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A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

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2. yet that word mentioned in the 1. Gen. where it is written that the Lord said Let there be light c. was Gods command which then had beginning whereas the Son was from all eternity To what end were all things created For Gods glory Prov. 16. 4. How doth the glory of God appear in them First his eternall power and Godhead is seen in raising all things out of nothing by his word alone Esay 40. 12. Rom. 1. 20. Jer. 10. 12. 51. 15. Secondly his infinite wisdome is made known by them Psal. 104. 24. Jer. 10. 12. 51. 15. Thirdly his goodnesse unto all his creatures is hereby manifested which is very excellently set out by the Prophet in the 104. Psalm Fourthly his infinite authority doth appear by them What uses then are we to make of the Creation First we are thereby taught to discern the true God from all Heathen and Idoll gods in the world Esay 45. 6 7. Jer. 10. 11 12. for nothing in heaven and earth can give a beeing to a creature but God Secondly we are to weigh them and learn their properties Eccles. 7. 25. Thirdly we should learn to give God glory for them Rev. 4. 11. Psal. 92. 5. where it is made one end of the Sabbath Ps. 104. throughout Fourthly we are to gather comfort to our selves from hence That resting upon this faithfull Creator our hope needs not fail us so long as either heaven or earth have any help for us 1 Pet. 4. 19. Esa. 37. 16 17. What doth the Scriptures teach us concerning the goodnesse of the creatures That God made all them in such excellency of perfection for their beeing working order and use that himself did fully approve of them and so establish them Gen. 1. 31. which established order is that which is called Nature In how many things doth the goodnesse of the creatures consist In three First in perfection of their nature Secondly in their properties and qualities whereby they are able to doe those things for which they were created Thirdly in their uses unto man How manifold is that good which men receive by them Threefold First profitable good Secondly pleasant good Thirdly honest and Christian good How were all things made good when we see there be divers kinds of Serpents and noysome and hurtfull beasts That they are hurtfull it commeth not by the nature of their creation in regard whereof they at the first should only have served for the good of man What doe you note in the time of their Creation The beginning and the continuance thereof Might not the world have been before all time even from eternity No for absolute eternity belongeth only to God neither could any thing that is subject to time be after an infinite succession of other things What say you then to Aristotle accounted of so many the Prince of Philosophers who laboureth to prove that the world is eternall Wherein he laboureth to finde out a point of wisdome which he had learned of none other that was before him he therein bewrayeth his greatest folly for his chiefest reason being grounded upon the eternity of the first mover is of no force to prove his most absurd position seeing God as he is Almighty and always able to doe what he will so is he most free and not bound to doe all that he can but what when and how it pleaseth him But seeing Aristotle was enforced by reason to acknowledge God to be the first mover even against his will for it seemed that he endevoured as much as he could to quench the light of divine knowledge shining in his face or obstinately to close his eyes against the same and yet not onely spoiled God of the glory of his Creation but also assigneth him to no higher office then is the moving of the sphears whereunto he bindeth him more like to a servant then a Lord the Judgement of God uttered by S. Paul Rom. 1. 21. is most notoriously shewed upon him in that he knowing God did not glorifie him nor give him thanks but became vain in his disputations and his foolish heart was darkned while he professed wisdome he was made a fool approving Idolatry and that wickednesse which the Apostle there sheweth to be a just punishment of Idolatry and nature it self abhorreth Arist. Polit. lib. 7. cap. 6. lib. 2. cap. 8. How long is it since God did create the world Four thousand years before the birth of our Saviour Christ and so about 5614 years before this time Why is the order of the years of the world so carefully set down in the Scripture To convince all Heathen that either thought that the world was without beginning or that it began Millions of years before it did To give light to all sacred Histories of the Bible To shew the time of the fulfilling of the Prophecies which God foretold But why was not the world made sooner Saving the hidden wisdome and free pleasure of the Maker therein appeareth the free power of God to make or not to make and his absolute sufficiency within himself as having no need of any externall beeing only creating that he might communicate manifest his goodnes How long was God creating the world Six days and six nights Why was he creating so long seeing he could have perfected all the creatures at once and in a moment First to shew the variety distinction and excellency of his severall creatures Secondly to teach us the better to understand their workmanship even as a man which will teach a child in the frame of a letter will first teach him one line of the letter and not the whole letter together Thirdly to admonish us that we are bound to bestow more time in discerning and knowing them then we doe Fourthly that we might also by his example finish our work in six days Fiftly that we might observe that many of the creatures were made before those which are ordinarily their causes and thereby learn that the Lord is not bound to any creature or to any means thus the sunne was not created before the fourth day and yet dayes which now are caused by the rising of the sunne were before that so trees and plants were created the third day but the Sun Moon and Stars by which they are now nourished and made to grow were not created till after the third day Hitherto of the creation in generall what are the particular creatures The world and all things therein Acts 17. 24. or the heavens and the earth and all the host of them Gen. 2. 1. How many heavens are mentioned in the Scriptures Three the first is the ayre wherein we breathe the birds doe fly and the snow rain frost haile and thunder are begotten Matth. 6. 26. Gen. 7. 11. The second is the sky wherein the Sun the Moon and the Starres are placed Gen. 1. 14 15. Deut. 17. 3. The third wherein the Angles and the soules of the Saints from
wrought were Gods building as well as Gods husbandry For who saith hee is Paul and who is Apollo but Ministers by whom you beleeved even as the Lord gave to every man I have planted Apollo watered but God gave the increase So then neither is hee that planteth any thing neither hee that watereth but God that giveth the increase Two things therefore wee finde in our great Prophet which doe farre exceed the ability of any bare Man and so doe difference him from all the Holy Prophets which have been since the World began For first wee are taught that no man knoweth the Father save the Son and hee to whomsoever the Son will reveale him and that no man hath seen God at any time but the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father hee bath declared him Being in his bosome hee is become conscious of his secrets and so out of his own immediate knowledge inabled to discover the whole will of his Father unto us Whereas alother Prophets and Apostles receive their revelations at the second hand and according to the grace given unto them by the Spirit of Christ. Witnesse that place of S. Peter for the Prophets Of which salvation the Prophets have enquired and searched diligently who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you searching what or what manner of time THE SPIRIT OF CHRIST WHICH WAS IN THEM did signifie when it testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow And for the Apostles those heavenly words which our Saviour himself uttered unto them whilst hee was among them When the Spirit of Truth is come hee will guide you into all truth for hee shall not speak of himself but whatsoever hee shall hear that shall hee speak and hee will shew you things to come Hee shall glorifie mee for hee shall receive of mine and shew it unto you All things that the Father hath are mine therefore said I that hee shall take of mine and shall shew it unto you Secondly all other Prophets and Apostles can doe no more as hath been said but plant and water onely God can give the increase they may teach indeed and baptize but unlesse Christ were with them by the powerfull presence of his Spirit they would not bee able to save one soule by that Ministery of theirs Wee as lively stones are built up a spirituall house but except the Lord do build this house they labour in vaine that build it For who is able to breathe the Spirit of life into those dead stones but hee of whom it is writen The houre is comming and now is when the dead shall hear the voyce of the Son of God and they that heare it shall live And again Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light Who can awake us out of this dead sleep and give light unto these blinde eyes of ours but the Lord our God unto whom wee pray that hee would lighten our eyes lest wee sleep the sleep of death And as a blinde man is not able to conceive the distinction of colours although the skilfullest man alive should use all the art hee had to teach him because hee wanteth the sense whereby that object is discernible so the naturall man perceiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can hee know them because they are spiritually discerned Whereupon the Apostle concludeth concerning himself and all his fellow-labourers that God who commanded the light to shine out of darknesse hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ but wee have this treasure in earthen vessels that the excellency of the power may bee of God and not of us Our Mediatour therefore who must bee able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him may not want the excellency of the power whereby hee may make us capable of this high knowledge of the things of God propounded unto us by the ministery of his servants and consequently in this respect also must bee God as well as Man There remaineth the Kingdom of our Redeemer described thus by the Prophet Isaiah Of the increase of his government and peace there shall bee no end upon the Throne of David and upon his kingdom to order it and to establish it with judgement and with justice from henceforth even for ever And by Daniel Behold one like the Son of man came with the clouds of Heaven and came to the Ancient of dayes and they brought him neer before him And there was given him Dominion and Glory and a Kingdom that all People Nations and Languages should serve him His dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall not passe away and his kingdome that which shall not be destroyed And by the Angel Gabriel in his ambassage to the blessed Virgin Behold thou shalt conceive in thy womb and bring forth a Son and shalt call his name Jesus Hee shall be great and shall be called the Son of the Highest and the Lord God shall give him the Throne of his Father David And hee shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever and of his kingdom there shall bee no end This is that new David our King vvhom God hath raised up unto his own Israel vvho vvas in Truth that which hee was called the Son of Man and the Son of the Highest That in the one respect wee may say unto him as the Israelites of old did unto their David Behold wee are thy bone and thy flesh and in the other sing of him as David himself did The Lord said unto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole So that the promise made unto our first Parents that the seed of the Woman should bruise the Serpents head may well stand with that other saying of S. Paul that the God of peace shall bruise Satan under our feet Seeing for this very purpose the Son of God was manifested in the flesh that hee might destroy the works of the Devil And still that foundation of God will remain unshaken I even I am the Lord and beside mee there is no Saviour Thou shalt know no God but mee for there is no Saviour beside mee Two speciall branches there bee of this Kingdom of our Lord and Saviour the one of Grace whereby that part of the Church is governed which is Militant upon Earth the other of Glory belonging to that part which is Triumphant in Heaven Here upon earth as by his Propheticall office hee worketh upon our Minde and Understanding so by his Kingly hee ruleth our Will and Affections casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowledge of God and bringing into captivity
employed onely in the gathering of Toll Matth. 9. 9. Peter James John Fishermen whose liberty of speech when the chief Priests the Elders of Jerusalem beheld and understood that they were unlettered and ignorant men it is recorded Acts 4. 13. that they marvelled and took knowledge of them that they had been with Jesus Paul from a bloody persecuter converted to be a Preacher and a writer of the Gospel shewed by that sudden alteration that he was moved by a command from heaven to defend that Doctrine which before he so earnestly impugned Fourthly the matter of the holy Scripture being altogether of heavenly Doctrine and savouring nothing of earthly or worldly affections but every where renouncing and condemning the same declareth the God of heaven to be the onely inspirer of it Fiftly the Doctrine of the Scripture is such as could never breed in the brains of man three Persons in one God God to become man the Resurrection and such like mans wit could never hatch or if it had conceived them could never hope that any man could beleeve them Sixtly the sweet concord between these writings and the perfect coherence of all things contained in them notwithstanding the diversity of persons by whom places where times when and matter whereof they have written for there is a most holy and heavenly consent and agreement of all parts thereof together though writen in so sundry ages by so sundry men in so distant places one of them doth not gain-say another as mens writings doe as our Saviour Christ confirmeth them all Luke 24. 44. Seventhly a continuance of wonderfull prophesies foretelling things to come so long before marked with their circumstances not doubtfull like the Oracles of the Heathen or Merlins prophesies but such as expressed the things and persons by their names which had all in their times their certain performance and therefore unto what may we attribute them but to the inspiration of God Vide Calvins Institut lib. 1. cap. 8. Thus was the Messias promised to Adam 4000. years before he was born Gen. 3. 15. and to Abraham 1917. years before the accomplishment Gen. 12. 3. The deliverance of the Israelites from Egypt to the same Abraham 400. years before Gen. 15. 13 14. The prophesies of Jacob Gen. 49. concerning the twelve Tribes which were not fulfilled till after the death of Moses and that of the continuance of the Tribes and Kingdomes of Judah held untill the comming of Christ In the first Book of Kings the 13. ch 2 3. there is delivered a prophesie concerning Josias by name 331. years Esa. 45. 1. concerning Cyrus 100. years before he was borne Daniels prophesies and that especially of the 70. weeks Dan. 9. 24. are wonderfull so likewise are those of the rejection of the Jews the calling of the Gentiles the kingdome of Antichrist c. some of which now we see fulfilled Eightly the great Majestie full of heavenly wisdome and authority such as is meet to proceed from the glory of God shining in all the whole Scripture yea oftentimes under great simplicity of words and plainnesse and easinesse of style which neverthelesse more affected the hearts of the hearers then all the painted eloquence and lofty style of Rhetoricians and Oratours and argueth the holy Ghost to be the Authour of them 1 Cor. 1. 17. 21. 24. 2. 15. Ninthly in speaking of the matters of the highest nature they go not about to perswade men by reasons as Philosophers and Orators but absolutely require credit to bee given to thē because the Lord hath spoken it they promise eternall life to the obedient and threaten eternall woe to the disobedient they prescribe Laws for the thoughts to which no man can pierce they require sacrifice but they preferre obedience they enjoin fasting but it is also from sin they command circumcision but it is of the heart they forbid lusting coveting c. which is not to be found in any Laws but in his that searcheth the heart Tenthly the end and scope of the Scriptures is for the advancement of Gods glory and the salvation of mans soule for they intreat either of the noble acts of God and of Christ or the salvation of mankind and therefore by comparing this with the former reason we may frame this argument If the Author of the Scripture were not God it must be some creature if he were a creature he were either good or bad if a bad creature why forbiddeth he evill so rigorously and commands good so expresly and makes his mark to aim at nothing but Gods glory and our good if he were a good creature why doth he challenge to himself that which is proper to God onely as to make Laws for the heart to punish reward eternally c if it were no creature good nor bad it must needs be God Eleventhly the admirable power and force that is in them to convert and alter mans mind and to encline their heart from vice to vertue Psal. 19. 7 8. Psal. 119. 111. Heb. 4. 12. Acts 13. 12. though they be quite contrary to mens affections Twelfthly the Writers of the holy Scriptures are the most ancient of all others Moses is ancienter then the gods of the heathen that lived not long before the wars of Troy about the time of the Judges and the youngest Prophets of the Old Testament match the antientest Philosophers and Historians of the heathen Thirteenthly the deadly hatred that the devill and all wicked men carry against the Scriptures to cast them away and destroy them and the little love that most men doe bear unto them prove them to bee of God for if they were of flesh and blood then flesh and blood would love them and practise them and every way regard them more then it doth for the world loveth his own as our Saviour Christ saith Joh. 15. 19. But wee being but carnall and earthly savour not the things that bee of God as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 2. 14. and untill the Lord open our hearts and we bee born again of Gods Spirit and become as new-born babes wee have no desire unto them 1 Pet. 2. 2. Fourteenthly the marvellous preservation of the Scriptures though none in time bee so ancient nor none so much oppugned yet God hath still by his providence preserved them and every part of them Fifteenthly the Scriptures as experience sheweth have the power of God in them to humble a man when they are preached and to cast him down to hell and afterward to restore and raise him up again Heb. 4. 12. Shew now how the holy Scriptures have the consonant testimony of all men at all times since they were writen that they are the most holy word of God First Joshua the servant of Moses the first Scribe of God to whom God spake in the presence and hearing of six hundred thousand men besides women and children who was
places in heaven and in earth and the sea and hell all at one time neither can he be contained in any compasse of place as is a man or Angel or any other creature but he is in all places and filleth all places at once and is beyond all compasse of place that we can imagine 1 King 8. 27. Ps. 139. 7. 145. 3. Job 9. 7. Esa. 66. 1. 40. 12. Jer. 23. 24. Is God every where bodily No for he hath no body Is God every where in speculation only No for he worketh in every thing which he beholdeth How then is he every where He is every where essentially for his essence is not contained in any place because he is incomprehensible Doth he not remove himselfe from place to place He filleth heaven and earth and all places therefore he can neither depart from any place nor be absent from any place Is he not half in one half of the world half in the other half of the world No but as the whole soul is in the whole body and every part thereof so God is whole and wholly in every part of the world Obj 1. If God be every where essentially then he is in the most filthiest sink and puddle It is no abasing of the glory of his Majesty to say that he is there no more then it is to the Sun whose beams and light are there or to a Physitian to be amongst those that are sick All the creatures of God in themselves are exceeding good and when he is in the most filthiest sink in the world he is not in a more filthy then our selves whether we be sick or sound They are his workmanship and it is no abasement of the workmaster to be amongst his works Obj. 2. If God be every where why is it said he dwelleth in the heavens Psal. 2. 4. Because his glory and Majesty which is every where alike shineth most perspicuously and visibly in heaven Obj. 3. It is said Numb 14. 42. he is not amongst the wicked He is not amongst them with his grace and favour to protect and defend them but otherwise by his power and providence he is amongst them to bridle their raging affections to plague their furious obstinacie and dispose of their desperate attempts to his own glory and good of his people Obj. 4. If God be every where at the same instant of time how is he said to be sometimes near sometimes farther off Esa. 56. 6. God is said to be near unto us when by his word or any other means he offereth us grace and favour by them and when he heareth and granteth our prayers as Moses saith Deut. 4. 7. What nation is there so great who have God so nigh unto them as the Lord God is in all things that we call upon him for Obj. 5. If God be in hell then all goodnesse is there for he is all goodnesse and so consequently there is no want of joy in the damned The damned in hell feel no part of his goodnesse that is of his mercy and loving favour but of his power and justice So that God is in hell by his power and in his wrath To what purpose and use serveth this doctrine of the immensity or infinite greatnesse of God The consideration thereof should put us in mind that nothing which is vile and base should be offered unto God in the worship of him Secondly it serveth to drive all grosse and idolatrous conceits of God out of our minds and to detect and bewray the impiety and blasphemy of those persons who either by making of pictures as they thought of God or by maintaining of them being made or by suffering them to stand still without defacing especially if it be known have thereby denied God to be incomprehensible For those pictures and resemblances of God which ignorant men have forged in their own brain doe tell us and say that God may be comprehended and contained within a place yea in a small place or in any place as a man or other creature which is most high blasphemy against the Majesty of Almighty God What is his eternity It is an essentiall property of God whereby his essence is exempted from all measure of time and therefore is the first and the last without either beginning or end of dayes 1 Tim. 1. 17. Esa. 41. 4. 44. 6. Psal. 90. 2. Rev. 1. 8. 11. In what respect is God called eternall in the Scriptures That he hath been from all eternity without beginning is now and shall be for all eternity without end That all times are present with him continually and so nothing former nor latter nothing past nor to come That he is the Author of everlastingnesse unto others because he hath promised to give his children of his eternall goodnesse and to have a continuall care of them through all eternity and will have a Kingdome in Angels and men whereof shall be no end Is it necessary that we should know this Yea that we may here stay our selves with the certain hope of eternall life grounded upon his eternity How may that hope be grounded upon his eternity Very well for God being eternall he can for ever preserve us and seeing he hath promised he will for ever preserve us Ps. 48. 14. 103. 17. Hereby likewise are we strengthned not only in the immortality of our soule but also in the immortality of our bodies after the resurrection considering that by his everlastingnesse he giveth continuall beeing to such of his creatures as he is pleased to give a perpetuall continuance unto Why else is God said to be eternall That so he might be discerned from all other things created for nothing is like unto God as the Scriptures testifie Esa. 40. 18. Psalm 113. 45. How is God said to be alone everlasting seeing Angels and soules of men shall be also everlasting In regard of the time to come they are everlasting but not in regard of the time past for though they shall continue alwayes yet they had their beginning which cannot be said of God who therefore is called Alpha and Omega Rev. 1. 8. Their continuance is such as it is not absolute and by it selfe but proceeding from the power of God who is able if so he pleased to give unto them an end as well as a beginning in which respect God is said onely to have immortality 1 Tim. 6. 16. Is it necessary we hold God to be eternall that so he may be discerned from all things created Yea we hold it in that respect for two causes First because certain hereticks have thought either all the creatures or some of the creatures at least to be derived from the very nature and essence of God by propagation as children from their mothers womb Secondly that all idolatrous cogitations of God may be excluded out of our minds What is the life of God It is an essentiall property of God whereby the divine nature
as most men think it to be What breaches of the first Commandement may be observed in this transgression First infidelity whereby they doubted of Gods love towards them and of the truth of his word Secondly contempt of God in disregarding his threatnings and crediting the word of Satan Gods enemy and theirs Thirdly hainous ingratitude and unthankfulnesse against God for all his benefits in that they would not be beholding unto him for that excellent condition of their creation in respect whereof they ought unto him all fealty but would needs be his equall Fourthly curiosity in affecting greater wisdome then God had endued them withall by vertue of their creation and a greater measure of knowledge then hee thought fit to reveale unto them Fiftly intolerable pride and ambition not onely desiring to be better then God made them but also to be equall in knowledge to God himselfe and aspiring to the highest estate due to their Creatour How did our first parents break the second Commandement Eve by embracing the word of the Devill and preferring it before the word of God Adam by hearkning to the voyce of his wife rather then to the voyce of the Almighty Gen. 3. 17. What were the breach of the third First presumption in venturing to dispute of Gods truth and to enter in communication with Gods enemy or a beast who appeared unto them touching the word of God with whom no such conference ought to have been entertained Secondly reproachfull blasphemy by subscribing to the sayings of the Devill in which he charged God with lying and envying their good estate Thirdly superstitious conceit of the fruit of the tree imagining it to have that vertue which God never put into it as if by the eating thereof such knowledge might be gotten as Satan perswaded Fourthly want of that zeale in Adam for the glory of God which he ought to have shewed against his wife when hee understood shee had transgressed Gods Commandements How was the fourth Commandement broken In that the Sabbath was made a time to conferre with Satan in matters tending to the high dishonour of God If it be true that on that day man fell into this transgression as some not improbably have conjectured for at the conclusion of the sixth day all things remained yet very good Gen. 1. 31. and God blessed the seventh day Gen. 2. 3. Now it is very likely Satan would take the first advantage that possibly he could to entrap them before they were strengthened by longer experience and by partaking of the Sacrament of the tree of life whereof it appeareth by Gen. 3. 22. that they had not yet eaten and so from the very beginning of man became a manslayer John 8. 44. Shew briefly the grounds of the breach of the Commandements of the second table in the transgression of our first parents The fifth was broken Eve giving too little to her husband in attempting a matter of so great weight without his privity and Adam giving too much to his wife in obeying her voyce rather then the Commandement of God and for pleasing of her not caring to displease God Gen. 3. 17. The sixth by this act they threw themselves and all their posterity into condemnation and death both of body and soule The seventh though nothing direct against this Commandement yet herein appeared the root of those evill affections which are here condemned as not bridling the lust and wandring desire of the eyes as also the inordinate appetite of the tast Gen. 3. 6. in lusting for and eating that onely fruit which God forbad not being satisfied with all the other fruits in the garden The eighth first laying hands upon that which was none of their own but by a speciall reservation kept from them Secondly discontent with their present estate and covetous desire of that which they had not The ninth judging otherwise then the truth was of the vertue of the tree Gen. 3. 6. and receiving a false accusation against God himselfe The tenth by entertaining in their minds Satans suggestions and evill concupiscence appearing in the first motions leading to the forenamed sinnes Thus much of our first parents sinne and the causes thereof Now let us come to the effects of the same shew therefore what followed in them immediately upon this transgression Three fruits were most manifest namely guiltinesse of conscience shame of face and feare of Gods presence Did any punishment follow upon this sinne Sinne guiltinesse and punishment doe naturally follow one upon another otherwise the threatning that at what time soever they did transgresse Gods Commandement they should certainly dye should not have taken effect Declare how that threatning took effect They were dead in sinne which is more fearfull then the death of the body as that which is a separation from the favour of God for there came upon them the decay of Gods glorious image in all the faculties of their soule and also a corruption of the powers of their body from being so fit instruments to serve the soule as God made them and this in them is signified by nakednes Gen. 3. 7. And in their children called originall sin Then there issued from thence a streame of actuall sinnes in the whole course of their life which appeared in Adam even upon his fall by his flying from Gods presence and affirming that it was his nakednesse that made him flye his excusing of his sin and laying it on the woman c. By sin an entrie being made for death Rom. 5. 12. they became subject to the separating of the soul from the body which is bodily death and of both from God which is spirituall death signified by expelling them out of Paradise and debarring them of the sacramentall tree of life Gen. 3. 22. c. And thus by the just sentence of God being for their sin delivered into the power both of corporall and of eternall death they were already entred upon death and hell to which they should have proceeded untill it had been accomplished both in body and soule in hell with the Devill and his Angels for ever if the Lord had not looked upon them in the blessed Seed For the fuller understanding of the things that immediatly followed the transgression of our first parents let us consider more particularly what is recorded in the 3d. ch of Gen. And first shew what is meant by that in v. 7. that their eyes were opened they saw themselves naked were they not naked before and having the eye sharper then after the fall must they not needs see they were naked It is true howbeit their nakednesse before the fall was comely yea more comely then the comeliest apparell we can put on being clad with the robe of innocency from the top of the head unto the sole of the foot wherefore by nakednesse he meaneth a shamefull nakednesse both of soule and body as the Scripture speaketh elsewhere Rev. 3. 17 18. Exod. 32. 25. What
have no other Gods before him that is in the secret of our heart whereof he alone taketh notice So in the second by the words Make Bow Worship he forbiddeth any outward service of Religion to any other Wherefore must God be worshipped both by our bodies and our soules Because he is the Lord and Maker of them both 1. Cor. 6. 20. What gather you from hence That such as dare to present their bodies to a Masse or to any other grosse Idolatry and say that they keep their hearts to God are here convicted of falsehood and hypocrisie So much of the second Commandement in generall what are the particular branches of it There is here first required that all solemne religious Worship should be given to the true God and secondly that it be given to him alone and not communicated to anything which is not God So that the summe of the first part is Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Matth. 4. 10. How are we to worship the Lord our God By those meanes onely which himselfe approveth in his Word according to the saying of Moses Doe that which I command thee and doe no more Deut. 4. 2. 12. 32. What is here required First that we give unto God that Worship which hee himselfe hath prescribed in his Word Secondly that we give him that alone without addition or alteration What is forbidden First the neglect of Gods Worship or any of his Ordinances when we contemne or despise or leave undone that service which hee hath commanded us to performe unto him Secondly the adding any thing unto or taking any thing from the pure Worship when we serve him by any other meanes then that which he himselfe hath commanded What are we to consider in the pure worship of God which he hath prescribed in his Word 1. The parts of it 2. The right manner of using of it What be the parts of it They are partly such as we give unto God and partly such as God giveth unto us What is required of us touching these kinds 1. That we use these things that God hath given us to that end that God hath given them for 2. That neither in giving to God nor taking from him we devise any thing of our owne to serve him withall What are the things God giveth us to serve him by His Creatures in the first place and his Word Sacraments Ministery Discipline and Censures of the Church which we must use according as they are instituted of God What duties are here required Our presence at the exercise of Religion the preaching hearing and reading of the Word of God together with meditation conference and all other means of increasing our knowledge therein the administring and receiving of the Sacraments c. Acts 2. 42. How doe you worship God in these In the Creatures by beholding his glory in them in his VVord by diligent hearing of it and carefull beleeving and practising of it in his Sacraments by receiving them duely in the Ministery and Censures by submitting our selves to them VVhat are the things that we give unto God They are either more or lesse ordinary VVhat are the more ordinary 1. To pray to God both publickly and privately 2. To praise God both alone and with others Are these duties required of all Christians Yea every true Christian must offer this Sacrifice to the Lord every day For in all ages and at all times it hath been the practise of Gods Saints to offer unto God the Sacrifice of Prayer and Praise as we may see by the practise of Daniel and Peter who went up at noone to pray Acts 10. 9. and Isaac who went out at Eventide to pray in the Fields Gen. 24. 63. What are the parts of Prayer Three 1. Confession which is the Sacrifice of a broken Heart and wounded Soule 2. Petition for such things as we lack 3. Thanksgiving for such things as we have received What are the things lesse ordinary 1. Fasts publicke or private Joel 2. 12 15. 2. Solemne Thanksgiving for speciall Blessings Psal. 50. 14. whereunto Feasting also is joyned when speciall occasion of joy is given us 3. Making and performing holy Vowes unto God What is Fasting And abstinence for a time from all the commodities and pleasures of this life so farre as comelinesse and necessity will suffer to make us more apt to Prayer and more able to serve God What is a Vow A solemne promise made unto God of some things that are in our power to performe which we do to declare out thankfulnesse to strengthen our faith and to further us in doing of good duties wherein we are backward our abstaining from some evill whereunto we finde our selves especially inclined So much of the parts of Gods solemne Worship What is required to the right manner of using of the same Our carefull sincere and diligent behaviour in all his Service that every thing may be done as he hath appointed and no otherwise What are the things required hereunto They are partly inward partly outward the former whereof concerne the Substance the latter the Circumstance of Gods worship What are the inward As all the powers of the soule are charged to joyne together by the first and great Commandement in the entertaining and loving so by this in performing all acts of solemne worship to the true God therefore herein there must bee a concurrence as well of the understanding that we have knowledge of the particular service which wee doe Romans 14. 5. 1 Cor. 14. 14 15. as of the will and affection that we may worship God in Spirit and in Truth Joh. 4. 22. What things are requisite to the performance of this Three 1. A diligent Preparation and advisednesse before we come to any holy exercise 2. A right disposition of the minde in the action of it selfe 3. A comfortable departure upon the sensible feeling of the fruit thereof What is required in the Preparation before the Action That wee bethinke our selves before-hand about what things wee come and dispatch our selves of all the things that hinder us in the service of God which sith we must doe in things otherwise lawfull much more in things unlawfull What is further to be observed herein That every Preparation be answerable to the exercise whereunto wee are called as in the parts of Prayer for example 1. In Confession we must have a true feeling of our former sinnes 2. In Petition we must have the like sense of our wants and bethink our selves what need we have of the things we aske and strive against our staggering and doubting of Gods promises 3. In Thanksgiving we must call to minde at least Gods benefits bestowed upon us and consider the greatnesse of them And so in all other Services of God VVhat Disposition of the minde is required in the Action 1. A reverent diligent and earnest attentivenesse to the thing withall the