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judgement_n defendant_n good_a plaintiff_n 2,512 5 10.2701 5 true
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64622 A body of divinitie, or, The summe and substance of Christian religion catechistically propounded, and explained, by way of question and answer : methodically and familiarly handled / composed long since by James Vsher B. of Armagh, and at the earnest desires of divers godly Christians now printed and published ; whereunto is adjoyned a tract, intituled Immanvel, or, The mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God heretofore writen [sic] and published by the same authour.; Body of divinity Ussher, James, 1581-1656.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1645 (1645) Wing U151; ESTC R19025 516,207 504

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condemned in respect of the second part of this Cōmandment 253 Helpes and hinderances to the keeping of this Commandement The reasons enforcing obedience to this Commandement 1 Reason 2 Reason 3 Reason 4 Reason 254 The second Table The summe of the second Table The generalls to bee observed in this Table The division of the second Table 255 The first Commandement 256 The meaning and scope of the fift Commandement The duties of equalls What are Superiors Who are Inferiours 257 What it is to honour Duties of Superiours The divers sorts of Superiours 258 The duties of aged Persons Duties of the yonger unto them Superiours in knowledge Superiours in authority Duties of inferiours to those that are in authority Duties of Superiours in authority 259 Kinds of Superiours in authority 260 Superiours in the family and their duties Inferiours in the Family and their duties Duties of husbands and wives Duties of the husband The duties of the wife 261 Duties of Parents Sinnes of Parents 262 Duties of Children towards their parents Duties of Masters towards their Servants 263 Duties of Servants towards their Masters 264 Publick Superiours and their duties The sorts of publick Superiours Superiours in the Church and their duties 265 The Peoples dutie to their Minister Superiours in the common-wealth The Magistrates dutie in civill affaires 266 The duties of Subjects towards their Magistrates Of the helps and meanes enabling us to keep this fifth Commandement 267 Hinderances to these duties here commanded Of the reason annexed to the fifth Commandement Of the promise of long life and how performed 268 The sixth Commandement The summe and meaning of it The negative part The affirmative part The duties respecting our owne persons 269 Duties respecting our soules The contrary vices forbidden Duties respecting our bodies The contrary sins forbidden Duties respecting the time of our departure 270 Duties respecting our neighbour while he liveth Inward duties respecting our affections Duties respecting the preservation of peace 271 Evill passions opposite to these duties Outward duties respecting the soules of our neighbours The contrary vices to the former duties Duties respecting the whole person of our neighbour 272 Duties required in words The opposite vices The use 273 Duties required in our deeds The contrary vices to the former duties How we doe indirectly endanger our neighbours life 274 How wee doe directly take away our neighbours life Chance-medley and how proved to be a sinne Of manslaughter 275 Of Duels Of wilfull murther Reasons perswading to the detestation of this sinne Duties to be performed to our neighbour after his death Duties respecting beasts Of punishments due to the breakers of this Commandement 276 Meanes furthering us in the obedience of this Commandement Hinderances to the obedience of this Commandement The seventh Commandement 277 The meaning and scope of the seventh Commandement Of inward impurity and the branches of it Abuse of apparell 278 Of the abuse of meat and drink Wanton gestures 279 Chastitie in the eyes c. Wanton speeches Chastity in the tongue and eares Stage-playes 280 Breach of the seventh Commandement in respect of action Of Stewes and the unlawfulnesse of them 281 Of Rape Of Incest Of Fornication 282 Of Adultery Of Polygamy What is required in the entrance into Marriage The contrary abuses 283 What is required in the holy use of Marriage Vnlawfull separation The punishments of the breach of this Commandement 284 Helps and means of keeping this Commandement Hinderances of obedience 285 The eighth Commandement The end of the eighth Commandement The occasion of this Commandement 286 Of Theft The parts of this eight Commandement Generall duties commanded 287 Opposite vices Speciall duties here required Arguments disswading from the love of money and earthly things 288 Self-contentednesse Motives perswading to self-contentednesse Lawfull measuring of our appetite 289 Affected poverty 290 Covetousnesse Ambition 291 Carking care Carelesnesse Solicitous and distracting care What required to just getting 292 Lawfull Calling and labour in it Extraordinary getting 293 VVhat is opposite to a lawfull Calling Vnjust getting out of contract Theft 294 Domesticall Theft Theft committed out of the family Sacriledge Theft of persons 295 Rapine Oppression Accessaries to theft Acquisition by lawfull contract 296 Acquisition by liberall altenation Acquisition by illiberall alienation Merchandise 297 Of selling Vices and corruptions in selling Of buying what is required to it 298 Of pawning and what is required unto it 299 Of location and letting 300 Of conduction and hiring Of usury Of contracts between Magistrates and people 301 Of contracts betweene Ministers and people Of Work-masters and hirelings and their duties to one another Of things deposited and committed to trust 302 The duties of Executors Of persons committed to trust Of just possession of goods and what is required unto it 303 Of restitution and what is to be required in it Of the right use and fruition of goods 304 Of parsimony and frugality Of tenacity and miserlinesse 305 Profusion and prodigality Of liberality Of lending Of free giving The ninth Commandement 306 The scope or end The occasion of this Commandement 307 The chiefe sinne here forbidden The negative part The affirmative part The sum of the duties here required 308 Of truth Truth must be professed and how Opposite to truth 309 1. Lying Reasons to disswade from lying Three sorts of Lyes Vices opposed to freedom of speech 310 Opposites to simplicity of speaking truth Meanes of preserving truth 311 Profitable speech Curtesie and affability 312 Seasonable silence Opposites to profitable speech 1. Unprofitable 2. Hurtfull speech 3. Rotten speech Fame and good name 313 Of publike testimonies 314 Of rash judgement 315 Of perverse judgment The duties of the plaintiffe and the vices opposed hereunto The vices of the defendant 316 The duties of Lawyers and the opposite vices The duty of witnesses 317 False testimony in the publike ministry of the Word Flattery 318 Evill speaking Whispering Obtrectation Conserving our owne good name 319 The means of getting a good name 320 A true testimony of our selves 321 The opposites to the profession of truth concerning our selves Arrogancy and boasting Confession of sinne 322 The tenth Commandement The end of this Commandement 323 The occassion of this Commandement Two sorts of concupiscence Lawfull concupiscence 324 Unlawfull concupiscence and the kindes thereof The growth of sinne The parts of this Commandement 325 And first the negative part Originall concupiscence That originall concupiscence is sin Actuall concupiscence 326 Evill thoughts Evill thoughts injected by Satan 327 Evill thoughts arising from naturall corruption The speciall kinds of concupiscence here forbidden 328 What is meant by our neighbors house Neighbours wife 329 Neighbours servant His Oxe and Asse The affirmative part The meanes inabling us to obey this commandement 330 The impossibility of keeping this Commandement Hitherto of the rule of our sanctification the Morall 331 The effect or exercise of sanctification in repentance and new obedience Repentance what it is When repentance is to
Contracts between Magistrates and people Of Contracts between Ministers people Of Workmasters and hirelings and their duties to one another Of things deposited and committed to trust The duty of Executors Of persons committed to trust Of just possession of goods and what is required unto it Of Restitution and what is to be considered in it Of the right use and fruition of goods Of parsimony and frugality Of tenacity miserlinesse Profusion and Prodigality Of Liberality Of lending Of Free-giving The ninth Commandement The scope or end The occasion of this Commandement The chiefe sin here forbidden The Negative part The Affirmative part The summe of the duties here required Of Truth Truth must be professed and how Opposites to truth 1. Lying Reasons to disswade from lying Three sorts of Lyes Vices opposite to freedom of speech Opposites to simplicity of speaking truth Means of preserving truth Profitable speech Curtesie and affability Seasonable silence Opposites to profitable speech 1. Vnprofitable 2. Hurtfull speech 3. Rotten speech Fame and good name Publick Testimonies Rash Iudgment Perverse Iudgment The duties of the Plaintiffe and the vices opposite hereunto The vices of the Defendant The duties of Lawyers and the opposite vices The duty of witnesses False testimony in the publick Ministery of the word Flattery Evill speaking Whispering Obtrectation Conserving of our own good name The meanes of getting a good name A true testimony of our selves The opposites to the profession of truth concerning our selves Arrogancy and boasting Confession of sinne The 10. commandement The end of this Commandement The occasion of this Commandement Two sorts of concupiscence Lawfull concupiscence Vnlawful concupiscence and the kindes thereof The growth of sinne The parts of this Commandement and 1. the negative Originall concupiscence That originall concupiscence is sinne Actuall Concupiscence Evill thoughts Evill thoughts injected by Satan Evill thoughts arising from naturall corruption The speciall kinde of conpiscence here forbidden What is meant by our neighbours house Neighbours wife Our neighbors servant His Oxe and Asse The affirmative part The meanes enabling us to obey this commandement The impossibility of keeping this Commandement Repentance new obedience Repentance what it is When repentance is to be exercised Of the spirituall warfare Of the spirituall Armour Of our first enemy Satan 2. Enemy the World Third enemy our flesh New obedience Of good works in generall and of the Properties of them That there is no merit in good works Wherein our good works faile Why God rewardeth our works The ends of good works Of speciall good works required Of prayer what it is The necessity of prayer A more full description of prayer What is required that prayer may be holy That we must pray to God alone That we must pray only in the mediation of Christ. For whom we must pray The parts of Prayer Of Petition The meanes of obtaining the gift of prayer Motives to prayer Hinderances of Prayer The subject of our requests Prayer for others Of thanksgiving In what thanksgiving consisteth Why thanksgiving is required The properties of praise The meanes of thanks-giving Motives to thanksgiving Signes of thankfulnesse Of the Lords Prayer Of the p●e●ace Our Father Which art in heaven The parts of the Lords Prayer 6. Petitions in the Lords Prayer 1. Petition What is meant by Name What is meant by hallowed What we ask in this petition What graces we here pray for What things we here pray against The second Petition What is meant by Kingdome What is meant by comming The particulars here prayed for respecting the kingdome of grace 2. Respecting the kingdome of glory The third Petition The three last Petitions The fourth Petition What meant by Bread What meant by Give Give us This day Out Daily What we beg in this Petition The fifth Petition What is meant by debts What we aske of God in this fifth petition The reason of the petition The sixt Petition The summe of the sixt Petition Of the temptations and the cau●es why we must pray against them How God tempteth us Deliver us from evill What is meant by it What is meant by evill What things we paray for in the sixt Petition Conclusion of the Lords Prayer What is meant by Kingdome What is meant by Power What is meant by Glory What meant by Thine What meant by for ever What is meant by Amen Whether lawfull to use any other forme of Prayer What publick Prayer is What private Prayer is What ordinary prayer is What extraordinary prayer is Circumstances of prayer 1. Gesture Of the place of prayer Of the time of prayer Of Fasting What an holy Fast is Of the time of Fasting Of the kindes of Fasting Of publick Fast. Of private Fast. Who are to fast Of the parts of a Christian fast Of a holy feast Of the time of feasting In what an holy feast consisteth Of Vowes Gen. 28 20. Iudg. 11. 30. 31. 1 Sam. 1. 11. Who are to vow What is to be vowed The duty of those that have vowed Of Almes a 2 Cor. 9 7. Who are to give Almes a 1 Iohn 3. 17. b Luke 21. 2 3. c 1. Tim. 6. 17. d Eph. 4. 28. e 2 Cor. 8. 2. 14. a ● Sam. 25. 3. b Mat. 12. 7. a Neh 8. 10. b Luke 19. 8. How much must be given c 2 Cor. 9. 6. Gal. 6. 7. Prov. 11. 25. d Luke 3. 11. 1 Cor. 16. 2. e 2 Cor. 8. 13. f Acts 20. 25. g 2 Cor. 8. 1 2. 9 Luke 12. 35. h Act. 4. 34 35 with Acts 5. 4. i 1 Tim. 5. 8. k 2 Cor. 9. 12. Iob 31. 17 18 c. Iam. 2. 15 16. To whom alms must be given l Matth. 5. 41. Rom. 12. 20. m Luke 10. 33 with Ioh. 4. 9. n Psal. 41. 1. o Deut. 15 7. 11 Lev. 25. 35. p Luke 7. 5. q 2 King 6. 1. c. 2 Chro 34. 22. r Ioh. 5. 2 3. 9 s 2 Thes. 3. 10 11 12. 1 Tim. 5. 8. Mat. 15. 5 6. t Deut. 15. 7. What order must be observed in giving u Gal 6. 10. x 1 Kings 17. 13. y 1 Cor. 16. 2. z Luke 21. 1. Iob 31. 16. Prov. 3. 28. With what affections almes must be given a Deut. 15. 8. Mat. 5. 42. b Luke 6. 36. Psal. 37. 26. c Exod. 22. 25. d Neh. 5. 11. e Luke 6 35. f Prov. 1. 26. g Nehem. 5. 18. The fruits of Almes-deeds 2 Chro. 2● 14. Of Vocation Externall Internall Meanes of Vocation Inward Outward Inward The Spirit of God Of the Church visible Rev. 12. 14. The infallible marks of a true visible Church Whether the Curch may erre In what cases we may separate from a corrupt Church Of the enemies of the Church Of the Governours of the Church Things proper to the visible Church The Word Sacraments Censures Of the Word 1 Chro. 17. 7. Acts 2. 40 41. 11. 20. 1 Cor. 4. 13. Iohn 17. 10. Ephes. 1. 23. Rom 3. 19. 7. 9 10.