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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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liberty to sin afterward or at least to suppose that we have thereby merited at Gods hands what we fasted for Take heed of this a rightly grounded assurance of Gods mercy is highly commendable but a self-opinionating conceit of merit for the Works sake done is uncreaturely presumption a flat contradiction to the very end of Fasting which should be Self-unworthiness Self-denial true Humiliation This Fasting must never be without Prayer for Prayer and Fasting were joyned together Ezra 9.5 Neh. 1.4 Dan. 9.3 Judg. 20.26 Luke 2.37 5.33 1 Cor. 7.7 True indeed it is that Prayer is available without Fasting but Fasting never without Prayer for Fasting is not the worship of God but onely a help to it and the most principal end of a Religious Fast is Supplication or extraordinary Prayer whereunto as subordinate may be added Examination Humiliation and Mortification As touching the time of a Religious Fast it is now free in regard of Conscience indeed in the Old Testament they had a set time of Fasting as the tenth day of the seventh Moneth Levit. 16.29 But in the New Testament there is no set time which bindes the Conscience onely men must Fast as just occasion is offered and as for Civil-Politick Fasts they are set for orders sake and not to binde the Conscience Fasting was once Ceremonial when the Lord commanded by Moses that every Soul once in the year should humble it self in Fasting before the Lord in one of the great Assemblies of his people Levit. 16.29 c. 23.27 c. And though the Ceremony of the day be taken away by the coming of Christ Gal. 4. yet the thing it self continueth and remaineth in force The circumstances of Moral Duties may be changed but the substance may not be abrogated for where the same causes continue there the thing it self abideth Therefore this holy Exercise is of as great and necessary use as ever it was and remaineth in as full force and strength as ever it did Joel 2.12 Luke 5.33 c. 1 Cor. 7.5 Acts 13.2 3. The seasons of Publike Fasts being the times of any general Affliction upon our selves or our Brethren whether of Sword Pestilence or Famine or any other just judgement whether threatned feared begun or executed For Private Fasts the same rule holds in private Afflictions neither is any time unseasonable when the Religious Soul sequesters it self for this Spiritual Physick of private Humiliation Holy Feasting is a time of Solemn Thanksgiving for Benefits received or Evils removed wherein the Creatures of God may be more liberally used then at any other time For this is a day of Rejoycing wherein it was once said to the people of God Eat the fat and drink the sweet Neh. 8.10 Wherein we must be very careful to preserve the fear of God within our hearts Exod. 18.12 Jobs fear was lest his sons should cast this fear of God out of their hearts in their Feasting and so offend God In every bit we eat and every drop we drink we must remember the caveat our Saviour gives Luke 21.24 Take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfetting and drunkenness yea in this time of Holy Feasting there is also enjoyned us a certain kinde of fear of man Prov. 23.1 2. When thou sittest to eat before a Ruler put thy Knife to thy throat that is Bridle thine Appetite have respect not to pass the limits of Sobriety Temperance and Moderation The lawfulness of these Feasts may be derived from the Primitive Church so as the poor be regarded superfluity and riot avoided and the right end intended which is the praise and glory of God expressed in Thankfulness for the abundance of his Blessings Thus after the Sacrifices and Offerings Aaron and the Elders of Israel came to Feast with Jethro before God Exod. 18.12 So Ezra the eight Go your ways eat the fat and drink the sweet and send part to them for whom none is provided for this is the day of the Lord. In the Primitive Church it was a Custom to have a Feast before the Lords Supper made by the Communicants unto which some brought Honey some Bread some Wine some Milk and every one according to their ability contributing something thereunto These were called Love Feasts because they were herein to testifie their mutual Love among themselves as also to the poor who hereby were relieved and to the Ministery it self which was by these Feasts partly sustained But in these Feasts there were many spots Jude v. 12. who were eye-sores and disgraces to these holy Feasts pampering and feeding themselves and riotously wasting the Goods of the Church in stead of taking care for the poor and the Ministery for whose this Contribution was made It were to be wished there were no such spots in our Feasts at this day that neither blemish them by Surfetting Drunkenness or Wantonness nor by excluding the poor from having an interest therein Three things required for the right observation of a Religious Fast viz. 1. That the Causes be just and weighty such as these viz. 1. When we our selves are faln into any grievous sin whereof our Conscience accuseth us and whereby we procure the wrath of God against us So did the Israelites 1 Sam. 7.6 2. When some among us fall into any grievous sin though we our selves be free from it because for the sins of others Gods judgements may justly fall upon us For this Paul blamed the Corinthians 1 Cor. 5.2 3. When the hand of God in any judgement lies upon us Thus did the Israelites Judg. 20.26 4. When the hand of God in any fearful judgement lies heavy on others among whom we live though we our selves be free So David 2 Sam. 12.16 Psal 35.13 5. When Gods judgements are imminent and as it were hang over our heads So did Jehosaphat 2 Chro. 20.2 3. 6. When we stand in need of some needful Blessing of God especially such as concerns Salvation Thus did Cornelius Acts 10.30 7. For Gods blessing and good success on the Ministery of the Gospel So did the Church for Paul and Barnabas when they sent them to Preach Acts 13.3 And so ought we to do at this day 2. That the right maner of Fasting be observed which stands in these particulars viz. 1. Abstinence from meat and drink and all maner of nourishment of the Body 2. Abstinence from all maner of sin whether in thought word or deed 3. Abstinence from sleep such as thereby the body may be the more humbled and afflicted with the want of food 2 Sam. 12.16 4. Abstinence from soft and rich apparel Exod. 33.4 6. Jon. 3.6 2 Sam. 12.20 5. Abstinence from Matrimonial benevolence 1 Cor. 7.5 Joel 2.16 6. From the ordinary Works of our Calling Levit. 16.29 31. 23.28 32. 7. Abstinence from all pleasant and delightsom things which may any way refresh Nature 2 Sam. 12.20 Dan. 10.3 8. Abstinence from all maner of Sports Pastimes and
just and unjust but the beams thereof have happy influence onely on the Heirs of Grace melting the hearts of such into Faith and Repentance whilest they harden the cley-hearts of carnal Worldlings into stupidity and searedness of Conscience whose Mindes the god of this World hath blinded 2 Cor. 4.4 yet the express Command for Dispensation thereof is as Catholick as Christ or words could make it when being Risen from the Dead he accosted his Disciples saying Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature Mark 16.15 So that if the Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost 2 Cor. 4.3 In the next place stands the Ministerial Function the highest imployment that ever the Lord of Heaven vouchsafed the Sons of men If the Ministers of the Word would sit down satisfied with the Stiles and Titles given them in Scripture they needed no other Herald to blazon the Nobleness of their Calling nor any Stellicidiaries to invite the Hosanna's of the People Are they not called The Salt of the Earth the Builders of Christs Body Gods Fellow-workmen Christs Embassadors the Steward 's of the House the Fathers of the Church Fishers of men Ministers of the Spirit Builders of the Temple Shepherds of the Sheep Planters and Waterers of the Garden the Lords Harvest men his Vine-dressers Watchmen of the City Trumpeters of the Host yea Stars of the Firmament Rev. 1.10 It were worth a National Fast that all such as are thus highly dignified were or might be responsibly qualified Attribute we therefore none of these Titles to any such as are unfaithful in their Embassie not to unsavory Salt not to the Ignorant or Idle not to the Scandalous nor the Mercenary not to the Contentious nor the Covetous not to the Proud nor to the Superstitious into whose Mindes the subtile Sophister of all Ages hath specially in this foisted such specious Qualifications and such self-deceiving Equivocations to palliate those sins as if in order to Life and Doctrine he would feign perswade the World to spight the POPE the CLERGY could not erre Next follows the Hearing of the Word by this cometh Faith without this posteth Atheism yet take heed what ye hear Mark 2.24 yea and how ye hear Luke 8.18 Away therefore with itching ears with prejudicate thoughts with an impreparatory heart with presumptuous self-conceits Away with distracted Cogitations unsanctified Affections turbulent Passions sublunar Cares careless and extravagant Attention Away with carnal Security with vain Dissention of Opinions touching the Truths delivered Away with overchargings of Nature with drowsie Faculties with Unbelief Hardness of Heart Pride and uncharitable Thoughts ever Remembring that it is or should be the Word of God and not of man 1 Thess 2.13 not a tittle whereof shall go unfulfilled Matth. 5.18 till it become the savor of life unto life or of death unto deeper condemnation 2 Cor. 2.16 Take heed therefore how ye hear Luke ibid. After the Word in order follows the Sacraments which though they confer no Grace ex opere operato yet are effectual Signs and Witnesses of Gods incomprehensible Benevolence to man-wards For of Baptism saith our Savior He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved Mark 16.16 And of his Supper he saith This is my Body which is given Luke 22.19 and broken for you 1 Cor. 11.24 This is my Blood of the New Testament that is shed for many for the remission of sins Luke 22.20 Indeed a Sacrament is a Covenant of Gods free Favor to us confirmed by some outward Sign or Seal instituted by himself Thus was the Tree of Life a Sacrament to Adam Gen. 2.9 The Rainbow to Noah Gen. 9.9 13. The smoaking Furnace to Abraham Gen. 15.17 18. The Fleece of Wooll to Gideon Judg. 6.37 The Dyal to Hezekiah 2 Kings 20.7 11. The Sacrifices Circumcision and the Paschal Lamb to the Jews Baptism and the Lords Supper to the Faithful under the Gospel Mat. 28.19 Luke 22.19 In the next place stands Prayer the Souls Incense whereby she is wing'd for Heaven Wonderful are the Works wrought by Prayer not as a Cause but onely as an Instrument sanctified by God and effectual to the Righteous if it be fervent Jam. 5.16 This Fervency is that Magnetick Vertue in Prayer which attracts Heaven to Earth but the fervent Prayer of an unrighteous man availeth little save to betray his sinister dexterity in vanifying so excellent a Gift which in such the Lord knows too often comes within a breaths bredth of Blasphemy But let the Faithful be exceeding cautious whom they censure in this case lest they chance to touch the Apple of Gods eye and let him that prayeth pray fervently for Faith is full of vigor full of life and God loveth a sprightly Faith yea the Promise made to the Prayer of a Righteous man is not otherwise annex'd then on the condition of Fervency which we may not dream is confin'd to the activity of external gestures or volubility of a never-stammering tongue but chiefly consists in the sincerity of the Supplicant in the extent of his Faith and cordiality of his Desires Next follows the Lords Prayer if we have not forgot that there is such a thing in rerum natura Spiritualium It 's worth a Catechism to ask the Worlds Favorites Which of them that do so highly adore this Prayer can truly say Our Father Most can say but few can pray it Others disuse it under the notion of a set Form of Prayer but set Forms of Prayer quatenus such are not prohibited This is indeed a set Form of words for Prayer but no set Prayer as is generally mis-thought for it is a Prayer to none but such as can pray it in Faith Nor can there properly be said to be any such thing as a set Prayer for in submission to better judgements I conceive the motion of the Spirit in Prayer is that which denominates Prayer to be Prayer which Spirit is not confineable by this or any set Form of words as may appear 1 Sam. 1.15 For the motion of the Spirit in one praying the same words of another may be more extensively Spiritual in that one then in the other which could not be if the very words set in that Form Method and Order could confine the Spirit And hence it is that all that can say the Lords Prayer cannot pray Our Father for my voyce may be articulate enough without Faith but without Faith and the Spirit that articulate sound cannot properly be called a Prayer though articulated by the form of words in the Lords Prayer Thus though many say the same form of words for Prayer yet they may not be said to pray the same Prayer yea one and the same person at sundry times praying the same form of words may not infallibly be said to pray the same Prayer for it varies according to the measure of the Spirit in the person praying which may not be one the same in the same
that it commandeth otherwise it threatneth the curse but Faith requireth onely that we truly believe 3. The righteousness of the Law coming from our selves should set up Merit and put away Grace but that of Faith which is from God taketh away Merit and setteth up Grace As there is a double keeping of the Law 1. A strict and exact keeping of it 2. An Evangelical keeping of it that is when we desire and endeavor to fulfil the Law in all things So accordingly there is a double curse 1. A curse that follows the breach of the Moral Law that belongs to all mankinde till they be in Christ 2. An Evangelical curse that follows upon the Evangelical breach of the Law This is the curse of the Gospel which cannot be repealed and is more terrible then the curse of the Law Which curse consists in four things 1. A separation from Grace Goodness and Holiness 2. A seperation from the presence of God that is from the joy influence and protection of God 3. A curse on the outward estate wherein a man may be cursed in the midst of plenty 4. The eternal curse at the day of Judgement And in this fourfold curse we must note that men may be cursed though the curse be not executed Though no man can perfectly keep the Law yet is it of most excellent use these three ways 1. To humble us in regard of our miserable estate hereby discovered 2. To be a Rule of good life unto us 3. To be a Schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ driving us unto him as our onely Refuge to be made righteous by faith Gal. 3.24 God willeth us to desire in this life the perfect fulfilling of the Law for these Reasons 1. Because in those that desire it he will at length effectuate it hereafter 2. That we may now go forward in godliness according to Gods rule 3. That by this desire of fulfilling the Law God may exercise us in Repentance and Obedience This perfection is here two ways to be understood 1. As it is opposed to imperfections and wants and this is perfection of degrees whereby the Law is kept without failing in any thing Thus no man can keep the Law 2. As it is opposed to hypocrisie and this is called perfection of parts whereby what is outwardly professed is inwardly embraced so that as the outward part maketh a good shew the inward part is also right and sincere Thus David Josiah and others are said to be perfect and not otherwise and thus every regenerate man can and doth approve himself in some measure for perfect though amidst great weaknesses Again a man may be said to be perfect 1. Comparatively in regard of others that are more imperfect 2. In endeavor when a man setteth himself so much as possibly he can to keep not some but all and every of the Commandments of God Though the Law is impossible even to the regenerate in respect of God that is as touching the perfect inward and outward obedience of the Law yet is the Law thus possible to them and them onely 1. As concerning outward Order and Discipline 2. By the benefits of Justification and Regeneration both which we obtain by Faith 3. As touching the beginning of inward and outward obedience in this life 1 Joh. 5.3 and as concerning the imputation of Christs Righteousness Christ fulfilleth the Law three ways viz. 1. By his doctrine 1. By teaching it that is by repurging and purifying it from errors and corruptions and by restoring the true doctrine and understanding thereof Mat. 5.6 7. and by restoring unto it his proper meaning and true use as when he corrected the corrupt interpretations thereof by the Pharisees 2. By revealing the right way whereby the Law may be fulfilled 2. By his person 1. By paying sufficient punishment for our sins Rom. 8.3 By becoming accursed to the Law in suffering death upon the Cross for us 2. By his own Righteousness Heb. 7.26 By performing perfect obedience unto the Law doing all that the Law required Thus was he said to be under the Law Gal. 4.4 3. In men of 2 sorts 1. Elect in whom he fulfilled the Law two ways 1. By creating Faith in their hearts whereby they lay hold on Christ who for them fulfilled it 2. By giving them his own Spirit thereby reforming them unto the Image of God Rom. 6. 7. making them endeavor to fulfil the Law which in Christ is accepted for perfect obedience in this life and in the life to come is perfect obedience indeed 2. Unbelievers in whom Christ fulfilleth the Law when he executeth the curse of the Law upon them for that is a part of the Law and the execution and enduring of the curse is one fulfilling of the Law The uses or ends of the Law viz. 1. Maintenance of Order and Discipline as well in the regenerate as unregenerate 2. That we may know that God is and what he is 3. The knowledge of sin 4. A preparing to fearful horror in the thoughts and consciences of the wicked 5. A mean whereby Repentance may be kindled and encreased in Gods children 6. A Level or Rule of living unto the faithful The principal uses of the Moral Law 1. The preserving and maintaining of Discipline both in the Church and without also 1 Tim. 1.9 2. The acknowledgement and accusing of sin in the regenerate and unregenerate Rom. 3.20 3. An instructing and informing concerning the true service and worship of God and this use of the Moral Law is proper to the regenerate Jer. 31.33 Psal 1.2 119.50 The less principal uses of the Moral Law 1. It is a Testimony of God that there is a God as likewise who and what he is 2. It is a Testimony of the excellency of mans Nature which was before the Fall and which shall be in the life to come 3. It is a Testimony of eternal life for in this life it hath not its end in us How far the whole Law is abrogated 1. As touching Justification because Judgement is not given according to the Law for that Judgement would condemn us but according to the Gospel 2. As touching constraint we are under Grace and therefore we are stirred up by the Spirit of Christ to yield voluntary obedience unto the Law for now the Law doth not wrest obedience from us as a Tyrant because Christ beginneth voluntary and free obedience in us by his Spirit The causes or the chief ends for which the Sacrifices under the Law were instituted and ordained 1. To maintain the publike Assemblies of the faithful and their meetings together to serve the Lord. 2. That they might be shadows of good things to come to put them in minde of Christ and his sacrifice who is therefore called The Lamb slain from the beginning of the world Rev. 13.8 3. They were as the Sacraments of the Church and Testimonies of Gods infallible promise made to the Fathers touching salvation in the Messiah to come
laying hold on those things which were not instituted for them but for the Disciples of Christ 2. Because they prophane the Covenant and Testament of God by taking to themselves the Signs and Tokens of the Covenant and so would make him the Father of the wicked 3. Because they tread under foot the blood of Christ by not receiving his benefits by faith when as they profess they do and so mock God 4. Because they condemn themselves by their own judgement for they accept of this Doctrine yet are conscious to themselves that they are hypocrites and so condemn themselves All deadness and hardness of heart must not keep us from the Lords Table for it is twofold viz. 1. Sensible which is in Gods children which they bewail this may not discourage the Communicant from approaching the Table 2. Insensible which is a great and dangerous Judgement and one proper to the Reprobate They onely are to be admitted to the Supper of the Lord who by their confession and life profess faith and repentance and the Reason is 1. Because the Church should prophane Gods Covenant if it should admit unbelievers and men impenitent for he that doth a thing and he that consenteth to it are both guilty 2. Because if such should be admitted the Church should stir up the anger of God against her self as of whom wittingly and willingly this should be committed The Supper of the Lord is often to be celebrated for these Reasons viz. 1. Because of the words of institution 2. Because in respect of the end and purpose of the institution for it must be done in remembrance of Christ The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is not to be omitted when it is administred in the Congregation whereof we are members for they were to be cut off from the people who neglected the Passover but this Sacrament is greater then it in two respects viz. 1. This Sacrament is more clear because it doth more lively represent Christ exhibited in the flesh but the Passover onely represented Christ which was to come 2. Because the mercy we are now to remember is greater then that of the Passover the one being our Redemption from Sin and Hell the other our deliverance out of Egypt though that was not all The resemblances between the Passover and the Supper of the Lord viz. 1. As one is called the Lords Passover Exod. 12.12 so this is called the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.20 2. God calleth the Lamb the Paschal Lamb because the Angel in the common destruction passed over the houses of the Israelites so Christ calleth the Bread by the name of his body that was broken for us Luke 22.19 3. In the Passover the Lord saith This shall be for a memorial Exod. 12.14 so Christ saith Do this in remembrance of me Luke 22.19 4. God saith of the Lamb Take ye Exod. 12.5 Christ saith of the Bread Take ye Mat. 26.26 5. God saith of the Paschal Lamb Eat ye Exod. 12.11 Christ saith of the Bread Eat ye of the Wine Drink ye c. Christ would at the last Supper of the Passover institute this his Supper for these Reasons 1. That now an end was made of all the old Sacrifices and he did substitute a new Sacrament which should succeed and be observed that Paschal Sacrament being abolished 2. That the same thing might be signified difference of time onely excepted the one signifying Christ to come and to be sacrificed the other come and sacrificed 3. That he might stir up in his Disciples and in us greater attention and marking of the cause for which he did institute it doing nothing before his death but what was of most weight and moment The absurdities following upon and Reasons against Popish Transubstantiation of the bread into the body of Christ in the Supper of the Lord some wherof are also against Consubstantiation 1. If the bread and wine be turned into the very body and blood of Christ then shall be no Signs in the holy Supper and then no Sacrament for Sacraments cannot be without visible Signs Thus it overthroweth the Sacrament consisting of two parts a visible Sign and an invisible Grace signified but if bread were really the body of Christ then there could be no outward Sign to represent the inward Grace 2. Christs blood should be seperated from his body which can never be 3. The body of Christ should be infinite and therefore he should not be a very man nor truly ascended for by making the body of Christ to be in more places then one at the same time the nature of a true body is destroyed 4. That then the wicked and hypocrites as well as the godly coming to the Supper should then receive Christ and be indeed partakers of the body and blood of Christ yea irrational creatures which is horrible Blasphemy to imagine and determine 5. It maketh two Christs one that giveth another that is given one at the Table another in the mouthes and stomacks of the Disciples 6. The Apostle calleth it Bread oftentimes even after consecration 1 Cor. 10.16 11.26 27 28. and Christ instituted this Supper before he was crucified 7. If the body and blood of Christ had been really in the bread and wine Christ should have eaten himself even his own body and drank his own blood and have given his dead body with his living hands 8. This communion is common to the Fathers and us but the Fathers could not communicate any otherwise with Christ then by faith in the Word and Old Sacraments 9. Christ is ascended really with his body into heaven which must contain him until his coming again Acts 3.21 1.11 John 16.28 Matth. 26.11 The great wide difference between the Lords Supper and the Popish blasphemous idolatrous Mass 1. The Supper of the Lord testifies to us that we have perfect forgiveness of all our sins for that onely Sacrifice of Christ which himself once fully wrought on the cross Heb. 7.27 But in the Mass it is denyed that the quick and the dead have remission of sins for the onely Passion of Christ except also Christ be daily offered for them by their Sacrificers 2. The Supper of the Lord testifies also that we by the Holy Ghost are grafted into Christ who now according to his humane Nature is onely in heaven at the right hand of his Father Heb. 1.3 and there will be worshipped of us John 4.21 22 23. But the Mass teacheth that Christ is bodily under the forms of bread and wine and therefore say they is to be worshipped in them So that the very foundation of the Mass is nothing else then an utter denyal of that onely Sacrifice and Passion of Christ Jesus and an accursed Idolatry 3. The Popish Mass changeth or rather abolished the Rite instituted by Christ for it taketh away the cup from the people and most presumptuously addeth many toys 4. The Mass transformeth the Sign into the thing signified for it denyeth that there
and upbraideth not 6. To be a God true of his Promises therefore we crave the accomplishing of them 4. The necessity of prayer for it is the means which God hath appointed to obtain every good thing Mat. 7.7 Jam. 4.7 5. The utility or profit we receive by this duty of Prayer which is exceeding much and very beneficial to us many ways as 1. To obtain every good thing Christ hath passed his most certain and general Promise for it Joh. 16.23 2. To prevent Judgements threatned Jer. 26.19 and remove them being inflicted Jam. 5.18 3. To preserve nourish and strengthen in us all Spiritual graces Col. 1.9 c. 4. To obtain pardon and remission of sins Acts 8.22 5. To subdue in us the power of sin Psal 19.13 experience can well witness this to those that use prayer 6. To sanctifie all Gods creatures to our use and whatever we do 1 Tim. 4.5 usurpers are they that use them otherwise 6. The efficacy thereof for it prevaileth over all Creatures reasonable or unreasonable and of reasonable both visible as Man and invisible as Angels whether evil or good yea it prevaileth with God himself Examples of all which may be these Daniel by prayer stopped the mouthes of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Davids prayer turned Achitophels counsel into foolishness 2 Sam. 15.31 Thereby the Devil even when he is surest possessed is cast out Mat. 17.21 At Elisha's prayer a mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about him 2 Kings 6.17 By prayer Jacob had power over the Angel which was called The Angel of the Covenant Christ Jesus true God Hos 12.4 who therefore was called Israel because he prevailed with God Gen. 32.28 7. The great honor thereof whereby the Saints have a free access to the glorious Throne of Grace The Romish Church doth neither know nor teach nor practice the duty of prayer aright and that for these Reasons 1. They pray not in knowledge but in a strange tongue and allow of Ignorance as the Mother of Devotion 2. They commend doubting and speak against Assurance and so pray not in faith nor obedience 3. They pray not in humility for mercy for their sins for they think to merit by their prayers 4. They direct not their prayers to God onely in the name of Christ but to God and his Saints making the Virgin Mary their Mediatress In the close of all take this seasonable direction with thee touching praying for or against our Enemies We may lawfully pray against the evil cause that an evil man maintaineth but not against the person of that evil man Now if any extraordinary man hath truly and indeed the Spirit of discerning to judge whether Gods and his enemies be incurable and hath a pure zeal to Gods honor therein he may lawfully pray against such their very persons as David did in the 109 Psalm Prayer the Souls Incense sent by faith to God Attracts his Blessings and diverts his Rod It does acquaint us with the Lord and makes A trembling Terror cease th' Infernal Snakes It makes the weak victorious yea the Sun Stand still Go back It stays a Plague begun When th' Earth had in a Burning-Feaver layen Full three years space it caus'd a gracious Rain It wings the Soul for that Celestial good Which eye ear heart ne're saw heard understood §. 2. The Lords Prayer VVE must imitate and follow the matter and form of the Lords Prayer in all our prayers but are not so tyed to the very words of this Prayer but that we may freely use them or other words at our pleasure for our Savior himself oft-times prayed in other words and so did the Apostles neither is there such vertue as that by the bare repetition of them we can binde God to grant our requests or that we should never pray in other words But as the Ten Commandments contain all things to be done of us the Creed all things to be believed by us so the Lords Prayer doth comprehend all things to be asked by us of Almighty God Some think it is to be used onely as a Direction by which we may learn how and what to pray and that the words themselves are not to be used others think it the onely Prayer to be used at all times and upon all occasions The former opinion grounds it self on Mat. 6.9 the latter on Luke 11.2 The truth is the use of this Prayer is not onely to direct for matter or for words but for both but in praying the very words take heed lest the tongue run without the heart as it must needs do in those that ceremoniously rehearse them making haste to have done before they ever truly began Wherefore to pray these words rightly he that prayeth must in some convenient measure understand them and have his minde taken up with them in the uttering the heart still conveying it self into the meaning of every petition and if thus this Prayer be said it is well used alone or added to other prayer Now we must know That other prayers though differing from this in order yet if consonant thereto in matter may also be used by us for otherwise Paul in his Epistles would not have used such variety of order and maner in thanksgivings requests and deprecations for his Spiritual children for himself and for the whole Church So that though this order be generally to be followed yet neither is it always necessary nor yet is it a swerving from this Direction though some of these petitions onely be asked in some of our prayers and others be omitted But the error is when we go beyond the Rules here given us doting too much upon worldly things or having proud unfaithful or malicious hearts we make our prayers the labor of polluted lips In the Lords prayer are contained 1. A preface and therein a compellation Our Father wherein seven things are to be considered 1. Who is to be called upon that is God whom we are to call by the Name of Father wherein we must observe That Father here is not the Name of one Person onely but of the whole Essence 2. That God will hear such as call upon him because he is their Father 3. That he is able to grant and answer their requests for he is in heaven 4. Who ought and also are able to pray aright and they are the Sons of God 5. That Faith is here required for by Faith we become the Sons of God 6. Through whom we must pray that is in the Name of the onely begotten Son of God 7. The difference betwixt the prayers of Christians and of Turks or Jews for ours are made by faith in Christ 2. Six requests viz. 1. Hallowed be c. which is then done when the true knowledge and glory of God is celebrated by men 2. Thy Kingdom c. that is let thy Church be extended multiplied preserved enlarged and guided by thy Spirit 3. Thy will be c. which is then done when
we obeying the will of God do what he commandeth us 4. Give us c. that is all things which pertain to our sustentation in this life 5. Forgive us c. that is our sins and infirmities and here note That our forgiving others is not the cause but the consequence or effect of Gods forgiving us and the sign of our remission 6. Lead us not into Temptation that is 1. That God would not suffer us to be invaded or set upon by the wicked suggestions of Satan 2. Nor be drowned in the pleasures of sin 3. Nor by consent fall into the snares of Temptation But deliver us from evil that is generally all things hurtful to our selves the Church or State 3. The Conclusion For thine is the Kingdom c. which is added as a Reason of all the Petitions to strengthen our faith and therefore we adde a note of confidence and say Amen which particle is not as a part of the Prayer but as a note of our desire wherewith we wish we may be heard and of our faith whereby we believe we shall be heard The Lord used this kinde of Proeme because he will be called upon with due honor which consisteth 1. In the true knowledge of God 2. In true confidence in him 3. In obedience to him which compriseth 1. True love 2. True fear 3. Hope 4. Humiliation 5. Patience Again of the six Petitions in the Lords Prayer 1. The three former concern Gods glory 1. Hallowed be thy Name that is that the Name of God may be glorified in his Titles words and works 2. Thy Kingdom come that is that the number of true Believers may be daily encreased that Gods Kingdom of Grace being enlarged his Kingdom of Glory may be hastned 3. Thy will be done that is that all the people of God may upon earth as readily obey Gods will as the Angels and Saints in heaven 2. The three latter concern our selves 1. Give us c. that is all temporal things necessary for this life 2. Forgive us c. that is that God would freely forgive us all our sins as we do from our hearts forgive the offences of men against us 3. Lead us not c. that is that the Lord would not suffer us to be carried away by the Temptations of the World the Flesh or the Devil The excellency of the Lords prayer stands in these things 1. In the pithy shortness of it for in few words it comprehendeth endless matter 2. In the perfection of it for it containeth in it whatsoever is to be asked in prayer in which respect it is properly called the Abridgement of the whole Gospel 3. In the order thereof which is most exquisite 4. In the acceptation it hath with God the Father for it containeth the words of Christ his Son in whom the Father is well pleased The excellency of this Prayer sheweth 1. That if any set form of prayer may be used then this may being indited by the Mediator of the Church therefore let such as deny the use of it better consider hereof when as for the space of One thousand five hundred years after Christ there were never any that disallowed it 2. That the practice of such who conclude their prayers with this is commendable for hereby as by a most perfect and excellent prayer the wants and imperfections of our prayers are supplyed 3. That such who gather from the perfection and excellency of this prayer that it alone is to be used are deceived for Christs intent was rather to commend this prayer unto us for matter and maner then for the words 4. That though it be a most perfect prayer yet is it onely general but every true Believer needs particular prayers whereby in special form and maner his particular state and condition may be sent up unto the Lord yet so as they be always suitable unto this form here prescribed Two extremes are here to be taken heed of 1. Too much confidence in the words of this Prayer often repeated as some Popes of Rome have granted great Pardons to seven Pater-nosters and as many Ave-Maries said over every day or on some days and in some places which is gross and superstitious 2. Too much detracting from this Prayer by accounting it no better or not so worthy as a mans own conceived prayer which is derogatory and arrogant Our Saviour Christ having forbidden his Disciples all carnal and superstitious kinde of praying prescribed them this holy form Matth. 6.9 c. The use whereof is a form of Direction learning thereby what to ask what first and chiefly with what affections and assurance for if we were left unto our selves we should greatly erre in praying asking oft-times those things that are not good for us and against the will of God out of a fleshly minde therefore hath the Lord reduced all things which we may ask into these few short Petitions and out of any carnal presumption to transgress these bounds is not to offer a pleasing Sacrifice but as it were with strange fire to provoke him as did Nadab and Abihu Lev. 10. Some in a superstitious notion Suppose this Patern of Devotion Stands chiefly in the words and can expell Poyson and Counter-charm the Powers of Hell Blinde Idolist unless th' heart language shall The words the words are ineffectual Since thou hast giv'n us Lord compactly choyce Words and matter both give us too thy voyce Thy Spirits voyce in ours that so we may With Faith Love Zeal as thou hast taught us Pray §. 3. Our Father CHrist Jesus onely is the Son of God by Nature for which cause he is called the onely begotten Son of the Father Joh. 1.18 And we are Sons onely by Adoption and Grace and therefore when we call God Father we must not think any thing singularly of our selves as if he were our Father specially but the common Father of us all that believe And we say Our Father not My Father because we ought to pray for all the children of God as well as for our selves And here observe That here and always the Name of Father as also the Name of God when it is opposed to the Creatures is taken essentially not personally but when it is put with another person of the Godhead it is taken personally Our Father that is O Lord God thou art the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and in him our most merciful Father by Adoption and Grace yet here again observe That we do not here pray to the Father onely but to the whole Trinity yet as the first Person is the eternal Fountain of the Deity we pray to the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost nor may it seem strange that Christ who as he is Man is our Brother and is not ashamed to call us his Brethren Heb. 2.11 is called our Father for as he is God he is our Father and therefore called The Father of Eternity Isa 9.6 Christ by this word Our
or honor 3. When God offers occasion by any work of his Providence we must endeavor to glorifie and magnifie his Name therein whether they be acts of his Mercy or of his Justice We must thus labor to hallow Gods Name for these Reasons 1. Because it is an honor even due unto him Rev. 4.11 2. It is a credit to us also 3. We thereby testifie how we esteem of God 4. The contrary argues impiety Exod. 5.2 Isa 36.20 5. He hath severely punished the prophanation of his Name Exod. 14.28 2 Kings 19.37 Isa 37.36 37. Acts 12.23 6. He created us for this purpose Prov. 16.3 7. As all men account of their Names Eccl. 7.1 so God doth highly of his 8. It is not onely holy in it self but gives holiness to all other things that are holy 9. Moses and Aaron entred not into Canaan because they did not sanctifie the Word amongst the children of Israel Deut. 32.51 Num. 20.12 10. The Lord himself proclaims That he will be sanctified in them that come near him and that before all the people he will be glorified Lev. 10.3 If we say Hallowed be thy Name with our mouthes and prophane it in our lives we bewray a false heart and discover the rotten profession of most damnable hypocrisie by this unchristian contradiction rendring our selves more odious in the sight of God then base dissemblers are in our own estimation Let therefore the practice of our lives demonstrate the sincerity of our hearts keep tune with the Musick of our lips when we sing Glory to God on high and in an holy sympathy eccho forth the Devotion of our souls when we pray Hallowed be thy Name May all our Thoughts Words Actions sanctifie Thee Holy Father May this Prayer be In all our Thoughts in all our Words still pray'd In all our Actions still devoutly said And may our Hearts to this Petition be Joyn'd to make up this holy Harmony Touch thou the strings thereof and then no fear Of jarring discord to ascend thine ear Thy Servants with thy holy Spirit inflame Thy Church shall practice Hallowed be thy Name §. 6. Thy Kingdom come GOds Kingdom is the Rule that he doth exercise over his Creatures generally over all the whole world specially over his Elect over his Church howsoever now dispersed into many places yet making but one Kingdom which is partly in Heaven Triumphant partly upon Earth Militant till the last great Day when in Heaven onely it shall be everlastingly glorious Now besides this there is a Spiritual Kingdom an inward Spiritual Kingdom of God which is over all those in whose hearts his Laws are written to do them and the holy Spirit ruleth and beareth sway and happy is that man who is thus of his Kingdom Let thy Kingdom come that is Let it by continual encrease be augmented and always by a new enlargement and accession be extended and multiplied which thou O Lord in thy Church dost hold and possess wherein we desire That the number of true Believers may be daily encreased that Gods Kingdom of Grace may be enlarged and his Kingdom of Glory hastned Thus let thy Kingdom come outwardly thy Power and Providence being exercised and inwardly Grace being encreased and Glory hastned Let nothing hinder the coming of thy Kingdom neither the Devil nor wicked men neither in the Magistracy Ministery nor People neither infidelity impenitency any raigning sin or negligence but let thy Kingdom come to us that be pilgrims and strangers here on earth prepare us for it and enter us into it that be yet without renew us by thy Spirit that we may be subject to thy Will confirm us also in this estate that our souls after this life and both souls and bodies at the Day of Judgement may be fully glorified yea Lord hasten this glory to us and to all thine Elect. And here also implicitely we acknowledge our opposite disposition to Gods Kingdom and bewail it For this imports That there is another Kingdom even the Kingdom of Satan which is a Kingdom of darkness full of disorder and confusion through sins which greatly hindreth and annoyeth Gods Kingdom of Grace especially This is that Tyrannical Regency by which as the Prince of Darkness he by Gods just permission ruleth in the children of darkness and rageth against the children of light 2 Cor. 4.4 Rev. 12.3 erecting up two other Kingdoms the one of Sin Rom. 6.12.5.21 the other of Death Rom. 5.14 all which are Enemies to this Kingdom we pray for This Petition doth in order next follow Hallowed be thy Name because it is the first means by which Gods Name is hallowed and next to the hallowing of his Name we ought chiesly to pray That Gods Kingdom may come Mat. 6.31 And it is also placed before Thy will be done to teach us That no man can rightly do the will of God and please him unless he be of his Kingdom and delivered out of the Kingdom of Darkness by faith in Christ and the Spirit of Sanctification he shall do his will indeed as a vessel of wrath being over-ruled by his Almighty power but not as a vessel of mercy out of a good heart to be accepted Thus no man can ever do Gods will in any thing till such time as Gods Kingdom be erected in his heart because no man can do Gods will that is not Gods Subject Joh. 1.24 neither can any man keep Gods Law but by Gods grace Psal 119.32 Conclude we therefore That Gods Kingdom is that Spiritual Rule which God through Christ doth by grace begin in us in this life and by glory will accomplish in the life to come Dan. 2.37 Mat. 25.37.6.31 Rom. 14.17 The kingdom of God is threefold viz. 1. The Kingdom of Power Psal 99.1 By this he ruleth Satan and all his enemies Psa 2.9.145.13 commands all creatures and preserveth his own people This Kingdom is external and is a government of all 2. The Kingdom of Grace Mat. 3.2 By this he ruleth the godly and raigns in their hearts by his Word and Spirit Luke 17.20 This Kingdom is internal and a government of the Elect. 3. The Kingdom of Glory Luke 23.42 By this he crowneth the godly with Celestial happiness This Kingdom is eternal and a government of the departed out of this life into heaven The kingdom of God signifies these particulars viz. 1. The sending of the Son our Mediator 2. The ordaining and maintaining of the Ministery of Christ 3. The gathering of the Church by Christ out of mankinde by the voyce of the Gospel and the efficacy of the holy Ghost beginning in us true Faith and Repentance 4. The perpetual Government of the Church 5. The preservation thereof in this life and protection against her enemies 6. The casting away of her enemies into eternal pains 7. The raising of the Church unto eternal life 8. The glorifying of the Church in eternal life when God shall be all in all We therefore when we pray Thy Kingdom
come desire that God will by his Son our Mediator 1. Preserve the Ministery which he hath ordained 2. Gather his Church by the Ministery of his Word and the working of the Holy Ghost 3. Rule his Church gathered and us the members thereof with his Holy Spirit 4. Defend us and his whole Church against our Enemies and Tyrants 5. Cast away his and our enemies into eternal pains 6. At length deliver his Church and glorifie us in the world to come Again The Kingdom of God is twofold viz. 1. General which is his absolute Power and Soveraignty whereby he ruleth all things in Heaven in Earth and in Hell even the Devils themselves Psa 103.19 This we acknowledge in the conclusion of the Lords Prayer but pray not for it in this Petition because nothing can hinder it 2. Special which is that whereby he Ruleth his Elect and chosen people working his will in them by his Holy Spirit And called special because it is not exercised over all the World but only over all the elect whō he hath ordained unto eternal life This special Kingdom of God is twofold viz. 1. Of Grace which is a Spiritual estate because 1. It is principally exercised in the Conscience 2. This Regiment in the Conscience is by the Spirit of God Wherein God makes men willingly subject to the written word of his Spirit which is a voluntary subjection of the whole man in soul body and Spirit to the Will of God reveal'd in his Word This subjection which indeed is perfect freedom stands in these 3 things especially Rom. 14.17 18. 1. In Righteousness that is 1. In Christs Righteousness imputed 2. In the Righteousness of a good Conscience the ground whereof is Sanctification by the Spirit which Christ gives to whom he justifies 2. In Peace that is Peace of Conscience towards God and peace with Gods Church yea with all Creatures so far forth as is needful for them Under which is comprehended love for as Righteousness concerns the person in soul and body so Peace respects all duties and actions of the life Righteousness is the Root whence springeth this Peace for when the heart is sanctified the life is reformed 3. In Joy in the Holy Ghost which is a fruit of both the former respecting especially the state of affliction for when a man is justified and sanctified and hath peace towards God then ariseth in his heart a Spiritual delight in God in all estates Now whosoever hath these three branches of this Spiritual subjection is a good Subject in the Kingdom of Grace 2. Of Glory which is the blessed estate of Gods Elect in Heaven whereby God in Christ becomes all things unto them immediately all things needful to the perfection of felicity The state of grace in this life is the beginning and entrance to the state of glory the state of glory in the life to come is the perfection of the state of grace And this special Kingdom of God in both these estates do we in this Petition pray for Understand therefore this Petition of the special Kingdom the coming whereof is in four degrees viz. 1. Let it be erected where it is not 2. Let it be confirmed and continued where it is Let it not be abolished by Persecution corrupted by Heresie vanish by Hypocrisie or degenerate and grow into the contrary by Prophaneness 3. Let it be restored where it is decayed or corrupted in doctrine or maners Restore such as are faln by weakness and purge the Errors of such as are seduced 4. Let it be perfected and made compleat by hastning the Marriage-day the eternal Jubile of Joy unconceiveable much more unutterable such as neither eye hath seen nor ear heard nor heart conceived and by finally destroying Sin Death the Devil and every enemy Thy Kingdom come that is to us men in the world then it cometh when God doth erect and establish the same in their hearts Now unto perfection it comes by five degrees viz. 1. When God gives unto men the outward means of Salvation wherein he doth reveal his grace and favor in Christ Thus the Gospel preached is called The word of the Kingdom Mat. 13.19 and The Kingdom of God Luke 11.20 17.21 2. When the word preached enlightens the minde so as a man knows and understands the mystery of the Gospel which is the Law of this Kingdom 3. When a man is thereby regenerate and so brought into this Kingdom for by Regeneration we have effectual entrance into the state of grace whereby Christ rules in us by his word and Spirit and we yield subjection unto him 4. At the end of this life when the body goeth to the earth but the soul to God that gave it being translated to the joys of heaven in the glory of this Kingdom 5. At the last Judgement when body and soul being reunited are both made partakers of this Kingdoms glory And this is the full and perfect coming of it In this kingdom are observable these things especially 1. That Christ is King Mat. 2.2 2. That the Subjects are true Christians Psal 2.8 Angels and Saints 3. That the Laws are the Word Psal 119.105 and the efficacy of the Holy Ghost 4. The enemies are Satan Sin Death Hell Damnation the Flesh the World and the Wicked Eph. 6.12 Rom. 6.12 8.1 1 Cor. 15.51 Gal. 5.17 Gen. 3.15 5. The Rewards are the good things of this life and eternal happiness in that to come Mark 10.30 6. The Chastisements are afflictions Heb. 12.6 7. The Weapons are Faith Hope Love the Word and Prayer Eph. 6.16 8. The Time of it is to the worlds end Mat. 28.20 9. The place is this world and the world to come Rev. 5.10 Mat. 25.34 10. The Officers are Preachers 2 Cor. 5.20 11. The Vice-gerents are Governors Isa 49.25 12. It is exercised upon the Conscience of man Rom. 14.17 Again the Head or King of this Kingdom is God the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost There is but one King because there is but one God 1. The Father is King and Ruleth by the Son and the Holy Ghost 2. The Son is King because 1. He sitteth God at the right hand of God and Ruleth with equal power with the Father 2. He is Mediator by whom God worketh immediately and giveth the Holy Ghost The enemies of this Kingdom are 1. Partly in the Church as Hypocrites who challenge to themselves the Name and Title of the Kingdom when as they are nothing less 2. Partly without the Church as Turks Jews and all such as defend Errors against the ground and foundation of the true Religion It appears from what hath been said That the Kingdom of God cometh to us four ways viz. 1. By the Preaching of the Gospel whereby is revealed the light of the true and heavenly Doctrine 2. By Conversion when some are converted and are endued with Faith and Repentance 3. By making progress or encrease when the godly receive encrease or
adversity because it cometh unto us by the will of God 5. That God would turn the hearts of all men from sin and bring them every where to the obedience of his will 6. That Events such as are not contrary to Gods will that is that such things may come to pass which so please him 7. That God would bless and prosper our actions and counsels that no other Events may follow them but such as himself knoweth may most serve for his glory and our salvation 8. That God would hasten that time and state unto us wherein we shall perfectly do the will of God that is our state of glory Rules of obeying Gods will 1. Obey Gods will absolutely and for himself obey man onely in God and for God 2. Obey God in the maner as well as in the matter which he commandeth 3. In doing the works of piety let them give place if unfaigned necessity require and calleth to a work of Charity 4. Let the works of thy private Calling give place to works of the publike calling and general as if thou be laboring on the six days the Lord calling to his House by his worship there thou must attend it Lev. 23. 5. The works of a general common calling must give place to the works of a special undoubted calling being contrary if a man at any time hath such That all our obedience to Gods will may be the better accepted of him it must have these three properties 1. Chearfulness and readiness God loveth the chearful giver 2. Sincerity which is heartily and from the Spirit approving our selves to God and not affecting the applause and praise of men 3. Universality which is in all and every particular thing thus Job is approved obediently professing his subjection to God though he should aggravate his misery and kill him The way how to become chearful doers of the will of God or the duties required by this petition to be practised by us that Gods will may be done 1. We must prove what is the good and acceptable will of God Rom. 12.2 that is we must by often tryal of our actions by the Word of God become expert in Gods will and esteem highly of it be it never so contrary to carnal Reason Thus Abraham did Gen. 22.3 2. We must lay aside our own wills and be possessed with a base conceit thereof not leaning thereon 3. We must labor for a true perswasion of Gods mercy in the pardon of our sins and for the salvation of our souls whereby we may shew our selves thankful to God for so great a mercy 4. We must consider that we are the Temples of the Holy Ghost which is a wonderful dignity to sinful men and in regard hereof we must stir up our selves so to live that we make not sad the Spirit of God which dwelleth in us 5. We must consider the blessings of God bestowed on us both in soul and body one by one and this will move us to love God which love we shall shew in doing his will 1 Joh. 5.3 6. Let us consider the threatnings of God against sin and his Judgements upon them that live in sin and these will help to restrain our corruptions that they break not forth into action 7. We must be strict in the matter of sin making conscience of every evil way yea even of the first motions unto sin that never come to consent for this Petition for obedience respects not onely our words and deeds but also our secret thoughts for even they must be brought to obedience unto God 2 Cor. 10.5 8. We must seek to cut off all things that hinder us from doing Gods will we must use Spiritual means and pray for the Spirit to mortifie and crucifie the lusts of the flesh Rom. 8.13 which makes us rebels against God in transgressing his will Now the ground of this work is the death of our Saviour Christ applyed by true Faith to our corrupt hearts 9. We must not live inordinately but in that sort which God hath enjoyned Christians in his word every one godly in the general calling of a Christian and faithfully and conscionably in his particular calling whether of Church State or Family 10. We must endeavor to subject our selves patiently to the will of God in all afflictions whatsoever for it is the will of God that through manifold afflictions we should enter into his Kingdom This Petition teacheth us to bewail 1. Our natural disposition whereby we are prone to rebel against the will of God 2. Our natural hypocrisie even that which remaineth in us after grace received 3. Though we have never so much grace yet to lament and bewail our want of obedience in all good duties because the best of us all fail in the maner of doing them 4. Our impatience that when God layeth any crosses upon us we cannot as we ought endure them patiently and thankfully 5. Our slack and imperfect obedience yea privy pride proud presumption deadness of Spirit secret hypocrisie and other weaknesses incident to us even in our best services 6. The sins of others whereby they disobey the will of God and so rebel against him whereby he is dishonored and therefore must we be passionately grieved for the sins of others and labor to reclaim them In the supplication of this petition we pray 1. For grace to deny our own wills and ways 2. For understanding of the will of God which without it we cannot perform 3. For faith whereby to believe that the will of God revealed unto us is the will of God 4. For power to obey the holy whole will of God which is both active in doing and passive in suffering In the deprecation of this Petition we pray against 1. Rebellion or an obstinate offending against the known will of God 2. Prophaneness which is an undervaluing estimation of holy duties 3. Hypocrisie which is a drawing near to God with the lips but estranging the heart from him 4. Natural Corruption which draweth away to disobedience enticing to evil 5. Wea riness in well-doing a refusing to go forward and a turning back again 6. Impatience murmuring at crosses and discontent at Gods Providence The thanksgiving of this Petition is 1. For disobedience and sin in any measure mortified 2. For the knowledge of Gods will for faith and desires in truth to obey the will of God in all things all the days of our life In this Petition we are taught to frame our lives to an holy imitation of the blessed Angels which will not stand with their humor who account zeal in Religion affected preciseness But such as call God Father in sincerity must set before them the obedience of the holy Angels as a patern for their imitation to a like resemblance although not to a like equality of perfection Now in them we may observe these things for us to follow 1. They desired before Christs Incarnation to look into the mystery of our Redemption wrought by Christ 1
Ephesus of Calcedon yet is there not a diversity of Faiths for these are not other from this Apostolique Symbole but certain words are added as an Explication of this by reason of Hereticks by whom because of the shortness thereof this was depraved There is no change either of the Matter or of the Doctrine but onely of the form of declaring it as easily may appear by comparing them together This Creed is called Apostolique or the Creed of the Apostles for these Reasons 1. Because it containeth the sum of the Apostolique Doctrine 2. Because the Apostles delivered that sum of Doctrine to their Schollars and Disciples which the Church afterwards held as received from them not that the Apostles composed the form of this Creed but believed and preached the subject matter of it The ends why the Creed was penn'd by the Apostles left unto the Church were these 1. To be a Rule of faith and preservation from Heresie 2. That it might be a mean of distinguishing betwixt true Christians and Hereticks 3. That every man entring the profession of Christianity might continually have before his eyes that Faith for which he should suffer persecution and to the defence whereof he should stand unto the death 4. That every one of the Catechumeni which were new converted Christians might have in a readiness what to answer and believe at their initiation thereinto The principal parts of the Apostolick Creed are three 1. Of the Father and our Creation 2. Of the Son and our Redemption 3. Of the Holy Ghost and our Sanctification Though our Creation Redemption and Sanctification are each appropriated to some one person of the Trinity yet have all three Persons their joynt-working in them For the Creation is given to the Father Redemption to the Son and Sanctification to the Holy Ghost not as they are simply an operation or work for so should the other persons be excluded from it but in respect for the order and maner of working which is peculiar and proper to every of them in producing and bringing forth the same external work Or thus The works of our Creation Redemption and Sanctification are the operations of the Godhead outwardly that is external operations which God worketh on his Creatures and they are undivided that is common to the three Persons which they by common will and power work in the Creatures by reason of that one and the same Essence and Nature of the Godhead which they have but in respect of that order of working which is between them it is otherwise For the Father Createth but mediately by the Son and the Holy Ghost the Son from the Father and the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son The Father and the Holy Ghost Redeem us but mediately by the Son but the Son immediately from the Father by the Holy Ghost So the Father and the Son Sanctifie us but mediately by the Holy Ghost but the Holy Ghost immediately from the Father and the Son The Christians Faith or Faith's Epitomy Or Ensign of true Christianity The Faith for which the valiant Martyrs fought With all the Princes of the Ayr and sought For life by losing it quenching the flame Not by their Blood but with new fire which came From their resolved Faiths Spiritual eyes From whose most zealous spicy flame did rise In Heav'n a Crown of Immortality On Earth the Phoenix of their Memory §. 2. I believe in God the Father Almighty Maker of Heaven and Earth THat is I believe that God is my Father as by Generation and Creation so by Regeneration and Adoption able to do all things as it pleaseth him the Creator of the whole world and the Lord and Governor of the same I believe not we believe with the Papists as the Church believes but every man must so believe as to be able to give an account of his Faith when lawfully called thereunto Now it is one thing to believe God another thing to believe in God To believe God sheweth onely a Faith of knowledge or historical Faith To believe in God declareth true Faith or confidence that is to be perswaded That whatsoever God is and is said to be he is all that and referreth it all to our safety for his Sons sake that is to resolve that he is such an one to me in particular God is to be considered in the three persons Father Son and Holy Ghost a person being nothing else but a maner of being in the Godhead Now no man is able to know God according to the excellency of his own Nature Joh. 1.10 18. but the Scripture delivers us such a knowledge of him as is both necessary and profitable for us Rom. 1.19 20. We must therefore acknowledge God to be such as himself hath manifested himself to be and though he cannot be defined because he is Immense and because his Essence is unknown to us yet may he be described by his Attributes and Properties the persons and principal works which may be thus God is a Spiritual Essence a Spirit John 4.24 or simple Spiritual Essence Exod. 3.13 an everlasting Spirit 2 Chron. 3.17 Infinite Psalm 139. Jer. 23.24 most holy Isa 6.3 onely wise 1 Tim. 1.17 most just and most merciful Exod. 34.6 7. Almighty Rev. 1.8 And he is but one Exod. 10.3 Living Psal 84.2 True Jer. 10.10 without body parts or passions John 4.24 of infinite power Ezek. 10.5 wisdom Psal 147.5 and goodness Psal 106.1 The Maker Gen. 1.1 and Preserver of all things Mat. 10.29 30. other from all the Creatures Incomprehensible most perfect in himself Immutable of an immense Power Wisdom and Goodness True Just Pure Merciful most free angry and wroth with sin of whose days there is no beginning nor ending Rev. 1.8 And in the Unity of this Godhead there be three Persons of one Substance Power and Eternity the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost 1 Joh. 5.3.2 Cor. 13.13 Or which Essence is the eternal Father who from everlasting begot the Son according to his Image and the Son who is the Coeternal Image of the Father and the Holy Ghost proceeding from the Father and the Son And the Eternal Father together with the Son and the Holy Ghost hath created Heaven and Earth and all Creatures and worketh all good things in all And that in Mankinde he hath chosen unto himself and gathered a Church by and for the Son that by his Church this one and true Deity may be according to the word delivered from above acknowledged celebrated and adored in this life and in the life to come And lastly he is the Judge both of the just and unjust The Name Father as it is opposite to the Son is understood personally or it signifies the first person of the Godhead as here but as it is referred to or compared with the Creatures it is taken essentially signifying the whole Divine Nature which is the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost And Creation is here ascribed unto God
the Husband of his Church Hos 2.19 20. Jer. 2.2 and cannot suffer his Honor and Worship to be communicated to another Idolatry therefore is Spiritual Whoredom and God is a jealous God of his glory As then God is the Husband of the Church so our Spiritual Worship is a certain Marriage of our Souls consecrated unto the Lord and therefore all false and forged Worship is Spiritual Whoredom and Idolatry towards him 2. Because Idols are but the worke of mens hands moth-eaten painted Stocks Weather-beaten carved Stones crack'd-brittle-crasie Glassgods It follows therefore That such as most sacrilegiously rob the most High true God of his Honor to give it in any kinde to these Stocks and Stones under any pretence whatsoever cannot prosper but shall be confounded Hos 8.8 9. Jer. 3.23 24. 10.15 Isa 44.9 10. 42.17 18 19. No familiarity is to be used with Idolaters but we are carefully to avoid the company of them Hos 4.15 Deut. 7.5 Psal 16.4 Judg. 2.2 1 Cor. 8.9 10.21 2 Cor. 6.17 Isa 52.11 1. Because whosoever will avoid sin must also avoid the means whereby they may be induced and insnared to fall into it Psal 119.115 2. Because our Nature is prone and inclinable to Idolatry and therefore by their Company by their Example by their Practice by their Perswasion and by their Doctrine we may easily be corrupted as the Lord himself threatneth Judges 2.3 Popery may not be tolerated in any State for these Reasons viz. 1. Because it maintaineth inherent Righteousness of their own and Justification by Works done by themselves and in themselves and thereby as by many other ways derideth the imputation of Christs Righteousness abandoning renouncing and rejecting the Savior of Mankinde 2. Because they corrupt the Worship of God in substance by professing and practising Idolatry yea more then Heathenish Idolatry by entertaining a mixture of Paganism and Judaism 3. Because the Church of Rome is the Church of Antichrist and therefore not of Christ 4. A natural Papist that is such an one as acknowledgeth and believeth in the Councel of Trent and is obedient to the Doctrine of the Jesuits cannot be a good Subject and obey for Conscience sake and how dangerous it is for any State to admit them former Times have already recorded in characters of Blood scarce yet dry That the High Priest of Rome is the true and very Antichrist may most evidently thus appear 1. If we consider the Place where we are to seek and where we shall finde him The Seat of Antichrist is Mystical Babylon and Mystical Babylon is no other then Rome it self for the Whore of Babylon is the Great City which in the Apostles time had rule and dominion over the Kings of the earth Rev. 17.18 and this City is scituated upon seven Hills Rev. 17.9 so is Rome as is well known to all Travellers and Historians 2. If we consider the Time when the Church was to look for him The time of Revealing and Manifestation of Antichrist was foretold by the Apostle That he should come when the Emperors were removed and taken out of the way and when once the Empire in the West should be dissolved then should Antichrist succeed in the Seat 2 Thess 2.7 8. that is in the Government of Rome for the Empire of the West was the Roman Empire 3. If we consider the Conditions and Qualities of Antichrist which are plainly described 2 Thess 2.4 he is said to be an Adversary opposed to Christ yet not professed but disguised for under this Vizard of Hypocrisie he oppugneth Christ and his Truth and denyeth the Lord Jesus to be that Christ anointed to be the onely King the onely Priest the onely Prophet of the Church in all which the Bishop of Rome usurps a share lifting up himself above all that is called God that is all to whom the Name of God is communicated or by whom the Name of God is called on and sitteth in the Temple of God as God Witness his usurped Authority upon the Consciences of men upon the Scriptures his Pardons and the like Private Caveats to avoid Idolatry 1. We must not delight in Idolatrous Papists company to be their inward friends 2. We must be careful how we travel for pleasure and delight into Popish and Idolatrous places lest we expose our selves to inevitable dangers by consorting and conversing with such as are ready to allure us to commit Idolatry to go into their Idolatrous Temples to see and hear for fashion and experience sake and afterward to fall down before their Images 3. We may not for Wealth Friends or any worldly wicked Respects link our selves in the nearest Society of Marriage with Popish Idolaters taking and nourishing in our bosoms a Serpent which is ever at hand day and night to tempt and entice us to forsake our Covenant with God to renounce his pure Worship and ●o embrace Idolatry and Superstition This was the sin of the Sons of God before the Flood Gen. 6.1 2. This was Solomons sin for all his wisdom 1 Kings 11.4 Neh. 13.26 This was Ahabs sin 1 Kings 16.31 and Jehorams sin 2 Kings 8.18 4. We are not to be present with our Bodies before the abominable Idol of the Mass whether it be of a fancy or for fashion whether of curiosity or for fear of punishment nor to give the least outward approbation to Idolatry though we reserve our hearts to God and his pure Worship for if this were allowable then the Holy Martyrs needed not to have suffered nor the Three Children of God to have walked in the fiery Furnace rather then bow before the Idol You that Religion t' any tune can sing Make Gods of Wood of Stone or any thing You that are Gods unto your selves can strain Devotion to the Idol of your Brain You that pray to your Lust and Sacrifice Vnto the Glances of Lascivious Eyes You that hoord up your God and put your Trust In What cannot defend it self from Rust And thou Whose Belly is thy God All ye Shall be indicted of Idolatry §. 3. Of Hypocrisie THe other Vice repugnant to this Commandment is Hypocrisie and whosoever will keep his Soul uninfected and unpoisoned by this pestilent and venomous sin must look to his heart to keep that sincere as the Root and Fountain of all his actions otherwise it may deceive others and it will deceive himself but can never deceive God Counterfeit Holiness is a double Ungodliness If it be a good thing to be good indeed what Reason hath the Hypocrite to but appear to be what he would not be And if it be an evil thing to be evil indeed why will be be that indeed which he would not so much as seem to be Wherefore let him appear as he is or be as he appears for what will it profit him to seem to the world a very Saint and to his God a Devil A wicked man of himself as he is wicked is too sufficiently wicked but
and Traditions are ordinarily better observed and more regarded then this Commandment of God The people indeed would rather go to Church then to work but to carnal Delights and Recreations rather then either forgetting the Memento wherewith the Lord more specially commands as well due preparation before as unsophisticate performance in the actual celebration of this holiest of days Such as make no conscience to take the Lords day from him are Spiritual Thieves and meddle with that which is not their own never considering the wrong and injury that they offer unto the Almighty God rested on the Seventh day that is he ceased to create any New parts of the World as being now perfect and such as he would have it to be Good Reason therefore had the Lord of this day on pain of Eternal death of Body and Soul in Hell the place of the Damned strictly to charge and command that every Soul keep this whole day holy to his glory How dares then any creature-Man think his own thoughts speak his own words or do his own works on this glorious day Isa 58.13 the Lords own holy day He that walks away this day in vain Discourse idle Pastimes and sinful Recreations steps every step he thus prophanely steps one step forward to Eternal Death He that gathered but Sticks thereon was stoned to death because he had not kept that Statute which God had enacted as by solemn Proclamation That all sorts that profess themselves his Servants should wait upon him on the Sabbath It was Christs own custom to preach the Gospel in the Synagogues on this day so also the Disciples Acts 20.17 17.1 2. 1 Cor. 16.11 The Doors of the Temple were shut the six days but opened from morning until the evening upon the Seventh day Ezek. 46.1 2. And this sanctifying of the Lords day is a Moral Duty and bindes perpetually otherwise we should have but Nine Commandments whereas they are often called the Ten Words Exod. 34.28 Deut. 14.13 10.4 And Christ came not to destroy but to fulfil and keep the Law Mat. 5.17 Know then we may not make this day a day of vain pleasures and carnal delights a day of Sports and Recreations thinking it sufficient if we follow not the works of our Calling neither may we on this day go or ride about our worldly matters to buy bargain sell and talk with others robbing God of his day to spare one of our own neither is it sufficient to observe onely so much of this day as is enjoyned by Laws and Injunctions of men and prophane the rest of it thereby dividing the Lords day between God and our selves And every sin is so much the greater by how much less the thing is for which men sin I say the less the thing is for which a man will sin and transgress the Law of God the greater always is his sin because the greater is his contempt of God Thus was it with him that gathered Sticks on the Sabbath day and was stoned to death for his pains And thus it is with such as recreate away the Sabbath by walking the Fields who offend God more therein then he that worketh thereon in his Calling for his Necessity Yet here by the way we are to beware of a Jewish Superstition which Christ often refutes in the Gospel that is to think it unlawful to perform on the Sabbath day whatsoever works belonging to the necessity either of his own life or of others for by the end of the Commandment it appears That such works onely are forbidden as hinder the Exercise of the Ministery of Gods Word The parts of this Commandment are two viz. 1. The Commandment That the Sabbath be sanctified that is that it self viz. the Seventh day be allotted for Gods Service Gen. 2.3 Exod. 20.11 16.26 20.10 2. The Reason of the Commandment drawn from Gods Rest on the Seventh day after the Creation and his hallowing thereof Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day that is with great care and Religion and that for these Reasons 1. Because the breach and violating of the Sabbath is the breach and violating of the whole Worship of God for the neglect of the Ministery soon corrupts the whole Doctrine and Worship of God 2. Because by the exacting of this Typical Sabbath God would signifie the greatness and necessity of the Spiritual Sabbath 3. Because God will have the external Sabbath to serve for the beginning and perfecting of the Spiritual Sabbath in us In this Commandment we are commanded to keep holy the Sabbath day which is done 1. By preparing our selves by Prayer and emptying our hearts of sin 2. By assembling together to Pray unto God to Praise him to hear his holy Word and to Receive the blessed Sacraments 3. By meditating upon Gods Works and the Word which we have heard suffering it so to work in us as that we may be furthered in all holiness of life 4. By collecting and distributing to the Poor by visting the sick and reconciling dissentions among Neighbors In this Commandment is forbidden all Prophaning of the Sabbath which is 1. By doing worldly works which are not of present necessity by journeying about worldly Affairs idle resting or absenting our selves from the publike Duties of Gods Word and Worship 2. By forgetfulness of the Sabbath upon the six days by which we often bring upon our selves a necessity of prophaning the same 3. When being Parents or Governors we leave such as are under our charge to their liberty upon that day The Reasons of this Commandment are 1. Partly expressed therein and are taken 1. From the Lords Example who rested the Seventh day from all his works of Creation 2. From his Blessing inseparably linked unto the hallowing of this day 2. Partly enfolded therein are these 1. The Law of the Sabbath is Ancient and was of force in Paradice before Mans Fall 2. Because it is most Equal the Lord allowing us six days to labor in 3. Because the Seventh is the Lords peculiar day so that without Sacriledge we cannot any way prophane it God will have all our children and family to cease from their labors on this day for two causes 1. That these also may be brought up by their Parents and Masters in the service of God and may be admitted unto the Ministery of the Church 2. Because he will have especially on the Sabbath day Love and Bountifulness towards our Neighbors to be shewed and seen in the Church Strangers also are commanded to intermit their labors and that if they were converted to true Religion because they were of the houshold of the Church if they were Infidels it is commanded them not in respect of themselves but in respect of the Israelites and that especially for these two Reasons 1. Lest by their ill Example they should give offence unto the Church 2. Lest their liberty might be an occasion to the Jews to accomplish by them those labors which it was
shorten their days Psal 37.37 38. Eccl. 8.12 Isa 3.10 11. Who say there is to Man no Honor due Belye that God that 's infinitely True And by this specious fond Delusion Vsher an Vnity of Confusion Both in the Church and State disjoynting more The Frame o'th'World then Babel did before Childe Reverence thy Parents thou shalt have By far the longer Journey to thy Grave But if the Lord doth sooner call thee hence Eternity shall be thy Recompence The Sixth Commandment Thou shalt do no Murther THe Sum of this Commandment forbiddeth all kinde of evil and commandeth all kinde of good to our Neighbors person So that the scope or end of this Commandment is the preservation of the life and safety of mens Bodies and of the welfare both of our selves and others herein being forbidden all those things which tend to the destruction of our life or the life of others And the defence of our Neighbor is here commanded because Negative Commandments include Affirmatives Thou shalt do no Murther therefore thou shalt help and aid thy Neighbor Thou shalt do no Murther that is according to thine own pleasure and lust but when the Magistrate punisheth God punisheth Now the Vertues of this Commandment are such as either hurt not men as particular Justice Mildeness Equability Peaceableness and the like or such Vertues as help and further the Safety of men either by repelling evils as Commutative Justice true Fortitude holy Indignation and Zeal or by doing benefits as Humanity Mercy Amity and the like So that herein we are commanded to preserve as much as in us lieth the life and health of our selves and others especially of our Neighbor and most especially the life of his Soul by good Counsels Exhortations and Admonitions Now here know therefore That to give or accept the Challenge to fight the single Combat is unlawful That which the Natural man accounteth Valor God esteemeth a Vice and therefore it is no disgrace to refuse it but rather true grace in yielding obedience unto God for no man must sin against God for the saving of his Credit and Reputation among men Duellists if they are slain are accessary to their own wilful and untimely Murther if they kill presently after the Murther committed they have cursed Cains fearful Mark stamp'd on them There was never any man rightly informed either in the Principles of Nature or in the gracious way to Heaven in the sober Passages of Morality or in the Justice of State or Policy or acquainted with the fairness of true Honor that ever gave any allowance to the Reputation of Honor falsly so called purchased by private Quarrel in the Field Now as Murther is one of those sins the Earth findes most unsupportable and cryeth the loudest of any other to Heaven for Vengeance So among all the several kindes thereof Parricide is the abominablest and most odious such as of old no particular Law was made against as being supposed an act too unnatural for any Childe to commit which Supposition deceived even Solon that wise Law-maker among the Heathen and caused him by his own confession to omit the Enacting Punishment against such Offenders Cic. pro Ros Ame. Yet when this inhumane impiety was known to the world the Civil Law ordained this most exquisite ingenious punishment That if any one should kill his Parent the Sword or Fire or any other usual punishment should not be his but being sewed in a Sack together with a Dog a Cock a Viper and an Ape he should be cast into the next Sea or River Just Cod. cap. 9. Tit. 17. as unworthy to live the life or dye the death of men unworthy the Element of Air while he lives or of Earth being dead To this high degree of Murther borders that ungodly and unnatural act of Parents in destroying their own Children whether at any time after Birth or in the Womb after Conception for that which hath received a Soul formed in it by God if it be unjustly cast away shall be Revenged yea if both or either of the Parents through any wilful default whatsoever cause the childe to miscarry they make themselves guilty of that miscarriage if both miscarry they make themselves guilty of the blood of both at least in the Court of Conscience before God Lastly because this horrible sin of Murther is most commonly occasioned by Duelling we must yet further know That the Law both of God and Man condemneth this common practice of Brawling Fighting Quarrelling or Challenging one another into the Field for private and personal wrongs Whosoever think it a disgrace to refuse such Challenges think it also a disgrace to walk in the ways of God and to obey the good Edicts of Princes and wholesom Laws of the Commonwealth The greatest disgrace is Not to yield Obedience unto God it is no credit to sin against him to salve a supposed Honor and Reputation among men for no man ought to revenge his own Cause or Quarrel Likewise the causes of these Duels are most commonly very wicked as sometimes Pride and Vain-glory sometimes Drunkenness and Lust sometimes Covetousness and Greediness of Gain and the cause of all these causes the Devil himself who was a Murtherer from the beginning The effects thereof are no better for they cause deadly Fewds breed Hatred never to be appeased nourish Contention and Confusion hinder Prayer and holy Exercises of Religion shed mans blood made in the Image of God and bring down the Vengeance of God upon our own heads Let all such therefore as challenge or accept of Challenges consider That he that killeth is guilty of execrable Murther before God and he that is killed is guilty of his own death and no better then one of the Devils Martyrs for as God hath his Martyrs that dye in his Cause so the Devil also hath his Martyrs that dye in his These words Thou shalt do no Murther do signifie 1. Thou shalt not desire to Murther either thy self or others 2. Thou shalt not intimate or signifie any desire of Murthering either thy self or others either in words behavior countenance or otherwise 3. Thou shalt not put this desire in execution This Commandment hath these two parts viz. 1. The forbidding of Murther and therein all the degrees and steps by which we come unto it 2. The commanding of keeping Peace and Friendship with our Neighbors The steps or degrees towards Murther are these three viz. 1. Hatred conceived in the heart Lev. 19.17 2. Rash sinful Anger which is a declaration of that hatred lying hid in the heart 3. Every hurt purposely offered to the person of our Neighbor whereupon ensueth sometimes Murther it self That Murther may be committed in the very Affection or Will may be thus manifested 1. Because when the Effect is commanded or forbidden the Cause is so also 2. From the scope or end of the Commandment God will not have us hurt any therefore he forbiddeth the means also whereby we may hurt 3.
became obedient to the death even that ignominious death of the Cross and shall not we suffer an ignominious life by Poverty without making it more ignominious by Theft Usury is a main breach of this Commandment as being a Gain exacted by Covenant above the Principal onely in lieu and recompence of lending it and being thus considered it is quite contrary to Gods Word yet is it lawful sometimes to take above the Principal but with these conditions viz. 1. If a man take heed that he exact nothing but that which his Debter can get by good and lawful means 2. He may not take more then the gain nay not all the gain nor that part of the gain which drinks up the living of him which useth the Money 3. He must sometimes be so far from taking gain that he must not require the Principal if his Debter be by inevitable and just casualties impoverished and it be also plain that he could not make no not by great diligence any commodity of the Money borrowed Reasons why a man may sometimes take above the Principal viz. 1. That which the Debter may give having himself an honest gain besides and no man any ways endamaged that the Creditor may safely receive 2. It is convenient that he which hath money lent him and gaineth by it should shew all possible gratitude to him by whose goods he is enriched 3. It is often for the benefit of the Creditor to have the goods in his own hands which he lent whereby he is prejudiced by the forbearance and therefore may justly expect not exact reparation from the Rich not the Poor Lending is twofold viz. 1. Of Due which is the Loan of the Rich to the Poor when his Necessity compels him to borrow and for this a man cannot with good conscience take any encrease 2. Of Courtesie when one rich friend lends unto another this is left to a mans own liberty and discretion and hath not any particular Promise of Reward not in this case is all taking of Encrease simply condemned even for these Reasons in these cases 1. When the encrease is given onely in way of thankfulness for ingratitude is abhorred of all and the Law of Natures requires to do good for good and all Divines allow this kinde of encrease 2. When a man sustaineth damage by his lending he may receive encrease by way of Satisfaction for his loss 3. When a man is contented to adventure his Principal in the hand of him that borroweth it like as a man may receive hire for his Horse or other goods standing to the loss Exod. 22.14 Three general Rules set down by Paul Rom. 14. to direct us in all our actions that we commit not this or any other sin viz. 1. He is happy that condemneth not himself in the use of those things which he knoweth to be lawful This concerneth those that be strong 2. No man must do any thing with a doubtful Conscience for such a one woundeth his own Conscience and offendeth God though perhaps the thing be in it self good which he doth Rom. 14.23 Such a one doth many good things that do displease God which would please him if they were well and rightly done This Rule belongeth to the weak 3. Whatsoever proceedeth not from Faith is a sin committed against God and condemneth him that doth it forasmuch as without Faith its impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 And this Rule engendereth two others viz. 1. Whatsoever proceedeth from meer Naturals whatsoever cometh from the force of any free will in us is sin in the sight of God 2. All the Vertues and actions of the Infidels and Unbelievers though in the substance of the works and as they are the gifts of God they are not evil but good yet in the Judgement of God they are sins Corruption of judgement being also another main breach of this Commandment See to it ye Great Ones and know That Judgement is corrupted four ways viz. 1. Through Fear when we dread to pronounce Truth for fear of offending great persons So did Pilate wrest the Law and sin against his own Conscience for fear of Herod 2. Through Covetousness when we are corrupted by Bribes and hired for Money which blinde the eyes of the wise So did Felix gape after gain and look for Rewards Acts 24.26 3. Through Hatred and Malice for as Naboths Vineyard was Ahabs Sickness so he dealt corruptly with Michaiah because he hated him and could not abide him 1 Kings 22.8 27. 4. Through Favor and Affection when we seek to gratifie or pleasure our Kinsmen or Acquaintance as Pilate did to please Herod In this sense it is that the Lord will not have even the poor man countenanced in his cause Exod. 23.3 The sins forbidden in this Commandment viz. 1. Inordinate living whether it be in no set Calling or idly wherein by neglecting their duties such persons mis-spend their time goods and revenues 2 Thess 3.11 Gen. 3.19 1 Tim. 5.8 2. Unjust dealing in heart which is called Covetousness Mat. 15.19 3. Unjust dealing in deed which is either in bargaining or out of bargaining Unjust dealing in bargaining hath many branches viz. 1. To sell and bargain for that which is not saleable 2. All coloured forgery and deceit in bargaining as using forged cavillation Luke 19.8 or when men sell that which is counterfeit for good as Copper for Gold and mingle any ways bad with good making shew onely of the good Amos 8.4 5 6. by mixture of base things of little or no value with things of price in the sale thereof or by setting a counterfeit gloss on imperfect Ware by sophisticating any Wares or using false lights or slights 3. By false Weights and Measures This is an abomination to the Lord Deut. 25.13 14 16. Lev. 19.35 36. Amos 8.4 4. By over-reaching the Buyer by dissembling lying and extolling speeches when the Ware is unworthy or when the Buyer concealeth the goodness of the thing or the Seller the faults of it and blindefoldeth the Truth with counterfeit speeches Mat. 7.12 Prov. 20.14 5. By Factions when as two or three compact together by offering to buy what they intend not to deceive him that intendeth to buy indeed 6. When in buying and selling the people are oppressed as by raising the just price of things by inhancing the price by reason of a set day for payment by Ingrossing or Monopolizing any Commodity by becoming Bankrupt to be enriched by the damages and goods of other men 7. By not restoring that which was lent pledg'd or found Ezek. 18.7 by delaying any kinde of Restitution from one day to another Prov. 3.18 Psal 37.21 or by practising Usury Psal 15.5 Exod. 22.25 or by detaining the laborers wages Jam. 5.4 4. Unjust dealing out of bargaining is likewise manifold viz. 1. To pronounce false Sentence or Judgement for a Reward either proffer'd or promised Isa 1.23 This is the Lawyers and the Judges sin 2. To feed or clothe stout
not the defamation or hurt of any man 6. We must always use moderation of minde in going to Law which chiefly stands in these three particulars viz. 1. In seeking after Peace to the utmost Rom. 12.18 2. In love with our Enemies with whom we are at controversie in Law 3. In neither using nor shewing extremity in our proceedings Mat. 18.28 7. We must not be given to Strife and Contention and in an humor seek occasions to begin and breed quarrels 1 Cor. 3.3 Phil. 2.2 8. In all Suits of Law we must be mindeful of the Law of Charity and not so much endeavor to maintain our own Right as to recal our brother which erreth into the right way 8. Commutative Justice which keeps equality in the common Trade of life according to just Laws under which are comprehended all Contracts as Buying and Selling Loan Commodation Donation Exchange Letting to hire Pledging or gaging Committing on Trust Partnership and the like 9. Fidelity which is a vertue that heedeth another mans harms and endeavoreth to avert them gladly and diligently performing all the parts of his Calling in doing his duty to this end that God may be honored and we enabled to succor our selves ours and others for he that undergoeth not those labors that he is able and ought to undergo committeth Theft 10. Liberality which is a vertue giving to others that want our own goods according to the Rule of Right Reason not by any due Bond or Obligation but according to the Law of God and Nature with a free heart according to our own Ability and the Necessity of others know where when to whom and how to give observing a mediocrity and mean between base Niggardliness and riotous Prodigality 11. Hospitality which is one kinde of Liberality even Bountifulness towards Travellers and Strangers especially towards those that are of the houshold of Faith or exiled for the Profession of the Gospel entertaining them with all duties of discreet Bountifulness commendable Hospitality and Christian Charity He breaks this Commandment 1. That thinks but a thought tending to the least hinderance of his Neighbors welfare 2. That lives in no Calling 2 Thess 3.11 or neglects his Calling Jer. 48.10 3. That spends his Wealth in Ryot and provides not for his Family 1 Tim. 5.8 4. That useth powdering starching blowing dark shops to make ill wares more saleable 5. That conceals the faults of his wares or that useth false Weights and Measures Lev. 9.35 6. That useth words of deceit Prov. 20.14 or takes more for his wares then the just price Mat. 7.12 7. That oppresseth his Tenants by racking his Rents Hab. 2.11 8. That useth ingrossing of wares or that raiseth the price onely in consideration of a day of payment 9. That either gives or takes Bribes Isa 1.13 or writes Letters of Affection in wrong Suits 10. That holds back things borrowed Ezek. 18.7 or things found or pawn'd Lev. 6.3 11. That being lusty lives by begging or that relieveth such 2 Thess 3.10 12. That for Gain defends bad Causes and delays Suits in Law 13. That laye Burthens on the people without measure Isa 1.23 Ezek. 22.27 14. That makes Merchandize of Gods Word and Sacraments Mic. 3.11 2 Cor. 2. ult 15. That gets his living by casting of Figures and by Plays Eph. 4.28 16. That is rash in Suretiship Prov. 11.15 or keeps back goods given to any man 17. That steals mens Children to dispose of them in Marriage 1 Tim. 1.10 or otherwise 18. That restores not things evil gotten Ezek. 33.15 19. That is a Receiver of things stoln and gives consent to the fact any way Rom. 1.31 20. That waits for a Dearth to sell his things the dearer Amos 8.5 21. That takes by stealth but the least Pin though it be for the best end Rules of Obedience to this Comandment 1. We must be in a lawful Estate and Calling according to the Precept 1 Cor. 7.20 and we must be diligent therein Gen. 3.17 Prov. 22.5 2. We must be content with our present Estate whatever it be which with godliness is great gain 1 Tim. 6.6 3. We must be frugal and thrifty to save that wherewith the Lord hath blessed us not spending it unnecessarily upon vanity nor losing it by neglect 4. We must be constant to perform all our lawful Promises Psal 15.4 and faithful in all our dealings Live in some Calling be not Prodigal Vse no Deceit to set false Wares to sale Vse no unlawful Weights give just measure Rob not the Nation or the Churches Treasure Give God and Cesar both their due and fly The Cankerworm of Biting-Vsury Oppress not Bribe not Lye not nor Ingross Restore things lent found pawn'd Revenge no loss Steal not in heart word deed Do this and be From any Breach of this Commandment free The Ninth Commandment Thou shalt not bear False Witness against thy Neighbor THou shalt not bear that is Answer when thou art asked before a Judge Deut. 19.17 18. False Witness by a figure signifieth every word whereby the credit and estimation of our Neighbor is either impaired or diminished By the word Neighbor any other man is to be understood as Luke 10.29 Gen. 11.3 Esth 1.19 Prov. 18.17 for we are all of one blood Acts 7.26 The Sum of this Commandment recommendeth unto us the care of our Neighbors good-name in all respects to preserve as much as in us lyeth his and our own good-name stopping our ears against false Reports suppressing them and alway speaking the Truth So that the drift of this Commandment is the maintenance of the Truth among men wherein not onely the bearing of false witness but also all those things which are of near affinity with it the general whereof is Lying are forbidden So the bearing of true witness is commanded The name of Truth is here taken for Trueness or Truth-speaking that is for the agreement or correspondency of our knowledge and speech with the thing whereof our speech is for it is then true when the speech in all agrees with the thing This Commandment hath two parts viz. 1. False witness is forbidden which is 1. In Judgement which becomes Perjury Theft or Murther 2. Out of Judgement 2. True witness is commanded There are two kindes of false Testimonies in Judgement viz. 1. Altogether false 2. False onely in part which is a Cavil or crafty Accusation when something is either taken from the Truth or put to it or changed False testimonies out of Judgement are principally three 1. Backbiting or Slandring which hurteth three at once The Slanderer the Hearer and the Slandred Of this kinde are Whisperers and Tale-bearers 2. Flattery which is a smooth fostering of other mens Vices Isa 5.20 3. Lying which is of diverse sorts Psal 5.6 There are chiefly these five kindes of Lyes viz. 1. Some proceed of Covetousness and are very dangerous being pernicious to our Neighbor 2. Others be of infirmity or fear Gen. 12.13 3. Others be of lightness for
fruits and effects thereof viz. 1. It converted happy and blessed Angels into cursed and damned Spirits for the Devils by Creation were good Angels as Powerful Wise Quick Speedy Invisible Immortal c. as any other Angels equal in every respect but inferior in no respect to the very best Angels Now when they fell they lost not their natural Substance and essential Properties thereof no more then man lost his when he fell For as man remained to be not onely Flesh and Blood but also a Living yea and a reasonable Creature after his Fall So the Devil remained to be a Spirit Invisible Immortal Quick Speedy c. as before onely the Quality of his Nature and Properties is altered from Good to Evil. Now the things which especially make them seem so terrible are Their Power Malice Subtilty Sedulity and Speed for where Malice is strengthned by Might Might whetted on by Malice both Malice and Power guided by Craft Craft and all stirred up by Diligence Sedulity and Speed the Enemy is prevalent Be wise therefore Watch and Pray stand fast in the Faith Yet know that the Devil is not able to do whatsoever he will for this is proper onely to God whose Power is Infinite but the Devils Power is a created Power and therefore limited within bounds of a Creature yea he is not able to do any thing simply above or directly against that course which the Lord hath ordained unto his Creatures which is commonly called The course of Nature for God hath tied all his Creatures thereunto and hath reserved onely for himself who is the sole Lord of Nature power to alter it as pleaseth him But the extraordinary power of the Devil consisteth in this That he can do any thing that is within the compass of Nature and may be effected by Natural means as the violent moving of the Air causing of Tempests and Storms Thunder and Lightning troubling the Seas the causing of Earth-quakes throwing down Buildings rooting up Trees entring into Bodies both of Men and Beasts casting them into Fire and Water grievously vexing and tormenting them inflict sore Diseases on them possess them make them Lunatick Deaf Dumb Blinde stir up Wrath Pride Covetousness Lust and the like Passions in men He knows the dispositions of men and accordingly layes baits for them he can darken their Understandings and cause much Anguish in their Soul and Conscience he can inrage Man against Man Kingdom against Kingdom Subjects against Princes Princes against Subjects and so cause whatsoever mischief can be caused which the whole World may witness by too woful Experience As touching the Nature of Devils they are Spiritual Substances they were created Spirits and Spirits they still remain to be their Fall hath not altered their Substance but the Quality of it for else could not that Nature and Substance which transgressed be punished Grosly therefore do they erre who Think and Teach That they be nothing else but bad Qualities and evil Affections which arise from our Flesh If because they are Spiritual things they should be no Substances but onely Qualities then neither should the Souls of Men nor good Angels be Substances for these are termed Spirits Eccles 12.7 Heb. 1.14 Spiritual things may be as truly and properly Substances as Bodily things And as for the Devils the Actions which they perform the Places where they are the Power wherewith they are endued and the Pains and Torments which they suffer evidently shew that they are plainly and truly Substances And we may know that in Hell there are both degrees of Torments and degrees of Devils for there is one Head of wicked Spirits called Beelzebub or The Devil who hath innumerable wicked Angels ministring unto him as may be gathered Matth. 25.41 where Hell is said to be prepared for the Devil and his Angels And it is not unlike that they are more in number then all the men upon the Earth for where can any man be in this Life but some wicked Spirit will be ready to tempt him to sin And though the Evil Motions arise from our own Corruption yet the Devils help is never wanting to bring them into Action which confutes the folly of our common people who never dread the Devil but when he appears unto them in some horrid shape they think he is never neer them but when they see him but it is far otherwise and there is more Reason to fear his Temptations then his Appearance for this is not so terrible to the Sight as his Temptations are hurtful to the Soul And this fearful Fiend this cursed Spirit this damned Devil had not been at all had it not been for Sin 2. It occasioned Adams Fall by his disobedience whereby himself and all his Posterity forfeited that Happiness wherein they were created and incurred a most fearful punishment which is Threefold viz. 1. In this Life as the painful Provision of the things of this Life proneness to Diseases shame of Nakedness pains in Childbirth trembling of Conscience in the Soul care trouble hardness of Heart and madness Deut. 28.28 Subjection to the power of Satan Damage to the Temporal estate Deut. 28.29 And the loss of that lordly Authority which man had over all the Creatures 2. Temporal death or a change like unto it Rom. 6.23 3. After this life eternal destruction from Gods exceeding glorious Presence Presume not to commit that Sin in secret which thou wouldst not before men for all secret Sins hidden to men are known to God for these Reasons viz. 1. Because it is impossible that any thing in Heaven or Earth should hide us or our works from his knowledge 't is not the darkness of the night nor the secrecy of the place nor the politique contrivance of any act can conceal us from his Knowledge and Omnipresency his All-seeing Eye Psal 139.9 10 11. 2. Because it is the Office of God and an essential Property attributed unto him to be the Searcher of hearts Gen. 6.5 1 Chron. 28.9 Jer. 17.10 Thus he saw the secret Sacriledge of Achan the Hypocrsie of Ananias and Sapphira and the Treachery of Judas In Original Sin consider 1. The Cause which is Adams Fall partly by the subtile Suggestions of the Devil partly through his own Free-will and the propagation of Adams corrupted Nature to his Seed and Posterity 2. The Subject thereof which is the Old Man with all his Powers Minde Will and Heart 1. In the Minde Ignorance of God and his Will 2. In the Will Rebellion against the Law of God 3. The Effects thereof they are 1. Actual Sins 1. Inward as ungodly Affections 2. Outward as wicked Looks prophane Speech and ungodly Actions 2. An Evil Conscience which bringeth the Wrath of God Death and Eternal Damnation To the Sin of Adams Fall there were three things concurring viz. 1. Gods Permitting not by instilling into him any evil or taking from him any ability to good but by suffering Satan to tempt him 2. By
respect sake which we owe our Bodies 1 Cor. 12.23 24. Special Rules for Direction in the right adorning of the Body viz. 1. Every one must be content with their own natural Favor and Complexion that God hath given them 2. We must place the principal Ornament of our Souls and Bodies in Vertue and good Works and not in any outward thing 3. In the use of Ornaments we must be very sparing and keep our selves within the mean 4. Ornaments must be used not always alike but according to occasions as in this time of Holy Feasting we may use them more freely then at other times 5. We must adorn our Bodies to a right end viz. That thereby we may honor them and in them honor God The right and spiritual use of Apparrelling our selves viz. 1. To consider our Cloaths are but as the Plaister of our shame and thereby to humble our selves 2. When we clothe our selves to remember to gird up our loyns to prepare our selves for Christ whether by Death or by Judgement 3. By putting on of our Garments we must be admonished to put on Christ Rom. 13.14 4. By putting off of our Cloaths we are admonished to put off the old Man the Body of Corruption Sick Soul hast surfetted with Sin No doubt Thy safest Physick is to Fast it out Or is Gods hand his just Revenging hand Threatned inflicted on thee or the Land Or doest thou want some Blessing Go thy way Prepare thy self to Mourn to Fast and Pray But if God stops a Plague or sheaths his Sword Thou may'st be glad Rejoyce but in the Lord And let thy Holy Feasting never be Without Thanksgiving Fear and Charity CHAP. VIII Of Ecclesiastical Discipline ECclesiastical Discipline is that other Key of the Kingdom of Heaven which is joyned with that of the Preaching of the Gospel and doth open or shut when according to the Commandment of Christ they who in Name are Christians but in their Doctrine or Life shew themselves aliens from Christ Rom. 12.7 c. After they having sometime been admonished will not depart from their Errors and Wickedness are made known unto the Church or to them that are appointed for that matter and purpose of the Church and if neither then they obey the Admonition are of the same men by interdiction from the Sacraments shut out from the Congregation of the Church and by God himself out of the Kingdom of Heaven And again if they profess and indeed declare amendment of life are received as Members of Christ and his Church Matth. 18.17 c. 1 Cor. 5.2 c. 2 Thes 3.14 15. This Ecclesiastical Discipline is to be ministred by the Pastors of the Church whereunto are adjoyned certain Elders for this end as Necessities shall require chosen of the Church For Excommunication is an Action of the Church performed in the Name of Christ whereby a grievous Transgressor or an open ungodly and obstinate Sinner is banished from the Fellowship of the Faithful by the judgement of the Elders by the consent of the Church by the Authority of Christ and by the Holy Scriptures They who are to be Excommunicated are chiefly such as deny some Article of the Faith or shew that they will not repent nor submit themselves to the Will of God according to his Commandments neither make any scruple of persisting stubbornly in manifest Wickedness The chief and principal part in Excommunication is Denunciation whereby is denounced That he that denyeth Faith and Repentance is no Member of the Church as long as he continueth such And this Denunciation whereby one is Excommunicated is not in the Power of the Minister of the Church but in the Power of the Church and is done in the name of the Church because this Commandment was given by Christ unto the Church and not for the destruction of the Sinner which is to be Excommunicated but for his Edification or Salvation 1 Cor. 5.5 Some draw the Original of this Church Censure even from Adam whom the Lord cast out of Eden and by an Angel kept him from re-entring and suffered him not to touch or taste of that Tree which was a Sacrament of Life unto him So some observe touching Cain whom the Lord cast out and banished from his face and indeed the Face of God may be called The place of his solemn Worship where he more specially appears In the time of the Law were many Ceremonies to this purpose the unclean were kept from coming to the Tabernacle from entring into the Temple from the partaking of the Sacrifices and from eating the Passover Num. 19.13 20. 9.13 And Abraham is commanded to cast out the Bond-woman and her son out of his Family which was the Church Gen. 21.10 11. So in the New Testament Matth. 16.19 18.18 The use of the Keys to open and shut and the words of binding and loosing come directly to this purpose This was executed on Hymeneus and Alexander 1 Tim. 1.19 20. From all which it is very clear That Excommunication is a sentence of the Church whereby a Member thereof convicted of some grievous Crime and by no means brought to Repentance is driven out of the Church and cut off from the Communion and Fellowship of the Faithful that thereby he may be driven to Repentance The Church is the City of God Excommunication is the Sword That the School of Christ this is the Rod That the Temple of God this is as it were the Whip to scourge out such as abuse it and themselves That the Body of Christ this is as a Medicine to cure the sick Members thereof That the Vine and Sheepfold this serveth to keep the Foxes and Wolves from it The Mark whereat Excommunication aimeth and the end whereto it tendeth is That the Sinners being ashamed may be brought to Repentance and that such as live in the Church might not be corrupted for the cause of the Institution of Excommunication is not so much the punishment of Sin as the Salvation of a Sinner the edifying of the Church and the glory of God For the Church according to the Doctrine of Christ smiteth none with the Spiritual Sword but such as are impenitent and doth not this unto death but unto life and therefore receiveth them that repent The Censure of Excommunication must be used as an Ordinance of God not as an Invention of Man not onely knowing the nature and use of it but practising it to the glory of God and to the good of others Not like the Church of Rome that playes fast and loose with the souls of men for gain nor like their Apes of Modern Times little regarding whether the Excommunicate repented or not but more advising them to pay their Fees and discharge the Court then to repent of their Offences The persons that are liable to this Censure of the Church are onely such as have confessed Christ and called upon God the Father together with us albeit they have denied him in their deeds
46 b. Bible the Canonical Books thereof not perishable 6 a. Blood of Christ how it saves from sin 321 a b. Body the Metaphor thereof used in Scripture what it implieth 151 a. Bondage from the which Christ hath freed us is fourfold 322 a. Bread daily Bread what is meant thereby 98b Burial of Christ the Causes thereof 37 c. C CAlling twofold 150 c. Censure the evil of it and how many ways it may be committed 305 a. Censures of the Church threefold 379 c. Ceremonies Judaical oblige not Christians 16 a. Chastity twofold 289 b. Rules to preserve it ibid. c. 290 b. Children their Duties to Parents 263 c. Christ his Natures and Properties described 127 b c. the degrees of his Humiliation 127 a. also of his Exaltation ibid. Why called the First-born ibid. why called our Head ibid. 128 a. why called our Lord 127 Messias Christ or Anointed ibid. b. why called the Word 129 a. the Lamb from the c. 322 c. the Head of the Church 151 b. how said to be Present with us 157 b c. to what ends Anointed 128 b. his Royal Prophetick and Priestly Offices 128 129 his Theanthropeity and the use thereof 131 c. Church what it is to believe in the Holy Catholick Church 149 c. why called Catholick 150 a. The Church twofold Visible and Invisible ibid. b. 152 c. its Priviledges 151 c. Marks to know the true Church by 152 a. her Titles of Honor ibid. why called Holy ibid. b. her Properties ibid. why God permits it to be persecuted ibid. c. 153 a. 198 b. why the World hates it ibid. c. How the Church before Christs coming differs from the Church since his coming 154 a. how it differs from Common-weals ibid. b. her Office and Authority touching the Scripture ibid. how the Church may be said to erre ibid. c. what she may not do ibid. The Duties of Faith in the Holy Catholick Church 155 a. Circumcision why Abolished 46 c. why Christ was Circumcised ibid. b. Communion of Saints what 155 c. 156 c. Doctrine thereof 155 to 156. How we are said to have communion with God 157 c. the Signs of true Communion with God 158 a. 159 a. the Duty of the Saints by vertue of this Communion ibid. c. Conception of Christ by the Holy Ghost what 132 c. what it signifies 133 c. why he was conceived ibid. what it is to believe in Christ conceived 134 b c. Confession the Properties thereof 79 b. Christian Confession twofold 246 b. Caveats touching private Confession 225 c. Consubstantiation Reasons against it 57 b. Conversion what 337 Doctrine thereof ibid. to 343. Conversion twofold 341 c. how wrought 342 a b. The Object Subject Parts and Causes of Conversion ibid. b c. how is differs from false Repentance 343 a. Covenant betwixt God and Man twofold 330 a. Covetous how said to be Idolaters 309 a. Covetousness what 306 c. the Evils thereof 309 b. Remedies against it ibid. a. 110 b. Creation described 124 c. 125 a. 316 why God created the World 125 the Doctrine of the Creation ibid. b c. 316 to 319 the use of that Doctrine 119 b. Creatures four kindes thereof in the world 318 b. a twofold goodness in the Creature ibid. a. Creed why vulgarly called Apostolique 117 c. and why so framed ibid. Cross fourfold 198 c. a Cordial against fainting under it 200 a. 201 b. Cruelty the Properties thereof 278 b. Curse for Sin fourfold 19 c. D DEath of Christ why so ignominious 137 c. the Benefits thereby ibid. a. Debt a threefold Debt in Sin 105 a. Decalogue how divided 170 c. the Doctrine thereof 169 to 310 Rules how to expound it 171 c. 172 a b. Deity proved 119 c. 120 a. Deliverance how many ways God works it for his people 113 a. why God sometimes defers it 200 c. Descention of Christ into Hell what 135 c. the diversity of Opinions touching it 138 b c. Despair what 222 c c. Doctrine thereof ibid. to 226 threefold 225 a. Causes thereof ibid. b. Remedies against it 111 b. 225 c. 226 a b. Discipline what Ecclesiastical Discipline is 376 b. the nature of it how and by whom to be administred ibid. why and by whom Instituted 378 a. the Method thereof ibid. the Necessities thereof ibid. c. the Difference betwixt Church-Discipline and State-Government ibid. Distress of Minde the kindes thereof 224 b c. Doctrine how true Doctrine differs from other 153 c. Drunkenness Remedies against it 111 a. Duties the kindes thereof 271 a b. E EArth a twofold Right to it 272 c. Eating to the Lord what and how 374 b. Election what 313 Doctrine thereof ibid. to 316 kindes thereof 315 b. Effects thereof ibid. c. the way to obtain Assurance thereof 316 a. Envy twofold 281 c. why to be avoided ibid. Remedies against it ibid. Essence Divine what 2 b c. 3 b. how the Essence of God differs from the Essence of the Creature 4 a. Why the Difference of Essence and Person in the Trinity is necessary to be known ibid. b. Examination before Receiving the Lords Supper 49 c. to 53 b. Examiners three sorts of Examiners 53 a. Excommunication what 376 c. its parts 381 c. the Original thereof 377 a. how to be used ibid. b. of no force against the Childe of God ibid. c. Three Judgements in Excommunication 378 b. Observations thereon 379 b. Duties to be performed by and to the Excommunicate 380 a b. The fearful condition of Excommunicated persons ibid. c. the end and use of Excomunication 381 a b. with the use to be made thereof 382,383 Eyes Rules for the governing of them to avoid Adultery 289 a. F FAith what 174 b. Doctrine thereof 379 to 194 What the most Mysterious point of Faith 1 a. how many ways we may be said to Believe 183 b. Faith fourfold ibid. Historical Faith what ibid. c. Justifying Faith wherein it consists 184 a b. its Properties 186 c. Gods order in working Faith 184 c. how many ways Faith works 187 a b. how it admits Degrees 186 a. 238 c. 239 a. Effectual Faith what 187 wherein the effectualness of it consists 188 a. the Fruits Effects and Signs of Effectual Faith 192 b c. the Causes of uneffectual Faith 188 a. Faithless Works threefold 187 c. Tryal of Faith 50 b c. 51 c. Duties of Faith in Christ Crucified 138 a. how Faith and Hope differ 189 a. wherein they agree ibid. c. how Faith differs from Presumption 191 a. how Faith differs from Moral Honesty 238 b. the Degrees of Temporary Faith 239 b. Satans Engines to destroy Faith 188 c. Titles in Scripture given to Faith 190 c. how far the sense of Faith may be lost ibid. Motives to grow in Faith 191 b. Means to attain it ibid. c. The use of Faith in Prosperity 193 c. Faithful why called Saints 157 a. Fast what a Religious Fast is 369 a. 370 c. 371 a b. the several kindes thereof ibid. c. 372 a. Rules touching the same
he Rose again ibid. what chiefly is therein considerable ibid. c. why our Resurrection is the Fruit of his 141 b. The Duties of Faith in the Resurrection of Christ ibid. Rest on the Sabbath the several kindes thereof 260 b. Restitution twofold 239 c. why required ibid. Revenge Gods Prerogative 275 c. Motives in man to avoid it 278 a b. Reverence due to Superiors the several kindes of it 266 b. the over-reverencing of Parents sinful ibid. Righteousness of Christ how ours 325 b. Rome an Enemy to the Royal Priestly and Prophetick Office of Christ 129 c. S SAbbath what it signifies 258 b. the nature and Doctrine thereof 254 to 262. Why it is to be kept holy 256 b. 257 a. 258 a. in what maner ibid. 260 b. wherefore must Beasts rest that day 257 b. the degrees of the Sabbath 258 c. the Sanctification of the Sabbath twofold 250 a b. why it is perpetual ibid. c. why now called the Lords-Day 260 b. what chiefly observable in the Jewish Sabbath 261 a. why the Day was changed ibid. wherefore instituted at first ibid. c. how many ways it is broken and prophaned 262. Sacraments what ●7b their Institution 38 b. how the signs therein differ from the things signified 38 c. how Sacraments differ from the Word 39. how they agree ibid. c. how the Sacraments of the Old and New Testament differ ibid. how they agree 40 a. The ends and right use of Sacraments ibid. b. Sacramental Vnion wherein it consisteth ibid. c. Sacrifices under the Law why instituted 21 b. Salvation how wrought by God 329 c. 330 a. not to be doubted by Gods children and why 189 c. Sanctification what 326 b. the Doctrine thereof ibid. to 333. its parts 327 b. the kindes thereof ibid. c. 328 a. and signs 332 c. Scripture Holy Scripture what meant by it 6 a b. why called the Word of God 7 b. Proved to be the Word of God 7 c. 8. The matter thereof 8 a. End ibid. Effects 8 b. 14 a. Properties ibid. Testimonies 8 c. Majesty 9 a. Subject 12 b c. The Division of Scripture 9 c. wherein the Old and New Testament agree ibid. wherein they differ 10 a. why all sorts of men are bound to the knowledge of the Scripture 11a in what respects it is difficult ibid. and the Raeson thereof ibid. b. Means whereby to finde out the true sense of Scripture ibid. c. the Graces required for the right use thereof 12 a. how to profit by the Scriptures 13 a. The several kindes of Neglecters thereof 13 b. Observations for the right interpreting of the Scriptures 13 b. how to decide the doubtful places ibid. c. the Graces obtained by the Scriptures 14 a. the Papists Error touching the Authority thereof 9 b. their twofold Scripture ibid. Seal twofold 205 c. Sects of Jews under the Law 22 b. Sin what 343. why called a Debt 105 a. the seat of sin in man threefold 345 c. the kindes and degrees of sin 346 347. In what sense sin may be said to be venial ibid. c. 348 a. the occasions of sin ibid. b. the sundry kindes of communication with sin ibid. the heinousness of Adams sin 353 a. God not the Author of sin 352 c. why God permitted the first sin 353 a. Two main Disswasives from all sin 350 c. 351. Rules whereby to see our sins 354 a. how God doth punish sin ibid. b. the sad Effects of sin ibid. c. An Antidote against sin 355 a b. Rules to be observed in forsaking of sin ibid. c. Means sanctified by God himself against it 356 a. Sin Original Sin what 343. the nature of it 350 352. Sin against the Holy Ghost what 345 b. ' Degrees thereof 349 a. how this sin is differenced from all other sins ibid. b. why God leaves this sin unpardonable Sincerity the signs and tryals thereof 239 c. Son the second Person in the Trinity 1 to 5. Sprinkling in Baptism what it signifies 43 c. Subjection twofold 270 b c. Sufferings the Doctrine thereof 135 to 139. Supper of the Lord what 48 a. the Doctrine thereof 48 to 58. the signs and things signified 48 b c. the Sacramental Rites of this Supper 49 b. the Properties of a true Communicant ibid. a right disposition in the act of Receiving 53 b c. a true discerning of the Lords Body what 54 a. 55 a. what it is to shew forth the Lords Death 54 a. our Duty after Receiving 54 b c. Resemblance betwixt the Passover and the Lords Supper 56 c. 57 a. why Christ at the last Passover instituted the Lords Supper ibid. why the Bread and Wine is called the Body and Blood of Christ 58 b. Rules whereby to discern the Lords Body in the Sacrament ibid. c. how the Lords Supper differs from Baptism ibid. it is not necessary to come Fasting to the Lords Supper and the Reasons 59 a. the true and right ends of the Lords Supper ib. b. Swearing the Causes of common and prophane Swearing 243 c. when and wherein a man may lawfully swear 250 b c. Why we ought to swear onely by God and not by the Creatures 251 b c.. T TEmptation twofold 108 b. the kindes thereof ibid. c. and degrees thereof 109 a. how God is said to lead a man into Temptation 108 a. Testimony of the Spirit how wrought 330 b. of our own Consciences how discerned 332 a. Thanksgiving the subject matter thereof 68 c. 69. Directions for Thanksgiving ibid. c. Theft the several kindes thereof 291 292 293 a. the degrees thereof 296 b c. 297 299 c. 300 a. Remedies against it 293 b. Thoughts threefold 308 b. Vnclean Thoughts twofold 309 c. how to discern such Thoughts as the Devil injects into the heart ibid. an Antidote against evil Thoughts 316 b. Toleration of false Worship exceeding dangerous 217 c. Transubstantiation Reasons against it 57 b. Trespasses and Sins why called Debts 103 a. 109 b. Trinity what 1. the Doctrine thereof 1 to 5. Trinity and Triplicity how they differ 3 b. Trinity of Persons in Vnity of Godhead why necessary to be believed and maintained 4 b. Truth fourfold 305 c. Truth in speech twofold 301 b. Types are visible Promises 17 c. U UNion taken three ways 157 a. how united to Christ ibid. b. the Saints Priviledges by their Vnion with Christ 158 b c. 159 a. Motives to Spiritual Vnion with Christ ibid. c. the effects thereof 160 a. Vocation what 322 b. threefold 323 a. the Doctrine thereof 322 323 324. Vows how far they are to be kept 242. What is required in every Vow to make it lawful 252 c. 253 a. Considerations touching Vows 253. Usury conditions and qual fications touching it 295 a. Reasons why a man may sometimes take above the Principal ibid. W WAr lawful in the godly without the guilt of Murther 282 b. the Qualifications to be observed therein ibid. c. Will Liberty of Will what 338 b. the nature of the Will ibid. 339. Liberty of Will how constituted 340 a. why called Free ibid. b. Degrees of Free-will ibid. 341 b. the difference betwixt the Liberty of Gods Will and ours ibid. c. What things in the Will are common to Angels and Men with God 341 a. the degrees of the malice of the Will 350 a. Will of God what 93 c. Doing of Gods Will what it signifies 95 a. Rules how to obey it ibid. b. Wishing Conditions required therein 310 a. Witness the heinousness of bearing False Witness 301 c. Wives duty to their Husbands 269 b c. Word of God what 6 a. not alway the same with the letter of the Scripture b c. Why to be warily observed in Scripture 10 c. how falsified by Hereticks ibid. Works of God twofold 123 c. Works Good Works what 356 c. the Doctrine thereof ibid. to 363. kindes 358 a. and ends thereof ibid. 359 b. why Good Works required since they do not justifie 326 b. Rules to be observed in doing Good Works 357 b. how many ways God accepts of Good Works in us ibid. b. the diversity of Opinions touching the Necessity of Good Works ibid. c. how the wicked do things seemingly good ibid. c. why we are bound to Good Works 359 c. Good Works cannot merit 360. See Merit Why they cannot justifie us 361 b. how the Works of the Regenerate and Vnregenerate differ ibid. c. the fruit of Good Works 362 c. Worship the kindes thereof 171 a. wherein it consists 216 a. Rules touching it 217 a. Required in the Second Commandment 230. Doctrine of true Worship ibid. to 240. the kindes of false Worship 231 c. Rules for right Worship 232 a. FINIS