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A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

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near as hot as hell he must believe the least point of Reliques with as strong a faith as the greatest mysteries of the God-head and if he deny any of the former he is no lesse an Heretick then if he had denied the latter and he that believes not the Churches tradition to be as necessary to be believed as the Epistles of Paul he cannot be saved Indeed there is not an Article of the Church of Rome that is Catholick wherein reformed Churches differ from her but in those Articles that are but of Yesterday such as those above mentioned they stand at a distance praying for her but loth to touch her she being not sick of a small Ague but hath running sores Ulcers Infections Pestilential humours within her which makes them write over her as if she were visited Lord have mercy upon her but dare not make themselves one body with her H. The Apologist of the Church of England declares That we have Renounced that Church wherein we could not have the Word of God sincerely taught being mixed with tradition nor the Sacraments rightly administred the one half of the Lords Supper being but given to the people and Baptisme being given to Bells c. Nor the Name of God duly called upon praying to the Saints and Angels and in a Latin tongue which the people understand not To conclude we have forsaken the Church viz. of Rome as it is now not as it was in old time past c. and come to that Church viz. of England wherein all things be governed purely and Reverendly This overthrowing of the foundation thou maist call Heresie in d●ctrine Yet by caution take not the manners of the people for doctrine let the people be what they will the man what he pleaseth it is neither the good lives of men nor the bad lives of men that makes or unmakes Churches but false and corrupted doctrine Much loosenesse was in the Church of Corinth and Prophanenesse partic●larly about the Sacrament of the Lords Supper yet the Apostle gives no ground at all for separation only exhorts to a more orderly peaceable walking and a more holy and prepared celebration Neither must we take things indifferent for doctrine nor every blemish for fundamentall Heresie It is an errour in our age to take Circumstances and outward Ceremonies for essentiall parts of worship There was much corruption in the Church of the Jews in our Saviours time and much false glosses put upon the Law yet in regard the fundamentals were not razed he commanded his disciples to hear even the Pharisees who yet were thieves and robbers being none of those appointed to expound the Law which justified not their manner of teaching but the truth of the doctrine taught who sate in Moses chair Matth. 23.1 2 3. but gives them a Caveat to beware of the practices and leven of the Pharisees that is hearken and obey to those truths and fundamental precepts that they give out teach to be in my Fathers Law first taught by Moses as cirumcision the way and manner of the Sacrifices which in the Jewish Church were necessary points but refuse those things they lay down as from tradition as Corban washing of cups for not these but the other are commanded you to do Moreover you must be sure not to separate your selves from those who possibly are ignorant of the depths of Sathan in that particular doctrine delivered for Christ pities such and speaks comfortably to them Revel 2.4 nor from others whom you can perceive in the least to disown that corrupted doctrine though privately being troubled at the razeing out of necessary principles How many poor souls are led away from the truth by those that creep into houses in our days that are ignorant possibly of the designes of their prime Teachers following them as much as the people followed Absolon viz. in the simplicity of their heart these giving great encouragement to those that so teach makes them bolder to go on against the unity of the faith showing the Number of their Disciples loving to hear those Doctrines that either add to or take from the infallible and unalterable rule of the Word in both which the Church of Rome is erroneous and therefore the separation from her justifiable 2. We may lawfully separate our selves from a Church when she enjoyns those acts of worship as necessary not enjoyned by Christ when a Church preacheth corrupted doctrine as from God we may separate from her so may we nay so ought we to do when she injoyns false worship to be performed to God whether it be in worshipping him after a false manner or giving another besides him true worship Deut. 10.20 This is another cause of the reformed Churches separation from Rome their Beads their Ave Maries their Fastings a great part of worship with them their praying to Saints as those that have the plague must pray to St. Rochus those that have the tooth-ache to Apollonia those that are poysoned to Saint Iohn those that are in Captivity to Saint Leonard those that have the Fistul● to Saint Quintin Women that are in labour must pray to Saint Margaret but especially to the Virgin Mary besides those common prayers that you must make in common to all the Saints and to the Angels also must prayer be made There is a little Book published by the Authority of Pope Pius the V. in which almost at the beginning that all might prosper the better you have this Prayer Precibus meriti● beatae Mariae semper Virginis omnium sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad Regna Coelorum The Summe of which Prayer is this that God would be pleased to lead bring the Petitioner unto Heaven by the intercession praers and merits of the blessed Virgin and of all the Saints I do wonder that Christ should be left out by whose merits and intercession alone we are saved but I marvail most whether all these shall be a distinct Company by themselves for of the whole company of the Virgins they cannot be the foolish Virgins had no Oyle the wise had but enough to save themselves where is there any of their merits then left for me yet this is better then Tu per Thomae sanguinom c. These with many more of the like nature as praying for the Dead offering or burning up of incense praying in an unknown Tongue that common people know not what they pray their Ordination of the Hoast their holy water their penance their Pilgrimages their oyl or Chrisme sal● and spittle used in Baptism was the cause of that separation made from her by the reformed Churches these points and this kind of worship being not Catholick for as before they separate not from Rome in any point of worship that she holds in Common with the Ch●rch of Christ but these being brats of her own begetting they deny them entertainment or Countenance and separate themselves from her and their separation is justifiable
Church for though every one that are members of the visible are not of the body of the invisible Church yet he is not of the invisible that acknowledgeth not himself a member of the visible he that hath God for his Father hath the visible Catholick Church for his only mother and must have her if he would be saved She is like the Ark of Noah as all without that was drowned so all without this is damned In the judgement of Charity we must indeed suppose that God hath his own among the heathen and by working upon them by his Spirit in an extraordinary secret and hidden way brings them unto the knowledge of his Son by which they are ingrafted into his body and so made members of the Catholick Church for as before out of it there is no salvation the reason is out of it is to be out of Christ for that is his body and to be out of Christ is to be without God and to be without him is to be without eternal life For this is eternal life to know thee to be the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent Quest. 12. What are the marks of a true Church General notes and marks are set down by the Church of Rome whereby it is pretended that the true Catholick and Holy Church may be distinctly and perfectly known from all false Congregations or Churches as 1. Visibility 2. Antiquity 3. Durability 4. Prosperity 5. The name of a Catholick Church 6. Agreement with the ancient Church 7. It s union with the head viz. the Pope 8. Holiness of Doctrine 9. Efficacy of Doctrine 10. Holiness of life 11. The glory and power of miracles 12. The gift of Prophesie 13. The acknowledgement or confession of her enemies 14. The unhappy and unfortunate success of her enemies 15. A succession of Bishops With several others which in their own nature are either separable from the true Church or may agree to a false and may constitute a Synagogue of Satan as well as a Church of Christ for which with many other reasons they are rejected of the Reformed Churches as proper Characters of that body whereof Christ is the head that being able to consist pure holy and visible without some of them though in some points they agree to her also in that but not as essential or Characteristical and knowing also that many of them are forged by and in Rome that she may appear the better and stand the firmer in her Pontificalibus The proper and essential Characters of a true Church whereby she is differenced from all false also from the Church of Rome and which gives her her esse vivere sentire are these viz. 1. The pure dispensation of the Word Act. 2.4 Where the Word is taught in a pure manner according to the institution of it without detraction from or addition to it wherever that is taught what Christ commanded and the Gospel holds out so farre there is a pure Church and where that is mixed and mingled with mens Inventions as points of doctrine so far the Church is impure 2. The pure Administration of the Sacraments Matth. 28.19 30.1 Cor. 11.23 That Church that keeps to the institution of those Ordinances appointed as Seals of the Covenant by Christ putting nothing to them nor taking nothing from them as necessary for the making of them Seals so far that is a pure Church and where that is not done it is so far impure Some adde Church discipline but that holds out rather her well being then her being in times of persecution she hath wanted that and may want it and yet a true Church by the keeping pure of the Word and Sacraments which a visible Church cannot consist without hence we behold and look upon Ierusalem Galatia Thessalonica Corinth Colos. and once those famous Churchs of Asia though the gospel was taught in them in a glorious and a pure dispensatory way yet for the present wanting those two we eye them not nor number them among the Churches of Christ. The same teacheth the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 14. Behem Art 8. France Art 27. Belg. 29. Ausp Art 7. Sax. Art 11. Wirtem Art 32. Swed or the 4. Cities Art 15. S●ot Art 15. and of England Art 19. That Article it self is this Art 19. of the Church of England The visible Church of Christ is a Congregation of faithfull men in which the pure word is preached and the Sacraments be duly administred according to Christs Ordinance in all those things that of necessity are requisite for the same c. All which considered it follows 1. That the Church of Rome is no true Church or pure Church making the Scriptures to be imperfect for salvation without their own Tradition They will not suffer the Church to be clean through the word that Christ hath spoken The Church is only tyed to the Gospel For if an Angel from heaven teach any other Doctrine he is to be accursed by her 1 Gal. 9. With her Baptismal water she adds oyl salt and spittle as essential parts of Baptism and useth this holy Ordinance upon Bells Stocks and wood With the Sacramental wine she must mingle water of which the Lairy must not taste With her Sacramental bread she visits the sick salutes Emperors makes Procession it must be also a wafer C●ke and it must not be broken with both these Elements she maketh a Sacrifice for the dead and she teacheth that a Priest may give it to himself alone that the vertue or efficacy both of that and Baptism depends upon the intention of him that doth administer and yet the efficacy must not be questioned but believed and forasmuch as they are administered in Latine which the common sort may not understand they must act implicite faith 2. That those segregated Congregations in England are not true Churches The word preached by many that are not men in Sex nor Ministers in Office prayer being preached down and preaching only to be heard from men of their own principles teaching for Doctrine not Traditions but fancies blasphemies affirming the nullity of Apostolical Ordination c. The Sacraments are either abused as re-baptizing those that were baptized before making dipping necessary to that Ordinance and the Sacrament performed by a Laick person The Sacrament of the Lords Supper being either preached down altogether or grosly abused in nature It s vertue depends upon his goodness that gives it a sin to receive it with any that we conceit not to be holy or know him to be prophane though he be never admonished by them and if he were yet he is not to be eaten withal least I eat and drink damnation to my self through his sin the Elements not consecrated through which that only is an Ordinance and the body or blood of the Lord they are not consecrated for he that often attempts to do it hath no power so to do wanting Apostolical Authority viz. Ordination 3. That the
they sinned that word that might have been purely and unsported given to the Father through negligence forgetfulness wilfulness might not have been delivered intirely and perfectly to the son but now in writing none of these can alter the age that now is can know if others do corrupt and those that come after may judge of this each having copies by them they are able to discover or iudge of the integrity of another neither can any one corrupt it in the least but it may easily be discryed by his neighbour through the copies or writings of it 3 That helpe might be afforded men against those imperfections that attend the best for through fraile nature cares and troubles of the world sutable comforts confirming truths might not suddenly be thought on now by writing this malady hath a proper cure the word being open and before our eyes we may take up and read such truths as may stay the Soul in her greatest shakeings and comfort her in her languishing distempers 4 That mens faith might be the more confirmed in the truth of it when men see the prophecies that were foretold in the book of Daniel and in the Revelation the fulfillings of the threatnings is against the Jews c. To know that these things are done and to see them foretold so many hundred years before induceth a man more firmely to beleeve them then if it were told him barely from another that his Father or Grandfather said it should be so of which he also might have cause to doubt and the truth of the Speaker even in that particular suspect Quest. 10. Whether men be bound to believe all that is in the Scripture For the dispatching this Question we must distinguish 1. Between the Scripture it self and the persons who writ it is not necessary to salvation to believe that Matthew writ that Gospell that goes under his Name nor that Peter writ his to believe what is spoken or written is one thing and to believe that David writ it is another thing 2. Between the writing it self and the time when or the place whence it was written It is one thing to believe the truth of those Epistles of Paul and another thing to believe that they were written from Corinthus as that to the Romans or that from Athens as that to the Thessalonians or from Rome when Paul was brought the second time before Nero as that last Epistle to Timothy 3. Between the Words written and the meaning or sence of the thing writ It is one thing to believe that Paul writ the words of his Epistles in that order method place as we have them in our Bibles ordered and placed and another thing to believe the sence and the meaning of the thing so written we shall find the writers of the Scriptures in citing of places deviate from the naturall order of the Words given them by the first Author which shews that we are not bound to believe that For instance David declares Psal. 16.8 I have set the Lord always before me because he is at my right hand I shall not be moved which Text Peter having occasion to use Act. 2.25 reads it thus viz. I foresaw the Lord always before my face he is on my right hand that I should not be moved The words being clearly varied but the sence and meaning being the same we are tyed to the one and not to the other which alteration is evident in many places particularly the very next verse both of that Psalm and this Chapter 4. Between an Historical and a saving faith we are to believe all that the Scripture contains and set down that is the sence and meaning of it to be no other then the very will purpose mind and Law of God which we must believe if we would be saved And that it was written by David and sent to the chief Musitian by Matthew by Paul and sent to them from Corinthus that the Epistle to Timothy Ordained the first Bishop of the Church of Ephesus was written from Rome when Paul was brought the Second time before Nero as his second Epistle at the close declares ought to be believed by an Historical faith that not being written by the infallible spirit of God but by the Churches Tradition of whose authority in an Historical way it is but presumption in any man to doubt CHAP. IV. Of Reading We are now come to the prosecuting and enforcing of those directions above named as necessary Antecedents for the Words indwaking The first was to read the Scriptures In the handling of which we shall 1. Prove it is a duty to read 2. Direct how to read 3. Resolve some Questions Sect. 1. THat all are to read the Scriptures is a truth that the Religious Christian will not doubt of and the Hypocriticall dare not deny yet that all might be left without excuse we shall prove that all must do it According to the usuall division of Magistrates Ministers and people or of Old and young which comprehendeth al sorts of persons whatsoever 1. Magistrates are to read it God giving Laws concerning the Ruling of his People to him that should be King ●ver them Commandeth Deut 17 18. that when he sitteth upon the Throne of his Kingdom that he shall write him a Copy of this Law in a book out of that which is before the Priests the Levites and it shal be with him and he shal READ therein all the days of his life The King therefore it not exempted from this duty though he be Lord of all notwithstanding all affairs he must READ therein all the days of his life And the truth is he will be the best Ruler that is best acquainted with this word he will know sin the better which he is to punish Rom. 13.13 the better he be acquainted with the Scripture Rom. 7.7 It is the abundance of the sincere milk of the Word that maketh Kings Queens nursing Fathers and nursing Mothers unto the Church Isai. 49.23 that all that live under them may by their knowledge and discipline grow in all godlinesse and wax strong to every good work sucking from their breasts wholesome doctrine springing from good government and Laws and enjoying the fruit of all in every Act of Justice What God doth in this place require of a King who is Supream 1 Pet. 2.13 he requires the same of all Magistrates and Officers under him that are as Kings in their proper places and Domininions and by the Subjects ought so to be beheld 1. That they be not puffed up by conceit of Earthly greatness Psal. 131 1 2. 2. That they may be impartiall in their Sentences Proverbs 31.5 3. That they may uphold and defend the truth of his worship 2 Kings 23.1 2 3 4. 4. That they may know whom to encourage and whom to punish Rom. 13.3 5. That every thing may be done by them as those that must give an account to the King of Kings and Lord of Lord for
in and run in It is dangerous to have or to suffer any to stand at the head of that way to call in Passengers from that road which leadeth unto life since men of themselves are apt and prone enough to turn from it and go in the contrary path 5. Religion is the foundation of States and Kingdoms and diversity of foundations will never keep up long a building herein we find those States in Scripture to stand surest whose Kings feared God and they that feared put down all false worship 6. Religion is the band and cord by which the unity of the State is preserved if there be heard diversities of Doctrine and the unity of Faith broken either the people are divided in their affections or among themselves and against their Princes or their Governours Hence proceed burnings emulations strifes envy malice sedition faction Rebellion Innovation treachery and disobedience and infinite more mischiefs Let me add two more 7. Let all diligence be used to keep out or subdue false Religions Satan will keep them in we know by the Proverb Where God hath his Church the Devil will whatever man do to the contrary have his Chappel A toleration seems to bring stones and timber for the enlarging of it and making it a Synagogue 8. The Angels of the Churches of Pergamos and Thyatira Rev. 2. are blamed for tolerating false Religions taking it for granted that there is but one true ziz the Catholick one of them had them tolerated possibly not by Law but by connivance and indulgence who taught the Doctrine of Balaam to eat things sacrificed to Idols and to commit fornication whether natural or spiritual and the Doctrine of the Nicholaitans which God did hate then and yet in this Age it passes for true Divinity with many The other suffered Iez●bel who called her self a Prophetess first to teach and then as a proper consequence to seduce our Praedicantiffs do the same and yet plead for a toleration since Paul gave out a Law concerning womens teaching I Tim. 2.12 we finde none but this Iezabel undertaking such an Office It is observable that the Angels of the Church are reproved for bearing with or suffering them so to do and they were the Church Officers Ministers or Bishops by which it seems they had power and authority to restrain and controul them to pull them out of their pulpits and to stop their mouths Whether they were Lords or no let their power and authority speak to do this was Lord-like in my apprehension and not to do it was a ground of Gods accusation Rev. 2.19 20. This Authority was it from heaven or of men If from Heaven then Church Officers have power to controul and put down both Balaam and Iezabel and to stop their mouths and yet not to be accused for Factious If of men then Church-Officers ought to put their power in execution and resist and stop the proceedings of lawless persons command that none hear Iezabel and stop the mouths of all irregular and presumptuous Teachers and not to be accused as busie-bodies and though they be yet let rather men accuse them for performing then God should accuse them for not doing their duty Yet if the Religions be such as do not overthrow the fundamentals of Truth or such as disturb not the Government established in that State Church or Kingdom wherein they be and that the Professor of those Religions be not factious ambitious or pertinarious having no other end in holding their opinions but Gods glory and the satisfaction of their own consciences and willing to be taught and be convinced of their errors diversities of Religions may be tolerated but in private only time may produce a reno●ncing of them when violence might harden them God hath his own times of Calling men and let the humble good honest Christian have his time Wise States Kings and Princes for this cause have granted a private toleration The very Turk who is zealous in his Religion grants this it is especially to be granted in times of great infection then indeed a total suppression in private of different opinions might prove and end in a great disturbance both to Church and State but Philosophandum est sed paucis Quest. 8. Wherein consists the Individuality or singleness the Vnity or Oneness of the true Church That the Catholick Church is but one is both asserted in Scripture and believed in our Creed and though it be scattered up and down through the world in every Kingdom Nation People Province Common-wealth Countreys and Dominions that are known in the earth from La Mairs Straits to Greenland from Sancta Creek to S. Ians yet differs no more then one member of the body differs from another the question then is this what is it that like Arteries and Ligatures Sinews and Nerves holds such a vast body together that the Church of God in this place is not a distinct Church of it self from that that is in another but only a part of it differing as a bone in the neck from that in the foot of the self same body one may be preaching or hearing the word in the Country of the Great Mogul another in Iapan and another in Pauls at London and yet he in one and the self same body And as the Sea receives divers names according to the Countreys she runs through though all but one Sea so the members of the Church Triumphant above in heaven and those of the Church Militant beneath make but one body differing only as a mans upper from his lower parts this Unity consists 1. In a consenting of all of them to the truth and doctrine of the Gospel for we know no Church but the Christian what ever is written by the holy Ghost through the Ministery of the Apostles and Disciples the best expositors of the prophets Psalms and Moses whether made in it and to be done or said to be fulfilled in it and done the whole society of the Church whereever they be scattered believes it and readily consents to it as a Canon of faith and manners 2. It consists in the consenting and unity in reference to the Sacraments of the Gospel the same Sacraments for number for nature that one part holds to be profitable for the Souls of men the same doth the other it is true there are many Churches that differ from another in more externall and Ceremoniall points it is the current doctrine of all reformed Churches and of England Art 34. that it is not necessary that ceremonies be alike in all places but may be altered as the People or Officers may teach and think meet but as touching the essentiall and necessary truths as the ends the uses the Author the profit of them all Christians of the Catholick Church hold one and the same thing 3. I consists in the consenting to and unity in holding the util●●y and necessity of hearing and obeying a Gospell ministery where it is to be had it is a Catholick
2 Peter 1.29 And as many as walk according to this Rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Gal. 6.16 Hence it is that the Scriptures are called Canonical because they contain and give a perfect Rule of all things conducing to salvation 4. God hath now ceased to repeat any new matter to his Church or for giving them any other Rule We must know that God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in Times past unto the Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son Heb. 1.1 We are to expect no●hing now but to walk according to what his Son hath given us and to the word his Son hath left us God hath revealed his mind by his Son to the world and there stops his Son at the time appointed will come to Judge according to this Rule that he hath left behinde Him 5. By this Rule only can the soul be satisfied and peace secured when this Rule is left what Rule can man have to walk by nay how many Rules shall he presume to settle himself by when this is laid aside All other are so full of uncertainties so loaded with doubtings so liable to exceptions so uncomfortable in distresses so various in their natures that like Noahs Dove Gen. 8.9 the creature can get no rest for the feet of its soul untill it pitch upon this again When he that is builded that is ruled and fitted to upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Iesus Christ being the chief corner stone groweth unto a holy Temple c. Ephes. 2.20 being ●●stened secured and confirmed he grows in holiness and purity and in Christ is quieted and glorified 6. The Spirit of God it self when it acts within us is to be tryed by this Rule We are not to believe every Spirit but try whether they are of God 1 Ioh. 4.1 And this is one way to see if it speak according to the teaching of Jesus Christ or not Ioh. 14.26 The Doctrine that St. Paul taught was by the infallible Spirit of God and yet the Bereans are commended by the same Spirit for searching the Scriptures to understand whether the things th● were spoken were so or not Acts 17.13 7. We should open a wide door to all impieties and prophaness should we admit another What Laws might not be baffled by pretence of the Spirit what murders thefts might not be committed under the notion of a Call from God What man could be secure of his life or his goods if men might walk according to their own wills How often is that in Scriptures In those days there was no King in Israel but every man did that which was right in his own eyes And what villany was then committed is clear and obvious 8. We have seen sad wanderings and dangerous paths since this doctrine of inward Light was known or broached The s●me teacheth the Reformed Churches of France Art 2. Belg. Art 7. Bohem. Art 1. Helvet Art 1. of Ireland Art 5. and Article 6. of the Church of England The Article it self is this Art 6. of the Church of England Holy Scriptures containeth all things necessary for salvation for whatsoever is not read therein nor may be proved thereby is not to be required of any man that it should be believed as an Article of Faith or be thought requisite and necessary to salvation c. Quest. 3. Whether men may come to a saving knowledge of GOD without the Scripture That there is a natural knowledge of God in the hearts of men cannot be denied by him that knows his own soul the Nations never so barbarous acknowledged ever a superiour power and supreme being unto whom they called for help in their distresse but a spirituall saving knowledge of the true God is only to be acquired from the Scriptures but we must distinguish 1. Between Infants and the Adult how God works upon Infants in a saving manner to fit them for himself is a Theam the Scripture is dark in that Infants may be saved and that some are is easie to be defended though they are not capable of knowing God by Scripture the Question is to be understood of the Adult and such as are grown in years 2. Of the Adult there are two sorts some that never had the Scriptures unto whom the knowledge of Christ never came these we ought not neither will we judge them but leave them to rise and fall to their own master and others that have the found of the Gospell unto whom Christ hath been preached of them only is the Question proposed 3. Those that have the sound of the Gospell are of two kinds Some of them God hath bereaved of the use of sence or understanding one that is born deaf another that hath not the u●e and exercise of Reason we must behold as perpetuall Infants and leave them to the Judge of Israel that will do justly And others there are unto whom God hath given the benefit of sence use exercise and reason those then who having their understandings open to receive the Gospel and opportunities of hearing can have no knowledg that is saving without the Scriptures For 1. There was never any other way given by God The Scriptures since their composing have been by God given unto men that men might live by them know him serve him in this only is the way to motives for holynesse and piety here alone can we read of Heavens glory to stir up zeal and of eternall life to cause diligence 2. There was never any other way known to the Church of Gods The Scriptures are written that ye might have life through his name Joh. 30.31 The Church of Ephesus is recommended to this Word by Paul it being alone able to build them up and give them an inheritance among them that are sanctified Acts 20.31 Blessed is he only that keepeth the sayings of the prophesie of this Book Rev. 22.7 3. We are to shun him nay cur●e him that w●●ld teach us another way For though we or an Angell f●●m Heaven preach any other g●spel unto you that is that holds ou●●noth●r way to be saved then is in the gospel then that which we hav● 〈◊〉 unto you let them be accursed As we said before so ●ay ● now again If any man preach unto you any other gospell let him be accursed Gal. 1.8 9. An Angel who is incompassing the Throne of God dayly and whom ●od useth as his Messenger Ordinary should he as from God reveal another way of salvation though by his very nature and holynesse he might allure men to this doctrine but forewarned forearmed he were to be Anathema Maranath● 4. What need we any further witnesse we our selves have heard him say To the Law and to the Testimonies Isai. 8.20 Thou shalt not go aside from any of the Words that I command thee this day to the Right hand or to the left Deut. 28.14 Quest. 4. Whether Perfection may
of prejudice nor malice but by simplicity and ignorance By beliefe is not meant a saving beliefe or such a faith as may save him but to cause him behold the Bible as a true History not a fiction now this beliefe may be wrought in such a one by these and the like Argument 1 From the Churches tradition in all ages and through all generations were the books of Moses received and owned to be his Solomons to be his yea they were by the whole consent of the Church owned as the very word of God spoken in the mouths of men Now as he believes the books going under the name of Ovid to be his and of Virgil to be his of Cicero to be his because that former generations yea that age they lived in then gave them down to the next as theirs and they to the next untill it comes to us so he may be brought to a Historical beleiving of these books to be true and not Supposititious 2 The nature of the men that made it They were good just and upright in their generation As Moses Samuell David Solomon Esaiah c. who would not have took pains to have cheated the world nor deceived men as to write those Histo●ies of Israels comeing out of Egypt c. Had they not been true 3 The miseries that the writers of the Scriptures went through is a proof of some concernment if men would cheat it would be for some profit but what honour or preferment had Paul for his preaching or for his writing The Apostles in general might have lived at home in ease and not go abroad to the hazzard of their lives as they did What could their policy or reason suggest to them by being at so much trouble to themselves purely to cheat others What needed or what could provoke Ieremy to undergo such dangers as he did purely to cheat the world We know they were in Jeopardy every hour for writting and preaching of it Which in reason shews that they had no purpose to delude 4 The distance of the place it was written in if it had been done all in one place there might have been some cause of suspicion but what consultation had Moses in Arabia or in Egypt with Daniel in Babylon or what agreement had Paul in Rome with David in Ierusalem severall ages they lived in and no compact had the one with the other which if they had made yet what would have been the issue of their undertaking but stripes death and imprisonment enough to have diverted their thoughts from such a dangerous enterprize 5 The agreement of every part of it with the whole Nothing that David writ contradicted Moses nor nothing that Samuel writ was spoken against by Solomon no prophet spo●k against another nor none of the Apostles wrot against them yea so far were they from that that they strengthened and confirmed each others doctrine Had it been of men there would have been real jangling and apparent contests writing so long after one another and at such a distance from each other 6 The submission of the gravest soberest persons that are now in the world to the practice of it There are men that will not easily give a credence to what they read or hear but are carefull of their reputation that way But yet yeildeth and gloryeth in that yeilding to the truth of what is therein writ and when their glory wisdome parts vertues are tryed they appear to be the most eminent persons in the world 7 From the sincere dealing of the co●posers of it men that would go about to flatter or allure wo●●● 〈◊〉 by some arguments at least seemingly pleasing to th●●● 〈◊〉 they would delude but now the Scriptures are contrary they will ●a●● men to forsake houses wives and land for it Call upon them ●o forsake that which above all things they love most plucking out the right eye hatred affliction persecution is that which the Scripture declares men must undergo that come to her Nothing that is pleasing to flesh and blood throughout the whole Scripture that is promised to or allowed of unto men 8 From the Silence of its greatest and most Implacable enemies How was Christ hated in the times wherein he lived And Ieremiah and Paul and yet none durst nor none did write books in confutation of those books written by them nor to perswade the people that it was but a feigned story The Scribes and Pharises that hated Christ and did persecute him to death yet wrot no book in confutation of Matthew or of Luke which if in the least they could have falsifyed the gospells should not have come to us without a Salvo Quest. 7. How far the Saints be our Rule besides the Scripture That the Saints lives ought to be a Rule for us and that we are to walk according to their steps is Catholick Doctrine Heb. 6.12 Phil. 3.17 But how far they are to be followed is the ground of our Question That the Saints had failings haltings and miscarriages is not to be denied but in such things they are our Examples for evitation but not for Imitation Follow the Saints we must But 1. So farre as they were approved of God where we can hear God saying whether in providence or by his presence Well done good and faithful servant we may be bold to tread in that step and to keep in that Road. 2. So far as their actions tended to the glory of God What we can see Abraham Iacob David doing which brings in any revenue to the Exchequer of Gods praises so far may they be our pattern copy and example 3. So far as they gave no just cause of offence to the Church of God Peter that seemed to be a Pillar yet in this is not to be followed but blamed Gal. 2 11 12 13. In this we must be wary that we tread not in their steps least we make the enemies of God to blaspheme and slay him for whom Christ dyed 4. So far as they had the promise of God we may safely walk in that way wherein wee find God promise to be with them keep them blesse them and in his favour to protect them 5. So far as their own hearts did excuse them before God where we find them doing and afterwards their hearts smite them for their so doing let us by their fall look the better to our own way and by by that blot seek to mend our hand Always provided 1. That be not done by us which was but for a time approved and to some peculiar persons granted as was was the Offerings Washings and Sacrifices under the Law and Iebu with Elishas going into Ba●ls Temple 2. That for which God was silent only for a time as concerning the Saints Polygamy or plurality of Wives he was c. 3. That which for a season was only granted that the gospel might not be hindred as Pauls care in giving of offence which was in great measure but untill the Jews
ordained Elders and left them in Churches which they had planted And sure to the end there shall be as much need of o●dained Priests or Elders for they are one as then men will be perverse wicked sinfull Impenitent unruly ignorant despisers of dignityes ununregenerate unholy and still there will be some ignorant of the Misteries of God therefore care must be taken to plant and leave Elders in every City and in every country for the cure of those evills It is easie to behold how soon a parish or a village will grow loose disorderly and indeed loose the very face of religion if they want a setled Minister but a few moneths the like we may judge what would befall the world should it want Church officers Though people were wicked yet an orderly keeping of the Sabbath c. conscience in some sort will bring them to it but in unsetlement they have arguments to stop consciences mouth which by degrees brings them quickly to be Heathens the Principles of religion not taught them that are young makes them regardlesse of God or his word either when they come to years of maturity and so their profession comes to be prophane and their conversation to be Ungodly which in a great measure is prevented by a setled Minister though but of weak parts or abilities Quest. 4. Whether it be lawfull to hear an unordained man Preach We must stand at the doore of this question avoid errour and distinguish of Unordained Preachers before we go forward 1. There is a preaching by way of tryall to ordination their gifts their knowledge their uprightnesse their utterance cannot be known but by preaching the Church generally will have a tryall of their parts before she separate any for that worke thus Paul preached before his ordination 2 There is a preaching by way of opposition to ordination so there are some that will presumptuously execute all the offices of a minister and slight ordination desiring possibly not to be bound nor tyed to that calling that though their errours might be detected yet their irregularity might passe unpunished of these latter sort the Question is to be understood and that it is unlawful appeares 1 Because to hear such is to goe out of Gods way and practise the Pharises that taught sound doctrin in some points yet were but theeves and robbers coming not in at the door but climbing up some other way these the sheep hear not Never did God give a power to any to ordain themselves Stewards in his house and therefore we are not to go to them for bread left we be thought strivers against him he never intrusted them with his broad seale and therefore we are not to receive the seales from them Christs knows Paul and Stephen and Timothy but these he knows not therefore his people are bound to esteem them not as Ministers of God 2 It encourages them in their irregular proceedings when they behold giddy heads ignorant persons curious spirits flocking after them imboldens them and hardens them in their errour whereas to withdraw from them might in time make them ashamed of their doings 3 It gives an evill example when the weake Christian seeth one that is strong going to those upstart teachers the weak may follow him he may go out of wantonnesse or curiosity and the other may go out of conscience and frailty 4 Errour is ever sooner believed then truth It is experimentally known that an Heretick may broach that doctrine in a day which truth cannot overcome in a year there is a certain connaturality between the nature of man and falsehood It is best therefore to withdraw from them the very foundation of whose teaching is erroneous in as a much as the authority they pretend to have goes contrary to that authority that ever God invested his Church withall 5 Experience shews that God is offended with mans hearing or following of them for we shall seldome see men giving eares to their doctrines but what through ignorance of justice they are brought to believe a lye which mkes them hop from one opinion to another untill faith and religion be lost and conscience it self be baffled or stifled that they sit down in the seat of the scornful and mock at laws established by either God or man Quest. 5. Whether an ordained person may have an office in the Common wealth There are that maintaine this Popish tenet and yet would be thought no Papists that the Church hath nothing to do with the state or that the government of the Church is a distinct thing from that of the state a distinction framed upon his holinesse anvil at Rome and received here by them that are no good willers to the Catholick clergy to be short an ordained person that is a man separate for spirituall offices may exercise judiciall offices in the Common-wealth and state 1 From the practises of those that were of old separate for the Lord Melchizedek was both a Priest and a King Gen. 14.18 a great part of the government of Israel was in the hands of the Levits we find them judges In all the businesse of the Lord and in the service of the King 1 Chron. 26.29 and ver 19. Zecharia is a wise counsellour They are also appointed together with the Princes For judgement of the Lord and for controversies in Jerusalem between blood and blood c. 2 Chron. 18.8 9. so also Samuel a Levit was both judge and priest in Israel 1 Sam 7.15 and if ignorance make any boast of Samuels being a prophet It may be answered that his sonnes were Levits set a part by God for the service of the Tabernacle Yet their Father made them judges in Israel 1 Sam 8.1 his own circuit was yearly while he had strength and failing he allotted circuits to his three sonnes throughout Israel Who by reason of perverting judgement through bribes are complained of by the people ver 5. by the same rule it will follow that those that are separate now for the work of the gospel may be in businesse of the Lord and also of the King 2 From the abilityes of some persons that are ordained It may be known that in all matters of controvesie in both kindes of the Law the Clergy may have more understanding then many Gentlemen that are justices in the Country and the presence of the Clergy may be helpful in that respect to the most judicious judge 3 From that apparent necessity that there seems to be of it the ordained person is not free from trouble from Law-suits from warrants taxations in which he may receive much wrong if there be none but Lay-persons there who usually may look over the inferiour sort of the Clergy with an unregardfull aspect nay possibly the gentleman may be both judge and harry of himselfe A minister may have stronger presumptions to be redressed of his wrongs which are seldome of the smallest magnitude when he hath some of his own function upon the bench 4.
the name of a Catholick no more then a theife when he gets into a House deserves the name of a true Heire for by their new fangled toys brought in by the keys of the Pope a new word also the true antient and Catholick faith is robbed of her gracefull purity yea the antient Church of Rome is divested of her glorious Apparel by which those Popish impostors passe the better undiscovered and Romish Polititians make the better show but set them passe Are all the members of the Catholick Church holy No All are not Israelties that are of Israel Rom. 9.6 Would all the Lords people were Prophets Christ hath some Branches in his Body that bring not forth fruite and therefore shall bee taken away Iohn 15.2 There are some that by profession are members of his visible Church yet are dead Branches not having in them the sap of the Spirit to bring forth the fruits of Holinesse and good Works which alone makes them members of his invisible There are Prophane and Hypocritical sinners which are part of Christ but so as Mos or dead Branches are of the Tree accounted so of God and by Christ esteemed so to be Yet they professing the Doctrine of the Gospel owning the Sacraments of our Lords institution must be looked upon as members of the holy People There were prophane men no doubt in Israel yet by outward profession they were all the Lords people there were in our Saviours time those whom he threatn●d should be cast out and with the same breath acknowledges them Children of the Kingdom Mat. 8.12 It could not be that a Prophet should perish out of Jerusalem and the whole multitude with the high Priests and Elders of that City having seen the man that was Gods Fellow cryed out away with him away with him Crucify him Crucify him in her God found as in a common slaughter house the blood of all the Prophets and the Blood of the Son of God was charged upon her yet at the se●f same time the holy Ghost acknowledges Jerusalem to be a holy City Matthew 27.53 For there the law of God was read the worship of God performed and outwardly the people of God dwelt and the house of God was frequented There were divisions among the Corinthians contentions Law suits Fornication great haughtinesse of mind great prophanenesse and loosenesse in the administration of the Lords-Supper yea some receive it drunk and for all this the Apostle call them Saints prefacing the Epistle he sends to them for the redressing of those disorders thus viz. unto the Church of God which is at Corinth 1. Corinthians 1.2 Their profession made them outwardly holy and by their owning the Gospel ordinances it is manifest that they were outwardly called though their sins did demonstrate that they even those whom he had called before Saints were carnal 1 Cor. 3.3 If we in this age could but learn or see that the gate of the Church is wider then the gate of Heaven we should have less noise amongst us and more charity for each other Laodicea had lost her first love and was wretched miserable blind and naked nigh to be spued out yet the true and faithfull witnesse beares this record of her that she is a Church and her Pastor or Bishop is an Angel Revelations 3.14 In a word profession of the most holy faith and beleiving of fundamental Doctrine is sufficient among men to own any man as a member of the visible Church and to denominate him there from but not to give them interest or Title to the invisible or to make them fellow Citizens with the Saints in the new Jerusalem for without holinesse no man can see the Lord Hebrews 12.14 And therefore the Church is compared to a draw-net which draweth up Fishes of all sorts both good and bad Matthew 13.47 And to a field wherein is found both darnell and good corn both tares and wheat and they must not be plucked up before the time If Saul had been plucked up as a tare we should never have had such a pretious Paul To this Doctrine consent the reformed Churches Art 17. of the Church of Helvetia Art 8. of the Church of Bohemia Art 26. of the Church of France Art 27. of the church of Bel. Art 7. of the Church of Auspurge c. It is now time to come 2. To resolve some Questions concerning the Church Question 1. WHether the single Testimony of the Church be to be received in matters of Faith Quest. 2. Whether the Church hath p●wer to Ordain Ceremonies that are not Ordained ●f God Quest. 3. Whether the Church hath Power to compell any irregular person to her Ordinances Quest. 4. Whether the civill Magistrate hath power in or over the Church Quest. 5. Whether the segregated congregations now in England be Churches Quest. 6. What may justifie a Separation from a Church Quest. 7. Are there more Religions then one to be celebrated where the true Church is established Quest. 8. Wherein consists that individuality singlenesse unity or Oxenesse of the true Church Quest. 9. Why the true Church is called holy Quest. 10. Why is the true and only Church called catholick Quest. 11. Whether the Elect be onely Members of the true Church Quest. 12. What are the Marks of a true Church Quest. 1. Whether the bare and single Testimony of the Church to be received in matters of Faith or Salvation The Church of Rome defends the necessity of her Members yielding to the simple Testimony of the Church in matters of faith but very unsoundly for 1. Every particular Member of the Church hath erred and therefore the whole Church may for what ever be the quality of the parts the whole must be of the same as the simples are so is the Electuary that is made of them hot ingredients can never make a cooling plaister It is dangerous to make it the ground of my faith of which I have no surer testimony then he or they sayes so The Popes we know have sinfully erred whom they would make the Church virtual Councels have erred whom they would make the Church representative the Councels of Basil and Constance cannot both be true Peter erred Demas may fall back Laodicea may lose her first love It s hard to make a sound Christian believe he shall be damned for not doing that or not believing that which God hath nowhere commanded or spoken of Certainly to make the precepts of men equally binding to Scripture is against that text Deut 12.33 What thing soever I command you observe and doe it thou shalt not and the reto nor diminish therefrom why then should I believe that there are pains in purgatory which I must undergo with as strong a faith as to believe there are joyes in Heaven And why must I be damned if I believe not that the Pope is as really head of the whole Univarsal Church as to believe that Christ is risen from the dead The reason is the Church it
sedition or division to requit it will foster Heresie Hereticks do corrumpere sidem and Schisma●●cks or Separatists do disrumpere charitatem the one corrupts the Doctrine of the Church the other falls from her Communion both are fruits of the flesh and they that do such things shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Verse ult The sin of Separation is so infectious that in Scripture we are to separate from them that so do Rom. 16.17 There is a Rule in Divinity that wil make the sin of separation to be great it is this Those sins are the greatest which are most contrary to and do most oppose the greatest of Christian vertues or graces Now they are recorded 1 Cor. 13.13 Now abideth Faith Hope and Charity but the greatest of these three is Charity Now by the Rule distrust in Gods promises or in his power is a great sin it being a sin against hope Heresie or a stout persisting in an errour is a far greater sin for it is a sin against faith and seeks to cover conceal if not to destroy the truth Now Charity is greater then either of these that follows therefore that that sin that destroys the peace of the Church untyes the Ligatures by which the whole body is compact together is the greatest but this doth the sin of Separation a thing by this age of no account yet they wil find it of great moment in the day of their Account It is a sin generally accompanied with the other lusts of the flesh viz. Hatred Varience Emulations Strife Wrath which seldome lurks long in a Corner but in time appears in the field in the habit and acts of Murtherers Ravishers Traytors and all with the voyce of Iacob pretending Godlinesse and conscience as Histories do abundantly show But to answer the Question So long as a Church makes no separation from Christ no separation is to be made from it but to keep in it is the duty and safety honour and happinesse of him that would enjoy the Communion of Saints the forgivenesse of sins the Resurrection of the body unto life Everlasting A Church separates from Christ two ways 1. When she overthrows the foundation of that Doctrine that is laid by Christ the foundation of all truth is already laid and he that goes to overthrow that may be said to turn from it Do we see a society of men whether Nationally or Domestically whether openly or secretly going in that road that thwarteth the foundation or fundamental points of Religion there must be a separation Rev. 18.4 whether it be in the adding to these fundamentals as if they were not sufficient or taking from them as if they were redundant or superfluous This made the Reformed Churches beyond Sea and the Church of England to separate from the Church of Rome which hath both taken from and added to those fundamental Truths whereupon the Church was by the Lord and his Apostles erected and builded Having to the Scriptures added some Books as the Apocrypha makes the Scriptures to be an imperfect Rule and must have Traditions to compleat it That the sense and meaning of the Scripture depends upon the Churches authority That in all matters of Controversie not the Scriptures but the Church must be the Judge They have made five Sacraments more then Christ made They have clearly blotted out the whole body of the second Commandment out of the first Table of the Law in several Books That Infants that die without Baptism are eternally separate from God except they be as it were martyred by which martyrdom they are baptized Baptismo sanguinis with their own blood They teach that men are not justified by Faith alone before God They make Saints and holy men departed assistant in the work of reconciling us to God and therefore maintain they must be prayed unto That the Doctrine of Purgatory must be believed if we would be saved That the efficacy of the Sacraments depends upon the worthiness or intention of the giver That Baptism totally abolisheth Original sin That the real fleshly body of Christ is in the Bread at the Sacrament of the Lords Supper as soon as the Priest pronounceth the words Hoc est corpus meum this is my body if he should say Corpus mea it were no Sacrament They take the Wine or keep the Cup from the Laity in that Sacrament That the wine in that Ordinance must be mingled with water that that Sacrament is profitable not only for the living but for the dead The Priest is not to bless a second marriage They baptize Bells with the very words of Baptism and by that they teach Devils are drove from the Church O Romanists great is your Faith and give them proper names That God-Fathers and God-mothers at the Font by reason of the nearness of their Spiritual Kindred are not to nor must no● marry for the seventh generation That the Pope or Bishop of Rome is the universal Head of the Church and Christs Vicar All which ●enets as they were utterly unknown to the former Bishops of Rome nor heard of in the Church of Christ for many Ages so they are for the present opposed by all the Reformed Churches abroad who have upon that account forsaken her and England hath thrown her off and separated from her and by the Champions of the several Churches hath their separation been defended By vertue of that Catholick truth 1 Tim. 6.3 If any man teach otherwise that is then the Scriptures do and consent not to wholsom words of our Lord Iesus and to the Doctrine which is accord●ng to godliness c. from such separate turn away or withdraw thy self their separation is justifiable What Paul would have Timothy in this place to do he practiseth himself in another Acts 19.9 yet probably in one and the same City was it both done by Paul and to be done by Timothy Saint Paul being in Ephesus some there were that believed his word others not but hardened their heart speaking evil of him and of the Gospel After he had preached three moneths and perswading to the things concerning the Kingdom of God he separated the Disciples he would not have those Believers that had received the Truth to be in any Church-fellowship with those that spoke against it Luther who began to rise up and take his farewell of the Church of Rome Anno 1517. being an Augustian Frier was called an Apostate answered Consitetur se esse Apostatam sed beatum Sanctum qui sidem Diabolo datam non servavit that he had only fallen back from that Covenant and Engagement he had made with Satan Not that there is a separation to be made from all the Doctrine of Rome for she holds many great mysteries of Divinity purely and soundly wherein we must and do all agree with her as Christians but he that is a true member of the Church of Rome as it now stands he must believe that the least coal in Purgatory is very
with the flesh might and doth breed bad and unwholesome humours in the body of which Noah might have been ignorant or at least would caution him against it and the Israelites we know are most of all forbidden those beasts and fouls and fishes that in their own natures do breed no good nor wholesome nourishment to the body whatever the matter was above other Countries Israel had most Lepers God suited their fare according to the nature possibly of their foyl forbidding in it selfe what might harm their healthy constitution and among other things forbid them blood or to eat flesh with the blood or flesh not well blooded as being grosse food and tending to the hurt or detriment of man 2. Morall blood might be forbidden to the Jews 1. To separate them and keep them from the practice of the Gentiles who eat and drank the blood of those Creatures they offered in Sacrifice to their false gods That Israel was a people prone to Idolatry it is known no Nation was more they might quickly learn this piece of Gentilisme which to prevent this Law might be enjoyned them 2. To dehort or keep them from cruelty to teach them by prohibiting the eating of the blood of any not greedily to thirst after the life of any Creature or of their own kind that the Jews naturally are a cruell mercilesse and hard hearted people is known by a proverb to teach them therefore to be tender of the blood wherein is the life of all Creatures how strictly doth God give a Law concerning little Birds Deut. 2.26 that they shall not take the young ones with the Dam but to let her go So they are not to seeth a Kid in his Mothers milk Deut. 23.19 which literally to understand is not absurd which shows how farre God would have his people from the very appearance of cruelty 3. Mysticall and to the Author this is Instar omnium God would have the blood not to be eaten because he would have it sprinckled and poured out upon his Altar signifying that man for his Rebeliion had forfeited his lifeto the hands of Justice for it is said Levit. 17.11 And I have given it to you an Attonement for your souls For it is the blood that maketh an Atonemen for the soul. This is the mystery that is included in the prohibiting of blood it it makes attoneme●t and God would have it not put to any use for food of the ●o'y for he intended to be for the use even the Atonement of the soul which might by inspiration be known even to Noah and to the Fathers before Moses since the eating purely was not expr●ssely forbidden till now Since Christ by his blood hath made an Attonement for the souls of men there is no use to be made of blood now in Sacrifice neither is it a Creature can be used any other way then for food it must therefore be eaten or thrown away that is upon the account o● conscience to throw it away ha●h an appearance of sin nay is a sin since there is a Rule in the gospell to make all things edible good for man to be eaten some say is a sin since it is forbidden in the gosspell at a Council of the Apostles and Elders Act. 15. In that Epistle written to the Churches of Antioch but this Scripture is also wrested which to demonstrate we shall briefly view the occasion of that Epistles writing The parties written the thing written of 1. The occasion of that Epistles writing A Church being planted in Antioch by the conversion of many Gentiles to the Christian faith some Jewish Preachers yet believers taught unto them the necessity of keeping the Law of Moses Act. 15.1 if they would be saved and v. 5. this discouraged the Gentiles much from or in believing in Christ the Law being to the Iews themselves an unsupportable bur●hen as is implyed v. 31. Paul and Barnabas dissented from such teaching maintaining that Believers were not at all tyed to Moses Law Now the Houses Churches and Pulpits of Antioch were full of disputings and arguings the Iewish Doctors teaching one thing and Paul another No small dissention was among them v. 2. At length they think of an agreement Paul and Barnabas and others some of both opinions are sent to the Church of Ierusalem to know their minds vers 2. At their arrival there is a Councel called great controversy and much disputing there was the law of Moses must be kept if they would be saved ver 5.6.7 Peter rises so great is the difference Appeals to the Councel if among them whom God appointed to Preach he had not made choice of him to Preach to the Gentiles the gospel of Christ that they might be saved from whom as if he had said I received no such commission as to preach the Law of Moses as circumcision or the like Takes God to witness that all times God had testified of his content sufficiently and was satisfyed in the Gentiles beleiving without their keeping of the Law of Moses by giving them faith and the holy Ghost vers 7.8.9 Maintains further that they tempt God that reach the contrary doctrine and hinder or may hinder the progress of the Gospell by putting on that yoake viz of the Ceremonial Law of Moses on the necks of the Disciples which neither we nor our Fathers were able to bear by which he holds forth that the law of Moses obligeth not the Church under the Gospel And therefore is to be taught by none and is any do they tempt God At this Argument the mouths of all opponents are stopped Peter had been an eye witness of our Lords death and resurrection He got a special tripled comission to feed the sheep of Christ And at Gods Appointment did preach to the Gentiles the gospel and not the Law that God had blessed his preaching by giving the Gentiles Faith and the holy Ghost Though the Law was never taught nor observed their conscience now tells them this their doctrine is not of God they remained silent no disputing no arguing more vers 10 11.12 Paul and Barnabas takeing occasion by this argument of Peters declares unto the Councel what works God had done by their preaching among the Gentiles without the observance of the Law makeing the same conclusion Implicitely that Peter made from the same Premisses viz God owning their Preaching by faith and miracles and therefore as they taught at Antioch so they teach now being both here and there guided by the infalliable Spirit of God that the Law of Moses was not to be Preached was not to be kept in the mouth of these three Witnesses guided by the Holy ghost let this truth be justified that no part of the Ceremonial Law is to be taught obliging now and by consequence eating of blood is no gospell precept v. 12. Again there is silence the whole Councel being convinced of the truth of the Arguments urged by Peter confirmed by Paul and Barnabas However being
are able to know their error in this particular Be ye not called Masters both being equally a sin and equally reproved and forbidden by our Saviour And thus have we gone through both the nature and circumstantial adjuncts of publick teaching we must now come to speak of private which we shall cast into the body of the third direction given above for the words indwelling which was to confer about the Scripture to communicate with each other touching the great concernments therein contained CHAP. 12. Of Conferring THat part of the Text Teaching and admonishing one another is now to be the subject of our discourse of authoritative or publick teaching we have spoken which is proper to the Ministerial function of charitative or private teaching we must now speak which is common to all the royal Priesthood and that which is chiefly enjoyned in the Text as appears by that word one another This we call conference and hath two parts Teaching and Admonishing touching their difference we have in part spoken before Learned Interpreters by Teaching understand the doctrine of faith not done or not believed because not known and by Admonish they understand things known but not done of each in order Teaching one another i.e. in the matters of faith as touching the doctrine of creation redemption of the authority of Scriptures the union of God and man in the person of our Mediator the necessity of the Sacraments of the new Testament of the publick worship of God of the slate of the dead and of eternal judgement All which is profitable to be done at convenient times and in convenient places where and when Christians meet together Seeing it is the duty of all Christians at all convenient times to teach and instruct each other about the things of God to press this is within the compass of our undertakings and therefore touching it we shall consider 1 The necessity of doing it 2 The manner of performing it 3 Resolve some Questions SECT 1. That it is an ordinance of God for Believers to build up each other in the most Holy faith and to instruct their families Gen. 18.19 to comfort and edifie one another 1 Thes. 5.11 and that the aged should be teachers of good things Tit. 2.2 3 4. and that their communication should be such as might minister grace unto the hearers Ephes. 4.49 may appear by these Arguments viz. 1. Every one must give an account of the Talent given him Mat. 25.19 according to the measure of knowledge given to man and grace infused in him must he give an account to the Lord of heaven and earth we are not only to present him what he gave us but to produce what we have gained for him otherwise we shall be but unprofitable wicked and floathful servants that knowledge therefore and light that is in us ought to guide the feet and instruct the soul of him that dwelleth near us 2. All ought to be sensible of the infirmities of those that are amongst them there are imperfections in the souls of men and the brightest light may want and stand in need of snuffing what through ignorance forgetfulness dulness how many are there that go astray and what through Satans watchfulness lifes shortness how many may perish in the midst of their sinne to prevent which this duty and ordinance of private teaching would be a soveraign help and remedy 3. All ought to walk as members of each other Eph. 4.25 As the hand will assist another part of the body when it is distempered and the eye will pitifully behold a member that is out of case and weep over it so ought every Christian to spy out the spiritual distempers of his christian brother and give him to his power help accordingly We are not made Christians for our selves only But to exhirt one another dayly while it is called to day 4. All are bound to give to their very enemies natural relief therefore much more to the ignorant Christian spiritual help as there are corporal works of mercy which some reduce to seven Visito poto cibo Redimo tego colligo condo So there are spiritual which are reduced to the same number thus Consule castiga Doce Solare R●mitte Fer ora As we are bound to feed the hungry refresh the thirsty cloath the naked harbour the stranger visit the sick redeem the captive and bury the dead so we are bound to teach the ignorant to correct the obstinate to counsel the doubtfull to comfort the afflicted to suffer patiently to forgive charitably and to pray for each other servently It is but half good neighbourhood to regard the outward estate or condition of one that dwelleth near thee and take no thought of that ignorance that dwelleth in him 5. From that practise of Christians conferring each with other about worldly affaires may we draw an argument inforceing the duty now pleaded for Men will be apt to discourse of that mans nature of the others neglecting of his person of anothers bad husbandry of his health and of his estate and give their opinions judgements and counsels accordingly Ought not men also to regard the ignorance weakness sinfulness of others and give instruction doctrine and exhortations surable thereunto 6. Grace naturally will be doing and it ought not to be stifled as the kingdome of heaven is like leaven so is the kigdome of grace It will endeavour to dilate extend and inlarge it self it will as fire be striving to bring every thing to its own nature Grace in the religious soul will beger grace in anothers and true godliness will be satisfied though it walk towards heaven desiring still to have companions in a holy course The meetings of Christians ought to be Christian meetings in building up each other in their most holy faith and true grace will take an opportunity to insinuate it self into the bosomes of others that God may be all in all yet in this beware of these three mistakes 1 Take not thy passion nor thy prejudice against a thing for the spirit of God Luk. 9.55 2 Take not thy opinions in matters of Indifferency to be necessary points of faith 3 Take not thy Brothers judgment in his opposing thine in cases of indifferency to be infidelity in him There are apt seasons wherein men may speak and instruct each other for good in points of faith for other discourses usually engender strife however when God seemes to put forward such discourses the prudent may take the advantage and follow them and the Christian will charitably manage them SECT II. To performe this in such a way as a Christian Brother can accept these necessary qualifications must go along with it 1 Love and friendship the faith of Christ can never be foundly taught in choler nor received in rage passion is no good teacher nor will religion be rooted in anger It is but labour in vain to point out the way of heaven in heat of blood to him that is in thy presence he
hath reason to suspect that fury not zeale makes thee a teacher and upon that flight the doctrine taught Love like a small and thick shour can open the ground of the heart and soften it whilest passion like great shoury drops hardens it and causes it only to become the more hard whereby the thing taught slides off and is not received into the bosome of him that is reached and so becomes ineffectual to his edification 2 Humility and meeknesse Let not him that is taught perceive that thy end is to shew thy own excellency above his that may marre thee in thy purpose let him rather behold that thou desires he should see his own ignorance which may make his soul to blesse thee and his soul to be saved through thee 3 Zeale and earnestnesse speake of God of Christ of the scripture of judgment and of eternal glory as to affect the hearts of them thou wouldest instruct so as to burne again if thou do it in a cold or carelesse way it will be heard after the some forme and manner 4 Order and patience we are not to suppose that what we teach must be Immediatly got by heart our teaching may but open a door to let in those instruction of another which are to perswade to Godlinesse we are therefore to have patience Paul may plant grace but not live to see it grow a minister may plant or water what another hath planted and yet the fruits of that plant may be reaped by another have patience then build thou orderly and lay a good foundation God perhaps hath ordained another to lay the roofe and to furnish the building 5 Truth and simplenesse What men teacheth in points of faith ought to be the word of Christ not their own inventions and the word of Christ ought not be mixed with carnal ordinances but given purely and sincerly to the weak Christian that he may grow thereby if otherwise we teach not but pervert we instruct not but deceive This is done 1 By discovering his errour from the word of Christ we ought in this case to let men see the scriptures rather then our selves against his judgment to undertake to reprove a man for his errour when it is not reproved by the word of Christ is but to procure to our selves a staine or a blot 2 To demonstrate the necessity of believing the thing taught from scripture what we reach in matters of faith is to be mantained from scripture only that being the meanes to be get faith and to nourish it there is nothing to be taught as necessa●y for salvation but what can be proved a duty f●om thence and therefore presume not if thou be wise to do the contrary SECT III. Questions resolved Quest. 1 Whether private or night meetings might lawfully be upheld Quest. 2 Whether it be lawfull for Christians when they meet to make mery one with another Quest. 3 Whether the conference or private meetings lately used in● England were agreeable to the power of Godlynesse Quest. 1 Whether private or night meetings might lawfully be upheld To affirme that Christians ought not to meet at all times or at any time to instrust and edifie each other were to affirme that a sin which is both practised and taught by the saints both of the old and new testament Mala. 3.16 But yet those meetings that were formerly in England seems not to be approved For 1 Their meeting was not so much out of zeale as for other causes When the practise and conversation was seen in the world they nothing out-stripped other men They were singular only in this that when others had come from the publick temples they were then going to prepare for private meetings if religion had made them set about this over night it is to be supposed that it would have singularly remained with them next day but that not appearing some other cause might be inquired after which shall not at this time be insisted on 2 They seemed to be unthankfull to God for that liberty he had given his Church blessed be God if it be good that they teach it might be done at noon if evill the night hideth not from him that seeth all things Intimes of persecution the Saints worshiped wandering in deserts and in mountains and in dens and caves of the earth Heb. 11.38 but now to do it were a peece of unthankfullnesse and ingratitude 3 Their actions seemed to speak evil of dignities they said in their harts that our Soveraign Lord the King was not the defender of the Faith In as much as they durst own their doctrine in the face of Authority by which tacitly they rather behold and declare him for a persecutor 4 The doctrine therein taught was generalty in opposition to the doctrine established in the Church of England by relation it was usuall with those meetings to in veigh against that which by good and sound advice was established and in the generations following used whereby many were drawn from their obedience and allegiance given and plighted to their mother Church unto the factious humours of some zealous pretenders who in most points did appear to stumble at ●nats and swallow camels Their generall doctrine was erroneous in one particular before mentioned viz. Their taking things of Indifferency to be necessary points of faith which the unlearned not being able to difference were led a way by those meetings to the disturbance of the Church unto whose doctrine they were baptized 5 They gave too much cause to suspect their actions there finding them in the day time to be no better then others their meetings in the night when law had forbid it had something of ●●everence● of under earne●se and of refractorine●●e in them the●eby their b●st a●tions might justly be suspected to have some ●incture of pride of discontent and ●edicion 6 The Spawn or seed of the late troubles in all probability had its being fro● them and its rise of them but c. Quest. 2. Whether it be lawfull for Christians when they meet to make merry one with another There are them who are eminent in godlinesse that considering the multitudes of dutys that●lye upon Christians can find no time nor leasure to make mirth There are others who out of a Stoicall sullennesse think it a sin even to laugh and he is often causelesly condemned who offends them in that particular Not to censure the former sort their own practise may be a ground upon which they build so general a proposition as no Mirth is to be used but withall we may truly say they lay a yoak upon the neck of the disciples which all are not able to beare and the spi●it may be willing but the flesh is weak Touching the latter laughing being the immediate effect of a rational soul and a gift that God hath given to be in man with man as he is man without question it may therefore be used by the sons of men Notwithstanding that it is the
commanded his Disciples to baptize before he commanded them to teach according to the order of the words of that Text. It is a rule given us by the Rabbies Non datur prims posterius in Scripturae that being first put in on place which is last in another and contrary Unto the case in hand we find baptizing according to the words going before preaching Mark 1.4 2. They find no express Text for it in Scripture such an Argument as this taught the Traskit to deny the Christian Sabbath but to touch these men nearer home have they any express Text for dipping for preaching upon the account of gifts or administring the Sacraments for spending the first day of the weak in holy exercises for administring the Sacrament of the Lords Supper to women or dipping in a River either naked or in linnen garments when they shew express Text for these and many other things I shall shew them one for Infant Baptisme Yea before For When our Saviour expressly commanded his Disciples to make Disciples of all Nations and baptize them who or what meaned he Whether the Earth or Ground of all Nations or the inhabitants that were upon that ground if them then whether Masters or servants husbands or wives parents or children who can say or dare say that he meaned the one and not the other he meaned all without a peradventure so that there is in this precept as express a command to baptize children as to baptize either men or women grown in years 3. They finde Faith in Scripture required of all as a necessary precedent grace unto baptisme so do we in persons that are grown in years as the Eunuch Cornelius and the Jaylor was but that faith was required of the seed of them that once believed as a grace necessary for baptisme is not yet by them demonstrated nor never shall Our Saviour having a little child before him Mat. 18.6 faith Who so shall offend one of those little ones that believe in m c. This is spoken of all that shall be believers to the end of the world and of all that were about him and of that child also that was in the midst of them so that children cannot be said to be without faith though little ones by which onely God is well pleased If children have no faith in Christ or God then why doe they teach their Children to pray or call upon God as I presume they do since without faith it is a taking the Name of God in vain a sin which they would be thought to make conscience of Briefly when men can make a rope of sand then shall we or themselves be able to make something of their own opinions in reference to this of Infant Baptisme teaching that they are without sin yet see them die that all are born holy ye● some born children of wrath 2 Eph. 3. That Infants belong to the kingdom of God yet have no interest in the Covenant that they are saved though they want faith without which it is impossible to please God to teach them to call God their Father and yet say they are not in Christ by Adoption when these things are reconciled and made to hang together we shall call them a subtile generation 14. It is against the practice of the whole Church of God in all ages and places of the world and at this day contrary to the Doctrine and practise of the Reformed Churcher of Helvet Art 21. of Bohe. Art 12. of Fr. Art 35. of Belg. Art 34. of Ausp Art 9. of Sax. Art 13. of Wirt Art 10. of Swethland Art 17. of Irel. Art 90. of Scot. Art 23. of Engl. Art 27. The Article it self is this Article 27. of the Church of England Baptisme is not onely a sign of Profession and marke of difference whereby Christian men are discerned from others that be not Christned but it is also a sign of Regeneration c. The baptisme of young Children is in any wise to be retained in the Church as most agreeable with the Institution of Christ. Quest. 3. Whether baptisme is or ought to be readministred It hath been the practice of some among us to throw off their first Baptisme and as they suppose receive a new one Yea Papists who though they teach the contrary Doctrine yet sinfully have practised it upon the children of the Reformed Churches but however Baptisme if given in the name of the Trinity by applying water according to the Institution is not to be received twice For 1. It is against the nature sign end and use of that ordinance Baptisme is a visible sign representing a believer to be new born Hence it is called being born of water Iohn 3.5 Now though men eat and drink often and receive the Sacrament of the Supper often that being our food Spiritual yet we are born but once and therefore ought to receive the Ordinance of Baptisme but once that being our Spiritual birth 2. It opens a gap for one great inconvenience He can give no reason of his being twice baptized but the same reason will make him or perswade him to be baptized the third time the fourth time nec decies repetita placebit the twentieth time Whether this doctrine so brief and current among us did rise and spring from the Popish Holy water which they look upon as a dayly baptisme representing the pardon of actual sin is worth inquiring after and a Question would be seriously thought upon by our governours c. 3. Circumcision was not but once to be administred Nay when through ignorance and blinde zeale some of the circumcised would have become uncircumcised by a way not fitting to be named the Apostle commands the contrary 1 Cor. 7.18 but will have them stick to and own their former Circumcision let those that suppose they are inwardly called remember that they become not unbaptized by receiving baptisme anew 4. The sad events of rebaptizing may be a sufficient testimony of the thing now defended what errors wanderings crooked paths unheard of blasphemies of them that are so used our ears hears toe too much and our eyes have sufficient knowledge c. 5. The Reformed Churches of Christ condemn it in their practice and so many as have published their opinions to the world upon that subject have condemned it in their Confessions particularly the Church of Bohe. Art 12. of Fr. Art 35. of Belg. Art 34. of Sax. Art 13. of Hel. Art 20. The Article it self is this Article 20. of the Church of Helvetia There is but one Baptisme in the Church of God For it is sufficient to be once baptized or consecrated unto God for baptisme once received doth continue all a mans life and is a perpetual sealing of our Adoption to us c. Quest. 4. Whether witnesses at baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved N cases of indifferency people are not to Question the reason of a Law given them by
enemys of the Churches peace get more ground then since their hands have been weakned and their faces blurred by the violence and malice of wicked proud and ambitions men 7 Men cannot profit under them as they might without praying for them It is certain that non can justly expect that blessing from God which they never asked of him if some would but spend as much time in praying for Magistrates and Ministers as they do in barking against them they might in mercy receive more good by them then ever they are otherwise like to have they may in anger be crossed perplexed by them when in mercy they might live quietly peaceably and holily under them yea in a great measure they bring upon themselves the guilt of their magistrates and Ministers failings and miscarriages for who knows but the power or fervency of thy prayer may stirre up God to hold him by the hand in his stumbling that he might engage the soule the more unto him as people will give the nurse good things for love of the Child so God may give those nursing Fathers gifts and graces if not for their own yet for thy sake c. 3 We are to pray for apostates and backsliders When we see any turne from the Lord we are to turn for them to the Lord. When any leaves the paths of uprightnesse to walke in the wayes of darknesse as those wicked ones Prov. 2. 13. least the Lord suddenly shoot them and they fall into the pit we should 〈◊〉 with the Prophet Lord forgive Amos. 7.2 1 Because of the great and unavoidable perdition that they are likely to fall in who are guilty of that sin in the least the shortest step men can make in it carries them a great way towards that sin unto death that sin against the holy ghost Heb. 6.4 5 6 7. we ought therefore to strive in prayer for him 2 The truth of Christ is the more confirmed by their recovery trees shaken and totterring by the winds opens the earth and in calm gets a faster hold then before being bettered rooted by that blast these soules that are shaken by the wind of false doctrine may be afterward if they returne which yet we seldome hear of better established and rooted in the faith then before 3 Our own glory shall be the greater in heaven Dan. 12.3 It is a glo●ious and happy thing to have a hand in the conversion of a soul a multitude of sins is hid by converting a sinner from the errour of his way Iam. 5.20 and if God should harden his soul to proceed in his back-sliding yet the prayers made for him return seven fold into the bosome of him that made them 4 We must pray for Heathens Infidels or Idolaters there is a generation that have gone a whoring from God and cast off the thing that is good that have altogether broken the yoak and burst the bands and others there are that have not the knowledge of his law these must be thought on and for them God must be intreated by those that call upon his name For 1 Certaine damnation will be their portion they that depart from God whether in point or in point of worship of practise God will depart from them Neither is there any name given under heaven by which men can be saved but the name of Iesus Christ whom men killed and God raised from the dead that he might be the justifier of them that believe but now how can men believe on him of whom they have not so much as heard Let us pray therfore that the Lord of the harvest would send forth laborers into his harvest And that God would open a doore of faith unto the Gentiles Act. 14.27 And return to the many thousands of Israel That Jacob may tak● root and Isra●l bud and blossom● and fill the face of the world with fruit Isa. 27.6 2. They are of the same common nature with us they have the same kind of souls we have and for ever must lye in flames or shine in thrones when the earth and the Sea Death and Hell gives up the dead that are in them they must also appear before the judgment seat of Christ and if we know these things what ought we to do but be jealous over them with a godly jealousy that they may be builded together with us for an habitation of God through the spirit Eph. 2.22 And so all Israel shall be saved as it is written Rom. 11.26 And all Flesh see as well as we the salvation of God Luk. 3.6 3 It will much rejoyce the soul of Christ to see this accomplished if the Angels rejoyce at a sinners conversion how shall Christ abundantly be satisfied since he poured out his soul as an offering for their sin verily verily there is joy in the heir of heaven over one sinner that repenteth let us therefore fulfill his joy and pray that his other sheep may be brought home Which in time ●ast were not a people but now may be made the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now may obtain mercy 1 Pet. 2.10 and that he may see of the travell of his soule and be satisfied Isa. 53.11 4 The Certainty of Christs aboad in heaven untill this be accomplished might of it self presse home the duty pleaded for The heavens must containe him until● the restitution of all things untill all things spoken of him in the Scriptures be fulfilled the end shall not be he that waits therefore for the coming of the Lord and longs to be cloathed upon must wait at the throne of God u●til the fulnesse of the Gentiles become in then shall come out of Zion the deliver●r and shall turne away ungodlinesse from Iacob Rom. 11●25 That there may be but one sheep-fold as there is but one sheepheard Iohn 10.16 and when we see these things then know that summer is nigh 5 God hath promised to bring in all the elect even in our dayes viz. In the lattar dayes which in the old Testament signifies the beginning of the Gospell Isa. 2.1 And in the new the end of the world 2 Tim. 3.1 if God hath promised that in our time he will do this great work O let us Pray and Importune God to build up his Church by the home-bringing of the Iews and in calling of the Gentiles and amongst other arguments let this be one That the time to favour Sion yea the set time is com● that th● Children of Israel may returne and seek the Lord their God and David their King and fear the Lord and his goodnesse in the latter dayes Hos. 3.5 To open th●ir eyes and to turn them from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan unto God that they may receive forgivenesse of sinnes and inheritance among them that are sanctified Act. 26.18 5 We must pray for the Saints pious or religious such as worship God in the beauty of holinesse are to be beautifull in our eyes and
to be considered It is twofold 1 Internall consisting in the affections of the soul. 2 Externall in the gestures of the body of these in order There are severall quallities God requires in every true prayer and conditions he makes with every one that calls upon him we shall set down some that are chief with reasons enforceing their practice 1 Prayer must be made incessantly that is without ceasing 1 Thes. 5. 17. Not that we are to be alwayes in that act of duty that being impossible for our frailty and for that engagement God layes upon us for performing other dutyes both to himself and toward each other To pray without ceasing Notes 1 That we be much and of● in this duty It is not to be a strange peece of worship to us but through frequency to make it our familiar exercise to be often calling and often knocking at heaven gates Luke 18. 1. Ephe. 6. 18. 2 That we be ever disposed to this duty to keep our selves ever in such a frame of Spirit that we may be sit to pray a liberate man is not alwayes giving to the poor yet he is alwayes disposed a Christian though not alwayes upon his knees yet ought to be ever fitted for it 3 That we give not over untill we be blessed in this duty to pray for such a blessing and leave off at first is contrary to the practise of that importunate widow Luk. 18. 1. Who is said by her daily comming to pray 4 That we do not weary in this duty that we droop not that we may not saint That we may pray alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the spirit Eph. 6. 18. For this that above mentioned widow is said alwayes to pray 5 That we lay hold on all fit oppertunityes to pray in times of leisure retirement to pray is always to pray thus Cornelius a Captain is said to pray alwayes Act. 10. 3. This unwearied diligence ought to be in men For 1 Satan is incessantly seeking to devoure them 2 Sin is incessantly working in them 3 Death is incessantly creeping upon them 4 God is incessantly requiring it of them 5 Wicked men are incessantly seeking to subvert 6 Christ is incessantly praying for them 7 The Church is incessantly in need of them 2 Prayer must be made reverently we ought to have awfull respect and speciall apprehension of the Majesty of him prayed to Psal. 2. 11. We are not to come to him as to our companion or our equall as some bold pretenders to the spirit lately did whose boldnesse was but rudenesse and whose familiarity was but fawciness To brings us to a reverent frame of spirit we may consider our selves and our God 1 Ourselves and that severall ways 1 Originally but dost at best and ashes 2 Naturally but enemies and rebels 3 Contractedly seven times more the Children of Satan then we were born having in our lives and actions been 1 Heedlesse of his Law 2 Carelesse of his Honour 3. Despisers of his Majesty 4. Stiflers of his Spirit 5. Dishonourers of his name 6. Abusers of his creatures 7. Haters of his being all which considered will bring us before him with awfull thoughts and reverential gestures 2. Our God and that also several ways as 1. His Justice 2. His Holinesse 3. His Power 4. His Omnipresence 5. His Majesty Which when thought upon with the Angels we may cover our faces as affrayd and ashamed of so great a majesty as he is and of so much guilt as we have 3. Prayer must be made faithfully we ought to pray in faith nothing doubting without this grace prayer wants one wing to fly a lost and be heard in Gods holy temple Iam. 1.5 There are severall things we must necessarily believe in this duty of prayer relating to God and to our selves In relation to God we are bound to and must believe 1. His good will to hear our prayer 2. His power to give that for which we pray 3. His readinesse to grant the same In relation to our selves we are bound to believe that God will hear our prayers 1. What ever Infirmities lye upon us 2. What ever Satan hath to say against us 3. How-ever for the present God deales with us And truly it may be wondered that we do not always pray with abundance of faith considering 1. The many promises God hath made to hear prayer 2. Christs continual Intercession by prayer 3. The Constant communion of the Saints is cheifly in a way of prayer 4. The wicked have been heard in the time of prayer 1 King 21 27. 4. Prayer must be made in sincerity God will have truth in the Inward part Psal. 51.6 This sincerity in prayer cheifly consists 1. In the satisfaction that the soul takes of Gods seeing and of his hearing though man do neither Matth. 6.5 9. In having a right end and design touching the thign prayed for Iames 4 3. and the ends of prayer are breifly these 1. Just. 2. Charitable religions for what ever we aske ought to respect one of these ether to our selves to others or to God 3. In a union and agreement between the tongue and heart in the time of prayer and also touching the thing prayed for 4. In a sober genuine acknowledgment of all our sins in our prayer without any degree of extenuation and an exact enumeration in some degree 5. In a diligent useing of the means to obtaine the thing desiered by prayer some in our days makes religion a support for Idlenesse but when we have prayed for our dayly bread we ought to labour for it Now men ought to be sincere in all their ways and in all their prayers For 1. God is Infinite in knowledge he knoweth all hearts and seeth all thoughts Heb. 4.13 2. Transcendent in in goodnesse he is sincer in whatever he did for man man ought therefore to be sincer unto him and not flatter him with his lips 3. In exorable in Justice He hath prepared Hell for Hypocrits Matth. 24.51 other sinners are but inmates to them Hell being their proper habitation 5. Prayer must be made zealously 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to boyle shewing that our bosomes are to be hot as fire in the time of our devotion This zeal Is a holy affection of the soul putting forth it self in all earnestnesse for the obtaining the thing desired earnest we ought to be 1. For God 2. For our selves 3. For our neighbours 4. For the things excellency This zeal in prayer consists 1. In the souls watchfullnesse in prayer now their is a two fold watchfulnesse mentioned in Scripture 1. Unto prayer 1 Pet. 4.72 In prayer Col. 4.2 1. Unto prayer that is 1. A removeing of all Impediments that may hinder prayer 2. A laying hold on all advantages that may assist prayer 2. In prayer that is 1. To avoyd all distraction dulnesse of body drouzinesse of spirit suggestions of Satan 2. A restlesnesse untill our suit be granted 3. An eye solely to the