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A64986 An explicatory catechism: or, An explanation of the assemblies shorter catechism Wherein those principles are enlarged upon especially, which obviate the great and growing errors of Popery; useful for those families that desire to hold fast the form of sound words. Vincent, Thomas, 1634-1678. 1675 (1675) Wing V434; ESTC R220763 119,453 302

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only the accidents remain so that there is length and nothing long breadth and nothing broad thickness and nothing thick whiteness and nothing white moisture and nothing moist sweetness and nothing sweet that is a long broad thick white moist sweet nothing The Priest pours out nothing but Lines and Colours when he pours out the Wine for these accidents of Bread and Wine are not in the Bread because that is avoided and vanisht and they are not in the Body of Christ as themselves say and yet it is plain this Bread and Wine do nourish the Body and is the Body nourished by meer accidents Can there be plainer contradictions 4. Can the same Body at the same time have his just Dimensions distance of parts symmetry proportion as the Body of Christ hath and yet not have these because all parts Yea the whole Body of Christ say they is in one and the self same point or crumb of Bread 5. Can the Body of Christ which is much greater be wholly contained in a Wa●er or piece of Bread in his full Dimensions and that as many times as there are points crumbs drops in the Bread or Wine 6. Can the Bread be turned into the very Body of Christ and yet not any thing of that Bread become any thing of Christ nor the matter nor form nor accidents of Bread be made either the matter or form or accidents of Christ 7. Can the same thing as Christs true Body at the same time be wholly above it self and wholly below it self within and without it self Can it be moved and yet be still be carried from one place to another and yet not move be brought from Heaven to Earth and yet not come out of Heaven Who then can assure us that when Christ hung upon the Cross he was not walking somewhere else Crucified and not Crucified eaten and not eaten alive in one and dead in another place 8. What dishonour do these men render the Body of Christ obnoxious unto to be eaten by wicked men by brute Creatures by Mice by other vermine to be cast into some unclean place For so long as the form of Bread remains so long the Body of Christ is there though it be in the Mouth or Belly of a Mouse saith Hales and the rest of the Schoolmen who do one where or another acknowledge the most of these monstrous Absurdities and go about to heal and solve them Q. We shall surcease from raking further into the ingrateful sink whose Name Transubstantiation is but of yesterday in comparison and which dishonours the Body of Christ into a Monster destroyes the nature of a Sacrament and fills the world with dreadful Contentions and broils And shall now consider with our selves what may profitably be observed from all this What therefore may be observed upon the whole matter A. We may observe 1. What grievous impositions the Romanists lay upon the Faith of them that are devoted to her Communion 2. What contradictions and absurdities the common people do ignorantly and implicitly believe 3. What strong delusions even to believe lies God gives up learned men unto that refuse the simplicity of the truth for interests and politick ends 4. What a Mercy of God it is to deliver us from that Tyranny which leaves us no other choice but to swallow and digest such impossible things or to be sacrificed in flames and the Lord forbid the Re-entrance of that Religion among us which in all likelihood will cost us our Souls or our Lives Q. Since the worthy Receivers are not after a corporal and carnal manner partakers of Christs Body and Blood After what manner are they partakers of them A. By Faith Q How understand you that A. As truly as the Minister gives them the Bread and Wine so truly doth God give them the Body and Blood of Christ that is the Crucified Saviour not by local motion but by real communication not to their teeth but to their Souls and consequently exhibits to them all the benefits thereof to their spiritual nourishment and growth in Grace and all the advantages that flow to them from the death of Christ. Q. 97. What is required to the worthy receiving of the Lords Supper A. It is required of them that would worthily partake of the Lords Supper that they examine themselves of their knowledge to discern the Lords Body of their Faith to feed upon him of their Repentance Love and new Obedience lest coming unworthily they eat and drink Judgement to themselves Explic. Q. How ought Christians to partake of the Lords Supper A. They ought to partake worthily that is suitably with a suitable frame of heart to this Ordinance Q. What is the great duty of those that would thus partake A. It is required that they examine themselves Q. How many things must they examine themselves about A. Five especially viz. 1. Knowledge 2. Faith 3. Love 4. Repentance 5. New Obedience Q. Must every one that cometh to the Lords Supper have Knowledge A. Yes Q Why is Knowledge necessary A. To discern the Lords Body Q. What other graces must they examine themselves about A. Their Faith Repentance and Love Q. In their examination what must they look after A. Two things especially 1. That they have these Graces 2. That the said Graces be in readiness for service and exercise that is that they so stir up these Graces of the Holy Ghost as they may be most profitably exerted in this most Sacred solemn Ordinance Q. Why is Faith necessary A. To feed on Christ. Iohn 6. 53. Q. Why is Repentance necessary A. Repentance for sin will fit them to receive and sweeten their receiving the benefits of Christs death to their Souls Q. Why is Love necessary A. Because they who have no Love to God and Christ and their Brethren are unfit to receive the pledge of Gods Love to themselves Q. What else must they examine themselves about A. New Obedience whether they propose and practise it in any good measure Q. Why is New Obedience necessary A. Because Christ only communicates the benefits of his death to them that obey him Q. What if any Communicants shall eat this Bread and drink this Cup of the Lord unworthily A. They shall be guilty of the Body and Blood of Christ Q. What danger is there in that A. All such Communicants eat and drink Judgement to themselves Q. 98. What is Prayer A. Prayer is an offering up of our desires to God for things agreeable to his Will in the Name of Christ with confession of our sins and thankful acknowledgement of his mercies Explic. Q. What are the parts of Prayer A. Confession Petition and Thanksgiving Q. And how many things are there as the matter of these A. Three our sins as the matter of our Confession our desires and wants as the matter of our Petition and our Mercies as the matter of our Thanksgiving Q. What is Confession A. A due acknowledgement of
true unto Christ. Q. Is the Sacrament then an holy Ordinance A. Yes Q. By whom are our Sacraments instituted A. By Christ. Mat. 28. 19. 1 Cor. 11. 23 24 25. Q. What do you mean by being instituted by Christ A. Appointed and ordained by him Q. What are the parts of a Sacrament A. The sign and the thing signified Q. What are the outward parts of the Sacraments A. The sensible signs Q. Do the signs offer themselves to the Senses A. Yes Q. And offer the things signified to our Faith A. Yes Q. What are the inward parts of the Sacraments A. Christ and the benefits of the New Covenant as the things signified by the outward sensible signs Q What is the use and proper work of the Sacraments A. To represent seal and apply Q. But are the Sacraments of the New Testament signs and seals to all even to unbelievers A. Yes Q How do the Sacrameats seal to all even to unbelievers A. 1. As Circumcision was a Seal of the righteousness of Faith or of the Covenant as well when Ishmael received it as when Abraham received it God is everlastingly true and these are really Seals whosoever recelves them Many persons take the same Physick the operation is not the same the Physick is the same And if we might call the Tree of Life a Seal it retains the nature of a sign though Adam never tasted of it The Rain-bow is a Covenant though there be thousands in the world that never knew it was a Covenant And it is the use and proper work of our Sacraments to commemorate and seal 2. Sacraments are visible D●ctrines Ier. 2. 31. O Generation see ye the word of the Lord. In the Sacraments are written in small Characters what at large are found in the works of God And Faith acts upon these Symbols upon a doctrinal notion as they are teaching Ordinances They testifie as a sign Christs Love as a Seal Gods faithfulness The Word of God is given us that we may believe and that we may be strong in Faith So likewise the Sacraments are given us not only to believe but for our increase in Faith And as the word Jesus Christ is evidently set forth crucified before our eyes so do the Sacraments as the Oracles of God teach us plainly the mysterie of Faith and the way of Salvation 3. The Sacraments are not only signs and Seals but Sanctions and such Laws as we are charged to observe upon pain of Gods wrathful displeasure Which will be more manifest by our comparing the S●craments of the Old and New Testament together B●ptism and the Lords Supper succeeding in the place of Circumcision and the P●ssover For as Baptism and the sprinkling of clean water upon us is to wash off the filth of the Soul that we might be clean so was Circumcision to take away the stony heart out of the flesh and to give an heart of fl●sh And as the sprinkling of blood was of old a Law in Israel so is the Lords Supper a Sanction of the New Testament to us And as Moses said This is the blo●d of the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you here in like manner Christ hath Preached the G●spel doctrine and now he comes to put a Sanction 〈◊〉 this Sacrament This saith he is 〈◊〉 blood of the New Testament which is 〈◊〉 for many for the remission of sins There is this only disparity the sign was 〈◊〉 Blood now Wine now Wine because there is to be no more shedding 〈◊〉 blood then blood sprinkling because Christ our P●ssover was not sacrificed for us So that as to substance the Sacraments of the Old and N●w Testament differ no more than the Old and New Moon which are not two but one and the same All which considered joyntly may sufficiently clear it to us that our Sacraments are not only signs and seals but Sanctions yea Sanctions of the Covenant of Grace or of the New Testament And if he that despised Moses Law died without mercy under two or three witnesses Of how much sorer punishment suppose ye shall he be thought worthy who hath trodden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the blood of the Covenant wherewith he was sanctified as unholy thing and hath done despite unto the Spirit of Grace For if the Word spoken by Angels was stedfast and every transgression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward How shall we escap● if we negl●ct so great Salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord and was confirmed to us by them that heard him Especially when we have Jesus Christ thus evidently set forth crucified among us not only to the ear but to the eye by his Word and Sacraments Q. But are the Sacraments effectual to Salvation or savingly applied only by Believers A. Yes Rom. 4. 11 12. Q 93. Which are the Sacraments of the New Testament A. The Sacraments of the New Testament are Baptism and the Lords Supper Explic. Q. Were there other Sacraments under the Old Testament as Circumcision and the Passover A. Yes Gen. 17. 10. Exod. 12. 43 47. Q. Do these remain in use now A. No. Rom. 10. 4 Gal. 5 2 3 4. 1 Cor. 5 7 8. Q. W●at Sacraments hath Christ appointed under the New Testament in the room of these A. Baptism and the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 12. 13. Q. Are these two the only Sacraments of the New Testament A. Yes Q. How doth that appear A. 1. Because when the number of Sacraments were most necessary as under the Law there were but two and therefore ours succeeding in the room of them there can be no more 2. Because these two Seals do fully assure us of all Gods Graces both of our reg●n●ration entrance and ingrafting into Christ and of our growth and continuance in him and therefore we need no more Q. But there are five more added by the Papists as Confirmation Pennance extream V●ction Holy O●ders and Matrimony Are not these properly and truly Sacraments instituted by our Lord Iesus Christ and necessary to the Salvation of Mankind A. No. Q. Why so A. The nature of a Sacrament agreeth not to them 1. Because they are not all proper to the Church but common as Marriage to the Heathen 2. They are not all instituted by Christ as perpetual standing Ordinance 3. They do not consist of an outward sign as Penace and inward Grace 4. The Covenant of Grace is not sealed in any of them Q. But is not Extream Vnction a Sacrament instituted by Christ as a perpetual standing Ordinance when every sick man is enjoyned James 5. 14. to call for the Elders th●se standing perpetuated Officers that they may pray over him anointing him with Oyl in the Name of the Lord A. N● Q Why so A. 1. Because the anointing spoken of in S. Iames was frequently omitted by the Apostles themselves in their working of cures and was indifferently either used or
supposition renders it most probable be it known to all such unnatural Parents as reject Infant Baptism that they harden their hearts against their own flesh Q Why so A. Because Children are parts of Parents and by this contempt of Baptism they reject the Counsel of God against themselves and their Children Q What other reason have you for Infant Baptism A. 3. Children were ever admitted to the sign and Seal of this Covenant which of old was Circumcision and Baptism succeeds in the room of Circumcision Q. How doth that appear A. 1. It appears in that the Apostle of the Circumcision commands Baptism upon the same ground that Circumcision was 2. Because St. Paul in Col. 2. gives to Baptism the very Name of Circumcision to teach us that it succeeds i● Object But if Baptism ought to be administred to all those to whom Circumcision was administred because Baptism succeeds Circumcision by the same reason the Eucharist ought to be administred to all those who did eat the Paschal Lamb seeing the Eucharist succeeds the Iewish Passover But you stay longer before you admit your Children to the Lords Supper than the Iews did before they admitted their Children to the eating of the Paschal Lamb. A. The Jews admitted their Children to eat of the Paschal Lamb so soon as they were able to eat flesh and to ask their Fathers the reason of that legal ceremony and we defer the admitting of ours to the Lords Supper until they be capable of those dispositions which God requires and are able to examine themselves according to the command of the Apostle 1 Cor. 11. Let a man examine himself and so let him eat of that Bread and drink of that Cup. Q. 96. What is the Lords Supper A. The Lords Supper is a Sacrament wherein by giving and receiving Bread and Wine according to Christs appointment his Death is shewed forth and the worthy receivers are not after a corporal and carnal manner but by Faith made partakers of his Body and Blood with all his benefits unto their spiritual nourishment and growth in Grace Explic. Q. What is the other Sacrament of the New Testament called A. The Lords Su●p●● Q. Why so A. Because it was instituted at that time after the Paschal Supper was end●d Q. Are we therefore bound to celebrate it alwaies at the same time A. No because there is no command for it nor is there the same reason for it now as then this circumstance of time not obliging us to do it after Supper any more than the fashion of lying along binds us to the using of the same posture both of them being upon occasion of the Paschal Supper then Q. Why do you super add the circumstance and limitation of that present time A. Because the first Paschal Supper in Egypt was eaten standing but afterwards sitting and lying along leaning one on anothers breasts in sign of their rest and security otherwise than they had in Egypt Q. What are the sacramental Elements in the Lords Supper A. Bread and Wine Q What are the sacramental actions A. Breaking the Bread giving and receiving the Bread and Wine Q. What is signified by the Bread and Wine A. The Body and Blood of Christ. Q. What are the Ministers actions A. Breaking the Bread and giving the Bread and Wine not withholding the Cup from the people as the Papists sacrilegiously do Q. What is signified by the Ministers breaking the Bread A. Christs Body being broken for us Q. Why must the people partake of the Elements of both kinds A. Because all that were present at the first Sacrament given by the Lord Jesus himself did so Q How d●th that appear A. By the plain express words of Scripture Mat. 26. 26 27. Mark 14. 22. 23. Q. But all present at the first Sacrament were the twelve whom Christ sent forth as Apostles to Preach the Word and administer the Sacraments and therefore they and their Successors only had the priviled●e to drink of the Cup A. 1. By this argument the Bread may be taken away from the people too and so they would have no right to any part of this Sacrament And what is this but egregious sacriledge in robbing the people of their highest Church-priviledge 2. The practice and writings of the ancient Church in this matter which is the best way to explicate any such difficulty in Scripture is a clear Testimony that both the Bread and the Wine belong to all the people in the Name of the twelve Disciples at that time Q. What is signified by the giving of the Bread and Wine A. Gods giving all Christ to us Q. What is the peoples action A. Receiving eating and drinking the Bread and Wine Q. What is signified by the peoples receiving A. Their taking a whole Christ. Q. Why are the Bread and Wine given apart and not together A. To shew forth Christs Blood in the parting of his Blood from his Body Q. What is the rule of Administration and Participation A. All must be done according to Christs appointment Q. For what end is this Supper cele●rated A. Hereby Christs death is shewed ●orth Q. How many sorts of Receivers are there A. Two worthy and unworthy Q. What do the unworthy Receivers partake of A. They pertake of the outward Elements only Q. What do the worthy Receivers partake of A. They partake of Christs Body and Blood Q. After what manner do not these worthy Receivers partake of Christs Body and Blood A. Not after a corporal and carnal manner they partake not of the substance of his fl●sh and blood Q. Why so A. For that is in Heaven Q. But do not you affirm with the Pa●ists that in this Sacrament the Body and Blood together with the Divinity of Iesus Christ are truly really and substantially present and that the whole substance of the Bread is converted into his Body and the whole substance of the Wine into his Blood A. N● should we do it our Senses our Reason and the Word of God would give us the Lye We perceive by our Senses that the Bread and Wine are the same they were before Consecration And we are not more certain that there is a God who created us and a Sun that gives us light than we are fully perswaded that the Divinity of Jesus Christ is every where and his humane nature at the right hand of God from whence he shall come to Judge the quick and the dead Q. And why are you afraid to affirm that the Elements of Bread and Wine art transubstantiate and changed into the substance of the Body and Blood of Christ when the Scripture is plain and express that Christ took the Bread and said This is my Body And after the same manner took the Cup which Protestants as well as Papists interpret figuratively for the Wine in the Cup and said This is my blood of the New Testament c. as you m●y read in the following Texts Mat. 26. 26
to suffer Not as predictions of the event any more than Thou shalt and Thou shalt not in the command are Predictions but only are expressive of the dueness of obedience Q. How do the Old and New Covenant differ A. They differ more especially these two waies 1. In their tenor the tenor of the Old is Obey perfectly and live sin and die The tenor of the New is Believe on the Lord Iesus Christ and thou shalt be saved 2. The New Covenant admits of Repentance which the Old doth not Q. But must not a believer acknowledge perfect obedience to be still his duty A. Yes Q. Why so A. Because this honours the equity of Gods Commandments Q. And hath the Redeemer then by making this one of the Conditions of the Gospel-Covenant given his Father his Law back again A. Yes Q. Doth he not repeal it A. No it 's still the Rule of life and every Commandment still obligeth a Believer Q. What hath Christ then done for us A. Christ hath only released us from the condemning power of the Law not the commanding power of it Q. How understand you that A. We must still press after perfection but though we fall short of it we shall not die for it Christ having Redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us He leaves us under the Government and Command of the Law Q. But have you any Scripture-warrant for what you say in this matter A. Yes the whole matter is excellently expressed 1 Ioh. 2. 1. My little Children these things write I unto you that you sin not And if any man sin we have an advocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous Q. But generally and more briefly what doth God promise to deliver the Elect out of in the Covenant of Grace A. Out of the estate of sin and misery Q. But how doth God perform this Promise to them seeing that they also are liable to the miseries of this life and to the first Death as the wages of sin A. Although the Old Covenant in part be executed on them yet doth not God leave them in the state of sin and misery but hath entred into a New Covenant with them to bring them out of it And what they suffer is for their good that being reformed by stripes they may be freed from those punishments which fall on the unreformed to all eternity Q. And what doth God promise to bring the Elect into in the Covenant of Grace A. Into an estate of Salvation Q. Is then the Deliverance of Gods Elect out of the estate of sin and his bringing them into an estate of Salvation the sum and the substance of what hath been said more at large in several particulars concerning the benefits of the New Covenant A. Yes Q. How doth God promise to do all this A. By a Redeemer Isa. 53. 10. When thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin he shall see his seed he shall prolong his daies and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand vers 11. He shall see of the Travail of his soul and shall be satisfied c. And this by some learned Divines is called the Covenant of Redemption Q. What do they mean by it A. That federal transaction that was betwixt God the Father and the Son from everlasting about the Redemption of lost and fallen M●n Q. Is not this the same with the Covenant of Grace A. This Covenant is a Covenant of Grace but 't is not strictly that Covenant of Grace which the Scripture holds out in opposition to the Covenant of works but rather the means to it or foundation of it Q. Wherein do these two Covenants differ A. In the Confederates For in the Covenant of Redemption the Confederates are God and Christ but in the Covenant of Grace the Confederates are God and Believers Q. 21. Who is the Redeemer of Gods Elect A. The only Redeemer of Gods Elect is the Lord Jesus Christ who being the eternal Son of God became man and so was and continueth to be God and Man in two distinct natures and one person for ever Explic. Q. Who is the Redeemer A. The Lord Jesus Christ. Q. What is it to Redeem A. By price or power to save any from bondage or misery Q. Who is Christ the Redeemer of A. Of Gods Elect Q. Is there any other Redeemer A. He is the only Redeemer Q. Why is he called Lord A. 1. Absolutely as he is God he is Lord over them and all things 2. Especially in reference to them that are redeemed he is their Lord being redeemed by him Q. Why is he called Iesus A. Because he is a Saviour Q. Why Christ A. Because he is anointed to the Office of a Prophet Priest and King which persons were usually anointed under the Law Q. Whose Son was Christ A. The Eternal Son of God Q What is it to be the Eternal Son of God A. It is to be God of the Substance of the Father begotten before the Worlds Q. What did the Eternal Son of God become that he might be our Redeemer A. He became man Q. Was it a voluntary act in Christ to become man A. Yes Q. Was Christ both God and Man A. Yes Q. How many Natures then be there in Christ A. Two his God-head and his Manhood Q. Was Christ God here upon Earth A. Yes Q. Doth he continue to be Man as well as God now he is in Heaven A. Yes Q. Do these two natures make two persons in Christ A. No but one Person Q. How long doth Christ continue God and Man in two distinct natures and one Person A. For ever Q. 22. How did Christ being the Son of God become Man A. Christ the Son of God became Man by taking to himself a true body and a reasonable Soul being conceived by the power of the Holy Ghost in the Womb of the Virgin Mary and born of her yet without sin Explic. Q What did Christ take to himself when he became man A. A true body and a reasonable Soul Q. Are these the Essential parts of a true man A. Yes Q. Did Christ take to himself a Phantastical body i. e. only the shape and appearance of a body A. No a true body Q. Did Christs divine nature enliven and actuate his body instead of a Soul A. No. Q. Had Christ a reasonable Soul such as men have as well as a true body A. Yes Q. Had Christ an ordinary or extraordinary Generation A. An extraordinary Q. 23. What Offices doth Christ execute as our Redeemer A. Christ as our Redeemer excuteth the Office of a Prophet of a Priest and of a King both in his estate of Humiliation and Exaltation Explic. Q. What is it to execute an Office A. To do or perform what belongeth to the Office Q. How many Offices doth Christ execute
you that A. 1. Because the Will of God as secret is a peculiar Treasure which he hath put in his own power and will keep to himself 2. Because a man may sometimes sin in fulfilling the secret Will of God and be ashamed repenting in dust and ashes that he hath done it 3. Because all Creatures do this Will of God and none ever resisted it Q. Is the revealing of an event which God hath determined or those Actions whereby that event shall be brought to pass the Rule of Mans obedience A. No Q. But are not Gods own positive and ceremonial Laws this Rule of Mans obedience A. No. Q. How prove you that A. 1. Because they were so burdensome a yoke that neither we nor the Jews themselves were ever able to bear them 2. Because they were never pleasing to God irrespectively of themselves neither did he at all ever take delight in these Laws themselves simply considered 3. Because these positive Laws were such by which men should never obtain Eternal Life Q. What Law then is that which is the Rule of Mans obedience A. The Moral Law Q. Why is it so called A. Because it hath a perpetual binding power in all Ages unto the end of the world Q. When was this revealed A. At first Q. How understand you that A. Two waies 1. This Law was at first given to Adam in Innocency God having written it on his heart some small remainders whereof abide yet in mans nature 2. This Law was first revealed by Gods immediate voice after written in Tables of Stone and given to the Church as a perpetual Rule for their obedience Q. 41. Wherein is the Moral Law summarily comprehended A. The Moral Law is summarily comprehended in the ten Commandments Explic. Q What is it for the Moral Law to be summarily comprehended in the ten Commindments A. To have the summ and chief Heads of the Law contained in them Q. 42. What is the summ of the ten Commandments A. The summ of the ten Commandments is to Love the Lord our God with all our Heart and with all our Soul and with all our Mind and with all our Strength and our Neighbour as our selves Explic. Q In how many Tables were the te● Commandments at first written A. In two Tables of Stone Deut. 10. 1 2 4. Q. How many Commandments are comprized under the first Table or first great Commandment A. The so●r first Q How many under the second Table or second great Commandment A. Six Q. Do the Papists well in leaving out the second Commandment and in their dividing the tenth into two A. No Q. What is the comprehensive Duty of all the Commandments written in these two Tables A. Love Rom. 13. 9. For this Thou shalt not commit Adultery Thou shalt not Kill Thou shalt not Steal Thou shalt not bear false Witness Thou shalt not Covet And if there be any other Commandment it is briefly comprehended in this saying Namely Thou shalt Love thy Neighbour as thy self The like may be said of all the Commandments of the first Table Q What is the summ of the first Table of the Law A. To love the Lord our God with all our Heart and with all our Soul and with all our Mind and with all our Strength Q. What mean you by the word Summ A. A general or chief Head which comprehends other particulars in it Ibid. Rom. 13. 8. Q. What is it to love the Lord our God with all our Heart c A. It doth imply the supremacy ardency and activity of our Love whereby we chuse the Lord cleave to him and delight in him as our chief Good and employ all our faculties and powers in his service in obedience to him out of Love Q. What is the summ of the second Table of the Law A. To love our Neighbour as our selves Q Who is our Neighbour A. Every man Luk. 10. 29 38. Q. What is it to love our Neighbour as our selves A. To love him with the same truth and constancy of Love as we do our selves Q. But are we not bound to love our Neighbour with the same Degree of Love as we do our selves A. No. Q. 43. What is the Preface to the ten Commandments A. The Preface to the ten Commandments is in these words I am the Lord thy God which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of Bondage Q. 44. What doth the Preface to the ten Commandments teach us A. The Preface to the ten Commandments teacheth us that because God is the Lord and our God and Redeemer therefore we are bound to keep all his Commandments Explic. Q. How many reasons or arguments are there in the Preface to oblige and perswade us to keep all Gods Commandments A. Two 1. God is the Lord. I am the Lord. 2. God is our God and Redeemer I am the Lord thy God which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of Bondage Q. How are we bound and obliged to keep Gods Commandments as he is the Lord A. As he is the Lord he is our Creator and supream Soveraign and we owe him obedience as we are his Creatures and Subjects Q. You say you owe God obedience as you are his Creatures and Subjects what mean you thereby A. We mean that once we were not were made and are preserved by God or that we derived our Being from an● hold it of God and that we are und●● the unlimited and absolute Dominio● and Soveraignty of God and therefor● ought to serve and glorifie God in 〈◊〉 Body and in our Spirit which 〈◊〉 Gods and to be in perfect subjection 〈◊〉 the Laws of Heaven Q. How are we bound and obliged 〈◊〉 keep Gods Commandments as he is our God and Redeemer A. As our God and Redeemer our Father and Benefactor he hath brought us into the special relation of Children to himself and hath entred into Covenan●●● with us to bring us out of spiritual Egypt and Bondage under sin as he brought his people of old out of the earthly Egypt and the Bondage of men These two Rules must be learn'd for the understanding of the Commandments Rule 1. That when any sin is forbidden the contrary Duty is required and when any Duty is required the contrary sin is forbidden Rule 2. That where any sin is forbidden all the Kinds and Degrees of it temptations and incentments to it are likewise forbidden and when any Duty is required all the kinds and the highest perfection of it together with all the means and helps to it are also required Q. 45. What is the first Commandment A. The first Commandment is Thou shalt have no other Gods before me Q. 46. What is required in the first Commandment A. The first Commandment requireth us to know and acknowledge God to be the only true God and our God and to worship and glorifie him accordingly Explic. Q Is
thing else nor the sense of them neither by any Creed farther than it contains it self within the very terms verbal or real of the holy Scriptures themselves But as the Creed contains it self within such terms we are to hold it fast as a form of sound words And as by the ten Commandments we may discern what are the words of God and what are the Commandment of men and by the Lords Prayer what Petitions we are to put up to God and what Prayers we are to say Amen to so by the Creed we may know what doctrines are of God and what of men And let what will be pretended if any man teach otherwise and consent not to these wholesom words he is proud knowing nothing he is of a corrupt mind and r●probate concerning the Faith I shall conclude this Head in the words of judicious Mr. Calvin Expertus pridem sum quidem saepius quicunque de verbis pertinacius litigant fovere occultum virus ut magis expediat eos ultro prov●care quàm in eorum gratiam obscurius loqui A●d the liberty of not using the very words of Scripture on some occasions hath ever been accounted lawful in the Church of Christ and is at some times very necessary for the obviating of growing Heresies Where all these Helps are either wanting or do not avail us as to some particulars and single clauses not so necessary to be known The Hebrew and Greek Idiotisms elegancies or proprieties may possibly guide us to the true and genuine sense and interpretation 3. Subsequent Rules 1. We must pray again Orationi lectio lectioni succedat Oratio We must pray and read read and pray again 2. We must medi●a●e upon the Scriptures we have read and understood and that sometimes will lead us into the true meaning of those which in our course of reading we understand not For Scripture will give light to Scripture 3. We must both before and after our reading the holy Scriptures get the guidance of Gods holy Spirit Methinks I hear God saying to each of you that are much in reading the ●o●y ●criptures Vnderstand you what you read And you again saying to God How can we except thy holy Spirit guide us Ask my beloved in our Lord Iesus Christ and it shall be given Luk. 11. 9 13. Suffer the word of Exhortation You that are much in reading the holy Scriptures content not your selves with bare reading but in the use of all attainable means endeavour to understand what you read of them To perswade hereunto take these two Motives 1. The bare reading of the holy Scriptures will be unprofitable to you It will be to you as he that speaketh in an unknown tongue whom none of you understandeth or as he that speaketh into the air whose speech is unfruitful Indeed the Scripture is the Water of life but to you the fountain is sealed It is as the Garden of the Lord But behold Cherubims and a flaming Sword which turneth every way to keep the way of the Tree of Life You are kept out of this Garden while you are kept ignorant of the true sense and meaning of the Scripture which is as the Soul and Life of it It is a Vision but the Vision becometh to you as the words of a Book that is Sealed which men deliver to one that is learned saying Read this I pray thee and he saith I cannot for it is Sealed By what hath in brief been said you see that the bare unintelligent reading of the holy Scriptures themselves is in this like a a Graven Image which we are sure is profitable for nothing 2. But contrariwise if you understand what you read the Scripture of all writings will be the most profi●able unto you 2 Tim. 3. 16. 'T is by way of eminency called The Scripture as the Original first writing as the hand-writing of God It is in Genere materiae sufficient to save our souls It is as that Tree mentioned Rev. 22. 2. which bare twelve manner and yielded her fruit every moneth and the leaves of the Tree were for the healing of the Nation● There is more weight in one Sentence of Scripture than in all Orations Declamations Poets Satyrs and Philosophick invectives It was a wise observation of Scaliger that some passages in Plato are wiser than their Authour and many excellent conceits are recollected from Homer and Aristotle they never dreamed of But in the Word of God it is quite contrary for after all the recollections that have been made by the most acute Sages of the world we must say with the Queen of Sheba in another case the one half hath not been told us I shall therefore conclude this Exhortation and Discourse in the words of holy and learned Baxter As you love your Comfort your Faith your Hope your Safety your Innocency your Souls your Christ your Everlasting Rest Love Reverence Read Search Study Obey and stick close to the Scriptures FINIS 2 Cor. 5. 10 Psal. 51. 1 5 Mat. 21. 15. Levit. 14. 41 c. Gen. 17. Gen. 22 a Hos. 10. 1. Isa. 5. 2. b Ps. 4. 6 7. 1 Joh. 2. 15 16. c Prov. 16. 4. Rom. 11. 36. d 1 Cor. 10. 31. e Psa. 73. 24 25 26. f 1 Joh. 1. 3. g Ps. 50. 23. and 25. 14. h 1 Cor. 13. 12. Luk. 13. 28. i 1 Thes. 4. 11 12. 1 Tim. 5. 8. Prov. 30. 8. Ps. 144. 15. Prov. 3. 8. Deu. 12. 19. and 14. 27 29. with Mal. 3. 8. k Joh. 11. 4. Ps. 144. 15. l Deut. 30. 19 20. Isa. 55. 3. with Joh. 17. 3. m Psal. 119. 16 17. Neh. 8. 8. 2 Tim. 4. 2. Act. 11. 19. 2 Pet. 1. 18 19. and 1. 1. 25. Mat. 7. 13. Act 13. 44. 1 Joh. 1. 3. n Gal. 6. 16. o Eph. 2. 20. p 2 Tim. 3. 15. q Gen. 3. 15. and 12. 3. and 49. 10. Dan. 9. 24. r 2 Kings 13. 2. with 23 16. Isa. 45. 1. Jer. 25. 12. and 29. 10. with Ezr. 1. s 1 Per. 1. 12. t 1 Cor. 2. 7 10. Eph. 3. 4 5. Col. 1. 25 26. u Deut. 4. 5 6 7 8. a Rom. 15. 18 19. 1 Cor. 14. 18 22. Acts 2. 42 43. and 4. 30 33. and 5. 12 14. and 6. 7 8. and 7. 36 37 38. and 8. 6 12 13 14 and 13. 11 12. and 14. 3. and 15. 12 and 19. 10 11. Mark 16. 17 18 20. with Heb. 2. 3 4. b Act. 2. 41. and 4. 4. with Matth. 28. 19 20. c Rom. 1. 21. d Heb. 11. 3. Psal. 19. 1 7. and 73 2 3 12 18. and 36. 5 6. e Psal. 119. 98. 99 100. Act. 24. 14. f Joh. 13. 13. Matth. 23. 9 10. g Jam. 4. 12. h Rev. 22. 18 19. i Psal. 19. 7. Joh. 5. 39. with 17. 3. 17. 2 Tim. 3. 15 16 17. Psal. 119. 96 Joh. 20 31. k Joh. 4. 39 41 42. l 2 Tim. 1. 13. m Luke 17. 10. n Acts 20. 27. and 24. 14.