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

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is of the power and by the finger of God effected so every evill thought word and act the workes of the Divell perpetrated by his lend agents and instruments 41. In the second place what meane you by the wicked world All that is not of God produced in the world viz. all the corruptions and as it is called the covetousnesse and concupiscience and pompes and vanities of the same 42. But are not these the workes of the Divell Yes and so with him and in him considered as the author in the world as the subject place and matter where seene and acted in the slesh as the agent and instrument the Divell useth in effecting them 43. VVhat is meant by pompes All unnecessary proud and superfluous excesses in the world exceeding that Christian measure and moderation becomming the servants of God whether in meat drink apparell or other vaine ostentation 44. Are all pompous showes pageants and solemnities then unlawfull By no meanes if within measure and moderation prescribed in comparison of the estate or persons to whom they appertaine 45. How meane you that All the solemnities in the publique service of God fitting the magnificence of him and his Temple all ornaments of estate belonging to King Magistrate City or University for the better administration of the government of the Church and Common-wealth all ensignes of honour and the like on lawfull and honest occasions used and worne Publique triumphs and shows in honour of Prince Countrey City or Common-wealth or any member thereof by law of God and man approved and allowed or for some good end ordained 46. VVhat doe these profit To the well and orderly government and apparant honour and decency of Church and Common-wealth yea to the advancement of vertue and so encouragement of good and vertuous mindes 47. How may it be By the fitting splendor and glory of Gods House the Kings Court City or University eminently advanced in such manner testifying the flourishing estate and prosperity of the same which every good man is glad to behold 48. Doe any envy them this If any doe as loath either Kingly Courtly or other robe of decent ornament should exceed the size of the Millers or Weavers jacket that may be apparantly seen such more precise then wise little respect the decency and comelinesse fitting a well ordered estate the honour of God and his Church or Majesty of the Prince 49. What is then here renounced Unnecessary proud vaine and superfluous pompe beyond those rules of decency ornament or honour by law and wisdome prescribed 50. VVhat are the vanities of the world All these superfluous excesses and whatsoever else savoureth of the nature of sin which is vaine 51. How is sin vaine As empty of all goodnesse and making the soule empty of grace and worse then nothing so both vaine the use not satisfying and in the end extreame vanity and vexation of spirit 52. How saith the wise man all is vanity In two respects 1. As all things in the world are but momentary and soone fading 2. As they are too much infected with sin the just sinning seven times a day and so all his actions and all things else even vanitie of vanities 53. VVhat are the sinfull lusts of the flesh Our homebred corruptions our sins and lusts traitours to our selves and owne soules by which the Divell working taketh us his captives and so we become servants to sin and him whom by his meanes we obey 53. VVhat meane you by the flesh The worse part of man the house of clay the body of death or prison of the soule as rebellion against God 54 VVhat the lusts All evill concupiscence tyrannizing over the soule by the meanes of the flesh so drawing both captive to sin and death 55. How sinfull lusts 1. By the subtilty of the Divel suggesting them 2. By the maliguity of the world fostring them 3. By the frailty of the flesh breeding them And by whom the soule infected the whole man becommeth exceedingly sinfull if we doe not resist and strive against them 56. How are we to resist them By faith and continuall and hearty prayer to God to give us his grace whereby it commeth to passe the life of a good Christian is a continuall warfare or combat against these three spirituall enemies fighting against the soule the Divell the World the Flesh. 57. In the second place how is faith here described By beleeving all the Articles of our Christian confession 58. VVhich are they Expressed hereafter in the Creed 59. VVhom doe they concerne God and his Church whereof we are made visible members of the baptisme so received into that society 60. VVhy doe we professe or learne them That we may know God and our owne estate 61. VVhat of God How he is a most powerfull eternall wise glorious and gracious God and our Creator and father in Jesus Christ. Redeemer delivering us from all our enemies Sanctifier comforting and preserving us in all our necessities 60. VVhat of our selves That though by nature we are sons of wrath in Adam yet in Christ adopted sons and made members of the Catholique Church and communion of Saints have blessed hope of forgivenesse of sins resurrection of the body and life everlasting 61. To what end are we taught this That we may both conscionably Learne Know Professe Promise Practise our Christian duties the better 62. How so By ordering our selves as the servants of so great and good a God and applying our selves to his worship and obedience as becommeth Saints 63. In the third place then how is obedience here decyphered That generall duty of ours is set forth 1. By the universall diligence in keeping and observing 2. By the universall object of this diligence the will and commandements of God 3. By the universall countenance of this diligence all the dayes of our life c. 64. How followeth it in this place As a fruit of faith whereon it dependeth for if we know God as we ought we cannot chuse but serve and obey him 65. How is this duty commended In that obedience is better then sacrifice 66. VVhy so preferred Because by sacrifice we offer but the flesh of Lambes Bullocks or other Cattel by obedience we offer our owne selves soules and bodies to God as a living holy and acceptable sacrifice mortifying and subduing our corrupt affections to the will of God 67. How is our diligence in this duty described By keeping and walking in or observing the Commandements and will of God 68. VVhat meant by keeping Our will and desire to Seeke into Learne to know Remember Lay up in our hearts Ponder consider That holy wil of God his Commandemēts 69. How to walke and observe them To direct our wayes and words and workes and counsells thoughts and hearts according to the same 70. VVhat the object or matter here named The will and Commandements of God his holy Lawes 71. VVhat is the will of God Our holinesse and sanctification in body and
in the obedience to the morall law out of which it seemes taken and we may judge other lawes of most equity and excellency that come neerest unto it onely such variation of due circumstances observed 19. What the difference betweene the Ceremoniall and Morall Law 1. In that the Morall Law was about in ward obedience and duties of the soule the Ceremoniall about outward service and ceremonies 2. The morall delivered by God himselfe the ceremoniall and judiciall onely by Moses instructed of God 3. The morall first given the other in consequence depending from some parts of that 4. The morall law neglected made worse then infidels that did by nature the things of the Law when the ceremoniall onely a confusion in order among Gods people 5. The morall broken was a hainous sin alwaies reputed the ceremoniall not so as in the wildernesse Circumcision except with perversenesse as in Zipporah Uzzahs presumption and Aarons sons to offer strange fire in alteration of the ceremony 6. The morall without cost the ceremoniall not without great cost and chargeably performed 7. The morall law laid in the Arke in regard of the perpetuity thereof signified the ceremoniall not so 20. Why was the ceremoniall to end 1. Because the first Temple unto which fitted was to take end by succession of a second in stead thereof 2. Because the sacrifices the shadowes of Christs one eternall sacrifice were in him the substance to end 3. Because the other ceremonies types of him or some divine actions of his had in his exhibition ended their typicall signification 4. Because sacraments of theirs were now to give place to the new so the lawes concerning these this must needs be antiquated and ended 21. How learne we that ceremonies should end 1. By Christs entrance a new High Priest after the order of Melchisedee and so Aaron and his with their types to end 2. By the renting of the vaile of the Temple at Christs death shewing as it were their dissolution and those former reasons urged excellently by the author to the Hebrewes Heb. 7. c. 22. And are all ceremonies then ended Al that have relation to Christ to come are now vanished and out of use because the thing they shadowed and signified to come is now exhibited so no further use of them 23. How doe Christians use ceremonies then Not any of this sort but of another for ornament and decency in the service of God not so much in imitation of these as founded upon the morall law in exhibition of externall worship to God and sanctification of the Sabbath in decent manner and by the institution doctrine and example of Christ and his Apostles who did both write how some things should bee and promised to set other things in decent order when they come 24. How is the morall law perpetuall Though given onely to the Jews yet as they Gods people so in generall by them to the whose Church and though in the letter of the Commandements they 1. Are expresly to that their state and time of the Jewes 2. Yet in effect to all Gods servants before that time that acknowledged the force and truth both generally of the whole morall law and particularly of every Commandement to all since who according to the same direct their wayes in righteousnesse and walke not according to the flesh but the spirit in newnesse of life and obedience to this law of God 25. How was the law in effect before In generall not onely Gods people Noah Abraham and the holy men but the law of nature in the heathen written in their hearts made them doe and acknowledge the workes of the Law Rom. 2. 26. How in particular the Commandements For the first Table the service of God his honour and sacrifices and Sabbaths recorded before the Flood and no idolatry recorded or found till long after yea most of the heathen gods and greatest too even after Moses time and for the second Table morall duties and honest dealings none can deny in Noahs and Abrahams families yea and in divers governments footsteps thereof as in the Assyrian monarchy and other kingdomes 27. How the first Commandement To Abraham God saith I am God alsufficient stand before me and be upright Gen. 17. 1. so by Adam Enoch Noah and those other Patriarkes it appeares they had no other God but him 28 How the second Commandement In that Jacob purged his house of Idols when he built Gods Altar in Bethel Gen. 35. 2. thereby acknowledging the abhomination of them 29. How the third Commandement The true use of Gods name by their prayers and so just oath by the true God as Abraham to Abimelech Gen. 21. 23. and Jacob to Laban Gen. 31. 53. and others the like 30. How the fourth Commandement By God in Paradise and no doubt by Adam and holy men afterwards either punctually or equivalently 31. How the fifth Commandement By all the godly Sons of holy Fathers and Patriarkes honouring and obeying their Fathers and Superiours in all reverence and humility 32. How the sixth Commandement Seen a spectacle in abhorred Cain confessing the crime of murther and guilt of conscience for it so condemned and detested of all 33. How the seventh Commandement Seene in Joseph flying his Mistresse temptations and the rest of Jacobs sonnes taking to heart the shame done to their sister Dianah Gen. 34. 34. How the eight Commandement Acknowledged by Jacob to Laban if any had stolne let them die Gen. 31. 30. and by his sonnes to Pharaohs Steward or Josephs if any had stolne the cuppe to bee his bondmen Gen. 44. 5. 35. How the ninth Commandement In Abraham Gen. 20. and Isaac Gen. 26. reproved by Abimelec for telling a lie or false testimony and Jacob feared to be found or counted a liar or deceiver in counterfeiting Esau. 36. How the tenth Commandement In the uprightnesse of heart required in Abraham Gen. 17. 1. and seen in him and Enoch who walked with God Lot Melchisedec and all the just 37. How is this Law in effect with us As we are exhorted to these duties still and to shew our faith by obedience to them willingly and readily according to them to undergoe our duty and service to God in holinesse and uprightnesse to the world in godly conversation 38. How is it then said we are not under the Law but under Grace This and the like sayings that wee are freed from the Law and that Christ hath freed us Rom. 7. Gal. 8. 18. and 4. 1. c. and other places are to be understood 1. Either absolutely of the ceremoniall Law which is abrogated and vanished in Christ as in that to the Gal. and Heb. especially appeareth 2. Respectively of the morall as it should bee conceived to be unable to justifie and hath need of Christ to be the end of it for its perfection To be performed by Christ for us who striving to the uttermost are never able to performe it but onely in him To be made more
and vertue thus comparative in respect of that name referred to his Attributes though otherwise usually accepted for his name 23. How are his attributes else showne By his appropriating or entituling himselfe to Israel or Israel to himselfe calling himselfe thy God O Israel and who brought the deliverance whereby he is not onely said the Lord or God but their Lord and their God their deliverer and defendor and as David speaketh the lifter up of their head 24. What learne we hence By that neare bond that we are obliged unto him so loving and good a God that calleth himselfe ours what should be our intimate affection duty and allegiance and how we should be his 25. But how doth this concern us As Israel was the true people of God the naturall vine and we the branches ingrafted in the same and so all true beleevers are in Christ the Israel of God as well as what was literally spoken of them is typically of the whole Church to be understood as is hereafter shewed 26. What the actions here Of deliverance from a most wretched estate and slavery into liberty and peace from all oppressors and oppression to worship and serve him so From Egypt and her proud King Pharaoh From Egypt and tyrannicall oppressors the Egyptians From Egypt and constrained Taske-masters of their owne Nation From Egypt and that house of bondage temporally and corporally of the bodies spiritually of the soules in danger of Idolatry and other abominations abounding there 27. How is this understood Literally of the Israelites so indeed delivered by the hand of Moses in the mighty power of God and mystically of all true Israelites in Spirit having many and mighty deliverances from all enemies spirituall and temporall by the hand of God and in Christ. 28. Who are the true Israelites in spirit All the faithfull engrafted into Christ and so the seed of Abraham who as many deliverances in body so more especially in soule are delivered by Christ out of The spirituall Egypt or Sodome of this world and her Prince the Divell wickednes and vanity and from her 1. Tyranny of sin death and hell 2. Oppressors and 3. Taske-masters 1. Of the Egyptians all externall Agents 2. Of the owne bloud evill lusts fighting against the Spirit House of bondage whether the Flesh and body of death house of clay that depresseth the Sipirit World wherein all wicked Agents and Instruments under the Divell their Prince threaten both spiritual and corporall and endanger us both in temporall and eternall bondage of sin and her punishments 29. What hence enforced As honour to this Lord and love to our God so all duties of love and thankefulnesse for these blessings and deliverances and in especiall obedience in all those respects to his Lawes As if Lord his honour and feare As if God his greatnesse and power As if our God and deliverer love and duty require our best respect reverence and obedience to his Lawes that doe so ensue 30. What else learne we from hence Gods mercy singularly manifested in thus dealing with us and those that are his to win us to grace and obedience our duty in following his example by all meanes to seeke how to procure our owne and others good to his glory 32. How his so especiall mercy In that in delivery of his Law and Commandements there he doth not onely shew what is good or his will and pleasing to him which is a favour and mercy or command it barely which he may doe with all authority in equity but much more seeketh by all meanes to allure us by his mercies favours and promises of life and goodnesse and putting us who are too forgetfull in minde of his many blessings and deliverances 33. What our duty hence For Ministers and all others to seeke by all meanes to bring themselves and many to God setting forth and calling to minde his manifold mercies and graces His goodnesse enforcing love of him His power and authority requiring obedience His excellencies winning honour and admiration His workes requiring reverent consideration His Law our meditation and best attention His deliverances binding us to all best duties of joy thankes praises and the like and that so what justice requires of duty may be performed towards him if possible with all sincere affection and good will 34. For what profit or to what end should wee doe this That by often and continuall meditations in his Law wee may know what the good and perfect will of God is who will so make it easie to us and us to understand wisedome secretly and the excellent and wonderfull things of his Law 35 How should we best understand his Law By seeking to know it in the internall meaning not so much according to the letter as in the intention and illumination of the Spirt for the letter seemeth sometimes dead but the spirit giveth life and as it is said holy Davids Psalmes ought to bee sung with his spirit or with the spirit and understanding to bee rightly used and so Saint Pauls writings to be read with his spirit to be truly understood so much more this holy writing the Law by Gods Spirit that endited it 36. VVhat rules or instructions have you for the better understanding of it There are certaine briefe rules and directions given for the right and true understanding of it or to guide the soule into due and orderly meditation of the things therein contained and may serve both Ministers in their interpretation and others in conceiving the true sense and interpretation or meaning thereof and where these come short of attaining this it is to bee further sought for by prayer in humility as from more speciall and internall illumination of Gods Spirit which can only bring the best knowledge of these things and contentation to the soule 37. Explaine this farther As required Davids spirit rightly to understand Davids Psalmes and Saint Pauls spirit or the Spirit of God rightly to conceive of Saint Pauls writings or holy Scriptures so for the spirituall and true understanding of the Law not onely according to the letter the letter killing or dead but the spirit giving life in the spirituall sense intending or comprehending all goodnesse here are further directions for such spirituall meaning required and as in law this one word the whole law and duty of man comprehended so in one word here not seldome to be seene in one vertue all the branches in one sinne all the kindes or what ever neere of kin comprised and therewith all signes meanes occasions and provocations to it so spiritually to be understood and by and with the vertue commanded and by and with the vice prohibited as well as by any vertue commanded the opposite vice and all his sequell discommended forbidden and by the vice or sin forbidden the opposite vertue and all of kin commanded and commended to bee embraced by our selves and all others in the Communion of Saints so there are such rules to this purpose
consecration of it and holy Abraham comming neare Mount Morijah where he was to offer maketh such difference and distinction of the persons places and things I and the lad saith he will goe yonder the sacrificer and sacrifice to the Altar shewing the Court of the Priests but stay you here designing as it were the Court of the people and to Moses was it spoken from God Exod. 3. 5. Come not nigher put off thy shooes for the place c. as if he should say it is holy there by my presence being so neare put off ●hy shooes therefore but come not nigher though thy shooes be off it is holier here the best respects are little enough for the place where thou art and too little for the place where thus am being ignis in rubo Deus in carne Christus in virgine come now to his Church you must not tread on that ground with thy shooes on nor on this though thy shooes be off thy shoos are too uncleane for that place and thy bare feet not cleane enough for this as a learned Divine of our Church well notes on the place 56. And how since the Law was it observed In like manner such reverentiall distance and degrees as we may not thinke Gods honour lesse or his holinesse and presence more alienated from his Church since his sending his Son in the flesh then before rather more illustriously to all intents there manifested in that house and Church of his where the very Pascall Lambe was sacrificed in truth substance by himself then where onely in types and shadowes by another viz. Aaron and his sonnes in the Temple especially since we see and heare that Evangelicall Prophet among many others so triumphantly proclaiming it Esay 60 1. 3. 13. c. concerning Christ and his Church and in him and it verified Arise shine thy light is come the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee the Gentiles shall come to thy light Kings to the brightnesse o● thy rising thy gates shall be open the glory of Lebanon shall come to thee c. they shall call thee the City of the Lord the Sion of the Holy One of Israel thy wals shall be salvation and thy gates praise the Lord shall be thy everlasting light and thy God thy glory all spoken of the glory of the Church in the abundant accesse of the Gentiles and great blessing by the presence of the Messias and graces of God powred out and appearing on her as throughout all the Chapter is plentifully declar●● so the converted Ge●●iles with the Jew●s fallin ● downe in the Church shall all worship acknowledging Gods presence and the beauty of ●olinesse most effe●t●●lly powerfully there yea even to admiration in most joyfull and glorious manner or more ample m●●ner and measure then ever before shewne as now manifested in subst●nce what before by 〈◊〉 types shadowed and according to the practice of the people of God have the Gentiles received to grace and engrafted into Christ followed their steps kept their reverentiall distances and degrees not presuming with p●arisaicall arrogancy but in humil●y and lowly manner in those consecrated and holy places taught ●o tender their devo●ions for so testifie all pri●itive times before ever that sawcinesse and f●iniliarity of faith that would bring in co●fusion and ●hrust all things out of order among Schisma●ickes and factious persons grew to be fanc●d or i● fashion 57. They intend perha●s with more freedo●e and bo●●ly to come and performe those acts of divine worship there And well may they so they doe it with more humility t●ught in the Publica● where no lesse the proud deportment of the Pha●isee was withall pointed at and reproved and we may note that as well as O come let us sing unto the Lord a venite exultemus be to be found to invite us to diligence and alac●ity with boldnesse in the action so there is also a venite adoremus Let us worship and fall downe before the Lord our Maker let us bow downe yea fall downe before him and fall low on our knees before his foot-stoole to teach us ●umility and shew our duty for he that requires a diligent servant desires also a dutifull one and he that loves a du●ifull and diligent servant loa●hs a malapert and saucie one and who can be too lowly in his presence looke to Da●ia and other holy mens deportment before him and if we humble our selves so to Kings or our fellow servants here on earth as is fitting and by Gods word approved with what humility should we that are but dust and ashes appear● before him there or how can we too much expresse lowlinesse that he so loveth for he regarded the lowlinesse of his 〈◊〉 whom therefore all generations do now call blessed leaving the proud and mighty in the ●maginations of their owne hearts exalted the humble and meek yea still scorning the proud giveth grace to the hum●le and heareth their prayers when they call upon him 58. How groweth yet this distinction of holinesse and degrees of it in such manner in the holy places or things As the presence of the Lord may be understood to be there and his graces dispenced by or in the same but not in the same degree in all of them whereby though one be holy and the other yet not one so holy as the other as was in effect spoken to Moses from God to this purpose the place where thou standest and hearest me speake is holy but this ●olier from whence I speake that too cleane for thy shooes this for thy bare feet therefore come not ●igher thus where God was more then ordinary he required respects more then ordinary thy shoos are too uncleane for that place and thy bare feet though they are permitted there are not cleane enough for this so the reason of this distinction hence to be gathered not any inherent essentiall preeminence of the place or thing but relative arising from some peculiar dispensation of his presence beneficence and graces there or in them whence came the distinctions in divers degrees according to the degrees of such dispensation of graces observed and severall consecrations of holy things places and persons in or under the Law and before and of our Churches since and all parts of them and other things according to the same respects that are moral and unchangeable for the substance of them the types now vanished under the Gospel and indeed for the excellencie and eminencie of their use in divine worship worthy to bee reverenced and so distinguished as from all antiquity we have received them and thus for holy places have we the Church-yard as consecrated ground in a first degree the Church it selfe Chancell and holy Table in their order in higher and different degrees of reve●entiall respects ever acknowledged till the fu●y or frenzie of Novelists disturbed it and answerable to this in other matters observed 59. In what other matters Both times persons and things consecrate
caring for the Lords body and comming but as Hogges swine these best things are to them an occasion of falling and they will be plagued for their presumption as making the Table of the Lord and feast of salvation a table of condemnation by their profanesse against which carelesnesse and contempt God hath threatned severe judgement and casting out of his presence to bee punished in utter darknesse with the Divell and his Angels for ever From which fearfull doome hee in his mercy deliver us SECT V. An Appendix concerning the summe and use of the Catechisme An Appendix shewing the sum and use of the Catechisme to be the foundation of our profession of Christianity in the laying thereby the grounds of religion specified In those rites of Our faith and good works the Creed and Command●nents and the rule and doctrine of Prayer and the Sacraments all taken out of holy Scripture and the expresse word of God whose bookes are in this order remembred the Chiefe of which as the Canon ●aith and rule of all godly obedience are received the others for good example and that History admitted and read though not so generally approved as many Pseud●graphe were by the Church utterly rejected but the true worth of the Canonicall proved by the most evident testimonies of Gods Spirit the Churches and Fathers as well Arguments drawne from the things themselves as the antiquity miraculous preservation matter handled confession of the very heathens of their excellency consent of themselves and with truth commonly wanting in other Writers and the like all o● them testifying to the ●●nscience the excellencie of the same and more commending the hearing reading and meditating of them to the t●uly devout and godly Christian to the eternall comfort of his soule which is more effectually wrought also from the same word of God by his owne ordinance of the right dividing p●●aching and expounding the same here explained whence the duty of hearers also touched who are the better prepared thereunto by the grounds of Religion thus said in the Catechisme and Gods blessing to be praied for the seconding the same 1. VVHat is the summe of all As saith the wise man the Preacher to feare God and keep his commandements this is the whole duty of man Eccles. 12. ult 2. What the summe of the Catechisme The very same being the explication of that du●y of ours to God 1. By fearing him according to that holy rule of faith expressed in the Creed 2. By keeping his Commandements in doing as in the Law appointed praying as hee hath taught us Receiving the Sacraments holy mysteries and pledges of his love seales of grace as he hath instituted and ordained 3. What the use of it To conforme us outwardly and inwardly in soule and body or whole course of life and conversation to that we make profession of the name and calling of a Christian. 4. How doth it this By laying these maine grounds and foundation of religion which howsoever they may seem few and little as comprised in so small a booke as the Catechisme are yet the substance of many large volumes and the best learning in the world as all that we should or need to beleeve by faith doe in all duty pray for from God or desire in the covenant of grace whereby fitted to serve God and else to behave our selves outwardly and inwardly according to that our most holy profession 5. How is that As we are taught hereby fitted and furnished Both in wardly with faith knowledge and graces and all such things which a Christian ought to know and beleeve for his soules health and to confirme us in the truth And outwardly to the acts of a Christian life being hereby enabled to make profession of our hope and render account of our faith in some measure to reprove or convince the gainsayers And to other acts mentioned and in ended in the Title and beginning of the Catechisme 6. Which are they To be thought sufficiently prepared and fit 1. To be confirmed of the Bishop so receiving such confirmation and approbation 2. To be admitted to receive the holy communion To be surety for others at baptisme as able to teach them to answer for themselves 3. To have their owne suretie released as they enabled to stand for others sureties 4. To heare Sermons and Scriptures read or expounded more profitably And 5. To read holy Scriptures more comfortably themselves And 6. To understand it better being thus grounded in these principles of Religion taken out of holy Scripture as being the chiefest and most substantiall parts of the same that primarily concern our blessed estate and salvation 7. How the Creed Concerning 1. God the Father I beleeve c. I beleeve Lord help my c. You beleeve in the Father beleeve in me also I and the Father are one Luke 14. 1. c. Ps. The eyes of all things c. Gen. 1. 1. In the beginning c. 2. God the Sonne the whole doctrine of the Evangelists and Apostles in every point expressed in the Gospel 3. God the holy Ghost Joh. 14. 15. Joh. 15. 26. and Joh. 16. 7. and 16. 13. Ioh. 20. 22. Luke 24. 49. Acts 2. c. As concerning the Church Matth 16. 16 17 18 c. Jo. 17. 15 16 17. Act. 2. 47. Holy cath Church Commun of Saints Mat. 16 19. Luk 18. 13. 15. 10 11. 24. 47. Joh. 20. 23. Act. 2. 38. forgivenesse of sins Joh. 5. 28 6. 40 11. 25. Luk. 14. 14. resurrection of the body and life c. with many places of holy Scripture more 8. How the rest Concerning The Commandmēts Exod. 20. 1. God spake c. Deut. 5. 6. I am the Lord c. The Lords Prayer Mat. 69. When ye pray say c. Luk. ●1 1. Our Father c. The Sacraments Baptis Mat. 28. 19 Mar. 16. 15 Acts 2. 41. Act. 10. 47 L. Sup. Mat. 26. 26. Mar. 14. Luk. 22. 19. 1 Cor. 11. 25. 9. What is the word of God The will or especially the promises and merc●es of God revealed 1. In the flesh Christ the incarnate word and truth and shewed both in the creation of the world and redemption of mankinde 2. In the characters of the voice the bookes of holy Scriptures the written word of God contained in the Bible or Book of God in the old and new Testament so called and the Bookes thereof 10. Which or how many are they The Canonicall Bookes of the old Testament so called by the Hebrews the 24. Genesis 2 Samuel Proverbes Exodus 2 Kings Ecclesiastes Levit. 2 Chron. Song of Solomon Numb Ezra Isaiah Deuter. Nehem. Jeremie with Lament Josua Hester Ezechiel Judges Job Daniel Ruth Psalmes The 12. small Prophets The new Testament all of them 21. or by dividing of the Epistles 27. viz. Gospels 4. Acts 1. The Epistles of Saint Paul 14. Peter 2. James 1. John 3. Jude 1. Revelation 1. Apocry phall Esdras Tobit Judith Hester Reliques of
The Compleat CHRISTIAN And Compleat Armour and Armoury OF A CHRISTIAN Fitting him with all necessary furniture for that his holy Profession OR The Doctrine of Salvation Delivered in a plain and familiar explication of the Common Catechisme for the benefit of the younger sort and others Wherein summarily comprehended is generally represented the truly Orthodox and constant Doctrine of the Church of England especially in all points necessary to salvation By W. S. D. D. Hac est Porta Domini Justi intrabunt in eam Printed for the Authour 1643. This Treatise is divided into five Parts according to the five Parts of the Catechisme THe first Part Explicating the Title and Introduction in the 4. first Questions The Second Part Concerning the Creed or Articles of the Beleefe the summe of our Christian faith in the 2. next Questions The Third Part Concerning the Law of God or ten Commandments the Rule of our obedience teaching our duty and good works in the next five Questions The Fourth Part Concerning prayer and the rule or paterne thereof the Lords prayer in the 2. next Questions The Fifth Part The Doctrine of the Sacraments in the 12. last Questions with an Appendix Concerning holy Scripture and the due hearing reading and Art of meditating on the same To the thrice Excellent and Illustrious Charles Prince of Wales his Highnesse Most Noble Prince THough the present paterns of your Royall Parents and lasting Monuments of your famous Ancestors remaining in Memory to all Posterity may fully and lively de●●●ia●e and daily instructions of your grave and learned Teachers and Governours may most amply expresse the Portraiture of a true perfect and compleat Christian whereof the one may be said to enforme the other to enforce you to the imitation of their Heroicall vertues and graces in the Profession of Christianity the one guiding you by rule the other by example that it may seem nothing wanting to make you abound in such heavenly knowledge and Divine Philosophie yet since Nunquam nimu discitur quod nunquam satis discitur and no word is to be accounted out of time that may be spoken profitably whereby and so accounted of the wiseman as apples of gold in silver or transparant dishes and more especially since the subject of this discourse and Bafis whereon this Compleat Christian standeth and is founded so properly pertaineth as by the Lawes appropriated to those of the younger sort and your Highnesse the head of the Infantery On whom the eyes of all those Minims of Nobility and other the younger plants of this flourishing Kingdom are fixed and ready to admire your Princely expression and expresse the imitation of you in their action Let it not seem strange that I thus present this to you so properly to the younger sort and Primarily to your self belonging as Prince of the Youth and Prime Mirror of all those younger Plants The next Ages hope the story and glory of succeeding times or stay and prop of the flourishing of this famous Kingdom many things and of meane worth are usually and frequently I know offered unto your Highnesse and you have been pleased to accept of so meane dedication as of Grammar and other the inferiour sciences how much more to cast a favourable aspect hitherwards and to dayne your Graces acceptance of this Treatise of so high and heavenly a Nature as holy Divinity the Queene and Mistresse of all other Arts and Sciences bringing with her and bestowing on her followers such ornaments as best suite from the meanest to the Mightiest to all the Professors of true Christianity As this Treatise also may serve if need were to make not onely a Complementall but a Compleat Christian and afford to all as we ought to desire the good of all profit or contentment profit to the meanest who may learne by it contentment to those of riper Maturity who can best judge of it if many of ablest judgement and Masters in their Profession be not deceived Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit utile dulci. What the Authour faileth of this and of the generall good he faileth of his best vote who heartily desireth the spirituall and best good of all Such as it is it lieth prostrate with the Authour himself at your Highnesse feet onely begging such your gracious favour as good deservings or best desires do usually finde and obraine at your Princely hands So tendering his Orisons at the Throne of Grace for the aboundant store of all heavenly and earthly blessings for the continuall increase of your happinesse as your increase in dayes to Crowne and attend you The due and daily prayers of a faithfull and sworne Servant in that your Royall family sometime Chaplaine to your worthy and Illustrious Grand Mother of blessed Memory and no lesse for many other respects in all dutifull observance to your Highnesse Most Humbly Devoted Ever William Slatyer The Table or the Contents of the whole booke divided in five parts THe First Part Concerning the Title and Introduction The Second Part Concerning the Creed The third Part Concerning the Commandments The Fourth Part Concerning Prayer The Fifth Part Concerning the Sacraments with an Appendix The Contents of the first Part devided into five Sections THe First Section discourseth of the Title of the Catechisme The Second Section Treating of the first Question The third Section of the second Question The fourth Section Of the third Question The fifth Section Handling the fourth Question The second Part divided into 13. Sections THe first Section whereof is of the fifth Question and of the Creed in generall and of faith The second Section a more particular explication of the Creed The third Section more neerly following the words of the Creed and the first Article thereof The fourth Section of the second Article of the Creed The fifth Section of the third Article Christs incarnation The sixth Section of the fourth Article his Passion The seventh Section of the fifth Article his descent into hell The eight Section Concerning his exaltation in five and sixe Articles The ninth Section of the seventh Article his coming to judgement The tenth Section the eight Article Concerning the holy Ghost The eleventh Section of the ninth Article Concerning the holy Catholique Church The twelfth Section the 10. 11. and 12. Article concerning the priviledges of the Church The thirteenth Section Of the sixth Question concerning the summe of the Creed The third part of the Catechisme divided into thirteen Questions THe first Section the seventh Question of the law in Generall The second Section the eighth Question of the Commandments and the Preface to them with divers necessary rules The third Section Of the first Table and first Commandment The fourth Section Concerning the second Commandment The fifth Section Concerning the third Commandment The sixth Section Concerning the fourth Commandment The seventh Section Concerning the fifth Commandment first of the second Table with some other necessary rules The eighth Section Concerning the sixth Commandment The
the Churches command 10. But have not some kept their old names as those of yeares baptized Yes it may be so and no doubt but parents or themselves or others upon good occasions may and have authority at other times to change them as aforesaid 11. How are names then said received in Baptism Generally or for the most part and by common practice of all or most being a particular or personall and speciall priviledge doth not infringe or overthrow an universall law 12. But we finde many received names before baptisme It is true at Nations conversions and with people of yeares converted to Christianity it being at their owne choice to keepe or change their names but we speake generally here of children comming to baptisme of whom as well as the ancient manner thereof we shall speake more hereafter in the Sacraments 13. Jt is then most convenient to give names in Baptisme It is as at our birth wee receive the name of man and sirname of parents so at our new birth or regeneration in baptisme to receive a new name or Christian name in remembrance of the family of Saints whereinto we are by this meanes engrafted so also was it in Circumcision in whose place Baptisme succeedeth 14. But divers instances may bee given to the contrary for Circumcision To bee understood then of breach of the ordinance or in case of necessity or some extraordinary incumbrance or priviledge that doe not disanull or infringe a generall law 15. For Gersom he was named ere circumcised It was a plaine breach of the ordinance and Moses like to have beene punished and died for the fact and perversnesse of Zipporah his wife 16. All the children of Israel in the wildernesse not circumcised yet had names assuredly But that a place and case of extraordinary necessity and incumbrance when much good order and discipline was neglected and sometimes superciliously by the factious Israelites contemned 16. Benoni was named by Rachel before circumcision But as her wish onely held and at circumcision Benjamin by his father who had the absolute authority 17. But Saint John Baptist and Christ also by the Angels before circumcision Extraordinary revelation was the preparation of names for those sanctified persons yet the 8. day according to the Law ordinarily circumcised and the names solemnly imposed or published to the accomplishment of the very letter of Moses Law 18. It standeth then with best reason or conveniency to have the name imposed in baptisme It doth and from all antiquity so received at our new birth to receive that new or Christian name and that the Godfathers should impose or publish the same 19. Is that most convenient Yes for so is the generall use and we have no custome in the Churches to the contrary but many reasons for the same As 1. Not against Scripture but consonant to them 2. It is most anciently received and used 3. It proceeds from the love of parents requesting it and them undertaking it 4. It is a benefit to the infant if the parents die 5. It is a helpe to the parents by aiding and remembring them 6. It is a comfort encouragement and stirring up of the childe to remember the duties 7. It is a meanes to increase mutuall love and friendship among neighbours by performing this duty one for another 20. But why are children baptized being infants and not rather when they come to yeares and discretion For divers good reasons especially these foure viz. 1. Imitation of Circumcision in whose place it succeeded 2. After the example of Christs receiving little children 3. For that the covenant pertaines also to them as well as the parents and so that seale 4. That we may be so presented to God as earely as may be 21. How in imitation of circumcision As which was commanded the eight day and that being the seale of the Covenant and so this hence administred also to infants as that was by Gods speciall command 22. How from the example of Christ He not only not refusing the little children or their good will that brought them but blaming them that would have them kept from him and commanding them to be brought and suffered to come and more expressing his will and good will By his 1. Receiving them 2. Taking them in his armes 3. Laying his hands on them 4. Blessing them and his 5. Exhortation to all men to follow their innocency 6. Promising them and them only heaven 7. Affirming their Angels to stand before his Father in heaven c. 23. How pertaines the covenant to them As made to Abraham and his seed all the saithfull and their seed whosoever borne of faithfull parents and in the bosome of the Church and to whom as the Covenant so especially this seale at first as that of circumcision doth pertaine and though never so little ones yet we see respected by God and Christ in mercy 24. Why also presented so in the Church That as early as may be conveniently they may be testified so and Registred in the number of Gods children as what greater happinesse and so never too soone and from which to be kept a misery or abatement of the blisse as the utter deprivation endlesse misery 25. Then it is good children should be soon baptised As with conveniencie may be and to that purpose are divers Canons of the Church and though God can save without meanes yet we are called upon to shew our duty and love in not neglecting the ordinary meanes of our salvation 26. Is baptisme then a meanes thereof It is though not Ex opere operato in the bare worke yet our conduit of grace by the faith in Christ and application of other saving graces implied in the right use and receiving of the same 27. Then it is faith and not baptisme that saveth But that faith requireth also Baptisme as baptisme implyeth the vertue of faith and as Christ originally faith instrumentally so Baptisme Sacramentally cooperate worke and assure our salvation 28. Both faith and baptisme then are required Yes they are for he that beleeveth and is baptised shall be saved and except a man be borne of water and of the spirit he cannot be saved so not the bare circumcision but a new creature required 29 How doth this then pertain to Infants As they are borne in the bosome of the Church and the Covenant also made to them and are So 1. Presented to God in the Church and 2. By faithfull parents and 3. Upon Gods gracious promise in Christ in that covenant of grace 4. In the faith of the Church and parents 30. But is this enough For them it is but for others of riper yeares is required a due disposition to faith and repentance actually performed and grace to shew forth the fruits of the spirit and so in men of yeares as they are found in grace they were though fit to bee baptized as we read of Cornelius the Eunuch and others 31. Many then are baptized that are not
his Fathers will 3. Love and submission to him and his will and Commandements 4. Repulse of the Divell and his temptations 5. Humility even in the greatest degree and beyond compare 6. Contentednesse in his humility sufferings and reproach 7. Thankfulnesse honour and praise given to his Father for all and in all things in most abundant manner and measure counterpoising Adams fall and all our frailty but much more in infinite measure surmounting it as he the second person in Trinity and descending from heaven performed this who was infinite as God and so made infinite satisfaction and restored by it not only Adam but his posterity and in token thereof carried the poore penitent theefe on the crosse with him into Paradise 24. Are we so then pardoned in his person justice Yes as in one Adam all sinned by one Christ are all made alive and as the offence by one to condemnation so much more the grace abounded to justification and in his stripes we are healed 25. But how is the law satisfied Man sinned and man must dye man offended and the Man Christ made full and superabundant satisfaction 26. But the soule that sinneth must dye It is true Anima quae peccat morietur by one Adam sin came into the world and had dominion over all and in that one Adam and his person we all sinned and were deprived of grace all since offences but branches of that radicall and originall transgression so that person Christ in his loynes in the flesh did make satisfaction for his and all our guilt and being without sin in the sanctifying of Gods Spirit as the first fruits hallowed was an oblation for all our sinnes the branches or buds of that first sin whose root thus cut off in Christ the branches must needs dye unlesse again replanted by the hellish power of Satan and falling from grace 27. But is this exact and true justice Yea we may see it an eye for eye and tooth for tooth life for life infinite satisfaction for an infinite offence that it may well be not only in vigore but rigore Juris true and exact justice and though some seeme to remit it à rigore Juris wherein the soule that sinneth not a Damon for Pitheas not a friend for a friend but the soule it selfe that sinneth is to dye and shew that in vigore juris full satisfaction is made and the debt paid and we all cleered yet if we consider that one person that sinned and we all in his loynes the foundation of guilt and that one person that maketh satisfaction and we all his members and in him if ever elect or saved we may so exact justice truely to the uttermost mite and superabundant satisfaction made both in rigore as well as vigore juris and praise and admire with all Saints and Angels the wisedome goodnesse and mercy of God 28. Why is the humanity and genealogie of Christ so particularly set downe and recorded To shew he is truely the Messias and promised seed according to the Scriptures viz. of the seed of Abraham of the Tribe of Juda and house or linage of David 29. How appeareth it Plainely in the Scriptures and his genealogy recorded by the Evangelists Matthew and Luke 30. But doe not these genealogies differ They may yet both true according to divers direct lines as we see in the lines of Nathan and Salomon as after five or ten or many descents the children intermarrying severall direct lines came from the same party to the same on both sides 31. But divers fathers are named there of Joseph Yet both right the one the naturall father the other the legall father whose the issue accompted when the younger brother was to take the elder brothers wife to raise up seed to his brother 32. But the Genealogy is of Joseph not Mary whose Son Christ was in the flesh But he tooke a wife of his owne Tribe and family according to the Law and the Evangelists and Angel Luke 3. shew and call him as her son the son of David 33. Yet was not Mary said of the Tribe of Levi These two Tribes of Juda and Levi were so neerely linked as placed at Jerusalem and about the offices of the Temple and so many Intermarriages so the more occasioned had passed that it was sure enough and not hard to shew their descent from either Tribe 34. How can you shew that By all histories of the times and Scripture where it is apparant the Kingly family of Juda and Priestly of Levi much intermixed and so the very government was with the priest not only in regard of their high and sacred office but of their blood by many Intermarrriages intermingled and lines there of Nathan and Salomon compared with the history of the governours doe shew 35. Why then was Christ especially named of the linage of David As the Kingly line fitting the Son of the King of Kings and in regard of the promise and prophesies 36. He is then also acknowledged of Levi And not unfitly as hee was to offer that eternall sacrifice and is a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec who was also both King of Salem and Priest of the most high God 37. How were his Disciples called his brethren The phrase and custome of the Jewes was so to call the neere kinsmen or acquaintance and he also calleth them so in his love saying goe tell my brethren and some of them were his neerest kinsmen according to the flesh and so Abram said to Lot his kinsman we are brethren 38. How or which Disciples were his neerest kinsmen Anna the wife of Ioachim the Father and Mother of the Virgin Mary both of the Tribe of Iuda according to Damascene she of the Tribe of Levi according to Epiphanius and both by divers lines truely said had by two other husbands two other Maries by Cleophas Mary wife of Alephus mother of Iames Alpheides and Symon Cananaeus by Salome the other Mary wife of Zebedeus mother of Iames and more especially called the brother of the Lord and Iohn the Evangelist whom the Lord as it is said so loved Thus his cousin germanes and called in the common phrase his brethren 39. How was this James more especially called the brother of the Lord Because he was so like him as testifieth Egesippus who lived next to the Apostles times that those who were sent to take him were faine to send Iudas before them to shew which he was and to distinguish them one from the other and so he came and by that token of the kisse betraied him 40. What learne we hence Many duties especicially As 1. Reverent admiration with all Saints Angels of this divine unspeakeable mystery 2. Humiliation of our selves before God in remembrance of his admirable humility 3. Gracious magnanimity and lifting up our hearts to God and heaven in remembrance of our hereby acquired in him best and truest nobility 4. Joyfull commemoration of this his wonderous favour
types thereof and analogies to be observed 22. What analogies herein An analogy or correspondency of it both to the descension as he came downe to earth from heaven the bosome of his father and height of glory by his incarnation so here he ascended from earth to heaven to his father and his right hand in Majesty by his glorious ascension The types thereof Moses Enoch and Elias of whom hereafter 23. What the ascension or action His glorious ascending to heaven in the sight and presence of many witnesses as it were foretold accordingly performed 24. How foretold Both by the Prophet David thou art ascended up on high hast led captivity captive and given gifts to men By himselfe Joh. 14. 2. I go to prepare a place c. Joh. 20. 17. I ascend to my Father and your Father to my God and your God By the types of it in the old Testament Enoch Moses and Elias 25. Why in sight and presence of many witnesses To their comfort and our confirmation that as his resurrection manifested to the women the Disciples one after another and sometimes two or three and then more together even till more then 500. at once so many times during his abode on earth so his ascension as every part of his actions for us and so our faith might be confirmed in the mouth of many witnesses and so indeed were by both Prophets Martyrs and others 26. Whence ascended he From earth to heaven from top of Mount Olivet by Jerusalem as it were from the earth to the heavenly Jerusalem City of the great King from the Church here to the Church above 27. To what end To prepare a place for us as he taught his Disciples To elevate our hearts to heaven and heavenly things To shew the way to us and all that are his To manifest his power and glory to mortall eyes and hearts according to their capacity that abundantly more is apparent in the highest degree to the blessed Saints and Angels in heaven 28. In what manner ascended he In an admirable and wonderfull manner as appeared by the Angels words then appearing to his Disciples and those present testifying of him and saying ye men of Galilee why stand ye gazing up into heaven This Jesus whom ye saw ascend shall so come as c. Acts 1. 11. 29. When was that Forty dayes after his resurrection during which time he was conversant on earth directing and comforting his Disciples and strengthning them 30 Why were those forty dayes interim For many good reasons and gracious comfort and instruction to his Church As 1. assurance of his resurrection in that space conversing though after a more divine manner and appearing so often and to so many 2. Confirmation of the verity of his humanity offering himselfe to be seene and touched and felt yea and eating with them though hee needed no sustenance yet as to Thomas herein descending to them to confirme their weake though ravished and admiring faith 3. Strengthning his Disciples opening their hearts and so comforting instructing and confirming them against all occurrences and times of fiery trials and persecutions 29. Did he not also appeare at other times and to others Yes but after a more ravishing strange and transcendent manner so to divers holy men As to Saint Paul on the way to Damascus but with such glory and splendor that hee was both amazed and stricken blinde but converted To Saint Stephen full of faith and of the holy Ghost even from heaven and in his majesty at the time of his martyrdome and very dissolution To Saint Iohn in Pathmos on the Lords day in a heavenly vision to the illustration of his understanding in writing that prophesie of the Revelation And to many Saints else to whom the Lord in grace yet with manifestation of some part of his glory appeared 30. Who were types of this his ascension Enoch who walking with God was taken away and no more seen Moses who ascending to mount Nebo was taken from men and Eliah who went up to God in that fiery charet and in the sight of Elisha ascended up to heaven 31. What analogy of their ascension to this As types to the antitypes usually have so those both to Christ and his ascension 1. As Enoch the 7. from Adam a holy and sabbaticall member and generation of the just walked with God and was so translated 2. So Christ the 7. of those that were ever til then raised to life of that line the Holy and Just One Prince of peace and author of our rest and endlesse Sabbath having walked with God now thus ascended 32. How Moses As that great Lawgiver and who in the wildernesse after forty dayes fast received the Law from God on mount Sinai and delivered the curses on mount Ebal and blessings on mount Geresin Deut. 27. 12. at last ascending mount Nebo though buried by God thus translated and taken from men was from the earth and tents of Israel ascended So Christ the Law-giver and confirmer of a better Law and covenant of grace after 40. daies fast in the wildernesse having vanquished Satan and on mount Sion manifested his Majesty after forty dayes conversing with men after his ascending Mount Calvary and death buriall and resurrection to life thus from Mount Olivet ascended up to heaven 3● How Eliah As the greatest Prophet that ever arose in that state and the Church of the Jewes as who raised the dead to life opened and shut heaven at his prayer without dying was translated and ascended up to God in the power of the Spirit in that strange manner and convoy the fiery Charets and horsemen of Israel So Christ the great Prophet and Messias raising the dead in soule and body to life eternall having the key of David and opening and shutting heaven by those siery trials at his passion opening the gate of life and entring thereby at his resurrection thus triumphed in his ascension 34. Was this so manifested It might seeme so even by himselfe in his transfiguration where those types thereof Moses and Eliah met with him the Antitype on Mount Tabor as it were in a divine conference about the same 35. What was the event of it In that triumph ascending he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men 36. What gifts Gifts and graces of his holy Spirit yea and the pouring forth of that Spirit in his Church most abundantly or as he speaketh the sending of the Comforter the holy Ghost the Spirit of truth for the direction guiding and comfort of his Church to the worlds end 37. What learne we hence In duty of humble thankfulnesse and praises often to ascend 1. In our contemplation to those high Palaces that so with preparation of soule in this life we may ascend to those high Courts hereafter whither he is gone before 2. In affection and hearty desire and longing after them by our preparation of will and wishes to be there with Christ whither he ascended and is
before the promulgation of it in that forme at Mount Sinai as well as since and how far in force still with us Christians who though we are freed from the curse bare letter and slavish feare are yet bound to the duties and effect thereof by the Law of Grace that so agree Christ being the scope and end of both how and why it was written in the two Tables and that twice and how divided 1. YOu said that your Godfathers and Godmothers did promise that you should keepe Gods Commandements Yes in that third part of the vow and promise in Baptisme whence we come to consider in this third place the Commandements of God 2. Tell me how many there be Ten. 3. How appeareth that By the prescript word of God himselfe and his servant Moses by whom they are named the ten Commandements the ten words or decalogue signifying as much 4. What doe they containe The whole Will or Law of God or duty of man 5. What Law The morall Law binding the soule and conscience to the performance of such duties as are perpetuall and so this Law above all others perpetuall 6. What other differences of Lawes are there 1. Both Laws humane politique and municipall of divers formes according to the customes and manners of divers peoples and Countries 2. Divine or given by God himselfe of divers sorts Which are they Not onely that Law of nature written by God himselfe in the heart of all creatures but also other positive and written Lawes both the Law of workes doe this and live to the first Adam and all his posterity Of Grace beleeve and have life by the second Adam to all Saints 7. How was the first Law of works promulgated By God himselfe in Paradise to Adam onely abstaine or eat not of the forbidden tree By God himselfe to the Jewes upon mount Sinai the morall Law or ten Commandements 8. What was the event Both brake the Law and none was able to keep it wholly whence was need of the Messiah the promised seed who should satisfie for their misdeeds and breach of the Law of workes by their taking hold of the Covenant and Law of Grace 9. How was that shewed In the promises to Adam thy seed shall break the Serpents head or power of Sinne and the Divell and to all the Fathers consequently made of Christ as likewise by those many sacrifices and types and shadows of the Messiah and his offering sacrifice as well as those other Laws of the Jews to the talsing notice of punishing of sin offences thus entred into the world by Adams offence and hence that other division of the law springeth 10. What division Of the Jewes Law which was thence accordingly divided into The morall Law The ceremoniall Law The judiciall Law 11. Why are we to take notice of the Jews or their Lawes As they were the true Israelites the Church of God to whom both the Law and Testimonies the Arke and Temple of God and all tokens of his grace and favour were committed yea all the priviledges that belong to the whole Church once appropriated to that holy elect and chosen people as from whom the Messiah according to the flesh should spring to be the joy and light of all Nations and in whom all Adams posterity should be blessed 12. Was the whole Church straitned in so narrow limits as one little people It seems so to the good providence of God as once in one Adam and since in one Arke onely eight persons the whole Church yet cursed Cha● also among them and then one Abrahams family and one people of the Jewes and among them many unbeleevers to shew the few number of the truly faithfull and now though all Nations admitted yet but one Church a little flocke guided also by one rule and Law the Covenant of Grace 13. What were those Laws then of that Church of God among the Jews 1. The morall Law binding to performance of all good duties towards God and man 2. The ceremoniall setting forth the sacrifices for sinnes in the breaches of the former and directions in Gods house and service 3. Judiciall deciding controversies about politicall and temporall matters and inflicting punishments upon offenders against the same or the former which punishments of offences or sacrifices for sinne the greater part of these latter Lawes had beene of no use if the morall Law could have been performed and breaches thereof whether by ignorance uncharity and contentions or else could have been avoided 14. How long were these Laws to continue The judiciall Law so long as the State or Common-wealth of the Jewes as fitted to their state manner or customes the ceremoniall Law during the time of that their Temple or Tabernacle whose ceremonies and sacrifices as types and shadowes were referted to the substance and ended in Christ and the revelation of the Messiah who opened the second Tabernacle his Church but the morall Law binding to the duty of vertue and godlinesse abideth and standeth fast for ever 15. How then was it said a Law of the Jews As they were then accepted and were indeed the true Church of God for as considering 1. The letter it was delivered to them as Gods owne and peculiar people having such priviledges as no other people ever had and but the same or such as the Church hath now 2. The substance it was delivered to the Church in generall then in them and so to all people who must serve God in holinesse and righteousnesse and so standeth firme in that point for ever 16. What the difference between the judiciall and morall Law 1. The judiciall was chiefly in foro exteriori judiciae the morall in foro interiori conscientiae exercised and appointed 2. Judiciall was founded on the morall to certifie the outward breaches of the same 3. Judiciall was fitted to divers manners and customes of the people the morall to the heart and soule of all people in obedience to God 4. Judiciall is more particular and the morall more generall and divers such other respects from these flowing for difference may be seen 17. Why should the judiciall so soone end 1. Because the Common-wealth of the Jews to which it was particularly referred and to whose customes appropriated is ended 2. The ceremoniall to which it was also tied and allied as concerning manumission in the year of Jubilee and the like is also vanished 3. Diversity of manners and customes in other peoples and propensity to particular vices and diversified by divers respects doe often require divers and other Lawes and punishments 18. But are we no more then tyed to obey or respect it then any other strange Law whatsoever Though we be not tyed to the observation of it as abrogated yet we may therein see and respect the equity and excellency of it and wisdome of the Law-giver above all other lawes whatsoever and though we leave it in the very letter or circumstances yet in the substance we observe it
his truth if he bid thee so end thy forrowes he is a liar for it is to god from temporall to eternall sorrow if he say thou must commend thy soule to God and die so he is a liar and if it were good he would not tell thee so for it is to die in murder and going from God and a murder of soule and body and that everlastingly so only flie to Gods mercy and leave sin and Satan and if thou pray for this he cannot come nigh unto thee nor hurt thee 40. But some as Lucretia have been commended for it for preservation of chastity or vertue It may be so by heathens that know not God but not by Christians who know Gods Law and the damnablenesse of the crime and so Saint Augustine sheweth this Lucretia's vice in this though by the heathens commended for a vertue whose chastity was to be admired but selfe-murder to be discommended lib. de Civitate Dei 41. What sorts of selfe-murder Either 1. Body and life naturall by 1. Omission and neglecting of the means of life for niggardlinesse or starving through idlenesse or not using other lawfull means of preserving the same 2. Commission of ill in prejudice thereof by 1. Sins of drunkennes whoredome or excesse imparing health 2. Thrusting ones self in danger therewith quarrelling c. and 3. Contriving their owne death 1. Indirectly by cōmitting some capitall crime worthy death 2. Being their own butchers murderers 2. Soul by 1. Omission in the neglecting the means of salvation c. 2. Commission in 1. Making no conscience of sin but sinning against conscience and knowledge 2. Persisting in sin without grace or repentance 4. What opposite duty required Seeking all ordinary and honest means of preservation of life and health by moderate recreations of body or minde physicke and avoiding dangers or sins so distempering both body and soule and finally for the souls health seeking the means of salvation flying sin and praying and practising repentance 43. What in other murder else to be considered The person as well as the matter manner and punishment 44. What of the persons The 1. Murderer whether 1. Principall or 2. Accessory 2. Murdered whether 1. Stranger or near of kin 2. Private person or publick 3. Offender or innocent person whereby the guilt is diversly distinguished and so accepted extenuate or encreased 45. How the principall or accessory I. The principall as prime agent the deepest in offence II. The accessory also murderers if abettors or counsellours whether 1. Superiours by 1. Unjust command 2. Wrongfull sentence 3. Not punishing murder but co●niving at one to the perpetration of other 2. Any others by 1. Consent and abetting 2. Counsell or hiring 3. False testimon 4. Treachery c. 46. What the other respects As 1. the parricide or murderer of father brother or near kin more abominable then the ordinary homicide Secondly the regicide or murderer of superiours or them in authority as of servants their Masters or wives of husbands or private persons of publicke accounted treason or petty treason in the lowest degree more abominable then common murder Thirdly the murder of an innocent person more then of an offender and proscribed or condemned person who is yet to be put to death by the person and manner appointed by law and not at randon by any person which were murder but done according to law is not only not evill but good and just 47. How is it said to be good and just As warranted both by divine and humane law when bloud requiring bloud God commanding that who sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his bloud be shed and who so blasphemeth or obey not the Father Deut. 21. 8. 19. 20. or the voice of the Priest Dent. 17. 12. the Sabbath breaker adulterer ravisher and divers other in Gods Law and such exorbitant offences by humane lawes commanded to be punished by death and so the Magistrate beareth the sword not for naught Rom. 13. 4. 48. All taking away life is not then here forbidden No for hence are exempted and excepted all those persons and in all those cases where the Lord himselfe 1. Giveth the sword Of justice as the Magistrate who beareth it not for naught In lawfull battel as the souldier for their Prince or Countrey In just defence as of ones selfe against theeves robbers or other necessity 2. Offereth another as manslaughter by meere chance and not of any malice or anger for whom God provideth refuge of sanctuary Exod. 21. 13. Deut. 19. 4. 49. How of Moses Phinees and the like Of speciall instinct and commission from God in extraordinary manner and if private men yet of heroicall or divine zeale but Christians must follow ordinary rules and examples not speciall exceptions or imitations of extraordinary actions 50. What else of the matter or manner Murder or the taking away the life the greatest wrong that can be done to man and defacing of Gods image is either in respect of The 1. Meanes perpetrated 1. Directly by force and violence 2. Indirectly by Poyson Witchcraft or the like 2. Manner and motion 1. Ones owne accord and that of 1. Maliceprepensed 2. Blind zeale 3. Heat choler 4. Drunkenness or other passiō 2. Another as 1. Commanded 2. Counselled 3. Hired c. to doe it 51. What the punishment Bloud for bloud usually and in some fearfull manner also according to the aggravation of the offence so that who spilleth mans bloud by man shall his bloud be spilt it being a crying sinne as Cains murder Abels bloud crying to heaven for revenge Gods judgement shewing it selfe many times in extraordinary manner revealing the murderer and presenting him to be punished as by the dead body sometimes the bloud or the murderers owne conscience 52. Why so severe punishment Because it is even 1. A destruction of the little world the Microcosme of man 2. Defacing of Gods image betwixt which and clipping the Kings coin wherein is his image yet death for it there is no comparison 3. An encroaching upon Gods office whose onely right to call men when he please out of the world 4. The greatest sin against man that can be unlesse murder of his soul which also is punished like as this bloud for bloud soule for soule so the bloud of soules is required at their hands and lyes heavy in their heads that destroy them 53. How is soule murder understood Either in respect of the life I. Naturall an unjust grieving and vexing of a mans soule II. Spirituall by first omission of duties of 1. Governours Ministers Masters to whom belongeth the guiding care and 2. Instruction of others for their soules health and salvation Second commission in being cause of sinne and offence as by provocation counsell evill example c. 54. What duties opposite required Both preservation of life and preventing so much as possible all meanes of hurt both in ones selfe and others with helping and not hindering our owne and others
salvation but furthering the same by Instruction admonition exhortation reproofe Consolation and any other pious meanes as wel as good example 55. What the sum of all The preservation of life both of body and soule and avoyding of all hurt or hindrance of the same with that crying sin of murder 56. What followeth The seventh Commandement third of the second Table importing the preservation of the chastity SECT 9. The seventh Commandement the order and analysis of the seventh Commandement shewing the severall parts and duties and their branches whether intimated or expressed and first of chastity body and soule and opposite unchastity in the severall sorts and branches or degrees of each of them whence the latitude of the Commandement in all these respects more evidently to be seen and observed where the meanes also of preserving chastity in our selves and others and the opposite offences touched the degrees in this sin from the heart and all outward signes and appearances of evill the messengers of the soule and means with and by the sences to the farther degrees of this sinne in actuall adultery and fornication where pride in attire gadding abroad dauncing and such like lascivious and wanton actions behaviour and gestures by divers Writers are sharply censured and reproved as the meanes and occasions of much other filthinesse and further mischiefe and so the foulenesse heynousnesse of adultery farther set forth and demonstrated by the vile effects punishments and the like circumstances of the action as well as lawes and execution of them duly cared for and seen to by the Lawmakers themselves with great severity and others by their example prosecuting and persecuting the crime with the greatest detestation and to that purpose the sentences of the Scriptures and Fathers as on the other side the excellent praise and commendation of chastity And lastly the meanes to be taken and used for avoiding so crying and heynous crimes the godly entring into the holy estate of matrimony and what godly caution and circumspection therein to be used so lastly of Sodomy Incest and such unnaturall sinnes and what generally here commanded and intended 1. VVHat is the seventh Commandement Thou shalt not commit adultery 2. What is the order of it Next to the forbidding of murder as the next greatest offence and in his nature so foule as deserveth death according to the law of God and sundry Nations and so placed here before theft and next to murder 3. What manner of Commandement A negative inferring his opposite affirmative viz. thou shalt not commit any act of uncleannesse but preserve thy body and soule in temperance sobernesse and chastity 4. What the negative part The prohibition of all unchastity or uncleannes of body and soule and of all signes or tokens meanes or provocations of the same or being accessory thereunto 5. What in these branches then more expresly forbidden 1. All outward actions of uncleannesse adultery fornication incest c. 2. All filthy ' and obscene speeches bookes pictures c. 3. All incontinent thoughts and lusts of heart 4. All occasions of uncleannesse as surfetting drunkennesse 5. All accessorinesse to any filthinesse in this kinde c. 6. VVhat the affirmative part Commanding chastity of body and soule and all 1. Signes and tokens 2. Meanes and occasions preservation of the same both in our selves and others 7. VVhat in these branches more expresly to bee understood 1. Both temperance sobernesse and chastity in outward actions of the body and to keepe that a Temple of the holy Ghost 2. Honesty and modesty in speeches and expressions of the minde 3. Continency sobriety and chastity of minde and soule 4. All good meanes of preservation of this vertue by temperance fasting labour prayer c. 5. Labour and well wishing to the preservation of others chastity and vertue 8. How are the parts here seene opposite or opposed Evidently and plainly as 1. Chastity commanded opposite to uncleannesse forbidden 2. Modest speeches opposite to obscene and filthy forbidden 3. Continency of minde opposite to incontinency and lusts of heart 4. Means of preservation of this vertue in our selves opposite to the means and occasions of falling 5. Labour to preserve or procure it in others opposite to the being accessory to others uncleannes 9. What is chastity The preservation or study to preserve body and soule in purity and from all pollutions of uncleannesse and concupiscence of the flesh and so Both inward of the soule Externall of the body Totall of both body and soule 10. What is inward chastity or that of the soule The purity of the soule from all 1. Motions 2. Passions of lusts and unlawfull concupiscence 11. What is the opposite or unchastity of the soule Inward concupiscence or adultery of the heart Matth. 5. 25. 1. Whether before the consent of will forbidden more expresly in the tenth Commandement 2. Joyned with consent of will and that either 1. Sudden flames or motions of lust 2. Inveterate lusts and burning in unclean flames of letchery 12. What outward chastity The possessing of the vessels of our bodies in holinesse and honour both continencie of 1. The eyes from beholding vanity and objects of lust 2. The ears from hearing or hearkning after uncleane and filthy talke 3. The tongue from filthy and ribauld speeches 4. The whole body and fact from all uncleannesse and unchaste and wanton pleasures 13. What the opposite unchastity All outward pollutions of the body or any part thereof by uncleannesse as adultery of the eyes wandring after evill and said full of adultery Active with wanton glances to entangle others Passive beholding others so entangled 1. Of the ears open to filthy communication 2. Of the tongue polluted with ribauld and lewd speeches 3. Of the fact of all uncleannesse and lasciviousnesse 14. How meane you that uncleannesse of the fact The acts of adultery fornication incest or the like pollutions committed either 1. Against sobriety without a partner inselfe polution whether Sleeping Waking 2. Honesty with a partner and I. Without consent so forced or ravished rape which as an act of Violence against the 6. Commandement Brutish uncleannesse against this and punished with death II. With consent and that either First naturall of the male with the female and betweene persons 1. Too neare of kin incest 2. Single or unmarried fornication And if first onely with one she a concubine Secondly with divers she a whore and hee a whoremonger 3. Married and that either To divers polygamy With unmarried single adultery With another married person double adultery Secondly unnaturall against naturall use and monstrous as Of the same sex Buggery or Sodomy Of divers kindes man with beasts bestiality With spirits Incubi Succubi 15. How is chastity usually set forth 1. In single life continency the gift of God to which belongeth chaste widowhood 2. Mariage Conjugall fidelity Moderate and modest use of the mariage bed Abstinency on occasion of Absence Fasting and prayer Times of separation c. as
resembling lunacy and frenzy more then that foolish gesture of dauncing the strange shakings and motions of the body at the noise of a beaten sheeps skin and ridiculous to marke the grave behaviour measurable march pompe and ostentation of women dauncers and the great care they have to performe wisely so foolish an action that it is very likely at that time all their wit is distilled from their head into their feet for that there it is then more requisite and needfull then in their braines as saith Lodovicus Vives 27. How is this to be understood Of the immoderate foolish and inordinate use or rather abuse of them too commonly seene the froth and fume of wine and excesses and nurse of lewdnesse and laciviousnesse or worse if worse may be as sometimes quarrells rappes murders and the like have been occasioned by them as among others Herodias dauncing daughters cunning herein cost Saint John Baptists head when especially consorted with drunkennesse as too often may be observed what good effects to be expected since as Saint Augustine noteth Serm. 231. de vitanda ebrietate as by too much raine the earth is dissolved into dirt and made unfit for tillage so by excessive drunkennesse our bodies are made altogether unfit for the spirituall tillage and can bring forth no fruits of holinesse but rather like bogs and marshes are fit to breed nothing but serpents frogs and vermine all manner of abominable sins and lothsome wickednesse and this a prime companion of dauncing or at least dauncing an usuall dependant on wine and belly chear 28. Is no dauncing then to be allowed Surely as before was shewed it ought to bee with great caution or sparingly and singular moderation for feare of inconvenience thence arising and so proving but an incentive to lust and folly 29. What in the next degrees All kinde of incontinency from the heart as it were budding forth by any outward shewes of words habit attire or gesture forwarded and expressed and by such midwives brought to the full birth and produced into act in all the species and kindes thereof 30. Which are the kindes As were before remembred or according to the Schoolemen and summists of these six sorts viz. 1. Fornication among the unmarried or single 2. Adultery where one or both married 3. Incest with any of affinity or consanguinity within the degrees forbidden 4. Deflowring of virgins called Stuprum 5. Rape or ravishing which is against the will and with violence 6. Unnaturall lust 1. Inordinate of sexes sodomy 2. With beasts beastiallity 3. With spirits Incubi Succubi and to which may be referred all other nocturnall and selfe-pollutions arising especially of riot intemperance and excesse 31. But are not Stuprum and Rape also fornication They are but in a higher or worse degree according to the quality of the person wronged as a virgin or else and so diversity of punishment or satisfaction by divers lawes appointed or with violence and so rape punishable with death both by Gods Law and others to avoid more dangerous consequences 32. What of fornication As next to adultery in foulenesse before God and lightly who falleth to the one maketh small conscience of the other and the whore compared to a dogge before God when neither the hire of a whore nor price of a dog might be brought or offered in the Temple Deut. 23. 18. and many wayes the odiousnesse thereof appearing 33. How is the detestablenesse thereof showne 1. Because of the indignity hereof offered to Christ in it whose members the Christian hereby made the members of a harlot 1 Cor. 6. 15. 2. The wronging of the good Spirit of God dispossessed of his House and Temple the body and soule of a Christian 1 Cor. 6. 19. the holy Spirit expelled and lust brought in 3. The greatest wrong that can be to the body and soule and others also as every sin else without the body this is the body fighting against the soul and cutting it off from God divorcing it from Christ and from Gods Spirit dissolving the Covenant of God and Idolatry compared with it or unto it 33. What say you then of Adultery As a most heynous sinne before God and men and odious to all most severely appointed to bee punished by death so both the adulterer with the married wife or betrothed maid with the adulteresse both to dye Deut. 22. 22. 34. How is it adultery accounted with the maid Because she is betrothed and thence forth reputed wife and that full adultery which is so farther distinguished to be either I. Adultery single where one party onely is married and that 1. Properly so called if the woman be married or betrothed for so it is fully adultery and he an adulterer and she an adulteresse 2. Improperly if the man only be married so called improperly adultery since she but a concubine II. Adultery double when by married man with woman married or betrothed 35. How compared with fornication Far greater for that in simple fornication seen by the Law of God the truest estimation of things 1. It was punished with pecuniary mulct as the dowry of virgins but adultery with death 2. Notwithstanding the fact so permitted that the persons might marry and were so commanded if the virgins father did consent but adulterous persons sentenced to suffer death and since forbidden ever to marry together for divers reasons and respects 1. Both to themselves so polluted 2. Others whose lives might be endangered by such permission That by such evill examples others might be drawne on to mischiefe 3. It was offence only or chiefly to themselves though both in body and soul against God and the congregation but adultery also against others in the highest degree and so most severely taken notice of and punished as shall be shewed and thereby the heynousnesse thereof more evidently appearing 36. How so heynous a sin that so severely punished 1. As a breach of a most sacred covenant made before God yea and with God accounted so the lewd woman said to forget the covenant of her God Prov. 2. 17. 2. The greatest disgrace to a family that may be when the mother a where the children bastards and a family instead of a chaste houshold and Church of God made a brothell house or stewes lothsome to God and all good men 3. An intollerable wrong to the husband so abused in that he nourisheth bringeth up and provideth for the bastardly brood of lewd knaves as for his owne hereby robbed of his estate and so adultery joyned with theft and much greater in many respects 37. How is it greater or worse then theft As the abused husband 1. Is prevented and defrauded of his greatest worldly comfort the love of his wife and her fidelity 2. Defrauded and wronged in his greatest worldly treasure the bastards suggested in stead of gennine and true begotten children 3. Is continually robbed and wronged in his estate as every bit of bread the adultresse or her brats doe eat a
Yes but not beyond the intent of the Law which willeth absolute righteousnesse both in our soules and bodies or actions and most inward affections and is hereby a Schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ and when wee are not able to doe it to send us to him that hath done it for us if wee shew our love and obedience by our willingnesse 23. How may our willingnesse be seene 1. By our hate of the things of the flesh 2. By our delight in the Law of the Lord Rom. 7. 16. 3. By our stirring or striving and moving in holy duties 4. By our desire to bee instructed and directed 5. By our growing up in godlinesse and these are also assigned as tokens of our new birth proceeding by degrees in grace directed by the Law profiting and perfected in Christ. 24. What generally commanded here Contentednesse with our estate in not covetting our neighbors goods but submitting our souls to the good will and pleasure of God and his holy Spirit and ordering our selves with thankfulnesse according to the direction of the same in which contentednesse all vertues seeme to shine forth and to be comprehended as Prudence justice temperance fortitude constancy c. both in generall and in particular of all vertues as in their severall kindes and branches is to bee seene as what Christian prudence and heavenly wisedome sheweth it selfe where wee are graciously contented with Gods providence over us and appointment of us in that our estate and condition to doe him such service as therein required what justice towards God and men shineth forth in our readinesse so contentedly to doe our duties what Christian moderation and temperance to be seene above all turbulent affections of vainglory pride or covetousnesse so to submit our selves to Gods will and command and our fortitude and constancy so to continue and persevere as indeed where any virtue is actually there habitually are all the rest virtues and graces goe concatenate there is such mutuall league of love and tye of affinity betweene and among them as no virtue without prudence to gurde it justice the soule and substance of it in the duty whether to God or man our selves or others temperance the mediocrity and moderation of it fortitude the strength of it and courage to proceed constancy the continuance and so the rest humility the ground continency the girdle love the comfort chastity the ornament piety the crowne of them all and each adding a lustre to other and where any deficient the rest blemished by it but in this one contentednesse all generally entertained and every one particularly illustrated by it 25. What are the fruits hereof True blessednesse here and hereafter the promise annexed to the performance of good duties 26. What the whole duty man To feare God and keepe his Commandements 27. VVhat the sum of the Commandements Love 28. VVhat followeth in the Catechisme The explication of that love the summe of the Commandements as it extendeth it selfe to the performance of duties both towards God and men and so to shew what we learne in them SECT 13. The ninth and next Questions Love the sum and substance or root and fountaine of the Law and all good duties therein comprised whether to God or man pertaining so called the royall law of love or fulfilling of the law whose degrees in our duty to God to superiours to equals and inferiors in their severall orders and kindes to be exercised how to love the neighbour as ones owne selfe and what by the Talion law to doe as we would be don● to is required our giving hon●● to superiours love of equalls all else shewn by hurting none by breach of any the Commandements as 〈…〉 or 〈…〉 incontinency picking and stealing evill speaking lying or slandering or coveting other mens goods and so consequently to use the honest meanes whereby to be better able to perform this to learne to labour in some lawfull calling as God appointeth us with thankefulnesse and contentednesse 1. VVHat doe you chiefly learne in these Commandements Two things my duty towards God and my duty towards my neighbour or the root and fountaine whence these duties doe slow love extending it selfe to God Men. 2. How is love the fountaine of these duties or sum of the Law 1. It is the summe of the Law as it is the whole scope of all good duties and intention of the law and inward forme of that spirituall life we live by grace ready to performe all good duties and so called the royall law of love 2. It is the fountaine and root of his double duty as the love of God produceth the zeale of his glory seeking his honour and so obedience to all the Commandements and thereby performance of duties both to God and men 3. What is thy duty towards God To beleeve in him To feare him and to love him with all my heart minde soule strength as Luke 10. 27. Deut. 6. 5. Mat. 22 28. Marke 12. 30. Whence sloweth the performance of all other services of his and honor done unto him as from the first Commandement all the rest 4. VVhat meane you by this A faith in God producing his feare in love and filiall observance the feare of God the beginning of wisedome performing obedience and love in hearty affection adhering unto him and trusting in him with minde unfainedly seeking knowing and remembring him and soule wholly addicted to his honour and service to the utmost strength and power of both bodily and spirituall faculties persevering therein the substance of the first Commandement and so performing all parts of his service in the rest of the Commandements 5. In what wanner 1. Both to worship him after his will 2. Give him thankes and praise him for his benefits 3. Put my trust in him in distresse 4. Call upon him in all my needs as in the second Commandement 5. Honour his holy name and his word as in the third Commandement 6. Serve him truly all the dayes of my life and especially his Sabbaths as the fourth Commandement 6. VVhat is love to these duties The very foundation of them for if I doe love Cod With all my heart sincerely With all my minde understandingly With all my soule affectionately With all my strength effectually I will assuredly also strive to perform these things and continue in them all the dayes of my life 7. VVhat is thy duty to thy neighbour I. In generall 1. As by our Saviour Christ is taught to love him as my selfe so reade Math. 22. 39. Luke 10. 27. Marke 12. 31. so Lev 19. 18. 2. According to talion Law to doe to all men as we would they should doe unto us by our Saviour taught Math. 7. 12. Luke 6. 31. so Tob. 4. 15. II. Speciall to First superiours as in the fifth Commandement to 1. To love honour and succour father c. 2. Honour and obey King and his c. 3. Submit my selfe to c. 4. Order my selfe lowly c. Secondly all
others I. In generall being true and just c. II. In particular as in 6. Commandement to beare no malice c. 7. Commandement keeping body in c. 8. Commandement keepe hands from picking c. 9. Commandement tongue from evill c. 10. Commandement not to covet c. 8. How is that to love my neighbour as my selfe To love him as my selfe in that true sincere and hearty affection that I wish well unto my selfe withall and not hypocritically and fainedly and coldly or dissemblingly but truly for his good and unfainedly for his soules health 9. VVho can love his neighbour so Every good Christian that hath but learned what charity and the love of God is for if he doe not love his brother thus whom hee hath seene neither doth he love God whom he hath not seen but if he say he doth he is a lyar because the truth of God is not in him since truth of love is wanting and God is love and the truth and so hee loveth us in truth and commandeth us so to love one another and seeth the heart and by this showeth who are his children that in truth love him and their neighbour 10. But we see none doe love other so much as themselves Neither is it so set downe so great a love in the quantity but as true a love in the quality and a second in order my selfe the rule my neighbour as my selfe and both in God and for his love else all love of my selfe and others is vaine that is in any other respect such as worldly or carnall and fleshly love is 11 How meane you it then To love him even as my selfe for 1. The manner in true and hearty love though not in that measure and extent in every respect of it or Quoad qualitatem veritatis though not quoad quantitatem magnitudinis so true though not so great alone Quoad modum though not gradum to the utmost degree that I must care and provide for my selfe 12. How then shall this love be Sicut meipsum or as my selfe both in respect of 1. Quod in meipso my soul and his Gods Image 2. Ad quod meipsum for grace here and glory hereafter 3. Propter quod meipsum for Gods glory and the soules good 4. In quo meipsum in God and goodnesse 5. Quosque meipsum to the end and this to love him truly and Christianly as my selfe 13. What will the effect of this be That I will then wish no more hurt to him then to mine owne soule loving him so truly and sincerely as my selfe and for Gods sake and will wish to receive from all men as I would do unto them 14. How is that to doe to all men as I would c. According to the true effect of the Talion law in love not revenge but doing so well by them that I would not wish better from them and so wish as well to them as to my selfe or my owne soule which could not be amisse for who hateth or wisheth ill to himselfe that is but honest or in his right minde and so love the fulfilling of the law seene in all these particulars 15. How towards superiours By doing to them as I would wish them or others to doe by me if I were a superiour and in their place which is the summe and substance of the fifth Commandement whereby 1. To love honour and succour my father and mother 2. To honour and obey the King and his Ministers 3. To submit my selfe to all my governours c. 4 To order my selfe lowly and reverently to all my betters which is the love and effects thereof in honour and obedience and submission and well ordering my selfe in duty and humility that I owe 1. To my naturall parents father and mother 2. To politicall parents King and Magistrates 3. To spirituall parents Pastors and Ministers 4. Oeconomicall and other parents superiours or betters as Masters Teachers ancient rich or noble persons in any degree better or above my selfe and in modesty extended my very equalls 16. How towards others In generall to hurt no body by word nor deed but to be true and just in all my dealing the sum and substance of all the five last Commandments as not hurting any body I. By word contrary to the ninth Commandement by lying slandering false witnesse c. II. By deeds by 1. murder slander malice or the like contrary to the sixth Commandement 2. Adultery fornication or other uncleannesse in tempting others or attempting or wronging others chastity or mine owne contrary to the seventh Commandement 3. Stealing in oppressing fraud or the like contrary to the eight Commandement and so consequently being true and just in all my dealings in all these respects and even not contrary to truth or honesty to cover or desire other mens goods or make any lewd or evill pretences to the same so contrary to the tenth Commandement as more particularly expressed in the words following 17. What is it to bear nomclice or hatred in my To be free from murder and all inducements to the same since who hateth his brother is a man-slayer before God and of malice and hatred sprung contentions quarrells and unquietnesse and so consequently blood-sucking if not blood-shedding so this the effect and substance of the sixth Commandement on the contrary enjoyning and commanding love and the preservation of our neighbours life and person 18. What is it to keepe my body in temperance sobernesse and chastity The substance of the seventh Commandement where these vertues of temperance in our mindes affections and actions enjoyed sobriety in our speech gestures attires actions and behaviour and chastity both of body and soule though as most seen in the actions and body so for good example sake intimated and most required and on the contrary in that Commandement all adultery fornication and acts of uncleannesse with all intemperance and unchastity and signes or meanes of the same forbidden 19. What to keepe my hands from picking and stealing The plaine sense of the eight Commandement forbidding all stealth whether by covert fraud cousenage or secret purloyning or overt oppression in robbery and other unjust and ungodly courses getting others goods or encreasing our owne as on the contrary in that Commandement the preservation of our neighbours estate restoring of goods unlawfully gotten and lawfull getting and using yea laying out of our owne goods to pious and charitable uses enjoyned if as we are but stewards we will not be accounted theeves and usurpers before God 20. What by keeping the tongue from evill speaking lying and slandering The substance of the ninth Commandement where all untruth and uncharity by untrue and undue testimony publicke or private in place of judgement or else by lyes slanders or false reports to the wrong of the neighbour and his or our owne good name and breach of love and charity are forbidden and so on the contrary truth and charity in all these respects to the preservation
which what good Christian is free and so good a preparative to our end and calling hence of which who is certaine or who can be too religiously carefull especially since they are so often in holy Scripture called on for it and should often remember their end and the strict account then to be made of all the things committed to their charge and of all that they have done in the flesh which with the holy Father that thought he heard the trumpet of God and Archangells voice continually sounding in his eare that surgite mortui venite ad judicium often meditated on this and the like thoughts and preparations would as to this also be motives to much good and to prevent much evill 50. But how is the Minister able to discerne the spirits or to do this sufficiently not knowing the secrets of the heart or sins lurking there The Priest indeed cannot nor may not absolve any but the penitent nor can know their penitency but by their outward expression it is Gods prerogative to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to know the thoghts and secrets of the heart the Priests eye pierceth not so farre he onely reads the sorrowes of our hearts by our words and outward confession without which he cannot give nor we receive the benefit of absolution 51. But is not private or auricular confession how ever it seeme needfull sometimes rooted out of our Church and abolished Though not so generally and peremptorily commanded or in the Priests power to enforce or require it yet it is not rooted quite out neither nor utterly abolished as we see by that second exhortation before the Communion urging the penitents to it and by the forme prescribed for the visitation of the sicke and their absolution after their private or auricular confession and by the Canon enjoyning the Ministers silence on paine of suspension of such crimes so privately by the humble penitent revealed and confessed in all which passages we see it by Law approved so though the Ministers power of calling them to it be abridged the thing it selfe yet and use of it is not abolished 52. What differs the Priests power ministerialiter that you shewed before and this declarative If you meane declarative onely very much or as much as the Judges and his ●riers declaration of the same things otherwise ministerialiter is declarative too but not that only as ministerialiter in respect of God and his Church may be authoritative also in respect of Gods commission granted to them to be Judges of the sinnes and soules of his people as aforesaid as Gods deputed Judges on earth for those things and so the Kings Judges as his Ministers of justice Ministers in that point to the King and Commonwealth yet having authority from him authoritativé proceed and pronounce sentence of the things in their commission and ministerially execute his the Kings judgements according to his Lawes and have power so to doe and declarative pronounce the same and their authority granted doth no way lessen the Kings which the exercise mediately rather doth more shew and promulge the same but to say they had therefore power but declarative because ministerialiter they execute the Kings authority or declarative only not authorative because ministerialiter they do it whereas they may well stand together yet each in their order and degree were to derogate from their authority and dignity as these schismaticks do in the like manner from the Churches office and authority 55. This authority then of the Church and Priests in that point is cleare enough It is and though ministerialiter to the honour of God and good of his Church executed and declarative uttered or published by them not to be denied authoritative also by power and vertue of his commission granted to them in whose name they doe it as originally in him in his own proper right and only doe existent to them only mediately and by grace derived and thus by The Doctrine of the Church of England according to the true record and rule of holy Scriptures and the consent of the Fathers from all antiquity we are assured hereof and taught this truth against all novelties of Schismatickes so that if we either Assent to our mother Church Beleeve the Scriptures or Credit the ancient Fathers as aforesaid wee cannot deny the Priest this power of the remitting sinnes having thus Gods word and Scriptures sure record his Sonnes promise and holy Spirits testimony so many wayes to assure us of it and since he can in the name of God forgive us our sinnes good reason have we to make our confession to him for surely God who doth nothing in vaine never gave the Priest this power in vain but for our benefit and expects our doing the best we can to make good use of it having ordained in the Priest the power of absolution that wee should use the best meanes we can to obtaine that blessing which is our confession to him nor can we sleight this but we may quickly and well heare Saint Augustine Tom. 10. Homil. 49. applying his speech close to such slieghters teaching us a better lesson nemo sibi dicat saith he occulte ago quia apud Deum ago c. let no man flatter himselfe and say I confesse in private to God and God that knoweth my heart will or shall pardon me though I never confesse at all to the Priest ergo sine causâ dictum esset quae solveritis in terra c. hath God in vaine said whose sinnes ye remit they are remitted Hath he in vaine given that power of the keyes to the Priest Frustramus ergo Dei verbum by our wilfull neglect shall we goe about to make void the promise of Christ God forbid if we have offended this way preveniamus judicium Dei per confessionem let us let us yet now at last prevent the terrible judgement of the last day by timely confession of our sinnes to God and the Priest as he hath commanded who as he hath prime and originall power of absolution Esay 43. 25. and is our high Confessor in the heavens hath not in vaine done any thing or commanded us to humble our selves in his Church and to his substitutes the Priests our confessors here on earth and thus much of the power of the Church in the dispensing of absolution requiring our duty of confession 54. If this were the doctrine of the ancients how was it seconded by their practise Accordingly to all intents both privately to the comfort and absolution of such humble penitents and more publickly in reforming the stubborne or notorious offenders and as with all authority thus commanded with all gravity by them exercised and with all humility and dutifulnesse by all the sonnes of the Church even to the greatest of them obeyed as the Ecclesiasticall Histories doe plentifully declare whereby the Churches discipline grew so religiously admired that even famous for it to succeeding times awfull feare and obedience
and expedient Extended over all creatures whatsoever life and death heaven and hell that hath the keyes of both time and eternity Paradise and hell and will doe as he please shutteth and no man openeth openeth and no man shutteth giveth life or taketh but referreth all to his glory 8. What is that glory The scope and end of all things in the manifestation of his power and excellency of his Kingdome proposed 1. By God himselfe to all his actions of mercy justice 2. To men that they should seek it 3. To Angels and Saints eternally to desire and doe and sing it 4. To the Divells and worst creatures that though unwillingly in their misery shall shew it and in his justice be made spectacles of his glory and so we see to which end all things are and shall be referred 9. Wherein his glory most seen 1. In his creatures heaven and heaven of heavens Sun and stars that he ordained Men his Image c. Angels his glorious Courtiers c. 2. In his actions of creation redemption governance c. Mercies to all that desire them Benefits to all creatures especially Men and Angels Wisdome truth justice c. 3. In his house or Church in 1. Earth where his graces praises c. 2. Heaven where Saints and Angels perpetually his glorious servants and delight in setting forth his glory 10. How the eternity In that all other Kingdomes and Empires have their periods and ends as the heavens their revolutions but Gods Kingdome no end all other power is limited Kings nor Tyrants whose breath is in their nostrills their hearts and all in Gods hand can doe but what he appointeth nay the very Divell is herein limited that else would as a roaring Lyon be a more terrible Dragon and destroyer onely Gods power is without limit of time or coertion bounded only by his holy and good will and pleasure and to eternity and all earthly glory and beauty is fraile and mortall like that of the lillies or flower of the field though in Solomon and his royalty and shall have end yea the heavens and Sunne and Moone as they were create though of long continuance at last will perish They wax old as doth a garment but his glory in the heaven and in his servants that attend it are to endure for ever and so in his presence is fulnessesse of joy life and power kingdome and glory for evermore 11. How the certainty of it In the truth and consistency of this being who is I am who was who is and who is to come blessed for ever who is true and the truth even eternall truth and fountaine of life and of truth and so kingdome power and glory is truly and for ever his the Divell did say of the power and glory of the kingdomes of the world that they were his and he would give them but he was a lyar and that not the truth but all earthly glory power kingdome and dominion is from God and truly his and heavenly kingdome power and glory more appropriated to him and his as more fitting the Majesty of his glory and thus certainly a King powerfull and glorious holy and blessed for ever 12. How is this ascribed By all good inen Saints and Angels by the tongues of all creatures in their kindes The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth c. So the Sunne and Moone hoasts of heaven showres and dewes earth and seas and all things praise and magnifie him for ever but most especially all spirits and soules of the righteous and all holy and humble men of heart and his servants shew his glory and confesse that his is Kingdome power and glory for ever 13. What doth this teach Princes To remember to whom they owe a tribute of praise who hath given them that high estate who is absolute King of Glory and Lord of Hoasts and their Lord as King of Kings and Lord of all lords and so to doe according to his will exalt his honour follow his Law which will bee their honour and happinesse when they come to render an account of their stewardship and Kingdome to him that is their Lord Paramount and King for ever 14. What to Magistrates To remember of whom they and all Kings have that power and from whom and to what end derived unto them so to use their power so committed to them to his glory who gave or sent it them remembring also their accounts that they must make of their power and authority to him that is King of eternall power and glory 15. What to any other of high condition To remember from whom they have all their glory and high estate and so to use it as to his glory and praise him for it who is the King of glory and hath ordained all things for and to the same 16. What to all other the faithfull To erect and raise up their mindes and cogitations to heaven where they have such a Father who hath all Kingdome and Empire Power Majesty and Glory at his dispose and in his hand yea most eminently in his person for ever to whom all earthly Kings and Emperours compared are but wormes and their greatest glory to be his servants and vassalls in whose service also who most humble most honourable and so to consider the excellent dignity of the Sonnes of God to the despising and contemning of all earthly things as but clay and durt and drosse in comparison of this 17. What else learne you out of this conclusion The summe of the Lords Prayer and our desires briefly recollected and recommended to us in this close and words of the same 18. How is that observed 1. The Preface Our Father which art in heaven signified in the eternity and certainty of his Kingdome power and glory 2. The first Petition his name hallowed by this setting forth his praise and excellency of his glory 3. The second Petition his Kingdome come in the acknowledgement here of his eternall Kingdome 4. The third Petition his will be done by his Almighty power both now and for ever 5. The fourth Petition for our good comprehended in his glory for which and to which referred they ought to be desired and not else to the confidence and assurance of all of them asked in faith in the last word Amen 19. What or whence the ground of our confidence Manifested partly in the Preface and more fully in the conclusion and so most amply in both joyned together well considered here included or as I. In the Preface Our Father which art in heaven his love mercy and compassion His eternall Majesty and eminencie II. In the conclusion our Father his 1. Kingdome and dominion over all 2. Power ruling and governing all 3. Glory to it guiding and directing all 4. Eternity the happinesse of all 5. Certainty and truth that is Amen 20. How is Amen understood Either as a 1. Nowne the truth it selfe and so God and Gods word who is Yea
orationibus expi●ti On Palme-Sunday instructed in Baptisterio then only used ordinarily but at that time of the yeare on Easter Eve so commanded they did publickly say the Creed and professin● that faith were baptized semel vel●ter intincti ut in nomine 3. personarum in earum vel unius Dei memoriam and so then with baptisme signo crucis muniti being of ●●ll age received also confirm●tion 5. Int●ncti Neophyti or Tyrones so baptized they might learne and say the Lords prayer and not before and were publickly to rehea●se it on Low-Easter-Sunday and using whit● garments till that Dominica in albis thence so called were then admitted to see and partake of the holy mysteries 6. Fideles they were thence forward accounted and of these onely and no● of the Intincti Neophyti Catechumeni or others might any be to holy orders and not without great exploration of their vertues to be Deacons Priests or Bishops admitted 53. Was this order so strictly then observed Yes a●●u●edly and as for the Abstenti o● Excammunicati poenitentes ordinary Audientes Competentes and Cat●chumeni the former excluded the Church those last might not come neere or see the most sacred mysteries which were celebrated In Sacrario or Secretorio as some meane it the innermost or uppermost part of the Church and severed from the rest resembling as it were the Sanctum Sanctorum of the Jewes that was resembled by the Adyta of the Gentiles Not in Auditorio or the body of the Church as some have dreamed though there too be tribunall Ecclesiae the Pew and P●lpit unde Evangelii praecept a leguntur Cypr. lib. 4. Ep. 5. This most apparant out of all Authors Councels and Fathers that mention the Sacrarium Secretorium Presbyterium and Cancellos within which they were most religiously and solemnly celebrated and with such retirement for their majesty and holinesse reserved that not lawfull for many of the former sorts so much as to see them as before related and as we finde in Numeritius the Emperour repulsed by Bishop Babylas who but desired per transennā in mysteria Christianorum inspicere prohibited contaminatis oculis ea spectare denied with eyes de●iled with Idols to behold the divine mysteries and if the Catechumeni saw casu aliquo secreta by any chance those mysteries not the Table onely they were straight to bee baptized without staying the ordinary time till Easter as writes Albaspinus lib. 2. observat c. 2. 54. But some have transgressed anciently against those both Orders and Decorum in the Church And as anciently corrected by the godly Bishops Councels and their Canons confirming these things and therein lively depainting the manners of Heretickes and Schismati●k●s of both their and our times as learned Tertullian describing mores haereticorū and schismaticorū with their confusion of all things as neerly toucheth those with us that deale so confusedly neglecting such good order and all antiquity making so little difference or having no better respect to sacred things as if the holy Table and reading Pew Chancell and lower end of the Church Altar and Belfrey were scarce worthy to bee distinguished the end or cunning of those that thus turne out all good order and distinction as our late Schismatickes and Puritans that orders and degrees taken away they may hand over head suddenly leap or step over all to the highest place a quick way of preferment or at least to have all rowly-powly hail-fellow well met and sit cheek by jowle like mother Zebedees sonnes with Christ in his Kingdome their knees being too stiffe to kneel at the communion or neck and back to bow towards the holy Altar or almost to any in authority rather ready to kick against and countermand all or any authority or as if all equalls at least and all places persons houses of equall holinesse degree and respect and no difference or no order or degree no Altar or consecration no house place or person holier or more to be so respected or regarded one then other but as Christians I hope all Priests since a Royall Priesthood and then all Kings too perhaps as the Lords annointed so this a short cut a quick way indeed but to Anarchy and confusion and that to endlesse trouble for if it might be allowed as some migh●ily affect and desire it we should shortly have no Church but a meeting-place and consequently no Bishop a prime policie of theirs and if no Altar no Church no consecration and so no Priest no Deacon a happy day for Lecturers only but hence to be doubted nor Fideles nor Catechumeni● or other ranke of Christians to be found 55. Whence may we gather such order and degrees and thence arising different respects to be or to be warranted in the holy places persons or things From all approved authority and practise of antiquity with Church and Fathers best Interpreters of holy Scriptures and their meaning as well as from Gods owne order words and the holy Scriptures themselves even totidem and expressis terminis divers where if we observe them and that both before since and under the Law testified as under the Law particularly seen in the Courts of the Lords house and s●verall attendants in their stations the sacrifici●s and others with the Altars and sacrifices the●● to be noted the Sanctum and Sanctum Sanctorum atrium populi and sacerdotum the outer and innermost Courts without and within the vesle the Altar of incense and other sacrifices with the Oracle and such other types of holy and holiest things so a distinction of holinesse in the persons Exod. 29. Levit. 8. Numb 8. in their garments Exod. 28. and 29. in their sacrifices Levit. c. 1. c. 2. and 3. in the ornaments Exod. 26. and 27. in the other furniture of the Temple some holy most holy others Exod. 30. 10. 29. 36. and Gershoms charge holier then Meraryes Coath's then Gershoms and that of Aarons family then eithers the whole campe holy and therefore no uncleane person must be in this Numb 5. the Tabernacle holier then the Campe and ●herefore the Levites alone must pitch round about that Numb 1. 50. 53. the Sanctuary holier then the Tabernacle and therefore the Priests only must enter there Levit. 21. 6. 22. and into the Tabernacle without washing but not into this or within the veile Exod. 30. 20. 21. and 40. 30. the Oracle holier then all and therefore none but Aaron the holiest of all to approach there and that our once a yeare and not without Lotions propitiatory vestments sprinkling and a cloud of incense Heb. 9. 3. 7. c. as Solomons Temple also shewed the like distinction and degrees in the same things according to that of Gods owne platforme in the Mount nor were these degrees or distances before the Law given unobserved for Jacob notes Bethel for a fearfull place for the holinesse presence of God manifested to him in vision and by that appearing of Angels whence flowed the
spirit 72. How is Gods will knowne As it is revealed in his holy Word 73. VVhere is that word conteined In the bookes of the Old and New Testament 74. VVhat are the Commandements of God The Law of God given to us and his will in generall as before mentioned for the morall part thereof more particularly expressed in the ten Commandements hereafter recited 75. How long obliged to this duty and diligence So long as we have any being all the dayes of our life 76. VVhy so Because from him wee have received our life and being and so to his honour ought all to bee referred 77. How all our dayes Whether of prosperity in praises or adversity in patience to give him thankes and submit our selves wholly to his holy will and pleasure 78. How life Whether our naturall life so rightly understood or life of grace in Gods Church and service as well applyed that the life of grace here may bee an entrance to the life of glory hereafter 79. Is this the summe of the sureties promise It is into these three parts distributed viz. 1. Our repentance to forsake and renounce all evill the Divell World and the Flesh. 2. Our faith to beleeve all the Articles of our Christian faith 3. Our obedience to keep and walke in Gods holy wil and his Commandements all the dayes of my life SECT 5. The fourth Question Our Christian resolution to performe the vow made for us in baptisme and how we are bound to performe and that many wayes in common morality conscience and reason law and Religion since for our so apparent good and Church and superiour institution and command to which wee are to submit our selves in humility our duty to praise God for our happy estate of salvation given to us in Christ by the administry of the Church and meanes of the Sacraments Confirmed and sealed to our soules and to pray for the grace of continuance so to persevere therein to the 〈◊〉 and here also a reason is rendred why the first part of the sureties promise or vow in Baptisme is passed by and the second part concerning the Creed is so here first and principally insisted on as followeth 1. DOst thou thinke thou art bound to beleeve and doe as they have promised for thee Yes verily by Gods helpe so I will c. 2. What is conteined in this answer A fourefold resolution 1. As a direct and resoulte affirmation of the demand yes verily 2. As a resolute asseveration and protestation to the same and by Gods helpe 3. As a resolute praising of God and giving of thankes I heartily thanke c. 4. As a resolved prayer for grace of continuance and perseverance to the end I pray God c. 3. Is then the party bound by anothers act He is both in morality and conscience reason and Religion 4. Without any deputation Yes since it is for his good and if it had not been promised yet in conscience and else bound to performe that 5. How so 1. In common morality since it was for his good and so in duty for good order and vertues sake to doe it 2. In conscience since for the honour of God and good of our owne soule so obliged 3. In reason since by superiours and those that have authority over us our parents and superiours enjoyned 4. Religion since by the Churches authority so for the honour of God and our owne good ordained 6. But can Infants be bound or those under age by their owne or which is lesse others acts By both when it is for their good otherwise not if to their prejudice and rather by tutors and governours acts then by their owne 7. Why so Because they are intended of wisedome and judgement and knowing what is convenient and trusted with the guiding and government of the Infant or young here yet wanting discretion 8. How appearoth it that they are so bound In very law as well as reason the ground of all good lawes when it is for their good and necessary occasions as meat drinke and apparell teaching and bringing up and the like the Infant and Pupill or heire in nonage as well as the most aged persons bound to performe pay and discharge such dues and promises 9. What is the reason for it Because it is for his apparant good and benefit so if he finde a hand to receive a beneficiall lease in law being an Infant he must also finde a hand to pay the rent and performe the condicioned covenants 10. But how is this for his good In an uncomparable great and high degree as hereby received into the heavenly society of Saints and to have that glorious priviledge hereby signed to him to be the Son of God member of Christ and heire of blessednesse and so as hee receiveth the benefit tyed to performe the Covenants 11. How followeth it that he saith By Gods grace so I will In acknowledgement of 1. The fountaine whence all sufficiency and ability doth flow 2. The readinesse and propensity we ought to have to perform it 11. Have we then no ability of our selves No not so much as to thinke a good thought much lesse to performe any good deed but all our sufficiency is from God 12. What is our duty then to doe To pray for ability from him expect his graces and after the same in humility as considering whence all our ability comes to direct our courses 13. Can we doe this then Not we as of our selves but Gods grace and good Spirit within us that beginneth will performe every good worke to his glory 14. What shall we doe then Only submit our selves to his will be prest to obey and doe as his good Spirit moveth us not to quench the spirit but being ready to say Speake Lord for thy servant heareth accordingly continue in well doing 15. How shall we finde or know this If we praise God for graces received and pray unto him for more as followeth in this answer 16. Why should we praise him Because thanksgiving for graces received is the fruit of the former grace and seed of the latter 17. VVhat doe you praise him for here For calling me to this state of salvation 18. VVhat is this state of salvation The state of a Christian in the love and favour of God by his Covenant of grace whereof the Sacraments are signes and seales 19. How are we else Out of Gods favour weltering in our owne bloud and pollution of sin by nature but restored to his favour thus by grace 20. In or by whom or what meanes Through Jesus Christ our Saviour in whom God is well pleased and for his sake doth blot out all our guilt and offences 21. How are we brought to this estate We are called by God by whom elected and by the Ministry of his Church by his appointment and the voice of his holy Word and thus lastly sealed for his receive these signes the Sacraments with the vertue and effect of them pledges