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A60361 The compleat Christian, and compleat armour and armoury of a Christian, fitting him with all necessary furniture for that his holy profession, or, The doctrine of salvation delivered in a plain and familiar explication of the common catechisme, for the benefit of the younger sort, and others : wherein summarily comprehended is generally represented the truly orthodox and constant doctrine of the Church of England, especially in all points necessary to salvation / by W.S., D.D. Slatyer, William, 1587-1647. 1643 (1643) Wing S3983; ESTC R38256 385,949 1,566

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for some temporary or other respects more servent and faire in outward appearance to the world then the weaker faith though a true faith of the elect but for the most part discovered at last by the want of the Root love Fruit good workes Continuance to the end 37. How may wee know the true though weake faith By many good signes in ones selfe longing after God and proficiency in grace and especially by this one grace of God of unfained desire not onely of salvation which the wicked and gracelesse may desire but of reconciliation with God in Christ. 38. Is this a true signe of true faith It is and onely peculiar to the elect proceeding out of a touched and humbled heart for sinne and whosoever have it have in themselves the ground and substance of true and saving faith which afterwards may grow to greater strength and so Blessed are they that hunger and thirst c. Matth. 5. 6. 39. How many wayes may faith be weake Either by want of due Knowledge of the Gospell Application to the soule Though in that measure of knowledge that may else seeme sufficient 40. How is it to be strengthened By using diligently the meanes appointed of God the Word and Sacraments so humbly walking before God it is knowne to bee a true faith and daily encreased 41. What is a strong faith That whereby a man so apprehendeth and applieth the promises of God in the Gospell that hee can distinctly and truly say of himselfe hee is fully resolved in conscience that hee is reconciled to God in Christ and so not neglecteth to finde all godly signes and shew the fruits of the same in his cheerfull service of God 42. Js there any faith perfect No for howsoever it may be strong and stronger then others yet it is alwayes imperfect and requiring encrease and confirmation for which we must pray and strive for so also our knowledge is and will bee so long as wee live in this world as mingled with ignorance unbeleefe and sundry sorts of doubting 43. Have not all sorts of saving faith their fruit following Yes according to their degrees more or better all in some acceptable degree obedience to the will of God and willing profession of the truth and more particularly confession of the faith of Christ. 44. Why must we confesse it For divers reasons these especially that 1. With the mouth outwardly confessing wee may glorifie God and doe him service both in body and soule 2. By confessing of the faith we may sever our selves from all false Christians hypocrites and seducers whatsoever 3. We may incite confirme and strengthen others in the same 45. Js there any other acceptation of this word faith It is sometimes taken for the doctrine of the truth as 1 Tim. 3. 9. and 4. 1. as well as that habit or Theologicall vertue thence and by the gift of God produced in the minde of which wee spake before also where a dead faith false and fained faith hypocriticall faith and the like they are understood to be want of faith or a temporary onely or historicall faith as faith to be healed Matth. 8. under faith working miracles 1 Corinth 18. of all which before 46. What is else necessary to be knowne concerning faith To observe the causes and effects of this true faith 47. What causes The Efficient cause matter form and end of this true faith how wrought and formed in us 48. What efficient cause Either principall or instrumentall What principall God 1. The Father Ioh. 6. 29. this the work of God that ye beleeve in him whom he hath sent 2. The Son Heb. 12. 2. the author and finisher of our faith Jesus 3. The holy Ghost 2 Cor. 4. 14. the Spirit of faith and former of it in us without our preparation or workes 49. What the instrumentall cause The word of God and Sacraments and comfortable learning and using of them What the matter of faith In respect of the Subject Understanding to apprehend Will to assent and apply Conscience to make use of the promise and grace of God Object referred to the 1. Understanding the truth of Gods promise 2. Will grace of God manifested in Christ. 3. Conscience joy and comfort in the holy Ghost 50. What is the forme of faith 1. To beleeve or to seeke to apprehend and know the mercies of God with our best understanding 2. Receive and apply to our soules the free mercies of God in Christ with our whole heart and will 3. Make use of it in our conscience to the Purging and rooting out of dead workes and sin Bringing forth good workes fruits of a living faith 51. What the end of faith In regard of God his glory in his mercies Us our justification by his free mercies in Christ. 52. What is justifying or our justification To be Discharged before God of our guilt Approved before him free and innocent Accepted of God and allowed his favour and presence 53. Doth faith doe this Faith is said to doe it as the instrument whereby we apprehend apply and take benefit of Christ and his merits the very originall and principall cause of this as in whom only and alone we are Discharged and acquitted Approved innocent and accepted God is well pleased and reconciled 54. But Saint James saith we are justified by workes Saint James doth not there speake of our justification as the cause whereby we are justified inwardly before God which is only faith in Christ but of the outward justification as the testification approving thereof to our consciences to the world that we have faith seen by the fruits thereof 55. What of the distinction of generall and speciall explicite and implicite faith Generall and implicite faith are indeed no faith or not true faith explicite and speciall may be as they may be rightly understood the same with our faith and the saving and true faith 56. What are the effects of faith Many or at least by many names stiled and called in holy Scripture and may be reduced to These two 1. Putting off the old 2. Putting on the new Man or this one word encluding both repentance 57. How else called or described Either Workes of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22. death to sin and life to righteousnesse Rom. 6. walking not in the flesh but the spirit Rom. 8. Renewing the minde Ephes. 4. 22. True holinesse and righteousnesse ibid. 23. A new creature Gal. 6. 15. Generally good works Jam. 2. Tit. 2. c. 58. But if these workes doe not justifie us what need we doe them and why For divers reasons especially these 1. Because they are good and so to be done 2. They are for the glory of God and his Gospel and nothing more against God then the works of sin 3. They are to the good of the Church and faithful 4. They testifie our faith James the 2. 5. They confirme our election Jo. 4. 12 13. 6. They win others to the Gospel 1 Pet. 3. 7. They
some gifts taken from them Joh. 6. 37. but from the reprobate even that they seemed to have concerning faith and regeneration is taken away utterly Matth. 13. 12. and 29. Luke 8. 18. 31. How may we be assured of the presence of Gods Spirit dwelling in us By the good and holy effects of the same in our soule life and conversation as 1. Our knowledge faith hope charity and other graces 2. Carefull study of godlinesse and innocency 3. Love of God and hatred of sin 4. Comfort in holy actions and delight in Gods house and children 5. Separating our selves and affections from the world and placing them on God 32. How is Gods Spirit said to be quenched in us 1. By neglect and carelesnesse in holy duties and exercises 2. Contempt of the graces and good motions offered which is a despite to that Spirit of grace 3. Ungodly and wicked actions 33. What is the sin against the holy Ghost In generall as he is God all sins against the majesty of God in particular and properly in regard of his person and office as hee is the sanctifier and illuminating Spirit so those haynous and stubborne sins against the open and plaine truth and testimony of conscience of purposed malice wittingly and willingly against and in despite of that good and milde Spirit 34. How said to be unpardonable As commonly hardnesse of heart and finall impenitency is joyned with them and even so it is as a judgement laid on those sins said that we should not even pray for them 35. What learne we hence Many good duties concerning our sanctification and his graces as to Beleeve the holy Scriptures even by his inspiration as the way to God and take heed of neglect Keepe our bodies and soules holy and pure as Temples of the holy Ghost and not to defile them Use all our gifts to the honour of God for of him we have received them the graces of his Spirit and not abuse them to vanity Submit our selves to the government of Gods Spirit and not be proud or stubborne and so despise that Spirit of grace Seeke encrease in graces daily and confirmation and not to quench the Spirit or fall away 36. What profit hereof The joy and comfort of our Spirit called joy in the holy Ghost by his blessed operation making application of all Christs merits and mercies to our soules adorned with his graces giving us assurance thereof by his power in holinesse and newnesse of life or sanctification the earnest peny of glorification 36. What followeth The fourth and last part of the Creed in those foure last Articles concerning the Church of God and his graces bestowed on the same in these words The holy Catholique Church the Communion of Saints forgivenesse of sins resurrection of the body and life everlasting Amen SECT 11. The 9. Article concerning the Catholique Church The analysis of the 9. and following and here first of the Catholique Church and how we professe our beleefe concerning the same so how here is a Church or company of the faithfull separated from the world and vnited in God and Christ their head and so gathered or called thence named Ecclesia being but one universall or Catholique one though consisting of many particular branches so comprehending all times places and persons whence our Church one with that of the Iewes and our faith the same with Abrahams being all one in Christ the head and substance of the covenant how said to be visible or invisible militant or triumphant how also Catholique and holy and the notes of the true Church described whereby from all other companies or not so rightly named Churches distinguished by the true preaching of the word and right and due administration of the Sacraments and for the Notes of universality autiquity visibility succession consent and the like if without holinesse no perfect marks since so to be found in many false Synagogues and so what may be said of the Church of Rome and her holinesse and Religion and some other opposites or enemies to the same And of the promise of the holy Spirits presence in the Church to the end Of the world Of the communion of Saints what it is and between whom both between Saints themselves and them and Christ and so with God whence all happinesse peace and unity influence of grace and effects or fruits of holinesse all Saints in heaven and earth by their union in Christ to God combined so in the Comfort and fruition of this faith enjoying that glorious 〈◊〉 name and calling and happy assurance and priviledge of the Saints being many good uses to be made of the same three last Articles containing three great priviledges of the Church 1. VVHat doth the last part of the Creed concerne The Church of God and therein considered either the body of it called the holy Catholique Church and united in the communion of Saints Or the priviledges and graces indulged on the same 1. The forgivenesse of sins 2. The resurrection of body 3. The life everlasting 2. What herein to be then considered The Action as how we beleeve Object as aforesaid the Church her priviledges 3. What of the action That here we say not beleeve in that is put trust and confidence therein but onely beleeve the same that is that there is a holy Catholique Church of God so elected called and sanctified where of Christ the Lord and head that it is united into that communion of Saints his members united among themselves and to their head Christ and that in the same and no where else to bee fought or found salvation and so those priviledges consequently that there is truly forgivenesse of sins the blessed hope of resurrection and assurance of life everlasting 4. What difference to be noted herein That to beleeve in God or on him as the highest degree of faith is onely proper to God and so we can put our trust or confidence in him and no other but to beleeve the holy Catholique Church and the other points of faith is in a second degree and though with the same certainty and assent to the truth yet not with that confidence or trust in them for their power or any thing else which were to make idols of them and set them up in the place of God 5. What of the object the Church For the body and substance of the same these positions 1. That there is a Church 2. What that Church is and the Name Nature Parts Proprieties and Notes of the same 3. What union is in it viz. a communion of Saints 6. How shew you that there is a Church It is evident to the eye of Nature and Reason as well as Faith even to naturall men that see the Church and company of the faithfull separated from them and their prophane conversation and reason even testifying to the sense the causes of this separation the honour and service of God the supreme good with expectation of reward which faith most cleerly
in the obedience to the morall law out of which it seemes taken and we may judge other lawes of most equity and excellency that come neerest unto it onely such variation of due circumstances observed 19. What the difference betweene the Ceremoniall and Morall Law 1. In that the Morall Law was about in ward obedience and duties of the soule the Ceremoniall about outward service and ceremonies 2. The morall delivered by God himselfe the ceremoniall and judiciall onely by Moses instructed of God 3. The morall first given the other in consequence depending from some parts of that 4. The morall law neglected made worse then infidels that did by nature the things of the Law when the ceremoniall onely a confusion in order among Gods people 5. The morall broken was a hainous sin alwaies reputed the ceremoniall not so as in the wildernesse Circumcision except with perversenesse as in Zipporah Uzzahs presumption and Aarons sons to offer strange fire in alteration of the ceremony 6. The morall without cost the ceremoniall not without great cost and chargeably performed 7. The morall law laid in the Arke in regard of the perpetuity thereof signified the ceremoniall not so 20. Why was the ceremoniall to end 1. Because the first Temple unto which fitted was to take end by succession of a second in stead thereof 2. Because the sacrifices the shadowes of Christs one eternall sacrifice were in him the substance to end 3. Because the other ceremonies types of him or some divine actions of his had in his exhibition ended their typicall signification 4. Because sacraments of theirs were now to give place to the new so the lawes concerning these this must needs be antiquated and ended 21. How learne we that ceremonies should end 1. By Christs entrance a new High Priest after the order of Melchisedee and so Aaron and his with their types to end 2. By the renting of the vaile of the Temple at Christs death shewing as it were their dissolution and those former reasons urged excellently by the author to the Hebrewes Heb. 7. c. 22. And are all ceremonies then ended Al that have relation to Christ to come are now vanished and out of use because the thing they shadowed and signified to come is now exhibited so no further use of them 23. How doe Christians use ceremonies then Not any of this sort but of another for ornament and decency in the service of God not so much in imitation of these as founded upon the morall law in exhibition of externall worship to God and sanctification of the Sabbath in decent manner and by the institution doctrine and example of Christ and his Apostles who did both write how some things should bee and promised to set other things in decent order when they come 24. How is the morall law perpetuall Though given onely to the Jews yet as they Gods people so in generall by them to the whose Church and though in the letter of the Commandements they 1. Are expresly to that their state and time of the Jewes 2. Yet in effect to all Gods servants before that time that acknowledged the force and truth both generally of the whole morall law and particularly of every Commandement to all since who according to the same direct their wayes in righteousnesse and walke not according to the flesh but the spirit in newnesse of life and obedience to this law of God 25. How was the law in effect before In generall not onely Gods people Noah Abraham and the holy men but the law of nature in the heathen written in their hearts made them doe and acknowledge the workes of the Law Rom. 2. 26. How in particular the Commandements For the first Table the service of God his honour and sacrifices and Sabbaths recorded before the Flood and no idolatry recorded or found till long after yea most of the heathen gods and greatest too even after Moses time and for the second Table morall duties and honest dealings none can deny in Noahs and Abrahams families yea and in divers governments footsteps thereof as in the Assyrian monarchy and other kingdomes 27. How the first Commandement To Abraham God saith I am God alsufficient stand before me and be upright Gen. 17. 1. so by Adam Enoch Noah and those other Patriarkes it appeares they had no other God but him 28 How the second Commandement In that Jacob purged his house of Idols when he built Gods Altar in Bethel Gen. 35. 2. thereby acknowledging the abhomination of them 29. How the third Commandement The true use of Gods name by their prayers and so just oath by the true God as Abraham to Abimelech Gen. 21. 23. and Jacob to Laban Gen. 31. 53. and others the like 30. How the fourth Commandement By God in Paradise and no doubt by Adam and holy men afterwards either punctually or equivalently 31. How the fifth Commandement By all the godly Sons of holy Fathers and Patriarkes honouring and obeying their Fathers and Superiours in all reverence and humility 32. How the sixth Commandement Seen a spectacle in abhorred Cain confessing the crime of murther and guilt of conscience for it so condemned and detested of all 33. How the seventh Commandement Seene in Joseph flying his Mistresse temptations and the rest of Jacobs sonnes taking to heart the shame done to their sister Dianah Gen. 34. 34. How the eight Commandement Acknowledged by Jacob to Laban if any had stolne let them die Gen. 31. 30. and by his sonnes to Pharaohs Steward or Josephs if any had stolne the cuppe to bee his bondmen Gen. 44. 5. 35. How the ninth Commandement In Abraham Gen. 20. and Isaac Gen. 26. reproved by Abimelec for telling a lie or false testimony and Jacob feared to be found or counted a liar or deceiver in counterfeiting Esau. 36. How the tenth Commandement In the uprightnesse of heart required in Abraham Gen. 17. 1. and seen in him and Enoch who walked with God Lot Melchisedec and all the just 37. How is this Law in effect with us As we are exhorted to these duties still and to shew our faith by obedience to them willingly and readily according to them to undergoe our duty and service to God in holinesse and uprightnesse to the world in godly conversation 38. How is it then said we are not under the Law but under Grace This and the like sayings that wee are freed from the Law and that Christ hath freed us Rom. 7. Gal. 8. 18. and 4. 1. c. and other places are to be understood 1. Either absolutely of the ceremoniall Law which is abrogated and vanished in Christ as in that to the Gal. and Heb. especially appeareth 2. Respectively of the morall as it should bee conceived to be unable to justifie and hath need of Christ to be the end of it for its perfection To be performed by Christ for us who striving to the uttermost are never able to performe it but onely in him To be made more
joyned Baal as the Idolatrous Israelites 3. Joyned with God Angels or other Powers Intelligences or the like Nature fate or such dreams of the old Philosophers or Heathen whereby in effect Atheisme and denying him and his truth without the true God setting up many gods as the Gentiles in generall their many gods recorded in the Scriptures Dagon Ashteroth Moloch Bel and the Dragon c. In the Heathen Stories their Jupiter Mars Mercury and where majores minores dii more in number then the Nations or the Cities and Countries The Egyptians in particular gods of all sorts of things Sunne and Moone and Stars Serpents Fowles Fishes Beasts and men as Osiris ibis c. 19. What Idolatry All setting up of Idolls whether in the heart or Temples to worship them and so of two sorts 1. In the heart internally set on them 2. In the Temples externally to worship them against which especially is the second Commandement 20. Is there no other Idolatry Yes all falling away from the Lord and trusting in or seeking to the creature in neglect of him is before him accounted Idolatry so to trust in or set our heart upon this world with worldlings Upon uncertain riches whence covetousnesse Upon Idolatry pleasures of the Epicures Upon glutony and drunkennesse with the voluptuous pride and vanities of life long life and the like to the forgetting of God and trampling his Commandements under foot is to set up Idols and setting our hearts upon these Idolls ' and fancies of our hearts set up above him in our esteem 21. Who then as thus Idolatrous Both the Covetous worldings Idolatrising to his god Mamon Epicures making their belly their god Ambitious that on aspiring to high places set all their devotion Proud that honor Lucifer for their god Cockering parents that as Eli did above God set their love or dotage on their children and generally all sinners that leave God to serve sin c. or put their trust in creatures leaving the Creator whether wholly or in part totall or partiall Idolatry 22. Who are they Such as against God trust in Princes or any childe of man In the arme of flesh and bloud In force of united Nations In their wit and policy In Ships or Castles or Munitions In great persons their favourites In horses and chariots yea Men Angells or Divells and flie to any other helpes forgetting and neglecting God cannot be said free from Idolatry not David numbring his people nor Achitophel with his plots or Haman with his policy more then Nebuchadnezzar with his arme of flesh and great Babell 23. Who doe idolatrize to Men Angels or the Divels Those who trust in or flie 1. To men and their helpe above God 2. To Angells or Saints to invocate them besides or contrary to Gods will and commandement 3. To Witches and Wizards to helpe them where God leaveth them 4. Evill and wicked arts and meanes that God hateth and condemneth as leaving him his providence and goodnesse 24. What is it to love and honour God Not only to have him or him alone in our hearts in exculsion of other vaine gods but also to exhibite our duties and devotions to him best expressed in those tearmes of his honour and love the exhibition of honour to him as our Lord ' and Master Of love as to our good God and Father 25. What is opposite to this Both Ignorance next door to Atheisme sowing error and bringing forth Sin and Idolatry opposite to his love neither seeking to know or love him Prophanenesse near kin also to Atheism or a kinde of Atheisme in the living and therein expressing it in lewdnesse and denying God by the life and deeds opposite to his honour which is set forth by a godly life 26. How many sorts of ignorance 1. Either purae negationis in such as cannot understand the truth naturall corruption or blindnesse 1 Cor. 2. 14. Rom. 3. 11. 2. Pravae dispositionis affected ignorance wanting knowledge Either 3. Carelessely a carelesse ignorance 4. Stubbornely refusing it a perverse ignorance 27. What the fruit thereof Error and so Atheisme Idolatry and all kinde of sinne and foolishnesse Whiles the foole saith in his heart there is no God and so shew little love trust or confidence in him and consequently poore service or honour of him but much wickednesse abomination and prophanenesse 28. But may not a small measure of knowledge bee pleasing unto God Yes if it be joyned with a desire to have more and study to serve him according to the same and not an affected carelesse or stubborne ignorance 29. But often seene the more knowledge the lesse grace The more is the malice of the Divell seene the fault not being the knowledge by which God is most honoured but in abuse of the gift as good things may be abused yea optimi corruptio pessima and so much the more lamentable if lost or abused but it is the Divells policy and he will take most paines so to pervert and corrupt the best things yea assaile even the Saints and their best grace that did not leave our Saviour unattempted but such as in seeming knowledge fall away shew indeed that they knew nothing as they ought to know 2 Cor. 8. 30. But ignorance is the mother of devotion Yea of blinde devotion but truest devotion will hearken to the voice of wisdome to be guided thereby 31. How is ignorance the mother of prophanenesse As by not knowing caring or remembring there is a God men rush into ill as a horse into the battell or upon destruction without all feare or understanding or as prophane Esau hated of God preferred a messe of pottage and earthly things through ignorance before heavenly blessings 32. How prophanenesse seen In 1. Brutish living that also without all practice of devotion prayer or other godly Meditation Exercises with an irkesomenesse of godlinesse and all good duties 2. Securely living in open and notorious sin or courses as without feare or care grace or shame without God before their eyes 3. Prostituting themselves to sin as slaves to Satan and children of Belial tumbling both themselves and their associates headlong into hel of such we ought to beware destruction and unhappinesse being in their waies and the way of peace have they not knowne and no feare of God before their eies this the fruit of their ignorance 33. Is this the greatest sin against this Commandement It might seeme so by the uglinesse of it but there are sinnes also of a higher nature and degree and monstrous in the perversenesse against knowledge and conscience such as sinne against the Holy Ghost and sacriledge in respect of the heart though alias ressectu Oris Operis actionum ad extra They may be referred to the third Commandement and so as other compounded sinnes may bee found in other or divers Commandements 34. How are we to love God With all our heart with all our minde with all our soule and with all our
Heathenish at least and idolatrous and nothing savouring of true Christianity 40. How commeth it to bee so foolish or damnable Because it is not only in derogation to the Majesty of God to set up creatures or other foolish things to be sworne by but a depraving of his worship it being a part of his worship to sweare reverently by him as Jacob is noted in that hee sware by the feare of his father Isaac and so wee are commanded to sweare by him Deut. 6. 13. Esay 65. 16. and 45. 23. besides they may be noted for fooles to call dumbe things to witnesse truth that knowes nothing Stupid as B●als Priests to call to them that cannot heare Children that like to children prate to such babies of clouts Prophane persons commonly as the ordinary and common swearer also 41. What is the odiousnesse of perjury An abomination even with the heathen of whom notable stories are recorded both in the love of fidelity and hate of perjury out of morality much more among Christians to be respected since else by perjury both God is made patron of a lie the Divells property who is a liar and the father of lies God is called to witnesse a lie which he hateth then which what greater indignity The perjured person prayeth against himselfe wishing himselfe plagued and damned then which what greater madnesse or impiety The bane of all societies and hellish confusion must be set on foot if it be suffered 42. How so If oath be taken or suffered falsly it must follow That Kings would be tyrants Subjects prove traytors Magistrates wolves Pastors devourers Neighbours and neighbouring Nations to cut throats one of another without conscience of amity league of sidelity and impunity granted to all impiety Plainly to be seen 43. What is the opposite hereof The right and lawfull use of an oath whereby the Lords name is sanctified used as himselfe commanded in swearing by him and him alone Esay 65. 16. Jer. 12 6. 44. What is the right and lawfull use To sweare in truth righteousnesse and judgement Jer. 4. 2. 1. So in Truth To that which is true Truly Ex animi sententia 2. Righteousnesse as lawfully required of God or Magistrate or is on just ground and in lawfull manner and good occasion 3. Judgement duly weighing and discerning the necessity of the oath together with the conditions and circumstances of the persons matter and especially the end 45. What the end The manifestation or confirmation of a hidden and doubtfull truth necessary so to be cleered The ending of controversies and satisfaction of our neighbour and justice The cleering of our innocency or duty discharged The glory of God for truth and right to take place as commonly wanting these ends and conditions it must needs be ill and so all swearing as if it be either 1. Of no necessity 2. Or first to no end but either rashly vainly of foolish custome c. Secondly an ill end As 1. in bravery to glory in their shame and 2. Blasphemously to rap out oathes to garnish their speech with such hellish eloquence 3. To falsifie the truth and to deceive by perjury 46. What are vowes A kinde of oathes or promissory oathes which as made to men are onely called oathes but to God are properly named vowes and binde to the performance of some thing promised and vowed 47. What required in promissory oathes That they be of things Lawfull and honest In our power and possible That we meane to performe That we doe also performe for otherwise 1. If lawfull and possible and not performed we are perjured 2. If impossible the oath doth not binde 3. If unlawfull it doth not onely not binde us but we are bound to breake it else we adde sinne to sinne What other conditions required in vowes That it be voluntary not forced or hypocriticall That it be to this good end The glory of God The good of our neighbours and brethren of ones owne soule 48. Of what sorts are vowes Either common to all Christians as the vowes in baptisme c. Or proper to some onely either required on some condition in regard of their place and degree or voluntary c. undertaken of divers things lawfull or indifferent 49. What common errors in oathes and vowes 1. To sweare for malice hire favour falsly or foolishly 2. To vow evill and hurtfull things as murder c. 3. Or vow and not meane to performe at least not performe To performe by halves and not fairly but with delay or diminution and doubling as Ananias and Saphira Acts 5. 50. What is the hainousnesse of the guilt and ofsence hereby The subverting or at least sleighting the truth The mocking of God destroying sidelity The bringing in Atheism by polluting the name of God and his honour in consequent worse then Jewes Turkes or Heathens that in their manner have beene zealous of these things 51. What the generall duty affirmed The glorifying of God especially in our speech and right use of the tongue wherein wee exceed all other creatures on earth yet proceeding also from the heart and budding forth into holy life and godly conversation 52. How especially scene In our taking care and making a conscience of 1. Speaking the truth from the heart 2. Speaking reverently of the great and fearfull name of the Lord and so on any occasion to remember it 3. Using the same religiously in our speech and communication 4. The vow in Baptisme and so of leading a godly and Christian life 53. VVhat is else here intimated All possible reverence and honour with all carefulnesse to be exhibited as the condemning of all neglect thereof in any degree and so all foolish idle and trifling speeches on no occasion as O good God O Lord O Jesus c which though seeming good yet as without the heart and idlely uttered without affection towards God or ground for them accounted dallying with the name of God and an offence or prayers and such like devotions as to say Our Father which art in heaven c. or I beleeve in God the Father never thinking of him whose holy name we utterwith our unadvised lips what it is but to take his name in vaine or mocke God and how much more with rash and beastly and so much more to bee abhorred of customary oathes or curses hereby condemned 54. VVhat reasons of this Commandement A two fold reason noted 1. Implicite from the name of the Lord thy God 2. Expressed in the Commination for the Lord will not c. 55. VVhat the implicite reason For that the Lord is Lord of heaven and earth death and life yea hell and all and can hurle thee headlong thither for thy abuse and so thou shouldest not dare Thy Lord and God from whom all good so what ingratitude is it in the vile swearer curser blasphemer to abuse his holy name Such a Lord as the Divell and all the powers of hell cannot dishonour but he will turne all to his
childbed or any other sicknesse 16. VVhat the opposite of this 1. Both incontinency in single life or widowhood 2. Breach of wedlocke 3. Using the mariage bed First immoderately and lustfully Secondly immodestly without shamefastnesse or honesty Thirdly unseasonably at forhidden times 17. VVhat meanes of preserving chastity to bee observed I. Either generall 1. Prayer for continency as the gift of God 2. Keeping company with sober and chaste persons II. Speciall preservatives and remedies 1. Sobriety and moderation of delights 2. Temperance in diet 3. Diligence and painfulnesse in our callings 4. Vigilancy over our affections 5. Modesty in eyes and countenance Speech and behaviour Attire and gesture 6. Marriage it selfe the lawfull remedy if the other means faile provided that such as have not the gift of continency may marry and keep themselves undefiled members of Christs body 18. What opposite to this I. Both frequenting the company of unchaste drunken effeminate and wanton persons places suspected and infamed II. Intemperance in gluttony drunkennesse and the like III. Idlenesse and slothfulnesse IIII. Immodest 1. Eyes beholding unchaste or beautifull and wanton persons obscene pictures reading lewd bookes or playes 2. Countenance impudent and harlots forhead 3. Speech gesture and gate wanton mincing and dancing 4. Attire proud and excessive V. Unlawfull marriages vowes divorces either expresly and ipso facto adultery or the occasions and meanes of it 19. What signes of chastity to be noted Sobriety modesty and shamefaltnesse keeping good and chaste company and avoiding suspicious shew of evill which are both meanes and signes of chastity and so doubly worth the regard as on the contrary wantonnesse immodesty impudency haunting unchaste company suspected places and at suspected times both signes and meanes of unchastity 20. What duty of procuring or preserving others chastity The generall care thereof in all as occasion serveth and especially For parents to provide for their childrens honest bringing up behaviour and marriage For Magistrates to provide good lawes and due execution with severe punishments to represse uncleannesse 21. What the opposite hereof To be accessory or procurers of others unchastity as bawds the divells instruments to bring naughty packs together those that counsell consent hire or allure to uncleannesse or prostitute them whose chastity they ought or promised to protect and so Parents Magistrates or others that connive at such offence deny or forbid the remedy marriage or execute not due punishment against the offenders 22. What are the degrees in this sin 1. In this order the first means motives and all occasions of this sinne by gluttony drunkennesse intemperance or other meanes whatsoever 2. Motions of the heart whether with or without consent of the will so who seeth a woman to lust hath committed adultery Mat. 5. 28. 3. Outward appearance of evill in adulterous and unchaste eye and countenance tongue gesture attire c. 4. Fornication and the act of uncleannesse in any sort 5. Adultery and other the monstrous and unnaturall sins whose punishments ordinarily by divine and humane lawes is death and sometimes with more infamous aggravations thereof 23 How account you of the first degree As the high way to the foulest of the rest and therefore he that would avoid crying and great sins ought to make conscience of the smallest as occasions draw on the action and gluttony and drunkennesse marshall in chambering and wantonnesse the heart is made the shop and store house of sin and the eyes the lewd shop windowes to let it in or set it to sale evill words corrupt good manners light and vaine apparrell curious ornaments frizeled haire and the like signs of loosenesse and immodesty as idlenesse the way to wantonnesse and that to impudency which at last bringeth forth fornication and adultery or other grosse and crying sins 24. What of pride in atire dancing and gadding abroad As appearances of evill and fruits of the flesh if not open defiance and enmity with God and so noted alwaies as pride the forerunner of shame wanton dancing of all good men condemned as an extreame folly and enticement to lewdnesse if not used with rare moderation as for the dancing in armour in the Pirrichian dances or men or women by themselves for exercise or joy of some great good hap or victory as Miriam as David before the Arke excellent and commended by all but for lascivious and amorous dances men and women confusedly together with wanton gestures kissings and dalliance the fuell of lust and as Herodias daughters dancing cost Saint John Baptists head so this many a headlesse soule and for gadding abroad the token of the wanton and idle widdowes 1 Tim. 5. 12. and of the harlot and those of loose behaviour Prov. 7. 9. and cost Dinah her honesty and the Sichemites their ruine 25. Some speake very bitter words against dancing Very true and so to be understood of wanton and dissolute dancing and at unfit times or in too impudent and foolish manner with mimique and even zany gestures and fashions as loosely as lewdly performed the very fellowes to kindle the flames of lust and impudency and such indeed was the gravity of the Romans at sometimes and some other Nations that they highly detested or were displeased with such lightnesse and folly as Demosthenes before his Athenians reproached Philip of Macedon and his Courtiers for common dancers such as having filled their bellies with meat and heads with wine fell scurriloussy and loosely a dancing and Salust of Sempronia said she was to fine a singer and dancer to be honourable withall and Cioero in his Apologie for Murena challenged also for dancing not minding to excuse it of him putteth it of or slatly denieth it with a concession nemo saltat sobrius and Plutarch in the vertues of women putteth it that shee ought to be no dauncer 26. But doe not the Fathers and Doctors say as much Yes for Saint Basil saith thou caprest and leapest with thy feet in dances unwise as thou art when thou shouldest rather bend thy knees in prayer to thy Creator but what gaine is got thereby surely this that virgins returne robbed of their virginity married wives of the truth to their husbands all lesse chaste then they went and more dishonest then they should though lesse perhaps then they would as if not in act which peradventure may be yet stained in thought which cannot be eschewed 1. So Saint Chrysostome saith to the maides and wives that daunce at marriages and so pollute their sex in such lascivious daunces the divell beareth a part as dauncing with them 2. Saint Ambrose that it is better to dig and delve on holy-dayes then to daunce and where banquets are concluded with dauncing there chastity is commonly but in an evill case 3. Vives in his instruction to a Christian woman hath not a little to this purpose who holdeth it for a strange vanity and saith he certaine Asians seeing the Spaniards daunce ran away for feare thinking them lunaticke nothing
have need of his commodities and sleights to defend themselves and his workes 38. What are to be said of parables and similies that are not the very truth Though they are not the very and precise truth according to the bare letter yet in the sense and understanding as well as the intention they are the truth and sometimes an excellent and divine truth and more effectually working upon the mind and understanding then any plaine words expressing the same could doe so they are truth in the reflex and so are the Riddles Parables Mythologies in divers good Moralists and especially in holy Scripture 39. What here commanded then in generall I. With the avoiding of all the aforesaid vices forbidden as in particular may be seen in the premises II. With the love and study of truth and charity 1. In the heart inclining to it 2. In the tongue professing it 3. Deeds practising it to the best use in the preservation of our owne or neighbours goods and good name 40. How found in the heart By the inclination we finde in us glad and willing 1. To heare the truth and hate untruth To heare well of our neighbour and good report to his commendations and not ill or good unwillingly 2. To judge charitably not rashly or suspitiously or determining against him 3. To interpret things to the best and not good things ill or doubtfull things to the worst part 4. To report onely good and profitable things or necessary rather silencing then blazing the faults of others 41. How to be found in the speech and tongue By the practice and entertaining of profitable and good speech such as may minister grace to the hearers and honest comfort whether tending 1. To Gods glory especially 2. To our owne and neighbours good Spirituall of soule Temporall for Honest delight Society Profit Opposite to which vaine hurtfull rotten evill and dishonest speech lying scurrility c. 42. What meanes to entertaine such speech Docility and vertues of urbanity courtesie affability and taciturnity if need be to avoid idle and unprofitable language opposite to which are morosity inurbanity rusticity and counterfeit courtesie much babling and profitable truth smothered in silence 43. How found in practice and in deed By the constant care and stedfastnesse in maintaining the truth to our utmost power and endeavour and according to the rules of charity for our owne and our neighbours credit and good name 44. How is our neighbours good name maintained By all the meanes aforesaid in avoiding all evill speaking or hearing and speaking judging or interpreting all things to the best in charity so a step to the preservation of our owne 45. What if he be manifestly ill may we not speak it Yes but 1. In charity occasioned by justice or for his admonition and amendment 2. Or in complaint to God as David against his enemies Before men to avoid them as the Prophets and Apostles speake against false teachers 3. Not in his disgrace in malice or any like evill pretence 46. How to preserve or procure our owne good name I. By observing the rules towards others a step to our owne good name II. Using the meanes whereby though therein unsought it is to be gotten 1. Serving God 2. Seeking his kingdome and righteousnesse 3. Walking uprightly 4. Keeping a good conscience whereby without seeking a good name therein but better things we shall finde a good name III. By avoiding all First hypocrisie and hypocriticall behaviour Secondly vainglory in 1. Boasting 2. Seeking praises of men or flatterers by vanity 3. Censuring others or 4. Disgracing ironically and arrogantly scorning them Thirdly Infamy by 1. Such vanity 2. Sinnes and vices 3. Opprobrious speeches 4. Evill company c. 47. How is true testimony to be given of our selves 1. For the good if true with modesty onely on good occasion Not for boasting or vainglory but for the good of others to confesse it If false not to assume but with modesty and humility to deny it II. Evill 1. If true to confesse it First to God to aske forgivenesse Secondly to men onely if necessary for Gods glory our owne or others good 2. False constantly to deny it Opposite to which arrogancy counterfelt modesty to draw more then deserved commendations and boasting of evill to our owne shame and Gods dishonour or good wee have not for our owne vaine glory gaine or disgrace of others or disgrace our selves to picke thankes or gratifie others contrary to truth candor and integrity 48. What followeth The tenth and last Commandement concerning the moderation of the very thoughts of heart to the preservation if possible of our selves entirely to God SECT 12. The tenth Commandement The order and reason thereof and Analysis of the tenth Commandement shewing the parts and duties as well as opposite vices and abuses thereby intimated or expressed of concupiscence and the severall sorts and root thereof originall guil whence bud out all actuall transgressions and the degrees of the same according as found in the severall passions and parts of the soule and in such other respects distinguished with the object of the concupiscence as in the Commandement expressed and how evill lusts in the other Commandements implicit here more expressely and fully and fully forbidden the generall duties and vertues hereby commanded where in the generall inclination to justice and contentednesse in a sort a sort as it were all or the chiefe of all vertues may be seene 1. VVHat is the tenth Commandement Thou shalt not cover thy neighbours house thou shalt not covet thy neighbours wife nor his servant nor his maid nor his Ox nor his Asse nor anything that is his 2. What the order of it The last making this addition to the rest even if it were possible not in thought to transgresse and to kill the first motions of sin in the heart the Cockatrice in the shell that the budding forth of originall sin into actuall may be smothered atleast making conscience of the smallest offences crying sins may be avoided 3. What manner of Commandement A negative inferring his opposite affirmative viz. all evill and corrupt affections understood by concupiscence forbidden and all good thoughts of minde and motions of Gods Spirit in the heart cheerfully to be entertained and hereby commanded 4. What the negative part The prohibition to shew Gods hate of them and of all evill affections both in the 1. Originall guilt hereditary corruption of nature especially budding out towards actuall transgression 2. Actuall Evill thoughts and phantasies Evill motions passions and perturbations of the minde Evill consent to the said motions c. and desire as it were to effect the same or wish it done which is plaine concupiscence in the full growth 5. What the affirmative part The hate of that originall guilt and corruption of nature which God hateth commanded and thereby with the rooting out of that evill of thought fantasie and motions or passions and perturbations of minde a holy entertainment of
not exepect forgivenesse nor any other blessing for want of true charity for we 1. Are hereby unfit to pray as we ought Unfit to receive any blessings 2. We desire no forgivenesse because we forgive not others 3. We desire rather a curse and God will not forgive us because we forgive not and so in effect we pray for our owne condemnation 32. May we not leave this petition then Yet neverthelesse Christs sentence remaineth true except we forgive we shall not be forgiven and we pull downe condemnation upon our soules or if we thinke to pray other prayers no prayers are accepted without charity or not regulated by this nay our prayers will be turned into sin and a curse and snare to our soules and but a mocking of God without this charity 33. Who then can forgive sins God only originally and totally but 1. The Church authoritative from him and ministerialiter 2. Man also partially and fraternialiter for his part what lyeth in him 34. But how can men forgive sin That part which pertaineth to him in the offence as 1. The want of charity or breach of brotherly love 2. The wrong or injury for which he oweth satisfaction 35. When man hath forgiven is the sin acquitted Not except God also forgive and wash out the offence in his mercy for the least part of sin even against men is that offence against man and the greatest part against God 1. The blot of the soule 2. The blemish of Gods Image in the same 3. The breach of his command and so contempt of his Majesty which is the foulest part rightly conceived of all sin and the poyson of it 35. What if man doe not or will not forgive Yet God may to the truly penitent and he bee fully absolved though man refuse it if he be asked forgivenesse since both the offendor and the offended person are but clay in Gods hand and they both wholly his and all that they have and he may dispose of them and theirs absolutely at his pleasure and if they stubbornly refuse to forgive he both can and will forgive 36. What need we aske forgivenesse then of men or give it them 1. To shew our charity or brotherly love 2. To maintaine love and charity and emutuall duty 3. To exercise our piety and faith and gaine peace of conscience 4. To expresse and 5. To signifie Our desire to be forgiven at Gods hand Our obedience to Gods Commandements c. 37. What forgivenesse of our brother then required To forgive him alwaies the breach of charity By forgetting of offences By not seeking revenge By not taking opportunity to revenge By not bearing malice c. To forgive him sometimes the very offence and debt or satisfaction if the party unable to make satisfaction If in that case desire it numbly Offer any satisfaction he can in part or in penitence 38. How is it forgiven if satisfaction required If all malice and remembrance of injury be put away and all desire or seeking revenge bee laid aside the chiefest and best part performed and yet in many cases satisfaction may be required lawfully as where there is ability yea and sometimes commanded if for publicke testimony of good name the truth or the like and otherwise though the debt or satisfaction be forgiven and malice not removed or not done in charity the best part of forgivenesse is not performed but happiest he that can forgive both which meant of forgiving forgetting and being in perfect charity 39. Who offend against this All such as either will 1. Not forget wrongs and injuries 2. Amplifie them beyond measure or the truth 3. Not be courteous towards others imperfections or weaknesse 4. Not forgive being humbly and penitently desired 5. Curse or revile their trespasses 6. Study revenge or to hurt them again 7. Continue in malice hate or desire of revenge and so out of charity 40. What then of David Moses or others that cursed or punished offences severely It was done of them both 1. For the publicke glory of God 2. By his particular command and direction 3. Not without the spirit of prophesie 4. Against the noted and open enemies of God 5. As publicke Magistrates 41. How of the Magistrate that punisheth and not forgiveth It is to be considered and so distinguished between a private and publicke person the publicke in the place of God and for the good of the Common-wealth and therefore set to execute his office and punish the offendor and it were cruelty for him and the place of judgement to acquit the guilty as well as punish the innocent which were to set open the doore to all impiety though as a private person he may commiserate the person though not the offence and for his private selfe forgive that part of the offence though punish the person and so in place of judgement hee must execute justice and give sentence according to right and only in some cases after upon hope of amendment may extend mercy or grant pardon but not to the encouragement of any vice or wrong 42. But who is so faithfull and charitable that can as we ought so truly and fully forgive If we desire truly to forgive and forget wrongs and onely imbecility of the flesh striving against the good Spirit of God in us making us have a sense of our owne weaknesse it is a good signe of that Spirit working in us that will effect his good worke and that such our desire is accepted and God will more perfect it for it is not said as we forgive or meant either 1. In that measure that God forgiveth us 2. As a meanes or cause of merit in us 3. As a paterne for Gods imitation of our imperfection in forgiving 4. In that extent God forgiveth totally c. But to testifie the truth and sincerity of our heart in this desire and the charity wee be are in our heart unfainedly to our brother though wee cannot perfectly doe what wee desire and that we may consider how gracious before God even such good desire is that he preseribeth it here for a condition 43. How doth the Church forgive sinnes As by Gods power and commission given to it or the power of the keyes in foro interiori acquitting the truly penitent and in foro exteriori or facie Ecclesiae testifying the same where if men out of hardnesse of heart will not forgive when required yet God as by himselfe by men also his Ministers will both forgive and quiet their conscience and acquit the guilt if with unfained repentance desired as to whom power over all doth belong and who doth and can doe it powerfully as men his servants ministerially whatever men not his servants recalcitrate or kicke against it so what in foro conscientiae cleered and in facie Ecclesiae published as in aede soli his Church acquitted shall in arce poli his Temple and throne of justice in Heaven bee so acknowledged and we have his Word and record