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A07350 The English catechisme explained. Or, A commentarie on the short catechisme set forth in the Booke of common prayer Wherein diuers necessarie questions touching the Christian faith are inserted, moderne controuersies handled, doubts resolued, and many cases of conscience cleared. Profitable for ministers in their churches, for schoole masters in their schooles, and for housholders in their families. By Iohn Mayer, Bachelour of Diuinitie.; English catechisme Mayer, John, 1583-1664. 1622 (1622) STC 17733; ESTC S100659 485,672 636

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foolish was Achan and Ananias and Saphyra to their smart as their Histories doe declare and Salomon in taking many wiues and contracting affinity with most Princes for the encrease of his power and establishing his peace For Ios 7 Acts 5 Gehazi is thus made a loathsome Leper Saul is turned out of his Kingdome Achan and Ananias lose their liues and Salomon almost ten Tribes of his posterity Let these examples therefore be warnings vnto vs that we trust not to our owne inuentions but goe out after the Spirit speaking in the Word with Abraham Heb. 11.8 though we our selues know not whither Euen as silly Orphans which know not how to buy and se●l and to deale in this wily world themselues doe willingly submit themselues to some faithfull friend that vndertakes this care for them Quest 33. Which is the second part of your articles of faith concerning the Church of God Answ The second part is The holy Catholique Church the Communion of Saints the Forgiuenesse of sinnes the Resurrection of the body and the life euerlasting Quest 34. What learne you here to beleeue concerning Gods Church Answ Foure things Quest 35. Which is the first Answ First I learne to beleeue that God hath a Church consisting of a certaine number of true beleeuers of whom some be in Heauen and some vpon earth and that I my selfe am a member of the same To beleeue in the holy Catholique Church Explan We are to prefix in our vnderstanding I beleeue and so to confesse I beleeue the holy Catholique Church c. and not I beleeue in as we say of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost For the meaning of the words then it is fully set downe in the answer viz although I cannot see with the bodily eye into the inuisible Church of God consisting onely of true beleeuers yet I doe by faith firmely hold that as there is an outward and visible Church militant here vpon earth that is a company of people outwardly called by the sincere preaching of the Word and further marked out by the right administration of the Sacraments amongst them so there is such a Church as is seene onely by the eye of the Lord inwardly called by the efficacy of the Spirit part of which is already triumphant in Heauen and part here still in this world the one sort being the Saints and faithfull departed the other faithfull men and women yet liuing And because I can no otherwise haue no comfort in al this I beleeue to my further comfort that I am a member of this inuisible Church and of the same body with the godly in heauen 2. For the grounds of this they are first to bee brought which testifie that God hath a Church 2. That this Church is a visible company called together by the preaching of the Word which is the Church before men 3. That they yet onely are the true Church before God which are Beleeuers 4. That no Church is to be beleeued in that is to be made the foundation of our faith but onely to be beleeued that is to be acknowledged and to be cleaued vnto when it is found to be Gods Church and to be obeyed in all things wherein it obeyeth Iesus Christ the head of all First that God hath a Church is plaine 1. Proofe That God hath a Church from the often mentioning of the Church of God in the Scriptures Great persecution is said to haue bin raised vp against the Church in the Acts and God is said to haue giuen some Apostles c. Acts 8 1 Ephes 4.12 Reuel 2.3 for the building vp of his Church And in the Reuelation there be seuen Epistles directed to seuen seuerall Churches one to the Church at Ephesus another to the Church at Laodicea c. This is so generally acknowledged that it shall not need to bee further insisted in But that this Church is a visible company called together by the preaching of the Word c. The true mark of the Church these being the principall markes and signes by which it is knowne amongst men is somewhat contradicted yea exploded by the Romanists and other signes of vniuersality antiquity succession of Bishops c. substituted and therefore aliquantulum operosiùs as this Commentary will beare to deale herein And first of all the word Ecclesia a Church comming of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greeke that is to call out giueth great light herein the Church being according to the signification of this Word a people called forth out of the rest of the world as the Apostle not naming the Church at Rome yet in effect calleth it saying To you which are at Rome Rom. 1.7 called to bee Saints now if it bee a people called out of the world the best note whereby to knowe it must needes be the voyce calling which if it be the Talmud of the Iewes it is a Synagogue of Christs enemies if the Alchoron of Mahomet it is an assembly of Saracens if the Word of God corrupted by false interpretations in matter of faith it is a Sect of Heretiques But if it be the pure Word of God purely and sincerely preached it is the Church of God For this hath euer beene a certaine note of Gods Church and such as cannot deceiue Thus hath it beene noted to be in the family of Enoch that walked with God viz. by obedience to his voice Proofes of the old Testament and of Noah for hee did thus also walke with the Lord and of Abraham who went out at Gods Word from his Fathers house and amongst his posterity the Iewes who at the Word of the Lord followed Moses and Aaron thorow the red Sea thorow the wildernesse and the numberlesse turnings by which they were directed from the Land of Aegypt vnto Canaan And still vnder the new Testament this was the infallible marke of Gods Church first amongst the Apostles who were called out from others by the Word of God to follow the Lord Christ then amongst other faithfull people as they were added to the Church they were called by the Word witnesse that great worke of conuersion Acts 2.41 wrought by the Ministry of Peter at one Sermon there were three thousand who when they heard it were seuered from the rest of the World and added vnto the Church Verse 47. and it is immediatly further noted that the Lord dayly added vnto the Church such as should bee saued viz. calling them by the Sermons of his Apostles and Ministers To proceed from History to the Doctrine of holy Scripture Doth not the Prophet Esay teach the same thing Esay 8.20 when he saith To the Law and to the Testimony if they speake not according to this Word it is because they haue no truth in them viz. When Seducers shall goe about to draw them to the seruice of Idols Verse 19. and to follow South-sayers and such as haue the
spirit of Diuination as in the 19. verse they were still inseparably to sticke to the Law of God and not to follow them which doe otherwise and the marke whereby to know these is that they spake not according to this word then the marke of Gods people must needs be this word purely spoken 2 Iohn 10 and taught amongst them Againe S. Iohn saith If there come any vnto you and bring not this doctrine receiue him not to house neither bid him God speed And in the verse before he twice nameth the doctrine of Christ Verse 9 Hee that continueth in the Doctrine of Christ hath both the Father and the Sonne So that if Iohn bee made iudge of the Churches markes the principall shall be the Word the true doctrine taught there Aand to the same effect speaketh Saint Paul Gal. 1.8 Though we or an Angel from Heauen preach otherwise vnto you then we haue preached let him be accursed corrupt preaching is still made the marke of Seducers and then on the contrary side sincere Preaching cannot but bee the marke of Gods people What should I multiply more testimonies in this case Christ himselfe hath plainely taught the same with his Disciples For to what else tend these words against the Pharisies O hypocrites Esaias prophesied well of you Math. 15 7. Verse 9. saying In vaine doe they worship me teaching for doctrines mens precepts Doth he not co●demne the Pharisies for their false doctrine to be a false Church and what is this else but to iustifie this as a certaine marke of the true Church viz. true doctrine and teaching out of Gods holy word and what hath beene said of the Word of God the same is true also of the holy Sacraments these rightly administred are further certaine markes of the true Church for these are the seales of Gods word the signes of his couenant whereby he bindes himselfe to be our God and receiues vs to be his people and sure pledges of his loue towards vs which we really haue till we come actually to be possessed of perfect holinesse and glory with Christ in stead of which these are here giuen vnto vs. The Sacraments of old were Circumcision and the Passouer the Baptisme in the redd Sea the water flowing out of the rocke c. which the Apostle reckoneth vp as markes of the Israelites where hee saith that vnto them pertaines the couenants Rom. 9.4 the giuing of the Law and the seruice of God c. And more particularly when he would describe the old Church visible and the true Church of the Iewes for example to the Church that then was hee sets it foorth by these markes They all eat of the same spirituall meat 1. Cor. 10.2 Verse 4. Verse 2. and dranke of the same spirituall drinke for they dranke of the rocke that followed them And againe They were all baptized in the Cloud and in the Sea vnto Moses And in the Epistle to the Hebrewes comparing the first Tabernacle with the second that is the Church vnder the old Testament with the Church vnder the new he makes the markes of that Church The Candle-sticke Heb. 9.3.4 the table the Shew-bread the golden pot with Manna and Aarons rod sacrifices c. All Sacraments setting foorth Iesus Christ And more specially at the first ordaining of Circumcision the Passe-ouer this is by the Lord assigned to bee the ende of them viz. to bee a signe and marke of his People Of Circumcision hee saith to Abraham This shall be a signe of my couenant vnto thee Gen. 17.11 that is whereby all that would might know him and his posterity to bee Gods people Likewise of the Passeouer The blood shall bee a signe vpon the post of the doore Exod. 12.13 by this Sacrament the very Angell that came to destroy should know where Gods people dwelt and it was a perpetuall signe till Christs comming Verse 27. for their children many generations after must bee still continually instructed heerein Now vnder the new Testament Proofes of the New Testament Mar● 16.16 two others haue succeeded in the roome of these Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord. Concerning Baptisme the Lord saith Hee that beleeueth and is baptized shall bee saued Heere Baptisme is made a marke of Beleeuers 1 Pet. 3 21. and S. Peter compareth Baptisme with Noahs Arke which was easie to be knowne from other buildings by the floting alone vpon the water so is the Church by true Baptisme and alwayes so soone as any imbraced the Word the first marke of the Church they are exhorted to this second without delay as the Iewes that were at Peters Sermon When they were pricked in their hearts and would know what they should doe Act 2.38 Bee baptized saith hee in the name of the Lord Iesus for the remission of sinn●s And this was the next thing that the Eunuch proceeded vnto after he had receiued the word Act. 8. What hi●ders me saith hee from being baptized It was the next thing done to Cornelius to the Iaylour and all others of whose conuersion wee read in the holy Scriptures It is true indeed that aferwards some famous men did delay their baptisme vpon some sinister conceit as is to be feared that is left by sinning after Baptisme they should for euer bee cut off from being Gods people Theod lib 4. cap. 12. Athan. Ap●eg ad Constantin Socr. ib. 5. c. 6. Basil exhort ad baptismum Naz. orat in bap Chrisost hom 1. in Act. Greg orat de non differ bapt though some other reasons haue beene alledged on their behalfe as that Constantine the Great deferred his Baptisme that hee might receiue it at the riuer Iordan where Christ was baptized as saith Theodoret and in the same delay did his sonnes follow him Constans and Constantius and Valens and Theodosius as hath Athanasius Theodoret and Socrates And this was so common that there were Clini●i and Grabatarii so called who deferred vntill their last sicknesse but this was euer misliked by the sincere Fathers who therefore did often inueigh heere against as Basilius Nazianzen Chrysostome Gregory of Nissen c. Lastly for the Sacrament of the Lords Supper the Apostle makes it so certaine a marke of Gods Church that when he would expresse the company of Gods people of which they cannot be which partake of the table of Diuels he saith 1 Cor. 10.11 Yee cannot partake of the Lords table and of the table of Deuills and cannot drinke the cup of the Lord and the cup of Deuills the reason is euident for that the Lords table is a marke or cognizance of Gods people the Deuils table of the Deuills and not long after speaking of corrupt partaking of the Lords Supper when men came together in heart-burnings and contentions he saith 1 Cor. 11.16 Wee haue no such custome nor yet the Church of God as who should say that this is no mark of a true Church
the heart the very Esse of prayer and a worship due onely to their Lord and ours what warrant I say of doing this vnto them seeing the King would thinke his subiects made his fellowes and greatly disdaine if in his presence we should first kneele and put vp our petitions vnto them and then vnto himselfe For the Papists doe much worse praying oftentimes to the Virgin Mary letting the Lord to stand by as it were a cipher Quest 57. Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ Both from the equity of it because he is the Lord our God and none other and also from the benefits bestowed vpon vs in bringing vs out of the bondage and thraldome of the diuell Reason of this Commandement Explan The sinnes against this law being so great and the duties so necessary aboue al others great need there was that it should be fortified by strong reasons and therefore the Lord hath not omitted to vse these although out of his authority hee might haue commanded and with threatnings haue compelled vs vnto the obedience of his will Which teacheth vs first how vnexcusable men are liuing in sinne there being no meanes to draw them to a vertuous and holy course of life omitted for first it is reuealed what the Lord would haue vs to doe then haue wee his absolute command with which no man can dispence and lastly most forcible reasons to moue vs as wee are not brute beasts but reasonable soules Againe this same teacheth the seruants of God the ministers of his word not to handle it negligently but to study for the aptest and best reasons wherewith it may be more inforced and fastned vpon the hearers because God himselfe hath vouchsafed thus to doe and the other remisse handling of Gods word is as the laying of twiggs without bird-lime the casting of a net into the water without weights to presse it downe O let vs study then to deale most workman like as diuine artists neither playing with texts and multyplying tantologies to the wearying of the hearers for want of paines but let vs study with euident demonstrations and arguments of the Spirit to conuince mens consciences of sin that they may bee ashamed and cease here from and of the truth that they may come to be firmely grounded herein and followers of it Reas 1 Rom. 1.20 The reasons of this Commandement are two First from common equity I am the Lord thy God Euery one is easily yeelded vnto when he challengeth but his due but in requiring you to haue me for your God and none other I chalenge but my due for I am the Lord thy God that is I onely am such therefore yee may easily yeeld this vnto mee and yee shall deale most vniustly and contrary to all equity if yee yeeld not to haue none other Gods but me There is nothing here to be further proued but that the Israelites and all we haue daily experience of viz. that the Lord is God only they had experience of it when all the gods of the Heathen were not able to stand against him alone and the visible most goodly creatures of the heauens and earth do teach vs no lesse euerie day but that the infinite power and wisdome which made them all is the onely God of the whole world and this is Iehouah the Lord whose very name essence or being doth imply no lesse but that he alone hath being of himselfe and giueth being to all other things Reas 2 The second reason is taken from the benefits bestowed vpon his people Which haue brought thee out of the land of Egypt Heb. 2. out of the house of bondage Which Egypt was a type of Satans kingdome vnto whom we were all in bondage till the Lord by his Christ came and deliuered vs. Now it is an vnthankfull part as if the Lord should haue said not to make him thy Lord and Soueraigne only vnto whom alone thou art beholding for thy freedome who hath deliuered thee when as before thou wert a slaue and vnder hard bondage but if thou deny to make me thy Lord and God thou shalt shew thy selfe thus vnthankfull because that I alone haue deliuered thee when as before thou wert in slauery therefore thou shalt haue none other Gods but me Here all things are most plaine both to the Israelites and vnto vs they were in Egypt vnder Pharaoh and questionlesse they did there serue other Gods yet it profited not but still they were in sore bondage Exod. 3.4 toyling continually in making bricke for Pharaohs buildings they had taske-masters ouer them most rigorously exacting that they should doe their stintes and not sparing to beate them when they failed and which was most grieuous of all Col. 2.14 their male children were appointed vnto the slaughter so soone as they were borne which did strike them as much as continuall tormenting with swords in their sides But when through the greatnesse of their griefe the voyce of their crie came vp to heauen the Lord sent Moses and Aaron with signes and wonders to deliuer them and by his iudgements so subdued Pharaohs hard heart that he was glad to let them goe and when hee was againe hardened and followed with his forces to bring them backe the Lord diuided the red Sea and let them through but drowned their enemies in the bottome of the deepe Againe for vs of the Gentiles when wee were in bondage vnto Satan who did imploy vs in filthy workes which it is a shame to speake and had power ouer our selues and children so that we were all but dead men dead in sinnes and condemned to death euerlasting when we were I say in this fearefull estate the Lord sent his own Sonne in the flesh who in the crosse ouercame and triumphed ouer the diuell and made vs free yea sonnes and heires vnto God the Father of a kingdome in heauenly places If therefore thou doest either reuerence the commander the most high and mighty if equitie be of any force with thee to giue euery one his due and if thou abhorre the infamous note of ingratitude then tremble to shew any disloyalty any way to the Lord be ashamed to deny the best of all his due and study by all meanes to shew thy selfe thankefull for so great benefits Deny not him that gaue thee beeing with the Atheist neglect nor diuine knowledge with the ignorant bee not loosely minded towards Gods worship with the prophane rob not God of his honour with the Couetous Epicures Selfe-louers and Papists but giue vnto the Lord the loue of all thy heart feare him aboue all put thy whole trust in his holy name and make thy prayers vnto him onely Quest 58. In which words is the second Commandement and which is the reason Answ The second Commandement is Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen image nor the likenesse of any thing that is in heauen aboue or in the earth beneath or in the water vnder
sinfull course of life which they might haue amended in them by teaching charging reprouing and requiring better things at their hands and leading them on by a good example For this as hath been shewed is their dutie as it is to furnish them with things necessary for the bodily life and therefore as in the denying of these they which are vnder their gouernment perishing their blood shall be laid to their charge so is it when they deny them meanes necessary for their soules and much more if they giue them the poyson of bad counsell or bad example this murthering of soules shal be charged vpon them 3 Neighbours And lastly euery neighbour that giueth his neighbour drinke to make him drunken that stirreth vp one against another to sighting and quarrelling and generally if hee enticeth to any sinne or doth countenance and fauour and defend it to the heartning of a man on therein euery of these waies he is the cause of the destruction of his neighbour and shall answer as a soule-murtherer For this is taxed in Gods word as an high offence Habbac 2.15 Woe be to him that giueth his neighbour drinke that is to make him drunken and it is set downe as an height of sinne Rom. 1.31 Which not onely doe such things but fauour such as doe them And good reason seeing euery man is bound to keepe his neighbour as much as in him lieth from sinne otherwise he is censured as hating his brother For Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart Leuit. 19.27 saith the Lord but rebuke him plainely ●nd not suffer him to sinne Oh then how shall hee answer it that prouoketh his brother to sinne without doubt hee shall be iudged as an hater yea a murtherer of his brother at the last day Quest 93. What is here commanded Answ Out of the loue that we beare to our neighbour as much as in vs lieth to preserue his life and health and specially the life of his soule by good counsell exhortations admonitions and the like Explan The duty here commanded ariseth from the consideration of the sinne forbidden for if it be forbidden to murther then it is commanded to saue life because he that saueth not life when it is in his power is guilty of murther Now as murther is either of a mans own self or of another man so the duty that we may be free from the guilt of any murther is to endeauour to saue both a mans owne life and the life of another man 1 To saue our owne life by flying in time of danger First then thou art here bound to preserue thine owne life by the vse of all lawfull meanes 1. In the time of danger flying from one place to another whether the danger bee by persecution as Dauid was indangered by Saul and therefore fled from him and as Athanasius an holy father of the Church hid himselfe a long time when he was sought for to the death by the Arians and as Eliah long before fled from Jezabel 1. King 19. or if the danger be by famine as Abraham Isaack Iacob Naomi and other holy persons haue commonly done or if there be danger by the plague the chiefe cure of which deuouring euill next to repentance is to change the aire and that speedily not in an opinion to be safe from Gods stroake but in obedience to his wil who would haue vs to preserue our liues by all lawfull meanes in the time of danger And a principall ground of all this is that commandement of our Sauiour Matth. 10.23 If they persecute you in one City flie into another and the speciall command vnto Eliiah in the time of famine 1. King 17. Gen 12. Gen. 20. and the Lords manifest approbation of Abrahams flying then comforting him and taking his part against Kings If it be demanded but may Ministers flie in the plague-time and leaue their people Answ That Ministers may flie in time of danger Without doubt they may if it bee Gods will to preserue themselues for the greater good of the Church whereas if they should harden themselues and stay amongst the infected there were apparant danger of being cut off and so to bee preuented of doing further good in the Church 2. By vsing lawful meane in times of sicknesse Esay 38.21 Secondly in the time of sicknes keeping thy selfe warme and taking such things as whereby thou mayest be freed from the matter of thy disease and by Gods blessing bee restored Thus Hez●chiah that was sick vnto the death is bidden to take a ●umpe of drie figs and lay it vpon the boile 3. To defend our selues with our best force Thirdly being set vpon by wicked men or by the enemy defending our selues with our best forces 4. By vsing lawfull recreation Fourthly by vsing lawfull recreation at lawfull times by some extraordinary motion of the body or otherwise chearing our minds and spirits with the vse of pleasant pastimes that are in themselues indifferent Such is shooting of which m●ntion is made in the holy Scriptures ● Sam. 1.18 He bad them teach the children of Israel to shoote as it is written in the booke of Jasher And Musicke Nehem. 7.67 Iudges 14 9. vnto which many were brought vp and propounding of riddles and the like But heere is no tolleration for gaming meerely for gaine which in stead of recreating distempereth the mind and body and is commonly accompanied with many foule sinnes To preserue another mans life 1. By almes-deeds Iob 3 9. For the life of another man This is preserued 1. By almes deeds where necessity doth require for thus Iob saith that hee had not seene any perish for want of cloathing c. and some there are in this danger continually vnlesse they be relieued and he that seeth it and hath wherewithall to helpe them but doth not if they perish is guilty of their death 2. To helpe in time of danger 1. King 18.13 2. By rescuing and helping a man in any danger as Obadiah hid the Prophets of the Lord in caues to saue them from Ahab and Iezabel in time of persecution 3 By patience and me●knes 3. By patience and meekenesse preuenting quarrels and bloudshed that doth otherwise often times follow The parts of this gentlenes and meekenes are 1. Soft answers when any meanes be vsed to prouoke vs Prou. 15.1 for a soft answer putteth away strife Dauids fury was calmed when Abigail came vnto him with gentle and pleasing words and without doubt seruants and children might escape many cruell blowes if they would frame their tongues to this soft answering 2. A stayed temper of affections whereby wee are not suddenly moued and for trifling matters neither doe wee keepe our anger as hath beene shewed already Be slow to anger and let not the sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath for thus is this dangerous sinne preuented which for want of this stayd temper many doe
bountifull reward euen euerlasting life They of the Church of Rome are afraid that by teaching this all good workes would be neglected and therefore make men beleeue that they may perfectly keepe the Law yea and doe workes of supererrogation also more then the Law requireth at their hands but you may easily perceiue by that which hath beene said how little cause there is of any such feare The sonnes of Belial indeede men without all grace growe secure hereupon and endeauour to doe nothing themselues because Christ hath done all for them but they are fowly deceiued as they shall finde to their cost another day The Apostle saith not simply He hath fulfilled the Law for vs Rom. 8.4 but with this addition which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit that is for vs which would faine be righteous and keepe the Law our selues but through the weaknesse of the flesh are not able hee hath done nothing therefore for these secure persons 2. Duty To rely onely vpon Christ The second duty is to cast out the anchor of our hope of eternall life onely vpon the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus and not vpon any merits of our owne no not whereunto we are inabled by the merits of Christ Iesus For as hee saide vnto Paul My grace is sufficient for thee 2. Cor. 12. so may it be said of his merits and righteousnesse His righteousnesse is sufficient for vs. Either it alone must make vs righteous or not at all that must not doe somewhat and our owne righteousnes somewhat the Lord will admit no such partnership Rom. 11.6 But if it be of grace it is no more of workes saith hee else were grace no grace if of workes it is no more of grace else were worke no more worke Our good workes are ordained of God as a way to eternall life Ephes 2.10 verse 9. that we should walke in them they merit nothing lest any man should boast Let the Roman Catholiques therefore sit at anchor here if they will let them build their hope vpon this sandy foundation but let vs sticke fast and remaine vnmoueable vpon the rocke Christ Iesus let vs looke for the sweetning of all our imperfect good workes from the perfume of his righteousnesse that thus wee may be sure to be accepted before God his Father at the last day Quest 28. In which wordes is his exaltation set downe and how many be the degrees hereof Answ In these words The third day hee rose againe from the dead and ascended into Heauen he sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty and from thence he shall come to iudge both the quicke and the dead And of this there be three degrees also Quest 29. Which is the first and in which words Answ First In that he arose againe from death to life and ascended vp into Heauen In these words The third day he arose againe from the dead and ascended vp into Heauen Two branches of the fift Article Explan As the Lord Iesus taking vpon him the worke of our redemption was greatly humbled as hath beene shewed so when this worke was finished he was againe highly exalted and looke by what steps of humiliation he descended by the like also he ascended till he came to the height of his glory beginning first to rise from the lowest in that out of the nethermost earth he goeth vp to the highest Heauens Of this Article there be two branches The third day hee arose againe from the dead is the first He ascended vp into Heauen is the second Concerning the first Being laid into the Sepulchre by Ioseph of Arimathea and a great stone rolled to the doore of the Sepulchre a watch also was set to keepe his body lest his Disciples stould come by night and steale it away and say He is risen againe being I say thus strongly guarded he is not hereby hindered but powerfully riseth and commeth forth of the Sepulchre the third day after his buriall which was the Lords day or first day of the weeke as he had foretold vnto his Disciples Proofe for the grounds of holy Scripture Math. 28. Mark 16. Ioh. 20. Luk. 24. from whence this is taken the history recorded by the foure Euangelists doth plainely declare thus much who doe all set forth his rising againe with the circumstances thereof Generally this time was the time of the Passeouer to shew that the true Paschall Lambe was now come into the world and the religious killing of all other lambs as meerely a figuratiue and shadowing ceremony should now cease the substance it selfe being now present Againe it was the first moneth about the middest of it which answereth to our March wherein in this Northern Hemisphere of the world the pleasant spring doth begin to shew that the earth did in her kind reioyce to receiue the Lord reuiued from the dead according to that of Melancthon Melancth Ecce renascentis testatur gratia mundi Omnia cum Domino dona red sse suo See how the worlds grace reuiu'd doth shew With the Lord of all all gifts return'd anew Gal 5 2. Thirdly it was early in the morning before the Sun to shew that a brighter Sun the Sun of righteousnesse was risen to the world Fourthly it was the first day of the weeke when he had lyen all the Iewes Sabboth in the graue to shewe that they are dead still vnto Christ that keepe their holy rests vpon that day as is spoken of circumcision If ye be circumcised Christ profiteth you nothing and to shew that a greater worke was now ended then the creator of the world viz. the redemption of the world and that as vnder the creation the Lords resting day from that great worke was the Sabboth of Gods people so vnder the redemption Christs resurrection day and of ending a greater worke became their Sabboth to endure to the worlds end Fiftly it was the third day after his death and buriall no sooner to shew that hee was truly dead without all deceit no later lest through his longer tarrying the faith of his Disciples should turne into despaire Now that he did rise againe indeed and that he was not taken away out of his sepulcher as the Iewes his enemies would make the world beleeue is diuersly testified and so fully as that it were shamefull impudency to deny it First he himselfe foretold thus much sometime darkely Ioh. 16.16 Yet a little while and ye shall not see me and a little while againe and yee shall see me Sometime plainely Math. 12.40 As Ionah was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly so must the Sonne of man be in the heart of the earth Sometime againe more plainely Math. 17.12 23. The Son of man shall be deliuered into the hands of sinners and be crucified and slaine and rise againe the third day Secondly as he foretold so that it came to passe the Angels doe witnesse He is
merits as it were with incense out of a censor what neede haue we of Saint or Angell to helpe vs to accesse and acceptance before the Father Yea I neede not say what neede but what Faith can we haue in so doing seeing that both himselfe hath bidden vs aske in his owne name and in the case of sinne-guiltinesse wee are directed onely to him as our onely Mediator and Aduocate Wherefore the profession of the Church of Rome is in this point by all meanes to bee reiected as a profession and practice of infidelity in Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father Their comparison from earthly Princes are chaffie and of no moment if they be brought to the ballance of the Sanctuary and are meerely colours whereby they seeke to dawbe ouer their blinde deuotion and to gull the doting people Quest 31 Which is the third degree of his exaltation and in which words Answ Thirdly he shall come from Heauen at the ende of the World to iudge all that shall then be found liuing and all that haue dyed since the world began in these words From thence hee shall come to iudge both the quicke and the dead Explan For the meaning of this Article it is opposite to that which setteth downe the first degree of his humiliation for as there of God he was made Man yea a poore man vnder the gouernment of Ioseph and Mary so heere hee is of a poore man set ouer all both rich and poore great and small that they might be disposed of according to his pleasure And as there he was vnder earthly Iudges and Rulers who did often decree hard things against him so here hee comes as Iudge and Ruler of all to decree vnalterably extreame things against all the stoutest of his enemies and comfortable things for all his louers and friends He shall come from Heauen that is as man for thus onely hee can remooue from place to place his God-head euer fils all places as man then hee shall come downe visibly and openly with great glory and troopes of Angels about him as Iudges are wont in pompe and with great attendance to ride their circuits and he shall come downe towards this nether part of the world where they haue liued whose causes shall be heard and proceeded in as Iudges are wont to go to sit in Iudgement in such places as wherin they dwel which are to be brought before them To iudge those that shal be then liuing for the World shall be full of people euen to the houre of his comming and then the dead being raised out of their Graues euen all from the first Adam shall be ioyned with the liuing who shall onely instead of dying be changed and thus all people together of all Countries and Nations shall bee presented before his Tribunall to receiue sentence according to the equity yea and iustice of his Gospell whether of Absolution to passe into the Kingdome of the Father or of condemnation into the Kingdome of Hell with the Diuell and his Angels for euer Proofe Secondly for the grounds of holy Scriptures whereupon all this is founded the comming of Christ to iudgement according to all these circumstances is plainely heere set downe in many Places First that he shall come againe the Angels sent of God for the same end told his Disciples thus much immediatly after his ascension saying Acts 1.12 This Iesus shall euen so come downe from heauen as ye haue seene him goe vp to heauen Heb. 9.28 And in another place it is said that Christ vnto them that looke for him shall appeare the second time without sin vnto saluation and of himselfe he saith I goe away but will come againe Secondly that he shall come to iudge Iohn 14. not in pouerty but in Maiestie not basely accompanied but gloriously with Angels not like a Lamb to be slaine againe but like a Lyon to teare in pieces his enemies all this doth he himselfe promise saying Then shall they see the Son of Man come in the clowds of Heauen with power and great glory Mat 24.30.31 and he shal send his Angels with the sound of a Trumpet c. And what is here wanting is further supplied in the next Chapter Chap. 25.31.32 When the Son of man commeth in his glory and all the holy Angels with him then shal he sit vpon the Throne of his glory and before him shall be gathered all nations c. Thirdly that the world shall bee then full of people liuing as at other times and that all shal not die before the Apostle sheweth both where purposely he entreateth at large of the resurrection saying We shall not all sleepe but we shall be changed in a moment 1 Cor. 15.51 in the twinkling of an eye at the last trumpet 1 The. 4 and where he comforts the Church of God in this that their dead friends and they aliue shall meete againe at the last day And the Lord himselfe plainely saith that as it was in the dayes of Noah and in the daies of Lot so shall it be at the comming of the Son of man then the world was full of people which were eating and drinking marrying and giuing in mariage c til the floud came Luc. 17.27 swept them all away till fire came from Heauen and consumed them all so shall it be at Christs cōming to iudgment Fourthly that quick dead shal all come to iudgement before him was long since confirmed vnto Iohn by vision He saw a Throne set and the Son of of Man sitting theron the books opened and al euen the dead as wel as the liuing brought before him to be iudged according to the things written in the bookes Reuel 20.12 then the earth gaue vp the dead buried there the sea gaue vp the dead that were therin Rom. 14.10 And S Paul hence giues warning that wee iudge not one another For wee must al appeare before the Iudgemēt seat of Christ Fiftly that the maner of his comming shall be most terrible to all his enemies but comfortable to his friends and faithfull people for the terrour it is set forth by comparisons taken from the flood Luk. 17.27 fearefully drowning the old world without mercy or compassion from the fire and brimstone descending vpon Sodome Prou. 1. from the sorrowes comming vpon a woman in trauell Math 24. from a seuere master returning from a farre countrey and adiudging his vnprofitable seruants to be cut off and to haue their portion in the place of weeping and gnashing of teeth and from a thiefe breaking into an house to rob and slay in the dead time of the night c. For euen such and more terrible by farre shall Christs comming to iudgement be 2. Pet 3.10 Againe this terrour is set forth by particular accidents that shall accompany this time viz flaming fire in which the Lord shall come to render vengeance to the wicked
Church of God against which our aduersaries may onely barke but not be able to vtter one word with reason more specially for our ministery howsoeuer perhaps we might answere that when an ordinary calling cannot be had there is place for an extraordinary yet we can truly maintaine that wee can deriue canonically our ordination from the successors of the Apostles as Master Mason hath learnedly declared Proofe Beleeuers onely the true Church Now it followeth to be proued that they onely are the true Church before God who are beleeuers And this appeareth plainly first for that many of the visible Church are reprobates and without part in Gods Kingdome as our Sauiour Christ teacheth by many parables both of the sower that went forth to sowe some of his seede falling vpon the thorny ground Math. 13 some vpon stony and some vpon the high way and so bringing forth no fruit and in the parable of the drawnet Math. 25. of the good corne and the tares of the Virgins of the seruants with their talents c. all which tend to set forth the state of Gods Church to be such as that therein there be many castawayes Moreouer hee teacheth the same plainely Math. 7.21 wherein he saith They shall cry Lord Lord open vnto vs we haue prophesied in thy name and c. and in another place Thou hast eaten and drunke in our streetes Luk. 13.25 and taught in our Synagogues but I will say vnto you depart from me yee workers of iniquity Which being so it must needes follow that all the visible Church is not Gods true Church but onely the company of true beleeuers Secondly this is further manifest because faith onely setteth vs into Iesus Christ and maketh vs members of his body Eph 4.12 which onely is the true Church for to this effect speaketh the Apostle They were broken off by vnbeliefe and thou sta●dest by faith Rom. 11.20 viz Ingrafted into the Oliue tree Iesus Christ out of whom the Iewes were broken by vnbeliefe Faith onely maketh vs the children of Abraham Gal. 3. and heires by promise Thirdly the same appeareth from the description of the true Church to the Ephesians which hee calling them and magnifying Gods mercy in calling them to this estate he saith Eph. 2.8 By grace yee are saued through faith in Iesus Christ and againe through him yee are Citizens w●th the Saints Vers 19.20.21 and of the household of God and are built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Iesus Christ himselfe being the chiefe corner stone in whom all the building coupled together groweth to an holy Temple in the Lord. Here faith onely is that which makes vs grow to this Temple and to be thus neere vnto the Lord. No man therefore can beleeue himselfe to be a member of the true Church before God by reason of any outward priuiledge entring him into the visible company of Gods people vnlesse he be inwardly before God through sauing faith made a member of the same Fourthly The Church to be beleeued and not beleeued in Jeron part S. Epist 41. Non dicimus credo in sed credo ecclesiam that the Church is only to be beleeued thas is acknowledged where it is found to be and to be cleued vnto but not to be beleeued in that is to be made the foundation of our faith This point as it consisteth of seuerall members so are they distinctly and seuerally to be laid open First it is to be acknowledged wheresoeuer it is found out by the markes before spoken of thus the Church at Rome was once famous all ouer the world and Peter indeauoured much after that he had once beene with Cornelius and the Gentiles Rom. 1 8 Act 12.5.6 to bring the Church of the Iewes to acknowledge them to bee the Church of God also and indeed how otherwise can I say I beleeue the Church Which is firmely to hold and constantly to acknowledge it Secondly it is also to be cleaued vnto for when the Church began first to flourish vnder the Gospell it is said Act. 2 that God added vnto the Church daily such as should be saued he prouided that they should be ioyned vnto the assemblies of his people so that as Peter saide vnto the Lord whether should we goe thou hast the wordes of eternall life Ioh. 6.68 so saith euery faithfull man and woman of his spouse the Church Eternall life is no where else to be obtained all the creatures out of the Arke perished so doe all that keepe out of the Church The word preached therefore is by all to be attended the Sacraments are reuerently to be receiued the assemblies of Gods people to be frequented Cantic 1.8 Thus the Lord directeth all his to doe in that mysticall song Get thee forth by the steppes of the flockes and feede their Kids by the tents of the shepheards Thirdly it is not to bee made the foundation of our faith because so the spouse should be set in the roome of the husband Christ and because that so we might erre and fall from true Christianity as any visible Church may doe and many haue done For the first it was before shewed that there can be none other foundation for the next it is manifest that the Church of the Iewes did often times erre and chiefly in crucifying the Lords Messiah The Church of Galatia did erre so farre that the Apostle professeth himselfe to bee afraid that hee had laboured in vaine amongst them hee was afraide also of the Church of Rome for the same errour which maketh him so long in prouing iustification by faith without the workes of the Law Reuel 3.3 The Church of Sardis was so farre gone that the Lord saith it had onely a name to be aliue but was indeede dead and the Church of Laodicea was spiritually miserable poore blind and naked and ecclesiasticall history doth shew that scarce any Church hath beene free but at sometime infected with heresie which though it was not in former times noted in the Church of Rome yet I take it it could not be farre from heresie Jerom Damasus when the head thereof Liberius subscribed vnto Arianisme and Honorius vnto the errour of the Monothelites when Marcellinus sacrificed to Idols and Siluester the second sold himselfe to the Diuell and became a Coniurour and Negromancer But say it was free a long time doth that proue that it must needs be so euer nay rather it is likely that as other Churches had their time of infection formerly so the Romans turne came more lately Againe that the visible Church may fall into heresie is plaine because it hath sometimes made decrees and afterwards the contrary hereunto Of the supremacy Con Nic Can. 6. euen in matters of great moment As about the supremacy of Bishops In the counsell of Nice it is decreed that as the Bishop of Alexandria had authority ouer all Egypt
And the Lord doth receiue all such as come vnto him whether they be Pharisees Publicans or common people of what calling soeuer bond or free male or female Iew or Grecian or Barbarian of what estate sect or sex soeuer prodigall children lost sheep Gal 3 28. Luc. 15. 1 Tim 1.12 notorious sinners persecutors and blasphemers Secondly for places Christ saith That neither at Ierusalem nor at Iaacobs well the Father shall be worshipped but euery where true worshippers should worship him in spirit and truth that is Iohn 4 20 the Church should not be tyed to this or that place but be vniuersally in all places and Peter sayth In euery nation hee that feareth God and worketh righteousnesse is accepted with him Acts 10 35 And not to multiply more Texts of Scripture wee haue the places of Gods Church euen in the Apostles times particularly registred At Ierusalem in Caesarea Palestina in Tyre Countries where the Gospel hath beene receiued Euseb Jrenaeus Necephorus Tertullian Vincentius Lyrinensis c. and Ptolemais in Antioch of Syria in Tharsus of Cilicia in Mesopotamia Ephesus and Smyrna amongst the Sardians the Trallians the Philadelphians the Colossians in Magnesia Hierapolis Pergamopolis Troas in Nicomedia Phrygia Mysia Galatia Ancyra in Vicomanus Pontus Amastria and Synope amongst the Parthians Medes Persians Hyrcans Brachmans Indians Armenians and Elamites And in all the chiefe Countries of Africa in Aegypt Thebais Marmarica Cyrenaica Numidia Mauritania Getulia Lybia Aethiopia in Alexandria Carthage the Ilands Pathmos Creet Gortyna and Messana a city of Sicily In Greece there were many famous Churches amongst the Athenians the Corinthians the Lacedaemonians in Achaia amongst the Philippians and Thessalonians in Laryssa Thracia Anchiolis and Debeltis In Illiricum in Dalmatia in Croatia in Corinthia Vindelicia Rhetia Noricus Laureacus by Danubius In Maguntia Treniris amongst the Tungrians Agrippines and Bardenickes In Germany Rome Tirinus Genua and Derdona In France at Vienna Lugdune c. and amongst the Celts In Spaine at Compluto and Tolledo in Scotland and England amongst the Sarmatians Dacians and Scythians and other barbarous people For the times of the Church The Church in al ages descending from Adam no age hath euer beene without the Church of God though sometimes it hath beene amongst a very few and sometimes inuisible to the world 1 King 19.18 At the first it was in Adams family when Abel was slaine that God might not want a Church hee sent Seth into the world Afterwards it was in the Family of Noah then of Abraham Isaac Iaacob and of the Patriarkes and their posterity the Iewes vnto whom few of other nations ioyned themselues and so most were without the Church and at the comming of the Gospell it was amongst the Disciples and Followers of Christ and afterwards in all Nations as hath beene already shewed of which though many reuolted to Turcisme and many were infected with the superstions of Popery or rather oppressed with the tyranny of the Papacy yet some fewe still cleaued vnto the truth and in these last times the light brake forth againe out of darkenesse and the pure preaching of Gods Word out of infinite corruptions by false interpretations blind traditions and affected wrestings The true Church was inuisible in Elias his time who thought that he was remaining himselfe alone vntill that the Lord had told him that he had left seuen thousands that had not bowed their knees to Baal and whose mouthes had not kissed him which the Apostle applyeth also to his times wherein the Iewes did so much oppose themselues against the proceedings of the Gospell that they seemed to be all enemies to the truth yet without doubt he saith that there is a remnant through the election of grace Rom. 11.5 Luk. 24.21 And the same was the state of the Church at the time of Christs apprehension and crucifying all fled from him one of the chiefe denied him others plainely professed their distrust in him and oftentimes since hath it beene brought to the same passe through the tyranny of Persecutors and Heretiques and chiefely by the tyranny of the Roman Bishops who as they were giuen ouer to corruptions together with their Churches in Italy by their proud affection of an vniuersall Dominion ouer all other Churches so they haue euer enforced the same corruptions vpon others so strongly as that few durst mutter against them but some haue euer been endued with heroycall spirits to resist and speake and write against the same by whose forwardnesse wee may gather that there were many more in secret in all times which groned vnder the burthen of popish superstitions and that Luther and Zwinglius were not the first as they would beare the world in hand as though before them there were neuer any dissenting from the Church of Rome but to lay down briefly what we finde in Ecclesiasticall Histories After that the foundations of a new Church vnder the Gospell were laide by Christ and his Disciples the stormes and billowes of persecution arose and continued vnder the raigne of many Heathen Emperours for the space of three hundred yeeres and vpward by all which though it was brought vnder and much hazarded of drowning yet it was onely drenched and by the good Emperour Constantine the Great repaired and much refreshed Yet this was but a calme for a season for in his sonnes times Arianisme was set abroach caused almost as great troubles as in the time of Heathenisme the Orthodox notwithstanding claue still to the trueth and manfully endured all the brunts of this long lasting storme though it was at times more then two hundred yeeres After this the Monothelits and Nestorian Heretiques lifted vp their heads and hauing higher powers on their sides did not a litle by their persecutions trouble the Church of God After these things about the yeere 800. the worshipping of Images beganne to be set vp by a wicked Empresse Irene of Constantinople against which Gregory opposed himselfe allowing the vse of Images but not the adoration nor praying before them and the Diuines vnder Charles the Great But before this the Church of Rome hauing aduanced it selfe by the meanes of Phocas who of a common Souldiour came to the Empire of Constantinople by murdering his Master Mauritius the lawfull Emperour his wife and children laboured much with superstitious ceremonies and stroue to conforme all other Churches hereunto For this cause anno 617. Columbanus and Gallus were sent forth with the authority of the Roman Bishop to set vp their ceremonies in all places but were in all likelyhood then preuented for two Councels were hereupon assembled the one in Bauaria against the ceremonies of Columbanus and Gallus Auentin Annalium Batorum lib. 3. Author vitae Eustatij in 3. tom operum Beda Beda Vincentius Balaeus ●oan Mayer Bed ●d 3. c. 25. lib. 4. cap 4. Episcop Lindisfarnensis the other in Mariscon vnder King Lotharius of both which the bare titles only remaine
leauing scarce sufficient for their owne maintenance Nor doth this fauour the Anabaptisticall Community of all things for we are not otherwise to conceiue of the Community of things in the Apostles times but onely that as any man did sell and dedicate any thing to the Apostles and Disciples which had not wherewithall else to liue so that onely so dedicated did remaine as the Church treasury out of which the faithfull that wanted were relieued there remaining vnto euery man still some things which were proper vnto himselfe or at least there remained a liberty to haue retained some parcell vnto himselfe As in all populous places abounding with poore there be stockes and treasuries at this day the onely difference is that then men being more deuoted the necessities of the Saints greater it was more aboundantly brought into this treasury but now more sparingly For if all things had beene common that exhortation to the Church of Corinth 1. Cor. 16. of laying aside for the poore euery first day of the weeke as God had blessed euery man had bin to no purpose there had bin no vse of their loue-feasts which were made by the richer for the comfort of the poore neither could some by excesse haue beene drunken and some hungry as they were when the vse of these feasts was corrupted amongst them 1. Cor 11. Col. 3.1 Sixtly and lastly for our Communion with the Saints departed it is first in our conuersing with them by heauenly thoug●ts according to that exhortation to the Colossians Set your affections on things which are aboue by holinesse of life according to that profession of the Apostle to the Philippians Our conuersation is in Heauen from whence we expect a Sauiour Phil. ● 20 and by sighing after Heauen according to that consolation of the Corinthians 2. Cor. 5.2 Therefore we sigh desiring to be cloathed with our house which is from Heauen Secondly in our like affections vnto Gods glory and against the enemies of the Church for as we pray for the aduancement of the one and the confusion of the other so much more doe they for they cry Reuel 6.10 How long Lord holy and true doest thou not iudge and auenge our blood-shed by them vpon the earth which they say not because they are indued with lesse charity towards their enemies and persecutors then faithfull Martyrs vpon earth who haue prayed for them but partly through the loue of their fellow-seruants still subiect to their fury vnlesse they be cut off and partly through their vnderstanding cleared to discerne reprobate persecutors and chiefely through the desire that Gods glory may bee magnified by taking away such maine lets and hinderances of the Gospels proceedings For it may well bee held that the Saints in Heauen doe cry vnto God in generall against Sathan and all his instruments at all times knowing their fury euen to the end of the world against Gods people in the world but the errour is to beleeue that they know our particular necessities or can heare vs vpon earth complaining of thē which is a property of the Godhead onely which is infinite and all-sufficient to such as call vpon him 1. Duty To renounce wicked societies Hauing thus at large dealt with the meaning of this Article and the grounds of holy Scripture from whence it is taken it remaineth now that we lay down the duties Of which the first is To abandon all wicked societies because we professe fellowship with Saints betwixt whom and these there is no agreement For What agreement is there 2. Cor. 6 saith the Apostle betwixt God and Belial betwixt light and darknes betwixt righteousnesse and vnrighteousnesse wherefore wee are forbidden to haue fellowship with such 1. Cor. 5 1● If any bee called a brother that is a Fornicator or Drunkard or Idolater through couetousnesse with such an one eate not and againe If any walke inordinately we command you that you withdraw your selues from them And 2. Thes● ● ● With the foole saith Salomon thou shalt learne folly and the companion of fooles shall be afflicted with many other places purposely restraining vs from such companions And indeede how canst thou beleeue thy selfe to be of the Communion of Saints and yet haue voluntary inward fellowship with the wicked Verely no more then those that liued among the Samaritans and had dealings with them could defend themselues to bee of the Iewes Common-wealth seeing as the woman of Samaria told Christ Ioh. ● the Iewes meddlenot with the Samaritans no more then they which haunt the Stewes daily can defend themselues to be chast and honest men seeing that such come not into these dangerous places It is true I grant that the Saints may come amongst vicious persons as amongst strangers to eat and to drinke to buy and to sell with them or they may vse their company to win them to Christ as S. Paul saith that to all men hee became all things that hee might winne some but to make them our choyce companions to delight in them and single them out to bee our consorts can no more stand with the communion of Saints then the Sunnes cleerest light with the most pitchy darknesse of the night Let vs abstaine then from such company with John the Apostle let vs cry Properemus hinc Let vs hasten hence lest the house fall vpon vs where an enemy of the truth is when hee vnderstood entring the bath that Cerinthus the Heretique was there 3. Duty To walke in the light The third duty is to walke in the light of Gods holy Word by vertuous liuing because of our fellowship with Christ through him with God the Father for God is light saith S. Iohn and if wee walke in darknesse and say that wee haue fellowship with him we lye and doe not truely 1 Ion. 1.7 So Christ calleth himselfe the light of the world and pronounceth this the condemnation of the world because light was come and men loued darkenesse more then light because their deeds were euill that is when hee came to inlighten them with his holy precepts of faith and repentance they neglected this and persisted in vnbeleefe and sinne which would bee their damnation Whosoeuer therefore treadeth in the same steps may well expect the same end they are not in Christ they are farre from any vnion with him for such walke after the spirit speaking in the Word and so there is no condemnation vnto them Rom. 8.1 This is the spirituall whordome of which the Prophet did so much complaine causing a diuorce betwixt the Lord and his people and so a depriuation of all goodly ornaments before bestowed so that as the case of a woman is which hath played the whore and for this is put away from her husband with shame and without all mercy burnt in the fire so is our case if wee neglect his will and follow our owne corruption our vnion with the Lord is
old age c. The sixth command against murther was written in Cains conscience for that made him to cry out after the murther of his brother Abel Gen. 4 My sin is greater then J am able to beare and whosoeuer shall finde Caine shall kill him Vers 23.24 And Lamech from hence aggrauateth his owne case when he had slaine a man for that he had this law not onely written in his heart but a warning in his great Grand-father Cain And immediatly after the flood the Lord doth expresly set downe Gen. 9.6 Who so sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed for in the Image of God hath he made man Gen. 39.9 The seuenth command was to bee seene in Iosephs heart when being tempted by his mistresse to adultery he said Shal I doe this and sinne against God in the other sonnes of Iaacob also Gen. 34 when Dinah their sister had beene defiled by Shechem who doe therefore put him to death Gen 31.30 The eight Commandement Laban vrgeth vpon Iaacob saying Though thou wentest thy way because thou longedst to come to thy Fathers house yet why hast thou stolne away my Gods vnto which he answereth acknowledging this to be so great a fault as that he saith Gen. 44.5 With whomsoeuer they be found let him dye And this was held to be so haynous a sinne as that Iaacobs sons being charged by the steward with Iosephs siluer cup stealing yeelded themselues vpon the finding of it with any of them to become his bondmen Gen. 20.9 The ninth Commandement heathen Abimelech shewed to be written in his heart when hee complained of Abrahams false testimony concerning his wife of whom hee had said that she was his sister Gen. 26.9 telling him that he had done things which ought not to be done and Isaack is afterwards reproued by him also for the like faults Lastly for the tenth so many as did knowe God aright could not but acknowledge also that it was a sinne against his Maiesty to entertaine euill motions in the minde contrary to any of these Lawes because where these are there cannot be the vprightnesse commanded vnto Abraham God cannot bee honoured with the heart and thus much of the first thing The difference of the lawes of God Now we are to speake of the difference betwixt the Law of God containing these Commandements and other Lawes giuen also by the Lord for besides this Law which is called Morall there is another called Iudiciall and a third Ceremoniall The Morall is so called because it is a perpetuall rule of good maners without the obseruation of which the world cannot stand or if it should stand it would bee but as a confused Chaos and without forme of a world The Iudiciall is so called because as a statute-law it setteth down with what iudgements and censures men were to be censured that did offend in speciall cases The Ceremoniall is so called because it is altogether conuersant about rites and ceremonies shewing what ceremonies were to be vsed by the church of God and what not in his seruice Esa 1.12 1. Sam 15.22 Now the difference betwixt these standeth in many things First in that the morral Law was published and written by God himselfe so as that all the people did receiue it from his mouth but it was not so with the Iudiciall and Ceremoniall for the Lord instructed Moses onely herein and the people receiued them from him who wrote them downe for them 2. The Morrall Law was first giuen as most worthy the other two afterwards as not so much to be regarded in respect of it for when the Morall Law hath beene neglected and the other most diligently obserued the Lord hath beene as much moued as if no Law at all had beene regarded which may easily be gathered both from that of the Prophet Esay Bring no more oblations in vaine incense is an abomination vnto me c. And from that of Samuel to Saul Hath the Lord as great pleasure in burnt offerings and sacrifices as when the voyce of the Lord is obeyed behold to obey is better then sacrifice and to harken then the fat of rams that is to obey the Morall Law farre exceedeth all ceremonies And Dauid hath the like saying in the Psalmes Doe I eate buls flesh or drinke the blood of goats Psal 50 offer vnto God praise and pay thy vowes vnto him c. And I will haue mercy saith Christ and not sacrifice with many more places to the same effect The same also appeareth from the practise of corrupt man which hath euer beene most diligently to obserue ceremonies but most negligently the precepts of the morall Law for our nature is set vpon contraries and therfore looke what we should most carefully obserue that we most neglect looke what should be cared for in the second place that wee looke vnto in the first Math 23. The Pharisies tithed mint and cummin in the payment of their tithes but let passe the weighty matters of the Law and thus was it the manner of the Iewes euer to doe Wherewith say they in Mc●a shall we come before the Lord Mich. 6.6.7 Shall I come before him with burnt offerings and calues of a yeere old will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rammes or ten thousand riuers of oyle And this is the manner of most men at this day they are most strict in outward obseruances but most remisse in the substance of godlinesse in the very act of hearing and prayer not regarding that innocency charity and righteousnesse which should accompany this outward deuotion 3. The ceremoniall Law hath beene oftentimes broken without sin but the morall Law neuer without some speciall countermand from God Gen. 22. Exod 12.36 as when Abraham was bidden to kill his sonne Isaack when the Israelites were bidden to rob the Egyptians yea euen in these very cases the learnedst of the Schoolemen do by sound distinction maintaine that the law it selfe was not broken no nor dispensed withall if we speake properly but onely the matter or obiect of the precept changed by God so the Israelits did not steale from or defraud the Egyptians but tooke their owne when God who hath an absolute power to dispose of all these had before by his command transferred the right and dominion of those rights from the possessors to the takers So likewise did Abraham in offering to kill his sonne vpon Gods command no more breake the Law then a Souldier that at the command of the Generall who hath power of life and death killeth his fellow Souldier As for that act of circumcision or sacrificing Math. 12.5 by which our Sauiour Christ saith that the Priests breake the Sabbath it is not so to be vnderstood as though the Law were broken being rightly vnderstood or as though the Lord went about to iustifie this that a man might without sinne breake this command but hee speaketh of
their strictnesse shewing their weaknesse in maintaining that it was against the Law to doe any worke at all vpon the Sabbath day for that in this sense their very Priests did continually breake the Law His intent then was to shew the right meaning of the command to be this that they should doe no manner worke except such as was of present necessity or helped to the sanctification of the Sabbath day Now for the Ceremoniall Law that it might bee omitted without sinne the Lord himselfe sheweth where hee saith I will not reprooue thee for thy sacrifices or burnt offerings Psal 50.8 that haue not beene continually before me and for Circumcision all the time of the people of Israels being in the wildernesse for the space of forty yeares their children were vncircumcised and yet no sinne imputed and without doubt they failed in sundry other things also Ioshua 5. Matth. 12. as the Priest did in giuing Dauid of the shewbread which it was not lawful for the people to eat and yet we do not find that they were therfore reproued by any of the Prophets howsoeuer it cannot bee denyed but that when they presumed to alter any ceremony they were grieuously punished Leuit 10. as when the two sonnes of Aaron aduentured to sacrifice with common fire they were destroyed by fire comming from heauen When Vzzah presumed to carry the Arke vpon a Cart and to stay it with his hands when as he ought not to haue touched it and it should haue beene borne vpon mens shoulders he was smitten with present death All which I doe not speake to the end 2. Sam. 6. that men should thinke that any of Gods lawes might lightly haue bin brokē without offence but that there being iust cause the ceremonial law was many times transgressed and yet the transgressors remained blameles which is not so with the Morall 4 The Moral Law being neglected maketh men of how holy a sect and profession soeuer worse then Infidels that are without all written lawes and yet obserue the Law of Nature according to the doctrine of the Apostle Rom 2.26 Vers 27. If thou bee a transgressor of the Law thy Circumcision is made vncircumcision and shall not the vncircumcision which is by Nature if it keepe the Law condemne thee which by letter and circumcision art a Transgressor of the Law It maketh men worse then bruit Beastes which haue not a reasonable soule according to that of the Prophet The Oxe knoweth his owner Esay 1.1 and the Asse his Masters Crib but Israel hath not knowne mee It is not so with the ceremoniall that being neglected maketh only worse then the seruants and peculiar people of the Lord should be and a confused multitude of altogether 5. The ceremoniall law was very chargeable and costly the Aulter could not bee maintained without costs the first borne could not bee redeemed without manifold and deepe costs neither could theee be an expiation of sin without costs and charges so that it was burthensome vnto the the people and grieuous to bee borne but the Morall Law putteth to no such busie multiplicitie and encombrance of cost it requireth the right disposition of the heart and then obedience in pract●se will easily follow 6 The Morall Law engrauen in Tables of stone was kept in the Arke which was a signe that it should last perpetuallie euen as Heauen the Throne of God in the figure whereof it was put for euen in Heauen the Morall Law is obserued for which cause it is that we pray that Gods wil may be done in earth as it is in Heauen But it is not so with the other lawes these being to last only to the fulfilling of all by Christ Reas 1 The cerimoniall Law ceased For first to speake of the Ceremoniall Law that was then without doubt to cease euen as there is no further vse of a Candle when the Sunne is risen of a picture when the person is present of the A. B. C. when the Grammer is taught For the ceremonies of the old Testament had none other vse but a little as they were able to set foorth Christ Iesus who was to shed his blood for our sinnes as the blood of beasts was shed and sprinkled in the Tabernacle and Temple of the Iewes to offer himselfe vpon the Altar of the crosse as the beastes were offered there vpon an Altar to beare our sinnes as the scape Goate did the sinnes of the Iewes especially and so of the rest according to which Saint Iohn saith Ioh. 1.17 The Law was giuen by Moses but grace and truth came by Iesus Christ and this may serue for a first reason of the abrogation of the Mosaicall Ceremonies Reas 2 Secondly the renting of the vaile of the temple at Christs suffering and the destruction of the Temple not long after which could neuer since bee built againe shew the same For all the time that the ceremoniall law was of force God would not suffer it to be thus but if for sinne he did he soone returned in mercy againe at the humiliation of his people and restored these seruices Reas 3 Heb. 7.8.9 Thirdly Christ was a new high Priest after the order of Melchisedeck who was greater then Aaron and therefore his order was to cease at the comming of this worthier euen as at the change of head officers amongst the Romans the Dictators ceased when the Emperours came on This argument the Apostle handleth learnedly and at large to the Hebrewes Fourthly Christs comming made vs to be of age when as before men were children and nothing differing from seruants as the Apostle reasoneth to the Galathians saying When wee were children we were in bondage vnder the rudiments of the world c. Now such things as serue for the instruction of children are of no further vse when they come to be men so is it with this law 2. Iudiciall Lawes cease Secondly as for the Iudaicall lawes some are willing to grant that those of them were to cease which concerned some speciall ciuill customes of that people the entailing of their Lands the freedome of seruants in the yeare of Iubilee and such like but as for all those Iudicials which vpheld and backed any Morall Law they would haue them to be still in force and to bind all Christians Of those that lay this yoke vpon vs I must craue pardon and rather thinke that all obligatory power of those Lawes was to cease at the dissolution of the Iewes Common-wealth in as much as those Lawes were by speciall measure of circumstances squared and fitted to the nature of that people as well in the Ciuill as Ecclesiasticall estate and gouernment Here I tread in reuerend Master Caluins stepps Cal Instit lib. 4. cap. 20. Sect. 16. who in his Institutions doth very soundly determine this point shewing that it is neither necessary nor expedient that the Lawes of other Nations should be the same that were
Law is also a Schoolemaster when we are come to Christ euer checking and correcting vs when wee walke not according to the straight rule thereof but the Gospel vpon our humiliation comforteth vs and assureth vs that al our aberrations and going astray are remitted so that there be an heart vnfainedly hating that euill which we doe Rom. 7. Now as there be differences betwixt the Law and the Gosspell so there be some things wherein they agree The agreement of the old Testament and the new Heb. ● 1 Mat 3. 1. In the author God not as the mad Manichees taught the bad God to be the author of the law and the good God the author of the Gospell for the same God which spake by his Son Iesus Christ in these last daies spake also at diuers times and in diuers maners in times past he that said from heauen this is my beloued Son heare ye him the same God spake all these words said from heauen I am thy Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt out of the house of bondage c. 2. They agree in the threatning of sin and vrging obedience vnto the Lord in all things but the Law vrgeth it for feare the Gospel for loue If ye loue me keepe my Commandements the Law as the meritorious cause of life the Gospell as most necessary signes of the life of faith and the way that God hath appointed vs to walke in vnto life the Law giueth no hope in the case of swaruing from the strict rule thereof the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent and where the like hope is giuen by the Prophets they doe rather play Euangelists then Preachers of the Law 3. They agree in this that howsoeuer the Gospell giueth hope to the penitent yet it denieth all hope to those that liue and die in transgression of the Law for against such most common are the threatnings contained in the Gospell They that doe such things Gal. 5.17 shall neuer inherit the Kingdome of Heauen 4. They agree in this that there is no contradiction betwixt them but as they come from one and the same spirit so there is a sweet harmony consent between thē the one only sheweth what God doth strictly require in his iustice the other how his iustice is satisfied and yet his mercy to sinfull man appeareth the one saith he that breaketh the Commandements shall die the other saith that because man through the weaknes of his nature could not but breake them one man that neuer brake any the least of them died in the stead of sinfull man and thus freed him that was the son of death from death and damnation 5. They agree in the Ministers of them both for they of the Law were to be without blemish their lipps were to preserue knowledge they were to liue of their seruice they were diuers sorts both Priests Leuits they were watchmen c. so ought the ministers of the Gospell they must be vnblameable apt to teach they that preach the Gospell are to liue of the Gospell 1. Tim 3. 1. Cor. 9.24 Ephes 4.12 2. Pet. 5.2 some are Doctours some Pastours c. they are Pastours watching and keeping their flockes as those that must giue accounts for them And thus much of the third generall The manner how this law was giuen Exod. 19.20 The next thing to be spoken of in generall is the manner how this Law was giuen and that is described in the nineteenth and twentieth of Exodus 1. First there was great preparation three dayes together the people were sanctified according to the manner of those times by washings and purifyings shewing both what need wee haue by prayer and reading of the holy Scriptures which may bring vs from worldly to heauenly meditations to prepare our selues euer before that we come to heare the Lord speaking vnto vs in the Ministery of his holy word and also how wee must euer be more and more doing away by the Spirit of Sanctification the blots and blemishes of our natures that we may be the fitter to come into the presence of the Holyest 2. Secondly a straight charge was giuen that neither man nor beast vnder paine of death should come neere the Mount whence the Law was to be deliuered but certaine marks were set beyond which none might dare to passe shewing as the Apostle hence noteth 2. Cor. 3.6.7 Heb. 12.19 how glorious was the Law now to bee deliuered and if such as passed the markes set them were without mercy to die the death that much more the transgressours of any of these precepts should die and find no mercy Heb. 12 2● Thirdly the Lord descended with great terrour the Trumpet sounding the earth shaking and Lightnings flying abroad insomuch as that the people are noted to haue run away and Moses himselfe to haue said I tremble and quake shewing that the things here vttered were graue and waightie and to be receiued into the heart with a feare of offending against them and also that when the time shall bee of calling the offenders to account with what wonderfull terrour the Lord will then come against them 4. Almighty God himself spake al these words in the hearing of al the people but whē they were too weak to beare his words and desired that the Lord would not speake any more for so they should die but promised obedience if Moses should speak two tables of stone were giuen vnto him written with Gods own finger that he might carry them to the people shewing hereby how stony-hard our hearts be and that Gods finger alone is able to imprint them there his speech from Heauen must worke in vs a reuerence of them otherwise we shal all be too negligent of his Lawes 5. When Moses had broken these Tables through zeale seeing how God was dishonoured in his absence by golden Calues which they had set vp and worshipped the Lord bad him hew two other Tables and therein he wrote all the words that were in the first shewing hereby that mans heart by Gods creation had all the lawes ready written in it as the Tables prepared by God himselfe had but the heart which he had gotten vnto himselfe by falling away from God is without any letter hereof in effect vntill that the Lord wrote them anew as it was with the Tables prepared by Moses 6. Lastly when Moses had been long with the Lord and came with these Lawes vnto the people his face shone so as they were not able to looke vpon him for which cause he vsed a vaile when hee came vnto them and put it off when hee returned vnto the Lord shewing hereby as S. Paul noteth 2. Cor 3.13 ●4 that the Iewes should not be able to see into the end of the Law Christ Iesus vntill the vale of blindnesse and hardnesse of heart were taken away by the Lord neither yet could any of the Gentiles without the same
in a chest So the Lord would haue vs at any time to come vnto his owne Maiesty and whereas this is slandered with the name of presumption let not any word or sillable tending heerevnto be shewed in all the Scriptures and then wee will yeeld it to bee so also but sure it is that all things there sound to the contrary that God is very gratious to all that seeke vnto him without the help of Aduocates Or if we need an Aduocate as sure we doe such an one as partaketh both natures we haue one appointed vs Iesus Christ the righteous 1 Ioh 2 2. who is the propitiation for our sinnes and therfore I am sure that such as flye to others in auoyding supposed presumption doe incurre very damnable superstition Rom. 10. Now we cannot thus set vp the Lord yet in our hearts vnlesse we know him according to that How shall th●y call vpon him of whom they heard not So how shall wee pray vnto him whom wee know not How shall wee loue him and trust in him Ignoti nulla cupido There is no desire of a thing vnknowne we will neuer take any paines in seruing the Lord vnlesse we know him For this cause is ignorance so much exclaimed against and the knowledge of God so highly commended as that it is said to be life eternall Wherefore wee must also endeauour our selues in this as the foundation of all Ioh 17. H●b 11. seeing he ●hat commeth vnto God must first know what God is But concerning this wee shall not need to adde any more in this place because it hath been already handled in the sixth Question vnder the title What God is Quest. 56. What are wee forbidden in this Commandement Answ First Atheisme which is the acknowl●dgement of no God Secondly ignorance which is the neglect of he knowledge of God or of his Word Thirdly prophanenesse which is a regardlesnes of God and of h s worship that is prayer hearing of the Word and receiuing of the Sacram nts Fourthly inward Idolatry which is the giuing of Gods worship vnto creatures by praying vnto them trusting in them or setting our hearts vpon them Explan After the duty Vices forbidden in this Commandement 1. Breach by Atheisme heere follow the vices and sins against this Commandement not all but the principall which haue also other branches springing from them The first and maine breach of this Commandement that striketh at the very head is Atheisme a monster in nature whereby the creature riseth against the Creatour not as the men of Babell to stop the passage of his iudgements but vnlike to all men to disanull him to make him without being who giueth being to all to pull him out of his Throne and to leaue him no authority who is aboue Kings and Princes and to put downe his power who alone by his power vpholdeth all things and in whom only we liue and moue Yet such a sin as this there is amongst monstrous and vnnaturall men and that not only amongst some barbarous people in profession which is the heighth of Atheisme but euen secretly in the heart with which kinde many are infected euen vnder the Gospell And this is when men doe but in their hearts imagine that it is all vanity which is spoken of God or that there is no such God as the word doth describe vnto vs. The diuers kindes of Atheisme Thus there be sundry sorts of heart-Atheisme as first that which Dauid complaineth of in the Psalme The foole hath said in his heart that there is no God Which is when men through a selfe-conceitednesse affect to be wiser then all the world Psal 14.1 doe hold this that there is a God not really but in opinion or shew being an Idol Scar-crow fit only to keepe simple persons in awe by these their reaching imaginations prouing themselues most simple and foolish of all others For what greater folly can there bee then to haue the vnderstanding blinded more then bruite beasts Psal 104. whose eyes doe looke vnto God and so receiue their food in due season but these being daily fed and cloathed by the same God are not able to see so farre as to him that reacheth out the hand of prouidence continually to sustaine them O Aegyptiacall darknesse with which they are beset which neuer befell any that were left vnto nature onely except Epicures Belly-gods that lay ouer-whelmed in the bottome of pleasures gulfe Act. 17. all others scorned to be Atheists and rather than vnto none did sacrifice to the vnknowne God as wee may see by the Athenians Psal 10.3 A second heart-Atheisme is to conceiue otherwise of God then he hath reuealed himselfe in his Word for whatsoeuer is there spoken of God such an one he is yea euery attribute of God is God so that the heart conceiuing a God without any of these is guilty of Atheisme Now the attributes of God are mercy power iustice presence wisedme and holines all infinite and in the highest degree so that he which goeth on in sin blesseth himselfe with the couetous he which flattereth himselfe with a conceit of Gods absence far aboue in the Heauens and couered with the clouds with the wicked against whom Ioh sharpeneth his tongue and he which kisseth his hand in secret Iob. 22.22.3 and sacrificeth to his nets in his prosperity praising his owne diligence industry with the wicked ones of Zephanies time Zeph. 1.12 ascribing neither good nor euill to the Lord hee I say hath an heart possessed of Atheisme And hence ariseth also a third Atheisme when any shall conceiue otherwise of God in regard of the persons in the God-head viz. denying either the Sonne or Holy Ghost as Turkes and Iewes 1 I●h 2.23 for he that hath not the Son neither hath he the Father and then must needs be an Atheist as by the same reason he is that hath not the Holy Ghost For the ground of this truth there is a God See aboue vnder the sixth Question 2. Breach is by Ignorance The second breach of this Commandement is by ignorance which is the very next dore to Atheisme because that where ignorance preuaileth there can be but a poore deale of loue little confidence and simple seruice done vnto the Lord. This ignorance is somtime simple somtime affected Simple ignorance when the meanes of knowledge bee wanting either within a man there being dulnesse want of capacity or without there being no vision prophesying failing preaching coldly or seldome exercised and this excuseth not simple people thus liuing in ignorance Luc. 12. if they doe things worthy of stripes for they shall notwithstanding be beaten euen where vision faileth the people perish Ezech. 3. But if there bee fault in the watchmen their blood shall also bee required at their hands Neither ought this to seeme strange considering that naturall visible meanes the Heauens Sun Stars Rom.
the earth thou shalt not bow downe to them nor worship them The reason is For I the Lord thy God am a iealous God and visit the sinnes of the fathers vpon the children vnto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me and shew mercy vnto thousands in them that loue mee and keepe my Commandements Quest 59. What are we forbidden in this Commandement Answ All outward Idolatry which is first by making the image of God or of any creature to be worshipped secondly by falling downe before any image thirdly by seruing God according to our own phantasies ●ees f●rbidden in this Commandement Expl●n This Commandement being negatiue wee doe first begin with the vice forbidden which is outward Idolatry euery corruption in the outward duties of Gods seruice image-making and image-worshipping are onely named to make it the more odious And we call it Idolatrie because this word signifieth a seruing or worshipping of Idols or images which in Greek are al one the word Englished Idols signifying a shew representation or likenesse the word Englished Image signifying a liuely picture or portrayture now this Idolatry is againe subdiuided 1 The making of Images to be worshipped The first is the making of Images to bee worshipped of things in Heauen either of God who fitteth in Heauen as in his Throne or of his holy Angels and Saints which giue attendance about his Throne Of all these the image of the Lord is simply forbidden as it is further illustrated by other places of Scripture the making hereof may not in any wise be attempted Reas 1 Esay 40.25 Verse 22. First because it is impossible as the Lord himselfe signifieth by his Prophet saying To whom now will yee liken me that I should be like him saith the holy One He sitteth vpon the circle of the earth and the Inhabitants thereof are as Grasse-hoppers he spreadeth out the Heauens as a curtaine and stretcheth them out as a tent to dwell in Looke into the chapter and yee shall see how greatly the Lord disdaineth both the work and the workman and good reason seeing euery image of the God-head Ior. 10.8 Heb. 2● 18. is a doctrine of vanity and though most curiously polished yet a very stocke yea it is a teacher of lies An earthly King or great person would stomacke it much if a paultry painter should presume to set forth his person in base colours without any apparance of royalty or nobility with a swines head and a Pigmees body and much more then will the Lord if by any Image man shall dare to set him forth for he must needes be as much belied and as greatly abused in being pourtrayted by any human shape he being immense and infinitely glorious this base and not the ten thousandth point of his person Wherefore well might the Apostle say Acts 17.29 that Wee ought not to thinke the God-head to be like vnto gold or siluer or stone grauen by the Art and inuention of man Reas 2 Deut. 4.15 Secondly because wee haue an expresse command to the contrarie Take good heed vnto your selues saith the Lord by Moses for ye saw no image in the day when the Lord spake vnto you in Horeb out of the middest of the fire that yee corrupt not your selues and make you a grauen image c. neither can there any toleration be found hereof representing God by the image of a man for that the likenesse of other baser creatures is only expressed seeing Saint Paul in reckoning vp the images of the Heathen Rom. 1.23 saith in way of reproofe that they turned the image of the incorruptible God into the image of corruptible man Moreouer the Lord hath not onely forbidden to make images but hath also straightly charged that they be pulled downe Exod. 23 24. and broken in pieces In the booke of Exodus he saith Thou shalt vtterly ouerthrow and breake in pieces their images Chap. 34 13. And againe Yee shall ouerthrow their altars breake their images in pieces and cut downe their groues And when any King otherwise well affected hath been negligent herein he is branded with it as with a note of disgrace The high places remained yet in his dayes Reas 3 Exod. 31. Thirdly because the Lord is wonderfully prouoked by Images When the golden Calues were set vp in Moses absence how grieuously did he take it how much moued was he with it how hardly could he hold his hands from destroying all the people certainly he was neuer more moued to indignation then by this base Idolatry If any shall say that his anger was not because they would make some remembrance of the true God but for that they ascribed their deliuerance to the Egyptian Gods which were wont to be set forth vnder these likenesses I answer that without doubt they intended hereby to set forth the true God and because their ignorance could not better deuise how to doe it they did it by the similitude of calues the chiefe gods of the Egyptians amongst whom they had liued For first they could not be so simple as to think any worth to be in the Egyptian gods seeing their people had bin wonderfully plagued and at the last drowned in the sea and they their enemies deliuered and saued Again they proclaime the holy day vnto Iehouah Vers 5. and lastly they only desire some visible thing to go before them because Mo●es was a long time absent from them who was wont by his presence to comfort them and to be as it were the Lords Oracle vnto them for which purpose it should seeme rather that they would haue the golden calues fondly supposing that they could not haue Gods presence vnlesse they had some outward thing vnto which they might goe with their blind deuotion Reas 4 Iudges 8.27 Fourthly because Images haue been occasions oftentimes of grosse Idolatry Gideon who had been a Champion of the Lord yet making a golden Ephod procureth the destruction of his owne house and corrupted all Israel for it is said that They went a whoring after it The brazen Serpent which was set vp by the Lords owne command 2 King 18.4 yet turned to be an occasion of Idolatry so great is the danger of Images Reas 5 Lastlie because it is a thing scandalous to such as be without the Iewes and Turkes are hereby hardned against the Christian religion when they compare Moses his Law with the practice of Romish Catholikes who make so much account of Images when the Lord hath put them downe for so great abominations Psal ●15 8 Thus yee see that simplie to haue or to make the Image of God is vtterlie vnlawfull or to make any Image to bee worshipped But wee must here take heede that wee make not this Commandement stricter then the Lord hath made it to cast a snare vpon the consciences of men it is true that as the Image so the Image-maker and Image-worshipper are alike abominable
euen as the holy Scriptures yea which is horrible before them and against them It is a farre greater wickednes accounted amongst them to omit auricular confession once in the yeare which was inuented by man then to leade a vile life all the yeare long to taste a little flesh vpon the Friday then to wallow in the filthy sin of vncleannes that a Priest be coupled vnto one lawful wife then that he defile himselfe with many whores Pap. pharis cap. ●7 to neglect a vow of going on Pilgrimage then to breake the necessarie vow of obedience in diuers Morall and Christian duties to God and man c. and therefore whereas any light punishment sufficeth when Gods lawes are broken such as breake any of their traditions are punished with imprisonment banishment death Neither doth it make any whit the more for their iustification whereas they pretended them to be the Traditions of holy men and ancient for this was the colour of the Pharisies theirs were the Traditions of the Fathers yet they were threatned for teaching and following them as Papists doe at this day Yet on the other side this hindreth not but that a true Christian Church may without any imputation of Idolatry inuent according to Ecclesiasticall prudence and impose decent circumstances of time place habit and gestures for the outward clothing of Gods worship so they be neither burthensome in multitude nor superstitious nor vnsauorie but tending to edification good order and comlines whereby the sincere inward worship may be not choaked but cherished Such are those which our blessed Mother hath thought fit to reteine as being vsed of old in the purer age before the corruptions of Popery crept in but as for the later Ceremonies which are the very spawne of Romish superstition our Church hath most piously and wisely cast them out of her doores I pray God and hope they shall neuer rush in againe Iohn 4.20 Secondly an Idoll is worshipped and not the true God when as men rest in the outward work of his seruice without the truth of heart and spirit For God is a Spirit and all true worshippers worship him in Spirit and in truth As the Apostle saith of comming together to the holy Communion 1. Cor. 11.20 When ye come together into one place This is not to eate the Lords body So is it of all other duties the outward hearing and preaching of the Word the outward praying singing and giuing of thankes are not alwayes acceptable seruice vnto God but when the life of the Spirit and heart is annexed The drawing neare with the lips when the heart is away is abomination to the Lord. And herein againe are they of the Church of Rome to be taxed for that they place the worship of God in outward things in kneeling knocking crouching kissing crossing repeatings praying vpon Beades sprinkling with holy water going on pilgrimage c. and some dull and ignorant people of our Church which serue God with the bare reciting of the Pater noster Creed and ten Commandements with resorting to the place of his worship and inwardly profiting no more then stocks and stones All these and the like doe please the Lord no better with their seruice then Kain did with his sacrifice or the Iewes imperfect offering Lastly an Idoll is worshipped and not the true God when men presume to compasse about the Lords Altar with vnwashen hands when they come impenitently to doe any holy duty For the Lord professeth that he is not delighted in any such seruice yea that he requireth it not yea which is more that it is abomination vnto him Wherefore he dealeth with the Iewes in this case by his Prophet Esay Esay 1.12 as a man would deale with his professed enemy who notwithstanding maketh a shew of loue by offering his best seruice he sendeth him as it were to meete them vpon the way and to stay them from their incense and Sacrifices new Moones and Sabbaths bidding them to bring no more oblations in vaine and professing that hee is weary of their solemne Assemblies c. and the cause hereof was for that their hands were full of bloud that is they liued impenitently in oppression and wrong and other heynous sinnes Now if God be not serued but grieued and made weary by being thus serued what else can it bee but an Idoll vnto which homage is done when holy duties are vndertaken by wicked persons liuing and proceeding in their sinnes Whence wee may see the fearefull estate of sinners which make a trade of wickednesse they runne still more into sinne euen into the worshipping of an idoll when they would be holyest when they would giue God honour they doe most dishonour him when they would bring a present to pacifie his wrath they make him more angry and to bid them bring no more oblations in vaine Wherefore whosoeuer thou art that wouldest please God by doing the parts of his worship present him first with a broken heart and contrite Spirit for thy sinnes as Dauid did Psal 51. Luke 16. wash the feete of the Lord with thy teares as Mary Magdalen did be deiected and haue a sense of thy sinnes foulenes as the poore publican had Rom. 7. let there bee an hatred of that which thou hast done as in Paul let there be a forsaking of sinne as in him that shall haue mercy Prou. 28.13 and then shalt thou bee like to bring an acceptable present and not to depart without thy full load of mercy and iustification Quest. 60. What are wee heere commanded Answ To performe all outward duties of Gods seruice according to his will reuealed in his word The duties of this Commandement Explan This duty of doing all the parts of Gods worship according to his will c. doth necessarily follow vpon the contrary forbidden viz. the following of our owne heads in the seruice of God for if we may not make our phantasies the rule of our doings then certainely Gods word alone must be our rule in all things Againe our God is so wise and prouident for our good as that it cannot but be a great disparagement vnto his care ouer vs to thinke that he hath left vs at sixe abd seauen in matters of so great moment as the parts of his worship be In the old Testament the temple was distinctly plotted out and all sacrifices particularly prescribed Matth 6. And in the new Testament the Lord directeth his Disciples not only in the matter but in the maner of fasting prayer 1. Cor 11. Chap. 14. and giuing of almes Saint Pau● setteth downe the maner of rightly comming to the holy Communion and how the word is to be preached and heard But yet there is difference for matter of circumstance betwixt the old Testament and the new Gal. 4. In the old as in the infancy of the Church euerie particular is set downe about euery duty for that was the time in which they
were vnder age but in the new as in the Churches riper age we haue onely generall rules according to which we are to be ordred in all particulars Rule 1 Rules of circumstance vnder the Gospel Matth. 3.15 1. Cor. 14. First all things are to be done in order and not confusedly the author of this is Christ Iesus when as he offereth himselfe to be baptised of Iohn vrging him to doe it for orders sake for thus saith he ought we to fulfill all righteousnesse and Saint Paul teacheth the same concerning prophesying that one onely should speake at a time and the rest be silent till that he had vttered all which he had to say Hence it appeareth that all disorder about Gods seruice is a fault not to bee tollerated either in vndue comming to Church or going out or walking sleeping talking or by Haukes doggs or vnruly children which breed a confusion in the congregation or when any shall presume to teach or administer the Sacraments publikely without a calling Rule 2 Secondly all things must bee done in greatest humilitie and highest reuerence towards him whose seruice it is when any preach or pray or ioyne with others in these duties men must be vncouered women must bee couered not onely in praying but also as I thinke yet herein I referre to the laudablest custome of our Church when the Word of God is read 1. Cor. 11. for this is the preaching of the Prophets and Apostles who were infallibly guided by the Spirit of truth The Thessalonians are commended for this that they receiue the word as the word of God 1. Thes 2.13 Acts 20. Paul with his company is noted to haue kneeled in prayer euen vpon the bare ground and ancient Christians to haue stood bare-headed all the time of their being in the Church Which reproueth greatly our irreuerence either of Ministers in reading or preaching as if they were vttering table-talke or of people in sitting at the time of prayer lying along sleeping or proudly behauing themselues any way the Turks shall condemne them through the reuerence which they vse to the Alchron of Mahomet And this seemeth to me to iustifie our reuerent humble receiuing of the holy Cōmunion with the most submisse gesture of kneeling which many impugne but without sufficient ground It mattereth not that Christ sat he sat also preaching but we stand and I am perswaded if wee should kneele and the people kneele in hearing to expresse our vnworthinesse about these holy things though we differed from the Apostles and Christians of the Primatiue Church wee should not offend at all Rule 3 Matth 6.1 Thirdly all things are to be done without shew of vaine-glory for this was the great fault of the Pharisies and Christians are warned to take heed of it in their praying fasting and giuing of almes wee are not to desire to be seene of men that we may haue their praise but in our priuate deuotion to be most priuate and in publike not to affect notoriety by exceeding the rest of the congregation in sighing groning knocking the breast c. Rule 4 1. Cor. 13. Fourthly all things are to bee accompanied with loue to our neighbour and zeale for Gods glory for without loue whatsoeuer we doe is as a sounding brasse or tinckling Cimball if zeale be wanting and we be luke-warme we shall be offensiue to the Lords stomacke Reuel 3. and hee will spue vs out of his mouth Wherefore if the minister shall preach coldly or the people heare coldly if they shall together be luke-warme in prayer and praise giuing to the Lord there will be a sacrifice indeed but for want of the fire of zeale vndrest and such as the Lord cannot digest Therefore let Paul his zeale and Peters and Steuers bee imitated by ministers Acts 17. Acts 2. Acts 7. Nehem. 8.6 by burning in the spirit against grosse abuses by earnest exhorting to repentance with most effectuall words and by reprouing with all boldnes the gain-sayers of the truth and let the zeale of the godly in Nehemiahs time bee imitated by our people by giuing the greatest and most heedfull attention by lifting vp the hand in prayer and adding to the Ministers petition Amen Amen Rule 5 1. Thes 5.22 2. Cor. 6 17. Fifthly all things are to be done without shew of idolatry according to that Abstaine from all appearance of euill and Touch none vncl●a●e thing and yee shall be my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord. Therefore of old the Temple was garnished without images and newly the Lords supper made of naked elements Which if it be so how can the Church of Rome be excused being full of representations of heathenisme and in the very Sacrament hauing the image of a Lambe vpon their wafer Cake If any scrupte shall arise hereupon touching the Crosse Copes and Surplisses vsed in the Church of England It may well bee said that they were vsed in the Churches purity and had not their beginning from religion corrupted and so are not resemblances of things meerely naught but first good afterwards peruerted So that if it be replyed that when these things are vsed there is an outward face of Popery I may aswell say in like manner of Gods ancient Catholike Church Euen as when the people of Israel had sacrificed to Molech and other Baals such as afterwards did offer sacrifices vnto God made some resemblance of their abomination for that both offer sacrifice and consent in some ceremonies yet it followeth not that their sacrificing is vnlawfull because that is cut off which maketh it naught so when these things are vsed in our Church it followeth not that they must be naught for some ill resemblance because that is cut off which made them naught they had them yoaked with idolatry and superstition we with the truth Quest 61. Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ Partly from the punishments to be inflicted vpon such as breake it vnto the third and fourth genera ion and partly from the benefits to be bestowed vpon such as keepe it vnto the thousandth generation Reas 1 Reasons of this Commandement of two sorts 1. of terror 2. of comfort Explan The reasons vsed to perswade to the obedience of this commandement be of two sorts the first of terrour the second of comfort Their estate is most terrible whosoeuer they be that dare to offend here the Lords iealousie is kindled against them and hee will punish both them their children and their childrens children after them Their danger is set forth by three degrees First their sin is such against the Lord as his sinne is against a iealous husband that violateth his wiues chastity no price will appease an husband thus prouoked but he will kill the adulterer and as greatly incensed is the Lord against those that commit idolatry it is spirituall adultery the Lord had married them vnto himselfe Hosh 2. that like a good and obedient spouse
it is to speake any thing derogatory to the glorious attributes of the all-sufficient Creator of all The word signifieth the hurting of a good name by disgracefull speeches and thus largely it is blasphemy whereby man is disparaged as in Naboths example he is said to haue blasphemed both God and the King as also wherby any doctrine is disgraced thus Paul the fourth a Bishop of Rome blasphemed the holy Gospell when vnto Bembus a Cardinall he called it a fable saying O how much hath this fable concerning Christ gained vs. And Bonner here in England blasphemed the doctrine of the Apostle Paul when vnto one Mill● a Martyr hee alleaged that saying of the liberty of a woman her husband being dead and said that when her husband was asleepe shee was at liberty for another man Lastly it is the greatest blasphemy when the Lord is disgraced as by Pharaoh who said vnto Moses Who is the Lord Exod. 3. 2. Kings 19. that I should let the people goe And by Senacherib who alleaging vnto the people how the King of Assyria had destroyed all people and burnt vp their gods asked Who is the God of Israel that he should deliuer you out of mine hands as if they should haue said he is of no such authoritie and power 2. This sinne is most odious for amongst men Take away his good name we say and take away his life So take away the Lords good name and put him out from hauing a being and fill the world with damnable Atheisme 3. A man is made accessary vnto it by giuing occasion to others to blaspheme which is when a mans profession is holy and Christian and yet his practice lewd and wicked which raiseth this blaspemous opinion in others that the God which he serueth is like vnto himselfe Rom. 2.24 2. Sam. 12. With this the Iewes are charged by the Apostle saying The name of God is blasphemed through you amongst the Gentiles And Nathan telleth Dauid that he had caused the enimies of God to blaspheme by his adultery for we vse to say Like will to like and Augustine doth from hence conuince the Heathen August de Ciuit. Dei lib. 1 cap. 32. that their gods were filthy Idols because they did represent them with obscene and filthy spectacles and were not taught to liue in any vertuous or commendable course of life by them Psal 50.21 And may not the Iewes and Turkes vse the same argument against the Papists for their authorised idolatries and superstitions And against the Protestants for their drunkennes whoredomes prophannesse and many more abominations though not authorised yet too much winked at yea they do daily hence take occasion to blaspheme the name of our God as though hee were not the true God his seruants being so wicked And well may they thus thinke of our God seeing that the wicked man doth himselfe thus blaspheme God in his heart These things thou didst saith the Lord and whilst I held my peace thou thoughtest that I was like vnto thee Breach 2 The second way of abusing Gods name is by swearing falsly which is when a man shall sweare that a thing is true which hee knoweth to bee false or which hee knoweth not to bee true thus they did sweare falsly which were suborned by Iezabel to testifie against Naboth and against Christ as touching the destruction of their Temple when as they knew not that hee meant the Temple of Salomon Secondly by swearing deceitfully which is when a man shal affirme any thing vpon his oath that he wil performe and do it when his intent is otherwise or not doe it when his meaning is to doe it or when hee shall bee carelesse and negligent of his oath and of this we haue no President as I remember in the holy Scriptures 2. Sam. 22. but onely that of Saul the forsaken of God who brake the oath 1. Sam. 24. by which Ioshua had tied all the people not to doe any hurt vnto the Gibeonites and the oath by which he bound himselfe vnto Dauid not to hurt him as it is likely Ioshua 9. For Ioshua when hee had bound himselfe by an oath he was moued with such reuerence hereunto as that though he were deceiued he would not break it no nor yet the wicked Iewes which had tied themselues by an oath to an vnlawfull act Acts 3. to kill Paul but that they were by Gods Prouidence preuented And both these kinds of vnlawfull swearings are commonly called by the name of periury the odiousnesse of which sin will the rather appeare if we consider First how much it hath euer been abhorred euen by heathen men and voyd of true godlinesse The Pharisies themselues forbad forswearing a mans selfe and commanded men to performe their oathes vnto the Lord. Matth 5 33. August de ●●uit Dei ca. 15. lib. 1. And Saint Augustine reciteth an history of Marcus Attilius Regulus a Prince amongst the Heathen Romans who being captiue taken by the Carthagenians was sent home to his Country-men being first bound by oath if he did not effect this for which he was sent viz. an exchange of Captiues Carthagenians for Romans he should returne to them againe He when he could not preuaile with his Countrey-men or rather would not forsomuch as he thought it vnprofitable for the Roman Common-wealth returned againe for his oathes-sake which was taken by an Idoll-god and then was put into a vessell of wood made of purpose either side being full of sharpe pointed awles or bodkins that hee might not leane any way but bee wounded by them and thus hee died a most cruell and bloudy death chusing rather this then to be forsworne Much more then should Christians hauing taken an oath by the true God of heauen abhorre the breaking thereof whatsoeuer they should lose by obseruing it Consider againe that by periury God is made Patron of a lye which is the Deuils owne propertie for he is a Lyar and the father of lyes for the Lord is called to giue testimonie vnto a lye which is the greatest indignitie in the world Moreouer consider that the periured person prayeth against himselfe and bindeth his soule ouer to euerlasting torments for so much as he desireth the Lord so to helpe him as it is a truth vnto which he sweareth and on the contrary side then to plague and punish him if it be a falshood and this is meere madnesse and vnnaturalnesse it was neuer heard that any would pray against themselues but all they can for themselues Consider also that it is the bane of all societies and the very high-way to hellish confusion for that if oaths shall be taken falsely Kings will be Tyrants to their subiects subiects Traytors to their Princes Magistrates Wolues vnto the people Ministers Deuourers of the Lords flock Neighbour-nations Cut-throats to one another notwithstanding any league betwixt them Breach 3 By swearing rashly Gen. 31.53 Common swearing A third abuse in swearing
is to sweare rashly and without due consideration what an oath is and by whom it is taken for swearing rightly is a part of Gods worship and must be done with high reuerence as Iacob is noted to haue sworne by the feare of his father Isaac Fourthly swearing commonly in our communication and talk one with another which we are by Christs owne authority forewarned to doe I say vnto you sweare not at all Matth. 5.33 neither by Heauen for it is the throne of God nor by the earth for it is his foot-stoole c. Whence doe arise these three conclusions necessary to be considered of by all common swearers Concl. 1 First that it is a very childish thing to sweare by creatures bread or light c. 1. Because as our Lord elsewhere expoundeth himselfe Hee that sweareth by the Temple Mat. 23.20.21 sweareth by him that dwelleth therein So hee that sweareth by creatures sweareth by God who created them and yet he will not bee heard to sweare by the sacred name of the Lord as if a child abhorring any bitter thing or poyson should notwithstanding take the same vnder a little sugar 2. Because hee calleth vpon dumbe things that cannot heare he bringeth them to patronize his cause that can neither hurt nor helpe like vnto Baal● Priests vnto whom hee was not able to giue answere though they called vpon him from morning till noone-tide or like infants that prate vnto babies made of clouts 3. Because that hauing taken vp this childish custome of swearing they are no whit daunted either at the authority or charge giuen here against by our Sauiour Christ no more then children that are yet without all vnderstanding are moued to leaue any foolish quality whatsoeuer and how great soeuer he be that doth admonish them thereof Concl. 2 Eccles 9.2 Secondly it is a most vngodly thing to vse common swearing 1. Because the Deuill is the authour hereof for let yea be yea saith he and your nay nay for whatsoeuer is more then these commeth of the euill one 2 It is to agree with the Pharisees who did not forbid swearing by smaller oaths 3. It is an argument of a prophane person All things fall out alike to all saith the wise man to the cleane and the vncleane to him that sweareth and that feareth an oath in which words hee maketh swearing an euident proofe of a prophane person 4. It is a great indignity offered vnto the Lord to call him to witnesse to euery trifling matter as the common swearer doth no man will offer the like to his familiar friend much lesse to a greater person 5. It is hereby derogated from the maiestie of the Lord in whose roome base creatures are placed at which our Sauiour also glanceth when hee saith that heauen is Gods throne as if he should haue said it hath nothing in it worthy the swearing by it is not God but his seate and the earth his footstoole 6. Because it is most straitly forbidden both here and by S. Iames who propoundeth it as a prime and most necessary charge Before all things my brethren sweare not Concl. 3 Ier. 5.7 Amos 8.14 Thirdly to sweare by the Masse by the Rood is wicked in an higher degree because all these haue been made Idols and thus considered Gods greatest enemies as he that doth royall honour vnto a subiect vsurping the Princes throne and hauing been condemned for a traytor therefore sheweth himselfe herein to be a most vild traytor and vnworthy to liue as being a preferrer of his Princes greatest enemy This makes the Lord breake into such impatience against the Israelites How should I spare thee thy children haue forsaken me and sworne by them that are no Gods And againe They that sweare by the sinne of Samaria saying Thy God O Dan liueth shall fall and not rise vp againe answerable to which be the sinnes of the Papists the Masse and the Rood c. And thus much both for swearing commonly and by creatures Breach 4 By cursing and banning The fourth way of abusing Gods holy name is by cursing or banning which is a calling for plague or murreine or any fearefull euill vpon those with whom a man is offended For this is first a malicious sinne and therefore noted to be a fruit of such hearts as are full of gall and bitternesse Rom 3.11.12 as they are described out of the Psalmes Their throat is an open sepulcher the poison of aspes is vnde● their lippes their mouth is f●ll of cursing and b tternesse For which cause the people of God are forbidden all cursing and commanded to blesse yea euen such as curse them Bl●sse your persecutors blesse I say and curse not Rom. 12.14 Iames 3. And Saint Iames maketh it an infallible argument of a corrupt fountaine to send forth this soure water of cursing And it is very corrupt indeed for as much as for small hurt receiued or a little offence giuen reason being blinded with malice any mischiefe or grieuous plague is wished vpon the head of the offendour So that the Lord may rightly say another day of the wicked curser Out of th●ne ●●wne mouth shalt thou be condemned seeing that for small offences thou hast adiudged others to the plague or the Deuill much more shall my fearefull plagues be thy portion and the Deuill possesse thy soule as his vassall for euer Secondly this cursing is a presumptuous sinne because that hee which curseth another entreth vpon Gods office vnto whom alone it belongeth to say vnto plagues and punishments as the Centurion to his souldiers Come and he commeth For what else is it in the wretched curser of his brother bidding the Deuill take him but to doe that which is in the Lords power onely and to make a mans selfe equall vnto God as the Pharisies obi●cted against Christ taking vpon him to remit sinnes which none can doe but God Wherefore we reade not that any of the holy men of God haue giuen the aduenture to curse without special commission from the Lord Iude v●es 9. no nor so much as Michael the Archangell for he durst not curse the Deuill in his fight with him about the body of Moses plainely noting the arrogancy and blasphemous presumption of cursed man that shall dare to curse N●mb 23. Baalam shall rise vp in iudgement and condemne them for that being hired by Balaack to curse he durst not doe it without commission from the Lord which hee could not obtaine and therefore notwithstanding the great rewards promised turned his speech to blessing the people of Israel The false Prophets shall rise vp in iudgement against these cursers and condemne them for they were sharply censured only for blessing and promising mercy without commission from the Lord. But these doe take vpon them by their owne authoritie to curse without any instigation of higher powers without hope of reward onely some little distemper carrying them hereunto Breach 5 By
vowing things impossible or vnlawfull The fourth way of abusing Gods holy name is by vowing things impossible or vnlawful or by neglecting of our vows which vowes be either generall in the time of our baptisme or speciall vpon any speciall occasion of danger or benefit whereupon some speciall promise is made vnto the Lord or without any such occasion onely vpon a free resolution the rather hereby to glorifie God The first kind of vow wee all make both before God and his people to forsake the Deuill and all his workes c. not that wee are not thus to doe without a promise for it is our duty by the Law of nature but the rather to stir vp our dull hearts and to pricke forward our vnwilling wils when as by a double band wee shall bee tyed hereunto The other vowes are made to moue the Lord the rather to moderate our chastizements and the more speedily to remoue them when in the time of sicknesse or danger wee promise to dedicate our selues vnto the Lords seruice if wee recouer againe or els they are more speciall of giuing this or that vnto the Lord or of abstaining from or doing this or that particular dutie for the preuenting of sin and the furtherance of grace Thus Iacob vowed in the time of his danger to make the place of his rest Bethel Gods house Gen. 28.22 Thus Iob made a couenant with his eyes that they should not looke vpon a maid Thus were they wont freely to dedicate some thing of their substance Iob 31.1 to the maintenance of Gods seruice Acts 5. Now to neglect any of these vowes or the like is a great indignity offered vnto God and a dishonour of his name which he will not endure as may appeare by that which befel Ananias after hee had vowed his lands vnto the Lord but would haue kept away part of the price he was smitten with sudden death and it is destruction to a man saith Salomon to deuoure that which is hallowed and after the vowes to enquire And truly great reason for that God is hereby deluded and mocked a light account is made what is said or promised vnto him as if a man had to doe with some person of no worth and if hee onely that promiseth vnto man and performeth shall dwell in the Tabernacle of the most High but they which breake their promises bee excluded much more shall they only that performe their vowes vnto the Lord inhabit there and they which make no conscience to doe as they haue vowed be excluded and for euer shut out Oh that this would enter into the hearts of carelesse Christians that liue as though they were the deuils sworne seruants howsoeuer they haue solemnly in their baptisme vowed their seruice vnto God and that with the Israelites only promise and expresse some good resolutions vnder the terrour of Gods rodde but in being remooued are as licentious as before 2. Sam 21. Mal. 3.8 And as ill doe they prouide for their owne good which denie things vowed to the Lord by whomsoeuer or vpon what occasion soeuer for this brought a famine vpon Israel and destruction vpon Sauls house viz his slaying of the Gibeonites vnto whom was vowed immunity and freedome from danger it is a robbing of God See more afterwards touching sacriledge Hauing thus explained first the last member of the answer the first yet remaineth of vowing things impossible or vnlawful which cannot be without great impiety and dishonor vnto the Lord. Things impossible are either so vnto al men as to restore the dead to life to heale incurable diseases c. or though not vnto all yet to the party that voweth as if a poore man should vow that hee would be a King a man burning in the disposition of his mind and body that he wil euer liue chaste a single life or a lame Creeple that hee will goe a foote forty miles in a day Of this kind is the vow commonly made by the Romish Priests and Votaries that enter into any religious order seeing that most of them doe daily shew by wofull experience that it is as possible to liue pure and free from all sinne as from sinning against that speciall vow Witnesse the frequent adulteries and fornications the rapes and murthers of infants committed to couer these vncleane copulations It is well knowne that the Monkes at Spira of Saint Germans did so lewdly abuse the daughters and wiues of the Citizens vnder a colour of religion that they were vtterly expelled thence and their Monastery pulled downe I can goe on in more lewd examples of the most eminent in the Romish Church euen in the vnerring demi-gods but modesty bids me forbeare If it should bee obiected that these haue been but the faults of some speciall men it appeareth to be most false by Popes tollerations Decrees of Counsels and iustifications of Popish Writers See Article 9. vnder the Title The Church of Rome vnholy Acts ●3 12 And thus much for vowing things impossible Things vnlawfull are either against the Lawes of God or against the wholesome Lawes of the Countrie wherein a man liueth Of this sort was the vow made by those forty conspirators against Paul who bound themselues neither to eat nor drinke vntill they had slaine him Thus Russians and Swaggerers do vpon any disgrace receiued vow the death of one another and if any wrong bee done to be reuenged once in seauen yeares which besides that it is a cursed fruite of malice is an intollerable indignity done vnto the most iust God for hee that is called as it were to be a party and a fauourer heereof Of this sort also bee the vowes of women who are tyed by the law of their husbands euen in things otherwise lawfull and honest Rom. 7. if against the liking and consent of their husbands For if a woman voweth a vow which her husband disaloweth it must not stand Numb ●0 And the like is to bee said of children being in their parents house that is vnder their gouernment And yet these vowes are common well approued of in the Church of Rome Wherefore one hath said well that they are for many causes to bee reproued They impugne the law of God they are oftentimes impossible to bee performed they are against Christian liberty they are a renewing of Iudaisme Idolatry Hypocrisie Pi●k Armil Aur. cap. 21. Wherefore to conclude this point let vs in our vowes obserue these things First let them not bee against Gods word Secondly nor against Christian liberty Thirdly with the consent of superiours Fourthly agreeable to our calling Fiftly of things not impossible Sixtly with good deliberation Seuenthly with a good end and intention Breach 6 Light vsing of Gods holy name The sixth abuse of Gods name is the light vsing thereof by saying O Lord or Oh God vpon euery light occasion without hauing the heart lifted vp vnto him or by way of admiration crying out good Lord
fountaine but if it be holy gracious sober peaceable exhorting and admonishing one another blessing of God and wishing good vnto our neighbour it is a fountaine of sweet water to the praise of the Lord. Right vse 2 Phil 2.10 Secondly when we speake reuerently of the name of God for many things doe vrge vs heerevnto First Gods commanmandement Thou shalt reuerence the fearefull name Iehouah and at the name of Iesus one of the titles of God euery knee shall bow both of things in heauen in earth and vnder the earth 2. The same reuerend phrase alwayes vsed in the Commandements when the Lord is named in the first I am the Lord thy God in the second I the Lord thy God in the third the name of the Lord thy God in the fourth the Sabbath of the Lord thy God and in the fifth which the Lord thy God giueth thee 3. The signification of euery name of the Lord vsed in the Scriptures being such as that it putteth vs in minde of great reuerence He is sometime called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is strong and mightie and sometime in the plurall number strengths sometime Iehouah Essence or being as in whom all thing● haue their being sometime 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 almightie sometime 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Highest and the Lord of hostes the beginning and the end which was which is and which is to come c. 4. The reuerence which was wont to be vsed by the Israelites the Lords ancient people in naming Iehouah they would not pronounce it out of the Temple nor put the letters of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into their numerals least it should bee prophaned 3. When in all things wee make conscience of speaking Right vse 3 the truth for of this Ioshua specially saith vnto Achan Ios 7.19 My sonne giue glorie vnto God and speake the truth The tongue is Index mentis The bewreyer of the mind and heart if then a man shall lie and dissemble herewith he doth peruert the nature of it 4. When an oath is rightly taken or a vow rightly made Right vse 4 for this is a speciall part of Gods seruice Deut. 6.13 Iere. 4.1 Thou shalt feare the Lord and serue him and sweare by his name And in Ieremie it is said If thou returne O Jsrael returne vnto mee and thou shalt sweare the Lord liueth in truth in iudgement and in righteousnes For as by periury and vaine swearing the name of God is highly dishonoured so by swearing reuerently and rightly it is honoured and glorified Thirdly we must glorifie God in the thoughts 3 To glorifie God in thoughts and desires of our hearts which is when euen here we are conteined with a reuerence of his holy name and doe burne with a desire of his glory aboue all things For the outward reuerence is nothing without this as may appeare by the people of Israel trembling and falling downe before the Lord with offering their obedience if Moses onely should speake vnto them Deut. 5.29 vnto whom the Lord answereth saying Oh that there were such an heart in them to feare me as who did not set by this outward reuerence vnles together with it there were the inward of the heart And for the earnest desiring of Gods glory aboue all we are put in mind of it so often as we rehearse the Lords prayer wherein we first and chiefly pray Hallowed bee thy name And where true zeale is this desire so exceedeth as that like a fire consuming all things it euen eateth vp such as are inflamed herewith it maketh them to neglect themselues so that God may haue glory Exod. 32. Rom 9. as Moses and Paul who rather than God should haue dishonour by the destruction of his people wished their owne names to be blotted out of the booke of life 4. To win men to glorifie God Math. 5.16 Fourthly we must labour to win others to the glorifying of Gods name according to that of Christ Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen There is no good child that doth entirely loue his father and reuerence him but hee seeketh by all meanes to bring others also to speak reuerently and well of him Wherefore if it may further Gods glory amongst others to endeauour after their conuersion and reformation he is attentiue about exhorting instructing and admonishing them if it may further Gods glory to auoid all scandal giuing euen to those that are without he wil liue purely and blamelesse among all men He is not a Cain that saith Am I my brothers keeper neither is hee a spot and blot by his scandalous life amongst Christians as the false brethren of whom Iude speaketh and the carelesse people of these times But if his endeuours may glorifie God any way he acknowledgeth that all which hee can doe is too little and therefore his care extendeth euen to others as many as he can possibly winne to the praise and glorie of God Quest. 65. Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ From the fearefull estate of such as any way abuse the name of God the Lord holdeth them as guiltie of dishonour done vnto his blessed maiestie Reasons implicitie of this command against prophaning the Lords holy name Expl. The reason of this commandement howsoeuer it may seeme to be but single yet indeed it is twofold The first implicite It is the abusing of his name who is the Lord our God so the very words of the commandement doe yeeld a weightie reason First because he is Iehouah the great God of heauen and earth whose name is abused 1. Sam. 2.25 it is great presumption man is not abused who might be dealt withall for a pacification but God for the pacifying of whom who can or dare plead as the Prophet saith 2. His name is abused who is the Lord thy God who is thy king thy soueraigne thy father and Sauiour from whom commeth euery good gift Iam. 1.17 which is grosse ingratitude The very heathen did not thus requite their kings and benefactors but did rather honour them too much euen when they were dead and their greatnesse ceased and yet thou vile swearer wretched curser and abominable blasphemer doest dayly abuse that great name which not men but Angels and the very deuils doe reuerence yea thou abusest him with thy tongue who bestoweth vpon thee the great benefit of the vse of the tongue without whom thou canst not stirre either tongue hand or foot or thy least finger 3. His name is abused whose dishonour the Deuill in hell himselfe endeuoureth in vaine for hee both can and will turne all things to his glorie How vaine was Pharaohs light reiecting of the Lords messengers Moses and Aaron Exod. 3. with the blasphemie which he added Who is God that I should let Israel goe For this was
turned to Gods great glory when he drowned him with his armie in the bottome of the deepe How vaine also were the blasphemous brags of Senacherib insulting ouer this great God 2. King 19. for without any armie he was confounded and like a silly fish as with a hooke taken and brought backe into his owne country and perished there to the great honour of the almightie God of Israel And in like manner if any be so hellishly disposed that they will still go on to blaspheme his holy name as Sathans sworne champions to anger God they shall not preuaile but in spight of them the mightie God will haue glorie by their confusion Rom. 1.24 The reason expressed He holdeth them as guiltie of dishonour done vnto his Maiestie They are alreadie set downe in his booke as damned persons and in themselues they beare the palpable marke of prophanenesse Euen as the Gentiles because of the dishonour that they did vnto God were giuen ouer to reprobate minds For in like manner is it with common swearers and cursers they haue this brand of reprobation vpon them to be generally insensible of sinne especially they are giuen ouer withall to lying drinking filthy talking gaming and vanity neglect of prayer and the exercises of Gods word quarrelling prophaning of the holy Sabbaths scorning mocking at all reproofs though most iust So that he which hath an eye to see may easily see them stand guiltie the sentence already denounced written in their forheads What blasphemer would not this make to tremble if hee would but set his heart to consider of it and whilst hee hath time seek for a pardon by vnfained turning from this cursed wickednes of the vnruly tongue Helps thus to doe are 1. To pray often and specially against this vice for he is noted by the Preacher to feare an oath Eccl. 9.2 that vseth to sacrifice that is to pray 2. To heare and meditate much vpon Gods holy word for thus Dauid saith haue hid thy word in my heart that I might not sinne against thee Psal 119.11 3. If oaths or cursed speaking haue at any time proceeded from our mouths 2 Cor. 7. ●● to be reuenged vpon our selues by refraining euen from speech in such company and in such cases as wherein we haue been so much ouer seene 4. To admonish one another heereof according to that streight charge giuen by the Lord Leuit 19 17. Thou shal● not hate thy brother in thy heart suffer him to sin but shalt plainly tell him of his faults Quest. 66. If there be such danger in swearing may a man lawfully sweare in any case whatsoeuer Answ Without doubt a man may sometime lawfully sweare either for the confirmation of a truth which cannot otherwise be known yet necessary or for the strengthening of honest leagues and couenants made betwene me●● or lastly we being called hereunto before a lawfull Magistrate Swearing lawfull Math. 5.33 Explan Here are two things further to be explaned First that it is not altogether vnlawfull to sweare Secondly that a man may lawfully sweare in these cases Concerning the first diuers haue beene contrariwise minded because of those words of Christ I say vnto you sweare not at all neither by Heauen c. Not onely the Anabaptists haue vpon this withstood all swearing and the Heretiques called Manichees who did vtterly reiect the old Testament because it commaundeth to sweare by the name of God but Ierom also a learned Father held that the liberty of swearing by the name of God Math. 5.33 Chrysost ●●om 7. in Math. was only granted vnto the Iewes as vnto little children lest they should sweare by deuils euen as he saith he would haue sacrifices done vnto him rather then vnto Idols And certaine Martyrs aboue two hundred yeeres agone are recorded to haue refused the taking of an oath being offered by the Magistrate vpon the same reason But alas good men they were in an errour as will plainely appeare if wee consider first that the Lord hath commaunded his people to sweare by his name not once but oftner as was shewed a little before out Deut. 6.13 Iere 41. where it is put for a maine part of his worship and of him that shall dwell in the Tabernacle of the most High it is said that he sweareth to his owne hinderance and changeth not Wherefore Psal 15.4 not onely the more hard-hearted of the people but the holiest of all Abraham Iaacob Ioseph c haue sworne vpon some occasions which they would not haue done if it had onely beene tolerated vnto the people because of the hardnesse of their heart 2. If we consider that as it was commanded in the old Testament so is it pronounced in the new to be an end of controuersies amongst men Heb 6.16 Phil 1.8 therefore Paul sometime sweareth to the Philippians God is my record how I long after you And to the Corinthians J call God for a record vnto my soule 2 Cor. 1.23 Heb. 6.14 And the Lord is said to haue sworne by himselfe vnto Abraham to confirme his promise of blessing And the Angel in the Reuelation Reuel 10.6 sware by him that liueth for euermore all which would not haue been so had it not been lawfull in any case to sweare Concerning the second thing in the answere 1. That it is lawfull to sweare to confirme a necessarie truth which otherwise cannot be knowne is plaine from the examples going before The Apostle sware to confirme the Philippians and Corinthians of his vnfained loue towards them and the Angel that Time should be no more which were weightie things and necessary to be knowne certainely for the furtherance of the Gospell and yet so hidden that they could not be certainely knowne but by calling God for a witnesse who is the knower of all secrets 2. For the making of leagues and couenants sure it was the common practise of Abraham Isaac Iaacob and all holy men to sweare by the true God that he being called to be witnes of what they had promised they might not dare to deale falsly 3. The lawfull Magistrate is Gods Vicegerent heere vpon earth and therefore if hee call thee to sweare thou must not refuse but obey herein Rom. 13.1 for to obey the lawfull Magistrat is to obey God seeing the powers that bee are ordeined of God And to these may be referred all other lawfull cases of swearing otherwise they are abuses of Gods holy name Quest 67. What else is required that our swearing may be lawfull Answ These foure things 1. Wee must sweare onely to such a truth as we know to be so 2 We must sweare according to the knowne intent of him vnto whom or before whom we sweare 3 We must sweare onely things possible and lawfull 4. This being a part of Gods worship we must doe it with great reuerence Explan These things must also bee knowne and considered by him that
That it was appointed for holy meetings to preach and heare c. 3. Not in some one Church but generally in the Churches of Christians at Troas Galatia Corinth c. 4 Not in some week only but euery weeke Arg. 2 Exod. 20.10 The second reason is taken from places of Scripture which proue the same by consequence as that in Exodus where the Commandement being giuen this is added as a reason The seuenth day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God and the Lord rested the seuenth day Math 12.8 A second place is that in Matthew The sonne of man is euen Lord of the Sabbath A third place is in Iohn All men should honour the Sonne Iohn 5.23 euen as they honor the Father The reason may be framed thus If the same reason grounded vpon Gods word be as wel for the first day of the weeke as it was once for the Sabbath of the Iewes then wee are as certainly tied to the obseruation of this day as they were for their Sabbath but there is the same reason Therefore wee are certainly tied vnto this day The first part of this argument is plaine for the same reason is of the same force the second part appeareth by the places noted in the margent The maine reason of the Sabbath of the Iewes is because it was the Sabbath of the Lord and therefore his people must necessarily do him this honour that there might be a conformitie betwixt God and his people and in like manner our Sabbath is the Sabbath of the Lord Christ when he had finished the worke of our redemption for which cause hee also giueth the same name The Sonne of man is euen Lord of the Sabbath As if in more words he should say When God the Father had once ended the making of the world he rested and published himselfe to be the Lord of that rest and dedicated it vnto himselfe giuing it the name of the Sabbath of the Lord In like manner when I shall haue finished the worke of mans redemption I will rest and will haue the day of my rest dedicated vnto my selfe for which cause I say that the Sonne of man is euen Lord of the Sabbath also it shall bee called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Lords day And thus shall the will of the Father be fulfilled which is that as they honoured the Father in keeping the Sabbath betwixt the creation and redemption so they should honour the Son in keeping the Sabbath betwixt the redemption and consummation of the world Arg. 3 Matth 28. A third reason may be drawne from the vniforme practise of the Church euen from the time of mans redemption vnto this day Christ himselfe first began it when he arose early in the morning vpon this day and thenceforth euer obserued it so long as he continued vpon the earth Iohn 20.19 When the Disciples were gathered together for feare of the Iewes the doores being shut he came and stood in the middest of them vpon that day Againe Verse 26. when incredulous Thomas was amongst them he came and shewed his hands side and feete vpon that day and immediately the Euangelist subioyneth And as for the practice of the Apostles herein it is so plaine as that it were great impudency to deny it Again for the practice of those that liued next vnto them whether Greekes or Latines they followed the same order Reade for this Ignatius in his Epistle to the Magnesians Iustie Martyr in Apologeticis Ireneus in his fourth booke chap. 19.20 Euseb Eccles hist lib. 4. chap 23. Origen Hom. 3. in Exod. Cyrill in Iohan. Tertul. de Idolat Ieronym in vita Paulae Ambros serm 62. August in Iohan. Gregor lib 11. epist 3. c Lastly for the Churches of these times since and at this present whether Protestant or Popish of what Country soeuer all consent for the obseruation of this day though in opinion there be some difference about it some grounding it vpon Gods Ordinance according to that which hath been said as Beza Iunius Piscator Bollocke Hooper Fulke and the book of Homilies yea and some Papists also as S●●tas Panormitanus Syluester Felicius and the Schoolemen some vpon tradition onely as the Rhemists Testament Tollet and Bellarmine Whence wee may reason thus That day which the Lord Christ hath sanctified by his resurrection wherein hee came together with his Disciples to instruct and to confirme them wherein all Christian Churches of all Ages haue made their Assemblies is certainlie the Sabbath of the Christians but such is the first day of the weeke Therefore certainly our Sabbath Arg. 4 A fourth argument may bee drawne from the iudgements of God most fearefully befalling such as either haue contemned the Sabbath of this day or through worldly mindednesse haue neglected it In a Councell held at Paris some holy men vrged the making of speciall decrees about the strict obseruation of the Lords day because as they alleaged partly of their owne knowledge partly by the relation of others some intending their husbandry vpon this day had been smitten with thunder and lightning to the laming of some and to the vtter destruction of others Another carrying home corne vpon this day had both corne and barne most lamentably consumed by fire Also that in Chimstat a towne in France a certaine woman being wont together with her children to peele hempe vpon the Lords day when others were at Church was first terrified with some sparkes of fire falling amongst her hempe another time with a flame of fire arising in her hempe and lastly not being warned by this there kindled a fire againe which whilst she laboured to quench both she and her children did miserably perish thereby The Centuriatours of Magdenberg do tell of a certaine Noble-man that was wont to follow his sport of hunting vpon the Lords day when others went to Church but the Lord shewed a great iudgement vpon him therefore he had a child borne vnto him with the head of a dog And that a certaine Miller intentiue about his grinding vpon this day had his house and meale burnt by a fire kindling in his mill And to come nearer home Anno 1583. whilst they were beholding the Beare-baitings in Parish-garden vpon this day the scaffold burst down suddenly and eight persons were slaine outright and many more hurt and maimed Arg. 5 A fifth argument may be drawne from such things as fell out worth the noting vpon this day August de temp serm 25● Notable ●hi●gs ●pon this day N●●●m 154. Christ arose vpon this day the elements were framed the world begun the Angels created and Manna began first to fall vpon this day the Israelites passed thorow the red sea Christ was baptized turned water into wine fed fiue thousand with a few loaues vpon this day and vpon it wee hope Wolph Cron. lib. 2. cap. 1. that hee shall come to Iudgement saith Augustine Vpon this day Christ was borne Aaron and
his Law is broken Obiect Sol. If it be said the Lord will haue mercy and not sacrifice I answer this is in case of necessity not to be auoided hee meaneth not that if thou be poore he had rather thou shouldest worke vpon his Sabbaths but abstaine serue him faithfully and he will stirre thee vp mercy for thy reliefe Quest 75. Are wee bound to doe the holy duties of Gods seruice all this time without ceasing Answ No for we may refresh our selues with eating and drinking singing and musick and other honest delights whereby the mind is cheared vp and ioy and gladnesse befitting the Lords holy day expressed Hos 2.11 Explan Although we teach a strict keeping of the Sabbath vnder the new Testament yet it is not so to bee vnderstood as though wee were bound vpon this day to doe nothing but spirituall duties all the day long for in respect that we haue flesh as well as Spirit that would be wearisome to vs and would turne the Lords day which is for a delight into a heauy burthen I say therefore that wee haue liberty to refresh our selues with such things as cheare the outward man and expresse ioy befitting the Lords holy day For euery holy day of the Lord is a festiuall and ioyfull day for outward ioy and delight which is expressed by the Prophet Hosea saying I will cause all her mirth to cease her feast dayes her new Moones and her Sabbaths When hee threatneth iudgements against the land Nehem. 8.9.10 And Nehemiah inuiteth the people to eate of the fat and drinke the sweete reproouing them when they began to weepe because it was an holy day of the Lord. Whence it appeareth plainly that mirth and ioy euen externall doe well become the holy day of the Lord neither were the people of Israel euer reprooued for this but that through their couetous mindes they accompted the Sabbath a burthen and thought long to haue it gone that their seruants might goe to their labour and they themselues to their markets for in this respect they are threatned by the Prophet Amos Amos 8 5. Heare yee this that swallow vp the poore and say when will the new Moone be gone that we may sell corne and the Sabbath that we may sell wheate c. And some of them not staying the ending of the Sabbaths trod Wine presses and laded and carried out burthens against which Nehemiah prouideth being grieued hereat Nehem. 13.15 as at a great abomination Yet let no man vnderstand this so as though it were hereby tollerated to spend this day in outward and vaine bodily pastimes for for then how shall we improue it to the best aduantage of our soules as hath been already shewed wee had need and ought to doe but so farre forth we may vse bodily delight as it doth not hinder but further the hallowing of this day as it doth not expresse an heathenish feast such as were the old Bacchanalia but setteth forth a diuine feast kept in the honour of the Lord Iesus 1. Let no man therefore be eating and drinking and making merry when the publike seruice of God calleth for him Phil. 3 ●7 for that were truly to make a mans belly his God as the Apostle speaketh seeing he attendeth vpon that when he should attend vpon God in his seruice 2. Let no man so affect outward pleasure as that he should forget the chiefe pleasure and comfort of the soule by neglecting to prepare to Gods worship before or to meditate that it may sinke and take rooting in his mind after 3. Let euery man as hee is able exercise himselfe in priuate in reading and studying the holy Scriptures and praiers with other helpes to strengthen the inner man in grace and knowledge 4. Shunne and auoide all obscene and filthy pleasures which are rather corrupting then hallowing and all vnlawfull gaming or ouer laborious exercises which in the end do rather trouble and dull the Spirits then quicken and cheare thē vp Let there be no frequenting of Alehouses or Tauerns vnto riot no chambring wantonnes or in a word let there bee no mirth but what becommeth sober temperate and chaste minds fearing God and reuerencing his ordinances And that licentious persons may bee the rather restrained from their vaine pleasures vpon this day the Lord hath apparantly executed iudgement vpon diuers for contempt of this day Quest 76. Is this all that we are bound vnto to keepe the Sabbath our selues in ceasing from labour and doing the duties thereof Answ No but whosoeuer hath sonne or daughter man-seruant or maid cattell or stranger within his gates is alike bound to prouide that all as much as in him lieth obserue this day in their kind both man and beast Gen. 17. Explan The Lord the author of this commandement as in giuing other lawes he speaketh not vnto inferiours and the gouerned but vnto the gouernours as in the law of circumcision he commandeth all vnto Abraham both for the act to be done the time and manner in the law of the Passeouer he commandeth all vnto masters of families Exod. 12.21 and Moses openeth the matter vnto the elders onely so in commanding the obseruation of the Sabbath he layeth all vpon the gouernours saying Thou thy sonne thy daughter thy man-seruant thy maid thy cattell and stranger that is within thy gates Gouernours charged with children and seruants And not without iust cause because that 1. Parents and Masters of families are in Gods stead to their children and seruants and haue his titles vpon them which for what else is it but only to remember them so to bring vp those that are vnder them in all godlines and holinesse as if God himselfe did more particularly take vpon him the training vp and nurturing of them 2. Because of the neare relation betwixt gouernours and their people he is the head oeconomicall they the members of all which we know what care the head hath seeking stil to put more comlines vpon them and in these kind of members the greatest grace is holines and greatest meanes of breeding this the due obseruation of the Sabbath 3. Because of the corrupt nature wherein parents beget and bring forth their children into the world so that without grace they are fountaines of infinite misery vnto them they being by nature the children of wrath and vassals of the deuill Ephes 2.2 now what a corasiue must it needs be to the heart of any kinde-hearted father or mother to consider that they haue bred children to be fire-brands of hell and what a care then must this needs worke in them to helpe them to be deliuered here-from and the chiefest ordinary way vnto this is to bring them to the Sanctuary vpon the Sabbath to vrge them and helpe them by prayer examinations and instructions to the fruitfull obseruation hereof 4. Because they cannot looke for a blessing vpon those things about which they imploy their seruants and
children vnlesse they be Iacobs or Iosephs godly and righteous which none are without the conscionable obseruation of the Sabbath Iosh 24.15 Therefore the example of Ioshua is to be followed by all masters of families doe not onely say I but I and my houshold wil serue the Lord and keepe his holy Sabbaths seeke that praise before God which was giuen vnto Abraham I know Abraham Gen 18.19 1. Sam. 1. saith the Lord that hee will command his to walke in my waies With ●lcanah and Hannah bring Samuel to the Temple whilst he is young that he may be a seruant vnto the Lord all the dayes of his life With Timothies grand-mother 1. Tim 3 15. breed in him thus knowledge of the Scriptures from a child Ezech. 3.17 Now howsoeuer the charge of inferiors lyeth vpon the superiours yet this will not excuse the inferiours if they shall neglect this holy day but as the Lord telleth Ezechiel when he had made him a watchman ouer Israel if thou admonish them not and the enemy commeth they shall die in their sinnes but their bloud will I require at thine hands so they shall die in their sinnes and feele the smart of Gods eternall wrath in the world to come Euen as it is said of all persons vncircumcised or that keepe not the Passouer they shall be cut off from amongst the people be they masters or seruants children growne vp or parents howsoeuer the Lord would haue slaine Moses because his sonne Gershom was not circumcised Wherefore let children and seruants as they loue their owne welfare Exod 4.25 be as forward to obserue the Lords holy dayes as their gouernours to command them as diligent about their priuate Christian exercises as they to performe them and as studious to satisfie them in holy indeauours as they to helpe them herein Quest 77. Doth the Lord onely take care for our right spending of this day and leaue vs to our selues vpon the sixe dayes Answ No doubtlesse but it is his will and command also that we should vpon the sixe dayes abstaine from idlenesse and diligently labour in the workes of our callings Explan Before we come to the explanation of this by cattel The charge concerning the sixe dayes whose rest is also commanded are meant their Camels their Oxen their Asses c. whose strength and labour they vsed about their carriages treading out their corne works of husbandry Now the Lord out of his mercy as he would not haue the poore seruant and bondslaue to by torne and worne out with sore labour vnder the hands of vnmercifull masters so would he not haue the poore dumbe creatures and therefore elsewhere explaining further this commandement he saith that thy seruants and cattell may rest as well as thou Moreouer the cattell could not labour but men must be in some sort assistant vnto them and so neglect the Sabbath The stranger was a people not comming of the stocke of Israel but of some other either following them out of Egypt or taken and bought out of other countries whom they had for slaues perpetually as the Gibeonites Now the Lord would not haue there to do any work vpon the Sabbath day Iosh 9.23 though borne without the couenant and liuing without circumcision without passeouer without sacrifice without God in the world partly that through being fauoured they might come to affect the true religion the fountaine of this their sweet rest and partly that being in the bosome of the Church there might be an outward vniformitie of al in the reuerencing of this holy day which sheweth that they which liue in the same Nation and vnder the same gouernment are to be compelled to an outward conformity of religion though the heart can only be turned by the Lord and whatsoeuer thy seruant be inwardly thou must cause him to be conformable to all good orders outwardly but this extendeth not to such as come strangerwise vnto thee ouer whom thou hast none authority To returne now to the proper question Some hold that the Lord doth onely remit his owne right in saying sixe daies shalt thou labour c. because all the dayes of the weeke are his otherwise the people of God had not done well in setting apart some of the sixe dayes vnto holy exercises Working vpon six daies commanded here vpon any occasion whatsoeuer But they are deceiued and their ground is too weake for in euerie commandement wee are not onely inioyned the dutie Reas 1 but the helpes and furtherances heereunto now vnto the right and free keeping of the Sabbath it helpeth not a little to spend the six dayes well about the workes of our callings partly for that our worldly businesses being done we are the freer from any intanglement hereby therefore he saith Thou shalt labour and doe all that thou hast to doe Partly for that being weary of labouring the rest of the Sabbath will be the more sweet and pleasant vnto vs according to that of the Prophet If thou call the Sabbath a delight Esa 58 13. and partly for that the Lord of his goodnes will the rather sanctifie vs and make vs fit to sanctifie a Sabbath when as we diligently doe the workes of our callings vpon the six daies according to that comfortable saying of Iohn Of his fulnesse wee haue all receiued and grace ●oh 1.16 for grace hauing the grace of faithfulnesse and diligence in the duties of our callings we receiue further grace of diligence about Sabbath day exercises which is peculiarly verefied in this very thing in that the most idle which spend their time of the six dayes in gaming sporting and least doing are least holy and most prophane vpon the Sabbath but contrariwise the honestly diligent and intentiue to their callings 2. The iniunction of working vpon sixe dayes is giuen Reas 2 in the same commanding termes in the originall that the iniunction of not working the seuenth is giuen in in the first is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt doe worke in the second is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt not doe worke 3. As there be reasons alledged of ceasing from worke vpon the seuenth day so there is reason laid downe also of working Reas 3 king the six dayes as the maine reason of the first is God rested the seuenth so the reason of the second is In six dayes the Lord made heauen and earth hee wrought If it bee said This needeth not to bee heere commaunded it rather belongeth to the second Table I answer that one and the same dutie may belong to diuers Commandements in diuers respects and in what respect this of labouring belongeth vnto this hath bin already shewed neither is mine intent otherwise to bring it in heere and for some questions which are fitly heere further to be discussed Againe I say that the ground of the former assertion is too weake for not men but God himselfe hath againe set apart since the giuing of
this law some of these dayes for holy duties And a good construction may be made hereof and yet this stand for an vnder-commandement Six dayes shalt thou labour vnlesse the worship of God shall hinder and call thee from thy labour for we must in reason yeeld as much to the businesses of Gods seruice vpon the six daies notwithstanding the command of working as to bodily labours vpon the seuenth notwithstanding the command of resting therefore as when we are bidden to rest all the day we are not yet denied works wherunto necessitie or charitie call vs so when we are bidden to worke the six daies wee are not yet denied ceasing when religion and Gods worship call vs heereunto But for the further cleering of these things here arise certain weightie and needfull questions Quest. 78. Is it not lawfull then to forbeare working to attend vpon God in his seruice in the six dayes Answ Yes it is not onely lawfull but necessary to doe the duties of Gods seruice euery day of the weeke in priuate and in publike when iust occasion is offered 1. Thes 5.7 2 ●im 4 1. Deut. 6.7 Explan It is the corrupt maner of most men when the Sabbath is ended yea when publike seruice is done neuer more to call the Lord to minde all the weeke after or if they doe to performe their deuotion very slenderly and weakely as though they were sufficiently sanctified in two or three houres vpon the Sabbath for all the weeke after or as though they were Gods people only vpon that day and their owne only all the weeke after But this is great forgetfulnes by all meanes to be rooted out from amongst Christians for the Lord is to bee serued euery day of the weeke with the best heart and care that we can First wee haue for this his command Pray continually and in all things giue thanks and preach the word of God be instant in season and out of season and Thou shalt talke of the Lawes of God continually when thou tarriest in thy house and when thou walkest in th way as thou lyest downe and as thou risest vp So that duties of religion doe not onely tye vs semper all the dayes of our liues but ad semper also to euery day and time when good opportunitie is giuen we must expresse our deuotion by praying reading meditation hearing and conferring at fit times 2. We haue for this the example of holy men Daniel prayed dayly thrice a day and praised his God Dan. 6. ●0 and the Text sheweth that it was his manner thus to doe Dauid prayed early in the morning he wept in prayer euen in his bed Psal 5 2. Psal 6 6. Psal 22. ● Psal 34.1 so as that he made it swim with teares I call by day and by night sa●th he I will alway giue thankes vnto the Lord and his praise shall bee in my mouth continually Morning and euening and at noone-tide hee called vpon the Lord. Anna a good widdow is said to haue serued the Lord in the Temple Luc. 2.37 Acts 2.46 wi●h fasting and prayer night and day They were dayly together in the Primitiue Church with one accord in the Temple And Sozomen reporteth out of P●●lo Iudaeus Sozom lib 6. cap. 18. that the Christians in Aegypt continued all the six daies in deuotion so earnestly as that they forgat to take their food from morning till night and the people of Edessa would not bee terrified from their often meetings Ruff. lib. 2. c. 5. through the feare of death threatned vnto them Which I doe not rehearse as fauouring the Monasticall life which is wholly spent in blinde deuotion for euery man must liue in a calling not onely generall as hee is a Christian but specially as he is a member of a Common-wealth and if Anna did liue in the Temple shee had doubtlesse some other imployment besides prayer and fasting and for those of the Primitiue Church their time was extraordinary and most dangerous but I rehearse these examples to commend the general of omitting no day without giuing the Lord his due 3. We haue for this great encouragement giuen Hee is pronounced a blessed man Psal 1.1 Psal 119. ●8 Verse 99. that doth exercise himselfe in Gods word and meditae therin day and night Dauid saith that because Gods Commandements were euer with him he was made wiser than his enemies Yea saith he ● haue had more vnderstanding than all my teachers I vnderstood more than the ancient So that he which will be wise indeed must doe as Dauid did haue euer Gods Commandements with him and make Gods testimonies his daily meditation 4. We haue to vrge vs to holy duties our owne great necessitie euery day We are daily subiect to sin and therefore must daily seek the remission of our sins by praier according to the direction Giue vs this day our daily bread We haue daily businesses vpon which wee need but cannot looke for a blessing without daily earnest prayer otherwise we may build Psal 1 27. watch and worke but in vaine we are subiect to daily dangers either by reason of the Deuils rage the crie of our sins or our weak constitutions which we cannot look should be preuented without diligent prayer euery day prayer being our last greatest refuge Eph. 6. ●8 according to the Apostle and we daily receiue at Gods hands great blessings the course of which we shall cause him to breake off vnlesse we be daily in rendring praises to his holy name Ephes 6.17 Againe for the reading and meditating on Gods word our necessities do all so require that we should be somewhat emploied herein euery day The Word is the sword of the spirit without which how can we combat with our spirituall enemies that will not leaue vs vnassaulted any day The Word is the milke 1. Pet. 2.2 whereby we must be nourished and grow vp in regard of which we are as new borne babes how then can we in any day liue without it but be very Dwarffes in grace The word is the seed of God by which we are kept from sinning 1. Iohn 3.9 brought to be his beloued and holy children If this seed then be not daily in vs how shal we be kept from being ouergrowne with weeds and briars and so from being reprobate accursed ground The word is a light vnto our feet and a lanthorne vnto our paths how then can we walke on and be kept vpright without dangerous stumbling falling Psal 119.105 vnlesse we haue euery day this light set vp in our minds To say nothing of the readinesse and dexteritie in the Word of God which we shall grow vnto by daily exercising ourselues therein according to the prouerbe Vse maketh perfectnesse and how much the more apt we shal thus become for publike instructions to receiue them for our greater comfort Quest 79. It seemeth then that euery day ought to
kept holy from yeare to yeare continually And Judas Maccabeus 1. Mac. 4.59 after that he had purged the Sanctuarie and set vp a new Altar ordained that the remembrance heereof should bee continued with ioy by keeping a feast Dedication eight dayes together from yeare to yeare which feast Christ himselfe graced with his presence Ioh. 10.22 23. preaching in the Temple that he was the true Shepheard and that he did giue vnto his sheepe that heard his voice and followed him eternall life Leuit. 23. Thirdly because the Lord himselfe howsoeuer hee hath said Sixe dayes shalt thou labour yet vpon iust occasion hath set apart some of these at certaine times of the yeare to be kept holy as for the feast of the Passeouer of Tabernacles and of first Fruits that there might bee then a more speciall remembrance of the great benefits bestowed at those speciall times which the Magistrats his Vicegerents following to their great commendation as further occasion was offered doe plainly shew that it is not only lawfull but requisite that it should be thus in all ages amongst the Lords people And thus much for the confirmation of the first Secondly I say that as the setting apart of some of the weeke dayes is lawfull and commendable by examples vnder the old Testament so it is much commended by the practise of the pure and vncorrupted times of the new Testament It is well knowne to such as are but meanely read that the feast of Easter and Whitsontide when Christ arose againe and when the Holy Ghost descended and the feast of the Ascension Natiuitie and Circumcision of Christ were obserued in the Primitiue Church soone after the Apostles time and not long after there were added vnto these the Apostles dayes Jeron Gal 4. and then of some singular Martyrs betwixt whose daies there was yet this difference the Apostles were kept in all Churches these onely where they suffered all which Ierom testifieth in his Commentary vpon the Epistle to the Galathians chap. 4. Adding there further that then the histories of their liues and deaths were read and their godly examples commended vnto others after all which this prayer was added Concede O Deus vt quorum natales celebramus eorum virtutes imitemur Grant O God that we may imitate their virtues whose birth-daies we celebrate Now although antiquity is not sufficient of it selfe to iustifie this or that obseruation yet next vnto the Holy Scriptures it is to be reuerenced according to that of Augustine Post sacras Scripturas Aug. Tom. 2. Epist 118. ea nobis sunt obseruanda quae vel ab Apostolis profecta esse per traditionem vel a vniuersalibus consiliis definita esse iudicantur Those things are of vs to be obserued next vnto the holy Scriptures which are iudged to come from the Apostles by tradition or to haue bin defined by generall Counsels New holy dayes rightly made Thirdly I say that to set apart any day to prayer thankesgiuing c. without iust cause is superstitious and if for the honouring and praying vnto any Saint it is idolatrous for neither God nor good men haue thus made any holy dayes A iust cause is therefore 1. When any great benefit and extraordinary Cause 1 hath been bestowed for which it were grosse ingratitude not to haue a solemne time of praising God Such was the bringing of Israel into the land of Canaan which they were euer thankfully to remember at the feast of first fruits and such is the Natiuity Resurrection and Ascension of Christ the comming downe of the Holy Ghost the stirring vp and sending of the Apostles to plant the Churches of the Gentiles which is a bringing of them into spiritual Canaan to partake of the hony and milke flowing there 2. When any great and wonderfull deliuerance hath been Cause 2 wrought such was the bringing of Israel out of Egypt their deliuerance from Hamans bloudy plot and from Gorgias vnder Iudas Macch●beus so that the Temple was cleansed and the Altar repaired for which they kept the Passeouer the feast of Purim and the Dedication and such haue been our deliuerances from the Spanish Nauy from the Gun-powder Treason and Gowries Conspiracy for which we are to continue solemne times of praising the Lord. Cause 3 3. When some great danger is vrgent vpon a people or imminent Ioel 1.14 and hanging ouer their heads thus Ioel hauing foretold of a famine to come calleth for a fast and a solemne assembly Ionah 3. and the Nineuites when Ionah threatned their destruction hauing onely the light of nature to guide them kept solemnely three daies together fasting and crying vnto the Lord for mercy And thus haue our Magistrates godly prouided that there should be solemne publique meetings for humiliation in our great danger Anno 1588. And in the time of famine and pestilence and it were to be wished that before we bee againe pressed with the like or greater iudgements which our sins cry for some times were solemnely appointed for the pacifying of Gods wrath towards vs. Cause 4 4. When any other speciall occasion is offered for the glory of God and the edification of the Church such as bee the daies dedicated to the memory of the most worthy Saints and Apostles of Christ the remembrance of whose holines miracles and excellency reuiueth the right-affected Christian to the glorifying of God who hath so wonderfully endued men with his grace and to a zealous imitation of them in their holines and integrity Out of these cases to appoint holy daies is altogether without warrant from the Word of God and the practice of purer times and if they bee multiplied to the hinderance of the poore Labourer ouer-much from his labour and to the ouer-hooding of mens consciences they are a bondage against which the Apostle inueigheth saying How turne yee againe to beggarly and impotent rudiments Gal. 4.9.10 whereunto as from the beginning yee will bee in bondage againe Yee obserue dayes c. Obiect 1 If it bee heere obiected that this cannot stand with the Lords precept Six dayes thou shalt labour Sol. I answer that this precept must not nor can bee simply vnderstood but conditionally vnlesse the Lord shall call vs to publike duties of holinesse vpon any of these dayes otherwise the Lord himselfe had amisse appointed some of these dayes yearely afterwards for holines and godly magistrates of old had been much to blame Obiect 2 If it be further obiected that thus dayes appointed by men shall also become Sabbaths and of as great account Differences betweene holy dayes and Sundayes as the Lords day I answere God forbid for yet there is great difference betwixt the Lords day and dayes appointed by men First in regard of the stricter kind of rest required vpon the Lords day from which there is more liberty vpon other holy daies insomuch as now wee may lawfully goe or ride iourneyes keepe markets or faires and
also doe the more priuate workes of our callings so that we obserue the times of publike meetings and giue no scandall to our brethren nor offence to our Gouernours Secondly in regard of more free recreations in which wee may now exercise our selues all waies excepting the times of publike prayer Thirdly in regard of speeches and thoughts out of the publike times we may in some conuenient sort and measure talke of our worldly affaires and deuise in our thoughts for the best for them If any doe otherwise esteeme ordinary holy daies appointed by men hee doth derogate from the dignity of the Lords day as they of the Church of Rome which make more account of some Saints dayes then of the Lords day it selfe and are more carefull then to exercise their deuotion and tyrannise in their strict censures more remisse and licentious vpon this most holy day Quest 81. What is the sinne by this commandement forbidden Answ All prophaning of the Sabbath day Which is first by doing workes that are not of present necessitie by iournying by idle resting or absenting our selues about worldly businesses from the publike duties of Gods seruice Secondly by forgetfulnesse of the Sabbath vpon the sixe dayes by which wee often bring vpon our selues a necessitie of prophaning the same Thirdly when being parents or gouernours we leaue our children pupills and seruants to their owne liberty vpon this day Labour on the Sabbath Explan The sinnes against this Commandement I referre to three heads the first whereof is a direct and the greatest prophaning of the Lords day 1. For labour vnlesse wee be necessarily called heereunto such as it is only then when it is a necessary worke of mercy as hath been already shewed it is the most direct breaking of the Sabbath and taketh away the very nature of it because the Sabbath is the rest And how great a sinne this is the Lord hath sundry waies made knowne vnto his people the Iewes Which motius though they bind not vs in the same rigor as the Iewes were of old yet they are a good inducement to vs to stirre vp our reuerence vnto Gods ordinance and our care to obserue the Christian Sabbath though not in any ceremonious degree of stricktnesse yet in conuenient decency and sequestration of our selues such as may stand with Christian liberty How close the Iewes well held by God to the precise obseruation appeareth Reas 1 1. By his seuere poenall lawes against all labour though neuer so honest Exod. 31.15 and lawfull in it selfe Whosoeuer doth any worke vpon the Sabbath shall die the death Reas 2 2. How much the Lord is displeased with working vpon this day is made knowne by his iudgements executed vpon some in their prophane working He that gathered stickes was stoned to death the Israelites were held captiue in Balon seuenty yeares for their working vpon the Sabbaths Numb 15.32 Ier. 25. that the land might enioy her Sabbaths and sundry examples tending to the same purpose haue been already brought amongst the arguments for our Sabbath which I spare to repeate referring the reader thither 3. How displeasing to the Lord it is to worke vpon this day appeareth by his prouidence for the rest heereof rather then any worke should be done euen about their daily food he sendeth the Israelites Manna enough for two dayes the day before the Sabbath Exod. 16. and whereas at other times the Manna would putrifie and be full of wormes if they kept any of it vntill the morrow after they had gathered it now they did keepe it sweet and good all the next day Reas 4 4. The working vpon the Sabbath hath been at all times condemned by all good men endued with Gods Spirit Moses is most earnest in many places against it Nehem. 13. Nehemiah threatned to punish the Merchants that came to Ierusalem to sell their wares vpon the Sabbath dayes and Esay Ieremy and the rest of the Prophets doe all of them put to their helping hands to roote out this sinne of working vpon the Sabbath day Wherefore if thou makest conscience of stealing because the Lord hath forbidden it make conscience also of doing the workes of thy calling vpon the Sabbath because God hath so strictly forbidden it so seuerely iudged it so carefully prouided against it and stirred vp so many holy men to beate downe this grosse abuse 2. For iournying I shall not need to adde any thing because it hath been specially intreated of already what iourney is allowed and what a breach of the Sabbath Only wee may take with vs this one memorandum that the Lord hath so precisely forbidden trauaile as that he hath charged Exod. 16.29 Tarrie euery man in his place and let no man goe out of his place vpon the seuenth day viz. about his worldly vnnecessary busines though it may seeme vnto thee to bee time gained so that thou shalt not bee hindred now from thy worke vpon the weeke day or though it may seeme otherwise to redound to thy benefit Let them consider this that forecast to make their iourneyes specially vpon the Lords day surely this wisdome commeth not from aboue but from the deuill whose thou art Iohn 8 44. whilest thou doest his will 3. For idle resting and sitting at home all day or most part of the day Idle resting when others assemble themselues to the worship of God or sleeping and lying longer in bed in the morning so that a man cannot prepare himselfe fitly and come in due time to the place of Gods publike worship this is also a most vnworthy vsage of a mans selfe vpon the Lords day He that doth thus like the vaine eccho resoundeth the last word of the Lords precept Thou shalt Sanctifie the Sabbath taking onely Sabbath an idle resting vnto himselfe and therefore as idle watchmen appointed ouer Gods people that see the enemy comming and danger at hand yet doe onely sit still and behold it but sound no trumpet to giue them warning shall be so farre from any reward of their office that the peoples bloud shall be required at their hands so these idle Sabbath-keepers shall be so farre from the blessing attending vpon such as sanctifie a Sabbath as that they shall bee called to account for this pretious time lost through their idlenesse and the vsurpation of that to their owne ease which they were bound to spend to Gods glory Let all therefore that would consecrate this day as glorious to the Lord flie this idlenesse and learne of Nehemiah to rise early in the morning at the least in their hearts to sanctifie the Lords day and duly repaire whilst God inableth to the place of publike meetings otherwise to keepe holy-day at home as his infirmities permit 4. For absence from the publike duties there bee many that content themselues to sit at home Absence from Church and reade some good prayers and other good bookes especially if the weather be but a little
the Lord Ios 24. Otherwise that sharpe sentence belongeth to thee Rom. 2.17 Thou that saist a man should not steale dost thou steale c. The duty of Maisters towards seruants Gen. 18.19 Maisters doe also owe a duty vnto their seruants as being fathers of their families They must teach them also and command them to feare the Lord as Abraham his houshold 2. Not bee too harsh towards them by ouer-correcting by churlish vsage by too sore labouring them but to vse them as those that remember that they also haue a master in Heauen according to that Col. 4.1 Yee maisters doe vnto your seruants that is iust and equall There must be discretion therefore vsed in corrections Sins against God are more seuerely to be punished then against themselues if they be often more if seldome lesse if obstinately or of purpose more if by infirmity lesse And for labour they must remember that the righteous man is merciful to his beast much more to his seruant 3. They must duely recompence their labour with fit maintenance and wages Iam. 5.4 for there is a cry against those that keepe backe their wages which commeth vp to heauen for vengeance 4. They must not despise their good counsell if they can aduise them well at any time but follow it as Naaman did his seruants and Iob acknowledgeth of himselfe saying If I haue despised the iudgement of my seruant and my mayd when they did contend with me Iob 31.13 For what auaileth it for a seruant to bend his minde for his maisters good if his aduice be neuer heard It had been better for the Leuite in his trauell if he had heard his seruant counselling him Iudic. 19. he had escaped a great danger which he doing contrary fell into The duty of Princes to subiects Kings Princes all Magistrates do owe a duty to their subiects to the cōmon people which is to deale iustly truly with them to be coragious to maintaine the right and to hate couetousnesse Exod. 18.2 as Jethro did wisely counsell Moses to prouide for in setting Iudges ouer the people to iudge the fatherlesse and widdow Esa 1.16 supporting them in their iust causes not to lift vp themselues aboue their brethren or pressing them too much with charges Deut 17 19. as the Lord commandeth to the Kings of Israel to reward the good and to punish the euill which is the maine cause why he beareth the sword and hath the Scepter committed to him The duty of Ministers to peop●e 2 Tim 4.2 Ez●ch 3.17 Ministers owe a duty to their people which is publikely to pray for them and with them to preach the word vnto them with diligence in season and out of season to watch ouer them as Ezechiel is charged to espye their danger by reason of their sinnes and to admonish them with all earnestnesse euen as watchmen doe when the City is in danger by the enemies comming to care for them studying how best to further their sanctification 1 Pet. 5.2 as Peter exhorteth Feed the flocke of Christ that dependeth on you caring for it not to domineere or tyrannically to rule ouer them Verse 3. as it followeth Not as Lords ouer Gods heritage but that yet may bee examples to the flocke Ephes 1. And lastly in their priuate dayly prayers to commend them to the Lord as Paul professeth that he did for the Ephesians and Thessalonians 1 Thes 1.2 Ephes 6.28 Duty of Husbans to their Wiues Ephes 5.30 1 Cor. 14.34 1 Pet. 3.7 c. and as the people are also bound to pray for the Minister 1 Cor. 7 3. Husbands owe a duty to their wiues which is to loue them dearly euen as their owne flesh as Christ loueth his Church to teach them if they would or ought to know any thing to dwell with them as men of vnderstanding and not to liue separate and to keepe their bodies as proper and peculiar by a sacred band to them onely and not as their owne to abuse them with other women or to deny them to their lawfull wife as the wife is also bound to her husband The duty of rich toward the poore 1. T●●● 6.17 The rich owe a duty towards the poore and such as bee meaner which is not to carry themselues haughtily and proudly towards them for against this the Apostle giueth warning Warne rich men that they be not high-minded Wherefore as meaner persons giue them reuerence so let them bee courteous to the poorest and another duty is to distribute of their goods vnto the poore as it followeth in the same place That they doe good and be rich in good workes and ready to distribute and communicate This if they doe not they are false stewards and shall be turned quite out of office and haue their portion with hypocrites 7 If any bee learned or excelleth in any faculty or science his duty is not to bee strange and lifted vp in the sight of his gifts but to doe the more good to seeke in all humility to winne the more glory to God As Apollo is commended to haue done Acts 18. mightily confuting the Iewes out of the Scriptures and Paul that did so much excell became all things to all men that hee might winne some Quest 89. What is here forbidden Answ All irreuerence towards those that bee in place and authority aboue v and churlish behauiour in such towards those that be of a low degree Explan Before that we come to speake of the sinnes something is here to be premised Wherefore is the duty of Inferiours onely expressed in this Commandement and not of Superiours if all be alike bound heereby Answ The Commandement indeed is heere in singular and different from the rest but this omission doth not giue any whit the more liberty to Superiours because Parents and children Maisters Seruants c. are relatiues so that the duty of the one cannot be set downe but the duty of the other is by the rule of relation vnderstood nay Superiors are more taxed heereby if they faile of their duty as being of more vnderstanding such as therefore must more readily doe without any pressing by expresse words seeing which is also a more speciall motiue they are as Gods towards others in authority in maiesty in greatnesse and in reuerend antiquity Oh how foule a thing is it then in them not to carry them selues accordingly if it be a fault in inferiours in any thing to neglect their duty much more are they faulty in neglecting theirs because they doe not onely neglect their duty which they ought to doe but being so strongly bound by Gods beneficence towards them and it being presumed so far of their readinesse on Gods part for this honour giuen vnto them that as though meere conscience would not suffer them to be so fouly negligent he maketh no mention of that which they ought to doe
Disobedience Touching the sins against this Commandement they are of two sorts as the duties were 1. Of Inferiours 2. Of Superiours The sinne of Inferiours is irreuerence that is to be without that awfull regard which ought to be towards Superiours and it may be referred to these heads 1. Disobedience and refusing to doe and to bee ruled thus stubborne and vnruly children and seruants sinne greatly and stubborne people that will not yeeld to follow the directions of Ministers they were by Gods censure all subiect to the same most fearefull punishment viz. to bee stoned to death For it was the plaine Law of God touching children See before in their duties to parents Deut. 21.18 And for people it was commanded Thou shalt doe according to all that they that is Deut 17.10.11 12. the Priests and Leuites teach thee According to the Law that they teach thee thou shalt not decline neither to the right hand nor to the left And that man that will doe presumptuosly not harkning to the Priest shall dye Thus people that obey not the wholsome lawes of the Magistrates sinne greatly and if any refuse to be ordered by them they resist the ordinance of God Rom 13.2 and are specially threatned that they shall receiue to themselues condemnation Quest Is it a sinne then in any thing to doe contrary to the Kings lawes for examples sake to eate flesh in Lent or vpon Fridayes Answ If the intent of this Law were that euery one should vse this abstinence without exception it were a sinne to disobey vnlesse necessity did compell but the chiefe politique intent being that Fisher-men might haue vtterance for their fish and so be encouraged for the good of the Common-wealth as the title of that Law sheweth and that young things might in Lent be preserued and not spent before they come to some age and greatnesse if this bee obserued and the Law be not purposely crossed I take it that it is no sinne of disobedience against the higher powers in regard of the ciuill and politicall prohibition and the like is to be thought of all other statute-lawes their intent and scope must be duly by all good subiects obserued Quest It is a sin for children to disobey their Parents by deuoting themselues in their youth to any religious course or order or without or contrary to their liking Numb 30.1 Math 15.4 Answ Yea doubtlesse for God hath taken order that such a vow as vnlawfull should be counted of no force It is therfore meerely pharisaicall in the Romanists that in this case allow nay commend disobedience of young and ignorant children in deuoting themselues to any Monasticall order though to the great offence of Parents 2. Fraudulent and deceitfull obedience Thus seruants sin when they obey and vse diligence in their masters sight Deceitfulnes but are slothfull and negligent behinde their backs they rob and steale from them taking meat drinke and wages to doe their worke with diligence but contrariwise neglect it and prefer their own ease they can haue but cold comfort when they looke to the great Lord of all Christ Iesus that seeth all their sloth and deceit 3. Deriding and scoffing at Superiours as Ham mocked at his father Noah for which he was accursed in himselfe Gen. 9. Deriding Superiours and posterity This is a common vice in wayward youth when they are taught any thing that is good or admonished of their vanity if not openly which they dare not yet in heart they mocke at the admonitions of Parents Masters and Ministers But see what a cutse of God is out against them Pro. 30.17 The eye that mocketh his father and despiseth the instruction of his mother let the Rauens of the valley picke it out and the young eagles eate it This irreuerent scoffing neuer escaped Gods punishing hand The children that mocked Elisha 2 King 2. calling him Bald-pate were suddenly torne in pieces by Beares to two forty of them The Ephraimites that mocked Iphtah and his Gileadites calling them runagates of Ephraim were slaine to two forty thousands Nahash with his Ammonites 1 Sam. 11. that mocked at the conditions of peace offered by tbe men of Iabesh Gilead saying that if they might put out euery mans right eye and bring that shame vpon Israel they should haue peace were all slaine scattered so as that not two of them were left together And what fearefull end the Iewes came to that mocked at Christ and the holy Apostles wee all know Feare therefore to scoffe at any good man but much more at such as thou oughtest to reuerence for his place and function Cursing Superio●rs Exod. 21.17 Exod. 22.28 4 Cursing and backbiting Superiours Hee that curseth Father or Mother shall die the Death And the Lord expressely commandeth Thou shalt not raile vpon the Iudge nor speake euill of the Ruler of the people Thus therefore children seruants people that let loose their tongues against their Gouernors to curse and raile vpon them take the right way to bring Gods curse vpon themselues Numb 23 Balaams case shall be easier at the last day then theirs for he durst not curse where God forbade him 5 Irreuerent gestures towards Superiours in any particular mentioned before in the duty Too much obedience to Superiours Now as this Law is broken by detracting and taking away from the reuerence of Superiours so their is a sinne in ouer reuerencing them 1 If obedience be absolute without respect to Gods will for there we must say with the Apostle Acts 4.19 Wee must rather obey God then men If Parents or Masters bid thee lye steale worke vpon the Sabbatth or the like for their gaine thou must in all modesty deny so to doe If Kings and Rulers command Idolatry Superstition or Heresie obey not lest escaping their hands thou fall into the hands of the Lord. Quest Whether is a Minister of Gods Word being forbidden to preach by the Magistrate to forbeare to execute this his office of Preaching seeing the Apostle did not though straightly charged Ministers suspended may not preach Answ The ordinary Ministers of these times are bound in this case to obey the Magistrate as touching the publike execucution of their office because that howsoeuer they haue an inward calling from God yet their outward to the publike place is from man or by man and may againe bee taken away by man but it was not so with the Apostles who as the other Ministers of those times were immedialy and extraordinarily set a worke by God onely The onely preaching that they may now in this case exercise is by way of conference and exhortation in priuate prouided alwayes that it be not contrary but as the Law doth allow otherwise the power is resisted Here we may see what the Anabaptists are that are enemies to authority viz. euen a sinagogue of fantastick braine-sick soules enemies to Gods ordinance and so are many other humorus
people of these times who though in word they acknowledge the higher powers yet in practise they doe not seeing all their opinions and practises in matter of religion are still to disgrace authoritie and gouernment hereby established both Ciuill and Ecclesiasticall I know that many of them are zealous persons but they are zealous as the Apostle saith to the Galathians amisse Oh that they would weigh that next vnto zeale towards God is zeale to Gods vicegerents and where they are ill spoken of and despised in the heart as it is where their wayes of gouernment are impugned there can hardly be right zeale towards God it being a marke of such as are ordained to damnation to despise gouernment Iude vers 8. and to speake euill of those that be in authority Acts 12. Secondly Superiours are ouer reuerenced by ascribing too much vnto them and extolling them too highly as the people are noted to haue done to Herod saying the voyce of God and not of man whereat the Lord was so displeased that hee strook him with an horrible death and as the Popes flatterers extoll him calling him alterum deum in terris another God vpon earth and Dominum Deum papam the Lord God the Pope with other the like blasphemous appellations 1. Cor. 11.1 Thirdly by making them absolute patterns to be followed in all things for it is no excuse for people liuing in sinne to say they follow their minister or for children to follow parents or subiects their Princes for examples of the greatest are no further to be followed but as they follow Christ as Paul speaketh of himselfe Follow mee as I follow Christ Iesus The blind guide and he that followeth him shall both fal into the ditch 4. By preposterous obseruance towards them in the Congregation which is when we rise vp to great persons being in the very act of Gods worship this is absurd as much as if wee should say by thy leaue Lord a little heere commeth a greater then thou for why else dost thou rise if he be greatest and most worthy whom thou dost now worship Wherefore looke not for nay suffer not this absurd honour to be done vnto you yee great persons parents and masters vnlesse ye would part stakes with God yea be better accounted of whilst men rise off their knees to God to bow vnto you 5. By our humble prostrating the body vnto them as vnto God Acts 10. Saint Peter forbad this vnto Co●nelius and the Angels raised vp Daniel and Saint John prohibiting this kind of reuerence to be done by one fellow-seruant to another This gesture where it proceedeth from religious humiliation and worship commeth very neare the brinkes of open Idolatrie and cannot but incurre that reprehension Take heed thou doest i● not But in ciuill worship performed to Kings I dare not condemne the lowest prostrations whereas I see in the Scripture that such gestures were vsually exhibited to the most pious Kings 2. Sam. 14.22 So Ioab to Dauid fell to the ground on his face and bowed himselfe Yet could I wish that Christian Princes in their piety and by their authoritie would enact a difference betweene the signes of reuerence yeeldable to the heauenly and the earthly Maiesty that there might bee some outward as well as inward adoring gesture appropriated to Gods worship vtterly vncommunicable to any mortall man though bearing the image of God and exercising a vice-gerency of his Soueraignty What is to be thought of childrens kneeling to their parents morning and euening to aske their blessing Answ Kneeling to aske blessing I take it that this custome is lawfull and grounded vpon this Commandement Honour thy father and mother that they may prolong thy daies that is by their blessing which in godly parents hath euer been accounted a sacred ●●ing Therefore Isaac would giue his blessing to his sonne Esau before his death and Iacob to his children and the children of I seph which examples though they were extraordinary as farre as they were speciall prophesies yet they shew it to bee a very ancient and laudable custome and of excellent vse for children to aske and parents to giue their blessing vnto them because as their curse hath alwaies been ominous to wicked children and disobedient that is such as hath bin followed with Gods curse so their blessing hath been auspicious that is such as hath been followed with Gods blessing vpon good children and obedient And the like is to be thought of the blessing of spirituall parents that it hath vertue by Gods ordinance annexed vnto it and therefore is not to bee neglected but reuerently to be receiued before that wee depart the congregation For kneeling vnto parents and vnto Princes if it be but as vnto men it is as lawfull as any other low bowing vnto them for nothing can bee pressed against the one but it alike impugneth the other if it bee otherwise intended by way of religious adoration as some Heathen Emperours haue taken vpon them the honour of Gods it is Idolatrous The sinnes of Superiours And hitherto of the sinnes of inferiours Superiours sinne against this commandement by too much austerity and rigor or by too much remissenes Their sinne may be referred to these heads 1. Cruelty and threatning for this is most vniust and vnequall for the reuerence and seruice which seruants and children doe to their parents and masters wherefore it is forbidden Yee masters doe the same things to them Ephes 6.9 putting away threatning knowing that euen your master is in heauen and there is no respect of persons with him Thou doest rather represent the deuill who striketh feare into men and terror in thus doing then God whose Image thou shouldest beare 2. Denying them things conuenient meat drinke cloth resting time and recreation which may be sufficient Heere is Mammon serued indeed whilst to get wealth thou dealest so vnworthily with thy family euen wringing it out of their flesh and spirits which thou doest thus pinch and beate downe that they cannot be so seruiceable to Church or common-wealth They shall crie against thee to heauen and their crie shall bee heard if being weary of their liues through thy hard vsage they shall doe any mischiefe to themselues or others or runne head-long into any forlorne course through griefe and despaire thou art guiltie of their sinne because thou haste driuen them to it 3. Prodigally wasting all or most part of thy estate without any prouidence for posteritie or care to reward the extraordinary paines of thy houshold seruants 2. Tim. 5.8 If there bee any that prouideth not for his owne and namely for them of his houshold he denieth the faith and is worse then an infidell 4. Neglecting the good education of youth through the want of teaching or praying for them and inuring them to good duties and by leting passe grosse sinnes and disorder without due correction Heauy will their account be for this at
the last day when they shall see Ioshuah Abraham El●ana Hannah and all good gouernours sitting downe in the kingdome of God and themselues shut out of doores 5. Leuity and remisnes in Princes and set Magistrates sparing sinnes that must necessarily bee punished and to the incouragement of malefactors 6. Tiranny exercising their owne pleasure vpon their subiects without all respect of equity and right Contrariwise did the good iudge Samuel 1. Sam. 12. and Dauid the King after that he was well schooled witnesse that which hee professeth saying Psal 101.1 I will sing of mercy and iudgement And so scrupulous was he that he would not take of gift much lesse by violence the threshing floore of Arannah but would buy it to offer sacrifice there 2. Sam. 24.21 although the Lord had commanded him to build an Altar in that place 7. Sloath and infidelity in ministers whose calling is to labour who haue hire to labour and whose labour is to so excellent an end if then they be loyterers if they be seeds-men of tares woe is to them The dispensation is committed to me saith Paul 2. Cor 9.16 woe is vnto me then if I preach not the Gospell A threefold woe then is vnto them that haue not only the calling but the hire also and that double and trebble if they vse not diligence as is sometime seene to the scandall of the ministerie 8. A vitious life in all persons of note and qualitie whether they be magistrates ministers masters ancient learned or of any excellency any way they doe not only sinne in the breach of Gods law but in giuing example to inferiour persons so that they pull vpon them the burthen of their sinnes also and because many are ready to follow them more then men of meaner condition they make their estate by far more fearefull then others the sinnes of multitudes besides their owne lying at the dore Wherefore when a grieuous fall is threatned to wicked Iudges it is said Yee shall fall Psalm 82.7 as one of the Princes The Kings of Israel that were wicked are said to haue made Israel to sin they are euen the eldest sonnes of Satan that be such and therefore good reason that they should share deepely in his inheritance Quest. 90. Whence is the reason of this Commandement taken Answ From the promise of long life if God please not to preuent vs with the blessing of eternall life 1. Tim 4.19 Explan The promise heere annexed may bee also read That they may prolong thy dayes Not that parents haue any power so to doe in themselues but partly keeping them from many dangers which they are ready to runne into to the shortening of their dayes but are preuented whilest they obediently follow their graue and godly counsell and partly blessing them by vertue of Gods ordināce with such efficacy as that this redoundeth to their great good euen for the prolonging of their happy and good estate in this world And in this sense it is vsuall in the holy Scriptures to ascribe that to the instrument which is proper to God Paul commending to Timothy the study and teaching of the word of God saith in so doing thou shalt saue both thy selfe and others And to the Corinthians he saith I haue begotten you vnto Christ Iesus Therfore of the reason then is thus 1. That is duly of all to bee done by which they may liue long and comfortably but the rule to be followed for this is Honour thy father and mother Therefore all are to honour father and mother 2. Thou wilt honour them gladly by whom thy life may be prolonged especially in weale but such are thy father and mother therefore honour father and mother For the first of these Life is so sweet that all desire it and most though it be ioyned with much bitternes and sorrow but to liue long well all doe naturally most earnestly desire so that they would follow any rule though verie hard for this but all other rules are vaine this only effectual the Lord the greatest Phisitian telleth thee so Doe not therefore harden thy selfe against it but bring downe thy rebellious nature and become obedient seruants children and people of all sorts For the second Euery phisitian whom experience teacheth to be a meanes of the health and long life of his patients men will honour in the time of necessitie seeking to them and carefully following their directions and he thinkes himselfe a happy man that can come to the best neither will hee for any thing displease him though he be froward and hastie towards him although his skill often faileth him and he bee till that time a very stranger vnto him but thy parents are no strangers but such as may challenge something at thy hands because they haue bred and brought thee vp with care and paines and God giueth them this blessing to prolong thy daies and not to faile if thou honour them Foolish then and out of his wits is hee and worse then a bruite beast which alwaies doth that which is naturall whosoeuer giueth not honour to his parents according to the scope of this commandement Quest 1 But how is this promise verified seeing as well such as honour parents and doe their duty as the disobedient doe often times die in the prime of their age and the disobedient and vnruly doe often liue long First it is often verified to obedient children when as they are kept thus in a temperate and honest course of life the disobedient comming to their end by surfets How parents prolong their childrens life or the Gallowes with shame in their very prime 2. It is alwaies verified because obedient children liue well and in the feare of God and to liue well is to liue long according to the prouerb 1. Tim. 5 6. Bene viuere bis biuere est To liue well is to liue twice and to liue ill is neuer to liue but to be euer dead as S. Paul speaketh of wanton widdowes Shee that liueth in pleasure is dead whilest shee liueth so that though the disobedient liue long yet they haue not this blessing of long life the obedient and dutifull haue it though they liue not many yeares for one day is better then a thousand of the rebellious Eccles 8.12 which is the cause that the Wise man maketh no reckoning of a sinners life though hee liue an hundred yeares 3. If it bee not verified for life here yet it is more then made good by their taking hence they receiuing for frailty strength for basenes glory for temporalitie eternity Who wil say that if the King promise any of his houshold-seruants by name one of his Guard a Pentioner or Porter that he shal euer inioy his place and yet remoueth him to be the Master of his Horse his Treasurer or Chamberlaine that he is not so good as his word vnto him and who can say then that the Lord of all if he promise
killing of Christ Act. 8.1 though hee washed his hands and ●aul vnto the killing of Steuen 3. He that concealeth as is set downe in the case of a man found slaine whose murtherer is vnknowne the Elders of the City nearest shall purge themselues of the guilt of this bloud by washing their hands and saying Deut. 21.7 our hands haue not shed this bloud neither haue our eyes seene it so that if any had seene it and not reuealed the murther hee had made himselfe guilty of murther Now this murther is so odious before God as that hee which doth it must die without any fauour yea Exod. 21.14 if he flieth to the Sanctuary he shall be pulled away from thence for thou shalt take him from mine altar saith the Lord and put him to death Whence we may see how great the Popes presumption is in giuing pardon for grosse murders to such as flie to any popish sanctuary 1 Murther a most grieuous sinno But iustly hath the Lord appointed this seuere punishment first because murther is the destruction of a little world as man is rightly called wherein the wonderfull wisdome power and mercy of God doth as much appeare 2. Because it is the defacing of Gods image which is in euery man betwixt which and the clipping of the Kings coine hauing his image there is no comparison 3. Because it is an incroching vpon Gods office to whom alone it belongeth to cal men when it pleaseth him out of this world 4. Because it is the greatest breach of loue and peace and so the greatest sinne against man Iohn 8.44 Gen. 4. Whence it is that Christ entitleth the Deuill a murtherer as by his proper name and how secretly soeuer murther bee committed it is noted aboue all other to be a crying sinne Cains murther cried to Heauen against him The Egyptians murther made amongst the Iewes children cried against them The sin of the rich denying the hire of the poore cryed to Heaven and this is a kind of murther also Iames 5.4 in these places we reade of sinnes that are crying for vengeance to shew that murther of all sinnes is the most crying sinne so that the murther shall not rest but if man reuengeth not God will if man cannot know it God will make it knowne sometime making the dead body to bewray the murtherer somtime the birds and sometime the murtherers owne conscience And hitherto of the head sinne against this Law 2 Against quarrelling A second sinne here is the next degree vnto murther all iniury done vnto our neighbor tending to the preiudice of his life 1. By striking and fighting in priuate vniust quarrelling whereby it commeth to passe that an eye or tooth is lost the head the face or the arme is bruized or broken or some other part of the body hurt The Lord prouideth for the punishment hereof Eye for eye tooth for tooth Exod. 21.24 hand for hand and to pay the charges of the party stricken during the time of the healing 2. By grinding the faces of the poore in selling and letting without all conscience in diminishing their hire or in taking their meanes away from them this is also called oppression Esay 1.15 by which rich mens hands are filled with bloud and such an oppressing bloudy sin as that it shall escape no more then actuall murther when the poore cry out vnder this burthen Exod. 22.24 the Lord threatneth that his wrath shall be kindled and he will kill them that vse it 3. By vsing any outward meanes of impairing our neighbours life or health as if the Phisitian or Chirurgion shall deale falsely with his patient giuing him rather things against then for his health that he may be the longer vnder his hands or hauing no skil or but little shall pretend skill sufficient and so keepe him to the indangering of his health and life from such as bee more skilfull and likewise if the Apothecarie through a greedy desire of gaine or by neglect shall giue one thing for another vnwholsome improper ingredients in stead of the prescribed here is not only a wicked deceit but a degree of murder And as it is in regard of others so also is it in regard of a mans owne selfe if he shall by any meanes willingly impaire his owne health rather choosing to indanger his life in time of sicknes then that he will be at charge for the meanes of recouerie in the time of health rather staruing through idlenesse then working or on the contrary side following drunkennes surfeting and whoring to the breeding of noisome diseases in his body thus and whatsoeuer way else he taketh to the preiudice of his owne life besides his sinne against other Commandements he is guilty of selfe murther 3 Against railing speeches The third sinne is to raile and reuile in speeches although no stroke is giuen for this is also a degree of murther Christ himselfe being Iudge where speaking of murther hee saith Whosoeuer shall say vnto his brother Matth. 5.22 Racha shall be worthy to bee punished by a Counsell and whosoeuer shall say Thou foole shall be in danger of hell fire Prou. 12.18 For rayling and bitter words are like the pricking of swords and therefore are not only forbidden but all appearance hereof by crying out aloud Ephes 4.31 where the Apostle biddeth to put away anger euill speaking and crying And good reason that this should be forbidden here as a degree of murther seeing experience teacheth that of words blowes doe commonly arise 4 Against malice hatred and enuy The fourth sin is to haue murtherous affections of malice hatred and enuy against our brother or but the first degree hereof vnaduised anger for to preuent the height of these euill affections the Lord threatneth such as bee vnaduisedly angry as culpable of iudgement and Saint Iames saith Matth 5.22 Matth. 5.22 Iames 1.20 that the anger of man doth not worke the righteousnes of God This vnaduised anger is heate arising in vs vpon some priuate iniurie done vnto vs or to our friend pricking vs forward to reuenge and this may well be said not to worke the righteousnes of God because it setteth not a man the right way but contrary to that which the Lord hath appointed vs saying Rom. 12 19. Ephes 4.26 Vengeance is mine and I will repay it There is a kind of anger which is commanded Be angry but sinne not but this is not an humane but holy anger and hath these properties First Properties of holy anger 1. Against sin it is only against sinne and not against that which is a priuate displeasure done vnto vs. Such was the anger of Moses when as comming from the Lord with the tables of the law in his hands seeing the idolatry of the people he threw them downe not being able to hold when he saw God thus highly dishonoured 2. It is onely because God is offended
2. Because God is offended for the same sinne may be to the offending of God and of our selues also because it is some iniury vnto vs as when a seruant neglecteth his masters busines behind his backe or spendeth his money at the Ale-house or when a people walketh stubbornly against their Minister or ruler in these and the like cases our anger must not be for our selues but for our God Here meek Moses himself erred at the waters of Meribah when the people murmured for water so that hee could not enter into the land of Canaan 3. It is not sudden but vpon deliberation 3. It is not sudden Iames 1.19 Theodor. 5. cap. 17. according to that precept Bee swift to heare slow to speake slow to wrath Thus Ambrose Bishop of Millaine obtained at the hands of Theodosius the Emperour after that he had greatly offended by sudden anger that he should not suffer any decree made in his anger to be executed till thirty dayes after 4. It doth not continue long Psal 03.89 Ephes 4.26 4. It doth not continue long but is soone ouer againe where there is repentance according to the example of our Lord who is slow to anger and ready to forgiue wherefore it is said Let not the Sunne goe downe vpon thy wrath 5. It ariseth from loue 1. Cor. 13. Gal. 6.1 5. It ariseth from loue and is guided by loue the loue of God and the loue of our neighbor that hath sinned for whatsoeuer is without this is sinne and if any be fallen by infirmitie saith the Apostle restore such an one with the Spirit of meekenesse When anger is thus ordered it is so farre from being a sinne as that it is necessary in all men it is zeale for Gods glory and out of this anger the disgracefull words of fooles wicked children sonnes of a whore c. haue rightly and without sinne been vsed as by the Prophets our Sauiour Christ and by the Apostles But out of these cases anger is fleshly and if it be more violent it is hatred if it dwelleth in a man to make him watch his opportunity to be reuenged it is malice if it causeth ioy when it falleth out ill vnto our neighbour and griefe when it is well with him it is diuellish enuy if it bee a perpetuall barre to reconciliation it is a reprobate affection as of such as cannot be appeased Rom. 1.30 Now as the very act of murther hath been shewed to be a most odious sinne so are these degrees of railing anger c. 1. First the heart and tongue is here set on fire of the fire of hell Iames 3. neither good men nor good Angels durst euer doe thus no not Michael the Archangell when he stroue with the Deuill about the body of Moses Iude verse 9. he durst not blame him with cursed speaking but said the Lord rebuke thee 2. To sinne thus is to be a murtherer before God euen as Cain was Iohn 3.15 for he that hateth his brother is a manslayer Rom. 3.13.14 3. It is a proper brand of the wicked His throate is an open Sepulcher the poyson of Aspes is vnder his lips his mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse 5. Properties of cruelty Prou 12.10 Cruelty in the lookes Gen. 4. Gen. 31.2 5. The fift sinne against this Commandement is al cruelty towards man or beast for the righteous man is noted to bee mercifull euen to his beast Cruelty is sometime in the very looke and countenance when it is cast downe towards any man thus was Cains towards Abel before his murther and Labans countenance expressed his malice against Iacob before his departure and this downeward looke is a sinne in any when an ill mind is hereby set forth as it is for the most part 2. In the behauiour there is cruelty when it is harsh In their behauiour and churlish as Nabals is said to haue been towards his seruants so as that they could not tell how to speake to him of him therefore it is said He was churlish 1. Sam. 23.3 and ill conditioned and this is an ill condition indeed and vnworthy a Christian seeing our lesson is Learne of me that J am meeke and gentle Matth. 11. Too much seuerity towards the poore 3. When any way too much seuerity is vsed by the rich towards the poore by officers towards malefactors dealing with them in all extremity by gouernours towards such as be vnder them vnreasonably correcting or otherwise expressing an hatefull mind against them This was a sinne in the Pharisees that brought the adulterous woman to Christ Iohn 8. breathing out cruelty against her and al they shal haue iudgement mercilesse that are thus without mercy 4. Cruelty is in the vnmercifull vsage of the dumbe creature Vnmercifull vsage of the dumb creatures working them without reason pinching them in things necessary beating or killing them without mercy or otherwise abusing them so as that they surfet or grow diseased hereby all these are wicked acts and shew wicked men Prou. 12.10 whose mercies are cruelty 1. Cor 9. For howsoeuer the Apostle saith comparatiuely Doth God take care for Oxen it is certaine that God doth take care for Oxen and Horses and for the very fowles of the aire Deut. 22.6 seeing that he hath made a law forbidding when a man findeth a birds neast to take the old together with the young It is therfore to be vnderstood that he doth not take care for Oxen principally and chiefely but subordinately as his care is towards all the creatures And hitherto of the sinnes against the bodily life The murther of soules 1. Cor 8.11 Now there bee sinnes also against the spirituall life and soule according to the teaching of Saint Paul who sheweth a case wherein a man destroyeth the soule of another viz. when he is an occasion of his stumbling and falling into sin Thus Ministers murther 1. In Ministers or at the least make themselues guilty of murthering the soules of the people committed to their charge when as through their default any of them perish This is plainely taught in Ezechiel Ezech. 3. whom the Lord told that he made him a watchman ouer the people and if the enemy which is sin should come and destroy any he not giuing them warning their bloud hee threatneth to require at his hands If any minister therfore either by neglecting to teach and watch ouer the people much more if by false doctrine or a wicked life he be an occasion that any die in their sins he shall vndoubtedly answer for this soule-murther if he endeauoreth being furnished with gifts necessary to saue them whosoeuer shal perish he is acquitted shal haue his reward 2 Parents and Masters Againe parents and masters and all priuate gouernours are murtherers if by their neglect or bad example their children seruants or pupils perish by ignorance prophanenes or any other
commonly runne into 3. A disposition alwayes to interprete such things as are done against vs in the best sense that wee can as it is noted to bee the property of loue It thinketh not euill 1 Cor. 13.5 for by a misconstruction men are often prouoked causelesly to sinne against their owne soules or when small matters are aggrauated and accounted greater 4. A loue of peace and seeking it with all men as much as may be according to the precept As much as in you lyeth Ro● 12.8 haue peace with all men And againe Dost thou desire to liue long and to see good dayes refraine thy tonge from euill Psal 34.12 and thy lips that they speake no guile cease to doe euill learne to doe well seeke peace and ensue it 5. Lastly a minde content for the loue of peace sometimes to depart with a mans right as Abram the vncle Gen. 13. Math. 17. gaue Lot his nephew his choise being content that part which hee left and Christ when he had proued that hee was not to pay tribute or poll money did notwithstanding pay it being demanded By interring and timely bringing to the buriall dead bodies of Christian people or others which being vnburied would be noysome and preiudiciall to the liues of the liuing Wherefore Abraham prouideth a place to bury Sarah in But this taxeth not the hanging vp of paricides or other notorious murtherers in chaines without buriall who are vnworthy of the honour of Christian buriall And this duty doth more properly belong to the fift Commandement 1 Pet. 2.2 Ro. 10.14 Now as there is a spirituall murthering as well as a corporall so there are duties to be done to preserue the spirituall life and first to preserue thine owne thou art bound to desire the sincere milke of the word as S. Peter saith that thou maist grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.2 Rom. 10.14 attend the preaching hereof whereby faith may be wrought and confirmed and that with all diligence as it is to bee preached in season and out of season thou must hide the word in thy heart by serious meditation as Dauid did Psal 119.11 Cor. 3.16 and let it dwell plenteously in thee pray continually for grace and reuerently receiue the Sacraments and vnto all these ioyne obedience be doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiuing your selues If any of these things bee neglected Iam. 1.22 thy soule cannot liue thou destroyest thy selfe euerlastingly To preserue the life of the soule To preserue thy neighbours spirituall life 1. If thou be a minister teach exhort rebuke vse all meekenes discretion and diligence in doctrine and life to keepe in the right way to bring in such as are out to strengthen the weake to comfort the faint-hearted to curbe the vnruly to informe the ignorant and erronious and to further the sanctification saluation of all 2. If thou beest a Iudge a ruler or a magistrate in executing iustice seeke not onely in regard of temporall punishments to make men affraid of sinning but much more because they shall thus damne and destroy their owne soules commend an honest and deuout course of life both by word and example so as S. Paul saith to Timothy thou maist saue both thy selfe and many others 3. If thou be father or mother master or priuate gouernour teach and season youth in good things betimes command them with Abraham to walke in the way of the Lord instruct them in the grounds of religion out of the holy Scriptures euen in their childhood with Timothies grandmother chastize them duly when they sinne against God as Ely did not and in all things bee an example of holinesse vnto them bringing them to the publike place of Gods worship and praying earnestly for them with Elchana and Hannah and thus thou shalt dedicate them with Samuel to the LORD and well prouide for the saluation of their soules Heb. 3.13 Leuit. 19.27 4. If thou be a priuate person exhort such as are backward and prouoke vnto loue and good workes reproue such as offend and suffer them not to sinne such as are forward in goodnesse incourage with the Kingly Prophet who saith I was glud when they said Psal 1 22. 1 Cor. 10● let vs goe vp to the house of the Lord and by no meanes lay any stumbling-blocke before thy brother by which he should fall and perish and thus many priuate persons to their great ioy saue the soules of others whilest others carelesse of these duties like Cain haue murtherous mindes and say am I my brothers keeper Quest 94. What is the seauenth Commandement Answ Thou shalt not commit Adultery Quest 95. What is heere forbidden Answ First all outward vncleane actions of Adultery Fornication c. Secondly all filthy and vncleane speeches songs and Bookes and Ballads of this sort Thirdly all incontinent thoughts and lusts of the heart Fourthly whatsoeuer is an occasion of vncleannesse as surfetting drunkennesse and idlenesse c. Mat. 5.28 Explanat The sinne heere forbidden is not onely the act of Adultery but whatsoeuer is any way against chastitie or sobernesse either in deed in word or in thought directly or indirectly as a meanes of sinning heere against For thus large our Sauiour sheweth the extent of this Commandement to be where hee saith Whosoeuer looketh vpon a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her in his heart stretchihg this commandement to the very thoughts and the meanes of such wicked thoughts a wandering eye Gen 19.18 First therefore this commandement is broken by vnclean actions of euery kinde whether by beastiality Leuit. 18.23 or by vnnaturall lust Rom. 1.26.27 and so foule an euill is this as that the Lord hath done more against it euen in the view of the world then against any other sinne sweeping away euen whole Kingdomes with fire and brimstone from Heauen not sparing any of that impure people and continuing the memoriall of his iudgement vnto this day by the dead sea which is there by the apples outwardly faire hauing nothing within them but smoke and by the generall desolation of the Countrey voyd of euery liuing creature Deut. 22.22 Or the act of vncleannesse is committed with a man or woman married or betrothed and this is adultery which is also so foule as that the punishment appointed is death If any man bee found lying with a woman married to a man then they shall dye euen both twaine to wit the man that lay with the wife 23. and the wife If a maa bee betrothed to an husband and a man lye with her then shall yee bring them both out to the gates of the Citie and shall stone them with stones to death And good reason that adultery should bee thus puninished because it is an abhominable sinne diuers wayes Against adultery 1. It is a breach of a most sacred couenant made before God and the congregation of his people in most sollemne
whence it is said Prou. 6.30 Men doe not despise a thiefe when he stealeth to satisfie his soule because he is hungry but it is added If hee be found he shall restore seuenfold Verse 31. or giue all the substance of his house that is manifold according to the first Law or be sold for a seruant Wherefore take heed of the least theft thou that art poore and needy if thou canst then worke and take paines honestly for thy liuing if thou beest not able with Lazarus rather lye and dye at the gates of the rich than steale and so maist thou bee recompenced with him in heauen otherwise thou takest the way to hell And for young dissolute persons that will rob to maintaine their riot they shall assuredly pay deare therfore with shamefull ends being hanged like dogs and which is worst of all vnlesse they duely repent with eternall most horrible paines for a little pleasure in riot mixt also with dread and feare 2. The second kinde of theft is oppression and wronging without recompence making Oppression of many sons 1 Kinde and this is a farre stretching sinne a monster with many heads 1. In Kings and Princes when as tyrannically they exact vpon their poore subiects taking vnreasonably of them for their owne pleasure The Lord made this an occasion of the peoples reuolt from Rehoboam when without all mercy hee threatned saying 1 King 12.11 My least part shall bee bigger then my fathers loynes whereas my father did burthen you with a grieuous yoake I will make your burthen more heauy 2. In the Officers of Kings and Princes which extort from the people more then they are by their Lords commanded euen to the priuate inriching of themselues This was the Publicans sinne who were the Officers of the Romanes the Lords of the world and therefore were odious amongst all people and therefore called Publicans and sinners When they came to Iohns Baptisme desirous to know what they should doe this was commanded them as their maine duty Require no more then that which is appointed vnto you Luke 3 13. as if failing in this they were guilty of so notorious a sin as that whatsoeuer else they did they could not escape Gods wrath to come 3 Kinde 3. In noble men and great persons which take away the lands or commons of meaner persons or inforce them to sell for feare of their displeasure at an vnder-reckoning This was Ahabs sinne against Naboth King 22. and so felonious a robbery as that God arraigned him and condemned him to lose his bloud as Naboth had done If any now adayes doe the like as God knowes there bee many though hee murther not directly that hee may possesse yet if he abuseth his power to the wronging of the poore or meaner persons hee is a robber by oppression may look for his punishment threatned in this case Hos 5.20 The Princes of Iudah are like those that remoue the bound● therefore will J poure out mine anger vpon them like water that is without any stay or let 4 Kinde 4. In rich men that take aduantage of the poore mans necessity through which hee is constrained to sell lands or goods not giuing to the worth for them Against this as a fore oppression the God of Israel gaue a Law to his people saying Le●it 25.14 If thou sel●est ought vnto thy neighbour or buyest of him thou shalt not oppresse but according to the number of the yeares from the Iubile● thou shalt buy of thy neighbour if there bee many yeares increasing the price c. But this law or the equity hereof is little regarded now adayes euen amongst such as take themselues to bee Gods people euery man almost euery where being onely for himselfe 5 K●nde 5. In Iudges and Iusticers or any other Ministers of Iustice or Subordinates vnder them which haue their hands open to receiue bribes and then they are ready to worke on any side Esa 1.23 Verse 24. Their Pr●ices are rebellious saith the Lord and the companions of theeues euery one loueth gifts and followeth after reward● Therefore I will ease me of mine a●uersaries and auenge me of mine enemies I would to God that this were euer before the eyes of euery corrupt Iudge and Iusticer and of euery griping vnconscionable Lawyer and pilling officer in euery Court that such are companions of theeues and Gods grieuous enemies 6 Kinde In such as toward deare seasons hoord vp their corne and the like in Fore-stalling of Markets Regratours and Ingrossers which are so set vpon their owne priuate gaine as that they endeauour by all these meanes to inhaunce the price to the vtter vndoing of the poore These are theeues of the Commonwealth also they are accursed Prou. 11 2● He ●hat withdraweth the corne the people will curse him but blessing shall be vpon the head of him that selleth corne Many bitter cryes bee daily sent vp against such Cormorants by the Lords poore people curses vttered which shall not be in vaine 7. In such as take pledges of the poore 7 Kinde which they cannot spare but to their great hinderance and hurt and such as restore not the pledge for the Lord hath forbidden to take thy neighbours garment to pledge when he hath no more or at the least Exod. 12 2● Deut. 24.6 to restore it yer the euening when it serueth to couer him also No man shall take the vpper or the neither milstone to pledge And for restoring any pledge taken it is a property of him that shall liue and not dye Ezech. 18.7 Hee hath restored the pledge to his debter whereas hee that hath not restored shall dye A fearfull doome against many misers in these times that without all conscience take aduantage against poore men when lands being laid to pledge by morgage are forfeited the poore man not being able to redeeme it for in this case thou must giue the full price as it is wortb otherwise looke how many pledges thou keepest so many witnesses dost thou keepe to testifie thy oppression against thee at the latter day 8. In such as let lands or monies 8 Kinde Oppression in letting lands setting them vpon the racke and not so as the hirer by Gods ordinary blessing may be saued harmelesse doing his best endeauour this is called a biting and deuouring of our neighbour For these lettings are both so alike as I take it as that they may wel be ioned together according to that law which if it be rightly applyed belongeth equally to them both Deut 23 18. Thou shalt not giue to bitting to thy brother either money meat or any thing that is put to vsury or byting so that if there be any way that the wicked heart of man hath deuised to oppresse by in letting any thing it is a breach of this law and a deuouring oppression Wherfore let both the caterpiller-like vsurer and the
lawfull meanes maintaine our owne credit and a good name for proximus quisque sibi euery man is next to himselfe he that will vse that care which hee ought to the preseruing of his neighbours good name doth begin with looking to his own Yet I say that we must doe it by lawfull meanes because there be some that doe ambire famam too earnestly secke after credit and offend hereby It is vnlawfully therefore sought Math. 6. Vnlawfull meanes of fame First by hypocrisie as the Pharisies fought the praise of men by pretending exceeding great godlinesse for which they are censured by the Lord to haue their reward so that if any seeke fame by making a most excellent shew that hee may be seene he may indeed get a name before men but hee shall lose it before God Secondly by flattery as Absalon is noted to haue flattered the people vsing all courtesie towards them that so he might make a way to the Kingdome such are some courting Gallants now adayes that vse all courtesie towards others hauing most proud hearts and making most lowly shewes these and the like get the names of most kinde Gentlemen and lowly when they are proud and insinuate themselues into men for aduantage by thus setting vp their names amongst them Luc. 6.26 Thirdly by the neglect of a mans duty when he ought to oppose himselfe against mens sinnes winking at them and forbearing to censure them when his office doth require it that he may thus haue the report of an honest quiet man After this manner to seeke and to obtaine a good name and to bee well spoken of is to bee infamous and vile before God who hath threatned such saying Woe is vnto you when all men speake well of you for so did they to the false Prophets Lawfull means of fame The lawfull meanes of getting and maintaining a good name are Prou. 10.7 1. To liue well and righteously for the memory of the iust be blessed but the memoriall of the wicked shall not Whatsoeuer good parts a man hath yet if there bee any thing scandalous in him Eccl 10.2 it is a flye in a boxe of precious oyntment corrupting it all 2. In all things thou must endeauour to glorifie God for Such as honour me 1 Sam. 2.30 saith the Lord J will honour them seeke to maintaine and aduance Gods fame and thou shalt be sure of a good name though thou seemest to be vile before some Michel as Dauid in dancing before the Arke Math 7.2 3. Thou must speake well as much as thou canst of other men for it is iust with God as thou measurest vnto others so that it should be measured to thee againe 4. If there be any other thing which is honest which is iust Which is pure which is worthy of loue which is of good report Phil. 4.8 If there be any vertue if there be any praise think on these things Our duty towards our neighbours good name Now for the credit and good name of our neighbour that we may doe our duty aright towards the maintaining hereof 1. We must congratulate with him for the good report that goeth of him as S. Paul professeth his ioy for the faith of the Romans Rom. 1.8 which was published throughout the whole world and likewise towards other Churches particular persons And if we be not likewise affected to the good report that goeth of our neighbour but do contrariwise repine at it as though something were heereby detracted from vs as is the manner of many we are far from maintaining his good name as our duty requireth 2. We must speake of the good things in our neighbours to their praise and commendation as the Christians at Lystra and Iconium Act 16.2 2 Cor. 8. are said to haue reported well of Timothy as Paul commendeth the charity and forwardnesse of those of Macedonia 3. Wee must conceale and hide the infirmities of our neighbour sparing to speake of them to his disgrace for loue couereth all trespasses and beare one anothers burthen saith the Apostle Prou. 10.12 Gal. 6.2 and so fulfill the Law of Christ Little care of the neighbours good name is in him that is ready to set abroach his weaknesses 4 If any thing be done by our neighbour that may haue a tolerable construction we must so construe it and not in the worst sense This was the charity of the rest of Israel towards the Reubenites and Gadites on the other side Iordan Ios 12. which had set vp an Altar for a testimonial they sent first vnto them to vnderstand the thing before that they begin to war vpon them and Ioseph willing to make the best construction that he could of Maries being with childe determined secretly to send her away 5. Against all slanderous tales and reports against our neighbours credit to stop our eares it is commended as a necessary property in such as bee inhabitants of Gods holy mountaine not only not to slander but not to receiue a false tale against his neighbour And what loue is there in such Psal 15.3 as be ready to hearken to backbiters vnlesse it may notoriously or euidently appeare to be no slander Wherefore thou must not onely not hearken to such but reproue them bee angry with them and make them knowne as most odious persons going about to rob thy neighbour of his principall iewell more worth then all his substance Whether a man may praise himselfe Whether may a man to preserue his owne credit and to get him a good name speake of such thinges as are praise-worthy in himselfe seeing it is forbidden Let another man praise thee and not thine owne lippes This is to be iudged of according to the fountaine from whence it proceedeth if it commeth from pride and selfe-loue out of a desire to be famous and highly thought of as it is in most it is to be condemned as pride it selfe which maketh a man hatefull to God and man but if it commeth from necessity because otherwise a man shall bee vniustly in disgrace through slanderous tongues heere is a time to seeke to maintaine his owne good name Thus did Paul iustifie himselfe and extoll his owne gifts and labours or else because otherwise some aspersion shall be cast vpon Gods glory something slanderous laid vpon his seruant being imputed to him 1 Sam. 11. as if Samuel had not stood forth to iustifie himselfe and to publish his vpright dealing in his Iudges Office or lastly because otherwise sometime euen such as are of excellent deserts might remaine vnknowne and bee vsed as enemies when there is none else to make them knowne Thus Obadiah telleth Elijah to his owne praise that hee hid an hundred Prophets of the Lord 1 King 18. fifty in a Caue and fed them with bread and water And Nehemiah speaketh much of his goodnesse towards the Iewes desiring the Lord to remember him in mercy
Sanctification Secondly sanctification is the vertuall diffusing of his bloud in our hearts and in euery corner thereof by the working of his holy Spirit to the cleansing of them from sinne so as that it hath no more dominion ouer vs Rom. 6.3.4 For all wee that are baptized into Christ are baptized into his death Wee are buried then with him by baptisme into his death that as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father so we also should walke in newnes of life Rom. 8. ● 2. Cor. 5.77 And such as are in Christ are described thus Which walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit Jf any bee in Christ hee is a new creature old things are passed away all things are become new It is a vaine thing therefore for any man to perswade himselfe of deliuerance from sinne and death by Christ his bloud vnlesse his conscience bee heereby purged from dead workes of sin in newnesse of life to serue God No price paid for the ransome of a flaue can set him at liberty if he stil beareth a slauish mind that he will serue his old master alwaies neither can any friend though he will die for him that deserueth death saue him if he will still desperately cast himselfe vpon mortall danger nor yet can any water of Iordan clense from the foule leprosie if the precepts of the Prophet bee not obeyed No more can that man be any better then a slaue of the Deuill though Christs precious bloud hath been paid for ransome if hee will still liue the seruant of sinne and of the Deuill neither can he be saued from death though our dearest friend Christ hath once died for man that stil by sinning runneth vpon the danger of death Nor lastly can any be cleansed from the leprosie of sin vnlesse his precepts bee obeyed who onely can and doth direct rightly to vse the streames of his bloud for this end and purpose Oh mad men then that hope for deliuerance from sin but haue sinne ruling and raigning in them How happeneth it that being so wise for things worldly and temporall yee haue no more vnderstanding for things spirituall and eternall How is it that yee looke for deliuerance from death by Christs bloud when no power of this death is seene to mortifie and kill sinne in you What word haue yee What promise of God to build this confidence vpon As verily as God is truth yee haue none at all from God Whence then is the ground of your hope What doe you build your comfort vpon vpon a shadow vpon nothing Bee ashamed in time of this your folly flatter not your selues in vaine yee sinners but lay hold vpon saluation whilest it is offered being sanctified and washed by vertue of Christ his bloud in your hearts so that all iniquity being expelled thence it may by power of the same bloud be expiated and neuer appeare to your condemnation at the day of account Now as Christ his bloud alone purgeth from sinne so it of 〈…〉 must be applied by the sinner vnto his own soule by the hand of faith All the water of all riuers will not make a man cleane vnlesse with hands he bee washed with the water no more will Christ his bloud make cleane the soule vnles with the hand of faith it be applied vnto it For this cause as the bloud of Christ is said to clense from all sinne so faith is said to purge the heart from sinne and to iustifie a sinner That precious bloud purgeth 1. Iohn 3.3 Rom. 3.28 and iustifieth as the cause materiall faith as the cause instrumentall Q. 111. How is faith first begun wrought in the hart Meanes of working Faith Answ Ordinarily by the preaching of the Gospell of Christ the holy spirit inwardly opening the heart to belieue those things that are outwardly preached to the eare Rom. 10.17 Explan Finding that Faith is the instrument of our iustification and saluation it is necessary to consider how or by what meanes this instrument is purchased that if it be wanting it may bee sought here if it bee already attained the meanes and giuer hereof may bee magnified and honoured The meanes therfore I say is the Gospell published and made knowne vnto vs which the spirit opening the heart it beleeueth For Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word of God and this word thus working faith is the Gospell the Law driueth to despaire the Gospell erecteth by hope the Law threatneth and filleth with feare the Gospell promiseth and filleth with comfort the Law sheweth our miserable estate and what need we haue of a Sauiour the Gospell sheweth a remedy against this misery and pointeth out vnto vs our Sauiour Then must be a kind of faith or assent to belieue the Law also but this is not the Faith by which wee are saued from the Law but when this is and the Gospell is preached euen as a man at deaths dore through extreame sicknesse at the newes of some soueraigne remedy lifteth vp himselfe taketh it and is recouered So the sinner euen dead by the Law at the newes brought in the Gospell of a remedy lifteth vp himselfe with hope and by faith taketh it and is recouered out of his danger And being so sicke of sinne and weake as that he cannot of himselfe doe it the holy spirit is ready holding vp the hand and opening the mouth of the soule to enable it to receiue this wholsom medicine as in the case of Lydia of whō it is said that A certaine woman named Lydia Acts 16.14 a seller of purple of the City of the Tbyatirians which worshipped God heard whose hart the Lord opened that she attēded to such things as Paul spake Q●●st 112. How is faith encreased Ans Chiefly by prayer reading preaching and hearing of the word and receiuing the Sacraments for if these be well attended we will not be wanting in workes of mercy and righteousnesse Exercises of Faith Rom. 10.14 Explan Of Prayer the Apostle speaketh as of a chiefe fruit and exercise of Faith for How shall they call vpon him saith he in whom they haue not belieued So that if there be faith that setteth a worke presently to pray When the disciples belieued a chiefe care which they had was to be taught to pray wherfore they come to Christ saying Lord teach vs to pray as Iohn also taught his disciples And great reason is there Luke 11.1 that faithfull people should pray often prayer being a proper worke of faith euen as to speake is proper vnto man whence it is that the Kingly Prophet saith I belieued and therefore I spake or prayed as if he should say I had vtterance and therefore I vttered for what difference betwixt the tongue of man and beast but in the speech and what difference betwixt the beleeuer and the atheist if he prayeth not 1. Tim. 4.5 Againe as faith purgeth man so
because they pray not his words which is a harder matter to doe Wherefore to pray these words rightly thou must in some conuenient measure vnderstand them and haue the minde taken vp with them in the vttering the heart still conueying it selfe into the meaning of euery petition which that it may be done there must be vsed good deliberation in him that prayeth Thus if this prayer be said it is well vsed alone or added to other prayers like vnto a wrastler who hauing vsed his best skill and strength to ouercome in his wrastling yet finding the victory getting to bee very hard hee re-inforceth himselfe at the last with all his might force and skill together that he may carry away the prize so the Christian man wrastling as Iaacob with God by prayer in the end re-inforceth himselfe in this prayer that he may not depart vnblessed Two extreames are heere to be taken heed of The one is too much confidence in the words of this prayer often repeated as some Popes of Rome haue granted great pardons to seuen Paternosters and as many Aue Maries said ouer euery day or on some dayes and in some places which is grosse and superstitious The other is too much detracting from this prayer by accounting it no better or not so worthy as a mans owne conceiued prayer which is derogatorie and arrogant Secondly vse this prayer as a forme of direction learning hereby what to aske what first chiefly with what affections and assurance Are not other prayers also to be vsed by vs though differing from this in order yet consonant in matter Yes doubtlesse for otherwise the Apostle Paul in his Epistles would not haue vsed such variety of order and manner in thanksgiuings requests and deprcations for his spirituall children for himselfe for the whole Church nor would the primitiue Christians in their ioynt prayer for the Apostles haue beene so bold as to premise this part of thanksgiuing before their intreating of Gods assistance to the Apostolicall offices as they did when Peter and Iohn being dismissed and charged to speake no more in the name of Iesus they all together prayed vnto the Lord. Act. 4.24 Wherefore though this order bee generally to bee followed yet neither is it alwayes necessary nor yet is it a swaruing from this direction though some of these petitions onely bee asked in our prayers and others bee omitted But the errour is when we goe beyond the rules heere giuen vs doting too much vpon worldly things or hauing proud vnfaithfull or malicious hearts we make our prayers the labor of poluted lippes Why doth the Apostle say that we know not what to aske Quest Rom. 8 26. as wee ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed if this be a perfect direction teaching vs all things Or are we not rather to hold it a generall direction onely for matter and that to be true which hee saith for words we know them not afore-hand wee follow not any set forme of speech but as the spirit giueth vtterance at the time of prayer And so heere commeth to bee enquired what is to be thought of set formes of prayer and whether it be well to vse them It is true indeed wee know not of our selues as naturall men what to aske but the Spirit of God teacheth vs partly enlightening vs by the Word of God and partly stirring vp this heauenly motion in our mindes to pray and long after the fulnesse of Gods grace which is an argument of our full deliuerance from mortality and basenesse into perfect glory of soule and body and this onely is the scope of the Apostle in that place Againe because prayer is the worke of Gods Spirit it may bee hence gathered that all such as haue the Spirit and are regenerate doe and are able in some measure to pray to their owne comfort hauing none other helps of prayers made by men or aforehand deuised by themselues Yet it doth not hence follow that it is not good to pray in set formes of prayer no more that it is not good to haue staires to goe vp into an vpper roome because a man may make a shift to goe vp by a ladder or by some other meanes In publique for the ordinary seruice of God it is needfull there should bee set formes of prayer because it is not certaine that euery Minister of Gods Word hath the Spirit of Prayer in him to teach him and if hee had there would be danger through weaknesses of memory of omitting many things needfull to bee prayed for in the congregation of excursions and runnings out into clauses impertinent and idle in so long prayers and of tautologies and repeating the same things againe and againe to the wearying of the congregation Numb 10.35 Numb 6.24 And thus this heauenly seruice of Prayer should bee vnequally performed according to the inequality of the ministers some Churches hauing men able and sufficient some againe very weake ones and deficient For these causes set formes haue beene vsed anciently in the Church of God vnder the Law Moses vsed the same forme of prayer when the Arke remoued and when it stoodstill by the commandement of the Lord he taught Aaron and his sonnes a forme of blessing the people Rom 16.24 2 Cor 13.13 Dauid made many Psalmes which were formes of praise and prayer to bee vsed publikely as the 104 105.106.107 Psalmes the 90. Psalme was a Psalme for the Sabaoth Vnder the Gospell the first forme of prayer is the Lords Prayer the first forme of blessing is that of Paul The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with you all or more fully The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ the loue of God and the Communion of the holy Ghost bee with you all Amen And since it hath beene the custome of Gods Church to pray in the congregation by set prayers If therefore these rules following be obserued I suppose it shall be well Rules of prayer First that all vse the set formes of common prayer appointed in publique Secondly if more speciall prayers are to be vsed before or after the preaching of the word for which no set common forme is nor can well bee appointed that euery man endeauour himselfe hecrein either with words studied and set before or then iudiciously and reuerently conceiued as by the Spirit he is able Thirdly that nouices or such as haue not the gift of well conceiuing prayers vse set formes of prayer deuised by others in priuate Fourthly that such as vse the prayers of others labour to be moued with the same spirit of the Authors as if the wordes did flow from the Spirit in them Lastly that no man stand heere without indeauouring to goe further if hee can pray some set forme but striue to grow to more perfection in this heauenly faculty and to bee able without the helpe of set wordes to make knowne his desires vnto the Lord. If
any man shall thinke as some doe that this is presumption without set wordes to come to God in Prayer when as to a mortall Prince wee dare not hee is greatly deceiued and sheweth to haue little vnderstanding of the faithfull mans neerenesse vnto God and acquaintance with Gods holy Spirit For will such as wait about the Kings person euery day and talke continually with him study set wordes afore-hand what to speake they will indeed thinke of the matter concerning which they would speake but for wordes they would not especially if they had alwayes some eloquent person at their elbow ready to prompt them and to tell them what to say in like manner faithfull men doe continually attend vpon the Lord and talke with him by Prayer and the most eloquent Spirit of God is alwayes ready to prompt and helpe them wherefore so that the matter to be spoken of be thought vpon before it is no presumption to come without set wordes in such as by experience doe finde some sufficiency by Gods gracs to talke thus with their heauenly King and Father Quest What desirest thou of God in this prayer Answ I desire my Lord God our heauenly Father who is the giuer of all goodnes to send his grace to me and to all people that wee may worship him seeue him and obey him as we ought to doe And I pray vnto God that he will send vs all things that bee needfull both for soule and body and that he would bee mercifull vnto vs and forgiue vs our sinnes and that it will please him to saue and defend vs in all dangers ghostly and bodily and that he will keepe vs from all sinne and wickednesse from our ghostly enemy and from euerlasting death And this I trust he will do of his mercy and goodnesse through our Lord Iesus Christ and therefore I say Amen So be it Explan Heere in briefe are set downe the most needfull things contained in the Lord● Prayer with such plainnesse as that euen children may attaine some good vnderstanding of the prayer heereby which was the laudable intent of our Church in prouiding this wholsome milke for tender babes I shall not need therefore to adde any explanation of these words of our Catechisme being so plaine and euident of themselues other then by poynting at the parts of the Lords Prayer secretly diffused through this Answer The first parcell whereof compriseth both the meaning of the Preface that he vnto whom we pray calling him Father which art in heauen is the Lord God of heauen and earth our common Father by faith and heauenly most glorious and full of maiesty from whom euery good thing descendeth and the meaning of the first Petitions that by our worshipping him hee may be glorified and his name hallowed by our liuing as his loyall subiects and faithfully seruing him his kingdome may come and by our readines to obey him in euery thing his will may be done in earrh as it is in heauen and not onely by such a● readily obey but by all people his ouer ruling power compelling the disobedient and stubborne The words next following are the interpretation of the rest of the petitions that he would giue vs all things needfull both for soule and body which is to giue vs this day our dayly bread to forgiue vs our sinnes is the next petition to saue and defend vs from all dangers c. is not to lead vs into temptation but deliuer vs from euill from all sinne and wickednesse from our ghostly enemy and the end and reward of being led heereby euerlasting death The last clause And all this I trust he will doe c. serueth to explaine the conclusion for thine is the kingdome c. thou art a most gracious King full of mercy and goodnesse in Iesus Christ and this thy mercy and goodnesse shall thus bee more glorified wherefore I trust and assure my selfe that thou wilt doe these and in this confidence I say Amen Quest 117. How many bee the partes of this Prayer Answ Three the Preface Our Father which art in Heauen the Petitions Hallowed be thy name thy kingdome come c. And the conclusion For thine is the kingdome the power and the glory for euer and euer Amen Eccles 4.17 Exod. 3. Explan This Prayer being an absolute forme of direction for vs hath in it all things needfull both for beginning proceeding and concluding the petitions are not nakedly set down without a preface neither are they left without a conclusion hemming them in on both sides to shew both the necessity of preparation when we addresse our selues to prayer and of obseruation when wee haue prayed Preparation to prayer there must needs be otherwise we shall be ready to offer the sacrifice of fooles wee shall draw neere to the flaming bush with shooes on our feet and tread on holy ground with vncleane feet and compasse the Lords Altar with vnwashen hands Obseruation there must bee when wee haue prayed to giue God the glory of our petitions granted otherwise we shall deale deceitfully with God mocke him Gal. 6.7 which he wil not heare pretending his glory and kingdome but the sequell shewing when we rest at the blessings receiued that we intend our owne ease and pleasure Quest 118. In the Preface why doe you call God Father Answ Because he is ready as a louing Father to heare mee calling vpon his name whence J learne with boldnesse and confidence to come vnto him in my prayers Explan Hauing shewed the necessity of preparation vnto prayer in generall heere follow the parts of this preparation in particular And the first is to consider rightly vnto whom we pray and with what faith and affiance Hee vnto whom is called Father teaching vs both who can pray and what faith is required in praying First he only can pray aright and as a true Christian that can call God Father by adoption grace through Iesus Christ It is not sufficient that hee be thy Father by creation for so is he the father of the spirits now damned in hell but he must also be thy Father by regeneration through the preaching of his word casting thee into a new mold of righteousnes and holines according to his Image Rom. 8.25 wherein man was first made For wee haue receiued saith the Apostle not the spirit of bondage to feare againe but the Spirit of adoption whereby wee cry Verse 16. Abba Father And the same spir t beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God So that there must be a Spirit in him that will pray making him the childe of God by adoption 1 Ioh. 3.3 purging him to become holy as he is holy 1 Ioh. 3.9 Whence it followeth that a wicked man liuing in sinne cannot pray seeing he which is borne of God sinneth not who only is indued with the Spirit of Prayer All his praying therefore is a vaine beating of the ayre with a
powers but of God and the powers that are are of God Euen as the riuers come from the sea and runne into the sea so all mens greatnesse and that they are men commeth from God and ends in God If God commandeth any thing he is to be heard for his commands sake if man commandeth any thing he is to be heard for Gods sake which if it were so sinne should not so much haue the vpper hand but this is turned amongst the men of this age into the contrary man is heard and obserued for himselfe God for man a plaine euidence whereof is the obedience of the most vnto great persons and gouernours and neglect of Gods poore Ministers armed only with the Word the Sword of the Spirit 2. That the first and maine thing by the Lord intended in creating all is his owne glory and whatsoeuer is good for man is subordinate vnto this and onely so farre forth to bee sought after as it maketh for Gods glory The heauens are made to shew his glory the earth and seas are for his glory al men are made for his glory yea the vessels of wrath for of him for him and vnto him are all things to him be glory for euer Rom. 11 36. Amen This made Moses to neglect his owne soule rather then God should be dishonoured and Paul to lay open himselfe to the curse that God might haue glory by the conuersion of the Iewes And this will make euery one that is an obedient subiect to the King of heauen with ioy to beare any crosse so that God may haue glory to account all losse which is gotten with his dishonour For if the maine estate of any man bee safe he is the lesse troubled at small losses but much lesse if hundreths of pounds bee daily added hereunto and his losses be but some few pence no more ought wee to be much troubled at our owne losses or crosses seeing the maine Gods glory is hereby greatly increased 3. That the glory of the Lords name is so deare as that hee did not only make it his marke in the creation but in euery particular dutie done by man hee setteth it still as his marke as here in prayer in giuing the law he beginneth with his owne maiesty in the Gospell at the very natiuity of that blessed one the Angels are heard lauding and glorifying God And in like manner ought wee to bee affected to Gods glory in euery duty seeking this first and chiefely and not to be seene of men as the Pharisees For if a man doth fast pray heare the word giue almes deale iustly in some other respect chiefely he breakes this rule of Christ he pleaseth not whatsoeuer or how oft soeuer his deuotion bee hee can haue no thankes at Gods hands Quest 122. Which bee the three petitions concerning Gods glory Answ The first is Hallowed be thy name the second Thy Kingdome come the Third Thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen Quest 123. In the first of these petitions what do you desire Answ That the holy name of God may bee glorified in the vse of his titles word and workes Explan In handling these petitions more particularly I will obserue first the order secondly the sense thirdly the scope of euery petition For the first Hallowed be thy name this is placed before thy Kingdome come to teach vs that no man can bee a true subiect of Gods kingdome vnlesse that in his heart hee maketh principall account of Gods glory For then onely maist thou hope to be accepted as a good subiect vnder Gods kingdome when thou first desirest Hallowed bee not mine but thy name The name of God When thou settest vp not thy selfe thy pleasure profit or glory to be chiefly sought after in professing the Christian religion but the honouring of Gods name so that such as seeke for aduantage by their profession 1. Tim. 6.6 thinking that gaine is godliness as was the manner of some whom the Apostle challengeth that vnder the colour of religion deceiue and inueagle others to their owne commoditie are not of Gods Kingdome but are puffed vp knowing nothing doting in stead of going the right way Verse 5. or hauing any true wisdome 2. For the sense of the words By the name of the Lord here we are to vnderstand that whatsoeuer it is whereby the Lord is made knowne vnto vs according to his most glorious attributes wisdome power mercy c. 1. God is knowne by his name And this is first by his titles God Lord Iehouah Lord of hosts the Almighty c. for by these God hath made himselfe knowne vnto vs and th●se do serue most properly to set forth God for which cause though for their office sake being Gods Vicegerents some haue been called Gods and Lords yet neuer any man presumed thus to bee called as by his proper name that we can reade of amongst all Gods people ●n the booke of God but Iesus Christ who was truly Emmanuel God with vs. Let no man therefore aspire after such names but leaue them off rather as too high for mortall man 2. By his word Iohn 1. 2. Cor. 3.18 Secondly God is made knowne by his word and therefore Christ hath the title of the word of God being the fountaine from whence the word of wisedome sloweth and hee that knoweth the word written knoweth God his face being visibly and gloriously reflected to our open faces there as by a glasse Thirdly by his works the heauens the earth the seas 3. By his work● infinite number of creatures herein contained which doe also set forth God vnto vs For the inuisible things of him that is Rom. 1.20 his eternal power and God-head are seene by the creation of the world considered in his workes And as these lasting workes of God do set him forth vnto vs so doe his transient workes acts of iudgement mercy prouidence and goodnesse Let thy name be hallowed or sanctified 1. This doth first signifie To Sanctifie what the purifying of a thing which before was corrupt and vnholy thus mystically it was shewed to Peter that God had sanctified the Gentiles when hee being inuited to eate of the creatures appearing in the sheet and refusing them as vncleane was the second time commanded The things which God hath sanctified Acts 10.15 pollute thou not 2. The separating of any thing common to an holy vse thus Aaron and his sonnes are said to be sanctified and their vestments and vessels of the Temple and all things dedicate and thus are the houses of God now a dayes to bee counted holy and glebes and tithes of the Church 3. The acknowledging of a thing to be holy and declaring it by giuing all due obseruance and respect hereunto so that the holines thereof may be made more famous and notable amongst all men and thus principally doe wee pray hollowed bee thy name as it is holy and glorious make vs to
godly by his mercie rewarded the rage of the enemies of good order being restrained and the peaceable and righteous being encouraged For according to al this Deut. 27. they were taught of old to pray when a curse being annexed to euery Commandement broken all the people were bidden to say Amen 2. For al good meanes and furtherances of his special kingdome which is his Church and such are godly and righteous Magistrates defending the faith diligent and zealous preachers publishing the faith of Christ Iesus for such we pray that many may be stirred vp and continued in all places For Preachers Matth. ● 38 we haue a speciall precept Pray the Lord of the haruest that he would send forth Labourers into his haruest and as wee are to pray for the encrease of their number so for their vtterance Ephes 6 19. and boldnesse in preaching the Gospell And for such as be in authoritie how we are to pray hath been shewed already they are nursing Fathers and Mothers of the Church Kings shall be thy nursing Fathers Esay 49 23. and Queenes shall be thy Nurses saith the Prophet Let thy Kingdome come therefore is Let godly Magistrates bee encreasen vnder whose gouernment thy Church and people may flourish and send many faithfull Preachers Deut. 33.8 as Moses said of Leui Let thy Thummim and thine Vrim be with thy holy ones Such integritie of life and light of doctrine that they may be as lights set vpon an hill giuing light to such as be in darkenesss of sin and ignorance 3. For the defence of these from all dangers whereby they may be interrupted in their proceedings that their liues may bee continued and their power encreased to the comfort of the faithfull Thus it hath bin the manner of good Subiects of old to pray for their good Gouernours Cushi comming to bring word vnto Dauid of Absaloms death prayeth saying The enemies of my Lord the King 2. Sam 12.32 and all that rise against thee to doe thee hurt be as that young man is And for Ministers Smite through the loynes of them that rise against him saith Moses of Leui and of them that hate him Deut. 33.11 that they rise not againe And Saint Paul speaking of the Ministers of the Gospell saith Pray for vs that the Word of God may haue free passage and be glorified and that we may be deliuered from vnreasonable 2. Thes 3.1.2 and euill men 4. That many may be daily conuerted by the Ministry of these faithfull seruants of the Lord and grace vertue and true religion confirmed encreased in them And first and chiefly that inferiour Gouernours which haue the priuate rule of others committed vnto them in the well ordering of their families and iurisdictions may helpe forward the worke of grace in their children and seruants Thus Saint Paul professeth often that hee prayed for such people as amongst whom the Word was preached and willeth all men to do the like when he bids Pray that the Gospell may haue a free passage 5. That the Kingdome of glory may bee hastened to the comfort of all the faithfull all the workes of the Deuill beeing then dissolued the flesh and old man being quite abolished and grace onely ruling and gouerning vs all or rather grace being perfected and swallowed vp in glory And this is the highest pitch of our desire here this being the height of Gods honour the most full establishment of his kingdome and the perfection of his will Wherefore the Spirit Reuel 22 17.20 and the Bride both say thus Come let thy Kingdome come and the inspired prophetical Diuine saith Euen so that is quickly Come Lord Iesus 2. The deprecation is against all impediments and lets of Gods Kingdome and these are either generall or speciall 2 The deprecation Generall hinderances of Gods Kingdome are either in the Magistracy or in the Ministry 1. In the Magistracy is an Anarchy when any Countrie is without a King and lawfull Gouernour by reason whereof euerie man doth what hee thinkes good as being vnder no Law of a Gouernour such as was the estate of the Israelites immediatelie before Samuels time as is twice noted In those dayes there was no King in Israel ●udg 18.1 19.1 And this wee are to pray against as the most wofull condition of anie people that may bee there beeing hereby such a gappe opened to all licentiousnesse and lewdnesse as that another Nero. or Vit llius may better bee indured then this being without a Gouernour At this time was that outrage done by Dan vnto Michah and Idolatrie so graffed amongst the Danites as that God seemeth for euer to haue blotted them out of his booke of life Reuel 7● when thousands of all other Tribes being sealed Dan is passed ouer vnmentioned Iudges 19. And at this time was that villany done for which the Tribe of Beniamin was cut short almost brought to be no people And our fore-fathers in this I le haue felt the terrour and miserie of such times by the inuasion of the barbarous Picts to be greater then when they haue been ruled by Tyrants and Strangers If any therefore be vnwilling to liue vnder gouerment and long after the liberty of an Anarchy he doth most palpably pray against himselfe in this petition 2. Wee pray against Tyrannie that is an euill and wicked gouernment whereby the truth is discountenanced as in Ahab time who hated Michaiah or persecuted as when Iezabel was Queene or idolatrie or heresie is maintained and commanded as by Nebuchadnezzar or lastly whereby wickednesse is rewarded and fauoured as by some Heathen Emperours of the Romans Tiberius Caesar is said to haue rewarded Nouellus Tricongius with a Pro-Consulship for drinking three pottles of wine at one draught Against such Gouernours we pray Munst Cos pag. 720. that if God so please no place may be troubled with them if they be that their hearts may relent and be turned 3. We pray against euill lawes made against the proceedings of the Gospell and for the maintenance of men in sin such was the law made by the Pharisies against the followers of Christ Iohn 9.22 they ordained that if any followed him he should be cast out of the synagogue such was the Law of Darius that no man should pray vnto any other for thirty daies but vnto himselfe onely Dan. 6. He●● 3. against which Daniel prayeth and such was the decree of Ahashuerosh made for the destruction of all the Lords people in one day against which they all fasted and prayed We pray therefore here against such lawes of Infidell Kingdoms as forbid all comming of strangers in amongst them to preuent the rooting out of their idolatry as amongst the people of Ch●n against the bloudy Inquisition in Popish Countries tending to the preuention and rooting out of all reformation for euer and against any lawes of Turkes or Iewes hindring their conuersion that God would
liue to morrow as the Widow of Sarepta who notwithstanding imparted of her meale to the Prophet 1. Kings 17.10 and belieued that it should continue for her reliefe from day to day 7. Humility and lowlines of mind because we are al beggars it is of almes that we haue any thing we haue nothing of our owne and without these things giuen vs of the Lord we cannot be sustained Euen as the lampe vnlesse it be from time to time supplied with new oyle must needs goe out What a shame therefore is it for a man to he proud and insolent ouer others seeing all are fellow-beggars as well the rich as the poore the King as the slaue A proud heart and a beggars purse we say doe not well agree together 1. Cor. 4.7 Wee pray therefore that it may not be thus with vs but that we in all humilitie may acknowledge that wee haue nothing which wee haue not receiued and of our selues are poore and miserable The things prayed against The deprecation is against all hinderances to our bodily health and welfare yet not simply but with submission to the will of the Lord who knoweth to bring light of darkenesse and to turne hinderances to helpes and furtherances euen to our outward estate We pray therefore with submission 1. Against vnseasonable weather immoderate raines vntimely heate or cold and droughts when wee need moysture against pestilent influences from any star or out of the earth by the vapours or by the quaking and opening thereof 2. Against improuident Magistrates and Gouernours which bring on woe to a land Eccles 10 16. Woe vnto thee O Land when thy Prince is a child and eateth in the morning 3. Against plague pestilence and famine against all noysome and contagious diseases whereby thousands haue in short time been taken away so that the liuing haue not been able to bury the dead 4. Against inuasion of the enemies bringing destruction and making hauock of all things this being a time of such misery as that no pestilence or famine is comparable vnto it which made the Kingly Prophet to desire rather to fall into the hands of the Lord. 5. Against ciuill wars the people rising against the Prince or one part of a Kingdome against another the miserie of which wee haue seene France and the Low Countries to tast of and doe reade of the like in King Iohns daies in Edward the second and Richard the seconds daies c. in England but haue not felt it our selues and we pray that we may neuer tast of it 6. Against extreame pouerty and want of all things tending to the famishing of our bodies for such as feare the Lord shall want no good thing though the Lions hunger and bee hunger bit 7. Against all things that defile man and make the creatures vncleane and accursed vnto him 8. Against an vnhealthfull constitution turning our meats and drinkes into il humours to the hazarding of our liues and the decay of our bodily strength 9. Against idlenesse and sloth whereby time is spent vnprofitably or not to so much benefit of the Common-wealth as it might be either through want of bodily labour to whom this belongeth or of studie and care otherwise to doe good towards the preseruation of the peace and welfare of the Countrey 10. Against discontent whatsoeuer our want is that we may not doe that iniury to the Lord as to prescribe him a time when to helpe vs or else murmure through want as the Israelites in the wildernesse 11. Against trusting in any arme of flesh what wealth or friend soeuer we haue for they which doe so fall downe flat and it was the folly of the rich man in the Gospel Psalm 20 8. that he said vnto his soule Eate drinke and be merry Luke 12 16. for thou hast much goods laid vp for many yeares 12. Against Couetousnesse and worldly cares carrying vs on to the greedy desiring of more through the loue of money It is a spirit farre differing from that of Agur of whom it is written for our learning that he desired Pro. 30.9.13 Giue mee not riches lest I be full and deny thee and say Who is the Lord 13. Against hard-heartednesse and vncharitablenesse whereby the hand is held backe from relieuing the needie when with the tongue reliefe is desired for them as for our selues 14. Against all vniust and vnrighteous dealing for bread gotten thus is not our owne and God is mocked whom wee pray to giue vs bread but in the meane season we thus carue for our selues vtterly against his will 15. Against prodigality and wastefull spending the goods of this world vpon vanity for must not the Lord needs be offended if comming to begge things necessary of him and receiuing we like wanton vntoward children cast them away againe No man but will haue indignation at such a beggar and rather let him starue then giue him any thing againe as the Prodigall in the Parable Seeing we pray against these things may wee at any time pray for them that being afflicted we may be humbled which in the time of our prosperity we will not be Expressely to pray for any affliction is to doe contrary to the first principles of nature which teacheth to pray for Answ To pray for affliction and to seeke all things that are good and to shunne and pray against all things that are euill and tend to the destruction thereof and therefore must needs be vnlawfull as it is vnlawfull voluntarily to hurt a mans owne body vnder what pretence soeuer For it is all one to pray for some hurt vnto the body and to doe it hurt the tongue being the instrument in the one case and the hand in the other in both a member of the body armed against the body 1. Cor. 9.7.2 Cor. 7.11 Secondly this is without precedent or other warrant except of superstitious persons who haue whipped themselues almost to the death or otherwise vnduly beaten downe their bodies to preuaile in the rash vow of chastity euen to the infeebling of themselues so that they haue been vnable to doe the workes of their callings and yet haue not preuailed being they had not the gift of continency Thirdly conditionally to pray for afflictions in the case of rebellion of the flesh if the Lord hath appointed this to be the meane of our mortification and bringing to sanctification and so to himselfe it is without doubt most lawfull and Christian for this is in effect to aske nothing but that which is good for vs. Whereas Saint Paul saith I beate downe my body and bring it in subiection c. And calling vpon the Corinthians for reuenge vpon themselues he meaneth not this vnnaturall violence offering to the body but denying of such things as whereby the body is pampered to sinne though otherwise lawfull in themselues which is the duty of vs all Whereas Saint Augustine saith Aug. tom 10. serm 181. Etsi
the death of Christ from all sinne for blindnesse spirituall expelled for hard hearts mollified and for the extreames and barres of grace despaire and presumption remoued for loue abounding where offences against vs a bound and for malice banished and purged out of vs. Psalm 32. Blessed is the man whose sinne is couered and to whom the Lord imputeth not sinne Hee therefore that is made partaker of this cannot but blesse God againe yea all the Saints in heauen do euer without ceasing sing of this Reuel 5.9 Thou wast killed and hast redeemed vs to God by thy blood out of euery kindred tongue people and nation and hast made vs vnto our God Kings and Priests and we shall reigne vpon the earth c. The supplication therefore is Forgiue vs our trespasses Let none of our sinnes euer come in remembrance against vs but be washed away in the blood of Christ the deprecation let nothing hinder but that thou maist forgiue our trespasses the thanksgiuing thou hast turned our hearts and forgiuen our trespasses wee praise thee therefore and this alike concerneth the whole law Quest 129. What pray you for in the third of these which is the sixth petition of the Lords Prayer Answ That the Lord would not suffer vs to be carried away by the temptations of the world the flesh or the deuill to the committing of sin but that he would deliuer vs from the euill of all temptatious both sinne and damnation Explan For the order of this petition it is added vnto the former made for our soules good so that there be two petitions for our soules and but one for our bodies teaching vs that our care for our estate spirituall before God ought to be double to our care for things temporall and of this world And good reason because the soule liueth for euer the body but a short time the things of the soule are permanent and lasting euer to the comfort of it the things of the body are slitting and fade soone away Lastly the soule is most excellent and of more worth then the whole world the body is base euen as the dust of the earth from whence it was taken and vnto which it shall returne againe So that they do foulely forget themselues which care altogether for the body and take little or no care for the soule when it is poore miserable and naked as is the manner of most men 2. This petition is immediately subioyned after the other crauing the pardon of sinne to teach vs that this is not the only care of Christians to seeke to haue sinne pardoned but they ought as earnestly to striue against sinne and to resist it for the time to come according to the warning giuen by Christ Goe thy way sinne no more least a worse thing befall thee He that seeketh for the pardon of his sinnes and not to subdue and mortifie them is like vnto a prodigall spend-thrift who is no whit the richer though he receiueth much for in like manner though he talketh often of the pardon of sinne and prayeth for it he is destitute and miserable through sinne his prayers not being heard but turned into sinne 3. After that we haue prayed for the pardon of sinne wee pray against temptations tending to sinne being hereby taught that a Christian mans life is a continuall warfare and when one enemy is ouercome and vanquished hee must prouide to incounter with another Wherefore Saint Paul speaking of this estate saith We wrestle not against flesh and bloud but against principalities against powers and against worldly gouernors c. Ephes 6 12. Euen as they which are besieged in a Towne or Castle into which the enemy attempts the entry haue not sufficiently defended themselues if some times they haue beaten backe their enemies scaling their walles or making breaches to come vpon them but they must continually prouide to do the like if they will saue their hold So in the spirituall warfare the enemies must be continually watched against and resisted otherwise we shall bee taken and spoiled of our soules If any man findeth no such need of preparing to resist he is dangerously sicke of a spiritual Lethargy some inchanting Circe hath him at his pleasure hee is sure enough for comming to his heauenly country Let all men therefore awake and seeing their danger keepe watch and ward ouer their soules 2. For the meaning of the words Temptations of diuers sorts Temptation is either that whereby God tryeth man searching and prying into his heart to see whether it be vpright as Dauid prayeth Trie mee O Lord and prooue mee and thou shalt find none iniquity in mee or giuing him some hard commandement as vnto Abraham to kill his sonne and to the young man in the Gospell to sell all that he had and to giue it to the poore or sending him some grieuous affliction which Iames calleth temptation Iames 1.2 willing vs to count it exceeding ioy when wee fall into sundrie temptations Psalm 95. 2. Temptation is that whereby man tempteth God of which the Psalmist complaineth they tempted in a proued mee and saw my workes that is by murmuring and refusing to belieue and to rest vpon Gods prouidence without seeing euident present signes of his power and goodnes and thus whosoeuer saith in his heart God regardeth not or God cannot or will not helpe in the time of necessity tempteth God Matth. 4.7 Againe there is another tempting of God by aduenturing vpon apparant danger without warrant according to which Satan tempting Christ to cast himselfe downe from the pinacle of the Temple he answereth Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God 3. Temptation is that whereby man tempteth man seeking to circumuent him Matth. 22.18 by trying him with politique deuises thus the Pharisees are said to haue tempted Christ for Why tempt ye 〈◊〉 yee hypicrites saith the Lord 4 Temptation is that whereby man tempteth himselfe his corrupt heart alluring and drawing him on to sinne according to that of Iames Iames 1.14 Euery man is tempted when he is drawne away by his owne concupiscence and i●●●i●●d Genes 3 Matth. 4. 5. Temptation is that whereby the deuill tempteth man and prouoketh him to sinne as hee did Euah in Paradise and attempted against the Lord Christ For these two last temptations of the flesh and deuill we desire here to be deliuered from the third we pray to be kept in the fourth petition from the second in the second petition from the first wee doe not pray to be kept but rather that the Lord would trie vs and vse all meanes which hee seeth best to further our sanctification Lande vs not thus we pray because that howsoeuer the deuill tempteth and the flesh tempteth without being set aworke by the Lord yet if hee be pleased not to leade vs into temptation we shall be safe from danger Now the Lord is said to leade into temptation To leade into temptation what
thee but louing and ready to accept of them and to grant their suites thou shalt make thy glory to shine more and more by being beneficiall vnto vs thy faith and religion shall bee more esteemed and reuerenced and this will bee the end of all that thou doest for vs thine eternall praise yea we giue thee glory in confidence of thy goodnes promise due thankfulnesse and intend this in our desires aboue all things Amen wee verily belieue that it shall bee so and againe with all feruency begge O Lord let it bee so wherefore let vs not bee deceiued of our hope but do thou subscribe to our desires and say So be it 3. For the scope The reasons c●ntained in the conclusion it containeth sundry most strong reasons for the propping of our faith and assurance in our prayers 2 Sam. 24. First from the Kingdome of God A good King louing and kind to his subiects is easie to be intreated of them and is delighted with their life and welfare but thou art the best King of all we thy subiects who do craue nothing but things needfull for vs and tending to our welfare therefore thou wilt be intreated And the strength of the reason lyeth in the first part that a good King tendreth the good of his people which wee shall find to bee true in all good Kings and Rulers in Dauid who desired when the plague raged amongst his people Let thy hand Lord bee against mee and against my fathers house these sheepe what haue they done And in Samuel being vnkindly reiected by the people yet being in their danger desired to pray for them God forbid saith hee 1. Sam. 12. that I should sinne against the Lord and cease praying for you Yea some Heathen Kings haue excelled herein as Vespasian who was so delighted in doing good vnto his people as that if hee had let slippe any day without doing some speciall good for some man he would say O socii per didimus diem O fellowes wee haue lost a day This disposition therefore to doe good must needes bee much more in the best King of Kings at all times Secondly from the power of God wee haue this reason A King that wanteth no power to doe good vnto his subiects if he be good will assuredly doe for them in all their necessities but thou O Lord art such a powerfull King nothing can hinder or resist thy good pleasure Therefore thou wilt doe these things for vs. Euery part of this reason is euident for nothing but ability can hinder a mercifull Lord from doing for his humble seruants hee being Parens patriae the father of the country Matth. 6. and a father being so ready as the Lord sheweth to doe good vnto his children when they aske of him and as for this King his power is infinite he doth whatsoeuer it pleaseth him in heauen and earth hee is all-sufficient to defend Abraham in strange countries Iacob in Padam Aram Dauid in the wildernesse and Ionah in the whales belly wherefore we may build assured confidence of his mercy Psalm 19. Thirdly from the glory of God we haue this reason Hee that being a great King regarding his glory aboue al things will readily doe whatsoeuer may redound to his honour and glory but thou O God art thus regardfull of thy glory it being aboue all things tendred by thee therefore wee doubt not but thou wilt grant these things of which thou shalt haue so much glory The strength of this reason lieth in the second part that God doth principally regard his glory and that by granting our requests hee shall haue glory The first is plaine both by the most excellent workes of creation redemption c. which serue to manifest his glory according to that of the Psalmist The heauens declare the glory of God c. and according to that of the Apostle who speaking of Predestination and redemption Ephes 1.6 saith that it was to the praise of the glory of his grace And it is plaine also by his dealings honoring such as honour him and bringing downe such as take honour to themselues that hee onely may bee exalted in that day Againe that God hath glory by granting our requests appeareth for that our first and chiefe request is that God may bee glorified and our desire is by being heard in all our requests to haue matter of praysing and magnifying his holy name Fourthly from the eternity of these things for euer and euer wee may reason thus A most glorious and excellent King out of whose power nothing is who remaineth such for euer is euer alike graciously disposed to his subiects but God is a most glorious King and powerfull for euer in all times and ages alike and hath heretofore heard the requests of such as faithfully haue called vpon his name therefore he is still likewise ready to do for vs granting all our petitions The first part of this reason is plaine because that he to whom no change is incident the case being alwaies alike cannot be changeable in his grace and fauour The second part is also euident for God is hee Reuel 1.8 Heb. 13.8 which is which was and which is to come yea Iesus Christ is the same yesterday and to day and for euer Now for his grace in times past and readines to heare the prayers of such as haue faithfully called vpon him no age hath been without large testimony Iacob prayed in his distresse and was heard so that of a man naked and destitute hee was made rich and had great droues of cattell Iehosaphat prayed and had victory ouer his enemies when he knew not what to doe sundry diseased possessed and blind persons both in body and soule prayed and were healed and had their sinnes pardoned wherefore wee need not to doubt but that we also are heard in our desires Fifthly from our confidence expressed in the last word Amen we may reason thus The Lord will grant vnto vs whatsoeuer we belieue shall be granted when we aske but we belieue when we aske these Petitions for we say Amen in hart verily wee are perswaded that it shall bee so therfore they are granted Marke 9.23 The first part of this reason it is the saying of our Lord Whatsoeuer yee aske if yee belieue it shall bee done vnto you for the second if wee dissemble not but haue our heart going with our tongue wee doe belieue and therefore are the more confident to speed of our desires But more especially of these reasons The first hath reference to the second Petition the second to the third the third to the first the fourth to the fourth and fift the fift to the last Petition From hence arise these two conclusions First that they which learne aright to pray are most happy and blessed they build good speed and successe in all their designes vpon the surest foundation in the world the Kingdome power glory eternity and fidelity of
so they be few and cheape and not like the ceremonies of the Law which were a costly and burthensome yoake that the forefathers were not able to beare for such was it fit that in fulnes of time should be appointed vnto sonnes Gal. 3. and heires and not to be kept any longer vnder the rudiments of the Law as vnder tutors and gouernours Quest 3 Is there no care to be had of other circumstances for conformity vnto the first institution so that we vse bread and wine in the right forme with thanksgiuing as for the leauen the water which it is likely was mixed with the wine for the gesture sitting c It is not required that we obserue all circumstances no more than that the Iewes in keeping the passeouer should continually stand with staues in their hands and shooes on their feete according to the first institution for Christ himselfe did otherwise keepe the Passeouer Now all men I suppose doe yeeld herein for most circumstances of the place in an vpper chamber of the persons a few disciples men only in the time of the night after supper but it is questioned about the leauen water sitting though little reason to make question about these 1 Cor. 11.17 First if we confider that they are no where precisely expressed though they may be gathered from the place where the institution is described nay which is more where the Apostle repeateth the institutiō though he remembreth the time the night wherein he was betrayed the persons his Disciples yet he speaketh not of leauened bread or water mixed with wine nor yet of sitting Secondly if it bee considered that as the standing at the Passeouer the night c. were taken vp occasionally not purposely as Sacramentall so was the leauened bread this kinde of bread being at hand and sitting or rather leaning downe along which is implyed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luc. 22.14 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 26.20 that gesture being the position of the body at that time Thirdly if it bee considered that as the night season the persons and place are without any intended signification so is the leauened bread and sitting If it bee said sitting doth set forth our Communion with Christ I answere take heede of inuenting this or the like significations which are beyond the word least thou bee such an one as addeth vnto the word of God and least herein thou rashly censure all those Churches wherein standing walking or kneeling is vsed Indeed some circumstances there be which are not only expressed but commaunded also as Sacramentall and these are alwayes necessary in the Lords Supper First the giuing of thankes whence it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Eucharist or Thankesgiuing for when he had giuen thankes it is said that he brake the bread Acts 2.23 Secondly the taking of the bread and of the cup whereby may be signified how the Lord tooke his deare Sonne and set him apart to be crucified and slaine for the sinnes of the world euen from the beginning of the world for hee was not by the Iewes taken and slaine as being by them ouer-powred but hee was deliuered by the determinate counsell and fore-knowledge of God hee was the Lambe of God slaine from the beginning of the world Thirdly the breaking of the bread whereby is set foorth the Lords submitting of himselfe to the death of the Crosse where he was pierced hands feet and side so that the bloud ranne out abundantly from him Fourthly the distributing of the Bread and of the Wine to his Disciples whereby is set foorth how Christ is giuen by the Father vnto all faithfull Christians to nourish their soules vnto eternall life according to that of the Apostle Hauing giuen vnto vs Christ Iesus how shall hee not together with him giue vs all things also Math. 26.26 Verse 27. Fifthly the forme of wordes in deliuering the bread and wine Take eate this is my bodie doe this in remembrance of mee Drinke ye all of this This is my blood of the new Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sinnes Which words are not the same precisely recorded by euery Euangelist but yet so as that the record of any one doth set foorth the signification the vse and the end of this Sacrament So that if a forme of words bee vsed according to these it is rightly done and according to rule as in our Church Eate this in remembrance that Christ died for you c. the precise wordes as they are recorded by Saint Paul being placed immediatly before Now that these things besides that they are expressed are commaunded is to be noted from the command giuen to the Disciples Doe this in remembrance that is not as some interpret it make this my body but doe in all these things as yee haue seene me doe giue thankes take breake distribute and say according to this forme As for other things yea euen for gesture they may be as shall seeme best vnto the particular Churches of God which haue power to appoint any most lowly reuerent gesture such as kneeling seeing that euen in praising God wee are inuited by the Kingly Prophet O come let vs worship and fall down and kneele before the Lord our maker and the people of Israel in Egypt hearing the good newes of Gods appearing to Moses to deliuer them bowed themselues and worshipped so that as well in receiuing a benefit as in asking this lowly casting downe of the body doth well become vs. The chiefe obiection heere against for all else are friuolous is that kneeling was brought in for adoration of the bread transubstantiated for answere vnto which first I say that it is indeed to bee graunted that they kneeled vnto the supposed body of Christ but it is to be prooued that hence it began first otherwise it is as good an argument they kneeled in praying with their heads therefore we ought not to kneele in our prayers they came to the Masse at Easter therefore wee ought not to come then to the Communion but at some other time c. What superstitious Idolaters haue done in the seruice of their idols marreth not what we do like them the fault not being in the thing or gesture vsed but in the end their kneeling being to an Idol ours to the God of heauen giuing his Sonne to our hearts by faith Quest 132. What is the inward part or thing signified Answ The body and blood of Christ which are verily and indeed aken and receiued of the faithfull in the Lords Supper Explan The inward part of the Lordes Supper is the bodie and bloud of Christ which are present to all the faithfull In handling whereof three questions 1 Cor. 10.16 First how is the Lords body and bloud there for that hee is receiued by the faithfull is plaine both because he saith This is my body and my body is meate indeed and my blood drinke indeed
either way there is nothing but iudgement with out mercy If if bee demanded here whether it bee not a sinne in the Minister to admit such to the holy Communion Matth. 7.6 I answer if any be euidently knowne to be such and wil not promise amendment he that receiueth him giueth that which is holy to doggs and casteth pearles before Swine If otherwise there be a shew of penitency man that cannot see into the heart may admit of him If it should seeme that without difference the wicked as well as the godly are to bee admitted to this holy Supper without difference putting seeing that Iudas was admitted by the Lord. I answere that it is most probable that Iudas was gone out before seeing Matthew and Marke doe speake of his going out immediately after the sop before the holy Supper began vnto whom consenteth Iohn Chap. 13.30 Secondly if it bee granted that hee was present yet this example proueth nothing to this purpose for Iudas was not yet detected his treason was onely in his heart not in action that followed afterward Moreouer how can the minister giue the Lords body to him that is appointed by the Lord to be giuen ouer to Satan for as it was with the incestuous person against the Corinthians 1 Cor. 5.5 so is it with euery notorious scandalous liuer he is vntill repentance to bee put from the communion of Gods people Thus we see what a maze or labyrinth sin doth bring men into in danger they are by comming and in danger by not comming to the Lords Table Quest 139. What may a man doe then in this case Answ He must humbly sue vnto God for the pardon of all his sins to strike his hard heart that he may melt into teares for them and constantly cleaue to his commandements and if there be any dissention he must goe and be reconciled to his brother Explan So gracious is our good God as that when wee are brought into desperate straights and wildred so by sinne as that we know not which way to get out hee holdeth forth the thread of his mercy by the helpe of which wee may come into the right way againe Like vnto Ahashuerosh his scepter stretched out towards his beloued Hester when shee was intangled with danger euen so is the Lords Scepter euer held out vnto vs that in the name of his Sonne we may come vnto him though wee be most wretched sinners Aske saith hee and you shall haue seeke and you shall find knocke and it shall be opened vnto you This is the gate or scale of Heauen which Iacob saw hither wee may come being thus beset with sinne and find mercy to bee deliuered and made welcome to the Lords Table If it bee said but can I being thus in my sinnes pray to bee heard seeing that God heareth not sinners and the sacrifice of the wicked is abomination to the Lord I answer was not the Publican likewise in his sinnes and yet hee prayed and was heard and iustified and did not the Thiefe vpon the Crosse likewise So that wicked men praying out of a desire to bee made repentant and to bee brought to amendment grieuing that they are so hard-hearted and without faith are heard in their prayers neither is this against the places before alleaged for the wicked whom God will not heare are such as delight in sinne and are without all care of amendment resolute in sinning Quest 140. What ought a man to doe at the Lords Supper Answ He ought thankefully by seeing and receiuing the outward signes to remember the inward graces of God towards him Quest 141. What are these graces Answ First the Lords giuing of his Sonne Iesus to death for vs set forth by the Ministers taking of the bread and wine breaking and powring out and offering it to vs all Secondly our neare vnion vnto Christ and how we haue all our spirituall foode from him set forth by our taking eating and inward digesting the bread and wine that becommeth nourishment vnto vs. Thirdly the neare vnion that God hath made by Christ betwixt all the faithfull set forth by the same bread being made of many graines of corne and by the same wine being made of many grapes Expl. I shall not need largely here to intreat of these meditations which hath been done already onely the Communicant that commeth to the Lords Table is to bee aduert●sed that by no meanes he bee there an idle beholder of things done but a profitable ponderer of all circumstances to stirre him vp to greatest thankfulnesse vnto God for so great benefits In which that hee may bee holpen let him first herein consider Gods admirable loue in giuing his Sonne to death for his sinnes his holy body to be broken and his pure bloud to be shed for without Gods giuing of his Sonne to the cursed death of the Crosse all the power of the Scribes Pharisees and high Priests was not able to doe it Wherefore he saith I lay downe my life for my sheepe and no man taketh it from me but J lay it downe of my selfe Euen as if a man being condemned to die another most louing friend should lay downe his life and suffer for him Oh how thankfully were this loue to be remembred and with what praises to bee celebrated as being vnmatchable by any loue that euer hath been seene amongst men for a deare friend there hath been in many ages one amongst many Kingdoms of the Latines one amongst many of the Grecians that haue offered to die for their friends but for their enemies neuer any Lord therefore should the soule of euery Christian say I offer againe vnto thee mine own self soule body to serue thee and my old nature to be killed and slaine with al the concupiscences thereof though neuer so deare vnto me for thou hast offered thy deare sonne for mee and vnto me without any desert of mine and for this cause art most worthy of all honour and thanksgiuing Secondly let the Communicant consider of Gods admirable loue in vniting him so neare vnto his Sonne and through his sonne vnto himselfe and in feeding him from heauen with such comforts without which his soule must needs bee hungerstarued and perish Iohn 17.21 This was Christs prayer vnto the Father that we might be one with him that they may all be one as thou O Father art in me and I in thee that they may be also one in vs and this did he my stically in this Sacrament shadow out vnto vs. When Dauid was offered the Kings Daughter and to be the Kings Sonne in Law Who am I said he that I should be Sonne in Law to a King and who am I should the Communicant say that I should bee made one with the King of Heauen Most vnspeakable O Lord is thy loue towards me that thou shouldest haue such respect to so poore a worme to raise me out of the dust to sit with thy Christ Rom. 8 1●
still in sinne and blindnesse Quest 148. What is the preaching of the Word of God Ans It is properly the expounding of some part thereof the teaching hence the duties to be followed and the sinnes to be auoided and exhorting to doe accordingly Nehem. 8.9 Explan Some there be that moue as much trouble about preaching as others that deny the necessity hereof and content themselues onely with reading some affirming the bare reading of the Scriptures to be preaching some talking hereof one neighbour to another and some the reading of Homilies or Sermons But the preaching of the word to speak properly is more then all these as may appeare both by the practise in the dayes of Nehemiah when it is said that the Priest stood vpon a place higher then the people and read the Law of God plainely and expounding the sence gaue the vnderstanding of the Scriptures And also in the new Testament where after the Lecture of the Law and the Prophets it is said that the Rulers of the Synagogue sent to Paul and those with him saying Act. 13 15. Men and brethren if there be in you any word of exhortation vnto the people speake From hence ariseth plainelie this description of Preaching to be an expounding c. as in the Answere Now for reading the Scriptures though in a large sense it be a kind of preaching because that the truth is hereby set forth and the Gospell and meanes of saluation made known to him that readeth or heareth it read yet it is properly no more preaching then reading is an Oration neither is hee that doth thus any more a Preacher then such an one an Oratour For when the question is made whether reading be preaching it is not meant whether by reading is not the truth set forth and may not sauing grace be wrought in the hearers but whether reading bee the preaching practised by the Ministers of Gods word vnder the old and new Testament which is so much commended for the liuely operation being Gods special and greatest ordinary power to saluation and whether the reading bee that which wee haue charge to intend when we are bidden go preach the Gospel For vnlesse they striue to make their reading such a preaching they question about nothing if to make it such a preaching they striue against the streame the whole current of examples recorded in the Word being against them yea that speciall place which they think a most sure ground for them Moses hath of old such as preach him when he is read in their Synagogues euery Sabbath day Acts 15.26 doth plainely rebuke their negligence seeing that it may well be hence gathered that at all times vpon the Sabbath when the Priests read Moses they expounded and gaue light vnto the people by teaching as in Nehemiahs daies Much more might bee said for the confute of such grosse opinions but because I propounded to bee briefe in all things thus much shall suffice briefly for this Let vs all lay aside partiality whereby wee are carried to fauour our selues and seeke our owne ease and this corrupt fountaine of such troubled opinions being dammed vp I doubt not but wee shall with one consent endeauour to preach in another manner then by reading and familiar talking applying our selues to the right vnderstanding of the Scriptures that we may giue the right sense after the sense find out sound and profitable doctrines strengthened with good reason conuincing the iudgement and after the doctrines frame some forcible exhortations to bring and bow the affections to the light set vp in the vnderstanding that Gods people may haue more grace and his holy name more glorie Quest 149. Who may preach the Word of God Answ Onely such as are outwardly sent of God ordinarily and when extraordinary necessity doth require all such men as are inwardly stirred vp and inabled by the spirit of God Who may preach Explan Hauing shewed what the preaching is it followeth what Preachers are viz. either in times ordinary or extraordinarie ordinarily we are to account him as a fit Preacher who is outwardly sent of God and none other that is in a Country where the Gospell is maintained by the higher powers and an order for the sending forth of preachers is established he is a lawfull preacher of the word that is sent forth according to this order and if any preach being not thus sent they are intruders and not labourers sent into the Lords haruest And this I say for the satisfaction of the people that they may haue a sure ground to rest vpon against al cauils of those that would make thē belieue that the licensed Preachers of the Church of England are no lawful Preachers either because they which make them had not ordination at the first from such as could lawfully giue it which is the cauill of the Papists or because some forsooth misliked ceremonies are vsed in their ordination which is the dotage of the Brownists For admit that Bishops and other Ministers of the Gospell should faile so that there were none to giue orders or that all were so corrupt as that they would not to any that embraced the truth what should there neuer then be any more lawfull Ministers of the Gospell God forbid for so the Lord should be tyed necessarily to outward meanes of sending forth Preachers and if he wanted vnder-meanes his Haruest should be vnprouided of Labourers But the Church of England God be thanked needeth not to flie to this refuge We can and doe proue our Ordination and succession of Bishops Canonically inuested and continuing the ofspring of our inferior Ministery without interruption mauger the barking of lewd Romanists against our Church whose very Popes haue been many of them meere open intruders Secondly for the reformed Sectaries what other then decent and commendable ceremony can their pure wisdoms carp at in our Ordination Againe admit that some errors should creepe into the ordination of Ministers what shall the Ministers bee disabled hereby and become no lawfull Ministers God forbid for thus the maine vertue of such as take orders should depend vpon some outward circumstance making them if it bee right marring them if otherwise and the people that know not the circumstances of euery mans ordination should bee held in doubt whether they be Gods lawfull Ministers and to be heard or not Rom. 10. Wherefore I say that he is a lawfull Preacher that is outwardly called and sent prouided alwaies that hee preach the truth and no heresies which are errors stiffely defended contrary to the plaine euidence of the Scriptures and if he doth preach heresie which thou thinkest may bee so proued by some fa●re fetcht Argument yet this maketh not him to cease from being a lawfull Preacher yea though he maintaineth heresie plainely against the word in a Church where the truth is by the higher powers maintained he is stil a lawfull Preacher vntill that by publike authority he be inhibited And the
reason of all this is because such as are outwardly sent by the Ministery of Christs Vicegerents the Apostles successors who ordaine them are sent by Christ and if thus sent who shall say they are vnlawfull Preachers and if not thus ordinarily sent who shall say that they are lawfull seeing it is written How shall they preach vnlesse they be sent And if they be thus sent of God they must likewise be inhibited before they cease to be lawfull 1. Tim. 5.22 Preachers indeed may be vnworthy and vnworthily sent and continued but if through remissenesse or couetousnesse any send them so they make themselues partakers of their sinnes and bring a double woe vpon their owne heads and if any goe being such though sent they make the sacrifices of the Lord to bee an abomination to the people and with Elies sonnes shall haue iudgements making the eares of those that heare it to tingle 1 ●a● 2 17. Wherefore bee circumspect yee reuerend Fathers in ordaining and if any degenerate after their ordination exercise your authority by suspending and without speedy reformation by turning them out of the Ministery Is it not lawfull for a man to preach being for gifts sufficient vnlesse hee hath this outward calling or being once sent and forbidden againe without iust cause may hee not lawfully preach any more It is not lawfull to exercise the worke of preaching let his gifts bee what they will bee vnlesse he hath in an ordinary time this outward sending neither is it lawfull to persist in this Office if hee bee inhibited Whereas it may seeme otherwise by the Apostles practice who preached although they were strictly charged not to preach it is to be vnderstood that that time was not ordinary but a time of persecution wherein the enemies of the Gospel reigned and forbad all preaching in the name of IESVS and therefore this practice giueth no warrant when the Gouernours are Christian and doe onely forbidde some men but doe generally commend and commaund the preaching of the truth In times extraordinary when the Gospell is impugned and the preaching thereof not suffered a man must according to the Apostles example rather obey GOD then men that is being inlightened by Gods Spirit and made fit to preach though hee hath no outward sending but bee forbidden it is lawfull for him notwithstanding to preach and set foorth the truth and it is his patt so to doe Quest 150. What is required to the right hearing of the Word Answ To prepare a mans selfe by prayer and holy meditation and by emptying the heart of corrupt affections to attend diligently and reuerently at the preaching of the Word and laying it vp in the heart to doe accordingly all the dayes of his life To heare the word rightly Explan Take heed how you heare was often in the mouth of our Sauiour and must bee alwayes in the eares of such as will heare well otherwise as the Lord saith of speaking good words Matth. 7. Not euery one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heauen so not euery one that heareth shall be saued but hee that heareth rightly and as hee ought to heare Now for this there must be preparation before diligence in hearing and care afterwards 1. For preparation the Lord sheweth the necessitie hereof when hee requireth that the people should be sanctified three daies together before that they should heare the Law and the wise man Eccles 4.17 who biddeth Take heed vnto thy feet when thou enterest into the house of the Lord and be readier to heare then to offer the sacrifice of fooles so that such as come vnpreparedly come foolishly to heare and are so polluted as that the Lord cannot take pleasure in their hearing That a man may therfore come prepared it is necessary that he be humbled for his sinnes purge his heart of sinfull affections pray for a right disposition and meditate vpon the excellency of the Word and his owne need hereof Hee that doth not before hearing call himselfe to account for his sinnes to be humbled and to craue mercy in the pardon of them is like vnto an ill debter who being ingaged in ten thousand talents to his creditor and an execution out against him doth notwithstanding come boldlie into his presence without seeking by the mediation of friends to make some composition and agreement beforehand what the rashnesse and danger of such is all men know So likewise is it the act of him that commeth to heare the Word of GOD not hauing sought reconciliation aforehand by humiliation and prayer either publike or priuate Hee that commeth to heare not hauing purged out sinfull and vile affections is like vnto the sicke man that would haue some comfortable receit without purging or vnto the wounded man that would haue lenitiues applied to his corrupt sore without corsiues which is the way to greater danger so hee that commeth to heare not hauing purged his heart of malice enuie lust worldlinesse c. is farre from taking the right way to cure his soule for he putteth it further into deadly danger Wherefore Saint Peter warneth to lay aside all maliciousnesse 1. Pet. ●1 2 all guile all dissimulation and enuie and as new borne babes to desire the sincere milke of the Word as who should say ye are vnfit to ●eare vnlesse as new-borne babes yee bee purged so as that ye be without any of these vile affections Euen as a dead flie that lieth hid in a boxe of precious ointment corrupteth it all so corrupt affections though deepely hidden in the heart make the seruice done vnto God naught worth Iohn 4.10 Prayer is as Iacobs Ladder set vp to heauen by which the soule ascendeth and fetcheth downe Gods blessing it is the knocking seeking and asking that euer preuaileth it obtaineth water of life though there bee nothing to draw it with as Christ told the Woman of Samaria saying If thou hadst asked I would haue giuen thee of the water of life Wherefore when the Word is to bee preached Pray for mee saith Paul that vtterance may bee giuen vnto mee and that I may open my mouth boldly to vtter the secret of the Gospell So let euery hearer pray Ephes 6.19 that the Preacher may haue vtterance and his owne heart an open dore of entrance Lastly to consider the excellency of the Word and our owne necessitie stirreth vp an hungring and thirsting deesire after the Word breedeth an appetite and maketh vs fit to digest this food and to turne it into wholesome nourishment to our soules For so excellent is the Word being a light sent from Heauen to inlighten vs in our darkenesse a sword to defend vs a precious treasure to inrich vs food to nourish vs a sweete sauour to perfume vs salt to season vs and a girdle to strengthen vs as that if wee cast our eyes hereupon wee shall vndoubtedly long after it But looke we withall vpon our own