign God to be the grand deceiver of the World For things sensible are his Works and so is Sense And he makes us know no supernatural Revelation but by the intromission of some Sence And if God may deceive all men by the way of sense we can never be sure but he may do it otherwise 10. They set up Men who confess their own senses are not to be credited to be more credible than all our senses and to be the Lords of the understandings of all Princes and People in despight of sense And he that is to be believed before our senses is an absolute Lord. 11. They deny it to be a Sacrament For if there be no sign there is no Sacrament 12. They feign every ignorant drunken Priest every time he consecrateth to work greater Miracles than ever Christ wrought and so to make Miracles common and at the Wills of thousands of wicked men I must not here stay to handle all this But in a small Book call'd Full and Easie Satisfaction which is the true Religin I have shewed thirty one Miracles with twenty Aggravations which all Priests are feigned to work at every Sacrament Q. 10. What is it that is called the Mass which the Papists say that All the Fathers and Church used in every age and we renounce A. In the first Ages the Churches were gathered among Heathens and men were long Instructed and Catechized hearers before they were baptized Christians And the first part of the day was spent in publick in such Common Teaching and Prayer as belonged to all and then the Deacon cryed Missa âest that is Dismist the unbaptized hearers and the rest that were Christians spent the rest of the time in such duties as are proper to themselves especially the Lords Supper and the Praises of God Hereupon all the Worship following the Dimission of the unchristened and suspended came to be called barbarously the Mass or Dismission And this Worship hath been quite changed from what it was in the beginning and the Papists by keeping the Name Mass or Dismission make the ignorant believe that the Worship it self is the same as of old Q. 11. What be the changes that have been made A. More than I may now stay to number Iustin Martyr and Tertullian describe it in their Time to be just such as the Scripture mentioneth and we now commonly perform that is In Reading the Scripture opening and applying it Praying as the Minister was able Praising God Baptizing and administring the Lords Supper After this Ministers grew less able and trusty and they decreed that they should pray and Officiate in set forms yet so that every Bishop might choose his own and every Presbyter must shew it to the Bishops and have their approbation The Creed Lords Prayer and Commandements and the Words of Baptism and Delivery of the Lords Supper were alwayes used in forms before After this they grew to use the same forms called a Liturgie in whole Provinces some Ceremonies were so Ancient that we cannot find their Original that is The Anointing of the baptized the giving them Milk and Honey to taste dipping them thrice cloathing them in a white Garment after to Worship with their faces toward the East and not to kneel in Prayer or Adoration any Lords day in the year nor any Week day between Easter and Whitsuntide and specially to observe those two yearly Festivals and Good Frydaies fast And quickly after the encouraging of persecuted Christians to suffer drew them to keep a yearly day at the place where a Martyr was kill'd or buryed to honour their memories and give God thanks for them After this they built Altars over them And they built their Churches where their graves or âome of their bones were laid and in honour of their memory called the Churches by their Names Next they brought their Names daily into the Church Liturgies And next they added to them the Names of such Bishops of those particular Churches as had left an honourable memorial behind them And the Lords Supper was celebrated much like as it is in our English Liturgy save these Names And thus far the changes were then accounted laudable and were not indeed such as should discourage any Christians from Communion Nor do we read of any that were against them Besides which they overvalued the use of Crossing But quickly though by degrees a Flood of Ceremonies came in and Popes and Prelates added at their Pleasure till Gods publick Worship was made quite another thing I. God who is a Spirit and will be Worshipped in Spirit and Truth is by Mass-Priests and Papists Worshipped by such a mass of Ceremonies as makes it like a Stage-play and representeth God so like the Heathens Idols delighted in Mummeries and toyish actions as is greatly to the dishonour of Religion and God II. They have brought in the Worshipping of God in a Language which the People understand not and praying for they know not what III. They have lockt up the very Scriptures from the people and forbid all to use it in their known Tongue translated but those that get a special License for it IV. They abolish all substantial Signs in the Sacrament as is aforesaid and say There is no Bread or Wine and so make it no Sacament V. They give the Laity the Bread only without the Cup. VI. They call the Consecrated Bread by the Name of their Lord God and taking it to be no Bread but Christs Body worship it with Divine