Selected quad for the lemma: honour_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
honour_n due_a fear_n tribute_n 2,900 5 10.7895 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
A64611 The summe of Christian religion, delivered by Zacharias Ursinus first, by way of catechism, and then afterwards more enlarged by a sound and judicious exposition, and application of the same : wherein also are debated and resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are controversed in divinitie / first Englished by D. Henry Parry, and now again conferred with the best and last Latine edition of D. David Pareus, sometimes Professour of Divinity in Heidelberge ; whereunto is added a large and full alphabeticall table of such matters as are therein contained ; together with all the Scriptures that are occasionally handled, by way either of controversie, exposition, or reconciliation, neither of which was done before, but now is performed for the readers delight and benefit ; to this work of Ursinus are now at last annexed the Theologicall miscellanies of D. David Pareus in which the orthodoxall tenets are briefly and solidly confirmed, and the contrary errours of the Papists, Ubiquitaries, Antitrinitaries, Eutychians, Socinians, and Arminians fully refuted ; and now translated into English out of the originall Latine copie by A.R. Ursinus, Zacharias, 1534-1583.; Parry, Henry, 1561-1616.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622. Theologicall miscellanies.; A. R. 1645 (1645) Wing U142; ESTC R5982 1,344,322 1,128

There are 18 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

eye-service or hypocrisie II Particular justice Particular distributive justice which keepeth a proportion in distributing of offices rewards and punishments or which is a vertue giving to every one his own Now every mans own is such an office or honour or reward as is convenient and fit for him and belongeth unto him Give to all men their duty tribute Rom. 13.17 The contrary vices to whom yee owe tribute custome to whom custome feare to whom feare honour to whom ye owe honour To this is opposed 1. Errour which taketh away an office from him to whom it is due and giveth it another who should not administer it or to whom it doth not agree 2. Rashnesse or accepting of persons or partiality in distributing offices or in giving honours or in bestowing rewards III Sedulity Sedulity or diligence or fidelity which is a vertue in a man well knowing and understanding those parts which belong properly unto his own duty and office examining them and doing according to Gods commandement those things that belong to him constantly continually studiously willingly and cheerefully likewise containing himself with this endeavour of wel-doing within the bounds of his own duty and calling letting passe things that appertaine not to his vocation and such as are unnecessary and all to this end principally as thereby to serve God and his neighbour and to doe those things which are pleasing to God and profitable unto men Study to be quiet and to meddle with your owne businesse He that ruleth 1 Thes 4.11 Rom. 12.8 Ephes 6.6 Eccles 9.10 let him doe it with diligence Serve as the servants of Christ doing the will of God from the heart All that thine hand shall finde to doe doe it with all thy power But it is to be observed that this vertue is not onely to understand what are the parts of a mans duty but also to examine and search if yet there be ought remaining which he knoweth not to belong unto his duty For he that knoweth not must seek and search otherwise he shall neverthelesse render an account of neglecting his duty because his ignorance was purposed and voluntary The contrary vices which excuseth not Vnto sedulity is opposed Negligence Negligence of slothfulnesse which either doth not looke after matters or doth willingly let them passe and performeth the parts of this duty either not willingly or not entirely or not diligently A shew of diligence A shew of diligence which doth his duty chiefely for his owne glory and commodity sake Curiosity Curiosity which intrudeth and insinuateth himselfe into other mens duties Arrogancy Arrogancy which giveth that unto himselfe which he hath not or boasteth of that which he hath IV Love of our kindred Love or tender affection towards our kindred and neere of bloud as towards our Parents Children and other kinsfolkes For when God willeth us to honour our Parents he will also that we love them and that as our Parents and when he will have them Parents he will also have their children to be loved of them and that not onely as strangers but as their children For seeing God ordaineth the bonds of conjunction betweene men he also alloweth the degrees of love and duties If there be any that provideth not for his owne 1 Tim 58. The contrary vices and namely for them of his houshold he denyeth the faith and is worse then an Infidel Unto love are repugnant Unnaturalnesse Vnnaturalnesse which either hateth or doth not affect and love those which are neere of bloud unto him neither is carefull of their safety Indulgency Indulgency or cockering which for the love of any either winketh at their sinnes being pernicious either to themselves or others or doth gratifie them in things forbidden of God V Thankfulnesse Thankefulnesse which is a vertue consisting of truth and justice acknowledging from whom what and how great benefits we have received and have a desire or willingnesse to performe and returne for them mutuall labour or mutual duties such as are honest and possible He that rewardeth evill for good evill shall not depart from his house Prov. 17.13 The contrary vices Unto Thankefulnesse are repugnant Unthankfulness Vnthankefulnesse which doth not acknowledge or doth not confesse the author and greatnesse of the benefit receive or doth not indeavour to performe mutuall duties Flattery Vnlawfull gratifying or parasite-like flattering VI Gravity Gravity which is a vertue that on knowledge of a mans calling and degree observeth that which becometh a mans person and sheweth a constancy and squarenesse in words deeds and gestures that thereby we may maintaine our good estimation or authority that our calling be not reproached For because God will have superiours to be honoured he will also that they themselves maintaine their owne honour Now glory which is an approbation yeelded us both of our owne conscience and of the conscience of others judging aright seeing it is a vertue necessary both for the glory of God and for the safety and wel-fare of men is without question to be desired so that these ends be withall respected Prov. 21.1 Eccles 7.3 Sirac 41.12 Gal. 6.4 Titus 2.7 A good name is to be chosen above great riches A good name is better then a good oyntment Have regard to thy name for that shall continue with thee above a thousand treasures of gold Let every man prove his owne worke and then shall he have rejoycing in himselfe onely and not in another Above all things shew thy selfe an example of good workes with uncorrupt doctrine with gravity integrity Unto gravity are contrary The contrary vices Levity Levity not observing seemlinesse or conveniency or constancy in a mans words deeds and gesture or not having a desire of retaining his good name and estimation Ambition Swelling or ambition which is to lift up himselfe in respect of his owne calling or gifts and to contemne and neglect others and to be aspiring to higher places and to seeke the applause and approbation of man not for any desire of Gods glory or of his neighbours safety but onely for an ambitious humour and desire of preeminence VII Modesty Modesty is a vertue which hath neere affinity with gravity whereby a man knoweth his owne imbecillity and considering his place and office wherein he is placed by God keepeth a meane and conveniency of person in opinion and in speech of himselfe and in actions and in behaviour to this end that we give no more to our selves then becometh us or defraud others of due reverence that we shew no more glitter or gloriousnesse in our apparell in our behaviour in our talke and life then is needfull that we set not our selves before others or oppresse others but behave our selves according to our ability and capacity with an acknowledgement of Gods gifts in others and of our owne defects Now as it was said Modesty hath
Old He is minister of God to thee for good Rom. 13.4 IX In that saying of Luke 22.25 Christ doth not debarre such kings from the Church but he onely forbids the Apostles and Ministers of the Church to meddle with riotousnesse preheminence and civill dominion But Paul Gal. 6.15 doth not speak of the externall habit of Christians of whom some were circumcised as the faithfull Jewes and some were uncircumcised as the Christians who had been Gentiles To which saying answereth that Galat. 3.28 There is neither Jew nor Greeke there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female Which words if they understand literally surely they must also be separated from Christ seeing they are either servants or free either males or females The sense then of the Apostle is this That the outward differences of men doe nothing hinder or promote eternall salvation and that onely the new creature in Christ Jesus is necessary to salvation X. Lastly by that saying of Mat. 5.39 Christ doth not take away punishments due to the wicked but only private revenge for otherwise no Christian neither father nor mother nor school-masters nor any minister of the Church could be suffered the dutie of all which is to resist evill and wicked men and to maintain discipline every one in his place without which an horrible ataxie and confusion would ensue too much libertie would be brought in and at length would follow the subversion both of humane societie and of the Church it selfe Surely Christ and his Apostles did very often resist evill Neither doe wee reade any where in the Scripture that they who were appointed for politicall functions did after their conversion to Christianitie desert their province or calling or that ever they were commanded to forsake it So that Ruler in the fourth of John ver 33. beleeved himselfe and all his house Sergius Paulus the Deputie Act. 13.12 beleeved So the Keeper of the prison Act. 16.33 was baptised he and all his houshold XI Concerning the divers formes of Common-wealths which of them is best let Politicians dispute In the Scripture we reade of Cesars Kings Princes Governours Presidents Pretors Consuls Captaines Dukes and in a word both of inferiour and superiour Magistrates Of whom is this generall saying of Paul the Apostle There is no power but of God Rom. 13.1 1 Pet. 2.13 14 17. The powers that be are ordained of God And of S. Peter Submit your selves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it be to the King as supreme or unto Governours as being sent by him Also Feare God Honour the King Where we may note that when the Magistrates office by Peter is called an humane ordinance this is not repugnant to Paul who calls it a divine ordinance For God only ordained the Magistrate but as for the forms of Common-weathls and their distinct degrees to wit that in them should be Emperours Kings Princes superiours inferiours this depends from humane ordination and politicall sanction yet all are alike governed by God therefore wee must be subject to humane ordinance for the Lords sake saith S. Peter XII Of the right of Magistrates thus saith Paul For this cause pay you tribute also for they are Gods ministers Rom. 13.6 7. attending continually upon this very thing Render therefore to all their dues tribute to whom tribute is due custome to whom custome feare to whom feare honour to whom honour Againe Give to Cesar what is Cesars Whence we gather that the right of Magistrates consisteth of three things First that hee may be knowne as the minister of God to whom therefore honour and reverence is due because hee is in stead of God for this cause as it said Magistrates are called gods Secondly that for the authoritie of so great a function they should be reverenced honoured and feared by their subjects no lesse then parents are by their children for Magistrates should be to subjects in stead of parents Thirdly that customes and tributes due to Magistrates should be paid them that out of them they may be able to sustaine the heavie burthen of their function preserve their lives and dignitie and exercise their bountie towards others Yet the Magistrate must be as far from riotousnesse as the subjects themselves as it is in Jer. 22.14 15. and every-where else in Scripture XIII God hath furnished the Magistrate with chiefe power that hee may command some and may governe others and use the sword also if need require against the disobedient and maintaine and defend his owne authoritie For so it is written Dan. 4.22 The most High ruleth in the kingdome of men and giveth it to whomsoever hee will Againe The princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them Mat. 20.25 and they that are great exercise authority upon them Againe Rom. 13.4 He beareth not the sword in vaine XIV God also for this cause laid upon the magistrate this carefull and troublesome burthen that he might urge promote and preserve among men the obedience due to Gods Law chiefly among Christians For first hee ought entirely to maintaine the honour and worship of God according to the prescript of the first Table and to propagate pietie with the true worship of God amongst his subjects according to Gods will and word For so God commanded Josuah Jos 1.8 This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night that thou mayest observe to doe according to all that is written therein So Paul Rom. 13.4 He is the minister of God to thee for good Now the chiefe happinesse of subjects consisteth in true religion and the true worship of God XV. Againe the office of the Magistrate is to maintaine right and justice and to preserve honestie peace and concord to love the good to afright and punish the wicked to maintaine and defend their subjects and territories even with the sword against domestick and forraigne enemies As it is written Jer. 22.3 Psal 82.3 Thus saith the Lord Execute ye judgement and righteousnesse and deliver the spoiled out of the hand of the oppressour and doe no wrong doe no violence to the stranger the fatherlesse nor the widow neither shed innocent bloud in this place Againe Magistrates are not a terrour to good workes but to the evill Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power doe that which is good but if thou doe that which is evill be afraid for he beareth not the sword in vaine for he is the minister of God a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doth evill XVI Both offices of the Magistrate are usually impugned by Pontificians Anabaptists and other fanaticall persons XVII In Popery the Pontificians confesse Bellarm l. 4. de Laicis c. 17 18. that the Magistrate ought not only to have a care of the civill government and to promote the publick peace but also by all meanes to defend Gods worship as it
as the Egyptians testified by their acclamations to Joseph Gen. 41.43 and the Wiseman saith Prov. 11.1 Rom. 13. 1 Pet. 2.17 My son feare God and the King And Paul Give feare to whom feare is due and honour to whom honour appertaineth And Peter Feare God Honour the King XXIX To this honour succeedeth subjection to wit that godly subjects yeeld to their Magistrate in all just things obedience in the Lord which obedience consisteth in three things 1. That subjects obey all the precepts and commands of the Magistrate 2. That they pay them their due Tributes and Customes 3. That they beare the Civill burthens without murmuring such as conduce to the preservation of the State and defence of the Countrey Of these Paul speaketh Tit. 1.3 Put them in minde that they submit themselves to Principalities and powers that they may be obedient that they may be prepared for every good ●orke And Rom. 13.1 Let every soule be subject to the higher powers Where we must note that he saith to the higher powers for subjects are not subject to a foreigne and strange Magistrate but to their owne as the Magistrate is to command his owne subjects and not strangers or foreigners XXX The Apostles reasons by which he commendeth this subjection to subjects are chiefly six The first is taken from Gods command God so ordained that Magistrates should rule their subjects and subjects should obey their Magistrates but it is not lawfull to resist Gods Ordinance 2. From the contrary wicked and pernicious effect It is most unjust that the creature should resist the Creator but to resist the Migistrate is to resist God for he is ordained to be Gods Minister and Vicegerent 3. From an effect also pernicious The disobedience and contempt of the Magistrate brings revenge and punishment for the Magistrate should be a terrour to the wicked but it is a foolish thing for a man to cast himselfe rashly upon punishment 4. From a profitable effect For it is praise-worthy to obey the Lawes and the Magistrate for he is given to the subjects for their good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5. From the impulsive antecedent cause and the end thereof If the disobedient feare not the punishment of the Magistrate yet they ought to keepe their conscience inviolated which by their disobedience they wrong shamefully and provoke Gods anger against them both temporall and eternall 6. From the adjuncts To whom tribute is due to him obedience cannot be denied the subjects then paying rightly tribute to their Magistrates they ought also to performe due obedience By these arguments of Paul the Subjects through all Churches and Common-wealths should by all meanes be driven to yeeld due obedience to the Magistrate XXXI There is also required in Subjects forbearance in bearing with the blemishes and infirmities of the Magistrates as likewise they ought to pray to God for them for because the burthen of the Magistrate is no lesse dangerous then laborious under which oftentimes they faint and are forced to indure much extremity so that sometimes they have scarce time or place to breathe in therefore it is no wonder if many times he is carried away with humane affections to wit with pride ambition intemperance pleasures sloth forgetfulnesse security anger fury and such like passions to which so much the more then other men they use to be obnoxious by how much more they are urged and assaulted with molestations more then other men It will be then the duty of pious Subjects to beare patiently with these infirmities no lesse then children should patiently indure the blemishes of their Parents Besides they ought to beseech God for their safety and prosperity as the Apostle prescribes I exhort above all things that intercession prayer and supplication be made for all men for Kings and all that be in authority that we may live a peaceable and quiet life in all godlinesse and honesty for this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour XXXII In the saying of Paul which we alledged a little above three questions use to be moved to which we will briefly and succinctly answer The first is on the Subjects part Whether the Pope Bishops and other Clergy-men are contained also under the name of higher Powers The second as also the third are of the Magistrates part Whether wicked Magistrates as were Nero and Caligula or such as are given to Idolatry be worthy of honour Also Whether obedience is to be given to that Magistrate who oppresseth his Subjects with divers wrongs and burthens and so becomes a Tyrant commanding oftentimes that which is repugnant to good manners and honesty against God and his Word XXXIII To the first question it is thus answered Though Bishops Ministers and Pastors in respect of their Doctrine and Function immediately are subject to God yet notwithstanding in respect of the Calling it selfe to wit the Ecclesiasticall Ministery and their diligence in performing of it yea much more in respect of their strength and life the government of their families and possessions by the generall command of the Apostle they are no lesse subject to the Magistrate to his power and jurisdiction then all other Christians Hence we reade in the Old Testament that the Priests and Levites in their Office depended on the Kings beck and pleasure and did all things accordingly as we see in the history of David Solomon Mat. 22.21 Mat. 17.27 Rom. 13.1 Josaphat Josiah Ezekiah In the New Testament saith Christ Give to Cesar that which is Cesars Christ also paid tribute for himselfe and for Peter the Apostle also saith without any limitation Let every soule be subject to the higher Powers The same doth Gregory acknowledge of the Romane Prelates l. 1. Epist 31. and so doth Chrysostome Bishop of Constantinople expound that saying of Paul Let every soule be subject This saith he is injoyned not onely to secular men but also to all Priests and Monks whether he be an Evangelist an Apostle or a Prophet or whosoever hath attained to high places for this subjection is no hinderance to piety S. Bernard also thus writes to Henry Archbishop of Sena or Senon Bern. Ep. 42. who refused to obey the King Let every soule be subject to the Powers If all then yours Who will except you out of this universality He that goes about to except you goes about to delude you Christ both commanded and practised otherwise Give saith he to Cesar what is Cesars and to God what belongs to God what he uttered verbally he performed really Cesars Maker stuck not to pay tribute to Cesar he left this example for you to follow By the Imperiall Law it is thus commanded Let all live according to the Laws although they belong to the house of God l. Omnes C. de leg Const Princip XXXIV From this command and practise of Christ the Bishop of Rome hath freed himselfe by denying tribute or obedience to Cesar nor hath he only
instrument of the holy Ghost to worship God 4. Seeing that God would have mankind to consist of two sexes each is to have his due place and honour neither is the weaker to be contemned or oppressed by tyranny or lust or to be entertained with injuries and contumelies but justly to be governed and protected 5. But especially seeing man was created to the image and likenesse of God this great glory is to be acknowledged and celebrated with thankfull minde neither through our lewdnesse and malice is the image and likenesse of God to be transformed into the image and likenesse of Satan neither to be destroyed either in our selves or others 6. And seeing it is destroyed by sinne through our own fault wee must acknowledge and bewaile the greatnesse of this unthankfulnesse and the evils which followed by comparing therewith those good things which we have lost 7. We must earnestly desire the restoring of this felicity and glory 8. And because the glory and blessednesse which is restored unto us by the Son of God is greater then that which wee lost in Adam so much the more must the desire of thankfulnesse and of profiting and increasing in godlinesse be kindled in us 9. And seeing we heare that all things were created for the use of man and that the dominion over the creatures lost in Adam is restored unto us in Christ we must magnifie the bountifulnesse of God toward us we must aske all things of him as being our Creatour and soveraigne Lord who hath the right and power of giving all good things to whom and how far he will himselfe and use those things which are granted to our use with a good conscience and to the glory of God who gave them 10. And that this may be done we must not by infidelity cast our selves out of that right which we receive in Christ and if God of his owne power and authority either give us lesse then wee would or take away from us that which he hath given wee must submit our selves patiently to his just purpose as most profitable for our salvation 11. And seeing the soule is the better part of man and the happiness of the body dependeth on the happinesse of the soule and seeing also we are created to immortall life we ought to have a greater care of those things which belong to the soule and eternall life then of those things which belong unto the body and this temporall life 12. And at length seeing the end and blessednesse of man is the participation and communicating of God his knowledge and worship let us ever tend unto it and referre thither all our life and actions 13. And seeing we see one part of mankind to be vessels of wrath to shew the justice and severity of God against sin let us be thankfull to God sith of his meere and infinite goodnesse he would have us to be vessels of mercy to declare through all eternity the riches of his glory 14. Last of all that we may learne consider and begin these things in this life let us to our power tender and help forward the common society and salvation of others for which we are borne OF SIN IN GENERALL The speciall questions of sin in generall are these 1 Whether sin be or whence it appeareth to be in the world and in us 2 What sin is 3 How many kinds of sins there are 4 Whence sin is what be the causes therof 5 What be the effects of sin 1 Whether sin be in us THat sin is not only in the world but in us also we are divers waies convinced We know that sin is in us By Gods owne testimony Gen. 6.5 18.21 Jer. 17.9 Rom. 1.21 3.10 7.18 Psal 14. 53. Isa 59. By Gods divine testimony which pronounceth us all guilty of sin and we are to give credence unto Gods assertion sith he is the searcher of hearts and truest eye-witness of our actions By Gods Law Rom. 3.20 4.15 5.20 7.7 By the Law of God sin is fully knowne as before in the third and fifth Questions of the Catechism hath been at large declared according to those texts of Scripture By the Law cometh the knowledge of sin The Law causeth wrath for where no Law is there is no transgression The Law entred thereupon that the offence should abound I knew not sin but by the Law By conscience and the law of nature Rom. 1.19 1.14 By conscience which convinceth us of sin for God besides the written Law reserved unto us certain generall notions and principles of the law of Nature imprinted in our understanding sufficient to accuse and condemn us Forasmuch as that which may be known of God is manifest in them The Gentiles doe by nature the things contained in the Law and shew the effect of the Law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witnesse and their thoughts accusing one another or excusing 4. The punishment and death whereunto all men are subject and enthralled Nay our Church-yards places of buriall and of execution are as so many Sermons of sin because God being just inflicteth not punishment on any but for sin Rom. 5.12 Rom. 6.23 Deut. 27.26 as saith the Scripture Death went over all men forasmuch as all men have sinned Again The wages of sin is death Also Cursed is every one that confirmeth not all the words of this law to doe them The use of this question is The use of the doctrine of sinne is 1 To worke in us Humility and Repentance That we may thence exercise our selves continually in humiliation and repentance 2 To withstand Anabaptists That we detest and withstand the outrages of Anabaptists and Libertines who deny that there is any sin in them contrary to the express word of God If we say we have no sinne we deceive our selves and contrary to all experience For they both commit many things which God in his law pronounceth to be sins 1 John 1.8 howsoever themselves falsly and blasphemously tearm them the motions of the holy Spirit and live also in misery no lesse subject to death and diseases then other men which truly were they no sinners were flat against that precise rule Where there is no sin there is no death But it is demanded Object whether wee have not a knowledge of our sinne by the Gospel also For The Gospel charging us to seek for righteousnesse not in our selves but without our selves even in Christ pronounceth us sinners Therefore by the Gospel also wee have knowledge of our sinne and not by the law alone Answ The Gospel pronounceth us sinners but not in speciall as doth the Law How the knowledge of sin cometh by the Gospel neither doth it purposely teach what or how manifold sinne is what sinne deserveth c. which is the property of the Law but it executeth this function onely in generall and lesse principally and presupposing the whole
John 16.30 Eph. 5.25 26. Christ loved the Church and gave himselfe for it That he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word He is unchangeable Heaven and earth shall passe but my word shall not passe He is truth it selfe and the fountaine of truth Mat. 24.38 John 0781 0 8.14 John 14.6 Eph. 5.2 Though I beare record of my selfe yet my record is true I am the Way the Truth and the Life He is of unspeakable mercy Even as Christ hath loved us and hath given himself for us to be an offering and a sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour to God He is angry against sin John 3.16 Rev. 6.16 17. and taketh vengeance thereof yea of hidden sins He that beleeveth not the Son shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Fall on us and hide us from the presence of him that sitteth on the Throne and from the wrath of the Lambe For the great day of his wrath is come and who can stand The Son therefore is God by nature and equall to the Father 4 The Scripture in like sort attributeth all Divine operations to the Son as it doth unto the Father And it communicateth unto him 1. All generall effects and works common to the whole three persons as that he is Creatour John 1.3 Heb. 1.3 By him were all things made Likewise that he is the preserver and governour of all things Bearing up all things by his mighty word 2. It appropriateth unto him certain speciall offices and functions appertaining to the safety of his Church as that he sendeth Prophets Apostles and other Ministers of the Church As the Father sent mee so send I you John 20 21. Ephes 4.11 He therefore gave some to be Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists and some Pastours and Teachers That he furnisheth his Ministers with necessary gifts and graces I will give you a mouth and wisdome where against all your adversaries shall not be able to speak John 1.18 nor resist That he revealeth unto us his spirituall doctrine The only begotten Sonne which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him unto us That he confirmeth this doctrine by miracles And they went forth and preached every where Marke 16.20 1 Cor. 11.23 Mat. 28.19 Rev. 22.16 John 16.14 John 10.14 16. And the Lord wrought with them and confirmed the word with signes that followed That he instituted Sacraments I have recived of the Lord that which I also have delivered unto you Baptise them in the name of the Father the Son and the holy Ghost That he revealeth things to come I Jesus have sent mine Angel to testifie unto you these things in the Church He shall receive of mine and shall shew it unto you That he gathereth the Church I am the good Shepheard and know mine and am known of mine Other sheep I have also which are not of this fold them also must I bring and they shall heare my voice and there shall be one sheep-fold and one Shepheard That he inlightneth the understanding and hearts of men No man knoweth the Father but the Son and he to whom the Son will reveale him Mat. 11.27 Luke 24.45 John 1.33 Titus 2.14 John 15.5 Gal. 2.20 Mat. 11.28 John 14.27 Then opened he their understanding that they might understand the Scriptures That he governeth the actions and lives of the godly Without me ye can doe nothing Thus I live yet not I now but Christ liveth in me That he ministreth comfort in temptations Come unto mee all ye that are weary and laden and I will ease you Peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you That he strengthneth and defendeth us against the temptations of Sathan and preserveth those that turne unto him by a true faith John 16.33 John 10.28 John 14.14 2 Cor. 12.8 even unto the end Be of good cheere I have overcome the world My sheep shall not perish for ever and no man shall take them out of mine hand That he heareth those that pray unto him If ye shall aske any thing in my name I will doe it I besought the Lord thrice and he answered mee My grace is sufficient for thee That he forgiveth sins justifieth and adopteth unto us to be the sons of God Esay 53.11 Mat. 9.6 By his knowledge my righteous servant shall justifie many That ye may know that the Son of man hath power to remit sins on the earth As many as received him John 1.12 John 10.28 1 John 5.20 Acts 10.42 Acts 17.31 to them he gave power to be the sons of God That he giveth life everlasting I give unto them eternall life This same is very God and eternall life That he judgeth the world It is hee that is ordained of God a Judge of quicke and dead Because he hath appointed a day in the which he will judge the world in righteousnesse by that man whom he hath appointed These divine works attributed unto the Son differ so from the divine properties which are attributed unto him as effects from their causes so that then his properties worke them 5. The equality of honour and worship dependeth of the equality of essence properties Esay 42.8 He hath equall honour given him and workes I will not give my glory to any other But the Scripture giveth equall honour and worship to the Father and the Son Therefore they are truely equall in God-head and in all the perfections thereof The Minor is confirmed 1. By testimonies Psal 97. Heb. 1.6 Rev 5.13 John 5.23 John 14.1 Psal 45.7 He● 1.8 Acts 30 28. 1 Tim. 16. proving that he is worshipped of Angels and the whole Church Let all the Angels of God worship him That all should honour the Son as they honour the Father Faith and hope are due unto him Yee beleeve in God beleeve also in mee 2. He is called God absolutely and simply as is the Father 3. The Epithetes or titles of divine honour which are every where in the Scriptures attributed unto the Son as God blessed for ever The great God and Saviour The Lord himself from heaven The Lord of glory The Lord of lords and King of kings power and eternall Kingdom Sitting at the right hand of the Father The Bridegroom Husband Head of the Church God of the Temple which are all the Elect Trust and beliefe in him Invocation for he is worshipped of the Church of God and Bridegroome of the Church at all times and in all places Thanksgiving for his divine benefits Furthermore albeit the name of God especially being put absolutely and without restraint doth evidently prove the Sons equality with the Father as it hath been said yet seeing that signifieth moe things and is also applyed to others who are not by nature God we are diligently to collect and to have in a readiness those testimonies in which things proper to the true God only are attributed to the
and omnipotency not of his flesh but of his God-head united thereunto by which Christ-man doth effectually apply to us those benefits which he hath obtained for us of his Father Now to acknowledge when we worship Christ the Mediatour these things in him and to professe the same both in words gestures and actions is the honour which is due and is exhibited by us to his humanity by reason of the God-head united thereto yet so that this veneration of his humanity is not separated from the honour which agreeth to Christ according to his God-head For with one and the same particular and individuall invocation and worship we speak to and honour whole Christ God and man according to the properties of both natures which he retaineth and will have also now in his glory and for ever to be attributed to him unitely but yet distinctly that is As the person and office of the Mediatour so the adoration or worship is compound having parts whereof some agree to the God-head some to the flesh and as in the office so also in the honour of the person the properties and operations of the natures are not separated neither yet confounded but being united are distinguished Wherefore as it doth not follow The God-head in Christ is Redemptresse by reason of the flesh assumed Therefore it is alwayes subject to sufferings and mortall did suffer and was dead So there is no necessity in this Ubiquitary argument Christs humanity is adored by reason of his God-head Therefore the same is also really omniscient omnipotent and after the same manner to be adored as is the God-head The reason is because of the fellowship or conjunction of office and honour in the person the same properties and operations in natures are wrongly and heretically inferred The summe of all is That Christs humanity is adored by reason of his God-head cometh not thereof as if his humanity also were really omniscient and omnipotent as is the God-head For by reason of these and other like properties is the God-head onely invocated but because it doth truly know understand heare our necessities cogitations desires prayers the divine intelligence and understanding which is united to it revealing and opening them unto it and also because what we crave at Christs hands the same it effectually performeth not by the bones sinewes hands fingers feet but by the force and power of the same God-head Furthermore that manner and forme of speaking whereby the properties of one nature are really attributed to the person denominated of the other nature or of both natures is usually called the communicating of the properties Likewise The communicating of names because the names and attributes of both natures are affirmed of the same person and of themselves interchangeably by reason of the unity of person consisting of both natures The communicating of properties hath some resemblance of the figure in speech called Senecdoche and is termed by many Synecdoche because that is affirmed of the whole person which agreeth unto it onely in respect of one of the natures as a part It is also called a mutuall and interchangeable attribution because as humane properties are attributed unto God in respect of the humanity so divine are attributed unto man in respect of the divinity As God suffered Man is omnipotent So likewise the communicating of names For Man is God and God is man by reason of the personall union of both natures A rule to be observed concerning the attributes or properties of the office of Christ Mediatour THe names of Office and Honour agree unto the whole person in respect of both natures keeping still the difference in natures of properties and operations These attributes are rightly affirmed of subjects both concrete and abstract that is both of the person and of the natures For it is well said The God-head quickneth the manhood quickneth and God or man quickneth The attributes of office are To be the Mediatour to make intercession to redeeme to save to justifie sanctifie purge from sinnes to be Lord and Head of the Church to be worshipped to heare and such like These offices require the properties and operations of both natures not separated neither yet confounded but conjoyned and distinct For even for this very cause was it necessary that the two natures should be united in Christ Mediatour that what neither nature could doe being set apart in the work of our Redemption that Christ subsisting in both joyned together might doe and accomplish by both As therefore the natures themselves so their properties also or faculties of working and operations are proper and remain divers and distinct yet so that they concurre to the effectuating and working of one effect or work and benefit as parts and communicated labours For albeit the natures doe alwayes labour and work together in the office and benefits of the Mediatour and neither without other yet doth not therefore one worke the same which the other doth But each worketh according to his property and force of working onely that which is proper to each nature and not that also which belongeth unto the other As neither the soule doth that which is proper to the body neither the body that which is proper unto the soule each doing their proper function So likewise the humanity accomplisheth not that which is proper to the God-head nor the God-head that which is proper to the manhood but the same Christ executeth and performeth one and the same office and benefit by both natures which he hath in him as parts of his person the Word working according to the property therof what belongeth to the Word and the flesh in like manner executing according to the peculiar and proper faculties therof and not according to others that which belongeth to the flesh For the properties and operations proper to each nature are not common to both natures but to the same person consisting of both natures Wherefore in such like phrases of speech concerning Christs office which are called of the ancient 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is communicatings or such as make things common the properties and operations of natures are to be distinguisht from the office of the person and from the honour which in respect of the office is due unto the person likewise one effect or act The antropall that is both of God and man or worke or benefit from one operation or action as the whole from a part The office is common to both natures but the natures proper faculties of working and actions in executing that office are not common to both natures For that the same should be both proper and common doth imply a manifest contradiction So the work and benefit of whole Christ is a certaine whole thing and is as it were compound and common to both natures but there are two parts hereof and diverse operations proper to each nature which are wrought joyntly and belong to the same person which is Christ God and man that is
and governeth all things They commonly define it to be to reigne in equall power and glory with the Father That is true indeed of Christ for he doth all things likewise as doth the Father and is endued with the same power with the Father which also he exerciseth But the Son hath alwaies so reigned and the same agreeth also to the holy Ghost who yet is not said in the Scripture to sit neither doth sit at the right hand of the Father because the Father doth not governe all things especially his Church immediately by the holy Ghost but by the Son Wherefore this definition which is commonly received is not sufficient and perfect Some confound his sitting with his ascension and say it is all one But we have already shewed and proved a difference and it is absurd that in so short a Confession should be an idle speaking of the same thing twice This phrase of speech is taken from the custome of Kings Whence the phrase of Christs sitting at Gods right hand ariseth who place those whom they honour at their right hand and have their assistant assessors to whom they commit the power of government So Christ is said to sit at the right hand of the Father because the Father will rule and governe by him immediately all things both in heaven and earth This Session therefore is the supreme dignity and glory given by the Father unto Christ after his ascension Or the peerlesse exaltation of the Mediatour in his Kingdome and Priest-hood Christ alone sitteth then at the right hand of God the Father that is he is that Mediatour and person omnipotent by which the Father governeth all things immediately but especially by which he defendeth the Church against her enemies And this glory and Session of Christ at the right hand of the Father Foure things wherein Christs sitting at Gods right hand consisteth is 1. The perfection of Christs divine nature that is the equality of the Word with the Father which he did not then receive but ever had Which his Divinity though for the whole time of his humiliation it lay hidden and undiscried yet it afterwards shewed forth it selfe with power and majesty 2. The perfection and exaltation of Christs humane nature This perfection compriseth 1. The personall union of the humane nature with the Word Col. 2.9 In him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the God-head bodily 2. The excellency of gifts wisdom power brightnesse glory majesty and other graces far greater and more in number than are bestowed on all men or Angels and therefore in which he far excelleth both men and Angels Joh. 1.16 3.34 Of his fulnesse have all we received God giveth him not the spirit by measure 3. The perfection or the excellency of the office of the Med●atour that is the Propheticall Priestly and Royall function which Christ now as the glorified head of his Church doth in his humane nature gloriously exercise in heaven For now he is our glorious intercessor he is the glorious giver of the holy Ghost and the mighty preserver and defender of his Church This excellency of Christs office is the very exalting of Christ in all his functions that is the laying down of the infirmity of Christs humane nature and the perfection of glory which was due unto Christ both in respect of his office as being a Prophet King and Priest and in respect of his person as being God Mat. 28.18 All power is given unto me both in heaven and earth 4. The perfection of Christs honour that is the adoration worship and reverence which equally as to the Father is yielded unto Christ both of Men and Angels because he is adored and magnified of all as the Lord and Prince of all Let all the Angels of God worship him Psal 97.7 Heb. 1.6 Phil. 2.9 Hee hath given him a name above every name By these and the like speeches are signified the parts of Christs sitting at Gods right hand But the name whereof is spoken in the words of the Apostle before alledged is the excellency of the person and office of Christ and a declaration of both by his visible majesty that all may be forced to confesse that this is the King by whom God ruleth all things So also did Stephen see him standing on Gods right hand adorned with visible majesty and glory and worshipped him Christ had some parts also before of his excellency both of his office and of his person but he then came to the full perfection of all when being taken up into heaven hee was placed at the right hand of the Father A more full description of Christs sitting at Gods right hand By these parts now of Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father the definition of his sitting may be made more full in this wise When Christ is said to sit at the right hand of the Father he is said to have the same and equall power with the Father To excell all Men and Angels in his humane nature both in gifts bestowed on him more and greater than on them as also in visible glory and majesty To shew himselfe Lord of Men and Angels and of all things that are created in the name of the Father To rule and administer immediately his Kingdom in heaven and the whole world and chiefly To govern by his power immediatly the Church Lastly To be acknowledged and magnified of all as chief Lord and Head But how and how many waies Christ is called our Head hath been heretofore fully handled in the 32. Question of the Catechisme Christ may be said to sit at Gods right hand in respect of both natures 1. How in respect of his humanity The Session therefore at the right hand of God is the honour not of the Father or the holy Ghost but proper to the Son alone and is indeed the last degree and consummation of honour which the Son obtained in both natures but diversly in each of them For in respect of his humane nature it is a reall communication of heavenly gifts or perfect glory which the humane nature or man-hood of Christ injoyed not before the ascension But as concerning his divinity his session at the right hand of God is no change thereof 2. How in respect of his divinity but a bare laying aside that humiliation whereunto it had subjected it selfe and a manifestation of that glory which he had alwaies with the Father and had concealed in the time of his humiliation and a title of full and free challenge whereof the God-head in the assumption of humane nature had as it were discharged it selfe For as the God-head humbled it selfe so also it was againe exalted and placed at the right hand of the Father namely John 17.5 it was gloriously manifested in the flesh Father glorifie me c. Many objections are by this definition refuted As 1. The holy Ghost also is equall with God the Father Therefore we may
mannage the affaires of the Common-wealth let the Preacher instruct the Church on the good heape rewards on the evill aggravate punishments Let honour be given to whom honour belongeth Rom. 13.7 and tribute to whom tribute belongeth There is also another division of Justice namely Of the person and Of the cause Justice of the person when a person is just and agreeable to the Law Justice of the person and of the cause Of the cause when he hath a just and good cause in any controversie whether the person himself be good or bad Herewith David doth oftentimes comfort himself in his Psalmes It is otherwise called The justice of a good conscience A briefe Table comprehending the partition of Justice set downe in the second Chapter of this tract of Justification Justice in generall is a conformity with God or with the Law of God Or it is a fulfilling of Gods Law This Justice is divided into 1. Uncreated justice which is God himselfe whose whole effence is meere Justice 2. Created justice which is an effect of God in reasonable creatures whereby they be conformable unto Gods Law It is divided into 1. Legall justice or justice of workes which is perfect obedience of the Law performed by Angels or Men. This again is distinguished into 1 Universall justice which is an observing of all the lawes which belong unto us It is divided into 1. Perfect justice which is an external and internal conformity with the Law of God and other lawes of men which concern us 2. Imperfect justice which is a conformity indeed but begun onely This is again subdivided into 1. Philosophicall or humane justice which is a knowledge of Gods Law and vertues imperfect obscure and weake c. 2. Christian justice which is a knowledge of God and his Law imperfect indeed yet apparent kindled in the heart by the holy Ghost through the Gospel and joyned with a serious inclination of the will and heart to obey God according to all his commandements 2. Particular justice which is a vertue giving to every man his owne and is divided into 1. Commutative justice which observeth an equality of things and prices in contracts and exchanges 2. Distributive justice which observeth a proportion in distributing offices goods rewards punishments 2. Evangelicall justice or justice of faith which is a fulfilling of the law performed not by us but by another for us that is the ransome of the Son of God imputed unto us 3. In what Justice differeth from Justification JVstice is the very conformity it selfe with the law and the fulfilling of the law and the thing whereby we are just before God which is the very satisfaction of Christ performed on the Crosse Justification is the application of that justice and by this application the thing whereby we are just even that justice and satisfaction of Christ is made ours and except that be made ours or applied and imputed unto us we cannot be just as neither the wall is made white except whitenesse be applyed unto it For even in like maner Justice differeth from Justification or justifying as whitenesse from whitening So application and imputation are not all one for imputation is not extended so far as application For God alone doth impute but we also doe apply unto us Now Justification is divided in like sort as is Justice For there is one Justification legall which is a working of conformity with God or with the Law of God in us Legall Justification This is begun in us by the holy Ghost when as we are regenerated There is another Justification evangelicall which is an application of his evangelicall justice unto us Evangelicall Justification or it is an imputation of anothers justice which is without us in Christ or it is an imputation and applying of Christs righteousness which he performed by dying for us on the Crosse and rising againe It is not a transfusing of the qualities into us but an assoiling and absolving us in judgement for anothers righteousnesse Wherefore Justification and Remission of sins are all one For to justifie is that God should not impute sin unto us What it is to justifie but accept us for just and absolve or pronounce us just and righteous for Christs justice imputed unto us That this word is thus to be understood is proved In thy sight shall no man living be justified that is shall not be absolved Psal 143.3 22. shall not be pronounced just to wit by inherent righteousnesse Blessed are they Psal 32.1 2. Rom. 4.7 whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth no sin Out of these words Paul interpreteth justification to be the remission of sins where the word impute is seven times used Object Hee that is just and righteous is conformed and agreeable to the law To justifie is to make just Therefore to justifie is to make one agreeable to the law All this is granted To justifie is to make one agreeable unto the law either in himselfe which is called our own justice inherent infused legall justice or in another which we terme imputed righteousnesse righteousnesse of faith the righteousnesse of the Gospel and anothers righteousnesse because it is not inherent in us but in Christ this is also a conformity with the law Rom. 3.31 For faith maketh not the law to be of none effect but establisheth it And such now is our Justice and Justification For the question is concerning that righteousnesse whereby we sinners are just in this life before God not of that whereby we shall be just in the other life or had bin just before the fall if man had not sinned 4. What is our justice or righteousnesse before God Our righteousness is Christs satisfaction which consisteth in his humiliation OVr justice or righteousnesse that is the justice or righteousnesse of the Gospel whereby wee are just in the sight of God is not our conformity with the law nor our good workes nor our faith but it is Christs satisfaction onely performed unto the law for us or the punishments which hee sustained for us and so his whole humiliation from the beginning of his conception untill his glorification that is his taking of flesh his undertaking of servitude penury ignominy and infirmity his suffering of that bitter passion and death all which he did undergo for us but willingly finally whatsoever he did or suffered whereunto himselfe as being just and the Sonne of God was not bound and that humiliation and satisfaction freely of God imputed unto us his faithfull and beleevers For that satisfaction is equivalent either to the fulfilling of the law by obedience or to the abiding of eternall punishment for sin 1. Cor. 2.2 Col. 2.10 Rom. 5.19 Esay 53.5 6. Luke 22.20 Rom. 3.24 25. 4.7 5.9 10. to one of which wee were bound by the law I esteemed not to know any thing among you save
testifie that he doth in a lawfull and right use of them bestow the thing promised and so may confirme our faith or that he may instruct us of his will by his Sacraments and by them exhort us to receive and imbrace the blessings purchased by Christ and further seale by those Sacraments these benefits and blessings of Christ unto us Now the Sacraments seale these benefits and blessings unto us 1. Because Sacraments are signes 2. Because they are pledges having a promise Therefore by these signes and pledges of Gods favour towards us the holy Ghost effectually moveth our hearts no lesse then by the Word The second end is the distinguishing of the Church from Painims 2. To distinguish the Church from others and all other Sects whatsoever For God will have his Church to be beheld in the world and to be knowne by these sacred signes as souldiers are knowne by their military tokens and sheep by those marks which their shepheard seareth seareth in them He willeth the Jewes to be circumcised and Christians to be baptized he interdicteth aliens and strangers and excludeth them from eating of the Paschall Lamb. God will have his Kingdome discerned from the Synagogue of Sathan for these two causes 1. For his owne glories sake 2. For our comfort and salvation For as he will not have himselfe shuffled and mingled with Idols so neither will he have his people shuffled and mighled with the Kingdome of the Devill The third end is the profession and testification of our thank fulnesse and duty towards God 3. To prosesse and testifie our thankfulnesse which is the bond whereby we are obliged unto Christ to be his people as he is our God to shew true repentance to beleeve in him and to receive of him his benefits offered unto us The fourth is the propagation and maintenance of the doctrine 4. To propagate and maintain the doctrine because God will not have the use of his Sacraments to be without the Word and application thereof The fifth is an occasion thereby given to the yonger sort to inquire what these things meane 5. To give an occasion to the younger to inquire and learne the things by them signified Exod. 13.14 and so an occasion also of explicating and preaching the benefits of Christ unto them As also the Lord saith unto his people When thy son shall aske thee to morrow saying What is this Thou shalt then say unto him With a mighty hand the Lord brought us out of Egypt out of the house of bondage The sixth and last end is that they may be bonds of mutuall dilection and love because they 6. To unite us in mutuall love and affection who are entred into an association or confederacy with Christ the head of the Church ought not to be at difference among themselves By one spirit are we all baptized into one body In like manner the Sacraments are the bonds of publike meetings and congregations in the Church When ye come together to eate tarry one for another For we that are many are one bread 1 Cor. 12.13 11.33 10.17 Ephes 4.5 and one body because we are all partakers of one bread One God one Faith c. But we cannot settle among us this communion neither maintaine and continue it being once settled neither profitably annunciate and shew sorth the death of the Lord as long as we dissent and jarre among our selves contentiously about the institution of the Sacraments For the Sacraments are pledges of that communion which Christians have first with Christ and then between themselves In what Sacraments differ from Sacrifices WE must hold and observe a difference betweene Sacrifices and Sacraments that we may know what to doe when we come unto the Sacraments and not make Sacrifices of Sacraments that is present our owne workes imagining that they please God for the very work done and deserve remission of sinnes as Papists doe Now the difference betweene these consisteth especially in two things In their kind and nature In their kinde and nature For Sacraments are onely ceremonies witnessing unto us Gods will Sacrifices may be ceremoniall and morall works also as our Sacrifices of thanksgiving of praise and thankfulnesse the calves of our lips our almes c. are morall works whereby we yeeld unto God due obedience and honour without any ceremony In their principall end In their principall and chiefe end In the Sacraments God offereth unto us his benefits but Sacrifices are testimonies of our obedience towards God This appeareth out the definition of both A Sacrament it a work wherein God giveth us something to wit the signes and the things signified A Sacrament A Sacrifice and wherein he testifieth of his offering and bestowing his benefits upon us A Sacrifice is a work wherein we yeeld unto God obedience or the worship which he hath commanded us Or it is our work done in faith and to this end principally That God may have his due honour and obedience They differ then as these two To give and To take differ For God giveth Sacraments unto us and he receiveth Sacrifices of us Howbeit the same rite or ceremony may be in diverse respects both a Sacrament and a Sacrifice A Sacrament as it is given of God A Sacrifice as it is used by the godly performing to God their obedience and yeelding him tanks Therefore a Sacrament and Sacrifice are often one and the selfe-same thing The same thing or work may be a Sacrifice and a Sacrament in a diverse respect but still they differ in respect All Sacraments then in respect of us are Sacrifices also but those onely Eucharisticall and of thanksgiving not propitiatory For there is but one onely Sacrifice propitiatory to wit the ransome of Christ offered for us on the Crosse Hence we easily may answer unto that objection Object The Passeover and other ceremonies of the Old Testament were both Sacrifices and Sacraments Therefore the Sacraments doe nothing differ from Sacrifices Ans More is in the conclusion then in the premisses because this only followeth That the same thing may be a Sacrament and a Sacrifice So Baptisme and the Lords supper are Sacraments and Sacrifices in a diverse manner and respect They are Sacraments and that principally because they are the work of God who giveth us something in them and doth therein testifie his gift unto us For in them he reacheth unto us certaine symbols and tokens by his Ministers as also by his Ministers he speaketh as by his mouth unto us according as it is said Luke 10.16 He that heareth you heareth me So therefore every Minister reacheth with his hand the Sacraments unto us and we receive them at their hands as at the hands of God if so we take them with reverence but much more God giveth and as it were reacheth with his hand unto us in the lawfull and right use of the Sacraments the things themselves which are
the light 1 John 1.7 we have fellowship one with another and the bloud of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin And further this communion whereof Saint Paul speaketh is our union with Christ and fruition of all his benefits by faith Hither belongeth the similitude of the body and the members the vine and the branches which have nothing to doe with any corporall eating This communion was and is common to all the faithfull from the beginning unto the worlds end But they could not eat the body of Christ corporally by their mouth That we might grow up unto him by whom all the body is coupled and knit together Eph. 4.15 16. He that is joyned unto the Lord is one spirit 1 Cor. 9.17 And by one spirit are we all baptised into one body Hereby know we that we dwell in him and hee in us 1 John 4.13 because hee hath given us of his Spirit This union therefore is that communion which is wrought by the holy Ghost wherefore it is spirituall For bread cannot be this communion but by a figure as it is a signe Repl. He that is guilty of the body of Christ eateth it They who receive unworthily are guilty of the body of Christ Therefore they eat it corporally for spiritually they cannot because if they could so eat it they should not be guilty Answ The Major is false For he is guilty of Christs body who by his sins hangeth it on the crosse again and despiseth Christs benefits For any reall eating is not required to this guilt but he that will not receive Christ offered by faith is thereby made guilty So the injury done unto the Ark is said to be done unto the Lord. Repl. They that discern not the Lords body eat it But the guilty discern it not Therefore they eat it Ans It the Major be taken sacramentally as of the bread which is called and is the body of Christ it is true but if properly it is false For not to discern his body is not to give due honour to it to contemn it yea not to receive the thing signified So They are said to tread under foot the Son of God Heb. 10.29 and to count the bloud of the testament as an unholy thing who contemn him 5. They reason from the testimony of the Fathers and the godly of ancient times in the purer state of the Church Ans The sayings of the Fathers are to be understood sacramentally or of our spirituall communion Repl. 1. Augustine saith Thou shalt receive this in the bread which hung on the crosse and this is the cup which was shed out of Christs side Answ In the bread as in the signe that is together with the signe thou shalt receive the thing signified When we receive the bread we are certain that wee have Christ Repl. 2. Cyril upon John saith By naturall participation not onely spiritually but also corporally not onely according to the spirit but also according to the flesh corporally and essentially Answ Cyril speaketh not of the manner of eating but of the thing which was to be eaten He sheweth that we are made partakers not only of Christs spirit but also of his humane nature Now he understandeth a spirituall communion 1. Because hee citeth those places concerning it John 6. 1 Cor. 10. where no mention is made of corporall eating 2. He speaketh of the presence of Christ not in the bread but in us 3. He proveth the abiding of Christ in us by the use of the Supper not by any corporall eating 4. He so describeth it that hee saith It shall continue in the life to come 5. Hee speaketh of that communion which is proper unto the saints Now this is spirituall for otherwise it should befall also to the wicked The shifts of Consubstantiaries whereby they go about to elude and shift off certain of our objections not all for moe are objected against them 1. WEe make not say they any Capernaiticall eating Ans We demand of them whether Christ be eaten by the bodily mouth be it after a grosse or after a finer manner But how ever they answer in that opinion which they hold there is too too much idolatry for Christ refuting the Capernaites doth not distinguish the eating of him into a grosse and a finer manner but saith simply That his body cannot be eaten with the bodily mouth for he saith that he must ascend And that the words which he speaketh are spirit and life 2. We maintain not Ubiquity for there is not a word thereof to be found Ans Here is to be observed the dissention of the adversaries about Ubiquity But neither is a word to be found hereof That the body of Christ is together in two places And further of this their opinion followeth Ubiquity For he that is together and at one time in moe places must needs be infinite and therefore every-where 3. Wee overthrow not the article of Christs ascension Ans Yea but they doe overthrow it For while they hold that as often as the Supper is celebrated Christ is corporally eaten they must needs say that he remaineth and is invisible on earth But he is said to have left the world to have ascended from a lower place into an higher and to remain in heaven untill he come to judgement Now that some except that Christ doth descend from heaven as often as the Supper is administred it is already refuted 4. We take not away the doctrine of the properties of Christs humanity Ans They altogether take it away For they will have his humane nature to be such as is not seen nor felt nor limited in place Rep. But Christ did put off these infirmities and retained the essentiall properties Ans But these are very essentiall properties which being taken away the verity also and truth of his humane nature is taken away Augustine saith Take away from bodies their spaces and they shall be no where 5. Wee abolish not the doctrine concerning the communicating of properties of both natures Ans Yea but they endeavour it For they apply those properties of his divine nature which are affirmed of the whole person in the concrete to both natures I will be with you to the end of the world This they understand of both natures which is all one as if when it is said Christ God and man was circumcised one should thus conclude Therefore the God-head of Christ was circumcised as well as his flesh Repl. This only we adde That those articles belong not unto them Ans After this sort all sects may shift off all testimonies of Scriptures But they belong hither and that by a double right 1. Because they are written of the body of Christ But the body of Christ belongeth to the Supper Therefore these articles also belong hither for they shew how Christs body is to be eaten 2. They belong hither because no article of faith is at variance with another So
sufficing for the true knowledge of God 13. Moreover although naturall testimonies teach nothing that is false of God yet men except the light of Gods word come thereto gather and conceive out of them nought else but false and erroneous opinions concerning God both because these testimonies shew not so much as is delivered in the word and also because even those things which may be perceived and understood by naturall judgement men notwithstanding by reason of that blindnesse and corruption which is ingendred in them take and interpret amisse and diversly deprave and corrupt 14. Wherefore in the first Commandement of the Decalogue the ignorance of those things is forbidden and condemned which God hath proposed unto the Church to be knowne of us concerning him in his word and in his works both of our creation and redemption Likewise all errours are condemned of such as imagine either that there is no God as the Epicures or moe gods as the Ethnicks Manichees and those that pray to Angels dead men and other creatures and the vanity of superstitious men which put their trust in other creatures or things diverse from him who hath manifested himselfe in the Church as Jews Mahumetists Sabellius Samosatenus Arius Pneumatomachists and such like who acknowledge not God to be the eternall Father with the Son and the holy Ghost co eternall Hitherto have we delivered certaine generall rules for the better understanding of the true meaning of the Decalogue Now we are to speake of the sense and meaning of the Decalogue in speciall that is of the meaning of every particular Commandement An exposition of the first Commandement THe first commandement hath two parts a preface and a commandement The preface goeth before being comprehended in these words I am Jehovah the Lord thy God which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of bondage This preface belongeth to the whole Decalogue because it describeth and discerneth God the Law-giver from all creatures Law-givers and false gods and further it containeth three severall reasons why the obedience both of this first Commandement Three reasons why obedience is to be performed unto God in this and in all the other Commandements and of the rest which follow is to be performed unto God 1. He saith he is Jehovah whereby he distinguisheth himselfe the true God from all creatures that he may shew himselfe to have the chiefe right of ruling I am Jehovah That is I whom thou hearest speaking and giving the Law unto thee am the true God who is and existeth from himselfe and by himselfe and giveth unto all other things their being and therefore hath chiefe authority and soveraignty over all Creatour of all things eternall omnipotent author and preserver of all that are good therefore obey me 2. He saith that he is the God of his people that through the promise of his bountifulnesse he might allure us to obey him God verily is the God of all creatures as touching both the creating and preserving and governing of them all but he is the God of his Church by the singular participation and manifestation of himselfe How God is said to be out God God then is our God when we acknowledge him to be such as he hath manifested himselfe in his word namely who imployeth his omnipotencie justice wisdome and mercy unto our salvation or who tendereth us with an especiall and peculiar favour in his Sonne For God is properly said to be their God whom he loveth and favoureth above all others Whereupon also the Prophet David affirmeth that Nation to be blessed whose God is the Lord Psal 33.12 even the people that he hath chosen for his inheritance 3. He saith Which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt As if he should say I am he I am he who have manifested my selfe unto thee and bestowed all those blessings upon thee This he addeth that by the mentioning of his late and notable benefit he might declare unto them and admonish them that they were bound therefore to shew thankfulnesse and obedience unto him This also belongeth unto us because it doth figuratively comprehend and imply all the deliverances of the Church by the mentioning of so famous and notable a benefit And further also this was a type of our wonderfull deliverance atchieved by Christ Now when he saith that he Jehovah is this God and deliverer of the Church he opposeth himselfe both to all creatures and to Idols challenging all divine honour and obedience unto himselfe alone according to the exposition hereof delivered Deut. 6. Esa 43. and in other places Wherefore it followeth not onely that this Jehovah is to be worshipped but that he alone is to be worshipped and to be accounted for our God Some of the ancient made this preface to be the first Commandment and for the second Commandement they took the words following Hesychius Thou shalt have no other gods before me But it is manifest that these words I am the Lord thy God c. are not the words of commanding ought but of one recording or rehearsing something of himselfe Howbeit the words which follow Thou shalt have no other gods c. have the forme and nature of a Commandement The end of the first Commandement The Commandement then is Thou shalt have no other gods before me The end of this Commandment is the immediate internall or inward worship of God that is that we acknowledge the true God alone revealed in the Church and give due honour unto him with our whole minde will and heart Moreover this Commandement is in such wise a negative and denieth other gods as that it containeth also an affirmation thus Thou shalt have none other gods therefore thou shalt have me that Jehovah which have manifested my selfe in my Church thy God alone Now to have God What it is to have God is 1. To know and acknowledge God namely that there is a God that he is one God that he is such a God as he hath manifested himselfe in his Church and that he is such a God also towards us 2. To trust in God onely 3. With great humility and patience to subject and submit our selves unto God 4. To expect and looke for all good things from God onely 5. To love God 6. To reverence and worship God Herein consisteth the obedience of this Commandement whose parts are the vertues which follow immediatly after the explication of the words of the Commandement What is meant by the words other God What it is to have other gods An other God is every thing to which the properties and works of God are attributed though the thing it selfe have them not and they be not agreeable to the nature of the thing whereunto they are attributed To have other gods is not to have the true God that is either to have no God or to have moe gods or an other then the knowne God or not
in meeknesse of minde let every man esteeme another better then himselfe Pride a vice contrary in the defect to Humility Unto Humility in the extremity of defect is opposed Pride or arrogancy which is to ascribe his gifts not to God but to his own worthinesse or ability and therefore to stand in admiration of himselfe and his gifts not truly to feare God neither to acknowledge and bewaile his defects and so further to be aspiring to higher places and callings and standing not upon God but upon his owne gifts to attribute also to himselfe those things which he hath not to attempt things above his power and not belonging to his calling to contemne and debase others in respect of himselfe to yeeld to none but to covet to excell and be eminent above other to referre his gifts and counsels principally to his owne glory to be angry with God and men to fret and fume against God when his desires and counsels are hindered and also to accuse God of errour and injustice if Gods counsels agree not with the judgements and affections of men More briefly thus Pride and arrogancy is for a man to admire himselfe and his own gifts to attribute them to himselfe as chiefe causes of them to intermeddle with other mens affaires and fret and fume against God if his will and desire be hindred Hereof it is said 1 Pet. 5.5 Prov. 16.5 God resisteth the proud All that are proud in heart are an abomination to the Lord. Vnto humility is opposed in the extremity of excesse a feigned modesty or humility which is a double pride and it is to hunt after the praise and commendation of humility by denying of those things outwardly which yet a man doth in his minde attribute unto himselfe either truly or falsly and by refusing of those things which he most of all desireth and covertly laboureth to compasse When ye fast looke not sowre as the Hypocrites for they disfigure their faces that they might seeme unto men to fast Verily I say unto you that they have their reward Aristotle termeth it feigned nicenesse and those that are possessed therewith counterfeit nice men Some render the word there used by Aristotle thus Vaine-glorious dissemblers The words of Aristotle are these They who dissemble in small and open matters are called coy deceivers and grow contemptible every where with men and sometimes it is pride in men as the wearing of Lacedemonian attire or cladding themselves in any course and vile apparrell Therefore counterfeit humility is double pride VII Vertue Patience Patience is the knowledge and agnizing of Gods Majesty wisedome justice and goodnesse resolving through a confidence in Gods promise and so in hope of Gods assistance and deliverence to obey God in suffering those evils and adversities which he sendeth on us and willeth us to suffer neither in respect of the griefe which they bring to murmur against God or to do any thing against his Commandements but in our dolour and griefe to retaine still the confidence and hope of Gods assistance to aske deliverance of him and by this knowledge and full perswasion of Gods will to mitigate and asswage our griefe and paines Psal 37.7 35 Hold thee still in the Lord and abide patiently upon him Hope thou in the Lord and keep his way and he shall promote thee Humility and Patience belong unto the first Commandement not onely because they are parts of that internall obedience which God requireth immediatly to be performed unto him but also because they follow and accompany the true knowledge or confidence love and feare of God as necessary effects of the same Impatience contrary in the defect to patience Unto Patience in the extremity of defect Impatience is contrary which is through the not knowing and distrust of Gods wisdome providence justice and goodnesse not to be willing to obey God in suffering such adversity as he willeth us to suffer and through griefe to fret against God or to do somewhat against his Commandements neither to desire or expect from God any help and deliverance neither by the knowledge and trust or perswasion of Gods will to moderate the griefe but to yeeld unto it and being broken therewith to be driven and solicited unto despaire Examples hereof are Saul and Judas also many raging affections in Jobs complaints wherewith the godly are often shaken and distressed Unto Patience in the excesse Temerity or rashnesse is opposed Rashnesse contrary in the excesse to patience Sirac 3.27 which is through foolishnesse not knowing or not considering the dangers or his own calling or the will of God or else through a confidence in himself to adventure dangers without any need or necessity He that loveth danger shall perish therein Here is to be noted and observed that oftentimes in this and other Commandements the same vices are opposed to sundry and diverse vertues So unto faith hope and feare of God is opposed carnall security to faith hope the love of God humility and patience is opposed the tempting of God and to the true knowledge of God and faith Idolatry is most repugnant The same may be seene also and must be observed in the vertues and vices of other Commandements ON THE 35. SABBATH Quest 96. What doth the second Commandement require Ans That we should not expresse or represent God by any image or shape and figure a Esay 40.18 19 25. Deut. 4.15 16. Rom. 1.23 24. Acts 17.29 1 Sam. 15.23 Deut. 12.30 Matth. 15.9 or worship him any otherwise then he hath commanded in his word himself to be worshipped The Explication The end of this second Commandement TWo things are contained in this second Commandement the Commandement it self and an exhortation to obedience The end or scope of the Commandement is That the true God alone who commandeth himself to be worshipped in the first Commandement be rightly worshipped of us namely with such worship wherewith it is right and meet he should be worshipped of intelligent and understanding creatures and such as pleaseth him and be in no sort dishonoured by superstitious kinds of worship Wherefore the true worship of the true God is here injoyned and withall a rule is given that we holily and religiously containe and hold our selves within the lists and tarriers prescribed by God neither adde ought to that worship which God himselfe hath instituted nor maime the same so much as in the least point which also we are in other places expresly injoyned by the Lord. What is the true worship of God and what it is to worship him truly Now the true and uncorrupt worship of God is every internall or externall worke commanded of God done in faith which is perswaded that both the person and the worke please God for the Mediatours sake the chiefe end whereof is that due honour may be given unto God whereby we may shew that we acknowledge him alone for the true God who hath willed
withall or for some dangerous kind of ornament 2. Whether all worshipping at Images be forbidden and may not in any sort be defended TO this question we make answer out of the second part of the commandement which simply forbiddeth us to impart divine honor and worship to Images and pictures not onely that which is given thereby or referred to creatures but also which is referred to the true God Thou shalt not bow downe to them nor worship them Object 1. We worship not the Images say the Papists but God of whom those are signes and tokens according to those versicles of the second Nicene Councel That which the Image sheweth is God the Image it selfe is not God Look on the Image but worship in thine heart that which thou beholdest therein and according to those of Thomas Whensoever thou passest by the Image of Christ see thou doe obeisance yet worship not the Image but worship that which the Image representeth Answ 1. We deny that Images are signes of God because God cannot be truely signified by them seeing he is immense and though he could yet he ought not because he hath expressely forbidden them and because it is not in the power of any creature to ordaine or establish any signes whereby to signifie God but onely in the will and pleasure of God Answ 2. In this argument our adversaries tender and alledge unto us a false and needlesse cause For not onely the worshipping of Images is the cause and forme of Idolatry but even the very worship of God also which is given to Images or other creatures besides or contrary to his word 1 Kings 12.28 Exod. 32.5 as the story of Aarons and Jeroboams calves doth sufficiently declare For though these men said Behold O Israel thy gods which brought thee up c. To morrow shall be the holy day of the Lord yet God both detested and severely punished those worships as horrible and abominable Idolatry Wherefore howsoever Idolaters pretend the name and honour of God yet in Idols not God but the Devill is worshipped according as Paul testifieth of the Gentiles 1 Cor. 10.12 These things which the Gentiles sacrifice to Idols they sacrifice c. though even they also in their worshippings pretended the name and honour of God Object 2. The honour which is given unto the signe is the honour of the thing signified Images are a signe of God Therefore the honour which is given unto Images is also given unto God Answ We againe deny the Minor or distinguish of the Major thus The honour of the signe is also the honour of the thing signified namely when the signe is a true signe that is ordained by him who hath authority to ordaine it and when also that honour is given to the signe which the right and lawfull author of it will have done to the signe For not the will of him that honoureth but of him that is honoured is the rule which must prescribe the due honour Now whereas God hath forbidden both these namely that Images should be erected to him and that himselfe should be honoured at Images erected to him or to any creatures he is not honoured but contumeliously wronged and reproached when any honour done to images is fastned on him Repl. Whatsoever contumely is done to the signe that redoundeth on God although the signe be not instituted by his commandement Therefore the honour also that is given to the signe redoundeth on God although that honour be not commanded to be given to the signe Answ This reason doth not follow because then are contrary things rightly attributed to contraries when the contrariety of the attributes dependeth of that according to which the subject is opposed and not of some other thing So we grant that contumely against God followeth indeed the contumely against the signe albeit the signe were not instituted by God but not simply in respect of the signe it selfe unto which that contumely was done but in respect of his corrupt and bad will who by shewing contumely against the sinne which is thought to represent God purposeth himselfe and is minded to despite with contumely and reproach God himselfe For to the shewing of despite and contumely against God it sufficeth if there be any intent or purpose of departing from his commandement But if through a desire that we have to avoide Idolatry we detest Images and other false reputed signes of God by this contumely done to the signes we rather promote further and advance Gods glory But the honour of God doth not follow the honour of the signe except both the honour and the signe be ordained by God because it is not the intent and purpose of honouring God that sufficeth to the doing of honour unto God but the manner also which himselfe hath prescribed whereby to be honoured is required and must be observed Object 3. It is lawfull to honour the Images of noble renowned and well-deserving men Therefore much more is it lawfull to honour the Images of blessed Angels and Saints Ans 1. To the Antecedent we answer That honour of monuments is lawfull which is a gratefull and honourable memory of those whose monuments they are and also that which is applyed to the use which themselves would justly have it and not to the worship of them or to the worship of God by their monuments yea and the defacing and utter razing of those monuments if necessity require such a change so it be done without any will or desire of despighting or dishonouring them whose monuments they are is also lawfull But by no meanes may we attribute divine honour unto them such as that is which these Papists yeeld unto their Idols whether they cloak it with the name of adoration and worship or veneration and service 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The images or monuments of notable men must be such as have not been drawne into Idolatry for if so we are not to honour them but to suppresse them altogether after the example of the brasen Serpent which Ezekias brake in peeces 2 Kings 18.4 Num. 11.8 9. when it was abused to Iolatry though in former times it were kept as a monument of Gods goodnesse shewed in the wildernesse in healing by the aspect or beholding of it them that were bitten with the fiery Serpents Quest 98. But may not Images be tolerated in Churches which may serve for the use of the common people Answ No. For it is not seemly that we should be wiser then God who will have his Church to be taught with the lively preaching of his word a Rom. 1.17 2 Pet. 1.19 2 Tim. 3.16 17. and not with dumb images b Jer. 10.8 c. Hab. 2.18 19. The Explication THis is their demand who grant that indeed the picture and images of God and Saints are not to be adored but maintaine that they are to be retained in Christian Churches as the books of lay-men and for other causes also so
necessary circumstance of those which are required to the lawfull and true invocation of God as Idolatrous invocation or prayer which either is directed unto false gods or to creatures or tyeth Gods hearing of us and his presence to a certaine place or thing without his word that is without the commandement or promise of God Such is the invocation and prayer of Pagans Turkes Jews and of all who imagine and make unto themselves another god besides him which hath manifested himselfe in his word by the Prophets and Apostles through the sending of his Sonne and his Spirit Ye know not what yee worship John 4.22 Likewise idolatrous is the Papists invocation who invocate on Angels or on the Saints departed because they attribute and give unto them the honour which is due unto God alone Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Mat. 1.10 I fell before the Angels feet to worship him but he said unto me See thou doe it not Revel 19.10 I am thy fellow servant and one of thy brethren which have the testimony of Jesus Worship God Praying for things contrary to Gods will James 4.3 A craving of such things at Gods hands as are contrary to his will and Law Yee aske and receive not because yee ask amisse that yee might consume it on your lusts Lip-labour or faithlesse and unrepentant prayer Lip-labour or vaine babbling that is prayers made without any true motion of the heart without a desire of Gods bountifulnesse onely in word or outward motion of the body or without true repentance without faith beleeving to be heard without a submitting of our will unto Gods will without the knowledge or cogitation of Gods promise without confidence and trust in Christ the Mediatour only and without acknowledgement of our owne weakenesse and infirmity Mat. 6.7 Esay 1.15 James 1.7 When ye pray use no vaine repetitions as the Heathen for they thinke to be heard for their much babbling When you shall stretch forth your hands I will hide mine eyes from you And though you make many prayers I will not heare Neither let that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord. Objections of Papists for invocation and prayers to Saints departed OBject 1. The Saints for their vertues and gifts are to be worshipped of us with the worship either of Adoration or of Veneration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But not with the worship of Adoration for this is due unto God onely as giving unto him to whom it is yeelded an universall and generall power providence and dominion Therefore Veneration is due unto them that is such honour wherewith we venerate and worship Saints for their holinesse and merits Ans 1. We deny the consequence because the enumeration of duty and reverence proposed in the Major is imperfect For besides the worship of Adoration and Veneration as they distinguish there is another kind of worship and honour due to the Saints What worship is due to Saints and beseeming them namely An agnising and celebrating of that faith holinesse and gifts which God hath bestowed on them and an obeying of that doctrine which they have delivered unto us from God and an imitating and following of their life and godlinesse whereof Augustine testifieth They are to be honoured saith he by imitation Lib. de vera Relig. not by adoration This worship is due unto the Saints neither do we detract or take it away from Saints either living or departed but with all willingnesse we yeeld it unto them Heb. 13.7 according to the Apostles commandement Remember them which have the oversight of you which have declared unto you the word of God whose faith follow considering what hath bin the end of their conversation 2. We deny the Major because the worship which they entitle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is adoration and veneration are not diverse but one and the same not befitting Saints or other creatures but God onely because he heareth and understandeth in all places and at all times the thoughts groanes and wishes of such as call upon him and relieveth their necessities None but God can heare them which pray therefore this honour is to be rendred to God alone that it is he who heareth them that pray as also this honour agreeth to Christ alone that through his merit and intercession remission of sins eternall life and other blessings are given us of God This honour therefore cannot be translated unto Saints without manifest sacriledge and Idolatry whether it be called by the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifie but one thing Mat. 4.10 Mat. 6.24 Luke 16.13 1 Thes 1.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 16.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Levit. 7.21 Levit. 25.28 Valla in cap. 4. Mat. or any other name whatsoever For this distinction is very frivolous seeing the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifie indifferently the same thing both in Scripture and in profane Writers Of God it is said Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve Where the English word Serve is in the Greek Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Yee cannot serve God and Mammon where the English word Serve is in the Greek Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used in this sense in these places Yee turned from God to Idols to Serve the living and true God They that are such Serve not our Lord Jesus Christ And Paul every-where calleth himselfe the Servant of God In the Greek Text of the Bible servile and slavish businesse is commonly termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Suidas writeth that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 importeth as much as to serve for hire or reward Valla sheweth that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth to serve men as well as to serve God citing and alledging for proofe a place out of Xenophon where the husband saith that he is ready to adventure his life rather then his wife should Serve where Xenophon useth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And againe the wife saith that she would adventure her life rather then her husband should Serve which word Xenophon expresseth by the verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 differ no more then meat and food that is they are two names of one thing Object 2. Whom God honoureth the same must we also honour God honoureth the Saints Mat. 19.28 Ye shall sit upon twelve thrones c. Therefore we also must honour them Ans We grant this concerning that honour which God giveth unto the Saints for therein invocation is not comprehended as being an honour due unto
Sacrifices or Sacraments Sacrifices are ceremonies appointed by God wherein we offer and performe some certaine obedience unto God Sacraments are Ceremonies instituted of God whereby God testifieth and performeth certaine benefits to us Those Ceremonies which are ordained by the Church Ordained by men are not the worship of God and may be changed by the advice of the Church if there be good causes for the changing and alteration of them 4. Whether the Church may ordaine Ceremonies Caveats to be observed by t●e Church in instituting of Ceremonies THe Church may and ought to ordaine Ceremonies because without defining and determining of circumstances the Morall worship cannot be kept There are notwithstanding certaine conditions to be observed by the Church in ordaining Ceremonies namely 1. They must be such Ceremonies as are not impious but agreeable to the word of the Lord. 2. They must not be superstitious such as to which we annex worship or merit or necessity or which are done with offence 3. They must not be too many nor too toylesome and burdensome 4. They must not be idle and unprofitable but must all tend to edifying ON THE 39. SABBATH Quest 104. what doth God injoyne us in the fifth Commandement Answ That we yeeld due honour love and faithfulnesse to our Parents and so to all who beare rule over us and submit our selves with such obedience as is meet to their faithfull commandements and chastisements a Ephes 6.1 2.5 5.22 Col. 3.18 20 22 23 24. Pro. 1.8 4.1 15.20 20.20 Exod. 21.12 Rom. 13.1 And further also that by our patience we beare and suffer their vices and manners b Pro. 23.22 Gen. 9.24 1 Pet. 2.18 ever thinking with our selves that God will governe and guide us by their hands c Ephes 6.9 Col. 3.19 21. Rom. 13.2 3 Matth. 22.21 The Explication NOw follow the Laws of the second Table of the Decalogue the obedience whereof doth as well verily respect God as the commandements of the first Table but the works are immediately exercised towards men For the immediate object of the second Table is our neighbour and the mediate is God The summe of the whole obedience of the second Table Christ hath briefly comprised in these words Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe Matth. 22.39 And he hath laid downe this rule for better understanding of the Commandements of this second Table Marke 7.12 Whatsoever yee would that men should doe unto you even so doe ye unto them for this is the Law and the Prophets Of the whole second Table Christ also pronounceth that Mat. 22.39 The second Commandement is like unto the first that is the second Table is like unto the first Table which is thus to be understood 1. As touching the kinde of the chiefe worship of God the second Table is like unto the first and so is the second said to be like unto the first in respect of the ceremoniall which are not the chiefe worship 2. As touching the kinds of eternall punishment because the transgression of both Tables meriteth eternall punishment 3. As touching the inseparable coherence of the love of God and our neighbour For our neighbour cannot be loved without the love of God and the love of God is declared and exercised by the love of our neighbour Three causes of the necessity of obedience unto the second Table Whence also we may gather the causes for which obedience is necessarily to be yeelded unto the second Table seeing God no lesse exacteth it at our hands then he also requireth the obedience of the first Table namely 1. That in this obedience God himselfe may be worshipped and our love towards him shewed and declared by our love towards our neighbour for his sake 2. That by the love of our neighbour our conformity with God may appeare 3. That the society of mankind may be preserved which was ordained of God for the celebration and magnifying of his Name Moreover this fifth Commandement of honour due to Parents which Hierome plainly calleth the fifth in order is placed first in the second Table 1. Because this is the cause the bond Comment in Ephes 6.2 Two causes why this Commandement is placed first in the second Table and ground of the obedience of the rest of the Commandements following For if this obedience stand which is of the inferiours towards the superiours who are those which ought in Gods name to command the obedience of the Commandements that follow then must the obedience towards the rest of the Commandements necessarily follow 2. Because the Lord annexed a speciall promise and a singular blessing unto this Commandement that is length of life to be heaped on those who yeeld obedience unto it And these two namely the Commandement and the Promise doth this fifth Commandement containe The end of the fifth Commandement Now the Commandement proceedeth thus Honour thy Father and thy Mother The end of the Commandement is the preservation of civill order which is the order decreed and appointed by God in the mutuall duties of superiours and inferiours The superiours are all such whom God hath set over others to rule and defend them The inferiours are those whom he hath submitted to the power of others to be ruled and defended by them The duties of superiours are comprehended by the name of Father and Mother And our superiours are 1. Parents themselves who bred us Five sorts of superiours understood by the name of Father and Mother 2. Tutors and over-seers of pupils or young children 3. Schoole-masters Teachers and Ministers of the Church 4. Magistrates high or low 5. Our Elders All these or whosoever else rule over us are understood in the name of Parents and are to be honoured of us because God giveth them all to us instead of Parents and they discharge the duty of Parents and are as it were Gods Vice-gerents in ruling and governing us substituted by God for Parents to us when the malice of men began to increase Now Parents rather then other governours are named and commanded to be honoured Foure reasons why Parents rather then other Governours are here commanded to be honoured 1. Because the Father-like power and government was the first amongst men 2. Because this is as it were a rule according to which others are to be composed and framed and God will have superiours beare a Father-like mind and affection towards their inferiours 3. Because it is most beloved of all men so that to it and in regard of it they easily submit themselves 4. Because seeing the bond of duty towards Parents is the greatest the contempt of them is the more haynous and grievous which therefore also is with greater severity condemned by God In this Commandement then is prescribed the honour not only of Parents but also of all Superiours and likewise the obedience not onely of children but also of all inferiours Herein also are
of prayer Some demand Whether wee be so tyed to this forme of prayer that in praying wee may use no other Answ Christ delivered this forme unto us not that wee should be tyed to these words but that wee might know 1. What things aske 2. How to aske them For it is a generall forme of the manner whereby and the things which we are to aske Now it falleth out oftentimes that particular benefits are necessary for us which we must aske of God according to those sayings of Scripture Whatsoever ye shall aske the Father in my name he will give it you John 14.13 James 1.5 Matth. 24.20 If any of you lack wisdome let him aske of God and it shall be given him Pray that your flight be not in the winter But these as touching the words are not in this prayer There are also many examples of prayer in the old and new Testament which as concerning the words 2 Chron. 20.6 2 King 8.15 Dan. 9.4 John 17.1 Acts 4.24 differ from this as the prayers of Josaphat Salomon Daniel Christ himselfe the Apostles and others which neverthelesse were heard of God Wherefore the forme of prayer delivered unto us by Christ is wholly a thing indifferent Object Wee may not be wiser than Christ Therefore seeing hee hath appointed us a certaine form of prayer we must hold us contented therewith and therefore we do amisse when we use other formes of prayer Ans We may not depart from that forme if Christ will have us tied unto it but he will not have us tyed to these words because his purpose was when he taught his Disciples to pray to deliver a briefe summe of those things which we are to aske of God Repl. That is to be retained than which no better can be invented Wee cannot invent a better forme and better words than are these of Christ himselfe Therefore wee must retaine also the forme and words of Christ. Answ We cannot invent better words neither a better forme to expresse this summe of such things as are to be desired which is as it were the generall of all things that are to be desired These generals of Gods benefits which Christ in this forme hath prescribed unto us to be desired cannot be proposed in a better forme but Christ will have us also to descend to specials and aske particular benefits according to our necessity For that form prescribed by Christ is nothing else but a set or course of certaine heads or generals whereunto all benefits as well corporall as spirituall may be referred And when Christ willeth us to desire the generals hee willeth us also to desire the specials And further also those which are here put in generall we are in like manner for this cause to declare in speciall that we may be led into a consideration of our necessity to a desire of making of our petition to God to help our necessity Now that we may doe this we have need also of speciall formes of praying For to the explication of generals by their specials we have need of another form But yet all other formes of prayer must agree with this forme prescribed by Christ Hence Austine testifieth August ad Prob. that All the prayers of saints extant in Scripture are contained in the Lords Prayer And he addeth farther that It is free for us to say the same things in other words when we pray but it is not free for us to say or mention other things than are comprised in this forme of prayer Quest 120. Why doth Christ teach us to call God our Father Answ That presently in the very entrance and beginning of the prayer hee might stirre up in us such a reverence and confidence in God as is meete for the sonnes of God which must be the ground and foundation of our prayer to wit that God through Christ is made our Father and will much lesse deny unto us those things which wee aske of him with a true faith than our earthly Parents deny unto us earthly things a Math. 7. v. 9 10 11 Luke 11. v. 11 12 13. The Explication THis Prayer of Christ hath three parts a Proeme Petitions and a Conclusion The Proeme is Our Father which art in heaven The Proeme hath two parts 1. A calling on the true God in these words Our Father 2. A description of him in these which art in heaven And the Lord used this kind of Proeme because he will be called upon with due honour This honour consisteth 1. In the true knowledge 2. In true confidence 3. In obedience Obedience compriseth 1. True Love 2. True Feare 3. Hope 4. Humiliation 5. Patience Our Father God is called Our Father 1. In respect of our creation The sonne of Adam the Sonne of God 2. In respect of our redemption God is our Father in three respects Luke 3.38 and receiving into his favour by his Son our Mediatour Christ is the only begotten and naturall Sonne of God wee are not his sons by our own nature but are for Christs sake adopted to be sons 3. In respect of our sanctification or regeneration by the holy Ghost in Christ Christ will have us to call God Father and so to invocate him Five causes why we here call God Father 1. In regard of the true invocation of God who is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ 2. In regard of the true knowledge of him that we may know him to be our Father who through and for his Son the Mediatour hath adopted us to be his sonnes when otherwise wee were his enemies John 20.17 I goe unto my Father and unto your Father and who farther also for his Sons sake regenerateth us by the holy Ghost and endoweth us with all gifts and graces necessary 3. In regard of reverence namely that in us may be stirred up and raised true reverence towards him that seeing hee is our Father wee therefore behave our selves as becometh sonnes and be affected with such reverence towards him as it becometh children to be affected towards their Father especially being adopted children and unworthy of Gods blessings and benefits 4. In regard of confidence that the same be raised in us whereby we may be assured that we shall be heard and that hee will give us all things which pertaine to our salvation For seeing God is our Father Rom. 8.32 and even so loving a Father to us That hee hath given his onely begotten Sonne for us to death how then shall hee not give us together with him all things necessary to our salvation 5. For a memoriall of our creation Now God will heare those onely that ●o pray because in them hee obtaineth the end of his blessings and benefits Object 1. We invocate the Father according to the prescript of his owne Son Therefore wee must not invocate the Sonne and the holy Ghost Ans The consequence of this reason is denied because the consequence holdeth not from the
heed lest he fall A declaration of the miseries of this life A declaration of the miseries of this life lest we should wexe secure and love and cleave to the world A confession of Gods providence A confession of Gods providence whereby as Cyprian testifieth is shewed that the Divell can effect nothing against us except God first permit him that so our whole feare and reverence might bend to God-wards seeing in our temptations that wicked one can doe nothing except power be given him of God Now the Divell hath power over us according as our sinnes reigne in us as it is said Who gave Jacob for a spoile Esay 42.24 and Israel to the robbers did not the Lord because we have sinned against him For they would not walke in his wayes neither be obedient unto his Law And this power indeed is given him to a double end either to our punishment when we offend or to our glory when we are tried c. Thus far Cyprian The order and coherence of the petitions Now we are to observe the order and coherence of these petitions 1. The Lord commandeth us to desire the true knowledge of God and his promise which is the cause of all other his blessings 2. He willeth us to desire that God would governe us by his Spirit and so continually preserve and confirme us in this knowledge 3. That every of us may doe and fulfill thereby his duty in his vocation and calling 4. That he would give us those things whereby every one may doe his duty namely corporall blessings The fourth petition then agreeth with the former because if we must at all be in our own vocation and calling we must live and have things necessary for the maintenance of our life 5. He adjoyneth next after the petition of spirituall and corporall blessings a very fit objection of our unworthinesse That thou mayest give us spirituall and corporall blessings forgive us our debts Wherefore the fifth petition is the ground and foundation of the rest which being overthrowne the rest fall to ground For if thou resolve not that thou hast God gracious and favourable unto thee how shalt thou have him to be mercifull How shalt thou continue in that knowledge which thou hast not How shalt thou doe thy duty and the will of God seeing thou art his enemy and endeavourest the contrary How shalt thou ascribe all things to God How shall they turne to thy salvation 6. After the petition of spirituall and corporall blessings there followeth lastly the petition of our deliverance from evils both present and to come And from this last petition we returne againe to the first Deliver us from all evils both of crime and paine both present and to come that we may know thee to be our perfect Saviour and so thy name may be hallowed and sanctified of us Quest 128. How concludest thou this Prayer Answ For thine is the kingdome the power and the glory for ever that is we aske and crave all things of thee because seeing both thou art our King and almighty thou art both willing and able to give them all unto us a Rom. 10.11 12. 2 P●t 2.9 And these things we therefore aske that out of them not to us but unto thy holy Name all glory may redound b John 14.15 J●●●m 33.8 9. Psalme 115.1 The Explication THis last part of prayer serveth to confirme our faith and beliefe or confidence of being heard and obtaining our desire to wit that God will and is able to give us those things which we desire Thine is the kingdome Thine is the kingdome This first reason is drawne from the duty of a King which is to heare his subjects to defend and preserve them Therefore thou O God seeing thou art our King mightier then all our enemies having all things in thy power good and evill evill so that thou art able to represse them good so that there is no good so great which thou canst not give as is agreeing and standing with thy nature and seeing we are thy subjects be present and assist us with thy power and save us as who art loving unto thy subjects and thy protection and safe-guard is alone saving and preserving He is called a King 1. Because he hath power over all creatures 2. Because he is the peculiar King of the Church The power And the power The second reason is drawne from the power of God Heare us O God and give us what we desire because thou art mightier then all our enemies thou art able to give us all things and thou only art able in thee alone resteth this power joyned with exceeding goodnesse The glory And the glory The third reason is taken from the end or finall cause We desire these things for thy glory From thee alone the true God and soveraigne King we desire and expect all good things and professe thee to be the Author and fountaine of all good things And verily because this glory is due unto thee therefore also do we desire them of thee Heare us therefore for thy glory For this petition and expectation of all good things from thee is nothing else but the attributing and yeelding unto thee thy due glory and honour and especially because thou wilt also for thy glory sake give us those things which we desire For what things serve for thy glory the same wilt thou performe and do but those things which we desire serve for thy glory therefore thou wilt give them us Give us therefore these things that we desire and the glory shall returne and redound unto thee if thou deliver us For so shall thy kingdome and power and glory be manifested Object We seeme to bring perswasive and moving arguments unto God whereby we may move him to doe what we desire But in vaine are reasons used to him who is unchangeable God is unchangeable Therefore in vaine use we these reasons unto him Ans This is a fallacy putting that for a cause which is no cause For we grant this argument in respect of God but not in respect of us For we do not when we thus speak use reasons to move God or perswade him to do it but to perswade our selves that God will do this and to confirm and assure us that we shall be heard and to acknowledge our necessity and the goodnesse and truth of God Wherefore these reasons are not adjoyned to our prayers as thereby to move God but only to confirme and assure us that God will doe what we desire because these are the causes why he doth it Thou art a most good King therefore thou wilt give these things to thy subjects Thou art most powerfull and mighty therefore thou wilt shew thy power in giving these gifts which are most great and which can be given of none other but of thee alone It shall be to thy glory therefore thou wilt doe it because thou hast care of
But now we make no inquiry of the Laws in generall what of how many kinds and which be best but rather what these Laws should be according to which the Magistrate ought to governe a Common-wealth XXIV Which question ought not to be accounted superfluous because many have beene so ignorant that they have not doubted to assever that Christians ought in all things to be subject to the Laws of Moses then which no better judiciall Laws can be made seeing God himselfe did prescribe them to the Israelites which preposterous opinion made great stirs in the Church and Common-wealth at that time when there were such tumults in Munster XXV We must know then that there is not a better Law nor more excellent then the Law of God himselfe which is justly preferred to all others but with this difference that it be done according to Gods will and minde revealed in his Word This difference is taken from the three-fold end and scope of Moses Law For one end considers the manners vertues and vices of all men promiscuously which by the law of Nature to every man are either commanded or prohibited and so God would have his Law contained in the Decalogue to be observed by all men The other end and scope of the Mosaicall Law was to governe the Leviticall Priest-hood by certaine rites and ceremonies which were types of Christs Priesthood These Laws of Aarons Priest-hood God would have to continue and flourish no longer then till the exhibition of Christ and then to be abrogated He that will go about to introduce into the New Testament these legall Ceremonies he must needs both introduce Judaisme and withall deny that Christ is yet come in the flesh The third scope and end of the Law respects the Judaicall politie in which God would discriminate the Israelites from all other people by certaine Laws because Messiah the Saviour of the world was to be borne of the Tribe of Judah this Law God would have to continue so long as the difference of people was observed but when Christ was borne this difference ceased and of two people he made one Mark 16.16 to wit Christians of Jews and Gentiles as Paul witnesseth Ephes 2.14 Therefore Christ commanded his Disciples and Apostles that they should preach the Gospell not to one people alone but to all people through the whole world If any then would obtrude upon Christians this Civill Law as absolutely necessary what else I pray did he do then deny Christ to be yet come in the flesh for the redemption of his people XXVI Hence it appeares that the Ceremoniall and Judiciall Law of God was heretofore to the Jews an excellent Law till Christ came but both these God so appointing it at this day are abrogated by Christ so that the Jews themselves at this time neither will nor can keepe either of them Therefore all people that have among them the Church of Christ have this liberty granted them that they may rule their Common-wealths by their owne usuall and positive Laws As for the Morall Law which is the expresse image of the law of Nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and of common equity God hath not abolished it but it tyes all men by Gods own prescription both Jews Gentiles and Christians to the observation thereof XXVII The summe of all this is 1. That it is the duty of a Christian Prince and Magistrate to rule their subjects according to the Morall Law of God set downe in the two Tables of the Decalogue as the onely and surest rule of equity and justice from which rule they are not to depart a haires breadth in the government of their States 2. Seeing that Civill causes or pleadings without which humane society cannot subsist concerning Judicature Offices buying and selling and other contracts also concerning Inheritances Fines and punishments and such like Statutes are not expressed or commanded in Gods Law but are left free to the Christian Magistrate to be determined by his arbitrement therefore these particular Laws may be enacted and proclaimed according to the custome and priviledges of each Religion Province People or City by any godly Magistrate yet having regard still to common and naturall equity But among all Civill Laws of all other people those were alwaies accounted most just as being most consonant to the Law of God and of Nature which of old were enacted by the Romans which Christian Emperours Kings Princes and subjects have every-where retained and approved even Paul the Apostle also when as yet he conversed with the Jews did willingly submit himselfe to these same Lawes and in the Acts did often appeale to them Acts 22.28 25.10 12. 1 Pet. 2.13.17 I saith he am a Romane Citizen borne and I stand here at Cesars Tribunall where I must be judged I appeale to Cesar Petor also the Apostle exhorts Christians to subject themselves to the Romane Lawes and to obey them he therefore approves of the Romane Republique and of their Civill Laws which he would have to be observed by the Christian Civill Magistrate 3. When lastly Judiciall Lawes are neither expressed in the Morall Law of God but are left to the arbitrement of Christian Princes and their subjects neither in the written Laws of the Romanes which are approved for the most part by Christian Common-wealths are all cases of every People Nation place City expresly comprehended neither are municipall Laws Customes and particular Constitutions repealed Princes and Christian Magistrates should carefully provide that adiaphorous or things indifferent which by God have beene neither commanded nor prohibited for ought we reade may be determined For example Whether there is need of such and such Offices Whether a greater or lesser Tribute or Subsidie is to be imposed on the people Whether Subjects should beare Armes and such like which are called positive Laws by the Lawyers that they may be consentaneous both to the law of Nature and to the Law of God being enacted for promoting the publique good and therefore to be observed carefully by the subjects nor to be slighted without wronging the conscience as it is written We must be subject not onely for wrath but also for conscience XXVIII The office and right of Subjects consisteth in three things 1. That they afford due reverence and honour to the Magistrate to wit for that dignity which he hath received from God This honour is not properly in externall gesture given to the Magistrate whom wicked men also do thus reverence accounting Magistrates necessary evils but the Magistrate is duely and chieflly honoured when the subjects acknowledge Gods Ordinance in him that he is Gods Vicegerent and Minister to whom God himselfe hath delivered his owne power to rule subjects according to Gods will From hence depend reverence and love feare also and obedience due to the Magistrate which honour God hath commanded in his Law Honour thy Father Exod. 20.12 and Mother for the Magistrate is the Father of the people