Selected quad for the lemma: hand_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
hand_n david_n lord_n saul_n 9,635 5 10.3237 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A09365 The whole treatise of the cases of conscience distinguished into three bookes: the first whereof is revised and corrected in sundrie places, and the other two annexed. Taught and deliuered by M. W. Perkins in his holy-day lectures, carefully examined by his owne briefes, and now published together for the common good, by T. Pickering Bachelour of Diuinitie. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one of the heads and number of the questions propounded and resolued; another of the principall texts of Scripture vvhich are either explaned, or vindicated from corrupt interpretation.; Cases of conscience Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Pickering, Thomas, d. 1625. 1606 (1606) STC 19669; ESTC S114066 314,224 686

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

offered First choise must be made of the most fitte and present remedie and that must be vsed in the first place Now the most fit and present remedie is to bring the partie troubled to the personall exercises of faith and repentance by and in himselfe For this ende he must examine his conscience most straightly and narrowly of all the sinnes of his heart and life Secondly he must humbly confesse against himselfe all his knowne sinnes and withall acknowledge the due condemnation that he thereby hath deserued Thirdly he must crie to heauen for mercie intreating the Lord most instantly for pardon and for the restraint of his wrath due vnto him for his sinne Dauid beeing in this distresse performed all these duties as we may read in the 6. Psalme and he saith further of himselfe that whilst he concealed his sinnes the hand of God was heauie vpon him but vpon his earnest confession and deprecation he receiued mercie And if we read the booke of Iob we shall finde that the principall scope thereof is this namely to shew vnto vs that Iob was throughly exercised with this temptation and that in the ende hauing beene rebuked both by his friends and by God himselfe his recouerie was made by humbling himselfe when he saith Behold I am vile againe now I abhorre my selfe and repent in dust and ashes Some may here demand If it fall out that the person himselfe cannot performe any good dutie of himselfe by reason of his distraction in soule and bodie what must then be done Ans. If the partie can but sigh and sobbe vnto God for mercie and comfort it is no doubt a worke of Gods spirit and a practise both of faith and repentance We know not saith Saint Paul what to pray as we ought namely in our distresses but the Spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes that cannot be expressed and therein lies our comfort Thus Moses at the redde sea beeing in great distresse and not knowing what to say or doe sighed and groned inwardly in his soule vnto the Lord for helpe and protection and his very desire was in stead of a loud crie in the eares of the Lord. The second thing is that triall must be made whether the partie hath in him any tokens of grace or not These tokens are the small beginnings of grace which before I haue declared As for example a griefe because we cannot grieue for sinne as we should a serious will and desire to beleeue and repent a purpose to sin no more and such like If these be found in the partie then by them as by sure pledges he may bee assured of the fauour of God towards him and where any of these be found the saying of God to Saint Paul must be vrged My grace is sufficient for thee and therewith must the distressed partie stay his minde Yea we are to be content with any condition in this life be it neuer so miserable so long as we are in the fauour of God though he should lay vpon vs euen the paines of hell till the time of our death So did Dauid who when he was pursued by his owne sonne vttered these words vnto God Behold if I please thee not do with me what thou wilt And the like was the mind of Paul who being assured of the fauour of God was content for his glorie the saluation of the Israelits if it had beene possible to be separated 〈◊〉 Christ and to indure the very pangs of hell The third thing in this cure is to Applie to the said distressed partie such promises of God made vnto afflicted persons as are most large and comfortable For example that The Lord is neere to them that are of a contrite heart and will saue such as be afflicted in spirit Psal. 34. 18. Againe I came not saith our Sauiour Christ but to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel Matth. 15. 24. He saies not to the straying sheepe but to such as are now in the pitte readie to be drowned or in the Lyons mouth readie to be deuoured Againe The Spirit of the Lord is vpon me therefore he hath annointed me that I should preach the Gospell to the poore that is to such as are distressed in consciēce and poore in spirit he hath sent me that I should heale the broken hearted that I should preach deliuerance to the captiues These many other such like promises are in this case to be vrged and the partie mooued to endeauour to beleeue them to hold to them and rest himselfe vpon them though he loose all things els Fourthly the partie must be brought to a serious consideration of his owne life past and of Gods mercifull dealing with him others in his case in former times and therwith is he to be comforted for the time present For if aforehand he hath receiued any tokens of the fauour and loue of God by them he is now to stay and to settle his minde The reason is plaine the gifts of god are without repentāce whom he loueth once he loueth to the ende whom he chooseth he calleth iustifieth and sanctifieth and will also in time glorifie Dauid beeing in such affliction that he could hardly thinke vpon God yet he tooke this course praied to the Lord for comfort communed with his owne heart and called to remembrance how God had formerly dealt with him and with this meditation of the continuall course of Gods mercie in his preseruation he confirmed his faith and staied his heart in his greatest troubles Sect. 5. The fifth and last thing to be done is the remooueall of such reasons and doubts as the partie distressed vsually makes against himselfe for his owne ouerthrow For it is the manner of those that are troubled in minde to dispute against themselues and commōly they are woont to alleadge three things First beeing instructed how to humble themselues and to depend on Gods mercie they will graunt that all these indeede are good things but they belong not to them for they neither do nor can feele any thing but the tokens of Gods anger and that they are alreadie entred into some degrees of condemnation This obiection may be taken away by informing them of the manner of Gods dealing in all his workes For commonly he workes all things in his creatures in and by cōtraries if we could know the whole frame of them Thus in the Creation euery creature had his beeing of that which had no beeing and something was made not of something but of nothing After the flood the signe of Gods coueuant for the preseruation of the world from destruction by raine is the Rainbow which indeed is a naturall signe of raine When Elias was to prooue the Lord to be the onely true God against the Idolatrous priests of Baal and that by burnt offerings he powred water vpon the sacrifice fills a trench with water round about and in this contrarie
afflictions for this life and in glorie for the life to come Now if God hath decreed that those whome he foreknew should be conformable vnto his Sonne in these respects then hath he also decreed the afflictions themselues Secondly God doth not onely barely permit afflictions to be but also he effecteth them and brings them into execution as they are crosses corrections trialls and punishments I make peace saith the Lord and I create euill that is not the euill of sinne but of punishment which is euill in our sense and feeling For things are tearmed euill two waies some are euill indeed some are euill not indeed but in regard of our sense apprehension and estimation and of this latter sort are afflictions which God is said to create And to this purpose is the saying of the Prophet Amos Shall there be euill in the citie and the Lord hath not done it Thirdly as God causeth afflictions so he ordereth and disposeth them that is he limiteth and appointeth the beginning the end the measure or quantitie and the continuance thereof Yea he also ordereth them to their right endes namely his owne glorie the good of his seruants and the benefit of his Church Thus God is saide to correct his people in iudgement that is so as he will haue the whole ordering of the correction in his owne hand Ioseph tells his brethren that when they intended euill against him in selling him to the Ishmaelites for siluer God disposed it for good When Shemei cursed Dauid he forbade his seruants so much as to meddle with him and why because saith he the Lord bade him to curse and who then dare say onto him Why hast thou done so And to this purpose the Prophet Dauid saith I held my peace and said nothing why because thou Lord hast done it Psal. 39. 9. Here some wil say if Afflictions did come onely from God it were somewhat but of●ent●●es they come from men that beare vs no good will and therefore no maruell though we be impatient Answ. When crosses doe come from men God vseth them as instruments to execute his iudgements vpon vs and in this worke God is the chiefe doer and they are as tooles in the hand of the workman And the Lord inflicteth them vpon vs by men to trie our patience vnder the crosse Ioseph though he knew well the badde dealing of his brethren towards him yet he looked not to them alone but to an higher cause namely the Lord himselfe who executed his owne good will by them God faith he disposed it to good And againe God did send me before you into Egypt for your preseruation The Second ground is The commandement of God touching the crosse and obedience vnto him therein This commaundement is expressed Luk. 9. 23. where we are commanded to take vp our crosse euery day and follow Christ. Abraham was commanded with his owne hands to sacrifice his onely sonne Isaac and to this commandement though otherwise a great crosse vnto him he addresseth himselfe to yeeld obedience And in the prophecie of Micah the Church saith Shee will boare the wrath of the Lord that is shee will performe obedience to him in the crosse because shee had sinned against him And Saint Peter saith that God resisteth the proud and giueth grace to the humble therefore humble your selues vnder the mightie hand of God And this beeing the commaundement of God that we should yeeld obedience to him in euery affliction we ought to be no lesse carefull to obey it then any one commandement of the morall Law The Third ground is that God will be present with his seruants in their afflictions Vpon this ground Dauid comforts himselfe because God had promised to heare him to be with him in trouble and to deliuer him And in an other place Though I should walke in the shaddow of death I would feare none ill for thou art with me c. Now that we may the better vnderstand this doctrine we are to consider what be the Ends or Effects of Gods beeing with vs in affliction whereby he testifieth his presence and they are three The first is to worke our deliuerance from the crosse Call vpon me saith the Lord in the time of thy trouble and I will deliuer thee This promise must not be vnderstood simply but with an exception so farre forth as it shall be for our good For all promises of temporall deliuerance are conditionall and must be conceiued with this limitation of the crosse and chastisement if God please to impose it Some may say how if God will not deliuer vs but leaue vs in the affliction what cōfort shall we then haue Answ. In the second place therefore we must remember that God will temper and moderate our afflictions so as we may be able to beare them Habbakuk praieth vnto God in the behalfe of the Church that he would in wrath remember mercie And Paul saith that the Lord will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue that we are able to beare but will giue an issue with the temptation Thirdly put the case that God doth not moderate our afflictions but suffer them to remaine vpon vs not onely for some time of our life but to the very death yet then will he testifie his holy presence an other way namely by giuing the partie distressed power and strength to beare his affliction Vnto you it is giuen saith Paul for Christ that not onely ye should beleeue in him but also suffer for his sake The Fourth ground of comfort in affliction is that euery affliction vpon the seruants of God hath some speciall goodnesse in it Rom. 8. 28. We know that all things worke together for good vnto them that loue God And in regard hereof the crosses which are indured by Gods children are so farre from beeing preiudiciall to their saluation that they are rather helps and furtherances of the same Now this Goodnes is perceiued two waies First by the fruit and effect of it and then by the qualitie and condition thereof In both which respects afflictions are good Touching the fruits of Afflictions because they are manifold I will reduce them to seauen principall heads I. Afflictions doe make men to see and consider their sinnes Iosephs brethren for twentie yeares together were little or not at all troubled for their wickednes in selling their brother yet vpon their affliction in Egypt they began to consider what they had done We haue say they verily sinned against our brother in that we saw the anguish of his soule when he besought vs and we would not heare him therefore is this trouble come vpon vs. Manasses in the time of his peace gaue himselfe to witchcraft and the worshipping of straunge gods but when he was captiue in Babylon then was he brought to the sight of his sinnes mooued to humble himselfe before God for them II.
spirit He also that praies for the same to God the Holy Ghost must pray that he would assure vnto him the remission of his sinnes from the father by and for the merit of the Sonne CHAP. V. Of the second part of Religion touching the worship of God and first of the inward worship II. Question How God is to be worshipped and serued FOr the full answer hereof we must remember that the worship of God is twofold inward or outward Inward is the worship of the mind the heart the conscience will and affections for man by all these ioyntly and seuerally performeth worship and seruice to his creator The outward is that worshippe whereby the inward is testified outwardly in the speach and actions The former of these two is the spirituall worship of the inward man and the very ground and foundation of all true worship of God for God is a spirit and therfore must be worshipped in spirit that is in the the minde conscience will and affections Indeede all the worshippe of God is spirituall euen that which we call outward yet not of it selfe but by vertue of the inward from which it proceedeth Sect. 1. The heades of Inward worship are two Adoration of God and cleaving to God For as they are two different actions of the heart so they may fitly be termed two distinct parts of Gods worship This distinction is in some part propounded by Moses where he exhorteth the Israelites to feare Iehovah their God to adore him to cleaue vnto him and to swear by his name Adoration is that part of Gods worship whereby a man vpon a vile and base estimation of himselfe as beeing but dust and ashes submits subiects his soule to the glorie and Maiestie of God This hath two principal groundes in the heart which if they be wanting there can be no true worship of God The first is Abnegation or deniall of our selues when we esteem our selues to be meerely nothing The second is exaltation or Advancemēt of Gods maiesty aboue all the things in the world Exāples of these we haue many in the scriptures as of Abraham who called God his Lord and himselfe dust and ashes of the Angels whome in a vision the Prophet sawe standing before God with one wing couering their feete which signified the abasing of themselues and with another couering their faces which betokened their adoration of the maiestie of God Of Daniel when he confesseth To thee O Lord belongeth righteousnes it selfe but to vs shame and confusion of face Lastly of the woman of Canaan who calls Christ Lord and her selfe a dogge Now in Adoration there are foure Vertues Feare Obedience Patience Thankefulnesse Feare is a great part of the worship of God which I prooue by two places laid together Esa. 29. 13. Matth. 15. 8 9. wherein Feare and Worship are taken for one and the same thing for that which Esay calls Feare Matthew calls Worship Now in this feare there be two things that serue to distinguish it from all other feares First it is absolute for by it God is reuerenced absolutely Saint Paul exhorteth to yeelde tribute feare and honour to the Magistrate not for himselfe but for God whose minister he is And our Sauiour saith Feare ye not them which kill the bodie and are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and bodie in hell As if he should say I allow and command you to feare men onely for God who hath set them ouer you but feare God for himselfe Secondly it makes a man first of all to feare the offence of God and then the punishment and iudgement For it is not a feare of the offence alone but of the offence and punishment together and of the offence in the first place Mal. 1. 6. If I be a Lord where is my feare And where it is saide in Matthew but rather feare him that is able to cast bodie and soule into hell fire there is commanded a feare of God in regard of his anger We feare the sword of man and that lawfully why then may we not feare the punishment of God If it be said this is a seruile feare to feare the punishment and agrees not to Gods children I answer slauish feare is when a man only fears the punishment not the offence of God or at least the punishment more then the offence The second vertue of Adoration is inward Obedience of the hidden man of the heart The Lord preferres this obedience before all sacrifice 1. Sam. 15. 22. This standeth in two things First in yeelding subiection of the Conscience to the commaundements threatnings and promises of God so as we are willing that it should become bound vnto them Secondly when the rest of the powers of the soule in their place and time performe obedience vnto God And by this meanes doe we bring into captiuitie euery thought vnto the obedience of Christ as Paul speaketh 2. Cor. 10. 5. The third vertue of Adoration is Patience which is when a man in his afflictions submitteth his will to the will of God and quieteth his heart therein because God sendeth afflictions This was Dauids counsell Be silent before the Lord and alwaies waite vpon his pleasure And his practise when in trouble he resigned himselfe into the hands of God and said Lord if I please thee not loe I am here doe with me as seemeth good in thine eyes This patience is a part of Gods worship because it is a kind of obedience The fourth vertue of Adoration is Thankfulnesse to God which shewes it selfe in two things First in an acknowledgement of the heart that our selues and whatsoeuer we haue is Gods and proceedeth from his blessing alone Secondly in a consecration of our bodies soules liues callings and labours to the honour and seruice of God Thus much of the first head of Inward worship or the first action of the heart standing in Adoration Sect. 2. The second Action of the heart in Inward worship or the second part thereof is Cleauing vnto God Now we cleaue vnto God by foure things by Faith Hope Loue and inward Inuocation By Faith I meane true iustifying faith whereby we rest vpon Gods mercie for the forgiuenes of our sinnes and life euerlasting and vpon his prouidence for the things of this life Thus Abraham beeing strengthened in this faith and relying by it vpon Gods promises made vnto him gaue glorie vnto God Rom. 4. 20. This Sauing faith is the very roote and beginning of all true worship For Loue which is the fulfilling of the Law must come from it 1. Tim. 1. 5. The second is Hope which followes and dependes vpon faith and it is that grace of God whereby with patience we waite the Lords leisure for the performance of his promises especially touching redemption and life eternall If we hope saith Paul for that we haue not we
distinctly to be obserued I. That in our eating we practise Iustice. Salomon saith The bread of deceit that is gotten by vnlawfull meanes is sweet vnto a man but afterward his mouth shall be filled with gravell Prov. 20. 17. And Paul giues a rule to the Church of Thessalonica that euery man should eate his owne bread that is the bread which is procured and deserued by his owne iust and honest labour 〈◊〉 Thess. 3. 2. This first thing serues to checke a number of men that liue in the daily practise of iniustice by spending their goods in good fellowship at Tauernes and ●ipling houses neglecting in the meane while the maintenance of their own charge by following their honest labour and by this meanes doe euen robbe their families of their due and right II. That we may eate to the Lord we must practise Loue Charitie in our eating How is that First we must giue offence to no man whatsoeuer It is good saith Paul neither to eate flesh nor to drinke wine nor any thing whereby thy brother stumbleth is offended or made weake Rom. 14. 21. Secondly in our eating we must haue respect of the poore Thus Nehemiah exhorteth the Iewes that were mourning for their sinnes to be chearefull to eate of the fat and drinke the sweete and send part vnto them for whome none was prepared that is to them that were poore Nehem. 8. 10. And the Prophet Amos inueigheth against some of the Princes of Israel who drunke wine in bowles and annointed themselues with the chiefe ointments and were not sorrie for the affliction of Ioseph that is did not releeue the poore brethren that were led captiue and wanted foode and maintenance Amos 6. 6. III. We must vse our meate in Sobrietie Sobrietie is a gift of God whereby we keepe a holy moderation in the vse of our diet Prov. 23. 1 2. When thou sit test to eate c. consider diligently what is set before thee and put the knife to thy throat that is be very carefull and circumspect in taking thy foode bridle thine appetite take heede thou doest not exceede measure If it be asked what Rule of moderation is to be obserued of all whether they be men or women young or old I answer First one mans particular example must not be a rule of direction to all In the East countries we read that men haue liued and doe yet liue a great time with a little for example with parched corne and a cake Now this example of theirs is no rule to vs that liue in these parts For their country is hotter then ours and therefore lesse might serue them then vs we are hot within and so our appetite is the more strong Againe in eating we may not iudge or condemne him that eateth more or lesse then we our selues because his eating is no rule to vs in this case Secondly a mans owne appetite is not to be made a rule of eating for others For a mā must not eate so long as his stomacke craues meate least he fal into the sinne of gluttonie Rom. 13. 13. And this sinne is noted by our Sauiour Christ to haue beene in the old world in the daies of Noah Mat. 24. 38. whē they gaue themselues to eating and drinking like the brute beasts for so the word signifies If then neither example nor appetite may rule our eating what be the right rules of Christian moderation in this behalfe Ans. That we may not exceede measure we must keepe or serues within these limits First our food must not goe beyond the condition place abilitie and maintenance that God hath giuen vs. Iohn the Baptist being in the wildernesse contented himselfe with very meane fare agreable both to the manner of that countrey and to his owne calling and condition of life His meate was locusts and wild hony Mat. 3. 4. Secondly it must be framed to the order and difference of time place Against this Rule the rich glutton offended who fared deliciously euery day without any difference of time or place Luk. 16. Salomon pronounceth a woe to that Land whose Princes eate in the morning Eccl. 10. 16. S. Paul notes it a fauit in a Minister to be giuen to wine 1. Tim. 3. 3. that is a cōmon tipler one that loues to sit by the wine morning euening day by day Thirdly euery man must eat and drinke so much as may serue to maintain the strength of his nature of his bodie and mind yea so much as may serue to vphold the strength of grace in him Salomon the King of Israel would haue all Princes to eate in time for strength and not for drunkennes Eccl. 10. 17. Esay notes it as a iudgement of God vpon men when they vse feasting and mirth and haue not grace to consider the workes of God Esay 5. 12. Our Sauiour would haue all men so to eate and drinke that they may be the fitter to watch and pray Luk. 21. 34. 36. And the Apostle Paul exhorteth men not to be drunke with wine wherein is excesse but to be filled with the Holy Ghost Eph. 5. 18. His meaning is that men ought so to eate and drinke that their bodies mindes and senses may not be made thereby more heauie but rather more lightsome and able to performe their duties to God and man For if they so eat as that thereby they be hindred in this behalfe they are guiltie of excesse and riot which is greatly displeasing to God and offensiue to men This rule serueth to admonish somepersons who as the Prouerb is are good forenoone-men but bad afternoonemen because in the morning they be sober but for the most part ouer come with drinke after dinner IV. Euery man must eate his meat in Godlines This is indeed to eat vnto the Lord and it may be done by obseruation of these rules First by taking heed of the abuse of any creature appointed for foode by Intemperance This abuse holy Iob suspected in his sonnes while they were a feasting and therefore he sent day by day and sanctified them and offered vp burnt offerings vnto God according to the number of them all Iob. 1. 5. Secondly by receiuing the creatures as from the hand of God himselfe For this very end did God by expresse word giue vnto Adam euery hearth bearing seede which was vpon the earth and euery tree wherein was the fruit of a tree bearing seed for his meat that he might receiue it as God had giuen it vnto him from his owne hand Gen. 1. 29. Thus Moses said vnto the Israelites touching Manna This is the bread which the Lord hath giuen you to eate Exod. 16. 15. This Dauid acknowledged saying Thou giuest it them they gather it thou openest thy hand and they are filled Psal. 104. 28. and 145. 15. The Lord vpbraideth Israel with this fault by the Prophet Hosea She did not acknowledge that I gaue her corne and wine and oyle and multiplyed her siluer and
he spake no more but the truth onely he concealed part of the truth Now if it fall out otherwise that policie be vsed and any of these foure Caueats be not obserued then it looses both the name and nature of true Policie and becomes fraud craft and deceit and so is condemnable Example hereof we haue in Dauid 1. Sam. 21. 14. who when he came to the court of Achish king of Gath and saw himselfe in daunger he faines himselfe madde Which though he did to saue his owne life yet his poli●●e was not to be allowed of for it tended to his owne disgrace he beeing King of Israel and it was also dishonourable vnto God who had appointed him to be the king of Israel Againe that which is commonly called the policie of Machiavel is here to be condemned For it is not answerable to the Cauears before remembred Besides that it is not onely against the written law of God but euen against the law of Nature And the very foundation thereof standeth onely in the practise of lying swearing forswearing in fraud deceit and injustice CHAP. III. Of Questions concerning Clemencie CLemencie or meekenes is a vertue that serues to moderate wrath and reuenge Touching Clemency there be three Questions I. How a man is to carrie himselfe in respect of iniuries and offences done vnto him II. When Anger is a sinne and when not III. How a man should remedie his rash and vniust anger I. Question How may a man carrie himselfe in respect of iniuries and offences done vnto him Aus That a man may behaue himselfe so as becommeth a Christian in these cases he must in the first place inquire into the nature and qualitie of the wrong done Now Offences that are done to vs by others are of three sorts The first sort and the least are when some things are done to vs that do onely displease vs but bring no losse or hurt to vs. These be light offences and of this kind are common infirmities as hastinesse teastinesse frowardnesse slownesse and dulnesse of nature of this kind also are reproches of vnskilfulnesse ignorance basenes pouertie and such like The first degree then of Clemency is not so much as to take notice of these sleight offences but to let them passe and burie them in obliuion Salomon saith A mans vnderstanding deforreth his anger and it is his credit to passe by an offence Pro. 19. 11. his meaning is that when small offences are done which cannot be avoided then in discretion a man should with hold his anger and not take notice of them but passe by them and let them goe for this shall be a farre greater ornament vnto him then if vpon the deede done he should haue hastily proceeded to reuenge The second sort of Offences are small iniuries such as doc not onely displease vs but with all bring some little hurt to vs either in our goods life or good name Now the second degree of meekenes is to take notice of these but withall to forgiue them and put them vp The reason is because alwaies greater care must be had of peace and loue then of our owne priuate affaires Read the practise hereof Ioh. 8. 49. It was obiected to Christ wrongfully that he was a Samaritane and had a Deuill Christ takes knowledge of the wrong and saith you haue reproched me but withall he puts it vp onely denying that which they said and clearing himselfe I haue not a Deuill but I honour my father Dauid had receiued great wrong at the hands of Ioab and Shimei as appeares in the historie of his life but principally when he came first to be King of Israel a. Sam. 3. and yet he takes not a hastie course presently to be reuenged vpon his adversaries but proceedes in this order First he takes notice of the fact and commits his cause to God ver 39. and then afterward as opportunity serued gaue the parties their iust desert The reason was because beeing newely invested in the kingdome his adversaries were strong and himselfe weake euen by his owne confession therfore not able at the first to redresse the iniury done vnto him But when he had once established himselfe then he doth not onely beginne 2. Sam. 19. 14. but proceedes to full execution of punishment vpon them as we read 1. King 2. ver 5. 6. 34. 35. The third sort of Wrongs are greater iniuries such as are not onely offensiue to our persons but withall doe preiudice our liues and bring a ruine vpon our estates both in goods and good name These are the highest degree of Iniuties manifested in open and apparent wrongs And therefore answerable to them is required the third and highest degree of Clemencie which stands in three things First in taking notice secondly in forgiuing them thirdly in a iust and lawfull defending our selues against the wronging parties This is the summe and substance of the answer For the better conceiuing whereof sundry Questions are further to be propounded and resolued First in generall it is demanded how a man should and ought to forgiue an iniurie Ans. In forgiuenes there be foure things The first is forgiuenes of Reuenge that is of requiting euill for euill either by thought word or deede This must alwaies be practised For vengeance is not ours but the Lords and great reason then that we should euermore forgiue in regard of reuenge and hatred This the Apostle teacheth when he saith 1. Cor. 13. 5. Loue is not provoked it neuer thinketh much lesse speakes or does evill The second is forgiuenesse of priuate punishment which is when men returne punishment for iniuries done in way of requitall and this must alwaies take place with vs because as vengeance it selfe so also punishmēt in way of revenge is Gods alone The third is forgiuenesse of iudgement when we iudge an inurie done to be an iniurie This iudgement we are not bound to forgiue vnto men For we may with good conscience iudge a sinne and a wrong to be as they are And yet notwithstanding if a man make satisfaction for the wrong done then there ought to be forgiuenes even in regard of iudgemen The fourth is forgiuenesse of satisfaction This we are not alway bound to remitte but we may with good conscience alway require satisfaction where hurt is done Secondly for the further clearing of this generall Question we are to answer some particular Cases vsually propounded in the liues of men and namely fiue I. Whether a man may defend himselfe by law II. How he may defend himselfe by law III. Whether a man may defend himselfe by force IV. How V. Whether a man may defend himselfe by Combate I. Case Whether a man may with good conscience and a meeke Spirit defend himselfe by law for wrongs that are done vnto him I answer affirmatively A man may with good conscience defend himselfe against great iniuries by the benefite of lawe For Magistracie is Gods ordinance for the good of men Rom.
afraid least when he came to the Corinths God would humble him for their sinnes 2. Cor. 12. 21. Againe he teacheth that those which are fallen into any fault must be restored by the spirit of meekenes because we our selues are subiect to the same tentations Gal. 6. 1. And in this regard he would haue men to mourne with them that haue in them the cause of mourning Rom. 12. 15. Thirdly iust anger must be contained within the bounds of our particular calling and civill decencie that is so moderated as it makes vs not to forsake our duties which we owe to God and man nor breake the rules of comlines Thus Iacob was angrie with Laban and yet he speakes and behaues himselfe as a sonne to his father euen in his anger Gen. 31. 36. Ionathan was angrie with Saul his father and yet he withdrawes not any reuerent or dutifull respect from him 1. Sam. 20. Sect. 2. The second part of the Question is When Anger is a vice and vnlawfull Ans. It is a sinne in fiue regards contrary to the former First when we conceiue it without counsell and deliberation This rash hastie sudden and violent anger is condemned by our Sauiour Christ Mat. 5. 22. Whosoeuer is angry with his brother vnaduisedly shal be culpable of iudgment Secondly when it is conceiued for no cause or for a light or trifling cause Prou. 10. 12. Loue couers a multitude of sinnes Therefore euery light offence must not be the cause of open anger Prov. 19. 11. It is the glory of a man to passe by some infirmities Eccles. 7. 23. Take not notice of all the words that men speake no not of all those which seruants speake vnto their masters Besides that causelesse anger is many times forbidden in the Scripture And Paul saies that loue is hardly provoked because it will not be mooued to conceiue hatred but vpon weightie and important causes 1. Cor. 13. Thirdly when the occasion is iust yet the measure of anger is immoderate Eph. 4. 26. Be angry sinne not and if by infirmitie thou fall into it let not the Sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath The reason is added in the next words Giue not place to the Deuill because he is alwaies at hand to inflame the affection as he did Sauls who therefore in his rage would haue killed him that was next him Fourthly when it makes vs to forget our dutie to God or man and to fal to brawling cursing and banning Thus was Shemei angry when he railed vpon the King and flung stones at him and his seruants giuing him bad and vnreuerent tearmes and calling him a man of blood and a man of Belial 2. Sam. 16. 5. 6. 7. Thus did the Disciples forget their dutie of loue vnto their brethren and in anger desired that fire might come down from heauen and destroy the Samaritanes Luk. 9. 59. Thus the Iewes in vndecent and vncharitable manner gnashed with their teeth at Steven Act. 7. 54. And Saint Paul saies that the fruites of wicked anger are clamors and crying speeches between person and person in their fury Eph. 4. 31. And thence it is that we find Balaam in his anger to haue beene more void of reason then his asse Numb 22. 27. Fistly when we are angrie for priuate respects concerning our persons and not concerning the cause of God Thus Cain is said to be exceeding wrothe and to haue his countenance cast downe onely vpon a priuate respect because he thought his brother Abel should be preferred before him Gen. 4. 5. Thus Saul was wrath with Dauid taking himselfe to be disgraced because the people after the slaughter of the Philistimes ascribed to Dauid ten thousand and to him but a thousand 1. Sam. 18. 7. In like manner he was angrie with Ionathan for his loue that he bare to Dauid and for giuing him leaue to goe to Bethleem 1. Sam. 20. 30. Thus Nebuchadnezars wrath was kindled against the three children because he tooke himselfe to be contemned of them Dan. 3. 19. Thus Haman meerely in regarde of priuate disgrace growes to great indignation against Mordecai Esther 3. v. 5. Thus Asa was angry with the Prophet Hanani because he thought it a discredit to him to be reprooued at his hand 2. Chron. 16. 10. And in this sort were the Iewes filled with wrath at Christs reproofe Luk. 4. 28. shewing thereby as it is truly expounded by the Commenter that they were very hotte in their own cause and not in the cause of God III. Question What is the Remedie of vniust Anger Ans. The Remedies thereof are twofold Some consist in meditation and some in practise Sect. 1. The Remedies that stand in Meditation are of three sorts some doe concerne God some our neighbour and some our selues The Meditations cōcerning God are specially sixe I. Meditation That God by expresse cōmandement forbiddes rash and vniust anger and commandeth the contrarie namely the duties of loue Read for this purpose Mat. 5. 21. 22. where we may obserue three degrees of vniust anger The first whereof is that which is inwardly conceiued and not outwardly shewed The second when vniust anger shewes it selfe by signes of contempt as by snuffing rushing changing and casting downe of the countenance The third is railing thou foole which is culpable of Gehenna fire the highest degree of punishment Now all these three degrees are murther and the punishment of a murtherer is to be cast into the lake of fire Rev. 21. 8. Againe Christ commandeth vs to reward good for euill to blesse them that curse vs and to doe good to thē that hate vs if we will be the children of our Father which is in heauen Mat. 5. 45. And S. Paul wisheth vs to ouercome evill with goodnes Rom. 12. 21. II. Meditation That all iniuries which befall vs doe come by Gods providence whereby they are turned to a good ende namely our good Thus David saith that God had bidden Shemei to curse him 2. Sam. 16. 10. And this was the ground of Christs reproofe of Peter Shall I not saith he drinke of the euppe which my Father hath giuen me to drinke of Ioh. 28. 11. III. Meditation God is long-suffering even towards wicked men we in this point must be followers of him In regard of this God is said to be mercifull gracious slow to anger abundāt in goodnes truth Exod. 34. 6. Hence it was that he spared the old world 120 yeres ● Pet. 3. 19. He spared the Israelits after their Idolatrie 390 yeres Ezek. 4. 5. Besides this we haue example of the lowlines long suffering of Christ who saith Matth. 11. 29. Learne of me for I am humble and meeke and of whome it is said 1. Pet. 2. 22. When he was reuiled he reuiled not againe when he suffered he threatned not but committed his cause to him that iudgeth righteously Nowe because some may haply say that these examples of God and Christ are too perfect for man to followe who cannot
commandements of God but the doctrine and precepts of men Furthermore Paul in 1. Tim. 4. 3. foretells that there should be many in the latter daies that should command to abstaine from meates To which place the Papist answers that that was because such persons taught that meats were vncleane by nature But the words are simply to be vnderstood of meates forbidden with obligation of the conscience and the text is generall speaking of the doctrine not of the persons of those men nor in ciuill respects but in regard of the bond of conscience Lastly it is a part of Christian libertie to haue freedome in conscience as touching all things indifferent and therefore in regard of meates To this doctrine some things are opposed by them of contrarie iudgement Obiect I. Princes doe make lawes and in their lawes do forbidde meates and drinkes and they must be obeyed for consciēce sake Rom. 13. 5. Ans. They doe so but all these lawes are made with reseruation of libertie of conscience and of the vse of that libertie to euery person But to what end then will some say are lawes made if they be made with reservation Ans. The scope of them is not to take away or to restraine libertie or the vse of libertie in conscience but to moderate the overcommon and superfluous outward vse As for that text Rom. 13. 5. It is to be vnderstood for conscience sake not of the law of the Magistrate but of the law of God that bindes vs to obey the Magistrates law Obiect II. There was blood and things strangled forbidden in the counsell at Ierusalem after Christs ascension Act. 15. Ans. It was forbidden onely in regard of offence for a time so long as the weake Iewe remained weake not in regard of conscience And therfore afterward Paul saies that all things euen blood it selfe was lawfull though not expedient in regard of scandall 1. Cor. 6. 12. And to the pure all things are pure Tit. 1. 15. Obiect III. Papists make lawes in which they forbidde some meats onely to restraine concupiscence Ans. Then they should forbid wine as well as flesh For wine spices and some kindes of fish which they permit are of greater force to stirre vp lust then the vse of flesh And hence it is that Saint Paul exhorts men not to be drunke with wine wherein is excesse Eph. 5. 18. Againe I answer that Iust may be restrained by exhortation to temperance without prohibitory lawes for the obligation of the conscience which are flat against Christian libertie Vpon this Answer a further Question may be made Whether a man may with good conscience eate flesh at times forbidden Ans. There are two kinds of eating eating against the Law and besides the law Eating against the law is When a man cats and by cating hinders the ende of the law contemns the authoritie of the law-maker frustrates the law it selfe and withall by his eating giues occasion to others to doe the same This eating is a flat sinne against the fift commandement For it is necessarie that the Magistrates laws should be obeyed in all things lawfull Heb. 13. 17. The master and the parent must be obeyed in all lawfull things much more the lawes of Magistrates Eating beside the law is when a man eats that which the law mentioneth and forbiddeth but not hurting the law And that a man may thus eate sundry cautions are to be obserued I. This eating must be vpon iust cause in a mans owne selfe II. It must be without contempt of the lawmaker and with a loyall mind III. It must be without giuing offence to any by his bad example IV. When it doth not hinder the maine end of the law V. When the eater doth subiect himselfe to the penaltie voluntarily and willingly In this eating there is no breach in conscience neither is it a sinne to eate that which the law forbiddeth For man hath free libertie in conscience to eat that which he doth eate Now if he vse his libertie and hurt no law obseruing these cautions his eating is no sinne For example It was Gods law that the Priests only should eat the shew-bread Now Dauid vpon a iust cause in himselfe all the former cautions obserued eates the shew-bread and sinnes not because his conscience was free in these things and therefore Dauids eating was not against the Law but onely beside the law II. Question How we may rightly vse meates and drinks in such sort as our eating may be to Gods glory and our owne comfort Ans. That we may so doe some things are to be done before we eate some in eating some after our eating §ect 1. The thing that is to be done before our eating is the Consecratiō of the food that is the Blessing of the meates which we are to eate 1. Tim. 4. 5 Euery creature of God is sanctified by the word of God and prayer By sanctification there is not meant that whereby we are sanctified by the holy Ghost neither that wherby the bread and the wine is halowed in the Sacrament of the supper But it is this when we are assured that the creature is made so free and lawfull to vs in respect of our vse that we may eate it freely and with good conscience By the word of God Paul meanes the word of creation mentioned in Gen. 1. 28. 29. repeated Gen. 9. 3. as also the word of God touching the libertie of conscience namely that to the pure all things are pure Tit. 1. 15. It is further added and prayer that is prayer grounded vpon the said word of creation and the doctrine touching Christian libertie whereby wee pray for grace to God that we may vse the creatures holily to his glorie The reasons why this sanctification of our meat is to be vsed are these First that in the vse of it we may lift vp our hearts vnto God and by this meanes put a difference between our selues and the brute beasts which rush vpon the creatures without sanctifying of them Secondly that we may be admonished thereby touching the title we haue to the creatures which beeing once lost by the fall of Adam is restored vnto vs again by Christ. Thirdly that it may be an assured testimony to our heartes that we may vse the creature with libertie of conscience when we doe vse it Fourthly that we may be sanctified to the vse of the creature as it is sanctified to vs to the end that we may vse it with temperance and not abuse it Fiftly that when we vse the creature we may depend on God for the blessing of it to make it our nourishment For no creature can nourish of it selfe but by Gods commandement who as Dauid saith Psal. 145. 16. Openeth his hand and filleth all things liuing of his good pleasure And in bread we must not consider the substance onely but the staffe which is the blessing of God vpholding our bodies Sixtly that we may not grow to securitie forgetfulnes