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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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shalt have no other Gods but me SECT 3. The first Commandement The division of the two Tables and how many Commandements comprised in the first Table and divers opinions concerning the same and foure Commandements proved properly to be in the first Table the first Commandement and full Analysis of it amply expounding the duties and opposite abuses therein literally or else intimated or expressed what it is to have the Lord for our God and the opposite Atheisme or having no God what also to have him alone and the opposite Polytheisme and Idolatry of divers sorts both among the Heathens and other carnall professors and false Christians making Religion but a cloake for their villany or maske for their sin and folly what it is to love know and honour God with the opposite thereof ignorance errors and prophanenes of all sorts springing from ignorance nothing rightly stiled the mother of devotion other malignant sins bordering on prophanenes And the love of God if with all the minde heart soule and strength seen in divers good Christians vertues and duties that with their opposites are here described as in knowledge beleeving 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 feare and rejoycing in him humility and mecknesse patience and constancy with perseverance and without murmuring obedience and thankefulfulnesse with a zeale of his glory and holy and godly life the branches and fruits of his love the very ground-worke of all the rest of the Commandements 1. VVHat is contained in the first Table By all confessed our duty towards God as in the second our duty towards our neighbour 2. How many Commandements are there in the first Table Though by some controverted yet as may most plainly appeare both by the words of command as well as the substance of the matter foure Commandements 3. What difference then is there of opinions Some distinguishing the first Table into three the second into seven Commandements as Saint Augustine sometimes did the Lutherans and Church of Rome doe others as we and generally all the Fathers the Jews themselves and the matter it self shewes properly dividing the first Table into foure the second into six Commandements 4. What reasons had they for the first Saint Augustine as it seems in holy and reverend respect to the Trinity and that sacred number three so in that comprising the Commandements pertaining to the honour of the Trinity as in that other sacred number seven the rest of the Commandements comprehending the duties to men in this septimana or weeke of the world the others insisting in his steps and for private reasons of their owne and in defence or at least respect of Images 5. What pretence for leaving out a Commandment As in the first Commandement including the second and proposing the second but an exposition of the first so by the first Commandement understanding all Atheisme Idolatry both internall and externall forbidden and true worship commanded and the second Commandement an explication of the former concerning that part chiefly externall Idolatry and worship and so are faine to divide concupisence in the last Commandement according to the severall objects of lust or covetousnesse and make two Commandements out of one so to supply the defect of this second Commandement thus lost or imbezled 6. How prove you rather foure Commandements in the first Table 1. By the foure words of absolute command set downe as in the 1. Commandement Thou shalt have none c. 2. Thou shalt not make c. 3. Thou shalt not take c. 4. Remember that thou sanctifie c. 2. By the things therein commanded viz. Who is to be worshipped the Lord Jehovah in the first Commandement How his solemne worship his owne prescript not Idolatrously second Commandement How far in our lives to honour him to glorifie his name third Commandement When to worship him solemnly on his Sabbath fourth Commandement 7. What the first Commandement Thou shalt have no other Gods but me 8. What Commandement is it A negative Commandement under it according to the first rule comprehending an affirmative so to have no other or strange gods but Jehovah for our God and him alone 9. What the negative part In the prohibition of these five things as forbidding 1. All Atheisme having no God 2. All Polytheisme having many gods 3. All Idolatry having strange gods or idols 4. All Ignorance no knowledge of the true God in the mind 5. All Prophanenesse no honour or expression of it in the life 10. What the affirmative part In these three things commanded 1. To have Jehovah for our God 2. To have him alone for our Lord and God 3. To honour and love him by all meanes in soule and mind as we ought or as agreeable to our duty and his Majesty or in these five parts 1. To have Jehovah and 2. Him alone 3. To Abhorre Idolls 4. Seek to know him faith 5. Seeke to honour him love and duty 11. How are the positive and opposite parts seene or opposed To 1. To have Jehovah for our God 2. Have him alone 3. Honour and love him opposite to 1. Atheisme having no God 2. both 1. Polytheisme many gods 2. Idolatry idols and strange gods 3. both 1. Ignorāce not knowing or loving him 2. Prophanenesse not honouring him 12 How is this further demonstrated 1. As to have Jehovah opposite to having no God 2. As to have him alone so not many gods 3. As to have no other god or strange gods so no idols 4. And if we have him need must it be if in minde to know and love him 5. And so as internall love externall honour opposite to Ignorance and Prophanenesse 13. What is it to have the Lord for our God 1. To set him up in our hearts who is Jehovah the Lord. 2. To set our hearts on him to honour love and feare him as the Lord. 3. To set and apply our whole selves to his worship 14. What the opposite of this Atheisme the not having the Lord and in effect having no God 15. How many sorts of Atheisme 1. Either open Atheisme as of ungratious reprobates 2. Or secret heart Atheisme in any 1. Doubting and questioning the divine Majejesty and his truth by whom they are and subsist 2. Conceiving otherwise of God then wee ought either of his Essence or Persons as Infidels or Hereticks 3. Denying him by prophane life 16. What is it to have him alone Setting him onely and him alone in our hearts and his honour before our eyes denying both our selves and all other things that shall offer to put him out of our hearts or obscure his honour 17. What opposite to this 1. Both Polytheisme having many or any other gods with him or besides him to his dishonour 2. Idolatry setting up other gods Idols or vanities in our hearts to worship them in his stead 18. What Polytheisme With God to joyne any other as those that 1. Either made two Gods one the beginning of all good the other of all ill 2. With God
strength 35. How is the love of God seen By adhering to him so with all our minde seen in knowing beleeving in remembring him With all Our heart in trusting hoping fearing and rejoycing in him soule in humility and submission patience and obedience gratitude and thankfulnes to him Strength to the uttermost of body and soule in all good duties to his honour 36. How in generall is the love of God considered 1. For the measure 1. Simply without measure and as before with all heart minde soule and strength comparatè 2. Comparatè above all things else Matth. 10. 37. Luke 14 26. 2. The manner absolutely and first our friends in the Lord. Secondly our foes for the Lord. Hence rising zeale of Gods glory opposite to this 1. Either in the defect want of the love of God with all our hearts above all things Hatred of God and his graces encreased by sin 2. Disorder loving our selves above God and his Commandements the world in the riches pleasures pride and other carnall things 37. VVhat are wee to consider in the knowledge of God The matter God and his truth and goodnesse revealed The measure according to our calling meanes time alotted The manner spirituall and holy knowledge in humility and effectuall to grace and salvation Opposite to this in the excesse curiosity wise above sobriety The defect 1. exceedingly ignorance simply affected 2. In a sort a small measure of knowledge too little for the quantity and 3. For the quantity a literall or speculative knowledge without care or conscience of godlinesse or the power thereof 38. VVhat in beleeving to be considered In generall faith in God and assent to the word of God In speciall to the threatnings of the Law and promises of the Gospell and for the Quantity with full understanding consent and assent Quality lively and working by charity Opposite to this in excesse credulity to even vanity without Gods word In defect in understanding by ignorance Consent by doubting Assent by wavering In Quantity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quality idle and dead faith And that either legally infidelity working carnall security Or evangelically counterfeit faith of hypocrites heretiques c. 39. VVhat in remembring God to be considered The laying up and treasuring in our mindes the things concerning God and secondly often calling such things to minde especially his mercies and judgements opposite to which if wee forget him his holy word mercies or judgements or so partially or slenderly remembring them without care conscience or obedience 40. What is assiance or trust Adhering to God and depending on him in all our needs whether we have means or not as who can helpe without above meanes Opposite to which if On the contrary in Excesse we tempt God Defect wee carke and care or use unlawfull meanes leaving God In disorder we trust in instruments and meanes as wealth world men many mighty wizards or divels 41. What hope A kinde of trust with faith fixed on God and his goodnesse expecting from him deliverance from ill and exhibition of good things whether for this present life or the life to come opposite to which in excesse is presumption in defect is despaire and so as wee ought to trust and hope in him and him alone are we to take heed wee presume not nor despaire or in participation of both with Epicures grow carelesse and without hope 42. What is his feare An awfull and son-like feare which though the object be Gods anger against sinne yet is more loath to offend him so good a God and mercifull then for the danger of punishment effect of his anger opposite to which is carnall security senselesnesse and despaire 43. What is rejoycing in God Delighting in him as the supreme good in his word his mercies and promises and the heavenly and inestimable comfort wee receive by them with joy in the prosperity of his house his Church his servants and honour which filleth the heart with more content then any carnall and worldly things Psal. 4. opposite to which are miserable delights of sinfull worldly carnall and voluptuous men 44. What is humility and submission to God A removing of all conceit of our owne worthinesse and humble acknowledgement of our owne vilenesse in nature and defect of sinne and desert of punishments together with consideration of Gods mercies and bounties to us whereby to bee cast downe before him that hee may raise us up Opposite to which a high conceit of our owne selves our worth and merits to the robbing him of his honour and praise and our forgetfulnesse of duty 45. What is patience An humble subjection of our selves to the crosse or hand of God in his chastisements and tryalls which must needs bee for our good and so found to be as his children by Our Meekly Cheerfully and comfortably Constantly Enduring entertaining them Opposite to which rashnesse and senselesnesse in excesse in defect impatience murmuring fainting and despaire or seeking issue by unlawfull meanes whiles wee will endure much for the world nothing for God 46. VVhat obedience The submitting our wils to the will of God and that onely rightly if voluntarily not forced totally not by fits or in part sincerely without hypocrisie and continually to the end Opposite to which either Disobedience to him by sinnes of omission and commission and that by negligence or contempt Obedience to men or other things more then God yea to sinne the flesh the world and the divell Gods enemies Disorder in the manner not voluntarily or totally sincerely or continually 47. VVhat gratitude or thankefulnesse A testification both by word and deed of a thankfull minde for all his benefits in all estates whether prosperity or adversity acknowledging him and him alone the author of all good things Opposite to which is unthankfulnesse and not acknowledging this or ascribing it to our owne power wit worth worke fortune idols or instruments or meanes forgetting the prime fountain 48. How to love God with all our strength With all powers of body and soule and so in the whole man to exercise all these good duties to his honour 49. How his honour set forth Both by word and deed internally in the soule and externally in the body and whose life and conversation to expresse and advance the praise and glory of God and so to avoid all prophanenesse which is especially to his dishonour Hence springeth 1. Internally zeale of Gods glory 2. Externally holy life and behaviour 50. What is the zeale of Gods glory A servent desire of the advancement thereof both in our selves and others and cheerfully using of the meanes thereof together with removing all impediments of the same proceeding from sincere affection guided by knowledge and discretion seene in the moderation in respect of all circumstances and especially of the time and seasonablenesse 50. What opposite to this Either want of zeale in luke warmnesse Apoc 3. 15. coldnesse Zeph. 1. 12. Or corrupt zeale mixed with Maliciousnesse bitter zeale Covetousnesse
of his favour 22. What are we then to doe To pray for continuance and perseverance in this so holy and happy estate 23. Can we fall from this estate Never if we be truely his 24. Why then should we pray for it To shew that we are truely so for if we bee his we cannot chuse but doe so and if we doe not so it showes we are not his notwithstanding the outward signe of Baptisme for grace which is the inward part and as it were the very soule of the Sacrament will shew it selfe in praise and thanksgiving which is also a blessed token of Gods servant as who honoureth his master and shall be honoured of him 25. What pray you for here The grace of continuance and to persevere Can we not continue else in this estate No more then begin unlesse he lend power and grace as the precedent and preventing so also the consequent and continuall grace of continuing and perseverance 26. Then we assume to our selves no power at all Not unto us we ought to say not unto us but unto thy Name O Lord be praise for there is nothing that we have not received and so are to honour God for it and such is the very estate of Saints and Angels who have all their excellency from God and so shall evermore praise him 27. If we or they have no excellency or sufficiency of our selves why then so honoured As Instruments of his praise and for his glory which shall be such abundant blessednesse as no mortall heart able to conceive the happinesse or glory thereof 28. How long pray we so to continue To continue in the same to my lives end viz. to have continuance of grace here the earnest penny of endlesse glory hereafter What may this teach us The difference of our estate here in the Church in grace and that in glory hereafter The dependancy of one on the other the former being the door gate or entrance to the latter 29. This then is the summe of this answer It is comprehending an earnest and resolved Affirmation yes verily Asseveration and by Gods grace c. Praising God I heartily thanke Prayer I pray God c. 30. What followeth The Creed or summe of our Christian beliefe the second part of the Catechisme occasioned by the second part the vow in Baptisme in the Question and Answer last before rehearsed and so here endeth the first the Introduction comprehended in these foure first Questions and Answers 31. Why is not the first part of the threefold promise here likewise as distinctly handled As the Second concerning the Articles of faith or third concerning the commandements Because that as at the latter end of the Creed the estate of the damned is left out though a part of the faith as lesse principally pertaining to the comfort and consolation of the godly in their most holy calling where the estate of the Elect is deciphered to life everlasting as the prime scope the vessels of grace doe aime at in eternall glory or only intimated Exopposito in the same so here the consideration of the Divell the World and the Flesh that are to be renounced and left so only pointed at are passed over sicco pede as it were and the second and third part as more materiall to the information of the Christian are more principally here insisted on and thus punctually prosecuted whiles the other left so soone as only intimated or but remembred 32. But good instruction to repentance ariseth from the first well considered Yes but the more materiall foundations of our faith though in the second place promised for orders sake so proposed here principally prosecuted as the other thought sufficiently at this place so only touched and at other places on good occasion more fully handled as in the Sacraments 33. But might it not well have beene more insisted on here No that it might not stay us from better and more substantiall matters concerning the foundation of faith in the Articles of the beleefe though withall it is intimated in the very beleefe it selfe for who can believe in God aright except hee renounce the World the Flesh and the Divell God and Mammon light and darknesse Christ and Belial 〈…〉 not dwell together but as most necessary faith the ground-worke and foundation of our salvation here first expended for what else comparable to that consideration or what else to be here seene in them more then as before noted considerations moving us to repentance that cannot yet be perfited nor indeed well begun without the ground-worke of faith whereby only we can most truely see these to flye them being such evills and so opposite to the divine goodnesse As the 1. Divell so ready to devoure us that roaring Lyon old Serpent red Dragon the accuser of the brethren and ancient enemy of mankind that attends All 1. Mischiefe and evill against the godly as in Job 2. Times the Sabbath not free from his seducements other times how much lesse 3. Places as 1. Heaven not exempt whence he fell for pride and where hee accused Job 2. Church where he shuts the eyes eares hearts mouthes of his 3. Paradise where he tempted our first parents and what places then priviledged 4. Societies in Heaven where among Angels Lucifer Paradise by him subverted Christs Disciples where a Judas and what holier societies ever found 5. Occasions in all times places and societies whatsoever 2. World 1 That is a Vale of teares and flood or torrent of troubles sea of misery turmoiled with continuall tempests of cares tribulations and sorrowes like waves so raging and violent without all quietnesse till the world passed and heaven that haven of rest attained Yet the body so glewed to the world and the soule by it so cleaving to the Mammon and things or mucke and dung thereof that it can hardly bee thence separated or won to cleave stedfastly to God 2. Where are a sort of Canaanites Ismaelites Moabites c. enemies of God and his people fooles like children following feathers bubbles vanities pleasures and like Indians or Glaucus Exchanging gold for iron silver for pibbles And all sorts ready perire or perdere themselves or others as 3. The 1. Men with cares troubles or tribulations 2. Youth with vanity lightnesse and folly overtaken all with sin ignorance errour and blindenesse Children not yet born perishing by the mothers hand cup or knife or throat cut by her foot or poysoned born starved in body or soule or both bred idle untaught untutor'd that better unborn or abortive 3. Father 's either idle exposing them to want beggery theeving c. or as bad By Mammons providing a sword for the soul whiles the body fed pampred proudly cloathed but the soule naked starved and cloathed in rags O poore soule no better cared for 3. Flesh and all the lusts exorbitant passions vanities So many enemies furies or fiends within us to torment us and betray us when any Externall enemies occasions and temptations
and mercy to our consolation 5. Thankfull expression of praise both in word and deed life and actions for this his admired mystery and meanes of our redemption 41. What followeth in the Creed The other parts of his humiliation in his passions and sufferings death buriall and descent to the grave and hell in the following foure and five Articles SECT 6. The second degree of Christs humiliation in the fourth Article The Analysis of the fourth Article In his passion and the maine parts thereof His sufferings and obedience to the Law and thereby to death for us that by our transgressions of it had so deserved and by whose death and performance of it or obedience both active and passive we are freed if we study and strive with our best endeavours to performe the same whence our chiefest comfort ariseth As by whose stripes we are healed The many degrees and processe of whose sufferings and continuall travels labours and contumely that he throughout his whole life and especially at his death a little before it for our sakes endured and under-went are here in order described as also the most bitter potion or cup of his Fathers wrath his bloody passions with all those remarkeable ciroumstanstances agony betraying unjust judgement crowning with thornes buffetting reviling and lastly crucified that night shamefull and ignom nious death wherein how much more excellent his soul so much more sensible of misery and exquisite his torments of both soule and body though death by his death destroyed and by his buriall our graves as it were opened and our rest or sleepe ther sanctified and so we learne to sorrow for sin that caused such his hitter sorrow and sufferings yet comforted in his death that destroyed death and opened to us the gate of glory 1. VVHat is the fourth Article He suffered under P. Pilate was crucified dead and buried 2. What is hereby expressed The manner of his many sufferings he suffered in his life at his death His humiliation to death buriall under Ponce Pilate dead and buried 3. What is therein briefly then to be observed The second degree of his humiliation and therin two things especially 1. Intimated his perfect obedience to the whole Law in undertaking the performance and curse for us 2. Litterally laid downe his sufferings 4. VVhat obedience Perfect and absolute obedience which all ought to performe hoc fac vives or else cursed every one that continueth not in all these Lawes to doe them 5. How is this part of his humiliation for us In that hee not onely descended from heaven and was incarnate for us conceived and borne and so fitted in the forme of a servant to performe these things for us but was also actually obedient to the Law performing it and all righteousnesse whereby man fulfilled the Law and which is more suffered the penalty due for our delinquencies and by it was made sin for us that we might be the righteousnesse of God in him 6. How did he fulfill the Law In performing what was required and written both in the Law and the Prophets Math. 5. 17. 7. How in the Law 1. All the whole Ceremoniall Law concerned either the service and honour of God the types of him and his sacrifice Math. 15. 17. us to performe and so himselfe as Luke 2. 21. circumcised and offering gifts Lepers as every one of us Luke 1. 2. c. Math. 26. 2. Morall Law in most exquisite love to God and his neighbour all mankinde his brethren for whom he laid downe his life and what greater love 3. Judiciall did wrong no man nay even required not his owne but gave to Caesar what was Caesars and to God the things c. and over and above himselfe for others good 8. How in the Prophets What ever was written by them in exposition of these Lawes or of him and signified in types to be performed by him so he performed all righteousnesse Math. 3. 9. Were we bound to the performance Yes of the whole Morall Law and so much of the residue as were branches thereof seene in the other and pertaining to the service of God or justice to our neighbour 10. But are we now freed From the curse and servility thereof not from the duties and performance for wee are freed from the curse or bondage and feare to be in love with joy a people studious of good workes 11. But hath not Christ performed it for us Yes if wee strive to shew our selves obedient and willing to doe all righteousnesse and so it is Rom. 8. 4 he hath fulfilled the Law for us but with this limitation if we walke not after the flesh but the spirit that is who are willing to be righteous and keepe the Law though not for our weaknesse able 12. How of them that strive not to keepe it He hath done nothing for them for they walke not after the Spirit so if they be sonnes of Beliall without grace not seeking to walke godly or securely thinking or presuming Christ hath done all for them and therefore they seeke to doe nothing to their cost they will finde Christ hath nothing for such gracelesse and secure ones but hath done these things only for his faithfull ones 13. The doctrine then of faith destroyeth not good workes No but confirmeth the godly to goe on more cheerefully in good workes since there is is a reward for such godly and though the worthinesse of them and acceptablenesse be of the power of faith and in Christ yet as God is thereby more glorified so by them a more abundant reward when the ungodly or they that want them shall find none or only the miserable reward of iniquity 14. We are then bound to doe them Yes but to looke for the perfection and sweetning of them to our soules and assurance from him that they are made worthy and acceptable by faith and his most preceious blood 15. What comfort herein That there is help laid on one that is mighty and able to performe and so if we be willing though not able to performe all righteousnesse hee hath done it for us yea and borne all our transgressions 16. How is that In that second part of fulfilling the Law his sufferings for sin and bearing the punishment both in body and soule due to all our offences 17. What were his sufferings Of two sorts 1. Generally all those miseries in the flesh sustained for our sakes even in his infancy childehood and before his manifestation to Israel 2. Especially those grievous ones suffered 1. after his manifestation 2. immediately before and at his death 18. Which of the former sort 1. In his infancy the common miseries in his infancy which as the rest considered in regard of his excellency of person so much more eminently perspicuous 2. Persecution raised by Herod so soon as born in pretence of worship seeking his blood and slaying so many infants not sparing his owne childe that it was said and verified better be
for it and agreeing fully with it though else we need not desire this neither it being without it so fully by the former proofes demonstrated 41. Yet if said to what end did he descend or what needed his descent how is it to be answered Though curious questions and such as this seeking into Gods secret determinations need no answer but reproofe it being our duties to rest in Gods revealed will without presumptuous seeking into his secret counsels as many gracelesse ones use to doe to their owne perdition such curious devisers thereby giving evidence of want of grace by their immodest seeking and presumption yet because this being used for an argument to overthrow all is well and sufficiently with warrant as before of holy Scripture for confirmation of this truth and retorted to the overthrow of the opposers error it may have a ful and plenary answer and solution 42. How shew you this As indeed if no end why or no need of it they conclude no descent so whereas to good end and great good occasions then great and good need of such descent to hell and consequently that he descended The reasons why many alledged by many principally these 1. As some say to binde the divell and power of darknesse but if nescio or non plene intelligo be set here it matters not 2. To fetch soules thence dixere patres but non audeo dicere 3. To suffer as Flaccus Illyricus indignam Christo whose consummatum est had abundantly on the crosse finished all satisfactory sufferings and overcome the bitternesse of them 4. To triumph or in triumph even when at lowest to manifest his glory and power there by holy men is beleeved 5. To convince the disobedient in the dayes of Noah as Saint Peter shewes ante or any the like since condemned by their owne conscience and convicted by testimony of his presence such his preaching there to be understood 6. To convince the gainesayers and to condemne the unfaithfull then alive denying herein the mighty power of God and his word of truth able to doe all things especially what promised as in the signe of the Prophet Ionah they looke for signes but no signe shall be given but that of the c. So here spoken as it were Come ye despisers and wonder c. 7. Comfort of faithfull and assurance of salvation in the very Son of God to whom heaven open and grave sanctified hell vanquished with all her power of sin and death so no power against them with whom Christ is si Deus nobiscum quis contra nos and he is Emanuell God with us 43. Are those the reasons then They are and thus is our assurance sealed hee went to the dead yet alive to the damned yet blessed to hell yet reigneth in heaven since impossible that he should be holden of either grave or hell for the Grave opened and sanctified Death swallowed in victory Paines thereof loosed Hell it selfe vanquished the power thereof subdued and triumphed over and he that sanctified the grave by his presence opened hell by his power which he vanquished in the gates or strength of it thought else impregnable and made it the gate and way of life by his resurrection opened and entred heaven by his ascension 44. What to be learned hence Our duty of religious care and thankfulnesse that in the meditation and remembrance 1. Of his extreame passions and torments in soule suffered for us 1. It may be an Antidote against sin that caused such sufferings and so sore displeased God 2. A motive to hearty sorrow and repentance for sin committed so great anger and punishment 2. His descent may make us by contemplation of his great humiliation for us to humble our selves that comming even to the gates of hell often by our deepe humiliation repentance and sorrow out of those deepes calling unto the Lord he may heare us from his holy heaven and by the merit and in the vertue of Christs descent save us from the eternall prison 45. What followeth The fifth Article or that part of it that concerneth the exaltation of our Saviour and first degree thereof his resurrection in these words The third day he rose againe from the dead SECT 8. The exaltation of Christ in the five sixe and seventh Articles A farther Analysis of the five six and seventh Articles of the Creed and first of the resurrection and time and types thereof as well as prophesies and other observations concerning the same wherein farther thè efficiency and mighty power by which it was wrought and performed and divers Types as of Adam Enoch Eliah and divers others are showne and remembred with some necessary lessons to be thence learned and uses to be made of the same The second degree of his exaltation in his ascention wherein the order and manner of it prophesies concerning reasons and end of it observed together with the time and divers apparitions of his before the time reasons of them and no lesse divers types thereof as Enoch Moses and Eliah prefiguring the excellency of it as wherein his triumph over death was most apparantly seene and shewne when he gave gifts to men even his holy Spirit and graces and the use to be made and fruit hence to us arising the the third degree of his exaltation in his session at Gods right hand in glory with the maner or figure of that speech declared and how it is to be understood with the distinction of it from the former and how great is that excellency of that his estate of glory and majesty and what we are to learne from the same 1. VVHat is the exaltation of Christ As his humiliation was his descent from his glory and humbling himselfe even to death and hell for our sinnes and to our salvation so this exaltation is his raising himselfe in the power of his divinity from death and hell to life and the height of glory for our happinesse and justification 2. What herein considerable That as by divers degrees he humbled himselfe from glory to the depth of humility so here by divers degrees from the lowest humility he ascended againe to the highest state of glory and as he came from heaven to earth so now he ascended from earth to the highest heaven 3. In what degrees seene In his resurrection as in this fifth Article the third day he rose againe from the dead In his ascension and session in glory in the sixth Article he ascended c. In his returne to judgement with power and great glory in the seventh Article from thence he shall come c. 4. What to be considered in the Resurrection 1. The time the third day 2. The action he rose againe from the dead Why the third day In Remembrance and regard of the Trinity in whose power he arose Conveniency of the time Foretelling and Prophesie Type of it Jonah 5. How conveniency of the time Only then and no sooner that it might appeare he was truely and
in glory Cupio dissolvi c. 3. Gracious steps of life and conversation to ascend up to his holy hill of sanctification as preparing heart and hand soule and body to ascend to Christ at last and pertake with him in sanctity here as in glory hereafter and therefore did hee send the holy Spirit or Comforter 38. What fruit hereby Cheerfull ability to goe forward both in our Christian callings and duties of Religion by his comfort guidance and instruction alwaies remembring that he is ascended and gone before to prepare a place That we ought to prepare our selves to be received That we are strangers and Pilgrimes here That we have a high and more enduring City That therfore we elevate our minds and hearts and eyes and hands towards that place where our hope and helpe is and thither ascended into glory 39. What followeth The third degree of his exaltation his session at the right hand of God in Majesty and glory expressed in these words He sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty 40. What is meant thereby His consistency for ever and plenitude of Majesty and glory there with the Father in the heavens 41. What in the words to be considered The figure or manner of the speech The meaning of the phrase 42. What the manner or figure The expression of this or the like divine matters and mysteries according to our humane capacity As by sitting understanding consistency being and remaining so for ever As by the right hand of God understanding his high power and Majesty 43. Is this frequent Yes concerning God especially where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 causâ for humane weaknesse sake the eyes armes hands fingers and feet of God are often mentioned and the like figures and Metaphors used when we are not with the Heretiques Anthropmorphites to thinke God hath them so really in humane figure but to signifie his greatnesse past finding out or goodnesse and benefits to us by them 44. How to be conceived then 1. By his eyes his providence over us and all things 2. By his mouth his word and divine revelation 3. By his armes outstretched and mighty hand his strength power and mighty deliverances 4. By the workes of his hand and fingers acts of his power and by him ordered and ordained 5. By his feet and goings his marvellous proceedings and the like and so here as aforesaid by sitting stability for ever by his right hand or at his right hand of Majesty and glory to be conceived so Bathsheba at Salomons right hand 1 Kings 2. 19. and the Queen at the Kings right hand in the 45. Psa. understood placed in the greatest honour glory and Majesty 45. What is the full meaning of the phrase As in other places expressed Christ being sitting or standing his consistency for ever at the right hand of God in the power and glory of the divine Majesty 46. Was not this meant by ascending to heaven No for it is a distinct thing from it for That The ascension is in order before it The ascension may be without it The ascension of Christ was to this end 47. How understand you this It is evident the ascension was in time and order before said session and glory and ascension to heaven may be without it as we see in Saints and Angels who doe and shall ascend and though have fulnesse and an unspeakable measure of glory yet not in so high degree and Christs ascension was to that end to have that high degree above all as the complement of all glory and majesty 48. But was not Christ in that glory and at the right hand of the Father set from all eternity 1. In respect of his divinity he was so before all worlds and from all eternity and to that can bee no accession or addition of glory 2. In respect of his divinity united to his humanity so that it was from that time forth onely so considered and manifested 3. In respect of his humanity it was from that time and in that order so exalted 49. How is this elsewhere expressed in Scriptures By these speeches and prophesies or prophetique phrases 1. His exaltation farre above all heavens Eph. 4. 10. To a name above all names that at the name of Jesus every knee shall bow both of things in heaven and in earth Philip. 2. 9. 10. 2. All power given both in heaven and in earth Matth. 28. 18. 3. Let all Angels worship him Heb. 1. 6. so Psal. 97. 7. worship him all ye gods 4. I have set my King upon c. Aske of me and I shall give c. Psal. 2. c. 5. Sit at my right hand till I make thy enemies thy footstoole Psal. 110. 1. 6. All his enemies under his feet 1 Cor. 15. 25. And the like places and phrases shewing his majesty and glory 50. What analogy in this to his humiliation To the lowest degree as this the highest step of glory from the deepes of grave and hell to heaven so from the lowest misery in them to the highest glory in heaven 51. What learne we hence His great power able to defend and glory in majesty to the comfort and consolation of his Church and so our duties of Honour to his Majesty Praise to his excellent name Joy in the excellency of his glory Obedience to his mighty power with the Father and Holy Spirit in the guidance and government of his Church 52. In what respect As he is the head of the Church powerfull and able to defend all that are his against all powers of sin death and hell and Satan and all worldly opposition and in that honoured above all and constituted over all both men and Angels 53. What followeth His further manifestation of his glory in his second comming his comming to judgement the fourth degree or part of his exaltation expressed in the seventh Article From thence he shall come againe to judge both the quicke and the dead SECT 9. The 7. Article Christs comming to judgement The seventh Article shewing the fourth part of Christs exaltation in his comming to judgement and Analysis thereof where the time the end of the world and other circumstances and reasons such his last comming to judgement are to be considered as the antecedents and terror of the same with the extreame strangenesse of many accidents then happening The righteous processe and manner of executing it in all evidence and equity yet with all authority and the event and consequences the finall sentence and distinction of the sheep and goats or good and bad the one to life the other to death eternall to the full manifestation of Gods mercy and justice which began before to be showne is there more perfited and published so what duties to be learned and use of comforts to be raised from the same 1. VVHat is comprised in this seventh Article The fourth part or degree of Christs exaltation his commission and comming to judgment in power and great glory 2. How
effects of the same 10. How is the Spirit of God so called Of his secret and hidden originall and proceeding as well as actions and operations in the hearts of the faithfull How in particular 1. Of his spirituall nature incorporeall and invisible spiration and secret proceeding from the Father and Son 2. Equality with Father and Son so as God a Spirit 3. Spiration and secret operation of graces in the Church 11. How called Gods Spirit As proceeding from the Father and the Sonne their holy power and vertue 12. How called holy Spirit 1. Of his originall the holy Father and the Sonne 2. Being himselfe Holy God and Holy One of Israel 3. Operations Sanctifying the Church Working all holy motions in the heart of the faithfull 13. How is his manner of existence in the Trinity As in blessed Athanasius Creed expressed not made or created nor begotten but proceeding by internall spiration from the Father his love to the Son and from the Son his love to the Father eternall with them and from both the love proceeding to the comfort and conservation of all things this good and loving Spirit of God 14. VVhat is his order in the Trinity Though in the Trinity in essence power or eternity none be afore or after other none greater or lesse then another but all three persons coeternall and coequall yet in order the Father is first from eternity producing the Son the Son second from eternity begotten in that eternall generation and the holy Ghost the third in order as eternally proceeding from both 15. VVhat is his personall propriety Proceeding from them and so distinguished from both for the holy Spirit onely is proceeding and not either Father or Son as the Son onely begotten and not the Father nor Spirit though all the three indifferently and equally named and said to be God and Lord uncreate invisible and all other the like attributes 16. VVhat are the actions of the Spirit Especially attributed to him as to his office and person the comfort renewing sanctification and conservation of all things by and in Scriptures testified as Job 38. 4. The Spirit of the Lord hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life So Gen. 1. The Spirit of the Lord moved on the waters and God breathed into man a living soule Exod. 31. 3. I have filled him with the Spirit of God in wisedome c. Psal. 51. 11. Take not thy holy Spirit from me and verse 12. Stablish me with thy free Spirit Psal. 104. 30. If thousend forth thy Spirit they are created so thou renewest the face of the earth Esa. 11. 2. The Spirit of the Lord is upon him the Spirit of wisedome c. and Esa. 61. 10. The Spirt of the Lord is upon me as recited Luke 4. 18. and so most abundantly in the New Testament 17. How there showne As the gifts and graces of God by that Spirit are said bestowed upon the Church and faithfull in Christ 1 Cor. 12. and plentifully else As 2. Tim. 3. 16. Scriptures by inspiration of the holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 12. Holy men moved by the Spirit of God Rom. 8. 15. By that Spirit to cry Abba Father and Rom. 8. 16. The Spirit witnesseth with our spirit that sons c. Iohn 3. 3. Except regenerate of water and the holy Ghost not see the kingdome of God Mat. 3. 11. Where Christ is said Baptizing with the holy Ghost and being baptized the holy Ghost visibly descended c. As also in the Acts and many like places 18. How is comfort attributed As he is called the Comforter and sanctification attributed as the holy Spirit or sanctifier also teaching illumination and the like Iohn 14. 26. and 15. 26. and 16. 7. c. where the holy Spirit the Comforter shall teach them all things and lead them into all truth and bring all things to their remembrance and shew them all things to come 19. But are not these things from the Father also Yes from the Father in the Son but by the dispensation of the holy Spirit and attributed more particularly to him as the Comforter in respect of their end the comfort and sanctification of the Church by all saving graces when else in respect of the power and originall it is true Opera Trinitatis ad extra sunt indivisa All three persons jointly produce these holy actions 20. What is the holy Ghost then in briefe The third person in Trinity proceeding from the Father and Son distinct in person but one in essence and coequall with them in substance eternity majesty and glory 21. What his office To effect the workes of God in his creatures and to bestow his gifts on them and especially to sanctifie the elect to eternall life 22. What are those gifts Divers according to the good working of that holy Spirit as well in regard of diversitie of times and other occasions and circumstances as persons 23. How in regard of the persons Either particular to the elect as the adoption and confirmation thereof in sanctification and other saving graces to salvation Or common to others also as knowledge power to doe excellent things yea with show of some sanctification as members of the visible Church though else reprobates found at last as seene in very Iudas and divers others 24. How in regard of the times or other circumstances Some ordinary in the Church at all times and common to all the faithfull as saving graces illumination holinesse sanctification Others extraordinary as in primitive times and else as it were in stablishing and confirmation of the faith then new planted or preached as the gifts of healing miracles tongues and such like 25. How is the Spirit given From the Father and the Sonne Joh. 14. 26. or from the Father by the Son Iohn 15. 26. 26. How is the name of the Spirit of God taken For the Spirit himselfe illuminating comforting and sanctifying the faithfull and sometimes for the gifts of the same Spirit shed into the hearts of those vessels of grace 27. Is it necessary to have the holy Ghost Yes for except we bee borne againe of water and the Spirit wee cannot inherit the kingdome of God Ioh. 3. 5. and that Spirit beareth us witnesse we are the children of God and in him only we cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. and without that Spirit flesh and bloud cannot inherit the kingdome of God 1 Cor. 15. 50. 28. By what meanes is the holy Ghost attained The ordinary meanes the ministry of the word use of the Sacraments frequent and fervent praier Extraordinary the good occasions offered at the pleasure of God 29. How is that holy Spirit retained By the same meanes that attained with meditation and godly care not to offend that good Spirit or neglect his graces 30. Can the Spirit of God be taken away The Spirit of adoption and regeneration is never wholly taken away from the elect though the operation sometimes eclipsed to the eye and
11. and 12. Articles of the Creed concerning the Priviledges of the Church and first forgivenesse of sinnes by washing us in Christs blood covering of our sinnes and imputation of his righteousnesse to those that are his and none others we being not able to satisfie for our owne but needing God powerfully the Church ministerially to forgive them where faith in Christ is required the condition whence the use of much comfort and consequently the blessed hope of resurrection the second priviledge manner certainty and reason wherof are here observed taken from Gods justice equity and mercy As also farther illustrated by divers examples and similitudes presenting to us a shew of the resurrection so the order of it and excellent estate therein more amply expressed in respect of the godly and what good duties to be hence learned and what good uses to be made of the same Whence also consequently our joyfull hope of life everlasting The last Articls where life of joyntly of soule and body raised and united in joy unspeakable and endlesse in heaven is by that to be understood which is also called the union With God and fruition of the glorious Godhead and blessednesse eternal which is the life of Angels though the meanes or cause of it as Christ or the word sometimes figuratively called life and life eternall or as it may be inchoate herein in the kingdome of grace as consummato in glory whereas the contrary and estate of the damned not properly a life but death or ever dying life and so not mentioned in the Creed where onely the comfort of the godly intended the use they make and duty they ought o learne in seeking striving for it in assuranc● of which their blessed faith and hope they say Amen 1. VVHat is contained in these three last Articles Three priviledges granted to the Church and not elsewhere to be found or attained each Article one viz. 10. Forgivenesse of sinnes 11. Resurrection of body 12. Life everlasting 2. What is forgivenesse of sins Gods passing by our sins without calling them to his remembrance to shame or punish us for them but on the contrariwise imputing righteousnesse to us and accounting and allowing us just 3. Wherein consisteth it In these two things the Covering or cancelling and discharging of sinne Imputation and gift of justice 4. How is the covering or discharging of sin In taking away both the spot and staine of guilt and consequently the removing all punishment 5. How is it done By washing our soules in Christs bloud purging them by his merits and drowning them in the sea of his infinite love and mercy and as wee are in Christ he beholdeth no staine in us hee seeth no iniquity in Iacob and the cause of sin removed punishment the effect and death eternall the due to sin must needs be done away 6. How the imputation of Christs justice and his merits As in him our sins done away so in him is justice given by putting on him and his robes of righteousnesse as we are in him part of that holy society the communion of Saints and members of the true Catholique Church 7. To whom is then forgivenesse of sins Onely to the true members of the Catholique Church for so to them that are in Christ thence is no condemnation because they are of that body and in him in whom God is well pleased and so to all others who are not in him what can bee expected but condemnation 8. Can we not satisfie for our owne sins How can we satisfie for sin that without him and his grace are not able to thinke a good thought and when our best workes in comparison of true holinesse are but as poluted and filthy clouts before him and when wee have done the most we can it is but our duty yea when the best we can we are but unprofitable servants where is then our merit of our selves or ability to satisfie for our misdeeds 9. Who forgiveth sin Onely God the Father Son and Holy Spirit who having power to make the Law have power to forgive the offence 10. How is the Church said or men to forgive sinnes The Church ministerially and that divers ways from God as by The ministry of the word procuring it by offering and ordering the doctrine of repentance and forgivenesse of sin and converting sinners to God The exercising the power of the keyes by Gods order and commission for the benefit of the Church to humble the soule The applying the same to the penitent and so in the power of Gods commission to give and pronounce absolution to the benefit and comfort of the soule desiring the same 11. How the keyes or power of them exercised In foro 1. Exteriori in facie Ecclesiae more publiquely in the sight of the Church to the reforming of offences and removing of scandals 2. Interiori conscientiae more privately to the comfort of the soule and quieting the conscience of the humble penitent 12. How men how doe they forgive Onely partially in regard of some part of some offences concerning them but God forgiveth to the truly penitent totally in respect of all parts of both guilt and punishment and fully whatsoever either the Church holily intendeth or men neglect or wilfully refuse to forgive if he please 13. How stands this with Gods justice As in justice even to the utmost satisfied in the sufferings of Christ and in mercy as he gave and accepteth him and in his merits for us 14. What is then required to forgivenesse of sins A lively faith in Christ whereby we apprehend him and his merits and perfections thereby applyed and made ours whence commeth true repentance forsaking sinne and cleaving stedfastly to God 15. What certainty of it Gods gracious promises in Christ effectually applyed and sealed to the soule by the ministry of the Church in the holy use of his Word and Sacraments 16. What learne we hence In this life seeking this priviledge in the Church 1. To make our calling and election sure in Christ. 2. To become truly a member of his so to have our sins forgiven 3. Obtaine peace of conscience thus and both with God and men 4. To disclaime our owne merits so in humblenesse crave and have Christs justice 5. To try our faith by our repentance and so by our assurance of forgivenesse and thus seeking we shall surely attaine it both from God and his Church and have peace with God and men 17. What followeth of this Resurrection of body as a consequent of forgivenesse of sins for as death entred by sin so sinne also taken away the punishment also to be removed which being of the body in part shall also in that part be dissolved at the last and the body raised 18. But how and when shall it be By the mighty power of God and in his word by the voice of his Angell and sound of his trumpet at the end of the world 19. How can this be Though wormes have eaten it or
originall fountaine of life living of himselfe and undependently and so giving all things else their life and being 43. How doth the body live By vertue of the soule and her union with it and so by the power and operation of the same 44. What is eternity A duration and continuance or enduring without beginning or end or both 45. How explaine you this Eternity or such enduring is considered First either simply and absolutely without beginning or end and so only God absolutely eternall and inhabiting eternity 2. In part as the Schooles speake either a part ante without beginning but having end so Gods decrees from eternity either without beginning but ending in his workes or a part post having beginning but without end so the eternity of Angells and soules that by creation had beginning but by Gods grace and goodnesse continuing them shall never have end this is also called eviternity and thus all eternity is contra distinguished to time 46. In what manner As eternity absolute hath neither beginning nor end so God eternall Eviternity hath beginning but no end so Angels and Soules Time hath both beginning and end so this world and all temporall things and thus all continuance is usually distinguished 47. What is eternall life then The fulnesse of joy and comforts of life in the presence of God that shall never have end 48. How more largely The union of body and soule as the resurrection of the just to that end to be united unto God and have the fruition of the glorious God head enlightning and inhabiting those that are his for ever so making them to dwell with him in whose presence is fulnesse of joy and life for evermore 49. How is this else called Happinesse and blessednesse eternall as therein enjoying the fruits and comforts of that everlasting life 50. Js this also the life of Angels It is whose onely blessednesse and chiefe delight is in contemplation and fruition of the glory beauty and majesty of God then which there can be no greater joy or happinesse 51. How so Because in him is all goodnesse even in the fountaine all goodnesse else but a few dispersed sparkes of that eternall light or a drop of that Ocean wherein onely is plenitude to the satisfying of all desires of what goodnesse soever 52. How is eternall life else taken Sometimes in the Scripture for the meanes and beginning of this in the kingdome of Grace as it is said to Christ to whom shall we goe thou hast the words of eternall life and this is eternall life to know thee and whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ. 53. How is this eternall life As it is the union of the soule to God by grace though imperfectly yet receiving the comforts of life from him by the influence of his holy Spirit bringing joy and unspeakable blessings and peace to the same 54. How manifold is eternall life then Twofold either inchoate in this life in the kingdome of grace Or consummate as aforesaid in the kingdome of glory And this is also twofold or in two degrees 55. Which are they 1. Either in that part onely the soule as that is united to God and enjoying happinesse with him when the soules of the just depart hence in the Lord. 2. Or in body and soule most fully as shall bee after the generall resurrection and so principally here intended 56. What the parts of this life and blessednesse The divine and blessed living of the soule and body when joyned together in the presence of God and union with him enjoying the fulnesse of all that is called goodnesse as both joy and pleasure riches health liberty honour glory and all these absolute and entire not mixed with any grief or any other inconvenience as worldly things but perfect according to the perfection and excellence of the person place and giver 57. And how this estate expressed else in holy Scripture By many comfortable phrases and figures expressing the joy honour glory comforts or blessings there as said to be and remaine With God and in God in the Lord. In the hand of God in his presence In heaven in eternall rest and peace In Paradise in Abrahams bosome In joy blessednes as here in life everlasting 57. But is not life everlasting to the wicked No for their estate is not properly a life as wanting all joy comforts and fruits of life but a death or continuall dying in paine and torments and so if at any time said to live it is with addition of everlasting torments or to live in everlasting chaines of darknesse with the Divell and his Angels or the like whereby signifying an eternall dying life or living death and in that respect most properly termed everlasting death 58. Why is not this their estate expressed also in the Creed Because this is here intended as a symboll of their faith so penned for the comfort of the just and to remember them of their hope and happinesse and stirre them up to godlinesse leaving the others to the hand of God whose estate yet may hence be plainly gathered and also is in St. Athanasius Creed some others more fully expressed 59. What learne we hence Many good duties as in our Christian calling so to order our lives and conversation as alwayes having an eye to this blessed hope Remembring this end without end Breaking off sinne betimes since no uncleane thing may enter here Striving to enter the strait gate of vertue leadign to eternity leaving the broad way of the world Taking joy in things that shall yeeld everlasting joy Desiring praying longing for it c. 60. Why is Amen added To shew the certainty assurance and confidence we have as well as our owne consent to this faith 61. VVhat signifieth it Verily certainly or undoubtedly or as it is else usually rendred So be it 62. What meane you then by it That we doe beleeve and confesse Not onely in word professing but from the very heart Not wavering but certainly without doubting Not as though it were in our owne power but craving helpe and strengthning of our faith from the hand of God 63. But how should Amen bee added since it is no prayer 1. Either as the last Article signifies those priviledges of the Church whereunto all faithfull soules aspire and so in that aspiration say Amen 2. Or as we generally confesse the certainty of it and our submission of soule to this faith and the will and truth of God 3. Or in particular we intimate our prayers for this or some other thing for our owne good and the Church of God 64. For what things For faith as Lord give us true faith For encrease of our faith as Lord encrease our faith For helpe and comfort Lord helpe our unbeleefe For defence Lord defend us and all professors of this faith Or the like holy aspiration to heaven and heavenly things in the meditation and confession of this faith 65. But doe not they abuse it
that make a prayer of it Yes in that ignorance and much more all infidell-like and deboished Christians that take the words in their mouthes and never conceive it in their hearts nor expresse it in life by obedience and so most fearfully abuse and take Gods name in vaine to their condemnation 66. Why the gesture of standing used by all at this confession 1. To difference it from prayers where at we kneele 2. To shew uniforme gestures with the Ministers as unity in consent 3. To shew our readinesse to stand constant yea and die in the constant profession of this faith 4. To signifie the posture of Souldiers as ready to fight in defence of this faith and our Lord and so souldiers with their swords drawne and standing signified as much as Primitive times and Histories relate 67. What learne we hence To stand in the truth profession and defence of this faith even to death that the Lord may give unto us the Crowne of life which he grant to us for his mercies sake in Christ to whom be glory ever Amen SECT 13. Quest. 6. Concerning the summe of the Creed Not so much a praier as acclamation in zealous expression of their confidence The sum of the Creed or substance thereof Epitomised and application of our Christian faith to the three Persens in Trinity Father Son and Holy Ghost and under the third part or Article concerning the Holy Ghost the rest of the Articles shewne comprehended with a most plaine and familiar expression of the same 1. VVHat learne you chiefly in these Articles I learne this one thing faith or to beleeve in God distinctly explicated in three parts according to the number of the three Persons in Trinity 2. What the first First I learne to beleeve in God the Father who hath created me and all the world 3. What note you in it The application of my faith to the first Person in Trinity the Father described by His Essence God Person Father Attribute Almighty Action of creation the Creation Object thereof the world Application thereof to my selfe My Creator as Thomas said my Lord and my God who created me and all the world 4. Which the second Secondly in God the Son who redeemed me and all mankinde 5. What note you in this The application of my faith to the second Person in Trinity the Son described By His essence God Person the Son Action redemption the Redeemer Extent in sufficiency to all mankinde in efficiency to all the Elect. Application to me also my Saviour and Redeemer What more chiefly observed in the Mediator Christ His name Jesus a Saviour Christ anointed His nature God and Man so Gods Son our Lord. His office of Saviour or Messiah Mediator to God making atonement for men Redeemer of men the redemption performed by his humiliation in his incarnation sufferings death By his exaltation in his resurrection ascension session with comming to judgement 6. How more especially his office of mediation seen Apparently executed in His Kingly office governing Priestly office offering that sacrifice his body and making atonement for Prophetick office instructing his Church 7. Which the third part Thirdly in God the holy Ghost who sanctifieth me and all the elect people of God 8. What note you in this The application of my faith to the third Person in Trinity the holy Ghost described By His essence God Person the Holy Ghost Action the sanctifier and sanctification Object the Elect or Saints of God Extent all of them Application to my selfe as he sanctifieth both me and all the elect people of God 9. But what is that which followeth in the Creed concerning the Church of God Intended to be comprehended in this Article concerning the Holy Ghost as by the vertue and efficacie of his holy Spirit all the merits and benefits of Christs office and sufferings and the merits of God are applied to the Church and Saints called the elect people of God 10. How are they called then The Church of God by the merits of Christ redeemed and by the operation of this Spirit collected united and made A holy Church by his sanctification Catholicke Church by his every where diffused graces Communion of Saints in his uniting power knitting them to the head Christ and God among themselves in unity of faith Christians Spirit at peace with God themselves all others Charity helping one another participation of the Sacraments signes and seales of this communion whereby called Saints and whence the blessings and benefits or the priviledges of this holy company do spring which are to be found in this Noahs Arke the Church and no where else 11. Which are they The forgivenesse of sins by the application of Christs merits to our soules in this life The resurrection of bodies after this life in the vertue and power of his resurrection our sins being forgiven The life everlasting the consequent of this resurrection to enjoy glory in eternity with him and in him by his grace 12. Why is all this attributed to the Holy Ghost Because by him is the dispensation of Gods graces to his Church 13. Is it not then to Christ Yes and to the Father too for these three are one and their workes are joyntly exercised together for the good of the Church though distinguished in the order and manner of the execution of them according to the propriety of the persons in the Trinity 14. How then attributed to the Father As to the fountaine from whence all goodnesse mercy and graces doe proceed and flow 15. How to the Son As to the meanes whereby derived to the Church the powerfull and valuable price of our redemption whereby all good is conferred on the Church 16. How to the Holy Ghost As to whom the dispensation of all his goodnesse and grace is committed to the perfection and complement of this worke of God in sanctification the earnest penny of glorification 17. This then is the sum of our faith Yes concerning both God and his Church and so the whole substance of the Creed 18. What followeth The third part of the Catechisme concerning the Law or the Will and Comandements of God The third part of the Catechism concerning the Commandements SECT 1. QUEST 7. Wherein the transition The transition to the Commandements or third part of the Catechisme in the seventh and following question where first the number name and title of them as the written Law of God whence the difference of Laws and especially those of the Iews the once whole Church of God are shewed and handled with many notes of particular distinction among themselves as of the morall Law from the judiciall Law that was more peculiar to the Common-wealth and state of the Iewes and of them both from the ceremoniall with the reason and manner time and and or change and other respects of the same of Christian ceremonies and their use and of the Morall Law more in particular how it is perpetuall and in effect and force both
Commandement thou shalt not take the name of c. The commination against the breach or neglect for the Lord will not hold him c. 2. What manner of Commandement A negative inferring and enforcing his opposite affirmative viz. not to dishonour or vainly abuse Gods most holy Name but to honour it and use all the holy meanes for the sanctifying of the same throughout all our whole life 3. What is the negative part In the forbidding all abuse of the most holy Name of God whether it be 1. By blasphemy against him his holy word holy things 2. Cursing and banning 3. By filthy swearing whether 1. Falsely 2. Deceitfully 3. Rashly 4. Cunningly 5. Or in any vaine manner and protestation 4. Foolish vowing and impossible unlawfull vowes 5. Or just vowes neglected or not performed 4. What the affirmative part The sanctifying of his name and setting forth of his honour with all our heart and expressed in our words and writings life and workes both by glorifying him his holy name and word By blessing and praising him By religious and godly swearing by him in his truth and to his glory By holy and just vowes and performance of them 5. How the parts opposite or opposed seen As we see glorifying his name opposite to blasphemy Blessing opposite to cursing Religious and godly swearing opposite to rash vaine and prophane oaths Holy and just vowes opposite to unlawfull ones and performance to the breach of them 6. What is understood by Gods name Either himselfe or his Attributes which are himself and whereby he is renowned as his Justice Mercy Power Glory goodnesse c. his Titles as Jehovah Jah Lord God I am c. The meanes whereby he is made known to his Church his holy Word Ordinances Religion and even all his creatures in all his workes As those of his Creation his creatures heaven and earth Characters of his power and glory Gubernation and providence blessings and judgements 7. How is his name signifying himselfe or his Attributes abused By unreverent and ungodly thoughts unholy and unreverent speeches unholy and prophane life 8. How honoured and well used In our hearts by thinking and conceiving of them reverently acknowledging beleeving and remembring him and them effectually In our mouthes confessing and speaking of them and him holy and reverently In our lives conformable to that holy profession 9. How is his name as it signifieth his glory abused By our pride or vain glory neglect or unthankfulnesse as also by idle and unsavoury speeches of him or dissembling suppressing denying or oppugning his truth and by our sinnes to his dishonour 10. How contrariwise herein to be honoured By our desire of his glory speech to his praise and deeds to his honour bringing forth good fruits to his glory and good example of others whereby he glorified in us and by others 11. How dishonoured in his Titles By neglect of them unreverent and carelesse use of them in any wicked light or ridiculous sort or manner By superstitious use of them to charmes exorcismes ungodlinesse By hypocrisie taking his name and profession on us in vaine 12. How honoured by them By our taking them in and to our hearts using them in our speech words and writings and professing them in godly life with all reverence holinesse and humility as in serious in most religious and godly manner 13. How is his word abused In our neglect or contempt of it In our unprofitablenesse and vaine use of it In our evill use to confute truth confirm errors scoffes or jests charmes or inchantments In our disobedience impenitency and prophanenesse notwithstanding our profession of it 14. How well used 1. By our study care and meditation in it Psal. 1. 2. Words ministering grace to the hearers seasoned with the power and efficacy of it 3. Obedience and deeds conformable to the same 15. How in his Ordinances honoured or dishonoured By our due observation to his honour or neglect or contempt of them whereby we dishonour him 16. How in his Religion honoured or dishonoured By upright and inoffensive conversation answerable to our profession to his honour by hypocrisie dissolute and prophane life of carnall gospellers his dishonour in the scandall of Religion 17. How honoured in his workes of Creation By holy meditation and mentioning of them to his glory and our instruction and by pure and sanctified use of them by the word and prayer to our comfort refreshing and blessing 18. How dishonoured in them By our neglect and carelessenesse to consider them prophane and irreligious use or abuse of them to sinne and shame presumptuous use in unthankefulnesse or superstitious use invanity idolatry witchcraft or the like 19. How honoured or dishonoured in his workes of gubernation his blessing or judgements First honoured in the reverent and thankefull receiving and regard of all his blessings whether to our selves or others in joy thankefulnesse and praises dishonoured in the neglect thereof Secondly for his judgements of punishments honoured by our patient bearing them humiliation and magnifying his justice and condoling with others dishonoured by our carelesnesse incorrigiblenesse impatience or murmuring under his hand and chastisements or mockings scoffing scorning or rejoycing at others afflictions Thirdly for his judgements in his particular providence over our estates and fortunes by lots or such like determinations honoured in the lawfull use for deciding controversies elections and the like and submission to his judgement in the same dishonoured by abusing and abusive lots to casting of fortunes and such other trifling and so abused and unlawfull games and idle haunting the same 20. What meane you then by taking Gods name in vaine The dishonour and abuse thereof in generall by all or any of the meanes and usages aforesaid according to the severall acceptations of the same In particular by blasphemy cursing filthy swearing rash and foolish vowes 22. What is blasphemy It is in generall as the word signifieth evill and hurtfull speaking 1. Against man to the damnifying of his good name disparaging and disgracing him so sometimes used 2. Against God to the derogation of his Majesty and so the false acrusation of Naboth went he had blasphemed God and the King but for evill speaking against God and holy things most usually and especially accepted 22. How is blasphemy against God Whatsoever derogatorily spoken uttered or done either against his Person Power and Majesty Attributes Name and Word As Pharaoh Exod. 3. Who is the Lord that I should c. Sennacharib 2 Kings ●9 Who is God of Israel In contempt the Jewes that said of Christ and God let God save him is he will have him and he saved others himselfe he cannot of the Gospell in despite calling it Avangelion and Jesus Jeshu c. as lastly in some sort propahnenesse whereby the name of God and Religion the truth and Christianity is blasphemed Rom. 2. 24. the name of God thus blasphemed among the Gentiles and Davids adultery 2 Sam. 12. so causing
Good thoughts and cogitations Good motions of Gods Spirit and truth Good resolution to follow the good and truth chosen and allowed in heart 6. How the parts opposite scene opposed 1. As the cherishing originall guilt into actuall concupiscence opposite to the hating and rooting out of the same and that naturall inclination to the guilt or hereditary corruption opposite to the inclination to justice and Gods love in the flesh lusting against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh 2. Actuall Evill thoughts opposite to good Evill motions opposite to good motions c. Evill consent opposite to good resolution c. 7. What sorts of concupiscence I. The habituall and hereditary 1. Cleaving to our nature derived from Adam which is called originall sin 2. Confirmed by perpetrating actuall and many offences II. Actuall the buds of that originall as proceeding from the same and more confirming it so either producing and confirming other daughter and mother either to other and spreading so largely all sins and vices seeme branches of the same 8. What opposite to it Originall righteousnesse lost in Adam renewed and restored by Christ in some measure and degrees of grace here in full measure hereafter in glory the opposition of which grace or renewed righteousnesse here in the flesh to that guilt is that continuall combat of a Christian in the subduing of the flesh and evill affections to the spirit and lusting of the spirit against the flesh as the flesh against the spirit so long as wee live and till fully reformed to the image of God 9. Whence commeth actuall concupiscence 1. From that originall guilt as the fountaine or root suffered to bud and grow in us 2. From other accidents as occasions of bringing it into action or adding fuell to the flame as from the 1. Motions and suggestions of The devill Lewd men and his instruments Our owne intemperance 2. Sense infected with sin 3. Phantasie minde and memory c. corrupted by lewd objects 10. How shall we then avoid it By taking heed to our wayes and carefully observing our evill inclinations to reduce and regulate them after Gods will and Commandements more especially in our 1. Walking with God by prayer and holy meditations 2. Going from the company of the world by retiring and secret examination of our hearts wayes and senses Psal. 4. 3. Armour of God to resist the evill one Eph. 5. 6. c. 2 Cor. 10. 5. 11. What are the degrees hereof As they are either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 foregoing passions or as some speake unformed concupilcence going before the act of reason as in 1. Wanton dreames 2. Uncleane thoughts 3. Malicious dreames of hatred c. 4. Minde withdrawne or heart affected by sudden delight passion or bait by the sense phantasie memory or other seducing occasions presented 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 full passions or formed concupiscences and acts of unreasonable reason in deliberate desire and consent of will that are either 1. Rowled in the minde with approbation 2. Taken delight in by that approbation though without consent to the practice of them 3. Delighted in even to consent of practice 4. Desired to be put in practice and so the very actuall breach of other Commandements as of false testimony slander theft adultery c. 12. How the affections of the heart else distinguished Into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a versation from some appearing evill by anger feare hate and the like 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 desiring of some appearing good as properly this concupiscence whose obliquities and defects against honesty good reason Gods will and depravation by evill judgement is the breach of this Commandement for there may bee a good and holy feare anger and hatred as of sin and concupiscence of good things to Gods glory 13. How evill concupiscence distinguished As immoderate into concupiscence of the objects that are evill or evilly desired as of 1. Pleasure or lust of the flesh carnall concupiscence 2. Profit lust of the eyes covetous concupiscence 3. Honour pride of life and ambition or ambitious concupiscence 1 Iohn 2 15. 14. VVhence commeth the evill of them As they either 1. Proceed from an evill fountaine as From originall sin Evill and depraved nature Diabolicall temptations Intemperance or the like 2. Are motions to things First horrible and evill in nature as murder theft adultery or other mischiefe Secondly hurtfull to our selves and others III. Against God and his holinesse and honour though in things appertaining to out neighbour here especially remembred 15. Which are they Evill longing after either House or field by covetousnesse Wife by carnall concupiscence Servant Ox or Asse or any thing else by any inordinate or carnall desire whether in Heart longing Minde plotting Will devising or Word and thought wishing for it 16. What then in generall forbidden here All suffering of sinne to Bud Live Grow in the heart to the prejudice of the soule harbouring it the neighbour endangered to be damnified and God dishonoured by it 17. Why so precisely forbidden As the root of all evill because from the heart and from within proceed evill thoughts and so adulteries thefts fornications murders covetousnesse and all wickednesse that defile a man Marke 7. 22. as our Saviour himselfe sheweth and thereby the leprosie foulnesse and deformity of the same 18. But is it not forbidden in the other Commandements It may be answered yes but withall to be noted I. How 1. Intimated there and more implicite in and with the act forbidden 2. More expresly and plainly here as of set purpose to avoid all doubt and to assure and remember us of the same II. Or else as it is The first bud here reproved all even the unformed lusts and inordinate desires before full consent In the full growth and formed in the will ready for the act with and in the act there forbidden likewise 19. What is then here commanded The vertues opposite to the former evill concupiscences and so as the rooting of them out the reformation of the soule in planting and cherishing the graces opposite to the same as before remembred seene in 1. Not yeelding to sin and temptation of Satan 2. Resisting evill concupiscence covetousnesse and fleshly desires that fight against the soule 3. Entertaining the good motions of Gods blessed Spirit and 4. Fostering and cherishing the same by good thoughts and meditations godly and Christian resolution 20. How is this to be effected By taking to us the whole armour of God Eph. 5. able to resist all the fiery temptations of the devill and seeking the sincere milke of the word which is able to make us grow up in faith unto all righteousnesse which is in Christ. 21. What are the parts of it 1. A mortification of sin and our fleshly members 2. A regeneration or new birth unto righteousnesse 3. A sanctification of the spirit unto God whence also the workes of sanctification and holinesse flow c. 22. But this is beyond the Law
legere and preeando disces prccari so using this we may learne to pray and weepe for that wee cannot weepe or be sensible of these best things which shewing a good desire can never be far from the wished effect also in our mindes often to revolve and consider 1. The great mercies and goodnesse of God towards us to stir us up to thankfulnesse 2. The great wants and miseries we are in to move us to confession and prayer for reliefe 3. The great wants our poore brethren are in to move us to charity and compassion so to pray for them 4. The many dangers we have escaped by the gracious providence of God to move us to praise him 5. The many blessings we receive continually to urge us to thanksgiving that are continually preserved fed and nourished kept and sustained by him which only well thought on might move us effectually to this duty to pray continually 24. How or in what respect 1. As every minute day Sabbath houre and yeare are new blessings adding continuance to our life and being 2. As every minute day and houre bring new blessings or minister occasions to consider of the same and move us to thankes 3. As every creature may seem to put us in mind of their and our Creator 4. As every good creature yeelding us comfort may put us in minde of his goodnesse as the summe of his glory the Heaven his throne and residence the day his light and so every good thing sheweth some sparke of his grace and goodnesse 5. As every blessing a new memoriall of his love and bounty to us so to remember him the giver of life heat and comfort friends goods health and whatsover we enjoy to cloath feed helpe or releeve us and such pious arguments of praise might be continually present with us to move us to praise him that even while we live on earth we might herein lead an Angels life and be better prepared for glory and capable of it in greater measure the soule so adorned having so great a measure of grace 25. When and where are we to pray As often as conveniently we may and the oftner the better so with zeale and discretion or with the spirit and understanding 1. Both publicke on the Sabbath and solemne feast dayes in the Temple with the Saints in the great congregation 2. Privately on the weeke dayes in the family with the promise of the presence of God 3. Retiredly at any time in the closet where God that seeth in secret hath also promised to reward openly 4. Continually on every good occasion and blessings received and considered to remember and blesse the giver and send up some sigh or ejaculation towards heaven whence the gifts descend 5. Ordinarily for all those daily blessings received as at our First uprising that restored to a new day and light that might else have slept an endlesse night and sleep Secondly at our downelying that having passed the troubles of that day we have rest and in remembrance of our grave our bed and sleep of death Thirdly at our receiving our meat sanctifying the same by prayer and after giving praise for the same 6. Extraordinary as any necessities urge or extraordinary blessings or dangers present oftner and more incessantly so we finde first Daniel three times a day Dan 6. Secondly David seven times a day and at midnight and with great earnestnesse for the childe Thirdly Christ himselfe three times together at his agony 7. Whensoever we finde our selves best disposed to so holy a dutie and not to quench the Spirit or neglect his good motions of grace in the heart 26. What else to be noted for the circumstances of prayer 1. Such as the time the Sabbath most especially appointed for his solemne worship yet not neglecting other times but as often as conveniently may be 2. Such as the place the Temple especially thence called the house of prayer where many gathered together like many coales giving the greater heat many sticks the greater flame and many godly mens prayers joyntly more powerfully ascending to pull downe blessings from God as he signifieth Ezechiel the 14. by joyning Noah Daniel and Job together to shew powerfull prayer and not nelecting any other place on good occasion as the three children in the Furnace David on his bed and Daniel in the Lions den 3. Such as the persons the Minister especially in publicke but withall the whole company and communion of Saints so called as gathered together in so holy an excercise and therein associated with the Saints and Angells in heaven that joyntly with them and ever performe that spirituall and divine exercise 4. Such as the ceremonies such as appointed or most tending to comelinesse and edification 5. Such as the gesture the most humble and reverent by the outward position of the body signifying the inward reverence and humility of the soule 27. How is that In uniformity with the Church in publicke and according to the custome of the place and direction of Authority and so generally kneeling in praier used with us as the most humble gesture according to our Countries guises though prostration in the Easterne Countries and with the Jews but not simply to exclude any manner of gesture in humility presented in private though in publicke required uniformity most commendable and kneeling shewing most humility and so we may finde Daniel kneeling and David saying Come let us fall downe and kneele before the Lord our maker David prostrate before the Lord for the childe Isaac walking in the fields praying The poor Publican standing aloof and praying Jonah lying in the Whales belly praying and heard and so any gesture not in convenient in humility or it not stubbornely opposed to it or charity or uniformity which thereby loseth the praise of humility and groweth scandalous in the same 28. What other the rules or order in prayer Direction 1. To whom to pray to God alone not to Saint or Angel 2. In whose name in Christs the only Mediator and no other 3. By whose helpe the holy Spirit speaking in us and making us truly cry Abba Father 4. For what things for only good things not evill 5. By what rule according to Gods will 6. To what end to Gods glory the end of all 7. With what conditions and virtues to bee graced 29. What virtues required Chiefly 1. Humility wherein the poore Publican respected when the proud Pharisee rejected 2. Faith whereby only prayer is made powerfull and acceptable 3. Charity without which we can never aske a petition shall please God nor ever obtaine of him more for our selves then in charity we would desire for other 4. Repentance whereby we putting off our polluted garments of sinne when we come into the presence of God whose eyes try the children of men and who so hateth sinne that no impure thing shall come nigh him for if a King would not be served by filthy clownes or boores at his table how much lesse God
explained the second petition for our selves or fifth in order with the order and Analysis and parts thereof observed what meant by forgivenesse and debts or trespasses and how we are debtors many waies and say justly our trespasses the condition whereon we aske forgivenesse as we forgive others and also no forgivenesse at Gods hand so how and how far men may and ought to forgive their brethren and their trespasses and who offend against this divers wayes how David Moses and others did curse and the Magistrate punisheth and not forgiveth and who truly or as they ought forgive others whereby the way is discussed the power and authority that the Church and Priest hath to forgive sins both according to the doctrine of the holy Scriptures and expositions thereon of the ancient Fathers and all orthodox Writers and so generally of the whole Church of God in all ages as well as the present Church of England with the right understanding of her tenet in that point and the good use to be made of it whereby confession is explaned how far forth requisite and coldly for the most part now used but the defect of discipline and other inconveninces plainly enough to be perceived issuing from the same so the true and genuine use thereof asserted and cleerly proved by many arguments as aforesaid and more fully by the generall practise of the Church and primitiva times demonstrated whereby the manner how it was by them exercised and so the order of the ancient Church discipline is on this occasion set forth and decyphered and for the present petition here is farther declared what herein we ought to doè or avoid so what is here expressed or intimated thus particularly summed up together and explaned 1. VVHat are the three latter Petitions Concerning us and our necessities for things either 1. Temporall as daily bread Give us this day our daily bread 2. Spirituall As forgivenesse of sins c. Deliverance from temptations 3. Partly spirituall and partly temporall as deliverances from all evill ghostly sin and bodily dangers 2. What the first of these Petitions The fourth of the Lords Prayer Give us this day c. wherein we pray for all things necessary for this present life under the name of bread or dayly bread and this day 3. What is the order Placed before those that desire spirituall things or blessings to shew 1. Our exceeding necessity in this life and so first desire food and raiment without which wee cannot subsist 2. Our Fathers mercy that considereth this our need and weaknesse 3. Our account and use wee ought to make of it since allowed to aske it to use it as a step or degree towards better blessings 4. What contained or to be confidered in it 1. The object bread and double epithetons of it 1. Our and 2. Daily bread 2. The action give and adjoyned circumstance twofold of the persons To us time to day 5. What understood by bread 1. Either spiritually bread of life panis vitae or coelestis Angelorum Manna Angels food Christ and Gods word and Sacraments in which respect it might be well preferred to all the rest of the Petitions but thus more improperly 2. Or temporally the staffe of bread food raiment and all other necessities all other comforts of this life whereby to make bread relish well and us to enjoy it 6. How for the first sense Spiritually taken it may be understood indeed that most divinely for Gods holy word which is food of souls bread of life called by such honorable epithetons shewing the vertue and efficacy to sustain the soule according to that of our Saviour Man liveth not by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Secondly also for Christ himselfe who is the incarnate Word and Wisedome of the Father who is the true bread of life and food indeed as thirdly of the Sacraments of his body and blood the spirituall food also of our soules and so this called panis coeli or coelestis Angelorum and the like but not so properly in this place intended since this bread in the first and second Petitions desired where Gods name and glory and kingdome are prayed for and whereas in patriâ wee desire to bee satiated with this heavenly Manna here more properly intended is the panis via or viatorum and that part that concerneth the temporall necessities of this life intimated also by Today and daily and so bread is said to be either Panis Nature of this life Doctrine of Gods word Gratia Christus in Sacramentis Gloriae Christus in Coelis 7. How is the word of God bread As it doth nourish comfort and strengthen the soule as materiall bread doth the body and so noted in these respects of our soules 1. Vivification raising it from death to life 2. Consolation comforting it in that life and against all tribulation 3. Confirmation in goodnesse and against all ill and assaults of the divell 4. Delectation with the heavenly taste and sweetnesse roborating strengthning and illuminating of the heart in the true faith 7. How is Christ the bread of life As the word of God manifested in the flesh to the quickening and raising up of our soules and bodies so panis hominum and as the comfort of Saints and Angels in glory so panis hominum Angelorum c. and so to bee noted this bread of life in I. The Sacraments are to be hol●ly 1. Prepared for with reverence reached unto with feare received by faith 2. Ruminated with devotion that it may nourish us in Christ and make us one with him II. Heaven doth Satiate without any defect to eternity in glory Delight with eternall sweetnesse maintaine life eternally and so Angels food and as the Psalmist said Man did eat Angels food panem Angelorum thus in grace and glory 9. What then of other naturall or materiall bread As by it we understand the very materiall food of our bodies in this life with all the necessary appurtenances of quietnesse and peace friends house lands or revenewes rayment health and other blessings to make it sweet and comfortable to us as that stay of life the staffe of bread is or is accounted to be so we must remember that it ought to be 1. Got by our honest labour 2. Received with moderation and thankfulnesse and so onely properly our daily bread 3. Imparted to others with us as the poore our bread 10. But why is all food called bread To teach us the 1. Use we should intend for strengthning us the property of bread chiefly not for vanity or voluptuousnesse 2. Moderation that should be as the holy and abstemious men that lived with bread and water onely 3. Blessing if we have it from God it shall be sufficient and having food and rayment to bee content 11. Why say you Our bread To signifie both 1. The love of God that granteth it to be ours by the giving when else we
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
Church in the administration of the Sacraments and admission of Converts to Baptisme and Penitents into the Church and participation of the other Sacrament in primitive times especially and even when whole Nations were converted to Christianity and baptized As this also a preparation by the description of the holy Table or Altar-place of it ceremonies and reverence used at it to the doctrine of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper coming next to be handled Yet once more ere we passe this Sacrament what is meant by these words used in the ceremony In the name of the Father c. By the Name of God as all Divines teach is understood not onely that Nomen ineffabile Tetragrammaton 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as written with foure letters and by some corruptly pronounced Jehovah instead of Jaha or J●hu and usually read Adonai by the Hebrewes themselves and others by their directions but all other the glorious titles attributes and holy meanes whatsoever whereby any no●●●●s of the divine Majesty are imparted and the knowledge of God in any sort derived unto us and so by them as farre as humane frailty will permit God himselfe made knowne unto men And as his attributes of Mercy Justice Goodnesse and the like seeming accidentall attributes are yet ●o essentiall they are his very essence and God himselfe Nullum accidens in Deum cadit quicquid in Deo est essentia est so much more his Name and Titles taken for God himselfe all of them together sparkling like rayes from that their center of theirs the divine Majesty which they would expresse to our knowledge thus God himselfe meant by his name and by the Hebrewes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shem the name is ordinarily accepted for God himselfe absolutely as the chiefe meanes of our knowledge of him which yet hath a twofold consideration as what is either passive received or active set forth byus which knowledge passive received or in the receiving may perhaps properly pertaine to the third Commandment and exposition of the name of God there as the same passive in the setting forth and acknowledgement of it may pertaine to this place and perhaps both to the first Petition of the Lords prayer wherein we desire Gods Name may bee hallowed which we may well interpret by all holy meanes of receiving this knowledge of him as well as setting it forth and acknowledging of it to his glory and in this last sense here properly understood that the person is baptised in the Name that is in the 1. Power and authority 2. Confession and acknowledgement 3. Honour and praise 4. Love and feare Of the divine Majesty of the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost the great and glorious mystery of the Trinity so revealed as in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shem the name and that saving Name Jesus Emmanuel and other names of God the same and other mysteries are no lesse emphatically then sweetly shadowed and included In what manner Thus the name expressing the divine Majesty or all meanes of the knowledge of ●t thereby expressed and all saving health springing from that knowledge or as Nomen est nota rei and the Sonne the Character of his Fathers glory how fitly may the Sonne the Saviour Jesus the center of the Trinity and of our salvation the Father saving by the Sonne actuating it by the holy Spirit to whom committed the dispensation of Faith and treasury of all graces here shadowed under this Name for the name above all names for if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shaddai the Epitheton of the Father may seeme to import the fountaine of his all-sufficiencie and power as it doth right so may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shem the name above all names at which every knee should bow imply the character of the brightnesse of his Fathers glory as it importeth also the Word the Wisedome the Way the Truth the Light the Life of all saving health and knowledge whence all saving health derived and as sweetly suiting with the rest and sympathizing with his nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shekina shadowing unto us the overshadowing power and goodnesse of that holy and blessed Spirit the dispenser of all divine graces and so all of them together the Trinity of the persons in the unity of the divine Majesty whereby showne as opera Trinitatis ad extra so essentia ad intra bein indivisa the Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity mysteriously included in the Name above all names that saving Name Jesus with the revelation of which Name the whole Trinity was also revealed in that Emanuel to all mankinde and which so great a mystery as desired to be looked into by Angels but hidden from all former ages was with him and in him manifested to the world And no wonder if so great mysteries should be in that great and glorious Name involved when in the very name of Antichrist and character of the Beast so deep mysteries are found included For as great is the mystery of godlines●e deep Gods counsels and secret his judgements past finding out so we may observe great are the depths of Satan strong the delusions of the Divell and as hideous as intricate the mystery of iniquity How is that mystery or name of the Beast and Antichrist meant or explained The Divell is usually tearmed Gods Ape so where God planteth his Church he will strive to erect his Chappell hard by And as God will set up his Christ upon his holy Hill of Sion so he striveth to set up Antichrist not onely in his owne Chappell but in the Church of God as much as he can poluted by him and whereas Christ hath his true Prophets and true wonders wrought by them in the power of God so Antichrist working by the power of the Beast hath his false prophets working lying wonders in the power of the Beast and Dragon and delusions of the Divel and thus as Christ to Antichrist Gods truth to Satans delusions and Gods counsels to the depths of Satan we may behold who the mystery of iniquity working by Antichrist and the power of the Beast are opposed to the mystery of godlinesse wrought by God and in Christ revealed as Contra●ia juxta se posita magis elucescunt God advancing his Christ the truth and godlinesse in his Church the Divell that Beast of the field in Paradise the old red Dragon for his bloudy designes and falling Angel for his pride striving to set up Antichrist and all spirituall wickednesse even in the high places as high as Tribunal Ecclesia the very pulpits if his false prophets can get into them to sow their seeds of Heresie Atheisine and prophanenesse and for his name literally it is plainly understood of his opposition to God and his Christ but for his name so mystically expressed by numbers or rather inveyled in them that have busied so many thousands searching eyes industrious wits and judicious heads to pry into them to finde out the mysterie it may
heart 2. To set at liberty in the spirituall bondage of sinne 3. To inflame us with a kinde of heat of devotion 4. To give patience in adversity and trouble 5. To nourish us in health and prosperity 6. To restore us in sicknesse or extremity 7. To unite us to God in peace and charity 8. To Communicate his graces to us in necessitie 9. To make us whole if weak and lame 10. To preserve us being made whole 11. To strengthen us in all our life 12. To conduct us to glory in our death And according to this is Saint Bernards meditation on the same 12. How is that That this heavenly Manna and divine mystery 1. Is physicke to the body 2. Way to the traveller 3. Strength to the weak 4. Joy to the whole 5. Refuge to the poore 6. Counsell to the rich 7. Help to them in danger 8. Heavenly comfort to the departing soule According to that which saith a reverend moderne Divine 1. If that I am sicke here I may cure me 2. If whole here I may keep me 3. If living here I may comfort me 4. If dead in sin here I may raise me 5. If I desire to burn with the love of God here I may inflame me 6. If I am cold in devotion here I may warme mee 7. If blind here I may enlighten me 8. If spotted here I may cleanse me 9. I will not flie from God as Adam did since here I shall finde grace to strengthen me 13. What sentences of holy Scripture concerning it For our comforts we may remember That 1. To Adam was said that day thou eatest of that tree thou shalt die but of this here to us eat and live for ever Joh. 6. 58. 2. Of mount Sinai it was said he that toucheth the hill Exod. 19. shall die but who commeth to this hill and feast described Esa. 25. 6. shall live 3. In Sampsons Riddle De forte dulcedo and out of this Lion of the Tribe of Juda the sweetnesse of this heavenly Manna in the Eucharist 4. Jacob said surely God is in this place though I was not ware of it Gen. 28. 16. so may we say God is here though we see him not 5. David saith Memoriam fecit mirabilium suorum Psal. 111. true of this holy mystery his memoriall and Tues magnus faciens mirabilia Psal. 86. 9. 6. Abraham weaning Isaac made a feast Gen. 21. 8. Christ to weane us from the love of the world maketh us this heavenly feast 7. To Zacheus was said This day is salvation come unto thy house Luke 19. this is said to our soules by Christs comming 8 Adam cast out of Paradise must eat the bread of carefulnesse man received to grace in Christ doth thus eat the bread of life Angels food 9. The Spouse in the Canticles saith Cant. 5. 1 I have gathered my myrrhe with my spice I have eaten my honey-combe with my honey I have drunk my wine with my milk eat O my friends drink c. so speaketh Christ to our soules in the Eucharist 10. Christ teacheth this salutation Peace be to this house Luke 10. 5. he saith so to us in this and if we open to him he promiseth to sup and rest with us Rev. 3. 21. 14. What should the soule say in this respect It may well answer in the words of the Spouse 1. Ecce Sponsus as the wise Virgins Mat. 25. 6. and go forth to meet him 2. Ecce Ancilla Domini with the blessed Virgin Luke 1. 18. 3. Dic verbum vivet anima with the Centurion Matth. 8 29. 4. Lift up your heads ye gates and be you lift up you everlasting doors and the king of glory shall come in Psal 24. 5. Taste and see how gracious the Lord is c. Psal. 34. 7. 6. Give us Lord this water of life with the woman of Samaria John 4. 7. As the Hart longeth for the water-brookes c. Psal. 42. 15. What other comfortable sayings of the Fathers of this In that reverent stile they use of it as aforesaid and as St. Chrysostome saith it is a miracle of mysteries Saint Cyprian a joyfull solemnity Thomas Aquinas a precious banquet admirable wholesome and full of all sweetnesse as by the ancient Christians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 feast of charity and so generally a great divine venerable inestimable and most noble mystery 16. What is our necessity of it or how discovered By considering 1. Our want and nakednesse without it and what need of refreshing we have in our earthly journey 2. What comfort it bringeth with it bringing Christ and his graces into our houses 3. What is our work our land our people as was demanded of Jonah Jon. 1. 9. 4. Whither our journey tendeth in this our pilgrimage of life 5. Heaven our home and haven and this the onely or chiefe viand we can have for our refreshing on the way 17. How may we be confirmed or farther enflamed with the love and desire of this holy mystery By serious considering and ruminating with thy selfe these or the like holy meditations of the necessity greatnesse worthinesse of this divine and heavenly Sacrament or thy duty in the same and blessednesse by it As 1. How it is Manna Angels food Bread of life the Seale of the Covenant Pledge of Grace c. Marriage feast 2. How in regard of it all earthly honours and substance are vaine And hereby peace is come to thy soule and salvation 3. How whilest thou dost communicate thou art a temple of the holy Ghost and thy soule a house of prayer 4. How by it thou art become a living and new sepulchre for thy Saviours body or which more his graces to reside in 5. How he is thus taken down from the Crosse by thee and lodged in this new Sepulchre in thy garden 6. How hereby myrrhe and pure spices shall flow and distill into that Garden thy Soule 7. How it is the heavenly viand of the soule and onely best refection in thy journey towards heaven and eternity 8. How hereby thou mayest be cured of thy sicknesse of sin blindnes issue of bloud lamenesse or other infirmity 9. How thou art bid to this feast bring but faith and have it and all blessings Pray Lord increase my faith 10. How if Napkins brought from the body of the Apostles wrought cures and miracles how much more this body of the Lord in thee and to thy soule 11. How Christ in his conception tooke our nature and we in this spirituall reception and conception of him partake of his Divine nature 12. How as we receive him here in this state of grace he will hereafter receive us in glory 17. How is our preparation by repentance The examination of the truth of our repe●tance by the consideration of the time past and former sins Present weaknesses and infirmities To come our purpose of amendment by leaving our former courses and study to amend our present imperfections by our striving and
us to 1. Observe and watch against the Divell world flesh and their temptations 2. To shut the corporall and spirituall eyes and senses against the baits of sinne and temptations of Satan and take heed especially of most dangerous sins as presumption despaire oblivion c. II. Of defence taking the whole armour of God Eph. 6 13. the 1. Shield of faith 2. Helmet of salvation 3. Sword of the Spirit 4. The word of God 5. Breastplate of righteousnesse c. III. Of deliverance by Christ and taken hold on by faith and effectually applied proved in true repentance and humility whereby rest and peace to the soule 14. What is here then desired All things that may confirme and strengthen us in goodnesse and to the resisting and extinguishing of evill 1. As Gods graces both preventing subsequent persevering with us to the end 2. A illumination of our spirit to discern what is good 3. As stedfastnesse of ●aith and that spirituall armour to resist temptations and evill 4. As comfort of his Spirit unto us in this life by turning evill to good unto us in humiliation of us In making us more carefull In estranging our affections from sin In privation of power to sin In preventing herein eternall death 5. Patience under the crosse c. 6. Everlasting life and blessednesse hereafter 15. What prayed against 1. Against sollicitation to sin in any degree as evill suggestion counsell consent delight c. 2. Against disertion and forsaking of God or his forsaking and leaving us 3. Against sin it selfe and the adjuncts of it oblivion of God presumption obduration despair 4. Against grievous and long afflictions and calamities 5. Against sudden death or strange and fearfull death or dangers and trialls 6. Against everlasting death and hell and our arch enemy the Divell 16. What expressed in the letter 1. The deprecation against all leading into temptation or evill 2. The Petition for deliverance from evill sin temptation 3. The intercession for others as well as our owne deliverance from evill defence against temptation 17. What intimated I. A confession of Gods power graces and free Spirit that is able ready and willing to aid us Our weaknesse and frailty ready to be tempted and overthrowne of evill Our duty to seek to him for his graces and so decline temptation and evill II. A thanksgiving and praises for 1. His graces we have had experience of Assistance in temptations and giving a happy issue to many of them 2. Many deliverances of us and others and that full deliverance the Saints enjoy 3. Our hope of full deliverance being freed from sinne hereafter in life everlasting 18. How summe you it up together in order 1. Our confession of Praises to God that he is only our Lord and Redeemer powerfull and able and willing and ready to deliver Our weaknesse that we poore creatures subject to many temptations and calamities Our duty therefore O Lord we looke to the hills whence our helpe and defence 2. Our Petition that thou O Lord wilt be a Tower of defence our Castle and defendor from temptation our deliverer from evill 3. Our intercession to him to deliver Israel from all her sinnes 4. Our deprecation against all the wicked men and instruments of the Divell temptations c. All evill remove O Lord lying lips and a deceitfull tongue and a heart that is froward all ungodlinesse and wrong all evill c. 5. Our thanksgiving and praises for our selves that have received many graces deliverances and best things as faith c. Others with us and bewayling our unfaithfulnesse and forgetfulnesse Our blessed hope of Saints that thou givest us and life everlasting promised The happinesse that thy Saints enjoy in thee O Lord eternally SECT 7. The Conclusion The conclusion with the reason and Analysis of the same wherein is shewed what is to be understood by Kingdome power and Glory so in their eminency excellency heere taught to him to bee ascribed and are now and ever shall be by all creatures most certainely to all eternity to be attributed which may teach all Kings Princes and Potentates as well as all other the aithfull and servants of God how zealously they ought to remember to set forth his glory in which conclusion the whole prayer seemes epitomized and included in assurance and confidence of which our zealous and faithfull prayers and praises as else diversly and for good respects used and here explicated as added Amen 1. VVHat is the conclusion added For thine is the Kingdome power and glory for ever and ever Amen whereby we acknowledge God both able to doe all hee will and willing to doe all for his glory which only we desire in all the Petitions and therefore in assurance to be heard in our just desires we say Amen 2. Why is it added As a very fit conclusion to prayer in the forme of praise and thanksgiving to him for so we acknowledge him the only powerfull King worthy to be praised and that there is no end of his greatnesse and honour and withall intimate our desire of his honour and that glory unto which all things are directed as to their end and it selfe without end even for ever and ever we give thanks for our and others good in it included and rejoyce in the same in that hope and assurance resting confident of his favour as our God and King as well as Father in Christ and in that desire of his glory thus conclude the thanksgiving and praises againe with prayer saying So be it 3. What herein contained A most firme reason of our faith and assurance as well as thankfulnesse drawne from 1. The object or matter ascribed Kingdome power and glory 2. The action or ascribing it Thine is the Kingdome power and the glory 3. The circumstance of the eternity of it for ever and ever certainty of it Amen 4. How a reason of our faith and assurance For that he whom we pray unto is so great and powerfull and glorious a God and King as to whom both 1. All Kingdome Power and Glory over all is due and to be ascribed 2. It is ascribed by all tongues and hearts both of men and Angels 3. It is ever and shall be acknowledged either by the good to their comfort or others to their condemnation 4. It is so certaine as truth it selfe for he hath said it that will doe it who is Yea and Amen 5. How a reason of our praise and thanksgiving Because who is more worthy to receive praise and thanksgiving then this our God whose Kingdome power and glory is so established in the heavens and whole truth endureth for ever in heaven 6. What meant by Kingdome His dominion and government absolute over and above all both generally in the world Specially over his Church in grace glory as in the second Petition more amply expressed 7. What his power His Almightinesse able to doe all that he pleaseth That we can desire That shall be good