which is worship devised by man and arbitrary or free is abhorred by the Lord. The second commandement forbids making to our selues the least sign fying ceremony Numb 15.39 Col. 2 noth ng pleaseth God but what comes from heaven for outward service pleaseth no further then it is done in obedience to God and is an expressing of inward worship Therefore this wil-worship being done not in obedience to God but to our own and others will Isa 24.13 it is not accepted of God To this all agree for it was the Pharisies sinne that they took up of themselues many washings not commanded of God nor forbidden by him but indifferent in themselues 2 The Lord hath given a perfect Platform and absolute Rule how hee will be worshipped in the time of the new Testament For Christ that hath ever taught the Church and directed Moses and David much more comming in his own person hath fully manifested the will of his Father Else he should be lesse faithfull then the servant in him are hid all the treasures of wisedom and knowledge so as in him we are compleat and need not further to seek nor borrow any light from the greatest Angells in heaven for matters concerning God or his worship Therfore they are accursed Gal. 1 that preach any other doctrine besides that the Apostles haue preached and left unto us 2 Tim. 3 The Scripture makes the man of God perfect and absolute to every good work and it is a light unto our feet and to our pathes so as not a foot is set towards heaven but where and how it should be placed is evidently shewed The Scripture is so large that it meets with all doubts else the Lord should not be so provident as man who meet in their lawes with all they can conceiue Now the Lord foresees all doubts Further the Scripture g ues direction how to use things indifferent 1 Tim. 4 in our common use therfore much more in a religious This for the substance is held by all our sound Divines against the Papists 3 The Lord is very strict for observing every thing commanded in his service without any addition or detraction in the least things Deut. 4.2 Moses must doe all according to the pattern shewed in the mount The Lord punished Aarons sonnes for offering strange fire Vzzah for offering to stay the Ark hee forbids to be called Baali Hes 2. The Lord is a jealous God 2 Com. and his authority is weakned when men presume to doe any thing in his worship and serv ce God will be the same in punishing that he is in forbidding Math. 5 the least jo e or title shall not passe but all must see fulfilled 4 The least sin may not be committed to injoy all the Ordinances of God Rom. 3. For 1 The Lord may take men away in the act of doing evill afore they come to any good 2 It is is a great dishonour to God to doe any sinne to a good end as though the Lord could not provide for thy soule without sinning against him and sârving Satan first 3 It opens a gap to all superstitâon upon a good meaning and a gap to injustâce in mens dealings 4 The least sinne done especâally wittângly and willingly brings judgement upon the doer 5 God in such times when without sinning against him wee cannot enjoy them calls us for the while to humiliation or removing his glory from that place calls otherwhere to ab de Matth. 15 Men Men may not deny duety to these parents in rele ving them to offer unto God it makes the commandement of God of none effect which for to doe for any man whatsoever is a most hoâr bâe sinne 5 A little leaven leavens the whole lumpe 1 Cor. 5 men dote ever upon their own dev sâs and hav ng oâcâ ãâã the bounds God hath set them run fuâtâer further Besides the Lord so knâtâa hâs worship and oâdinances togethâr that âorruption of one coârupts the âest and without curing and restoring in time expells all Gods institutions and leaues men nothing but their own stuffe For men withholding the truth in injustice are forsaken of God and become fooles because they worship not God as God that is as he reveales himselfe in his workes and word Leaven is a Gangreen 2 Tim. 3. 6 The offence of the weak in the abuse of things indifferent much more superstitious which none in earth can command this may bring damnation unto thy brother Therfore that is most uncharitable and none can command against charity The Magâstrate is keeper of this Law and ought not to see it broken This is a sin against Christ Woe be to him that offends the least of these little ones Math. 18. In this the Scripture is so large 1 Cor. 10 Rom. 14 because men are witty having no sense nor tendernesse of conscience in themselues nor true loue towards the sincere servants of God and therfore no care of their growth in grace and prosperity of their soules onely puft up with knowledge and a forme of Religion that they haue devised I say they are so cunning to offend their weak brethren for which Christ dyed under colourable pretences Math. 12.23 ad 8. Divine order it selfe giues way to charity towards mens bodies much more a humane to mens soules All power is to edification not destruct on 7 All men are bound to protest and stand out against all superstitious will-worship especially that of the Church of Rome so as they may leaue the pure truth to posterity now in this light of the Gospell 2 Cor. 6 Apoc 14.4 Saints are redeemed and bought from among men and virgins which are not defiled with women that is w th whorish and idolatrous service Else how doe wee answer the great mercy and goodnesse of the Lord if we deny not all ungodlânesse Tit. 2. 2 They are guilty of former superst tions if they cast not away all idols 2 Command 3 They wrong their posterity making them e ther to drink troubled waters or suffer persecution for standing against that wh ch they yeelded unto 4 This is a part of that victory which Christ hath gotten for all his over the world that will lay claime unto it 8 To doe a th ng doubtingly by the example of others may bring damnat on to the party so sinn ng Rom. 14.23 Men may sinne aga nst the r conscience and so stumble and fall 2 Men may be given over in other things to the like to follow men And this holds in following any one though never so learned For not many nor prudent haue the truth revealed unto them in every age there being some misteries in Religion which learning or study cannot attain to without a speciall assistance and working of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2. 9 It is a great sinne to obserue pleasing Traditions because they are commanded by men and haue a shew of wisedom Col. 2 Esa 29. It argues men are led onely by an humane
should make but such an offer that were well able to perform it and thereto binde themselues would not your hearts be glad like the Levite who having served Micah being offred a great place to be Priest to the Tribe of Dan made no question Why think brethren God is most true and all-sufficient and he that writes this hath experience of it wherfore neglect not such great kindnesse of the Lord offered unto you And look as David said to the men of Iâdah Why are yee last to bring home the King so may I say unto you why are yee so backward to bring Christ into his Kingdom As your places were the means to set up Antichrist in his Throne so let your voluntary forsaking of them be a meanes to pull him down Oh think what a blow it would giue him and how it would shake and overthrow the very foundation of his house You know not how many might be woon by this you know well Sampson that hee might be avenged on the Lords enemies laid down his life So much more should yee part with your state and pompe which is but vanity and will fade like as the grasse and floure of the field You know one of your Predecessours who left off his Bishoprick as too heavy a burden for him How should your names flourish in all after ages Wheras if you doe continue you make your selues guilty of the sinnes committed in and by those callings before You shall fulfill the measure of your iniquity you shall corrupt other Nations for a while as the Pope did and then know for a certainty that either you shall be given over as doggs as hee hath done the beast of Rome or else the hand of the Lord will be in terrible manner against you You cannot but discern how unprofitable nay how hurtsome you haue been unto the Church of God if you well consider but the present times Oh let not coveteousnesse or ambition make you stop your eares or be like the stiffe-necked Iewes that gnasht their teeth at the sharp reproofe that Stephen gaue them But hearken to me that God may hearken to you Take these things from loue in him that writes who seeks your good and having begged it at the hands of the Lord hopes at least in some to see it come to passe SECTION V. FRom that jurisdiction which these men claim we come now to their temporall sword the best weapon to defend a bad cause withall In handling whereof we shall be the more sparing because it is both more evident to all and more largely stood upon by others Herein the 1 Ground is our Saviourâ Refusing to devide the inheritance betwixt two brethren who was all-sufficient because it was without the compasse of his calling to leaue an example to his Ministers to the end of the world what to doe Though it may seeme profitable and a great meanes of good as this might yet it proues contrary for things proue not according to mans purposing and intendment of them but to the Lords institution and appointing of them 2 Ground Christs Kingdom is not of this world Ioh. 18.36 not an externall kingdom as learned Whitakers obserues against Bellarmine but internall These differences aââ assigned by him 1 outward Kingdoms haue certain and visible Kings Christ is a heavenly King acknowledged not seen by the eyes 2 in externall Kingdoms subjects aââ governed civilly Christ governes his spiritually 3 Externall Kingdoms are grounded and upheld by power riches armies and outward succession but Christ preserues his Kingdom by a secret power and force 4 Outward Kings are ordained for outward benefites of this present life Christs kingdom is in spirit and inward blessings Wherfore Christs Kingdom should endure âf all Princes in the world be against it As âs there affirmed ân h s first Question Whether the government of the Church be Monarchicall 3 Our Saviour Christ directly affirmes that he sent his Disciples as he was sent being baptized with the spirit and so the Apostles before they went their embassage were sent to preach and therfore were to rule with the power of the spirit not by any externall oâ humane power 4 Our Saviour forbids his disciples to exercise authority over one an other as Kings and Princes as is shewed before This place is firm against the temporall sword so alledged by Mr. Whitakers What hath a Bishop to doe with Empire or government a Priest with a Scepter Christ leaues no such power nay plainly forbids they should be temporall Princes This is the voice of the spirit of God 5 The Apostle Paul 2 Tim. 2 saith No man that goeth a warfare entangleth himselfe with the businesses of this life that hee might please him that hath chosen him for a Souldier whence it is plain every man is bound to attend on that office and bend himselfe therunto whâch the Lord hath assigned him 2. That men that doe not so cannot nor doe please the Lord therfore to entangle themselues with the businesse of this life is against all heavenly wisedom 6 1 Pet. 5.3 Ministers are charged not to rule over the heritage of the Lord To whâch place I doubt not but if the adversaries had the like for them against Elders they would not doubt to throtle that Ordinance of God If any say this place cannot be meant of temporall authority because they could not haue it in those times Princes being so adverse to them To this the answer is easie first the Apostle wrot this for us also that should come afterwards secondly then they might affect it and seek it and over the Church after a sort usurp it the people standing ân such awe of the Ministers in those times And there is in this place an excellent motiue to disswade from Lording ât over the people for they are the inheââtance of God and of Christ and it is dangerous to challenge dominion over his possession 2 There is as excellent a way frewed whereby they might draw on the people and bââter then by compulsion that is by gâving good example unto them which by taking thâs upon them is left off 7 The Apostles would not leaue their calling of the Ministery of the Word to provide for the poore which is a duty very necessary in it selfe therefore who is he that makes conscience of profiting the people and the discharge of his Ministery that dares offer to take this charge upon him Besides these plain grounds plain reason evinceth the unlawfulnesse hereof For Reas 1. To undertake such another calling as makes a man unfit for each is meerly unlawfull and ânprofitâblâ herein hee wrongs the Church and Common-wealth So doe thâse men For who is sufficient for these things saith the Apostle speaking of the Minâstery And if these bee a burden great enough for any of the greatest gifts to goe under what if an other be laid upon the same mans shoulders Sure hee can carry neither but must nâcessarily eâther cast off the
former or quite sincke under both 2 It wrongeth Christ as though hee could not or would not defend his Church except his servants like Peter should fight for him with an outward sword Cannot he stir up Magistrates and the spirit of prudence to be as nursing Fathers to his Church 3 This makes the Ordinances of Christ Excommunication and other Censures to be of none effect nor regard when they adde such corporall punishments themselus This is plain for who respects their Excommunications now a daies 4 This was not seen in the Church till past 300 yeares Wherfore as our Saviour said to Peter Put up thy sword he that taketh the sword shall perish with the sword so let all men be wise and learn well to use the sword of the spirit against their own pride and ambition and the sinnes of the times in others and no doubt they wâll soon leaue off that temporal sword What that reverend Whitakers speaks to the Bishop of Rome That if they had any spark or drop of piety and Rel gion they would leaue this sword So say I to you brethren disdaân not what was spoken by him for Religions sake leaue this to the civâll Magistrate whose it s Else know you take from Cesar and the State that which neither is nor can be yours And though you th nk lâke Peter to smite your enemies with this sword yât you profit not Christ nor wâll he bâ thus defended by you And undoubtedly look as the Kings of the earth sâall waken out of that slumber wherin they aâe as drunk with the cup of the whore and burn her up and destroy her wâth those swords that haue fought for her and defended her So though Protestant Princes suffer you and giue you authority for a while for the tâyall of his servants yet the Lord will raâse up the spirit of some who knows how soon that shall require at your hands the hurt you haue done with thâs sword and take away your authority and honour and make you naked SECTION VI. THE next controversie touching Dâocesan Bâshops is their tâtles which though ât may seem a matter too nâce smal to bâânsisted on because so many worthy Dâvines haue past it over and made nothing of ât yet if we consider what danger hath come to the Church by varying and altering words and how strâct the servants of God haue been in some cases it will not be amisse to giue some tast of this matter in hand especially since our opposites a long while were content to claim and hold this their authority onely from the Prince but now claâm it as from God therby condemning all other Churches in the world that haue the D scipline of God amongst thâm But to proceed to the matter 1 It is directly against Luke 22 where our Saviour forbids all humane pompe either in honour or tâtles Be not called Graciosn Lords As though he should say It shall come to passe that great places dignities and stiles shall be offered you but accept not of them for it shall not be so amongst you whence it is plain that all that will bee successors of the Apostles must not enjoy such titles as belong to the great men of the world So as this place contayns worthy reasons to disswade and shew the unfitnesse of all such things 1 Th s is the property God hath annexed and coupled to the Magistrates who are called Gods and it is most fitting they haue such externall pomp This Argument is firm for may they doe wrong to thâ Câvâll Magâstâate as they doe if they usurp his titles 2 Christ himselfe hath no such Titles but was as a servant 3 All of us are here abiding with Christ in his temptations and it is no time now in this great combat to bee expecting great titles 4 Our Kingdom is not of this world but Christ hath purchased and provided for us a Kingdom hereafter and there shall the glory of the Ministers chiefly be revealed These Arguments make as much against titles as they doe against the authority of Ministers If it be said then Princes and Magâstâates may not haue these tâtles The answer is plain the Lord giues them in a speciall manner to their Callings and denies them to the Ministery 2 The Lord will haue his glory and Majâsty externally to shine in Princes and theâfoâe they haue all allowed for magnificence and st te But his glory in his Ministers hee will haue shewed in his gifts upon them and the exercise therof 2 Argum. It is Pharisaism either to affect law full titles or challenge or assume such as are any way derogatory to Christ or our brethren to Christ when there is one Lord 1 Cor. 12 Ephes 4. Men claim this to be Lords over his heritage to exercise a genemission and power and that unlimited without preachâng of the word to them whom they rule over this is against Christ and their fellow-servants 2 To be masters in many things to be heard for them selues and teach without instruction from Christ as in thângs either substantiall or for order to thrust upon the Church what they haue no warrant from the Word for but onely authority and because they are the Church This is against Christ 3 To be fathers to the chu to beget Ministers giue the H. Gh. All these are derogatory which all may see to be the meaning of the holy Ghost both to Christ and the true members of the Church For Christs Kingdom and Lordship is usurped after a sort by the former His Propheticall office by the second Thirdly his Priestly and Kingly office both by the last For it is his priviledge to send out Ministers to giue the Holy Ghost and blesse the people To the members who are subjected to men in outward discipline forb ddeâ Be not servants to men to men in teachâng wheras we are commanded to hear Christ and him onely To men in ordayning and such speciall blessing as they seeme to bestow both by impositâon of hands and confirmatâon wheras all Ministers haue alike power for the ministeriall dispensatâon of these This Argument is plain neither can any deny it that is not possest with a Pharisaicall spirit 3 Apâstles Evangelists Prophets Pastors Teachers never had any such Tâtles nor gaue any such one to an other Peter calls Paul beloved brother So in that famous councill at Ierusalem the councill stiles themselues Apostles Elders and brethren called Barnabas Paul c. men beloved 1 Pet. 5.1 Peter calls himselfe Elder But these men as if they were abashed to make known their calling of the Minâstery stiles then selues like Earles as Richard of Canterbury c. as though that were more plâasing to them to be like the world in state and honour then Christ and his Apostles 4 The names and titles of Archbishops Metropolitan c. came not in till past 300 yeaâes âfter Christ when the Church began to dâcline and changed into an earthly
as though they were able to bear this burden and undergoe this task not being extraordinarily quaâââed by the Lord For all the instruments of the materiall Tabernacle Temple or Church in the new Testament had both extraordinary direction from the Lord and extraordinary gifts for that they should doe 4 No man can shew any licence or pattenâ from God wherein he is warranted to govern the church according to his own will but rather contrary not to adde or diminish from that which is written in the book of God 5 The Scripture is perfect making the man of God perfect and absolute to every good work therfore how to govern the church is taught in the Scriptures which are the will of God 6 Christ left not his church without government and a speciall form of discipline for that were confusion that would lay open the church to all dangers and no Polity or Socâety can long continue wherin Order and Discipline is not observed therfore it cannot possibly stand with Chr sts care and wisedom that Discipline should be neglected 7 Arbitrary forms of government overthrew the face of the church and brought in the Popes Supremacy which is an argument it is not from God who vaunts himselfe as God appointing what lawes he will and decrees to hold men in awe and subjection to himselfe that he might Lord it over Kings and Princes nor is it to be supposed but that which is arbitrary will ever be corrupted for mans will and minde being naturally so vain and wicked wanting a law to direct and contain it in obedience of it selfe grows corrupt and abuseth the power which is given to it Here two Questions are to be answered 1 Whether this form of discipline instituted by Christ may be altered The Answer s it may not by any whosoever The grounds of it are these following 1 It is a speciall priviledge of Christs Kingly Office to govern his Church outwardly by discipline as well as by the Word Chr st hath this Scepter and Rod and none ââe for the soules of men he hath the Key of David he that is Prince over the Kings of the earth wherfore no man hath power to alter this for that were to advance man aboue Christ 2 The Lord useth to forâshew his people what should be altered before it come to passe that changes disturbe not their minds This is plain for thus be did before hee placed his name in Ierusalem before Christ came before the Gentiles were to be called Wherfore if the Lord would haue altered this he would haue told it his Disciples else Christ should not be so faithfull a Prophet as Moses who shewed that covenant was to endure till Christ should come else Christ should not shew all things needfull to his Church 3 The Lord shakes the heaven and the earth but once after Moses the Prophets Hag. 2 Heb. 12 therfore there is no alteration afterwards of any thing touching the worship of God The Lord joyneth a renewing of his covenant with the institution of all things any way needfull for his Church 4 To desire a new form of government is to cast off the Lord from raigning over us 1 Sam. 8.7 which place binds in Ecclesiasticall as firmly as in Civill 1 Because the Lord instituted this as well as that 2 there was no expresse commandement that the people should ever be tyed to this form of government but that it was rather appointed that they should haue a King his duty described 3 the people desired it because they would be like the world in state and pomp 4 they did not first know the Lords pleasure but headily followed their affections This place shews that men who alter the government appointed by the Lord though it should be into another form lawfull in it selfe despise the Lord 2 that such exclude the Lord from raigning over them Like to this is that Iudg. 8.22 where Gideon being offered the Kingdom refused it for this cause that the Lord might raign over them which plainly shews what wrong they doe to the Lord his people which bring in another government then the Lords For the Lord else would raign defending his people from all spirituall enemies gently carrying his lambs upon his shoulders and leading them that are great with yong Esay 40.11 whereas now Satan is every where let in by seducers and idle shepheards the Lords name is not known his goodnes mercy obscured and hid men are tossed up and down hindred in their callings loosing their money and maintaining unprofitable dâoans A second questâon how may the discipline of Chr st be known Answ by theâe notes 1 For the persons Christ precisely forbids any one man to exercise Lordship and Aâthority over his people Luk. 22. This wâll bee more apparant hereafter therfore the government wherin any one Loâds ât over the rest is not Christs but where there is equality for jurisdâction 2 That which is most ancient neerest or rather one with the form followed by the Apostles undoubtedly is Chrâsts Now such is not primacy of one over an other 3 That in the which men proceed in thâir censures by the rules of the Word which teacheth who ought to be bound and who âoosed But so doe not they which govern by Popish canons by forced oathes but such as proceed by admonitions repâoofs c. according to Mat. 18. 4 That which best provides for the safety of mens soules and most furthers every man in the diâcharge of his duty that is from Chrâst for he onely so governes none else having such wâsedom or will Such is not the government by some one person over many congregations which hee is not able possibly to oversee but the contrary 5 Which proceeds not after the manner of a worldly government fearing men with outward toâments fines imprisonment and the like but in the power of the spirit and giv ng men over to Sathan Christ maintaineth his government by no such forcible meanes 6 That which is contrary or much opposite to the goveânment of Rome for Antichrist corrupted ãâã Sacraments and all and ât were worder âf this should not be corrupted by wh ch hee raignes most and most effectually eââablisheth his kingdom amongst men By all which men not prejudâcate and desirous to learn and practise the truth may understand what that is so much urged and pressed rather by force of armes then evident ground of Scr ptures SECTION XII SAtan hath many devises to bring in errours amongst men to be entertained he changeth himselfe into an Angell of light comes in the name of Christ Mat. 24 in the name of his best servants 2 Thess 2 and of the Church he comes under pretence of glorious ends to bring in devises of men Wherfore that we be not deceived by him it shall not be amisse to speak something of the Churches authority and what power it hath Herein I propound some grounds 1 That all the authority of the Church
the Lord. Secondly where the Gospell is soundly preached and men yeeld obedâence to the known tâuth therto we may safâly joyn For these are the âeep of Christ Ioh. 10. Object The Gospell is not faithfully preached many truths are concealed Answ The main and fundamentfull truths which giue life to a Christian are purely and wholly taught as the doctrine of faâth and âepentance 2 Other circumstantiall truths are taught too 1 generally to the undââstandâng of the wâse 2 in practisâ in that men doe abstain from all things they judgâ to be sinne 3 They suffer that is saâd upon them for refusall hereunto 4 Some haue taught thâse tâuths controvâât d by writing and private Râsolutâon Suppose ât bee a want amongst us as I confesse men haue been too wary for the most part in this kinde yet notwithstanding consider each want doth not bring a nullity of the Ministery 3 Reason Men must not separate till the Lord separate for Gods people must follow thâ Loâd not goe before him and they must not be holyer then hee who is of purest eyes Now the Lord is not s parated till hee giue men over and send no moâe Prophets to turn them to hâm for till then though men haue forsaken thâ Lord yet he forsakes not them 4 All Christians are bound to follow the Lamb whersoever he goes and joyn with him against the sinns of the times therfore mân should not separate so and leaue Christ but each to help and stand for Reformation incouraging the servants of the Lord that are sent out to protest against corruptions 5 No instance can be given that ever the servants of God haue severed or were commanded to seperate further then from the corruptions of the time to haue no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darknesse to touch no unclean thing 6 Men mourning for sin not acting nor joyning in consent in any known evill are not guilty of others sins therfore Lot was not guilty of Sodoms sin seeing they vexed his righteous soule 2 Pet. 2.7 Eze. 9 in the Churches of England men may doe thus 7 This kinde of separation obscures the good providence of God towards the land which giues some liberty in his service but with some paines cost and other crosses which usually accompany the pure worship of God This is no small sin to bereaue the Lord of the glory of so great mercy in spiritual blessings as he hath shewed towards our land Secondly this passeth rash judgment upon many reverend Preachers and godly people Thirdly men hereby despise and so loose the bânefit of the prayers of the Saints which is the greatest benâfit in the woâld next to tâe minâsteây of the Woâd Fourthly men so separate as they joyn to no reformed Church that holds and practâseth the same holy Ordinances of God which they desire and walk in the same way of obediânce with them 8 Wheras they might giue testimony to the truth in suffering for the Ordinances of God now they suffer for separation from the Word preached 9 The power of the Gospell doth as much appâar in any of the Professors being in our Chuâch as it doth when they are separated whâch should not if they onely had tâe Oâdânances of God 10 Gods children may eat their own meat though dogs and swâne be admitted through the negââgence of thâm that should exerc se Discipâânâ Wherfore bââthren follow after truth bâtân loue that you may haue the more inward peâcâ and doe the more good Oppose errour bât not any truth fight against tâe world but sâârr not agaiâst the chââdâen of God Make not the Church weak by your rânting from it nor giue occasion to the adversaries to speak evill of those truths you hold and ordinances of God which you seek SECTION XVIII BEcause it is so often in the mouths of men that these things controverted are things indifferent therfore it will not bee amisse to set down some speciall rules for discerning and using things indifferent A thing indifferent properly is a mean twixt good and evill and in it selfe neither good nor evill 1 It is a mean seated twixt the extreams having not the nature of either extrem So that a thing commanded or forbidden by the Lord is not indifferent 2 Twixt good and evill therfore that which is a mean in respect of some other sin is not indifferent as fornication is lesse âvill then adultery yet evill and not indifferent the like may be said of degrees of goodnesse 3 In it selfe that is in its own nature for in the particulars every action is good or evill So that the goodnesse or evill of a thing indifferent is not from it selfe but from the user if he be pure or impure from the circumstances from the manner of doing it So that an action of the same kinde may be evill in one in another commendabâe The laws of man cannot make the thângs that are indifferent simpây good or evill âoâ tâen they should change the very nature of things which men cannot What things are indifferent THe things that are indifferent are such as are left unto mans free cho se for the exercâse of wisedom faâth sobriety loue and the lâke graces of God in hâm Where by the way we may obserue why some things are left indifferent 1 Because in their own nature they are neither good nor evââl and therfore not to be commanded or foâbâdden 2 Because the Loâd would haue aâl his gracâs and the powers of mens soules to be the more exercâsed for the hardest thângs in Religion are often about things inââfferent 3 There sâould be infinite rules given then for these cases are innumerable and so the knowledg of things absolutely needfull should be hindred The particular kinds of things indifferent are 1 Meats and drinks it is true there is nothing of it selfe unclean 2 Garments are things indifferent 3 Recreations 4 The time of publique assembling together upon the Sabboth 5 And lastly whatsoever a man may doe wâthout impiety towards God or wrong to man In the use of things indifferent first every man must learn the right use from the Word 1 Tim. 4 for our own reason is very blând hereân and custom exceeding corrupt and this must the rather be remembââd Because 2 Man must giue account to Christ for his using things indifferent 3 Every man must be fully perswaded in hâs own conscience that the thing hee doth is lawfull n it selfe this perswasion is a certain knowledg in his own heart and conscience from the light of the Word and the spârit of God shining in him This excluds doubting 1 that is sin So is 2 depending upon others or following others example 3 When men are perswaded but by shews of reason or of men not by sound grounds out of the Scripture 4 Each man must be very wise in using this liberty 1 Men must discern what is expedient and may further to edifie others 2 Men must discern times and circumstances 5 Men must